FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
HAROLD C. HALL,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF LOS ANGELES; LOS No. 10-55770
ANGELES POLICE DEPARTMENT;
D.C. No.
DARYL F. GATES, individual
capacity; MARK ARNESON; KENNETH 2:05-CV-01977-
ABC-AJW
CROCKER,
Defendants-Appellees, OPINION
and
LIONEL ROBERT,
Defendant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
Audrey B. Collins, Chief District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
December 9, 2011—Pasadena, California
Filed September 24, 2012
Before: Dorothy W. Nelson, Ronald M. Gould, and
Sandra S. Ikuta, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Nelson;
Dissent by Judge Ikuta
11737
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11741
COUNSEL
John Burton, The Law Offices of John Burton, Pasadena, Cal-
ifornia, for the plaintiff-appellant.
William J. Genego, Nasatir, Hirsch, Podberesky & Genego,
Santa Monica, California, for the plaintiff-appellant.
Lisa Berger, Deputy City Attorney, Office of the City Attor-
ney of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, for the
defendant-appellees.
OPINION
NELSON, Senior Circuit Judge:
Harold C. Hall appeals the district court’s order granting
summary judgment to the City of Los Angeles and individual
defendants Mark Arneson and Kenneth Crocker (collectively,
“Appellees”) in this action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983. We conclude that the district court properly granted
summary judgment to Appellees on Hall’s fabrication-of-
evidence claim, and we affirm on that basis. We reverse, how-
ever, the district court’s denial of Hall’s motion to amend his
complaint and remand to the district court with instructions to
allow Hall to plead an explicit Fifth Amendment violation.
The exceptional circumstances in this case persuade us that a
remand is necessary to avoid manifest injustice.
11742 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
I. Background
Some might call Hall an unlucky fellow. In October 1984,
shortly after he turned 18, Hall witnessed a drive-by shooting
(“the 54th Street shooting”). Ten people suffered gunshot
wounds, five of whom died. Hall ended up with a broken nose
in the ensuing melee.
The police persuaded Hall, who had no gang affiliation, to
testify in the 54th Street murder case. The State needed Hall
to identify one of the triggermen, “Ace Capone,” an infamous
member of the Bloods gang. Hall’s cooperation with the
police put him in such serious danger that the police protected
his home every night for many months. Nevertheless, Hall
followed through and testified at the preliminary hearing.
Midway through his testimony, an attorney revealed Hall’s
home address. Hall abruptly left the stand, highly agitated and
nervous. He had to be persuaded to finish testifying.
Following the preliminary hearing, the police continued to
worry about Hall’s safety. Wayne Dufort, a detective on the
54th Street case, wanted to keep Hall safe both for Hall’s own
sake and to ensure his eyewitness testimony at trial. Dufort
urged Hall to move a number of times, to no avail. Dufort
always was worried about Hall and thought that “there just
didn’t seem to be enough protection.”
Between the preliminary hearing and Hall’s arrest for rob-
bery nine months later, Dufort visited Hall’s home regularly,
sometimes daily. Dufort and Hall met in person about 200
times during those months. These visits fostered a symbiotic
friendship of sorts between the two unlikely companions. In
addition to being concerned for Hall’s safety, Dufort grew to
care for and like Hall during that time. The detective wanted
to see Hall find a job, attain success and remain safe from any
harm he risked by testifying in the 54th Street murder case.
Dufort even recommended Hall for a job and gave him a char-
acter reference. For his part, Hall saw Dufort as a friend, and
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11743
maybe even as a father figure. Dufort gave Hall money,
helped him get a job and treated him with respect.
Meanwhile, someone murdered siblings Nola Duncan and
David Rainey in June 1985 (“the Duncan-Rainey murders”).
Hall, who lived near the crime scene, gathered with other
curious neighbors to try to see what had happened. The close
proximity of his home to where the police found Duncan’s
body appears to be Hall’s only connection, if one could call
it that, to the crime.
The police had reason to believe that Theadry Art Powell,
Jr. committed the murders. Powell had a motive: Duncan sold
Powell low-quality or doctored PCP hours before she died.
When Powell discovered what Duncan had done, a witness
overheard Powell exclaim, “I hate that bitch, go kill her!”
before three men left Powell’s house. When questioned by
police, Powell initially claimed that he had not seen Duncan
in three months, but later changed his story twice and admit-
ted he had seen her on the night she died. Powell ultimately
implicated two of his associates, Jerry Williams and Lonnie
Wardlow, suggesting that maybe one or both of them took
part in Duncan’s murder. A polygrapher determined that both
Powell and Wardlow falsely denied their involvement in Dun-
can’s killing. Despite these leads, the police did not investi-
gate Powell, Williams or Wardlow as suspects in Duncan’s
murder.
The police arrested Hall for robbery in August 1985, six
weeks after the Duncan-Rainey murders. Upon his arrest, Hall
reached out to Dufort, seeking protection inside the jail from
gang members who sought revenge for Hall’s testimony in the
54th Street shooting case. Dufort arranged for Hall to be
housed with other informants. While his segregation from the
general population may have helped protect Hall from physi-
cal attacks, he became a sitting duck for predatory informants.
Three experienced jailhouse informants, with cases pending,
discussed Duncan’s murder with Hall. Those informants then
11744 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
falsely implicated Hall in the Duncan-Rainey murders by con-
cocting a story that Hall had confessed to the murders.
Detectives Arneson and Crocker, Appellees, worked on the
Duncan-Rainey case and received information from these jail-
house informants incriminating Hall. The first time Arneson
and Crocker interviewed Hall, they asked him what he had
heard about the Duncan-Rainey murders. Hall responded that
he “just heard some stuff” and that he was “just a witness.”
The officers did not read Hall his Miranda rights. The next
interview took place four days later and lasted about ten min-
utes. Two days later, on September 11, 1985, Arneson called
Dufort. Arneson said that he planned to interview Hall and
insisted that Dufort be there, but would not say why. Dufort
tried several times to avoid attending the interview because he
was too busy with other work, but ultimately agreed to meet
Arneson at the jail. Dufort arrived with his partner, Aaron
Martin. They met with Arneson and Crocker, as well as with
informant Cornelius Lee. Lee identified Hall as the driver in
the 54th Street shooting, suggesting that Hall was not, in fact,
an innocent witness as he had testified.
The police then interrogated Hall. First, Dufort and Martin
questioned Hall for several hours about the 54th Street shoot-
ing. Arneson and Crocker popped into the interview room to
ask if they could speak to Hall after Dufort and Martin were
finished. The police then moved Hall to a different booth
where all four detectives questioned him about the Duncan-
Rainey murders. The detectives did not advise Hall of his
Miranda rights. The detectives used a “we know more infor-
mation than you think we know” technique in questioning
him.
