Case: 10-60226 Document: 00511512706 Page: 1 Date Filed: 06/17/2011
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
June 17, 2011
No. 10-60226 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
JAMES E. JENNINGS, JR.,
Plaintiff - Appellee
v.
HOUSTON PATTON, In his individual capacity,
Defendant - Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Mississippi
Before KING, STEWART, and OWEN, Circuit Judges.
CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:
ON PETITION FOR PANEL REHEARING: The original opinion in this
case was issued on March 9, 2011. The petition for panel rehearing is
GRANTED to the extent that we withdraw our previous opinion, Jennings v.
Patton, 635 F.3d 655 (5th Cir. 2011), and replace it with the following. In all
other respects, the petition for panel rehearing is DENIED.
OPINION
In this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, James Jennings sued Judge
Houston Patton, a county judge in Mississippi, for allegedly causing Jennings to
be prosecuted without probable cause. Judge Patton moved to dismiss, or in the
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No. 10-60226
alternative for summary judgment, arguing in part that he was entitled to
judicial immunity and qualified immunity. The district court denied Judge
Patton’s motion, concluding that genuine issues of material fact precluded
summary judgment. This interlocutory appeal followed. Because we conclude
that Judge Patton is entitled to qualified immunity, we REVERSE.
I
Judge Patton has at all relevant times been a judge of the County Court
of Hinds County in Mississippi. In the early 1990s, Judge Patton presided over
a series of disputes between Jennings and Jennings’s ex-wife in which he
initially awarded Jennings a default judgment of $35,000. When Jennings was
later jailed for contempt by the Justice Court of Hinds County, Judge Patton
authorized his release. According to Jennings, however, Judge Patton
impermissibly conditioned that release on Jennings’s agreement to surrender the
$35,000 judgment. On the basis of this allegation, in January 1997, Jennings
filed a complaint against Judge Patton with the Mississippi Commission on
Judicial Performance. Jennings also hired an attorney, J. Keith Shelton, to help
him bring a civil rights suit against the judge that raised the same claim.
In March 1997, Shelton contacted Judge Patton to offer the possibility of
settling Jennings’s as-yet-unfiled suit. After several weeks of negotiation, the
parties agreed to the following terms: Jennings would release Judge Patton from
any civil claims and inform the judicial commission that his claims had been
satisfied, in exchange for Judge Patton’s $25,000 payment and reinstatement of
the $35,000 award.1 Unbeknownst to Jennings or Shelton, however, Judge
Patton had contacted the district attorney’s office to report Shelton’s offer, which
he considered to be a bribery attempt by the two men. As a result, the district
attorney’s office had opened an investigation and hired an investigator from the
1
Jennings and Judge Patton dispute the content of these negotiation discussions but
that dispute, being immaterial to the legal question presented, is not recounted here.
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No. 10-60226
county sheriff’s department, Larry Iles, to assist with its efforts. Iles recorded
or overheard several negotiation discussions between Judge Patton, Shelton, and
Jennings, including an April 1997 discussion where the three men signed a
purported settlement agreement reflecting the above terms. Based on a sworn
affidavit signed by Iles, an arrest warrant was issued. Two days later, Jennings
and Shelton were arrested.
In August 1997, a Mississippi grand jury returned indictments against
both Jennings and Shelton for bribery of a judge. Iles testified before the grand
jury that Jennings and Shelton had offered to dismiss their complaint against
Judge Patton in exchange for his $25,000 payment and reinstatement of the
prior $35,000 judgment.2 Jennings and Shelton were never tried, however, and
in 2005 the district attorney’s office moved to remand the cases to the file for
lack of prosecutive merit. The Circuit Court of Hinds County granted the motion
and remanded the criminal cases with prejudice, effectively dismissing the
charges.
Jennings thereafter filed the present action against Judge Patton and the
former Hinds County District Attorney, Ed Peters. He claimed that the
defendants had violated, and conspired to violate, his rights under the Fourth
and Fourteenth Amendments to be free from prosecution without probable
cause. Against Judge Patton, he claimed that the defendant
ha[d] [Jennings] prosecuted without probable cause in that he
subjectively knew that he was fabricating the charge against
him for the purpose of maliciously prosecuting him.
Jennings explained in additional allegations that Judge Patton had
misrepresented the settlement discussions to the district attorney’s
office—specifically, that Judge Patton had failed to disclose that the
reinstatement of the $35,000 judgment was a settlement term that Judge
2
It appears that Judge Patton did not testify at the grand jury proceedings.
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Patton, not Jennings, had insisted upon. Jennings argued that Judge Patton’s
misrepresentations to the district attorney’s office amounted to the initiation of
criminal charges without probable cause.
Judge Patton and Peters moved to dismiss the action, or in the alternative,
for summary judgment, arguing in part that they were entitled to absolute
immunity and qualified immunity. The district court granted Peters’s motion
but denied Judge Patton’s motion. In the district court’s view, Jennings had
presented evidence that, if credited, suggested that Judge Patton had
misrepresented facts to the district attorney’s office and to Iles. Concluding that
this factual dispute was material to whether Judge Patton was entitled to either
judicial immunity or qualified immunity, the district court denied his motion.
