The Supreme Court held in
Parratt v. Taylor,
I. FACTS AND POSTURE
The incidents leading to this action occurred in the City of Chamblee, a municipal corporation in DeKalb County, Georgia. DeKalb County supplies water and sewer service to Chamblee. On December 15, 1981, at 9:18 p.m., a resident of Chamblee called the DeKalb County Water and Sewer Authority and reported that a water meter was leaking and that the flow from the meter was running onto a nearby road. The caller warned that the temperature was expected to go below freezing that night, and that the leaking water might freeze on the road. DeKalb County did not repair the meter, water from the leak froze on the road, and a car skidded at the site early the next morning and collided with another car. The wreck caused extensive damage to the cars, inflicted personal injury on several of the cars’ occupants, and resulted in the tragic death of a son of one of the drivers.
Rittenhouse, driver of one of the cars, filed this § 1983 action 1 in federal district court alleging that her Fourteenth Amendment rights had been violated by DeKalb *1453 County, by C.L. Stewart, director of the County’s water and sewer authority, and by the City of Chamblee. Rittenhouse also sought adjudication in federal court of her pendent state law negligence claim against Bullard, the driver of the car that had skidded out of control. DeKalb County and Stewart contended in their answer that the County and its officials enjoyed immunity from suit, that County officials had acted in good faith, and that there was no official policy, practice or custom that had led to the accident. 2
The deposition testimony, when viewed most favorably to Rittenhouse, shows that DeKalb County road crews were not notified of the leaking meter. If the crews had been properly dispatched, however, they could have repaired the meter and salted the road, notwithstanding the pendency of other repair calls. The depositions further show that there is no common understanding among employees of the DeKalb County Water and Sewer Authority about how incoming repair calls are to be noted and referred to road crews for attention.
The district court granted DeKalb County and Stewart’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that “the allegations of tortious conduct... do not rise to constitutional proportions and are thus not cognizable in a section 1983 action.”
II. WHETHER THERE IS A VALID § 1983 CLAIM: THE APPLICABILITY OF PARRATT
We have no difficulty agreeing with the district court that defendants’ conduct did not amount to an abuse of power or other substantive constitutional violation. We are left then only with the contention that DeKalb County and Stewart deprived appellants of constitutionally protected rights without due process of law. Although appellants made this procedural due process claim to the district court, the district court did not explicitly address the claim. Apparently, the court assumed that a § 1983 action could be maintained only if the conduct complained of were an abuse of power or a substantive constitutional violation. The Supreme Court made clear in Parratt, however, that merely negligent conduct can support a procedural due process claim if the state does not provide adequate postdeprivation remedies.
The conduct complained of in
Parratt
was the negligent loss by prison officials of a hobby kit a prisoner had ordered through the mail. The prisoner asserted that the prison officials had deprived him of property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. In considering the viability of a § 1983 claim based on the officials’ conduct, the Supreme Court observed that “[n]othing in the lan
*1454
guage of § 1983 or its legislative history limits the statute solely to intentional deprivations of constitutional rights,”
Although the main thrust of appellants’ argument on appeal is that sovereign immunity deprives them of an adequate state remedy, a more basic contention was mentioned in brief and pressed at oral argument, i.e., that the deprivations complained of were caused by the County’s procedures, and that this case thus falls within the “established state procedure” exception described in Parratt, so that the Parratt analysis concerning the adequacy of post-deprivation remedies is simply inapplicable. We turn first to this “established state procedure” argument.
A. The Established State Procedure Exception
The Supreme Court recognized in
Par-ratt
that in many cases process must be provided prior to deprivation of a constitutionally protected interest.
The “established state procedure” argument which appellants present finds its origin in dicta in the
Parratt
opinion, by which the Court distinguished that case from cases in which a deprivation has occurred as a result of some established state procedure. This distinction was the basis of the holding in
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
We conclude, however, that the instant case does not fall within this “established state procedure” exception. It is apparent both from
Parratt
itself and from its progeny that the rationale for the exception is that predeprivation process is feasible where the deprivation occurs as a result of an established state procedure. The discussion in
Parratt
of the matter of “established state procedure” is in the context of the feasibility of predeprivation process.
