Collecting fines for parking in forbidden zones and like offenses is hard to do. The fines are small individually but large in the aggregate. Chicago tried private collection agencies, an experiment forged in bribery,
United States v. Davis,
One recent addition to Chicago’s arsenal is the Denver boot, named after the city where it was first used — and first declared unconstitutional.
Patterson v. Cronin,
The Denver boot is a form of pre-trial attachment — in both senses. To rid a car of the boot the owner must pay a booting fee and take one of these options: (a) pay the tickets in full; (b) file appearances in the Circuit Court of Cook County contesting the tickets; or (c) post collateral for half of the value of the tickets (up to $500) and promise to file appearances within 21 days. Chicago Municipal Code § 9-60-010(e). This sequence creates a constitutional difficulty, adverted to in
Sutton v. Milwaukee,
They do not seize it. Indeed they do not cite
Sutton,
or
Patterson.
Perhaps plaintiffs acknowledge the inevitable. Attachments are problematic only if the seizure precedes the opportunity for hearing.
Pinsky v. Duncan,
Plaintiffs’ argument is not procedural but substantive due process. This doctrine with an odd appellation (“substantive process?”
*
) and a checkered history once allowed courts to review the wisdom of state laws. They seized the opportunity to invalidate whatever struck them as unwise. E.g.,
Lochner v. New York,
Outside the realm of personal liberties, substantive due process may be a misnomer for the enforcement of rights expressly established in the Constitution and applied to the states through the fourteenth amendment.
Schroeder v. Chicago,
Trying desperately to make Chicago’s program look “arbitrary”, plaintiffs complain that the boot is designed to induce them to file appearances in state court. That is silly, they insist, because under state law only named parties need appear. Tickets do not name the owners. They contain blanks for the owner’s name and address, but the police do not fill these blanks. Instead they record the car’s license plate number and trust the City’s computers to look up the name and address. The ticket is the “complaint” filed in court (now the agency). Because their names are not on the tickets, plaintiffs insist that they are not parties. Surely it is arbitrary to force non-parties to file appearances, they conclude.
To the extent plaintiffs say that Chicago’s method of commencing lawsuits violates state law, they should present their claims to state court. Federal courts do not enforce state law by characterizing violations of state law as offenses against the Constitution.
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,
Formally, the question on this appeal is whether the district judge abused her discretion in denying the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. She did not. For the reasons we have given, this case is going about as far as a booted car. It should be immobilized — permanently. We therefore remand the case with instructions to enter judgment for the City without further ado. See
Chicago Observer, Inc. v. Chicago,
Affirmed and Remanded.
Notes
"[T]here is simply no avoiding the fact that the word that follows 'due' is 'process.’ ... Familiarity breeds inattention, and we apparently need periodic reminding that ‘substantive due process' is a contradiction in terms — sort of like 'green pastel redness.’ ” John Hart Ely, Democracy and Distrust 18 (1980).
