James T. MARTIN, Jr.
v.
D.C. METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT, et al., Richard Xander,
et al., Appellants.
James T. MARTIN, Jr.
v.
D.C. METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT, et al., Richard Xander,
et al., Appellants.
Nos. 85-6071, 85-6072.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Sept. 12, 1986.
Decided Feb. 10, 1987.
Rehearing En Banc Granted May 8, 1987.*
Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (Civil Action No. 85-00624).
John D. Bates, Asst. U.S. Atty., with whom Joseph E. diGenova, U.S. Atty., Royce C. Lamberth and R. Craig Lawrence, Asst. U.S. Attys., Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for appellant.
Kerry W. Kircher, with whom James E. Coleman, Jr., Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for appellee.
Before EDWARDS, GINSBURG and STARR, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge EDWARDS.
Opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Circuit Judge STARR.
RUTH BADER GINSBURG, Circuit Judge:
This case concerns the "absolute" immunity of federal law enforcement officers from common law tort liability, and their "qualified" immunity from "constitutional tort" liability. In a civil action for compensatory and punitive damages, plaintiff-appellee James T. Martin charged officers of the United States Capitol Police1 with malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and violation of rights guaranteed him under the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution.2 The federal officers moved to dismiss Martin's claims on immunity grounds. Citing Barr v. Matteo,
We hold that Martin's common law tort claims must be dismissed because the federal officers legitimately asserted absolute immunity and were not tenably charged with action beyond the outer perimeter of their law enforcement responsibilities. We remand Martin's constitutional claims for reconsideration in light of the pleading directions for qualified immunity cases indicated in Hobson v. Wilson,
I.
On November 27, 1982, the Ku Klux Klan held a march in Washington, D.C. The event attracted public controversy and media attention. Plaintiff Martin became a figure in the day's incidents. As Martin alleged in the instant litigation, local and national news media captured on film an assault on him by District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) officers wherein Martin was "shoved ... through a plate glass window [and beaten] with nightsticks about the head, shoulders, and arms."4 Martin does not claim that any of the present defendants, all U.S. Capitol Police officers, participated in the November 27, 1982 incident. He does assert, however, that after photographs of the MPD officers' assault were broadcast, various MPD officers and the Capitol Police defendants "conspired to develop an unlawful scheme to deflect attention from their actions and to deter plaintiff from seeking to vindicate the violation of his rights."5 Allegedly in furtherance of this scheme, Capitol Police officers arrested Martin and charged him with burglary, destruction of a police cruiser and theft of police property; he was subsequently acquitted of the latter two offenses and convicted, at his trial for burglary, of the lesser included offense of unlawful entry.
On February 21, 1985, Martin commenced this action. His suit in the district court included in the array of defendants the District of Columbia, MPD officers alleged to have participated in the assault or its aftermath, and Capitol Police officers alleged to have conspired with MPD officers to impede Martin's access to justice. While the instant appeal was sub judice, Martin reached a settlement with the District of Columbia and the MPD defendants, and all claims against those defendants have been voluntarily dismissed.
The federal officer (Capitol Police) defendants had promptly moved in the district court for dismissal of all claims asserted against them. First confronting the common law tort claims, the Capitol Police officers cited Barr v. Matteo,
The Capitol Police officers also failed to gain early dismissal of Martin's claims of constitutional violations. Their plea to this branch of the complaint was qualified immunity. The district court stated that qualified immunity exonerates federal officials only when their conduct "does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
II.
