Mirna Reyes v. North Texas Tollway Authorit ( 2017 )


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  •      Case: 16-10767    Document: 00514050531     Page: 1   Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    June 27, 2017
    No. 16-10767
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    MIRNA REYES; EMMANUEL LEWIS; JENNIFER BUNCH; DEBORAH
    GILBERT,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    NORTH TEXAS TOLLWAY AUTHORITY, (NTTA),
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and HIGGINBOTHAM and COSTA, Circuit
    Judges.
    GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:
    Gated toll booths are becoming a thing of the past. Their reign had one
    big advantage: drivers could not pass through the gate without paying. But
    they also caused traffic backups as drivers scrounged their vehicles for
    quarters, handed them over to an attendant or tossed them into a bucket, and
    then waited for the gate to lift after the payment registered.
    The North Texas Tollway Authority has been a trendsetter in the move
    away from gated booths. It created the first system in the country that allowed
    drivers without either change in their pockets or TollTags (sometimes called
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    EZTAGs) affixed to their windshields to still use toll roads. Of course, those
    drivers are supposed to pay their share at some point, so the Authority used
    cameras to take pictures of the vehicles’ license plates and mailed a bill to the
    owners. If the drivers did not pay the tolls within 35 days of the invoice,
    administrative fees started to accrue. The fees increased to $25 per violation
    once the Authority sent a third bill to the driver. The Plaintiffs in this case,
    who were assessed fees totaling hundreds and in some cases thousands of
    dollars after they repeatedly refused to pay tolls, contend that the $25
    administrative fee violates their right to substantive due process under the
    Fourteenth Amendment.         The district court held that the fee is not
    unconstitutional. We agree.
    I.
    The North Texas Tollway Authority is a regional agency established to
    administer toll roads in north Texas. See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 366.032.
    Among other roads in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, it oversees the Dallas
    North Tollway, President George Bush Turnpike, Sam Rayburn Tollway, and
    Chisholm Trail Parkway. When it was established in 1997, all toll booths were
    manned and gated, and drivers paid tolls either in cash or using a TollTag. A
    TollTag is a transponder attached to a vehicle that is linked to a driver’s
    account funded in advance. Each time the driver travels through a toll point,
    the toll is deducted from the account. Under the old system, the only way for
    a driver to jump the toll was to tailgate behind another vehicle that had paid.
    If caught, the offender was charged a $10 administrative fee along with the
    unpaid toll. The authority to collect these fees comes from section 366.178 of
    the Regional Tollway Authority Act. TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 366.178(c)
    2
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    (2009) (“[A]n authority may charge an administrative fee of no more than $100
    to recover the cost of collecting the unpaid toll.”). 1
    In 2000, hoping to ease congestion at toll plazas, the Authority opened
    TollTag-Only lanes, stopped manning all toll booths on a 24-hour basis, and
    removed gates from booths. Although these changes were expected to help
    with traffic, they would also make it easier for free riders to shirk tolls. Drivers
    no longer had to contend with gates or guards; they could simply drive through
    the unguarded, ungated booths of the TollTag-only lanes and hope they were
    not discovered. In a bid to keep drivers honest, the Authority installed high-
    speed cameras above these lanes, which could photograph drivers who refused
    to pay.    A bill was then sent requesting payment of the toll plus an
    administrative fee. The Authority determined that the old $10 administrative
    fee was insufficient to cover costs incurred in installing new cameras and the
    increase in drivers who would refuse to pay. The Authority ultimately decided
    to increase the administrative fee to $25, though Plaintiffs allege this decision
    was made without deliberation.
    The Authority then began moving to a system—the one challenged in
    this case—that went one step further in reducing traffic congestion. All booths
    were removed. TollTags were the only way to pay at the time the road was
    being used.     But rather than restrict usage to those with TollTags, the
    Authority created a ZipCash system that opened access to all drivers. For cars
    without a TollTag, the camera would capture the license plate.                   After a
    sufficient number of tolls were incurred, the Authority would send an invoice
    for the unpaid tolls. Unlike the bills for those who violated the rules of “TollTag
    1 After the time relevant here, section 366.178 was amended to reduce the cap on
    administrative fees. Now, the Authority can charge only one administrative fee of not more
    than $25. TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN.§ 366.178(c) (2015).
    3
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    As expected, the cashless system led to more drivers using the toll roads.