The police asked Hall whether, before the murder, he was
smoking dope at a beauty shop with Duncan, whether he had
sex with her and whether he had stabbed her. Hall denied
stabbing Duncan or having anything to do with her murder,
but the police persisted. Arneson falsely claimed that the
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11745
police had found Hall’s semen in Duncan’s mouth and his fin-
gerprints on her body. At this point, Hall became very afraid.
He asked for an attorney. Arneson asked Hall why he needed
an attorney if he was innocent and said that the only people
who need attorneys are guilty and trying to hide something.
Arneson then told Hall that the police had found his footprint
in the alley near Duncan’s body. Hall persisted in his denials.
Arneson then suggested that the police file charges against
Hall. Dufort warned Hall that if the police filed murder
charges against him and a jury convicted him, he would go to
prison with Ace Capone, the Bloods gang member he testified
against, and that Capone would kill him. Crocker added that,
if Hall ended up in state prison, all the Bloods would be after
him for testifying against Capone and that all the Crips, the
rival gang, would be after him for driving Capone to the 54th
Street shooting. Hall felt tired and hungry, but the detectives
kept berating him. The police continued to reject Hall’s
claims that he had nothing to do with the murders.
Fear took over. Hall worried that if he did not confess, the
police would file murder charges. If he was convicted of mur-
der, he would go to prison and be killed. He also worried that
if he did not cooperate, the police would remove him from
protective housing and put him in the general population,
where he would be in danger. Hall broke down and cried,
hoping his display of emotion would inspire mercy. It did not.
Hall gave in to desperation, fear and fatigue. The police fed
Hall the “facts” about what happened the night of the Duncan-
Rainey murder. Hall either acquiesced to each statement or
repeated it back to Arneson. Hall both initialed next to mis-
takes in the statement Crocker had handwritten and signed the
statement at the bottom, as the police directed. He did not
read the statement. This interrogation lasted somewhere
between two and six hours, and the police did not afford Hall
any food or bathroom breaks.
11746 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
After Arneson and Crocker left, Dufort and Martin contin-
ued to interrogate Hall about the 54th Street shooting case
until the early morning. In all, Hall was questioned between
17 and 19 hours that day. Hall was handcuffed during the
interrogations and denied food.
The State charged Hall with the murders of Duncan and
Rainey. No physical or forensic evidence connected Hall to
the murders. The sole evidence admitted at trial comprised
Hall’s confession and two documents provided by jailhouse
informant Lee—the same Lee who implicated Hall as the
driver in the 54th Street shooting. Lee had the cell next to
Hall. Lee and Hall had passed sheets of paper back and forth
between their cells, with Lee sending over written questions
and Hall sending back written responses. Hall’s answers, gen-
erally innocuous taken by themselves, appeared to incriminate
him in the Duncan murder. Expert testimony at trial estab-
lished that the handwriting on the notes belonged to both Hall
and Lee. Many years after trial, Lee admitted that he had
erased and re-written the questions after Hall answered them,
making it look as though Hall had confessed to killing Dun-
can, when he had not in fact done so.
Hall was convicted of the Duncan-Rainey murders based
on the confession Crocker wrote and the falsified documents
Lee gave to the police. Hall spent nineteen years in prison.
We granted his habeas petition in 2004, upon determining that
Hall’s conviction was predicated on the documents Lee falsi-
fied, resulting in a denial of due process. Hall v. Dir. of Corr.,
343 F.3d 976 (9th Cir. 2003) (per curiam). The State did not
retry Hall, and he was released from custody in August 2004.
Hall now works full-time for the Los Angeles County Bar
Association coordinating the Indigent Criminal Defense
Appointments Program.
Following his release, Hall brought this action for damages
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court, with Judge
Schiavelli presiding, granted Appellees’ first summary judg-
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11747
ment motion. We reversed and remanded on two issues. First,
Hall based his claim against the individual detectives on
Devereaux v. Abbey, 263 F.3d 1070, 1076 (9th Cir. 2001) (en
banc), which held that defendants enjoy a constitutional right
to be free from prosecution based on deliberately fabricated
evidence. We held that the district court wrongly precluded
Hall’s claim based on Devereaux prong (2) that the individual
detectives used such abusive and coercive investigative tech-
niques that they knew or should have known that those tech-
niques would yield false information. In addition, we
disagreed with the district court that Hall had abandoned his
municipal liability claim. Hall v. City of Los Angeles, No. 07-
56853, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 15428 (9th Cir. July 13, 2009)
(unpublished).
On remand, the district court, with Chief Judge Collins pre-
siding, again granted summary judgment for Appellees. The
district court held that Hall’s coerced interrogation claim was
not cognizable under Devereaux prong (2) and concluded that
even if Devereaux applied, Hall had not raised triable issues
of fact to support his fabrication-of-evidence claim. The court
also granted qualified immunity to the officers. This timely
appeal followed.
II. Standard of Review
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We
review de novo both the district court’s compliance with our
mandate, Snow-Erlin v. United States, 470 F.3d 804, 807 (9th
Cir. 2006), and its order granting summary judgment,
Bamonte v. City of Mesa, 598 F.3d 1217, 1220 (9th Cir.
2010). We view the evidence in the light most favorable to
Hall, the non-moving party, to determine whether any genuine
issues of material fact exist. Id., 598 F.3d at 1220. If not,
Appellees are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id.
11748 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
III. Discussion
A. Fabrication-of-Evidence Claim
1. Law of the Case and the Rule of Mandate
At the outset we must determine whether the law of the
case or the rule of mandate precluded the district court from
determining the applicability of Devereaux prong (2) to Hall’s
coercive interrogation claim. They did not.
The law of the case doctrine, a judicial invention, aims to
promote the efficient operation of the courts. Milgard Tem-
pering, Inc. v. Selas Corp. of Am., 902 F.2d 703, 715 (9th Cir.
1990). It generally preludes a court from reconsidering an
issue decided previously by the same court or by a higher
court in the identical case. United States v. Lummi Indian
Tribe, 235 F.3d 443, 452 (9th Cir. 2000). The issue in ques-
tion must have been decided explicitly or by necessary impli-
cation in the previous disposition. Id. Application of the
doctrine is discretionary. We therefore review the district
court’s decision for abuse of discretion. See Milgard Temper-
ing, 902 F.2d at 715.
“The rule of mandate is similar to, but broader than, the law
of the case doctrine.” United States v. Cote, 51 F.3d 178, 181
(9th Cir. 1995). A district court that has received the mandate
of an appellate court cannot vary or examine that mandate for
any purpose other than executing it. Id. At the same time, the
rule of mandate allows a lower court to decide anything not
foreclosed by the mandate. Herrington v. County of Sonoma,
12 F.3d 901, 904 (9th Cir. 1993). A district court is limited
by our remand when the scope of the remand is clear.
