Ruth E. PARKS, Plаintiff-Appellant, Arlon L. Parks, Plaintiff, v. CITY OF HORSESHOE BEND, ARKANSAS; Robert Spear, Individually and as the Mayor of the City of Horseshoe Bend, Arkansas; Fred Mitchell, Jr., Individually, and as Chief of Police of the City of Horseshoe Bend, Arkansas; Jаnice Fae Mitchell; David Perkins; Charles V. Simmons, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 06-1696
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
Submitted: Oct. 18, 2006. Filed: March 15, 2007.
480 F.3d 837
Nga Ostoja-Starzewski, North Little Rock, Arkansas, for appellee.
Before MELLOY, BENTON, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
MELLOY, Circuit Judge.
Ruth E. Parks appeals from the district court‘s1 grant of summary judgment in her
I. Background
This case arises from difficulties between two elected officials of the City of Horseshoe Bend, Arkansas. Parks was recorder/treasurer of Horseshoe Bend, taking office in January 1997. Spear served on the city council from January 1997 through January 1999, and then, starting in January 1999, he began a four-year term as mayor. While the relationship between the twо elected officials began well, a rift developed after a dispute over the city‘s contract for ambulance services. Parks expressed disagreement with the mayor оn other policy issues, as well.
Shortly after the ambulance service disagreement, one of Mayor Spear‘s friends, David Perkins, began to drive by Parks‘s home at a high rate of speed, honking his horn. Parks surmises that Mayor Spear asked or directed Perkins to undertake this annoying practice. Parks reported the incidents to Mayor Spear and Police Chief Mitchell and shе claims they were slow to respond to her concerns. Police Chief Mitchell had Parks file an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant for Perkins and Perkins was arrested for harassment. The state court entered a no contact order prohibiting Perkins from continuing the conduct that had vexed Parks. Nonetheless, Perkins continued to drive past Parks‘s home, honking his horn.
Perkins was triеd in state court on the harassment charge; the state court also considered whether Perkins violated the no contact order. At trial, Parks and her husband, Arlon Parks (Mr. Parks), testified. During cross еxamination, Parks was asked if she believed in unidentified flying objects (UFOs), whether she had ever seen a UFO, and whether she had ever been abducted by a UFO. Parks testified she believed in UFOs and had seen thеm in the past. She stated she had never been abducted by aliens. The defense attorney asked Mr. Parks similar questions. Mr. Parks testified he believed in UFOs, but had never seen one. He denied he had been abducted by aliens, but stated his wife had been abducted by aliens, commenting that she had scars to prove it.
The trial court found Perkins not guilty of harassment. The court concluded Per
The local newspaper, The News, reported on the Perkins trial. Defendant Janice Fae Mitchell (Ms. Mitchell), the wife of Police Chief Mitchell and a member of The News staff, authored an article about the Perkins trial that was published in The News. In the article, Ms. Mitchell recounted the testimony regarding UFOs. Specifically, the article noted that both Ruth and Arlon Parks testified that they believe in UFOs and have seen them in the past. It said they each denied having been abducted by aliens, but noted Mr. Parks‘s testimony that he believed his wife had been abductеd by aliens. Parks does not challenge the accuracy of the article‘s account of the UFO testimony, but instead claims the article, and others written by Ms. Mitchell about the Perkins controversy, were defamatory and designed to make her look foolish.
During the Perkins controversy, The News published a letter to the editor written by Parks. Underneath the letter, The News ran a cartoon arguably lampooning Parks. Parks аlleges the cartoon, which was published without attribution, was drawn by Police Chief Mitchell, although she provides no factual basis for this assertion.
Subsequent to the Perkins controversy, Parks ran for re-election for recorder/treasurer. Two candidates ran against her: Charles “Chuck” Simmons and Ann Shaw. Parks alleges Mayor Spear selected Simmons to run against her to silence hеr. Simmons, then the court clerk for the City of Horseshoe Bend, won the election, with Shaw receiving the second highest number of votes.
Parks3 filed suit pursuant to
The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. In making its decision, the district court found Parks arguably was deprived of a fundamental right because she presented evidence that Mayor Spear and Police Chief Mitchell foiled her re-election bid due to Parks‘s opposition to the mayor. The court held, however, that Parks failed to show Mayor Spear or Police Chief Mitchell acted under color of law as required to sustain a claim under
II. Discussion
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Cooksey v. Boyer, 289 F.3d 513, 515 (8th Cir. 2002). Summary judgment is proper when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Applying these standards to the instant case, we conclude Parks has failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to either of the essential elements of a
Further, while retaliation agаinst an individual based upon the exercise of her First Amendment rights can form the basis of
Second, Parks has failed to demonstrate a genuine issue as to whether the defendants acted under color of state law. Even if one were to assume, as the district court did, that Parks suffered a constitutional deprivation, there is no evidence that the conduct of Police Chief Mitchell or Mayor Spear was sustained by the authority of their offices, or that their actions were abuses of their official duties. Nor has Parks provided any factual basis, beyond mere speculation, that the other individual defendants were acting at the direction of Chief Mitchell or Mayor Spear when they opposed Parks.
This case, at its core, is a disputе fueled by the rough and tumble of local politics. We have thoroughly reviewed all of Parks‘s arguments challenging the district court‘s grant of summary judgment and find them without merit. “We are loathe to interpret section 1983 to proscribe what
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court‘s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants.
