This case concerns the relationship between the requirement of
"state action" to establish a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment
and the requirement of action "under color of state law" to
establish a right to recover under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, which provides
a remedy for deprivation of constitutional rights when that
deprivation takes place "under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage" of a State. Respondents filed suit in
Virginia state court on a debt owed by petitioner, and sought
prejudgment attachment of certain of petitioner's property.
Pursuant to Virginia law, respondents alleged, in an
ex
parte petition, a belief that petitioner was disposing of or
might dispose of his property in order to defeat his creditors;
acting upon that petition, a Clerk of the state court issued a writ
of attachment, which was executed by the County Sheriff; a hearing
on the propriety of the attachment was later conducted; and 34 days
after the levy, the trial judge dismissed the attachment for
respondents' failure to establish the alleged statutory grounds for
attachment. Petitioner then brought this action in Federal District
Court under § 1983, alleging that in attaching his property
respondents had acted jointly with the State to deprive him of his
property without due process of law. The District Court held that
the alleged actions of the respondents did not constitute state
action as required by the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the
complaint therefore did not state a valid claim under § 1983. The
Court of Appeals affirmed, but on the basis that the complaint
failed to allege conduct under color of state law for purposes of §
1983 because there was neither usurpation or corruption of official
power by a private litigant nor a surrender of judicial power to
the private litigant in such a way that the independence of the
enforcing officer was compromised to a significant degree.
Held:
1. Constitutional requirements of due process apply to
garnishment and prejudgment attachment procedures whenever state
officers act jointly with a private creditor in securing the
property in dispute.
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
395 U. S. 337. And
if the challenged conduct of the creditor constitutes state action
as delimited by this Court's prior decisions, then that conduct is
also action under color of state law, and will support a suit under
§ 1983. Pp.
457 U. S.
926-935.
Page 457 U. S. 923
2. Conduct allegedly causing the deprivation of a constitutional
right protected against infringement by a State must be fairly
attributable to the State. In determining the question of "fair
attribution," (a) the deprivation must be caused by the exercise of
some right or privilege created by the State or by a rule of
conduct imposed by it or by a person for whom it is responsible,
and (b) the party charged with the deprivation must be a person who
may fairly be said to be a state actor, either because he is a
state official, because he has acted together with or has obtained
significant aid from state officials or because his conduct is
otherwise chargeable to the State. Pp.
457 U. S.
936-939.
3. Insofar as petitioner alleged only misuse or abuse by
respondents of Virginia law, he did not state a cause of action
under § 1983, but challenged only private action. Such challenged
conduct could not be ascribed to any governmental decision, nor did
respondents have the authority of state officials to put the weight
of the State behind their private decision. However, insofar as
petitioner's complaint challenged the state statute as being
procedurally defective under the Due Process Clause, he did present
a valid cause of action under § 1983. The statutory scheme
obviously is the product of state action, and a private party's
joint participation with state officials in the seizure of disputed
property is sufficient to characterize that party as a "state
actor" for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment. Respondents were,
therefore, acting under color of state law in participating in the
deprivation of petitioner's property. Pp.
457 U. S.
939-942.
639 F.2d 1058, affirmed in part, reversed in part, and
remanded.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. BURGER, C.J., filed a
dissenting opinion,
post, p.
457 U. S. 943.
POWELL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which REHNQUIST and
O'CONNOR, JJ., joined,
post, p.
457 U. S.
944.
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution provides in
part:
"No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the
Page 457 U. S. 924
United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws."
Because the Amendment is directed at the States, it can be
violated only by conduct that may be fairly characterized as "state
action."
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983 provides a remedy for deprivations of
rights secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States
when that deprivation takes place "under color of any statute,
ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory.
. . ." [
Footnote 1] This case
concerns the relationship between the § 1983 requirement of action
under color of state law and the Fourteenth Amendment requirement
of state action.
I
In 1977, petitioner, a lessee-operator of a truckstop in
Virginia, was indebted to his supplier, Edmondson Oil Co., Inc.
Edmondson sued on the debt in Virginia state court. Ancillary to
that action and pursuant to state law, Edmondson sought prejudgment
attachment of certain of petitioner's property. Va.Code § 8.01-533
(1977). [
Footnote 2] The
prejudgment attachment procedure required only that Edmondson
allege, in an
ex parte petition, a belief that petitioner
was disposing of or might dispose of his property in order to
defeat his creditors. Acting upon that petition, a Clerk of the
state court issued a writ of attachment, which was then executed by
the County Sheriff. This effectively sequestered petitioner's
Page 457 U. S. 925
property, although it was left in his possession. Pursuant to
the statute, a hearing on the propriety of the attachment and levy
was later conducted. Thirty-four days after the levy, a state trial
judge ordered the attachment dismissed because Edmondson had failed
to establish the statutory grounds for attachment alleged in the
petition. [
Footnote 3]
Petitioner subsequently brought this action under 42 U.S.C. §
1983 against Edmondson and its president. His complaint alleged
that, in attaching his property, respondents had acted jointly with
the State to deprive him of his property without due process of
law. The lower courts construed the complaint as alleging a due
process violation both from a misuse of the Virginia procedure and
from the statutory procedure itself. [
Footnote 4] He sought compensatory and punitive damages
for specified financial loss allegedly caused by the improvident
attachment.
Relying on
Flagg Brothers, Inc. v. Brook, 436 U.
S. 149 (1978), the District Court held that the alleged
actions of the respondents did not constitute state action, as
required by the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the complaint
therefore did not state a claim upon which relief could be granted
under § 1983. Petitioner appealed; the Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit, sitting en banc, affirmed, with three dissenters.
[
Footnote 5] 639 F.2d 1058
(1981).
