Aрpellant Dennis Lee Campbell brought a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Child Protective Service (“CPS”) caseworker Paul Burt. Campbell alleged that Burt violated his federal constitutional rights by taking emergency custody of his three minor children and fаiling to file a court petition within two days of taking custody. The district court, following a bench trial, dismissed Campbell’s lawsuit.
See Campbell v. Burt,
I
Burt took emergency custody of Campbell’s children after discovering the squаlid conditions in which they lived. Their “home” was a storage shed measuring 6 feet by 12 feet that had no running water, refrigerator, toilet, or cooking facilities.
There were also indications that the children had been physically negleсted and that Campbell and Theresa Rossi, the children’s mother, had been in trouble with the law. Rossi twice had been arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol with the children in the car, and Campbell had a firearms convictiоn in his record. Campbell, who had mere visitation rights with respect to the children, was living in the shed while awaiting trial on charges of physically abusing one of the children. He was also awaiting trial on charges of abusing Rossi, whom he doused with gаsoline, and on charges of criminal property damage because the gasoline ignited and burned down the house where the children previously had been living. Campbell was later convicted on all charges.
In light of thesе circumstances, the district court found it reasonable for Burt to take emergency physical custody of the children without a prior court order. However, Hawaii Revised Statutes (“H.R.S.”) §§ 587-24 and 587-21 required Burt to file a petition for temрorary custody within two working days of taking emergency physical custody over^ a child without a prior court order. Burt did not file the petition until seven days after taking custody. On the same day Burt filed the petition, the Family Court issued an Ex Parte Ordеr for Temporary Foster Cus *929 tody, granting the state continued custody over the children.
The primary issue before us is whether, for purposes of qualified immunity, the seven-day delay before filing the petition and obtaining post-deprivatiоn judicial review violated Campbell’s clearly established procedural due process rights under the United States Constitution.
II
Federal procedural due process guarantees prompt post-deprivation judicial review in child custody cases.
See Jordan by Jordan v. Jackson,
However, “[a]n official is entitled to qualified immunity if the right which he allegedly violated is not ‘clearly established.’ ”
Campbell,
Federal case lаw as of April 1993 (when the children were removed) did not clearly establish that a seven-day delay before obtaining post-deprivation judicial review would violate due process. The relevant case law clearly established constitutional violations only for much longer delays.
See Weller v. Dept. of Social Ser vices,
Additionally, in all the eases establishing due process violations for removing children from parental custody, the parent actually had legal custody over the children. Here, Rossi, not Campbell, had sole legal custоdy over the children. This circuit has distinguished, for purposes of whether a post-deprivation hearing was a clearly established due process right, between whether children were
placed
with a person who lacked legal custody оr with a person such as a parent who had legal custody.
See Caldwell,
Ill
While Burt’s delay in obtaining post-deprivation judicial review did nоt violate clearly established federal law, his seven-day *930 delay in filing a court petition did violate state law, which required him to file the petition within two days. See H.R.S. §§ 58.7-24 and 587-21. The remaining issue is thus whether this state law clearly established a liberty interеst protected by the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.
As a general rule, a violation of state law does not lead to liability under § 1983.
See Davis v. Scherer,
The Supreme Court has recognized, however, that state law may form the basis for a federal action for purposes of qualified immunity in some cases: “Neither federal nor state officials lose their immunity by violating the clear command of a statute or regulation-of federal or of state law-unless that statute or regulation provides the basis for the cause of action sued upon.”
Davis,
In the present case, Hawaii law is both mandatory and clear. There is no dispute that Burt had to file a petition within two days of taking custody of the children, and that when he failed to do so, he violated state law.
Nonetheless, we hold that the state law in this case did not clearly establish a federal right at the time Burt removed the children. Both
Carlo
and
Olim
dealt with state laws governing prisоners’ rights, not the rights of parents of children taken into emergency custody.
1
In fact, as one court has noted, the “[ejstablishment of a liberty interest on the basis of state law, even when the doctrine was most in favor, was largely limited to state law regarding conditions of confinement in prisons and other institutions.”
Dietz v. Damas,
Thus, Burt cannot reasonably have been expected to know that a doctrine largely confined to prison regulations, which had never before been appliеd to creating federal liberty interests in statutes like H.R.S. §§ 587-24 and 587-21, would cause his actions to violate Campbell’s federal constitutional rights. This is especially true given the fact, as discussed above, that federal ease law had nоt clearly established that a seven-day delay in seeking judicial review was unconstitutional.
IV
Campbell also appeals various other rulings of the district court. We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion by denying Campbell’s motions for the appointment of counsel.
See Storseth v. Spell-man,
The district court аlso did not err by dismissing Campbell’s remaining state law claims, which were subject to qualified immunity. All other issues raised by Campbell were waived because they were not raised before the district court.
See Inti Union Bricklayers v. Jaska,
V
The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Neither the seven-day delay before obtaining post-deprivation judicial review, nor the seven-day delаy before filing a court petition, violated Campbell’s federal due process rights.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Moreover,
Carlo
was decided in 1997, long after the events at issue here. Thus, any rule of law that
Carlo
might have established was not clearly established during the relevant time.
See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
. While one case cited in
Carlo
found a state-created liberty interest in social worker supervision of children in foster homes, this was a substantive due process right to be free from the infliction of unnecessary pain, not a procedural due process right like the one at issue here.
See Taylor by and Through Walker v. Ledbetter,
