Appellants appeal the district court’s dismissal of their suit for failure to state a claim and based on the Younger abstention doctrine. This action springs from the appointment by Santa Clara Superior Court Judge Conrad Rushing of appellee Alan Munn as receiver to aid in the collection of a judgment rendered in favor of appellee Linda Wooten against appellant Betsey Lebbos. Appellants challenge the constitutionality of Cal.Civ.Proc. § 708.620 (West 1987) and Cal.Civ.Proc. § 568 (West 1979),
I
Betsey Lebbos is an attorney. Sometime in 1983 she brought an action against Woo
Betsey Lebbos, her daughter Aida, and the other plaintiffs, Garth Rease, C. Jonlyn Karr, and Genyses Corporation filed this action on October 2, 1986. Rease is a tenant of Aida Lebbos and leases a house owned by Lebbos in San Jose. Karr was the trustee of Aida Lebbos’s trust from its inception in 1973 until 1985. While acting as trustee, she purchased two properties from the proceeds of the trust. In May 1977 she purchased the property in San Jose, and in December 1983 she purchased a house located in Menlo Park. Martha McCutcheon apparently also is a tenant of Aida Lebbos’s. Genyses Corporation was the entity through which Betsey Lebbos operated her trust account for her legal practice.
Named as defendants are “the judges of the Santa Clara Superior Court”; Superior Court Judges Rushing, Jack Komar, and Peter Stone; attorneys Miller and Grilli; Timothy Keene, a process server utilized by Miller & Grilli; Elizabeth Wharton, an employee of Miller & Grilli; Jeradlin Sprad-lin, an associate with Miller & Grilli; Wooten; and Munn.
In their complaint, appellants challenge the constitutionality of Cal.Civ.Proc. §§ 708.620 and 568 under the due process and equal protection clauses of the fourteenth amendment, and seek to enjoin the judges of the Santa Clara Superior Court from enforcing either statute. They raise similar arguments and request similar relief with respect to the order entered by Judge Rushing on July 15,1986, appointing Munn receiver, as well as a subsequent order entered by Judge Rushing on September 29, 1986, modifying the July 15, 1986, order. They also seek an injunction precluding appellees from prosecuting: (1) Munn, Court Appointed-Receiver v. Lebbos, Lebbos, Rease and McCutcheon, an unlawful detainer action pertaining to the San Jose property; (2) Wooten v. Betsey Lebbos, Jonlyn Karr, and Aida Lebbos, a “Complaint for Failure of Garnishee to Deliver Attached Property and Fraudulent Conveyance,” also pertaining to the San Jose property; and (3) from enforcing the judgment in the original proceeding, Leb-bos v. Wooten. Appellants base their request for an injunction in each of these actions on the unconstitutionality of sections 708.620 and 568 and the orders relating to the appointment of Munn. Appellants allege various constitutional claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982) against Miller, Grilli, Keene, Wharton, Spradlin, Wooten, and Munn (private defendants) for which they seek compensatory and punitive damages.
II
The district court dismissed appellants’ action on several bases. In its initial order of dismissal, it dismissed (1) the claims against the unnamed judges and the claim for damages against the named judges based on the failure to state a claim; and (2) the claims for injunctive and declaratory relief against the individual judges and the claims for damages against the private defendants under the Younger abstention doctrine. In its second order, the court affirmed its prior order and also held that the complaint failed to state a claim under section 1983.
In order to facilitate a more orderly analysis of appellants’ arguments, we discuss the various claims for injunctive and declaratory relief separately from the claims for damages under section 1983.
A. Prospective Relief
Appellants claim the court improperly abstained from considering whether injunctive and declaratory relief is proper. The decision whether to abstain under the Younger abstention doctrine is reviewable de novo. See World Famous Drinking Emporium, Inc., v. City of Tempe,
Abstention is appropriate based on “interests of comity and federalism [that] counsel federal courts to abstain from jurisdiction whenever federal claims have been or could be presented in ongoing state judicial proceedings that concern important state interests.” Hawaii Housing Auth. v. Midkiff,
Appellants request three different injunctions: (1) an injunction precluding appellees from prosecuting the three actions pending in state court; (2) an injunction preventing enforcement of the two orders pertaining to the appointment of Munn; and (3) an injunction precluding the judges of the Santa Clara Superior Court from implementing sections 708.620 and 568. The first two requested injunctions, and obviously the third, are premised on appellants’ constitutional attack on sections 708.-620 and 568. We conclude that the district court properly abstained from considering each of appellants’ requested injunctions because appellants could have challenged the constitutionality of sections 708.620 and 568 in the unlawful detainer action pertaining to the San Jose property.
