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DAVID McMAHON, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
ALBANY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, et al.,
Defendants and Respondents.
No. A093980
In the Court of Appeal of the State of California
First Appellate District
Division Three
(Alameda County Super. Ct. No. 7846719, Honorable Kenneth
Burr)
COUNSEL
Walter K. Pyle for Appellant and Plaintiff.
Imai, Tadlock, Keeney & Cordery, LLP, T.G. Tadlock,
for Defendants and Respondents.
Filed December 31, 2002
Here we hold that appellant David McMahon's motion for
directed verdict was appropriately denied and that the jury properly
rejected his false arrest claim. His conduct of dumping gallons
of garbage on the floor of a schoolroom during a school board
meeting was sufficient to support an arrest for disturbing a
public meeting and was not speech protected by the First Amendment.
We reject McMahon's other claims of error as well and affirm
the judgment.
Factual and Procedural Background
The events at issue here occurred at the April 1996
meeting of the board of the Albany Unified School District (the
District), attended by the five board members and School Superintendent
Dale Hudson. Between January and April 1996, the board held its
meetings in the multipurpose room of Cornell Elementary School.
Meetings included time during which members of the public could
speak to the board. Speakers used a microphone located in front
of the board members and Hudson, who sat at tables facing the
audience.
Before the meeting in question, McMahon had attended
several other board meetings at Cornell Elementary School. At
two of those meetings he spoke about trash left by Albany High
School students in the neighborhood around the campus. McMahon
began picking up litter in the area. He brought a bag of this
rubbish to the board meeting in February 1996, and lifted it
in the air as he discussed the trash problem. McMahon told the
board that the bag contained drug paraphernalia and alcohol containers.
He did not empty the bag. No board member prevented McMahon from
speaking at the February board meeting or any other meeting.
About 15 people were in the audience of the April board
meeting. McMahon brought five 13-gallon bags of trash and placed
them in the back of the room before the meeting began. He had
been collecting the garbage over several weeks. During the public
comment period, McMahon addressed the board. He spoke about seismic
retrofitting and traffic improvements related to the building
of a new middle school. McMahon then told the board he wanted
to discuss trash. He said, "Excuse me one moment while I
bring up some trash." [FOOTNOTE 1] He went to the
back of the room and retrieved two or three bags, gloves and
a plastic tarp. As McMahon opened the tarp, board president Alan
Riffer asked, "What is your intent, because this period
is matters to address the Board, and we need to have some limit
on-and so that we can move on to the rest of the agenda."
McMahon replied, "My intent is to talk about public safety
as related to trash. And to underscore my point . . . ."
McMahon then spread the tarp on the floor and untied the bags.
Craig Boyan, principal of Cornell school, was seated in the front
row of the audience. Rising from his chair, Boyan called out
to McMahon, "Excuse me, kids are in this room tomorrow,
and I hope you' re not planning on emptying trash out here on
the floor." McMahon replied, "I certainly am,"
to which Boyan responded, "Well I hope you' re prepared
to clean it up." The multipurpose room was used as the school's
cafeteria and student assembly room and for an after-school childcare
program. Meals for Cornell and other elementary schools were
cooked in the kitchen adjacent to the multipurpose room.
McMahon, wearing gloves, lifted a bag and dumped its
contents on the tarp. Although McMahon was uncertain how many
bags he emptied, an audience member saw him dump two bags of
garbage. Because McMahon had not fully spread the tarp, some
of the trash spilled onto the floor. Principal Boyan described
the amount dumped as "substantial," "enough to
fill up the tarp."
By this time, superintendent Hudson was standing. Board
member McManus said to Hudson, "[W]ill you call the police,
because this is an absolutely inappropriate activity to do .
. . in a schoolroom . . . ." McMahon responded, "Get
the police here because there are some things that I would like
the police to see in this trash." The meeting was then adjourned
and the board left the room. McMahon announced, "There are
drug paraphernalia in this trash, there are bottles of alcohol
in this trash." Although McMahon claims the board was gone
when he described the contents of the bags, one board member
heard the remark as she was leaving the room. The board remained
in the adjoining kitchen while McMahon continued emptying trash
and speaking to the audience. Hudson called the police.
McMahon was still talking to the audience when the police
arrived. Hudson explained that the board wanted McMahon removed
so that the meeting could continue, but that McMahon was "still
at the microphone" and "[h]e dumped some trash."
A police sergeant testified that Hudson wanted McMahon arrested.
