Honey v. Distelrath (November 9, 1999)

* Court: Ninth Circuit

* Public Employer: West Covina

* Plaintiff's Job Class: Jailer

* Plaintiff's Lawyer: Larry Roberts

* Trial Court Decision: Against plaintiff

* Ninth Circuit Decision: In favor of plaintiff

* Issues: Federal civil rights litigation, claim preclusion, Parratt rule

Honey Facts

* Honey was a jailer with West Covina.

* Honey was fired in January 1996 for excessive force and mistreatment of female and minority prisoners.

* Honey appealed his termination and, at his hearing, requested to see all documents which formed the basis for his termination. (It is not explained why he did not get all of this at his Skelly hearing.) His request was refused, and his termination was upheld.

* Honey then filed a petition for writ of mandate, alleging his termination violated his procedural due process rights. The state court in June 1996 granted his petition and awarded him reinstatement and back pay.

* Honey then in July 1996 filed a million dollar claim with the city, which was denied.

* Honey in February 1997 filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in state court, which the city removed to federal court.

* The city then moved to dismiss Honey's action on the ground that Honey's successful state mandate action cured any procedural due process violation; the federal district court granted the city's motion to dismiss.

* Honey appealed, and the Ninth Circuit reversed the district court.

Honey Analysis

* Normally Honey would be barred by res judicata (otherwise known as claims preclusion) from relitigating in the new case the issues he could have raised in his mandate action. But this rule does not apply to Honey because the California Supreme Court held in 1993 that a mandamus action does not bar a subsequent federal civil rights action.

* The Ninth Circuit next found that Honey squeezed into another exception to another rule. That other rule is the Parratt rule, with the United States Supreme Court ruling that, where random and unauthorized acts by public officials had occurred, a plaintiff could not file a federal civil rights lawsuit where a post-deprivation state tort review process that complied with due process was available. The exception to the Parratt rule is the Zinermon exception, with the United States Supreme Court ruling that, where the due process violation was predictable, where a pre-deprivation review process could be created, and where the public official's act was deliberate, then a federal civil rights lawsuit could be filed, even if a post-deprivation state tort review process that complied with due process was available.

* The Ninth Circuit held that Honey came within the Zinermon exception, since the city's decision not to provide him with the back-up materials was deliberate, authorized, and a foreseeable deprivation of Honey's due process rights.

Conclusion

This case illustrates that, in a situation where a public employer has an established policy of violating due process rights, a federal civil rights lawsuit is available, even after a petition for writ of mandate has been successfully litigated.


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