John Justice went to the Richard J. Daley Civic Center, in Chicago, to file a pleading in a Cook County circuit court. He was told by sheriffs police that he couldn’t enter the building without being searched. He refused to agree to this indignity, and went away. He then brought this suit against the sheriff, the chief judge of the circuit court, and other officials, claiming that to condition his right to enter the building on his consenting to be searched violated his constitutional rights. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which the district court granted,
When Justice’s claims are properly viewed in Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment terms, McMorris v. Alioto,567 F.2d 897 (9th Cir.1978) is on all fours and wholly persuasive. McMorris upheld an identical court rule requiring searches, implemented in an identical manner to the one here, because of concerns stemming from threats and episodes of violence affecting public buildings such as the Hall of Justice (at issue in McMorris ) and the Civic Center (at issue here). Defendants point to the late 1983 murders of Judge Henry Gentile and attorney John Piszczor in a Civic Center courtroom as supporting the rule at issue here.
Id. at 31. Justice appealed to us, pro se; he had represented himself in the district court as well. We asked attorney Spencer Waller to file an amicus curiae brief on Justice’s behalf. In his excellent brief and forceful oral argument Waller contended that Justice’s complaint should not have been dismissed in the absence of any evidence about the nature of the search that Justice would have been required to undergo, the defendants having submitted no affidavits or other evidentiary materials in support of their motion to dismiss.
Waller is correct that just because an airport-style metal-detector search of public buildings in San Francisco has been upheld, it doesn’t follow that any search, however intrusive, of persons wanting to enter the Daley Center must be reasonable, and therefore lawful, under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. It would require more than one shooting incident to justify forcing every person who wanted to enter a courthouse in order to file a pleading or argue a motion or watch a trial to strip naked so that his bodily orifices could be inspected for weapons. The reasonableness of a search depends not only on the need to search but also on how intrusive the search is in relation to the need.
O’Connor v. Ortega,
— U.S. -,
It is a matter of common knowledge that the Daley Center, which is only a few blocks from the federal courthouse in which this appeal was argued and the members of this panel have their chambers, uses the standard airport-style metal-detector method of search; and this method, being unintrusive, is constitutionally unproblematic where as here there is some reason — there needn’t be much — to expect that armed and dangerous people might otherwise enter. See, e.g.,
United States v. Henry,
The defendants, however, neglected to submit to the district court an affidavit describing the method of search used at the Daley Center. We asked their counsel at argument why this simple step had been omitted. She replied that she thought the district court and this court could take judicial notice of Chief Judge Comerford’s order requiring that entrants into the Daley Center be searched. We asked whether the order is published; she said no, but that it was posted on the wall of the Daley Center. We asked her whether we can take judicial notice of placards and she wisely acknowledged that we could not. On rebuttal the amicus curiae told us that he had called Chief Judge Comerford’s chambers and asked for a copy of the order — and had been told there was no such order. If true, this is a serious oversight, but it is not a fact properly before us on this appeal.
There was no basis for invoking the doctrine of judicial notice in this case, see, e.g.,
Powers v. Dole,
*1051
In
McMorris,
on which the defendants and the district court alike relied, the evidence showed that the follow-up search was a pat-down search. See
However, the judgment for the defendants must be affirmed anyway. First, it is plain from Justice’s pleadings that his basic concern is not that the defendants’ procedure for searching persons wanting to enter the Daley Center might be unduly intrusive but that even the superficial first-stage search with the metal detector would reveal that Justice is carrying a gun, so he would be barred from entering. Apparently what he seeks is the right to enter the Daley Center armed. The question whether he has such a right is independent of the means by which the defendants might discover he was exercising it and might seek to thwart him. Yet apart from a vague and legally ungrounded invocation of a supposed preconstitutional right to bear arms — a Hobbesian right of self-defense in the state of nature — and a claim under the Second Amendment, which guarantees the right to bear arms but has been held not to be enforceable against state action,
Presser v. Illinois,
Second, Justice has throughout this proceeding been emphatic in his refusal to base his case on the Fourteenth Amendment, though it is only through that amendment that the principles of the Fourth Amendment governing unreasonable searches and seizures become applicable to state officers. One of the argument headings in his main brief is, “The Fourteenth Amendment Does Not Apply”; this was also the position he took in the district court. He believes that the Fourteenth Amendment was not validly ratified. Further, he does not want to claim rights under an amendment primarily designed, in his words, to benefit members of the “African race.” The district court brushed aside Justice’s disclaimer of reliance on the Fourteenth Amendment as “misguided.”
The reiteration by Justice in both his appeal briefs of his disclaimer of reliance on the Fourteenth Amendment, after being told by the district court that this was a “misguided statement that would talk him right out of court,”
id.,
was not inadvertent. Although Justice is not a lawyer, his briefs are coherent and demonstrate an ability to understand legal reasoning. It is apparent that he is deeply offended at the thought of sheltering under an amendment primarily designed to benefit black people, and that he would rather lose his case than be lumped in with them. It is true that his preferred grounds — the natural right of self-defense to which we referred earlier, and the Fourth Amendment somehow viewed as applicable to state as well as federal action entirely apart from the Fourteenth Amendment— have no standing in federal law; but if a competent adult chooses with his eyes wide open to disclaim the only colorable legal ground for the relief he seeks, we can think of no reason not to comply with his wishes. Like any other litigant, one not represented by counsel can forfeit meritorious grounds by failing to raise them.
Beaudett v. City of Hampton,
*1052
Indeed, we might well be violating Mr. Justice’s rights under the First Amendment if we forced him to maintain this suit under the Fourteenth Amendment. It would compel an association that he finds offensive on ideological grounds. See, e.g.,
Wooley v. Maynard,
Affirmed.