See
Similarly in
Logan,
the state procedures that were challenged were themselves pre-deprivation procedures. Those procedures were tested against the requirements of procedural due process, and were found to be deficient. In
Hudson v. Palmer,
468 U.S. -, -,
In like manner, the cases following
Par-ratt
in the various circuit courts of appeal have deemed the feasibility of predeprivation procedures as the central question in determining the applicability of
Parratt. Thibodeaux v. Bordelon,
On the basis of the foregoing authority, we conclude that the rationale underlying the “established state procedure” exception is that where a deprivation occurs pursuant to an established state procedure, predeprivation process is ordinarily feasible. Because predeprivation process is not feasible in the instant case, we conclude that the “established state procedure” exception does not apply and that the Parratt analysis requires that we focus only on the adequacy of postdeprivation remedies.
None of the parties in this case suggest that predeprivation process was feasible. There is no suggestion that the purpose of the challenged emergency procedures is to deprive anyone of anything, and the procedures cannot be said to contemplate the deprivation of any protected interest. At most, the deficient procedures might have been a contributing proximate cause of the accident, operating concurrently with other causes including the acts of the drivers of the vehicles. Thus, this case is distinguishable both from the cases cited in Parratt as requiring predeprivation process, e.g., Mullane v. Central Hanover Trust Co., supra; Bell v. Burson, supra; and Fuentes v. Shevin, supra, and from the cases that have relied upon the “established state procedure” exception, e.g., Logan, supra; Augustine v. Doe, supra. In all of these cases, it was the state statutes or procedures themselves that effected a deprivation, and it is obvious that in each instance predeprivation process would have been feasible. It is apparent, however, that no predeprivation remedies could have *1456 been furnished Rittenhouse, because she became identified only upon the occurrence of the random accident in this case. 4 Thus, since predeprivation remedies were not feasible, the rationale of the “established state procedure” 5 exception is not satisfied in this case. As a result, the Parratt analysis applies, and the state can satisfy due process by providing adequate postdeprivation remedies.
Our conclusion in this case is reinforced by the recognition that a contrary holding would sap
Parratt
of all of its vitality. In
Parratt,
and in any similar case, a reasonable argument could be made that better procedures would have prevented the deprivation. Appellant’s argument in this case is nothing more than a contention that better procedures would have prevented the accident. If such a contention were sufficient to invoke the “established state procedure” exception and remove a case from
Parratt,
few instances would remain in which
Parratt
might apply. We do not believe, therefore, that the Supreme Court intended general allegations of administrative negligence to render the
Parratt
analysis inapplicable.
6
Cf. Rizzo v. Goode,
423
*1457
U.S. 362,
We conclude that predeprivation process was not feasible in this case, and thus that the “established state procedure” exception does not apply. Rittenhouse therefore must make out her § 1983 claim, if at all, pursuant to a Parratt assessment of the postdeprivation remedies available to her. More particularly, the viability of her § 1983 action depends on whether her post-deprivation remedies are adequate to satisfy due process. We turn, therefore, to consider whether, in light of Georgia’s immunity rules, Rittenhouse has an adequate postdeprivation remedy under state law.
B. The Effect of Immunity on the Adequacy of State Law Remedies
DeKalb County is immune from suit for negligence under Georgia law. Ga.Code Ann. § 36-1-4 (Michie 1982);
see also
Ga. Const. Art. I, § 2, ¶ 9;
Miree v. United States,
We face apparently conflicting indications in Supreme Court authority as to whether state law immunity renders a state remedy inadequate. In
Parratt,
the Court noted that Nebraska furnished a tort claims procedure that satisfied the requirements of due process.
However compelling these inferences may be, they are only inferences, and are overborne in our view by the Court’s holding in
Martinez v. California,
[E]ven if one characterizes the immunity defense as a statutory deprivation, it would remain true that the State’s interest in fashioning its own rules of tort law is paramount to any discernible federal interest, except perhaps an interest in protecting the individual citizen from state action that is wholly arbitrary or irrational.
... We therefore find no merit in the contention that the State’s immunity statute is unconstitutional when applied to defeat a tort claim arising under state law.