Page 457 U. S. 926
The Court of Appeals rejected the District Court's reliance on
Flagg Brothers in finding that the requisite state action
was missing in this case. The participation of state officers in
executing the levy sufficiently distinguished this case from
Flagg Brothers. The Court of Appeals stated the issue as
follows:
"[W]hether the mere institution by a private litigant of
presumptively valid state judicial proceedings, without any prior
or subsequent collusion or concerted action by that litigant with
the state officials who then proceed with adjudicative,
administrative, or executive enforcement of the proceedings,
constitutes action under color of state law within contemplation of
§ 1983."
639 F.2d at 1061-1062 (footnote omitted).
The court distinguished between the acts directly chargeable to
respondents and the larger context within which those acts
occurred, including the direct levy by state officials on
petitioner's property. While the latter no doubt amounted to state
action, the former was not so clearly action under color of state
law. The court held that a private party acts under color of state
law within the meaning of § 1983 only when there is a usurpation or
corruption of official power by the private litigant or a surrender
of judicial power to the private litigant in such a way that the
independence of the enforcing officer has been compromised to a
significant degree. Because the court thought none of these
elements was present here, the complaint failed to allege conduct
under color of state law.
Because this construction of the "under color of state law"
requirement appears to be inconsistent with prior decisions of this
Court, we granted certiorari. 452 U.S. 937 (1981).
II
Although the Court of Appeals correctly perceived the importance
of
Flagg Brothers to a proper resolution of this case,
Page 457 U. S. 927
it misread that case. [
Footnote
6] It also failed to give sufficient weight to that line of
cases, beginning with
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
395 U. S. 337
(1969), in which the Court considered constitutional due process
requirements in the context of garnishment actions and prejudgment
attachments.
See North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem,
Inc., 419 U. S. 601
(1975);
Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., 416 U.
S. 600 (1974);
Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S.
67 (1972). Each of these cases involved a finding of
state action as an implicit predicate of the application of due
process standards.
Flagg Brothers distinguished them on
the ground that, in each, there was overt, official involvement in
the property deprivation; there was no such overt action by a state
officer in
Flagg Brothers, 436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 157.
Although this case falls on the
Sniadach, and not the
Flagg Brothers, side of this distinction, the Court of
Appeals thought the garnishment and attachment cases to be
irrelevant because none but
Fuentes arose under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 and because
Fuentes was distinguishable. [
Footnote 7]
Page 457 U. S. 928
It determined that it could ignore all of them because the issue
in this case was not whether there was state action, but rather
whether respondents acted under color of state law.
As we see it, however, the two concepts cannot be so easily
disentangled. Whether they are identical or not, the state action
and the "under color of state law" requirements are obviously
related. [
Footnote 8] Indeed,
until recently, this Court did not distinguish between the two
requirements at all.
A
In
United States v. Price, 383 U.
S. 787,
383 U. S. 794,
n. 7 (1966), we explicitly stated that the requirements were
identical:
"In cases under § 1983, 'under color' of law has consistently
been treated as the same thing as the 'state action' required under
the Fourteenth Amendment. [
Footnote
9]"
In support of this proposition, the Court cited
Smith v.
Allwright, 321 U. S. 649
(1944), and
Terry v. Adams, 345 U.
S. 461 (1953). [
Footnote 10] In both of these
Page 457 U. S. 929
cases, black voters in Texas challenged their exclusion from
party primaries as a violation of the Fifteenth Amendment, and
sought relief under 8 U.S.C. § 43 (1946 ed.). [
Footnote 11] In each case, the Court understood
the problem before it to be whether the discriminatory policy of a
private political association could be characterized as "state
action within the meaning of the Fifteenth Amendment."
Smith,
supra, at
321 U. S. 664.
[
Footnote 12] Having found
state action under the Constitution, there was no further inquiry
into whether the action of the political associations also met the
statutory requirement of action "under color of state law."
Similarly, it is clear that, in a § 1983 action brought against
a state official, the statutory requirement of action "under color
of state law" and the "state action" requirement of the Fourteenth
Amendment are identical. The Court's conclusion in
United
States v. Classic, 313 U. S. 299,
313 U. S. 326
(1941), that
"[m]isuse of power, possessed by virtue of state law and made
possible only because the wrongdoer is clothed with the authority
of state law, is action taken 'under color of state law,' was
founded on the rule announced in
Ex parte Virginia,
100 U. S.
339,
100 U. S. 346-347 (1880),
that the actions of a state officer who exceeds the limits of his
authority constitute state action for purposes of the Fourteenth
Amendment. [
Footnote 13]
"
Page 457 U. S. 930
The decision of the Court of Appeals rests on a misreading of
Flagg Brothers. In that case, the Court distinguished two
elements of a § 1983 action:
"[Plaintiffs] are first bound to show that they have been
deprived of a right 'secured by the Constitution and the laws' of
the United States. They must secondly show that Flagg Brothers
deprived them of this right acting 'under color of any statute' of
the State of New York. It is clear that these two elements denote
two separate areas of inquiry.
Adickes v. S. H. Kress &
Co., 398 U. S. 144,
398 U. S.
150 (1970)."
436 U.S. at
436 U. S.
155-156. Plaintiffs' case foundered on the first
requirement. Because a due process violation was alleged, and
because the Due Process Clause protects individuals only from
governmental, and not from private, action, plaintiffs had to
demonstrate that the sale of their goods was accomplished by state
action. The Court concluded that the sale, although authorized by
state law, did not amount to state action under the Fourteenth
Amendment, and therefore set aside the Court of Appeals' contrary
judgment.
There was no reason in
Flagg Brothers to address the
question whether there was action under color of state law. The
Court expressly eschewed deciding whether that requirement was
satisfied by private action authorized by state law.
