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Bassem Kandil v. Gary Yurkovic, 12-3099 (2013)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Number: 12-3099 Visitors: 36
Filed: Jun. 14, 2013
Latest Update: Feb. 12, 2020
Summary: NOT PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _ No. 12-3099 _ BASSEM KANDIL; SAMEH A. ABOELATA; HALLA KANDIL, his wife; FLORA KANDIL, his wife v. GARY YURKOVIC, Police Officer; ANTHONY MARK ABODE, Police Officer; WILLIAM OELS, III, Police Officer; WILLIAM OELS, JR.; EDWARD T. BOBADILLA, Police Officer; CHIEF OF POLICE; CITY OF NEW BRUNSWICK; NEW BRUNSWICK POLICE DEPARTMENT; MIDDLESEX COUNTY PROSECUTORS OFFICE; MIDDLESEX COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY BASSEM KANDIL; FLORA KA
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                                                         NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                     FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                          ____________

                               No. 12-3099
                              ____________

              BASSEM KANDIL; SAMEH A. ABOELATA;
           HALLA KANDIL, his wife; FLORA KANDIL, his wife

                                     v.

 GARY YURKOVIC, Police Officer; ANTHONY MARK ABODE, Police Officer;
   WILLIAM OELS, III, Police Officer; WILLIAM OELS, JR.; EDWARD T.
BOBADILLA, Police Officer; CHIEF OF POLICE; CITY OF NEW BRUNSWICK;
   NEW BRUNSWICK POLICE DEPARTMENT; MIDDLESEX COUNTY
PROSECUTORS OFFICE; MIDDLESEX COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY

              BASSEM KANDIL; FLORA KANDIL, his wife,

                                                        Appellants
                              ____________

              On Appeal from the United States District Court
                         for the District of New Jersey
                            (D.C. No. 06-cv-04701)
              District Judge: Honorable Dennis M. Cavanaugh
                                 ____________

                Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
                             June 13, 2013

       Before: SCIRICA, HARDIMAN and ALDISERT, Circuit Judges.

                           (Filed: June 14, 2013)
                               ____________

                       OPINION OF THE COURT
                            ____________
HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.

       This case comes to us for the second time. At issue is whether a release-dismissal

agreement signed by Appellant Bassem Kandil is enforceable. In 2011, we vacated a

summary judgment against Kandil and remanded the matter for the District Court to

decide whether Kandil’s agreement was enforceable as a matter of public policy. Kandil

v. Yurkovic, 448 F. App’x 228, 229 (3d Cir. 2011). After additional discovery, the

District Court again granted summary judgment against Kandil. For the reasons that

follow, we will affirm the District Court’s judgment as to Kandil’s federal claim, but will

vacate as to his state law claims.

                                             I

       Because we write for the parties, who are well acquainted with the case, we recite

only the facts and procedural history essential to its disposition. A more detailed

statement of the facts and procedural history is available in our prior opinion. See Kandil,

448 F. App’x at 230–31.

       In the early morning hours of October 1, 2004, Kandil was arrested for disorderly

conduct. According to one of the arresting officers, Gary Yurkovic, Kandil instigated a

belligerent confrontation with the police and then resisted arrest, which required the

police to subdue him. Kandil was later indicted for aggravated assault, resisting arrest,

and disarming a police officer. Although an internal police investigation accepted

Yurkovic’s version of events and cleared the arresting officers of wrongdoing, several

                                             2
witnesses claimed that Kandil was arrested after he and his friends began talking to a

woman named Pamela who was in a sexual relationship with Yurkovic, and that Yurkovic

and the other officers beat up Kandil without provocation.

       About a year later, Kandil and Middlesex County Assistant Prosecutor Marcia

Silva reached an agreement whereby the criminal charges against Kandil would be

suspended and later dismissed in exchange for a release of all his civil claims. Despite

this agreement, Kandil sued under both 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law, arguing that his

agreement was unenforceable as a matter of public policy. The District Court disagreed,

and entered summary judgment against Kandil, holding that the release barred his claims.

