ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
This § 1983 suit returns to this panel on remand from the Supreme Court. In our first opinion, we affirmed the district court’s grant of qualified immunity to defendants Cole and Robbins.
Wyatt v. Cole,
We have requested, and received, supplemental briefs from Wyatt, Cole, and Robbins.
1
In keeping with the Court’s suggestion, as well as the more explicit guidance provided by Justice Kennedy’s concurring opinion,
id.
at -,
I.
Howard Wyatt and Bill Cole are former business partners. Cole sought to dissolve the partnership in July 1986. When negotiations failed, Cole, with the assistance of his attorney, John Robbins, II, filed a state court complaint in replevin against Wyatt accompanied by a bond of $18,000. Pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. § 11-37-101, a writ of re-plevin issued and the county circuit judge signed an order directing the county sheriff to execute the writ a few days later. The sheriff seized 24 head of cattle, a tractor, and other property from Wyatt on July 29 and 30, 1986. The writ of replevin and summons were served on Wyatt the next day. On October 3, 1986, after a post-seizure hearing, the circuit judge dismissed Cole’s complaint in replevin and ordered him to return the property to Wyatt. Although Cоle had not yet complied with this order, the judge dismissed the action without prejudice on September 3, 1988.
In July 1987, Wyatt filed this § 1983 suit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, contending that the seizure of his property without notice violated the Due Process Clause as well as several state provisions. The district court declared the state replevin statute unconstitutional on April 13, 1989,
On appeal, we held that Wyatt’s request for damages suffered prior to the district court’s decision in 1989 was barred by
Folsom,
where this court held that “ ‘a § 1983 defendant who has invoked an attachment statute is entitled to an immunity from monetary liability so long as he neither knew
*1116
nor reasonably should have known that the statute was unconstitutional.’ ”
The Supreme Court then reversed, holding that qualified immunity is not “available for private defendants faced with § 1983 liability for invoking a state replevin, garnishment or attachment statute.” — U.S. -, -,
The Court identified two issues for consideration on remand. Noting that this panel affirmed the district court’s judgment solely on grounds of qualified immunity, the Court stated that its decision made it necessary to determine “whether Cole and Robbins, in invoking the replevin statute, acted under color of state law within the meaning of
[Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co.,
foreclose the possibility that private defendants faced with liability under [Lugar] could be entitled to an affirmative defense *1117 based on good faith and/or probable cause or that § 1983 suits against private, rather than governmental, parties could require plaintiffs to carry additional burdens.
Id. We address these issues in turn.
II.
Section 1983 provides a cause of action against any person who, under color of state law, deprives another of rights secured by the Constitution.
Collins v. City of Harker Heights,
— U.S. -, -,
In applying this standard to the facts of before it, the Court in
Lugar
found the presence of the ex parte attachment statute sufficient to satisfy the first requirement: “[T]he procedural scheme created by the statute is obviously the product of state action [and] is subject to constitutional restraints and properly may be addressed in a § 1983 action.”
Id.
at 941,
The district court held that Cole’s invocation of the Mississippi replevin statute was enough to trigger potential liability under § 1983. It also assumed, without expressly deciding, that Robbins, his attorney, had also acted under color of state law in requesting the writ of replevin. On remand from the Supreme Court, Cole challenges the district court’s determination. Wyatt has maintained throughout this litigation that Cole’s actions contravened not only federal law (in that the replevin statute operated to deprive him of his property without due process), but also state law, contending that Cole filed the complaint in bad faith, that replevin was improper under state law, and that Cole refused to return the cattle in violation of a state court order. Citing Lugar, Cole argues that he cannot be deemed a state actor because Wyatt’s assertion that his conduct was contrary to, not consonant with, state law and policy locate the source of his harm in purely private actions for which the state cannot be held responsible.
This argument is not without merit. The Court in
Lugar
faced a similar charge that private defendants’ attachment suit was “ ‘unlawful under state law.’ ”
Lugar,
The district court nevertheless properly held that Cole’s alleged misuse and violation of the Mississippi replevin statute did not preclude a finding that he acted under color of state law. Like the plaintiff in
Lu-gar,
With respect to Robbins, the district court held that “[w]hile an action strictly within the scope of representation of a client does not normally constitute an act under color of state law, an attorney is still a person who may conspire to act under color of state law in depriving another of secured rights.”