Id.
at
436 U. S. 156.
Although the state action and "under color of state law"
requirements are "separate areas of inquiry,"
Flagg
Brothers did not hold nor suggest that state action, if
present, might not satisfy the § 1983 requirement of conduct under
color of state law. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals relied on
Flagg Brothers to conclude in this case that state action
under the Fourteenth Amendment is not necessarily action under
color of state law for purposes of § 1983. We do not agree.
The two-part approach to a § 1983 cause of action, referred to
in
Flagg Brothers, was derived from
Adickes
v.
Page 457 U. S. 931
S. H. Kress & Co., 398 U.
S. 144,
398 U. S. 150
(1970).
Adickes was a § 1983 action brought against a
private party, based on a claim of racial discrimination in
violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Although stating that the § 1983 plaintiff must show
both that he has been deprived "of a right secured by the
Constitution and laws' of the United States" and that the
defendant acted "under color of any statute . . . of any State,"
ibid., we held that the private party's joint
participation with a state official in a conspiracy to discriminate
would constitute both "state action essential to show a direct
violation of petitioner's Fourteenth Amendment equal protection
rights" and action "`under color' of law for purposes of the
statute." Id. at 398 U. S. 152.
[Footnote 14] In
Page 457 U. S. 932
support of our conclusion that a private party held to have
violated the Fourteenth Amendment "can be liable under § 1983,"
ibid., we cited that part of
United States v.
Price, 383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 794,
n. 7, in which we had concluded that state action and action under
color of state law are the same (quoted
supra, at
457 U. S.
928).
Adickes provides no support for the Court
of Appeals' novel construction of § 1983. [
Footnote 15]
B
The decision of the Court of Appeals is difficult to reconcile
with the Court's garnishment and prejudgment attachment cases and
with the congressional purpose in enacting § 1983.
Beginning with
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
395 U. S. 337
(1969), the Court has consistently held that constitutional
requirements of due process apply to garnishment and prejudgment
attachment procedures whenever officers
Page 457 U. S. 933
of the State act jointly with a creditor in securing the
property in dispute.
Sniadach and
North Georgia
Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem, Inc., 419 U.
S. 601 (1975), involved state-created garnishment
procedures;
Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., 416 U.
S. 600 (1974), involved execution of a vendor's lien to
secure disputed property. In each of these cases, state agents
aided the creditor in securing the disputed property; but in each
case, the federal issue arose in litigation between creditor and
debtor in the state courts, and no state official was named as a
party. Nevertheless, in each case, the Court entertained and
adjudicated the defendant debtor's claim that the procedure under
which the private creditor secured the disputed property violated
federal constitutional standards of due process. Necessary to that
conclusion is the holding that private use of the challenged state
procedures with the help of state officials constitutes state
action for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S. 67
(1972), was a § 1983 action brought against both a private creditor
and the State Attorney General. The plaintiff sought declaratory
and injunctive relief, on due process grounds, from continued
enforcement of state statutes authorizing prejudgment replevin. The
plaintiff prevailed; if the Court of Appeals were correct in this
case, there would have been no § 1983 cause of action against the
private parties. Yet they remained parties, and judgment ran
against them in this Court. [
Footnote 16]
Page 457 U. S. 934
If a defendant debtor in state court debt collection proceedings
can successfully challenge, on federal due process grounds, the
plaintiff creditor's resort to the procedures authorized by a state
statute, it is difficult to understand why that same behavior by
the state court plaintiff should not provide a cause of action
under § 1983. If the creditor plaintiff violates the
debtor-defendant's due process rights by seizing his property in
accordance with statutory procedures, there is little or no reason
to deny to the latter a cause of action under the federal statute,
§ 1983, designed to provide judicial redress for just such
constitutional violations.
To read the "under color of any statute" language of the Act in
such a way as to impose a limit on those Fourteenth Amendment
violations that may be redressed by the § 1983 cause of action
would be wholly inconsistent with the purpose of § 1 of the Civil
Rights Act of 1871, 17 Stat. 13, from which § 1983 is derived. The
Act was passed "for the express purpose of
enforc[ing] the
Provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment.'" Lynch v. Household
Finance Corp., 405 U. S. 538,
405 U. S. 545
(1972). The history of the Act is replete with statements
indicating that Congress thought it was creating a remedy as broad
as the protection that the Fourteenth Amendment affords the
individual. Perhaps the most direct statement of this was that of
Senator Edmunds, the manager of the bill in the Senate: "[Section 1
is] so very simple, and really reenact[s] the Constitution."
Cong.Globe, 42d Cong., 1st Sess., 569 (1871). Representative
Bingham similarly stated that the bill's purpose was
the enforcement . . . of the Constitution on behalf of every
individual citizen of the Republic . . . to the extent of the
rights guarantied to him by the Constitution.
Id.App. 81. [
Footnote 17]
Page 457 U. S. 935
In sum, the line drawn by the Court of Appeals is inconsistent
with our prior cases, and would substantially undercut the
congressional purpose in providing the § 1983 cause of action. If
the challenged conduct of respondents constitutes state action as
delimited by our prior decisions, then that conduct was also action
under color of state law, and will support a suit under § 1983.
[
Footnote 18]
Page 457 U. S. 936
III
As a matter of substantive constitutional law, the state action
requirement reflects judicial recognition of the fact that "most
rights secured by the Constitution are protected only against
infringement by governments,"
Flagg Brothers, 436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 156.
As the Court said in
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
419 U. S. 345,
419 U. S. 349
(1974):
"In 1883, this Court in the
Civil Rights Cases,
109 U. S.
3, affirmed the essential dichotomy set forth in [the
Fourteenth] Amendment between deprivation by the State, subject to
scrutiny under its provisions, and private conduct, 'however
discriminatory or wrongful,' against which the Fourteenth Amendment
offers no shield."