All parties, and the district court, agreed that if the Capitol Police were engaged in discretionary activity within the "outer perimeter of their line of duty," then plaintiff's common law claims for malicious prosecution and abuse of process would be barred by the doctrine of absolute immunity. See Barr,
The district court, in refusing to dismiss the common law claims, emphasized Martin's allegations of an unlawful conspiracy among the federal and municipal defendants. The conspiracy theory, the court thought, placed the federal officers' conduct beyond the pale or "outer perimeter" of their authority, and thus let down the absolute immunity bar. In its initial order denying summary adjudication, the court stated: "[T]he plaintiff has clearly alleged that the federal defendants exceeded their authority by conspiring to violate the plaintiff's rights."12 In response to the defendants' renewed motion, the court further commented: "[T]he conspiracy allegations brought against the federal defendants, if true, constitute acts that fail to satisfy the 'functional' test set out in McKinney " insofar as the "immunity's justifying purpose [which] may best be defined as 'the effective functioning of government' [is not] 'related closely' to an alleged conspiracy to deprive an individual of basic constitutional rights."13 We find the conspiracy theory inadequate to overcome the absolute immunity defense; we set out our reasoning below.
No government officer, of course, can be "authorized" to act unlawfully. But if the scope of an official's authority or line of duty were viewed as coextensive with the official's lawful conduct, then immunity would be available only where it is not needed; in effect, the immunity doctrine would be "completely abrogate[d]." Briggs v. Goodwin,
The core of Martin's complaint in this case, before one can reach his conspiracy theory, is that the defendants were animated by improper motives in deciding to pursue his arrest and indictment. While such official pursuit of an individual may indeed invade a recognized legal interest, we stress that the pursuer would not on that account lose his absolute immunity from common law tort liability, for immunity of the absolute kind adheres "even when the [officer] is accused of acting maliciously and corruptly." Pierson v. Ray,
Martin's conspiracy allegations cannot change the analysis, for "[a]ccusing [the defendants] jointly, or by way of a count in conspiracy, gives [plaintiff's] case no more virtue than if he had proceeded against each [defendant] singly." Cooper v. O'Connor,
The district court stressed the "formative stage" of the proceedings in denying the defendants' dispositive motions:
Discovery has not yet begun, and thus it is not yet clear whether evidence exists to support the plaintiff's allegations.... [A]t this early stage, dismissal or summary judgment is plainly inappropriate. Having asserted a claim that could potentially defeat the defendants' immunity claim, the plaintiff is entitled to conduct discovery to determine if an issue of material fact exists.
Memorandum Order, Civil Action No. 85-0624, at 5-6 (D.D.C. Sept. 25, 1985), J.A. at 59-60. We think the "sue now, discover if you have a claim later," approach is particularly inappropriate in the context at hand.
Allowing discovery to proceed so as to enable Martin to establish "whether evidence exists to support" his allegation and "if an issue of material fact exists" is not the "firm application" of Rules 12 and 56 the Supreme Court envisioned in cases of this kind. See Butz,
Plaintiff's burden, when confronted with a properly supported summary judgment motion, is to "set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial." Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., --- U.S. ----,
In sum, the record now stands without "evidence from which reasonably minded jurors might draw an inference" that defendants' actions were unprotected by the absolute shield doctrine in point. See Anderson,
As earlier indicated, we follow the route traveled by the parties and the district court in approaching Martin's common law tort claims under an "absolute immunity" rubric, and his constitutional tort claims under a "qualified immunity" headline. If the double standard is problematic, see 5 K. DAVIS, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW TREATISE 97-100, 109-36 (2d ed. 1984), it is nonetheless the framework High Court precedent currently delineates. See Harlow; Butz,
Martin alleges, in substance, that the decision to arrest and prosecute him, in which the Capitol Police officers participated, was calculated to stop him from vindicating his legal rights. In particular, he asserts that federal and District police force members sought to impede his access to court to recover for his mistreatment by MPD officers on the Klan march day, November 27, 1982. If his allegations are true, he has indeed suffered an injury of constitutional dimension. See, e.g., United States v. Goodwin,
For constitutional claims of the kind Martin has attempted to state, the official actor's intent, motive, or purpose is the critical element. Defendants in this case are quite right when they describe Martin's charge that the Capitol Police "acted unlawfully" as "coextensive with [Martin's] allegation of unconstitutional motive, for ... only a bad motive ... could transform [defendants'] otherwise objectively lawful conduct [i.e., their participation in arresting and initiating criminal proceedings against Martin] into unlawful conduct." Brief of Appellants at 27 n. 11. We do not agree with defendants' further position, however, that under the Harlow decision now guiding the qualified immunity inquiry, as under Barr -style absolute immunity, an official's state of mind is never relevant, so that Martin is totally disarmed and the Capitol Police must prevail based simply and solely on the "objective reasonableness" of their conduct.
