Shortly before the date of her disciplinary hearing at the Cook County Treasurer’s Office, Maria Avila told a friend (and co-worker) that she could “go postal”; she advised the friend to duck. Concerned that Avila might be serious, the friend told her superiors. Police attended the hearing, and the implied threat became another ground of discipline. Avila was fired and criminally prosecuted. Illinois law treats as a felony a threat against a public official; otherwise a threat is a misdemeanor. Compare 720 ILCS 5/12-9 with 720 ILCS 5/12-2(a)(10). The State’s Attorney of Cook County charged Avila with a felony, on the ground that Michael Shine, one of three persons Avila had mentioned as potential targets, was a public official because the Treasurer had appointed him to an office created by statute. See 720 ILCS 5/12 — 9(b)(1).
Avila was acquitted at a bench trial after the state judge concluded that Shine was not a public official under § 5/12 — 9(b)(1). Avila then filed this federal suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. She contends that the Treasurer and her staff violated the Constitution by persuading the State’s Attorney to commence the prosecution. Avila calls this persuasion malicious prosecution and contends that it is both unconstitutional and tortious. The state tort claim depends on the supplemental jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1367, because all parties are citizens of Illinois. The district judge rejected the federal-law theories and, instead of relinquishing jurisdiction over the state-law theories, resolved them on the merits in defendants’ favor.
Judges cannot disregard the constitutional theories so easily, however; subject-matter jurisdiction depends on them. The first question in every case is whether the court has jurisdiction. It not enough to utter the word “Constitution” and then present a claim that rests on state law. If it were, every claim that a state employee committed a tort, or broke a contract, could be litigated in federal court. It is therefore essential that the federal claim have some substance — that it be more than a pretext to evade the rule that citizens of a single state must litigate their state-law disputes in state court. When the federal theories are insubstantial in the sense that “prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous”, there is no federal jurisdiction.
Hagans v. Lavine,
Prior decisions inescapably render Avila’s federal theories frivolous.
Albright v. Oliver,
This suit runs smack into
Albright
and
Newsome.
Avila articulates four federal-law theories. The assertion that the prosecution violated principles of substantive due process is refuted by
Albright
and
Newsome,
as well as the rule that substantive due process deals with violations of fundamental rights only. See
Washington v. Glucksberg,
Avila’s second and third federal theories are that the defendants conspired to violate the due process clause and failed to train their subordinates to avoid such violations; as malicious prosecution does not violate the due process clause, there is nothing wrong with an agreement among the defendants and no constitutional need for more training. See
Cefalu v. Village of Elk Grove,
The fourth theory is that the defendants violated the equal protection clause by persuading the prosecutor to bring charges.
Engquist v. Oregon Department of Agriculture,
Still, even before
Engquist
Avila had to show that the defendants lacked a rational basis for their actions. See
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
Defendants did not pick Avila’s name out of a hat. They asked the State’s Attorney to prosecute her because she told a friend that she could “go postal” — in other words, commit mayhem — at her disciplinary hearing. Avila has never denied making that statement. Although she does contend that she was joking, the statement supplies probable cause for a criminal prosecution. Probable cause is a rational basis for official action. See
Schor v. Chicago,
This suit has no business in federal court. A veneer of constitutional phraseology on top of a state tort claim cannot justify its adjudication in federal court. The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