Mendez-Gutierrez v. Gonzales, 444 F.3d 1168, 1172 (9th Cir.
2006). Violation of the rule of mandate is a jurisdictional
error. United States v. Thrasher, 483 F.3d 977, 982 (9th Cir.
2007).
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11749
Here, the district court did not violate the law of the case.
The applicability of Devereaux prong (2) to Hall’s coercive
interrogation claim had never been considered or decided by
any court. Our prior decision remanding to the district court
stated only that the opinion granting Hall habeas relief did not
preclude his § 1983 claim for a Devereaux prong (2) viola-
tion. The decision did not then go on to analyze whether
Devereaux prong (2) applied to Hall’s coercive interrogation
claim. Hall, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 15428, *4-5.
Nor did the district court violate the rule of mandate, as it
was free to decide anything not foreclosed by the mandate.
See Herrington, 12 F.3d at 904. The mandate stated, “Because
the district court’s decision regarding collateral estoppel pre-
vented the court and the parties from discovering and consid-
ering the evidence relating to Devereaux prong (2), we
reverse the district court on its determination of prong (2).”
Hall, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 15428, at *5. We did not impose
clear limits on the scope of the remand. See Mendez-
Gutierrez, 444 F.3d at 1172. Moreover, when a court is con-
fronted with issues that the remanding court never considered,
the “mandate[ ] require[s] respect for what the higher court
decided, not for what it did not decide.” United States v. Kel-
lington, 217 F.3d 1084, 1093 (9th Cir. 2000) (emphasis
added) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The
district court properly considered whether Hall’s coercive
interrogation claim fell within the purview of Devereaux
prong (2).
2. Cognizability of Coercive Interrogation Claim
Next we turn to the merits of the summary judgment
motion granted below. We must consider the district court’s
conclusion that Hall could not proceed on the theory, pursuant
to Devereaux prong (2), that his interrogation constituted fab-
rication of evidence in violation of the Fourteenth Amend-
ment. The district court did not err.
11750 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
[1] “Section 1983 creates a private right of action against
individuals who, acting under color of state law, violate fed-
eral constitutional or statutory rights.” Devereaux, 263 F.3d at
1074. Section 1983 “is not itself a source of substantive
rights, but merely provides a method for vindicating federal
rights elsewhere conferred.” Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S.
386, 393-94 (1989) (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted). Thus, the nature of a Section 1983 action requires
us to determine whether the right Hall identifies is in fact the
one that was allegedly infringed. See id. at 394.
[2] Hall asserts a Fourteenth Amendment due process
claim, predicated on Devereaux prong (2), that “there is a
clearly established constitutional due process right not to be
subjected to criminal charges on the basis of false evidence
that was deliberately fabricated by the government.”
Devereaux, 263 F.3d at 1074-75. We derived this right from
the Supreme Court’s holding in Pyle v. Kansas, 317 U.S. 213,
216 (1942), that “the knowing use by the prosecution of per-
jured testimony in order to secure a criminal conviction vio-
lates the Constitution.” Devereaux, 263 F.3d at 1075. To
support a Devereaux deliberate-fabrication-of-evidence claim,
a plaintiff:
must, at a minimum, point to evidence that supports
at least one of the following two propositions: (1)
Defendants continued their investigation of [plain-
tiff] despite the fact that they knew or should have
known that he was innocent; or (2) Defendants used
investigative techniques that were so coercive and
abusive that they knew or should have known that
those techniques would yield false information.
Id. at 1076. The only Devereaux issue before us relates to
prong (2). See Hall, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 15428, at *3-5.
We must determine whether Hall has put forth specific facts
showing that there is a genuine issue of material fact whether
Arneson and Crocker used techniques so coercive and abusive
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11751
in interrogating Hall that they knew or should have known
those techniques would generate false evidence. Devereaux,
263 F.3d at 1076.
[3] But it is the Fifth Amendment, not the Fourteenth
Amendment, that governs Hall’s claim. “Where a particular
Amendment provides an explicit textual source of constitu-
tional protection against a particular sort of government
behavior, that Amendment, not the more generalized notion of
substantive due process, must be the guide for analyzing such
a claim.” Albright v. Oliver, 510 U.S. 266, 273 (1994) (inter-
nal quotations and citations omitted). The Fifth Amendment
provides that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal
case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. amend. V.
Using a coerced confession against the accused in a criminal
proceeding implicates this Fifth Amendment privilege. E.g.,
Crowe v. County of San Diego, 608 F.3d 406, 427-29 (9th Cir.
2010) (discussing Chavez v. Martinez, 538 U.S. 760, 765
(2003) (plurality). Here, Hall claims that the detectives
coerced his confession and then used that confession to secure
his conviction. Thus, the Fifth Amendment is the explicit con-
stitutional provision that governs Hall’s claim.
[4] Hall has not brought a Fifth Amendment claim regard-
ing his confession, however. While Hall did seek to amend his
complaint to add an explicit Fifth Amendment claim, Judge
Schiavelli denied that motion. This is where Devereaux prong
(2) comes into play. Most likely because Hall’s complaint
does not include a Fifth Amendment claim, Hall alleges that
Appellees violated his Fourteenth Amendment substantive
due process right not to suffer a conviction based on deliber-
ately fabricated evidence. He attempts mightily to make his
coerced confession claim fit within a fabrication-of-evidence
framework. However artful this argument may be, it comes to
nothing. As the district court held, Hall “cannot remedy his
inadequate pleading now by repackaging a Fifth Amendment
coerced interrogation claim as one for deliberate fabrication
of evidence arising under the Fourteenth Amendment.”
11752 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
A survey of our caselaw confirms that Hall misses the mark
when he construes his coerced-confession claim as properly
cognizable under Devereaux prong (2). The facts in
Devereaux concerned the investigation of alleged sex abuse
involving lengthy and improper interviews of purported child
victims. 263 F.3d at 1073. These children did not endure
coerced interrogation techniques as suspects, but as third par-
ties. Moreover, in finding a right to be free from deliberately
fabricated evidence in Devereaux, we relied in part on Pyle.