Defendants' position exposes a fault or vulnerability in the current law of qualified immunity. We explain the problem as we see it. The Supreme Court in Harlow held that "government officials performing discretionary functions, generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established rights of which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow,
A reasonable law enforcement officer would surely know that an arrest or prosecution undertaken to deter an individual from pursuing bona fide civil claims would trample upon clearly established constitutional rights. Defendants do not suggest otherwise. Their focus is not on Harlow 's "conduct ... violat[ing] clearly established ... rights" reference. See Harlow,
The "clearly established law" and "objective reasonableness" facets of current qualified immunity doctrine tug in opposite directions where, as here, the "clearly established law" itself contains a subjective component. If Harlow and progeny do not ever permit inquiry into a government official's state of mind, defendants' motion must be granted forthwith, for in Martin's case, absent unconstitutional motive for the plaintiff's arrest and prosecution, no clearly established law has been violated. We do not think, however, that the Harlow decisional line reaches that far.
Harlow involved plaintiff Fitzgerald's allegation that, in violation of his rights under the first amendment, he had been dismissed in "retaliation for his truthful testimony before a congressional Committee." Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
Our recent decision in Hobson v. Wilson,
Hobson implicitly recognized that the "motive never counts" interpretation would radically alter the existing balance with respect to claims of constitutional deprivations. In effect, the alteration would insulate officials from liability in all cases in which the substantive prescription makes the official's state of mind an essential component of the alleged constitutional violation.17 So major a change, we believe, should not be embraced in the absence of unambiguous instructions from the High Court. Accord Kenyatta v. Moore,
At the same time, we do not lose sight of the goal the Harlow Court had in view when it set an objective standard in the qualified immunity context. That prime goal is the prompt termination of vexatious litigation against public officials. Harlow,
In Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, --- U.S. ----,
Defendants here, we think it safe to conclude, have said and produced enough in the first instance to cross into summary judgment territory.19 By affidavit, the Capitol Police officers have attested to their good faith. They have shown, in support of the "objective reasonableness" of their conduct, the at least arguable existence of probable cause to arrest Martin, and they have cited in corroboration Martin's subsequent indictment and conviction.20 We therefore turn our attention to plaintiff's side. In response to defendants' prima facie showing of entitlement to qualified immunity, has Martin demonstrated, or should he be accorded further opportunity to demonstrate, the existence of a "genuine issue of material fact"?
As Hobson indicated, plaintiffs must "produce some factual support for their claim [of unconstitutional motive] to avert dismissal." Hobson,
--the defendants participated in a meeting on November 29, 1982, to review videotapes of the November 27 beating incident;
--plaintiff was the "only person identified and marked for prosecution solely as a result of that review";
--the defendants "worked closely with" the U.S. Attorney in deciding to arrest and prosecute plaintiff;
--an "abnormally large and complex team of officers" effected plaintiff's arrest.
Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment at 10.
