The plaintiffs, Chalkboard, Inc., a day care center, and its owner-operator Karen Hoyt
1
brought this civil rights action in District Court for money damages against officials of the Arizona Department of Health Services (“DHS”), and the Arizona Department of Economic Security (“DES”), agencies responsible for child day care programs. The claim is based on defendants’ actions in summarily suspending Chalkboard’s license to operate a day care center. The defendants moved for summary judgment on grounds of absolute and qualified immunity. The District Court denied the motion and the defendants appeal. We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
We review de novo the denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Kraus v. County of Pierce,
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On October 10, 1985, the Tucson Police Department received a complaint from a local citizen that her young daughter had been sexually abused while at Chalkboard by a teacher on its staff. The Police notified the Office of Child Protective Services, a unit of DES, and defendant Susan Brandt of DES began an investigation. On the same day, DHS, the agency responsible for licensing and monitoring day care centers, was notified and also initiated an investigation.
During the next several days Brandt learned from interviews with students and one former employee of Chalkboard of at least one other complaint of sexual abuse concerning the same teacher. She also learned of several complaints of physical abuse, including the disciplining of children by tying their hands behind their backs with sheets, placing the children on a high shelf, or locking them in a shed or outside of the center. The former employee testified at a deposition that she had informed the investigators that the incidents of physical abuse had stopped nearly two months prior to the investigation. These accusations were also encountered by two investigators from DHS, defendants Sherry Meredith and Lucinda Blair. The DHS investigators learned from Hoyt that the teacher accused of the sexual abuse incidents had been suspended pending the outcome of the investigation. While at Chalkboard, the DHS investigators also noted that the day care center was over capacity, a problem of which Chalkboard had already been warned in 1983.
On October 16, 1985, defendant Boyd Dover, Deputy Director of DHS, issued an order summarily suspending Chalkboard’s license on the grounds of the alleged sexual molestation, the alleged physical abuse, and overcrowding. On the following day, an administrator of DES stood on the sidewalk in front of Chalkboard to inform parents of the closure and advise them of alternative day care centers. The press was also present at this time. Prior to Chalkboard’s closure, approximately 85% of
On the day of the suspension, Hoyt was notified of an administrative hearing on the license suspension to be scheduled in the near future. This hearing was subsequently scheduled for October 24, 1985, eight days after the suspension. Immediately after the suspension, however, Chalkboard had filed an action in Arizona Superior Court seeking an injunction. On October 18, at a hearing in state court, Chalkboard sought leave to withdraw the complaint, which was granted. On October 23, 1985, this action was filed. On October 24, Chalkboard appeared at the administrative hearing and stipulated to a postponement. Ultimately, Chalkboard elected not to attend the hearing.
ABSOLUTE IMMUNITY
Defendants first argue that they are absolutely immune. In general, executive officials are protected from constitutional claims only by qualified immunity.
Butz v. Economou,
The Supreme Court has made clear that absolute immunity depends upon the particular function performed by the official.
Butz,
This case arises, however, out of the DHS officials’ summary closure of Chalkboard. To the extent that such action may be judicial or prosecutorial, it is essential that this function be assigned by state law to the DHS. A judge who wrongfully sentences an accused to prison is absolutely immune; a policeman who takes it upon himself to perform that function clearly is not. We must therefore examine whether the DHS officials were placed, under state law, in the functions equivalent to those of judge or prosecutor with regard to Chalkboard’s summary closure.
The DHS officials contend that they were authorized summarily to close Chalkboard under Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 41 — 1064(C)(1988) 2 , which states:
No revocation, suspension, annulment or withdrawal of any license is lawful unless, prior to the action, the agency provides the licensee with notice and an opportunity for a hearing in accordance with this chapter. If the agency finds that public health, safety or welfare imperatively requires emergency action, and incorporates a finding to that effect in its order, summary suspension of a license may be ordered pending proceedings for revocation or other action. These proceedings shall be promptly instituted and determined.
