F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
DEC 26 2001
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
TENTH CIRCUIT
NORMA LIVSEY, KIPP LIVSEY, and
KELLY LIVSEY,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v. No. 00-4005
SALT LAKE COUNTY and SGT. JIM
POTTER,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Utah
(D.C. No. 99-CV-564)
Robert H. Copier, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
T.J. Tsakalos, Deputy District Attorney (David E. Yocom, Salt Lake County
District Attorney, with him on the brief), Salt Lake City, Utah, for Defendants-
Appellees.
Before SEYMOUR and HENRY, Circuit Judges, and OBERDORFER, District
Judge. *
*
The Honorable Louis F. Oberdorfer, United States District Judge for the
District of the District of Columbia, sitting by designation.
OBERDORFER, District Judge.
Norma Livsey, Kipp Livsey, and Kelly Livsey brought this action under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 against Salt Lake County and Jim Potter, a County police officer.
The complaint alleged that the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights were infringed by a
statement by Potter published in a local newspaper about the sexual behavior of a
deceased member of the plaintiffs’ family and by the County’s failure to grant the
plaintiffs’ request for a name-clearing hearing for the decedent. The district court
dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim, and later denied the plaintiffs’
motion for reconsideration and for leave to amend. The plaintiffs appeal. We
have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
I
On August 27, 1997, the Deseret News, a local newspaper in Salt Lake
County, published an article reporting that:
Hikers found the body of a man, identified only as a white male in
his 60s, Tuesday night about 30 yards from a dirt trail near 3000 E.
Emigration Canyon Road. Police first suspected foul play in the
death but are now saying the death was an accident. ‘It looks like it
was one of those autoerotic things.’ Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Sgt.
Jim Potter said Wednesday. ‘We’re still waiting for the autopsy
results, but there was some type of binding involved.’
Appellant’s App. at 10. Subsequently, the body was publicly identified as one
Edward J. Livsey, the husband of Norma Livsey and the father of Kipp and Kelly
Livsey.
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Further investigation led to criminal charges, a widely-publicized trial, and
a murder conviction. The record on appeal does not include any details about the
criminal trial. On April 24, 1998, citing Potter’s statements to the press, as
reported, Kipp and Kelly Livsey filed a written request with the Salt Lake County
governing body requesting an administrative name-clearing hearing. No one
representing Salt Lake County responded to this petition.
On July 22, 1999, the plaintiffs filed a complaint in the United States
District Court for the District of Utah against the County and Potter. The
complaint alleged that Potter’s statement, along with the denial of the name-
clearing hearing, “deprived [them] of their liberty and privacy interests secured
under the constitution and the laws” and actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim on the
grounds that (1) that the plaintiffs could not vicariously assert the constitutional
rights of her husband and their father; (2) that Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693
(1976), and its progeny establish that mere defamation or slander cannot support a
procedural due process claim; and (3) that the complaint did not allege an official
policy, practice or custom as required to bring a claim against the County. In
their opposition, the plaintiffs responded that (1) they were not asserting a
vicarious claim but rather their own personal constitutional rights to liberty and
property (2) that even after Paul v. Davis their procedural due process claim was
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rendered viable by Utah’s constitutional provisions and legislation protecting
crime victims’ rights, and (3) that their claims against the County were direct
claims because Potter was the County spokesperson and because the County was
responsible for the denial of the name-clearing hearing.
Before the district court ruled on the defendants’ motion to dismiss, and
before the hearing on that motion, the plaintiffs filed their own motion for
summary judgment. In that motion they contended that they were entitled to
summary judgment on three issues of law: (1) whether the failure to grant a
hearing “shocked the conscience” and thus violated the plaintiffs’ rights to
substantive due process; (2) whether Potter’s statement “shocked the conscience”
and thus violated the plaintiffs’ rights to substantive due process; and (3) whether
their rights as crime victims under Utah’s constitution and laws was a
constitutionally-protected liberty interest that triggered a right to procedural due
process. Also prior to the hearing on the defendants’ motion to dismiss, the
plaintiffs filed a motion to strike the defendants’ reply contending that it
attempted to claim for the first time that the plaintiffs’ complaint was limited to
procedural due process claims. The plaintiffs asserted in their memorandum in
support of their motion to strike that they were also bringing a substantive due
process claim on the ground that the government action “shocked the conscience.”
