In this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action claiming deprivation of rights secured by the fourth, fifth, and fourteenth amendments, plaintiff-appellant Olson appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant Tyler, Chief of Police of the City of Elroy, located in Juneau County, Wisconsin, and defendant Foster, Chief оf Police of the City of Mauston, also located in Juneau County.
The district court’s grant of summary judgment to Tyler and Foster was based on its conclusion that Olson had failed to state a claim for which relief can be granted. While the record contains affidavits of the parties, the cоurt did not consider them in reaching its determination. Our review will accordingly be confined to the question whether Olson has stated a claim for which relief can be granted, and we hold that he has. We express no opinion as to whether summary judgment in favor of one or both defendants might be аppropriate on the basis of the factual record made in the proceedings below.
I.
The allegations of Olson’s complaint, which were undisputed by defendants except as noted herein, may be briefly summarized. In March, 1982, Tyler and Foster began a cooperativе undercover drug investigation. Linda Jorgenson was employed as an informant and paid $50.00 for each drug purchase she made. Also in March, 1982, Olson was arrested in Monroe County, Wisconsin, for speeding and operating a motor vehicle without a license. He pleaded guilty to the charges, and was sentenced to a ten-day jail term to commence on June 16, 1982, and to be served in the Monroe County jail, located in Sparta, Wisconsin, approximately 40 miles from Elroy where he lived.
During the month of June, Olson was employed as a bartender at Kaz’s Bar in Elroy and аs a laborer with his father’s construction company, also located in Elroy. After his Monroe County arrest but prior to June 16, Olson contacted Tyler to determine whether he could serve his jail sentence in the Juneau County jail as he had been granted Huber Law privileges, 1 and desired to continue working for his father during the ten-day period of confinement. Tyler advised Olson that he would attempt to make such an arrangement. On June 16, when Olson began serving his sentence in the Monroe County jail, Olson's mother telephoned Tyler, at Olson’s request, to ask whether Tyler had made arrangements for Olson to serve the sentence in the Juneau County jail. Tyler told Mrs. Olson that he would check it out. Mrs. Olson then telephoned the Monroe County jail. She spoke with an officer who informed her that only the sentencing judge had the authority to permit service of the sentence in аnother county’s jail. In a subsequent telephone conversation, Mrs. Olson relayed this information to Tyler, who responded, “I guess we learn something new everyday.” Olson served the ten-day sentence in the Monroe County jail, not exercising his Huber Law privileges.
*280 On June 19, 1982, police informant Jorgenson informed Tyler that she had purchased some hashish from Olson in Kaz’s Bar at approximately 6:30 p.m. that evening. On the basis of this information, Tyler signed a criminal complaint against Olson. Following the signing of the complaint, the district attorney procured a warrant for Olson’s arrest from Judge Wallace Brady on August 4, 1982. Olson was arrested on August 6, 1982, after service of his Monroe County sentence, and held in the Juneau County jail until August 9, 1982, when he was released on a signature bond. At a preliminary hearing held on August 11, 1982, Jorgenson could not identify Olson as the person who had sold her the hashish at Kaz’s Bar, and the charges were dismissed.
Olson’s section 1983 suit against Tyler, Foster, and a number of other defendants, whose dismissal from this action is not challenged on appeal, claimed a violation of his fourth amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures, a denial of equal protection, 2 and a deprivation of liberty without due process of law. Olson alleged that Tyler and Foster knew or should have known that he was incarcerated in the Monroe County jail at the time he allegedly purchased hashish from the informant, and that therefore no probable causе existed for his arrest. 3 Tyler and Foster dispute this allegation, but concede it for the purpose of appeal.
In its memorandum order the district court did not mention Olson’s fourth amendment claim at all, apparently viewing it as abandoned.
4
The court based its grant of summary judgment entirely оn Olson’s claim to have been deprived of liberty without due process. The court found that to the extent that this case can be distinguished from
Baker v. McCollan,
II.
We believe that Olson intended to assert a claim that his arrest was unlawful under the fourth amendment, as made applicable to the states through the fourteenth amendment, and that he did not abandon or waive that claim. Consequently, we begin our analysis with the question whether the facts as alleged in the complaint would support such a claim.
An arrest is not unlawful merely because the information on whiсh it was based is later determined to be inaccurate.
McKinney v. George,
When a police officer, acting in good faith, obtains a warrant arid acts within its scope, he has engaged in no official misconduct; it is the magistrate’s responsibility to determine whether the officer’s allegations constitute probable cause and it is the magistrate’s error if the arrest is later determined to have been unlawful. In such a case, the magistrate’s issuance of the warrant shields the officer from liability for the illegal arrest. It is one exception to this general rule with which we are concerned here. A warrant does not еrect an impenetrable barrier to impeachment of a warrant affidavit.
Franks v. Delaware,
That a facially valid warrant will immunize only the officer whо acted in an objectively reasonable manner in securing it is a principle that has been embraced by a number of courts in section 1983 actions.
Briggs v. Malley,
Our conclusion is supported by
United States v. Leon,
— U.S. ---, 104 5. Ct. 3405,
In formulating the good faith inquiry as “whether a reasonably well-trained officer would have known that the search was illegal
despite the magistrate’s authorization, ” Leon,
III.
Olson also has claimed that defendants, in effecting his arrest and detention, deprived him of his liberty without due process of law. Olson clearly was deprived of his liberty in the most traditional sense of the word. And we believe he has adequately alleged that the deprivation was effected without due process of law. When an individual is deprived of his liberty pursuant to a warrant that does not conform to thе requirements of the fourth amendment, he is deprived of liberty without due process of law.
Baker,
The availability of state tort remedies does not negate Olson’s contention that the deprivation of his liberty was effected without due process of law.
Parratt
has no аpplication to alleged violations of substantive constitutional proscriptions that are binding upon the states through incorporation into the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment.
IV.
We express no opinion on possible defenses to Olson’s clаims. We hold only that under the circumstances summary judgment in defendants’ favor was inappropriate.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Under the Huber Law, persons serving county jail sentences may be eligible for work release privileges. See Wis.Stat.Ann. § 56.08 (West 1984).
. Olson’s equal protection claim, that he was dealt with arbitrarily, is not expoundеd on appeal. It is essentially a rephrasing of his fourth amendment claim.
See McKinney v. George,
. Olson alleged that defendants Tyler and Foster were required to and did exchange information about persons under investigation for drug-related activities and that defendants were required to and did exchange information concerning Olson's whereabouts on June 19, 1982, the date he was alleged to have sold hashish to informant Jorgenson. Foster contends that he was not in any way involved in Olson’s arrest. Our opinion is not intended to foreclose Foster’s asserted defense.
. In an earlier order grаnting judgment on the pleadings to a codefendant, the district court stated:
The complaint also mentions the Fourth Amendment, a contention the court understands to concern the arrest of plaintiff. However, in his brief plaintiff concedes that the warrant was facially valid, and further stаtes that the due process clause is the source of his complaint.
. The
Franks
rationale applies with equal force where police officers secure a warrant through the intentional or reckless
omission
of material facts.
See United States v. Dorfman,
. True, we are dealing here with an allegedly illegal arrest which may be remedied only in a civil action. Although Franks arose in the context of a motion to suppress evidence seized pursuant to a search warrant, we believe there is no principled basis for finding its reasoning inapplicable to arrest warrants. The misconduct of the officer is the same; only the remedy differs.
