This suit arises out of efforts of the town of Ackerman, Mississippi, to build a street on a strip of land of disputed ownership. The town claims to have acquired by prescription an easement for a public street along the strip, which is located across the front of the lot on which the home of plaintiffs is located. The plaintiffs, Carl and Nora Dell McCulloch, have no record title to the strip, but claim that by adverse possession they have acquired title in fee simple to the strip, unencumbered by the town’s alleged prescriptive easement.
With knowledge of plaintiffs’ claim of title and without taking action to determine or settle the competing claims between it and plaintiffs, the town knocked down plaintiffs’ fences, bulldozed the strip, and built a street on it.
Plaintiffs sued the town and Mayor Thomas Glasgow, asserting a federal claim (under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983) for damages for taking of property without due' process and a state claim for damages for taking property without just compensation in violation of Mississippi Constitution § 17.
In answer to Rule 49(a) interrogatories the jury made these critical findings: plaintiff Carl McCulloch acquired ownership of the strip of land by adverse possession; the strip was taken by the town without payment of just compensation; whether or not Carl McCulloch had title to the strip of land he had a legitimate or bona fide claim of entitlement to it and the town intruded upon this claim without due process; Mayor Glasgow authorized the intrusion, upon the land with malicious intent to deprive Carl McCulloch of his constitutional rights or cause other injuries to him. Judgment was entered for $20,000 actual damages against the town and Mayor Glasgow and $5,000 punitive damages against Glasgow alone.
Defendants appeal. We reverse.
*50 I. The state and federal claims
Award of damages based on the state claim for taking without just compensation cannot stand. The court did not instruct the jury that the plaintiffs could not claim rights in the contested strip of land based upon holding adversely against the town, and the defendants properly objected. Defendants are correct that under Mississippi law one may not hold adversely against a municipality.
Bright v. Michel,
Next we turn to the federal due process claim. The plaintiffs possessed a sufficient property interest in the land to entitle them to a due process hearing. In order to trigger the requirement of a hearing, title to the property need not be undisputed. Plaintiffs need allege only a “significant property interest.”
Carey v. Piphus,
II. Joinder
Defendants contend that the heirs of the original owners, against whom the plaintiffs claim adversely, should have been joined as indispensable parties under F.R. Civ.P. 19. They did not, however, raise this issue by proper motion before the trial court.
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Defendants correctly argue that the interests of the unjoined parties must be considered in a Rule 19 motion.
Schutten v. Shell Oil Co.,
Thus, although the defendants’ failure to raise the issue in the district court does not constitute a waiver,
Kimball v. Florida Bar,
III. Other issues
The jury found that plaintiffs were not afforded due process. The defendants’ contention that this finding was not supported by sufficient evidence is frivolous.
In support of the claim for damages, plaintiffs submitted evidence that as a consequence of the taking Carl McCulloch suffered a heart attack. Defendants incorrectly assert that unless there is a physical impact damages for mental or emotional suffering are not recoverable in Mississippi.
See First National Bank v. Langley,
Defendants also argue that because the heart attack was not foreseeable, plaintiffs may not recover damages. This argument fails on two grounds. Foreseeability applies only in negligence cases. An intentional tortfeasor is held to a higher standard in Mississippi.
State ex rel. Richardson v. Edgeworth,
Punitive damages may also be awarded in a § 1983 action even without actual loss, despite local law to the contrary.
See, e. g., Silver v. Cormier,
*52
Defendants also challenge the district court’s jurisdiction over the town. The action against the town was originally brought under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 for claims allegedly arising directly under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Supreme Court has recently upheld such a direct cause of action in the context of due process violations.
Davis v. Passman,
Other issues raised by defendants are not likely to occur in a retrial.
V. Attorneys’ fees
Should plaintiffs prevail on retrial they are entitled to attorneys’ fees against both defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 unless special circumstances would render such an award unjust.
Concerned Democrats of Florida v. Reno,
REVERSED.
Notes
. If the jury found, as it could have, that plaintiffs suffered no actual injury from the denial of a hearing, any award based upon taking of their land without due process would arguably suffer the same defect as the award under the state claim for taking without compensation. Possibly the error in instruction was so placed in the overall jury instructions that it related to only the state claim. Since our decision on the federal claim is based on other grounds, we need not decide this point.
. However, there is no jurisdictional barrier to joinder should the trial court determine on retrial that joinder is advisable and feasible. We merely decline to require joinder.
. Moreover it is doubtful that the impact doctrine ever applied to intentional as opposed to negligent torts.
Lyons v. Zale Jewelry Co.,
