On November 18, 1982, Pat S. Holloway, Humble Exploration Company, Inc., and Sterling Pipeline Company (hereinafter “Humble and Holloway” or “plaintiffs”) brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Judge Dee Brown Walker, the Brownings (Jane H. Browning, Katherine Louise Browning Cook, Averille Adams Browning, William Webb Browning, III, Winifred Fallon Browning, Robert Holland Browning, and others), G.H. Kelsoe, Jr. and R. Jack Ayres, Jr. (attorneys for the Brownings) and John Wright, Jr., who had served as a receiver appointed by Judge Walker (hereinafter collectively “defendants”). Holloway and Humble alleged that the appellees had conspired to control the outcome of a state court lawsuit over which Judge Walker presided and thereby deprive plaintiffs of their property without due process of law. The plaintiffs also asserted pendent state law claims. The district court held that the acts alleged by plaintiffs did not violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and dismissed the § 1983 action and the pendent state claims. We affirm.
I. Facts
The facts pertinent to this case were recited in an earlier opinion of this court,
Holloway v. Walker,
“The complicated history of this case begins on September 12, 1979 when the Brownings ... filed suit against Humble, Holloway and others in the 193rd Judicial District Court of Dallas County, Texas, seeking, as the alleged equitable owners of substantially all of the assets of Humble and Holloway, the imposition of a constructive trust on Humble’s and Holloway’s assets, actual and exemplary damages, and the appointment of an interim receiver to manage the disputed assets. Sterling Pipeline Company was later added to the case. (The lawsuit is hereinafter referred to as the ‘1979 case’). On November 19, 1979, Humble and Holloway filed Chapter 11 voluntary bankruptcy petitions and removed the 1979 case to the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1478(a).
“The parties entered a ‘Stipulation and Agreement on Manner in Which Controversy Shall Be Heard, Determined and Liquidated,' which was approved by the bankruptcy court and annexed to the court’s January 18,1980 ‘Order Remanding Causes of Action and Modifying Automatic Stay.’ The remand order remanded the 1979 case to the 193rd Judicial District Court pursuant to the terms of the stipulation and agreement, and modified the automatic stay to permit trial of the case upon remand, subject to the terms of the stipulation and agreement. The stipulation and agreement provided, among other things, that upon remand of the case the parties would request the presiding judge of the *1289 administrative judicial district to assign a visiting or retired state judge to hear the consolidated cases.
“The case was remanded and the presiding judge assigned it to a retired state judge who ordered enforcement of a prior settlement agreement. In 1981, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District of Texas (the ‘Texas court of appeals’) reversed the order enforcing the settlement agreement and remanded the case for a jury trial. The Texas Supreme Court found no reversible error. Upon remand from the state appellate courts, the 1979 case was assigned to a different retired state judge who entered an order nullifying the prior settlement agreement.
“On May 26, 1982, a group of investors sued Holloway and Humble in the 162nd Judicial District Court of Dallas County, Texas, Judge Dee Brown Walker presiding, claiming that Humble had wrongfully shut-in over 150 oil and gas wells jointly owned by the investors and Humble. This suit is alleged by Holloway to have been brought pursuant to the conspiracy, solely for the purpose of creating a case before Walker into which the 1979 action could be consolidated, in violation of the agreement that restricted the judge who could hear the 1979 action to one who had retired or was visiting the judicial district. The investors sought the appointment of a receiver over Humble’s assets. (The case is hereinafter referred to as the ‘1982 case’). The Brownings were named as defendants in the 1982 case because of their claim to ownership of Humble’s and Holloway’s assets. The 1982 case was removed to the bankruptcy court and remanded to Judge Walker’s court on the same day.
“On May 28, 1982, Judge Walker appointed a receiver in the 1982 case over Humble’s and Holloway’s assets. Thereafter ‘ensued a somewhat dizzying sequence of state court orders,’ most of which were issued by Judge Walker, and recounted in Browning v. Navarro, 37 B.R. 201, 205-06 (D.C.N.D.Tex.1983), which resulted in the transfer and consolidation of the 1979 case into the 1982 case before Judge Walker in the 162nd Judicial District Court. On June 24,1982, the May 28,1982 receivership order having been vacated by the state court of appeals, Judge Walker granted the Brownings’ request for a separate and expedited trial of the 1979 case. On August 26, 1982, after a month-long trial, judgment was entered in the 1979 case for the Brownings, imposing a constructive trust on Humble’s and Holloway’s assets and awarding the Brownings actual damages of $72,000,000 and exemplary damages of $10,000,000.