The sergeant advised Hudson that the police did not have the
authority to arrest McMahon because the accusation did not involve
a felony and no misdemeanor has been committed in police presence.
Hudson then made a citizen's arrest of McMahon for willfully
disturbing a public meeting. McMahon continued talking to the
audience as officers approached him, placed him in handcuffs
and took him to the police station. The board meeting resumed.
McMahon was issued a citation and released. No criminal charges
were filed against him.
McMahon sued the District, its board members and superintendent
Hudson, alleging various causes of action. At trial, as a result
of pretrial rulings, the only remaining cause of action accused
the District, Hudson and McManus of false arrest and false imprisonment.[FOOTNOTE
2] A nonsuit was granted as to McManus. The jury was unable to
unable to reach a verdict on the District and Hudson. After a
second trial, the jury returned a special verdict in favor of
the remaining defendants.
I. The Court Properly Denied the Motion for a Directed Verdict
McMahon contends the trial court erred in denying his
motion for a directed verdict. His claim is without merit.
"A directed verdict may be granted only when, disregarding
conflicting evidence, giving the evidence of the party against
whom the motion is directed all the value to which it is legally
entitled, and indulging every legitimate inference from such
evidence in favor of that party, the court nonetheless determines
there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support
the claim or defense of the party opposing the motion, or a verdict
in favor of that party." (Howard v. Owens Corning
(1999) 72 Cal.App.4th 621, 629-630.)
If a party resisting a motion for a directed verdict
produces sufficient evidence to support a jury verdict in its
favor, the motion must be denied. (Howard v. Owens Corning,
supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at p. 630.) McMahon's challenge essentially
contends that insufficient evidence supports the jury verdict
against him. "Only if there was no substantial evidence
in support of the verdict could it have been error for the trial
court earlier to have denied [the] motion for directed verdict."
(Ibid.)
In determining whether the judgment was supported by
substantial evidence, we consider all of the evidence in the
light most favorable to the prevailing party, giving it the benefit
of every reasonable inference, and resolving conflicts in favor
of the judgment. We do not reweigh the evidence. "Our authority
begins and ends with a determination as to whether, on the entire
record, there is any substantial evidence, contradicted
or uncontradicted, in support of the judgment." (Howard
v. Owens Cornings, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at pp. 630-631.)
"A private person may make a ' citizen's arrest'
for a public offense committed in his presence. (P.C. 837(1).)
However, the cooperation of police officers is necessary to make
the arrest effective. The citizen calls the police; they are
unable to make an arrest because the offense was previously committed
outside their presence; but the citizen may make the arrest and
the officers will then take the arrested person into custody."
(5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1988) Torts, § 390,
p. 473, italics omitted.) The jury was instructed that respondents
bore the burden of proving that McMahon was lawfully arrested.
It found the burden had been met. Substantial evidence supports
the finding and therefore the court did not err in denying McMahon's
motion for a directed verdict.
A. The Supreme Court's Decision in In re Kay
McMahon was arrested for violating Penal Code section
403, which provides in part: "Every person who, without
authority of law, willfully disturbs or breaks up any assembly
or meeting that is not unlawful in its character, . . . , is
guilty of a misdemeanor." The California Supreme Court undertook
an extensive analysis of section 403 in In re Kay (1970) 1
Cal.3d 930 (Kay), interpreting the provision to withstand a First
Amendment challenge. In Kay, over 6000 people attended
a Fourth of July celebration in a public park. A local congressman
was invited to speak during the formal program that preceded
the fireworks display. During the congressman's speech, a group
of 25 to 250 persons rhythmically clapped and shouted for 5 to
10 minutes, demonstrating disapproval of the congressman's position
on a grape boycott. The congressman, who had been using a microphone,
was able to finish his speech, pausing to assure the demonstrators
that they had a right to protest and encouraging them to be grateful
that they lived in a country that protected that right. Neither
the congressman nor the police asked the protestors to stop or
disperse. When the speech and the program ended, the fireworks
were shown. The demonstration did not affect the program. Charges
were filed against the protestors two weeks later. (Id. at
pp. 935-936.)
The Kay court noted that, with a single, irrelevant
exception, section 403 had not been interpreted since its passage
almost a century earlier. It then considered the constitutionally
permissible bounds of such a statute. The court pointed out that
it was guided by principles affecting First Amendment rights
and that the conduct involved in Kay, including the clapping,
constituted "speech" for the purposes of its analysis.
(Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 938.)
Justice Tobriner, writing for the majority, observed:
"The Constitution does not require that any person, however
lofty his motives, be permitted to obstruct the convention or
continuation of a meeting without regard to the implicit customs
and usage or explicit rules governing its conduct." (Kay,
supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 938.) The rights of some to peaceably
assemble and petition for redress of grievances would be undermined
if others could prevent or disrupt such activities by disregarding
the customs and rules which apply to meetings at which those
rights are exercised. On the other hand, other First Amendment
rights are at stake when views are publicly expressed. The Kay
court sought to strike the constitutionally required balance.
"Audience activities, such as heckling, interrupting,
harsh questioning, and booing, even though they may be impolite
and discourteous, can nonetheless advance the goals of the First
Amendment. For many citizens such participation in public meetings,
whether supportive or critical of the speaker, may constitute
the only manner in which they can express their views to a large
number of people; the Constitution does not require that the
effective expression of ideas be restricted to rigid and predetermined
patterns." (Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 939.)
However, "the Constitution indubitably affords
some measure of protection to the free expression of all
those present at a meeting," including speakers, officials
and the audience. (Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 941, italics
added.) Because of this broad-ranging protection, "section
403's prohibition of ' disturbances' potentially may collide
with safeguarded First Amendment interests. Nonetheless, the
state retains a legitimate concern in ensuring that some individuals'
unruly assertion of their rights of free expression does not
imperil other citizens' rights of free association and discussion.
[Citation.] Freedom of everyone to talk at once can destroy the
right of anyone effectively to talk at all. Free expression can
expire as tragically in the tumult of license as in the silence
of censorship." (Ibid.)
The Kay majority concluded that section 403,
as written, was constitutionally infirm because it applied to
"every person who ... willfully disturbs or breaks up any
assembly or meeting . . . ." If invoked without restriction,
the statute could criminalize conduct that was "nothing
more than an expression of free speech protected by the Constitution."
(Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 941.) The court then interpreted
section 403 in a way to serve its purpose without constitutional
impingement: "Accordingly, we now explicitly recognize that,
in light of the purposes of the provision and the competing First
Amendment interests at stake, section 403 authorizes the imposition
of criminal sanctions only when the defendant's activity itself-and
not the content of the activity's expression-substantially
impairs the effective conduct of a meeting. [¶ ] To effectuate
section 403 within constitutional limits we interpret it to require
the following showing to establish its transgression: that the
defendant substantially impaired the conduct of the meeting by
intentionally committing acts in violation of implicit customs
or usages or of explicit rules for governance of the meeting,
of which he knew, or as a reasonable man should have known."
(Id. at pp. 942-943.)
The Kay court made clear that, in applying its
ruling, the nature of the meeting in question "plays a major
role." "The customs and usages at political conventions
may countenance prolonged, raucous, boisterous demonstrations
as an accepted element of the meeting process; similar behavior
would violate the customs and usages of a church service. Audience
participation may be enthusiastically welcomed at a bonfire football
rally or an athletic contest, but considered taboo at a solemn
ceremony of a fraternal order. . . . Thus, rather than enacting
monolithic standards, section 403 draws its content from the
implicit customs and usages or explicit rules germane to a given
meeting." (Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 943.)
Kay involved the criminal prosecution of defendants
who expressed views contrary to those voiced by an elected official
at a large outdoor event. Since Kay's publication, no
appellate opinion has considered a section 403 violation. Here
we must apply Kay's rationale to the prosecution of a
civil lawsuit for false arrest in which McMahon claims he was
improperly arrested by public officials whom he was addressing
at a small meeting conducted in a schoolroom.
B. Trial Court's Application of Kay
The jury in this case was instructed in language specifically
based on the authority of Kay. It was told: "A fundamental
right under the First Amendment of our United States Constitution
is freedom of speech. Freedom of speech includes expression which
is not only spoken but may include acts or conduct. When conduct
is intended to express a message and the likelihood is great
that the message would be understood by those who view it, it
is entitled to the same protection under the Constitution as
the spoken word. [¶ ] In determining whether Mr. McMahon's
acts and conduct violated the law to warrant his arrest as a
violation of Penal Code section 403, a distinction has to be
drawn between expression which may include acts and an act independent
of expression. An act may coexist with expression as well as
being a part of the expression which is protected by the First
Amendment. [¶ ] Consequently, Penal Code section 403 authorizes
an arrest by citizens or police officers only when a person's
(for purposes of this trial Mr. McMahon' s) activity itself-and
not the content of the activity's expression-substantially
impairs the effective conduct of the meeting. [¶ ] For a
violation of Penal Code section 403, disturbing a lawful
assembly, the following elements must exist: [¶ ] 1. Mr.
