*1 United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 05-1430
ASOCIACIÓN DE SUBSCRIPCIÓN CONJUNTA DEL SEGURO DE RESPONSABILIDAD OBLIGATORIO, Plaintiff, Appellee,
v.
JUAN A. FLORES GALARZA, in his personal and official capacity as the Secretary of the Treasury of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; and ANNABELLE RODRÍGUEZ, Secretary of Justice of the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, Defendants, Appellants.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO [Hon. Daniel R. Dominguez, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lipez, Circuit Judge, Gibson,* Senior Circuit Judge, Howard, Circuit Judge.
Eduardo do Vera Ramírez, with whom Julio César Alejandro Serrano and Landrón & Vera, LLP were on brief, for appellants. Veronica Ferraiuoli-Hornedo, with whom Rubén T. Nigaglioni, Rafael J. Martínez, and Nigaglioni & Ferraiuoli Law Offices, PSC were on brief, for appellee.
March 1, 2007
* Of the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge
. The Compulsory Liability Joint
Underwriting Association of Puerto Rico ("JUA"), a Commonwealth-
created entity, filed a lawsuit against Juan A. Flores Galarza
("Flores Galarza" or "Secretary"), then the Secretary of the
Treasury of the Commonwealth, in both his official and personal
capacities, claiming that he violated the Takings Clause of the
United States Constitution by withholding from the JUA and
appropriating insurance premiums generated by Puerto Rico's
compulsory liability insurance law to alleviate the cash-flow
problems of the Commonwealth. Flores Galarza moved for judgment on
the pleadings, claiming that the forms of relief sought by the
plaintiff (declaratory, injunctive, and damages) were barred by the
Eleventh Amendment and the doctrine of qualified immunity. The
During the pendency of this case, Juan Carlos Méndez replaced
Flores Galarza as Secretary of the Treasury. As a matter of law,
Méndez was automatically substituted as a party for Flores Galarza
in his official capacity as Secretary. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
25(d)(1) ("When a public officer is a party to an action in his
official capacity and during its pendency dies, resigns, or
otherwise ceases to hold office, the action does not abate and the
officer's successor is automatically substituted as a party.").
Flores Galarza remains a party in his personal capacity. See,
e.g., Batistini v. Aquino,
district court denied that motion. We have before us an interlocutory appeal from that denial.
Among other complexities, this case tests the sometimes uncertain boundary between official- and personal-capacity claims against a government official, and the applicability of the qualified immunity doctrine to an unusual takings claim. For the reasons set forth below, after concluding that the JUA has standing to sue Flores Galarza, we conclude that, consistent with the Eleventh Amendment, Flores Galarza is amenable to suit in his official capacity for injunctive and declaratory relief, but is protected from damages in his personal capacity by the doctrine of qualified immunity.
I.
A. Law 253: The Compulsory Liability Insurance System
The following facts are drawn from the complaint and,
where noted, from relevant statutory and case law. On December 27,
1995, in response to financial losses from uncompensated damages to
motor vehicles in traffic accidents, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico ("Commonwealth") enacted the Compulsory Motor Vehicle
Liability Insurance Act, Act No. 253 ("Law 253"), codified at P.R.
Laws Ann. tit. 26, §§ 8051-61. Under Law 253, liability insurance
coverage is required for all motor vehicles that travel on public
thoroughfares. Law 253 "provides each insured vehicle owner with
$3000 of coverage for damages caused to third parties per accident
*4
in exchange for a uniform premium, initially set at $99 for each
private passenger vehicle and $148 for each commercial vehicle."
Arroyo-Melecio v. P.R. Am. Ins. Co.,
All "private insurers" – defined under Law 253 as those with more than 1% of the total volume of vehicle liability premiums in Puerto Rico, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 8052(b) – are required to provide compulsory liability insurance in one of two ways. First, private insurers are "bound to provide the compulsory liability insurance to those motor vehicle owners that request it," id. § 8054(a), unless those owners meet certain statutory criteria, most of which "identify applicants who are bad drivers or otherwise of high risk," Arroyo-Melecio, 398 F.3d at 61. Second, private insurers are required to provide compulsory liability insurance as members of the JUA, to which they must belong. The JUA is an association of all private insurers in Puerto Rico, which "provides compulsory liability insurance to all drivers, including those high-risk drivers whom private insurers are not required to insure." Id. (footnote omitted). "Through the JUA, the risk of insuring these high-risk drivers is thus spread among all the private insurers." Id. at 62.
Every vehicle owner must either: (1) pay the premium for compulsory liability insurance to the Secretary of the Treasury at the time that the owner acquires or renews a vehicle license, *5 effectively as part of the license payment; or (2) opt out of the compulsory liability insurance scheme by privately purchasing liability insurance with comparable or better coverage. Id. at 61 n.2 (citing P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 8061). In the case of those vehicle owners who pay the Secretary for compulsory liability insurance, "[t]he [JUA] shall receive from the Secretary of the Treasury the total amount of the compulsory liability insurance premiums received by said official, for its eventual distribution among the private insurers and the [JUA] itself, as the case may be." P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 8055(c). The JUA's administrative and operating expenses are "charged to the amount received from the corresponding premiums according to this distribution." Id. If a vehicle owner does not present a Certificate of Compliance proving that he carries traditional liability insurance, he must pay the compulsory liability insurance premium on the date Section 8061(a) states that motor vehicle owners with sufficient "traditional" liability insurance may rely on that coverage to comply with Law 253. "Traditional liability insurance" is defined by Law 253 as standard vehicle insurance, which in turn is defined in P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 407(1) as, inter alia, insurance protecting against both personal and property damage "resulting from or incident to ownership, maintenance, or use of any . . . vehicle."
According to the JUA's website, individuals who have the requisite amount of traditional liability insurance may obtain a Certificate of Compliance from their insurer to present when they obtain or renew licenses, and may thereby avoid paying the compulsory insurance premium to the Secretary. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 8061(b) (empowering the Insurance Commissioner to establish regulations "so that motor vehicle owners who comply with the insurance requirements of subsection (a) of this section may present attesting proof of . . . compliance").
of issuance or renewal of the vehicle license, and may then seek
reimbursement directly from the JUA or from his insurer, who will,
in turn, seek reimbursement from the JUA. Thus, the funds
[3]
transferred from the Secretary to the JUA appear to consist of: (1)
premium payments from individuals seeking to purchase insurance
through the JUA who paid the Secretary, as required by the statute,
when they obtained or renewed their vehicle licenses, (2) duplicate
premium payments from individuals who are purchasing the compulsory
insurance directly from a private insurer, but who paid the
compulsory assessment to the Secretary along with their license
fees (and who thus are eligible for a refund from the JUA), and (3)
duplicate premium payments from individuals who have adequate
traditional liability coverage, but who did not obtain the
Certificate of Compliance that would have exempted them from the
compulsory assessment (who also are eligible for a refund). The
JUA is responsible for distributing the premiums it receives from
the Secretary to its member insurers for the coverage they provide.
Arroyo-Melecio,
The statute does not indicate whether individuals who privately purchase only the compulsory coverage – and not the more comprehensive traditional liability coverage – may avoid the premium payment to the Secretary by presenting proof of coverage. For purposes of this appeal, we assume that they may not, and that, consequently, this group of vehicle owners must seek later reimbursement of their duplicate payments. Although the JUA's member insurers provide the compulsory
coverage, "every vehicle for which the requisite compulsory
The JUA is required to file an annual statement with the Insurance Commissioner detailing its financial condition, transactions, and affairs for the preceding calendar year. Because a portion of the total amount of premiums received by the JUA may be owed to third parties who seek refunds for duplicate payments – i.e., vehicle owners who bought insurance from a private insurer but also paid the compulsory liability premium when obtaining licenses, or private insurers who have reimbursed their insureds for payment of the compulsory premium – the JUA is required by regulation to set aside these premiums and accumulate them in a separate reserve account ("Reserve").
liability insurance premium has been paid is considered to be
insured by the JUA unless the owner of the vehicle opts out by
selecting a private insurer or purchasing a traditional insurance
policy." Arroyo-Melecio,
Pursuant to the general provisions of Puerto Rico's Insurance Code, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, §§ 2603-2607, the JUA's obligation to reimburse these so-called "unearned premiums" lasts seven years, after which time the premiums lapse to the Insurance Commissioner and are then deposited in the general fund of the Commonwealth Treasury. Although the JUA did not reference this general provision in either its brief before us or at oral argument, Puerto Rico's Insurance Code makes clear that this general provision applies to the compulsory liability insurance system under Law 253. See id. § 2612 ("The [general provision governing unclaimed funds] shall prevail over the provisions of any other chapter present or future which may be in conflict herewith."). Flores Galarza invokes this statutory provision in his brief.
B. The Secretary's Withholding of Funds
Since the effective date of the compulsory liability insurance system on January 1, 1998, the JUA has been unable to determine exactly how many registered motor vehicles in Puerto Rico are covered by private liability insurance. The JUA initially estimated that 25% of all vehicles were covered by policies from private insurers, and, accordingly, set aside 25% of all premiums received and accumulated them in the Reserve. By 2001, experience and additional data revealed that the actual proportion of privately insured registered motor vehicles was closer to 17%. As a result, the Reserve as disclosed in the December 2001 annual statement – approximately $73 million – exceeded the actual amount owed to third parties by approximately $10 million ("Overstated Reserve Funds"). In other words, the JUA set aside and accumulated in the Reserve approximately $10 million more than was actually owed to privately insured vehicle owners and their insurers who would be seeking reimbursement for the purchase of duplicative compulsory liability insurance. In 2001, the JUA sought permission from the Insurance Commissioner to adjust the Reserve to the accumulated level that it would have been if only 17% of all While Law 253 was enacted in 1995, the compulsory liability insurance system established under Law 253 did not take effect until January 1, 1998. 1995 P.R. Laws 253, § 16.
premiums had been set aside, rather than 25%. The Insurance Commissioner agreed to allow the JUA to adjust the Reserve for the 2001 fiscal year, but did not allow any adjustments for the preceding fiscal years.
