D.A.R. 1678
Stephanie G. PIERCE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
MULTNOMAH COUNTY, OREGON; City of Portland, Oregon;
Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District of
Oregon; Steve Duncan; Janet Bowdle;
and, George Karcher,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 93-35405.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Nov. 2, 1994.
Decided Feb. 14, 1996.
Stephanie G. Pierce, Pro Se, Portland, Oregon, for plaintiff-appellant.
Gerald H. Itkin, Multnomah County Counsel, Portland, Oregon; Harry Auerbach, Deputy City Attorney, Portland, Oregon, for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon, George E. Juba, Magistrate Judge, Presiding.
Before: FLETCHER, D.W. NELSON, and RYMER, Circuit Judges.
FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
Pro se1 plaintiff Stephanie Pierce appeals an adverse judgment following a jury trial in her 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action. Plaintiff sued the City of Portland ("City"), Multnomah County ("County"), the Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District of Oregon ("Tri-Met"), fare inspector Jackson, corrections officers Bowdle and Karcher, and police officer Duncan, alleging that the defendants violated her Eighth and Fourth Amendment rights and also violated federal and state law. She was detained for four hours for identification following a citation for boarding a train without proof of payment of fare. The parties tried the case before a magistrate judge, who directed verdicts for the City, Bowdle, and Duncan. A jury returned a verdict for the defendants on the remaining claims. Upon denial of her motion for a new trial, Pierce timely appealed. We have jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and reverse and remand.FACTS & PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
Fare inspector Jackson stopped Pierce as she was boarding a Tri-Met train and cited her for failing to produce proof of payment of fare. Pierce did not have any identification, so Jackson called the police to do an identification report. After police officer Duncan arrived, Pierce testified that shе provided her name, date of birth, zip codes, addresses, and phone numbers--one for her residence and the other for her business--but refused to provide her social security number. Duncan radioed the police computer and was able to locate Pierce's name, a matching address, and her arrest record. When Duncan asked Pierce whether she had an arrest record, Pierce initially denied that she had ever been arrested. However, Pierce later confirmed his information that she had been arrested for shoplifting many years earlier. The radio check also included a Laidlaw residential address. Although Pierce did not have her driver's license with her, the police data base provided her driver's license number. The Laidlaw address and the Ankeny store address were both included on the completed citation.
Duncan ultimately charged Pierce with the misdemeanor of furnishing false information to a police officer, Or.Rev.Stat. § 162.385,2 and with the failure to produce proof of payment of fare, Tri-Met Code § 29.15. She was handcuffed and searched. Pierce testified that Duncan performed these tasks in an excessively rough manner. Pierce was taken by police car to and led in hand-cuffs through the Meier & Frank Department Store where officer Duncan had gone in order to question a shoplifter in an unrelated incident. Pierce was then transported to the Multnomah County Detention Center for a "firm" identification. At the jail, Pierce was photographed, screened by a nurse, fingerprinted, searched, and detained in a cell.
Pierce testified that during the approximately four hours she spent at the jail, she was assaulted by corrections officers Karcher and Bowdle. According to Pierce, the officers forcibly yanked her arm behind her back, shouted at her, grabbed her hair, and forced her back into a cell after she was told she was free to go. The defendants admit that they administered "control holds," but claim that the force was necessary because Pierce was distraught, demanding, abusive, and uncooperative during her detention.
Pierce filed a section 1983 action. She stipulated to the dismissal of Tri-Met, and the remaining parties consented to trial before Magistrate Judgе Juba. Pierce inadvertently dismissed her claim against the County. The magistrate judge denied her motion to reinstate the County as a defendant.
At trial, the City and Duncan stipulated that the charge for furnishing false information was not the basis for their authority to detain Pierce. Rather, the City and Duncan relied solely on the infraction of failure to furnish proof of payment of fare as the basis for the plaintiff's custodial detention.
