GILBERT LLOVET, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF CHICAGO, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 13-3351
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED JULY 9, 2014 — DECIDED AUGUST 1, 2014
Before POSNER, KANNE, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 13 C 4923 — Rubén Castillo, Chief Judge.
POSNER, Circuit Judge. After being acquitted in a state court of aggravated battery, the plaintiff sued two Chicago police officers and their employer, the City of Chicago, under
The plaintiff asks us to overrule Newsome, which he contends both is unsound and has been rejected by most of the other federal courts of appeals; he tells us that “this case prоvides [this] Court with an opportunity to stop being an outlier circuit.” He wants us to hold, in direct opposition to the Newsome line of cases, that
Newsome derives ultimately from the Supreme Court’s decision in Parratt v. Taylor, 451 U.S. 527 (1981), which held that a claim based on the due process clause of the
Our plaintiff does not question the derivation of Newsome from Parratt and Albright but argues rather that a federal suit for maliciоus prosecution can be based on the
The court in Newsome did not deny that there may be cases in which maliciоus prosecution resulting in an arrest can be challenged under the
When charged with aggravated battery, the plaintiff was already in jail, awaiting trial on a charge of misdemeanor domestic battery against the same person on a different occasion.
Maybe so; but because the initial seizure was supported by probable cause and so did not violate the
Or so we believe; not all courts agree. Three of the string of eight cases cited in the passage we quoted from our opinion in Julian v. Hanna treat malicious protraction of detention as a “continuing seizure,” violative of the
The courts in the cases cited in the preceding paragraph reason that even if a defendant is arrested on probablе cause, unless released when he should be the unauthorized continuation of his detention violates the
Heck and Wallace imply that once detention by reason of arrest turns into detention by reason of arraignment—once police action gives way to legal process—the
“Continued detention” can mean just that the arrest was wrongful and resulted in the detention of which the plaintiff complains, rather than that a wrongful act committed after the plaintiff had been detained was a separate violation of the
A number of decisions reject or at least fail to embrace the “continuing seizure” doctrine in the form pressed by the plaintiff in this case—that an initially lawful detention becomes a Fourth Amendment violation if it lasts longer than it
Adoption of the “continuing seizure” doctrine in the form urged by the plaintiff would greatly enlarge the scope of the
We must consider, however, the plaintiff’s alternative argument, a variant of the “continuing seizure” theory, that a second seizure (the first being his arrest on the misdemeanor-battery charge) occurred when by filing the aggravated-battery charge the policе caused him to be kept in jail beyond the 12-month deadline for the misdemeanor charge. Bail on the aggravated-battery charge was set at $1 million. Unable to make bail in that amount (which would have required him to post a $100,000 bond), the defendant remained in jail past the 12-month deadline for holding him on the lesser charge.
To allow such a claim would enlarge the scope of the
Although we are affirming, we cannot forbear to mention with disapproval the verbosity yet stunted structure of the City of Chicago’s brief. The brief, 43 pages long, cites 104 different cases—far too many—yet omits a statement of facts without conceding the accuracy of the plaintiff’s fact statement. Considering the City’s precarious financial condition, we would have expected greater economy and selectivity in citations—and more facts.
AFFIRMED.
AFFIRMED.
