Teresa Anne GARMON, Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellant,
v.
LUMPKIN COUNTY, GEORGIA, and Kenneth Seabolt, in his
official capacity as Sheriff,
Defendants-Counter-Claimants-Appellees.
No. 88-8771.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Aug. 4, 1989.
Graham G. McMurray, Atlanta, Ga., for plaintiff-counter-defendant-appellant.
Robert E. Andrews, Gainesville, Ga., Kelso C. Horne, Jr., Dahlonega, Ga., for defendants-counter-claimants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Before VANCE and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges, and ATKINS*, Senior District Judge.
VANCE, Circuit Judge:
Teresa Anne Garmоn brought this action against the Sheriff of Lumpkin County and Lumpkin County alleging a violation of her civil rights resulting from her unconstitutional arrest. The district court granted defendants' motion for directed verdict based upon the doctrine of qualified immunity. For the reasons stated below, we reverse.
On January 22, 1986, Mrs. Garmon rеported to the Lumpkin County Sheriff's Department that she had been confronted at her home in Fulton County by a man who demanded that she drive him to Dahlonega, located in Lumpkin County. Mrs. Garmon reported that upon arriving in Dahlonega, the alleged abductor got out of her car and fled. After contacting the Georgia Bureau of Investigation ("GBI") and officials in Fulton County, Sheriff Seabolt accompanied Mrs. Garmon and GBI Agent William T. Attaway to the site where Mrs. Garmon said her abductor had left her car. No physical evidence of the alleged kidnapping was discovered.
The follоwing morning, Fulton County Detective Ronald Fuller accompanied Mrs. Garmon to police headquarters in Atlanta, where she assisted in producing a composite drawing of her abductor. Detective Fuller and Mrs. Garmon proceeded to GBI headquarters, where Mrs. Garmon consented in writing tо a polygraph examination. Because there was a possibility Mrs. Garmon was pregnant, however, the examiner refused to administer the test and advised her to set up another appointment after she had consulted her physician.
On February 9, 1986, less than three weeks after Mrs. Garmon's аlleged abduction, an article about the investigation was published in a Gainesville, Georgia newspaper. The article stated that Sheriff Seabolt was convinced Mrs. Garmon was not telling the truth and that he was considering pressing charges against her for the false report of a crimе. Sheriff Seabolt was quoted as saying that "[t]he problem is, we can't prove or disprove anything she said" and that "[f]rom this point on, anything I pursue in this case will be charges against her." The article was received into evidence, and Sheriff Seabolt's testimony at trial established that its contents werе substantially correct.
Three days later, Sheriff Seabolt instructed one of his investigators, who had little involvement in the case, to obtain a warrant for Mrs. Garmon's arrest. The county magistrate issued the warrant and Mrs. Garmon was arrested at her home the following day. She was released from the Fultоn County jail at 4:00 a.m. the following morning after posting a $1,050 bond. On February 25, 1986, more than one year after her arrest, the second grand jury before which the case was presented returned a true bill indicting Mrs. Garmon for the offense of giving a false statement. Her trial resulted in a judgment of acquittal.
Mrs. Garmon filed this 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 action on February 3, 1988 against Sheriff Seabolt and Lumpkin County alleging that their actions in causing her arrest violated her rights under the fourth and fourteenth amendments. The district court directed a verdict in favor of appellees, finding that although appellees lacked probablе cause to arrest Mrs. Garmon, they were insulated from liability by both the magistrate's issuance of the arrest warrant and the grand jury's ultimate return of an indictment.
To establish appellees' liability under section 1983, Mrs. Garmon must demonstrate that Sheriff Seabolt and the county acted under color of state law to deprive her of her constitutional rights. Appellees do not dispute that their conduct constituted state action. Rather, they argue that Mrs. Garmon's constitutional rights were not violated because the magistrate and ultimately the grand jury found that probable cause existed to аrrest her.