At the close of plaintiff's case-in-chief, the magistrate judge directed verdicts for the City and Duncan. The magistrate judge also directed a verdict for Bowdle on Pierce's Fourth Amendment claim for forcibly seizing her after she was released. The magistrate judge instructed the jury on Eighth Amendment standards pertaining to excessive force. It returned а verdict for the defendants on Pierce's excessive force claims against Bowdle and Karcher. Judgment was entered for all defendants. After Pierce's motion for a new trial was denied by the district court, she timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
I. Directed Verdict for City and Officer Duncan on Pierce's Fourth Amendment Claim
Pierce argues first that the trial court erred by directing a verdict for the City and Duncan on her claim that her Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the custodial detention for identification for the fare-beating infraction.3 We agree.
We review de novo the grant of a directed verdict. Zamalloa v. Hart,
A. Duncan's Claim of Qualified Immunity
As to Duncan, the factual dispute concerns whether Duncan reasonably could have believed the identifying information supplied by Pierce was inadequate or that the fare infraction warranted detention. We conclude that because Pierce presented evidence from which the jury could conclude that any such beliefs were unreasonable, Duncan was not entitled to a directed verdict on his claim of qualified immunity. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for determination by the jury after both sides have introduced their evidence.
The doctrine of qualified immunity shields public officials performing discretionary functions under certain circumstances. See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Applying these principles to the case at hand, we conclude that disputes of fact preclude a directed verdict on Duncan's qualified immunity claim.
1. Clearly Established Law
The threshold issue in determining whether an officer's conduct is objectively legally reasonable is whether the law regarding the right that the plaintiff claims has been violated was "clearly established" at the time of the alleged violation. Harlow,
Pierce claims that her de facto arrest by Duncan violated clearly established law because Duncan lacked authority to arrest her for identification after he had sufficient information for the issuance of the citation for the fare infraction. We agree. The length and scope of detention must be justified by the circumstances authorizing its initiation. See Terry v. Ohio,
2. Objectively Reasonable Conduct
The critical question, then, is whether Duncan's conduct in seizing and searching Pierce, conduct in which he engaged becausе he allegedly was not fully satisfied with her responses to his questions at the site of the initial stop, was objectively reasonable. If "the actions [the plaintiff] allege(s) [the officer] to have taken are actions that a reasonable officer could have believed lawful, then the officer is entitled to dismissal prior to discovery." Anderson,
"In evaluating a custodial arrest executed by state officials, federal courts must determine the reasonableness of the arrest in reference to state law governing the arrest." United States v. Mota,
However, "an officer who unlawfully enforces an ordinance in a particularly egregious manner, or in a manner which a reasonable officer would recognize exceeds the bounds of the ordinance, will not be entitled to immunity even if there is no clear case law declaring the ordinance or the officer's particular conduct unconstitutional." Grossman,
Duncan claims that Pierce's provision of her store address and her initial denial of any prior arrests cast sufficient doubt on her identity to permit him to detain her for firm identification at the jail facility. Pierce contends that she provided adequate information at the scene and that there was no basis for a further detention. Because the magistrate judge directed a verdict for Duncan at the close of the plaintiff's case-in-chief, the facts as to the sufficiency of Pierce's identification and justification for detention for a fare infraction were not fully resolved at trial. Because these foundational facts remain in dispute and could be decided in Pierce's favor by a jury, we conclude that Duncan is not entitled to qualified immunity on directed verdict. These facts must be determined by the jury before Duncan's qualified immunity claim can be resolved. For this reason, the magistrate judge erred by granting a directed verdict for Duncan on this issue.
B. City's Liability
We next turn to whether the trial court erred by directing a verdict for the City. To prevail on her Section 1983 claim against the City, Pierce must show that the City adhered to a "policy, practice or custom" that caused her to be deprived of her constitutional rights. City of Canton v. Harris,
To uphold the directed verdict for the City, we would have to conclude as a matter of law that the evidence introduced by Pierce in her case-in-chief allowed no other conclusion but that the City had no policy or practice of detaining persons for identification in violation of the Fourth Amendment, or that, if it had a policy or practice, the evidence allowed of no other conclusion than that the policy was not applied to Pierce in a way that violated her constitutional rights. See Kеnnedy v. Los Angeles Police Dep't,
The City acknowledged that it had a custodial-detention-for-identification policy but argued that its standard procedures were authorized by law and were constitutional. At the pre-trial conference, counsel for the City conceded that the City had a policy or practice of detaining individuals for firm identification in situations such as this where a law enforcement officer had probable cause to issue a fare citation for a nonarrestable offense; in fact, the attorney for the City acknowledged that the policy requires that the individual be held in the facility for a mug shot even after there is an order to release for lack of probable cause for arrest. The City argued that there was no factual dispute regarding the policy, but merely a question of law regarding the constitutionality of detention for collection of identification records even when there is no probable cause for arrest.
