Case Information
*2 Before FAGG and BEAM, Circuit Judges, and GOLDBERG, [1] Judge.
___________
PER CURIAM.
Steve W. Young appeals from the district court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Officers Harrison and Asscherick, the City of Rapid City, John Q. Hammons Hotels, Inc. (doing business as the Rushmore Plaza Holiday Inn), and Gerald Adcock in this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 case. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
On December 31, 1998, appellant Young and three of his friends rented a suite at the Rushmore Plaza Holiday Inn in Rapid City, South Dakota. Following several hоurs of drinking and bar-hopping, Young and his friends returned to the hotel and Young passed out in the bedroom of the suite. Young's friends stayed outside the suite and continued the evening's festivities. Hotel security officer Gerald Adcock informed Young's friends on three separate occasions that they needed to go to their room or to one of the hotel's common areas to avoid disturbing the other guests. The men ignored Adcock's request. Adcock claims that at around 3:00 a.m., he told the men he was evicting them from the hotel for refusing to return to their room and informed them that they had ten minutes to gather their things and exit the premises. Young was so intoxicated he does not recall the events of the evening. Young's friends claim that Adcock nevеr told them they were evicted. In any event, when it appeared to Adcock that the men were not going to leave the hotel, he called the police. Undaunted, Young's friends left their belongings in the suite and went to the hotel restaurant while Young slept in the bedroom. Several minutes later, the police officers arrived at the hotel and accompanied Adcock to Young's room. *3 Adcock knocked on the door, which was propped open, yelled out that he was hotel security and asked if anyone was in the room. Getting no reply, Adcock and the officers entered the suite. Once in the suite, but still outside the bedroom, Adcock could see that someone (Young) was in the bed in the bedroom and he announced his presence once again. After getting no reply, Officers Harrison and Asscherick entered the bedroom and tried to awaken Young by a technique known as a "sternum rub." [2] Young woke up, but apparently was disoriented and attempted to return to sleep on the bed. When Officer Harrison executed another sternum rub, Young reacted violently and shoved Harrison against the wall. The officers placed Young under arrest as a result of his violent outburst. The charges against Young were ultimately dismissed by the prosecutor.
Young then brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, alleging that his constitutional rights were violated by Officers Harrison and Asscherick because they illegally entered his hotel room and used excessive force against him. Young alsо sued the City of Rapid City, claiming that it maintains an unconstitutional policy regarding officer involvement in "self-help" evictions. Finally, Young alleges that John Q. Hammons Hotel, Inc. and Adcock conspired with the police to violate his rights.
II. DISCUSSION
We review a district court's grant of summary judgment de novo. Wilson v.
Spain,
A. Officers Harrison and Asscherick
Young claims that when Harrison and Asscherick entered his hotel suite and
arrested him they violated his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to be free
from unreasonable sеarches, seizures and excessive force. Section 1983 affords
redress against a person who, under color of state law, deprives another person of any
federal constitutional or statutory right. City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle, 471 U.S.
808, 816 (1985). But, public officials are entitled to qualified immunity and shielded
from liability when their conduct does not "violate clearly established statutory оr
constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow v.
Fitzgerald,
"[T]o withstand a motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, a civil rights plaintiff must (1) assert a violation of a constitutional right; (2) demonstrate that the alleged right is clearly established; and (3) raise a genuine issue of fact as to whether the official would have known that his alleged conduct would have violated plaintiff's clearly established right." Habiger v. City of Fargo, 80 F.3d 289, 295 (8th Cir. 1996). We think it is unlikely that Young has proven a violation of his constitutional rights. In any event, if the officers did violate Young's rights, they were not clearly established and the officers acted reasonably.
Young claims that when the officers entered his suite without a warrant,
consent, or exigent circumstances, they violatеd his Fourth Amendment rights. It is
clear, he says, that the protections against warrantless intrusions into the home apply
equally to a properly rented hotel room during the rental period. See, e.g., United
States v. Morales,
*6
The officers cite United States v. Rambo,
As noted, Young argues that his eviction was not justified becausе the hotel and officers did not follow the procedures for evicting a tenant provided by South Dakota's Forcible Entry and Detainer statute. This position is untenable. To comply with the requirements of South Dakota's statute, a landlord must give a tenant at least three days notice that eviction is planned. In addition, the statute allows for a jury trial to determine if the еviction is justified. These requirements are obviously nonsensical in the context of a hotel guest, especially one that is only lodging for one night. Although South Dakota appears to have never faced or decided the issue of whether a hotel guest is a tenant or something less, like a licensee, we think that if faced with the issue, South Dakota would join many othеr jurisdictions in concluding that a hotel guest is not a tenant and is subject to self-help eviction. If Young's eviction was justified, Rambo's holding applies, and Young's claim that the officers unconstitutionally entered his hotel suite must fail.
Many jurisdictions draw a distinction between a tenant and a hotel guest by
reasoning that the tenant acquires an interest in the real estate and has the еxclusive
possession of the leased premises, whereas the guest acquires no estate and has mere
use without the actual or exclusive possession. See, e.g. , Coggins v. Gregorio, 97
*7
F.2d 948, 950 (10th Cir. 1938); Marden v. Radford,
Recently the District of Columbia Court of Appeals was faced with the issue
of whether a hotel owner may еvict a guest using self-help as the means of eviction.