This enumeration is insufficient, we hold, to demonstrate the existence of a "genuine issue" as to the reasonableness and good faith of the Capitol Police. We recognize that in an ordinary case, where "the inferences to be drawn from the underlying facts ... must be viewed in the light most favorable" to the opponent of the summary judgment motion, see United States v. Diebold,
This is not, however, an ordinary case. While we hold that plaintiffs may present claims that depend upon proof of unconstitutional motive, we must take care not to reimpose "precisely the burden Harlow sought to prevent." Hobson,
We set out, as best as we can capture it, that more demanding standard. Where the defendant's subjective intent is an essential component of plaintiff's claim, once defendant has moved for pretrial judgment based on a showing of the objective reasonableness of his actions, then plaintiff, to avert dismissal short of trial, must come forward with something more than inferential or circumstantial support for his allegation of unconstitutional motive. That is, some direct evidence that the officials' actions were improperly motivated must be produced if the case is to proceed to trial. See Harris,
Limitations of this kind on the range of inferences a trial court may draw are not extraordinary. Where an antitrust conspiracy is alleged, for example, "mistaken inferences ... are especially costly, because they chill the very conduct the antitrust laws are designed to protect." Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corp., --- U.S. ----,
To recapitulate, plaintiff Martin's fact recitations, as they now stand, are insufficiently probative of the alleged unconstitutional motive to warrant denial of the Capitol Police officers' motion for summary judgment. Martin has indeed produced more than merely "his own subjective belief that the defendant[s] intended him harm." Barker v. Norman,
We do not put down our pen yet, and mandate immediate entry of judgment for the Capitol Police officers, for the approach to pretrial development of cases such as this one was far from clear and certain when the district court made its rulings in Martin's favor. Fairness therefore requires that we afford plaintiff in the case at hand a last chance to make the showing necessary to survive defendants' summary judgment motion.22
Summary judgment, in the mine-run of cases, is generally inappropriate "until all discovery has been completed." City of Rome v. United States,
While leaving some space for discovery, and, thereafter, the opportunity to replead,24 we reiterate here the necessity, underscored in recent Supreme Court decisions, to minimize the burdens imposed upon government officials:
What is a federal trial judge to do? One thing he may not do: face it as just another lawsuit in which the notice pleading's liberal policy of F.R.Civ.P. 8 counts on pre-trial discovery to ascertain the factual basis for the claim[.] ... Allowing pretrial depositions, especially those taken adversely of the government official to ferret all of his actions and the reasons therefor ... would defeat and frustrate the function and purpose of the ... immunity[.] ... [U]se of liberal discovery to establish the basis of a claim is directly at odds with the Court's direction in Harlow that government officials entitled to immunity be freed from the burdens, the stress, the anxieties and the diversions of pretrial preparations.
Elliott,
The Federal Rules permit the district judge to defer decision on a summary judgment application to permit the opponent of the motion to obtain affidavits, take depositions or pursue other discovery. FED.R.CIV.P. 56(f).25 The Rules also instruct district judges to allow pleading amendments "freely" and at any time "when justice so requires." FED.R.CIV.P. 15(a). Those Rules could be utilized here, with limitations appropriate "to ensure that [the defendants will not be subjected to] unnecessary involvement in further litigation." Black Panther Party,
Ultimately, when summary judgment for defendants on Martin's constitutional tort claims is reconsidered, the district judge should recall that Martin may not take his case to the jury simply because defendants' state of mind is at issue and jurors might disbelieve defendants' testimony. See Anderson,
CONCLUSION
While we part company with the district court in this case, we recognize that the Supreme Court precedent with which we deal in this opinion is still evolving, may be variously interpreted, and sometimes slips from the grasp of lower court (and therefore fallible) judges in the courts of appeals and district courts.26
For the reasons stated in the opinion, we vacate the orders on review and instruct on remand (1) dismissal of the common law tort claims asserted against the Capitol Police officers, because those officers possess absolute immunity from suit on those claims; (2) deferral of decision on defendants' request for summary judgment on the constitutional tort claims alleged in the complaint, pending (a) plaintiff's pursuit of discovery, limited in the manner indicated in this opinion, and (b) an opportunity for plaintiff's prompt presentation thereafter of an amended complaint meeting the standard set out in Hobson,
Orders vacated and case remanded to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
HARRY T. EDWARDS, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur fully in Judge Ginsburg's thoughtful opinion, including her reading of this court's decision in Hobson v. Wilson,
STARR, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I concur fully in Sections I and II of the majority opinion. I also agree with much of Section III, which ably treats the difficult issue of the defendants' qualified immunity from Martin's constitutional claims. Notwithstanding these important areas of agreement, I am obliged to part company from the majority with respect to its reading of our decision in Hobson v. Wilson,
* As is evident from this circuit's recent opinions on the subject, vexing and sensitive questions are posed by application of the "objective reasonableness" immunity test of Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
This circuit's most definitive attempt to date to strike the proper balance is Hobson v. Wilson. In my view, the majority opinion's handling of Hobson is at best grudging and at worst a regrettable failure to adhere to binding precedent. Our opinion in Hobson contained a separate section entitled, "Pleading Unconstitutional Motive," which dealt explicitly with the precise issue in this case. The majority here rightly draws from Hobson a requirement that "plaintiffs must 'produce some factual support for their claim [of unconstitutional motive] to avert dismissal.' " Majority Opinion at 1434 (quoting Hobson,
In Hobson, the court carefully noted the potential circumvention of Harlow that could be worked through an allegation of unconstitutional motive:
We recognize that in some instances, plaintiffs might allege facts demonstrating that defendants have acted lawfully, append a claim that they did so with an unconstitutional motive, and as a consequence usher defendants into discovery, and perhaps trial, with no hope of success on the merits. The result would be precisely the burden Harlow sought to prevent.
