Arlyn Tokar, James Tokar and Anthony Tokar v. Colonel Richard E. Hearne, United States Air Force

699 F.2d 753, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29891
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1983
Docket82-1254
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 699 F.2d 753 (Arlyn Tokar, James Tokar and Anthony Tokar v. Colonel Richard E. Hearne, United States Air Force) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arlyn Tokar, James Tokar and Anthony Tokar v. Colonel Richard E. Hearne, United States Air Force, 699 F.2d 753, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29891 (5th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

I.

Arlyn Tokar, wife of a retired serviceman, and her two sons, James and Anthony, filed suit against Colonel Richard Hearne, the Base Commander of Reese Air Force Base, and others for barring her from entering the base for a period of three years. Mrs. Tokar claims that such disbarment was issued in violation of her due process rights under the fifth amendment. Jurisdiction was premised on 28 U.S.C. § 1331. The district court, after a trial on the merits, denied relief to the plaintiffs and Tokar has appealed. After thoroughly reviewing the record and the applicable law, we affirm.

II.

Arlyn Tokar, at the time of the incident in question, had been married for seventeen years to retired Staff Sergeant Anthony Tokar. As dependents of a United States Air Force serviceman, Mrs. Tokar and her two sons were privileged to use air force base facilities including the base commissary, the post exchange, and other recreational facilities. By letter of September 18, 1980, Colonel Richard Hearne advised Mrs. Tokar that an investigation had disclosed that she was involved in an incident at Reese Air Force Base in which she assaulted an individual by throwing a drink in his face. He warned her by this letter that he would not tolerate such incidents at the Reese Air Force Base installation and that further misconduct on her part at the Air Force base might result in an order barring her from the base.

Less than a year later a subsequent investigation disclosed that Mrs. Tokar was involved in another incident at the Reese Air Force Base Bachelor Officer’s Quarters on July 19, 1981. The evidence showed that she was on base without a valid identification card and that she may have planted marijuana in an automobile of Lt. Shipp, a student pilot, in order to cause adverse disciplinary action against this student. In a letter to Mrs. Tokar dated July 23,1981, the Base Commander, Colonel Hearne, stated that, based on the September 7, 1980, and July 19, 1981, incidents and the invalid ID card, he had determined that “your further presence on Reese Air Force Base would be contrary to good order and discipline.” The letter then ordered Mrs. Tokar not to reenter the base for a period of three years.

The letter further notified Mrs. Tokar that she would have fifteen days to request a modification or termination of the disbarment order:

3. Should any compelling reasons exist which you believe to be sufficient to justify a modification or termination *755 of this order, you should, within 15 days of receipt of this letter, submit such request to this headquarters, ATTN: Chief of Security Police, for my consideration.

At the bottom of the letter Mrs. Tokar wrote the names of four people and their telephone numbers with the following message:

Sirs:
Here’s names of persons who can verify me that July 18, 1981, up to 3:00 a.m., Sunday, July 19, 1981.
Lawrence Carter-Duty PH. # 3296 Roy Raymond-Duty PH. # 3370 Marty Harbison-PH. 799-6873 Nancy Kamper-PH. 799-0910
I now have a new identification that expire in 1984; here a letter for you to read, written to me.
[Signed] Arlyn D. Tokar
PS. I’m carrying Shipp’s child.

Mrs. Tokar mailed the letter with the note to “Hearne” at Reese AFB, TX within the fifteen-day limit. The note did not request a reconsideration of the disbarment order. Mrs. Tokar did not take any further steps to request a modification or termination of the order nor did she request a hearing on the matter.

On October 29,1981, Mrs. Tokar filed suit in federal court against Colonel Hearne, three other officers of the United States Air Force, the Secretary of the Department of the Air Force, and the Secretary of Defense. The complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief and $12,000 in damages. On the same date Mrs. Tokar filed a Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order and a Preliminary Injunction. A hearing was held on the latter motion on November 6,1981. After ascertaining that Mrs. Tokar and her two sons each now had a valid identification card, that the disbarment order did not apply to Mrs. Tokar’s two sons, and that each of the plaintiffs was permitted by law to go on the base for medical treatment, the district judge denied issuance either of a temporary restraining order or of a preliminary injunction. A bench trial on the merits was held on April 5, 1982. After finding that the defendants had not acted in an arbitrary or capricious manner and after considering the reasonableness of the order barring Mrs. Tokar from the base, the court found that the defendants were fully authorized to deprive Mrs. Tokar of the privilege of entering Reese Air Force Base, including its post exchange, commissary and recreational facilities. The judge thus denied all relief requested by the plaintiffs. The Tokar plaintiffs filed a timely appeal.

III.

On appeal, Mrs. Tokar contends that she was denied a property right without notice and hearing in violation of the fifth amendment and that the base commander’s decision to bar her from the base was arbitrary and capricious because it was made without a sufficient factual basis and without objective standards.

A.

Mrs. Tokar contends that she was entitled to notice and a hearing prior to being barred from Reese Air Force Base. She contends that the benefits derived from using the base commissary, base exchange, or other base facilities constituted a “property interest” protected by the due process clause of the fifth amendment. Therefore she submits that she may not be deprived of this interest without notice and a hearing.

At the outset we would note that Mrs. Tokar argues that she was summarily barred from the base “without notice,” and that she had no opportunity to dispute the base* commander’s allegedly “wild” allegations. The record belies these arguments.

In the September 1980 letter, the base commander clearly informed Mrs. Tokar that “any further misconduct on your part at Reese Air Force Base may result in my ordering you not to reenter this base.” Moreover, her counsel stated at trial that “we don’t contest the notice in any way ... she did get notice.”

*756 Additionally, in the letter barring her from the base, Base Commander Hearne offered Mrs. Tokar an opportunity to present her side of the story. At trial, Mrs. Tokar admitted that she did not request a hearing and that she did not ask for any modification or for termination of the order.

Mrs. Tokar further argues that barring her from the base also effectively bars her two sons from using the base facilities because of their inability to drive. We would note that Mrs. Tokar’s children at the time of the trial on the merits on April 5, 1982, were 19 years old and 13 years old. In addition to public transportation to the base, Mrs. Tokar is capable of driving either or both of her sons to the front gate of the base. Thus while barring Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
699 F.2d 753, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arlyn-tokar-james-tokar-and-anthony-tokar-v-colonel-richard-e-hearne-ca5-1983.