Rаmsey County, Minnesota collects all of a detained arrestee’s cash upon booking. From this cash, the county automatically deducts a $25 booking fee. The county later returns the arrestee’s remaining funds in the form of a prepaid debit card. Erik Mickelson and Corey Statham, two men previously arrested in Ramsey County, filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action contending that the policies underlying these practices violated their Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district court 2 granted the defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings. We affirm.
I.
Under Minnesota law, a “county board may require that each person who is booked for confinement at a county or regional jail, and not released upon completion of the booking process, pay a fee to the sheriffs department.” Minn.Stat. § 641.12, subdiv. 1. This “fee is payable immediately from any money then possessed by the person being booked, or any money deposited with the sheriffs department on the person’s behalf.” Id. Pursuant to this statute, Ramsey County collects $25 from each person who is booked into and not immediately released from its county detention facility. The county takes this sum from the cash an arrestee is carrying at the time of booking. If the arrestee is not carrying sufficient cash, the county charges the fee and places the ar-restee’s detention-facility account into a negative balance. An inmate must satisfy this balance before he or she can purchase items from the jail commissary or receive a disbursement of funds. If the arresteе has no funds at the time of booking or during the period of incarceration, the county court may order payment of the fee as part of any sentence imposed. Id.
Persons arrested and detained in Ramsey County are entitled to a refund of the booking fee in three scenarios. First, an arrestee can recover the funds if he or she is not charged with a crime. Second, an arrestee may receive a refund if charges are dismissed. Finally, an arrestee may
Ramsey County also has a policy of confiscating all cash arrestees have at the time they are booked into the county detention center. Instead of returning cash to .detainees upon release, the county issues prepaid debit cards for a sum equal to the value of the confiscated cash less the booking fee. Along with the card, arres-tees receive a cardholder agreement explaining the fees associated with certain card uses. The fees include:
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The card starts incurring weekly maintenance fees after thirty-six hours. Withdrawing cash will result in an ATM fee. Materials provided along with the card include a website address providing customer service and a toll-free number that arrestees may cаll. These resources advise cardholders how to avoid all fees— such as by spending all of the funds on the card before the weekly maintenance fee accrues — and how to minimize other possible fees. Several private entities work with the county to provide these cards. Keefe Commissary Network, L.L.C. (“KCN”) coordinates the Ramsey County inmate trust-fund and release-services program. First California Bank (“FCB”), issues the ' prepaid debit cards. Finally, Outpay Systems, L.L.C., (“Outpay”) processes any debit-card transactions.
Erik Mickelson and Corey Statham, the plaintiffs in the present suit, were arrested in Ramsey County and subjected to the above-described policies and fees. Mickel-son was arrested for violating a noise ordinance. Police bookеd him into the Ramsey County Law Enforcement Center and confiscated his personal property, including $95 cash. Upon his release, Mickelson received a debit card carrying $70, a value that represented his $95 in cash less the $25 booking fee. He subsequently incurred $5 in fees while using the debit card. Mickelson ultimately pleaded guilty to violating a city ordinance.
Statham was arrested for disorderly conduct and obstructing the legal process. He was carrying $46 in cash when police booked him into the Ramsey County Law Enforcement Center. Upon his release, Statham received a debit card containing $21. His debit-card fees amounted to $7.25. All charges against Statham eventually were dismissed. Despite this dismissal, Statham did not receive a refund of the $25 booking fee.
Miсkelson and Statham sued Ramsey County, KCN, FCB, and Outpay, alleging four claims related to the booking-fee and debit-card policies: (1) defendants were liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violating the plaintiffs’ Fourth and Fourteenth
II.
“We review a judgment on the pleadings
de
novo.”
Williams v. Bradshaw,
A.
Mickelson and Statham argue first that the district court erred by determining that the county’s system of immediately collecting the booking fee complies with procedural due process. In this appeal, Mickelson and Statham raise no substantive due process or equal protection challеnge to the statutorily authorized fee itself. Instead, they contend only that the county violates the Fourteenth Amendment by deducting the fee before first conducting a pre-deprivation hearing. They suggest that the county, to avoid a constitutional violation, must delay collection until an arrestee has been afforded the type of hearing associated with conviction. Our court therefore must determine whether the district court correctly held that the county did not violate the arres-tees’ constitutional rights by collecting the $25 fee at booking without affording a pre-deprivation hearing.
As an initial matter, we agree that Mickelson and Statham had a property interest in the $25 used to pay the booking fee. The booking-fee policy thus
Although this booking-fee policy presents an issue of first impression in our circuit, other courts have passed upon the constitutional validity of collecting a similar fee at booking. The Sixth Circuit examined this issue in
Sickles v. Campbell County,
We find persuasive the Sixth Circuit’s assessment of the private and state interests at play in
Sickles.
