In
Esmail v. Macrane,
Olech and her husband, now deceased, used to get their water from a well on their property. But the well broke down and they asked the Village of Willowbrook, where their property is located, to connect their home to the municipal water system. The Village agreed, but besides requiring the Olechs to pay the cost of the hook up (which apparently is a standard requirement and one with which they complied without complaining) told them they would have to grant the Village not the customary 15-foot easement to enable servicing of the water main but a 33-foot easement to permit the Village to widen the road on which they live. The Olechs refused, and after three months the Village relented, acceded to the smaller easement, and hooked up the water. But meanwhile 'the Olechs had been without water and as a consequence suffered various types of damage for which they seek redress in this suit.
So far in our recitation of the allegations of the complaint there is nothing to suggest a denial of equal protection. But the complaint goes on to allege that the defendants’ motivation for insisting on the nonstandard easement was the fact that the Olechs earlier had sued the Village, and obtained damages, for flood damage caused by the Village’s negligent installation and enlargement of culverts located near the Olechs’ property. See
Zimmer v. Village of Willowbrook,
Nevertheless the district judge granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss because the complaint didn’t allege an “orchestrated campaign of'official harassment” motivated by “sheer malice,” quoting our opinion in
Esmail.
The present case is not one of uneven enforcement. The Village does not deny that it has a legal obligation to provide water to all its residents. If it refuses to perform this obligation for one of the residents, for no reason other than a baseless hatred, then it denies that resident the equal protection of the laws. And that is sufficiently alleged. While it may have been important in
Esmail
that the plaintiff alleged an “orchestrated campaign,” it was not important here. The district judge did not try to hook up the requirement of an “orchestrated campaign” to the language or policy of the equal protection clause, and we cannot think of any hook either. Nor is it important that the oppression of the plaintiff was merely temporary. Many temporary deprivations are actionable even under provisions of the Constitution that, unlike the equal protection clause, require that the deprivation be of liberty or property. E.g.,
Connecticut v. Doehr,
Of course we are troubled, as was the district judge, by the prospect of turning every squabble over municipal services, of which there must be tens or even hundreds of thousands every year, into a federal constitutional case. But bear in mind that the “vindictive action” class of equal protection cases requires proof that the cause of the differential treatment of which the plaintiff complains was a totally illegitimate animus toward the plaintiff by the defendant. If the defendant would have taken the complained-of action anyway, even if it didn’t have the animus, the animus would not condemn the action; a tincture of ill will does not invalidate governmental action. Maybe the present case can be disposed of on this or some other ground well short of trial; it cannot be disposed of on the pleadings.
And especially not on the defendants’ alternative ground, that their action was not
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the cause of the plaintiffs lacking water for three months. They point out that had her well not broken down, which is not contended to be their fault, she would have had an uninterrupted supply of water no matter what the Village failed to do. This is a ridiculous argument. It is like saying that if she didn’t live in the Village of Willowbrook she wouldn’t (in all likelihood) have had a water problem. That is blaming the victim with a vengeance. Every injury has a multitude of antecedent conditions. When one of them is the defendant’s culpable fault, he is not excused from liability on the ground that if some other, innocent condition hadn’t been present (such as Columbus’s discovery of America) no injury would have occurred. E.g.,
Movitz v. First National Bank, 148
F.3d 760, 762 (7th Cir.1998);
United States v. Feliciano,
Reversed.