II
A
As a threshold matter, we examine our jurisdiction to review Judge
Patton’s qualified immunity defense. Jennings challenges our jurisdiction,
arguing that Judge Patton appeals only the “genuineness” of the factual dispute
that the district court held precluded summary judgment.
In a § 1983 action, defendants can immediately appeal the district court’s
denial of a motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity, but only
“to the extent that it turns on an issue of law.” Hampton v. Oktibbeha Cnty.
Sheriff Dept., 480 F.3d 358, 363 (5th Cir. 2007). We “lack jurisdiction to review
the genuineness of those factual disputes that precluded summary judgment.”
Kinney v. Weaver, 367 F.3d 337, 341 (5th Cir. 2004). In this case, we consider
whether the factual dispute the district court identified is material for purposes
of summary judgment. Because our review turns only on this issue of law, we
are satisfied of our jurisdiction. We review de novo the materiality of that
factual dispute and the district court’s conclusions of law. Hampton, 480 F.3d
at 364.
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B
The doctrine of qualified immunity protects public officials from liability
for civil damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established
statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have
known.” Pearson v. Callahan, 129 S. Ct. 808, 815 (2009) (quoting Harlow v.
Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982)). We undertake a two-pronged analysis to
determine whether a government official is entitled to qualified immunity,
inquiring: (1) whether the facts that the plaintiff has alleged make out a
violation of a constitutional right; and (2) whether the right at issue was “clearly
established” at the time of the defendant’s alleged misconduct.3 Id. at 815–16
(citing Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S 194, 201 (2001)).
Here, the district court found that Judge Patton’s alleged
misrepresentation of the settlement discussions, if true, directly affected the
district attorney’s decision to seek an indictment and the grand jury’s decision
to return the indictment. On the basis of this finding, the district court
concluded that Judge Patton’s alleged actions, if true, amounted to a
constitutional violation. But the court did not explain the constitutional right
that Judge Patton had purportedly violated.
We have held that “causing charges to be filed without probable cause will
not without more violate the Constitution.” Castellano v. Fragozo, 352 F.3d 939,
953 (5th Cir. 2003) (en banc). However, “[i]t is equally apparent that additional
government acts that may attend the initiation of a criminal charge could give
rise to claims of constitutional deprivation.” Id. As we stated in Castellano:
The initiation of criminal charges without probable cause may set
in force events that run afoul of explicit constitutional
protection—the Fourth Amendment if the accused is seized and
arrested, for example, or other constitutionally secured rights if a
3
Pearson established that we may consider these prongs in any order. See id. at 818.
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case is further pursued. Such claims of lost constitutional rights are
for violation of rights locatable in constitutional text, and some such
claims may be made under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Id. at 953–54.
Jennings appears to make such a claim under the Fourth Amendment by
arguing that Judge Patton’s misrepresentations caused the warrant for
Jennings’s arrest to be issued without probable cause. Nevertheless, Jennings
fails to raise a fact issue as to lack of probable cause because of the independent
intermediary doctrine. Under that doctrine, “if facts supporting an arrest are
placed before an independent intermediary such as a magistrate or grand jury,
the intermediary’s decision breaks the chain of causation” for the Fourth
Amendment violation. Cuadra v. Houston Indep. Sch. Dist., 626 F.3d 808, 813
(5th Cir. 2010) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). However, this
insulation is not absolute. “[T]he chain of causation remains intact if it can be
shown that the deliberations of that intermediary were in some way tainted by
the actions of the defendant.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted).
Under the circumstances of this case, Jennings has not shown how Judge
Patton’s actions tainted the deliberations of the magistrate who issued the arrest
warrant or the grand jury that returned the indictment. The investigator for the
sheriff’s department, Larry Iles, independently concluded that Jennings was
attempting to bribe Judge Patton and signed the affidavit for Jennings’s arrest.
We have been “unwilling . . . to extend [§ 1983] liability . . . beyond the affiant
and person who actually prepared, or was fully responsible for the preparation
of, the warrant application.” Michalik v. Hermann, 422 F.3d 252, 261 (5th Cir.
2005). In so holding, we stated:
Although issues of fact may exist as to the roles that [defendants]
played in the investigation, and in providing some of the
information to [the affiant], these issues of fact are not material to
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the [claim for causing a warrant to be issued without probable
cause] because none of the evidence suggests that [defendants]
prepared or presented the warrant or were fully responsible for its
preparation or presentation.
Id.; see also Hampton, 480 F.3d at 364–65 (granting qualified immunity to
defendants who were neither the affiant nor the person who actually prepared
the warrant application). Furthermore, it appears that Judge Patton did not
testify before the grand jury; Iles was the one who testified before the grand jury
to secure Jennings’s indictment.
In light of these circumstances, Judge Patton is entitled to qualified
immunity. As we resolve this appeal on grounds of qualified immunity, we do
not address whether Judge Patton is entitled to judicial immunity.
III
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that Judge Patton is entitled to
qualified immunity and REVERSE the district court’s denial of summary
judgment.
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