Flowers v. City of Minneapolis , 478 F.3d 869 ( 2007 )


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  •                    United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 06-1672
    ___________
    Alfred Flowers,                         *
    *
    Plaintiff/Appellee,       *
    *
    v.                               *
    *
    City of Minneapolis, Minnesota,         *
    * Appeal from the United States
    Defendant,                * District Court for the
    * District of Minnesota.
    Kevin Stoll, in his individual and      *
    official capacities,                    *
    *
    Defendant/Appellant,      *
    *
    Sherry Appledorn, in her individual     *
    and official capacities,                *
    Erika Christensen, in her individual    *
    and official capacities, John Does 1-5, *
    *
    Defendants.               *
    ___________
    Submitted: October 19, 2006
    Filed: March 1, 2007
    ___________
    Before SMITH, BOWMAN, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
    Minnesota police officer Kevin Stoll appeals the district court’s denial of his
    motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Alfred Flowers sued
    Stoll under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of several constitutional rights. The
    district court dismissed a number of claims, but concluded that Stoll was not entitled
    to qualified immunity with respect to Flowers’s allegations that Stoll violated his
    substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. We conclude that
    the substantive due process claims should have been dismissed, and we therefore
    reverse.
    I.
    Flowers is an African-American resident of Minneapolis, and Stoll is a
    lieutenant in the Minneapolis Police Department. In the summer of 2003, Flowers
    began renting a home on Knox Avenue South in Minneapolis, on the same block
    where Stoll lived. Neither knew of the other’s identity on the block until the summer
    of 2004, although Stoll was aware that Flowers had a previous encounter with the
    police department. In September 2003, Flowers was arrested for disorderly conduct
    and resisting arrest, and later that year, Stoll accessed a computerized report
    concerning the Flowers arrest. In September 2004, after the events at issue in this
    lawsuit, Flowers was acquitted of the charges.
    On August 1, 2004, Stoll noticed graffiti on two garages in the neighborhood
    near the home rented by Flowers. This occurred in an area where graffiti was
    uncommon. Stoll spoke with the police gang expert about the incident. He explained
    that the graffiti appeared after the Flowers family moved into the neighborhood, and
    he raised a concern about whether gang activity might be associated with the Flowers
    residence. After observing the graffiti, an investigator told Stoll that she thought it
    was gang-related, and that she believed a woman suspected to be a gang member lived
    at the Flowers residence. She also sent Stoll a packet of information on Flowers. The
    police gang unit, however, made no further investigation into the matter.
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    On his own initiative, Stoll contacted the patrol supervisor for his neighborhood
    and requested a “directed patrol” of the Flowers residence. In a directed patrol,
    officers are instructed to patrol the area of the target address as time permits. On the
    same day, during a period when Stoll was the highest ranking officer on duty, he
    attended roll call at the precinct with jurisdiction over the Flowers residence. There,
    he distributed information about Flowers to the patrol officers, informed them about
    the graffiti near his house, and offered a steak dinner for any officer who made an
    arrest that led to the conviction or eviction of anyone living at the Flowers residence.
    There is conflicting evidence in the record as to whether Stoll’s actions were contrary
    to official procedures. (App. at 348, 430, 458).
    As a result of Stoll’s request, officers began to conduct heavy patrol on Knox
    Avenue. Department records show that officers checked the Flowers residence six
    times on directed patrol in August, for a total of sixty-nine minutes. Flowers testified
    that passing cruisers shined their lights into his home and frightened his family. He
    stated that a window at his home was broken during this period, shortly after a police
    squad car was seen driving by the house. Flowers averred that he and his family left
    the house to stay at another location for a weekend at the end of August. He also
    presented a letter from a woman whose son was enrolled in Flowers’s childcare
    facility, but withdrew in 2004 “due to allegations regarding the owner,” and then re-
    enrolled in 2005 after the woman “found out that the allegations were not true.” (App.
    at 542). She did not specify whether the “allegations” arose from the criminal charges
    of which Flowers was acquitted in 2004, or the investigation of possible gang activity
    initiated by Stoll.1 The directed patrol ended in late August, around the time Flowers
    1
    In an affidavit, Flowers also stated that he “learned from a police officer that
    police had put out a ‘hit’ on [him],” (App. at 58), and his sister, a former Minneapolis
    police officer, averred that she was told by an unnamed police officer that “some
    Minneapolis Police had put out a ‘hit’ on [her] brother.” (App. at 53). Neither
    witness attributed this alleged threat to Stoll, and presumably because the statements
    constituted inadmissible hearsay, the district court did not mention them. See Sallis
    -3-
    filed a lawsuit against the Minneapolis Police Department and several officers,
    including Stoll, based on this series of events.
