OPINION
This case is before the Court for the second time on the question of whether it should grant summary judgment for one of the parties. In a bench opinion rendered on December 9, 1985, the Court dismissed the complaint as against defendants Epitome Corporation, d/b/a Doughertys Corner Market, and William Gorman; denied defendants County of Kalamazoo and Eric Dunithan’s motion for summary judgment, except as to the issue of whether defendant Dunithan had probable cause to arrest the plaintiff, on which issue the Court granted defendant Dunithan’s motion; and, acting
sua sponte,
set a hearing for December 23, 1985, at 4:00 p.m., to consider whether it should grant summary judgment for the plaintiff on the issue of the remaining defendants’ liability. The Court’s bench opinion of December 9th, and the briefs the parties filed pursuant to that opinion, present three issues for the Court to resolve: (1) did plaintiff’s detention over the 1983 fourth of July weekend without a determination of probable cause by a judicial officer violate his rights under the fourth and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution; (2) if it did, can plaintiff hold defendants County of Kalamazoo and Eric Dunithan liable for such detention; and (3) if plaintiff can hold defendant Dunithan liable for an unconstitutional detention, can defendant Dunithan escape liability under the doctrine of qualified immunity. The standard under which the Court shall resolve these issues on this motion for summary judgment is well-established and will not be repeated in detail here.
See Adickes v. S.H. Kress Co.,
The following facts are undisputed. Defendant Dunithan arrested plaintiff on the evening of July 2nd, 1983, at around 7:10 p.m. on a charge of felonious assault. This Court held at the December 9th hearing that such arrest was made pursuant to probable cause. Defendant Dunithan proceeded to have plaintiff taken to the Kalamazoo County Jail and to process the charge against him, or to “book” him. Plaintiff was detained at the jail for the rest of the day on Saturday and all day Sunday and Monday. An assistant prosecuting attorney reviewed the charge against plaintiff sometime on Tuesday and decided that no charges should be formally filed. Plaintiff then was released from the jail. He alleges he was not released until approximately 6:00 p.m., while defendants indicate he was released sometime during the day. Regardless of which party is correct, it is undisputed that plaintiff was detained for at least sixty (60) hours before being released.
As the Court discussed at the December 9th hearing, the governing standards for this type of case were established by the Supreme Court in
Gerstein v. Pugh,
The parties have not suggested to the Court how long it took defendant Dunithan, or other personnel of the Sheriff Department or the Jail, to complete the administrative steps incident to plaintiff's arrest. Defendants do not argue, however, that plaintiff’s lengthy detention was required for them to complete such steps. Even given, moreover, the liberal interpretation of “administrative steps” the district court for the Southern District of Texas used in
Sanders v. City of Houston,
As I stated at the December 9th hearing, several courts have found that holding a person for longer than 24 hours without a determination of probable cause by a judicial officer violates the Fourth Amendment.
E.g., Bernard,
Defendants raise a number of arguments in an attempt either to justify their action or to forestall a decision against them at this time. They argue first that the case law is distinguishable on two grounds: (1) prior cases establish only the proposition that “detention prior to establishing probable cause for the purpose of completing an investigation or eliciting inculpatory statements is improper”; and (2) in those cases, judicial officers were readily available. Defendants' Brief at 3. The Court finds these distinctions to be unpersuasive.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Ger-stein established a per se rule, without regard to why the person is being held, that detention beyond the time needed to take “the administrative steps incident to arrest” requires a judicial determination of probable cause. Holding a person merely for the purpose of completing an investigation or eliciting inculpatory statements without according him a prompt determination of probable cause is improper. The rationale for the detention, however, is not material: it is equally improper to hold a person without a prompt determination of probable cause when the responsible officials have no ulterior motives for the detention. In other words, a defendant’s right *915 under Gerstein to a prompt determination of probable cause does not vary with the good faith or bad faith of the arresting and holding officers.
In the same vein, it is irrelevant in this particular case that plaintiff has not demonstrated that a judicial officer was actually available over the fourth of July weekend to make a determination of probable cause. Plaintiff satisfies his burden of proof once he shows that he was detained for longer than the period of time allowable under Gerstein. If a person is arrested during the evening, such period of time would generally include not only the time required to take the administrative steps incident to arrest but also the time needed to have a magistrate or other judicial officer make a determination of probable cause. If this case presented a close question of whether defendants had violated plaintiffs fourth amendment rights, e.g., if the period of detention had been approximately twenty-four (24) hours, then the Court may consider the question of whether a judicial officer was actually available to make a determination of probable cause to be part of plaintiffs burden of proof.
The violation in this case is too clear, however. Defendants are constitutionally obligated to ensure that a judicial officer is available to make a probable cause determination within the requisite period of time. A person’s fourth amendment rights are no less extant and binding on defendants on a fourth of July weekend than any other time of the year. “[T]he availability of the necessary judicial officers is an unresolved issue,” Defendants’ Brief at 5, but in this case it is not a material issue. Even the court in the case on which defendants rely most heavily,
Sanders,
held that persons arrested without a warrant “must be brought before a judicial officer ... not later than twenty-four (24) hours after the arrest” and stated that its holding would “apply ... on a weekend or holiday” as well as during the week.