In 1998 and 1999, the Secretary collected the insurance premiums and transferred them to the JUA in accordance with Law 253. The JUA then set aside a portion of these premiums in the [7]
Reserve. Beginning in 2000, however, the Secretary discontinued the transfer of compulsory liability insurance premiums to the JUA in an attempt to ease the Commonwealth's cash-flow problems. On [8] At oral argument, counsel for the JUA explained that "[p]rior to the year 2000, the premiums were being turned over [by the Secretary] . . . in a term of about 30-60 days," which the JUA found "reasonable, given the bureaucratic process" involved with such transfers. The record contains conflicting information about when the
Secretary began withholding the compulsory insurance premiums. At oral argument before us, in their appellate brief, and in their opposition to Flores Galarza's motion for judgment on the pleadings, the JUA states that the Secretary withheld the insurance premiums beginning in 2000. In the complaint, the JUA likewise states that it was forced to liquidate its investments as early as January 2000 "[a]s a result of the [Secretary's] failure to transfer th[e premiums]." Elsewhere in the complaint, however, the JUA states that the Secretary withheld premiums "[d]uring the past two years," which would mean that the alleged withholding began in approximately February 2001, based on the February 2003 filing date of the complaint. Flores Galarza argues that "although not alleged in the complaint, the supposed withholding of the transfers would have started on March 2001." While our analysis does not require that we resolve this discrepancy, we use for our analysis the earliest date that Flores Galarza is alleged to have withheld the premiums (January 2000), which date is supported by the record at this stage of the proceedings.
May 30, 2002, the JUA filed a petition for mandamus against the Secretary in the Puerto Rico Superior Court, requesting an order that the Secretary transfer to the JUA the withheld compulsory liability insurance premiums. By September 2002, the Secretary had withheld approximately $173 million in premiums from the JUA. Because of the Secretary's failure to transfer the insurance premiums, the JUA was forced to liquidate approximately $98 million of investments in order to comply with its own cash-flow needs. The liquidation of the JUA's investments, together with the lost opportunity to invest new premiums, resulted in a loss to the JUA of $14.2 million in interest. Despite the Secretary's withholding of premiums, the JUA continued to reimburse privately insured motorists and their insurers from its own funds. From January 2002 through September 2002, the JUA reimbursed third parties out-of- pocket a total of $13.6 million ("Out-of-Pocket Funds").
C. The 2002 Amendment to Law 253
On September 11, 2002, the Puerto Rico Legislature amended Law 253, 2002 P.R. Laws 230 ("2002 Amendment"), to require the JUA to turn over to the Secretary all funds held in the Reserve as of December 31, 2001 (i.e., $73 million), and to continue providing such funds every two years thereafter. The 2002 Amendment requires the Secretary to keep these funds in a fiduciary capacity for five years, to be reimbursed to owners of privately *11 insured motor vehicles and their insurers who seek refunds, after which time the funds become the property of the Commonwealth and pass to the general fund of the Commonwealth Treasury. The 2002 [9] Amendment also provides that any excess funds in the Reserve, that is, any funds included in the Reserve based on estimates which exceed the actual amount owed to third parties (the Overstated Reserve Funds), shall be immediately available for use by the Commonwealth. Income generated from the funds provided to the Secretary shall also be immediately available for use by the Commonwealth. Lastly, while the Secretary continues to transfer to the JUA the total amount of compulsory liability insurance premiums, the 2002 Amendment allows the Secretary to deduct from these premiums a fee for the collection service it performs. D. The 2002 Settlement
In November 2002, pursuant to a settlement stipulation in the mandamus action in the Puerto Rico Superior Court, the Secretary transferred to the JUA a significant portion of the $173 million in insurance premiums that had been withheld ("2002 Settlement"). Rather than transferring the full amount of funds [10]
The 2002 Amendment thus allocates the seven-year period provided by the general provisions of Puerto Rico's Insurance Code, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 2603, among the JUA (which holds the funds for two years) and the Secretary (who holds the funds for five additional years), after which time the funds lapse to the general fund of the Commonwealth Treasury. In his answer to the JUA's complaint, Flores Galarza asserts
that, by November 2002, he had paid the JUA approximately $85.8 *12 withheld, however, the Secretary retained approximately $73 million – an amount corresponding to the amount of funds in the Reserve as of December 2001, which the JUA was required to turn over to the Secretary pursuant to the 2002 Amendment.
II.
In February 2003, the JUA filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Flores Galarza in his personal capacity and in his official capacity as Secretary of the Treasury. In the complaint, the JUA alleged that Flores Galarza took the JUA's million ($8,576,709.37 on October 23, 2002 and $77,190,384.31 on November 13, 2002), which amount represented "all the moneys" owed to the [JUA]." While the JUA's complaint suggests that the amount paid by Flores Galarza was closer to $100 million, what matters for purposes of our analysis is the amount which Flores Galarza did not pay – $73 million. The parties do not dispute that these funds were never paid to the JUA. Defendant-Appellant Annabelle Rodríguez, then the Secretary of
Justice of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, is not listed as a defendant in either the complaint or in the district court order that is the subject of this appeal. The first mention of Rodríguez comes in the Notice of Interlocutory Appeal, which references her by political office only, not by name. The parties refer to Rodríguez again – this time, in her official capacity as Secretary of Justice – in the caption on their briefs before us, but neither party makes any argument respecting her. Assuming that Rodríguez was properly joined as a party to this action, she ceased to be a party when she left her post as Secretary of Justice in 2004 and was succeeded by William Vazquez Irizarry, who was, in turn, succeeded by the present Secretary of Justice, Roberto J. Sánchez Ramos. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d). We therefore do not reach Rodríguez's interests here. Furthermore, since neither the complaint nor the district court order lists the Secretary of Justice as a party, and since neither party argues that we should adjudicate the interests of the Secretary of Justice in this appeal, we do not reach the interests of Sánchez Ramos. On remand, it will be important for the district court to clarify Sánchez Ramos's status in this litigation.
property without just compensation and deprived the JUA of its property without due process in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and § 1983. Specifically, the JUA contends [12]
that "in order to alleviate the Commonwealth's cash-flow problems," Flores Galarza temporarily withheld "for [an] unreasonable period[] of time" (i.e., from January 2000 through November 2002) $173 million in insurance premiums, which are "the private property of the [JUA]" and "which [Flores Galarza] was bound by law to transfer to JUA." By temporarily withholding these premiums, the JUA argues, Flores Galarza also wrongfully appropriated $14.2 million in "interest generated by those premiums [which is] also the private property of the [JUA]." While Flores Galarza subsequently paid to the JUA a large portion of the withheld premiums pursuant to the 2002 Settlement, the JUA argues that by retaining $73 million, an amount of funds equal to the Reserve as of December 2001, Flores Galarza wrongfully appropriated the following amounts: approximately $10 million in Overstated Reserve Funds which do not [13]
For the sake of clarity, we note that § 1983 cannot be "violated," as the JUA suggests in the complaint. "Section 1983 does not confer substantive rights but merely provides a means to vindicate rights conferred by the Constitution or laws of the United States." Wilson v. Spain, 209 F.3d 713, 715 (8th Cir. 2000). Here, the JUA seeks to vindicate its right under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to be free from an uncompensated taking. The JUA uses two different percentages to calculate the Overstated Reserve Funds, and therefore arrives at two different totals for such funds. As noted above, the JUA originally estimated that 25% of all registered motor vehicles were privately insured, and so set aside 25% of all premiums received and *14 belong to third parties and therefore constitute the JUA's private property; and approximately $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds which the JUA was forced to pay to third parties from its own funds when Flores Galarza withheld $173 million in insurance premiums to meet the cash-flow needs of the Commonwealth.
accumulated them in the Reserve. In its complaint, the JUA argues that the number of privately insured motor vehicles as of 2001 was actually 17.4%, which means that the JUA overstated the Reserve by approximately $10 million. In its brief before us and at oral argument, however, the JUA argues that the number of privately insured motor vehicles in 2001 was actually 19.3%, which means that the Reserve was overstated by approximately $8 million. Counsel for the JUA also explained at oral argument that the Insurance Commissioner used the higher percentage in adjusting the Reserve for fiscal year 2001. The Secretary says nothing about this discrepancy. Because we must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-movant when considering a motion for judgment on the pleadings, and because the 17% figure set forth in the complaint would presumably yield a higher damages award for the JUA than the 19% figure, i.e., $10 million as opposed to $8 million, we use the lower percentage yielding the higher damages amount for purposes of our analysis.
We note that even that amount might understate the damages figure. If, as the JUA indicates, the Reserve is based on the estimated total number of privately insured vehicles – in an attempt to reflect the greatest number of owners who might be entitled to a refund – the Reserve would contain more than the amount needed for reimbursement to the extent that any of the privately insured owners had avoided payment of the compulsory insurance premium by presenting a Certificate of Compliance. Such owners would not be entitled to a refund, but the Reserve would include enough to reimburse them based on their private insurance status. The record does not contain the 2002 Settlement. Therefore, it
is not clear whether the JUA is suing for more than they agreed to in the settlement. Because the record does not permit us to answer this question, and because Flores Galarza does not raise the issue, we do not address it.
The JUA requested relief in the form of a declaratory
judgment that Flores Galarza "infringed upon the rights guaranteed
under the Takings Clause and the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process
Clause" by temporarily withholding the insurance premiums and
permanently taking the interest generated by those premiums, the
Overstated Reserve Funds, and the Out-of-Pocket Funds. Because the
JUA does not argue that Flores Galarza's taking of property
violated its substantive or procedural due process rights under the
Fourteenth Amendment, the JUA appears to invoke the Fourteenth
Amendment only for purposes of bringing a Fifth Amendment Takings
claim against Flores Galarza. See Chi., Burlington & Quincy R.R.