That case involved perjured testimony, also furnished by third
parties. 317 U.S. at 214. In fact, all of our published cases that
follow Devereaux concern interview techniques used to elicit
evidence from third-party witnesses, not the coerced interro-
gation of a suspect. See, e.g., Stoot v. City of Everett, 582 F.3d
910, 919 n.9 (9th Cir. 2009) (discussing claim that detective
coerced child victim); Gausvik v. Perez, 345 F.3d 813, 816-17
(9th Cir. 2003) (discussing claim that police officer used
“overbearing tactics” in interviewing victims of alleged sex
abuse); Cunningham v. City of Wenatchee, 345 F.3d 802, 812
(9th Cir. 2003) (discussing claim that officers used coercive
tactics when interviewing suspect’s daughters). The one case
that did not involve third party witnesses also did not involve
the coercive interrogation of a suspect. See Costanich v. Dep’t
of Soc. & Health Servs., 627 F.3d 1101, 1111-14 (finding due
process right to be free from deliberately fabricated evidence
in a child abuse proceeding where plaintiff produced evidence
that a social worker deliberately falsified statements).
[5] There is no question that the interrogation tactics Hall
alleges trouble us, but we are bound by the law as it stands.
Hall’s coerced confession claim falls within the explicit lan-
guage of the Fifth Amendment and does not arise as a subset
of the substantive due process right set forth in Devereaux
prong (2). We have little choice but to affirm the grant of
summary judgment to Appellees. Because we affirm the con-
clusion below that Devereaux prong (2) does not apply to
Hall’s coerced confession claim, we have no occasion to con-
sider the district court’s holding that Hall did not create triable
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11753
issues of fact in support of his deliberate fabrication-of-
evidence claim.
3. Qualified Immunity
The district court did not err in granting qualified immunity
to Arneson and Crocker. They are entitled to qualified immu-
nity unless (1) Hall has alleged facts that make out a violation
of a constitutional right and (2) that constitutional right was
clearly established at the time of the officers’ alleged miscon-
duct. Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 232 (2009) (citing
Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201 (2001)).
[6] As discussed, Hall’s right to be free from criminal
charges based on evidence deliberately fabricated by the gov-
ernment does not encompass Hall’s coerced confession claim.
Hall, therefore, has not alleged facts that would establish the
violation of his constitutional rights. The detectives therefore
enjoy qualified immunity as to this claim, and we need not
address whether the right Hall asserts was clearly established
at the time of his interrogation. See id. at 232-36.
4. Municipal Liability
Because Hall has not presented evidence creating a triable
issue of fact that Appellees violated his constitutional rights,
we need not reach the issue of municipal liability pursuant to
Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658, 694
(1978). See Aguilera v. Baca, 510 F.3d 1161, 1174 (9th Cir.
2007).
B. Fifth Amendment Coerced Confession Claim
[7] At oral argument, we asked the parties whether we
have the authority to remand this matter to the district court
with instructions to allow Hall to amend his complaint to
allege an explicit Fifth Amendment coerced confession claim.
We also asked the parties whether, if we do in fact have the
11754 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
authority to remand this case to the district court, we should
exercise our discretion to do so. To give the parties a full and
fair opportunity to address these questions, we also ordered
supplemental briefing.
1. Jurisdiction
Before considering the propriety of remanding this matter,
we must ensure that we have appellate jurisdiction to consider
sua sponte whether the district court erred in denying Hall’s
request to amend the complaint to incorporate an explicit
Fifth Amendment claim. See Rowe v. United States, 633 F.2d
799, 800 (9th Cir. 1980). We do.
“The courts of appeals . . . shall have jurisdiction of appeals
from all final decisions of the district courts of the United
States . . . .” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. An order denying leave to
amend a complaint is not appealable. Bradshaw v. Zoological
Soc’y. of San Diego, 662 F.2d 1301, 1304 (9th Cir. 1981).
“Such orders, as a class, contemplate further proceedings in
the district court, and [we] ha[ve] previously held that review
is available after the final judgment, into which they merge.”
Id. Once a district court enters final judgment and a party
appeals, however, those earlier, non-final orders become
reviewable. Licthfield v. Spielberg, 736 F.2d 1352, 1355 (9th
Cir. 1984) (“An appeal from a final judgment draws in ques-
tion all earlier, non-final orders and rulings which produced
the judgment.”). This is so because the earlier non-final orders
merge with the judgment. Bradshaw, 662 F.2d at 1304.
[8] This case comes to us on a timely notice of appeal of
the district court’s summary judgment, a final order. By
appealing the final judgment, Hall implicitly brought all of the
district court’s subordinate orders within the jurisdiction of
our court. Chacon v. Wood, 36 F.3d 1459, 1468 (9th Cir.
1994) (“When reviewing final judgments in civil proceedings
we have jurisdiction to review any interlocutory orders or
other rulings that may have affected the outcome below.”),
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11755
superseded on other grounds by 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c); U.S.
Dominator, Inc. v. Factory Ship Robert E. Resoff, 768 F.2d
1099, 1103 (9th Cir. 1985) (“While we recognize the impor-
tance of correcting erroneous interlocutory rulings as early as
possible, the failure to challenge an erroneous interlocutory
ruling does not make the error appeal proof when the final
judgment comes before this court for review”), superseded on
other grounds by 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c); cf. Sackett v. Beaman,
399 F.2d 884, 889 n.6 (9th Cir. 1968) (“[T]he question of
whether there was an abuse of discretion in denying leave to
amend can be reviewed under the final judgment notwith-
standing the fact that such judgment makes no reference to
such denial. All interlocutory rulings merged in the final
judgement and are reviewable on appeal therefrom.”); see
also Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Jackson, 235 F.2d 390,
392 (10th Cir. 1956) (“[F]or purposes of appeal, an interlocu-
tory action from which no direct appeal will lie becomes
merged into the final judgment and is open to review on
appeal from the final judgment”).
[9] Hall has satisfied the statutory requirements of jurisdic-
tion. Fed. R. App. P. 3(c)(1)(B); see also Smith v. Barry, 502
U.S. 244, 247-48 (“Courts will liberally construe the require-
ments of Rule 3.”); Ortberg v. Moody, 961 F.2d 135, 137 (9th
Cir. 1992) (“The purpose of Rule 3 is to ensure that the other
party is informed of the intent to appeal.”); Munoz v. Small
Bus. Admin., 644 F.2d 1361, 1364 (9th Cir. 1981) (holding
that “an appeal from the final judgment draws in question all
earlier non-final orders and all rulings which produced the
judgment” and also that a second judgment calls into question
the propriety of the first, giving the court jurisdiction over
both). We therefore have jurisdiction to review the district
court’s earlier denial of Hall’s motion to amend in connection
with our review of the final judgment now before us.
2. Manifest Injustice
[10] Having satisfied ourselves that we have jurisdiction,
we next ask whether we can and should remand for amend-
11756 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
ment of the complaint. Ordinarily, we refrain from consider-
ing an issue that a party has failed to raise. Laboda v.
Calderon, 224 F.3d 972, 985 (9th Cir. 2000). We note, how-
ever, two exceptions to this general practice, both of which
have force here: We may consider an issue sua sponte if fail-
ure to do so would result in manifest injustice, or if the oppos-
ing party will not suffer prejudice. Id.; see also Kohler v.