The standard for reviewing the district court's entry of a directed verdict is whether, considering all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, the facts and inferences point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of the moving party that reasonable persons could not reach a different conclusion. Aldridge v. Montgomery,
We first consider appellees' argument that the magistrate's issuance of the arrest warrant conclusively establishes the existence of probable cause for Mrs. Garmon's arrest. From the face of the arrest warrant it is evident that it was issued without probable cause. The incorporated affidavit supporting the warrant, completed at the direction of Sheriff Seabolt by one of his investigators who had relatively little involvement in the case, states only that the affiant swears that "to the best of (his or her) knowledge and belief Teresa Ann Garmon did ... commit the offense of false report of a crime." Such a conclusory assertion clearly is insufficient to establish probable cause. See Byars v. United States,
Appellees urge that even if the magistrate's issuance of the warrant was without probable cause, the subsequent grand jury indictment conclusively establishes that sufficient probable cause existed for Mrs. Garmon's arrest. We are not persuaded by this argument. When an arrest warrаnt is based upon an indictment, the grand jury's determination that probable cause existed to return the indictment also establishes that probable cause existed for the issuance of an arrest warrant for the person charged. When the warrant issues and the arrest occurs before an indictment is handed down, however, the question whether probable cause existed for the arrest must be answered by reviewing the facts that were before the magistrate. Accordingly, support in this case for a finding of probable cause must be found in the affidavit accompanying the aрplication for the warrant. Cf. Giordenello,
Appellant Seabolt argues that even if Mrs. Garmon's warrant was issued without probable cause he nevertheless is shielded from liability for damages under the rule of qualified immunity. The United States Supreme Court recently has held that the standard of objective reasonableness set forth in United States v. Leon,
We conclude that appellee Seabolt did not have an objectively reasonable basis for believing that his investigator's affidavit established probable cause to arrest Mrs. Garmon. The affidavit contained no facts whatever. We also conclude that Sheriff Seabolt's explanation for seeking Mrs. Garmon's arrest is not objectively reasonable as a matter of law. In the newspaper article published just dаys before Mrs. Garmon's arrest, Sheriff Seabolt stated that the reason for his tentative decision to press charges against her was that "[t]he problem is, we can't prove or disprove anything she said." The law enforcement authorities' inability to find evidence of Mrs. Garmon's alleged abductiоn cannot reasonably be said to constitute affirmative evidence that she made a false report of a crime.
The only other fact contributing to Sheriff Seabolt's decision to seek an arrest warrant was Mrs. Garmon's refusal to submit to a polygraph examination. Under Georgia law an alleged victim of a crime is not required to submit to a polygraph test, Houser v. State,
In this case, Mrs. Garmon initially consented to a polygraph examination. She refused only upon being informed by the polygrаph examiner that the test should not be administered to her because she might be pregnant. Sheriff Seabolt was well aware of her reason for refusing to take the test. Under these circumstances, Sheriff Seabolt did not have an objectively reasonable basis for considering her refusal to submit to the test as constituting probable cause for her arrest. Indeed, the record does not disclose that appellee Seabolt has been able at any time to state any fact or combination of facts that would constitute probable cause. At oral argument, with the advantage of hindsight and reflection, his counsel confessed an inability to do so.
Sheriff Seabolt's final contention is that even if he should have known that the affidavit failed to establish probable cause, the magistrate's issuance of the warrant breaks the causal chain between the warrant application and the arrest. The Supreme Court has squarely addressed this question and held that a magistrate's decision to issue an arrest warrant does not absolve the officer who applied for the warrant from liability:
[The question] is whether a reasonably well-trained officer [applying for a warrant] would have known that his affidavit failed to establish probable cause and that he should not have applied for the warrant. If such was the case, the officer's application for a warrant was not objectively reasonable.... It is true that in an idеal system an unreasonable request for a warrant would be harmless, because no judge would approve it. But ours is not an ideal system.... We find it reasonable to require the officer applying for the warrant to minimize this danger by exercising professional judgment.
Malley,
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the district court entering a directed verdict in favor of appellees is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Honorable C. Clyde Atkins, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida, sitting by designation
If the warrant stated that its issuance was based on probable cause shown, for example, we might presume that oral testimony was presented which supported the magistrate's determination. In this case, however, we know that no probable cause existed because the warrant explicitly states that it is supported by information sworn to "in the above affidavit."
The district court relied heavily on Shepard v. Byrd,
