Jon M. WOODS and Connie Blakley, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CITY OF MICHIGAN CITY, INDIANA, Michael M. Bigda, Officer
Hudson, Four Other Unknown Officers, individually
and County of LaPorte, Indiana,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 90-1582.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Dec. 3, 1990.
Decided Aug. 15, 1991.
Hugo E. Martz (argued), Valparaiso, Ind., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Charles E. Hervas (argued), James G. Sotos, James R. Schirott, Michael W. Condon, Phillip A. Luetkehans, Betty J. Gloss, Schirott & Associates, Itasca, Ill., Steven C. Snyder, Michigan City, Ind., Shaw R. Friedman, Bokland, Yandt & Friedman, and Martin W. Kus, Newby, Lewis, Kaminski & Jones, LaPorte, Ind., for defendants-appellees.
Before BAUER, Chief Judge, MANION, Circuit Judge, and WILL, Senior District Judge.*
MANION, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff Jon M. Woods brought suit under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 against the City, the County, and various police officers claiming unlawful detention after his arrest for reckless driving. Before releasing Woods the City police required him to post bond in accordance with a bond schedule issued by a state Superior Court judge. State law, however, explicitly eliminated the requirement that bond be posted for release in reckless driving offenses, conditioning such release instead on the defendant's signing a promise to apрear in court. Woods claimed that his detention and need to post bond in violation of state law resulted in a denial of his liberty interest under the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court concluded that the state judge's bond directive, although contrary to state law, was not a policy of the City or County. He concluded that Woods did not state a legally cognizable claim and granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. The district court also ruled that the defendant police officers were protected by qualified immunity, and consequently dismissed Woods' suit against them. Woods appeals, and we affirm.
I.
On May 25, 1986, at or around 10:30 p.m., defendant Officer Bigda of the Michigan City police department, while on his way home noticed an automobile "squealing" its tires in traffic within the city limits of Miсhigan City, located within LaPorte County, Indiana. Officer Bigda observed the car travel about one block and make an abrupt lane change in front of another car, causing that car to slow down suddenly. When Officer Bigda saw the car "squeal" from another light, he called on his police radio for assistance. Shortly, Officer Hudson and four other unknown policemen pulled the offending car over.
The police officers stopped the car and learned that the driver was Jon Woods (who was seventeen at the time) and that the car was owned by Woods' mother Connie Blakley. Bigda informed Woods that he had been following him and was arresting him for reckless driving, a misdemeanor offense. Bigda told Woods the arrest was based on the squealing tires, and for almоst causing an accident with another car because of the unsafe lane change. The policemen searched Woods' car at the scene but found no incriminating evidence. Friends accompanying Woods were permitted to drive the car back to Woods' mother's house. Woods was taken to the Michigan City Jail and charged with reckless driving (Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-56.1). Pursuant to a bond schedule issued by LaPorte Superior Court Judge Arthur Keppen, Woods was detained in the Michigan City Jail overnight (for about eight hours) until his mother procured his release with a $250 bond.
As a result of his detention, Woods filed a lawsuit in federal court against Michigan City, LaPorte County, and several police officers alleging an unconstitutional deprivation of his liberty. Woods claims that the police wrongfully detained him pursuant to the bond schedule issued by Superior Court Judge Keppen because Indiana Code Sec. 9-4-1-131 requires the release of every Indiana resident arrested for a traffic misdemeanor offense upon a signed promise to appear in court at a later date.1 Woods argued that the state law permitting his release upon signature vested him with a state-created liberty interest which may not be arbitrarily or without good reason denied him under the U.S. Constitution.
The district court entered summary judgment against Woods, stating in part that Woods could not show under Indiana law that the LaPorte Superior Court judge was a "policymaker" with ultimate policymaking authority necessary to impose liability on the municipal defendants for activity resulting in due process violations. The district court also granted qualified immunity to the defendant police officers, holding that the police's enforcement of the judicially pronounced bond schedule was not a violation of the "clearly established" rights of individuals within their localities.
II.
Our standard for evaluating the grant of a summary judgment motion is well established. "In examining the district court's grant of summary judgment, our duty is to review de novo the record and the controlling law." PPG Indus. v. Russell,
III.
