MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Wallace Clark (“Clark”) and his wife Lucille (“Mrs. Clark”) sue the City of Chicago (“City”), Donald T. Podgorny (“Podgorny”), Stephan J. Wilke (“Wilke”), Richard J. Brzeczek (“Brzeczek”) and Francis A. Nolan (“Nolan”), claiming injury from the issuance of a parking citation and Clark’s ensuing arrest and detention on charges of disorderly conduct and resisting a law enforcement officer. Their nine-count Complaint asserts claims under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985 and 1986, several theories of pendent state law claims by Clark, and two pendent loss-of-consortium claims by Mrs. Clark.
Defendants have moved under Fed.R. Civ.P. (“Rule”) 12(b)(6) to dismiss the Complaint entirely as to City, Brzeczek and Nolan and to dismiss all but the Section 1983 claim as to Podgorny and Wilke. In an oral bench ruling June 28 this Court (1) struck all Complaint references to Sections 1985 and 1986 and (2) refused to dismiss City, Brzeczek and Nolan from Count I’s Section 1983 claim. 1 This opinion deals *485 with the Complaint’s various state law claims.
Facts 2
In April 1982 Clark and his grandson were seated in his lawfully parked automobile near 34th and Halsted Streets in Chicago. Chicago police officers Podgorny and Wilke first falsely cited Clark for illegal parking, then — without probable cause— forced Clark to go to the district police station, subjecting him in the process to unprovoked physical and verbal abuse. They then — again without reasonable cause — charged Clark with disorderly conduct and resisting an officer and detained him for a period of time. All charges against Clark have been decided in his favor.
City, Brzeczek and Nolan have engaged in a pattern of failures in the training and discipline of Chicago police officers. Those failures have created a climate that has encouraged the unlawful conduct exemplified by Podgorny’s and Wilke’s actions against Clark.
As a result of the conduct already described, Clark has suffered and will continue to suffer serious physical and mental injury. Mrs. Clark has in turn sustained a loss of consortium.
Clark’s Pendent State Law Claims 3
Whenever plaintiffs stray from the mandates of Rule 8(a)(2) (“a short and plain statement of the claim”) and Rule 8(e) (“simple, concise, and direct” averments), both the defendants and the court are disadvantaged in dealing with the complaint. Clark’s Complaint is no exception. Its factual allegations are unduly repetitive, and it multiplies a single episode into a plethora of claims besides the Count I claim already upheld under Section 1983:
1. Count II asserts all defendants violated Clark’s rights under the due process clause of the Illinois Constitution, 111. Const, art. I, § 2.
2. Count III advances a claim against all defendants for false arrest and imprisonment.
3. Count IV charges all defendants based on the Podgorny-Wilke assault and battery.
4. Count V is a malicious prosecution action against all defendants.
5; Count VI runs against City for negligence of its duties in the hiring, training, supervising and disciplining of police officers.
6. Count VII charges City with willful and wanton disregard of its duties in the hiring, training, supervising and disciplining of police officers.
Count II
Defendants’ position as to Count II is summarized succinctly at R. Mem. 3:
There is not [a] common law claim for violation of one’s state constitutional rights, just as there is not [a] cause of action which may be brought directly under the United States Constitution.
Clarks add nothing to the analytical process, for their Mem. 2-3 simply contrasts— without citation of any authority at all— Count I’s federal constitutional claim under Section 1983 with Count II’s state constitutional claim. 4
*486
Defendants’ proposition is flawed even under federal law.
Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents,
The very essence of civil liberty certainly consists in the right of every individual to claim the protection of the laws, whenever he receives an injury.
True enough the availability of a direct remedy under the federal Constitution against a state actor {Bivens involved federal actors), given the previously-upheld existence of Section 1983 rights against the same state actor, poses other considerations. But it must be remembered Count II purports to set out a pendent claim, as to which state law provides the rules of decision. 5 And on that score the real question is whether Illinois law as to the Illinois Constitution parallels the Bivens analysis as to the United States Constitution.
At least two
post-Bivens
Illinois Appellate Court decisions have decided that question in the affirmative, upholding private claims brought directly against municipalities and state actors under the Illinois Constitution.
Newell v. City of Elgin,
Counts III Through VII 7
Not only Count II (see n. 6) but every other pendent claim advanced by Clark implicates the Immunity Act. Under Illinois law
only
the Act provides municipalities and their employees immunity from suit.
Clark v. City of Chicago,
Act ¶ 2-109 provides:
A local public entity is not liable for an injury resulting from an act or omission of its employee where the employee is not liable.
Thus any immunity available to a municipal employee under the Act is available to the municipality as well.
Melbourne,
Act ¶ 2-202 reads:
*487 Á public employee is not liable for his act or omission in the execution or enforcement of any law unless such act or omission constitutes willful and wanton negligence.
That provision does not afford qualified immunity from liability for all acts or omissions of a public employee while on duty, but only for those connected with the actual execution or enforcement of a law.
Arnolt v. City of Highland Park,
Finally, Act H 2-204 provides:
Except as otherwise provided by statute, a public employee, as such and acting within the scope of his employment, is not liable for an injury caused by the act or omission of another person.
No state court decision has been found construing that provision, but this Court’s colleague Judge Prentice Marshall has held Act 112-204 required dismissal of a complaint seeking to impose on a supervisor, acting within the scope of his employment, respondeat superior liability for a police officer’s having shot the decedent without probable cause or other justification.
