David Dyer, a Springfield, Illinois police officer also employed as a private security guard, arrested Crystal Pickrel following an altercation he had with her at a restaurant. After charges against her were dismissed, Pickrel sued Dyer, his public employer (the City of Springfield), and his private employer (MeGraw Enterprises). Two of Pickrel’s twelve claims were federal claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Dyer and the City for Dyer’s alleged violations of Pickrel’s civil rights. The district court dismissed Pickrel’s two federal claims under Fed.R.CivJP. 12(b)(6) and remanded the remaining ten state claims to state court. Pickrel appeals the dismissal of her federal claims; we re *1117 verse the district court’s dismissal and its remand of Pickrel’s state law claims.
I. Background
Because the district court dismissed Pickrel’s federal claims on the pleadings, the defendants have had little chance to present their version of the facts. However, when we review the granting of a defendant’s 12(b)(6) motion, we accept as true all the plaintiff’s well-pleaded factual allegations, as well as all inferences reasonably drawn from them.
Gibson v. City of Chicago,
On January 10, 1992, Piekrel, together with her father, went to a McDonald’s restaurant in Springfield. The restaurant had hired MeGraw Enterprises to provide a private security guard; Dyer was the guard MeGraw Enterprises supplied that day. The City of Springfield also employed Dyer as a full-time police officer. Dyer had parked his marked squad ear outside the restaurant and he was inside the restaurant. He was wearing his Springfield police uniform, complete with badge and gun.
Piekrel and her father sat down at a booth. Dyer came over to them and told them to leave, threatening to arrest them if they stayed. Apparently this was the continuation of a long-running dispute, although it is not clear from what the dispute sprang. Piekrel refused to obey; Dyer told her to stand up and said she was under arrest. When she did not immediately comply, Dyer stood her up with an “arm-bar” hold, pulled her out of the booth, and threw her to the ground. Dyer then arrested Piekrel and put her in handcuffs. Other police officers arrived and arrested Pickrel’s father as well. The officers put both of them in squad ears and took them to the county jail, where they charged Piekrel with criminal trespass to property, resisting a peace officer, and obstructing a peace officer.
On January 14, 1992, all charges against Piekrel were dismissed. In January 1994, Piekrel filed a twelve count complaint in Illinois state court against Dyer, the City of Springfield, and MeGraw Enterprises. Two counts of Pickrel’s twelve count complaint asked for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for alleged constitutional violations made under color of state law. Piekrel’s other ten counts asked for damages from Dyer and MeGraw Enterprises for violations of various state laws. The defendants promptly removed the entire action to federal court.
Dyer and the City of Springfield moved to dismiss several counts of Pickrel’s complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Dyer asked only that various state law claims be dismissed, mainly as time barred by an Illinois statute. He did not ask the . district court to dismiss Pickrel’s § 1983 claim against him. The City, however, did ask the district court to dismiss Pickrel’s § 1983 claim against it, as inadequately alleging a policy or custom of the City that had led to the alleged constitutional violations.
The district court partially granted the motion to dismiss, although not on the grounds the defendants argued. Rather, the district court reasoned:
Although Defendant Dyer was wearing his city police uniform, he was off duty and working as a security officer for Defendant MeGraw Enterprises when, in the course of his employment as a security guard, he arrested the Plaintiff. It was a city policy that police officers could use their uniforms- and squad cars when working on or off duty security jobs. It is also well known that private security guards may make arrests. [Citations omitted.] Therefore, it appears that Defendant Dyer arrested the Plaintiff in his capacity as a security guard, and not as a city police officer, since he was then off duty.
The court further explained this reasoning when denying a Rule 59(e) motion to alter its judgment of dismissal:
[U]nder the facts alleged in the present complaint, Defendant Dyer could only have been proceeding in the interest of MeGraw Enterprises when he arrested the Plaintiff for criminal trespass- As a result, Defendant Dyer was not acting under color of state law, and the Plaintiff may not sustain a cause of action against Mr. Dyer for a violation of the Fourth Amendment under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
On this reasoning, the district court dismissed both § 1983 counts and remanded the remaining ten counts to state court. Piekrel moved to alter the judgment under Rule *1118 59(e), but the district court denied the motion. 1
II. Analysis
Our review of the district court’s 12(b)(6) dismissal is, of course,
de novo. Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Bush,
For Pickrel to recover under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Dyer must have acted “under color of state law” to deprive Pickrel of some federally guaranteed right.
Hughes v. Meyer,
Deciding whether a police officer acted under color of state law should turn largely on the nature of the specific acts the police officer performed, rather than on merely whether he was actively assigned at the moment to the performance of police duties.
Stengel v. Belcher,
Under the facts Pickrel alleges, Dyer could have been acting under color of state law. Pickrel says that Dyer was wearing his police uniform and displaying his badge, both signs of state authority. He was wearing his gun, enabling, him to enforce his authority. His marked squad car was parked just outside, advertising the presence of a police officer to patrons of the restaurant. Dyer arrested Pickrel and charged her with, among other things, resisting a peace officer. Other courts have found that similar allegations support a § 1983 claim.
See, e.g., Lusby v. T.G. & Y. Stores,
The defendants argue that for § 1983 purposes a plaintiff may not allege that a police officer “wore two hats.” They say that Pick-rel logically cannot claim that Dyer was simultaneously acting in his private capacity and acting under color of state law. But plaintiffs may plead in the alternative, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(2), and that is what Pickrel did. At this stage complete internal consistency of claims is just not required.
Defendants’ fallback position is that
Askew v. Bloemker,
It may be appropriate at some later stage for the district court to examine the evidence then before it and make a fresh decision. Courts have found various factors, some not specifically mentioned in Pickrel’s pleadings, important in deciding whether an off-duty police officer was acting under color of state law. For example, Springfield may have had a local ordinance providing that Dyer was to act as a police officer all the time, even if not actively assigned to police duties at a particular moment.
See Revene,
Notes
. In its order dismissing Pickrel’s two § 1983 counts, the district court mentioned in passing that, although it was not necessary for its decision, it thought that Pickrel had adequately alleged a policy or custom of the City that had led to the alleged constitutional violations, as required by
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
