MEMORANDUM OPINION
Defendants, including Denzil Noble, the Administrator of the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (“DCRA”) Building and Land Regulation Administration (“BLRA”); J. Gregory Love, former BLRA Administrator; David Maloney, Officer with D.C.’s Historic Preservation Office (“HPO”); and Inspector Toni Williams-Cherry, an employee of HPO and contract worker for DCRA, seek reconsideration of this Court’s April 27, 2009 Opinion and Order,
I. FACTS 1
Plaintiffs in this action are Laura Elkins and John Robbins, wife and husband. They obtained building permits and approvals from the DCRA and the HPO for construction at their historic home on Capitol Hill. After construction began, city officials believed that Plaintiffs were building in violation of their permits, and they obtained a warrant to conduct an administrative search of Plaintiffs’ home in order to find evidence of illegal construction. Although the warrant did not authorize it, officials seized various documents during the search. The legality of both the search and the seizure were litigated before the D.C. Office of Administrative Hearings (“OAH”), and the Hearing Officer found that while the search was valid, the seizure of documents was not constitutionally permissible because it was not expressly authorized by the search warrant. This Court held that collateral estoppel precluded the relitigation of this issue and thus that Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights were violated due to the unreasonable seizure of documents.
See Elkins,
Defendants moved for summary judgment. On April 27, 2009, the Court (1) recognized that Plaintiffs are entitled to nominal damages; (2) found an issue of fact regarding whether Plaintiffs are entitled to compensatory damages with regard to the unconstitutional seizure alone; and (3) granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants on Plaintiffs claim for damages caused by actions other than the seizure. The Court held:
Plaintiffs are entitled to nominal damages for the violation of their Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure. Because Plaintiffs present an issue of fact regarding whether they are entitled to compensatory damages caused by the seizure alone, summary judgment will be denied on that issue. Summary judgment will be granted in favor of Defendants on Plaintiffs’ claim for damages caused by actions other than the seizure alone, e.g., damages caused by the revocation proceeding or by the April 24, 2002 stop-work order.
April 27, 2009 Opinion,
A question of fact exists regarding whether any Individual Defendant 2 acted with reckless disregard to the fact that the search warrant did not authorize the seizure of Plaintiffs’ documents. A prior draft of the warrant application included a request for seizure authorization, and yet the final draft did not include such a request. Inspector Cherry seized documents anyhow. These circumstancefs] raise the question of whether the seizure was done recklessly. Summary judgment cannot be granted on the issue of punitive damages.
Id. at 64.
Defendants now move for reconsideration of those portions of the Court’s deci *32 sion denying summary judgment. In essence, they raise two issues. First, they contend that the Court improperly found that Plaintiffs have an invasion of privacy claim. Second, they claim that the evidence of the Defendants’ personal involvement in the seizure is too scanty to overcome their motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs oppose.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A Rule 59(e) motion is discretionary and need not be granted unless the district court finds that “there is an intervening change of controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice.”
Fox v. Am. Airlines Inc.,
III. ANALYSIS
A. Clarification Regarding Remaining Cause of Action
Defendants erroneously contend that the Court has now permitted Plaintiffs to assert an invasion of privacy claim in addition to their claim for damages for the violation of their Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure. They misconstrue that portion of the Court’s Opinion that stated:
Like the plaintiffs in Hector and Totunes, Plaintiffs here can recover damages directly related to the invasion of their privacy — the illegal seizure of documents' — -but not for injuries resulting from the seizure of evidence and subsequent OAH proceeding.... [T]he constitutionally relevant harm that occurred here was the invasion of Plaintiffs privacy due to the illegal seizure of their documents, not the discovery of incriminating evidence (the unapproved plans) and subsequent OAH proceeding. Plaintiffs may recover for the invasion of privacy alone.
April 27, 2009 Opinion [Dkt. #83],
*33 B. Damages Caused Solely by the Seizure
Defendants also argue that none of the damages alleged by Plaintiffs was caused solely by the illegal seizure. “There is simply no way for the Court to award separate damages from Ms. Cherry’s acquisition of the notebook (an act taking a few seconds at most), in light of the claimed emotional damages from the overarching invasion of privacy authorized by the valid search warrant. The former is subsumed in the later.” Defendants previously raised this issue in their motion for summary judgment. The Court ruled that this is a factual question for trial. The April 27, 2009 Opinion explained:
Defendants erroneously argue that Plaintiffs have not presented any evidence of actual damages caused by the illegal seizure. In fact, Plaintiffs claim that as a “direct result of Defendants’ actions” they suffered emotional damages. They allege that their reputations were impaired and that they suffered humiliation and mental anguish. Ms. Elkins asserts that “these events [have] created ongoing physical and emotional stress-related disorders” for which she sought medical care. Plaintiffs also incurred attorney fees, some of which were associated with the motion to suppress in the OAH proceeding. There is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the seizure alone caused injury to Plaintiffs and regarding the extent and nature of such injury.
