This appeal concerns the applicability of
Parratt v. Taylor,
I. BACKGROUND
Appellants King, Beittel, Tourney, Kirchner, Ellis and Labo were residing in and claiming tenancy rights to apartments owned by appellee Massarweh. Following a rent dispute with the appellants, Massarweh called the police. When police officers Bosshard and Dutto arrived, Massarweh told them that at least some of the appellants did not belong on the premises. The officers arrested King and her fellow appellants for criminal trespass, searched the apartments, and seized some of the appellants’ personal items, including, allegedly, marijuana. On the advice of the police officers, Massarweh changed the locks to the apartments the appellants were occupying. The appellants were incarcerated for up to two days, then released. No one was charged.
The appellants sued Massarweh, the police officers and the City of San Francisco in federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1981) alleging fourth and fifth amendment violations. The district court dismissed the action, apparently because it found that adequate state remedies existed and that no practice or pattern of violation of rights existed. King and the other appellants appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Parratt as a Bar to Section 1983 Actions
1. Due Process Violations
A Section 1983 cause of action does not exist for a random, unauthorized deprivation of liberty or property where adequate post-deprivation procedures are available under state law.
Parratt v. Taylor,
Here, the appellants allege that they were deprived of liberty because they were taken into custody for up to two days and because personal property was taken from their apartments. However, there has been no showing that these deprivations occurred as a result of deliberate, non-random state processes.
Due process requires the state to provide a hearing .“at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.”
Armstrong v. Manzo,
The conduct of the defendant police officers here appears to have been random and unauthorized.
1
The officers acted in response to Massarweh’s call. They did not act in accordance with established state procedures but instead acted in violation of police procedures promulgated by the San Francisco Police Department.
Cf Piatt v. MacDougall,
2. Fourth Amendment Violations
While
Parratt
may bar the appéllants’ due process claims, it does not foreclose their other constitutional claims.
Parratt
does not apply to plaintiffs claiming direct violation of their substantive constitutional rights, as distinct from their due process rights.
Robins v. Harum,
Moreover, where plaintiffs allege violation of substantive constitutional rights apart from due process rights, availability of state remedies is immaterial.
Monroe v. Pape,
*828 The appellants alleged facts sufficient to establish a fourth amendment violation. The officers did not contend that they obtained either a search or an arrest warrant. They did not consistently contend below that their intrusion into a landlord-tenant dispute gave them probable cause to arrest the appellants. The police report itself mentions seizure of “indicia of residency.” The appellants allege that the police arrested appellants King and Beittel so hastily that their offers to produce rent receipts to show that they were not trespassers were ignored.
The appellants did not consent to the officers’ entry or subsequent conduct. The appellants alleged that the officers removed valuable items of personal property from the apartments. Each of the appellants was imprisoned for “up to two days,” by the officers’ own admission. Moreover, the police did not argue that exigent circumstances exempted their arrests, searches and seizures from the usual requirements of probable cause and a warrant. Officer Dutto admitted that appellant Kirchner was arrested later in the day than the other appellants, negating inferences that exigent circumstances existed.
The allegations establish a claim for violation of the appellants’ fourth amendment rights.
See e.g., Welsh v. Wisconsin,
The arrests for criminal trespass in this case provide weak justification for the defendant officers’ entry into the apartments.
See Welsh,
Furthermore, the appellants pleaded that they had been illegally detained for up to two days following the arrests. Detention of a plaintiff for 42 hours after a warrant-less arrest without giving him a probable cause hearing before a magistrate has been held to be a separate, independent ground for Section 1983 liability.
See Llaguno v. Mingey,
Because material issues of fact are disputed, summary judgment for the officers was inappropriate.
Ramirez v. National Distillers and Chemical Cory.,
B. Section 1983 Liability of the Landlord
In support of their Section 1983 claim against landlord Mitri Massarweh the appellants rely on
Howerton v. Gabica,
However, the issue here is not whether the landlord acted “under color of state law,” but whether the landlord’s actions proximately caused the appellants’ injury. The appellants’ injuries here were
*829
clearly the result of state action. State police officers arrested the appellants and searched their apartments. The question is whether landlord Massarweh is sufficiently connected with the clear state action in this case to have caused these acts to occur within the meaning of section 1983.
Arnold v. International Business Machines Corp.,
Under similar circumstances, this court has determined that, absent some showing that a private party had some control over state officials’ decision to arrest a person or search his residence, the private party did not proximately cause the injuries stemming from the arrest and search.
Arnold v. International Business Machines,
III. CONCLUSION
Massarweh sought the appellants’ removal, not their arrests. In evading California civil eviction procedures, he was arguably a cause of deprivation of the appellants’ property without due process of law. But Parratt directs the appellants to state court for such wrongs. As for the Fourth Amendment claims that survive Parratt, Massarweh was not a legal cause. For these reasons, we affirm the dismissal as to Massarweh and reverse the dismissal as to the police officers
AFFIRMED in part, and REVERSED and REMANDED in part.
Notes
. This court has determined that a conspiracy to prosecute maliciously is not random conduct for purposes of applying
Parratt. See Bretz v. Kelman,
