Riсhard HORN and all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CITY OF CHICAGO and Datacom Systems Corporation, Defendants-Appellants,
and
County of Cook, Morgan M. Finley, as Clerk of the Circuit
Court of Cook County, and Charles Sawyer, Director
of the Department of Revenue of the City
of Chicago, Defendants.
Nos. 87-1174, 87-1175 and 87-1936.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 25, 1988.
Decided Sept. 21, 1988.
As Amended Sept. 22, 1988 and Oct. 6, 1988.
Iris E. Sholder, Asst. State's Atty., Chicago, Ill., for Cook County etc.
Ruth M. Moscovitch, Corp. Counsel, Chicago, Ill., for City of Chicago.
William Lynch Schaller, Frances D. Morrissey and Thomas F. Bridgman, Baker & McKenzie, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellants.
Rick Schoenfield, Ettinger, Schoenfield & Katz, Ltd., Chicago, Ill., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Before CUDAHY, FLAUM, and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs1 are 330,000 motor vehicle owners who paid delinquent parking tickets pursuant to demand notices processed by Datacom for the City of Chicago. The district court held that the demand notices violated plaintiffs' right to due process of law by failing to give sufficient notice that a hearing was available to contest their liability for the amount demanded. The court therefore ordered the City to provide a hearing on the parking violation and fine for any plaintiff who so desired. We hold that as a matter of law the demand notices provided constitutionally sufficient notice, and we therefore reverse the contrary finding of the district court.
I.
When the Chicago Police Department alleges that a vehicle is parked in violation of a city ordinance, it places a citation ("ticket") on the vehicle. The ticket states, "Notice--this is a complaint for a parking violation." As the district court explained:
Upon issuance of the ticket, a court case is initiated in the Circuit Court of Cook County against the owner of the license plate listed on the ticket. See [Chicago Municipal] Code Sec. 27-364(a). A defendant in such a case may plead guilty to the parking ordinance violation and pay the scheduled fine by mail or may appear in court to contest the ticket on the date set forth on the ticket. If the defendant fails to mail in the fine or appear on the court date, the Clerk of the Circuit court sends a "white card" notice of a second court date to the defendant. If the defendant fails to mail in the fine or appear on the second court date, the Clerk of the Court lists the defendant as being delinquent in paying traffic violation fines, but no judgment is entered against such defendants.
Horn v. City of Chicago, No. 85 C 6838, Memorandum Opinion at 3-4 (N.D.Ill. July 25, 1986) . The tickets originally issued to plaintiffs in this case listed fines of $7, $10, or $15. Chicago hired Datacom, a private contractor, to collect these unpaid fines. Datacom subsequently mailed demand notices to plaintiffs. The original and later revised notices varied only slightly. The original notice read:
CITY OF CHICAGO
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
You can obtain additional information about this notice ONLY by writing to the address listed above or by calling (312)580-3400.
Our records indicate that the parking tickets listed below have not been paid. IF YOU DO NOT PAY THE TOTAL AMOUNT SHOWN BELOW IMMEDIATELY, THE CITY OF CHICAGO WILL TAKE FURTHER LEGAL ACTION AGAINST YOU. This may include preрaring a verified petition in the Circuit Court of Cook County requesting that a DEFAULT JUDGMENT in the amount of $35 plus court costs be entered against you for each unpaid ticket.
You can avoid this action by mailing a check or money order in the total amount shown below. Make your check or money order payable to the Clerk of the Circuit Court. To insure proper payment write the ticket number(s) on the front of your payment and enclоse the bottom portion of this notice with your payment. Mail only in the enclosed envelope. No information will be given or payment accepted at Traffic Court. DO NOT MAIL CASH.
TO PREVENT FURTHER ACTION YOU MUST RESPOND WITHIN 15 DAYS.
The original notice demanded $20 in "fines and penalties" for each unpaid ticket regardless of the amount listed on the ticket itself. Revised notices, sent to each alleged parking violator who did not respond to the original notice, demandеd $35, and finally $50 for each unpaid ticket.2 The original notices listed a sum labelled "AMOUNT NOW DUE;" the subsequent notices set forth the "TOTAL FINES AND FEES NOW DUE." The defendants collected almost $26,000,000 from May of 1985 to July of 1986 on hundreds of thousands of parking tickets.
