Colburn v. Odom, 911 F.3d 1110 (2018)

Dec. 21, 2018 · United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit · No. 17-11404
911 F.3d 1110

Timothy Jarrod COLBURN, David Edward Rhodes, Joseph Anthony Elliott, Daniel Rudolph Cassels, Jr., Todd Michael Harrison, Howard Derrick Butler, Landa L. Clark, Gary Lynn Blackwell, Plaintiffs - Appellees,
v.
Susan ODOM, Defendant - Appellant.

No. 17-11404

United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.

December 21, 2018

Thomas Lavon Carmichael, Russell Lee England, Lisa Marie Ivey, Law Offices of Lisa M. Ivey, Jasper, AL, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.

Andrew Lynn Brasher, Mary A. Goldthwaite, Alabama Attorney General's Office, Montgomery, AL, for Defendant-Appellant.

Before TJOFLAT and JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judges, and KAPLAN,* District Judge.

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

*1111The Fourth Amendment requires that a person who has been arrested and detained without a warrant must "promptly be brought before a neutral magistrate for a judicial determination of probable cause," generally within forty-eight hours. Cty. of Riverside v. McLaughlin , 500 U.S. 44, 53, 111 S.Ct. 1661, 1668, 114 L.Ed.2d 49 (1991).1 The States have discretion in how "to integrate [these] prompt probable cause determinations into their differing systems of pretrial procedures." Id.

In Alabama, a person who has been arrested and detained without a warrant must receive an initial appearance2 at which a judge or magistrate (collectively, "magistrate") determines probable cause and sets bail.3 See Ala. R. Crim. P. 4.3(a)(1)(iii), 4.4(a), 7.2(a) ; Nicholas L. Chiarkas, Jr., Alabama Criminal Trial Practice § 2:5 (2d ed. Supp. 2017). This appearance typically occurs within forty-eight hours of the arrest. Ala. R. Crim. P. 4.3(a)(1)(iii). If it does not, and a probable cause determination has not been made,4 *1112the arrestee must be released on the minimum bond amount5 and directed to appear in court at a specific time and place. Id.

In this case, Timothy Jarrod Colburn on behalf of himself and seven individuals-David Edward Rhodes, Joseph Anthony Elliott, David Rudolph Cassels, Todd Michael Harrison, Howard Derrick Butler, Landa L. Clark, and Gary Lynn Blackwell ("Plaintiffs")-allege that a Walker County Sheriff's deputy arrested them without a warrant for undisclosed crimes, that they were detained in the county jail, and that they were denied a judicial determination on whether probable cause supported their arrests in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

In Colburn v. Huddleston (" Colburn I "),6 a previous damages action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, five of these individuals- Colburn, Rhodes, Elliott, Cassels, and Harrison-claimed that Deputy Sheriff Blair Huddleston, who arrested them, and Walker County Sheriff John Mark Tirey were responsible for the alleged Fourth Amendment violations they suffered. No. 6:14-cv-01942-LSC, 2015 WL 1494554 (N.D. Ala. Mar. 30, 2015). The District Court dismissed their claims, and we affirmed. See Colburn v. Huddleston , 670 F. App'x 693 (11th Cir. 2016) (per curiam).

The instant case, Colburn v. Odom ("Colburn II "), was brought while the appeal of Colburn I was pending in this Court. In Colburn II , the Colburn I plaintiffs seek damages under § 1983 against three magistrates operating under the aegis of the Clerk of the Walker County Circuit Court, claiming that they are responsible for the Fourth Amendment violations alleged in Colburn I . These five Colburn I plaintiffs are joined by three other individuals who assert the same constitutional violations. Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that the magistrates failed to determine whether probable cause existed for their warrantless arrests for undisclosed crimes and that the Circuit Clerk, as the magistrates' supervisor, failed to ensure that the determination was made.

A United States Magistrate Judge tried this case by consent.7 Acting on the allegations of Plaintiffs' complaint and the affirmative defense of judicial immunity asserted in the magistrates and Circuit Clerk's motion to dismiss, the Magistrate Judge concluded that the magistrates were entitled to judicial immunity but that the Circuit Clerk was not. The Circuit Clerk *1113appeals the ruling.8

We are unable to meaningfully review the Circuit Clerk's appeal because, as to each Plaintiff, we cannot identify from the allegations of the complaint, answer, or motion to dismiss, which of the magistrates purportedly denied the Plaintiffs' Fourth Amendment rights.9 We therefore vacate the District Court's judgment and remand for further proceedings pursuant to the instructions laid out in the conclusion of this opinion.