    In his complaint, Flowers alleged federal claims under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and
    1983 and state law claims of defamation and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
    The district court dismissed the claims against all defendants but Stoll, and dismissed
    all claims against Stoll except for the constitutional claims based on substantive due
    process.
    II.
    To decide whether Stoll is entitled to qualified immunity, we first consider
    whether the facts alleged, taken in the light most favorable to Flowers, show that
    Stoll’s conduct violated a constitutional right. Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 201
    (2001). If so, then we determine whether the constitutional right was clearly
    established at the time. 
    Id. The claims
    at issue on this appeal are based on the substantive component of
    the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Due Process Clause
    provides the familiar guarantee of fair procedures, prohibiting the deprivation of life,
    liberty, or property by a State without due process of law. In addition, under the
    rubric of substantive due process, it “protects individual liberty against ‘certain
    government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement
    them.’” Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 
    503 U.S. 115
    , 125 (1992) (quoting Daniels
    v. Williams, 
    474 U.S. 327
    , 331 (1986)).
    v. Univ. of Minnesota, 
    408 F.3d 470
    , 474 (8th Cir. 2005) (explaining that non-movant
    must come forward with admissible evidence to defeat summary judgment).
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    To establish a violation of substantive due process rights by an executive
    official, a plaintiff must show (1) that the official violated one or more fundamental
    constitutional rights, and (2) that the conduct of the executive official was shocking
    to the “contemporary conscience.” County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 
    523 U.S. 833
    , 847
    n.8 (1998); Terrell v. Larson, 
    396 F.3d 975
    , 978 n. 1 (8th Cir. 2005) (en banc). In
    denying Stoll’s motion for summary judgment, the district court reasoned that “Stoll’s
    actions were sufficiently conscience shocking to impose liability,” and that qualified
    immunity was not available, because “a jury could conclude that a reasonable officer
    in Stoll’s position would have deemed his actions to violate Flowers’s substantive due
    process rights.” The district court concluded that Flowers had not established an
    “actual deprivation of a life, liberty, or property right” for purposes of his procedural
    due process claim, but the court did not discuss what alleged fundamental right was
    at stake in the substantive due process analysis.
    We conclude that Stoll is entitled to summary judgment on the substantive due
    process claim because whatever effect his actions may have on the contemporary
    conscience, the evidence does not show that Stoll deprived Flowers of a fundamental
    right protected by the Due Process Clause. For purposes of substantive due process
    analysis, fundamental rights are those “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and
    tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor
    justice would exist if they were sacrificed.” 
    Terrell, 396 F.3d at 978
    n.1 (quotation
    omitted). To discern “guideposts for responsible decisionmaking” in this area, we
    look to “[o]ur Nation’s history, legal traditions, and practices.” Washington v.
    Glucksberg, 
    521 U.S. 702
    , 721 (1997) (quoting 
    Collins, 503 U.S. at 125
    ).
    In urging us to affirm the district court’s ruling on substantive due process,
    Flowers suggests that a number of asserted fundamental rights are at issue in this case,
    and we consider the principal contentions in turn. First, Flowers claims that Stoll’s
    conduct threatened his fundamental right to “personal safety.” For an explication of
    this asserted right, Flowers directs us to Wood v. Ostrander, 
    879 F.2d 583
    (9th Cir.
    -5-
    1989), which discussed a liberty interest in “physical security” in a case involving a
    sexual assault, 
    id. at 589,
    and relied in turn on Ingraham v. Wright, 
    430 U.S. 651
    , 674-
    75 (1977), a procedural due process case that analyzed a child’s liberty interest in
    avoiding excessive corporal punishment in public school. Assuming for the sake of
    argument that the liberty interest discussed in Ingraham can be transported into
    substantive due process analysis, the facts alleged by Flowers do not approach the
    situations in Wood or Ingraham. There is no allegation of physical injury to Flowers
    or his family, and he has developed no substantial argument that surveillance of a
    home or the unwarranted direction of suspicion toward a household deprives the
    occupants of an unenumerated constitutional right to “personal safety” recognized by
    our Nation’s history and traditions.
    Flowers also alleges a violation of his liberty interest to engage in “the common
    occupations of life.” See Meyer v. Nebraska, 
    262 U.S. 390
    (1923). This liberty
    interest was first described in connection with a statute that prohibited the teaching of
    school in any language other than English. 
