Patricia Stephens Due, John Due and Gloria Smith v. Tallahassee Theatres, Inc.

333 F.2d 630, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4875
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1964
Docket21121_1
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 333 F.2d 630 (Patricia Stephens Due, John Due and Gloria Smith v. Tallahassee Theatres, Inc.) 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
Patricia Stephens Due, John Due and Gloria Smith v. Tallahassee Theatres, Inc., 333 F.2d 630, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4875 (5th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Chief Judge:

This is an appeal from orders of the district court dismissing a civil rights complaint in its entirety as against the two theatre corporations and their managers, and as against city officials and the City of Tallahassee and as to the first three of five “claims” of the complaint against W. P. Joyce, Sheriff of Leon County, Florida, for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and from a summary judgment in favor of the Sheriff defendant as to “claims” four and five of the complaint.

The orders of the trial court dismissing the complaint for failure to allege a claim on which relief could be granted can be quickly disposed of. These orders were clearly in error. The complaint alleged joint conduct by the Theatre Corporation and their managers, the city government and the Sheriff of Leon County, amounting to a conspiracy to deny the plaintiffs and the class they represented civil rights asserted under Sections 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1985, Title 42 United States Code Annotated.

We take the following statement from the brief of appellee Joyce, which brief has been accepted in full by the other appellees:

“The substance of this conspiracy is said to be that the Appellees, under color of law, pursue and enforce a policy of requiring white persons in Tallahassee to conduct their private business establishments on a segregated basis, which object is accomplished by requiring peace officers to disperse or arrest and jail any negroes attempting to secure services on a non-segregated basis. The Appellants allege that all of the previously enumerated acts [specific allegations dealing with the refusal of the Theatres to permit Negroes to enter the theatres even after, on one occasion, purchasing tickets] were done in pursuance of the conspiracy, and that the said actions of the Appellees constitute State action prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment.”

We think it is clear that the allegations of the complaint, as stated by the appellees themselves in the foregoing language, clearly allege a claim upon which relief could be granted by the trial court. It appears, in fact, to be a classical allegation of a civil rights cause of action. The trial court must have been so doubtful as to the ability of the appellants to prove these allegations that it thought that there was no substance in the complaint. However, this Court has repeatedly held that if the complaint alleges facts, which, under any theory of the law, would entitle the complainant to recover, the action may not be dismissed for failure to state a claim. Arthur H. Richland Company v. Harper, 5 Cir., 302 F.2d 324. 1 There is no doubt about the fact that the allegations here stated a claim on which relief could be granted, if the facts were proved. See Lombard v. Louisiana, 373 U.S. 267, 83 *632 S.Ct. 1122, 10 L.Ed.2d 338, and Peterson v. City of Greenville, 373 U.S. 244, 83 S.Ct. 1119, 10 L.Ed.2d 323.

We next turn to the summary judgment entered in favor of Sheriff Joyce as to claims four and five of the complaint. In the first place we do not think these claims can be separated from the remaining claims. Each of the claims after the first adopts all of the allegations contained in claim one. Each of them alleges joint action by all defendants. The Sheriff filed his motion for summary judgment and supported his motion by affidavit, which, in effect, asserted on oath that he had not conspired with anyone with respect to any of the matters alleged in the complaint. He also asserted that such arrests as he had conducted or supervised had been pursuant to an order of the Chancery Judge who had granted a temporary restraining order against picketing in front of the theatres involved in the dispute, a broad order that was subsequently modified to some extent when it became apparent that the court’s order clearly went beyond any permissible limits. Appellants filed no counter-affidavit. However, we must also look to anything testified to by them in the depositions taken of them by counsel for Joyce, for, of course, if a conflict of fact appears from the depositions taken in connection with the motion for summary judgment, this issue of fact could not be resolved on a motion for summary judgment.

It is plain from the depositions that none of the plaintiffs could point to any agreement or statement or specific proof to show the existence of a conspiracy by the official defendants among themselves or with the theatre defendants. Nevertheless they testified to conduct by city and Sheriff’s personnel that a fact finder could readily determine to have been outside the scope of the state court’s restraining order, and also to have been the result of unified or agreed upon course of action. Conduct of the kind that was not answered by the affidavit of the Sheriff included testimony that sheriff’s deputies and city police officers and others physically interfered with a. peaceful march of Negro students, towards the city far distant from the' situs as to which the state court restraining order applied. There was also-testimony of an actual entry by the public officials on church property where a meeting was being held by the student demonstrators, and which was not subject to any state court restraining order.. Moreover, the conclusionary statement by the Sheriff in his affidavit that he had not participated in any conspiracy would not, of itself, be a complete answer to the allegations that he had jointly with, the city officials and the theatre owners, deprived the plaintiffs of their civil, rights.

We do not think it is pertinent to this' appeal that the Sheriff may be immune from personal liability for civil damages for whatever conduct he participated in-that was protected by the order of the-state court. Neither is it significant to> this appeal that the appellants may have violated some of the terms of the restraining order if, as they alleged, they were also deprived by the Sheriff and the other defendants of civil rights that were not covered by the restraining order.

The Sheriff undertakes to equate his asserted immunity from damages to an immunity from injunction where it is alleged that the Sheriff exceeds his duty to carry out the state court order, or that the state court order itself is void. No such immunity exists. Subject, to certain statutory limitations, not raised here by appellees, one accepted way of testing the validity of a court order is to enjoin its enforcement. If, as alleged here, the officials, including the Sheriff, either through misunderstanding as to the scope of the order, or in excessive zeal in enforcing it, or because the order itself was void as violating the constitutional rights of the appellants, invaded appellants’ constitutional rights, this could be tested out in a suit seeking to enjoin such conduct by the public officials. Not only did this complaint allege such conduct by the Sheriff, but the depo *633 .-sitions taken by the Sheriff produced testimony to support the contentions.

Moreover, the complaint goes farther than to allege conduct by the Sheriff Lased on the court’s restraining order.

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Bluebook (online)
333 F.2d 630, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-stephens-due-john-due-and-gloria-smith-v-tallahassee-theatres-ca5-1964.