This provision is part of the Arizona Administrative Procedure Act, which forms a general set of rules applicable to administrative agencies in the absence of a more specific statutory structure.
See Didlo v. Talley,
When the department has reason to believe that a day care center is operating under conditions that present possibilities of serious harm to children, the department shall notify the county attorney or the attorney general, who shall immediately seek a restraining order and injunction against the day care center. 3
The district court concluded that the two provisions were in conflict and that Arizona law dictates that statutory conflicts be settled in favor of the more specific statute.
See Arden-Mayfair, Inc. v. Department of Liquor Licenses and Control,
While the Arizona Supreme Court has never defined the relationship between the two statutes, its decisions in Arden-Mayfair and Phelps Dodge, supra, render, the officials’ view implausible. We cannot accept the contention that a general purpose summary-closure provision enacted years earlier remains at the disposal of the DHS officials when the state has adopted a more recent and specific statutory scheme which provides for both routine and expedited methods of suspending the license of a day care center and which does not permit summary action by agency officials.
Thus, Arizona has provided, under section 36-886.01, for prosecutors and judges to effect a summary closure of day care centers. It is entirely possible that DHS officials who directly serve that process in one way or another will be absolutely immune.
See Coverdell v. Department of Social and Health Services,
Our precedent supports our conclusion that state law must authorize the prosecu-torial or judicial function to which absolute immunity attaches. In
Ybarra v. Reno Thunderbird Mobile Home Village,
QUALIFIED IMMUNITY
The fact that state law did not put the defendants in the position of prosecutors or judges does not, however, necessarily deprive them of all immunity.
See Meyers,
The constitutional violation alleged in this case is the deprivation of property without due process of law. While the right to due process is clearly established under the fourteenth amendment, the issue of qualified immunity cannot be resolved at such a high level of generality.
Anderson v. Creighton,
The defendants do not dispute that Chalkboard's license constitutes an entitlement amounting to a property interest. Nor do they dispute that a deprivation occurred. The questions that divide the parties are what process was due, and what process should reasonable officers have known to be due. The focus is on the need for some form of predeprivation review.
We begin with the proposition that a requirement of predeprivation process is the norm:
An essential principle of due process is that a deprivation of life, liberty, or property ‘be preceded by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.’ Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,339 U.S. 306 , 313 [70 S.Ct. 652 , 656,94 L.Ed. 865 ] (1950). We have described ‘the root requirement’ of the Due Process Clause as being ‘that an individual be given an opportunity for a hearing before he is deprived of any significant property interest.’ Boddie v. Connecticut,401 U.S. 371 , 379 [91 S.Ct. 780 , 786,28 L.Ed.2d 113 ] (1971) (emphasis in original); see Bell v. Burson,402 U.S. 535 , 542 [91 S.Ct. 1586 , 1591,29 L.Ed.2d 90 ] (1971).
Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
The next question, then, is whether reasonable officers would have known that the usual requirement of predeprivation process applied in the circumstances of this case. To determine whether the administrative process employed by defendants was constitutionally deficient and, if so, whether it was
clearly
deficient, we must begin by considering three distinct factors: (1) the private interest affected by the official action; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation through the procedures used and the value of additional procedures; and (3) the government’s interest, including the function involved and the burdens that additional procedural requirements would entail.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
A balancing of these factors, as they were applied in
Mathews
and, subsequently, in
Loudermill,
leads us to conclude that the administrative procedures
The risk of erroneous deprivation in cases like Chalkboard’s is also high. Whether or not instances of child abuse have occurred, and whether public health, safety and welfare require emergency action, are delicate judgments depending on credibility of witnesses and assessment of conditions not subject to measurement. The risk of error is considerable when such determinations are made after hearing only one side.
See Loudermill,
The final factor in the Mathews analysis — the government’s interest, including the function involved and the burdens that additional procedural requirements would entail — also militates, on balance, in favor of a requirement of predeprivation notice and an opportunity to respond. The key element, as we will show, is that defendants failed to follow the emergency injunction procedures specified by the legislature, and instead effected the summary suspension themselves.
