MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Before the Court is defendant Parron’s motion to dismiss the case, or in the alternative for summary judgment, and plaintiff's opposition thereto. For the reasons set forth briefly below, defendant’s motion to dismiss will be granted.
According to his complaint, plaintiff appeared at the Bureau of Traffic Adjudication on December 5, 1985, for a hearing on a traffic ticket he had received the month before. A free-lance writer and photographer, plaintiff brought his camera with him rather than leave it in his car. While waiting for his hearing, he asked several security guards if he could take pictures of the long lines of people who were also waiting for hearings, but was told that such picture taking is against the law. Plaintiff thereafter took a seat in a hallway and waited approximately two hours for his hearing. He alleges that at approximately 1:00 p.m. defendant approached him and accused him of having taken photographs. Complaint at 1117. She thereupon revoked his right to a hearing and ordered him arrested. Id. Two security guards executed the arrest and according to plaintiff, used excessive force in the process. Id. at 1118. Plaintiff was charged with disorderly conduct and released from custody after posting $10.00. These charges were later dismissed for lack of prosecution. Plaintiff retained counsel who attended a hearing on his parking ticket on December 11. He now brings this suit alleging that his arrest at defendant’s instigation and her revocation of his right to a hearing violated his right to due process causing him emotional and financial injury.
Defendant moves to dismiss the case for failure to state a claim upon which relief
Plaintiff predicates part of his due process claim on defendant’s revocation of his right to a hearing on his parking ticket. That this right is a creature of municipal rather than federal law is not in and of itself dispositive of the question of whether plaintiff can state a section 1988 claim for its loss. The relevant inquiry is whether the right to a hearing plaintiff was allegedly denied is a property right protected by the fifth and fourteenth amendments’ due process clauses. The hallmark of such property rights “is an individual entitlement grounded in state law, which cannot be removed except ‘for cause.’ ”
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
Plaintiff’s allegations that he was deprived of a protected interest by one acting under color of law, however, do not by themselves state a claim for relief under section 1983. As the Supreme Court made clear in
Hudson v. Palmer,
His claim of unlawful arrest stands on a slightly different footing, but is similarly deficient. Plaintiff alleges that defendant ordered him arrested even though she lacked the authority to do so. While defendant claims that she did not actually take plaintiff into custody and further suggests that the Court “may assume” that the security guard who did arrest him “had his own independent reasons” for doing so, Defendant’s Motion at 3, the Court is obliged when entertaining a motion to dismiss to treat the allegations of the complaint as true, and may not indulge assumptions favorable to the defendant. The complaint states quite clearly that defendant ordered his arrest. Complaint at 1117. Treating that statement as true for present purposes, plaintiff has again demonstrated that he was deprived of a protected interest, his liberty, by one acting under color of state law. Once again, however, because adequate post-deprivation remedies are available to plaintiff — namely state tort actions for false imprisonment or false arrest —he has failed to state a claim for relief under section 1983.
In
Parratt
itself, Justice Blackmun stated in a concurring opinion joined by Justice White, that he did not believe that the availability of adequate post-deprivation remedies was relevant in cases involving deprivations of life or liberty.
Parratt,
All circuits that have addressed the question agree that
Parratt
is inapplicable where a plaintiff claims a deprivation of a substantive constitutional guarantee, such as those secured by the fourth or eighth amendment, or a deprivation of
substantive
due process rights, such as the right to be free from the use of excessive force by law enforcement officials.
Gilmere v. City of Atlanta,
Here plaintiff has alleged only that defendant deprived him of his due process rights. While he states in his complaint that the security guards who arrested him used excessive force, Complaint at ¶ 18, he chose not to name these individuals as defendants. Thus, even if this allegation
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In fact, it is arguable that plaintiff suffered no deprivation at all, since his post-deprivation remedy was the very type of hearing to which he claimed he was entitled and which defendant allegedly denied him.
. In
Brewer,
the Fifth Circuit based its decision on both the intentional nature of the conduct challenged and the fact that the protected interest at stake was the plaintiffs’ liberty.
Hudson v. Palmer,
of course, made clear that
Parratt
applies to intentional as well as negligent conduct. Following the decision in
Hudson,
the Fifth Circuit ruled in
Thibodeaux v. Bordelon,
. The Ninth Circuit’s position is still relatively unsettled. In both
Bretz v. Kelman,
and the initial panel decision in
Haygood v. Younger,
the Ninth Circuit ruled, as it had in
Rutledge v. Arizona Board of Regents,
that an intentional deprivation of liberty does not constitute a procedural due process violation where there are adequate post-deprivation state remedies. The
Bretz
and
Haygood
decisions were withdrawn,
. Nowhere in his complaint or in his opposition to defendant's motion does plaintiff allege that defendant ordered the security guards to use excessive force, nor does he in any other way suggest that she should be held responsible for their actions. Because Daniels v. Williams eliminated negligence as a basis of section 1983 liability, plaintiff would had to have alleged not merely that the use of such force was foreseeable but that defendant intended that such force be used. As the record is barren of any such allegations, the guards’ conduct cannot provide a basis for imposing liability on defendant.
. Under the
Hudson v. Palmer
formulation of a procedural due process claim, the burden is on plaintiff to allege inadequate post-deprivation state remedies, for as noted earlier the Supreme Court has stated that no due process violation occurs until the state fails to provide such remedies.
. In her motion, which requests that "this case” be dismissed, defendant makes no mention of her counterclaim against plaintiff. The Court assumes defendant does not wish to proceed on this claim in view of the disposition of plaintiffs claims and therefore will dismiss the counterclaim as well. This dismissal will be without prejudice for a period of 15 days in order to permit defendant an opportunity to reinstate it should the Court’s assumption prove incorrect.
