We determine the extent to which the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a state to provide notice before it may tow a vehicle parked in violation of state registration laws, if the owner has dutifully complied with an alternate form of registration.
Facts
Virginia Clement 1 lived in a residential hotel and parked her 1981 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz in the hotel’s parking lot. The car had not been driven in seven years and Clement did not keep the car’s registration current. But she did dutifully complete an alternate form of vehicle registration, she had the hotel’s permission to park there and the car was in its proper space. Without so much as a letter, a knock on the door, a note on her windshield or even a parking ticket, the Glendale police towed and impounded Clement’s car. They left no clue to where it had gone. Only later did Clement discover that it had been towed for allegedly violating California vehicle registration laws.
The process started when Glendale police officer Young, on a routine patrol, noticed expired registration stickers on the car. He ran the plates and learned that Clement had filed a “planned non-operation” (PNO) certifícate with the state DMV. 2 A PNO certifícate allows vehicle owners to avoid paying for registration and insurance, so long as they don’t drive on public roads or park in publicly accessible parking lots. Cal. Veh.Code § 4000(a)(1). California law authorizes local police to tow and impound PNO vehicles found in publicly accessible parking lots, and to release the vehicle only after it has been properly registered. Cal. Veh. Code § 22651(o). Officer Young ordered Clement’s car towed because he believed the car was parked in a public lot in violation of the statute. 3
After discovering what happened to her car, Clement did the American thing: She sued. Among other claims, she brought a civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Officer Young and against the
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company that executed the tow, claiming that they violated her constitutional right to due process by impounding her car without giving her advance notice, and that they had unconstitutionally seized her car. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants on all of her claims. In a prior appeal, we reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment on her due process claim.
Clement v. City of Glendale,
Analysis
1. No state may “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
4
The courts have long interpreted this — along with the parallel restriction on the federal government in the Fifth Amendment — to require that notice generally be given
before
the government may seize property.
See Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
Of course, there are numerous exceptions to this general rule: The government need not give notice in an emergency, nor if notice would defeat the entire point of the seizure, nor when the interest at stake is small relative to the burden
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that giving notice would impose.
See, e.g., Zinermon,
However, having one’s car towed, even one that’s not operational, imposes significant costs and burdens on the car’s owner. To begin with, there is no place for the police to leave notice that the car has been towed, so the owner suffers some anxiety when he discovers that the vehicle has mysteriously disappeared from its parking spot. Then, after discovering the car’s new whereabouts, the owner will normally have to travel to the towing garage to retrieve it, which may involve significant cost for someone who doesn’t have an operational vehicle to drive. And, of course, the garage won’t release the car unless the owner pays towing, impound and storage fees. 7
Imposition of these burdens and costs cannot be justified as a means of deterring illegal parking. The punishment for illegal parking is a fine, which is normally imposed by affixing a ticket to the windshield. A ticket can also serve as notice of the illegality and a warning that the car will be towed if not moved or properly registered. The costs and burdens on the car owner associated with a tow can only be justified by conditions that make a tow necessary and appropriate, such as that the car is parked in the path of traffic, blocking a driveway, obstructing a fire lane or appears abandoned. A tow may also be
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appropriate where there are no current registration stickers and police can’t be sure that the owner won’t move or hide the vehicle, rather than pay the fíne for illegal parking.
See Scofield,
None of these circumstances are present here. As best the record reflects, the car was not blocking anyone’s path and the owner of the parking lot — the hotel where Clement was staying — had given its consent. Nor was this a situation where the owner might conceal the car instead of paying the ticket: As Officer Young knew, Clement had a valid PNO certificate, which meant the DMV had a current address for her. And, as Officer Young could have figured out, had he bothered to make the effort, the address where the vehicle was registered was the very hotel in whose parking lot the car was parked. The chances that the car owner would abscond without paying any ticket the officer left on the windshield were very small indeed. 8
The officer had several options open to him in these circumstances. He could have gone to the front desk of the hotel, asked to see the owner of the Eldorado Biarritz and told her personally that she needed to register the car or move it. This is what one might have expected from a conscientious public servant confronted with a car parked at the owner’s dwelling. Short of that, the officer might have written a ticket and left it at the front desk of the hotel, with a verbal warning that the car had to be moved or registered — which the hotel clerk could have been expected to deliver with the ticket. Or, the officer could simply have written a ticket and left it on the windshield. 9
Had Officer Young followed any of these alternative courses of action, he might then have had to return to the property a few days later to determine whether the car had been moved or registered. But this doesn’t seem like a very significant burden for an officer whose job it is, after all, to patrol the neighborhood looking for ways to protect and serve the public. In short, we see very little by way of a legitimate government interest in ordering a tow of the vehicle in the first instance, rather than giving the owner notice and an opportunity to avoid the cost and hassle of having to deal with a towed vehicle. Thus, we hold that the government must attempt to notify the owner of a vehicle parked in violation of a valid *1096 PNO certificate before the government may tow and impound it.
