MEMORANDUM OPINION
Virginia inmate Victor D. Whorley has filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to recover damages for the loss of his watch by defendants Karr and Cassell. Plaintiff alleges that he was arrested by Officer *89 Karr, a policeman with the City of Roanoke Police Department, on November 20, 1979. Subsequently Officer Karr inventoried plaintiff’s watch and other personal belongings. All of these items, except the watch, were placed in an envelope by Officer Cassell. Observing this, plaintiff questioned Karr about the watch, and Karr replied that it would “follow you to Roanoke City Jail.” Plaintiff alleges the watch never arrived.
Defendants have filed an answer which denies that defendants deprived plaintiff of his wristwatch. Plaintiff has in turn responded by denying defendants’ contentions. Although plaintiff’s complaint alleges that defendants have violated his sixth amendment rights, the Court cannot find that any such right is implicated in this case. Rather, plaintiff’s allegations apparently attempt to raise a claim under the fourteenth amendment of the United States Constitution that defendants deprived plaintiff of his property without due process of law.
In
Parratt
v.
Taylor,
In this regard the Supreme Court found that the Nebraska statutory tort remedy allowing inmates to recover against state prison officers fulfilled the requirements of due process. When a plaintiff seeks compensation for the “random and unauthorized act of a state employee,” due process standards do not require that there be a hearing prior to the taking by state officials. Instead the states need only provide “some meaningful opportunity subsequent to the initial taking for a determination of rights and liabilities.” Id.
Just as in Parratt, the complaint in this action simply alleges that public officials have committed unauthorized or negligent acts. No state procedure itself is being challenged. Thus the question presently before the Court is whether Virginia law provides plaintiff with a remedy against defendants Karr and Cassell that satisfies the requirements of due process as set forth in Parratt v. Taylor.
Under the due process standards set forth in
Parratt,
a civil suit filed in the courts of Virginia and alleging the tortious conversion of personal property would provide plaintiff with a remedy able to compensate him for his loss.
Sovereign immunity protects no governmental official who commits an intentional tort.
Elder v. Holland,
Defendants’ duty to inventory plaintiff’s personal belongings and then to safely transfer plaintiff’s property to officials at the Roanoke City Jail appears to involve no discretionary judgments. It is purely a ministerial duty carried out by state officials. Therefore plaintiff may bring an action in the courts of Virginia to recover for defendants’ alleged negligence in losing his wristwatch. In the alternative, if plaintiff claims defendants stole his watch, then he may maintain a suit against defendants under Virginia law because sovereign immunity does not shield those who commit an intentional tort. Thus, regardless of whether defendants negligently lost or stole plaintiff’s watch, plaintiff possesses a remedy to pursue in the state courts which is able to compensate him for his loss and provides him with a “meaningful opportunity subsequent to the initial taking for a determination of rights and liabilities.” Plaintiff has not been deprived of property without due process of law.
Accordingly, this action is dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
