A jury found that Chicago police Lieutenant Robert Curry coerced Michael Alvarado into resigning from his position with the police force and that this coercion deprived Alvarado of property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The jury awarded Alvarado $55,000 in compensatory damages and $100,000 in punitive damages. We reverse because Curry had qualified immunity. The district court should have granted Curry’s motion for a directed verdict on that ground and not allowed this case to go to a jury
I
Michael Alvarado was a Chicago police officer from May 16, 1975, until he resigned on November 22, 1985. At the time of Alvarado’s rеsignation, Lieutenant Robert Curry was the commanding officer of the Confidential and Corrupt Practices Unit of the Internal Affairs Division of the Chicago Police Department. The Unit was responsible for investigating allegations of criminal activity by police officers and in November 1985 was investigating Alvarado on allegations from three sources that he was using illicit drugs. 2
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On November 22, Alvarado, who had been on medical leave, reported to the Police Department’s Medical Section for treatment and was confronted by Curry. Within thirty minutes thereafter Alvarado resigned from the force. What transpired within those thirty minutes depends upon who is telling the story—Alvarаdo or Curry. When the issue of qualified immunity arises in the context of a directed verdict as it did in this' case, the district court must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the party opposing the defense; on appeal, so must we.
Rakovich v. Wade,
On the morning of November 22, Alvаrado reported to the Medical Section, signed in, received a number and sat down to wait for the doctor. Instead of seeing the doctor, a sergeant from the Medical Section led Alvarado to a room, approximately eight feet by ten feet, containing one desk and three chairs, in which Lieutenant Curry and Sergeant Cleary were seated. Curry ordered Alvarado to sit, and following the order of his superior, he did. At that time, Curry leaned over the desk toward Alvarado and said, “I’ve got a million-dollar deal for you.” Curry told Alvarado that he was authorized by the Superintendent of Police to offer Alvarado this million-dollar deal—if Alvarado resigned that day, he would not be indicted. Curry then told Alvarado that he wanted Alvarado’s resignation and that if Alvarado did not resign Curry would pull his star, take his I.D. and put him in a little room, presumably the radio room, where he would be ridiculed and scorned by his fellow officers. Sergeant Cleary then handed Alvarado a Personnel Action form, thе form used to resign, and suggested that he sign it. When Alvarado asked for some time to think it over, Curry got angry, started yelling and walked out of the room.
When Curry re-entered the room and asked Alvarado if he was ready to sign the form yet, Alvarado asked if he could postdate it. Curry told him no; that if Alvarado postdated the form, that would later involve some “scumbag” attorney and Curry did not want to deal with any attorneys. Cleary then got up and left the room, taking the unsigned resignation form with him. When he returned he had filled in the form with the statement, “I wish to resign from the Chicago Police Department for personal reasons effective 22 November 1985.” Alvarado then explained to Curry that hе was still being treated for his injury and that if he resigned he would not have any insurance. Curry responded that he did not care and put a pen in Alvarado’s hand. Cleary pointed to the signature line, and at that point Alvarado signed.
The entire meeting took less than thirty minutes. Although neither Curry nor Cleary used or threatened to use physical force, Alvarado stated that he was nevertheless confused and devastated by what was said; particularly by Curry’s statements that he was going to put Alvarado up to the ridicule of his fellow officers and citizens and that Alvarado was going to jail, the latter statement embellished with graphic descriptions of how policemen аre sexually abused in jail. The preceding is the version of the events of November 22, 1985, relevant to determining whether Curry is entitled to qualified immunity.
II
Qualified immunity is a threshold issue that the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized should be resolved at the earliest possible stage of litigation.
Anderson v. Creighton,
— U.S. -,
Despite the clear benefits to the defendant of asserting qualified immunity at the earliest possible stage in the litigation, Curry failed to raise the issue in his motion to strike and dismiss and neglected to file a summary judgment motion. He raised the issue for the first time on the eve of trial in his answer to the complaint 4 and at that time merely stated: “Defendants Cleary 5 and Curry are immune from liability in that their conduct, if any, was objectively reasonable and/or in good faith.” Although this statement raises the issue, it cites no authority, contains no arguments and suggests the wrong legal standard for immunity—good faith. Thus an immunity doctrine designed to preclude unnecessary trials was not even argued prior to trial.
Defendant Curry did argue qualified immunity very briefly, in five sentences with citation to, but without discussion of, two cases from this Court, in his oral motion for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiffs case. The district court denied the motion at that time. The trial continued and at the close of all the evidence, defendant renewed his motion for a directed verdict and the district court denied it again. Then during the conference on jury instructiоns, counsel for the defendant offered five instructions on qualified immunity and, over plaintiffs objections, the trial court allowed them. The salient instruction told the jurors that the “defendants are immune from liability if their conduct or conduct such as theirs had not been previously found to be unlawful, or if their conduct violated no clearly еstablished statutory or Constitutional right.” They were further guided by the same ipstruction that “[i]n making this determination, you must consider the status of the law on the date or dates in question before you.”