    Also as expected, many of them never paid after receiving the bill. This left
    the Authority on the hook for tens of millions of dollars in unpaid tolls. The
    fees imposed for those unpaid tolls exceed $1 billion. Among those unpaid tolls
    and fees are amounts owed by the Plaintiffs. Mirna Reyes, for example, used
    toll roads 153 times without timely paying, accruing $139.25 in unpaid tolls
    and $3,825 in unpaid administrative fees. Emmanuel Lewis racked up $387.80
    in unpaid tolls and $10,050 in administrative fees.
    The drivers filed this suit alleging a violation of numerous rights, but
    they ended up asserting just a claim under substantive due process. They
    contend that the $25 administrative fee is so much higher than the cost of
    collecting an unpaid toll that it violates the due process rights of drivers who
    incur them. For that assertion, they rely on analysis a contractor hired by the
    Authority performed after the fees came under public scrutiny. He concluded
    that the marginal cost of collecting an individual toll is $0.94.
    During this litigation, an expert hired by the Authority conducted a
    different inquiry: not how much it costs to collect a single toll, but a comparison
    of the total amount spent trying to collect tolls versus the fees actually
    collected. Under that approach, the fees collected ($41,677,514) 2 do not cover
    costs ($52,014,271). 3
    2  The collection rate is low. The Authority charged $1.38 billion in administrative fees
    during the relevant time period. As noted above, the gap between that number and what
    was collected is not just a matter of uncooperative drivers. There are a number of ways to
    have the fees reduced or removed.
    3 The drivers also hired an expert, who relied on a cost-per-transaction method in
    arriving at a different number. But the Authority’s expert noted that the drivers’ expert
    focused only on instances when fees outweighed costs to arrive at his number. Applying the
    drivers’ cost-per-transaction method to all relevant invoices results in a cost estimate that is
    actually higher than the one reached by the Authority’s expert. The drivers do not contest
    this recalculation, and thus fall back on the pre-suit $0.94 figure.
    5
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    Relying in part on this calculation, the district court held that there was
    a rational relationship between the $25 administrative fee and the Authority’s
    interest in recovering costs spent to collect unpaid tolls. The court also cited
    another interest—using high fees to encourage drivers to switch to the more
    efficient TollTag system—that allowed the fees to withstand Fourteenth
    Amendment scrutiny.
    II.
    In rejecting the substantive due process challenge, the district court
    applied rational basis review. The drivers urge us to apply that standard,
    though they disagree with the court’s application of it. That level of scrutiny,
    which is the default for substantive due process claims that do not implicate a
    fundamental right, requires that the administrative fees be rationally related
    to a legitimate government interest. FM Props. Operating Co. v. City of Austin,
    
    93 F.3d 167
    , 174 (5th Cir. 1996). Rational basis is a notoriously deferential
    standard, but the Authority argues that the drivers should face what it views
    as an even more daunting burden: having to show that the fee “shocks the
    conscience.” 4 Under that test, the drivers would have to show that the fee
    scheme was “so egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the
    contemporary conscience.” Conroe Creosoting Co. v. Montgomery Cty., 
    249 F.3d 337
    , 341 (5th Cir. 2001); see also County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 
    523 U.S. 833
    ,
    847–54 (1998).
    4 Though the parties seem to think so, it is not apparent that the rational basis
    standard is always a “lower” threshold for plaintiffs to meet. Consider a hypothetical based
    on the type of fee this case presents. An astronomically high administrative fee, say $10,000
    per violation, would be a potent incentive for drivers to convert to TollTags, thus furthering
    a legitimate governmental interest. But there would be a compelling case that the amount
    shocks the conscience.
    6
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    We have applied both tests in substantive due process cases. Compare
    FM Props. Operating 
    Co., 93 F.3d at 173
    –75 (applying rational basis review to
    a due process challenge to the application of a city’s zoning ordinance), and
    Mikeska v. City of Galveston, 
    451 F.3d 376
    , 379–81 (5th Cir. 2006) (applying
    rational basis review to a city’s refusal to reconnect utilities to a number of
    homes allegedly condemned under state law), with Cripps v. La. Dep’t of Agric.
