Eva Marie HUMMEL-JONES; Robert Harrison Jones, Jr., Appellants,
v.
Alan STROPE; Steve Popplewell; R. Fair; D. Tinkler;
James Kistler; A. Marmion; Kerry Rowden; Miller
County, Appellees.
No. 93-1471.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Sept. 15, 1993.
Decided May 26, 1994.
Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing En Banc Denied July 28, 1994.
Mark Belz, St. Louis, MO, argued (Timothy Belz, on the brief), for appellants.
Daniel R. Green, Jefferson City, MO, argued (Daniel R. Green and Jon E. Beetem, on the brief, for appellees Strope and Popplewell, Mark A. Ludwig, on the brief, for appellee Angie Marmion, Jeremiah W. (Jay) Nixon and Greg A. Perry, on the brief, for appellee Kistler), for appellees.
Before BEAM, Circuit Judge, FLOYD R. GIBSON and JOHN R. GIBSON,* Senior Circuit Judges.
BEAM, Circuit Judge
Eva Hummel-Jones and Robert Jones, Jr., (collectively "the couple") filed this 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 action after a 2:00 A.M. raid of the small birthing clinic at which they were staying. The couple alleged that the named defendants violated their Fourth Amendment rights to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures. The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants after determining that any search and seizure to which the couple may have been subjected did not violate their constitutional rights. The district court also held that even if the couple's rights were violated, the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. The couple appeals. We reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
This dispute arises out of an investigation of the Country Cradle, a well-established and openly-operated alternative birthing clinic located in rural Missouri.1 A registered nurse operated the clinic. Evidently, the defendants' concern that the nurse might be practicing medicine without a license prompted the search at issue.
On the afternoon of January 23, 1991, Board of Healing Arts Inspector Kistler became convinced that the nurse was delivering a baby at the clinic, and thereby practicing medicine without a license.2 Kistler contacted Deputy Sheriff Popplewell about the possibility of an investigation or a search. As a result, a reserve deputy was sent to the clinic that evening at 10 P.M. The couple, their toddler, and their four-hour old newborn were the only occupants at the time the deputy knocked on the door. The deputy told the family that he was a soldier on his way to the Gulf War. He claimed to be having car trouble, so the family admitted him to telephone for help. In reality, he was telephoning waiting officers to inform them that the Country Cradle was occupied by a family with a newborn infant.
At approximately 11:00 P.M., Investigator Kistler and Deputy Sheriff Popplewell went to the home of Miller County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Marmion to discuss the advisability of procuring a search warrant.3 Marmion prepared the application for a warrant and the accompanying affidavit. The affidavit was not only conclusory in nature,4 it also neglected to inform the magistrate that the "confidential informant" with information of a birth was an off-duty deputy impersonating a United States serviceman on his way to war and that a family with an hours-old newborn was occupying the clinic. The magistrate issued the warrant at approximately 1:00 A.M., and authorized a search for "video tapes, medical records, medical supplies, financial records, video equipment, medications or narcotics, sheets, [and] medical textbooks" being kept at the Country Cradle. Joint Appendix at 314.
At 2:00 A.M. four uniformed and armed officers, two prosecuting attorneys, and the inspector raided the Country Cradle.5 The officers entered after knocking and awakening Jones. They refused his request to return later in the morning. Jones was ordered to sit on the waiting room couch and was questioned. Several others of the search party went into the separate bedroom where the pajama clad Hummel-Jones was attempting to nurse her newborn son, and began to question her. The couple declined to identify themselves. The searchers seized the couple and restricted them to the waiting room couch while the search was conducted. Whenever Hummel-Jones left the couch, an officer accompanied her. Inspector Kistler photographed the family as "evidence." Kistler also photographed Hummel-Jones's lingerie soaking in the bathroom sink. Popplewell searched Hummel-Jones's overnight bag against her wishes. The searchers seized one of the family's banking slips to establish their identity.6 The searchers also seized the couple's personal video-tape of Hummel-Jones's afterbirth experience, despite the couple's objections. The search lasted for three and a half hours, or, essentially, throughout the night. The searchers permitted the family to use the bathroom and telephone, and Hummel-Jones was allowed to nurse her infant.
Afterwards, the couple filed this section 1983 action seeking actual and punitive damages against the defendants. The district court granted summary judgment to all the named defendants. The couple appeals the district court's finding that Sheriff Strope, Deputy Sheriff Popplewell, Inspector Kistler, and Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Marmion (the appellees) did not violate their Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by conducting the search in an unreasonable manner, by exceeding the scope of the warrant, and by unlawfully seizing them.7 They also appeal the district court's finding that qualified immunity shields the appellees from liability even if their actions were unlawful.
II. DISCUSSION
We review grants of summary judgment de novo. United States ex rel. Glass v. Medtronic, Inc.,
A. Reasonableness of the Raid
Although how best to proceed in performing a search is generally left to the discretion of officers executing a warrant, possession of a search warrant does not give the executing officers a license to proceed in whatever manner suits their fancy. Dalia v. United States,
The intrusion here was extreme and deliberate. The couple and their newborn were rousted out of bed at 2 A.M.; they and Hummel-Jones's lingerie were photographed as "evidence;" the searchers were armed, hostile, and arrogant; the searchers directed the couple to the couch, demanded that they stay there, searched Hummel-Jones's personal bag over her protests, and ordered Jones to "control" his wife. The searchers further seized the couple's personal documents when the couple refused to identify themselves. The searchers stayed and kept the family on the couch until after 5 A.M., or for most of the night, ignoring any risk to Hummel-Jones's health due to the inevitable trauma of such an invasion only hours after delivery.
