Theodore H. HEINEMANN, I, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Daniel SATTERBERG, King County Prosecutor, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 12-35404.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Aug. 27, 2013. Filed Sept. 24, 2013.
914
Before: M. MARGARET MCKEOWN and RICHARD R. CLIFTON, Circuit Judges, and JED S. RAKOFF, District Judge.*
OPINION
CLIFTON, Circuit Judge:
This appeal presents the question of whether
In this case, in addition to citing such a local rule, the district court considered the motion on the merits and concluded that it should be granted. We agree and affirm the judgment.
I. Background
Theodore Heinemann was a passenger aboаrd a United Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Seattle via Chicago. Near the end of the flight, Heinemann was involved in an altercation with two flight attendants. Heinemann and the flight attendants told very different stories about the episode.
Heinemann alleged thаt he suffered a mild epileptic seizure just minutes prior to landing in Seattle, and that a flight attendant denied him access to the bathroom in this “emergency medical situation.” He further contended that as he was disembarking after his seizure, anothеr flight attendant followed him out of the airplane “brandishing” an ice mallet. The flight attendants denied that Heinemann said anything about a seizure and instead stated that his strongly worded complaints about the airline‘s customer service escalаted into profanity and a physical threat.
Heinemann was arrested by the Port of Seattle Police Department when he got off the plane. A criminal complaint was later filed in state court charging Heinemann with harassment. The сomplaint was filed officially by the Prosecuting Attorney of King County, defendant Daniel Satterberg, and was actually signed by one of his deputy prosecuting attorneys.
A few months after he was criminally charged, Heinemann, proceeding pro se, initiated a civil action against United Airlines in state court, alleging that its personnel falsified police reports, falsely diagnosed an epileptic seizure, and threatened him with an ice mallet, among other things. United removed the case to district court on the basis of diversity, and moved for summary judgment. Reasoning that the Montreal Convention of 1999 precluded Heinemann from pursuing state law claims against United because the incident occurred on an “international сarriage,” and that Heinemann had no claims under the Convention itself, the district court granted United‘s summary judgment motion.
Heinemann then filed the current action against Satterberg in district court, again proceeding pro se. He contended thаt the King County prosecutor had no jurisdiction to file a criminal complaint against
Satterberg moved for summary judgment, arguing that (1) the Montreal Convention did not preclude criminal actions based on state law; (2) Satterberg did not personally participate in any deprivation of Heinemann‘s constitutional rights, as would be required to establish his liability for any claim under
Heinemann did not file any response to the motion, which the district court subsequently granted. In its short order, the district court explained: “Plaintiff has not opposed the motion, and thе Court considers such a failure to be an ‘admission that the motion has merit.’ Local Civil Rule 7(b)(2). The Court has also reviewed the motion on its merits and finds that dismissal is appropriate.”
Heinemann did not file anything further in the district court. Instead, he appеaled to this court.
II. Discussion
District courts may promulgate their own local rules so long as those rules comport with the
A. Summary Judgment by Default under a Local Rule
Satterberg argues that the district court properly relied on the local rule sanctioning summary judgment by default. Heinemann argues that under the Federal Rules, a motion for summary judgment may nоt be granted based on a failure to file an opposition to the motion, regardless of any local rule that suggests the contrary. We agree with Heinemann.
In its order, the district court cites Western District of Washington Local Rule 7(b)(2), which states that “[i]f a party fails to file papers in opposition to a motion, such failure may be considered by the court as an admission that the motion has merit.” The local rule does not exclude a motion for summary judgment, so by its terms it appears to permit the court to grant a motion for summary judgment by default whenever the opposing party fails to respond.
Summary judgment is governed by
In 2010, amendments to the Rule were adopted. Under a new section entitled
Moreover, the Advisory Committee Notes regarding the 2010 revision explain that these amendments prohibit the grant of summary judgment “by default even if there is a complete failure to respond to the motiоn.”
Considering some facts undisputed does not of itself allow summary judgment. If there is a proper response or reply as to some facts, the court cannot grant summary judgment without determining whether those facts can be genuinely disputed. Once the court has determined the set of facts—both those it has chosen to consider undisputed for want of a proper response or reply and any that cannot be genuinely disputed despite a procedurally proper response or rеply—it must determine the legal consequences of these facts and permissible inferences from them.
Id. We pay attention to the Advisory Committee Notes. See generally United States v. Vonn, 535 U.S. 55, 64 n. 6 (2002) (describing the Advisory Committee Notes as “a reliable sourcе of insight” on the meaning of a rule).
In including the new subsection, the Committee stated, the revised
The local rule at issue here, Western District of Washington Rule 7(b)(2), is not simply a “deemed admitted” rule. It permits the court to deem a non-movant‘s failure to respond a complete abandonment of its opposition to summary judgment. This is the practice that the 2010 amendments to
B. Merits of Summary Judgment in this Case
However, the district court did not grant the motion for summary judgment solely
Although the district court did not elaborate on its reasoning regarding the merits, perhaps influenced by its apparent authority to grant summary judgment under the local rule based on the lack of opposition, we may аffirm the district court‘s ruling on the merits “on any ground supported by the record.” Van Asdale v. Int‘l Game Tech., 577 F.3d 989, 994 (9th Cir.2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The record is clear that Satterberg was entitled to summary judgment. Any of the three arguments presented by Satterberg in his motion might provide an adequate ground. For our purposes, we will focus on prosecutorial immunity.
As Heinemann alleges in his complaint, Satterberg is the King County Prosecuting Attorney whose office filed a charge against Heinemann in state court. The only misconduct identified in Heinemann‘s complаint was that filing the criminal action was improper because the state court lacked jurisdiction and that only federal authorities could bring a charge against Heinemann. That is incorrect, but for current purposes it matters only that prosecutorial immunity protects a prosecutor for “his decision to initiate a prosecution.” Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409, 421-24 (1976).
At oral argument, Heinemann‘s pro bono counsel argued that immunity did not extend to protect a prosecutor who took aсtion outside a traditional prosecutor‘s role. See, e.g., Kalina v. Fletcher, 522 U.S. 118, 129-31 (1997) (holding that prosecutors are not absolutely immune when testifying about probable cause to obtain an arrest warrant). That is true, but Heinemann did not allege misconduct of that nature in his complaint. He complained only about the filing of the criminal charges. If Heinemann sought to pursue this alternative theory, then he could have responded to the summary judgment motion by asking for leave to amend his complаint. If he needed more time to investigate or to obtain evidence he could have sought a continuance under
We affirm the district court‘s grant of summary judgment on the merits.
AFFIRMED.
Judith ROMO; Vincent Taldone; Robin Tayler; Margaret Taylor; Randy Taylor; Ray Teets; Lawrence Tells; Kathryn Temchack; Charles Terry; Veronica Terry; Roberta Thorne; Margaret Tivis; Linda Todd; Delores Toohey; Debra Tourville; Tsouals; Allen Turner; Carolyn Turner; Wanda Turner; Starlet Tyrone; Gloria Underwood; Henry Underwood; Janice Vanison; William Verheyen; Charles Vildibill; Sharon Wallgren; Pam Walsh; Sharоn Walsh; Keesha Warrior; Latanga Washington; Darlene Watt; James Weiss; Wesley Welborne, III; Debra Wheeler; Marsha Whitt; Carolyn Whyno; Cecilia Wilckens; Sandra Wilemon; Stella
