The plaintiff in this civil rights action under 42 U.S.G. §§ 1983 and 1985 is a Missouri prisoner whose appeal from a state conviction of burglary is pending, as of the latest notice to us, in the Missouri Supreme Court. In the meantime however, the plaintiff has filed a pro se complaint in forma pauperis in the United States Distriсt Court, Eastern District of Missouri, 1 alleging deprivations of his civil rights.
Judge Wangelin, dismissed the complaint against all defendants, except Dr. Vargas, for failure to state a claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Against Dr. Vargas, the complaint was dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction, since service of рrocess was not accomplished. Judge Wangelin denied the plaintiff’s request and defendants’ (Moss and Scott) motions for appointment of counsel since the dismissals as to all defendants rendered the question of appointment of counsel moot. The District Court also denied the plaintiff’s request for a reversal of a Missouri Supreme Court order denying the plaintiff a transcript of his state conviction, since federal courts do not have “subject matter jurisdiction to reviеw on direct appeal such action by the Missouri Supreme Court.” We affirm the District Court.
The plaintiff was convicted of a burglary of the Living Room Lounge, St. Louis, Missouri, which occurred approximately at 4:00 a. m. on July 21, 1970. Sam Elmer Dorsey, owner of the tavern, told police that he was concealed in a closet inside the tavern when the plaintiff broke in the front door. Before the breakin, Dorsey had driven by his tavern at approximately 3:00 a. m. and had seen an officer investigating his tavern since the security alarm was sounding. Upon discovering a rear door window was broken, Dorsey told the officer that he planned to spend the rest of the night at the tavern. After the officer left, Dorsey noticed the plaintiff walking on the oрposite side of the street and glancing frequently at the tavern. At that point, Dorsey hid in the closet and waited approximately one hour before the plaintiff broke in the front door. Dorsey told the police that he fired two shots at thе plaintiff inside the tavern, that one shot struck the plaintiff in the thigh, and that the plaintiff got up off the tavern floor and walked outside where he fell to the ground. Dorsey called the police, and when they arrived, Barnes was arrested outside the tavern and taken to City Hospital No. 2. Barnes’ state conviction for burglary followed, and his appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court is now pending.
The defendants in this civil suit are: Honorable Michael Scott, Circuit Judge of Missouri in the Circuit Court, City of St. Louis, who presided at Barnes’ burglary trial; Neis C. Moss, Assistant Circuit Attorney for the City of St. Louis, who was the prosecuting' attorney at Barnes’ trial; James P. Lavin, Clerk of the Court of Criminal Corrections, City of St. Louis; A. L. Lark, Warden of the City Jail; Sheriff Percich, Sheriff of the City of St. Louis; J. Martin Hadicаn, the plaintiff’s court appointed attorney in the state conviction; Dorsey, the tavern owner and a witness in the state conviction; Dr. Vargas, who was employed at City Hospital No. 2 during the time of the alleged violations of the plaintiff’s сivil rights; and Police Officers Harry Hall, Fred Smith, Sergeant Major Blancett, and Michael Dunn. For various reasons, the plaintiff claims that these individuals either individually or in concert deprived him of his federally protected rights in relation to his arrest, his recоvery at the city hospitals, and his trial.
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Although the defendants filed various motions in the District Court to dismiss this action, Judge Wangelin treated all motions, except as to Dr. Vargas, as a failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. We agree that this procedure was proper. Meredith v. Allen Co. War Memorial Hospital Commission,
Plaintiff’s mаjor contention concerning his alleged deprivation of his civil rights and defective arrest and trial is that medical evidence clearly could establish that it was impossible for the plaintiff who was suffering a gunshot wound to have moved from inside thе tavern to outside and that Dorsey’s testimony was therefore improper and insufficient evidence on which to base an arrest and a conviction for burglary. Inferentially, the plaintiff wants us to conclude despite his conviction by a jury that hе was outside the tavern when he was shot and therefore that no burglary occurred. In relation to his argument of deprivation of civil rights, the plaintiff alleges that defendants Judge Scott, Moss, Lavin, Hadican, Dorsey, Hall, Smith, Dunn, and Blancett either singularly or in сoncert allowed Dorsey’s testimony in a police report to go uneontradicted for the basis of an issuance of an arrest warrant but allowed the suppression of the police report at trial which would have provided, due to its improbability, a ground for arguing the plaintiff’s innocence.