The unlawful detainer action was filed by Munn against Betsey Lebbos, Aida Lebbos, Rease, and McCutcheon, and sought to remove them from the San Jose property. The unlawful detainer action was filed well before this action, and clearly constitutes an ongoing state proceeding. See Midkiff
The second prong under Middlesex is also satisfied. Although Younger involved an ongoing criminal prosecution, “[t]he policies underlying Younger are fully applicable to noncriminal judicial proceedings when important state interests are involved.” Middlesex,
Contempt in these cases, serves, of course, to vindicate and preserve the private interests of competing litigants, but its purpose is by no means spent upon purely private concerns. It stands in aid of the authority of the judicial system, so that its orders and judgments are not rendered nugatory.
Id. at 336 n. 12,
In Pennzoil the Court found abstention appropriate in an action brought by Pennzoil to enjoin Texaco from executing a Texas court judgment in Texaco’s favor pending appeal of that judgment to the state appellate court. Pennzoil,
[Juidice ] rests on the importance to the States of enforcing the orders and judgments of their courts. There is little difference between the State’s interest in forcing persons to transfer property in response to a court’s judgment and in forcing persons to respond to the court’s process on pain of contempt. Both Juid-ice and this case involve challenges to the processes by which the State compels compliance with the judgments of its courts. Not only would federal injunctions in such cases interfere with the execution of state judgments, but they would do so on grounds that challenge the very process by which those judgments were obtained.
Id. at 13-14,
In filing the unlawful detainer action, Munn was acting in his capacity as court-appointed receiver. Like Juidice and Pennzoil, this action involves a challenge to the “process[ ] by which the State compels compliance with the judgments of its courts.” Id. (footnote omitted). Indeed, the facts of this case are even stronger than those in Pennzoil. In Pennzoil the state had not yet become actively involved in attempting to compel compliance with its judgment. Here, on the other hand, several years had elapsed since the verdict had been rendered, and the court found it necessary to appoint a receiver to aid in the collection of Wooten’s judgment. The state court’s interest in ensuring “that its orders and judgments are not rendered nugatory,” Juidice,
The inquiry under the third prong is whether the unlawful detainer action provided appellants a sufficient forum for raising their federal constitutional challenges. “Where vital state interests are involved, a federal court should abstain ‘unless state law clearly bars the interposition of the constitutional claims.’ ‘[T]he ... pertinent inquiry is whether the state proceedings afford an adequate opportunity to raise the constitutional claims....’” Middlesex,
California’s unlawful detainer statute is contained at Cal.Civ.Proc.Code §§ 1159-1179a (West 1982 & Supp.1989). Because an unlawful detainer action is a summary proceeding designed to facilitate owners in obtaining possession of their real property, cross-complaints, countercomplaints, and affirmative defenses are inadmissible. S.P. Growers Ass ’n v. Rodriguez,
Appellants allege that the issuance of the order appointing Munn receiver and vesting in Munn broad powers to collect the
The three requirements justifying abstention are accordingly satisfied.
B. Section 1983
We note at the outset that there is some confusion over whether appellants’ claims for damages under section 1983 apply to the judges. The appellees argued in their motion to dismiss and the district court agreed that (1) the claim for damages against the unnamed judges did not state a claim; and (2) the claims for damages against the three named judges were barred by absolute judicial immunity. It is evident from reading the prayer for relief contained in appellants’ complaint, however, that the section 1983 claims apply only to the private defendants. Additionally, appellants waived any claims for damages against the judges in their response to appellees’ motion to dismiss below, Appellants’ Responding Brief, December 4, 1986, at 3, and acknowledge that waiver in their brief filed with this court. Appellants’ Brief at 23. Any claim for damages against the judges has therefore been waived.