Careful adherence to the "state action" requirement preserves an
area of individual freedom by limiting the reach of federal law and
federal judicial power. It also avoids imposing on the State, its
agencies or officials, responsibility for conduct for which they
cannot fairly be blamed. A major consequence is to require the
courts to respect the limits of
Page 457 U. S. 937
their own power as directed against state governments and
private interests. Whether this is good or bad policy, it is a
fundamental fact of our political order.
Our cases have accordingly insisted that the conduct allegedly
causing the deprivation of a federal right be fairly attributable
to the State. These cases reflect a two-part approach to this
question of "fair attribution." First, the deprivation must be
caused by the exercise of some right or privilege created by the
State or by a rule of conduct imposed by the State or by a person
for whom the State is responsible. In
Sniadach, Fuentes, W. T.
Grant, and
North Georgia, for example, a state
statute provided the right to garnish or to obtain prejudgment
attachment, as well as the procedure by which the rights could be
exercised. Second, the party charged with the deprivation must be a
person who may fairly be said to be a state actor. This may be
because he is a state official, because he has acted together with
or has obtained significant aid from state officials, or because
his conduct is otherwise chargeable to the State. Without a limit
such as this, private parties could face constitutional litigation
whenever they seek to rely on some state rule governing their
interactions with the community surrounding them.
Although related, these two principles are not the same. They
collapse into each other when the claim of a constitutional
deprivation is directed against a party whose official character is
such as to lend the weight of the State to his decisions.
See
Monroe v. Pape, 365 U. S. 167,
365 U. S. 172
(1961). The two principles diverge when the constitutional claim is
directed against a party without such apparent authority,
i.e., against a private party. The difference between the
two inquiries is well illustrated by comparing
Moose Lodge No.
107 v. Irvis, 407 U. S. 163
(1972), with
Flagg Brothers, supra.
In
Moose Lodge, the Court held that the discriminatory
practices of the appellant did not violate the Equal Protection
Clause because those practices did not constitute "state action."
The Court focused primarily on the question of
Page 457 U. S. 938
whether the admittedly discriminatory policy could in any way be
ascribed to a governmental decision. [
Footnote 19] The inquiry, therefore, looked to those
policies adopted by the State that were applied to appellant. The
Court concluded as follows:
"We therefore hold that, with the exception hereafter noted, the
operation of the regulatory scheme enforced by the Pennsylvania
Liquor Control Board does not sufficiently implicate the State in
the discriminatory guest policies of Moose Lodge to . . . make the
latter 'state action' within the ambit of the Equal Protection
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment."
407 U.S. at
407 U. S. 177.
In other words, the decision to discriminate could not be ascribed
to any governmental decision; those governmental decisions that did
affect Moose Lodge were unconnected with its discriminatory
policies. [
Footnote 20]
Flagg Brothers focused on the other component of the
state action principle. In that case, the warehouseman proceeded
under New York Uniform Commercial Code, § 7-210, and the debtor
challenged the constitutionality of that provision on the grounds
that it violated the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of
the Fourteenth Amendment. Undoubtedly the State was responsible for
the statute. The response of the Court, however, focused not on the
terms of the statute, but on the character of the defendant to the
§ 1983
Page 457 U. S. 939
suit: action by a private party pursuant to this statute,
without something more, was not sufficient to justify a
characterization of that party as a "state actor." The Court
suggested that that "something more" which would convert the
private party into a state actor might vary with the circumstances
of the case. This was simply a recognition that the Court has
articulated a number of different factors or tests in different
contexts:
e.g., the "public function" test,
see Terry
v. Adams, 345 U. S. 461
(1953);
Marsh v. Alabama, 326 U.
S. 501 (1946); the "state compulsion" test,
see
Adickes v. S. H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. at
398 U. S. 170;
the "nexus" test,
see Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
419 U. S. 345
(1974);
Burton v. Wilmington Parking Authority,
365 U. S. 715
(1961); and, in the case of prejudgment attachments, a "joint
action test,"
Flagg Brothers, 436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 157.
[
Footnote 21] Whether these
different tests are actually different in operation or simply
different ways of characterizing the necessarily fact-bound inquiry
that confronts the Court in such a situation need not be resolved
here.
See Burton, supra, at
365 U. S. 722
("Only by sifting facts and weighing circumstances can the
nonobvious involvement of the State in private conduct be
attributed its true significance").
IV
Turning to this case, the first question is whether the claimed
deprivation has resulted from the exercise of a right or privilege
having its source in state authority. The second question is
whether, under the facts of this case, respondents, who are private
parties, may be appropriately characterized as "state actors."
Page 457 U. S. 940
Both the District Court and the Court of Appeals noted the
ambiguous scope of petitioner's contentions:
"There has been considerable confusion throughout the litigation
on the question whether Lugar's ultimate claim of unconstitutional
deprivation was directed at the Virginia statute itself or only at
its erroneous application to him."
639 F.2d at 1060, n. 1. Both courts held that resolution of this
ambiguity was not necessary to their disposition of the case: both
resolved it, in any case, in favor of the view that petitioner was
attacking the constitutionality of the statute, as well as its
misapplication. In our view, resolution of this issue is essential
to the proper disposition of the case.
Petitioner presented three counts in his complaint. Count three
was a pendent claim based on state tort law; counts one and two
claimed violations of the Due Process Clause. Count two alleged
that the deprivation of property resulted from respondents'
"malicious, wanton, willful, opressive [
sic], [and]
unlawful acts." By "unlawful," petitioner apparently meant
"unlawful under state law." To say this, however, is to say that
the conduct of which petitioner complained could not be ascribed to
any governmental decision; rather, respondents were acting contrary
to the relevant policy articulated by the State. Nor did they have
the authority of state officials to put the weight of the State
behind their private decision,
i.e., this case does not
fall within the abuse of authority doctrine recognized in
Monroe v. Pape, 365 U. S. 167
(1961). That respondents invoked the statute without the grounds to
do so could in no way be attributed to a state rule or a state
decision. Count two, therefore, does not state a cause of action
under § 1983, but challenges only private action.