Essentially, plaintiffs alleged that the defendants deprived them of due process of law in violation of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 by misrepresenting that plaintiffs owed fines, penalties, and court costs when no judgment had ever been enterеd against them3 in the traffic division of the circuit court.4 Plaintiffs sought a preliminary injunction prohibiting the city from sending further notices and collecting any further fines, and ultimately sought an accounting followed by a refund (plus interest) to all who paid pursuant to the demand notices. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim and on the ground that the district court should abstain from exercising jurisdiction under the doctrine of Younger v. Harris,
The court found that the demand notices violated plaintiffs' due process rights,7 by "demanding money ... in еxcess of the amounts stated on the tickets,8 without adequate notice of the hearing to which they were entitled." Horn, No. 85 C 6838, Amended Mem.Op. at 30. A listed telephone number could not substitute for notice of a hearing, the court held, and nothing in the demand notice indicated that the matter was still pending. "The demand notices strongly imply that a default judgment has been entered ... by the traffic court [in the amount listed on the notice] even though thе defendants had not amended the complaint nor sought a default judgment of [that] amount...." Id. at 26. The district court declined to refund the money paid, however, and instead ordered the city to provide an individualized hearing to any plaintiff who desired one to determine whether he or she was guilty of the infraction charged.9 It also ordered the city to amend the complaints and notify plaintiffs of such amendments if it wished to seek a fine higher than the one shown on the ticket.
II.
As courts have frequently emphasized, due process is a flexible concept; its protections vary according to the demands of a particular set of circumstances. See Morrissey v. Brewer,
Plaintiffs in this case were not involuntarily deprived of an essential service. Rather, they chose to pay the amounts demanded as fines for illegal conduct. All had received the parking ticket-complaint setting one court date, and a "white card" giving notice of a second court datе. The first demand notice informed them that if they did not pay the amount demanded the city would "take further legal action," which "may include ... requesting that a DEFAULT JUDGMENT" be entered. Revised notices omitted the reference to a default judgment and added a column indicating the "maximum fine allowed" for each infraction, stating that if the recipient failed to pay the city "may take actions to recover ... a larger amount [up to] the mаximum fine allowed by law." All of the notices listed "outstanding parking tickets" and a telephone and address where recipients could receive further information.
Two cases involving the same demand notices have been decided in the Circuit Court of Cook County. In Stelzik v. City of Chicago, 85 CH 7631 (Cook County Circuit Court Jan. 21, 1986), decided eleven months before the district court's opinion, plaintiff paid $180 in fines and penalties and $27 in court costs pursuant tо the City's demand notices. Stelzik sought class certification, contending that the notices violated Illinois law. He asked for an injunction against further violations and the return of all money paid as a result of the demand notices. Judge Freeman dismissed Stelzik's complaint for failure to state a claim, holding that it constituted a collateral attack on the pending traffic ticket litigation. The court found that the listed telephone numbеr and the language stating that the city would take "further legal action" if necessary adequately apprised recipients of the right to a hearing and "clearly indicate[d] that there [were] actions pending in the Circuit court at the time" the demand notices were received. The recipient of such a notice, the court held, was therefore required to bring any challenge in the context of the original action.
Another judge on the same court later came to the same conclusion that the demand notices were not misleading. Daley v. Datacom Systems Corp., 86 CH 2038 (Cook County Circuit Court Feb. 13, 1987). Judge Wosik dismissed the complaint with prejudice, holding that the "notices fully and adequately apprise the recipients of their right to seek further information in regard to the notices."
