Roy Ford brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against a police officer who had arrested him after a traffic stop. The district judge granted summary judgment for the defendant, noting that Ford had not submitted an affidavit or equivalent evidence in opposition to the defendant’s affidavit. But he had. For he had verified his complaint, and the complaint contains factual allegations that if included in an affidavit or deposition would be considered evidence, and not merely assertion. Rule 56(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that “when a motion for summary judgment is made and supported as provided in this rule, an ad
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verse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the ... party’s pleading.” See also Advisory Committee’s Note to 1963 Amendment to Subdivision (e). But Ford did not rest upon “mere allegations or denials” in his complaint. By declaring under penalty of perjury that the complaint was true, and by signing it, he converted the complaint, or rather those factual assertions in the complaint that complied with the requirements for affidavits specified in the rule — that they “shall be made on personal knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be admissible in evidence, and shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated therein,” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(e) — into an affidavit. That it was not called “affidavit” is of no moment,
Northwestern Nat'l Ins. Co. v. Corley,
We do not mean to commend the practice. The federal rules envisage the submission of evidentiary material in response to a motion for summary judgment as a means of sharpening the issues, so that the judge can determine just what if anything must be tried.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The judge’s oversight, however, is inconsequential. The factual allegations in the complaint that are based on Mr. Ford’s personal knowledge and must therefore be taken as true in considering whether summary judgment was properly granted amount only to the claim that although he was driving in a perfectly lawful fashion Officer Wilson stopped him. They got into an altercation that led to Wilson’s arresting Ford for obstructing justice, though the charge was ultimately dismissed. Ford argues that he cannot be arrested for obstructing justice if there was no basis for stopping him in the first place, but that is obviously wrong. There are legal remedies for being stopped by the police without any basis. Physical resistance, here in the form of refusing to sign the “I-bond” (individual bond, a form of bail that a driver who has been ticketed for a traffic offense must post, Ill. S.Ct. R. 502(h), 553(d);
People v. Kinney,
Although the arrest of Ford thus was proper, the initial stop is separable from the arrest, and a stop of a vehicle by a police officer, though not an arrest within the meaning that the courts have impressed on the Fourth Amendment, is a “seizure” within the meaning of that amendment,
Delaware v. Prouse,
Ford has another theory of liability, however — that he is the victim of racial discrimination. Slights lose their trivial character when the motivation is racial hostility. Ford is black and claims that Wilson stopped him only because of his race and that it is the custom and practice of Wilson’s police department to stop and detain people, without justification, if they are black. Neither of these assertions is an allegation of fact within the personal knowledge of Ford. He cannot tell what Wilson’s motive is unless Wilson said something indicating a racial motive. Ford does not allege that he did. And while he can allege, he cannot testify about, a custom of Wilson’s police department. The existence of a custom, since it is by definition not an enactment or promulgation of a law or policy, can be established only by showing a pattern of behavior.
City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
We do not think, by analogy to the McDonnell-Douglas framework for deciding motions for summary judgment in employment discrimination cases, that the combination of an arbitrary stop (as we must assume for purposes of the appeal that Ford’s stop by Wilson was) with a difference in race between the person stopped and the officer establishes a prima facie ease of racial dis *249 crimination. Otherwise any time a black arrested a white, or a white arrested a black, the person arrested could, by testifying that the arrest had been groundless, obtain a trial in federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We used the example of an arrest but the principle would apply equally to traffic stops — and again the specter of millions of new claims of constitutional infringements looms.
We do not think, finally, that Ford can appeal to the principle of Lewis
v. Faulkner,
AFFIRMED.