McMahon must have substantially impaired the conduct of the meeting;
[¶ ] 2. by intentionally committing acts; [¶ ] 3. in
violation of implicit customs or usages for the governance of
the meeting of which he knew or, as a reasonable person should
have known. [¶ ] If you find by a preponderance of the evidence
that such facts are true, you must find that there was proper
cause to arrest Mr. McMahon. [¶ ] If you find that such
facts are not true, you must find that there was not proper cause
to arrest Mr. McMahon. That is, if you find that Mr. McMahon
was arrested because of his expression (speech)-which can include
activities-and not because of his conduct alone, then he would
not have been properly arrested. [¶ ] If you find that the
standard of conduct for the Board of Education meeting lies in
doubt, in determining whether Mr. McMahon violated implicit customs
or usages for the governance of the meeting, a warning and request
that Mr. McMahon curtail his conduct should proceed [sic]
an arrest. You may consider whether or not a warning or request
was directed to Mr. McMahon to cease his activities, and if none,
whether there was an opportunity for such a request to be directed
to him. If you find that no warning was given and there was an
opportunity to give such a request than [sic] the arrest
is unlawful. [¶ ] In the crime of disturbing a lawful
assembly there must exist a union or joint operation of act
or conduct and general criminal intent. General criminal intent
does not require an intent to violate the law. When a person
intentionally does that which the law declares to be a crime
he is acting with general criminal intent, even though he may
not know that his act or conduct is unlawful."
The jury was thus told of the necessity to distinguish
between disruptive acts and the protected content of an act's
expression. It was informed of the elements required for a violation
of section 403 in conformity with Kay.
C. Violation of the Customs of the Meeting
1. The Act of Dumping Trash
McMahon claims that no custom or usage, of which he
knew or should have known, prevented him from dumping gallons
of garbage onto the schoolroom floor. Sufficient evidence supports
the jury's finding to the contrary.
The record indicates that McMahon freely discussed a
range of subjects at the school board meetings, including trash
in school neighborhoods. Previously he had illustrated his point
by holding up a bag of discarded items he had collected. None
of this conduct was unacceptable within the context of meetings
held in Cornell Elementary School's multipurpose room. The jury
concluded, however, that dumping trash on the tarp and floor
was another matter. The room served as the school's cafeteria
and student assembly room, and was used after school for childcare.
When McMahon started emptying the bag, Principal Boyan expressly
cautioned him: "Kids are in this room tomorrow . . . ."
The jury reasonably concluded that dumping trash is not an accepted
element of meetings regularly held in a room where children eat
and congregate, and thus violated the customs and usages of those
meetings. Although McMahon told the audience that the bags contained
drug paraphernalia and bottles of alcohol, he now describes the
contents as innocuous. His assertion is irrelevant. McMahon dumped
garbage. It was well within the jury's province to conclude that
McMahon's conduct exceeded the bounds of constitutionally protected
speech and crossed the line into the "tumult of license."
(Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 941.)
2. Clear and Present Danger
McMahon contends that if the board considered that the
material he dumped was dangerous or a threat to public safety,
respondents had the burden of demonstrating that dumping the
trash represented a "clear and present danger." He
argues that the First Amendment does not permit the arrest of
a speaker for a mere possible danger or for a danger that may
occur at some future time. In support of this proposition, McMahon
relies on In re Bushman (1970) 1 Cal.3d 767, In re Brown
(1973) 9 Cal.3d 612 and Jefferson v. Superior Court (1975)
51 Cal.App.3d 721, all cases that considered violations of Penal
Code section 415. As noted by the Bushman court, the portion
of section 415 applicable in those cases "makes punishable
only wilful and malicious conduct that is violent and endangers
public safety and order or that creates a clear and present danger
that others will engage in violence of that nature." (In
re Bushman, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 773.) McMahon was arrested
for a violation of Penal Code section 403, not 415. Nothing in
section 403 or in the Supreme Court's opinion in Kay imposes
a clear and present danger requirement. The danger and safety
issues involved with dumping trash on the floor were considered
only in the context of whether such activity violated the customs
and usages of a meeting held in schoolroom where young children
are cared for.
