ORDER DENYING IN PART AND GRANTING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS PLAINTIFF’S FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT AND GRANTING LEAVE TO AMEND
On March 30, 2000, plaintiff Mary Roe filed her first amended complaint (“complaint”) against the County of Lake, former sheriffs deputy John Caudillo, and Sheriff Rodney Mitchell seeking monetary damages and injunctive relief. 1 The gravamen of her complaint is that defendants violated her civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and various state laws when, after coming to her home to investigate a report of domestic violence, Caudillo raped her. Plaintiff further alleges that defendants County of Lake and Sheriff Mitchell have a de facto policy or custom of encouraging their law enforcement officers to violate the civil rights of women. Specifically, she .complains that the County and Sheriff Mitchell permitted this and other similar conduct by sheriffs deputies; failed to properly recruit, train, or discipline Cau-dillo or the other officers involved; and refused to prosecute her husband as part of a cover up. Defendants Lake County and Sheriff Mitchell (but not Caudillo) now move to dismiss the complaint against them pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), arguing that (1) the County cannot be liable because Mitchell and Caudillo acted on behalf of the State in their law enforcement capacity; (2) Mitchell is immune under the Eleventh Amendment because a sheriff is a state agent and therefore not a “person” within the meaning of section 1983; (3) plaintiffs state law violations are barred by the statute of limitations; and (4) once the federal claims are dismissed, there is no pendent party jurisdiction. 2
A local municipality, such as a county, may be sued under section 1983 if the alleged constitutional violations were committed by its officials pursuant to a municipal policy, practice, or custom.
See Monell v. Department of Soc., Servs.,
Defendants’ motion is premised on
McMillian v. Monroe County,
Before and after
McMillian,
the Ninth Circuit has considered a California sheriff a local law enforcement agent for purposes of establishing section 1983 liability under
Monel
4
As I am aware of no reported case that has applied
McMillian
to the precise question that defendants’ motion presents, I must conduct an independent analysis of California’s constitution, statutes, and case law.
See Weiner v. San Diego County,
*1149
The other provisions of the Alabama Constitution relied on by the Supreme Court are those that make a county sheriff subject to impeachment for neglect of office and that moved the authority to impeach a sheriff from a county court to the Alabama Supreme Court. See
McMillian,
The Supreme Court was impressed that the impeachment provisions were added to the Alabama Constitution in 1901 as part of a deliberate effort to exert state control over local sheriffs to prevent lynchings.
See McMillian,
The passage of this constitutional amendment will assure all of the people in each of fifty-eight counties of this state that their chief law enforcement officer at county level, the sheriff, will continue to be directly answerable to them through the elective process.
... Indeed, one of the most awesome of these responsibilities is a mandate to take appropriate action when there is a break-down of law enforcement at the local level, in a municipality. 7
While the opponents wanted to have the option of an appointed sheriff, they too saw the sheriff as a local official:
This proposed amendment to our constitution represents but one more example of the state attempting to intrude on the rights of local government and is, indeed, a violation of the basic concept of home-rule. 8
Also critical to the Supreme Court in
McMillian
were the facts that under Alabama law, the State — not the county— would be liable for damages in a suit against a sheriff and that an Alabama county could not be liable under
responde-at superior
for a sheriffs acts.
See McMillian,
Under California law, sheriffs are defined and regulated as county employees. Sheriffs are elected within and by the county.
See
Cal. Gov’t Code § 24205. Sheriffs in California are required to attend upon and obey state courts only within their county.
See
Cal. Gov’t Code § 26603. In contrast, Alabama sheriffs are subject to the supervision of any court in the State, even those outside their county.
See McMillian,
The only support in the California Constitution for the proposition that sheriffs are exercising state authority is found in Article V, section 13, which grants the Attorney General a supervisory role over “every district attorney and sheriff and over such other law enforcement officers as may be designated by law.” This provision was added in 1934, when the voters approved Proposition 4. As then Alameda County District Attorney Earl Warren told the voters, this amendment was designed to “address the lack of organization of our law enforcement agencies” by providing coordination and supervision by the Attorney General “[wjithout curtailing the right of local self government.” Argument in Favor of Proposition 4 by Earl Warren, District Attorney of Alameda County, 1934 General Election Ballot Pamphlet. 10
Article V, section 13 is fleshed out in several California statutes which give the Attorney General direct supervisory power over sheriffs, including the power to require written reports concerning any investigation, detection, and punishment of crime in their jurisdiction,
see
Cal. Gov’t Code § 12560; to appoint persons to perform the duties of sheriff in particular circumstances;
see
Cal. Gov’t Code § 12561; and to call a conference of district attorneys, sheriffs, and police chiefs to further “uniform and adequate enforcement” of state law,
see
Cal. Gov’t Code § 12524. In addition, a county board of supervisors in California is limited in its general supervisory control over the county sheriff from interfering with his power to investigate and prosecute state crimes.