I.

Colburn I

On October 10, 2014, Colburn brought suit for damages under § 1983 against Deputy Huddleston and Sheriff Tirey. Colburn's case was consolidated with those of Rhodes, Elliott, Cassels, and Harrison.10 In his thirty-six page complaint,11 Colburn alleged the following:

• Deputy Huddleston arrested Colburn on October 10, 2013 without a warrant and transported him to the Walker County Jail. The complaint did not indicate the offense(s) for which Deputy Huddleston arrested him .
• Deputy Huddleston failed to obtain a determination on whether probable cause existed for Colburn's arrest. The complaint did not indicate whether Colburn was taken before a magistrate for an initial appearance, a determination on probable cause, and admission to bail .
• Colburn was detained for thirty-six days before a probable cause determination was made.
• Colburn was released from Walker County Jail forty days after his warrantless arrest. The complaint did not indicate the legal basis for his release .
• Sheriff Tirey knew that Deputy Huddleston failed to seek a probable cause determination but did not correct that failure. The complaint merely concluded that Sheriff Tirey knew Deputy Huddleston failed to seek a probable cause determination .12

The defendants retained counsel13 and moved to dismiss Colburn's complaint on *1114the basis of qualified immunity. Their motion was the functional equivalent of an answer in that it included material facts omitted by Colburn's complaint. The motion stated that Colburn was brought before Magistrate Carol Haggard on October 11, 2013, the day after his arrest, for an initial appearance. As evidence that this occurred, the defendants attached to their motion Alabama Forms C-81, "Advice of Rights on Initial Appearance before Judge or Magistrate (Felony)," and C-80, "Order on Initial Appearance." These forms showed the following:

• Colburn was arrested for possession, trafficking, and manufacture of methamphetamine.14
• Colburn received an initial appearance within forty-eight hours of his arrest.15
• Magistrate Haggard read Colburn a statement from the Advice of Rights Form, which informed him that at the initial appearance she would determine probable cause and set bail. Colburn signed this statement, affirming that he understood.
• The Order from Colburn's initial appearance shows that Magistrate Haggard told him of the charges against him, informed him that he had a right to counsel, advised him of his right to remain silent, and notified him of his right to a preliminary hearing. She then set a secured appearance bond for Colburn in the amount of $3,016,000.16

In his response to the motion to dismiss, Colburn admitted that he received an initial appearance before Magistrate Haggard. He alleged, however, that Magistrate Haggard did not make a probable cause determination at the initial appearance, even though she informed him that one would be made.

The District Court, in ruling on the motion to dismiss, treated the complaint as if it had been amended to reflect the events recited in the Advice of Rights and Order Forms. The question was thus whether Deputy Huddleston and Sheriff Tirey were responsible for Magistrate Haggard's alleged failure to resolve the probable cause issue at the initial appearance. The District Court determined that "[Colburn] appeared promptly before a neutral magistrate, and it is not the place and responsibility of the [d]efendants, who were law enforcement officials, to question or direct the magistrate, who was acting as a court official, as to the proper performance of his or her responsibilities." Huddleston , 2015 WL 1494554, at *4.17 The District *1115Court granted qualified immunity to Deputy Huddleston and Sheriff Tirey and entered judgment against Colburn, Rhodes, Elliott, Cassels, and Harrison.