Count one is a different matter. That count describes the
procedures followed by respondents in obtaining the prejudgment
attachment as well as the fact that the state court subsequently
ordered the attachment dismissed because respondents had not met
their burden under state law. Petitioner
Page 457 U. S. 941
then summarily states that this sequence of events deprived him
of his property without due process. Although it is not clear
whether petitioner is referring to the state-created procedure or
the misuse of that procedure by respondents, we agree with the
lower courts that the better reading of the complaint is that
petitioner challenges the state statute as procedurally defective
under the Fourteenth Amendment. [
Footnote 22]
While private misuse of a state statute does not describe
conduct that can be attributed to the State, the procedural scheme
created by the statute obviously is the product of state action.
This is subject to constitutional restraints, and properly may be
addressed in a § 1983 action, if the second element of the state
action requirement is met as well.
As is clear from the discussion in
457 U.
S. we have consistently held that a private party's
joint participation with state officials in the seizure of disputed
property is sufficient to characterize that party as a "state
actor" for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment. The rule in these
cases is the same as that articulated in
Adickes v. S. H. Kress
& Co., supra, at
398 U. S. 152,
in the context of an equal protection deprivation:
""Private persons, jointly engaged with state officials in the
prohibited action, are acting
under color' of law for purposes
of the statute. To act `under color' of law does not require that
the accused be an officer of the State. It is enough that he is a
willful participant in joint activity with the State or its
agents,""
quoting
United States v. Price, 383 U.S. at
383 U. S.
794.
Page 457 U. S. 942
The Court of Appeals erred in holding that in this context
"joint participation" required something more than invoking the aid
of state officials to take advantage of state-created attachment
procedures. That holding is contrary to the conclusions we have
reached as to the applicability of due process standards to such
procedures. Whatever may be true in other contexts, this is
sufficient when the State has created a system whereby state
officials will attach property on the
ex parte application
of one party to a private dispute.
In summary, petitioner was deprived of his property through
state action; respondents were, therefore, acting under color of
state law in participating in that deprivation. Petitioner did
present a valid cause of action under § 1983 insofar as he
challenged the constitutionality of the Virginia statute; he did
not insofar as he alleged only misuse or abuse of the statute.
[
Footnote 23]
The judgment is reversed in part and affirmed in part, and the
case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
So ordered.
Page 457 U. S. 943
[
Footnote 1]
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983, at the time in question, provided in
full:
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory, subjects,
or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or
other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of
any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution
and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law,
suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress."
[
Footnote 2]
At the time of the attachment in question, this section was
codified as Va.Code § 519 (1973).
[
Footnote 3]
The principal action then proceeded to the entry of judgment on
the debt in favor of Edmondson, and some of petitioner's property
was sold in execution of the judgment.
[
Footnote 4]
In his answer to respondents' motion to dismiss on abstention
grounds, petitioner stated that "[n]o question of the
constitutional validity of the State statutes is made." Plaintiff's
Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss 3. The District Court
responded to this as follows:
"[D]espite plaintiff's protests to the contrary . . . the
complaint can only be read as challenging the constitutionality of
Virginia's attachment statute."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 38. The Court of Appeals agreed. 639 F.2d
1058, 1060, n. 1 (CA4 1981).
[
Footnote 5]
The case was originally argued before a three-judge panel. The
Court of Appeals, however, acting
sua sponte, set the
matter for a rehearing en banc.
[
Footnote 6]
JUSTICE POWELL suggests that our opinion is not "consistent with
the mode of inquiry prescribed by our cases."
Post at
457 U. S. 946.
We believe the situation to be just the opposite. We rely precisely
upon the ground that the majority itself put forth in
Flagg
Brothers to distinguish that case from the earlier prejudgment
attachment cases:
This total absence of overt official involvement plainly
distinguishes this case from earlier decisions imposing procedural
restrictions on creditors' remedies.
436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 157.
JUSTICE POWELL at no point mentions this aspect of the
Flagg
Brothers decision. The method of inquiry we adopt is that
suggested by
Adickes v. S. H. Kress Co., 398 U.
S. 144 (1970), and seemingly approved in
Flagg
Brothers. Joint action with a state official to accomplish a
prejudgment deprivation of a constitutionally protected property
interest will support a § 1983 claim against a private party.
[
Footnote 7]
The Court of Appeals held
Fuentes v. Shevin not to be
relevant because the defendants in that case included the State
Attorney General, as well as the private creditor. In the court's
view, the presence of a state official made the "private party
defendant . . . merely a nominal party to the action for injunctive
relief." 639 F.2d at 1068, n. 22. Judge Butzner, in dissent, found
Fuentes to be directly controlling.
[
Footnote 8]
The Court of Appeals itself recognized this when it stated that,
in two of three basic patterns of § 1983 litigation -- that in
which the defendant is a public official and that in which he is a
private party -- there is no distinction between state action and
action under color of state law. Only when there is joint action by
private parties and state officials, the court stated, could a
distinction arise between these two requirements.
[
Footnote 9]
We also stated that, if an indictment "allege[s] conduct on the
part of the
private' defendants which constitutes `state
action,' [it alleges] action `under color' of law within [18
U.S.C.] § 242." 383 U.S. at 383 U. S. 794,
n.7. In Monroe v. Pape, 365 U. S. 167,
365 U. S. 185
(1961), the Court held that "under color of law" has the same
meaning in 18 U.S.C. § 242 as it does in § 1983.
[
Footnote 10]
Besides these two Supreme Court cases, the Court cited a number
of lower court cases in support of the proposition that the
constitutional concept of state action satisfies the statutory
requirement of action under color of state law.
Simkins v.
