Plaintiff Craig Strauss filed suit against the City of Chicago (the “City”) and Chicago Police Officer John Doe under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 1 The district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, causing plaintiff to file a timely notice of appeal. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and we affirm the judgment of the lower court for the reasons stated herein.
I
For purposes of this Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion, we take the faсtual allegations in plaintiff’s complaint as true. Strauss’ complaint arises out of an incident on March 14, 1983. On that date plaintiff was lawfully on the premises of 7400 North Western Avenue when Chicago Police Officer John Doe placed Strauss under arrest without probable cause, or a reasonable belief that a crime had been committed or that Strauss had himself committed a crime. Subsequent to this unlawful arrest, the unnamed police officer struck plaintiff in the face.
Strauss alleged that policies of the City proximately caused this unlawful police conduct. Specifically, he claimed that the City
a. Had a custom and practice of hiring persons such as Defendant John Doe, whose prior history of brutality should have rendered them unacceрtable for hire.
b. Had a custom and practice of allowing Chicago Police Officers, such as Defendant John Doe, to remain cloaked with legal authority and employed as Chicago Police Officers, even though their experience on the job showed them to be brutal in nature and frequent violators of civil rights of persons in custody.
c. Had a custom and practice of allowing those in custody to be silenced by causing them to be beaten and physically abused.
d. Had a custom and practice of conducting investigations against police officers, by which said officers would be exonerated of any fault as a result of the investigative procedures employed by the police department; and which would result in the continued еmployment and cloak of authority upon brutal officers such as Chicago Police Officer John Doe.
Strauss pled no facts to support this charge, apart from those surrounding his own unlawful arrest and physical injury. He sought compensatory damages from the City for his injuries. 2
II
Our analysis begins with
Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,
We affirm the lower court’s dismissal of Strauss’ complaint for failure to state a claim because he has alleged no facts to suggest that the policies of which he complains actually exist. The standard a defendant must meet to have a claim dismissed for this reason is admittedly a high one. Dismissal is improper “unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
A complaint that tracks
Monell’s
requirement of official policy with bare allegations cannot stand when the policy identified is nothing more than acquiescence in prior misconduct.
3
The absence of any facts at all to support plaintiff’s claim renders the allegations mere legal conclusions of Section 1983 liability devoid of any well-pleaded facts. Our conclusion today does
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not conflict with the settled rule stated in
Conley,
that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not require a claimant to set out in detail the facts upon which he bases his claim. To the contrary, all the Rules require is “a short and plain statement of the claim” that will give the defendant fair notice of what the plaintiffs claim is and the grounds upon which it rests. (Footnote omitted; emphasis added.)
Plaintiff here has set out no grounds upon which his claim rests, an omission that is fatal. To allow otherwise would be tantamount to allowing suit to be filed on a
respondeat superior
basis. Plaintiffs could file claims whenever a police officer abused them, add
Monell
boilerplate allegations, and proceed to discovery in the hope of turning up some evidеnce to support the “claims” made. See
Rodgers v. Lincoln Towing Service, Inc.,
The existence of a policy that caused a plaintiffs injury is an essential part of Section 1983 liability, so that some fact indicating the existence of some such policy must be pled. Without some evidence apart from the fact of employment, regardless how slight, that a policy causing plaintiffs injury might exist, the plaintiff simply cannot proceed in court against the municipality. See
Sutliff, Inc. v. Donovan Co.,
Strauss did attempt to establish the minimal facts required by including statistical summaries from the Office of Professional Standards regarding complaints filed with the police department (memo in opposition to motion to dismiss). In
Powe, supra,
we stated that “the allegation of a pattern of conduct or a series of acts violative of constitutional rights will in many cases raise an inference of municipal policy.”
Powe,
At the very least Strauss “would need to identify as well what it was that made those prior arrests * * * illegal and to show that a similar illegality was involved in his case.”
Ekergren v. City of Chicago,
We do not mean to imply that a plaintiff must plead in greater detail, but merely that the plaintiff must plead some fact or facts tending to support his allegation that a municipal policy exists that could have caused his injury. Identifying such facts is of course more difficult when the policy through which plaintiff is aggrieved is one of acquiescence by the City in prior misconduct, thus encouraging the misconduct to continue, than when the policy is an affirmative one through which the City has acted to harm the plaintiff.
Murray v. City of Chicago,
In the case at bar, plaintiff has alleged something less than the failure to establish or execute appropriate procedures; he has alleged a policy of knowingly acquiescing in an individual police officer’s brutality. This claim requires sоme fact on which plaintiff’s opinion is based, a fact not included in his pleadings. We are sympathetic to Judge Marshall’s concerns expressed in
Means v. City of Chicago,
We are at a loss as to how any plaintiff, including a civil rights plaintiff, is supposed to allege with specificity prior to discovery acts to which he or she personally was not exposed, but which provide evidence necessary to sustain the рlaintiffs claim, i.e., that there was an official policy or a de facto custom which violated the Constitution.