Inter-Tel Techs., 244 F.3d 1167, 1182 (9th Cir. 2001); United
States v. Ullah, 976 F.2d 509, 514 (9th Cir. 1992).
[11] The extraordinary circumstances here convince us that
we must remand this matter for amendment of the complaint
in order to prevent a woefully unjust result. A jury convicted
Hall of murder, a crime he did not commit, based only on his
confession and falsified documents manufactured by a jail-
house informant. Hall served nineteen years in prison. Detec-
tives interrogated an eighteen-year-old Hall for up to six
hours, with no Miranda advisement. He was handcuffed and
denied food. When Hall asked for an attorney, Arneson asked
why Hall needed an attorney if he did not commit the crime.
Arneson also told Hall that only guilty people who were try-
ing to hide something needed attorneys. Dufort, the detective
Hall had grown to see as a trusted friend and father figure,
cautioned Hall that murder charges would lead to a convic-
tion, which would land Hall in prison with Ace Capone and
that Capone would kill him. Crocker then added that Hall
would find himself in serious danger if he ended up in state
prison because the Bloods would want revenge for his testi-
mony in the 54th Street case, and the Crips would want
revenge for Hall driving Capone during the 54th Street shoot-
ing. Hall—weary, hungry and terrified for his life and safety
—finally confessed to the crime with “facts” that Arneson
spoon-fed him. Hall initialed and signed the statement, but he
never read it. The police interrogated Hall, handcuffed, for
somewhere between 17 and 19 hours that day.
[12] Certainly, on these facts, Hall’s § 1983 counsel should
have pled a Fifth Amendment coerced confession claim in the
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11757
initial complaint. That error turned out to be unfortunate and,
without remand for amendment of the complaint, would prove
dire to Hall’s case. But we cannot escape the fact that justice
eluded Hall during his highly suspect, and constitutionally
questionable, interrogation. Justice eluded Hall when he suf-
fered a conviction based on that confession and the patently
false inculpatory evidence created by a jailhouse informant.
Justice eluded Hall when he served nineteen years in state
prison for a crime he did not commit. And justice will elude
Hall yet again without the opportunity to amend his complaint
and let a jury decide whether he deserves monetary compen-
sation for his unlawful incarceration. If ever there were an
exceptional case where we should exercise our discretionary
power to avoid manifest injustice, we believe this must be it.
See United States v. Atkinson, 297 U.S. 157, 160 (1936) (“In
exceptional circumstances, especially in criminal cases, appel-
late courts, in the public interest, may, of their own motion,
notice errors to which no exception has been taken, if the
errors are obvious, or if they otherwise seriously affect the
fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceed-
ings.”); cf. United States v. Ullah, 976 F.2d 509, 514 (9th Cir.
1992) (finding manifest injustice despite defendant raising
claim only in reply brief).
3. Prejudice to Appellees
[13] We find Appellees’ contention that they had no fair
notice of Hall’s Fifth Amendment claim curious, if not disin-
genuous. While Hall did not identify an explicit Fifth Amend-
ment claim, his 2005 complaint alleged facts that form the
basis of a classic coerced confession claim. Hall claimed that
the detectives (1) did not give him a Miranda admonition any
of the times they interviewed or interrogated him, (2) told
Hall he would be murdered in prison if he did not confess and
(3) subjected him to combined interrogations totaling 17 to 19
hours. Moreover, we provided the parties the opportunity to
brief this issue. Alcaraz v. INS, 384 F.3d 1150, 1161 (9th Cir.
2001) (citing United States v. Gamma Tech Indus., Inc., 265
11758 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
F.3d 917, 930 (9th Cir. 2001)). On the record before us, we
cannot conclude that amendment of the complaint would
cause Appellees undue prejudice.
4. Denial of Request to Amend
We now consider whether the district court erred in deny-
ing Hall’s motion to amend. We review the denial of a motion
to amend for abuse of discretion. Jackson v. Bank of Haw.,
902 F.2d 1385, 1387 (9th Cir. 1990).
Two years after filing his complaint, Hall sought leave to
amend his complaint to add an explicit Fifth Amendment
claim. The district court denied this request upon a finding
that Hall failed to meet and confer and that amendment would
prejudice Appellees because of undue delay. District Court
Docket Nos. 85 (citing United States ex rel. Schumer v.
Hughes Aircraft Co., 63 F.3d 1512, 1527 (9th Cir. 1995)
(affirming denial of motion to amend where plaintiff waited
three years to amend, amendment would have required addi-
tional discovery and plaintiff had amended the complaint once
before)). The district court abused its discretion in prohibiting
amendment of the complaint.
[14] Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) provides that a
party may amend its pleading once as a matter of course
within certain time limits, or, in all other instances, with the
court’s leave. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a). Because the relevant time
period had elapsed for an amendment as a matter of course,
Hall sought the court’s permission to amend. When a party
requests to amend a pleading, “[t]he court should freely give
leave when justice so requires.” Id.; see also Wyshak v. City
Nat’l Bank, 607 F.2d 824, 826-27 (9th Cir. 1979) (per curiam)
(finding no abuse of discretion where district court allowed
amendment of answer to assert statute of limitations because
the defense existed at the time plaintiff sued). “[T]his mandate
is to be heeded.” Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182 (1962).
“If the underlying facts or circumstances relied upon by a
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11759
plaintiff may be a proper subject of relief, he ought to be
afforded an opportunity to test his claim on the merits.” Id.
Moreover, “[i]n the absence of any apparent or declared
reason—such as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on
the part of the movant, . . . undue prejudice to the opposing
party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, futility of
amendment, etc.—the leave sought should, as the rules
require, be ‘freely given.’ ” Id.
[15] Here, the district court’s reliance on Hall’s failure to
meet and confer falls outside the supportable bases for deny-
ing a motion to amend. The district court also found that
amendment would prejudice Appellees because Hall waited
two years from the filing of his initial complaint to add his
Fifth Amendment claim. As we have noted, however, the
complaint gave Appellees fair notice of the facts supporting
the coerced interrogation claim. Moreover, it is questionable
whether amendment would have required additional discov-
ery, given the extensive discovery the parties had conducted
already.
An ordinary case in which counsel neglected to allege an
obvious claim in a pleading would not warrant sua sponte
consideration of an issue, nor would we feel compelled to find
an abuse of discretion. But we are not called to consider an
ordinary case, but, rather, an extraordinary one involving an
unfortunate confluence of events—events not fit for a just and
fair society. We are reminded today that as jurists we hold the
power to protect individuals against arbitrary government
action and abuse of power. See, e.g., Daniels v. Williams, 474
U.S. 327, 331 (1986). In remanding this matter to the district
court, we intend to safeguard the fairness, integrity and repu-
tation of our courts, by making justice possible for Hall. See
Atkinson, 297 U.S. at 160.
