Frank Glatt, the owner of a 40-foot yacht, was distressed when the Chicago Park District, the owner of Diversey Harbor in Chicago, reassigned him from slip D19 in the *192 harbor to slip D5. So, since this is America, he brought suit against the Park District and two of its employees under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the defendants had violated his constitutional rights. His principal claim is that he had a property right in D19, within the meaning of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which the defendants deprived him of without due process of law. The district judge dismissed this claim on the pleadings because he thought that the Chicago Park District Code, in ch. 8, § C, makes clear that the holder of a harbor permit, even though it is called a “permanent” permit, as was Glatt’s, does not have an entitlement to a specific slip. The Code does say that “the renewed permit ordinarily will be ..., if a permanent mooring permit, for the permittee’s prior assigned mooring.” But in the word “ordinarily” we have our first hint that the right to the same slip may be highly qualified. And this is confirmed by the further provision that the Marine Director “may change the permittee’s assigned harbor and/or mooring if, in the exercise of his/her discretion, he/she determines that such change is needed because of efficiency, safety, construction, repair, or other reasonable circumstances, including but not limited to water level or lake bed changes.”
All property rights are qualified — by the police power, the power of eminent domain, the taxing power, and much else besides. But at some point the qualifications become so numerous and open-ended, the “right” such a sieve, that the sense of entitlement evanesces.
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Thus far we have assumed that any substantive entitlement is a property right for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment. That is the tendency of the cases, e.g.,
Chaney v. Suburban Bus Division,
Glatt’s secondary, although actually somewhat more substantial, claim is that the district judge should have allowed him to amend his complaint to add a charge of retaliation for the filing of the original complaint. The original complaint had been filed on September 2,1993, the day after an internal investigation by the Park District had found colorable merit in Glatt’s claim not to have received timely notice of the transfer from D19 to D5. On November 17, the Park District decided not to pursue the matter because there had been no witnesses to the meeting at which one of the defendants claimed, and Glatt denied, to have notified Glatt of the transfer. Glatt contends that this about-face, which extinguished his chances of getting D19 back through the internal procedures of the Park District, was in retaliation for his filing this lawsuit. On January 2, 1995, Glatt moved to amend (he should have said, to “supplement”) the complaint to add the new claim of retaliation to his charges against the Park District.
The legal basis for the new claim is not articulated clearly. Glatt argues flatly that retaliation for filing a lawsuit violates the First Amendment, but this is not true in general. Some lawsuits are a vehicle for protected speech or for petitioning the government for redress of grievances, see, e.g.,
NAACP v. Button,
The good ground for denying Glatt’s motion was that Glatt failed to substantiate it. He says that it’s just a pleading; substantiation is for later, when the pleading is challenged by a motion for summary judgment. This is true of an original complaint but not of a motion to amend or supplement the complaint, a motion that being addressed to the discretion of the district court requires more to compel acceptance than the fact that the pleading sought to be added states a claim. Especially when the motion is filed long after the original complaint was filed (16 months after, in this case), and is based solely on a document that the movant had discovered more than a year earlier, the court is entitled to demand reasons for thinking that the denial of the motion would work a serious injustice. The court not only may but should consider the likelihood that the new claim is being added in a desperate effort to protract the litigation and complicate the defense; its probable merit; whether the claim could have been added earlier; and the burden on the defendant of having to meet it.
Foman v. Davis,
Ml the factors mentioned in the cases interpreting these rules weighed against the grant of Glatt’s motion. We note in particular that his contention that the Park District decided to abandon the investigation of his complaint because he had sued is based wholly on the principle of post hoc ergo propter hoc: the abandonment followed the suit, therefore must have been caused by it.
Enough said.
Affirmed.