At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs emphasized that it was their
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position that Paul v. Davis did not require dismissal of their entire complaint
because it did not apply to “all of the other liberty and privacy interests under the
constitution and laws such as substantive due process and privacy” which the
plaintiffs also intended their complaint to raise. Appellants’ App. at 18.
Also at the hearing, the district court asked the defendants’ attorney “[j]ust
as a matter of curiosity” why no name-clearing hearing had been granted. The
attorney responded:
Your Honor, there’s two sides to every story on this case, and there
are lots of things that happened here. The body was found, okay?
And then there was a criminal prosecution and a trial which was
widely publicized. And what was that trial about? It was about how
this man died. And in this case what came out, the truth was worse
than the fiction. And so a name-clearing hearing, with all due
respect, I don’t think was appropriate.
Id. at 29.
The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss. The court
concluded that (1) the procedural due process claim against Potter would be
dismissed because Paul v. Davis established that damage to one’s reputation by
itself is insufficient to support a procedural due process claim and because the
plaintiffs were not “crime victims” within the meaning of the Utah Constitution
and statutes; and (2) the claim against the County would be dismissed because
there was no underlying constitutional violation. Appellant’s App. at 23-25.
Despite the district court’s statement at the hearing that “it sounds to me like what
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[the plaintiffs’ attorney] is arguing is that your individual privacy and/or liberty
interests may be infringed and/or violated if someone does or says certain things
about a member of your family,” Appellee’s App. at 27, the district court
dismissed the complaint in its entirety without directly addressing these claims on
the merits. The district court did, however, opine, in the context of denying the
plaintiffs’ motion to strike the defendants’ reply, that the complaint did not
adequately plead a substantive due process claim. Appellant’s App. at 21.
The plaintiffs then filed a motion for reconsideration under Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 59, seeking to amend their complaint to include substantive due
process and privacy claims. The district court denied their motion. With respect
to the plaintiffs’ claim that “justice will be served by having plaintiffs’ claims for
‘substantive due process’ and ‘privacy’ violations adjudicated together with their
‘procedural due process claim,’” id. at 26, the court responded that “[t]he
arguments Plaintiffs now make were previously advanced, considered, and
rejected by this Court,” id. at 28.
On appeal, the plaintiffs contend that the district court erred because (1)
Potter’s disclosure to the press of private sexual practices attributed to the
decedent breached the plaintiffs’ constitutional right to privacy; (2) Potter’s
disclosure along with the County’s refusal to grant a name-clearing hearing
deprived the plaintiffs of their constitutional right to substantive due process; and
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(3) the County is liable on both claims. These issues involve questions of law
which we review de novo. Dang v. UNUM Life Ins. Co., 175 F.3d 1186, 1189
(10th Cir.1999); Estate of Holl v. Commissioner, 967 F.2d 1437, 1438 (10th
Cir.1992). We address each issue in turn.
II
A. Constitutional Right to Privacy
The plaintiffs contend that Potter breached their constitutional right to
privacy when he disclosed to the press sexual information about the deceased
without any government interest justifying the disclosure. They claim that an
individual’s right to privacy encompasses the right not to have information
revealed about a spouse’s sexual behavior where that behavior necessarily reflects
upon or reveals the intimate details of a marital relationship. 1
The Supreme Court has recognized that one component of the right to
privacy is “the individual interest in avoiding disclosure of personal matters.”
Whalen v. Roe, 429 U.S. 589, 599 (1977). We have further explained that:
Due process . . . implies an assurance of confidentiality with respect
to certain forms of personal information possessed by the state.
Information falls within the ambit of constitutional protection when
an individual has a legitimate expectation . . . that it will remain
confidential while in the state’s possession. The legitimacy of this
1
Although the plaintiffs do not distinguish among themselves with respect to the
right to privacy claim, counsel’s oral argument made clear that it pertains only to Norma
Livsey, the decedent’s spouse.