                                            II1

       We review the District Court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the

same standard as the District Court.2 Slagle v. Cnty. of Clarion, 
435 F.3d 262
, 263 (3d

Cir. 2006). Summary judgment is proper ―if the movant shows that there is no genuine

dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.‖

Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). In reviewing the District Court’s opinion, we are not limited to its

       1
        The District Court had jurisdiction over the federal claims under 28 U.S.C.
§§ 1331 and 1343 and supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims under 28
U.S.C. § 1367(a). We have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
       2
         After the District Court granted summary judgment against him, Kandil moved
for reconsideration, which was denied. Kandil’s notice of appeal mentions only the
denial of the motion for reconsideration. However, ―an appeal from a denial of a Motion
for Reconsideration brings up the underlying judgment for review.‖ McAlister v. Sentry
Ins. Co., 
958 F.2d 550
, 552–53 (3d Cir. 1992).
                                             3
proffered rationale, but rather ―[w]e may affirm the District Court on any grounds

supported by the record.‖ Nicini v. Morra, 
212 F.3d 798
, 805 (3d Cir. 2000).

                                             III

       For a release-dismissal agreement to be enforceable under federal law, it must,

among other things, be in the public interest. See Town of Newtown v. Rumery, 
480 U.S. 386
, 398 (1987); Cain v. Darby Borough, 
7 F.3d 377
, 381 (3d Cir. 1993) (en banc). More

specifically, two requirements must be met. First, there must be an ―objective‖ showing

that the prosecutor proffered a legitimate public interest reason for entering into the

agreement that was supported by the facts known to the prosecutor when the agreement

was reached. Though labeled ―objective,‖ this inquiry does not require an independent

evaluation of whether Kandil’s claims are marginal or frivolous, as such an evaluation

would entail the same costs and proceedings which release-dismissal agreements seek to

avoid. Rather, our inquiry is limited to whether the prosecutors’ conclusion regarding the

claims was reasonable in light of the evidence. See Livingstone v. N. Belle Vernon

Borough, 
91 F.3d 515
, 530 (3d Cir. 1996) (objective inquiry is whether ―the facts known

to [the prosecutor] could have supported the conclusion that the [plaintiffs’] civil rights

claims were marginal or frivolous‖ (emphasis added)); see also 
Cain, 7 F.3d at 383
(―[T]here must first be a case-specific showing that the released civil rights claims

appeared to be marginal or frivolous at the time the agreement was made.‖ (emphasis

added)). Second, there must be a ―subjective‖ showing that the proffered reason was the

                                              4
prosecutor’s actual reason for entering into the agreement. See 
Livingstone, 91 F.3d at 527
(citing 
Cain, 7 F.3d at 381
).

       In this case, the prosecutors’ proffered reason for entering into the release-

dismissal agreement was that Kandil’s civil claims appeared marginal or frivolous.3

There is a legitimate public ―interest in preventing the public fisc from being wasted by

defending frivolous lawsuits.‖ 
Cain, 7 F.3d at 381
; see also 
Rumery, 480 U.S. at 395–96
.

Thus, the questions presented in this appeal are ―whether [Kandil’s] civil rights claims

were regarded—and, if so, whether they were properly regarded—by the prosecuting

attorney as marginal or frivolous.‖ 
Livingstone, 91 F.3d at 530
.

                                              A

       Kandil’s release-dismissal agreement satisfies the objective prong of the public

interest test because ―the facts known to the prosecutor when the agreement was reached

. . . sufficed to support the prosecutor’s proffered public interest reason for concluding the

agreement.‖ 
Id. at 527. Here,
Kandil has presented some evidence that the police arrested him for an

improper reason and used excessive force in doing so. Witnesses testified that Kandil

was acting peacefully on the night in question, and did not consume any alcohol. On the

other hand, there is significant countervailing evidence that Kandil was acting in an


       3
         Defendants also suggested two other reasons the prosecutors might have entered
into the release-dismissal agreement. We rejected both of those reasons in the previous
appeal and will not revisit them here. See Kandil, 448 F. App’x at 234.
                                              5
intoxicated and belligerent manner on the night in question and that the police did not use

excessive force to subdue him.

       First, the police department’s internal investigation concluded that the officers

acted reasonably and without excessive force. The investigation report noted that police

reports filed at the time of the incident by Officers Yurkovic, William Oels, and Anthony

Abode were consistent with their later interview testimony. The internal investigators

also interviewed four employees of the hospital where Kandil was taken after his arrest.

These employees unanimously described Kandil as ―combative and aggressive.‖ App.