Co. v. City of Chi.,
The JUA also sought injunctive relief enjoining Flores Galarza, in his official capacity, from "engaging in violations of JUA's [constitutional] rights," that is, from withholding any more insurance premiums. In addition, it sought to enjoin him from "[a]ttempting to enforce or impose upon JUA the terms and conditions of [the 2002 Amendment] . . . inasmuch as they amount to The JUA conceded at oral argument that the Secretary resumed transfer of the insurance premiums following the filing of this action in February 2003, thereby "correct[ing]" the "situation which caused this problem . . . for the time being." *16 an unconstitutional taking," that is, from requiring the JUA to transfer funds accumulating in the Reserve to the Secretary every two years (which funds must be retained by the Secretary for an additional five years before lapsing to the general fund), and from retaining interest income accruing on the Reserve funds as well as any excess Reserve funds, i.e., the Overstated Reserve Funds that are not actually owed to third parties (which funds shall lapse immediately to the general fund). Finally, the JUA sought from Flores Galarza, in his personal capacity, approximately $38 million in damages: $10 million in Overstated Reserve Funds, $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds, and $14.2 million in lost interest as a result of Flores Galarza's taking of the insurance premiums.
Flores Galarza filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(c), arguing that: the JUA lacked standing to sue Flores Galarza in any capacity; Eleventh Amendment immunity barred the JUA from suing Flores Galarza in his official capacity; and the doctrine of qualified immunity barred the JUA from suing Flores Galarza in his personal capacity. The district court denied Flores Galarza's motion, holding that the JUA While the JUA seeks to enjoin the Secretary from enforcing the terms of the 2002 Amendment, which requires the JUA to transfer funds in the Reserve to the Secretary every two years, the JUA does not challenge the general provisions of Puerto Rico's Insurance Code, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, §§ 2601-2607, which require that any premiums not claimed within seven years must be paid to the Insurance Commissioner.
was not an arm of the state and therefore was not precluded from suing Flores Galarza; that Flores Galarza was not entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity because the declaratory and injunctive relief sought by the JUA was prospective, as was the JUA's claimed right to "money allegedly unconstitutionally attached" by Flores Galarza, i.e., "the insurance premiums for the compulsory liability insurance [and] . . . certain funds belonging to JUA"; and that Flores Galarza was not entitled to qualified immunity because the JUA alleged a constitutional violation that was well established at the time of the alleged conduct. Flores Galarza filed a motion for reconsideration that was also denied. This interlocutory appeal followed.
III.
We address in this section various preliminary issues,
including the JUA's standing and the rationale supporting
interlocutory review. We raised two issues sua sponte, mindful of
our obligation to consider the basis of appellate jurisdiction,
even if the parties have assumed its existence. See Espinal-
Dominguez v. Puerto Rico,
oral argument, we asked the parties to submit supplemental briefs addressing the following questions: (1) whether the JUA's claim meets the prudential ripeness requirements of the Supreme Court's jurisprudence on takings, and (2) whether the res judicata doctrine bars our review. As we discuss below, neither of those doctrines precludes our jurisdiction. Nor do we find any other jurisdictional barriers to this interlocutory appeal.
A. Availability of Interlocutory Review
Generally speaking, appeals are permitted only from final
judgments of the district court. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. There are,
however, several exceptions. "Chief among these is the so-called
collateral order doctrine," by which "an order may be appealed
immediately if it 'finally determine[s] claims of right separable
from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too
important to be denied review and too independent of the cause
itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until
the whole case is adjudicated.'" Espinal-Dominguez,
546 (1949)).
Orders denying claims of Eleventh Amendment immunity and
qualified immunity, to the extent they turn on issues of law, fall
within the ambit of this exception, and are thus immediately
appealable to this Court. See P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v.
*19
Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.,
B. Ripeness
A plaintiff frequently must scale "two independent
prudential hurdles" before bringing a takings claim against state
entities in federal court. Suitum v. Tahoe Reg'l Planning Agency,
520 U.S. 725, 733-34 (1997). The Supreme Court explained in
Williamson County Reg'l Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson
City, 473 U.S. 172, 194 (1985), that such a plaintiff must
demonstrate that he has both received a final decision from the
state on the use of his property and "sought 'compensation through
*20
the procedures the State has provided for doing so,'" Suitum, 520
U.S. at 734 (quoting Williamson County,
The Court held that the claim also was not ripe for a
second reason: the plaintiff had not sought recovery through the
state's inverse condemnation procedure, under which a property
owner may seek just compensation for an alleged taking of property
effected by restrictive zoning laws or development regulations.
Id. at 196. The Court explained that, because the Fifth Amendment
proscribes not the taking of property, but takings without just
compensation, "[if] the government has provided an adequate process
*21
for obtaining compensation, and if resort to that process 'yield[s]
just compensation,' then the property owner 'has no claim against
the Government' for a taking." Id. at 194-95 (alteration in
original) (quoting Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co.,
n.21 (1984)). Because the plaintiff in Williamson County "ha[d]
not shown that the inverse condemnation procedure is unavailable or
inadequate," the takings claim was premature "until it has utilized
that procedure," id. at 197. Cf. González-Álvarez v. Rivero-
Cubano,
For multiple reasons, the Williamson County prudential
ripeness concerns are inapposite here. First, to the extent that
the JUA is making a facial statutory challenge, its takings claim
need not be brought first to a Commonwealth body, either
administrative or judicial. See Suitum, 520 U.S. at 736 n.10
("'[F]acial' challenges to regulation are generally ripe the moment
the challenged regulation or ordinance is passed, but face an
'uphill battle,' since it is difficult to demonstrate that '"mere
enactment"' of a piece of legislation 'deprived [the owner] of
economically viable use of [his] property.'") (citations omitted);
*22
Yee v. City of Escondido, 503 U.S. 519, 534 (1992) (finding
petitioners' facial challenge ripe because it "does not depend on
the extent to which petitioners are deprived of the economic use of
their particular pieces of property or the extent to which these
particular petitioners are compensated"); Quicken Loans, Inc. v.
Wood, 449 F.3d 944, 953 (9th Cir. 2006) (finding that a facial
takings claim was ripe when the challenged statutes were enacted);
Pharm. Care Mgmt. Ass'n v. Rowe,
More significantly, however, the Williamson County
requirements are not fully applicable to the type of taking alleged
here. The Court in Suitum noted that Williamson County identified
"two independent prudential hurdles to a regulatory takings claim
brought against a state entity in federal court."
Even if both Williamson County prerequisites applied,
however, they would not foreclose our jurisdiction. The case law addressing the first "hurdle" focuses on whether the administrative body responsible for applying the challenged regulations has completed discretionary review of the plaintiff's particular situation. Here, there is no pending administrative process that could, through a variance, waiver or other discretionary decision, modify the statute's impact on the JUA.
The Court in Williamson County emphasized the distinction between the finality requirement it was describing and the need to exhaust remedies, which is not a prerequisite to a suit brought under § 1983. The Court explained:
While the policies underlying the two concepts often overlap, the finality requirement is concerned with *24 Nor does the second "hurdle" – the need to seek compensation through procedures provided by the state – pose a barrier here. See Suitum, 520 U.S. at 734 ("The second hurdle stems from the Fifth Amendment's proviso that only takings without
whether the initial decisionmaker has arrived at a definitive position on the issue that inflicts an actual, concrete injury; the exhaustion requirement generally refers to administrative and judicial procedures by which an injured party may seek review of an adverse decision and obtain a remedy if the decision is found to be unlawful or otherwise inappropriate. . . .
The difference is best illustrated by comparing the procedure for seeking a variance with the procedures that, under Patsy[v. Florida Board of Regents, 457 U.S. 496 (1982)], respondent would not be required to exhaust. While it appears that the State provides procedures by which an aggrieved property owner may seek a declaratory judgment regarding the validity of zoning and planning actions taken by county authorities, respondent would not be required to resort to those procedures before bringing its § 1983 action, because those procedures clearly are remedial. Similarly, respondent would not be required to appeal the Commission's rejection of the preliminary plat to the Board of Zoning Appeals, because the Board was empowered, at most, to review that rejection, not to participate in the Commission's decisionmaking.
Resort to those procedures would result in a judgment whether the Commission's actions violated any of respondent's rights. In contrast, resort to the procedure for obtaining variances would result in a conclusive determination by the Commission whether it would allow respondent to develop the subdivision in the manner respondent proposed. The Commission's refusal to approve the preliminary plat does not determine that issue; it . . . leaves open the possibility that respondent may develop the subdivision according to its plat after obtaining the variances. In short, the Commission's denial of approval does not conclusively determine whether respondent will be denied all reasonable beneficial use of its property, and therefore is not a final, reviewable decision.
'just compensation' infringe that Amendment; 'if a State provides
an adequate procedure for seeking just compensation, the property
owner cannot claim a violation of the Just Compensation Clause
until it has used the procedure and been denied just
compensation.'" (quoting Williamson County, 473 U.S. at 195)).
Most commonly in regulatory takings cases – which typically involve
land-use regulation – such a procedure is a state inverse
condemnation proceeding. See, e.g., Williamson County, 473 U.S.
at 196; Urban Developers LLC v. City of Jackson,
(1st Cir. 2005) (noting that "[a]dequate procedures for seeking just compensation are available under Puerto Rico law," and The Supreme Court explained the "important legal and practical differences between an inverse condemnation suit and a condemnation proceeding" as follows:
Although a landowner's action to recover just compensation for a taking by physical intrusion has come to be referred to as "inverse" or "reverse" condemnation, the simple terms "condemn" and "condemnation" are not commonly used to describe such an action. Rather, a "condemnation" proceeding is commonly understood to be an action brought by a condemning authority such as the Government in the exercise of its power of eminent domain. . . .