Accordingly, in cases involving a claim that defendants acted with an unconstitutional motive, we will require that nonconclusory allegations of evidence of such intent must be present in a complaint for litigants to proceed to discovery on the claim.
Id. (emphasis added).
As if that statement were not enough, Hobson went on to quote with approval the Second Circuit's standard: " '[C]omplaints containing only "conclusory," "vague," or "general allegations" of a conspiracy to deprive a person of constitutional rights will be dismissed.' " Id. at 30 (quoting Ostrer v. Aronwald,
Hobson was, after all, a lengthy, careful, and well-reasoned opinion. And it cannot be gainsaid that this heightened pleading requirement was central to the delicate balance Hobson struck. Even if one has latter-day doubts as to Hobson 's wisdom, the pleading requirement which it so clearly articulates is the law of this circuit. We are bound to follow it. Indeed, just recently we did not hesitate to apply Hobson in other cases of no little moment. See, e.g., Smith v. Nixon,
In my view, if Hobson were conscientiously applied to this case, Martin's complaint would plainly fail. It contains nothing that could be construed, even under the most charitable view, as a "nonconclusory allegation of evidence of [unconstitutional] intent," Hobson,
As a result of public and media attention to the unprovoked attack on plaintiff, defendants conspired to develop an unlawful scheme to deflect attention from their actions and to deter plaintiff from seeking to vindicate the violation of his rights.
First Amended Complaint, p 18, J.A. at 26, 31. This broadside is scarcely the stuff of "nonconclusory allegations."
The majority appears to divine a sufficiently nonconclusory allegation in Martin's reference to a meeting of law enforcement officials on November 29, 1982. See Majority Opinion at 1434-35, 1437-38. But there is a problem. Nothing of this November 29 conclave appears in Martin's complaint. He apparently proceeded in utter ignorance of this now-crucial meeting, where the alleged "get-Martin" scheme was hatched, until the Government's summary judgment motion, which was supported by an affidavit describing the meeting. Indeed, Martin's only invocation of the November 29 meeting is in his opposition to summary judgment, where he merely asserts that he was the only person identified for prosecution as a result of that meeting. See Plaintiff's Opposition to Federal Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment, Docket Entry 113, at 10; see also Majority Opinion at 1434-35 (referencing this filing as Martin's factual support for his claims). In my view, the majority properly concludes that this enumeration is "insufficient" to create a genuine issue, Majority Opinion at 1435, but then in the next breath the majority permits Martin's claim to go forward to discovery. Fairly and dispassionately viewed, Martin's "factual" enumeration is similarly an "insufficient" "nonconclusory allegation" to withstand Hobson's threshold test, even overlooking for the moment that it comes too late in the litigation process. Cf. Hobson,
II
Two passages in Hobson could perhaps be employed to water down the opinion's direct requirement. In my view, however, neither does service as a justification for the majority's decision.
First, immediately after setting forth the "nonconclusory allegations" requirement, the opinion notes that
[t]he allegations on this [unconstitutional motive] issue need not be extensive, but they will have to be sufficiently precise to put defendants on notice of the nature of the claim and enable them to prepare a response and, where appropriate, a summary judgment motion on qualified immunity grounds.