First, we agree with the court’s conclusion that the private interest at stake — the lost use of the $25 booking fee taken from each arrestee — is “small in absolute and relative terms.”
Id.
at 730. Although $25 is not an insubstantial amount from the subjective standpoint of some arrested individuals, the private interеst in the use of this sum “do[es] not begin to approach the kinds of government conduct that have required a predeprivation hearing, such as a limitation on the ‘historic’ ‘right to maintain control over [one’s] home,’ or the termination of government benefits, which for many people are ‘the very means by which to live.’ ”
Id.
(alternation in original) (internal citations omitted). For the erroneously deprived arrestee, the temporary deprivation of $25 is not comparable to “the cessation of essential services for any appreciable time[, which] works a uniquely final deprivation.”
See Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v. Craft,
Second, we agree with the
Sickles
court’s conclusion that the county’s interest in collecting the fees at booking is substantial. Collecting the fee from those required to pay under the statute allows the county to manage the costs of serving and policing the community and “further[s] offender accountability.”
The county’s interest in upfront collection — the current policy — stems from the increased likelihood that the county will be able to collect this statutorily authorized fee. Prompt collection from an arrested person ensures the county can secure the funds as contemplated under Minnesota law because the county can take the money from an arrestee’s available cash. As the Sixth Circuit recognized in
Sickles,
waiting until release would allow the detained ar-restee to exhaust the funds in his or her commissary account prior to conviction.
Our
Mathews
inquiry does not end with the balancing of the private and state interests at stake, however. We
With this principle in mind, we begin our analysis of this factor with the county’s criteria for upfront collection. Before Ramsey County collects the $25 fee, an individual must be arrested and detained at the county detentiоn facility. Arrest, as our court often has recognized, requires probable cause to support the belief that an arrestee has committed or was committing a crime.
Kuehl v. Burtis,
Pursuant to Ramsey County policy, all inmates charged a booking fee must receive a “Booking Fee Refund Form” upon release from the county detention facility. Generally, submission оf the form is the only prerequisite to receiving a refund once an individual has been acquitted or has had his charges dismissed.
4
The policy requires the county to mail the refund to all eligible applicants within thirty days of the form’s receipt. In addition, as the district court recognized and as the court found significant in
Sickles,
the jail’s grievance procedure also is available to the county inmates. The grievance procedure provides a mechanism through which inmates may challenge any unfair treatment, including ' alleged wrongful deductions.
See Sickles,
As written, this policy allows for the correction of any errors inherent in the overinclusive system of upfront collection. If all deprived arrestees who are not convicted can recoup their $25 simply by sending in a form, the risk of error is minimal, limited only to the possibility that some arrestees temporarily will lose the. use of $25. We do not discern any constitutionally significant value in the appellants’ proposed alternative — delaying collection until after conviction — that would outweigh the state’s valid interest in upfront collection of the fee.
Cf. Mathews,
The appellants rely heavily on the Seventh Circuit’s fractured en banc decision in
Markadonatos v. Village of Woodridge
to argue that the county’s system of collecting the booking fee upfront cannot pass constitutional muster.
With the
Sickles
and
Markadonatos
decisions in mind, we conclude that Mickel-son and Statham did not plead facts sufficient to establish that Ramsey County’s booking-fee policy fails to pass constitutional muster simply because it provides a post-deprivation remedy instead of a pre-deprivation hearing. The county has in place a coordinated refund process, and the modest private interest at stake does not approach those interests found to warrant a full-fledged pre-deprivation hearing.
See Sickles,
Notwithstanding
Mathews
and the decisions of our sister circuits, Mickelson and
In
Walters,
we stated that the district court erred when it determined that the availability of a post-deprivation action in replevin was fatal to a plaintiffs due process claim, a claim challenging a city’s policy of retaining a handgun and ammunition confiscated from an arrestee.
We do not read
Walters
to foreclose the possibility that an adequate post-deprivation process may satisfy the Fourteenth Amendment in a case such as this one. Indeed, Walters cited several Supreme Court cases explaining that post-deprivation process may suffice, even when the deprivation occurs pursuant to established state policy.
Id.
at 313-14 (citing
Zinermon v. Burch,
Several courts have applied the logic of these cases to uphold the collectiоn of jail fees from an inmate without pre-deprivation process.
See, e.g., Tillman,
Of course, for the specific post-deprivation remedy in place to satisfy due process, the remedy must be adequate.
See Mitchell,
Significantly, neither Mickelson nor Statham alleged in their complaint that they submitted the Booking Fee Refund Form or engaged the jail grievance proce
In sum, in view of the modest private interests at stake, the substantial state interests in the current withholding system, and the appellants’ failure to complete the existing refund process and demonstrate its alleged inadequacies, we conclude that Mickelson and Statham have not stated a plausible claim that the booking fee posеd a violation of constitutional rights that is actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We thus affirm the district court’s judgment on the pleadings.