. . . .
. . . The phrase "inverse condemnation" appears to be one that was coined simply as a shorthand description of the manner in which a landowner recovers just compensation for a taking of his property when condemnation proceedings have not been instituted.
United States v. Clarke,
*26
referring specifically to an inverse condemnation remedy). For
takings claims asserted against the federal government, the
applicable procedure is a claim brought under the Tucker Act.
Williamson County,
The key component of this prong of Williamson County is
the availability of a process that is particularly aimed at
providing compensation when government action effects a taking.
See, e.g., McNamara v. City of Rittman,
An inverse condemnation cause of action is a classic example of such a particularized procedure; it gives a property owner aggrieved by government conduct the opportunity to obtain compensation, thereby avoiding an unconstitutional taking. Requiring plaintiffs to avail themselves of such a procedure before bringing a federal takings claim protects the state's opportunity to use the scheme it designed specifically to avoid constitutional injury. By contrast, requiring plaintiffs to invoke any generally available state procedure that might provide a remedy for an uncompensated taking before bringing a federal claim would "transform[] Williamson County's finality rule into a rule of exhaustion," Washlefske v. Winston, 234 F.3d 179, 183 (4th Cir. 2000).
This result would be in diametric opposition to a foundational decision of modern § 1983 jurisprudence, Monroe v. Pape, which held that
initiate a mandamus action "to force the government actor into the correct appropriation proceeding." Id. In Ohio, therefore, mandamus as a vehicle to obtain an appropriation proceeding effectively substitutes for the more common inverse condemnation process.
"[t]he federal remedy is supplementary to the State remedy, and the latter need not be first sought and refused before the federal one is invoked."
Id. (quoting Monroe v. Pape,
The holding in Williamson County that a federal takings
claim is not ripe until the plaintiff has sought compensation
through state procedures has drawn substantial criticism, including
from Chief Justice Rehnquist in his concurring opinion in San Remo
Hotel v. City of San Francisco,
We consider a state takings claim to be remedial in
nature, however, and not a "procedure[] the State has provided for
[seeking compensation]," Williamson County,
In his concurrence, our colleague notes that the Supreme Court
addressed exhaustion in the context of the finality requirement
but did not suggest a similar limitation on the state litigation
prong. Although the Court's primary discussion of exhaustion
occurred with respect to finality, it reiterated that review
procedures need not be exhausted when explaining the need for "a
property owner [to] utilize procedures for obtaining compensation."
We note, in addition, that at least some of the cases
identified in the concurrence as rejecting our limitation on the
litigation requirement are not wholly in conflict with our view
that Williamson County requires resort to a procedure akin to
inverse condemnation. For example, in Villager Pond, Inc. v. Town
of Darien, 56 F.3d 375 (2d Cir. 1995), the court relied on a
Connecticut state court decision that had held that the state's
takings clause "may be used as the basis of an inverse condemnation
action to recover compensation for property taken from private
individuals, even in the absence of a separate statutory remedy."
Id. at 380. See also id. at 381 ("The inverse condemnation
requirement of Williamson applies whenever compensation is sought
for land that is taken . . . ."). Similarly, in Austin v. City &
County of Honolulu,
Here, no Commonwealth administrative process or cause of
action has been identified through which a claimant is expected to
seek compensation in the unusual circumstance of an alleged
unconstitutional taking arising from the government's appropriation
of funds. Cf. González-Álvarez,
Indeed, another line of cases suggests the
inapplicability of the Williamson County prerequisites to a taking
that involves the direct appropriation of funds. In Eastern
Enterprises v. Apfel,
As our discussion and the difference of opinion among our own panel members indicate, there is substantial tension among the various doctrines at issue in this context – ripeness, exhaustion and preclusion – and further guidance from the Supreme Court seems necessary to resolve the uncertainties.
fund such benefits. One such operator, Eastern, brought suit claiming that the Act, either on its face or as applied, violated substantive due process and constituted a taking of its property in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The Supreme Court considered whether the takings claim needed to be asserted first under the Tucker Act, which, as noted above, usually must be a preliminary step in a takings action against the federal government.
The plurality observed that Eastern was not seeking compensation from the government; it was requesting declaratory and injunctive relief against enforcement of the act by the Commissioner of Social Security. The Justices noted conflicting lower court precedent on whether a claim for equitable relief under the Takings Clause, even without a request for damages, must be brought first under the Tucker Act. Id. at 520-21. The plurality rejected such a prerequisite, stating that "Congress could not have contemplated that the Treasury would compensate coal operators for their liability under the Act, for '[e]very dollar paid pursuant to a statute would be presumed to generate a dollar of Tucker Act compensation.'" Id. at 521 (quoting In re Chateaugay Corp., 53 F.3d 478, 493 (2d Cir. 1995)). The Court plurality continued:
Accordingly, the "presumption of Tucker Act availability must be reversed where the challenged statute, rather than burdening real or physical property, requires a direct transfer of funds" mandated by the Government.
[In re Chateaugay,
Riley,104 F.3d 397 , 401 [(D.C. Cir. 1997)]. Instead, . . . the Declaratory Judgment Act "allows individuals threatened with a taking to seek a declaration of the constitutionality of the disputed governmental action before potentially uncompensable damages are sustained."
Id. (citation omitted). Five members of the Court went on to conclude that the Coal Act's application to Eastern was unconstitutional, but Justice Kennedy relied on due process, rather than takings, principles. See id. at 537, 539.
This case differs from Apfel because, among other distinctions, it does not involve the federal government and the Tucker Act. Nonetheless, the nature of the claim – that Puerto Rico's Secretary of the Treasury improperly withheld money belonging to the JUA so that it may be used for public purposes – strikes us as equivalent to the complaints about the "direct transfer of funds" at issue in Apfel and the decisions it cites. Application of the Williamson County prerequisites here similarly could only "'entail an utterly pointless set of activities.'" For that reason, and the others we have noted, we conclude that Williamson County's prudential factors do not prevent our review of the JUA's takings claim.
C. Standing
Flores Galarza challenges the JUA's statutory standing, arguing that the JUA, as a "state-created entity," lacks standing to "challenge actions taken by the state that created it [because] *34 it is [not] absolutely clear from the enabling statute that such access was expressly intended by the state legislature." The JUA contends that, while it was "created via an official act of the state," the JUA is not an "arm of the state [with] no constitutional rights to assert against the state which created it."
Flores Galarza's argument is precluded by our case law.
In Arroyo-Melecio, we stated that, while "[t]he JUA is under some
direction by the commonwealth," it is "private in nature" and is
therefore "not an agency of the commonwealth."
amendments under 42 U.S.C. [§] 1983."). The JUA is therefore a proper plaintiff in this case.
D. Res Judicata
In his supplemental brief, Flores Galarza asserts that
the JUA seeks "exactly the same remedy that it previously sought"
– and failed to receive – in the Commonwealth court, and argues
that the doctrine of res judicata bars the federal court from
reaching a different outcome on identical claims involving the same
parties. In response, the JUA emphasizes that both of the
Commonwealth court's rulings – the Partial Judgment issued in July
2003 and the Judgment issued in September 2003 – were "without
prejudice," and it argues that, under Puerto Rico law, a judgment
without prejudice is not an adjudication on the merits that would
trigger res judicata consequences. See Pueblo Int'l, Inc. v. Cruz,
We do not reach the substantive res judicata question,
however, because we conclude that it is outside the limited sphere
of this interlocutory appeal. Although we have not previously held
explicitly that res judicata, unlike standing, may not be reviewed
along with immunity issues, we intimated as much in Nieves-Márquez
*36
v. Puerto Rico, 353 F.3d 108, 123 (1st Cir. 2003), where we
considered the scope of an interlocutory appeal from the denial of
a motion to dismiss based on Eleventh Amendment immunity. We cited
there the Supreme Court's decision in Swint v. Chambers County
Comm'n,
In so ruling, however, we noted the Third Circuit's
decision in Bell Atlantic-Pennsylvania, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public
Utilities Commission,
IV.
A. Summary of Claims
Before turning to an analysis of the Eleventh Amendment immunity and qualified immunity claims, we pause to summarize the varied claims for relief made by the JUA. We do so because we must be clear about the precise nature of those claims in conducting the immunity analyses. As noted above, the JUA seeks three kinds of relief. First, the JUA seeks a declaratory judgment against Flores Galarza in his official capacity, declaring that he violated the JUA's constitutional rights by:
(1) withholding $173 million in insurance premiums for an extended period so that the funds could be used to ease the Commonwealth's cash flow problems, before transferring a large portion of those premiums to the JUA pursuant to the 2002 Settlement; and
(2) permanently appropriating: (a) $14.2 million in interest on lost or forgone investments as a result of Flores Galarza's taking of the insurance premiums; (b) $10 million in Overstated Reserve Funds that do not belong to third parties and therefore should have been deducted from the $73 million retained by Flores Galarza; and (c) $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds that the JUA was forced to pay to third parties from its own funds and therefore should have been deducted from the $73 million retained by Flores Galarza.
Flores Galarza helpfully summarizes the alleged permanent appropriations as follows:
Second, the JUA seeks injunctive relief from Flores Galarza in his official capacity, enjoining him from:
(1) withholding any more insurance premiums; and (2) enforcing the terms of the 2002 Amendment, that is, from requiring the JUA to transfer Reserve funds to the Secretary every two years, and from retaining interest income earned on the Reserve funds and any Overstated Reserve Funds (i.e., funds included in the Reserve that are not actually owed to third parties).