IV. Conclusion
[16] We affirm the grant of summary judgment to Appel-
lees on Hall’s fabrication of evidence claim. We reverse the
11760 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
denial of Hall’s motion for leave to amend his complaint and
remand to the district court to allow Hall to allege an explicit
coercive interrogation claim pursuant to the Fifth Amend-
ment.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part,
REMANDED. Each side shall bear its own costs.
IKUTA, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Not content with our task, prescribed by Article III, of
deciding the controversies raised by the parties, the majority
has decided to ask and answer its own legal questions instead.
At oral argument, the majority sua sponte raised the possibil-
ity that instead of addressing Harold Hall’s sole argument on
appeal that the district court had erred in rejecting his Four-
teenth Amendment claim, we could revive and address an
unrelated and unappealed procedural issue: whether, over five
years earlier, the district court had erred in denying Hall’s
motion to amend his complaint to add a new Fifth Amend-
ment claim.
Today, the majority takes itself up on that offer. It begins
by creating a novel legal argument for Hall and then, having
concluded that its own argument has merit, it proceeds to
resolve the case on those grounds. Maj. Op. at III.B. In doing
so, the majority disregards the most basic principles of judi-
cial restraint, erroneously overturns a district court decision
that we have no jurisdiction to review, and gives Hall relief
that he never asked us to give. While the majority claims that
these imprudent steps are necessary to “safeguard the fairness,
integrity and reputation of our courts,” maj. op. at 11759, I
fear that they will have the exact opposite effect. I dissent.
I
Because the majority’s impassioned retelling of Hall’s
story is economical with the procedural facts relevant to this
appeal, I will begin by outlining them here.
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11761
A
In 2003, a split panel of this court granted Hall’s habeas
petition on the grounds that “false and material evidence was
admitted at Hall’s trial in violation of his due process rights,”
and the state court’s contrary ruling was an unreasonable
determination of the facts. Hall v. Dir. of Corrections, 343
F.3d 976, 985 (9th Cir. 2003) (Hall I). Hall I rejected Hall’s
other constitutional claims, including his Fifth Amendment
claims for violation of his Miranda rights and right against
self-incrimination, stating “[w]e have examined the record
and find that these claims are without merit.” Id. at 981 n.5.
In March 2005, Hall brought suit for money damages under
42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Los Angeles, the Los
Angeles Police Department, and various police officers
involved in his prosecution. He alleged claims for relief based
on his unlawful arrest in violation of the Fourth Amendment
and the use of false evidence against him at trial in violation
of his Fourteenth Amendment due process rights.
Some two years later, in May 2007, after the close of dis-
covery and less than five months before the scheduled trial,
Hall moved to amend his complaint. The proposed amended
complaint dropped Hall’s Fourth Amendment claim, which
had become time-barred in light of a recent Supreme Court
case, and added an entirely new claim for violation of his
Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.1
1
Hall’s motion to amend asserts that “plaintiff is adding no new claim”
to the amended complaint, but this assertion is belied by the amended
complaint itself (attached to the motion), which provides a redlined com-
parison with the original complaint. For example, paragraph 37 of the
amended complaint begins:
Plaintiff has a right to be free from unreasonable seizures being
a witness against himself, as protected by the Fourth Fifth
Amendment. . . .”
11762 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
The City objected to the proposed amendment. First, the
City asserted that, contrary to his declaration, Hall had failed
to follow local rules requiring the parties to meet and confer
prior to the filing of any motion to amend. See C.D. Cal.
Local Rule 7-3. Second, according to the City, Hall had
unduly delayed his attempt to amend the complaint: he knew
all the facts underlying his Fifth Amendment claim when he
originally filed suit in March 2005, yet he unreasonably
waited over two years to add that new claim. Further, the City
contended, this amendment would be prejudicial because it
would require the City to prepare for an entirely new constitu-
tional claim with only months to go before trial and without
the benefit of additional discovery. The district court agreed,
holding that Hall had failed to comply with the requirement
to meet and confer, and also that his undue delay in amending
his complaint would be prejudicial to the City. Accordingly,
on June 19, 2007, it denied Hall’s motion for leave to amend
his complaint.
The City then filed a motion for summary judgment on
Hall’s one remaining claim: that the City’s police officers vio-
lated his Fourteenth Amendment due process rights by using
interrogation techniques so coercive that they knew the inter-
rogation would generate false evidence. The district court
granted summary judgment to the City on this claim, partly
because it concluded that Hall I’s determination that Hall’s
self-incrimination claim was “without merit,” Hall I, 343 F.3d
at 981 n.5, had a preclusive effect on Hall’s Fourteenth
Amendment false evidence claim, which also focused on the
police officers’ allegedly coercive interrogation tactics.
In December 2007, Hall filed a notice of appeal stating his
intent to appeal the district court’s order granting the City’s
summary judgment motion. Neither the notice of appeal nor
Hall’s appellate briefing made any mention of the district
court’s June 2007 denial of his motion to amend his com-
plaint. Instead, Hall challenged the district court’s determina-
tion that Hall I precluded his Fourteenth Amendment claim,
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11763
and reiterated his argument that his Fourteenth Amendment
right to be free from prosecution based on false evidence had
been violated. In July 2009, a different panel of this court
reversed the district court’s conclusion that Hall I had a pre-
clusive effect, and remanded for further consideration of
Hall’s Fourteenth Amendment false evidence claim. Hall v.
City of Los Angeles, 2009 WL 2020851 (9th Cir. 2009) (Hall
II).
On remand, the district court again granted summary judg-
ment to the City. First, the court held that Hall’s claim was
not cognizable under the Fourteenth Amendment, but should
have been raised as a violation of his Fifth Amendment right
against self-incrimination. Second, the district court ruled that
even if Hall’s claim was cognizable under the Fourteenth
Amendment, there was no genuine issue of material fact that
the City’s police officers had generated false evidence. Hall
filed a notice of appeal challenging the district court’s order
granting the City summary judgment.
B
This second appeal is now before us. As in his first appeal,
Hall advances no argument that the district court erred in June
2007 when it denied his motion to add a Fifth Amendment
claim to his complaint. In fact, the gist of Hall’s argument is
that the district court erred in holding that his claim was cog-
nizable only under the Fifth Amendment for the simple reason
that he was not bringing a Fifth Amendment claim. Rather, he
was bringing a broader Fourteenth Amendment claim that the
officers “fabricated the evidence (including but not limited to
the false confession)” that was used to prosecute him. The
City’s briefing responds to Hall’s Fourteenth Amendment
arguments.