    Id. at 399-400.
    The Court since has
    defined it as applying to the “complete prohibition of the right to engage in a calling,”
    Conn v. Gabbert, 
    526 U.S. 286
    , 291-92 (1999), and it may also extend to a suspension
    without pay and demotion in public employment, at least where the adverse action is
    undertaken based on race. Moran v. Clarke, 
    296 F.3d 638
    , 645 (8th Cir. 2002) (en
    banc). But whatever its scope, this asserted fundamental right clearly does not
    encompass a “brief interruption” of work in a desired occupation. 
    Conn, 526 U.S. at 292
    ; see Singleton v. Cecil, 
    176 F.3d 419
    , 426 n.8 (8th Cir. 1999) (en banc). Flowers
    complains, at most, of a temporary slowdown in his childcare business, evidenced by
    an inconclusive letter from one customer. The alleged injury, therefore, does not rise
    to the level of a deprivation of the fundamental right to engage in one’s chosen
    occupation.
    Flowers next asserts that Stoll interfered with the fundamental “right of families
    to live together,” citing the plurality opinion in Moore v. City of East Cleveland, 431
    -6-
    U.S. 494 (1977). Moore held unconstitutional a zoning ordinance that defined
    “family” in such a way as to prohibit a grandmother and her two grandsons from
    living together in an area designated for “single family” dwellings. See Doe v. Miller,
    
    405 F.3d 700
    , 710 (8th Cir. 2005). The Moore plurality’s reasoning is inapposite
    here. Stoll’s actions did not operate directly on the family relationship, and while the
    patrol activity was disturbing to the Flowers household and frightening to the children,
    it did not force the family members to live apart or otherwise amount to “intrusive
    regulation” of “family living arrangements.” 
    Moore, 431 U.S. at 499
    (plurality
    opinion). Flowers also invokes the individual rights “to direct the upbringing and
    education of one’s children,” “to marry and have children,” and “to marital privacy.”
    But the Supreme Court’s decisions concerning the rearing of children and the use of
    contraception are far afield from this situation, e.g., Pierce v. Society of the Sisters,
    
    268 U.S. 510
    , 534-35 (1925); Griswold v. Connecticut, 
    381 U.S. 479
    , 485-86 (1965),
    and they do not support Flowers’s claim.
    Flowers contends, finally, that Stoll acted affirmatively to place Flowers in a
    position of danger that he would not otherwise have faced, and that this action creates
    a constitutional duty of care on the part of the officer under the Due Process Clause.
    See S.S. v. McMullen, 
    225 F.3d 960
    , 962 (8th Cir. 2000) (en banc); Gregory v. City
    of Rogers, 
    974 F.2d 1006
    , 1010 (8th Cir. 1992). This “state-created danger” doctrine
    has been applied, for example, where a state trooper knowingly left the female
    passenger of an arrested driver stranded in a high-crime area, where she was later
    raped, 
    Wood, 879 F.2d at 589-90
    , and where police officers stranded young children
    on a Chicago expressway during inclement weather. White v. Rockford, 
    592 F.2d 381
    ,
    382-84 (7th Cir. 1979). The evidence in this case, however, is insufficient to show
    that Stoll placed Flowers in a position of substantial danger from which he was unable
    to protect himself. Viewed in the light most favorable to Flowers, the directed patrols
    and requests for investigation may constitute harassment, but they did not put the
    Flowers family in danger of an armed police raid or other assaultive conduct.
    Evidence that a window was broken at the Flowers home is too insubstantial to
    -7-
    establish that Stoll created a “danger of significant harm” to the family that did not
    previously exist. 
    McMullen, 225 F.3d at 962
    . The record is thus insufficient to meet
    the first element of a substantive due process claim based on the State’s affirmative
    creation of danger to a citizen.
    Flowers’s asserted injuries were a month of living with police patrols and
    spotlighting of his house, a broken window that occurred in close proximity to a
    police patrol, a short-term loss of some business at his childcare facility due to
    “allegations about the owner,” and a temporary stay at another location for a weekend.
    These harms are not de minimis, but even assuming they all could be attributed to
    Stoll, the scope of substantive due process is carefully circumscribed, and the
    evidence presented here falls short of establishing the deprivation of a fundamental
    right or liberty interest as is required to support a constitutional claim under that
    theory.
    *       *       *
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s decision denying in
    part Stoll’s motion for summary judgment, and we remand the case for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ______________________________
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