OPINION AND ORDER
Now before the Court are Plaintiffs Motion of Partial Summary Judgment (Dkt. # 93) and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and Brief in Support (Dkt. # 94). Plaintiff has also filed a Motion to Cite and Sanction Defendants for Aggravated Perjury (Dkt. ## 115, 116), Plaintiffs Motion to Renew Scheduling Order Deadlines (Dkt. # 125), and a Motion for Extension of Time to File Pretrial Disclosures (Dkt. # 127). Defendants have also filed Defendants’ Motion to Strike Plaintiffs Motion to Renew Scheduling Order Deadlines (Dkt. # 134) and a response in opposition to plaintiffs motion for extension of time to file pretrial disclosures (Dkt. # 135).
I.
Plaintiff David L. Brown, appearing pro se, brought suit against defendants J.D. Eppler, Ray Willard, Jane Doe, Janet Doe (collectively, “employee defendants”), Metropolitan Tulsa Transit Authority (MTTA), Paul T. Boudreaux, and Richardson Richardson Boudreaux, alleging that defendants violated and conspired to violate his rights under the United States Constitution, federal civil rights laws, and Oklahoma law. Dkt. # 1, at 1. Brown previously filed a similar action in state court, which was dismissed. Id. at 9-10. Plaintiffs complaint alleges numerous claims for relief against the MTTA and employee defendants, including violations of: the equal protection, due process, and “privileges and immunities” clauses of the United States Constitution; 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985; U.S. Department of Transportation regulations; and Oklahoma law. It also alleges violation of the equal protection and due process clauses and 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 by Boudreaux and Richardson Richardson Boudreaux. The Court previously dismissed all of plaintiffs claims except those under § 1983 for violations of the equal protection and due process clauses of the United States Constitution. Dkt. # 18. The Court denied plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction, as well as the remaining defendants’ first motion for summary judgment. Dkt. ## 25, 47.
MTTA is a trust created under Tulsa City Ordinance Title 39, Ch. 9, pursuant to the rules governing municipal trusts set forth in Okla. Stat. tit. 60, §§ 176-80. MTTA is responsible for the operation of municipal buses within Tulsa, Oklahoma. Eppler is currently, and was at the time of the incidents at issue, a security officer for MTTA. Dkt. # 94-3, at 1. Brown alleges that Jane Doe is a female bus driver employed by MTTA, and that Janet Doe is a female employed by MTTA in some supervisory capacity. Dkt. # 1, at 1-2. Willard is, and was at the time of the incidents at issue, the manager of security for MTTA. Dkt. # 94-4, at 1.
The dispute at issue began on or about April 5, 2007. Dkt. # 1, at 3. On that day, plaintiff was walking toward an MTTA bus stop with the intent to ride a bus, and saw a bus approaching. Brown had not yet reached the stop but, in an attempt to make the bus wait for him, held up a bus transfer pass. Dkt. # 94-1, at 17. The bus did not stop, and Brown waited for it to return. When it did, Brown boarded, and asked the driver, Jane Doe, why she had not stopped for him when she passed him.
Id.
at 18. Brown says that he told her that other drivers stop for people in that situation, and she responded that she was not like other drivers.
Id.
Brown claims that he then sat down in the back of the bus and that, without further provoca
Despite the imposition of the thirty-day ban, plaintiff was able at times to ride MTTA buses. Dkt. # 94-5, at 8-9. However, plaintiff was removed from an MTTA bus in May 2007, allegedly for being intoxicated and disruptive. Dkt. ## 94-3, at 2; 94-4, at 2; 94-5, at 9. The timing of the next incident is not clear from the summary judgment record, but at some point after his removal from a bus in May 2007, plaintiff was walking past the downtown bus station. Dkt. # 94-1, at 22. “While across the street from the station, he saw Eppler, and began to yell at him. Id. Plaintiff claims that he yelled only that he was going to sue’ Eppler. Id. Defendants allege that plaintiff was intoxicated, and that he shouted obscenities across the street at both Eppler and Tulsa County Deputy Sheriff Geza Horvath. Dkt. ## 94-1, at 22-28; 94-3, at 2; 94-4, at 1-2. Horvath then left the MTTA premises, walked toward plaintiff, and instructed him to leave the area. Id. at 27. Brown continued to make disparaging remarks to Horvath, including allegations of racism. Id. He says that after he made those allegations, Horvath told him that he was under arrest. Id. Brown ran across the street, but then stopped and was arrested by Horvath. Id. at 29-30. He was charged with public drunkenness, resisting an officer, and breach of the peace. Id. at 31-32; Dkt. # 94-6, at 2-3. Following his arrest, he was permanently banned from all future MTTA bus use. Brown alleges that Willard took a picture of him at the time of his arrest, and posted it around the MTTA bus station. Dkt. # 30, at 19-23.
