OPINION
Seven Michigan State University (“MSU”) employees (“Plaintiffs”) sued the City of East Lansing (“City”) under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for Fourth Amendment violations that occurred during the East Lansing Fire Department’s (“ELFD”) response to a possible anthrax contamination at MSU. Following a jury trial, a verdict was returned in favor of the Plaintiffs. On appeal, the City asks us to overturn the jury verdict and grant judgment in its favor as a matter of law. Because the City failed to preserve its sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge, we dismiss.
I.
In October 2001, MSU employees working at Linton Hall received a suspicious-looking envelope and contacted the ELFD. Given the possibility of an anthrax contamination and the ELFD’s mistaken belief that a white powder was found inside the letter, the ELFD implemented its Hazardous Material (“HAZMAT”) wet-decontamination process (“wet-decon”). The ELFD set up the wet-decon on-site in a hallway inside Linton Hall. Though the ELFD received information that the powder was not anthrax, it nonetheless decided to go forward with the wet-decon. Thé Plaintiffs (all women) were disrobed, scrubbed, and rinsed at different stations by men in HAZMAT suits. While some step's were taken to ensure patient “modesty,” the Plaintiffs’ privacy concerns went largely ignored. Following the wet-decon, which lasted approximately one hour, the Plaintiffs were transported to a nearby hospital where it was determined that they had not been exposed to anthrax or any other chemical or bacteria. A later investigation revealed that the suspicious letter was a request under the Michigan Freedom of Information Act by the organization Stop Animal Exploitation Now and did not contain any trace of anthrax.
During the jury trial, the City moved for judgment as a matter of law following the Plaintiffs case-in-chief, pursuant to FED. R. CIV. P. Rule 50(a). The district court
II.
The City claims that the evidence does not support the municipal liability findings of the jury. Because the City did not preserve this issue for appeal, we need not reach the merits.
We have previously held that where a party fails to renew its Rule 50(a) motion following the jury verdict per Rule 50(b), the motion is not properly preserved for appeal.
See Young v. Langley,
In
Unitherm Food,
the Court held that where an appellant fails to renew his pre-verdict Rule 50(a) motion following the jury verdict pursuant to Rule 50(b), “there [is] no basis for review of [appellant’s] sufficiency[-]of[-]theHevidence challenge in the Court of Appeals.” 546, U.S. at -,
Because the' City failed to move for judgment as a matter of law post-verdict as required by Rule 50(b), we are without jurisdiction to consider the merits of the City’s claim. Therefore, the Plaintiffs’ failure to raise this procedural shortcoming by the City in their brief to this court is without consequence.
1
According
DISMISSED.
Notes
. Our application of Rule 50(b) to the instant case is not impermissibly retroactive. The City was on notice after
Young
that we had the discretion .to dismiss a sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge for failure to preserve the
