Medicare & Medicaid Guide P 42,760
SHERWIN MANOR NURSING CENTER, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Judith McAULIFFE; Charles DeCuirre; Yolanda Pepper; JoAnn
Serpico; Fay Chin; and Patricia Best,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 93-2625.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Jan. 11, 1994.
Decided Oct. 6, 1994.
Howard M. Hoffman, James W. Marks, Holleb & Coff, Chicago, IL, Nathan Lewin (argued) and Niki Kuckes, Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin, Washington, DC, for plaintiff-appellant.
Gary L. Starkman (argued), and Mary L. Smith, Ross & Hardies, Chicago, IL, for defendant-appellee.
Before CUDAHY and FLAUM, Circuit Judges, and SHARP, District Judge.*
CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.
Sherwin Manor Nursing Center, Inc. (Sherwin), alleges that Illinois state licensing officials falsely cited the facility and discriminated against it because Sherwin's owners are Jewish. It contends that the officials' actions denied Sherwin both the equal protection of the laws in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and interfered with its right to the free exercise of religion in violation of the First Amendment. The district court dismissed Sherwin's Sec. 1983 complaint for failure to state a claim. We reverse.
I.
Sherwin is a licensed long-term nursing care facility, owned and operated by orthodox Jews and serving a primarily Jewish clientele. Historically, Sherwin had always garnered high marks in the annual licensure and certification survey by the Illinois Department of Public Health (Department). In December 1991, however, the defendants--six surveyors from the Department--purported to find multiple violations based on a two-week survey of the facility. The defendants then compiled a 124-page report, most of which included, Sherwin claims, "false, fabricated and meritless findings." Complaint p 34. According to Sherwin, the defendants erroneously found that Sherwin's facility lacked no-smoking signs, that its records were unavailable, that it lacked a quality assurance program, that its facility was "thick" with soil and smelled of urine, that the menu did not provide a varied diet because it did not include pork and that residents were not given a program of activities. The report noted 28 federal violations and at least 40 state violations. The submission of the allegedly biased survey immediately triggered the initiation of federal decertification proceedings.
Sherwin contends that the findings were based not on fact but on the surveyors' religious prejudice. Sherwin alleges, as evidence of the defendants' anti-Semitic animus, that the defendants made the following insulting and offensive statements:
"They are Jews, you can't trust them."
"She's a Jew and a liar--you can't trust her."
"These Jews, they hire Pollacks who can't read or speak English."
"These Jews, they don't tell anyone they have a Kosher kitchen."
"They are terrible, vicious, rotten people."
At the conclusion of the survey, Sherwin and its attorneys met with the supervising representatives of the Department and presented taped, documentary and photographic evidence establishing that most of the defendants' findings were erroneous.1 (As alleged, Sherwin thereby bypassed the opportunity to respond in writing to the Department's Quality Assurance Division.) The Department then withdrew 73 pages of the surveyors' findings, unconditionally renewed Sherwin's state license and recommended to the federal authorities that Sherwin be unconditionally recertified. All findings that would have comprised state violations were withdrawn, as were all serious federal violations.
On October 2, 1992, Sherwin filed a two-count complaint under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 and Sec. 1985(3) seeking, on each count, actual damages, punitive damages, costs and attorneys' fees. Sherwin based these claims on theories of due process, equal protection, free exercise and conspiracy. The district court on March 31, 1993, dismissed the complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), holding that Reichenberger v. Pritchard,
Sherwin then moved under Rule 59(e) to amend the order dismissing the complaint, asking the district court to reconsider the equal protection and free exercise claims. The court denied the motion, underscoring again the absence of an injury of constitutional magnitude. The court also concluded that Sherwin had not shown that it was treated differently than other similarly situated facilities since violations lodged against nursing homes were automatically reviewed by the Department and this review provided all with a level playing field.
Sherwin, in its appeal of the district court's dismissal, has discarded its due process theories and instead relies upon the equal protection, free exercise and Sec. 1985(3) conspiracy claims.
II.
We review the grant of a motion to dismiss de novo, accepting "the truth of all well-pleaded allegations and making all possible inferences in favor of the plaintiff." Wroblewski v. City of Washburn,
A. Deprivation of Constitutional Magnitude
The crux of the district court's analysis under each of the three theories before us on appeal is that Sherwin's claims failed to demonstrate injuries of "constitutional magnitude." Without such an injury, the court reasoned, Sherwin could not recover attorneys' fees as compensatory damages. See Reichenberger,
In Reichenberger the plaintiffs owned nightclubs that featured nude dancing, and the defendants, a minister and a member of the Common Council, allegedly conspired to eliminate the nude dancing. The complaint asserted that the defendants attempted to interfere in various municipal administrative proceedings in order to revoke the plaintiffs' liquor licenses or to make the cost of renewing the licenses prohibitively expensive. Id. at 282. As a result, the plaintiffs alleged both an abridgment of their free speech rights and a procedural due process claim--in that they were deprived of a property interest without due process.3 The Reichenberger court, however, found that the complaint did not allege either a procedural due process or a First Amendment injury, since the plaintiffs' expressive and business activities were not interrupted or curtailed and since the defendants' opposition to Reichenberger's activities did not require the plaintiffs to respond to inquiries to which they were not otherwise required to respond. Thus, we affirmed the dismissal of the complaint, noting the plaintiffs' "threshold inability to allege injury or deprivation of constitutional rights." Id. at 288. Reichenberger stands for the proposition that impermissibly motivated government conduct that does not cause "injury" is not actionable.4 Therefore, an individual who is required to respond to inquiries to which everyone else, in ordinary course, is also required to respond has not suffered a constitutional injury of any kind, even if the relevant government actor makes the customary inquiry animated by impermissible prejudice.
