Robert W. Kupke v. Orange County Florida

293 F. App'x 695
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 2008
Docket08-10814
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 F. App'x 695 (Robert W. Kupke v. Orange County Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert W. Kupke v. Orange County Florida, 293 F. App'x 695 (11th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In this civil rights action, Robert and Anita Kupke allege they were deprived of property without procedural due process. We vacate the district court’s threshold dismissal of the claim and remand for further proceedings.

I.

At the motion to dismiss stage we, like the district court, assume the factual allegations in the complaint are true and draw all reasonable factual inferences in favor of the plaintiff. See, e.g., Spanish Broadcasting Sys. of Fla., Inc. v. Clear Channel Commc’ns., Inc., 376 F.3d 1065, 1070 (11th Cir.2004). Then we review de novo whether the complaint, so construed, states a claim for relief. Id.

The Kupkes were cited by the Orange County Code Enforcement Board, their local land use authority, for impermissible outdoor storage of certain heavy machinery (including a bulldozer, a crane, a backhoe, and a “bush hog” 1 ) and for maintaining a junkyard. The Kupkes protested that their machines were bona fide farming equipment and therefore exempted by Florida statute from local nuisance and zoning laws.

A hearing on the citation was held in August 1998, at which the Kupkes presented some evidence, but the Enforcement Board adjourned the hearing to permit appellants to construct an outbuilding to house their equipment, which would have brought it into compliance with the zoning laws. Later, in July 1999, the hearing was reconvened, apparently with no outbuilding having been built. After affording the Kupkes minimal time (five minutes) to put on evidence that their equipment was exempt, the Enforcement Board issued an order finding the Kupkes in violation of the Orange County Code and giving them thirty days to correct the problem. Thereafter, fines would accrue at $250 per day, as authorized by Fla. Stat. § 162.09(1).

The Kupkes appealed the order to Florida’s Ninth Judicial Circuit. Both the Enforcement Board and the Ninth Judicial Circuit denied a stay pending appeal, so the fines continued to accrue, ultimately reaching about $125,000. The Board placed a lien upon the Kupkes’ property in March 2000. To avoid further fines and foreclosure of the lien, the Kupkes sold their farm equipment at auction, resulting in a substantial loss. Selling the equipment brought the property into compliance with the zoning requirements, so the Enforcement Board filed an affidavit of compliance before the Ninth Judicial Circuit in February 2001. The Board also agreed, at some unspecified date after this affidavit was filed and after negotiation with the Kupkes, to reduce the fine to $2,500, which the Kupkes then paid voluntarily. Thereafter, the Ninth Judicial Circuit found the Enforcement Board’s action to be lawful. The Kupkes sought appellate review in Florida’s Fifth District Court of Appeal. The court granted certiorari and concluded the July 1999 hearing deprived the Kupkes of property without procedural due process by denying them a meaningful opportunity to be heard prior to imposition of the fine. The court vacated the Ninth Judicial Circuit’s judgment and remanded with instructions to vacate the Enforcement Board’s order and order a new Board hearing, which Ninth Judicial Circuit on remand did. Before a new hearing could be held before the Enforcement *697 Board, attorneys for Orange County voluntarily dismissed the case.

The Kupkes then filed this suit, seeking to recoup the $2,500 fine, the loss they took when they were forced to auction their farm equipment, the costs of the auction, and lost profits from their inability to farm due to sale of the equipment. On motion of defendant, the amended complaint was dismissed for failure to state a claim. The district court concluded that the complaint stated no constitutional violation, or alternatively that even if it did, the monetary losses incurred by the Kup-kes were not caused by the violation alleged. This timely appeal ensued.

II.

The elements of the § 1983 claim at issue here are (i) deprivation of a constitutionally protected property interest, as a result of (ii) state action, and (iii) -without the benefit of constitutionally adequate process. See, e.g., Grayden v. Rhodes, 345 F.3d 1225, 1232-33 (11th Cir.2003). And although we have never explicitly stated it as a separate element of the claim, it is readily apparent that for a claim alleging deprivation of property without procedural due process to succeed, there must be a causal connection between the state action and the property deprivation. Id. at 1232 (due process implicated where plaintiffs are deprived of property “as a result of’ state action); see also Ross v. Clayton Cty., Ga., 173 F.3d 1305, 1307 (11th Cir. 1999).

Thus, the Kupkes’ theory of the case is that the deficient July 1999 pre-deprivation hearing resulted in the imposition of a fine (state action), which they eventually paid (a deprivation of property), and the accumulating fines caused them to undertake a fire-sale auction, resulting in further losses of property. Meanwhile, once the remanded Enforcement Board action was dismissed, they had no post-deprivation procedural remedy under state law, ensuring that they received constitutionally inadequate process.

The district court treated the state action complained of here as the voluntary dismissal of the administrative proceeding before the Enforcement Board after remand from the Florida courts. Accordingly, it concluded (i) that this state action could not give rise to a procedural due process claim because any plaintiff has an absolute right to dismiss its case, and (ii) that the deprivations of property complained of, which all occuired before the voluntary dismissal, could not have been caused by the dismissal, and therefore no claim would lie.

We believe the district court misconstrued the complaint by focusing on the wrong state action. The complaint does, in places, allege that “[a]s a consequence of the Notice of Dismissal the Kupkes were deprived of their due process of law, resulting in [damages].” Compl. 1128. But the complaint as a whole, fairly read, alleges that the damages sought are a consequence of the citation imposed after the inadequate July 1999 hearing and that the voluntary dismissal merely deprived the Kupkes of state procedural remedies which could have provided constitutionally adequate post-deprivation process. See Compl. K27 (“As a consequence of [the voluntary dismissal], the state court lost jurisdiction to further hear this dispute and to provide procedural due process ... The [voluntary dismissal] resulted in a deprivation of Kupkes’ constitutionally protected property interest in that the Kup-kes could no longer avail themselves of state court remedies ... ”). Put differently, we do not understand appellants to argue that notice and a hearing is required before a local government instrumentality may dismiss a lawsuit or administrative *698 proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
293 F. App'x 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-w-kupke-v-orange-county-florida-ca11-2008.