Kimberly G. McLaughlin v. Charles H. Weathers, John K. Walkup, and Suzette Peyton

170 F.3d 577, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 3949, 1999 WL 136953
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 1999
Docket97-6311
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 170 F.3d 577 (Kimberly G. McLaughlin v. Charles H. Weathers, John K. Walkup, and Suzette Peyton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimberly G. McLaughlin v. Charles H. Weathers, John K. Walkup, and Suzette Peyton, 170 F.3d 577, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 3949, 1999 WL 136953 (6th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

WELLFORD, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Kimberly G. McLaughlin appeals from the district court’s judgment which found that her due process challenge to the constitutionality of Tennessee Code Annotated § 29-6-101, et seq., the statute dealing with attachment, was without merit. Because we find that this statute is not facially invalid as lacking due process, and that even if it was, there were adequate state remedies McLaughlin could have pursued, we affirm the judgment of the district court and find that McLaughlin’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim must fail.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In October of 1996, Charles Weathers, defendant in this confusing controversy, filed a complaint in a Davidson County, Tennessee state court against plaintiff, Kimberly G. McLaughlin, and her attorney, Robert S. Catz, claiming rent and damages due from the former under a lease covering residential property occupied by the former, and a tort claim against the latter for abuse of process. Shortly thereafter, Weathers and his attorney, Suzette Peyton, filed an amended state court complaint coupled with an application for writ of attachment of $3,000 held by the Davidson County Court Clerk posted to sat *579 isfy a judgment arising out of a settlement in favor of McLaughlin and Catz in an earlier action. As counsel for Weathers, Peyton filed her own and Weathers’ affidavits claiming exigent circumstances for the action under Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-6-101. 1 This application for relief by judicial attachment was presented by said counsel, ex parte, to state Judge Walter C. Kurtz, who granted the relief sought requiring, through the court clerk, that Weathers and Peyton, in turn, post a $3,000 bond to protect the adversary parties in the event Weathers and Peyton were unsuccessful in the underlying claim.

McLaughlin moved to dismiss the Weathers-Peyton complaint, which motion was granted some ten weeks later on January 10, 1997. At the hearing on McLaughlin’s motion, the state court sua sponte determined that the writ of attachment had been improvidently granted and thereupon dissolved said writ, ordering at the same time that the $3,000 be paid over to McLaughlin and Catz. In February, this decision was carried out and a check was issued to Catz , and McLaughlin. Furthermore, the state judge denied Weathers’s motion to amend the decision in March.

In the meantime, McLaughlin filed this action for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and declaratory judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 2201 in federal district court on January 9, 1997, one day before the writ of attachment was dissolved and the underlying leasehold cause of action was dismissed as to McLaughlin. 2 The action for declaratory judgment was filed against the Attorney General of the State of Tennessee challenging the “prejudgment” attachment seizure instituted by Weathers as violative of McLaughlin’s due process rights, and sought a holding that TCA § 29-6-101, et seq. is unconstitutional. Service of process on defendants was attained January 14,1997.

The Attorney General filed a notice to dismiss the McLaughlin action based upon his contention that plaintiff failed to establish a redressable injury under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (plaintiff failed to show that there was no adequate state remedy available), and thus the district court had no jurisdiction. McLaughlin, in fact, did not deny, in her response to the motion to dismiss, that other remedies not utilized may have been available to her. Furthermore, the Attorney General claimed that the case was now moot because the relief she sought had been effectually attained before service of process on her federal suit. <

The district court granted judgment to the defendants after a hearing on September 17, 1997, holding, in part:

The Court has reviewed the statutory scheme. The Court has found nothing that would indicate that the state remedies are inadequate, or fail to provide sufficient process to remedy the alleged constitutional violation. A writ of attachment may *580 only issue under certain specified exigent circumstances. The statutory scheme has safeguards to challenge the grounds upon which a writ is issued and recover damages. There is no indication from the record that the Plaintiff ever utilized any of the several available judicial remedies. Any loss suffered by the Plaintiff was not caused by the prejudgment attachment statute, but by the Plaintiffs failure to utilize any of the available judicial remedies. The Court finds that the Plaintiffs due process argument is without merit. Plaintiffs request for declaratory judgment is therefore denied. Because there is no constitutional violation, the Plaintiff will be unable to pursue a civil rights action under section 1983. Accordingly, the Court will dismiss this action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
The Court notes that the prejudgment writ of attachment was dissolved on January 15,1997. Alternatively, the Court concludes that this action would be considered moot even if the Plaintiff was able to establish a due process violation.

This timely appeal followed.

The record is silent as to exactly when McLaughlin filed any response or motion seeking any relief from the issuance of the attachment at issue in state court. What is apparent from McLaughlin’s own complaint is that the $3,000 involved “had been tendered on behalf of Weathers to the Circuit Court Clerk in a satisfaction of an agreed judgment in favor of Plaintiff [McLaughlin] and Catz to be held by the Circuit Court Clerk for twenty days.” Prior to the expiration of the twenty day period, Weathers, by suit and by a petition for attachment of that money paid into court, sought, in effect, to challenge the prior agreed judgment. By Tennessee statutory requirement, however, Weathers had to meet strict statutory requirements indicating just cause bases for such extraordinary relief. See Wiltshire v. Frees, 184 Tenn. 523, 201 S.W.2d 675, 678 (Tenn.1947). A state judge, with right of absolute immunity for his actions, determined initially that Weathers had met the statutory requirements for attachment. McLaughlin conceded that Judge Kurtz, on October 30, 1996, directed the clerk to issue the “prejudgment writ of attachment” on the money paid into the registry of the court by Weathers himself. In effect, an attachment bond was permitted to be substituted for the money on the registry by the judge pending the outcome of the suit on the merits.

II. ANALYSIS

We hold that the Tennessee prejudgment statute is not facially invalid as lacking due process.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F.3d 577, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 3949, 1999 WL 136953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimberly-g-mclaughlin-v-charles-h-weathers-john-k-walkup-and-suzette-ca6-1999.