Noe Villanueva v. Oscar B. McInnis

723 F.2d 414, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 26165
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 1984
Docket82-2402
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 723 F.2d 414 (Noe Villanueva v. Oscar B. McInnis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noe Villanueva v. Oscar B. McInnis, 723 F.2d 414, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 26165 (5th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

In this civil rights suit Oscar B. Mclnnis, formerly district attorney for Hidalgo County, Texas, appeals a jury award of $90,000 for damages for conspiring to murder Noe Villanueva. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 1 Mclnnis contends that the complaint failed *415 to state a claim, that the district judge should have recused himself, and that Villanueva failed to prove a conspiracy, action under color of state law or a deprivation of any constitutional rights. Persuaded that Villanueva failed to prove that he was deprived of a constitutional right, we reverse.

I

We turn to the trial viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Villanueva. Boeing v. Shipman, 411 F.2d 365, 374-75 (5th Cir.1969) (en banc). When Villanueva and Patricia Parada were divorced on February 12,1974 Parada was given custody of Lorena, their child, and Villanueva received visitation privileges. On June 15, 1975 Villanueva, concerned for Lorena’s bruised appearance and frustrated over Parada’s failure to regularly deliver the child for visitation privileges, took Lorena from Hidalgo County and settled with the child in Houston, where Villanueva had relatives.

In October 1976 Villanueva was arrested in Houston for violation of the custody order and sent to Edinburg jail in Hidalgo County. There he first met Mclnnis, who, using foul language, asked Villanueva to divulge Lorena’s location. Villanueva asked Mclnnis when he was going to see a judge, to which Mclnnis replied that he wasn’t going to see anybody and that instead Villanueva should call his family, presumably to locate Lorena. Villanueva stayed in jail twenty-six days before he saw a judge. The state court judge sent Villanueva, under custody, back to Houston to find Lorena. Villanueva’s relatives, with whom Lorena was supposedly staying, had moved and could not be located.

Villanueva was returned to the Edinburg jail. He was found guilty of violating the custody order and sentenced to twenty days in jail, after which he would be given seven days to return with Lorena. The night before his scheduled release he was served with an arrest warrant for possession of marijuana, but made bail and was released the next day. At this time Villanueva was not arraigned, formally charged or told when to reappear for the marijuana charge. When he asked Mclnnis for his charges, Mclnnis tore off a piece of paper from a grocery bag, signed it, and told him “this is all you need.”

After his release, Villanueva returned to Houston and found his daughter within two days but did not return her to the court. Out of fear he did not return to Hidalgo County. He was found with Parada and Lorena at a Border Patrol checkpoint on March 6, 1978 and was arrested for bond-jumping on the marijuana charge. Villanueva plead guilty to the bondjumping charge and the marijuana charge was dropped. He was sentenced to ninety days at Edinburg jail, but, with good behavior, was released on May 5, 1982 after serving sixty days.

It was during this incarceration that Mclnnis entered into an agreement to murder Villanueva. Daniel Rodriguez, serving a sentence for pleading guilty to murder without malice, was also then a prisoner. Mclnnis met with Rodriguez at the jail in March or April, 1974. Mclnnis told Rodriguez that he was transferring Villanueva to his cell and that he wanted Rodriguez to learn what Villanueva planned to do when released from jail. Mclnnis testified that he did this to find out whether Villanueva planned to abduct Lorena again. 2 Villanueva was transferred to Rodriguez’s cell the following day. Rodriguez did not ask him anything, however, and at Rodriguez’s request Villanueva was removed from Rodriguez’s cell after three or four days.

A few days after Villanueva was removed from Rodriguez’s cell, Mclnnis told Rodriguez that he wanted to keep Villanueva in jail because of the difficulties Villanueva had caused Parada and Lorena. Rodriguez suggested a marijuana framing scheme that Mclnnis agreed to but which was never carried out. The next week Rodriguez told Mclnnis that the only way to *416 get Villanueva was to shoot him. Mclnnis asked Rodriguez to arrange the murder. In return for his assistance Mclnnis said he would try to get Rodriguez released. Rodriguez contacted a hit man, Jesus Cantu, in Reynosa, Mexico.

At this point, however, Rodriguez began to fear that he was getting set up by Mclnnis. He called Cantu and told him to forget about the hit. He then notified the sheriff and the FBI was brought in. The sheriff and FBI told Rodriguez to continue to pretend to Mclnnis that the hit was still planned. Rodriguez and Mclnnis discussed Villanueva’s release date and ways to get Villanueva to Reynosa. At first Rodriguez was to inveigle Villanueva to go to Reynosa, but this plan was scrapped. Instead Mclnnis talked to Parada and she arranged to meet Villanueva in Reynosa after his release from prison. A date for the “murder” was set.

After his release in May 1975, Villanueva, on the FBI’s suggestion, did not go to Reynosa. Rodriguez, however, reported to Mclnnis that the hit had been made and as proof gave Mclnnis Villanueva’s identification card and crucifix, both supplied by the FBI. Mclnnis took the card and crucifix from Rodriguez and gave him the address of some parole people in Dallas, Texas.

During his March through May stay in prison Villanueva was treated as any other prisoner. He was not aware of any plan to take his life until after his release from prison.

After his release from prison Villanueva moved to Houston, where he worked for about four months. He then returned to Hidalgo County and was unemployed for about eight months. Villanueva interviewed for twelve to fourteen positions for which he was qualified but was refused employment. At these interviews he was asked whether he was involved in the “Oscar Mclnnis” case-and if he had a criminal record. On cross-examination he testified that it was his criminal record that prevented him from getting a job. He later worked for an auto supply company for a year and two months but quit because people made remarks about himself, Mclnnis and Parada. He testified that he continues to be embarrassed at his present job and on the street.

Villanueva sued attempting to state claims under 42 U.S.C. 1983 alleging that Mclnnis deprived him of his constitutional rights because of his arrest, detention, processing and the conspiracy to commit murder. He claimed damages based on loss of employment during his period of incarceration, loss of his ability to gain employment due to his criminal record, and mental pain and suffering.

The district court denied Mclnnis’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim and request that the district judge recuse himself because he had earlier presided over a trial against Mclnnis for perjury resulting from the same incident. That trial had resulted in a hung jury and the charges were dropped.

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Bluebook (online)
723 F.2d 414, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 26165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noe-villanueva-v-oscar-b-mcinnis-ca5-1984.