Case Information
*2 Before WILKINS, NIEMEYER, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. _________________________________________________________________ Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wilkins and Judge Williams joined. _________________________________________________________________ COUNSEL
ARGUED: David Ira Salem, Assistant United States Attorney, Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellant. Pamela Lynne Lyles, Washing- ton, D.C., for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Lynne A. Battaglia, United States Attorney, Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellant. OPINION
NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
Following an investigation into a contact lens mail order business, the United States Postal Service obtained a criminal indictment charg- ing John Edmond and his attorney, Pamela Lyles, with mail fraud. Edmond and Lyles were arrested, detained, and released on bond. After Edmond and Lyles filed a motion to dismiss their indictment for prosecutorial vindictiveness, the government dismissed the indict- ment. And this civil action followed.
In their civil complaint, Edmond and Lyles alleged that various postal inspectors and the Assistant United States Attorney assigned to the case violated their constitutional rights in securing their indict- ment and arresting them. Asserting official immunity from suit, those defendants filed a motion to dismiss or, alternatively, for summary judgment, but the district court denied their motion. Because we hold (1) that absolute prosecutorial immunity shields the Assistant United States Attorney from the constitutional tort claims against her; (2) that absolute witness immunity shields one of the postal inspectors from the Fourth Amendment claim that he committed perjury before the grand jury; and (3) that qualified immunity shields the postal inspec- *3 tors from the remaining constitutional tort claims against them, we reverse. I
John Edmond owned and operated Landover Contact Lens Center ("Landover Lens"), a contact lens mail order company located in Marylаnd. Pamela Lyles was Edmond's counsel and, although not an owner, was intimately involved in running Landover Lens. Prompted by numerous customer complaints, Postal Inspector M. Sherwin Green began an investigation of Landover Lens in early 1986.
Green's investigation led to civil administrative action against Lan- dover Lens and a 15-count criminal indictment charging Edmond and Lyles with mail fraud. The criminal indictment charged that Edmond and Lyles had car- ried out a scheme to defraud contact lens suppliers by ordering lenses from them, paying them the minimum amount required to keep the account open, refusing to pay the remainder of the account or paying with checks not covered by sufficient funds, and, when further credit was refused, moving to another supplier. The indictment also alleged that in some instances Edmond and Lyles had used different business names to obtain lenses from suppliers who had already cut them off. Green and his supervisor Thomas Krautheim, accompanied by other postal inspectors and local police officers, arrested Edmond and Lyles at their Maryland apartment during the pre-dawn hours of Feb- ruary 18, 1987. The officers took Edmond and Lyles to the Postal Inspection Division Headquarters in Washington, D.C., where they were questioned, booked, and fingerprinted. The officers then trans- ported Edmond and Lyles to the federal courthouse in Baltimore, Maryland, where they were held for nine hours before receiving a bail hearing and being released on bond pending trial.
Edmond and Lyles filed a motion to dismiss their indictment for prosecutorial vindictiveness. After a hearing on the motion had been scheduled, the United States Attorney for the District of Maryland dismissed the indictment.
Thereafter, in February 1988, Edmond and Lyles filed a civil action
in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia based
on their allegedly wrongful prosecution and arrest against the United
States Postal Service General Counsel; Postal Inspectors Green,
Krautheim, and Dewey Sparks; Assistant United States Attorney
Wendy Arnell; Assistant Attorney General for the State of Maryland
Roger Wolf; and two complaining witnesses, Richard Spitz, Jr., a
businessman who had leased facilities to Landover Lens, and Arnold
Popkin, Spitz' attorney. As amended, the complaint alleged various
constitutional torts under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of
Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
Then, on November 22, 1991, the D.C. Circuit handed down its
decision reversing in part the district court's ruling dismissing
Edmond's and Lyles' D.C. action. Edmond v. United States Postal
Serv. Gen. Counsel,
II
Appellants first contend that the district court erred in refusing to dismiss the constitutional tort claims against federal prosecutor Arnell on absolute immunity grounds. They maintain that Arnell enjoys absolute immunity from the surviving Bivens-type claims against her because the alleged conduct that underlies those claims qualifies as "quasi-judicial." We agree.
. . . in a case of this sort, it may be better articulated under the Fifth
Amendment (because Edmond and Lyles already had been indicted at the
time of alleged wrongdoing)." Edmond,
Edmond's and Lyles' complaint does not allege that Sparks committed
or suborned рerjury or that Sparks was even present at their arrest. The
D.C. Circuit's opinion also overturned the lower court's ruling that it
lacked personal jurisdiction over Arnell, Spitz, and Popkin and permitted
jurisdictional discovery against those defendants. Edmond,
The district court in this case fоcused on the claim that Arnell had threatened to indict Edmond if he filed for bankruptcy. While acknowledging that a prosecutor's pre-indictment conduct is not investigatory per se, the court refused to hold "that an alleged threat to obtain an indictment if an individual declares bankruptcy is `inti- mately associated with the judicial phase' as a matter of law." Accordingly, it denied the federаl defendants' motion to dismiss the surviving Bivens-type claims against Arnell.
In declining to dismiss Arnell, the district court relied on a claim that no longer remained in the present action. After the D.C. district court had dismissed all of Edmond's and Lyles' Bivens-type claims, the D.C. Circuit remanded three constitutional tort theories of liabil- ity, only two of which apply to Arnell: Perjurer's Liability and Interference-with-Counsel. Because Arnell's alleged threat to indict Edmond was not part of either of those claims, the district court erred in considering arguments on it and in refusing to dismiss the claims against Arnell. In rejecting the Threat-to-Indict claim on the basis that it was no longer part of this action, we express no opinion on whether Arnell's alleged threat to indict Edmond might support a viable con- stitutional claim or whether Arnell's absolute immunity would shield her from such a claim.
III
We also agree with Appellants that the district court erred in failing to dismiss the Perjurer's Liability claim against Green for his alleg- edly false testimony before the federal grand jury that indicted Edmond and Lyles.
In Briscoe v. LaHue,
Finally, Appellants contend that the district court erred in refusing to dismiss, on the basis of qualified immunity, the Detour-and-Delay and Interference-with-Counsel claims against Krautheim and Green. 5 They argue that neither of those claims allege violations of rights that were clearly established at the time оf Krautheim's and Green's alleged conduct. Again, we agree.
To survive summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, a
constitutional tort claim against a federal law enforcement official
must rest on a violation not only of currently applicable federal law,
but also of federal law that was "clearly established" at the time the
alleged conduct occurred. Harlow v. Fitzgerald ,
V
Accordingly, we reverse and remand this case with the direction to the district court to dismiss all of Edmond's and Lyles' surviving Bivens-type claims. 6 REVERSED AND REMANDED In light of our ruling that the district court should have dismissed all of Edmond's and Lyles' surviving constitutional tort claims, we do not
reach Appellants' argument that the court erred in declining to rule on their motion for summary judgment on the ground that they had refused to permit discovery.