Means v. City of Chicago,
Clearly Counts III through V survive against Podgorny, Wilke and City in light of the Act and cases construing it. As to the individuals, only the familiar standard of
Conley v. Gibson,
As to Brzeczek and Nolan, however, Counts III-V must fall. They are named only on respondeat superior grounds, and the Means reading of Act 112-204 (the only sensible one) insulates them from such liability.
This opinion turns then to Counts VI and VII, directed only against City for the harm allegedly suffered at the hands of Podgorny and Wilke. Precisely the same analysis that preserved Counts III-V as against City also saves Counts VI and VII: Because Clark may be able to prove facts that would not insulate Podgorny and Wilke under Act ¶ 2-202, City cannot escape liability under Act ¶ 2-109 at this early stage of the litigation.
Punitive Damages
Counts III-V and VII seek an award of punitive damages against City. *488 City correctly contends such relief is barred under Act ¶ 2-102: 9
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a local public entity is not liable to pay punitive or exemplary damages in any action brought directly against it by the injured party.
All Clarks’ claims against City are direct actions. Though Clarks’ lawyers did not acknowledge their mistake as they should have (their memorandum opted instead for total silence), the punitive damages prayers are stricken.
Attorneys’ Fees
Each of Counts II through VII also asks for attorneys’ fees. Again defendants are right in saying Illinois law (this time unbroken case law, though they do not cite it) does not permit such an award as to the kinds of state law claims involved here.
Clark responds with the irrelevancy that 42 U.S.C. § 1988 may permit recovery on the pendent state claims (perhaps even if Clark were to lose on his Section 1983 claim). See
Church of Scientology of California v. Cazares,
Mrs. Clark's Pendent State Law Claims
Complaint Counts VIII and IX assert claims against all defendants for Mrs. Clark’s loss of consortium resulting from her husband’s alleged injuries. Those allegations raise the vexed question of pendent party jurisdiction.
Hixon v. Sherwin-Williams Co.,
[I]f the pendent party concept retains any vitality today ... when there is greater concern with avoiding unnecessary federal inroads into state jurisdiction than when the concept first emerged, it survives as a convenience to a party who has a substantive federal claim ... rather than as a service to the cause of judicial economy.
That surely addresses only the propriety of a proper plaintiff who asks to add a pendent party defendant. But Mrs. Clark, who lacks a federal claim altogether, does not fall within the terms of the Bernstein rationale.
It is true, as this Court has held in a different context, that Mrs. Clark’s loss-of-consortium action is wholly derivative from Clark’s allegations of injury.
Jarvis v. Stone,
Indeed the plain implication of
Zahn v. International Paper Co.,
At best the grounds for pendent party jurisdiction here are weak, at worst wholly nonexistent. And even if this Court were arguably to have the
power
to assume jurisdiction over Mrs. Clark’s claims (a doubtful proposition), the proper exercise of its discretion to do so (see
Gibbs,
Conclusion
Defendants’ motions to dismiss are denied as to:
1. Clark’s Count II claims under the Illinois Constitution; and
2. Clark’s claims against City in Counts III through VII.
Defendants’ motions to dismiss are granted as to:
1. Clark’s claims against Brzeczek and Nolan in Counts III through V;
2. Mrs. Clark’s claims for loss of consortium in Counts VIII and IX;
3. Clark’s prayer for punitive damages against City; and
4. Clark’s claims for attorney’s fees as to all pendent state law claims.
Defendants are ordered to file their answer to the surviving portions of the Complaint on or before September 19, 1984.
. As with the earlier discussion (see n. 4), this analysis owes nothing to the litigants. All the groundwork was laid by this Court’s law clerk, Will Buck.
Notes
. Defendants’ motion in the latter respect had plainly misread either the direct-action thrust of Count I as to those defendants or the holdings of
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
. As with every Rule 12(b)(6) motion, Clarks well-pleaded factual allegations are taken as true, with all reasonable factual inferences drawn in their favor.
Wolfolk v. Rivera,
. Clark's state law claims derive from the same "nucleus of operative fact” as Count I’s Section 1983 claim. That renders the state claims properly within this Court’s jurisdiction. See
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
. That delinquency on the part of both counsel is really unfair to this Court’s law clerks, who have the responsibility for generating first drafts of opinions for this Court’s further research and sentence-by-sentence revision. In the decisional process the available resources are much like a funnel, with the very wide mouth being the time of lawyers for the litigants in all the cases on a judge’s calendar, and the very narrow tube that provides input for the judge being the time of the two law clerks. To *486 force the law clerks (let alone the judge) to do the lawyers’ work is to waste the second scarcest resource in the system (the scarcest, of course, is the judge’s own time, and the lawyers' default in that respect often causes a waste of the judge’s time as well).
. If the substantive content of the Illinois Constitution’s due process clause proves identical to that of the Fourteenth Amendment, Count II could add nothing whatever to Count I. In that case this Court might well consider eliminating Count II from the case, either under the discretion implied by Gibbs or as introducing needless confusion and complexity for the jury.
. One other aspect of
Melbourne
is worth noting. It appeared to acknowledge (
. In response to defendants’ contention that no respondeat superior liability exists against City, Brzeczek and Nolan, Clarks’ Mem. 4 misses the point entirely by invoking Monell. That definition of Section 1983’s scope is irrelevant where state law provides the rules of decision (as it does on pendent claims).
. Defendants also point to the like reading of Section 1983 in
City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc.,
. If Clark is successful in this case, the Illinois law of collateral estoppel would afford Mrs. Clark (suing in state court) the benefit of any issues necessarily decided here and common to her action. See
Illinois State Chamber of Commerce v. Pollution Control Board,