We agree with Judge Wangelin that the plaintiff has alleged no cause of action against Judge Scott, since he was acting within the scope of his judicial authority. Pierson v. Ray,
In regards to the possible liability of Lavin, the court clerk, the plaintiff has failed to allеge that the clerk was not properly performing his ministerial duties. Although Lavin has not pleaded a “good faith” defense that, if proven, would exonerate him from liability under McCray v. Maryland,
In regards to the possible liability of Hadican, the plaintiff’s court
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appointed attorney for the burglary charge, we hold, as did the District Court, that Hadican “acted only in his performance of his duties as Cоurt appointed counsel in representing plaintiff” and “[s]uch actions are not performed under the color of state law.” Dyer v. Rosenberg,
In relation to defendant Dorsey, the tavеrn owner, the plaintiff claims that Dorsey fabricated the account of the shooting incident to the police and to the state court. No allegation has been made that Dorsey acted in concert with any public official, thеrefore Dorsey cannot be said to have acted under color of state law in violation of § 1983, nor to have acted as part of a conspiracy in violation of the Civil Rights Act. Dieu v. Norton, supra at 763.
The District Court also proрerly dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim against the four police officers. The plaintiff claims that his arrest was unlawful and his conviction improper since the police officers must have known that the plaintiff could not have moved outside the tavern. The police officers counter by claiming that Dorsey’s account of the shooting and breakin gave them .probable cause to arrest the plaintiff. Since the facts alleged by the plaintiff shоw that the officers acted upon probable cause, dismissal was proper, Pierson v. Ray,
The plaintiff also alleges that defendant Lark, Warden of the City Jail, contributed to aggravating the plaintiff’s injuries by taking the plaintiff’s walking cane and by rеquiring the plaintiff to re-use a disposable plastic syringe for the use of insulin. The plaintiff later became ill and was removed to a city hospital for oral insulin treatment. The District Court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint by relying on Fear v. Pennsylvania,
Plaintiff also contends that Sheriff Percich of the City of St. Louis forced the plaintiff to leave City Hospital No. 2 to appear for a preliminary-hearing in the burglary charge before the plaintiff’s broken leg had heаled. Sheriff Percich moved for a summary judgment since he took office on March 17, 1972, long after the alleged acts occurred. The plaintiff asked the District Court to join Sheriff Tozer, who preceded Sheriff Percich in office. The District Court dеnied the motion to add a party defendant. Obviously Sheriff Percich incurred no responsibility or liability to the plaintiff, and the District Court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to add Sheriff Tozer as a party defendant.
Plaintiff further argues that Dr. Vargas of City Hospital No. 2 contributed to the plaintiff’s leg injury due to improper medical care. Since Dr. Vargas was not properly served, the District Court dismissed the complaint for want of personal jurisdiction. The dismissal was obviously correct.
The plaintiff has asked us tо compel the Missouri Supreme Court to supply the plaintiff with a transcript of his state conviction of burglary. Due to the death of the court reporter, the transcript’s preparation was delayed. Apparently according to a letter sent by the Clerk of the Missouri Supreme Court to the District Court, the transcript was, as of November 14, 1972, in the process of being prepared. As the District Court held, we have no power to compel the Missouri Supreme Court to supply thе plaintiff with a transcript of his state conviction of burglary in this civil rights action. The request for appointment of counsel, as indicated by the District Court is now moot, in view of the dismissal as to all defendants.
The District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable H. Kenneth Wangelin presided. The opinion is published at
