Kenneth Harold Swipies, Appellee, v. Frank Kofka, Appellant.
No. 04-3244
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: May 11, 2005; Filed: August 12, 2005
Before MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, MURPHY, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
Kenneth Swipies sued Woodbury County, Iowa, Deputy Sheriff Frank Kofka under
I
Deputy Kofka was serving warrants when he saw Kendra Swipies, Mr. Swipies‘s twelve-year-old daughter, with Tina Swipies, Mr. Swipies‘s wife at the time (not Kendra‘s mother), and James Stark, a man whom Deputy Kofka knew to be facing sexual abuse charges, near Mr. Swipies‘s house. Deputy Kofka knew Kendra and Mr. Swipies because he was a friend of Kendra‘s mother, Mr. Swipies‘s ex-wife, Dawn Ebert. Shortly before Deputy Kofka spotted Kendra, she had come to her father‘s house for the start of a two-week, court-ordered visitation. Seeing Kendra in Mr. Stark‘s presence prompted Deputy Kofka to telephone a county attorney and ask him if he (Deputy Kofka) could perform an emergency removal of Kendra. The attorney responded that Deputy Kofka could remove Kendra from her father‘s custody if Deputy Kofka could articulate the bases for his decision to do so. Following this conversation, Deputy Kofka drove to Mr. Swipies‘s house and, in Mr. Swipies‘s presence, removed Kendra. After taking Kendra from Mr. Swipies‘s residence, Deputy Kofka phoned his supervisor and asked him to call the county attorney‘s office and the Iowa Department of Human Services to tell them that he had removed Kendra. Deputy Kofka did not call the juvenile court or ask his supervisor to do so. And he returned Kendra to her mother, the custodial parent, without informing Mr. Swipies that he had done so.
II.
Deputy Kofka argues that the district court should have entered judgment as a matter of law in his favor with regard to the due process claim because he did not infringe on a constitutionally protected liberty interest. The heart of Mr. Swipies‘s
Judgment as a matter of law is appropriate when “[t]here is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to find for [the non-moving] party on [an] issue.”
The due process clause of the fourteenth amendment says, in relevant part, that no state shall “deprive any person of ... liberty ... without due process of law.”
Deputy Kofka draws on both strands of this statement from Zakrzewski. He contends that the Constitution did not protect Mr. Swipies‘s right to visit his daughter and that even if Mr. Swipies had a cognizable right to visitation, any infringement was so brief as not to be actionable. To support this second point further, he analogizes the present case to Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Reg‘l Planning Agency, 535 U.S. 302 (2002). The Supreme Court concluded in that case that a temporary moratorium on real estate development did not constitute a categorical taking under the fifth amendment‘s takings clause. Id. at 320-21.
We reject Deputy Kofka‘s initial argument and conclude that Mr. Swipies had a protected liberty interest. Though in Zakrzewski we did not rule on the question of whether a non-custodial parent has a liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of his or her child, we held in an earlier appeal in this case that Mr. Swipies possessed such an interest. Swipies v. Kofka, 348 F.3d 701, 703-04 (8th Cir. 2003). We are bound to follow this holding. It is not only the law of the case, see, e.g., Popp Telecom, Inc. v. American Sharecom, Inc., 361 F.3d 482, 490 (8th Cir. 2004), but the law of the circuit, i.e., a decision of another panel which only the court en banc may overturn, see United States v. Bordeaux, 400 F.3d 548, 554 (8th Cir. 2005).
Even if our decision were not controlled by our previous holding, we would reach the same conclusion. If a state court affords a non-custodial parent visitation rights, we believe that the parent possesses, at least in some form, the liberty interest recognized in Manzano. A parent with visitation rights takes part in raising the child by making decisions about care, custody, and management during the period of the
To the extent that a de minimis exception attaches to this liberty interest, it does not apply to this case because Kendra was scheduled to be with Mr. Swipies for two weeks, and not just a few days, as in Zakrzewski, 87 F.3d at 1012-13. Relatedly, we are not persuaded by Deputy Kofka‘s analogy to Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council. That case did not create a generally applicable de minimis principle, but instead held that a temporary moratorium on real estate development was not a certain kind of taking. Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, 535 U.S. at 320-21. We do not see how this holding translates into anything useful in the context of the due process clause, for we know of no reason to think that a period of deprivation is too short to be cognizable for purposes of the due process clause just because the same period is too short to be cognizable for purposes of the takings clause.
III.
Deputy Kofka argues as well that the court erred in denying his motion for judgment as a matter of law because Mr. Swipies received all of the process that he was due at a hearing following the removal. Mr. Swipies filed a motion to hold his wife in contempt in the state court that presided over the divorce proceedings and that retained jurisdiction over related matters. The claim related to his wife‘s role in the removal. The judge held a hearing on this claim seventeen days after Deputy Kofka removed Kendra. Mr. Swipies, Deputy Kofka, and Ms. Ebert testified at this hearing, and Mr. Swipies, who represented himself, had an opportunity to cross-examine Deputy Kofka and Ms. Ebert. The judge decided not to hold Ms. Ebert in contempt for her role in the removal.