Both Eppler and Willard attest that the removal of plaintiff from buses in April and May 2007, and the subsequent ban on plaintiffs future use of MTTA buses, was a result of plaintiffs actions, including public intoxication, disruptive behavior, and criminal conduct. Dkt. ## 94-3, at 2; 94-4, at 2. Willard further attests that “[t]he ban o[n] [pjlaintiffs future use of MTTA buses was a decision made by MTTA pursuant to MTTA’s published and written rules against any fighting, throwing of any objects, pushing, rough or loud behavior or vulgar language and pursuant to MTTA’s policy to ensure that their customers have a safe and enjoyable ride.” Dkt. # 94-4, at 2. Eppler claims that he was not involved in the decision to impose a permanent ban on plaintiffs use of the MTTA buses. Dkt. # 94-3, at 2. Defendants state that “[i]t was not and has never been the
According to plaintiff, he had a conversation with Eppler in July 2008 during which plaintiff asked Eppler how long he was going to be banned from the bus and Eppler told plaintiff to speak to Willard. Dkt. # 94-1, at 37. Brown says he went to the MTTA office in July or August 2008, and that he spoke to Willard. Id. However, he claims that Willard was rude to him, that he was not permitted to make any statements, and that he was told to leave the office. Id. at 38. Willard denies that plaintiff came to his office to discuss the ban. Dkt. # 94-5, at 16. In his complaint, Brown claims that he requested a hearing or other means by which to “contest the arbitrary and capricious” decision to ban him from the bus, but that his request was ignored and denied. Dkt. # 1, at 5. However, defendants claim that while plaintiff orally contested his ban, he “never asked for a hearing or for an alternative method to contest said ban, even though he had ample opportunity to do so.” Dkt. ## 94, at 8; 94-1, at 37. Brown filed this lawsuit in July 2009.
II.
Summary judgment pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 56 is appropriate where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
“When the moving party has carried its burden under Rule 56(c), its opponent must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.... Where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party, there is no ‘genuine issue for trial.’ ”
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
III.
Brown’s sole remaining claims are against MTTA and the employee defendants for due process and equal protection violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
1
Dkt.
A. Due Process
“The Due Process Clause provides that certain substantive rights — life, liberty, and property — cannot be deprived except pursuant to constitutionally adequate procedure.”
Schulz v. City of Longmont, Colo.,
Brown claims he has a liberty interest in freedom to travel, live, and work where he pleases, and pursue the livelihood of his choice, as well as a property interest in availing himself of the benefits given to all citizens. Dkt. # 108, at 15. The liberty interests protected by the Due Process Clause are “not merely freedom from bodily restraint but also the right of the individual to contract, to engage in any of the common occupations of life ... and generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized ... as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
“The Fourteenth Amendment’s procedural protection of property is a safeguard of the security of interests that a person has already acquired in specific benefits.”
Roth,
To have a property interest in a benefit, a person clearly must have more than an abstract need or desire for it. He must have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it. It is a purpose of the ancient institution of property to protect those claims upon which people rely in their daily lives, reliance that must not be arbitrarily undermined. It is a purpose of the constitutional right to a hearing to provide an opportunity for a person to vindicate those claims.
Property interests, of course, are not created by the Constitution. Rather they are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules- or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law — rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.
Id.
at 577-58,
Whether an individual has a protected property interest in access to public transportation has not been decided by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals or any other appeals court, and the question is a close one.