Id. at 460.
But the complaint before us illustrates the possibilities in drafting that Judge Marshall’s approach leaves open to a creative lawyer. All counsel would need to do would be to concoct some explanation of plaintiff’s injury- that implicated the municipality — for example, a custom and praсtice of hiring as police officers those with a history of brutality — and the doors of the federal courtroom would swing open. Congress did not intend for Section 1983 liability to be so wide; mere employment of a tortfeasor is insufficient to impose liability on a municipality. Instead a cause of action will lie only for those injuries caused by faults “systemic in nature,”
Powe,
Once the district court dismissed plaintiff’s complaint for failure to state a claim, Strauss could either have sought the right to amend his complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) or 60(b) or stoоd on his complaint and appealed. J. Moore, 3 Moore’s Federal Practice II 15.07[2] at 15-51 (1984). His having elected the latter alternative after having had the opportunity to amend justifies the affirmance of the district court’s dismissal. Plaintiff now argues that he should be permitted at least to amend the complaint to name the defendant John Doe and pursue his claims against him. 6 Plaintiff hаs already had full opportunity to seek amendment, but has failed to do so. Moreover, John Doe was never served with summons and a copy of the complaint, so that the district court lacked jurisdiction over him. In this situation, dismissal of both parties was proper. 7 The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Section 1983 provides in relevant part:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State * * *, subjects, or сauses to be subjected, any * * * person within the jurisdiction [of the United States] to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.* * *
. Strauss’ complaint contained four counts, the first of which sought compensatory damages as just described. The seсond count sought punitive damages from the City, which are unavailable under
City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc.,
. The third and fourth policies that Strauss identified, those of allowing police officers рhysically to abuse those in custody and of corruption in the investigative process, clearly are aspects of a policy of acquiescence in known constitutional violations. Strauss might argue that the first two policies, those of hiring and retaining in employment as police officers individuals with known histories of brutality, constitute affirmative policies by the City going beyond merе acquiescence. But what the allegations amount to is that the City has hired brutal persons as police officers (without any indication that the City knew or should have known of the prior history of brutality) and then retained them even after receiving notice of the individuals’ violent propensities. In other words, the City has supposedly acquiesced in the physical abusiveness of such persons by not taking steps to fire them or to investigate reported offenses properly.
. These numbers are also somewhat dated since even the most recent year is four years prior to the year in which Strauss was injured. Police departments that earlier had in fact been guilty of the sorts of practices that Strauss charges might have remedied the alleged policies by the time of a plaintiff’s injury four years later, so that no such custom could have proximately caused the injury. Delays in tabulation and reporting might mean that these statistics were the most recent that were available to Strauss, though he does not indicate whether that was the case. Whatever the situation, our decision does not in any way turn on the age of the statistics, although thаt might be an issue had the numbers been correlated to Strauss' injury in the manner that we suggest could survive a motion to dismiss.
Daly v. City of Chicago, No. 81 C6632 (N.D.Ill. April 19, 1984), does not afford plaintiff the support on this point he attempts to claim. In *769 that case Judge Leighton denied the City’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Without deciding the correctness of his ruling, we note that the pleadings in that case contained very speсific data on police brutality pertaining to the individual police officers involved and the police station at which the .plaintiff had allegedly been beaten. This information differs greatly from the quite general statistics Strauss cites. We note also that Strauss omitted the statistical data he cites from his pleadings and included the information only in his memorandum in opposition to defendant’s motion to dismiss. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 7.
. In
Means,
the plaintiff made allegations similar to those at bar, namely, that the City "failed to train adequately the officers in question and police officers generally, failed to supervise and control their actions, and failed adequately to discipline them for past misconduct thereby en
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couraging the use of excessive force in the future."
.
Plaintiff’s primary justification seems to be that because “John Doe” did not join in the City’s motion to dismiss, he is still a party (Br. at 14; Reply Br. at 4). This argument is nonsense, for plaintiff cannot seriously expect the unnamed police officer, who has never been given notice, to know of the lawsuit and appear to file a motion to dismiss. Plaintiff had the responsibility of taking the steps necessary to identify the officer responsible for his injuries, a responsibility substantially supported by the discovery mechanisms available to him during the pendency of the lawsuit. Cf.
Gillespie v. Civiletti,
In this situation, -plaintiff knows from the outset that he cannot sustain his claim against John Doe without engaging in-discovery to identify him and that allowing a complaint to be filed against an unnamed party in the first place is viewed with disfavor. See
id.
at 642. The considerations here differ from the more general ones underlying our obsеrvation in
Murray,
. The remaining three counts were properly dismissed, as noted supra n. 2.