Although these concessions of policy by the City were not presented as evidence to the jury and are therefore not considered in our directed verdict analysis, we conclude that Pierce presented sufficient evidence at trial that the City had a policy, practice, or custom of custodial detention for firm identification on nonarrestable offenses to withstand the directed verdict. City of Portland Police Officer Kane testified on cross-examination in plaintiff's case-in-chief that he understood that he had the authority under Oregon law to take an offender to the station to perform an identification check, even in a situation in which the underlying offense did not carry a jail sentence. Based on this, a jury could reasonably conclude that the City authorized such custodial detention for identification, i.e., that it had a policy of permitting such detention.4 Kane's additional reference to other instances of officers taking suspects to the station for firm identification on nonarrestable offenses reasonably supports a finding of a City custom or practice of custodial detention for identification. Additionally, ID technician Pittock testified that he had seen instances of police officers bringing in citations that said "furnishing false information" without an accompanying underlying charge, as in the instant case. As the officers bringing in citations to the center included City police officers, it is reasonable to infer that there was a City custom or practice of custodial detention for identification even when there was no independently arrestable offense. Drawing all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to Pierce, there was sufficient evidence of a City policy, practice or custom of custodial detention for firm identification on infractions. Thus, the magistrate judge erred in directing a verdict for the City of Portland on the basis that "there is no evidence of any custom or policy."
There was also sufficient evidence to cоnclude that the City's alleged policy is unconstitutional on its face to the extent that it allows arrests for nonarrestable offenses. The extent of the permitted invasions of the individual's Fourth Amendment rights depends on the gravity of the offense. The alleged constitutional violation at issue here stems from the Fourth Amendment's guarantee that government officials may not subject citizens to unreasonable searches or seizures without proper authorization. In this context, the Fourth Amendment requires that the length and scope of a detention be "strictly tied to and justified by the circumstances which rendered its initiation permissible." Terry v. Ohio,
Although police need only a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity to conduct a brief investigatory detention, see, e.g., id. at 30,
The City argued that its blanket policy of allowing custody for firm identification was constitutional based on its interpretation of the statutory grant of authority to detain for identification for violations of infractions. See Or.Rev.Stat. § 153.110(3).5 However, that statute expressly denies authority to arrest for infractions. Id.6 In addition, Oregon courts have interpreted the statute as providing only a limited authority to stop and detain that is short of a full arrest. See, e.g., State v. Farley,
Even when offenses are involved for which police officers have explicit statutory authority to arrest, Oregon courts have held that police officers cannot lodge a person in jail under full custodial arrest unless they have other grounds apart from the minor traffic violation itself. See Easton v. Hurita,
Here, the only bаsis for the custodial arrest and post-arrest detention was the claimed need to verify Pierce's identification for citation for a non-arrestable offense and the City's and County's practice of creating a complete identification record, including taking mug shots and finger-printing, even after the individual detained has been firmly identified. Given Oregon's stringent controls on booking for identification even when the underlying offense is arrestable, we conclude that the City's policy of allowing booking and mugging for firm identification for nonarrestable offenses is not authorized under state law. If the state has decriminalized conduct by denying the City and its officers the authority to arrest for a particular offense, then the City is acting unreasonably when it permits its officers to proceed as though they had the authority to arrest for the offense.