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expectation depends, at least in part, upon the intimate or otherwise
personal nature of the material which the state possesses. If an
individual has a legitimate expectation of confidentiality, then
disclosure of such information must advance a compelling state
interest which, in addition, must be accomplished in the least
intrusive manner.
Sheets v. Salt Lake County, 45 F.3d 1383, 1387 (10 th Cir.), cert. denied, 516 U.S.
817 (1995).
With respect to the question of when an individual has a legitimate
expectation that information will remain confidential, we have held that an
individual’s expectation of privacy for constitutional purposes is legitimate only
if the information is “highly personal or intimate.” Nilson v. Layton City, 45 F.3d
369, 372 (10 th Cir. 1995). We have applied this test in a number of cases.
Compare Nilson, 45 F.3d at 372 (no legitimate expectation of privacy in expunged
criminal record); Flanagan v. Munger, 890 F.2d 1557, 1570-1 (10 th Cir. 1989) (no
legitimate expectation of privacy in police internal investigation files); Stidham v.
Peace Officers Standards and Training, 265 F.3d 1144, 1155 (10 th Cir. 2001) (no
legitimate expectation of privacy in reasons for resignation or employee
evaluations or allegations of rape and assault); with Herring v. Keenan, 218 F.3d
1171 (10 th Cir. 2000) (legitimate expectation of privacy in nondisclosure of HIV
status), cert. denied, 122 S. Ct. 96 (2001); Sheets, 45 F.3d at 1387 (legitimate
expectation of privacy in wife’s diary as it pertained to intimate marital matters);
A.L.A. v. West Valley City, 26 F.3d 989, 990-01 (10 th Cir. 1994) (legitimate
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expectation of privacy in confidential medical records).
Of our prior decisions, only Sheets, inexplicably not cited by either party,
involved the right to privacy in the context of a marital relationship. In Sheets,
we held that the plaintiff, who had turned over his wife’s diary to the police to aid
in the investigation of her murder, had a legitimate expectation that the contents
of the diary pertaining to matters personal to him, such as his wife’s written
perception of their marriage, would remain confidential. 45 F.3d at 1388. The
court held that “the fact that [the plaintiff] did not author the information does not
prohibit him from having a distinct privacy interest in the dissemination of
information written about the personal aspects of his life.” Id.
In the present case, the decedent arguably might have had a legitimate
expectation of privacy in the disclosed information pertaining, as it did, to highly
personal sexual behavior. Here, however, the complicating factor is that the
plaintiff, Norma Livsey, is the surviving spouse of the individual directly
implicated by the disclosed information. Whether she has a legitimate
expectation of privacy in this information about her spouse is an issue of first
impression. It is obviously not easy to define the limits of an individual’s right to
privacy in the context of intimate, personal matters. On the one hand, information
about the sexual behavior of one’s spouse will sometimes reveal, however
unintentionally, intimate and personal information about a marital relationship.
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While Potter’s statement did not name or otherwise identify the decedent, or his
spouse, it is reasonable to infer that, in time, their identities came into focus. On
the other hand, it would be almost impossible to define the limits of the right to
privacy if it encompassed information about a spouse’s behavior any time that
behavior arguably reflected on the marital relationship. Ultimately, we feel
compelled in this case to draw the line around the individual directly implicated
by or involved in the intimate or personal material revealed. Any other
conclusion would stretch the right to privacy beyond any reasonable limits. Our
decision in Sheets is not to the contrary. In Sheets, the revealed information,
although found in his wife’s diary, directly concerned the plaintiff and his
marriage. Here, the contested disclosure directly concerned only the behavior of
an unnamed decedent; it revealed no information about Norma Livsey or her
marital relationship as such, only an opportunity for some prurient readers to
speculate about that relationship after authorities had identified her husband as
the decedent to whom Potter had referred. Accordingly, we conclude that Norma
Livsey did not have a legitimate expectation that the information revealed by
Potter about her deceased husband would remain confidential. Having reached
this conclusion, we need not decide whether there was a compelling government
interest justifying the disclosure or whether the disclosure was the least intrusive
means of serving that interest. See Falvo v. Owasso Independent School Dist. No.