To establish a procedural due process violation, a plaintiff need not only show a protected interest, but must also show that he or she was deprived of that interest without sufficient process, i.e., without due process. Clark, 375 F.3d at 701. The due
Deputy Kofka maintains that the contempt hearing satisfied the requirements of the due process clause. He emphasizes that Mr. Swipies‘s interest was slight, because he was not the custodial parent, and that Mr. Swipies had a chance to present his side of the story and cross-examine Ms. Ebert and Deputy Kofka. Under the circumstances, he argues, nothing more was required.
We hold that Mr. Swipies did not receive all of the process to which he was entitled. Mr. Swipies was deprived of the opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time because the hearing occurred seventeen days after the removal. In Whisman, we decided, based on the facts of the case, that a hearing held seventeen days after a removal was not prompt enough for the purposes of the due process clause. Id. We reach the same conclusion here. The relative tardiness of this hearing is evident when one recognizes that it occurred after Mr. Swipies‘s two-week visitation period would have ended had it not been cut short by the removal. We do not believe, moreover, that the fact that Whisman involved a custodial parent‘s rights counsels a different outcome. Allowing the state to hold the hearing at a later date would lessen its administrative burden, but even a non-custodial parent‘s rights are sufficiently important to justify the greater burden of an earlier hearing. See generally Mathews, 424 U.S. at 335. For, as the court said in Jordan v. Jackson, 15 F.3d 333, 343 (4th Cir. 1994), “[t]he bonds between a parent and child are, in a word, sacrosanct.” To put the matter otherwise, if seven days is too long for a car owner to wait for a post-
IV.
Deputy Kofka contends that the district court erred when it denied his motion for a new trial, which was based on the court‘s refusal to give a jury instruction on good faith as to the procedural due process claim. Deputy Kofka asked the court to instruct the jury on the good-faith defense contained in
If a district court improperly instructs a jury, a new trial may be appropriate. See McKay v. WilTel Communication Sys., Inc., 87 F.3d 970, 976 (8th Cir. 1996); see
Deputy Kofka insists that the Iowa statute provides a good-faith defense for actions following removal, and not just for the removal itself. Thus, he asserts, by not instructing the jury on good faith as to post-removal activities, the district court
The district court did not err by failing to give the good-faith instruction because the supremacy clause prohibits
We think it appropriate at this point to note that while the jury instructions were not defective for lack of the good-faith instruction, they were flawed for another reason: they indicated that Mr. Swipies was entitled to judgment in his favor on the procedural due process
All of this said, we will not correct the error because of our view of the proper role of courts in an adversarial system. Deputy Kofka did not challenge the above-described aspect of the jury instructions before the district court, thus triggering plain error review,
V.
Deputy Kofka finally argues that the district court erred when it denied his motion for judgment as a matter of law as to the availability of punitive damages. Deputy Kofka knowingly deviated from
Punitive damages may be assessed in a
Deputy Kofka argues that punitive damages are not warranted in this case because “[t]here was no evidence ... from which a jury could conclude that [he] knew he may be violating federal law.” Unsurprisingly, Mr. Swipies does not think that the court erred in denying the motion for judgment as a matter of law. Mr. Swipies asserts that Deputy Kofka‘s insouciance toward the requirements of state law and his
We hold that there was no legally sufficient evidentiary basis on which a reasonable jury could have found for Mr. Swipies as to punitive damages. No evidence adduced at trial showed that Deputy Kofka acted in the face of a perceived risk that his post-removal actions violated federal law.
The fact that Deputy Kofka recognized that he was violating state law has no bearing on whether he knew that he was violating, or might be violating, federal law; all state law is not coterminous with federal law – there would be little need for it if it were. As for Deputy Kofka‘s friendship with Ms. Ebert, it is of no value to Mr. Swipies. As we have said, a plaintiff can establish that punitive damages are appropriate by proving either that the defendant acted with ill will or that the defendant was recklessly indifferent to the plaintiff‘s federal rights. Smith, 461 U.S. at 56. Mr. Swipies rested his argument entirely on the reckless indifference theory, and the court instructed the jury on this theory, to the exclusion of ill will. To establish that punitive damages were appropriate on the basis of reckless indifference, Mr. Swipies needed to show that Deputy Kofka knew that he was violating Mr. Swipies‘s federal rights or recognized that he might be doing so. See Kolstad, 527 U.S. at 536. The fact that Deputy Kofka had a friendship with Ms. Ebert demonstrates nothing at all about Deputy Kofka‘s knowledge of Mr. Swipies‘s federal rights. Deputy Kofka was entitled to judgment as a matter of law as to the availability of punitive damages.
Why would a jury, presumably composed of reasonable people, reach an unreasonable result? The answer can be found in the jury instructions. One of the instructions reads, “[i]f you find the conduct of the defendant was recklessly and callously indifferent to the plaintiff‘s rights to have the Iowa Code followed when his daughter was removed, you may award punitive damages.” This is an incorrect
VI.
For the reasons given above, we affirm the jury‘s finding that Mr. Swipies‘s procedural due process rights were violated, but vacate the award of punitive damages.