Third, the JUA seeks approximately $38 million in damages from Flores Galarza in his personal capacity, that is: (1) $14.2 million in lost interest as a result of Flores Galarza's taking of the insurance premiums; (2) $10 million in Overstated Reserve Funds; and (3) $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds. These items of damage mirror the items identified in the permanent appropriation portion of the demand for declaratory relief.
B. Standard of Review
The JUA claims that when the Reserve Account was retained, the [Secretary] took its property without just compensation because it withheld the [Overstated Reserve Funds], and did not allow the [Out-of-Pocket Funds] to be debited from the Reserve Account. The JUA also claims that it is entitled to just compensation for the period of time during which the [Secretary] withheld the transfers of the premiums without transmitting these to the JUA.
Where a district court's denial of Eleventh Amendment
immunity and qualified immunity turns upon purely legal questions,
our review is de novo. See Rodríguez-Marín v. Rivera-González, 438
F.3d 72, 84 (1st Cir. 2006) (reviewing de novo denial of qualified
immunity); Redondo Constr. Corp. v. P.R. Highway & Transp. Auth.,
357 F.3d 124, 126 (1st Cir. 2004) (reviewing de novo denial of
Eleventh Amendment immunity). "The standard for evaluating a Rule
12(c) motion for judgment on the pleadings is essentially the same
as that for deciding a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. '[T]he trial court
must accept all of the nonmovant's well-pleaded factual averments
as true, and draw all reasonable inferences in his favor.'" Pasdon
v. City of Peabody, 417 F.3d 225, 226 (1st Cir. 2005) (quoting
Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro, 843 F.2d 631, 635 (1st Cir. 1998)).
"Judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c) may not be entered
unless it appears beyond a doubt that the nonmoving party can prove
no set of facts in support of her claim which would entitle her to
relief." Feliciano v. Rhode Island,
C. Eleventh Amendment Immunity
Flores Galarza argues that the Eleventh Amendment bars
the JUA's suit against him in his official capacity. He
The Eleventh Amendment states that "[t]he Judicial power of the
United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law
or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States
by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any
*41
emphasizes that the JUA seeks damages of $10 million in Overstated
Reserve Funds, $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds, and $14.2
million in lost interest during the period in which the insurance
premiums were retained, all of which "[are] clearly retrospective
in nature." Flores Galarza misapprehends the JUA's argument.
While the complaint is not a model of clarity on this point, the
JUA explained in its argument to us and to the district court that
Foreign State." U.S. Const. amend. XI. "[N]otwithstanding its
plain language," the Eleventh Amendment "prohibit[s federal courts]
from hearing most suits brought against a state by citizens of that
or any other state." Metcalf & Eddy, Inc. v. P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer
Auth.,
The complaint states that the "JUA respectfully requests that this Honorable Court order the Secretary of the Treasury to pay the JUA the amount of $38,321,556.83 in order to return to JUA its private property and to compensate JUA for the opportunity cost it has suffered due to the Secretary of the Treasury's violations of JUA's constitutional rights." However, the complaint does not state whether the JUA's request is directed at Flores Galarza in his official capacity, his personal capacity, or both. The JUA's request that Flores Galarza "return [] its private property," on the one hand, and "compensate" the JUA, on the other, contributes to this confusion, suggesting that the JUA seeks the return of certain funds in the Commonwealth Treasury from Flores Galarza in his official capacity, and seeks damages from Flores Galarza in his personal capacity. As the JUA indicated in its brief to the district court, and as it made clear at oral argument before us, the JUA seeks damages for the taking of the funds at issue from Flores Galarza in his personal capacity – the JUA is "not asking to have any money returned to it" by the Commonwealth. Given the complaint's lack of precision, we understand Flores Galarza's misapprehension of the nature of the JUA's claims.
it is not seeking damages from Flores Galarza in his official capacity.
The JUA states that, while it "seeks damages against Mr. Flores-Galarza in his personal capacity," it seeks only prospective injunctive relief from Flores Galarza in his official capacity – "enjoin[ing him] from continuing to engage in the unconstitutional conduct." (Emphasis added.) At oral argument before us, the JUA stated that it merely seeks to compel the transfer of compulsory liability insurance premiums in the future – a remedy that it argues "is clearly a prospective one." The JUA further argues that "[t]he fact that funds would have to be transferred [in the future] as a result of the injunction requested does not create an Eleventh Amendment bar to the issuance of the injunction" because these funds do not constitute damages, but rather "belong to the JUA and are held by [the Secretary] in a fiduciary capacity."
In many instances, a suit against a state official is a
suit against the state, thereby triggering Eleventh Amendment
immunity. See Muirhead v. Mecham,
In Ex parte Young, the Supreme Court created an exception
to Eleventh Amendment immunity "for suits challenging the
constitutionality of a state official's action, on the theory that
since the state cannot authorize such an unconstitutional action,
the officer is 'stripped of his official or representative
character and . . . subjected in his person to the consequences of
his individual conduct.'" Parents for Quality Educ. With
Integration, Inc. v. Indiana,
(quoting Pennhurst,
D. Official- Versus Personal-Capacity Suits
In addition to finding that "[the JUA's] request for injunctive and declaratory relief is prospective," the district court found that "the retention of money allegedly unconstitutionally attached is equitable and subject to injunctive relief exempt from the Eleventh Amendment bar." To the extent that this latter statement may be understood as affording the JUA the right to sue Flores Galarza in his official capacity for damages, we reject this proposition. As discussed above, the JUA does not make this argument and, therefore, neither we nor the district court need reach it. Because we otherwise arrive at the same result as the district court on Eleventh Amendment immunity, any potential error on the part of the district court in its analysis was harmless.
The JUA argues that Flores Galarza, in his personal capacity, temporarily withheld approximately $173 million in compulsory liability insurance premiums for an "unreasonable period[] of time," and, in so doing, appropriated $14.2 million in interest generated by those premiums. The JUA also argues that Flores Galarza personally appropriated $10 million in Overstated Reserve Funds and $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds.
However, the JUA does not seek to hold Flores Galarza personally liable for the full $173 million in withheld insurance premiums, most of which was subsequently paid to the JUA pursuant to the 2002 Settlement, nor does the JUA seek to hold Flores Galarza personally liable for the full $73 million in Reserve funds retained by Flores Galarza after the 2002 Settlement. Instead, the JUA seeks to hold Flores Galarza personally liable for interest lost on the $173 million plus two portions of the $73 million Reserve – i.e., the Overstated Reserve Funds and Out-of-Pocket Reserve Funds. The total amount sought by the JUA is approximately $38 million, that is, roughly $14.2 million in lost interest, $10 million in Overstated Reserve Funds, and $13.6 million in Out-of- Pocket Funds. Flores Galarza contends that he is not liable in his personal capacity based on qualified immunity.
Before analyzing whether Flores Galarza is entitled to
qualified immunity, we pause to note the unusual nature of this
personal-capacity suit. We are troubled by the notion that the
*46
personal-capacity claim against Flores Galarza, by which the JUA
seeks enormous personal damages from him, is really a subterfuge
for an official-capacity suit that seeks payment from the
Commonwealth Treasury. Certainly the line between personal assets
and the Commonwealth fisc seems indistinct. The JUA has sued the
Secretary of the Treasury; the JUA claims that the Secretary
temporarily withheld and permanently appropriated the JUA's funds
for the benefit of the Commonwealth; and some of the damages sought
by the JUA correspond to funds accumulated in the general fund
pursuant to the 2002 Amendment. "'[W]hen the action is in essence
one for the recovery of money from the state, the state is the
real, substantial party in interest and is entitled to invoke its
sovereign immunity from suit. . . .'" Metcalf,
In considering that possibility, we have looked closely
at Hafer v. Melo,
However, the principles set forth in Hafer make the
factual distinctions between this case and Hafer seemingly
irrelevant. There, the Court said that "the phrase 'acting in
their official capacities' is best understood as a reference to the
capacity in which the state officer is sued, not the capacity in
which the officer inflicts the alleged injury." Id. at 26. Even
earlier, the Supreme Court had suggested that in determining
whether a suit involves a personal- or official-capacity claim, we
should be guided by the complaint or, if not clearly specified in
the complaint, by the "[t]he course of proceedings." Kentucky v.
Graham,
Here, the complaint, in combination with the course of
proceedings, see supra note 25, establishes that Flores Galarza is
being sued for damages in his personal capacity. If the JUA wishes
to seek a personal judgment against Flores Galarza in a ruinous and
probably uncollectible amount for actions that he took as the
*48
Commonwealth Treasurer to serve the interests of the Commonwealth,
they are entitled to do that. See generally Chemerinsky, supra,
§ 7.5.2, at 430 ("[T]he fact that a government officer is acting in
the scope of official duties is not enough to bar a suit as being
in 'official capacity'."). If such a judgment might induce the
Commonwealth to indemnify Flores Galarza from the Commonwealth
Treasury to spare him from ruin, that likelihood is irrelevant to
the personal-capacity determination. See Berman Enters., Inc. v.
Jorling,
officer's official duties. In such a suit, the officer could claim absolute or qualified immunity as a defense." Id. at 429. We turn, therefore, to Flores Galarza's qualified immunity defense.
V.
Our starting point is the principle that "government
officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded
from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not
violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of
which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
(1) whether the claimant has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right; (2) whether the right was clearly established at the time of the alleged action or inaction; and (3) if both of these questions are answered in the affirmative, whether an objectively reasonable official would have believed that the action taken violated that clearly established constitutional right.
Wilson v. City of Boston,
Here we ask whether the facts, "[t]aken in the light most
favorable to the party asserting the injury . . . show the
officer's conduct violated a constitutional right[.]" Saucier v.
Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201 (2001). As we have noted, "[t]he first
prong inquiry at this 12(b)(6) stage is unlikely to be very
specific, given that federal civil practice is based on notice
*50
pleading, where great specificity is not required, and that there
is no heightened pleading requirement for civil rights cases."