We agree with the Seventh Circuit that a particular arrest is objectively reasonable "so long as the police are doing no more than they are legally permitted and objectively authorized to do." United States v. Trigg,
Because there was evidence from which the jury could have found that the City had an unconstitutional policy, or applied it in an unconstitutional manner, we conclude that the magistrate judge erred by directing a verdict for the City on Pierce's Monell claim. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.II. Jury Verdict for Karcher and Bowdle for Pierce's Excessive Force Claim
In addition, Pierce claims that the trial court erred by instructing the jury to apply an Eighth Amendment standard in determining whether officers Karcher and Bowdle applied excessive force to Pierce during the period that she was detained in the jail for identification. We agree. The determination of the appropriate constitutional standard to govern treatment during the various stages of custody is a question of law subject to de novo review. Graham v. Connor,
Defendants contend that the Eighth Amendment governs excessive force claims inside a jail facility. This claim must fail, however, because the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against the malicious or sadistic use of force, see Hudson v. McMillian,
To decide the appropriate standard, we must determine what constitutional protection governs this particular juncture of the custodial continuum. See, e.g., Austin v. Hamilton,
In a pre-Graham case, we held that the seizure that constitutes arrest "continues throughout the time the arrestee is in the custody of the arresting officers" and thus any use of excessive force during this extended arrest period is subject to the Fourth Amendment's constraints. Robins v. Harum,
We find the discussions in Austin,
We hold, therefore, that the Fourth Amendment sets the applicable constitutional limitations on the treatment of an arrestee detained without a warrant up until the time such arrestee is released or found to be legally in custody based upon probable cause for arrest. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court erred by failing to direct the jury to apply Fourth Amendment objective reasonableness standards to the use of force against Pierce at the jail. We reverse the jury verdict for defendants Karcher and Bowdlе.
III. Directed Verdict for Bowdle on Pierce's Fourth Amendment Unreasonable Seizure Claim
Pierce also claims that the magistrate erred by directing a verdict on Pierce's Fourth Amendment claim against Bowdle for unreasonable seizure. We find that this claim has merit.
Pierce alleged that Bowdle violated her Fourth Amendment rights by seizing her and returning her to a cell after she had been released from the detention center. The magistrate directed a verdict for the defendant based on Pierce's own testimony which indicated that she was still in the process of being released. However, we do not find that Pierce's testimony mandates the magistrate judge's conclusion. According to Pierce, Officer Bowdle asked if she wanted to go and said that she was being rеleased. Based on these statements, a reasonable jury could find that although Pierce was still physically inside the detention center, she had been "released" because Bowdle had indicated that Pierce was free to go and by implication that the officer lacked any further authority to detain her. If this is the case, then a subsequent seizure could be in violation of Pierce's Fourth Amendment rights.
Because there was a basis for a reasonable juror to conclude that Bowdle's actions violated Pierce's Fourth Amendment rights, a directed verdict was inappropriate.
IV. Motion to Reinstate Multnomah County as a Defendant
Pierce claims that the trial court abused its discretion by denying her request to reinstate Multnomah County. We agree.
A denial of a motion for leave to amend аfter a responsive pleading has been filed is reviewed for an abuse of discretion, National Abortions Fed'n v. Operation Rescue,
About one month before trial, Piercе inadvertently dropped the County from the suit by mistakenly copying the defendant's proposed order into her pre-trial order. Pierce, recognizing her mistake, quickly sought to correct it by moving to reinstate the County during the pre-trial conference. The magistrate judge denied this motion.
Although the magistrate judge did not state his reasons for denying Pierce's motion, the following facts are clear. The County had participated fully in the case until it was inadvertently dropped from the suit in January 1993, one month before trial.7 The County's absence from the suit would have been for only a very brief time had the magistrate judge reinstated it as a defendant. It was prepared for trial. We conclude that the magistrate judge abused his discretion.
The magistrate judge's denial of Pierce's motion to amend her complaint to include the County is reversed. We remand to the district court with instructions to allow the filing of an amended complaint that includes the County.
V. Other Claims
Because we reverse the verdicts, we need not reach Pierce's additional claims that the trial court erred by denying her motion for a new trial and her claims of error concerning various evidentiary rulings by the magistrate judge. However, because the defendants are no longer prevailing parties, we vacate the order awarding costs to the defendants. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d).