To the extent the district court’s decision to dismiss the section 1983 claims against the private defendants is based on Younger abstention, it must be rejected. The Supreme Court has not yet decided whether the principles under Younger apply with equal force to claims for damages under section 1983. See Tower v. Glover,
Unlike in Mann, we do not think abstention is appropriate with respect to appellants’ claims for damages. As we have pointed out above, it appears that in California a constitutional defense may be raised by a defendant in an unlawful de-tainer action. We find no authority, however, that would lead us to believe that claims for damages arising from alleged constitutional torts—especially, as in this case, claims whose constitutional bases are wholly unrelated to the constitutional basis comprising the defense to the action—may also be raised in such an action. Additionally, we do not believe that consideration of the section 1983 damage claims against the private appellees will in any way interfere with the state proceedings. The interests of comity and federalism underlying Younger abstention are therefore inapplicable.
That abstention was inappropriate with respect to appellants’ claims for damages does not end the matter. The district court also found dismissal proper based on its finding that appellants failed to state a claim. In order to state a claim under section 1983,
Appellants’ allegations that the actions taken by the private defendants were in retaliation for Betsey Lebbos’s efforts to “clean up” the Santa Clara Superior Court and thus violative of the first amendment is not supported by any facts in the complaint. Additionally, this claim appears to have been directed at the judges, against whom the section 1983 claims have been dropped. We find appellants’ equal protection claim equally unsupportable by any facts in the complaint and that it too was properly dismissed. See id. at 1305 n. 10 (affirming dismissal of equal protection claim due to failure of appellants to allege any facts in support of the claim).
Appellants’ allegation that their fourth amendment right not to be subjected to unlawful searches and seizures and fourteenth amendment right to privacy were violated are based primarily on appel-lees’ activities in attempting to serve documents on appellants while trying to collect the judgment against Betsey Lebbos. With respect to the fourth amendment, appellants fail to allege that any search or seizure took place. As to the right to
Betsey Lebbos has, however, successfully made out claims under both the procedural and substantive aspects of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. “The Fourteenth Amendment protects one from deprivations of property or liberty without procedural due process. Due process requires an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.” Roley v. Pierce County Fire Protection Dist. No. 4,
“Substantive due process refers to certain actions that the government may not engage in, no matter how many procedural safeguards it employs.” Blaylock v. Schwinden,
Ill
The district court properly abstained from granting the injunctive and declaratory relief requested by appellants. Because appellant’s request for prospective relief was properly denied and appellants waived any alleged claims for damages under section 1983 against the judges, the dismissal of the judges was proper. The dismissal of appellants’ section 1983 claims against the private defendants is affirmed, except for Betsey Lebbos’s procedural and substantive due process claims against Munn, Miller, Grilli, Wharton, and Wooten. We remand these latter claims for consideration by the district court. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED.
Notes
. Section 708.620 provides:
The court may appoint a receiver to enforce the judgment where the judgment creditor shows that, considering the interests of both the judgment creditor and the judgment debt- or, the appointment of a receiver is a reasonable method to obtain the fair and orderly satisfaction of the judgment.
Section 568 states:
The receiver has, under the control of the Court, power to bring and defend actions in his own name, as receiver; to take and keep possession of the property, to receive rents, collect debts, to compound for and compromise the same, to make transfers, and generally to do such acts respecting the property as the Court may authorize.
. As we make clear below, we do not believe any claim for damages was alleged against the judges by appellants in their complaint. Any such claim, however, has been waived by appellants. See supra, at 13-14.
. Only the judges have filed a responding brief.
. Accordingly, we need not determine whether subject matter jurisdiction may also be premised on diversity of citizenship. New Alaska Dev. Corp. v. Guetschow,
.The judges are not immune from appellants’ claims for prospective relief. Pulliam v. Allen,
. In Goldie's Bookstore, Inc. v. Superior Court,
. Our conclusion that the three Younger predicates have been satisfied finds support in our decision in Worldwide Church of God, Inc. v. California,
. Although it is true that appellant Karr was not a party to the unlawful detainer action, her interest as trustee of Aida Lebbos’s trust is sufficiently related to the interest of Aida Lebbos that Karr should be subject to the same Younger considerations that govern Aida Lebbos. Cf. Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
. The Court reviews a dismissal for failure to state a claim de novo. Fort Vancouver Plywood Co. v. United States,
. Because Munn was acting in his capacity as court-appointed receiver, he was acting under color of state law.
. See Amended Complaint at 10 ("[U]nlawful campaign to deprive Plaintiff/Attorney Lebbos and all plaintiffs of their constitutional rights_”).