3. Need for a Warning
McMahon also argues that the board should have warned
him or asked him to stop before having him arrested. McMahon
relies on the following language from Kay: "Generally,
if disturbances are occasioned by nonviolent exercise of free
expression, section 403 will require that defendants be shown
to have engaged in such conduct with knowledge, or under circumstances
in which they should have known, that they were violating an
applicable custom, usage, or rule of the meeting. In instances
in which the appropriate standard of conduct lies in doubt, a
warning and a request that defendants curtail their conduct,
either by officials or law enforcement agents, should precede
arrest or citation. If section 403 were not so interpreted, individuals
would be forced to speculate as to what conduct might entail
criminal sanctions and would ' necessarily . . . "steer
far wider of the unlawful zone." ' "(Kay, supra,
1 Cal.3d at p. 945, citations and footnotes omitted.)
At the outset we note that Kay does not require
a warning in every circumstance that portends a section 403 violation.
The Kay court states that in instances where the "appropriate
standard of conduct lies in doubt," a warning and request
to curtail conduct should precede arrest or citation. The jury
could reasonably have determined that it is self-evident that
dumping garbage in a room where children eat lunch violates the
custom or usage of the board meetings, obviating the need for
a warning or request to stop. Nevertheless, even if admonishments
were required in these circumstances, there is sufficient evidence
in the record indicating that McMahon was advised that his conduct
was improper. Although McMahon claims he did not realize that
Boyan was the principal of Cornell School, Boyan's comment nevertheless
should have reminded McMahon of the obvious: children use the
multipurpose room. Moments later, McMahon heard board member
McManus state, "This is an inappropriate activity to do
in a school room." McMahon also heard McManus tell Hudson
to call the police. Still, McMahon made no effort to stop and
pick up the trash. Instead he urged Hudson to call the police.
McMahon continued to dump garbage and speak to the audience after
the board left the room. Even after the police arrived, McMahon
did not pick up the refuse.
McMahon contends that McManus's statement was insufficient
under Kay to serve as a warning and request to desist.
He contends that a board member should have stated expressly,
"Mr. McMahon, you are out of order. Please pick up your
trash and conclude your remarks." Kay, however, does
not mandate the use of any particular talismanic phrase. Rather,
sufficient notification should be given so that individuals are
not "forced to speculate as to what conduct might entail
criminal sanctions." (Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p.
945.) Board member McManus's direct identification of the conduct
as inappropriate and his request to have the police called adequately
gave McMahon the notice contemplated in Kay. Instead,
McMahon encouraged Hudson to call the police. On this record,
McMahon's assertion that he was given neither warning nor time
to curtail his conduct is unfounded.
D. Substantial Impairment of the Meeting
McMahon also argues that his conduct did not "substantially
impair the conduct of the meeting." (Kay, supra,
1 Cal.3d at p. 943.) McMahon argues that the board could have
continued the meeting, but simply chose not to do so. "Whether
a given instance of misconduct substantially impairs the effective
conduct of a meeting depends upon the actual impact of that misconduct
on the course of the meeting; the question cannot be resolved
merely by asking persons present at the meeting whether they
were ' disturbed.' [Citation.]" (Id. at p. 944.) The
Kay court, considering the Fourth of July celebration at
issue before it, concluded that "[s]ince the nature of that
meeting contemplated acceptance of the nonviolent expression
of alternative viewpoints, the petitioners' protest did not impair
the conduct of the meeting but instead constituted a legitimate
element of it." (Ibid.)
Here, the jury, evaluating the impact of McMahon's conduct
on the course of the meeting, concluded that McMahon did more
than merely disturb the sensibilities of the board members. McMahon
initially addressed the board about trash, eliciting no objections
from the board about the content of that speech. He then left
the microphone, returned with his garbage bags and spread a tarp
on the floor. At that point, board president Riffer alerted him
that the board needed to move onto other matters on the agenda.
Nevertheless McMahon proceeded to dump the bags' contents.
The jury legitimately concluded that the board, forced
to adhere to McMahon's agenda, was unable to proceed with its
own. Had McMahon been permitted to continue dumping his trash
in the middle of the meeting, one of two outcomes would necessarily
have transpired. Either the meeting would have been further delayed
at some point while McMahon picked up the garbage or other speakers
would have had to stand near the trash in order to address the
board and audience members would have been forced to peer over
a mound of garbage in order to watch a public body perform its
duty. The properly instructed jury declined to provide "so
excessive a use of the First Amendment right to protest that
the right would be devoured in its own excesses." (Kay,
supra, 1 Cal.3d at p.946.) Substantial evidence supports
the jury's finding that McMahon's conduct was not a legitimate
element of the meeting, but rather a significant impairment of
it. (Id. at p. 944.)
