Doggie Due Process - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Doggie Due Process

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Doggie Due Process. The Saga of 'Tut-Tut,' 'Bandit,' 'Boo ... Altman v. City of High Point, N.C., 330 F.3d 194 (4th Cir.(N.C.) 2003) What ... Civil action for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Doggie Due Process


1
Doggie Due Process
  • The Saga of "Tut-Tut," "Bandit," "Boo Boo," and
    "Sadie"

2
Altman v. City of High Point, N.C., 330 F.3d 194
(4th Cir.(N.C.) 2003)
  • What is a dog "at large"
  • What happened to plaintiff's dog?
  • Where was this done?
  • Why was this done?
  • What due process was provided?
  • How did plaintiff characterize the act in legal
    terms?

3
42 USC  1983. Civil action for deprivation of
rights
  • Every person who, under color of any statute,
    ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any
    State or Territory or the District of Columbia,
    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,
    except that in any action brought against a
    judicial officer for an act or omission taken in
    such officers judicial capacity, injunctive
    relief shall not be granted unless a declaratory
    decree was violated or declaratory relief was
    unavailable. For the purposes of this section,
    any Act of Congress applicable exclusively to the
    District of Columbia shall be considered to be a
    statute of the District of Columbia.

4
State Action
  • Who is the state actor?
  • What is the relationship to the state?
  • Is the city a political subdivision of the state,
    i.e., is the city covered by the 11th Amendment?
  • Why does this matter?

5
The Constitutional Violation
  • Is 1983 just a substitute for tort laws?
  • We will talk about tort claims acts next class
  • What type of violation is necessary for a 1983
    claim?
  • What kind of torts might qualify?
  • Whose rights were violated in this case?
  • What is the constitutional claim, i.e., what part
    of the constitution has been violated?

6
Dog Law in History
  • Nicchia v. People of State of New York, 254 U.S.
    228, 230 (1920)
  • "Property in dogs is of an imperfect or qualified
    nature and they may be subjected to peculiar and
    drastic police regulations by the state without
    depriving their owners of any federal right."
  • Sentell v. New Orleans C.R. Co., 166 U.S. 698,
    701 (1897)
  • "Property in dogs is of an imperfect or
    qualified nature, and they stand, as it were,
    between animals ferae naturae, in which until
    killed or subdued, there is no property, and
    domestic animals, in which the right of property
    is perfect and complete."

7
The Characterization of a Dog by Later Courts
  • Has the historic view of dogs changed?
  • Do some people pay for dogs?
  • Do some people confuse dogs with relatives?
  • What did the Katrina evacuation tell us about
    dogs?
  • Should the constitutional view of dogs evolve as
    well?
  • Did this court find dogs to be 4th Amendment
    effects?
  • What type of property does the court hold the dog
    to be?
  • What would they think of this in San Francisco?

8
Is Killing a Dog a Seizure?
  • If the dog is property, what is the effect of
    killing the dog?
  • Does the state need to take possession of
    property to seize it?
  • What is the test is killing a dog a seizure of a
    dog?

9
Is this Seizure a Taking?
  • What is a taking under the constitution?
  • What must the government do if it takes property?
  • If killing the dog was justified, must the
    government pay for the value of the dog?
  • Why not?
  • What is the killing was not justified?

10
Qualified Immunity Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457
U.S. 800 (1982)
  • The Court ruled that government officials
    performing discretionary functions should be
    protected from liability for civil damages if
    their conduct does not violate clearly
    established statutory or constitutional rights of
    which a reasonable person would be aware.
  • Those who are plainly incompetent or who
    knowingly violate the law cannot invoke qualified
    immunity.

11
The Policy Rationale for Qualified Immunity
  • Why is qualified immunity necessary for
    governmental action?
  • What would be a Mathews analysis?
  • Does litigation only cost when the defendant
    loses?
  • Why is there a strong policy for summary judgment
    in 1st amendment news cases?
  • Who has to pay the damages if the officers get
    qualified immunity but did improperly kill the
    dog?

12
Robles v. Prince George's County, Maryland, 302
F.3d 262 (4th Cir. 2002)
  • ...the Fourth Circuit considered whether police
    officers who bound a defenseless man to a pole
    with flex cuffs at three in the morning in a
    deserted parking lot and then abandoned him, all
    with admittedly no legitimate law enforcement
    purpose, were entitled to qualified immunity.
  • What did the Robles court find?
  • What does this tell us about the standard for
    qualified immunity?

13
Do the Officers Get Qualified Immunity?
  • Assume that it is ultimately found that the dog
    was improperly destroyed and that damages are
    owed.
  • Were the officers acting reasonably in their
    belief that they had the right to shoot the dogs?

14
The Dissent on Standard of Proof
  • The dissent reminds the majority that they are
    supposed to be looking on the plaintiff's
    allegations as true for the purposes of the
    motion.
  • What is plaintiff's story about the dogs?
  • Can the plaintiff rebut the dogs being a large?
  • Can you believe their claims the dogs were
    harmless?
  • What personal history does he point to that he
    sees as discrediting the officers?
  • Do we know if this is excessive?

15
The Dissent on Qualified Immunity
  • ...an officer violates clearly established
    federal law" when he shoots and kills an
    individual's family pet when that pet presented
    no danger and when nonlethal methods of capture
    would have been successful."
  • Where does he find this law?
  • Does the majority agree?
  • Is that alone evidence to support qualified
    immunity?

16
What is the Right Question?
  • Even if you believe the plaintiff's story, were
    the dogs at large as defined by the statute?
  • Was there evidence that they were menacing
    people?
  • Given this information, was it clearly
    unconstitutional to kill them, rather than using
    non-deadly means to subdue them?
  • If this is not clear, then defendants get
    qualified immunity.
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