See
Cal. Gov’t Code § 25303. The
McMil-lian
Court drew support from analogous statutory provisions in Alabama in finding that Alabama sheriffs are state officials.
See McMillian,
In California, such an analysis would prove too much, as the California Constitu *1151 tion permits the Attorney General to supervise all “other law enforcement officers as may be designated by law,” and California statutes treat sheriffs much like all other peace officers whose authority is fundamentally derived from and regulated by the Legislature. 11 Taken to its logical extreme, it would render all local law enforcement agencies in California immune from prosecution for civil rights violations and emasculate Monell, which preserves section 1983 liability against local governments.
“Section 1983 provides a federal forum to remedy many deprivations of civil liberties, but it does not provide a federal forum for litigants who seek a remedy against a State for alleged deprivations of civil liberties.”
Will,
Recognizing that local police power is derived from the State, McMillian requires a court to analyze the delegation of that power to determine whether it was sufficiently complete such that a suit for abuse of that power is not a suit against the State. 12 It seems clear-from the analysis above that California’s delegation of authority to Sheriff Mitchell is sufficiently complete. It is difficult to see how a judgment against a sheriff who, as is alleged here, permits his office to violate the civil rights of women in the way he maintains his staff and sets his policies, will operate as a judgment against the State. The fact that the sheriff is subject to supervision by the Attorney General does not alter this. Whatever the reality of the functional supervision that the Attorney General exercises over local sheriffs, 13 Sheriff Mitchell *1152 is ultimately supervised in Lake County, at least for the policies at issue here. The deterrent effect of paying any judgment plaintiff may obtain will be felt in Lake County. 14 If the public is dissatisfied with the way Sheriff Mitchell treats women victims, he will either not be reelected by the voters of Lake County or he will be impeached before a Lake County grand jury. It is hard to see how any of this will violate California’s sovereignty.
Rather than conduct their own analysis of California law, the moving defendants rely almost exclusively on two cases, neither of which is directly on point. In
Pitts v. County of Kern,
A prosecutor is absolutely immune, under common law and by California statute, from torts arising out of prosecuting criminal violations.
See Pitts,
*1153
In
County of Los Angeles v. Superior Court,
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion to dismiss the claims under section 1983 for damages and injunctive relief against Sheriff Mitchell in his official capacity are DENIED. In addition, the motion to dismiss the claim against Sheriff Mitchell in his individual capacity is DENIED. Although respondeat superior liability is not available under section 1983, the amended complaint alleges direct liability against Sheriff Mitchell for his failure to instruct, supervise, control, and discipline officers who were violating the civil rights of women. Accordingly, the allegations state a claim sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss.
Because the complaint survives against the sheriff in his official capacity as the chief policymaker for the county, the County is a redundant defendant and is therefore DISMISSED. However, plaintiff is granted leave to amend her complaint against the County in light of her state law allegations that could give rise to respondeat superior liability. Any amended complaint must be filed by no later than August 1, 2000.
Defendants argue that the state law claims are barred by the statute of limitations. Under California law, prior to filing a lawsuit for money damages against a local public entity, a plaintiff must present the claim to that entity.. See Cal. Gov’t Code § 905. If the claim is rejected, plain *1154 tiff has six months from the date such notice of rejection is delivered or deposited in the mail to file a complaint. See Cal. Gov’t Code § 945.6. On June 29, 1999, plaintiff received a notice of rejection of her state tort claim. On November 23, 1999, she filed her original complaint in federal court against defendants for violation of civil rights under section 1983. On March 30, 1999, plaintiff filed her first amended complaint in federal court, specifying for the first time that she was suing under California Civil Code 51.7, and specifically identifying other state law theories. Defendants argue that these state theories are barred because they were filed after the six month statute of limitations.
“The statute of limitations does not bar an amended complaint alleging new causes of action if it rests on the same facts as the original complaint and refers to the same accident and same injuries as the original complaint.”
Goldman v. Wilsey Foods, Inc.,
Defendants’ motion to dismiss the state law claims on statute of limitations grounds is therefore DENIED. Because the court retains jurisdiction over several of the federal causes of action, defendants’ motion to dismiss the state law claims for no pendent jurisdiction is DENIED.
Notes
. The parties have consented to the jurisdiction of a United States Magistrate Judge pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636.
. Dismissal is appropriate under Rule 12(b)(6) "only where it ‘appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.’ ”
Levine v. Diamanthuset, Inc.,
.Defendants have not moved to dismiss the claim for injunctive relief and conceded at the hearing that prospective relief is permitted under section 1983 even if the Sheriff is deter
*1148
mined to be a state official.