“On November 18, 1982, Humble and Holloway brought the action in which the present appeal is taken [the ‘§ 1983 action’ or the ‘civil rights case’] against Judge Walker, the Brownings, legal counsel for the Brownings and many others, alleging that all the defendants had conspired to violate Humble’s and Holloway’s civil rights in the 1979 case. The complaint alleges that Walker and the other defendants conspired to seize control of Humble through the abuse of Walker’s judicial office. Holloway contends that pursuant to the conspiracy Walker arranged to have the 1982 case brought before his court contrary to the usual procedure for assigning cases, that Walker thereafter arranged to have the 1979 and the 1982 cases consolidated in his court, that he imposed receiverships on Humble’s and Holloway’s assets, defied a mandamus order of the Texas Court of Appeals to refrain from interfering in Humble’s business, appointed an incompetent receiver for Humble, dismissed many Humble personnel, posted guards at Humble’s headquarters to seize the building, and, in a hotel near the courthouse, conducted meetings regarding Humble’s business, all in furtherance of the conspiracy. Holloway contends extensive damage was done to him and Humble through Walker’s pernicious actions____
“Holloway’s complaint requests damages as well as equitable and declaratory relief under section 1983. In addition, Holloway requests similar relief under Texas state law. [Judge Walker moved to dismiss the civil rights claim against him based on the
*1290
doctrine of judicial immunity. The district court denied his motion and Judge Walker appealed. This court held that Walker was entitled to the benefit of judicial immunity and dismissed all damage and state law claims against him.
Holloway v. Walker, supra,
“After Humble and Holloway filed the civil rights case they perfected an appeal from the judgment in the 1979 case to the Texas court of appeals. The Texas court of appeals was the appropriate Texas appellate court to hear the appeal of a case from Judge Walker’s court. However, neither Humble nor Holloway posted a supersedeas bond to stay execution of the judgment in the 1979 case pending their appeal.
“The Brownings then brought an action in the United States District Court (the ‘turnover action’) to obtain possession of Humble’s and Holloway’s assets which, according to the judgment in the 1979 case, were being held for their benefit. Humble, Holloway and their trustee, Dan Navarro, refused to turn the assets over to the Brownings. They argued that the proceedings before Judge Walker, an active judge, were void because the 1979 case was tried in contravention of the bankruptcy court’s original remand order. The United States District Court granted a summary judgment in favor of Navarro and held that the trial of the 1979 case before Judge Walker was void. This court, however, reversed the district court’s determinations and held that the trial before Judge Walker was not void because the remand order had been satisfied.
Browning v. Navarro,
“The appeal of the 1979 case was pending in the Texas court of appeals while the turnover action was being litigated in the United States District Court. The Texas court of appeals, however, believed that the turnover action constituted a collateral attack on Judge Walker’s judgment in the 1979 case. Therefore, the Texas court of appeals dismissed Humble’s and Holloway’s appeal because it did not believe Humble and Holloway were entitled to two appeals from the judgment in the 1979 case. [After the reversal of the district court’s decision in the turnover action, the Texas court vacated its prior order of dismissal. However, the appellate court, sitting
en banc,
later reinstated the order of dismissal.
Humble Exploration Co. v. Browning,
“[The various defendants in the civil rights case moved for summary judgment. On March 11,1985, the district court granted summary judgment for defendants with respect to Humble’s and Holloway’s claims of deprivation of procedural due process. The court relied on
Parratt v. Taylor,
II. Parratt/Hudson
The principal issue presented in this appeal is whether the § 1983 claim advanced by plaintiffs Humble and Holloway, i.e., that they were deprived of a fair trial by virtue of a conspiracy between Judge Walker and the opposing litigants, is barred by the Supreme Court’s holdings in
Parratt v. Taylor
and
Hudson v. Palmer, supra.
In
Parratt
a Nebraska state prisoner brought a § 1983 action to recover the value of a hobby kit negligently lost by a prison employee. He claimed that he had been deprived of his property “without due process of law.” The Supreme Court rejected this claim.
Parratt,
In
Hudson,
the
Parratt
rule was extended to a situation where the alleged deprivation of property was intentional rather than negligent. Reasoning that unauthorized intentional wrongs were no more predictable, and perhaps less so, than negligent behavior, the Court held that due process was not violated when a prison employee allegedly seized noncontraband property from a prisoner’s cell during a “shakedown” search.
Hudson, supra,
468 U.S. at —,
The district court in the present case held that the Parratt/Hudson rule barred the plaintiffs’ action because the alleged conspiracy by the state court judge to deprive plaintiffs of their property constituted a random and unauthorized act by a state employee. The opportunity to appeal from the judgment was an adequate postdeprivation remedy; thus plaintiffs, though deprived of their property, were not deprived of due process.