Riverdale Mills Corp. v. Pimpare,
1. Capacity to Allege Constitutional Deprivation Flores Galarza's argument that the JUA, as a state- created entity, "simply does not enjoy constitutional rights" and thus is "wholly incapable" of setting forth a violation of constitutionally protected property rights, is his standing challenge recast in qualified immunity terms. We have already *51 rejected this standing argument. The JUA has the capacity to allege an unconstitutional taking of its property.
2. Elements of a Takings Violation
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that
"private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just
compensation." U.S. Const. amend. V. Takings claims involve a
two-step inquiry. "To make a cognizable claim of a taking in
violation of the Fifth Amendment, the plaintiffs must first show
that they possess a recognized property interest which may be
protected by the Fifth Amendment. The plaintiffs must point to
credible sources for their claimed property interest . . . 'such as
state law-rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and
that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.'" Wash.
Legal Found. v. Mass. Bar Found.,
Assuming that the plaintiff can establish a
constitutionally protected property interest, the plaintiff must
next show that the challenged action "cause[d] an illegal taking of
th[at] interest[]." Wash. Legal Found., 993 F.2d at 974. The
Supreme Court has recognized two types of takings: physical
*52
takings and regulatory takings. See Brown v. Legal Found. of
Wash.,
"A physical taking occurs either when there is a
condemnation or a physical appropriation of property." Philip
Morris, Inc. v. Reilly,
For purposes of satisfying the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis, the JUA need not prove the taking of a constitutionally protected property interest; it need only allege such a taking. See Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201 (stating that the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis is satisfied where a constitutional right "would have been violated were the allegations established"); Mihos v. Swift, 358 F.3d 91, 98 (1st Cir. 2004) ("For a plaintiff to overcome a qualified immunity defense, he must show that his allegations, if true, establish a constitutional violation . . . ."). In accordance with our two- step approach to takings claims, the JUA must first allege a constitutionally protected property right to the funds in dispute. The JUA argues that, pursuant to Law 253 and the 2002 Amendment, "[t]he premiums collected and withheld by [Flores Galarza]," the "interest derived from the withheld premiums," and the Overstated Reserve Funds and Out-of-Pocket Funds – "are the private property of the [JUA]." Second, the JUA must allege a taking of that property. The JUA argues that Flores Galarza's appropriation of the funds in dispute is equivalent to a "permanent physical occupation and a per se taking for which just compensation must be paid."
Flores Galarza, on the other hand, argues that the JUA's takings claim fails both prongs of the takings analysis. According to Flores Galarza, "the JUA cannot establish that it has a *54 recognizable property interest" in any of the funds in dispute or that Flores Galarza's appropriation of these funds constitutes a taking.
Taking all facts in the light most favorable to the party
asserting the injury, as we must at this threshold stage of the
qualified immunity analysis, Saucier,
the JUA alleges the taking of a constitutionally protected property interest in most, but not all, of the funds in dispute under Law 253 and the 2002 Amendment.
3. The Insurance Premiums
a. The Earned Premiums The JUA argues that "the premiums collected and withheld by the [Secretary] are the private property of the [JUA]" under the plain language of Law 253. According to the JUA, although the premiums pass through Flores Galarza's hands before reaching the JUA, the premiums are never funds of the Commonwealth. To the contrary, the JUA argues, given that the JUA's responsibility for the compulsory insurance comes into effect at the time the premiums are paid to the Secretary of the Treasury, "the premium has to belong to the [JUA] at that time." Flores Galarza, the JUA argues, is thus merely a fiduciary who holds the premiums for the benefit of the JUA, as demonstrated by the 2002 Amendment's reference to the Secretary of the Treasury's "collection service performed in favor of the [JUA]." P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 8055(c). Flores *55 Galarza, on the other hand, contends that Law 253 "does not entitle JUA to ownership of the collected premiums until they are transferred to it by [Flores Galarza]." Therefore, Flores Galarza argues, because Law 253 does not state "when" the Secretary must transfer the insurance premiums to the JUA, his retention of the $173 million in premiums was not a withholding of private property – it was merely a "temporary retention or delay" in the transfer of funds which did not yet belong to the JUA.
In our view, Law 253 supports the JUA's claim of a
property right to that portion of the insurance premiums not owed
to privately insured motorists or their insurers ("Earned
Premiums" ). Law 253 created the JUA for "[t]he main purpose of
. . . provid[ing] the compulsory liability insurance to the
applicants for said insurance that have been rejected by private
insurers." Id. § 8055(b). As an insurer, the JUA is entitled to
the Earned Premiums. Law 253 gives the JUA the power to hold
property, and provides that the JUA "shall receive" premiums from
the Secretary and that the Secretary "shall transfer" these
premiums to the JUA. While the Secretary collects the insurance
premiums and holds them for some unspecified amount of time before
By "Earned Premiums," we mean the compulsory liability insurance
premiums paid by vehicle owners who are obtaining the required
coverage through the JUA rather than from a private insurer. We do
not use this term in its strict definitional sense, that is, "[t]he
portion of an insurance premium applicable to the coverage period
that has already expired." Black's Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004).
*56
relinquishing them to the JUA, the Secretary is not an insurer – he
is merely the custodian of these funds. As a custodian, the
Secretary has no entitlement to the premiums, and his woefully
undeveloped argument that the premiums do not vest in the JUA until
the Secretary transfers them does not convince us otherwise. Cf.
Webb's Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith, 449 U.S. 155, 162
(1980) ("[T]he State's having mandated the accrual of interest does
not mean the State or its designate is entitled to assume ownership
of the interest."). The JUA has successfully alleged an
entitlement to the Earned Premiums under Law 253, and therefore a
property interest in those funds. See id. at 161 (recognizing
interest earned on private funds as property entitled to protection
under Fifth Amendment); see also Brown,
We thus proceed to the second step of the takings
analysis (i.e., whether the property was taken). The JUA argues
that Flores Galarza's withholding of the Earned Premiums
constituted a "permanent physical occupation and a per se taking
for which just compensation must be paid." Specifically, the JUA
contends that Flores Galarza physically took, albeit temporarily,
$173 million of its insurance premiums, before transferring a large
portion of those premiums to the JUA pursuant to the 2002
Settlement. The JUA's assertion of a property right in the Earned
Premiums, together with its allegation of a physical appropriation
*57
of those funds, is sufficient to allege the taking of a
constitutionally protected property interest in those premiums
under the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis. See
Webb's,
b. Reserve Fund: the Duplicate Premiums While the JUA's alleged property right to the Earned Premiums is supported by Law 253, the same cannot be said for the JUA's alleged property right to the duplicate premiums paid by those already covered by privately obtained insurance policies ("Duplicate Premiums"). These premiums, Flores Galarza argues, "constitute a double payment for the same insurance," and, therefore, do not belong to the JUA, but rather belong to privately insured motorists or their insurers who are entitled to reimbursement. We agree.
Based on the law in effect at the time the premiums were withheld, the JUA was obliged to return the Duplicate Premiums to those requesting reimbursement. If no claim was made to these premiums after seven years, that money would lapse to the general fund of the Commonwealth Treasury. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, §§ 2603, 2606-2607. Thus, even if no one claimed the Duplicate Premiums within the requisite seven years, these funds became the property of the Commonwealth – not the JUA. Just as the Secretary is a custodian of the Earned Premiums for the benefit of the JUA, *58 the JUA is a custodian of the Duplicate Premiums for the benefit of either those entitled to reimbursement or, if the premiums go unclaimed, the Commonwealth.
The 2002 Amendment, which requires the JUA to transfer the Duplicate Premiums to the Secretary after just two years, explicitly recognizes the JUA's lack of a property right to the Duplicate Premiums. The "Statement of Motives" section of the 2002 Amendment states that
during the existence of the Association, certain funds have been accumulated that do not belong to it . . . [which] results from the fact that a great number of [privately insured] consumers . . . pay the corresponding [compulsory liability insurance] premium . . .
when they obtain the motor vehicle license for the first time or when they renew it, but they do not request the Association to reimburse the money as is their right.
(Emphasis added.)
Although claiming a right to all of the insurance premiums, the JUA concedes that a portion of the premiums collected by the Secretary (i.e., the Duplicate Premiums placed in the Reserve) "may belong to third parties: either motor vehicle owners with private insurance or private insurers who reimbursed their insureds." The JUA consequently admits that a large portion of the $73 million Reserve is the property of others. Given the lack of support for the JUA's claimed property right to the Duplicate Premiums, the JUA fails to allege a taking of this portion of the premiums under the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis.
c. Reserve Fund: the Overstated Funds Our determination that the JUA has not alleged a property interest in the Duplicate Premiums does not extend to the remainder of the Reserve Fund – the "Overstated Reserve Funds" – which consists of the cushion set aside by the JUA to ensure that the Reserve was large enough to meet all of the requests for reimbursement by insurers who purchased private insurance. As noted earlier, the $73 million Reserve held back by the Commonwealth allegedly contained approximately $10 million in excess funds – money that, as it turned out, was not needed for reimbursement because fewer individuals than estimated had purchased their own policies, which meant, in turn, that less of the Reserve than anticipated constituted Duplicate Premiums.
According to the JUA, "since the [Overstated Reserve Funds] came from the [JUA] and do not, in fact, belong to others, they should have been accounted for as income for the [JUA]." Flores Galarza contends that since these funds are merely portions of the Reserve, which, in turn, "is merely an accounting tool" for allocating the Duplicate Premiums, "the JUA has no proprietary interest[] in the[se] moneys."