Second, toward the end of the "Pleading Unconstitutional Motive" section, the Hobson court wrote:
In so holding we do not forget that in some circumstances plaintiffs are able to paint only with a very broad and speculative brush at the pre-discovery stage, and that overly rigid application of the rule we articulate could lead to dismissal of meritorious claims.
Id. at 30-31. This passage, apart from suggesting that the Hobson court certainly thought it was espousing a "rule," suggests that the shortcomings of Martin's complaint should be overlooked if he was merely painting "with a very broad and speculative brush." This does not, however, forgive him from even painting. Martin fails to allege even broad or speculative "facts" regarding the defendants' conduct, offering instead only the bald assertion that the "defendants conspired to develop an unlawful scheme." This brush is broad indeed, and not at all what Hobson had in mind. Otherwise, the Hobson "exception" would swallow the rule or be so broad and ill-defined so as to drain the "rule" of any meaning. Moreover, the sentence immediately following this picturesque "painting" language sets forth the following conclusion:
Thus, while we hasten to add that district court judges must act cautiously in this regard, and freely give leave to amend an inadequate complaint, we conclude that Harlow requires that merely conclusory allegations of unconstitutional motive, devoid of factual support, must be found lacking and be dismissed.
Id. at 31 (emphasis added). It therefore appears to me that even if we forgive the inadequacies of Martin's complaint as due to his being forced to "paint" broadly and speculatively, the proper remedy would be to grant leave for Martin to amend his complaint, not to expose government officials at this stage to the intrusive processes of discovery.
Thus, I find nothing in Hobson to undercut the pleading requirements which I should have thought were established beyond peradventure. My view is straightforward. I take Hobson to mean what it twice says: "merely conclusory allegations of unconstitutional motive, devoid of factual support, must be found lacking and dismissed." Id.; see also id. at 29 ("nonconclusory allegations ... must be present in a complaint").III
Hobson set forth a clear standard and outlined how it might typically be applied. The parties in this litigation had ample benefit of our teaching in that case; the opinion issued on June 8, 1984 and Martin's complaint was filed on February 21, 1985.* But while the Government has followed Hobson 's guidelines, Martin has not. Specifically, after noting that the Second Circuit's test from Ostrer was "more than adequate to address the Harlow concerns," see supra pp. 1426-27, the Hobson court continued:
We simply remind our trial courts that some factual allegations must support claims of unconstitutional motive. Plaintiffs who fail to allege any specific facts to support a claim of unconstitutional motive cannot expect to involve Government actors in protracted discovery and trial. On receipt of such a complaint, Government defendants might move for dismissal or, alternatively, for summary judgment. Then plaintiffs must produce some factual support for their claim to avert dismissal.
Id. at 30. This is precisely the course that the Government has followed. After receipt of Martin's complaint, the Government moved for summary judgment. While the complaint should have been dismissed as an initial matter due to Martin's failure to include "nonconclusory allegations" of "specific facts," granting a remand to permit discovery is even more outlandish in the posture of this case.
Martin has had ample opportunity to bring to the court's attention any information he possesses regarding the unconstitutional motive that allegedly infected the law enforcement officials' decision to arrest and prosecute him. He has displayed that he has no such "specific facts." Yet, the majority allows Martin to latch onto a fact set forth in the Government's summary judgment motion to carry him into discovery. This is court-sanctioned sandbagging in the extreme.
In sum, the majority's failure to adhere to applicable precedents, both from the Supreme Court and this circuit, adds confusion where clarity is needed, subjects government officials to needless and time-consuming discovery, and permits future plaintiffs to avoid Harlow 's application with a mere conclusory allegation of unconstitutional motive. Claims such as Martin's should not be allowed to proceed to discovery. Rather, as the precedents direct, they should be dismissed. I would take Hobson to mean what it says and move on to the next case.