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, 323 F.2d 959 (CA4 1963);
Smith v. Holiday Inns, 336 F.2d 630 (CA6 1964);
Hampton v. City of Jacksonville, 304 F.2d 320 (CA5 1962);
Bowman v. Birmingham Transit Co., 280 F.2d 531 (CA5 1960);
Kerr v. Enoch Pratt Free Library, 149 F.2d 212 (CA4 1945).
Each of these cases involved litigation between private parties in
which the plaintiffs alleged unconstitutional discrimination. In
each case, the only inquiry was whether the private party defendant
met the state action requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment. Once
that requirement was met, the courts granted the relief sought.
[
Footnote 11]
Title 8 U.S.C. § 43 (1946 ed.) was reclassified as 42 U.S.C. §
1983 in 1952.
[
Footnote 12]
There was no opinion for the Court in
Terry v. Adams.
All three opinions in support of the reversal of the lower court
decision pose the question as to whether the action of the private
political association in question, the Jaybird Democratic
Association, constituted state action for purposes of the Fifteenth
Amendment. None suggests that a Fifteenth Amendment violation by
the private association might not support a cause of action because
of a failure to prove action under color of state law.
[
Footnote 13]
United States v. Classic did not involve § 1983
directly; rather, it interpreted 18 U.S.C. § 242 (then 18 U.S.C. §
52 (1940 ed.)), which is the criminal counterpart of 42 U.S.C. §
1983.
See n 9,
supra, on the relationship between 18 U.S.C. § 242 and 42
U.S.C. § 1983.
[
Footnote 14]
The
Adickes opinion contained the following statement,
398 U.S. at
398 U. S. 162,
n. 23:
"Whatever else may also be necessary to show that a person has
acted 'under color of [a] statute' for purposes of § 1983, . . . we
think it essential that he act. with the knowledge of and pursuant
to that statute."
This statement obviously was meant neither to establish the
definition of action under color of state law, nor to establish a
distinction between this statutory requirement and the
constitutional standard of state action. The statement was made in
response to an argument that the discrimination by the private
party was pursuant to the state trespass statute, and that this
would satisfy the requirements of § 1983. The Court rejected this
because there had been no factual showing that the defendants had
acted with knowledge of, or pursuant to, this statute. It was in
this context, that this statement was made.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, writing separately, did suggest in
Adickes that
"when a private party acts alone, more must be shown . . . to
establish that he acts 'under color of' a state statute or other
authority than is needed to show that his action constitutes state
action."
Id. at
398 U. S. 210
(footnote omitted). Even in his view, however, when a private party
acts in conjunction with a state official, whatever satisfies the
state action requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment satisfies the
"under color of state law" requirement of the statute. JUSTICE
BRENNAN's position rested, at least in part, on a much less strict
standard of what would constitute "state action" in the area of
racial discrimination than that adopted by the majority. In any
case, the position he articulated there has never been adopted by
the Court.
[
Footnote 15]
JUSTICE POWELL's discussion of
Adickes confuses the two
counts of the complaint in that case. There was a conspiracy count
which alleged that respondent -- a private party -- and a police
officer had conspired
"(1) 'to deprive [petitioner] of her right to enjoy equal
treatment and service in a place of public accommodation;' and (2)
to cause her arrest 'on the false charge of vagrancy.'"
Id. at
398 U. S.
149-150. It was with respect to this count, which did
not allege any unconstitutional statute or custom, that the Court
held that joint action of the private party and the police officer
was sufficient to support a § 1983 suit against that party. The
other count of her complaint was a substantive count in which she
alleged that the private act of discrimination was pursuant to a
"custom of the community to segregate the races in public eating
places." Here the Court did not rely on any "joint action" theory,
but held that "petitioner would show an abridgment of her equal
protection right if she proves that Kress refused her service
because of a state-enforced custom."
Id. at
398 U. S. 171,
398 U. S. 173.
JUSTICE POWELL is wrong when he summarizes
Adickes as
holding that
"a private party acts under color of law when he conspires with
state officials to secure the application of a state law so plainly
unconstitutional as to enjoy no presumption of validity."
Post at
457 U. S.
954-955. This is to confuse the conspiracy and the
substantive counts at issue in
Adickes. Unless one argues
that the state vagrancy law was unconstitutional -- an argument no
one made in
Adickes -- the joint action count of
Adickes did not involve a state law, whether "plainly
unconstitutional" or not.
[
Footnote 16]
We thus find incomprehensible JUSTICE POWELL's statement that we
cite no cases in which a private decision to invoke a presumptively
valid state legal process has been held to be state action.
Post at
457 U. S. 950.
Likewise, his discussion of these cases,
post at
457 U. S.
952-953, steadfastly ignores the predicate for the
holding in each case that the debtor could challenge the
constitutional adequacy of the private creditor's seizure of his
property. That predicate was necessarily the principle that a
private party's invocation of a seemingly valid prejudgment remedy
statute, coupled with the aid of a state official, satisfies the
state action requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment and warrants
relief against the private party.
[
Footnote 17]
In fact, throughout the congressional debate over the 1871 Act,
the bill was officially described as a bill "to enforce the
provisions of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the
United States, and for other purposes."
See also, e.g.,
remarks of Senator Trumbull in describing the purpose of the House
in passing the Act:
"[A]s the bill passed the House of Representatives, it was
understood by the members of that body to go no further than to
protect persons in the rights which were guarantied to them by the
Constitution and laws of the United States,"
Cong.Globe, 42d Cong., 1st Sess., 579 (1871); and remarks of
Representative Shellabarger on the relationship between § 1 of the
bill and the Fourteenth Amendment,
id., App. 68.