Thus, on appeal, we should address the question Hall actu-
ally raised: whether his Fourteenth Amendment false evi-
dence claim survives summary judgment. Hall relies on our
11764 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
en banc decision in Devereaux v. Abbey, 263 F.3d 1070 (9th
Cir. 2001) (en banc), to argue that his due process rights were
violated because the City’s police officers used “investigative
techniques that were so coercive and abusive that they knew
or should have known that those techniques would yield false
information.” Id. at 1076. But, as the majority explains, we
have never applied Devereaux’s prohibition against the fabri-
cation of evidence to adjudicate claims involving the coercive
interrogation of a suspect. Maj. Op. at 11752. Whereas
Devereaux relies on the “scarce and open-ended” guideposts
of substantive due process, Collins v. City of Harker Heights,
Tex., 503 U.S. 115, 125 (1992), the “explicit textual source”
of the Fifth Amendment protects a suspect from coercive
interrogation, Albright v. Oliver, 510 U.S. 266, 273 (1994).
Accordingly, Hall’s claim that the City used his coerced con-
fession to convict him is cognizable under the Fifth Amend-
ment, not the Fourteenth Amendment. See Albright, 510 U.S.
at 273. Because Hall has not brought a Fifth Amendment
claim, we must affirm the district court’s grant of summary
judgment to the City on Hall’s Fourteenth Amendment claim.2
The majority agrees with this Fourteenth Amendment analysis
and thus, it correctly affirms the district court’s grant of sum-
mary judgment to the City on Hall’s Fourteenth Amendment
claims. That ruling should end this case. It is all that the par-
ties asked us to decide.
II
But that is not all the majority wants to decide. After reject-
ing Hall’s argument as a failed “repackaging [of] a Fifth
Amendment coerced interrogation claim as one for deliberate
fabrication of evidence arising under the Fourteenth Amend-
ment,” maj. op. at 11751, the majority then proceeds sua
sponte to offer Hall a different, unasked for, package of relief:
a second chance to add a Fifth Amendment claim to his com-
2
For similar reasons, we must also affirm the district court’s grant of
qualified immunity to the City’s police officers.
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11765
plaint, five years, two summary judgments, and two notices
of appeal after the fact. To do so, the majority posits an appeal
(one not actually brought by Hall) from the district court’s
June 2007 order denying Hall’s motion to amend his com-
plaint; asserts appellate jurisdiction over this theoretical
appeal; posits an argument (one not actually raised by Hall)
for why the district court abused its discretion by denying
Hall’s motion to amend his complaint; and relies on that argu-
ment to conclude that the district court did abuse its discre-
tion. This enterprise has no basis in precedent and disregards
many of our long-standing jurisdictional and procedural limi-
tations.
A
The majority begins by skipping over the most important
limitation on a federal court: our jurisdiction. Here, we are
simply without authority to review this “appeal” of the district
court’s long-forgotten denial of Hall’s motion to amend. It is
a basic requirement of appellate jurisdiction that “[t]he notice
of appeal must . . . designate the judgment, order or part
thereof being appealed from.” Fed. R. App. Proc. 3(c);3 see
Smith v. Barry, 502 U.S. 244, 248 (1992) (“[N]oncompliance
[with Rule 3] is fatal to an appeal.”); Torres v. Oakland Scav-
enger Co., 487 U.S. 312, 317 n.3 (1988) (refusing to waive
a noncompliant notice of appeal because “a litigant’s failure
to clear a jurisdictional hurdle can never be ‘harmless’ or
waived by a court.”). Hall’s notice of appeal identifies only
3
Rule 3(c)(1) provides that
The notice of appeal must:
(A) specify the party or parties taking the appeal by naming
each one in the caption or body of the notice . . .
(B) designate the judgment, order, or part thereof being
appealed; and
(C) name the court to which the appeal is taken.
Fed. R. App. P. 3(c)(1).
11766 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
the second summary judgment; he does not designate the dis-
trict court’s June 2007 denial of leave to amend his complaint
as a subject of appeal, nor does he provide any indication of
an intent to challenge that order in his briefing or argument
to this court. Cf. Shapiro ex rel. Shapiro v. Paradise Valley
Unified School Dist. No. 69, 374 F.3d 857, 863-64 (9th Cir.
2004) (holding that an insufficient notice of appeal was reme-
died by sufficient appellate briefing).
The majority claims it has jurisdiction because “earlier,
non-final orders become reviewable” once a district court
enters a final judgment. Maj. Op. at 11754. While the major-
ity is correct in explaining when an interlocutory order satis-
fies the finality requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1291, the
majority ignores the separate jurisdictional bar provided by
Rule 3. Even if an interlocutory order becomes sufficiently
final by merging with a later final judgment, the appellant
must still identify the prior order in the notice of appeal or
discuss it in its appellate briefing in order to demonstrate
some intent to appeal it. See Lynn v. Sheet Metal Workers’
Int’l Ass’n, 804 F.2d 1472, 1481 (9th Cir. 1986). That was not
done here.4 Accordingly, we lack jurisdiction to consider the
district court’s June 2007 order denying Hall leave to amend
his complaint to add a Fifth Amendment claim. See, e.g.,
Johnson v. Smithsonian, Inst., 189 F.3d 180, 185 n.2 (2d Cir.
4
The majority does not just liberally construe Rule 3’s requirements, it
ignores them entirely: the notice of appeal here raises no inference of an
intent to appeal the district court’s June 2007 order. Cf. Munoz v. Small
Bus. Admin., 644 F.2d 1361, 1364 (9th Cir. 1981) (holding that “the rule
is well settled that a mistake in designating the judgment appealed from
should not result in loss of the appeal as long as the intent to appeal from
a specific judgment can be fairly inferred from the notice and the appellee
is not misled by the mistake.”) (emphasis added). But liberally applying
a jurisdictional requirement is not the same as eliminating it, which the
majority has effectively done here. See Smith, 502 U.S. at 248 (“This prin-
ciple of liberal construction does not, however, excuse noncompliance
with [Rule 3].”); Torres, 487 U.S. at 315-16 (“Permitting imperfect but
substantial compliance with a technical requirement is not the same as
waiving the requirement altogether as a jurisdictional threshold.”).
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11767
1999) (dismissing an appeal of an order denying leave to
amend a complaint for lack of compliance with Rule 3(c));
Capital Parks, Inc. v. Southeastern Ad. and Sales Sys., Inc.,
30 F.3d 627, 630 (5th Cir. 1994) (same).
B
Even if we could set aside this jurisdictional issue, the
majority should not have abandoned the long-standing proce-
dural rules we have developed to maintain judicial restraint.