We agree with these courts that the demand notices were "reasonably certain to inform those affected," Mullane,
Notes
Plaintiffs were originally divided into two subclasses. The district court held that the subclass of plaintiffs who received demand notices but did not pay any money did not have standing to sue, because as to these plaintiffs there was no causal connection between the threatened default judgment (the threatened injury) and the allegedly improper demand for payment (the challenged action). See Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts,
The original and subsequent notices also demanded $3 for each unpaid ticket, a fee denominated "court costs" or "statutory mailing fee" depending on the notice
The present status of the traffic court cases commenced by the serving of the parking ticket-complaints is unclear. The plaintiffs argue that no final judgment was ever entered by the traffic court and the cases were simply dismissed following payment. However, payment pursuant to the demand notices would seem to have resulted in а "final disposition" of these cases, Horn, No. 85 C 6838, slip op. at 10 n. 7; Stelzik v. City of Chicago, No. 85 CH 7631, slip op. at 8 (Cook County Circuit Court Jan. 21, 1986), under Sec. 27-387(b) of the Chicago Municipal Code
Plaintiffs also alleged that defendants violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1961 et seq. ("RICO"), by fraudulently demanding and collecting payments through the mail. The district court dismissed the RICO claim because it found that plaintiffs had been deprived of a hearing "but not necessarily of money," and therefore had suffered no "injury" within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1964(c). The court also declined to exercise pendent jurisdiction over plaintiffs' state law claims of fraudulent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment. Plaintiffs do not contest these rulings and we therefore will not address them
As defendants have argued, there may be a serious Younger problem here. Younger mandates abstention when a state's interests in pending state proceedings "are so important that exercise of the federal judicial power would disregard the comity between the States and the National Government." Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
We do not approve of this action by the district court, and would find it necessary to remand this case if we were not reversing on other grounds. The defendants set forth additional facts in a "prefatory note" to their motion to dismiss, bearing on the magnitude of the city's parking enforcement problems and the potential impact of an adverse decision
"[I]f 'matters outside the pleading are presented to аnd not excluded by the court' in connection with a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the district court is required to treat the motion to dismiss as a summary judgment motion." Beam v. IPCO Corp.,
We have held that an award of summary judgment is improper where it takes the adverse party by surprise. Choudhry v. Jenkins,
To the extent that the district court may have acted on plaintiffs' pending motion for a preliminary injunction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(a)(2), it was similarly required to give the parties "timely notice allowing them to gather and present all the evidence that would be pertinent at a trial on the merits" before granting permanent relief. Proimos v. Fair Automotive Repair, Inc.,
The district court not only converted the 12(b)(6) motion into a summary judgment motion, but took the parties by surprise by entering summary judgment against the movants-defendants. This action deprived defendants of the opportunity to present factual and legal defenses they had not yet been required to raise, including the affirmative defenses of res judicata and collateral estoppel. We strongly caution against such a procedure.
We agree with the district court that "whether ... Illinois statute[s], the Chicago Ordinances, and the Cook County Circuit Court Rules and Orders allow defendants to obtain a default judgment in an amount in excess of that stated on the ticket is purely a matter of statе law involving no federal question." Horn, No. 85 C 6838, slip op. at 10 n. 7. This is also the case with regard to the $3 fee for court costs or statutory mailing fees that was demanded in the notices. See supra n. 2. Plaintiffs could have raised these issues before the traffic court had they chosen to appear. The central question in this Sec. 1983 action is whether plaintiffs were afforded the pre-deprivation process required by the United States Constitution. There is no dispute that defendants deprived plaintiffs of constitutionally protected property under color of state law, or that plaintiffs had an opportunity for a hearing. See Parratt v. Taylor,
The ticket-complaint and white card each clearly informed plaintiffs of thеir right to a hearing on the $7-$15 fines initially demanded
Plaintiffs moved to modify the judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6), seeking refunds of 50% of the amounts paid pursuant to the demand notices instead of the relief granted by the district court--the opportunity for a hearing. Plaintiffs argued that they should be allowed to take advantage of the city's "amnesty" program, initiated after the district court's decision, allowing parking tickets to be settled for 50% of the amount of the fine specified on the ticket
Plaintiffs contended that the court would have granted this relief had it known about the amnesty program, and that these exceptional circumstances warranted granting the Rule 60(b) motion. The court denied the motion, reasoning that had the city sent proper notices, plaintiffs would have either paid or appeared to contest the fine, and that in any event their cases would have been closed before the amnesty was offered. Horn v. City of Chicago, No. 85 C 6838, Order (N.D.Ill. May 27, 1987). Further, the court stated, some of the members of the plaintiff class would have wanted to contest their tickets even if 50% amnesty had been an option. To give these plaintiffs half of their money back but no hearing would "denigrate[ ] the seriousness of the constitutional violation which brought them into court in the first place."
We do not bеlieve the district court abused its discretion in denying the Rule 60(b) motion, but in any event our determination that there has been no due process violation moots the issue.
We note that "[t]he sense of justice is not outraged" by the city's attempts in this case "to enforce the parking regulations ... against those who flout them most audaciously." Sutton v. City of Milwaukee,
Cf. Gardner v. City of Columbus,