[
Footnote 18]
Our conclusion in this case is not inconsistent with the
statement in
Flagg Brothers that "these two elements
[state action and action under color of state law] denote two
separate areas of inquiry." 436 U.S. at
457 U. S.
155-156. First, although we hold that conduct satisfying
the state action requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment satisfies
the statutory requirement of action under color of state law, it
does not follow from that that all conduct that satisfies the
"under color of state law" requirement would satisfy the Fourteenth
Amendment requirement of state action. If action under color of
state law means nothing more than that the individual act "with the
knowledge of and pursuant to that statute,"
Adickes v. S. H.
Kress & Co., 398 U.S. at
398 U. S. 162,
n. 23, then clearly, under
Flagg Brothers, that would not,
in itself, satisfy the state action requirement of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Second, although we hold in this case that the "under
color of state law" requirement does not add anything not already
included within the state action requirement of the Fourteenth
Amendment, § 1983 is applicable to other constitutional provisions
and statutory provisions that contain no state action requirement.
Where such a federal right is at issue, the statutory concept of
action under color of state law would be a distinct element of the
case not satisfied implicitly by a finding of a violation of the
particular federal right.
Nor is our decision today inconsistent with
Polk County v.
Dodson, 454 U. S. 312
(1981). In
Polk County, we held that a public defender's
actions, when performing a lawyer's traditional functions as
counsel in a state criminal proceeding, would not support a § 1983
suit. Although we analyzed the public defender's conduct in light
of the requirement of action "under color of state law," we
specifically stated that it was not necessary in that case to
consider whether that requirement was identical to the "state
action" requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment:
"Although this Court has sometimes treated the questions as if
they were identical,
see United States v. Price,
383 U. S.
787,
383 U. S. 794, and n. 7
(1966), we need not consider their relationship in order to decide
this case."
Id. at
454 U. S. 322,
n. 12. We concluded there that a public defender, although a state
employee, in the day-to-day defense of his client, acts under
canons of professional ethics in a role adversarial to the State.
Accordingly, although state employment is generally sufficient to
render the defendant a state actor under our analysis,
infra at
457 U. S. 937,
it was "peculiarly difficult" to detect any action of the State in
the circumstances of that case. 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 320.
In
Polk County, we also rejected respondent's claims
against governmental agencies because he "failed to allege any
policy that arguably violated his rights under the Sixth, Eighth,
or Fourteenth Amendments."
Id. at
454 U. S. 326.
Because respondent failed to challenge any rule of conduct or
decision for which the State was responsible, his allegations would
not support a claim of state action under the analysis proposed
below.
Infra at
457 U. S. 937.
Thus, our decision today does not suggest a different outcome in
Polk County.
[
Footnote 19]
There are elements of the other state action inquiry in the
opinion as well. This is found primarily in the effort to
distinguish the relationship of Moose Lodge and the State from that
between the State and the restaurant considered in
Burton v.
Wilmington Parking Authority, 365 U.
S. 715 (1961).
See 407 U.S. at
407 U. S.
175.
[
Footnote 20]
The "one exception" further illustrates this point. The Court
enjoined enforcement of a state rule requiring Moose Lodge to
comply with its own constitution and bylaws insofar as they
contained racially discriminatory provisions. State enforcement of
this rule, either judicially or administratively, would, under the
circumstances, amount to a governmental decision to adopt a
racially discriminatory policy.
[
Footnote 21]
Contrary to the suggestion of JUSTICE POWELL's dissent, we do
not hold today that
"a private party's mere invocation of state legal procedures
constitutes 'joint participation' or 'conspiracy' with state
officials satisfying the § 1983 requirement of action under color
of law."
Post at
457 U. S. 951.
The holding today, as the above analysis makes clear, is limited to
the particular context of prejudgment attachment.
[
Footnote 22]
This confusion in the nature of petitioner's allegations
continued in oral argument in this Court. Although at various times
counsel for petitioner seemed to deny that petitioner challenged
the constitutionality of the statute,
see, e.g., Tr. of
Oral Arg. 11, he also stated that
"[t]he claim is that the action as taken, even if it were just
line by line in accordance with Virginia law -- whether or not they
did it right, the claim is that it was in violation of Lugar's
constitutional rights."
Id. at 19.
[
Footnote 23]
JUSTICE POWELL is concerned that private individuals who
innocently make use of seemingly valid state laws would be
responsible, if the law is subsequently held to be
unconstitutional, for the consequences of their actions. In our
view, however, this problem should be dealt with not by changing
the character of the cause of action, but by establishing an
affirmative defense. A similar concern is at least partially
responsible for the availability of a good faith defense, or
qualified immunity, to state officials. We need not reach the
question of the availability of such a defense to private
individuals at this juncture. What we said in
Adickes, 398
U.S. at
398 U. S. 174,
n. 44, when confronted with this question is just as applicable
today:
"We intimate no views concerning the relief that might be
appropriate if a violation is shown. The parties have not briefed
these remedial issues, and if a violation is proved, they are best
explored in the first instance below in light of the new record
that will be developed on remand. Nor do we mean to determine at
this juncture whether there are any defenses available to
defendants in § 1983 actions like the one at hand.
Cf. Pierson
v. Ray, 386 U. S. 547 (1967)."
(Citations omitted.)
CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, dissenting.
Whether we are dealing with suits under § 1983 or suits brought
pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment, in my view, the inquiry is
the same: is the claimed infringement of a federal right fairly
attributable to the State.
Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, ante at
457 U. S. 838.
Applying this standard, it cannot be said that the actions of the
named respondents are fairly attributable to the State.
* Respondents did
no more than invoke a presumptively valid state prejudgment
attachment procedure available to all. Relying on a dubious "but
for" analysis, the Court erroneously concludes that the subsequent
procedural steps taken by the State in attaching a putative
debtor's property in some way transforms respondents' acts into
actions of the State. This case is no different from the situation
in which a private party commences a lawsuit and secures injunctive
relief which, even if temporary, may cause significant injury to
the defendant. Invoking a judicial process, of course, implicates
the State and its officers, but does not transform essentially
private conduct into actions of the State.
