ORDER
Seven years ago a police officer in Plymouth, Indiana, searched Kevin Miller’s car after the officer’s drug-sniffing dog purportedly alerted to the scent of drugs in the vehicle. Nothing was found. Miller then sued the City of Plymouth and the police officer under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the search had violated the Fourth Amendment. The defendants prevailed at trial. Meanwhile, Miller had brought this second lawsuit against Vohne Liche Kennels and American Working Dogs United, the closely held, affiliated corporations that had trained and certified the dog. This action, again under § 1983, differs from Miller’s earlier suit only to the extent that he seeks to shift blame for the search of his car from the police officer to the corporate defendants. The district court granted summary judgment for the new defendants on the ground that Miller had sued them outside the two-year statute of limitations applicable to § 1983 claims arising in Indiana. We see a more-obvious hurdle: Miller’s suit against these private corporations does not even state a claim under § 1983.
Miller’s car was searched in May 2008. In his first lawsuit, filed in July 2009,
In this action, which Miller filed just under two years after learning about VLK, he theorizes that VLK’s training of drug-sniffing dogs has been deficient. The problems, Miller says, include teaching the dogs to alert to residual odors instead of strong odors that are more likely to signal the continuing presence of drugs, as well as utilizing short training programs that could leave dogs and their handlers inadequately prepared for field work. Miller originally sued a member of the Training Board along with VLK, hoping to get damages from VLK and an injunction forcing the Board, among other things, to revoke VLK’s authorization to supply drug-sniffing dogs in Indiana. On appeal Miller presses only his damages claim against VLK, so our focus is on that claim.
VLK was the first to move for summary judgment. The corporate defendants argued that Miller, by waiting to file this suit until January 2012, had missed the two-year statute of limitations that governs § 1988 claims arising in Indiana. See Behavioral Inst. of Ind., LLC v. Hobart City of Common Council,
Meanwhile, Miller had filed his own motion for “partial” summary judgment. He reasoned that, because VLK admits training. dogs to detect even residual drug odors, the district court should rule, as a matter of law, that probable cause to search a car cannot be established by a dog trained to alert to the residual odor of drugs instead of the actual presence of drugs. VLK opposed this motion, contending that a dog’s alert to a residual odor does indeed constitute probable cause. The companies pointed out that in Florida v. Harris, — U.S. -,
The district court accepted VLK’s statute-of-limitations defense and denied Miller’s motion as moot. VLK then moved for an award of costs, including $5,525 for trial transcripts from Miller’s first lawsuit. VLK argued that those transcripts had been necessary to explore a possible defense of issue preclusion. See 28 U.S.C. § 1920(2). The district court agreed with VLK.
Miller asserts that these privately held corporations acted under color of law because, in his view, the Indiana Law Enforcement Training Board delegated to them what he sees as a traditionally exclusive public function, i.e., training police officers. This view is bolstered, Miller says, because Plymouth paid VLK for the dog as well as training for the City’s police officer. But Miller misses the mark.
It is true that delegating an exclusive public function to a private entity does not absolve a state of its constitutional obligations. See West v. Atkins,
To this we add an observation: Even if Miller’s lawsuit presented a plausible allegation of state action, his only developed legal theory is untenable. Miller’s premise — that an alert by a drug-sniffing dog trained to detect residual odors does not establish probable cause to search — was rejected in Harris,
A district court may tax as costs the “fees for printed or electronically recorded transcripts necessarily obtained for use in the case.” 28 U.S.C. § 1920(2). This includes trial transcripts. Weeks v. Samsung Heavy Indus. Co.,
The district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED.