Notes
Section IV and the dissenting opinion were vacated. See
Defendant Richard Xander is employed by the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department; at all times relevant to this litigation, Xander was "on detail" to the U.S. Capitol Police. See Xander Affidavit at 1, Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 81
Amended Complaint at 8-11, J.A. at 33-36
The district court stayed discovery, first pending resolution of the defendants' motions, see J.A. at 46, and again pending this appeal. J.A. at 107
Amended Complaint p 13, J.A. at 30
Id. at p 18, J.A. at 31
Memorandum Order, C.A. No. 85-0624, at 12 (D.D.C. July 22, 1985), J.A. at 24
Memorandum Order, C.A. No. 85-0624, at 5 (D.D.C. Sept. 25, 1985) (quoting Mcwrnney v. Whitfield,
Id. at 6, J.A. at 60 (citation omitted)
Memorandum Order, C.A. No. 85-0624, at 6-7 (D.D.C. Oct. 31, 1985), J.A. at 102-03
Denial of a claim of absolute immunity is immediately appealable under the "collateral order" doctrine of Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
As we observed in McKinney, courts have "extended the absolute immunity defense to 'executive officials at all levels' of the federal hierarchy" and to "a full range of common law delicts." McKinney,
The distinction indicated (but not explained) in Butz between a federal official's absolute immunity from common law claims and qualified immunity from constitutional claims has not been universally well-received. See, e.g., Queen v. Tennessee Valley Authority,
Memorandum Order, C.A. No. 85-0624, at 12 (D.D.C. July 22, 1985), J.A. at 24
Memorandum Order, C.A. No. 85-0624, at 4 (D.D.C. Sept. 25, 1985), J.A. at 58
See Amended Complaint, p 7, 9-10, 25-27, J.A. at 29-33
Martin argues that "[i]t is one thing to say that a police officer who engages in otherwise proper activities for an improper purpose is immune from common law tort liability. It is quite another to suggest that two or more officers may conspire together for an unlawful purpose and still obtain immunity." Brief of Appellee at 15 n. 15. Our Cooper precedent, however, does indeed suggest that one of these things is like the other. The distinction Martin proposes, moreover, would open the door to artful pleading of conspiracy as a means to circumvent the immunity bar. Furthermore, we see no logical justification for treating differently an agreement to perform acts to which absolute immunity attaches, on the one hand, and the individual acts themselves, on the other hand, absent reason to believe that the very agreement (once more, leaving aside what motivated it) was somehow unauthorized
As an additional ground for refusing to dismiss the common law claims, the district court observed: "[P]laintiff's claims clearly imply that the defendants resorted to 'manifestly excessive means' to achieve their objectives." Order, Sept. 25, 1986, J.A. at 59 (quoting McKinney,
We are uncertain what "means" the district court had in view. In McKinney, the defendant supervisor had used unauthorized means--physical force--to achieve an otherwise authorized objective. We held that the supervisor forfeited his absolute immunity pro tanto; the employee allegedly hurt by the use of force could sue for assault and battery. Id. at 769, 771; see also Bishop v. Tice,
Another possible interpretation of the district court's position--that the defendants' allegedly improper motives constitute "excessive means"--is similarly infirm. Such an interpretation would subvert the protection afforded even improperly motivated actions by the absolute immunity doctrine. McKinney homed in on directly observable behavior--physical force visited on desk employees by supervisors. The opinion in no way suggests the propriety of a state of mind inquiry to defeat an absolute immunity claim.
Martin's assertion that he was "arrested by an abnormally large and complex team of officers ... even though [he] had only one prior criminal conviction ... and was charged with a relatively minor offense not involving physical violence," Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment at 10, comes closer to the McKinney mark. However, not only did plaintiff fail to provide factual support for his claim that the arresting team was "abnormally large and complex," he failed to demonstrate a sufficient nexus between the allegedly excessive means and his common law claims. Even if the arresting officers forfeited their immunity with respect to "th[at] specific conduct," see McKinney,
A government official's motive or purpose is often an essential element of plaintiff's prima facie constitutional claim. See, e.g., Washington v. Davis,
[A] police officer does not violate a citizen's constitutional rights by accidentally running into him on the street ... unless that police officer was trying to prevent the citizen from arriving at the polls to vote.... If the officer accidentally ran into a march of peaceful protestors, mangling and killing several, his careless driving alone would amount to no more than a State tort.... If, however, he swerved to frighten the protestors, of whom he disapproved, his accidental bruising of even one makes out a First Amendment violation under [42 U.S.C.] Sec. 1983, being the natural result of an unconstitutional intent.