II. The Court Did Not Err in Refusing McMahon' s
Requested Instruction
"A party is entitled upon request to correct, nonargumentative
instructions on every theory of the case advanced by him which
is supported by substantial evidence." (Soule v. General
Motors Corp. (1994) 8 Cal.4th 548, 572.) Although the trial court
fashioned a jury instruction based on Kay, set out in
section IB above, McMahon proposed an alternate instruction.
He argues that the court erred in failing to incorporate certain
portions of his proposed language. His claim is without merit.
McMahon argues that the trial court should have included
this sentence from his proposed instruction: "A person may
not be arrested for offensive speech or expressive conduct unless
there is both a clear and present danger of violence or threat
to public safety." McMahon argues that the court's instruction
did not inform the jury "that when an arrest is sought to
be justified on grounds that conduct which involves speech creates
a danger to public safety, that the justification must include
proof not just of a danger, but of a clear and present, i.e.,
immediate, danger." As we have discussed, McMahon was not
arrested for disturbing the peace in violation of Penal Code
section 415. McMahon's proposed language is not applicable to
section 403 and the trial court properly rejected it.[FOOTNOTE
3]
McMahon also claims that the jury should have been told:
"Under the First Amendment it is lawful for a person to
express himself through speech or expressive conduct even though
that speech or conduct is not in accord with propriety, modesty,
good taste or good manners. Likewise, a person may exercise his
right of free speech even . . . when his audience finds his speech
or conduct offensive." He also proposed an additional instruction
on this topic which stated in part: "The subject matter
of the communication protected by the Constitution is not limited
by what the audience may prefer to hear. The Constitution may
best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest,
creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even
stirs people to anger."
The court's instruction was a correct statement of the
law and adequately addressed the issues to be resolved by the
jury. The fact that McMahon's conduct may have been offensive
or beyond good taste or "inducing a condition of unrest"
is not the inquiry under section Penal Code 403. The Kay court
recognized the potential conflict between section 403's prohibition
of "disturbances" and First Amendment interests. The
court noted, "Nonetheless, the state retains a legitimate
concern in ensuring that some individuals' unruly assertion of
their rights of free expression does not imperil other citizens'
rights of free association and discussion." (Kay, supra,
1 Cal.3d at p. 941.) The trial court's instruction correctly
advised the jury to consider whether McMahon's conduct, apart
from his message, violated the customs of the meeting and resulted
in the "substantial impairment of the conduct of that meeting."
(Id. at p. 945.) The jury was specifically told that if
McMahon was arrested because of the content of his speech, the
arrest was improper. This charge adequately covered the point
made in the non-argumentative part of McMahon's proposed instruction.
Finally, McMahon contends that the trial court erred
in not incorporating the following part of his proposed instruction:
"In instances in which the appropriate standard of conduct
lies in doubt, the chairman or other officials conducting the
meeting must give a warning and a request that the speaker curtail
his conduct." The trial court's instruction states in part:
"You may consider whether or not a warning or request was
given to Mr. McMahon." McMahon argues that the trial court
should have instructed the jury that the warning or request must
come from meeting officials. He relies on the statement in Kay
that "a warning and a request that defendants curtail their
conduct, either by officials or law enforcement agents, should
precede arrest or citation." (Kay, supra, 1 Cal.3d
at p. 945.) McMahon claims the omission of his proposed language
allowed jurors to find that the remarks of Principal Boyan, seated
in the audience,[FOOTNOTE 4] constituted a sufficient warning.
We need not become enmeshed in a debate over whether
Principal Boyan was an "official" for purposes of the
Kay standard. The obvious purpose of a warning is to
clarify the appropriate standard of conduct, should that standard
be in doubt. Even if we assume, solely for the purposes of argument,
that a reasonable person might entertain an honest doubt about
whether it violates implicit customs or usages of such a meeting
to dump garbage on the floor of a school room, there was more
than sufficient evidence to prove McMahon had such notice based
on the statement of board member McManus.