Sanders,
Defendants also argue that “[wjhether the plaintiff’s detention constituted an unreasonable delay is a question for the fact-finder to determine after considering all of the circumstances.” Defendants’ Brief at 5. Defendants misconstrue the nature of the right plaintiff enjoys under
Gerstein.
The Supreme Court in
Gerstein
sharply limited the “balancing”, “consideration of all the circumstances”, or determination of “reasonableness” a court or finder-of-fact should engage in such cases when it stated that the existence of probable cause justifies only the arrest and “a brief period of detention to take the administrative steps incident to arrest.”
Gerstein,
The only determination of reasonableness that may be required is whether such officers took a “reasonable” amount of time in completing the requisite administrative steps and securing a probable cause determination from a judicial officer. In that limited context, there may be a question of fact for the finder-of-fact to resolve. In this case, however, as I stated previously, plaintiff’s length of detention was clearly unreasonable and violated his rights under
Gerstein
as a matter of law.
See Llaguno v. Mingey,
The Court must now determine whether defendants can be held liable for this violation of plaintiffs constitutional rights. I will first discuss the potential liability of the County of Kalamazoo. With respect to the County, the governing standard' is whether the injury plaintiff suffered resulted from “execution of a [county] policy or custom, whether made by its lawmakers or by those who edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy.” For the County to be held liable, the Court must find that plaintiff was unlawfully detained pursuant either to “a policy statement, ordinance, regulation, or decision officially adopted and promulgated by” the County’s officers or to a County “custom”.
Monell v. New York City Department of Social Services,
Although it is difficult for the Court to conceive of how the constitutional injury plaintiff suffered could have been anything but the result of a policy decision or custom, plaintiff has not provided the requisite support for the Court to so rule on this motion for summary judgment. Provided plaintiff does provide such support, either at trial or on a motion for summary judgment, the Court believes that the County would be liable. The County argues that it should not be held liable for the actions of the prosecutor, the sheriff department, and the district court since those governmental bodies operate independently and are not subject to the County’s control. The Court finds, however, that the actions of these bodies can “fairly be said to represent official policy” of the County, making the County liable for their constitutional misdeeds in this case.
With respect in particular to the district courts, Michigan law establishes a peculiar situation where such courts are under the control of both the County and the judicial branch. The County is responsible for the operation, financing, and maintenance of the district courts.
See
M.C.L. §§ 600.-8103, .8104, .8117, & .8501. The courts, however, also are subject to the control of the state supreme court. M.C.L. § 600.-8101. The County, or other “district control unit,” thus has responsibility for the courts in some areas but not in others.
See generally Judges of the 74th Judicial District v. Bay County,
The issues regarding the liability of defendant Dunithan are two-fold. The first is whether defendant Dunithan can be said to have “caused” plaintiff’s constitutional injury. The second issue is if defendant Dunithan did cause such injury, whether he can claim the benefit of qualified immunity from monetary relief. Defendant Dunithan argues that although he initiated plaintiff’s confinement, he did not cause plaintiff’s continued confinement because he had no authority under Michigan law to take action to release plaintiff or to secure a probable cause determination from a judicial officer. He thus did not “cause” the unconstitutional delay between arrest and a determination of probable cause by a judicial officer. Under Michi
*917
gan law, however, defendant Dunithan was responsible for taking plaintiff “without unnecessary delay” before a magistrate. M.C.L. § 764.13. He thus cannot wash his hands completely of responsibility for plaintiffs unconstitutional confinement. As with the County, however, there are unresolved questions of material fact, specifically whether and to what extent defendant Dunithan retained control over the plaintiff after the arrest, that preclude a grant of summary judgment at this time for either party.
See Lambert v. McFarland,
The Court does find that defendant Dunithan cannot claim the benefit of qualified immunity. Defendant Dunithan would be immune from civil damages, even if he “caused” plaintiff’s constitutional deprivation, if his conduct did not “violate [a] clearly established statutory or constitutional right[ ] of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Defendant argues that though this principle was clearly established, he could not have been expected to know that detention for more than one or two days would violate Gerstein since most of the cases holding such were decided only shortly before the incident in this case occurred. Plaintiff’s detention in this case, however, far exceeded the 24 hours the courts cited previously in this opinion found unconstitutional, and Gerstein itself states that once “the administrative steps incident to arrest” are completed, the State’s justification for holding a suspect without a determination of probable cause evaporates and it must make such a determination. Id. The fact that other Michigan officials, such as the prosecutor and district court officials, apparently were unaware of Gerstein is a factor the Court must consider in determining defendant’s qualified immunity defense, but it is not determinative. Ger-stein was decided too long ago and the violation in this case was too egregious for the Court to find that defendant Dunithan is entitled to claim the benefit of the doctrine of qualified immunity.
In summary, the Court finds that plaintiff’s detention for 60 plus hours over the 1983 fourth of July weekend without a judicial determination of probable cause violated his rights under the fourth amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Gerstein v. Pugh. I also find, however, that I cannot rule as a matter of law on the basis of the undisputed facts before me that either defendant County of Kalamazoo or defendant Dunithan should be held liable for this violation. The Court thus will not grant plaintiff summary judgment at this time. I will enter an order in accordance with this opinion. The Court also notes that this written opinion is intended to memorialize and to supplant the bench opinion rendered at the hearing held on December 23, 1985.
