This post examines an opinion the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit issued in a civil case: Lange
v. McGinnis, 2016 WL 1296753 (2016). The Court of Appeals begins its opinion by
explaining that
[f]ormer Benton Harbor Director of
Public Safety Roger Lange sued the City of Benton Harbor, Michigan, and City
employees, Dan McGinnis and Tony Saunders, under 42 U.S. Code §1983 and Michigan law. Lange claimed that the defendants violated
his Fourth Amendment rights when McGinnis
deleted all the files on a personal hard drive that Lange had attached to his
work computer. The district
court held that McGinnis was not entitled to qualified immunity as to
Lange's § 1983 claim. We respectfully disagree and reverse.
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
The Court of Appeals went on to
recite the facts in the light most
favorable to Lange. Benton Harbor hired Lange as its Chief of Police in 2009. A
year later, the State of Michigan determined that Benton Harbor was in a
financial emergency. In 2011, the Benton Harbor Police and Fire Departments
merged to form the Department of Public Safety, with Lange as its Director. In
January 2013, the Local Emergency Financial Assistance Loan Board appointed
Tony Saunders as the City's Emergency Manager.
In July 2013, the City Commissioners
received an anonymous fax complaining that Lange was not trained as a
firefighter. An attorney advised Saunders that he should require Lange to pass
the firefighter-certification test. The next day, Saunders placed Lange on paid
administrative leave until he could pass the firefighter-certification test in
August. Lange turned in his office and vehicle keys, and his firearm.
Thereafter, Lange was permitted on City property only to the extent necessary
to prepare for the exam. In August, Lange passed the written part of the
firefighter exam, but not the practical part.
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
The opinion also explains that,
[a]fter the August exam, the City
offered Lange a job as Community Liaison Officer, which he declined. Lange
instead asked Saunders to reinstate him as Director of Public Safety. Saunders
refused and told Lange that his choices were to take the Liaison position, go
on unpaid leave until he passed the firefighter test, or resign. Lange went on
unpaid leave in October 2013.
A few weeks later, Lange asked for
permission to retrieve his personal belongings from his office. Saunders said
no, and instead told Lange to itemize his belongings so that someone could
retrieve them for him. Lange sent Saunders a list of items, including a hard
drive. Saunders asked the Captain of the Police Division of the Department of
Public Safety, Dan McGinnis, to clear the hard drive of any City files. In
March 2014 the City returned the hard drive, but it was empty: McGinnis had
deleted all the files, City and personal alike.
Lange thereafter brought this lawsuit,
claiming that the deletion of his files was an unconstitutional search and
seizure under § 1983. Lange also asserted several state-law claims.
McGinnis moved for summary judgment on the§ 1983 claim, asserting
qualified immunity. The district court denied his motion. We review the denial de novo. Whitney v. City of Milan, 677
F.3d 292, 296 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit 2012).
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
The Court of Appeals then took up the legal issues in the
case, explaining that
McGinnis is entitled to qualified
immunity unless a reasonable jury could find that he violated a constitutional
right that was clearly established at the time of his actions. See DiLuzio
v. Vill. of Yorkville, Ohio, 796 F.3d 604, 608–09 (6 U.S. Court of
Appeals for the 6th Circuit 2015). `For a right to be clearly
established, the contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a
reasonable officer would understand that what he is doing violates that right.’ McGlone
v. Bell, 681 F.3d 718, 735 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th
Circuit 2012).
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
As Wikipedia explains, qualified immunity,
is available to state or federal
employees performing discretionary functions where their actions, even if later
found to be unlawful, did not violate `clearly established law’. The defense of
qualified immunity was created by the U.S. Supreme Court, replacing a
court's inquiry into a defendant's subjective state of mind with an inquiry
into the objective reasonableness of the contested action. A government agent's
liability in a federal civil rights lawsuit now no longer turns upon whether
the defendant acted with `malice’, but on whether a hypothetical reasonable
person in the defendant's position would have known that his or her
actions violated clearly established law.
