This is an appeal 1 from a district court order adopting the magistrate’s report and recommendation to grant summary judgment for defendants, Salt Lake City Corporation and Officer James E. Faraone of the city police department. 2 Plaintiff brought this action pro se under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to redress defendants’ alleged violation of plaintiff’s due process rights during the course of his arrest for driving under the influence (DUI) and the concomitant im-poundment and subsequent sale of his vehicle.
With plaintiff’s motions for discovery, appointment of counsel and recusal pending, the magistrate issued his report recommending dismissal of the case.
3
With respect to the legality of plaintiff's arrest, the magistrate concluded that the surrounding circumstances provided Officer Faraone with the requisite probable cause. The undisputed facts regarding plaintiff’s operation of his vehicle, the officer’s scent of alcohol emanating from the vehicle and plaintiff’s refusal to take a field sobriety test substantiate the magistrate’s conclusion. We agree that plaintiff, who only notes in this regard that his DUI charge was later dismissed, has failed to demonstrate that his arrest by Officer Far-aone was improper. Since probable cause for a warrantless arrest is determined in terms of the circumstances confronting the arresting officer at the time of the seizure,
United States v. Hansen,
The problematic aspects of this case concern the treatment of plaintiffs allegations dealing directly with the impoundment, retention and ultimate sale of his vehicle for the attendant fees. Plaintiff contends that his due process rights were violated because he was not given timely notice of his entitlement to a hearing in which to challenge the propriety of such action and, if successful, to recover his vehicle free of improper charges. The magistrate analyzed this contention in the following manner:
There is no evidence in the record that the plaintiff was given any notice before his vehicle was sold. Reasonable notice is one of the due process requirements.
However, neither the City nor Officer Faraone were responsible for giving notice, and the Motor Vehicle Division is not a party. Moreover, [Utah Code Ann.] § 41-6-44.30 contains the following statutory disclaimer:
“No liability may be imposed upon any peace officer, the state, or any of its political subdivision [sic] on account of the enforcement of this section.” Subsection (9).
The statutory disclaimer may not be recognized in [a] civil rights action, but § 1983 does require a showing of an affirmative link between the defendant’s conduct and any constitutional violation. Rizzo v. Goode,423 U.S. 362 , 370-77 [96 S.Ct. 598 , 603-07,46 L.Ed.2d 561 ] (1976). That affirmative link is missing from the plaintiffs due process claim.
The magistrate therefore recommends that the defendants be granted summary judgment. IT IS SO RECOMMENDED.
Magistrate’s report and recommendation filed March 5, 1990. The district court accepted this recommendation in the following summary fashion: “No objection has been taken to the magistrate’s report and recommendation. The court has reviewed the file and hereby adopts the magistrate’s report and recommendation.” District court’s order filed April 6, 1990.
This appeal presents an important procedural point that should be addressed prior to consideration of the substantive merits of the case. Shortly after entry of the order quoted above, plaintiff moved for reconsideration, asserting that contrary to the district court’s understanding, he had submitted timely written objections to the magistrate’s report and, therefore, it had been improper for the district court to exercise less than de novo review over the case. See “Motion to Vacate Judgment” filed April 16, 1990. Attached to plaintiff’s motion was a copy of his objections, which was stamped received by the city attorney’s office March 13, 1990, clearly within the ten-day period provided in 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1) for the filing of such objections. Thereafter, without specific reference to either the motion or the attached objections, the district court entered a second order dismissing the action in the same manner as the first. See district court’s order filed April 19, 1990. Plaintiff filed his notice of appeal on April 26, 1990.
De novo review is statutorily and constitutionally required when written objections to a magistrate’s report are timely filed with the district court.
See Gee v. Estes,
In this case, the district court expressly “reviewed] the file,” but its resulting order does not clearly indicate the extent, focus or rigor of that review. Furthermore, the district court obviously did not consider the specific objections asserted by plaintiff. Under the authorities cited, however, the district court’s review of the case was entirely proper, at least until the appearance or disclosure of any exceptional circumstances sufficient to call upon the court to take cognizance of plaintiffs objections and consider the matter de novo.