April 27, 2009 Opinion,
C. Individual Liability
Defendants contend that Plaintiffs have failed to point to any evidence that Messrs. Love, Noble, and Maloney were personally involved in the unconstitutional seizure at issue here. A § 1983 action cannot be maintained against an official in his personal capacity if the official was not personally involved in the decisions affecting the plaintiffs constitutional rights.
Brown v. District of Columbia,
Defendants argue that the mere scintilla of evidence raised by Mr. Maloney’s deposition testimony is insufficient to overcome summary judgment. On reconsideration, the Court agrees. Defendants argue that Mr. Maloney was not involved in the decision to seek a search warrant, in preparing the warrant application, in searching the house, or in seizing the documents. The Court found in its April 27, 2009 Opinion that there was a factual question regarding Mr. Maloney’s involvement:
Critically, he was involved in conversations with the District’s attorney regarding the search warrant and whether the warrant should authorize the seizure of documents. When asked why the attorney wanted to make sure that the warrant authorized the seizure, Mr. Malo *34 ney responded, “I assumed I guess that it was part of the point of having the search.” There is an issue of fact regarding Mr. Maloney’s personal involvement with the decision to seize documents despite the lack of authorization to do so.
April 27, 2009 Opinion,
With regard to Mr. Noble, Defendants again argue that the evidence linking him to the seizure is insufficient to go to trial. In the April 27, 2009 Opinion, the Court held that there was an issue of fact regarding Mr. Noble’s personal involvement with the decision to seize documents because (1) Mr. Noble signed the warrant application; (2) he testified in his deposition that one of the purposes of the search warrant was to seize documents; and (3) a prior draft of the search warrant affidavit written for Mr. Noble’s signature included a request that the warrant authorize the seizure of documents.
See
April 27, 2009 Opinion,
Defendants also argue that there is insufficient evidence of the personal involvement of Mr. Noble’s predecessor, Mr. Love. The Court found that this presented a genuine issue of material fact as follows:
There is some evidence that Mr. Love was involved in the decision to seize Plaintiffs’ documents. See Pis.’ Opp’n, Ex. 10 (Ford Aff. ¶ 20) (In May 2002, “Mr. Love instructed me to “find a way” to stop work at #20 9th Street, N.E. and force Mr. Robbins and Ms. Elkins to go back to the Office of Historic Preservation for re-approval of their work.”); id., Ex. 2 (email dated 10/28/02 from counsel to Mr. Love and others regarding topics for Oct. 29, 2002 meeting such as what “additional info” was needed *35 and what “steps” to take next). Thus, there is an issue of fact regarding Mr.
Love’s potential liability for damages. Id. at 65. Defendants argue now that the Ford Affidavit refers only to the revocation of the permits and not to the seizure of documents and should be given little weight. Weighing the evidence is for the jury, not the Court, as is the interpretation of Mr. Ford’s testimony. Plaintiffs have presented an issue of fact regarding Mr. Love’s personal involvement.
Defendants do not argue that Ms. Cherry was not personally involved in the unconstitutional seizure. After all, she accompanied the District’s attorney to Superior Court to apply for the warrant, she was present at the search, and she actually seized documents. Instead, they argue that she cannot be liable in the first place because she acted pursuant to a valid search warrant when she seized evidence in plain view, and because Plaintiffs consented to turning over the documents. The Court already held that Defendants are collaterally estopped from relitigating the finding by the Hearing Officer that the seizure of the documents was not constitutionally permissible.
See Elkins,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, Defendants’ motion for partial reconsideration [Dkt. # 85] will be granted in part and denied in part as follows: The Court’s April 27, 2009 Opinion is clarified as described herein. Further, the motion for reconsideration will be granted in favor of David Maloney because Plaintiffs have failed to present more than a scintilla of evidence demonstrating his personal involvement in the unconstitutional seizure. Mr. Maloney will be dismissed as a defendant in this case. The motion for reconsideration will be denied in all other respects. A memorializing order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. The facts are laid out in more detail in the Court's prior opinion.
See Elkins v. District of Columbia,
. The Court granted the motion for summary judgment in favor of the District of Columbia and it was dismissed as a defendant in this case. The "Individual Defendants” referenced in the April 27, 2009 Opinion are the remaining Defendants in this case, Messrs. Noble, Love, and Maloney and Ms. Williams-Cherry.
. The "invasion of privacy” language must be understood in context. The Court followed the reasoning of
Townes v. City of New York,