B.
Mickelson and Statham also contend that the district court erred by granting the defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings regarding the constitutionality of the prepaid debit-card scheme. Ramsey County instituted the debit-card policy to avoid having employees hold on hand, guard, regularly access, and track large sums of cash from numerous inmates. Mickelson and Statham argue that this scheme violates both procedural and substantive due process.
As discussed in the previous section, an individual must have a constitutionally protected interest in life, liberty, or property in order for the protections of procedural due process tо attach.
Singleton v. Cecil,
Here, the appellants failed to establish a constitutionally cognizable interest related to the debit-card scheme that is sufficient to trigger the protections of due process. Mickelson and Statham argue
According to the fee schedule provided to each inmate, fees may be avoided by the vast majority of, and perhaps all, arres-tees. The card starts to incur a weekly maintenance fee of $1.50
only
if an inmate has not spent the funds on the debit cards within thirty-six hours. If the arrestee spends the funds during this initial window, the card does not incur the fee. Likewise, the debit-card website advises that cardholders may “remove [the] entire card balance for no charge by visiting any financial institution that is a MasterCard principal member and asking for a cash advance for the balance on the card.” If the inmate instead converts the debit card back into cash using an ATM, only a onetime ATM fee of $2.75 automatically applies.
6
Such a minimal imposition does not trigger constitutional due process protection. The D.C. Circuit explained almost thirty years ago that “matters involving a few dollars or less” do not trigger due process.
Gray Panthers v. Schweiker,
Our precedent is also consistent. Although we have observed that the Due Process Clause “sets no minimum threshold value for which protection begins,” our court, prior to carrying out a due process analysis, has ensured that the interests at stake “manifestly equal[ ] or exceed[ ] those recognized as deserving of Fourteenth Amendment protection.”
Gentry v. City of Lee’s Summit,
In any event, we see no disputе of fact that a pre-deprivation or post-deprivation hearing would resolve. The criteria for conversion of cash to a debit card are arrest and temporary detention, and neither Mickelson nor Stat-ham contests the fact that they were lawfully arrested or detained. When a plaintiff identifies no dispute that a hearing could resolve, he has no viable basis for demanding more process.
See Codd v. Velger,
In this appeal, Mickelson and Statham also contend that the debit-card scheme violates substantive due process. We conclude that this claim is not properly before our court. When a party fails to argue a claim before the district court, we consider that claim abandoned such that we need not examine it on appeal.
Demien Const. Co. v. O’Fallon Fire Prot. Dist.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Susan Richard Nelson, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. Although we could conceive of a situation in which the county’s interest might be minimal, the appellants here did not seek any discovery related to the county’s interest in the current system. And they do not argue now that judgment on the pleadings was improper because genuine issues of fact remained regarding that interest. Instead, in their appeal, they rely on the pleadings and documents encompassed by them, and they contend that these documents alone make clear that the county violates due process. Because it “is not our task ... to scour the record in search of a genuine issue of triable fact,” we limit our analysis to the argument presented.
See Brasic
v.
Heinemann’s Inc.,
. If an applicant attempts to recoup the fee based on his contention that he will not be charged in the future, he also must submit documentation from the arresting agency supporting this contention. This requirement did not apply to either Mickelson or Statham. Mickelson pleaded guilty, and Statham’s charges were dismissed.
. The closest the appellants came to making such an allegation is found in a paragraph of their complaint that states that a pretrial detainee is not informed about the refund process when he or she "is
brought
to the Ramsey County detention facility.” This allegation is not inconsistent with the Ramsey County policy of informing detainees
upon release.
Moreover, the appellants failed to develop in their brief any argument that the county’s post-deprivation ' remedy is inadequate based on the county's failure to inform arrestees of the available process. Absent (his argument, we will not
sua sponte
consider the question here.
See Brasic,
. The debit card materials indicate that the local ATM provider may charge a separate fee for withdrawal. However, the debit card's customer service website provides a link to a map of surcharge-free ATMs and alternatively advises that selecting the "cash back” option at certain vendors will allow cardhоlders to obtain cash for no additional charge.
. The appellants contend that procedural and substantive due process arguments are inextricably intertwined such that a court must consider both on appeal. We disagree. Our court previously has found that a party waived a substantive due process claim even when our court entertained a procedural due process appeal.
See Hartman v. Workman,
. Because we uphold the district court’s determination that no constitutional violation occurred, we need not reach the question whether KCN, FCB, and Outpay are liable as state actors.
Cf. Jenn-Ching Luo v. Baldwin Union Free Sch. Dist.,