    and Forestry, 
    819 F.3d 221
    , 232–33 (5th Cir. 2016) (applying shocks the
    conscience to a state commission’s decision to deny a professional license to the
    plaintiff), and Giles v. Shaw Sch. Dist., 655 F. App’x 998, 1004 (5th Cir. 2016)
    (applying shocks the conscience to School Board’s decision not to renew
    principal’s employment). Although we have not always been transparent as to
    why we land on one test over the other, we have generally been consistent:
    government action that applies broadly gets rational basis; government action
    that is individualized to one or a few plaintiffs gets shocks the conscience. This
    is in sync with the many circuits that expressly apply rational basis to
    legislative or quasi-legislative action (government action that applies broadly)
    and shocks the conscience to executive action (government acts that are more
    individualized). See DePoutot v. Raffaelly, 
    424 F.3d 112
    , 118 (1st Cir. 2005);
    Nicholas v. Pa. State Univ., 
    227 F.3d 133
    , 139 (3rd Cir. 2000) (Alito, J.);
    Hawkins v. Freeman, 
    195 F.3d 732
    , 738 (4th Cir. 1999); Putnam v. Keller, 
    332 F.3d 541
    , 547 (8th Cir. 2003); McKinney v. Pate, 
    20 F.3d 1550
    , 1557 n. 9 (11th
    Cir. 1994).
    This legislative/executive dichotomy comports with the Supreme Court’s
    use of the “shocks the conscience” test. Its most prominent recent application
    of the test considered the actions of a police officer during the high-speed
    pursuit of a suspect. 
    Lewis, 523 U.S. at 854
    –55. Lewis explained that although
    both legislative and executive action must comply with due process, “criteria
    7
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    to identify what is fatally arbitrary differ depending on whether it is legislation
    or a specific act of a governmental officer that is at issue.” 
    Id. at 846.
    “[T]he
    substantive component of the Due Process Clause is violated by executive
    action only when it ‘can properly be characterized as arbitrary, or conscience
    shocking, in a constitutional sense.’” 
    Id. at 847
    (quoting Collins v. City of
    Harker Heights, 
    503 U.S. 115
    , 127 (1992)) (emphasis added); 
    id. at 846
    (“[F]or
    half a century now we have spoken of the cognizable level of executive abuse
    of power as that which shocks the conscience.”). That is also consistent with
    the case in which Justice Frankfurter articulated the standard, Rochin v.
    California, 
    342 U.S. 165
    , 171 (1952).        Lewis, at 849 n.9 (noting Rochin
    “formulated and first applied” the “shocks the conscience” standard for due
    process claims). Rochin addressed police forcibly pumping a suspect’s stomach
    in an attempt to obtain 
    evidence. 342 U.S. at 166
    ; see also 
    Collins, 503 U.S. at 127
    (applying, but not finding, shocks the conscience to the death of a city
    sanitation worker that was allegedly caused by the city’s failure to properly
    train its employees in safety procedures).
    The Authority’s administrative fees are not this type of government
    conduct directed at a particular individual. The challenged fees are unlike the
    actions of particular officer in Rochin or Lewis, a commission’s decision to deny
    an individual a professional license, 
    Cripps, 819 F.3d at 232
    , or a School
    Board’s decision not to renew a principal’s employment, Giles, 655 F. App’x at
    1004. Some due process challenges blur along the executive/legislative line,
    such as when a broadly applicable rule is challenged only as it applies to a
    particular situation. See Doe ex rel. Magee v. Covington Cnty. Sch. Dist. ex rel.
    Keys, 
    675 F.3d 849
    , 867–69 (5th Cir. 2012) (en banc) (applying shocks the
    conscience—in a situation similar to Collins v. City of Harker Heights—when
    a broadly applicable policy was challenged based on how it harmed a particular
    8
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    individual). In contrast, the challenge here easily fits into the legislative box.
    The fees are broadly imposed; any driver who uses the toll roads and shirks
    payment is subject to them. As the more than $1 billion in uncollected fees
    indicates, there are usually hundreds of such people every day. The lawsuit
    seeks to invalidate the fees across the board, not just a particular application
    of the fees that had an egregious impact. Rational basis review applies.
    The interest the government asserts to show rationality need not be the
    actual or proven interest, as long as there is a connection between the policy
    and a “conceivable” interest. FM 
    Props., 93 F.3d at 175
    . The Authority gives
    two reasons for the $25 administrative fee: (1) it recovers some of the costs
    associated with collecting unpaid tolls, and (2) it encourages ZipCash
    customers to switch to TollTags.
