*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
No. 99-3727
Eyrle S. Hilton, IV,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
City of Wheeling, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 99 C 860--Charles P. Kocoras, Judge.
Argued March 27, 2000--Decided April 20, 2000 Before Posner, Chief Judge, and Flaum and Williams, Circuit Judges.
Posner, Chief Judge. Eyrle Stuart Hilton, IV sued the Village of Wheeling (a Chicago suburb) and members of its police force (plus two social workers employed by the Village) for injunctive relief and damages, alleging violations of his constitutional rights to petition the government for redress of grievances and to enjoy the equal protection of the laws. 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants.
For the last seven years Hilton and his neighbors in an apartment complex in a blue- collar district of Wheeling have been locked in a feud that began when Hilton was seen beating a Rottweiler puppy (appropriately named "Rommel") with what a neighbor who called the police described as a baseball bat, though Hilton claims that it was merely a rawhide chew stick. When the police arrived he explained that he had broken his arm (Hilton’s arm, not the dog’s) beating Rommel the previous evening. Hilton was cited for cruelty to animals and fined $500. The subsequent history of Rommel is interesting, though perhaps not strictly germane. Hilton tired of Rommel, took him to a veterinarian, and told the veterinarian to kill the dog. The vet refused, saying that the dog was healthy (Hilton’s savage *2 beatings had failed to injure Rommel) and that he wanted to put him up for adoption. Hilton agreed, but later decided he wanted Rommel back, and when he could not get him back protested at an open hearing of the Wheeling village council, dragging the empty leash behind him to punctuate his plea. Since the initial contretemps with his neighbors over Rommel, Hilton has been cited or arrested some fifteen times by the Wheeling police on neighbors’ complaints for such transgressions as disorderly conduct, battery, and violating noise ordinances by yelling or by playing his stereo too loud. Hilton does not deny that there was probable cause for each of these arrests or citations. His argument rather is that the police have not been evenhanded in arbitrating, as it were, his feud with his neighbors. He has complained to the police about them many times. One neighbor, he complained, had kicked and broken his door. Another had thrown a rock at his house. Others had made loud noise. One called him an "idiot" in front of a police officer, which he describes as "verbal harassment." And so on. The police responded to all these complaints--they have responded some eighty times over the past seven years to complaints arising out of the feud. But only once have they taken any action against a neighbor complained of by Hilton. That was when he complained to them that a neighbor’s dog was barking loudly--and the police cited him for disorderly conduct as well as the neighbor. They have enforced the law one-sidedly.
The right to petition the government for redress
of grievances is found in the First Amendment to
the Constitution but has been held to be
enforceable against the states by virtue of the
due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Edwards v. South Carolina,
Winnebago County Dept. of Social Services, 489
U.S. 189, 195-97 (1989), and we have repeated
many times, the Constitution, insofar as it
creates or protects liberties, is (with
immaterial exceptions) a charter of negative
liberties. River Park, Inc. v. City of Highland
Park,
Through Murphy v. Morgan,
DeVito,
The reasons are historical, Jackson v. City of
Joliet, supra,
A complaint of unequal police protection in
violation of the equal protection clause is less
easily disposed of. On the one hand, the clause,
concerned as it is with equal treatment rather
than with establishing entitlements to some
minimum of government services, does not entitle
a person to adequate, or indeed to any, police
protection. On the other hand, selective
withdrawal of police protection, as when the
Southern states during the Reconstruction era
refused to give police protection to their black
citizens, is the prototypical denial of equal
protection. Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. (16
Wall.) 36, 70 (1873); David P. Currie, The
Constitution in the Supreme Court: The First
Hundred Years 349 (1985). Hilton, and so far as
appears his neighbors, are all white; there is no
suggestion that he is being discriminated against
because of his race, religion, gender, or some
other attribute that defines a group
traditionally protected by the equal protection
clause. But now that the Supreme Court has
affirmed our decision in Olech v. Village of
Willowbrook,
The role of motive is left unclear by the
Supreme Court’s decision. On the one hand the
Court recited the standard formula that the equal
protection clause forbids intentional differences
in treatment for which there is no rational
basis. On the other hand it said that the claim
that the difference in treatment was "irrational
and wholly arbitrary" (emphasis added) was
sufficient and that the Court was not reaching
our "alternative theory of ’subjective ill will.’"
Affirmed.