Although the district court docket contains no entry reflecting the filing of plaintiff's objections with the clerk, the district court clearly had been apprised of their existence, content and timely service on defendants before the second order of dismissal was issued. Under these circumstances, the district court should have addressed itself to the pending motion to vacate, acknowledged plaintiffs attempt to comply with section 636(b)(1) and exercised its considerable discretionary authority,
see Cessna Finance Corp. v. Bielenberg Masonry Contracting, Inc.,
Accordingly, although we do not suggest to the district court how its discretion should be exercised, we vacate its judgment insofar as the motion to vacate is concerned and remand the matter for express consideration.
See Hustler Magazine,
We take the present opportunity to express our reservations regarding the magistrate’s legal analysis in order to provide some guidance in the event the district court decides to reach the merits. First of all, we note that this circuit has precedent relating directly to the due process issues raised herein,
see Goichman v. City of Aspen,
We do not agree with the magistrate’s conclusion that plaintiff’s due process claim may be rejected for lack of an affirmative link tying defendants to the constitutional violation alleged. While Utah Code Ann. § 41-6-44.30(4) requires the Utah Motor Vehicle Division to provide notice to the impounded vehicle’s owner, this requirement is triggered only after “[t]he peace officer or agency by whom the officer is employed” fulfills his or its mandatory duty to notify the division of the impoundment in the first place. Section 41-6-44.30(3). Certainly, any police officer or department misfeasant in this regard cannot plausibly deny an affirmative link to the consequent failure of notice to the vehicle owner. Moreover, since this statute does not, in any event, afford the owner the requisite opportunity to recover his vehicle from the authorities free of charges improperly imposed, defendants may not use it as a shield to deflect due process responsibility onto the state motor vehicle division. 5
Such an opportunity is afforded, however, by the Salt Lake City Code provisions *1170 cited by defendants and attached to their brief. Under sections 12.96.040, 12.96.050 and 12.96.090, the impounded vehicle’s owner must be given notice of the right “to an administrative hearing to determine whether there was probable cause to impound the vehicle,” and this hearing provides the owner the opportunity to obtain the release of the vehicle “without fees or with a reduction in fees.” While the city code does not explicitly identify who is responsible for sending this notice to the owner, the city and its police department are clearly entrusted with general administration of the entire procedural scheme. See, e.g., § 12.96.050B (owner’s written request for hearing must be filed with city); § 12.96.060 (unredeemed vehicles sold at auction by police department); § 12.96.070 (city’s responsibility for distribution of auction proceeds); § 12.96.090 (hearing on validity of impoundment conducted by examiner designated by city). And, again, the duty of providing the initial notice that sets the established procedures in motion rests upon the officer directing the impoundment. See § 12.96.030.
We note an important point of distinction in this regard, however, with respect to the requisite character of the city’s affirmative link to the claimed constitutional deprivation. Unlike Officer Faraone, the city may be held liable to plaintiff only if the procedural deficiency alleged either was a direct manifestation of the city’s formal policy or informal custom, or resulted from a failure to train city personnel that, under the circumstances, evidenced a deliberate indifference to citizens’ rights sufficient, in itself, to constitute a policy or custom of the city.
See City of Canton v. Harris,
The judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Utah is VACATED insofar as it effected the unfavorable disposition of plaintiff’s Rule 60(b) motion, that matter alone is REMANDED for further proceedings and we retain jurisdiction over the remainder of the cause appealed.
Notes
.After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R. App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. The district court's earlier dismissal of the other named defendants is not challenged on this appeal.
. In light of the disposition effected herein, we express no opinion on the merits of the various procedural motions pending before the district court when the case was dismissed below.
. We consider plaintiff’s factually detailed objections to the magistrate’s report as augmenting the more conclusory allegations asserted in his quite brief pleadings.
See Dunn,
. Similarly, Utah Code Ann. § 41-6-44.10, which deals with the legal and administrative consequences of a driver’s refusal to submit to chemical tests for intoxication, imposes a duty on the arresting officer to serve notice regarding the division’s procedures in connection with the revocation of driving privileges, section 41-6-44.10(2)(a), but the hearing afforded is evidently limited to approving or disapproving such revocation and, thus, does not contemplate relief in connection with the vehicle impoundment and attendant fees resulting from the driver’s arrest, see section 41-6-44.10(2)(c). See also § 41-6-44.30(1) (authorizing impoundment of vehicles operated by drivers arrested or cited for violation of section 41-6-44.10).