Tower v. Glover,
III.
Bound by our prior decision in
Folsom Investment Co. v. Moore,
As the Court stressed in
Wyatt,
it has consistently recognized that Congress, in enacting the Civil Rights Act of 1871, legislated against a background of common-law tort liability. — U.S. at -,
The Court in
Wyatt
identified malicious prosecution and abuse of process as the common-law causes of action most analogous to Wyatt’s claim under
Lugar
and therefore focused its inquiry on the elements of these torts. While differing as to the legal consequences of their common finding, all of the Justices agreed that plaintiffs seeking to recover on these theories were required to prove that defendants acted with malice
and
without probable cause.
See
— U.S. at -,
The majority in
Wyatt
concentrated on the immediate issue at hand — whether the purposes and policies underlying § 1983 would be served by transforming essential elements of the plaintiffs case at common law into a defense of qualified immunity to be asserted by defendants. The Court held that they would not. — U.S. at-,
They agreed that plaintiffs, not defendants, bore the burden of proof on the questions of malice and probable cause, —• U.S. at-,
Justice Kennedy emphasized the importance of the subjective inquiry into malice, stating that, “[u]nder common law ... if the plaintiff could prove subjective bad faith on the part of the defendant, he had gone far towards proving both malice and lack of probable cause.” — U.S. at -,
A private defendant’s good faith is especially significant because Harlow’s qualified immunity standard is far more demanding than the objective componеnt of the common law probable cause inquiry, since private actors are not charged with the same knowledge of the law as public officials. As Justice Kennedy noted, “there is support in the common law for the proposition that a private individual’s reliance on a statute, prior to a judicial determination of unconstitutionality, is considered reasonable as a matter of law.”
Id.
at -,
In light of these considerations, we think that private defendants, at least those invoking ex parte prejudgment statutes, should not be held liable under § 1983 absent a showing of malice and evidence that they either knew or should have known of the statute’s constitutional infirmity. The record
*1121
in this case discloses that the Mississippi replevin statute invoked by Cole, while perhaps placed in “legal jeopardy” by our decision in
Johnson v. American Credit Co.,
Having concluded that Cole’s and Robbins’ invоcation of the Mississippi statute was not objectively unreasonable, we turn to consider whether they in fact believed the statute to be constitutionally valid at the time of the suit. Wyatt contends that Cole’s professed good faith reliance on the replevin procedures is undermined by the existence of several facts tending to show that Cole filed the complaint out of malice. Wyatt alleges that Cole threatened to use “political influence” to seсure the return of his cattle, had no grounds under state law for bringing his action in replevin, and refused to restore the property seized in violation of a state court order.
We will assume for purposes of decision that Wyatt’s account of these events is true. We do not see, however, how these allegations detailing Cole’s misuse and abuse of state procedures bear on whether he in fact believed the Mississippi statute to be constitutionally infirm. It is this narrow question, not whеther Cole exhibited a generalized “malice” by filing suit for improper reasons, that is relevant in determining whether probable cause lies. As we noted above, see supra opinion pp. 1117-1118, state law claims are not cognizable under § 1983. Wyatt seeks to hold Cole liable for damages for invoking the statute that led to the deprivation of his property without due process. Unless we may infer defendant’s knowledge of federal law from his alleged violations of state law, the lattеr have no bearing on the probable cause inquiry. In the absence of any evidence that either Cole or Robbins had actual knowledge of the replevin statute’s constitutional infirmity, we hold that the district court properly barred Wyatt’s damage claims against them.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
Notes
. The State of Mississippi and several county officials were also parties to this case in the district court and on appeal. Wyatt’s claims against these defendants were resolved prior to argument in the Supreme Court and are therefore not before us.
. Wc did reverse the district court on the issue of attorneys’ fees, holding that Cole, but not Robbins, was liable for fees incurred after the district court’s declaratory judgment because this decision "affected the behavior of Cole towards Wyatt by effectively requiring him to return the property seized.”
. Wyatt argues that Robbins, as an attorney, should be held charged with a greater knowledge than other private defendants. We disagree. As we indicated in our first opinion, Robbins "is subject to the same standard of good faith as Cole because the relevant distinction is between persons acting privately and those acting for the state.”