Woods argues that Michigan City and LaPorte County are liable under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 19832 due to the directive of Judge Keppen making reckless driving a bondable offense. He argues that the directive contravenes Indiana law, Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-131 giving Indiana residents an inviolable liberty interest protected by the U.S. Constitution. Woods further argues that Judge Keppen, as a judicial officer, is a senior policymaking official sufficient to subject the City and County to liability for constitutional deprivations suffered from the enforcement of the illegal bond schedule.
The standards establishing municipal liability under Sec. 1983 are set out in Monell v. Dept. of Social Services of the City of New York,
The "official policy" requirement was intended to distinguish acts of the municipality from acts of employees of the municipality, and thereby make clear that municipal liability is limited to action for which the municipality is actually responsible ... [R]ecovery from a municipality is limited to acts that are, properly speaking, acts "of the municipality"--that is, acts which the municipality has officially sanctioned or ordered.
Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati,
Thus, the official acts of a municipality include those of governmental officials "whose acts or edicts may fairly be said to represent official policy." Monell, supra,
[w]e hold that municipal liability under Sec. 1983 attaches where--and only where--a deliberate choice to follow a course of action is made from among various alternatives by the official or officials responsible for establishing final policy with respect to the subject matter in question. See [Oklahoma City v.] Tuttle, [
Id.,
The parties agree that Judge Keppen, as a LaPorte Superior Court judge, issued a bond schedule to the law enforcement officers within LaPorte County requiring bond for those arrested for reckless driving.3 This requires that those arrested be held until the bond is paid. It is also undisputed that this directive conflicts with Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-131 which requires a defendant's release after signing a promise to appear in court at a future date. Thus, the parties agree that Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-131 vests in certain persons, including Woods, a liberty interest entitled to protection under the due process clause. Because Woods was detained pending bond payment pursuant to Judge Keppen's directive, he was deprived of his constitutionally protectеd liberty interest.4 4]
City and county liability to Woods under Sec. 1983 depends upon whether Judge Keppen was a policymaker with final policymaking authority for those municipalities under state law. The identification of a policymaking official is not a question of federal law and is not a question of fact in the usual sense. "Whether an official had final policymaking authority is a question of state law." City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
Judge Arthur Keppen, author of the offending bond directive, is a judge of the LaPorte Superior Court. Under Indiana law, a judge of a court of criminal jurisdiction is the official with finаl authority for fixing bail. Ind.Code 35-33-8-4(a). Indiana law reveals that judges of Indiana's circuit, superior and county courts are judicial officers of the State judicial system: "they are not county officials." Pruitt v. Kimbrough,
Reckless driving is a violation of state law. State courts, such as LaPorte Superior Court, have jurisdiction over such violations. Since Superior Court judges in Indiana are considered to be officials of the state, Woods' claim that Judge Keppen is an official of the city or county, or that his bond schedule is an "act that" Michigan City or LaPorte County have "officially sanctioned or ordered" is unfounded. Pembaur, supra,
After entry of summary judgment in favor of Michigan City, LaPorte County, and the other defendants, Woods filed a motion to amend or alter final judgment. In his motion, Woods tried to advance another ground for Michigan City's Sec. 1983 liability. Woods argued that deposition testimony and certain party admissions establish that the enforcement of the constitutionally deficient bond schedule was a "custom, practice or usage" which, under Monell, can be a basis for municipal Sec. 1983 liability even though the "custom, practice or usage" is not formally aрproved or authorized by express municipal policy or policymakers. Monell,
In particular, the plaintiffs now argue that their theory of municipal liability did not rest on Judge Keppen's position as a policymaker for the City of Michigan City, but rested as well upon the theory that the City had its own custom or practice concerning release on bond for persons arrested for reckless driving. The court has reviewed the references in the plaintiffs' March 17, 1988 memorandum in opposition to summary judgment and concludes that reference to whаt the City does was only by way of illustration of the plaintiffs' basic premise that Judge Keppen was a policymaker. Plaintiffs' Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment, at 15-16 ("An illustration of the fact that Judge Keppen is of a sufficiently high level to set the policy of the Michigan City Police Department ..."). The court considered and rejected the "policymaker" argument, which was the only argument raised in opposition to the summary judgment motion.6
A motion to amend or alter a final judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) "cannot be used to raise arguments which could, and should have been made" before the trial court entered the final judgment. See Simon v. United States,
Finally, Woods argues that the defendant police officers are liable to him under Sec. 1983 because they should have known that detaining him until bond was posted violated his clearly established statutory and constitutional rights. The district court granted qualified immunity to the police officers on the basis that Woods' right to be free from having to post bond was not "clearly established" at the time of his arrest.