Our holding today dovetails with
Sco-field,
where we held that there was a due process requirement that notice be given— usually in the form of a ticket placed on the windshield — before police could tow apparently abandoned vehicles that are otherwise legally parked.
Scofield,
Officer Young could have avoided years of litigation and needless hassle for himself, the Glendale Police Department, the towing company, the courts, Ms. Clement and her daughter, by simply erring on the side of caution and good public service by letting her know that her vehicle was illegally parked. Instead, the rush to tow led to this protracted litigation that, no doubt, has consumed far more city resources than it would have taken to properly notify Clement.
2. Officer Young asserts qualified immunity as a defense to liability.
See Wyatt v. Cole,
Officer Young did not violate Clement’s clearly established right by calling for her car to be towed. The constitutional requirement at issue — that pre-towing notice be given before a car with a valid PNO certificate may be removed from a parking lot matching the owner’s address — was not clearly established at the time of Officer Young’s actions. Neither the text of the Constitution nor our caselaw clearly spoke to the balance between the rights of citizens to predeprivation notice and the authority of police to enforce registration statutes. While due process generally requires notice before the government may deprive a citizen of his property,
see
pp. 1093-94
supra,
our caselaw recognizes many exceptions.
See id.; Hudson v. Palmer,
3. Monterey Tow Service, the private towing company that actually towed Clement’s vehicle, may not assert qualified immunity because that defense is generally not available to private defendants in section 1983 lawsuits.
See Wyatt,
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The facts of this case justify allowing Monterey Tow Service to assert such a good faith defense. The company did its best to follow the law and had no reason to suspect that there would be a constitutional challenge to its actions. The tow was authorized by the police department, conducted under close police supervision and appeared to be permissible under both local ordinance and state law. The constitutional defect — a lack of notice to the car’s owner — could not have been observed by the towing company at the time when the tow was conducted; there would be no easy way for a private towing company to know whether the owner had been notified or not. Nor would the towing company be aware of the other facts and circumstances that would be relevant in determining whether giving notice was constitutionally required. The responsibility to give notice falls on the police, thus the constitutional violation arose from the inactions of the police rather than from any act or omission by the towing company. Having acted on instructions from the Glendale Police Department that specifically called for the tow, Monterey Tow Service is entitled to invoke the good faith defense.
Monterey Tow Service did not waive its good faith defense. It asserted— in both its answer and motion for summary judgment — that its employees were acting under the apparently lawful direction and authority of the city and officer. This was sufficient to put plaintiffs on notice that Monterey Tow Service intended to raise a good faith defense. As there is no disputed question of material fact underlying the defense, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Monterey Tow Service.
4. Clement’s seizure claim should not be reinstated. Our recent decision in
Miranda v. City of Cornelius,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Virginia Clement has been succeeded in this litigation by her daughter, Maty Clement.
. As the district court resolved the case on summary judgment, we assume Clement's version of events.
Meyers v. Redwood City,
.We need not decide whether the hotel parking lot was "publicly accessible" under the California Vehicle Code, nor whether the tow was proper under state law. We assume they were.
. In deciding a motion for summary judgment in a section 1983 action we are bound to look first to whether there was a constitutional violation and then to whether defendants have qualified immunity, even if the qualified immunity inquiry would resolve the case more easily. See
Saucier v. Katz,
. An unregistered car with a PNO certificate can still be operated on private roads- — such as on a farm or ranch.
See
Cal. Veh.Code § 360 ("highway” as used in registration law is limited to roads "publicly maintained and open to the use of the public”);
Meraz v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
. The owner — as here — may contest that the car was legally parked or properly registered. These disputes are likely rare; there is no evidence before us that the DMV’s registration information is consistently outdated, nor is there reason to believe that there are frequent debates over whether a given parking facility is publicly accessible or not.
.The owner might also dispute the validity of the tow, in which case California law provides for a hearing within 48 hours. Cal. Veh.Code § 22852(c). If the owner is successful in his challenge, the car will presumably be released without the payment of any fees. However, we must assume that the tow was proper under state law. Our concern is whether resorting to towing in the first instance, rather than ticketing the car first, or giving the owner some other form of advance notice and an opportunity to move or register the car before it is impounded, is consistent with the requirements of due process.
. California law calls for a fíne of not more than $250 for parking an unregistered vehicle in a public lot. Cal. Veh.Code § 42001.8. It would have been a simple task to mail a citation to the address on Clement’s PNO certificate if she hid the vehicle instead of paying the fine.
. We do not prescribe a particular procedure for giving notice; it is up to the government to develop a policy that will result in sufficient notice being given to car owners before impoundment.
See Morrissey v. Brewer,