Dandridge v. Police Dep't of Richmond,
We emphasize that this holding applies only to instances in which the controlling substantive law makes the official's state of mind an essential element of plaintiff's constitutional claim. Where that is not the case, Harlow should rule out subjective inquiry
Section IV was vacated on grant of rehearing en banc
It is not entirely clear which party bears proof burdens on the various issues subsumed within the qualified immunity inquiry. The Supreme Court may have intended to place on plaintiffs the burden of establishing that the rights at issue were "clearly established" at the time of the alleged violation. See Davis,
See Contemporary Missions Inc. v. United States Postal Service,
A magistrate's probable cause determination, the Supreme Court has held, does not conclusively establish the objective reasonableness of a police officer's search or arrest. Malley v. Briggs, --- U.S. ----,
Although the question came up as a pleading matter in Hobson, the essential inquiry remains the same whether it is posed under FED.R.CIV.P. 12(b)(6) at the threshold of the proceedings (dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted), or under FED.R.CIV.P. 50(b) at the end of the adjudication (judgment n.o.v.). The inquiry is whether there exists no genuine issue of material fact that would permit a reasonable jury to find against the moving party. See The Supreme Court, 1985 Term--Leading Cases, 100 HARV.L.REV. 100, 250, 257 (1986) (comment on Celotex and Anderson )
Our dissenting colleague, observing that "Martin has been represented throughout by highly competent counsel," would cut Martin off at this pass, with absolutely no chance for discovery, and no opportunity thereafter to replead. See Dissent at 1441-42 & n.*. We fear that our colleague, from his lofty appellate perch, has overlooked litigation's exigencies. A highly competent district judge, diligently endeavoring to follow our Hobson precedent, allowed Martin to proceed to uncircumscribed discovery. Should Martin have objected and insisted on a more guarded ruling?
We raise here, in addition, other doubts we have about the sense and sensitivity of the dissenting view. If the able district judge, a prime addressee of our Hobson opinion, did not fully grasp our meaning, might it be that we were less clear than the dissent supposes? Might it also be that a judge-made rule emerging in one context--e.g., the Hobson appeal, where discovery had long since been completed and where the narrow question of the permissible scope of discovery was at the periphery of the court's field of view--requires adjustment when applied in a different context? Is that not the way case law develops, through constant accretion, erosion, and correction, as judges sensibly respond to the varieties of human experiences that troop before our courts?
Harlow directed that "[u]ntil this threshold immunity question is resolved, discovery should not be allowed."
In two recent cases, we applied the Hobson pleading standard to deny plaintiffs an opportunity to conduct further discovery where they had failed to set forth "nonconclusory allegations of evidence of [unconstitutional] intent" in their complaints. Smith v. Nixon,
The Dissent would disallow this last chance; our colleague "would take Hobson to mean what [he] says [it means] and move on to the next case." Dissent at 8. There may be no next case under the Dissent's analysis, however
Our colleague reads Hobson with the rigidity Hobson's author cautioned against. See Hobson,
The Rule reads:
When Affidavits are Unavailable. Should it appear from the affidavits of a party opposing the motion that he cannot for reasons stated present by affidavit facts essential to justify his opposition, the court may refuse the application for judgment or may order a continuance to permit affidavits to be obtained or depositions to be taken or discovery to be had or may make such other order as is just.
Cf. Brown v. Allen,
This case does not involve a pro se litigant, a situation where a pleading requirement such as this might be less stringently applied consistent with other rules governing the interpretation of pro se complaints. See, e.g., Haines v. Kerner,