See, e.g., Ward v. Housatonic Area Regional Transit Dist.,
Defendants assert that “MTTA officials are given broad discretion to ban MTTA bus use pursuant to MTTA policies and procedures,” Dkt. # 101, at 4, 11, but have provided no evidence by which it is possible to verify the scope of discretion given to MTTA. However, as Brown alleges, MTTA is a “common carrier” under Oklahoma law, which defines that term to mean “[e]veryone who offers to the public to carry persons, property or messages.” Okla. Stat. tit. 13, § 4. “A common carrier must, if able to do so, accept and carry whatever is offered to him, at a reasonable time and place, of a kind that he undertakes or is accustomed to carry.” Okla. Stat. tit. 13, § 5. “A common carrier of persons may make rules for the conduct of his business, and may require passengers to conform to them,” if such rules are “lawful, public, uniform in their application, and reasonable.” Okla. Stat. tit. 13, § 43. “[A] passenger who refuses to pay his fare, or to conform to any lawful regulation of the carrier, may be ejected from the vehicle by the carrier.” Okla. Stat. tit. 13, § 45.
Neither party has briefed the question of how the Oklahoma common carrier statute impacts the existence of a protected interest in access to MTTA buses. Instead, in support of his argument that the right to transportation falls squarely within liberty and property interests created by state law, plaintiff relies primarily on
Wayfield v. Town of Tisbury,
More relevant is
Ward,
where, under facts very similar to this one, another district court found no protected property interest in access to public transportation.
However, while analogous, neither
Ward
nor other cases cited above involved a state law similar to the Oklahoma common carrier statute. There is no law from either Oklahoma state or federal courts regarding the discretion available to a common carrier in the exercise of its duties. Generally, where “[a] decision-maker is not required to base its decisions on objective and defined criteria, but instead can deny the requested relief for no reason at all,” the State has not created a constitutionally protected interest.
Olim v. Wakinekona,
[In] all government benefit/due process cases, the inquiry must focus on the legitimate expectations of the party seeking the government benefit. If the government is afforded broad discretion in conferring the benefit, and articulates reasons for denying the benefit within that discretion, then a plaintiff cannot prevail in establishing a constitutionally protected property interest. However, where the government’s discretion is limited by law and the government acts outside that limitation, or where the government’s articulated reason for denying the benefit is without basis in law ... then a plaintiff may assert an entitlement sufficient to support a constitutional claim.
RRI Realty Corp. v. Incorporated Village of Southampton,
The Oklahoma common carrier statute falls somewhere between the two poles of
The freedom of common carriers to make rules regarding the conduct of their business appears to modify the mandate that they accept and carry whatever is offered to it. Although the MTTA lacks the absolute discretion to refuse service to individuals for “no reason at all,” there are no substantive limits that dictate a particular outcome where it seeks to exclude a passenger based on violations of its rules of conduct. And while the MTTA’s regulations regarding the rules of conduct are not before the Court, whether such regulations exist and in what form is irrelevant for purposes of assessing the constitutional interest. Because the MTTA has the “discretion to change the terms and conditions” of its rules of conduct, Brown had “at best a unilateral expectation” regarding his ability to continue as a passenger of MTTA.
Fed. Lands Legal Consortium ex rel. Robart Estate v. United States,
Willard attests that the decision to ban plaintiff was “made by MTTA pursuant to MTTA’s published and written rules against any fighting, throwing of any objects, pushing, rough or loud behavior or vulgar language and pursuant to MTTA’s policy to ensure that their customers have a safe and enjoyable ride.” Dkt. # 94-4, at 2. Based on the Court’s reading of Okla. Stat. tit. 13, § 43, MTTA had the power to make such rules, and to exclude from service those who did not comply with them. Whether such rules were “lawful, public, uniform in their application, and reasonable,” and sufficiently spelled out the consequences of plaintiffs behavior, could potentially raise a question as the legality of the rules under state law. However, it does not create a constitutionally protected property interest under federal law. Therefore, summary judgment on Brown’s due process claims is granted in favor of defendants.
