The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on appellant’s § 1983 claim that he was held in jail Zlk weeks longer than he should have been for a DWI sentence. We affirm in part and remand in part on somewhat different grounds than those used by the district court.
On March 26, 1984, plaintiff pleaded guilty to the crime of driving while intoxicated and received a probated five-year sentence requiring that he serve 30 days in the Dallas County jail and pay a $500 fine at the rate of $15 per month. The court gave credit for time previously served against the 30 day sentence, which entitled plaintiff to be released on April 24. Plaintiff was not released until May 19, 1984. His lawsuit alleged somewhat inelegantly that he was “negligently and maliciously” deprived of his right to freedom from illegal incarceration because of poverty, freedom from unlawful arrest, and freedom from detention secured by the fourth amendment and the due process clauses of the fifth and fourteenth amendments. Defendants included Dallas County; Bill Long, the Dallas County District Clerk; “A. Ramirez,” an employee in the clerk’s office; and Donald Byrd, Dallas County Sheriff. Service was never made on Byrd, so he never appeared. Although the county originally appeared and answered on behalf of A. Ramirez, it later discovered that she no longer worked for the district clerk. The county moved to withdraw its appearance on behalf of Ramirez, who had not been properly served. This motion was not ruled upon by the district court.
The defendants Dallas County and Long filed a summary judgment motion supported by numerous affidavits describing the county’s policy for keeping track of offenders’ sentences and releasing them accordingly. Long’s affidavit denied that he participated, approved or acquiesced in Martin’s wrongful detention. Martin filed no controverting evidence, 1 and summary judgment was granted to Dallas County and Long. In an apparent oversight or *555 outpouring of generosity to the other named defendants, the district court also awarded summary judgment to Ramirez and Byrd.
The district court’s action is premised on its approval of the defendants’ analysis that Martin’s wrongful incarceration constituted a deprivation of liberty without due process of law. This theory may be inferred from Martin’s complaint. Whether such deprivation came about intentionally or negligently, both of which allegations are found in the complaint, this aspect of the case falls within the ambit of
Parratt v. Taylor,
Where a state system as a whole provides due process of law, federal constitutional guarantees are not breached merely because some state employee, even a highly-placed one, might engage in tortious conduct, either intentionally or negligently. To avoid such needless federal interference and thereby to preserve the balance between the state and federal courts is the important purpose served by the Paratt/Hudson doctrine. Logic and prior precedent of this circuit require that we give Paratt/Hudson a reading broad enough to effectuate this important purpose.
Holloway v. Walker,
Texas law afforded Martin remedies against his illegal detention both while it was underway and for post-deprivation compensatory relief. Martin could have sought habeas corpus relief pursuant to Tex.Crim.Proc.Code Ann. art. 11.01 or tort recovery for false imprisonment.
Workman v. Freeman,
Martin’s complaint, fairly read, also includes allegations that he was deprived of his substantive right to be free from illegal incarceration by the state, as guaranteed by the fourth, fifth, and fourteenth amendments. Violation of a substantive, as opposed to a procedural due process, constitutional right does not fall within the limitations of
Paratt/Hudson. Augustine v. Doe,
The summary judgment in favor of district clerk Long can be affirmed on the basis of his qualified immunity. In this circuit, a plaintiff must allege specific facts to support a violation of his constitutional rights by a named defendant to overcome a defense of qualified immunity.
Elliott v. Perez,
The results of our analysis should be summarized. We REVERSE summary judgment in favor of Dallas County, and REMAND for further proceedings. In particular, Martin may undertake discovery against Dallas County. We AFFIRM summary judgment in favor of Long. We VACATE the judgments entered in favor of Ramirez and Byrd, who, the record shows, were not present or represented in. these proceedings. We REMAND for further action by the trial court not inconsistent herewith.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, VACATED in part, and REMANDED.
Notes
. Martin contends that the district court erted in refusing to allow him to conduct discovery of the individual defendants pending resolution of their claims for immunity. The trial court, however, resolved this case as a matter of law and not on the basis of summary judgment evidence.
