Purtell v. Mason

527 F.3d 615, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 10360, 2008 WL 2038893
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 14, 2008
Docket06-3176
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 527 F.3d 615 (Purtell v. Mason) 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
Purtell v. Mason, 527 F.3d 615, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 10360, 2008 WL 2038893 (7th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

SYKES, Circuit Judge.

This free-speech lawsuit requires us to determine the present scope of the “fighting-words” doctrine. The setting is a neighborhood feud. The case features an unsightly, 38-foot recreational vehicle stored on a residential driveway in suburban Chicago, a neighborhood petition drive to force its removal, and a derogatory Halloween yard display erected in retaliation against the neighbors who led the petition drive. An unlucky police officer dispatched to mediate the dispute was *617 sued for his efforts, accused of violating the First and Fourth Amendments.

The plaintiffs claimed their Halloween display — wooden tombstones with epitaphs describing, in unflattering terms, the demise of their neighbors — was constitutionally protected speech. They alleged their rights under the First and Fourth Amendments were violated when the officer ordered them to remove the display on pain of arrest. The district court granted summary judgment for the officer on the Fourth Amendment claim but permitted the free-speech claim to proceed to trial. A sensible but probably misinstructed jury returned a verdict for the police officer.

We affirm. Summary judgment on the Fourth Amendment claim was properly granted. At the moment of arrest, the neighbor-combatants were engaged in a noisy argument over the tombstones, culminating in a “chest-butt.” This provided probable cause to arrest for disorderly conduct. The First Amendment claim need not have been tried. The tombstone inscriptions, although insulting, cannot be considered fighting words as that doctrine is presently understood. The display was, accordingly, protected speech. But the officer’s mistake about the scope of the plaintiffs’ constitutional right to ridicule their neighbors was one a reasonable officer might make in this situation. He was therefore entitled to qualified immunity.

I. Background

Jeffrey and Vicki Purtell owned a large recreational vehicle — 38 feet long and 12 feet high — and for a while stored it at a rental-storage facility. In 2001, however, they fell on hard financial times and parked it on the driveway of their home in the Village of Bloomingdale, Illinois. There it sat for more than a year. Here is a picture:

[[Image here]]

The Purtells’ neighbors were unhappy but tolerated the presence of this eyesore, at least initially. Their patience eventually wore thin, however, and they complained to the Village of Bloomingdale. There was little the Village could do because the Pur-tells were not violating any existing laws.

Several of the neighbors then took matters into their own hands and started a petition drive urging the Village to adopt an ordinance banning homeowners from storing RVs on their property. This effort was ultimately successful. In late November 2002, the Village Board enacted an *618 ordinance prohibiting the storage of RVs on residential property.

The Purtells eventually complied with the ordinance and moved their RV, but not before making a crude retaliatory statement to their complaining neighbors. While the RV ordinance was still under consideration by the Village Board, the Purtells erected six wooden tombstones on their front lawn. It was mid-October and Halloween was coming, but the tombstones were not mere seasonal decorations; they carried a message for the neighbors who had pressed for the RV ordinance. Five of the six tombstones referred to a specific complaining neighbor followed by a short inscription describing the neighbor’s death.

To be more specific, each tombstone was about three feet tall, and they were placed about five feet from the sidewalk, facing the street. Here is a picture of the display:

The tombstones were inscribed with epitaphs, in doggerel verse, directed at the neighbors who had petitioned for the RV ordinance. All but one referred to particular neighbors by name and specified a year of death corresponding to the neighbor’s street address, plus one additional number. For example, a tombstone referring to John Berka, who resides at 188 Jackson Lane, was inscribed as follows:_

Old John Burkuh

Said he didn’T give a care

So They buried hiM

aLive uP To his hair.

He couLdn’T breath

So now we’re relieved

Of ThaT NasTy oLd jerk!

~ 1888 ~

The remaining tombstones read as follows:

~ 1610 ~

Dyean was Known for Lying

So She was Fried.

Now underneath these daisies

is where she goes crazy!!

~ 1680 ~

Roses are red.

Violets are blue.

There’s stiLL some space

Waiting for you!

*619 BeTTe wAsN’T ReaDy,

BuT here she Lies

Ever since thAt night She DieD,

12 Feet deep in this trench ...

Still wAsn’T Deep enough

For thAt wenches STeneh!

~ 1690 ~

Here Lies Jimmy,

The OID Towne IDiot.

MeAn As sin even withouT his Gin.

No LonGer Does he wear

that sTupiD Old Grin ...

Oh no, noT where

they’ve sent Him!

OLd Man CrimP was a

GimP who couldn’t hear.

SLiced his wife from ear To ear

She died ... He was Fried. Now They’re TogeTher

again side by side!

~ 1720 ~

CrysTy wAs misTy-eyed

The DAy she DieD

AXE to the HeAD ...

No DoubT She wAs DeAD.

Now There’s no more comPlain’n

Even When iT’s rain’n!

_~ 1860 ~_

These inscriptions referred to neighbors Diane Lesner, Betty Garbarz, James Garbarz, and a neighbor who owned a crimping shop. The “misty-eyed Crysty” referred to on the sixth tombstone was fictional; Jeff Purtell said he included this one to “balance out” the display.

The Purtells’ neighbors were upset by the tombstone display, and several called the Bloomingdale Police Department to report that they felt intimidated by it and wanted it removed. On October 18 police officers were dispatched to the neighborhood and attempted to persuade Jeff Pur-tell to take down the tombstones; he refused, but agreed to cover the names with duct tape.

Halloween came and went, and still the tombstones remained. The simmering tension in the neighborhood eventually came to a boil on November 6, 2002, when the police were called because the duct tape had fallen off the tombstones and the names were visible again. Officer Bruce Mason and another officer went to the neighborhood to try once more to mediate the dispute. They spoke with Betty Gar-barz and Diane Lesner, who told the officers they felt threatened by the display, which they saw as a means for Purtell to vent his anger over the dispute about his RV.

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Bluebook (online)
527 F.3d 615, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 10360, 2008 WL 2038893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purtell-v-mason-ca7-2008.