OPINION
The district court denied the defendants’ motions for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity, holding that the defendants should have known that because the eviction notices they issued lacked specific informatiоn advising of the available appeals process, those notices were constitutionally inadequate. We must decide whether our decision in J.C. Flatford v. City of Monroe,
I.
Between December 9, 2009, and May 8, 2010, William Gardner and seven of his fellow plaintiffs (collectively, “Tenants”) were evicted from their respective homes in Lansing, Michigan, for alleged viоlations of the Lansing Housing and Premises Code. Jason Evans and the other defendants are the code compliance officers (collectively, “Inspectors”) who inspected the buildings and issuеd the notices of eviction. In each instance, the evictions followed an inspection of the buildings conducted in conjunction with criminal drug investigations.
After the respective Inspector went through each of the homes, he summarized his findings in an eviction “red-tag” notice form, which he gave to the home’s Tenant. Each red-tag was filled out as specified by the Lansing Housing and Premises Code § 1460.07. But none of the red-tags provided any information regarding the occupant’s right to appeal the inspector’s decision and receive an administrative hearing. Each red-tag stated:
You must contact the undersigned, no later than seven days before the compliance due date, to set up an appointmentto meet at the structure (to verify that all corrections have been completed) or to acquire an authorized extension. Before the re-inspection you must obtain all required permits and have those repairs inspected and approvеd by the appropriate inspector.
All violations must be corrected with approved materials and methods. If you have any questions or concerns about complying within the time indicated, you may contact at (517) 483^1064 Monday through Thursday between the hours of 8-9 AM or 12-1 PM. [Name of the officer to contact.]
The red-tag notices failed to reveal that § 1460.12 of the Lansing Housing and Premises Code оutlines a post-deprivation appeals process and directs that if an evicted occupant fails to file an appeal within twenty days after receiving a red-tag, the ocсupant waives the right to administrative review. Unaware of these requirements, none of the Tenants filed an appeal within the twenty-day period, and thus all of them inadvertently waived their right to an administrative review. Without recourse to any administrative remedy, the Tenants’ sole option was to pursue a judicial remedy.
The only question presented to us in this appeal is whether the district court еrred by denying the Inspectors’ qualified immunity defense with respect to the constitutional adequacy of the notice given to the Tenants.
II.
To overcome the defense of qualified immunity, a plaintiff “must, аt a minimum, offer sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of fact, that is, evidence on which [a] jury could reasonably find for the plaintiff.” DiLuzio v. Village of Yorkville,
A.
First, we address whether a constitutional violation occurred. The Tenants argue that the Inspectors violatеd their due process rights by failing to provide constitutionally sufficient notice of their ability to appeal the red-tag evictions. See Flatford,
“The essence of due process is the requirement that a pеrson in jeopardy of serious loss be given notice of the case against him and opportunity to meet it.”
For purposes of deciding this case, we need not determine whether the red-tags provided by the Inspectors meet the constitutional notice standard that we have just outlined. Even if we assume, without deciding, that the Tenants are correct and that the red-tags were constitutionally infirm, the Tenants cannot satisfy the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis, namely, whether this constitutional notice requirement was clearly established.
B.
The district court held that “[a]t least since Flatford, it has been clearly established in this Circuit that meaningful post-deprivation review process is constitutionally rеquired, and that direct, personal notice of such a process to affected individuals is also required.” Gardner v. Evans, Nos. I:12cvl338, l:12cv914,
The Supreme Court has stated that, in order for a qualified immunity defense to fail,
[t]he contоurs of the right [at issue] must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson v. Creighton,
In Flatford, our primary concern was who received the notice, not what the notice must include. See Flatford,
Moreover, in Silvemail, we indicated that even though the plaintiffs’ notice included only a phone number and an offer to answer questions, such notice was “reasonably calculated to inform the Plaintiffs of the allegations against them and provided a means for responding to the allegations.” Silvemail,
We need not multiply examples on this point. Flatford did not clearly establish that a notice of eviction must include an exрlicit reference to the availability of any post-deprivation appeals process and the manner in such an appeal may be pursued. The case law is not so cleаr on this point as to render the Inspectors’ actions unreasonable.
III.
Because we conclude that the type of notice required in these situations was not clearly established, we REVERSE the decision of the district court, and REMAND the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