Plaintiffs, however, seek to distinguish Parratt/Hudson on. two grounds. First, they argue that, unlike the situation in Parratt and Hudson, the deprivation in this case was pursuant to an established state procedure, rather than simply the result of a random and unauthorized act. Secondly, they contend that the actions of defendants deprived them not only of a procedural due process right, as was the case in Parratt and Hudson, but also of a substantive due process right to a fair trial. We discuss these contentions separately.
A. Established State Procedure
Relying on
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
In Parratt, the Court emphasized that it was dealing with “a tortious loss of ... property as a result of a random and unauthorized act by a state employee ... not a result of some established state procedure.” Here, in contrast, it is the state system itself that destroys a complainant’s property interest, by operation of law, whenever the Commission fails to convene a timely conference — whether the Commission’s action is taken through negligence, maliciousness, or otherwise. Parratt was not designed to reach such a situation. Unlike the complainant in Parratt, Logan is challenging not the Commission’s error, but the “established state procedure” that destroys his entitlement without according him proper procedural safeguards.
Id.
at 435-36,
Plaintiffs argue that because their property was taken through a judicial proceeding, which obviously is an established state procedure, the Logan exception to Parratt applies. However, plaintiffs do not challenge the validity of the established procedure, as did the plaintiff in Logan, but the alleged illegal and unauthorized acts of Judge Walker. While in Logan it was possible for the state to remedy the defective procedure so as to prevent the challenged deprivation of property, in the case at bar there is no practical way for Texas to prevent a biased or corrupt judge from depriving a litigant of property in the first instance.
Of course, it is possible for a procedure for choosing judges to be constitutionally inadequate because it makes bias or corruption likely. For example, in
Ward v. Village of Monroeville,
The Texas court system provided an adequate postdeprivation remedy through the right of appeal to restore any wrongfully taken property to its owner. In the absence of any challenge to the established judicial procedure of Texas or allegation that Judge Walker’s conspiratorial acts “represented official policy,”
see Augustine v. Doe,
Furthermore, plaintiffs’ argument is clearly foreclosed by
Collins v. King,
Plaintiffs rely on
Shelton v. City of College Station,
Finally, we reject plaintiffs’ argument that because the operation of Texas procedural rules has deprived them of their right of appeal in state court that they do not have an adequate postdeprivation remedy within the meaning of Parratt/Hudson. Nothing in Parratt or Hudson suggests that a postdeprivation remedy is inadequate merely because it is possible for a litigant to forfeit the remedy by virtue of the operation of reasonable state procedural rules. Plaintiffs do not challenge the constitutionality of the procedural rules themselves.
For the foregoing reasons defendants were entitled to summary judgment on the procedural due process claim.
B. Substance or Procedure
In
Augustine, supra,
Assuming for the sake of this analysis that plaintiffs established a judicial conspiracy, the resultant shocked conscience cannot displace common sense. That sense dictates that the right to an impartial judge is a matter of procedural, not substantive, due process.
See e.g., Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc.,
Plaintiffs rely principally on
Ward, supra
at note 1, to substantiate their claim that a biased judge violates substantive due process. Nowhere in
Ward,
however, does the Court state that the right to an impartial tribunal is a substantive right.
Ward
held that it was a constitutional violation to allow mayors to sit as judges in cases where the fines imposed went into the village treasury and that this combination of authorized procedures could not be corrected by a litigant’s later opportunity for an impartial adjudication.
In
Collins, supra,
743 at 250, we stated that an allegation of a biased tribunal was clearly a procedural due process complaint. In
Shelton, supra,
The allegation of a judicial conspiracy does not state a substantive due process claim. Summary judgment was properly entered for defendants on this claim.
III. Pendent Claims
Plaintiffs contend that the district court abused its discretion by dismissing the pendent state claims, including claims of negligent and wrongful receivership. However, as the district court pointed out, federal courts strive “to abstain from adjudicating the validity and propriety of the actions of the receiver appointed by a state court.” No abuse of discretion by the district court has been shown.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
IV. Conclusion
The Constitution of the United States marks the jurisdictional line for this § 1983 action. Plaintiffs level grave charges against Judge Walker and the opposing litigants. Plaintiffs’ rights of state court, review were lost by a unique, complex mix of events (which plaintiffs played a major part in creating). Nevertheless, these alleged acts of judicial conspiracy and lack of postdeprivation remedy do not amount to a violation of constitutional due process. The district court correctly granted summary judgment for defendants. 3 The district court’s dismissal of the § 1983 claims and the pendent state claims is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Daniels v. Williams,
— U.S. —,
. Obviously, McCrae, which held that Parratt did not apply to intentional deprivations of property interests, was overruled by the Supreme Court’s decision in Hudson.
. Our disposition of this case makes it unnecessary to reach plaintiffs' other contentions, including their argument that the district court erred in holding that the summary judgment record fails to demonstrate that the Brownings participated in the alleged conspiracy.