As outlined by the Supreme Court
in Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800 (1982), qualified
immunity is designed to shield government officials from actions `insofar as
their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional
rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
Getting back to the 6th Circuit’s opinion in the Lange case, the court went on to explain
that
[t]he Fourth Amendment provides that `[t]he
right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated[.]’ U.S.
Const. amend. IV. Government employees are entitled to some Fourth Amendment
protections in the workplace. See O'Connor v. Ortega, 480U.S. 709, 717 (1987) (plurality opinion); id. at
737 (Scalia, J. concurring).
The plurality in O'Connor held
that, to invoke the protections of the Fourth Amendment, government employees
must first show they had a `reasonable expectation of privacy’ in the subject
of the search. Id. at 711–12. Employees must then show that
the search was unreasonable at its inception, or as to its scope, or
both. Id. at 726. Justice Scalia would have skipped the
question whether the employee had a reasonable expectation of privacy,
reasoning that `the offices of government employees, and . . . files within
those offices, are covered by Fourth Amendment protections as a general
matter.’ Id .at 731 (Scalia, J. concurring). Under either approach
the outcome turns on whether `the governmental intrusion was reasonable.’ See id. at
732 (Scalia, J. concurring); id. at 726 (plurality
opinion).
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
The Court of Appeals then explained that
[w]e skip to the question whether
McGinnis's actions violated any clearly established right. Although the
district court analyzed the issue as if McGinnis executed only a search, he in
fact executed a search and then a seizure. We consider the search first. `Ordinarily,
a search of an employee's office by a supervisor will be justified ... when ...
the search is necessary for a noninvestigatory work-related purpose such as to
retrieve a needed file.’ O'Connor v. Ortega, supra Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted); see also id. at
732 (Scalia, J. concurring).
Here, Lange concedes that the City was
entitled to delete any work files on his hard drive. To determine whether any
work files were on the drive, the City needed to search the drive. And the
search itself was minimally invasive: It entailed only opening the hard drive
and seeing that its contents included City files. The search was also
undisputedly non-investigative. We see nothing about the search, therefore,
that would have made clear to a reasonable officer that the search was
unconstitutional.
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
The next section of the court’s opinion takes up a different
issue: whether McGinnis’s actions also
constituted a “seizure” of Lange’s files. Lange
v. McGinnis, supra. As Wikipedia
explains, the Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable “searches” (which, as the
above discussion demonstrates, involves privacy) and unreasonable “seizures”
(which involve interfering with someone’s possession and use of his or her
property).
The court goes on to explain that
McGinnis effected a seizure when he
deleted all of the files on Lange's hard drive. See Soldal v. Cook
County, 506 U.S. 56 (1992). Lange's concession that the City was
entitled to delete any work files on his hard drive amounts to a concession
that the City was entitled to effect a seizure to some extent.
The question is whether McGinnis
clearly went too far by deleting all the files on the drive. McGinnis could
have deleted fewer files by combing through the files one-by-one and then
deleting only the work files; but that approach would have effected a much more
invasive search. Or he could have done what he did, which was to effect a
minimal search and a broader seizure. No caselaw made clear to McGinnis that
the latter choice was a constitutionally impermissible one.
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
The Court of Appeals went on to conclude that the
cases that Lange cites only underscore
the point. O'Connor concerned physical files and said nothing about
choosing between a broader search and a broader seizure. Our decision in James
v. Hampton, 592 F. App'x 449 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th
Circuit 2015), came a year after McGinnis's actions and thus offered him no
guidance then.
And the other cases that Lange cites—a
Seventh Circuit opinion and a district-court one—are far afield from this case
factually and legally. See Narducci v. Moore, 572 F.3d
313 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit 2009); Maes
v. Folberg, 504 F.Supp. 2d 339 (U.S. District Court for the NorthernDistrict of Illinois 2007). No caselaw from this court, the Supreme Court, or
any other circuit court established that McGinnis's actions were
unconstitutional at the time he took them. McGinnis is therefore entitled to
qualified immunity as to Lange's § 1983 claim.
We reverse the district court's order
denying qualified immunity to McGinnis, and remand the case for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Lange v. McGinnis,
supra.
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