Colburn and his co-plaintiffs moved to alter or amend the judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e). They repeated the argument they made in response to the motion to dismiss. They argued that Deputy Huddleston and Sheriff Tirey had the responsibility to ensure that a magistrate determined probable cause at the initial appearance. They also moved the District Court to amend the complaint in Cassels' case.18 The proposed amended complaint, which spanned fifty-three pages, alleged the following:

• Deputy Huddleston arrested Cassels without a warrant on October 10, 2013 for possession, manufacture, and trafficking of methamphetamine and transported him to the Walker County Jail.
• Cassels appeared before Magistrate Carol Haggard within forty-eight hours of his arrest, at which time she set bail at $1,516,000 but failed to determine whether probable cause existed for his arrest.19
• Deputy Huddleston failed to ensure that Magistrate Haggard made a determination on whether probable cause existed for Cassels' arrest.
• Cassels was detained for thirty-six days before a probable cause determination was made.
• Cassels was released from the Walker County Jail forty-two days after his warrantless arrest when his petition for habeas corpus was granted. The complaint did not indicate the legal basis for the granting of his habeas corpus petition .
• Sheriff Tirey knew that Deputy Huddleston failed to ensure that Magistrate Haggard made a probable cause determination but did not correct that failure. The complaint merely concluded that Sheriff Tirey knew Deputy Huddleston failed to ensure that Magistrate Haggard made a probable cause determination .20
• Circuit Clerk Odom knew that Magistrate Haggard failed to make a probable cause determination at the initial appearance but did not correct that failure. The proposed amended complaint merely concluded that Circuit Clerk Odom knew Magistrate Haggard failed to make a probable cause determination .21

*1116The District Court denied the motion to alter or amend the judgment and the motion for leave to amend plaintiffs' complaints. It determined that the motion to alter or amend the judgment offered "nothing new." Order on Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment, Huddleston , 6:14-cv-01942-LSC, at *2. The District Court found "interesting" that the proposed amended complaint admitted "for the first time" that Cassels appeared before a magistrate within forty-eight hours of his arrest. Id. The District Court determined that this admission "further undermine[d]" the assertion that Deputy Huddleston failed to seek a probable cause determination within forty-eight hours of the arrests. Id. at *2-*3. It therefore denied the motions. Id. at *3.

On June 29, 2015, Colburn appealed the District Court's decisions granting the motion to dismiss and denying the motions to alter or amend the judgment and for leave to amend the complaint. See Huddleston , 670 F. App'x 693.

Colburn II

On October 13, 2015, with an appeal pending in Colburn I , Colburn and seven individuals-Rhodes, Elliott, Cassels, Harrison, Butler, Clark, and Blackwell-filed an action under § 1983 seeking damages from three Walker County Magistrates-Haggard, Lela Yahn, and Debra Courington-and Circuit Clerk Odom. The thirty-four page complaint alleged as follows:22

• Deputy Huddleston arrested Plaintiffs without warrants and transported them to the Walker County Jail.23 The complaint does not indicate the offense(s) for which Deputy Huddleston arrested them .
• Deputy Huddleston did not "approach a judge or magistrate for a probable cause determination" on Plaintiffs' arrests.
• Magistrates Haggard, Yahn, and Courington learned of Plaintiffs' warrantless arrests but did not determine whether probable cause existed for them. The complaint alleges that these magistrates
knew or should have known [of Plaintiffs' arrests] at the time [they were] brought into the jail ... because part of the[ir] duties, including traveling to the jail almost daily and making a determination of who were the new arrestees, what were their charges, and whether probable cause existed to believe the defendant committed the charge was to conduct an Initial Appearance Hearing in accordance with Rule 4.4.
*1117The complaint infers that these magistrates failed to afford Plaintiffs an initial appearance and therefore did not determine whether probable cause existed for Plaintiffs' arrests.
• Plaintiffs were unlawfully detained in the Walker County Jail for longer than forty-eight hours after their arrests.24
• Plaintiffs were released from the Walker County Jail after spending more than forty-eight hours there without a probable cause determination.25 The complaint does not indicate the legal basis for their release .
• Circuit Clerk Odom learned that the magistrates did not determine whether probable cause existed for Plaintiffs' arrests.26 The complaint states that the magistrates failed to determine probable cause, but it does not indicate when Circuit Clerk Odom learned of the failures . Nor does the complaint cite Circuit Clerk Odom's responsibility under Alabama law to review the magistrates' conduct at an initial appearance to ensure that they determine whether probable cause existed for an arrest without a warrant .