III. McMahon's Federal Civil Rights Claim Was Time Barred
On October 30, 1996, McMahon filed a claim against the
District under the California Government Claims Act (Gov. Code,
§ 910 et seq.) (Claims Act), alleging false arrest. The
claim was denied on February 10, 1997. McMahon filed his original
complaint on June 13, 1997, and a first amended complaint on
March 4, 1999. On July 13, 2000, McMahon filed a second amended
complaint alleging illegal seizure in violation of the Fourth
Amendment as a federal civil rights claim. (42 U.S.C. §
1983.) The trial court sustained respondents' demurrer on the
ground that the federal claim was barred by the statute of limitations.
McMahon argues, first, that the trial court erred because
the limitations period on the federal claim was tolled while
he pursued remedies under the Claims Act. We reject his contention.
The applicable statute of limitations for civil rights
actions brought in California under 42 United States Code section
1983 (section 1983) is the one-year statute of limitations for
personal injury actions, as provided in Code of Civil Procedure
section 340, subdivision (3). (West Shield Investigations
& Security Consultants v. Superior Court (2000) 82 Cal.App.4th
935, 953.) "' Although state law determines the length of
the limitations period, federal law determines when a civil rights
claim accrues.' [Citation omitted.] Under federal law, ' a claim
accrues when the plaintiff knows or has reason to know of the
injury which is the basis of the action.' "(Knox v. Davis
(9th Cir. 2001) 260 F.3d 1009, 1013.) McMahon's claim accrued
on April 30, 1996, the date of his arrest. His second amended
complaint, alleging the federal claim, was filed more than four
years later.
The Claims Act provides that notice of a claim must
be given to a public agency before an action can be brought against
it. (Gov. Code, § 945.4.) A civil action must be filed within
six months after the agency has rejected the claim. (Gov. Code,
§ 945.6.) On the other hand, a plaintiff does not have to
file under the Claims Act before initiating a section 1983 action.
(Williams v. Horvath (1976) 16 Cal.3d 834, 842.) There
are no procedural impediments to filing a section 1983 action
within the one-year period after the cause of action has accrued.
In Javor v. Taggart (2002) 98 Cal.App.4th 795,
the court recently held that the section 1983 limitations period
is not tolled by the prior filing of a state law claim. We agree
with that holding. The Javor court reached its conclusion
after a review of federal cases considering the issue. In Ervin
v. Los Angeles County (9th Cir. 1988) 848 F.2d 1018, 1019-1020,
the federal appeals court observed that while claims brought
under the Claims Act and section 1983 may be factually related,
they nevertheless constitute legally distinct wrongs. As noted
in Stone v. City and County of San Francisco (N.D.Cal
1990) 735 F.Supp. 340, 345: "[I]t is clear that the remedies
and procedures in the [Government] Claims Act and the Civil Rights
Act are separate and independent . . . . The court concludes
that plaintiff's [state law] tort claim is not sufficient to
toll the statute of limitations on his section 1983 action. Accordingly,
as a matter of law, plaintiff's section 1983 claim is barred
by the statute of limitations." Likewise, McMahon's federal
claim was not tolled while he pursued remedies under the Claims
Act. Because he failed to assert his cause of action under section
1983 within one year of the date of his arrest, the claim is
time barred.
Second, McMahon argues that his section 1983 cause of
action was tolled pursuant to the general principle of equitable
tolling. Under this doctrine, the limitations period is tolled
when "the record shows ' (1) timely notice to the defendant
in filing the first claim; (2) lack of prejudice to defendant
in gathering evidence to defend against the second claim; and,
(3) good faith and reasonable conduct by the plaintiff in filing
the second claim.' "(Daviton v. Columbia/HCA Healthcare
Corp. (9th Cir. 2001) 241 F.3d 1131, 1137-1138.) We need not
consider the first two prongs because McMahon did not satisfy
the third. After conceding that the facts supporting his state
tort claim and federal claim are virtually identical, McMahon
merely asserts that his conduct in filing the federal claim was
reasonable and in good faith. Even if McMahon mistakenly believed
satisfaction of the Claims Act was required before filing the
section 1983 action, he waited more than three and a half years
after denial of the Claims Act application before filing. In
Ervin v. Los Angeles County, supra, the appellant, who
had previously filed a tort claim action in state court, "had
not only conducted an investigation of her own into the facts
of this case, but had been in possession of a copy of the results
of the appellee's own investigation file as well for perhaps
as much as a year and a half prior to filing the instant action
in federal district court." (848 F.2d at p. 1020.) The federal
appeals court rejected her equitable tolling argument, stating:
"While it is true, . . . , that the California courts have
not clearly defined ' good faith' for purposes of determining
the applicability vel non of equitable tolling, we conclude
that, under the facts as presented here, ' good faith' is to
be used in its plain and ordinary sense, and that the appellant's
unwarranted delay in filing her federal civil rights claim was
neither reasonable nor in good faith." (Ibid.) Ervin's
reasoning is even more compelling here. McMahon waited a longer
period, without explanation, to file his second amended complaint.
