Olsen v. Correiro

189 F.3d 52, 52 Fed. R. Serv. 1290, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 20799, 1999 WL 648353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 1999
Docket96-1425
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 189 F.3d 52 (Olsen v. Correiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olsen v. Correiro, 189 F.3d 52, 52 Fed. R. Serv. 1290, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 20799, 1999 WL 648353 (1st Cir. 1999).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

On May 13, 1986, Lester Olsen was convicted of the first-degree murder of Harold Fernandes and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Approximately five years later, a Massachusetts court overturned his conviction, a ruling that was based on the investigating police officers’ failure to disclose an audio-taped interview with the prosecution’s chief witness, and ordered a new trial. Olsen was released from prison on bail pending the new trial.

On February 21, 1992, rather than go through another murder trial, Olsen pled nolo contendere to a charge of manslaughter and was convicted of that crime. The prosecution agreed to recommend a sentence of time served. Although the state judge questioned whether this sentence was sufficiently severe, Olsen was sentenced to the time he had already served for the original conviction, the balance of the ten to fifteen-year manslaughter sentence was suspended, and he was placed on probation for five years.

Olsen then sued the City of Fall River and two police officers, William Correiro and Alan Silvia, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for damages arising from the murder charge and conviction. His complaint was primarily focused on obtaining damages for his imprisonment. The jury awarded him $1.5 million in compensatory damages. The district court overturned this award under Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 114 S.Ct. 2364, 129 L.Ed.2d 383 (1994), and ordered a new trial on damages. At that trial, evidence of injury arising from Olsen’s incarceration was excluded, but evidence of other damages associated with his murder trial and conviction was permitted. The second jury awarded $6000 in damages. In this appeal, Olsen seeks the reinstatement of the first jury’s damage award.

In affirming the district court’s decision and the resulting judgment, we do not reach the grounds on which the district court relied, but rather affirm on other grounds. The first question presented in this case is whether evidence of the manslaughter conviction and sentence that resulted from Olsen’s nolo plea should have been admitted into evidence. We conclude that the evidence of the conviction and sentence should have been admitted; the admission of this evidence is not prohibited by the applicable evidentiary rules and policy considerations fail to justify a reading of those rules to exclude this evidence. The second question presented is what effect the manslaughter conviction and sentence for time served have on Olsen’s efforts under § 1983 to recover damages for his imprisonment. We conclude that incarceration-based damages are barred.

I

Olsen brought his federal civil rights action in April 1992, alleging that, as a result of the defendants’ actions relating to the murder charge, he “endured loss of liberty, mental suffering, humiliation, and emotional trauma from the improper incarceration and conviction,” and “was deprived of any means of earning a living” during the time he was incarcerated. He requested an award of $1,911,000 “representing 1,911 days illegally in custody.” The defendants’ answers raised Olsen’s manslaughter conviction resulting from the *56 nolo plea as an affirmative defense. The City of Fall River, for instance, stated that “[a]s the [pjlaintiff has been convicted of a lesser included offense of the original murder indictment and has had credited the period of incarceration of approximately five (5) years, [pjlaintiff is not entitled to damages based upon the period of incarceration identified with the conviction for manslaughter.”

Before trial, Olsen filed a motion in li-mine to “exclude the admission of evidence of plaintiffs nolo contendere plea in the state criminal case,” and the defendants filed motions, opposed by Olsen, seeking admission of the conviction and sentence imposed as a result of the nolo plea, arguing that “[pjlaintiff s incarcerations to the prison term for which he seeks damages in this action are admissible as substantive evidence on the issue of damages.” In support of their motions, the defendants proffered the transcript of the hearing at which Olsen pled nolo and the court imposed sentence. The federal district judge decided that any evidence pertaining to the nolo plea and its consequences would not be placed before the jury, and also excluded any references to the state court order allowing Olsen a new criminal trial. The jury thus did not know that Olsen had been granted a new state criminal trial after his initial conviction, had pleaded nolo rather than go to trial again, had been accordingly convicted of manslaughter, and had been sentenced to time served plus probation.

On March 17, 1994, the jury held all three defendants liable, finding that Cor-reiro and Silvia each failed to produce exculpatory evidence, that they conspired together to suppress the evidence and to give false or substantially misleading testimony before the grand jury, and that the City’s customs and practices amounted to deliberate indifference to Olsen’s constitutional rights, all resulting in the murder conviction. This first jury awarded Olsen $1.5 million in compensatory damages but awarded no punitive damages.

After trial, defendants filed motions for judgments as a matter of law, motions for a new trial, and motions for remittitur. Defendants Correiro and Silvia also renewed motions in limine in which they argued that the conviction and sentence imposed pursuant to the nolo plea barred plaintiffs action for compensatory damages as a matter of law (and further proffered the docket sheet of the Massachusetts court, which records the manslaughter sentence).

The district judge granted defendants’ motions for judgment as a matter of law on September 26, 1994 and substituted $300 in “nominal” damages for the jury’s award. The court stated that “[tjhe central issue ... is whether a voluntary plea of nolo contendere to a state manslaughter charge, pursuant to which Olsen is lawfully sentenced to ‘time served,’ precludes him from recovering damages, under § 1983, for an incarceration which had originally been imposed pursuant to an earlier unlawful conviction and sentence.” The court’s resolution of this issue was based on its analysis of Heck, which was decided while the post-trial motions were under advisement. 1 The court rejected the argument that the damages suffered as a result of the incarceration were solely due to the invalidated conviction, explaining that “Olsen cannot escape the fact that his sentence of incarceration was re-imposed validly, albeit retroactively, and § 1983 does *57 not allow a claim for damages based on a lawful confinement.”

The court justified its consideration of the manslaughter conviction and sentence by explaining that a nolo plea, like a guilty plea, results in a valid conviction under Massachusetts law. According to the court, Federal Rule of Evidence

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Bluebook (online)
189 F.3d 52, 52 Fed. R. Serv. 1290, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 20799, 1999 WL 648353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsen-v-correiro-ca1-1999.