    The drivers concede that the recovery of collection costs is a legitimate
    interest. See Broussard v. Parish of New Orleans, 
    318 F.3d 644
    , 656–57 (5th
    Cir. 2003). They argue, however, that the $25 fee is so far above the cost of
    collection that it is not rationally related to recovering costs. This argument
    faces a high hurdle because if the relationship “is at least debatable, there is
    no substantive due process violation.” Simi Inv. Co. v. Harris Cty., Tex., 
    236 F.3d 240
    , 251 (5th Cir. 2000). In an attempt to show a lack of any conceivable
    connection, the drivers emphasize the disparity between the $25 fee and the
    presuit study indicating that the cost of collecting an unpaid toll is only $0.94.
    But there are problems with the $0.94 figure the drivers quote.              That
    calculation did not include overhead associated with the new system—
    including camera installation and image processing—and appears to have
    assumed that all unpaid tolls would be collected.
    The drivers’ argument thus ignores the amount the Authority actually
    collected.   Far from a massive windfall, the Authority has only recovered
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    around $42 million in administrative fees, which is about $10 million less than
    what it spent to collect that amount.              The drivers blame the Authority’s
    inability to recoup collection costs on its voluntary waiver and abandonment of
    over $900 million in administrative fees.                But waiver often encouraged
    customers to switch to the TollTag system, which all these problems with toll
    collection show has the potential to save the Authority a lot of money in the
    long run. 5
    The parties thus offer different methods for evaluating the connection
    between the fee amounts and recovering administrative costs: the drivers focus
    on the estimated marginal case of collecting a single toll; the Authority focuses
    on the overall impact of collection efforts on its bottom line. In the deferential
    world of rational basis review, it is enough that the Authority can point to one
    reasonable way of looking at the question that justifies the fee.
    The drivers argue that their calculation is nonetheless required by the
    state statute authorizing the fees and that the district court erred in saying
    the state law is “not relevant” to the due process inquiry. On the latter point,
    that phrasing may be the one imprecision in the district court’s thorough and
    well-reasoned opinion.         Violating a state statute can be evidence that a
    government action is not rationally related to a legitimate government
    interest. See Stern v. Tarrant Cty. Hosp. Dist., 
    778 F.2d 1052
    , 1060 (5th Cir.
    1985) (en banc) (“[T]he Texas Medical Practice Act is relevant to . . . the
    question of whether there was a rational basis for [the state’s action].”). That
    5The drivers also challenge the waiver of the fees as arbitrary. They describe a system
    in which fees are waived for some lucky customers, but not others. The evidence is to the
    contrary. In fact, most of the plaintiffs were offered waivers of at least some of their fees in
    exchange for either paying unpaid tolls or switching to TollTag. The waivers, like the
    administrative fees themselves, were linked to the Authority’s interest in recovering or
    reducing costs associated with unpaid toll collection.
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    does not get the drivers very far, however, as violation of a statute is not
    enough on its own to render action an unconstitutional.                         
    Id. at 1059
    (“[V]iolation of state law is neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition for a
    finding of a due process violation.”). The drivers contend the statute requires
    a close connection between the fee and costs because it says “an authority may
    charge an administrative fee of no more than $100 to recover the cost of
    collecting the unpaid toll.” TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 366.178(c) (2009)
    (emphasis added). Assuming that language requires some such connection, 6
    we do not see why it mandates the marginal cost analysis the drivers prefer.
    And even if the fee does violate the “to recover” clause in the state law, that
    alone would not violate due process given the strong relationship the fee bears
    to collecting costs that the Authority has not fully recovered. Using the statute
    alone to establish irrationality is also undercut by the $100 cap it then placed
    on each administrative fee. How does the state law demonstrate that a $25 fee
    is irrational when it contemplated a fee four times that amount?
    It is telling that the drivers cite no case, nor could we find one, holding
    that a fee bearing any resemblance to this one violates substantive due
    process. 7 If we were to so hold for the first time, we would have to answer a
    6  The Authority’s view is that this language only explains the purpose of the
    administrative fees, without requiring the Authority to align the fee rate with the amount
    needed to collect the fees. In support it contrasts the fee statute with other Texas laws that
    make explicit the need for an authority to keep fees and cost closely connected. See, e.g., TEX.
    PROP. CODE ANN. § 203.004(a) (“The amount of the fee may not exceed the administrative
    costs to be incurred by the county in pursuing the matter.”).