Id.
at 282-83,
Martinez indicates that a state law immunity scheme could conceivably result in “state action that is wholly arbitrary or irrational” and which thus violates the Fourteenth Amendment. We can readily conclude, however, that the immunity De-Kalb County and Stewart enjoy under Georgia law is not arbitrary and irrational so as to implicate procedural due process concerns. The immunity in question shields the County and its officials from liability for a purely discretionary function involving the necessity for and nature of procedures for handling emergency matters in the water department. Such traditional governmental immunity is in no sense “arbitrary or irrational” and consequently, under Martinez, the Georgia immunity rules do not in themselves deny procedural due process.
We can discern no meaningful distinction between the conclusion in
Martinez
that immunity rules do not in themselves deny due process, and our conclusion here that they do not deny due process by virtue of making state remedies inadequate under
Parratt.
The constitutional question in either view is whether the state procedures, in light of the immunity, provide the process required under the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Parratt v. Taylor,
Martinez
was decided before
Parratt,
and it might be argued that
Parratt
and
Hudson
implicitly modify its holding on immunity. We find a direct indication to the contrary, however, in
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
*1459
The only circuit court of appeals case we have found on point reaches the same conclusion we reach with respect to state law immunity. In
Daniels v. Williams,
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the “established state procedure” exception does not apply, and therefore that the Parratt analysis is applicable. We further conclude that the sovereign immunity enjoyed by DeKalb County and Stewart do not render appellant’s state law remedy inadequate under Parratt. Consequently appellant was not deprived of her rights without due process of law. As a result, she has not stated an actionable claim under § 1983, and the district court did not err in granting summary judgment. The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
PITTMAN, District Judge, specially concurring:
I concur in the conclusion reached by the court. The action brought by the appellants in this case amounts to nothing more than a tort suit against the county. The fact that the allegedly tortious conduct was committed by state officials acting under color of law does not make the appellants’ injury a violation of the fourteenth amendment actionable under § 1983. The Supreme Court in
Parratt v. Taylor,
Justice Stewart in a concurrence stated that tortious conduct of the kind alleged by the plaintiff in this case is not the type of conduct that the Constitution sought to prohibit.
See id.
at 544-45,
Notes
. 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (West 1981).
. Bullard answered and filed cross-claims against DeKalb County, Stewart, and the City. The City answered and cross-claimed against DeKalb County and Stewart, and the latter two cross-claimed against the City. Both the City and Bullard seek indemnity against the County and Stewart, claiming that the acts or omissions of the County and Stewart were the ultimate cause of the deprivations at issue. The City of Chamblee, though nominally an appellee, takes the same position as appellants on the issues before us on appeal.
. Appellant Bullard concedes that all other claims were properly dismissed, if the district court was correct in dismissing the § 1983 claim. Brief of Karen Bullard at 9. Appellant Rittenhouse asserts on appeal only the § 1983 issue. Thus, we need not address any other issue on appeal:
. In some case, it might be argued that emergency procedures are so egregiously deficient that deprivations of protected interests are manifestly predictable, so that the situation more nearly resembles the "established state procedure” cases in which the purpose and contemplation of the state procedure involves deprivation of protected interests. In such a case, even though a particular plaintiff is not identified until the occurrence of the random contributing cause which accomplishes the deprivation, it might be argued that the governmental unit itself should have a duty
sua sponte
to correct the deficiencies, thus affording "predeprivation process."
See Parratt,
. We distinguish "policy or custom” as the term was used in
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
.
But cf. Marshall v. Norwood,
. If the state remedy were inadequate and a § 1983 action could be maintained, the question would remain whether the County or Stewart were immune under § 1983 jurisprudence. The Supreme Court has held that Congress did not intend to abolish common law immunities when it enacted § 1983.
Pierson v. Ray,
. Justice Powell reached this conclusion in his separate opinion in
Parratt.
"If ... immunity has the effect of cutting off all state-law remedies, under the Court’s reasoning there appears to be a deprivation of procedural due process, actionable in federal court."
. The Supreme Court was presented with two claims in
Martinez
— the Fourteenth Amendment challenge already discussed, which concerned the viability of a state law wrongful death action in the face of an immunity statute, and a separate § 1983 claim under federal law against the state parole officials. The Court disposed of the § 1983 claim on the ground that the parolee’s action in committing the murder was "too remote a consequence of the parole officers’ action to hold them responsible under the federal civil rights law.”