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I-011, 233 F.3d 1203, 1209 (10 th Cir. 2000), cert. granted on other grounds, 121
S. Ct. 2547 (June 25, 2001) .
B. Substantive Due Process
The plaintiffs also assert that Potter’s statement, coupled with the County’s
refusal to grant a name-clearing hearing, deprived them of their right to
substantive due process.
The defendants first argue that the plaintiffs’ substantive due process claim
should not be considered on appeal because the plaintiffs’ complaint failed to
adequately plead such a claim and because the plaintiffs were accorded an
opportunity and had an obligation to amend their complaint, but elected not to do
so. While the complaint is not a model of clarity, it is clear from the transcript of
the oral argument on the defendants’ motion to dismiss that the plaintiffs intended
their complaint to plead a substantive due process claim, and that the district
court clearly understood that. See Appellee’s App. at 27. The district court’s
subsequent rulings are confusing: first, in granting the defendants’ motion to
dismiss it found that the complaint did not adequately plead a substantive due
process claim; then, in denying the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration and for
leave to amend to add a substantive due process claim, the Court held that it had
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previously ruled on all claims on the merits. 2 Taking the district court at its word,
as reflected in its most recent order, we are persuaded that the plaintiffs properly
sought reinstatement of their substantive due process claim on appeal.
With respect to the merits, the question remains whether the defendants’
actions, as alleged, deprived the plaintiffs of their right to substantive due
process. “[T]he standard for judging a substantive due process claim is whether
the challenged government action would ‘shock the conscience of federal
judges.’” Uhlrig v. Harder, 64 F.3d 567, 573 (10th Cir.1995), cert. denied, 516
U.S. 1118 (1996) (quoting Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 126
(1992)); see also County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 834 (1998);
Tonkovich v. Kansas Bd. of Regents, 159 F.3d 504, 528-29 (10th Cir.1998).
To satisfy this standard, a plaintiff must do more than show that the
government actor intentionally or recklessly caused injury to the
plaintiff by abusing or misusing government power. Instead, a
plaintiff must demonstrate a degree of outrageousness and a
magnitude of potential or actual harm that is truly conscience
shocking. . . . The level of conduct required to satisfy this additional
requirement cannot precisely be defined, but must necessarily evolve
over time from judgments as to the constitutionality of specific
government conduct.
Tonkovich, 159 F.3d at 528 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
Here, the plaintiffs contend that “[t]he gratuitous disclosure of personal
2
As noted supra, in denying the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration, the district
court stated that “[t]he arguments Plaintiffs now make were previously advanced,
considered, and rejected by this Court.” Appellant’s App. at 28.
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private sexual practices when there was no governmental interest in such
disclosure, coupled with Salt Lake County’s refusal to grant a hearing . . . shocks
the conscience.” The defendants respond that “a comment in a single newspaper
article about an unidentified body found under unusual circumstances, bears no
resemblance to the factual scenarios where federal courts have found conduct that
“shocks the conscience” of judges. Appellees’ Br. at 22. We agree. The
defendants’ conduct, however ill-advised, inappropriate, or ill-considered it might
have been, does not “shock the conscience of federal judges” – at least not the
conscience of these three federal judges. 3
C. County Liability
The plaintiffs contend that the county is liable for the infringements of the
plaintiffs’ rights to privacy and substantive due process. Having concluded that
the plaintiffs’ underlying constitutional claims are not viable, this claim similarly
fails. A municipality may not be held liable for the actions of its employees if
those actions do not constitute a violation of a plaintiff's constitutional rights.
Trigalet v. City of Tulsa, 239 F.3d 1150, 1154 (10 th Cir. 2001); see also City of
Los Angeles v. Heller, 475 U.S. 796, 799 (1986) ("If a person has suffered no
constitutional injury at the hands of the individual police officer, the fact that the
3
It is apparent from the entire record and proceedings before the district court that
the district judge reached the same conclusion.
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departmental regulations might have authorized the use of constitutionally
excessive force is quite beside the point.").
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court.
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