The Supreme Court stated that "whether an official may prevail in his qualified immunity defense depends upon the 'objective reasonableness of his conduct as measured by reference to clearly established law.' " Davis v. Scherer,
Indeed, it is undisputed that the police officers acted pursuant to a judicially promulgated bond schedule which required a cash bond in order for Woods to gain his freedom, in violation of Indiana law. However, we agree with the district court that the officers could not have known that their detentiоn of Woods violated his rights in light of (a) their duty to observe the bond schedule issued by a state judge, and (b) the court's finding that the officers were unaware of the existence of Sec. 9-4-1-131. Even if they were aware of the state law, it was not unreasonable for them to follow the clear directive of the state court judge. The officers, thus, did not knowingly violate Woods' clearly established rights. Qualified immunity was properly granted to the police officers.
IV.
In his concurring opinion, Judge Will raises a valid and interesting question: whether Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-131(a) actually creates a constitutionally protected liberty interest which enables Woods to state a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. In a prison setting the Supreme Court has held that "a state creates a liberty interest by рlacing substantive limitations on official discretion." Kentucky Dep't of Corrections v. Thompson,
"Arguably" the statute creates a liberty interest. See Abdul-Wadood v. Duckwоrth,
Nevertheless, both parties concede that Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-131(a) implicates a liberty interest to which due process applies. (Appellees' brief p. 6 states, "[t]he defendants do not challenge plaintiff's assertion that Indiana Code Sec. 9-4-1-131(a) implicates a liberty interest protected under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. (See, Appellant's brief, pp. 6-11.) Rather, the defendants disagree with plaintiff's contention that [he was] deprived ... of his constitutional rights on procedural or substantive due process grounds."). The district court accepted this view but was relieved from holding on the due process question since Woods sued the wrong parties. Woods v. City of Michigan City,
We are satisfied that Woods has pleaded a non-frivolous constitutional claim which is sufficient to invoke the district court's federal question jurisdiction. Jackson Transit Authority v. Local Division 1285,
For the foregoing reasons the decision of the district court in all respects is
AFFIRMED.
WILL, Senior District Judge, concurring.
I join the majority's opinion and write separately only to differ on one point--whether Woods has made out a claim for deprivation of liberty without due process of law. The opinion states that hе has. See supra at 278-79 ("Because Woods was detained ... he was deprived of his constitutionally protected liberty interest."). I believe that he was not so deprived. Consequently, whereas the majority affirms Judge Miller's grant of summary judgment on grounds that there are no defendants here subject to suit, I would affirm even if there were available defendants--on the ground that Woods has no cause of action under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983.
I agree with the conclusion that there can be no municipal liability on these facts. Under Indiana law Judge Keppen is not a municipal official. But cf. City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
I also agree with the majority's conclusion that the officers who arrested Woods and held him over night are immune from suit. They acted on a court-issued bond schedule which they had a right to rely on. Cf. Michigan v. DeFillippo,
I differ with the majority on only one point--in my belief that, even if there were a defendant Woods could sue, he would still not have a Sec. 1983 cause of action. Holding Woods in jail overnight was a clear violation of state law, for which he may find a remedy under state law in an action for unlawful imprisonment. But Woods has no claim under the federal constitution. As Michigan City points out, Woods has not been deprived of a protected "liberty interest" without due process of law. See brief at 8-9 ("[A] failure to comply with Indiana's 'sign and go' statute fails to implicate any conceivable procedural due process right under the Fourteenth Amendment. The procedural due process components of notice and an opportunity to be heard do not apply to the defendants' failure to let Mr. Woods sign his ticket.... [T]he failure to comply with the statute does not invoke such procedural protections ... [There also was not] the requisite level of culpability to deprive [Woods] of substantive due process.").
