Nathson Fields v. City of Chicago

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 2020
Docket18-1207
StatusPublished

This text of Nathson Fields v. City of Chicago (Nathson Fields v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nathson Fields v. City of Chicago, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 17-3079, 17-3125 & 18-1207 NATHSON FIELDS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

CITY OF CHICAGO, et al., Defendants-Appellants. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 1:10-cv-01168 — Matthew F. Kennelly, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED NOVEMBER 8, 2019 — DECIDED NOVEMBER 20, 2020 ____________________

Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and RIPPLE and ROVNER, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. These appeals stem from an action brought in 2010 by Nathson Fields, asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law against the City of Chicago and individuals including several Chicago police officers as well as two former Cook County prosecutors. The lawsuit alleged that the defendants violated Fields’s constitutional rights as well as state law in their actions in fabricating evidence and 2 Nos. 17-3079, 17-3125 & 18-1207

withholding exculpatory evidence in a criminal investigation that resulted in Fields’s conviction for murder. After a retrial that resulted in an acquittal, Fields filed this civil suit, and the jury entered an award in his favor on a number of grounds. Two individual defendants, Chicago Police Detectives David O’Callaghan and Joseph Murphy, and the City of Chicago, now appeal.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY The § 1983 and state law claims in this case relate to the investigation and prosecution of Fields for the murders of Tal- man Hickman and Jerome Smith in 1984. Following a bench trial before Cook County Circuit Judge Thomas Maloney, Fields and his co-defendant Earl Hawkins were convicted of the murders. During the penalty phase, the prosecutors intro- duced evidence that Fields and Hawkins had also murdered Dee Eggers Vaughn and Joe White.1 Fields and Hawkins were sentenced to death for the murders of Hickman and Smith, and the conviction and sentence were affirmed on appeal in 1990. Twelve years after the trial, in 1998, those convictions were overturned on post-conviction review based on evi- dence that Hawkins’s attorney had bribed Judge Maloney to secure an acquittal and that Judge Maloney during the trial became concerned that he was being investigated by law en- forcement and returned the bribe; that corruption under- mined confidence in the outcome. Hawkins, who began to co- operate with federal law enforcement in 1987 following the

1 Hawkins and Anthony Sumner—who first implicated Fields in both

the Smith and Hickman murders and the Vaughn and White murders— later confessed to the Vaughn and White murders. Nos. 17-3079, 17-3125 & 18-1207 3

conviction, provided the evidence of the bribe. He also made a deal to testify for the prosecution in a retrial of Fields for the Hickman and Smith murders, in return for avoidance of the death penalty or life in prison without release. Under the plea agreement, Hawkins pled guilty to two counts of armed vio- lence and received a sentence recommendation of 42 years on each count to be served consecutively. The plea agreement also stated that “[i]t is the intent of both parties that defendant Hawkins remain in custody until he reaches 72 years of age,” which would be in 2027. R. 770-2 at 8. In the criminal retrial of Fields for the Smith and Hickman murders, the prosecutors presented a different factual sce- nario than in the first, relying on Hawkins’s testimony. Whereas Hawkins had been identified as a shooter in the first trial, he was portrayed as the getaway driver in the second trial and Fields and another individual were characterized as the shooters. Fields was acquitted in that retrial in 2009. He then sought a certificate of innocence, which was ultimately denied, and at the same time pursued this lawsuit. The lawsuit alleged that Chicago Police Detectives David O’Callaghan and Joseph Murphy violated his constitutional rights in connection with his criminal trials by fabricating ev- idence, engaging in suggestive identification procedures, and withholding exculpatory evidence. Fields alleged that the withholding of evidence was done in accordance with a pol- icy of the City of Chicago to withhold “street” files which were compiled by detectives and contained such exculpatory evidence. See Jones v. City of Chicago, 856 F.2d 985, 995 (7th Cir. 1988) (noting that “street files” are police files withheld from 4 Nos. 17-3079, 17-3125 & 18-1207

the stateʹs attorney and defense counsel and therefore una- vailable as a source of exculpatory information for a prosecu- tor deciding whether to charge or a defense attorney). Fields also included state law claims of malicious prosecu- tion, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and civil con- spiracy. The case proceeded to trial in March 2014, but after seven days of trial, the court declared a mistrial when the de- fendants introduced prejudicial testimony that the court had excluded in a pretrial in limine ruling. The second trial com- menced in April 2014, and at the close of the month-long trial the jury found in favor of Fields on his due process claim against defendant O’Callaghan, and in favor of the defend- ants on the remaining claims. The jury awarded Fields $80,000 on his due process claim against O’Callaghan. All parties filed post-trial motions. O’Callaghan sought entry of judgment as a matter of law on the due process claim, and Fields sought an entry of judgment on his claim against the City, both of which the district court denied. Fields also sought a new trial as to the claims that were not decided in his favor as to the individual defendants, a new trial as to damages regarding the due process claim against O’Callaghan upon which he prevailed, and a new trial on his Monell claim against the City. See Monell v. Dept. of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978). The district court granted Fields’s motion for a new trial as to the claims found in favor of the individual defendants and the City, and for a new trial as to damages with respect to the O’Callaghan claim. O’Callaghan subsequently sought a new trial as to liability, arguing that the damages issue could not be separated from that of liability, and the court granted that motion. After another month-long trial, the jury found in fa- vor of Fields against O’Callaghan and Murphy on one of his § 1983 claims, against the City on Fields’s Monell liability Nos. 17-3079, 17-3125 & 18-1207 5

claim under §1983, and against O’Callaghan on a state-law claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress, and found for the defendants on the remaining § 1983 and state law claims. The jury awarded Fields $22 million in compen- satory damages, and punitive damages of $30,000 against O’Callaghan and $10,000 against Murphy. O’Callaghan and Murphy (hereinafter the “individual defendants”) and the City now appeal that jury determination. We will not recap the evidence presented below in its en- tirety because such a comprehensive overview is unnecessary to the resolution of the issues before us and, with challenges before us to decisions made in two separate month-long trials, any such effort to do so for both trials would prove both vo- luminous and confusing. Instead, we present the relevant ev- idence in the discussion of each issue raised on appeal. For context, the district court summarized the evidence as fol- lows: Fields contended, and the evidence supported, that OʹCallaghan and Murphy falsified incriminating evi- dence and concealed favorable evidence, and that he was deprived of his liberty as a result.

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