B. Equal Protection
Brown also claims that MTTA and the employee defendants violated his rights to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. “The Equal Protection Clause requires the government to treat similarly situated people alike.”
Barney v. Pulsipher,
In support of his claim that defendants violated his equal protection rights, Brown alleges that MTTA has an “established policy and custom” of harassing and intimidating African-American and Native American passengers at the Denver Avenue bus terminal, Dkt. # 1, at 7, and that he was banned from MTTA buses due to a racially discriminatory policy. However, while he makes broad accusations of racial bias, he has provided no evidence that would support a claim that he was treated differently than other similarly situated individuals, or that such treatment was pursuant to a policy or custom on the part of MTTA.
5
Similarly, he has proffered no
IV.
Plaintiff has filed a Motion to Cite and Sanction Defendants for Aggravated Perjury (Dkt. # 115). In it, he states that defendants’ summary judgment motion and an affidavit by Eppler attached thereto establish that Eppler did not participate in the ban of Brown from MTTA buses. Because Willard testified at the hearing on plaintiffs motion for preliminary injunction that the decision to ban plaintiff was made by Eppler and two other MTTA employees, Brown argues that “there has to be perjury” on the part of Eppler and/or Willard. Dkt. # 115, at 2. He argues that the alleged perjury “constitutes aggravated perjury in contradiction to 18 U.S.D.A.[sie] [§ ] 1623(a),” and that Eppler and/or Willard should consequently be cited and sanctioned for aggravated perjury, or an order to show cause should be issued as to why they should not be charged with aggravated perjury.
Plaintiffs motion cites to 18 U.S.C. § 1623, a criminal statute regarding false testimony, and he asks that Eppler and/or Willard have perjury proceedings instituted against them. He also asks for general sanctions to be imposed against Eppler and Willard. “Perjury occurs when a witness testifying under oath or affirmation gives false testimony concerning a material matter with the willful intent to provide false testimony, rather than as a result of confusion, mistake, or faulty memory.”
United States v. Flonnory,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion of Partial Summary Judgment (Dkt. # 93) is denied; Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and Brief in Support (Dkt. #94) is granted.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiffs Motion to Cite and Sanction Defendants for Aggravated Perjury (Dkt. ## 115,116) is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion to Renew Scheduling Order Deadlines (Dkt. # 125), plaintiffs Motion for Extension of Time to File Pretrial Disclosures (Dkt. # 127), and Defendants’ Motion to Strike Plaintiffs Motion to Renew Scheduling Order Deadlines (Dkt. # 134) are moot. All other pending mo
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that this is a final order terminating this case and a separate judgment will be entered herewith.
Notes
. In his response to defendants' motion for summary judgment, Brown says he "antici
. The Court interprets Brown’s claims to allege two distinct violations of his protected property interest: 1) the initial 30-day ban; and 2) the permanent ban. Both may be assessed for possible violations of a protected interest.
See Fuentes v. Shevin,
. Unpublished decisions are not precedential, but may be cited for their persuasive value. See Fed. R.App. 32.1; 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
. The Court previously dismissed plaintiffs claims alleging the violation of Department of Transportation regulations or procedures. Dkt. #18, at 13. However, even assuming that, as plaintiff alleges, those provisions create a right to a grievance process against MTTA, Dkt. # 30, at 33, it is well-established that the right to process alone, without a mandated outcome, does not create a property right.
See Ripley,
. The only evidence provided by Brown regarding his equal protection claims are: unsupported allegations in his pleadings of racism; a document signed by other citizens who “have been and eyewittnessed [sic] the form of transgression and harassment^] oppression[,] and forced detention of this security guard [Eppler] at the city bus stop,” Dkt. # 1, at 12; testimony by Samuel Hill, another African-American man banned from riding the bus, Dkt. #30, at 52-61; and an affidavit by plaintiff regarding perceived unequal treatment. Dkt. #113, at 2. At only one point does plaintiff provide an assumed comparison
. Plaintiffs evidence in this regard again consists of blanket assertions of racial bias, without any supporting evidence or comparison to similarly-situated persons.