CONCLUSION
The order awarding costs to the defendants is VACATED. The judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
RYMER, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in рart:
I join the majority's opinion except for Part I, where I agree with the result (but not the dicta) as to Duncan and disagree with both the reasoning and the result as to the City.
Whether or not Pierce had been identified adequately at the time Duncan decided to transport her to the county detention center for firm identification is an issue of fact that is disputed. This unresolved issue of fact bears on whether Duncan could reasonably have believed that taking Pierce to the detention center violated clearly established federal law. That is all that needs to be said, or that can be said on the state of the record. Therefore, the majority's apparent conclusion that Pierce's "de facto arrest by Duncan violated clearly established law because Duncan lacked authority to arrest her for identification after he had sufficient information for the issuance of the citation for the fare infraction," maj. op. at 1037-38, must simply be a statement that if all those things were true, he should not have qualified immunity in the majority's view.
I see no basis for reversing the directed verdict in favor of the City of Portland. No matter what the City did or did not "acknowledge" pre-trial, there is no evidence from which a reasonable factfinder could conclude that any policy existed--let alone a policy, practice or custom of "custodial detention for identification," or "custodial detention for identification even when there was no independently arrestable offense," or "custodial detention for firm identification on infractions," or "arrests for nonarrestable offenses," as the majority opinion variously characterizes it. There is no way that one can figure out what the City's custom or policy may have been from what officers Kane and Pittock testified was the practice at the county detention center, or from Kane's (erroneous) belief that ORS § 153.110 gave him authority to take an offender into custody to perform an identification check. Accordingly, I believe the district court should be affirmed.
Notes
Plaintiff is a graduate of Georgetown University Law School. She has not practiced law since 1984
Oregon Revised Statute 162.385 states as follows:
(1) A person commits the crime of giving false information to a peace officer for a citation if thе person knowingly uses or gives a false or fictitious name, address or date of birth to any peace officer for the purpose of the officer's issuing or serving the person a citation under authority of ORS 133.045 to 133.080, 133.110 and 156.050.
(2) A person who violates this section commits a Class A misdemeanor.
Although Pierce appeals the directed verdict for Duncan in its entirety, which includes a state law malicious prosecution claim, her brief addresses only the Fourth Amendment claim. Therefore, we construe her claim on appeal as to Duncan as relating only to the Fourth Amendment claim, and we limit our decision accordingly. See Leer v. Murphy,
When Kane testified that he understood he had authority to take an offender into custody in order to perform an identification check, he relied on Or.Rev.Stat. § 153.110. That statute, however, specifically states that "[a]ny person authorized to issue citations pursuant to this section may not arrest for violation of the infraction but may detain any individual reasonably believed to have committed a violation, only so long as is necessary to determine, for the purposes of issuing a citation, the identity of the violator." Or.Rev.Stat. § 153.110(3) (emphasis added). As the statute does not itself authorize custodial detention, Kane's testimony certainly suggests that his employer the City had a policy of implementing the statute in such a way as to permit such detention
The City and Duncan also point to State v. Tucker,
153.110. Persons who may enforce infractions; issuance of citation; arrest prohibited
(3) Any person authorized to issue citations pursuant to this section may not arrest for violation of the infraction but may detain any individual reasonably believed to have committed a violation ... only so long as is necessary to determine, for the purposes of issuing a citation, the identity of the violator and such additional information as is appropriate for law enforcement agencies in the state.
Or.Rev.Stat. § 153.110(3).
The defendants argue that Pierce abandoned the County as a defendant nearly one year before trial in her Proposed Pre-trial Order of March 30, 1992. However, our examination of that document reveals that Pierce did not abandon her claims against the County at that time. To the contrary, she was vigorously asserting those claims. See, e.g., Plaintiff's Proposed Pre-trial Order, at 4 ("Plaintiff also maintains that the defendants Bawdle [sic], Karcher, and Multnomah County are liable under the pendent state claims and for the adoption of policy, ratification of conduct and/or under the doctrine of respondiat [sic] superior.") (emphasis added). Consequently, we find the defendants' factual assertion to be without basis
