Schneider v. Simonini

749 A.2d 336, 163 N.J. 336, 2000 N.J. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 6, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by142 cases

This text of 749 A.2d 336 (Schneider v. Simonini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Simonini, 749 A.2d 336, 163 N.J. 336, 2000 N.J. LEXIS 142 (N.J. 2000).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

COLEMAN, J.

This appeal involves a claim for a constitutional violation brought under 42 U.S.C.A § 1983 (Section 1983). We are asked primarily to decide whether sufficient probable cause existed to arrest Frank Schneider, Jr. (plaintiff) and, if not, whether defendants otherwise are entitled to qualified immunity. We must also revisit our summary judgment standard explicated in Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520, 666 A.2d 146 (1995), and adjudge whether the trial court or the jury should decide certain factual and legal disputes in Section 1983 cases. We hold that probable cause did not exist to arrest plaintiff. A majority of the Court however, holds that even in the absence of probable cause defendant Simonini is entitled to qualified immunity because he could reasonably have believed in its existence. We also hold that defendant Bueeino is not liable as a supervisor under the standard adopted today. Accordingly, the judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.

I.

Although the facts are, for the most part, undisputed, different inferences may be drawn from those facts. In October 1988, the Organized Crime Bureau of the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice (DCJ) began Operation LeJeune, a ten-month investigation into the Bruno/Scarfo organized crime family. Defendant Donald Simonini, the lead investigator, and defendant Robert [346]*346Buecino, commander of the Organized Crime Bureau of the DCJ, were two key members of Operation LeJeune.

From the beginning of the investigation, Simonini was assisted by a confidential informant named Anthony Bonura, who aided the investigation by providing inside information. Bonura’s identity remained confidential throughout most of the investigation. The name Frank Schneider first surfaced after a tape recorded conversation on April 19, 1989 between Bonura and Richard Discorfano, an Operation LeJeune target, which revealed that two men, Frank Schneider and Mark Vilardi, were involved in hijacking a truckload of VCRs. The recorded conversation revealed, in pertinent part:

Bonura: ... what about the big load, VCRs, shit like that.
Discorfano: That ain’t them, that ain’t them. Those guys are going into hijacking. Remember, I told you I hired a couple of guys to hijack. Those guys, they don’t know what they’re doing. They handcuffed a guy in South Jersey, they’re bring’em up here, the guys get out of the fuckin’ truck, he’s knocking on people’s fuckin’ door.
Bonura: Who stuck them up?
Discorfano: They did.
Bonura: Smokey and a ...
Discorfano: No. No. Frankie.
Bonura: Frankie Schneider?
Discorfano: Not the father, the son.
Bonura: The son. Yea.
Discorfano: Well. Mark right now is involved with the walkie talkie; Frank Schneider does the shit Know what I’m saying?

Bonura told Simonini that he did not know Frank Schneider, Jr. Thereafter, on July 10, 1989, Simonini was informed by FBI Special Agent Robert DeBellis that a Mark Vilardi and a Frank Schneider, Jr., had committed an armed hijacking of a truckload of VCRs on the New Jersey Turnpike for Richard Discorfano. According to Simonini, DeBellis told him that the hijackers abandoned the truck and its cargo and left the truck driver, Cliff Glidden, bound in the sleeper section of the truck after they struck a telephone pole in northern New Jersey. DeBellis also gave Simonini a description of Schneider relayed to him by his infer-[347]*347mant: a “big kid” between six and six feet two inches tall with a large muscular build and in his twenties. He told Simonini that Schneider and his father had criminal records and that the son lived in the Garfield-Lodi area. Simonini testified that, although DeBellis told him that there was a Frank Schneider, Sr., he was never told that Frank Schneider, Sr. had a criminal record. That is the only disputed relevant fact in the record. Finally, Simonini was told that Vilardi had an arrest record and lived in Paterson.

DeBellis mentioned to Simonini that the FBI had verified some of the informant’s information by checking police reports. The reports confirmed that two men hijacked a truckload of VCRs on the New Jersey Turnpike on December 27, 1988, and that they bound the driver with tape, threw him in the sleeper portion of the truck, and abandoned the truck and its cargo in Hackensack.

Based on that information, Simonini began his search to find Schneider and Vilardi. Simonini inquired whether DeBellis’s informant could identify Schneider or Vilardi, or whether there were any photographs Simonini could use to assist in his search for the hijackers. DeBellis told Simonini that neither he nor his informant could provide additional assistance, but that his informant had proven to be reliable in the past.

Simonini obtained access to the police reports on the hijacking and learned that no fingerprints were found at the scene. The truck driver, Glidden, gave a general description of one of the hijackers, whom he described as a “very strong” Hispanic male, twenty-five or thirty years old, about five feet eleven inches tall with dark hair, wearing a plaid coat, blue jeans and sunglasses. Subsequent to plaintiffs arrest, Glidden picked out the real hijacker from a photo line-up in August 1990. However, Simonini was unable to contact Glidden during the investigation.

Simonini accessed the Division of Motor Vehicles’ (DMV) computerized records for “Frank Schneider” and found several individuals with that name. Based on information he received from DeBellis and Glidden, he narrowed the field down to four “Frank Schneiders.” Two of those men were ruled out as suspects. The [348]*348first Frank Schneider, who had a Montville address and was born in 1944, was eliminated because he was too old to fit the description given by Glidden and DeBellis’s informant. The second Frank Schneider, who lived in Lincoln Park and was born in July 1964, was eliminated because his listed height, five feet eight inches, did not fit the “big kid” description given by DeBellis’s informant. The other two men were a Frank J. Schneider who lived at 10 Charles Court in Lodi with a listed birth date of “August 00, 1961” and an eye color of brown, and a Frank J. Schneider, Jr., who lived at 270 Walter Avenue in Hasbrouck Heights with a listed birth date of August 2, 1961, and an eye color of hazel. Based on the similarities between the remaining two men, Simonini concluded that the two men were in fact the same person. He testified that, in his experience, many people involved in criminal activities have more than one driver’s license with slightly different personal information.

Simonini then ran the name Frank Schneider and the birth date August 2, 1961, through the State Police Master Index. He obtained a report stating that that particular Frank Schneider, plaintiff, was six feet three inches tall and weighed about 150 pounds. The reports also reflected arrests for burglary, property damage, invasion of privacy, and disturbing the peace. Simonini believed those arrests corroborated the information from DeBel-lis’s informant that Frank Schneider, the suspected hijacker, had a criminal record.

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Bluebook (online)
749 A.2d 336, 163 N.J. 336, 2000 N.J. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-simonini-nj-2000.