The Alabama Attorney General answered the complaint on behalf of the magistrates and Circuit Clerk Odom on December 1, 2015. The answer was essentially limited to a denial that the magistrates failed to discharge their responsibility to determine probable cause and that Circuit Clerk Odom was obligated to ensure that such determinations were made. They also raised boilerplate defenses, two of which are relevant: (1) the complaint failed to state a claim for relief and (2) the defendants were entitled to judicial immunity.

Colburn I

On December 22, 2015, with Colburn II pending, Colburn and his co-plaintiffs filed a brief in this Court in Colburn I . Under *1118Alabama law, they argued, an arresting officer must seek a probable cause determination within forty-eight hours of making a warrantless arrest. See Brief for Appellant at 14-19, Huddleston , 670 F. App'x 693. They claimed that Deputy Huddleston failed to do so when he arrested them and that this failure made him liable for the alleged unlawful detention. Sheriff Tirey, they contended, learned of Deputy Huddleston's failure but did not correct it.

The defendants responded in a brief on February 8, 2016. They brought the matter of initial appearances to the forefront of the case: "Colburn, Cassels, Elliott, and Rhodes were taken before a Walker County magistrate judge where they received their initial appearances and bond hearings." Brief of Appellees at 2, Huddleston , 670 F. App'x 693. While the Advice of Rights read to Colburn at the initial appearance informed him that the magistrate would make a probable cause determination during the hearing, the defendants acknowledged that the Order did not contain a box for the magistrate to check indicating that a probable cause determination had been made. Id. at 3. The defendants therefore framed the question as whether Deputy Huddleston and Sheriff Tirey had the responsibility to ensure that the magistrate actually made a probable cause determination at the initial appearance. Id. at 22-23. They asked this Court to affirm the dismissal of the complaint because neither Deputy Huddleston nor Sheriff Tirey had this responsibility.

Colburn, in his reply brief, admitted that he and three other plaintiffs appeared before a magistrate within forty-eight hours of their arrests.27 He stated the issue as whether "the magistrate simply skipped the probable cause determination and proceeded straight to the separate initial appearance." Reply Brief of Appellants at 3-4 n.2, Huddleston , 670 F. App'x 693 (emphasis in original). He contended, however, that Deputy Huddleston should have ensured that the magistrate made a probable cause determination regarding his arrest by "promptly seek[ing] a warrant."28 Id. at 4.

A panel of this Court summarily affirmed the District Court's disposition of Colburn I on November 17, 2016. See Huddleston , 670 F. App'x 693.

Colburn II

On April 25, 2016, the parties consented to the disposition of the case by a United States Magistrate Judge. Months later, on July 15, 2016, the magistrates and Circuit Clerk Odom moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground of judicial immunity. They contended Plaintiffs' claims were based on a judicial function-namely, the determination of whether probable cause existed for their warrantless arrests. The doctrine of judicial immunity therefore barred the claims.

On February 24, 2017, the Magistrate Judge ruled on the defense of judicial immunity. At the time, the Magistrate Judge was unaware of the District Court's decision in Colburn I -which exonerated Deputy Huddleston and Sheriff Tirey of liability for the alleged failure of the magistrates to address the probable cause issue at the initial appearances in Colburn I -and our decision which affirmed the District Court's Colburn I ruling. The Magistrate Judge was unaware of these decisions because neither Plaintiffs' counsel nor the *1119Alabama Attorney General informed him of the existence of the Colburn I litigation.

In ruling on the judicial immunity defense, the Magistrate Judge faced a complaint and motion to dismiss that were entirely silent on whether Plaintiffs received an initial appearance following their attests. The complaint alleged only that Plaintiffs were in custody following arrests for undisclosed criminal offenses and that the magistrates failed to determine whether the arrests had been made on probable cause. Not only were the complaint and motion to dismiss silent regarding the crimes for which Plaintiffs had been arrested, the pleadings did not disclose which magistrate failed to make a probable cause determination as to which Plaintiff's arrest.

The Magistrate Judge looked past these pleading deficiencies in deciding the case on the judicial immunity defense. All that mattered to him was that the complaint charged the magistrates with failing to perform a judicial function, a function for which they were immune from suit as a matter of law. The Magistrate Judge therefore dismissed Plaintiffs' claims against the magistrates. He denied Circuit Clerk Odom the benefit of the defense, though, on the theory that her role as the supervisor of the Circuit Clerk's Office's personnel, including the magistrates, did not involve the judicial review of the magistrates' probable cause rulings.29 Circuit Clerk Odom appeals the Magistrate Judge's denial of judicial immunity.

