This suit by Thomas Lossman and his three children charges that the defendants — county welfare and law-enforcement officers in Wisconsin — deprived the plaintiffs of liberty without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, by removing the children from Lossman’s custody without good cause. They seek damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Lossman was divorced from the mother of his three children but had legal custody of them, and had remarried but was in the process of getting another divorce. He owned a bar, and lived in the back of it with the children, who ranged in age from 9 to 12. On the morning of March 28, 1980, Lossman’s wife (the children’s stepmother) complained to a county social worker that Lossman was beating the children. A police officer interviewed the stepmother and also the children’s natural mother. Both women stated to him that Lossman was constantly drunk, beat and kicked the children brutally, threatened to kill them, kept loaded guns around the house, made one of the children tend bar, and fed them inadequately. The guns made the police decide it would be prudent to remove the children from school rather than wait till they came home after school, and the police did this, pursuant to Wis.Stat. § 48.19(l)(d)(5), which provides, “A child may be taken into custody under ... circumstances in which a law enforcement officer believes on reasonable grounds that ... the child ... is in immediate danger from his or her surroundings and removal from those surroundings is necessary....” The children were interviewed at the police station, corroborated the women’s statements, and were forthwith placed in a licensed foster home.
That same afternoon the county prosecutor obtained from the local juvenile court an ex parte order confirming the foster home’s temporary custody. The order was pursuant to Wis.Stat. § 48.19(l)(c), which authorizes taking a child into custody on a judge’s order based “on a satisfactory showing to the judge that the welfare of the child demands that the child be immediately *290 removed from his or her present custody.” The order also directed the prosecutor to petition by April 1 for an adversary hearing on charges of child abuse and neglect. This part of the order was based on Wis.Stat. § 48.21(l)(b), which requires that such a petition be filed within 48 hours of the child’s being taken into custody under court order. Lossman claims that no effort was made to notify him that the children had been removed from his custody until after the court order had been obtained, contrary to the requirement of Wis.Stat. § 48.19(2) that a social worker who takes a child into custody “shall immediately attempt to notify the parent.” Although there is a question whether there really was any delay in notifying Lossman, for purposes of reviewing the district court’s grant of summary judgment we must accept his claim that there was.
A hearing was held on April 9 (it would have been held earlier if Lossman had not requested additional time for preparation), at which he appeared with counsel. Several witnesses were examined and cross-examined. At the conclusion of the hearing the court ordered the children continued in the custody of the foster home, but gave Loss-man visitation rights. On May 7 another, similar hearing was held, at which the court approved an agreement between Lossman’s attorney and the county prosecutor whereby the children would be returned to Loss-man’s physical custody (though legal custody would remain with the county welfare department for six months) under certain restrictions — that he refrain from unreasonably disciplining the children, not let them tend bar, allow their mother to visit them, and undergo psychiatric counseling for his alcoholism. Pursuant to the agreement the charges of child abuse and neglect were dropped. The children were restored to Lossman’s legal custody on November 6.
The Fourteenth Amendment forbids a state to deprive a person of his liberty without due process of law. Lossman’s liberty unquestionably includes the custody that state law gave him of his minor children,
Stanley v. Illinois,
The next question in logical sequence is whether Lossman and his children were denied due process — but it is doubtful whether we need reach that question either. Section 1983 plaintiffs sometimes forget that a damage suit under that statute is a tort damage action even though the duty the defendant is charged with having violated is created by the Constitution rather than by common law or a safety statute or regulation. A plaintiff seeking tort damages cannot withstand summary judgment if he has sustained no actual damage, e.g.,
Cenco Inc. v. Seidman & Seidman,
So plaintiffs have failed to establish a causal connection between the alleged denial of due process and any injury resulting from the removal of the children from Loss-man’s custody; and the principles of tort causation apply to constitutional as to other tort suits. See, e.g.,
Martinez v. California,
Not only is it unlikely that an adversary hearing on March 28 would have made any difference to the outcome of Lossman’s custody dispute with the defendants; we can take it as certain that Lossman was not legally entitled to the custody of the children at that time. The findings made in the hearing of April 9 establish, by the principle of collateral estoppel, cf.
Allen v. McCurry,
But maybe the complaint can be read to claim damages based on the nature of the March 28 proceedings and not just on the consequence of those proceedings in removing the children from their father’s custody — for example, damages for anxiety that Lossman suffered as a result of not being immediately told that the children had been removed from his custody, or, later, told where they were being sequestered. So we shall go on and consider whether there was any denial of due process on March 28, or between then and April 9 (there clearly was not from April 9 on; the hearing on April 9 satisfied the requirements of due process).
Although the hearing on March 28 was ex parte, there is no denial of due process in refusing to grant a full adversary hearing before taking away property or liberty, so long as such a hearing is provided later (as it was here) and there is justification for the delay. E.g.,
Sutton v. City of Milwaukee,
We need not decide what if any difference it would make to our resolution of the due process issue if on April 9 the court had ordered the children returned to Loss-man’s custody forthwith — beyond noting that the district court was justified in citing our recent decision in
Ellis v. Hamilton,
There is widespread concern about over-intrusive public juvenile authorities, see, e.g., Bane,
Is the Welfare State Replacing the Family?,
Public Interest, No. 70, Winter 1983, at 91; and some federal judicial involvement in custody matters is inevitable given the contemporary scope of the due process clause, see, e.g.,
Rivera v. Marcus,
Affirmed.