The due process clause of the fourteenth amendment gives substantive protection for some rights. That is "substantive due process." See for instance Turner v. Safley,
The eighth amendment also offers protections. Punishment may not precede conviction; the eighth amendment creates a strong presumption in favor of bail over detention, though not an irrebuttable one, see United States v. Salerno,
Of course, the several states are free to offer protections to their citizens which the federal constitution does not. But when a state promises substantive protections not guaranteed by the federal constitution and backs up that promise in writing--by passing a statute, the way Indiana has, promising that traffic offenders will be released without bail rather than jailed--the promise is its own. And if the state welshes on its promise, by requiring bail when it said it wouldn't, substantive rights may have been denied under state law. But no substantive rights have been denied as a matter of fedеral law. See Regents of University of Michigan v. Ewing,
This brings me to the question of procedural rights. Did the federal constitution, through the due process clause, guarantee Woods a hearing before being detained for bail? Here the answer is somewhat more complicated but still is "No."
The Supreme Court has held that, for purposes of the due process clause, "property" and "liberty" may be derivable from sundry sources of state law, independent of any common law or constitutional claim of right.1 One such source is a state statute or rule with "explicitly mandatory language." Kentucky Department of Corrections v. Thompson,
In Indiana, misdemeanor traffic violators "shall be released from custody ... upon signing a written promise to appear in the proрer court" at the proper time. That is explicitly mandatory language; it does not provide for discretion; there are no weasel words. Indiana's statute vests Indiana residents with a right to release without bail in misdemeanor traffic cases, contingent only on their first signing a citation. On that much Woods and the defendants are in agreement.
So far so good. But Woods infers next that, having given him a substantive right to sign and go, a "liberty interest," Indiana also owed him at least "rudimentary notice and a hearing," Brief at 11, before depriving him of the right it conferred; and he says the summary deprivation he suffered, being jailed without having been offered a chance to "sign and go" or a prior hearing, constituted a deprivation of a federally protected liberty without procedural safeguards--without due process.
Substance and procedure, however, are (as a doctrinal matter anyway) distinct and separate. State law may define substantive rights, but federal law defines the procedures that must accompany them, the process which states must provide. See Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
Consider three examples.
1. Welfare benefits are a matter of statutory entitlement for people eligible to receive them. They are "property." Accordingly, the procedures a state must provide to protect that entitlement are a matter of due process. And due process requires a prior hearing before benefits are cut off. Goldberg v. Kelly,
2. A state civil service statute which provides for employment "during good behavior and efficient service," and discharge only for cause, creates a property right in continued employment. And, in a state with such a statute, the due process clause guarantees civil servants a right to a hearing before being dismissed. Loudermill, supra,
3. A state which offers prisoners time off for good behavior, and provides by statute that "good-time" credits are to be forfeited only for "serious misconduct," makes good-time credits "liberty." And the due process clause makes them deniable only after written notice and a hearing. Wolff v. McDonnell,
In each of thе foregoing examples, procedures guaranteed by federal law give a person with an entitlement (or right or interest) created by state law a chance to give his or her side of the story--in a situation where the facts matter (because different facts might produce a different result) and the State might be acting on incorrect information. Thus, federal law guarantees that welfare recipients will have a hearing before their benefits are terminated so that they can challenge the State's determination that they are ineligible and no longer qualify for assistance; "for cause" civil servants are guaranteed a hearing before a discharge so that they can contest whether there is "cause" in fact to fire them; and prisoners with gоod-time credits forfeitable only for misbehavior are guaranteed a hearing prior to having credits taken away in order to contest whether they have misbehaved. The important point is that in each of these cases state action depends on certain facts having been established and a hearing provides a chance to ascertain or confirm those facts.
But not all state action depends on factual predicates. And where state action does not depend on predicate facts, or there are no disputed facts (and no disputes about the application of rules or policies to particular facts), generally no hearing is required. The due process clause does not mandate procedure for its own sake. Due process of law means an opportunity to be heard, sometimes in person, sometimes on paper, sometimes before the fact, Goldberg v. Kelly, supra, (welfare benefits), sometimes after Mathews v. Eldridge, supra, (social security benefits), in cases where there is something to be heard about.