In Circuit Clerk Odom's opening brief, the Alabama Attorney General disclosed for the first time the existence of Colburn I and our affirmance of the District Court's decision. The Attorney General indirectly asks that we take judicial notice of the Colburn I litigation, including the briefs the parties filed in the Colburn I appeal, which reveal that the Colburn I Plaintiffs received initial appearances. What the Attorney General could not represent is that a magistrate determined that probable cause supported their arrests. Nor could he represent that the Colburn II Plaintiffs, who were not parties in Colburn I , received an initial appearance.

Plaintiffs' answer brief does not respond to the Attorney General's references to Colburn I . Instead, Plaintiffs stand on the naked allegations of their complaint, in particular on the allegation that the magistrates never determined whether probable cause existed on their warrantless arrests for the undisclosed offenses. Plaintiffs ask us to affirm the Magistrate Judge's determination that Odom is not entitled to judicial immunity. That is, she is liable under the Fourth Amendment for the magistrates' alleged failure to decide whether probable cause existed for Plaintiffs' warrantless arrests and their consequent unlawful detention.

II.

The sine qua non of Plaintiffs' claims in Colburn I and Colburn II is that the magistrates failed to determine whether Plaintiffs' arrests for undisclosed crimes were based on probable cause. Plaintiffs' counsel are well aware that where a warrantless arrest occurs, Alabama law requires *1120a magistrate to resolve the probable cause issue at the arrestee's initial appearance.30 In drafting their complaints in Colburn I and II, though, counsel not only refused to identify the crimes for which their clients had been arrested, they refused to indicate whether their clients had been taken before a magistrate for an initial appearance. All counsel alleged was that as to each client, one of the magistrates (unidentified) at some point in time (undisclosed) failed to determine that the client's arrest was supported by probable cause.

The Magistrate Judge should have dismissed Plaintiffs' complaint on his own initiative because it failed to state a cognizable claim for relief. See Ashcroft v. Iqbal , 556 U.S. 662, 676, 129 S.Ct. 1937, 1948, 173 L.Ed.2d 868 (2009) ("[A] plaintiff must plead that each Government-official defendant, through the official's own individual actions, has violated the Constitution."); Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly , 550 U.S. 544, 555-56, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 1965, 167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007) ("Factual allegations must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level ... on the assumption that all the allegations in the complaint are true.").

At the outset, we stated that we were incapable of affording this appeal meaningful review. We vacate the Magistrate Judge's decision for that reason and remand the case for further proceedings against the Circuit Clerk Odom.31 Upon receipt of our mandate, the magistrates shall ask Plaintiffs' counsel whether their clients wish to amend their complaint. If they opt not to amend, the Magistrate Judge shall dismiss Plaintiffs' claims against Circuit Clerk Odom with prejudice. If Plaintiffs choose to amend, their amended complaint shall contain the following with respect to each Plaintiff:

• The date of the Plaintiff's arrest, the crimes for which the arrest was made, and the identity of the arresting officer (presumably Deputy Huddleston).
• The date and time the Plaintiff was booked into the Walker County Jail.
• The date and time of the Plaintiff's initial appearance, if the plaintiff received one.
• If an initial appearance was held, the identity of the magistrate who presided.32
• The magistrate's failure to determine probable cause for the Plaintiff's arrest for the crimes indicated above.
• The magistrate's bail decision and that it was made without a probable cause determination having been made.
• The date and time of the Plaintiff's release from custody.
• The legal basis for the Plaintiff's release from custody.

In addition to these factual allegations, the amended complaint shall cite the Alabama law which charges the Clerks of the Circuit Courts with the responsibility of reviewing a magistrate's initial appearance *1121decisions and, in particular, the magistrate's probable cause determinations.33

The Magistrate Judge shall determine whether Plaintiffs' amended complaint fails to state a cognizable claim as required by Iqbal and Twombly and, if so, the Magistrate Judge shall consider whether dismissal of the complaint without leave to amend is warranted.34

SO ORDERED.