By dismissing the complaint because Sherwin never lost its license or certification and because Sherwin took advantage of a post-survey remedy, the district court, it appears, mistakenly blurred the distinction between procedural due process injuries and other constitutional injuries. The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the states from depriving "any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." A procedural due process claim necessitates "a property deprivation of constitutional magnitude" and, of course, one effected without due process. Easter House,
By contrast, simply because they are not "procedural due process" injuries, other constitutional harms may arise no matter how much process is afforded. For example, an equal protection cause of action accrues whenever a state "den[ies] to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." U.S. Const.Amend. XIV, Sec. 1. To state an equal protection claim, a Sec. 1983 plaintiff must allege that a state actor purposefully discriminated against him because of his identification with a particular (presumably historically disadvantaged) group. See Shango v. Jurich,
Sherwin presents a cognizable equal protection claim since it alleges that it was subjected to differential treatment by the state surveyors based upon the surveyors' anti-Semitic animus. The district court incorrectly extended the due process injury requirement of Easter House to all Sec. 1983 cases. The defendants' anti-Semitic remarks may not by themselves give rise to an equal protection action by Sherwin. See Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
The Ninth Circuit, in Flores v. Pierce,
Like Sherwin, the plaintiffs in Flores were ultimately made whole: the Floreses in the end received the liquor license. Nonetheless, the Ninth Circuit held that there had been a sufficient allegation of injury:
The violation here consisted not in the ABC's initial denial of the license, but in the policy of the city officials to force the applicants to undertake extraordinary measures for its issuance. If the rigors of the governmental or administrative process are imposed upon certain persons with an intent to burden, hinder, or punish them by reason of their race or national origin, then this imposition constitutes a denial of equal protection, notwithstanding the right of the affected persons to secure the benefits they seek by pursuing further legal procedures.
Id. at 1391. Just as the Floreses were forced to appeal the denial of their liquor license application, so too was Sherwin forced to take extraordinary measures in appealing the biased report to the Department. Because the claims of the Floreses and Sherwin were properly grounded in equal protection rather than in procedural due process, the fact that further legal procedures cured the violation against property--i.e., furnished due process--affects only the quantum of damages, not whether the plaintiffs' equal protection rights were violated.
B. Damages
Since, unlike the district court, we conclude that Sherwin adequately alleged a constitutional injury in the denial of equal protection, Sherwin presumably has a right to recover its legal fees, should it prevail. This result is consonant with our holding in Kerr v. City of Chicago,
A plaintiff in a civil rights action should be allowed to recover the attorneys' fees in a state criminal action where the expenditure is a foreseeable result of the acts of the defendant.
We, of course, need not decide here whether Sherwin was forced to take extraordinary measures and thus incur attorneys' fees; that question is one for the finder of fact.6
III.
Just as the lack of constitutional injury has been erroneously applied to the equal protection claim, this erroneous application may not negate a proper free exercise or Sec. 1985(3) conspiracy claim.7 The district court also concluded that Sherwin did not state its free exercise claim clearly enough to apprise the defendants of the claims against them, as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 8 and Conley v. Gibson,
REVERSED.
Notes
The Honorable Allen Sharp, Chief Judge, of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana is sitting by designation
Except for the photographs, the evidence presented to the Department's representatives had already been presented to the defendants during the survey and at the "exit conference" at the end of the survey period
In finding that Sherwin defended itself before Quality Assurance, the district court failed to take the well-pleaded allegations of Sherwin's complaint as true. The complaint alleges that Sherwin communicated and met with supervising representatives of IDPH, not that they responded to the survey in writing as allowed for appeals to Quality Assurance. Compare Complaint p 39 with id. p 21
The plaintiffs also alleged a Sec. 1985 violation, which prohibits "conspiracies" to interfere with the exercise of constitutional rights. The court's conclusion that the plaintiffs suffered no constitutional injury applied equally to the claims brought under Sec. 1983 and Sec. 1985
This requirement is simply another way of stating the requirement for standing in federal court that the plaintiff has suffered an "injury in fact." See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, --- U.S. ----, ----,
The Supreme Court has addressed the related question of when a cause of action accrues in the context of employment discrimination. In Delaware State College v. Ricks,
In contrast to Ricks and Chardon, the accrual analysis is altogether different when the violation is predicated upon a procedural due process claim. In a case recently decided by this court, Lawshe v. Simpson,
We note, however, that the Flores court affirmed a $48,500 damage award for the plaintiffs that included a calculation for "additional attorneys' fees." Flores,
Both claims arise no matter how much process is afforded and thus they are complete without respect to the availability of due process