The "Statement of Motives" section of the 2002 Amendment, which was in place prior to Flores Galarza's appropriation of the Overstated Reserve Funds in November 2002, explicitly provides that the $73 million Reserve consists of funds "that do not belong to it *60 [the JUA]" as the result of the double payment of insurance premiums by some drivers. The 2002 Amendment therefore requires the JUA to immediately transfer to the Secretary "the funds known in its annual statement as 'Funds Retained by the Insurer Belonging to Others'" – that is, the $73 million Reserve – and to continue doing so every two years. There is, however, no carve-out for the "cushion" portion of the Reserve that consists of Overstated Funds. In fact, the 2002 Amendment provides that the Reserve funds transferred to the Secretary necessarily include any "reserve excess," and that this reserve excess "may be used as resources in the General Fund." P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 8055(l).
The JUA argues, in essence, that to the extent the Amendment directs the transfer of the Overstated Reserve Funds to the Commonwealth, the provision effects a taking of the JUA's property. Under Law 253, the JUA is obliged to insure drivers who might otherwise be uninsurable; the premiums for that insurance are initially collected by the Secretary. The JUA argues that all of those collected funds, other than the Duplicate Premiums, constitute the "Earned Premiums" and thus belong to it. Indeed, the Insurance Commissioner's adjustment of the Reserve percentage in 2001 to more accurately reflect the percentage of traditionally insured vehicle owners indicates the Commonwealth's recognition that the JUA is entitled to any funds above the amount representing Duplicate Premiums. Notably, the Amendment identifies the funds to *61 be transferred to the Commonwealth every two years as funds "Belonging to Others." Presumably, any such funds that do not belong to others belong to the JUA. We therefore conclude that the JUA has alleged the taking of a constitutionally protected property interest in the Overstated Reserve Funds.
4. The Out-of-Pocket Funds
When Flores Galarza stopped transferring insurance premiums to the JUA in 2000 in order to meet the cash-flow needs of the Commonwealth, the JUA had to reimburse privately insured drivers and their insurers out of its own pocket. While the JUA presumably recouped some of its costs pursuant to the 2002 Settlement, the JUA alleges that there was still $13.6 million outstanding – an amount which the JUA argues should have been set off against the $73 million retained by Flores Galarza. The JUA alleges that the $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds "used to reimburse insurance premiums from January to September 2002 [is] the private property of the [JUA]."
The parties do not dispute that the Out-of-Pocket funds used by the JUA to reimburse third parties belonged to the JUA. Accordingly, the JUA alleges a property right in the Out-of-Pocket Funds. Turning to the second step of the takings analysis, the JUA alleges that Flores Galarza physically appropriated $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds from the JUA by retaining the full $73 million in Reserve funds. At this stage of the qualified immunity *62 analysis, the JUA's assertion of a property right to the Out-of- Pocket Funds, together with its allegation of a physical invasion of those funds, is sufficient to allege the taking of a constitutionally protected property interest in those funds.
5. The Interest
Our determination that the JUA alleges a property right
to the Earned Premiums, the Overstated Reserve Funds and the Out-
of-Pocket Funds compels a similar conclusion with respect to the
interest lost as a result of the withholding of those monies. In
Phillips, the Supreme Court held that interest income generated by
client funds in IOLTA accounts was the private property of the
client under the common law rule that "interest follows principal."
Turning to the second step of the takings analysis with
respect to interest, the JUA alleges that by temporarily
withholding the Earned Premiums, Flores Galarza physically took
$14.2 million in interest generated by them. See Parella, 173 F.3d
at 59 n.10 (stating that in order to demonstrate a taking of
interest, "plaintiffs have the burden of proving that they had a
constitutional right both to the principal (i.e., withheld
benefits) and to the interest on that principal"). The JUA's
assertion of a property right in the interest generated by the
Earned Premiums, together with its allegation of a physical taking
of that interest, is sufficient to allege the unconstitutional
taking of that interest under the first prong of the qualified
immunity analysis. See Brown,
It follows, of course, that the JUA does not possess a property
right to the interest lost as a result of the withholding of the
Duplicate Premiums, which we have held do not belong to the JUA.
See Parella v. Ret. Bd. of R.I. Employees' Ret. Sys.,
amount of the $173 million in Earned Premiums that was withheld covers at least a portion of the interest generated by the Overstated Reserve Funds and the Out-of-Pocket Funds, which were part of that $173 million total. It appears that the $14.2 million in claimed interest also includes the interest on the Overstated Reserve and Out-of-Pocket Funds that were retained after the
6. Summary of Analysis of the First Prong of the Qualified Immunity Doctrine
The JUA has successfully alleged that Flores Galarza committed a constitutional violation by taking its Earned Premiums, Overstated Reserve Funds, Out-of-Pocket Funds, and the interest generated thereon. The JUA has failed to allege a taking of the Duplicate Premiums or the interest generated thereon. Therefore, as we turn to the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis (i.e., whether the impermissibility of the taking was clearly established at the time of the violation), we exclude from our analysis the Duplicate Premiums and the related interest. B. Second Prong: Constitutional Right was "Clearly Established" at Time of Violation
"The second question [of the qualified immunity analysis]
deals with fair warning; it asks whether the law was clearly
established at the time of the constitutional violation." Savard
v. Rhode Island,
Suboh v. Dist. Attorney's Office of Suffolk,
Significantly, "[t]his inquiry 'must be undertaken in
light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general
proposition.'" Wilson,
On the other hand, "[t]his exploration is not limited to
cases directly on point . . . . '[O]fficials can still be on
notice that their conduct violates established law even in novel
factual circumstances' . . . ." Savard,
the relevant legal rights and obligations must be
particularized enough that a reasonable official can be
expected to extrapolate from them and conclude that a
certain course of conduct will violate the law.
We note that, given the required specificity, "the bases for
the[] determinations [under the second and third prongs of the
qualified immunity analysis] often overlap." Savard,
Consequently, if the operative legal principles are clearly established only at a level of generality so high that officials cannot fairly anticipate the legal consequences of specific actions, then the requisite notice is lacking. The bottom line is that the qualified immunity defense prevails unless the unlawfulness of the challenged conduct is "apparent."
Savard, 338 F.3d at 28 (citation omitted) (quoting Anderson v.
Creighton,
The JUA argues that "[t]he contours of the Takings Clause . . . are very straightforward in the case where the government takes property from an individual for public use," as alleged here. Relying upon cases which hold that uncompensated physical appropriations of private property – including interest – are unconstitutional under the Fifth Amendment, the JUA contends that its "right to be justly compensated for the taking of its property" was "clearly established" at the time of the challenged conduct.
Not surprisingly, Flores Galarza disagrees. While "it [i]s clearly established that the taking of a property interest without just compensation [i]s unconstitutional," he argues that this proposition is too broad to satisfy the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis. "The property rights claimed by the JUA," Flores Galarza contends, "cannot be easily read into the law enabling the JUA and the Compulsory Liability Insurance," and, therefore, are not clearly established. We now test that proposition.
1. The Earned Premiums and Interest We already have concluded that the JUA, under Law 253, alleges a property interest in the Earned Premiums and the interest generated by those premiums. Because Law 253 was on the books at the time Flores Galarza withheld the Earned Premiums and interest, we conclude that the JUA's alleged property interest in those funds was clearly established. Flores Galarza essentially acknowledged as much (at least with respect to the Earned Premiums) by returning the Earned Premiums to the JUA pursuant to the 2002 Settlement.
The law was not so clear, however, that Flores Galarza's alleged withholding of the Earned Premiums and interest was a taking. Law 253 does not establish when the Secretary must transfer the premiums to the JUA. As noted by Flores Galarza,
[t]he compulsory insurance law is completely devoid of a timetable that controls the transfer of the premiums collected by the Secretary of the Treasury to the JUA. The statute simply states that the transfers must be made. However, when these transfers must be made is an entirely different question.
The JUA has never pointed to any substantive The JUA does not explicitly allege a separate property right in the interest on the Overstated Reserve and Out-of-Pocket Funds, presumably because such an allegation is largely subsumed within its interest allegation concerning the Earned Premiums. See supra note 32. We therefore address interest in this section and the next only in the context of the Earned Premiums. To the extent interest on the Overstated Reserve and Out-of-Pocket Funds is not covered by that discussion – i.e., for interest accruing on those funds after the Settlement amount was transferred to the JUA – our discussion of the principal amounts suffices to dispose of the interest.
source that establishes its entitlement to a prompt transfer of the premiums.
(Citation omitted.) Under the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis, it is not enough for the JUA to argue that Flores Galarza physically took the Earned Premiums to which the JUA was entitled under Law 253. Here, the JUA must demonstrate that Law 253 entitled the JUA to the Earned Premiums within a specified amount of time, such that the unlawfulness of Flores Galarza's temporary withholding of the premiums was "apparent." This it cannot do. Indeed, even if we imported into Law 253 a requirement that the Secretary transfer the premiums to the JUA within a reasonable period of time, that reasonableness requirement would be too indefinite to allow us to conclude that the alleged taking was clearly established. The unlawfulness of Flores Galarza's temporary withholding of the Earned Premiums, therefore, was not "apparent" under the statute. The right to interest inescapably is tied to the JUA's entitlement to the premiums and therefore also was not clearly established.
2. The Overstated Reserve Funds
The lack of clarity is even more apparent with respect to the Overstated Reserve Funds, which was the portion of the Reserve in excess of the amount necessary to reimburse insureds or insurers who already had paid for coverage. Certainly after enactment of the 2002 Amendment to the compulsory insurance law, which specifically required the JUA to transfer to the Secretary all *69 funds held in the Reserve as of December 31, 2001, the law did not clearly establish that the JUA had a property right in the $10 million of Overstated Reserve Funds or, indeed, that withholding any of the designated Reserve of $73 million was an unconstitutional taking. Whether, and how much, of that $10 million is in fact "excess" remains a matter of debate.