In Codd v. Velger,
In Board of Curators v. Horowitz,
Thus, Woods had a right, guaranteed by Indiana law, to release without bail. He did not, however, have a federal constitutionally protected right to a heаring before being deprived of that right. Application of Indiana's sign and go statute does not depend on facts. A predeprivation hearing would not have served any useful evidentiary purpose. Compare Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. If there had been a prior hearing, perhaps Woods or his lawyer might have alerted the judge or magistrate (even Judge Keppen) to a legal point, the invalidity of Judge Keppen's bail schedule in light of Indiana's sign and go statute. But Woods was not entitled to a hearing for that purpose. If the rule were otherwise, a prior hearing would routinely be required before any anticipated deprivation of property or liberty, so as to give the person about to be deprived a chance to question whether the correct legal rule was being followed. And that clearly is not the law. Mathews v. Eldridge,
Due process does not guarantee "right" substantive outcomes or correct conclusions of law. It guarantees advance notice of charges and a fair chance to refute them. Woods had notice that he was going to be held until he posted bail, there was no evidence to rebut and, in Laporte County anyway, the application of the law to the facts was clear--reckless driving was a bondable offense as established by a bond schedule entered by a statutorily competent judicial officer.
This is but another way of saying that a predeprivation hearing would not have been much of a hedge against Woods' being detained overnight and that, being of dubious probable value, it was not constitutionally required. See Mathews v. Eldridge,
There is one more possibility that due process may have been denied. An argument could be made that setting bail from a master bail bond schedule without a prior hearing is a denial of due process in itself. Ackies v. Purdy,
It is disturbing that Woods was handcuffed, taken to jail, held overnight and made to post bond for squealing his tires and a sloppy lane change. It is still more disturbing that all of this occurred notwithstanding the clear Indiana statute. Nevertheless, detaining Woods overnight and setting his bail without a prior hearing was not a deprivation of liberty without due process of law. He has no claim under 42 U.S.C. Seс. 1983.
Notes
The Honorable Hubert L. Will, Senior Judge for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, is sitting by designation
Ind.Code Sec. 9-4-1-131 provides:
Whenever a person who is a resident of this state is arrested for any misdemeanor regulating the use and operation of motor vehicles, and the resident is not immediately taken to court as provided in section 130.1 of this chapter, the person shall be released from custody by the arresting officer upon signing a written promise to appear in the proper court at a time and date indicated on the promise. The resident shall be given a copy of the promise.
Title 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 provides, in relevant part, that:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress....
The bond schedule, in its official form, was not included in the record of this case. However, the parties have a common understanding of the nature and operation of Judge Keppen's bond schedule as demonstrated in the following excerpt from Michigan City Defendant's Response To Request For Admissions:
When the Plaintiff, JON M. WOODS, was arrested for reckless driving on May 25, 1986, there was a bond schedule in force issued by Judge Arthur Keppen, Judge of the LaPorte County Court, sitting in Michigan City, directed to, among other persons and agencies, the MICHIGAN CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT and its police officers
ANSWER: Defendant admits the allegations contained in paragraph 1.
This bond schedule provided, among other things, that persons cited for reckless driving within the jurisdiction of the said court, were required to post a bail bond of TWO HUNDRED FIFTY DOLLARS ($250.00) cash ... and if they did not do so, they were to be held in custody pending the posting of a proper bond or release on such other terms as the court might impose
ANSWER: Defendant admits the allegations contained in paragraph 2....
Although it is questionable whether Woods has a valid liberty interest (see Part IV and concurrence, infra ), since we resolve this case on other grounds we need not reach that constitutional question
Relevant language in Monell reads as follows:
... Moreover, although the touchstone of the Sec. 1983 action against a government body is an allegation that officiаl policy is responsible for a deprivation of rights protected by the Constitution, local governments, like every other Sec. 1983 "person," by the very terms of the statute, may be sued for constitutional deprivations visited pursuant to governmental "custom" even though such a custom has not received formal approval through the body's official decisionmaking channels. As Mr. Justice Harlan, writing for the Court, said in Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
Monell,
Judge Rоbert Miller's unpublished memorandum and order of February 18, 1990, at p. 2
See, for instance, Greenholtz v. Inmates of Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex,