See Will v. Michigan Dep't of State Police,
.
Post-McMillian: See, e.g., Robinson v. Solano County,
00 C.D.O.S. 5735, 5737 (9th Cir. July 12, 2000);
Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt,
Pre-McMillian: See, e.g., Henry v. County of Shasta,
. A California county may exist as a general law county, organized in accordance with laws passed by the Legislature, or as a charter county, organized in accordance with a charter that is enacted by county voters and approved by the Legislature. To some extent, charter counties share the same benefits of home rule as charter cities. See Joseph R. Grodin et al.. The California State Constitution: A Reference Guide 184-91. It is conceivable that the analysis under McMillian could produce different results in California depending upon whether it is applied to a general law county, a charter county, or a consolidated charter city and county, such as San Francisco. The County of Lake is a general law county.
. See Grodin, supra, at 181 (discussing both the original enaction of Article XI as a reflection of legislators' mistrust of state government and the subsequent amendments that expanded local control).
. See Argument in Favor of Proposition 6 by Robert Presley, State Senator, 34lh District, and William A. Craven, Member of the Assembly, 76th District, 1978 General Election Ballot Pamphlet.
.See Argument Against Proposition 6 by Omer L. Rains, State Senator, 18th District, Howard Berman, Member of the Assembly, 43rd District, Bill McVittie, Member of the Assembly, 65th District, 1978 General Election Ballot Pamphlet.
.
See also Aleman v. Milwaukee County,
. Proposition 4 appears to have had its intended effect, judging by subsequent studies which have noted that California's law enforcement agencies are well-integrated and coordinated. See John P. Kenney, The California Police, ch. IV (1964); see also The Police in the California Community: Report of the Attorney General’s Advisory Commission on Community-Police Relations, ch. 4 (1973). These studies underscore the functional equivalency of county sheriff departments and municipal police departments.
.See, e.g., Cal.Penal Code § 830.1(a) (defining the jurisdiction of peace officers, including police chiefs and sheriffs); § 832.4 (prescribing certification standards and training for all peace officers). The authority of police chiefs depends upon general law powers delegated to the cities by the State. See Cal. Const, art. XI, § 5; Cal. Gov’t Code §§ 36501, 38630. In their capacity as enforcers of the general laws of California, police chiefs have the same authority and responsibilities as sheriffs, and are circumscribed in similar ways. See, e.g., Cal. Gov't Code § 41601 (police chiefs considered sheriffs in suppression of riots and other forms of preserving the peace); Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 10239.4 (both sheriff and police department required to assist commissioner with seizure of real property); see also Cal. Const, art. XI, § 7 (neither city nor county can make or enforce laws that conflict with general laws); see also Report of the Attorney General’s Advisory Commission, supra, at 4-2 (“[T]he basic legal foundations of police authority in California flow primarily from the State. This means that the underlying authority of all law enforcement agencies regardless of size or location is the same.”).
. In
Moor v. County of Alameda,
. Although county sheriffs have been frequently sued for civil rights violations in federal court, I have found no regulations which enable the Attorney General to prohibit or remedy such violations and have found no reported case in which the Attorney General has attempted to do so. This is consistent with the skepticism expressed by Justice
*1152
Mosk, a former Attorney General, in his dissent in
Pitts v. County of Kern,
.The Supreme Court has consistently held that the Eleventh Amendment only protects a State from liability that would be paid out of state funds.
See Quern v. Jordan,
. Defendants mistakenly argue that the Ninth Circuit's decision in Weiner is controlling. Weiner considers only the issue of whether district attorneys are state officials under McMillian, relied heavily on Pitts, and is therefore distinguishable for the reasons discussed here.
. A fundamental distinction between the policy of the district attorney challenged in
Pitts
with the policy of the sheriff challenged here is that under California law a county could never be liable in
respondeat superior
for the actions of a district attorney in prosecuting a crime, but will always be liable in
respondeat superior
for the actions of a sheriff of the sort alleged here.
Compare Pitts,
.Other courts that have applied
McMillian
to the role of California sheriffs in other capacities have come to inconsistent conclusions.
Compare Von Colln v. County of Ventura,
. ''Municipal defenses — including an assertion of sovereign immunity — to a federal right of action are, of course, controlled by federal law.”
. With the exception of courts largely in the Fourth Circuit, most courts that have conducted
McMillian
analyses have, as the dissent in
McMillian
predicted, narrowly confined
McMillian
to the unique nature of county government in Alabama.
See, e.g., De-Genova v. Sheriff of DuPage County,
But see Knight v. Vernon,