First, it is hornbook law that “[w]e need not and do not con-
sider a new contention that could have been but was not
raised on the prior appeal.” Munoz v. Imperial Cnty., 667 F.2d
811, 817 (9th Cir. 1982); see also Jimenez v. Franklin, 680
F.3d 1096, 1099-1100 (9th Cir. 2012). As described above,
Hall could have challenged the district court’s June 2007
order denying him leave to amend when he appealed that
court’s first summary judgment order to a prior panel of this
court. Because he “failed to do so,” he “cannot relitigate the
issue here.” Jimenez, 680 F.3d at 1100.
Second, it is also well established that “[w]e will not ordi-
narily consider matters on appeal that are not specifically and
distinctly argued in appellant’s opening brief.” United States
v. Ullah, 976 F.2d 509, 514 (9th Cir. 1992) (internal quotation
marks omitted). The majority concedes that such waiver
occurred here, but it nevertheless considers Hall’s forfeited
argument because the failure to consider it here would result
in a manifest injustice and Hall’s failure to raise the issue
properly did not prejudice the City’s defense. See id.; Maj.
Op. at 11755-57.
Both conclusions are incorrect. As a general matter, we
have reached unbriefed issues to avoid “manifest injustice”
only in criminal or deportation cases, where the deprivation
of rights resulting from a waiver are most severe. All the
cases cited by the majority to support its “manifest injustice”
reasoning are consistent with this pattern. Maj. Op. at
11768 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
11756-57. See, e.g., United States v. Atkinson, 297 U.S. 157,
160 (1936) (noting that such “exceptional circumstances”
arise “especially in criminal cases”); Ullah, 976 F.2d at 514
(“[I]t is ‘manifestly unjust’ to reverse the conviction of one
co-defendant but to uphold the conviction of another co-
defendant when the same error affected both defendants.”).
The majority fails to point to a single case holding there was
“manifest injustice” where the only thing at stake was the loss
of civil damages, as is the case here.
The majority also errs in concluding that our consideration
of Hall’s waived argument regarding amending his complaint
would not prejudice the City because it had fair notice of
Hall’s Fifth Amendment claim. Maj. Op. at 11757-58. While
this was certainly true when Hall attempted to amend his
complaint in 2007, the district court denied such an amend-
ment and Hall chose not to appeal that denial. At that point,
it was reasonable for the City to conclude that the Fifth
Amendment claim was gone. Now, five years and two appeals
later, the majority both resurrects and resolves the question
whether the district court abused its discretion in denying
Hall’s motion to amend his complaint. As a result, the City is
on the losing end of an argument it never had a chance to
refute.
C
Even if we overlooked our jurisdictional limits, turned back
the clock, and pretended that Hall had actually appealed the
district court’s denial of leave to amend, the majority is still
wrong in reversing the district court. We have repeatedly held
that a district court does not abuse its discretion in denying a
motion to amend a complaint “where the movant presents no
new facts but only new theories and provides no satisfactory
explanation for his failure to fully develop his contentions
originally.” Bonin v. Calderon, 59 F.3d 815, 845 (9th Cir.
1995); Allen v. City of Beverly Hills, 911 F.2d 367, 374 (9th
Cir. 1990); Vincent v. Trend W. Technical Corp., 828 F.2d
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11769
563, 570-71 (9th Cir. 1987); Stein v. United Artists Corp., 691
F.2d 885, 898 (9th Cir. 1982). That principle squarely governs
this case. Despite his disingenuous statement that he was “ad-
ding no new claim” to the proposed amended complaint,
Hall’s excerpts from the redline he attached to his motion to
amend show otherwise:
The individual defendants, while acting under color
of law, deprived plaintiff of his civil rights by violat-
ing his right under the Fourth Amendment to be free
from unreasonable seizures and his right under the
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment to due process of
law in that they seized plaintiff or caused plaintiff to
be seized and imprisoned, for approximately 19
years, without a warrant or probable cause to believe
that he was involved in criminal activity, by
knowingly using false and fabricated evidence upon
which, including confessions extracted in violation
of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, to convict
plaintiff. . . .
“Plaintiff has a right to be free from unreasonable
seizures being a witness against himself, as pro-
tected by the Fourth Fifth Amendment . . . .”
These proposed changes demonstrate that the amended
complaint merely substitutes a “new theory” (under the Fifth
Amendment) for an old one (under the Fourth Amendment).
Given that, in the majority’s view, Hall’s original complaint
gave rise to a “classic [Fifth Amendment] coerced confession
claim,” maj. op. at 11757, Hall has provided no explanation,
much less a “satisfactory” one, for why it took him nearly two
years to make this change. See Allen, 911 F.2d at 374. The
district court’s determinations that Hall had failed to comply
with local rules, that there had been undue delay in amending
the complaint, and that such a delay prejudiced the City’s
defense are not “illogical, implausible, or without support in
inferences that may be drawn from the record.” United States
11770 HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
v. Hinkson, 585 F.3d 1247, 1262 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc).
Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion by
denying Hall leave to amend.
III
As should be obvious by now, this case is not about apply-
ing the law to answer the questions raised, briefed, and argued
by the parties. Rather, for the majority, this case is about a
“confluence of events [ ] not fit for a just and fair society.”
Maj. Op. at 11759. It is about “protect[ing] individuals against
arbitrary government action and abuse of power.” Maj. Op. at
11759. And above all, it is about “prevent[ing] a woefully
unjust result.” Maj. Op. at 11756. Thus, as the majority tells
us, this is not “an ordinary case” involving a district court’s
grant of summary judgment in a civil action, “but, rather, an
extraordinary one.” Maj. Op. at 11759.
These equitable concerns carry the majority beyond what
the Constitution empowers us to do. Article III gives us the
authority to decide cases and controversies, provided to us
through the “proper adversarial clash” between litigants.
Ingalls Shipbuilding, Inc. v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Compen-
sation Prog., Dep’t of Labor, 519 U.S. 248, 266 (1997). A
fundamental premise of this adversarial system is “that appel-
late courts do not sit as self-directed boards of legal inquiry
and research, but essentially as arbiters of legal questions
presented and argued by the parties before them.” NASA v.
Nelson, 131 S. Ct. 746, 756 n.10 (2011) (quoting Carducci v.
Regan, 714 F.2d 171, 177 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (Scalia, J.)).
These limitations are imposed on the judiciary to “ensure
that its desire to do good will not tempt it into abandoning its
limited role in our constitutional Government.” Missouri v.
Jenkins, 515 U.S. 70, 136 (1995) (Thomas, J., concurring). By
reaching beyond our jurisdiction and beyond the questions
“presented and argued by the parties before” us, Nelson, 131
S. Ct. at 756 n.10, the majority unwisely turns its back on
HALL v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11771
these fundamental principles of judicial restraint and in doing
so, undermines the very principles of fairness and integrity it
purports to advance.
I dissent.