Harkins v. WIN Corp.,
Young did not direct us to, and we did not independently uncover, any precedent for concluding that South Dakota hotel guests might be tenants. Young simply relies on the fact that South Dakota statutes do not distinguish between hotel guests and tenants. However, that observation alone does not mean that hotel guests are tenants. The great weight of authority leads us to conclude that the better view *8 is that hotel guests are not tenants, and therefore hotel guests do not have all of the rights afforded tenants under South Dakota's Forcible Entry and Detainer statute. When Young was justifiably evicted from the hotel because his friends created a disturbance, the control over the hotel room reverted to the management and Young "cannot assert an expectation of being free from police intrusion upon his solitude and privacy in a place from which he has been justifiably expelled." Rambo, 789 F.2d at 1296.
Even if Young is correct and his constitutional rights were violated when the
officers entered his room, the preceding analysis makes it painfully clear that his
rights were not "clearly established." Habiger,
In sum, Young's constitutional rights were not violated by the officers' entry into his hotel suite because when a hotel guest is properly evicted he loses the Fourth Amendment's protection against warrantless entry. Even leaving that analysis aside, it is obvious that the officers did not violate any clearly established rights.
Finally, Young's claim that the officers used excessive force is simply
unsupported by the record. The minor scrapes and bruises Young received were the
*9
result of his attack on the officer. When Young assaulted the officer, the officer had
the right to make an arrest, which necessarily carries with it the legal authority to use
reasonable force to accomplish the arrest. Graham v. Connor,
B. City of Rapid City
Young claims that Rapid City violated his constitutional rights by illеgally
entering his hotel suite pursuant to a "policy statement, ordinance, regulation, or
decision officially adopted and promulgated by that body's officers." Williams v.
Butler,
4. When it is clear to an officer that the person is a "transient guest" (has resided less than four consecutive weeks in the same residency) the officer can ask the tenant to leave or face being arrested for unlawful occupancy under SDCL 22-35-6 or trespassing under Rapid City Revised Code of Ordinances 17-41(a).
Young claims that this policy is contrary to South Dakota law. To support this claim, Young again relies on his theory that a person "leases" a hotel room like any other tenant and he cannot be evicted without adherence to the procedures afforded tenants under the state's Forcible Entry and Detainer statute. Young concludes, therefore, that summary eviction of hotel guests pursuant to General Order 89-7 is contrary to state law.
As this claim relies on the theory that a hotel guest is a tenant, the claim against the city fails for the same reason Young's claim against the officers fails–a hotel guest *10 is not a tenant and adherence to the eviction statute is not required to expel an unruly guest from a hotel.
Leaving aside the analysis from the preceding section that a hotel guest is not
a tenant, an additional problem for Young is that the Order does not authorize the
summary eviction of individuals with leasehold interests in real property. The Order
allows for an officer to make an arrest if an individual is in violation of South Dakota
Codified Laws 22-35-6, which provides that "[a]ny person who, knowing that he is
not privileged to do so, enters or remains in any place where notice against trespass
is given . . . is guilty of a Class 2 misdemeanor." In other words, the Order allows for
the summary arrest of a trespasser who has been on a particular property for less than
twenty-eight days–it does not allow for the summary eviction of a tenant with a
leasehold interest. Put simply, even if Young was correct in his assertion that he did
havе a bona fide leasehold interest in his hotel suite, he could not have been arrested
and evicted pursuant to the Order, because the Order governs trespassers and not
tenants. Municipal liability only attaches if "the action that is alleged to be
unconstitutional implements or executes . . . a decision officially adopted and
promulgated by that body's officers." Monell,
C.
John Q. Hammons, Hotels Inc. and Gerald Adcock
Young alleges that security guard Adcock conspired with the police to deprive
Young of his civil rights. Private parties are only liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 when
they have been jointly engaged with public officers in the denial of civil rights.
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144 (1970). Young has presented no
evidence, beyond Adcock's calling the police, to support the proposition that Adcock
was conspiring with the police to violate Young's civil rights. "A private person does
not conspire with a state official merely by invoking an exercise of the state official's
*11
authority." Tarkowski v. Robert Bartlett Realty Co.,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, the order of thе district court is affirmed.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
Notes
[1] The Honorable Richard W. Goldberg, Judge of the United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation.
[2] A sternum rub is accomplished by applying pressure with the knuckles upon a person's sternum. Not surprisingly, this technique can successfully awaken people from a deep sleep.
[3] The statute governing leases provides: "Leasing is a contraсt by which one (the lessor or landlord) gives to another (the lessee or tenant) temporary possession and use of real property for reward and the lessee agrees to return such property to the lessor at a future time." S.D. Codified Laws § 43-32-1. The only statute that appears to cover lodging is found in the same statutory section and merely defines the рresumption for the length of the stay. "A hiring of lodgings for an unspecified term is presumed to have been made for such length of time as the parties adopt for the estimation of the rent. Thus a hiring at a weekly rate of rent is presumed to be for one week. In the absence of any agreement respecting the length of time of the rent, the hiring is presumed to be monthly." S.D. Cоdified Laws § 43-32-4. It appears that South Dakota does not have a statute, like many states, that defines the relationship between a hotel and its guests. South Dakota law is simply silent on the question of whether a hotel guest is a tenant or a licensee.
[4] "In all cases arising under subdivisions 21-16-1 (4), (5) and (6), three days' written notice to quit must be given to the lessee, subtenant, or party in possession, before proceedings can be instituted, and may be served and returned in like manner as a summons is served and returned. On the second service attempt, at least six hours after the previous service attempt, the notice to quit may be posted in a conspicuous place on the property, and also delivered to a person there residing, if such person can be found; and also sent by first class mail addressed to the tenant at the place where the property is situated." S.D. Codified Laws § 21-16-2.