The Court Did Not Err In Granting Summary
Judgment
McMahon's fourth cause of action alleged a violation
of constitutional rights under Civil Code sections 52 and 52.1.
His fifth cause of action sought a judicial declaration that
"Defendants' action in adjourning the Board meeting when
plaintiff was . . . criticizing their policies relating to trash
and public safety, and going into closed session and arranging
for the arrest of plaintiff, effecting the arrest of plaintiff,
and then resuming the Board Meeting after plaintiff's criticism
could not longer be heard, was a violation of the Brown Act.
[Gov. Code, S 54950.5 et seq.]" McMahon points out that
these causes of actions were identical as to all original defendants
and asks us to consider the arguments he made in his earlier
appeal as to those defendants dismissed by summary judgment.
(McMahon v. Riffer, et al. (May 22, 2002) A094883 [nonpub.
opn.]). We do so, and incorporate by reference our decision in
that matter.
Regarding McMahon's fourth cause of action, we concluded
that the response to McMahon's conduct at the meeting did not
violate the Constitution, and thus is beyond the scope of the
Civil Code sections at issue. We noted that Civil Code sections
52 and 52.1, along with other statutes, were enacted in a coordinated
effort to combat hate crimes. As we concluded, "Plaintiff's
arrest and subsequent brief confinement was not a hate crime;
indeed it was no crime at all." (McMahon v. Alan Riffer,
et. al., supra, A094883 at p. 6.) "Insofar as plaintiff
equates the adjournment of the public meeting with infringement
upon his First Amendment right of free speech, the inescapable
fact is that plaintiff's own conduct caused the adjournment of
the meeting." (Ibid.) It was not the expression of
his views that caused the adjournment, but his dumping of trash
in a school cafeteria.
As to McMahon's fifth cause of action, we concluded
the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that
declaratory relief would be inappropriate. The trial court's
conclusion was consistent with its determination that such relief
was superfluous to the resolution of the underlying merits already
reached. As we stated in our earlier opinion: "The chance
that the relevant conduct would recur can properly be regarded
as remote, thus the grant of relief was unnecessary in the context
of litigation the court was simultaneously ending." (McMahon
v. Alan Riffer, et. al., supra, A094883 at. p. 7.)
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Corrigan, Acting P.J.
We concur: Parrilli, J., Pollak, J.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: FOOTNOTE(S):::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FN1. The meeting was tape-recorded. A copy of the tape,
played for the jury, was admitted in evidence. A copy of the
transcript was provided to assist the jury in listening to the
tape, and was included in the record on appeal. (Cal. Rule of
Court, rule 203.5.) We have listened to the tape and reviewed
the transcript.
FN2. "[W]e point out that ' false arrest' and
' false imprisonment' are not separate torts. False arrest is
but one way of committing a false imprisonment, and they are
distinguishable only in terminology. [Citations.]" (Collins
v. City and County of San Francisco (1975) 50 Cal.App.3d 671,
673.)
FN3. In closing argument, respondents' counsel argued:
"First Amendment of the U.S.Constitution does not allow
you to call or yell out fire in a theater. It doesn' t allow
you to light a fire in a cafeteria room [or] public school where
young kids are, and I don' t think the First Amendment allows
you to dump trash that you have previously described as drug
paraphernalia in the cafeteria when you' ve been told there's
going to be kids in there the next day, young kids." McMahon
correctly observes that counsel's reference to yelling fire in
a theater is taken from Schenck v. United States (1919)
249 U.S. 47, in which Justice Holmes first announced the "clear
and present danger test." Counsel's remark did not inject
the "clear and present danger" requirement into the
jury's consideration, however. Considered in context, counsel's
remark was intended to depict McMahon's actions as violating
the customs of the board meeting and disrupting the proceedings.
FN4. McMahon claims he did not know that Boyan was
the principal of Cornell Elementary School and considered him
simply another member of the audience.
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