The primary justification the appellees put forth for performing this search of a well-established and openly-operating birthing clinic at 2:00 A.M. was to ensure that the mother and newborn would be present. Otherwise, we are told, items of evidence, to wit, the mother, newborn, and bloody sheets, might have been lost. Mothers and newborns at a birthing clinic are not "items of evidence." And, neither the warrant nor the warrant application mention either a mother or a newborn when particularly describing the "items" to be searched for and seized. In any case, the mother and newborn were not going to disappear. At worst, they were going to go home. Photographing the mother and her newborn on the clinic premises could not help establish whether or not there was unlicensed practice of medicine occurring at the clinic because it is not illegal to give birth wherever one happens to be when the moment arrives. Nor were the bloody sheets and lingerie attendant to a birth evidence of any illegality.
The appellees also argue that the search was reasonable because they had a warrant. Thus, the balance between the couple's privacy and the state's law enforcement interests had already been weighed by a neutral and detached magistrate, with the balance having been determined to be in the state's favor. First, as noted, possession of a warrant does not insulate the manner in which searches are executed from review for reasonableness. Dalia,
The appellees correctly point out that law enforcement officials cannot be expected to ascertain in advance whether their searches will interfere with the privacy rights of innocents. That fact, however, is irrelevant here, where the evidence shows officials went to great lengths to ensure that their middle of the night search would invade an intimate and legal family experience and further neglected to inform the issuing magistrate of this goal. Possession of a warrant, issued under such circumstances, does not render the invasion of this couple's privacy, at such a unique moment, reasonable.
While possession of a warrant generally justifies searching the effects of those occupying the premises, see United States v. Lucas,
In granting summary judgment as to the search of the overnight bag, the district court relied on two such cases to find the nonconsensual search of Hummel-Jones's bag within the scope of the warrant. United States v. Gray,
Neither Gray nor Giwa support the proposition that police may search the personal bags of overnight visitors merely because those bags are not in the visitors' hands. While both start with the general premise that it is reasonable to search any container within the area to be searched, both cases discuss in detail the special privacy concerns which arise when visitors are present. Gray,
In Robertson, the Ninth Circuit found that search of a visitor's luggage could not be justified by a warrant which did not specify her luggage, when the officers, as in this case, knew she was there and knew of the luggage when applying for the warrant.
Here, the couple was merely patronizing the clinic when the search was executed. In an analogous situation, the Supreme Court held that patrons of a bar could not be searched even though officers had a warrant to search the bar for heroin. Ybarra,
While we note that appellees improperly seized the Jones's,8 executed a search beyond the scope of the warrant,9 and treated the mother and baby as "items of evidence," which they were not, we find it unnecessary to discuss these matters in greater detail because of our holding on reasonableness.
B. Qualified Immunity
Since we reverse the summary judgment, we address the alternative finding of qualified immunity. The doctrine of qualified immunity protects well-intentioned officers attempting to do their duty. See Anderson v. Creighton,
It is elementary Fourth Amendment law that even valid warrants must be executed in a reasonable manner. Dalia,
III. CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court's summary judgment as to the couple's Fourth Amendment claims and remand for trial consistent with this opinion.
Notes
The HONORABLE JOHN R. GIBSON was Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit at the time this case was submitted, and took senior status on January 1, 1994, before the opinion was filed
Because of the posture of this case, we state the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs
Ms. Nichting, the registered nurse in question, operated the clinic under a physician's protocols. The investigation was prompted by a belief that the protocols had been withdrawn. There is no evidence that the Jones's were aware of any dispute about the legality of the operation of the facility, and they were never targets of the investigation
Marmion's prior superior had prevented her from prosecuting the nurse after a previous investigation in which the nurse had fully cooperated
The affidavit gives no basis for the affiant's "information and belief ... that the woman operating the 'Country Cradle' is not believed to be licensed nor [to have] a doctor's protocol to practice midwifery." Joint Appendix at 313. The only fact one can glean from the affidavit is that a "confidential informant" told the affiant that a baby had been born at the house. Giving birth, of course, is not illegal
The appellees, Deputy Sheriff Popplewell, Sheriff Strope, Investigator Kistler, and Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Marmion, were members of the search party
At that point in time, the searchers already knew that the only car in front of the clinic was registered to Robert and Eva Jones. They also had in their possession the birth certificate of the couple's newborn son. There was, therefore, no real question as to identity
There has evidently been no appeal as to defendants Rodney Fair, David Tinkler, Kerry Rowden, and Miller County
Compare Michigan v. Summers,
This warrant did not even arguably authorize photographing Hummel-Jones's soiled lingerie. We do not have enough information to determine whether the couple's personal video-tape fell within the scope of the warrant. However, a warrant to seize medical records and video-tapes presumptively applies to the clinic's records and video-tapes, not to the clearly personal belongings of patients and innocent bystanders who happen to be on the premises. Likewise, the warrant conveyed no authority to seize the couple's banking slip. See Brown v. Texas,
Appellee Marmion wisely makes no argument that she is entitled to absolute immunity for her actions as a member of the search party. See Buckley v. Fitzsimmons, --- U.S. ----, ----,
