Mаry R. Meier v. St. Louis, Missouri, City of; Doc‘s Towing, Inc.; St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners; Richard H. Gray, Member, St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners, in his official capacity; Thomas Irwin, Member, St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners, in his official capacity; Erwin Switzer, Member, St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners, in his official capacity; Bettye Battle-Turner, Member, St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners, in her official capacity; Francis G. Slay, in his official capacity as a member ex officio of the St. Louis City Board of Poliсe Commissioners; St. Louis P.O. House, DSN 219
No. 18-1597
United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit
August 19, 2019
Submitted: April 15, 2019
Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis
Before SMITH, Chief Judge, ARNOLD and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
Mary Meier sued the City of St. Louis and Doc‘s Towing, Inc., claiming that both defendants violated her rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments when her cаr was towed and stored without her consent or a warrant. The district court granted summary judgment in the defendants’ favor, concluding that neither defendant was a party who could be held liable for any alleged constitutional violation under
I
In December 2015, St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department (SLMPD) Officer Ashley Kelly responded to a hit-and-run accidеnt. Based on information received from the victim, she suspected that the vehicle that left the scene was a Ford F-150 truck registered to Meier. So she asked a SLMPD clerk to report the truck as “wanted” for an ordinance violation on the Regionаl Justice Information Service (REJIS) network. REJIS is a computer network established by a cooperative agreement between the City of St. Louis and St. Louis County. It allows law enforcement agencies within the county to share information with each other.
MHPD dispatch sent SLMPD a message through REJIS: “We have located this vehicle and we are towing it to Doc‘s Towing due to an arrest.” SLMPD responded, “Please notify our First District Detective Bureau in the morning with arrest information.” In the morning, SLMPD followed up with аnother message to MHPD: “Advise driver/owner of vehicle to respond to the First District Detective Bureau regarding release of vehicle.” MHPD mailed Meier a notice that the truck had been towed to Doc‘s Towing.
On March 18, Meier and her son went to Doc‘s Towing to get the truck back. An employee told them that MHPD had “released” the truck but that SLMPD still had a “hold” on the truck, and therefore it could not be released. Later that month, Ben Meier contacted SLMPD Detective John Russo to figure out how to remove the wаnted hold on the truck. Russo explained that Ben would have to answer SLMPD‘s “questions relative to the accident.”
Eventually, Meier hired a lawyer, Jeff Rath, to help her get the truck back. After numerous phone calls, Rath obtained a boilerplate “releаse order” form from SLMPD that “rescinded” the March 17 “hold order” on the truck. Rath faxed the release order to Doc‘s Towing on April 29. Doc‘s Towing then allowed Meier to retrieve the truck after paying a tow fee and a separate storage fee based on the number of days in storage. Unfortunately, the truck had been damaged during its time in storage, and an employee who mistakenly believed that the truck had been abandoned by its owner had already applied for salvage title. Doc‘s Towing attemрted to remedy this error, but at the time briefing was completed on this appeal, Meier still had not obtained clean title for the truck.
II
Meier sued various defendants under
A
Municipalities like St. Louis may be held liable under
We conclude that Meier has adduced evidence from which a reasonable juror could find that each of these three elements is met. Rath testified during a deposition that in his experience as a criminal defense attorney, SLMPD “regularly” detains vehicles suspected of criminal invоlvement in hopes of identifying the owner or driver of the vehicle. Cynthia Jennings, the REJIS training officer, teaches officers throughout St. Louis County that “[w]anted means . . . once you stop that vehicle and confirm the status of it, that vehicle would then be held if it meets the critеria from the originating agency.” SLMPD Captain Steven Mueller, whom SLMPD designated as its representative under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6), also understands that reporting a vehicle as wanted on REJIS is a request that the investigating officer “[d]etain [the vehicle] for us.” These statements, if believed, would demonstrate SLMPD employees’ continuing, widespread, persistent practice of using wanted reports to seize vehicles without a warrant as an investigative tool. St. Louis does not contest that Jenning and Mueller arе policymaking officials, so their statements also demonstrate that SLMPD‘s policymaking officials are aware of this practice. See Dahl v. Rice County, 621 F.3d 740, 743 (8th Cir. 2010) (“A policy can be inferred from a single decision taken by the highest officials responsible for setting policy in that area of the government‘s business.“).
A jury could also find that this policy resulted in Doc‘s Towing‘s retention of Meier‘s car. SLMPD reported Meier‘s truck wanted, and after it received MHPD‘s notice that the truck had been located, it instructed MHPD to “[a]dvise driver/owner of vehicle to respond to the First District Detective Bureau regarding release of vehicle.” When Ben Meier contacted SLMPD, Detective Russo believed that there was a “hold placed [on the truck] as it is wanted for leaving the scene,” and he told Ben to “respond to St. Louis Police Department to answer questions relative to the accident” to get the truck back. The release order provides further confirmation that the wanted report was intended to effect the seizure of Meier‘s truck, as it indicates that it rescinds a “hold order” entered the day that the truck was towed.
St. Louis also argues that regardless of its policy, it cannot be held liable because Meier has not brought claims against any individual SLMPD employee. It relies on Whitney v. City of St. Louis, 887 F.3d 857 (8th Cir. 2018), in which we stated that “absent a constitutional violation by a city employee, there can be no § 1983 or Monell liability for the City.” Id. at 861. This argument misreads Whitney. Municipal liability requires a constitutional violation by a municipal employee, but it does not require the plaintiff to bring suit against the individual employee. See Webb v. City of Maplewood, 889 F.3d 483, 487-88 (8th Cir.) (“[O]ur case law has been clear . . . that although there must be an unconstitutional act by a municipal employee before a municipality can be held liable, there need not be a finding that a municipal employee is liable in his or her individual capacity.” (cleaned up)), cert. denied,
B
To succeed on her
Doc‘s Towing argues that Meier has not adduced any evidencе of a “close nexus” between St. Louis and the detention of her truck. But the evidence would allow a reasonable jury to find just that. As explained above, a jury could find that
III
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court‘s decision and remand for further proceedings.