1179. One nurse also described Kandil as ―intoxicated.‖

       Another contemporaneous police investigation casts further doubt on Kandil’s

version of events. Immediately after the incident, Kandil alleged that the police were

motivated to arrest him for racial reasons. In response to this allegation, a police

investigator interviewed Kandil at the hospital approximately eight hours after his arrest.

In that interview, Kandil stated that he had consumed one gin and tonic that night, which

conflicted with his witnesses’ later statements that he had nothing to drink at all. In

addition, the investigator ―detected a very strong [odor] of alcohol emitting from [Kandil]

as he spoke‖ and noted that Kandil ―at times was [in very] close proximity to [the

investigator] and at times . . . would even touch [the investigator’s] left arm.‖ App. 439.

       Kandil’s evidence itself bears internal indicia of unreliability. All but one of

Kandil’s witnesses were friends who were with him on the night in question. The one

                                              6
independent witness was a woman named Lindsay, who was with Pamela that night and

who was acquainted with Mohammed Farzaie, a member of Kandil’s group. However,

Lindsay’s testimony presents only a weak case of police misconduct. Her testimony was

presented in the form of a phone call with Farzaie, in which Farzaie repeatedly made

leading statements and asked her leading questions. Lindsay admitted that she did not

know Yurkovic’s motivation for arresting Kandil, but only speculated that Yurkovic did

so because ―maybe [Pamela] told them that she felt threatened‖ or ―maybe [Pamela] told

them [Kandil’s group was] harassing me.‖ App. 674. In addition, Lindsay did not

observe the actual scuffle between Yurkovic and Kandil, as she was ―on the phone with

[her] boyfriend‖ and ―[g]etting in the car getting ready to go home‖ when it took place.

App. 679.

       In sum, when all the evidence is considered, it ―could have supported the

conclusion that [Kandil’s] civil rights claims were marginal or frivolous.‖ 
Livingstone, 91 F.3d at 530
.

                                            B

       Having concluded that the prosecutors could have reasonably deemed Kandil’s

claims marginal, we must turn to whether they actually considered them as such. After

our first remand, Prosecutor Silva was deposed. In her deposition, she stated that she

considered the merits of Kandil’s claim and discussed the issue of Pamela’s relationship

with Yurkovic with her boss. She also testified that Kandil’s witness statements did not

                                             7
influence her decision to enter into the agreement and that she ―had no doubt reading the

discovery, knowing that the case had been indicted by a Grand Jury, speaking to the

officers and reviewing the discovery he provided, there was probable cause for arrest that

night.‖ App. 624.

       Kandil has presented no evidence indicating that Silva testified falsely or that she

was trying to hide evidence of police misconduct. In fact, Silva also testified that, ―I

walked into Judge DeVesa’s on October 18th, I was trying that case, all the counts in the

case.‖ App. 629. Had she concluded that there was evidence of police misconduct to

hide, she would have likely proposed the release-dismissal agreement earlier, rather than

waiting for a settlement conference with a judge.

       In addition, the criminal complaint against Kandil was filed two months before his

notice of tort claim, and eleven months prior to the time he presented his evidence of

police misconduct to the prosecutor. Insofar as the public interest requirement is intended

to ―curb the temptation to trump up charges in reaction to a defendant’s civil rights

claim,‖ 
Cain, 7 F.3d at 380
(internal quotation marks omitted), that concern is not

implicated here where the criminal charges were filed long before the prosecutors were

aware of any civil claims. Therefore, we agree with the District Court that the subjective

prong of the public interest test is satisfied and that Kandil’s release-dismissal agreement

is enforceable to bar his § 1983 claims against Defendants.




                                              8
                                            IV

       Although we will affirm the District Court’s judgment on Kandil’s § 1983 claims,

we will vacate the judgment insofar as it found Kandil’s state law claims to be barred by

his release-dismissal agreement.

       Although the enforceability of release-dismissal agreements waiving § 1983 claims

is a question of federal common law, the enforceability of such agreements releasing state

law claims depends on state law. 
Livingstone, 91 F.3d at 539
. Here, the District Court

did not analyze under state law whether Kandil’s state law claims were barred by his

release-dismissal agreement. Therefore, we will vacate the District Court’s disposition of

the state law claims and remand. Of course, we leave to the District Court’s discretion

whether to decline supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims pursuant to 28

U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3).

                                             V

       For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the judgment of the District Court in

part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.




                                             9

Source:  CourtListener

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