The plaintiff, who is
not
nаmed “Jane Doe,” brought suit against a Chicago police officer, Charles White, charging him with both federal civil rights violations (42 U.S.C. § 1983) and tortious misconduct under Illinois law. She also named as a defendant the City of Chicago, contending that it is liable for White’s misconduct under the doctrine of respondeat superior, as codified in 745 ILCS 10/9-102; see
Yang v. City of Chicago,
As an aside, we express our concern about the plaintiffs litigating under a pseudonym. E.g.,
Coe v. County of Cook,
Although the plaintiff in this case is charging sexual harassment, sexual harassment cases are not brought anonymously even when the facts are gamier than they are here. The plaintiff is not a minor, a rape or torture victim (cf.
Doe v. Wright,
Given the procedural posture, we construe the facts as favorably to Doe as the case permits. She was in an auto accident and sought the help of a police officer, who happened to be the defendant Charles White. He was attracted to her, and аsked her to have a drink with him, but she refused. He started calling her at her home at night, pestering her for a date. She refused steadily, and wouldn’t give him her address. But one day while he was on duty and in his police car, he saw her driving and ordered her to pull over. He told her she’d done nothing wrong and he wasn’t going to give her a ticket, but he nevertheless insisted on examining her driver’s license' — so he could learn her address. One morning a couple of weeks later he broke into her house while she was sleeping. She woke up and encountered him in the kitchen. He grabbed her, rubbed against her, and even exposed his penis to her. She ordered him to leаve the house, threatening to call 911 if he didn’t leave. He replied that he “is 911,” and reminded her that he worked in her district. After another break-in by White and more harassing phone calls, Doe complained to the police department’s Office of Professional Standards. Following a hearing at which White denied Doe’s charges, claiming that the two had had a voluntary relationship that had gone bad, the police review board found him guilty of telephone harassment and trespass and ordered him suspended for ten months.
It is doubtful that if Doe obtains a substantial money judgment against White he will have the wherewithal to pay it. But if in harassing Doe he was acting within the scope of his employment by the City as a police officer, then under state law, as we noted at the outset, the City must pay the judgment. The general rule, on which the district judge relied in granting the City’s motion for summary judgment, is that an employer is liable for an intentional tort committed by its employee only if the tort was in furtherance of his employment, that is, only if the employee’s motive, or at least
a
motive, in committing the tort was to serve his employer. E.g.,
Wright v. City of Danville,
So if White had pulled over Doe both to ticket her for a traffic violation and to get her address for entirely personal reasons, that part at least of the harassment of which she complains (thе smallest part) would be within the scope of his employment. But Doe insists that even if White’s motives were entirely personal throughout, his torts were within the scope of his employment because he is a police officer who used (that is, misused) his authority to effectuate his personal design.
*671
The proposition that sсope of employment should be interpreted more broadly when the employee is a police officer has yet to be considered by the Supreme Court of Illinois, but it has a footing in other jurisdictions and may well be the wave of the future.
Mary M. v. City of Los Angeles,
Indispensable to law and order, he is also and inescapably a dangerous instrumentality. A person who keeps a tiger in his backyard is strictly liable for the injuries caused by it,
G.J. Leasing Co. v. Union Elec. Co.,
We cannot be certain whether the Supreme Court of Illinois would accept the analogy and hold that White, if the facts are as сontended by Doe, was acting within the scope of his employment in committing the acts of which she complains. But it might; and at argument the City’s lawyer joined Doe’s lawyer in urging us to certify the question to the Supreme Court of Illinois. Had the City opposed certification, we would be inclined to deny
*672
certification outright. A litigant who wants an adventurous interpretation of state law should sue in state court (if she can do so — but Doe could have done so because state courts have jurisdiction concurrent with the federal courts to enforce 42 U.S.C. § 1983) rather than ask us to declare such an interpretation to be the law of Illinois.
Chang v. Michiana Telecasting Corp.,
Certification to the Illinois supreme court is in any event premature becаuse the facts bearing on the scope of employment issue have not yet been determined. White denied Doe’s charges at the hearing before the police review board, and the board did not find him guilty of the most serious of her charges. The jury in White’s trial in the district court may disbelieve Doe’s evidence and reject her entire case, in which event the issue of the City’s vicarious liability will be moot. Or the trial may cast the facts in a different light from the version that the procedural posture of this appeal requires us to accept without our knowing whether it is the correct version. Whether the scope of a police officer’s employment should be deemed broader than that of other employees is a difficult and important question that we should not ask the state supreme court to answer on make-believe facts. Cf.
Eley v. Pizza Hut of America, Inc.,
It does not follow from our declining either to certify the question of the City’s liability or to venture onto terrain that the Supreme Court of Illinois has yet to set foot on that we must affirm the judgment in the City’s favor. The district judge jumped the gun when she entered a final, appealable judgment on Doe’s claim against the City. We have warned repeаtedly against trying to resolve indemnity before liability.
Lear Corp. v. Johnson Electric Holdings Ltd.,
The judge had the
poiver
to enter such a judgment; whenever there are multiple parties, an order that finally resolves a party’s liability is eligible to be made final, and therefore appealable, under Rule 54(b), though the case continues in the district court between the other parties. She had the power, but not the duty. Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b);
Continental Casualty Co. v. Anderson Excavating & Wrecking Co.,
One loose end remains to be tied up. Doe claims that when she was pulled over by White she had not committed a traffic offense, and she has used this claim to bolster her contention that White was harassing her. Before the рolice review board, and doubtless to be renewed at his trial in the district court, White claimed that she had committed a traffic offense; and in a rather desperate effort to bring White’s conduct within the traditional scope of a police officer’s employment, Doe now asks us to accept White’s version and treat the traffic stop as a dual-motive act, an act that involved stopping a violator of the traffic laws because it was his duty, as well as to get the violator’s address for a purely personal reason, and therefore an act that cast liability on the City under standard principles of resрondeat superior.
It is late in the day for Doe to be trying to change her version of the facts, and in any event might not do her any good. She isn’t seeking damages for the petty inconvenience of being stopped for a few minutes and then let go without a citation — those damages would be utterly negligible — but for the telephone harassment, the repeated breaking and entry, and the physical assault. The only connection between the traffic stop and the injurious acts is that the stop was the method *674 by which White got her address, that is, got access; and as we noted with reference to the meter reader, the fact that one’s emplоyment gains one access to a person’s home does not make the employer liable for a purely personal act within the home. For that act is not in furtherance of the employer’s business, though the gaining of access may have been. At least that is the general rule; the scope of employment of a police officer may be broader than that of a meter reader, but that is the issue that must abide a decision by the Supreme Court of Illinois. We intimate no view on what that decision should be.
The judgment of the district court is vacated for the reasons explained in this opinion and the matter remanded.
VACATED And Remanded.