How was the jury supposed to determine the law on the dates in question? And, if the jury somehow could determine the law on the dates in question, how was it supрosed to determine if that law was “clearly established”? As plaintiff’s counsel asked, “How is the jury ever going to know that?” The trial court had “no problem” with the above instruction. We do. The question of qualified immunity is a question of law for the court, not for the jury.
Rakovich,
Curry may not, of course, challenge this jury instruction because he did not
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object at trial — he offered it. Fed.R.Civ.P. 51. See
Rakovich,
Ill
The general rule of qualified immunity is intended to provide government officials with the ability “reasоnably [to] anticipate when their conduct may give rise to liability for damages.”
Anderson,
The practical application of this standard depends substantially upon the level of generаlity at which the relevant legal rule is to be identified. For example, Alvarado claims that Curry violated his rights to due process, and in the broadest sense those rights are “clearly established” under the Due Process Clause. Under such a broad definition, plaintiffs would be able to convert the rule of qualified immunity into a rule of virtually unqualified liability.
Anderson,
our cases establish that the right the official is alleged to have violated must have been “clearly established” in a more particularized, and hencе more relevant, sense: The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, ... but it is to say that in the light of the preexisting law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson,
As the plaintiff, Alvarado bears the burden of demonstrating the existence of the allegedly “clearly established” constitutional right,
Davis v. Scherer,
Murphy
is totally inapposite. The plaintiff, a former police lieutenant, signed a release waiving all rights to his salary for a period prior to his resignation when he was on suspension and waiving all claims arising from his resignation. The plaintiff did not allege that his resignation was coerced or that the release was coerced. He merely alleged that the release was invalid for lack of consideration. The court’s analysis, therefore, was based on Illinois contract
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law, not the Due Process Clause.
Murphy,
Boyd,
however, is relevant. It addressed the validity of an agreement, signed by a pregnant woman (who later miscarried, allegedly due to police mistreatment of her), that released the police officers from civil liability in exchange for the dropping of all criminal charges against her. At the time she signed the release, the plaintiff was on conditional recognizance bail and her uncontested testimony was that she would not be able to pay the fines and therefore thought she would again be put in jail. We held that under the age-old concept of duress by imprisonment, the plaintiff was effectively restrained and the release, therefore, was coerced.
Boyd,
Although
Boyd
might be useful in determining what constitutes coercion, it does not satisfy the standard required by
Anderson. Anderson
does not require that the very action in question has been held to constitute coercion, but it does require that preexisting law make the unlawfulness of the conduct apparent.
Anderson,
Defendant argues that plaintiff is unable to clearly establish that Curry’s conduct was in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment because his conduct was in fact constitutional. Defendant cites
Christie v. United States,
Defendant also cites some authority establishing that individual actions allegedly taken or threatened by Curry were themselves constitutional.
8
Confederation of Police v. City of Chicago,
For the reasons stated above, we hold that Lieutenant Curry was entitled to qualified immunity for the action he took against Alvarado in the performance оf his duty as commanding officer of the Corrupt Practices Unit.
IV
Defendant also appeals the award of $32,962.08 in attorneys’ fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Section 1988 allows the award of attorneys’ fees to a prevailing party in an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Because we hold Curry was immune from suit, Alvarado is no longer a prevailing party. Accordingly, the award of attorneys’ fees is vacated.
REVERSED.
Notes
. As of November 1985, Alvarado was the subject of three open police department investigations. In addition to the drug investigation by Curry’s unit, Alvarado was being investigated by the General Investigation Unit for an off-duty altercation in the area of State and Division *450 Streets and by the Office of Professional Standards for allegedly forging checks made out to his deceased mother.
.Although the benefit of immunity from suit is effectively lost once the parties go to trial, we allow plaintiffs to use "qualified immunity” as a defense to liability at any stage in the litigation. See,
e.g., Rakovich v. Wade,
. The answer was filed on December 15, 1986, and docketed on December 17, 1986. The trial began on December 16, 1986.
. The jury assessed $1,000 compensatory damages against Cleary which the district court subsequently reversed by entering a judgment n.o.v. The decision for Cleary is not at issue in this appeal.
. Although
Anderson
was decided after Alvarado’s resignation and after the trial in this case, it did not establish a new principle of law; it merely developed the requirements of qualified immunity under
Harlow.
Accordingly, we have held that it applies retroactively.
Rakovich,
. Defendant also cites
Dumas v. Merit Systems Protection Board,
. Again, defendant relied on, and appended to his brief, a case that is inapplicable because it was decided after the relevant date, November 22, 1985.
Shamley v. City of Chicago,
. The evidence is controverted on this point. While Curry said that he wanted a urine specimen from Alvarado for a drug screen, the latter testified that no such request was made (defendant’s br. 9, 10).