    7 The cases the drivers cite do not involve fees. The lot-clearing ordinance in Berger
    v. City of Mayfield Heights was struck down because it had almost nothing to do with the
    city’s stated interest in public health and safety. 
    154 F.3d 621
    , 625 (6th Cir. 1998). Mikeska
    v. City of Galveston vacated summary judgment in favor of the city because there was
    “nothing in the record” to establish any connection between the city’s refusal to reconnect
    utility services and its stated interest. 
    451 F.3d 376
    , 381 (5th Cir. 2006). For the Authority’s
    fee, the record amply demonstrates a connection with two legitimate interests.
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    number of questions. Should the Authority have to conduct a study estimating
    costs and collection rates before implementing the system? 8 How close to the
    Authority’s costs would the fees collected have to come? How often would the
    Authority have to perform the calculation and reassess the fee it charged? The
    drivers do not suggest answers to most of these questions. The Due Process
    Clause does not seem the place to find them.
    What we have said about the interest in recovering collection costs is
    enough to uphold the fees, but the Authority’s second justification for the $25
    fee also suffices. Recall that the fee is reduced by 2/3 if the violator opens a
    TollTag account, and during some promotions the entire fee is erased. The fee,
    with its avenues for avoidance, is thus a mechanism that strongly encourages
    drivers to get a TollTag. The drivers challenge this rationale primarily on the
    ground that incentivizing drivers to switch to TollTags is not a legitimate
    interest. Part of this argument comes from the state statute we have discussed
    that the drivers view as limiting the fees to recovery of administrative costs.
    As a violation of a statute is only evidence helping to show irrationality, it alone
    cannot render the fee unconstitutional when there is a strong interest in
    encouraging the more efficient TollTag method of payment.
    The drivers suggest more generally that the Authority should not be able
    to “force” them into the TollTag system through administrative fees. But no
    one is being forced to use the toll roads or any particular payment system. In
    a pre-ZipCash world, drivers without TollTags or change in their car could not
    8  For its part, the Authority asserts that rational speculation of costs is sufficient to
    pass rational basis review even if “unsupported by evidence or empirical data.” F.C.C. v.
    Beach Comms., Inc., 
    508 U.S. 307
    , 315 (1993) (applying rational basis review to congressional
    legislation). At its meeting approving the rate increase, the Authority’s board speculated
    that the administrative fees rate did not “generate monies in excess of that necessary to
    recover the cost of collection.” That is enough under the “low threshold” of rational basis.
    Simi 
    Inv., 236 F.3d at 251
    .
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    use the toll roads. Now they can. They just have to pay like everyone else, but
    are given the convenience of paying after usage. They can continue to pay with
    ZipCash rather than a TollTag and will avoid any fees if they timely do so.
    The driver’s also miss the nature of the Authority’s interest in
    incentivizing TollTag usage. It is not to prop up the transponder industry.
    Instead, the more drivers use TollTags, the fewer tolls there are to collect, and
    the more tolls end up getting paid. As with the other asserted interest, this
    one comes down to sustaining the Authority’s financial health. See 
    Broussard, 318 F.3d at 656
    . The fee passes rational basis review. 9
    ***
    The ZipCash system with its challenged fees is the type of novel
    policymaking for which the limited scrutiny of rational basis review is most
    justified.   Cf. New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 
    285 U.S. 262
    , 311 (1932)
    (Brandies, J., dissenting).        The Authority’s experiment sought to decrease
    congestion and increase access to the roads, two interests that often compete
    but could both be furthered by removing toll booths.                   There are usually
    imperfections in new policies. The amount of the fee may have been one.
    Indeed, public disapproval with the fees led to passage of a new state law
    limiting the amount of administrative fees the Authority could levy (notably to
    the $25 challenged here). The political process may continue to fine tune toll
    collection, but that is not the Due Process Clause’s role to play.
    The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    9 The failure of the due process claim also dooms the drivers’ claims for declaratory
    and injunctive relief. These claims are not freestanding; they must be supported by some
    underlying cause of action. Harris County Texas v. MERSCORP, Inc., 
    791 F.3d 545
    , 552 (5th
    Cir. 2015) (“[T]he Declaratory Judgment Act alone does not create a federal cause of action.”);
    Crook v. Galaviz, 616 F. App’x 747, 753 (5th Cir. 2015) (“As an injunction is a remedy that
    must be supported by an underlying cause of action, the failure of [ ] constitutional and
    common law claims also warrants the dismissal of [a] claim.”).
    13