Although the Secretary began withholding the Overstated Reserve Funds in 2000, along with the Earned and Duplicate Premiums, the alleged $10 million excess was undifferentiated from the balance of the Earned Premiums. As noted earlier, the JUA essentially claims that the $10 million should be considered Earned Premiums in which it holds a property right, and as such that money is encompassed within our prior discussion. Therefore, the law was not clearly established either before or after the 2002 Amendment that the Secretary's retention of the Overstated Reserve Funds was an unconstitutional taking.
3. The Out-of-Pocket Funds
The JUA argues that it has a clearly established right to
the $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds, which Flores Galarza
allegedly should have deducted from the $73 million Reserve he took
on behalf of the Commonwealth. Since it is undisputed that the
Out-of-Pocket funds belong to the JUA, the JUA's alleged property
right in the Out-of-Pocket Funds is clearly established. It also
was clearly established that the physical taking of property,
*70
without compensation, violated the Constitution. See Tahoe-Sierra,
4. Summary of Analysis of the Second Prong of the Qualified Immunity Doctrine
The JUA has successfully alleged that Flores Galarza's taking of the Out-of-Pocket Funds violated clearly established constitutional law. The JUA has failed to allege a clearly established violation of law with respect to the Earned Premiums, the interest generated by those premiums, or the Overstated Reserve Funds. Therefore, as we turn to the third prong of the qualified immunity analysis (whether a reasonable officer would have believed that the alleged conduct violated clearly established law), we focus only on the alleged taking of the Out-of-Pocket Funds. C. Third Prong: Reasonable Official Would Believe that Action Violated Clearly Established Right
While we note that the law was "clearly established," we take no
position on whether Flores Galarza's alleged appropriation of the
Out-of-Pocket Funds was, in fact, a taking without compensation.
"The inquiry into qualified immunity is separate and distinct from
the inquiry into the merits." Camilo-Robles v. Hoyos,
"The final prong of the qualified immunity analysis,
often the most difficult one for the plaintiff to prevail upon, is
'whether an objectively reasonable official would have believed
that the action taken violated that clearly established
constitutional right.'" Wilson, 421 F.3d at 57-58 (quoting
Starlight Sugar, Inc. v. Soto,
The JUA argues that "[t]he fact that the [JUA's] property was taken without any compensation whatsoever – and actually, to a very large cost to the [JUA] – would have alerted any reasonable official that he was violating [the JUA's] rights under the Takings Clause." We disagree.
After the Secretary discontinued the transfer of premiums in 2000, the JUA was forced to pay out a total of $13.6 million of its own funds to third parties seeking reimbursement. The 2002 Amendment was subsequently enacted, which required the JUA to pay *72 to the Secretary $73 million in Reserve funds. One month later, pursuant to the 2002 Settlement, Flores Galarza made a "massive transfer of all the funds [he] had retained since [he] stopped making the transfers," but he held back the $73 million in Reserve funds that the JUA was required to pay the Secretary under the 2002 Amendment. As Flores Galarza argues, a reasonable officer in these circumstances would have believed that he "had a law mandate, stemming from the [2002 Amendment], to retain for use by the Department of Treasury the Reserve Fund recognized by JUA as of December 31, 2001. Any officer in his shoes would have acted as he did in immediately retaining the full Reserve Fund amount without any compensation" to the JUA. Nothing in the 2002 Amendment suggests that funds owed to the JUA had to be deducted from the $73 million Reserve, and that the failure to do so would constitute a taking. As Flores Galarza argues, "money [is] fungible in nature." Thus, a reasonable officer could have believed that the 2002 Amendment required "the JUA [] to replenish the Reserve Fund" and then debit the Out-of-Pocket Funds "from this 'new' Reserve Fund . . . and not from the [$73 million] Reserve allocation recognized as of December 31, 2001." In that way, the JUA would be made whole with respect to the Out-of-Pocket Funds. Because a reasonable officer would not have believed that retaining $13.6 million in Out-of-Pocket Funds violated the JUA's clearly established rights, *73 we conclude that Flores Galarza is entitled to qualified immunity on this claim.
VI.
We summarize the essential points of our analysis. The JUA has standing to sue Flores Galarza under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and the Supreme Court's prudential ripeness requirements for takings claims pose no barrier to our consideration of the case. We may not, however, address res judicata issues in this interlocutory appeal. Flores Galarza is amenable to suit in his official capacity under the Eleventh Amendment because the JUA seeks prospective declaratory and injunctive relief against him in that capacity, namely: a declaration that his taking of insurance premiums, interest, and other funds to alleviate the cash-flow problems of the Commonwealth violates the Constitution; and an injunction enjoining him from withholding insurance premiums and from enforcing the terms of the 2002 Amendment to the extent they amount to an unconstitutional taking. Notwithstanding the indistinct line between official- and personal-capacity suits against government officials, we conclude that the JUA seeks to hold Flores Galarza liable in his personal capacity for damages. We conclude, however, that he is immune from such liability. Specifically, because the law was not clearly established that Flores Galarza effected an unconstitutional taking of the withheld insurance premiums, the interest generated by those premiums, or *74 the Overstated Reserve Funds, he is entitled to qualified immunity on these claims. Additionally, because a reasonable officer would not have believed that the failure to reimburse the JUA for the Out-of-Pocket Funds violated the JUA's rights, qualified immunity forecloses a damages remedy against him on that claim as well.
In conclusion, we affirm the district court's decision that the JUA has standing to sue Flores Galarza, and that Flores Galarza is amenable to suit in his official capacity under the Eleventh Amendment. We reverse the district court's decision that Flores Galarza is not entitled to qualified immunity from suit in his personal capacity. Each party shall bear its own costs of appeal.
So ordered.
- Concurring Opinion Follows -
HOWARD, Circuit Judge
,
concurring in the judgment.
One
part of this appeal concerns a takings claim under the Fifth and
Fourteenth Amendments of the federal Constitution against Juan
Flores Galarza, a state official acting in his individual capacity,
for withholding millions of dollars from the JUA, a state-created
pool of insurers. The lead opinion concludes that a viable takings
claim may exist against state officials acting in their individual
capacities, but that Flores Galarza is entitled to qualified
immunity because his withholding funds was reasonable in light of
the unique circumstances present. Ante at 67-69. I am not
entirely convinced that federal takings claims may ever properly
lie against state officials acting in their individual capacities.
Cf. Monell v. N.Y City Dep't of Social Servs.,
In Williamson County, the Supreme Court held that a
federal takings claim is not ripe until the claimant has met two
preconditions. See
My disagreement with the lead opinion's treatment of the ripeness issue concerns its application of the litigation *77 requirement. According to the lead opinion, claimants must avail themselves only of state process to recover compensation if the state has adopted a process "particularly aimed at providing compensation when government action effects a taking" and that "such [process does] not include litigation of a state takings claim [under the state constitution] or any general remedial cause of action under state law." Ante at 26 & 28. Based on this
reasoning, the JUA's claim against Flores Galarza is deemed ripe because Puerto Rico does not offer a specific administrative process or cause of action to seek "compensation in the unusual circumstance of an alleged unconstitutional taking arising from the government's appropriation of funds." Id. at 29.
There is no support in Supreme Court precedent for the
conclusion that claimants are relieved of the litigation
requirement unless the state has adopted specific processes
(presumably by way of statute) through which such compensation may
be recovered. Indeed, Williamson County suggests just the
opposite. The Williamson County Court derived the litigation rule
from procedural due process cases holding that a plaintiff does not
have a due process claim "unless or until the state fails to
provide an adequate remedy for the property loss." Id. at 195
(citing Hudson v. Palmer,
*78 due process context, the Court has held that common-law remedies available in state-court actions are adequate. Hudson, 468 U.S. 534-35. Yet the causes of action recognized as adequate in Hudson are exactly the sort of "general remedial causes of action under state law" that the lead opinion deems insufficient here. Ante at 26.
Several other federal courts have rejected my colleagues'
limitation on the litigation requirement. The Second Circuit has
held that a federal takings claim was not ripe under Williamson
County because the claimant had not brought a state-court action
seeking recovery under the takings clause of the Connecticut
Constitution. Villager Pond, Inc. v. Town of Darien,
379-80 (2d Cir. 1995); see also Southview Assocs. v. Bongartz, 980
F.2d 84, 100 (2d Cir. 1992) (concluding that takings case was not
ripe because plaintiff did not bring claim under Vermont
Constitution's takings clause seeking compensation). Similarly,
the Ninth Circuit ordered dismissal of a federal takings claim as
not ripe where the claimant did not bring an action for recovery
under the Hawaii Constitution's takings clause. Austin v. City &
County of Honolulu,
I understand that the lead opinion seeks to limit the litigation
requirement because of its concern that preclusion principles will
prevent takings claims from being litigated in federal court, if
claimants must pursue state remedies in state court. See ante at
28. This was the view of four Justices of the Supreme Court in San
Remo Hotel v. City & County of San Francisco,
The lead opinion also supports its limiting construction of
the litigation requirement by suggesting that requiring claimants
to pursue state constitutional takings claims or other general
causes of action would require claimants to exhaust state remedies,
which is inconsistent with Supreme Court caselaw interpreting 42
U.S.C. § 1983. E.g., Pasty v. Fla. Bd. of Regents,
Villager Pond,
Puerto Rico's Constitution includes a takings provision,
See P.R. Const. Art. II, § 9, and Flores Galarza suggests that the
JUA could seek compensation through a mandamus action. It is not
entirely clear that the JUA could obtain the compensation that it
seeks through either an action under the Commonwealth's
Constitution or some other cause of action. But it has not been
shown that such relief is unavailable either. In these
circumstances, the JUA was required to pursue its state-law
remedies before turning to the federal Constitution for relief.
E.g., Southview Assocs.,
I agree that, to the extent the JUA is pursuing facial challenges
to Puerto Rico statutes, the litigation requirement is not
implicated. San Remo,
