795 A.2d 1212 | Vt. | 2002
Plaintiffs Coliseum Enterprises and Shawn B. Cliche appeal from an order of the Chittenden Superior Court granting summary judgment to defendants who are individual members of the Burlington Local Control Commission. Plaintiffs brought an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that the commissioners violated plaintiffs’ due process rights when they rescinded their recommendation that the Vermont Liquor Control Board approve plaintiffs’ application for a liquor license. Plaintiffs also claimed that defendants tortiously interfered with plaintiffs’ business under state law. We agree with the trial court that defendants are entitled to qualified immunity from suit. Accordingly, we affirm.
On October 21,1996 the commissioners considered plaintiffs’ application for a first class liquor license. After hearing testimony in favor of and opposed to the application the commissioners approved plaintiffs’ application by a vote of 8-6. According to state law, once an application has been approved by a local commission, the application is passed on to the state board for it to investigate the applicant and approve or disapprove of the application. 7 V.S.A. §222. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ application was forwarded to the board. Before the board acted on the application, however, the Burlington commissioners decided to reconsider its prior vote at a November 18 meeting. Plaintiffs were present at this meeting and given an opportunity to be heard, as were, others in attendance. At the conclusion of this meeting, the commissioners voted by 12-1 to rescind the approval of the application. .
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the original vote of the commissioners bestowed upon plaintiffs a property interest in a liquor license that could be revoked only with due process. They base their argument on the fact that a high percentage of applicants whose licenses were approved by the local commissions were also approved by the state board. From this statistic, plaintiffs conclude that there was a strong likelihood that the board would have approved their application, vesting plaintiffs with a property interest in the license, and thus due process protections should attach following the approval of the local commissioners. The manner in which the commissioners rescinded the application, plaintiffs contend, did not comport with due process because the commissioners did not comply with the revocation proceedings laid out in 7 V.S.A. § 236. Plaintiffs also argue that the commissioners are not protected by qualified immunity because § 236 states the “clearly established law” in Vermont for revoking a liquor license of which the commissioners should have known.
We need not address the question of whether plaintiffs had a property interest in the liquor license following the original vote of the commissioners because we find that the commissioners are immune from suit. We have recognized that “[ijmmunity is a defense to § 1983 actions for damages against persons in their individual capacity.” Billado v. Appel, 165 Vt. 482, 486, 687 A.2d 84, 87 (1996). Although certain individuals acting in a legislative, judicial or prosecutorial capacity enjoy absolute immunity, in this case we are concerned with public officials performing a discretionary function who are entitled to qualified immunity. See id. at 486-87, 687 A.2d at 87-88. Here, the commissioners are immune from suit “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). To overcome the commissioners’ qualified immunity defense, therefore, plaintiffs must identify a “clearly established” right that was violated by the rescission of their application.
Plaintiffs’ argument in this regard hinges on the assumption that once the local commissioners have approved a license application, the license has been “granted.” Relying on this assumption, plaintiffs argue that the commissioners failed to comply with the clearly established law for revoking a license. Title 7 V.S.A. § 236(a) states that for a “license granted . . . [n]o revocation shall be made until the'permittee or licensee shall be notified and be given a hearing before the liquor control board.” The commissioners’ failure to comply with this statute, plaintiffs claim, deprived them of their due process rights because they had a vested property right in the license once it had been “granted.”
Second, even if plaintiffs were “granted” a license by the vote of the commissioners and thus the commissioners plainly violated 7 V.S.A. §236, plaintiffs may not use a violation of state law to bootstrap a violation of the federal constitution. In other words, the contention that the commissioners violated § 236 does not by itself give rise to a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 violation. Rather, the violation giving rise to the cause of action is the alleged deprivation of due process guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, not the violation of 7 V.S.A. § 236. Whether the commissioners complied with § 236 does not, without more, answer the question of whether the commissioners violated plaintiffs’ constitutional due process rights. See Davis v. Scherer, 468 U.S. 183, 195 (1984). In Davis, the Court held that an official sued for a constitutional violation does not lose qualified immunity merely because the conduct also violates a state statutory or administrative provision. Id. Plaintiffs’ obligation, under Harlow, is to establish that the commissioners’ rescission clearly violated federal due process law. They have not done so here.
Affirmed.