The defendants contend that the summary suspension did not violate procedural due process because swift action was needed to protect the welfare of children. The state’s interest in protecting children is undeniably great. Chalkboard strongly disputes, however, the existence of an emergency, and the facts are sufficiently in dispute to preclude resolution of that issue on summary judgment.
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The defendants urge, however, that there is no need to establish an emergency in this particular instance; it is sufficient that the action taken was of a
category
that justifies dispensing with the normal due process re
Soranno’s Gaseo and Virginia Surface Mining are easily distinguishable, however. In both cases, the courts were constrained to yield to legislative judgments regarding the threat to the public interest and the need for summary action. In Sor-anno’s Gaseo, we said:
The California legislature has determined that swift administrative action may be necessary in order to protect the public health and safety from violations of the state’s pollution control regulations. We are not in a position to second-guess that legislative determination.
In our case, however, the defendants chose not to follow the procedure specified by the state legislature for dealing with “conditions that present possibilities of serious harm to children.” Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 36-886.01 (1986). That statute, as we have already pointed out, requires the Department of Health Services to notify the county attorney or attorney general, who then must seek a restraining order and injunction from a court. Id. A restraining order may be granted without notice only upon a clear showing that irreparable injury will result before the opposing party can be heard, and upon certification of efforts to give notice or of reasons why it should not be required. Ariz.R.Civ.P. 65(d) (Supp. 1988).
Thus the state itself has specified the kind of emergency treatment required to safeguard the interests of its children. We are not entitled to second-guess that legislative determination,
Soranno’s Gasco,
Because Arizona has provided procedures offering additional procedural protections, requiring notice and hearing in the absence of a showing of actual emergency, it follows that the burdens of such additional procedures are not a substantial factor in the Mathews balance. The state itself has found the burdens acceptable.
We conclude, therefore, that under a Mathews analysis, Chalkboard was entitled to notice and some form of opportunity to respond prior to the summary suspension of its license by the defendants.
We also conclude that reasonable officials would have known that the summary suspension effected in this case violated Chalkboard’s due process rights. We assume that officials are aware of available decisional law.
Ward v. County of San Diego,
We agree with the district court that, on the showing made upon motion for summary judgment, the unlawfulness of defendants’ actions was apparent. Defendants accordingly failed to establish that they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the ground of qualified immunity. We therefore affirm the order of the district court denying defendants’ motion for summary judgment. That is the only issue before us on this interlocutory appeal; we express no opinion, of course, on the proper direction of future proceedings or on the ultimate merits of the case.
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Hereafter we refer to both plaintiffs as "Chalkboard”.
. This section was formerly codified at Ariz.Rev. Stat.Ann. § 41-1012(C).
. This procedure is considerably more expeditious than the normal license suspension procedure under the same statutory scheme, Ariz.Rev. Stat.Ann. § 36-889. The latter statute provides:
The department may revoke or suspend the license of any person for a violation of applicable law or regulations. The department shall afford the affected licensee the right of a hearing by serving upon the licensee at least thirty days’ notice, by registered mail with return receipt requested, to show cause before the director, upon a date to be fixed in the notice, why the license should not be suspended or revoked in accordance with the regulations of the department and the provisions of law. The notice shall set forth the act or acts constituting the violation and shall refer to the provisions of the applicable law or regulations alleged to be violated. If the licensee does not respond to the written notice within the period provided in the notice, the department shall revoke or suspend the license. If the licensee, within the period provided by the notice, rectifies the acts constituting the violation, the department may withdraw the notice of suspension or revocation.
.
Cf. Meyers v. Contra Costa County Dep’t of Social Services,
. We thus distinguish cases such as
Horwitz v. Bd. of Medical Examiners,
. We have noted that "[i]n a case where patient welfare is in immediate jeopardy or where the effective functioning of the hospital is severely threatened, a hospital might well be justified in immediate termination [of a physician] with the informal hearing procedures held shortly thereafter."
Stretten v. Wadsworth Veterans Hospital,
