This § 1988 case presents the question whether the plaintiff has vitiated the defendants’ qualified immunity defense. Because the plaintiff fails to allege sufficient facts to show that the defendants’ conduct violated clearly established constitutional law, we affirm the district court’s summary dismissal of the claim.
Facts and Proceedings Below
Alan Whatley and Sentry Title Company, Inc. brought this § 1983 claim against Robеrt Philo, Ira Goodrich, and David Becker, as individuals and as officials of the Texas State Board of Insurance (Board). In 1982, the Board investigated Whatley after receiving reports that he was engaged in the unauthorized issuance of title insurance policies. Based on information provided by the defendants, the Attorney General filed in the state district сourt, a petition in the nature of quo warranto proceedings against Whatley and Sentry. Two days later, the district court imposed, ex parte, a temporary restraining order and temporary receivership. The court set a hearing date some two weeks hence. Whatley appeared at that hearing and agreed to a temporary injunction and continuation of the receivership. Later, although denying that he had engaged in any illegal acts, Whatley agreed to an order that permanently enjoined him from engaging in the unlicensed practice of issuing title insurance. The district court adopted the agreed order and dismissed the case. Whatley did not appeal that decision.
Whatley then filed this claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the federal district court, contending that the defendants’ conduct effected a deprivation of property without due process and constituted mаlicious abuse of prosecution and malicious abuse of office, all in derogation of federal constitutional guarantees. The defendants asserted their qualified immunity defense.
The district court dismissed on summary judgment, 1 on the basis that Whatley had failed to overcome the immunity defense. The court concluded that Whatley failed to show that the allegedly wrongful conduct violаted clearly established constitutional rights. We agree.
The Law
Public officials whose positions entail the exercise of discretion enjoy the defense of qualified immunity in § 1983 actiоns.
Saldana v. Garza,
Whatlеy concedes that he enjoys no clearly established constitutional right to predeprivation notice and hearing in the circumstances of this case. 4 Rather, his argumеnt rests on the premise that the notice requirements of the state statute raise the federal “constitutional minimum.” Whatley focuses on the defendants’ conduct of initiating the quo warranto proceedings against him, which resulted in the ex parte imрosition of the temporary restraining order and receivership. He contends that state law mandates predeprivation notice and hearing. 5 He asserts that by violating the notice requirements under state law the defendants deprived him of procedural due process under the federal constitution.
We explained the “constitutional minimum” argument in
Levitt v. University of Texas at El Paso,
*22 Abuse of Legal Process
Whatley alleges that the defendants knowingly violated his due process rights by initiating “unfounded process” against him. Their actions, he contends, were not based on any sincеre belief that the public needed protection, but were maliciously intended “to vex and harass” him. He contends these' actions constituted malicious abuse of prоcess and malicious abuse of office and that these allegations are sufficient to rise to the level of a cognizable constitutional tort.
These factual аllegations do not support a determination that the defendants violated any clearly established constitutional right. Even assuming that his allegations support the common law tort claim of “misuse of legal procedure,” we have stated that “misuse of legal procedure, without more, does not rise to the level of a constitutional wrong remedied by § 1983.”
Beker Phosphate Co. v. Muirhead,
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b), based upon the plaintiff’s failure to vitiate the defendants’ qualified immunity defense.
Notes
. Whatley also sued the defendants in their official capаcities and named the State Board of Insurance as a defendant. The district court dismissed these claims based on the defendants' Eleventh Amendment immunity. Whatley does not raise this issue on appeal.
. Whatley alleges that the defendants, by initiating proceedings against him, acted "maliciously, with knowledge that they were depriving plaintiffs of their rights,” and that therefore the defendants have abrogated their qualified immunity defense. In
Harlow,
the Supreme Court explicitly rejected the "subjective bad faith” test, holding that the plaintiff could not defeat the qualified immunity defense by “bare allegations of malice."
. Whatley did amend his complaint to comply with the heightened pleading requirements in immunity cases, as set forth in
Elliott
v.
Perez,
. The state's
quo warranto
petition alleged that "the assets, if any, of the corporation are, and will be unavailable” to policyholders and creditors. The Supreme Court has long recognized that protecting the public interest against
economic harm
can justify the immediate seizure of property without a prior hearing.
Fahey v. Mallonee,
Relying on
Fahey,
this Court recently upheld the constitutionality of a Louisiana stаtute that allowed the state without predeprivation notice and hearing to suspend agricultural warehouse licenses temporarily.
Delahoussaye v. Seale,
. Whatley contends that thе defendants violated the predeprivation notice and hearing requirements under the Texas Insurance Code art. 9.29 (Vernon 1981). The defendants counter that their actions were lawful under the Texas Insurance Code, the Business Corporations Act and various other statutes. We need not, and do not, reach the question whether the defendants’ conduct violated state law.