Dennis v.
Sparks, 449 U. S. 24
(1980). Similarly, one who practices a trade or profession, drives
an automobile, or builds a house under a state license is not
engaging in acts fairly attributable to the state. In both \Dennis\
and the instant case, petitioner's remedy lies in private suits for
damages such as malicious prosecution. The Court's opinion expands
the reach of the statute beyond anything intended by Congress. It
may well be a consequence of too casually falling into a semantical
trap because of the figurative use of the term "color of state
law."
Page 457 U. S. 944
* The pleadings in this case amply demonstrate that the
challenged conduct was directed solely at respondents' acts. The
unlawful actions alleged were that respondents made "conclusory
allegations," App. 5, respondents lacked a "factual basis" for
attachment,
id. at 10, and respondents lacked "good cause
to believe facts which would support" attachment.
Id. at
19. There is no allegation of collusion or conspiracy with state
actors.
JUSTICE POWELL, with whom JUSTICE REHNQUIST and JUSTICE O'CONNOR
join, dissenting.
Today's decision is a disquieting example of how expansive
judicial decisionmaking can ensnare a person who had every reason
to believe he was acting in strict accordance with law. The case
began nearly five years ago as the outgrowth of a simple suit on a
debt in a Virginia state court. Respondent -- a small wholesale oil
dealer in Southside, Va. -- brought suit against petitioner Lugar,
a truckstop owner who had failed to pay a debt. [
Footnote 2/1] The suit was to collect this
indebtedness. Fearful that petitioner might dissipate his assets
before the debt was collected, respondent also filed a petition in
state court seeking sequestration of certain of Lugar's assets. He
did so under a Virginia statute, traceable at least to 1819, that
permits creditors to seek prejudgment attachment of property in the
possession of debtors. [
Footnote
2/2] No court had questioned the validity of the statute, and
it remains presumptively valid. The Clerk of the state court duly
issued a writ of attachment, and the County Sheriff then executed
it. There is no allegation that respondent conspired with the state
officials to deny petitioner the fair protection of state or
federal law.
Page 457 U. S. 945
Respondent ultimately prevailed in his lawsuit. The petitioner
Lugar was ordered by a court to pay his debt. A state court did
find, however, that Lugar's assets should not have been attached
prior to a judgment on the underlying action.
Following this decision, Lugar instituted legal action in the
United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia.
Suing under a federal statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Lugar alleged that
the respondent -- by filing a petition in state court -- had acted
"under color of law" and had caused the deprivation of
constitutional rights under the Fourteenth Amendment -- an
Amendment that does not create rights enforceable against private
citizens, such as one would have assumed respondent to be, but only
against the States.
Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, ante at
457 U. S. 837;
Flagg Bros., Inc. v. Brooks, 436 U.
S. 149,
436 U. S. 156
(1978);
Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U. S.
1,
334 U. S. 13
(1948);
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S.
3,
109 U. S. 11
(1883). [
Footnote 2/3] Both the
District Court and the Court of Appeals agreed that petitioner had
no cause of action under § 1983. They sensibly found that
respondent could not be held responsible for any deprivation of
constitutional rights, and that the suit did not belong in federal
court.
This Court today reverses the judgment of those lower courts. It
holds that respondent, a private citizen who did no more than
commence a legal action of a kind traditionally initiated by
private parties, thereby engaged in "state action." This decision
is as unprecedented as it is implausible. It is plainly unjust to
the respondent, and the Court makes no
Page 457 U. S. 946
argument to the contrary. Respondent, who was represented by
counsel, could have had no notion that his filing of a petition in
state court, in the effort to secure payment of a private debt,
made him a "state actor" liable in damages for allegedly
unconstitutional action by the Commonwealth of Virginia. Nor is the
Court's analysis consistent with the mode of inquiry prescribed by
our cases. On the contrary, the Court undermines fundamental
distinctions between the common sense categories of state and
private conduct and between the legal concepts of "state action"
and private action "under color of law."
I
The plain language of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 establishes that a
plaintiff must satisfy two jurisdictional requisites to state an
actionable claim. First, he must allege the violation of a right
"secured by the Constitution and laws" of the United States.
Because "most rights secured by the Constitution are protected only
against infringement by governments,"
Flagg Bros., Inc. v.
Brooks, 436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 156,
this requirement compels an inquiry into the presence of state
action. Second, a § 1983 plaintiff must show that the alleged
deprivation was caused by a person acting "under color" of law. In
Flagg Bros., this Court affirmed that "these two elements
denote two separate areas of inquiry."
Id. at
436 U. S.
155-156.
See Adickes v. S. H. Kress & Co.,
398 U. S. 144,
398 U. S. 152
(1970).
This case demonstrates why separate inquiries are required. Here
it is not disputed that the Virginia Sheriff and Clerk of Court,
the state officials who sequestered petitioner's property in the
manner provided by Virginia law, engaged in state action. Yet the
petitioner, while alleging constitutional injury from this action
by state officials, did not sue the State or its agents. In these
circumstances, the Court of Appeals correctly stated that the
relevant inquiry was the second identified in
Flagg Bros.:
whether the respondent, a private citizen whose only action was to
invoke a presumptively valid state attachment process, had acted
under color of state law in "causing" the State to deprive
petitioner
Page 457 U. S. 947
of alleged constitutional rights. [
Footnote 2/4] Consistently with past decisions of this
Court, the Court of Appeals concluded that respondent's private
conduct had not occurred under color of law.
Rejecting the reasoning of the Court of Appeals, the Court
opinion inexplicably conflates the two inquiries mandated by
Flagg Bros. Ignoring that this case involves two sets of
actions -- one by respondent, who merely filed a suit and
accompanying sequestration petition; another by the state
officials, who issued the writ and executed the lien -- it wrongly
frames the question before the Court, not as whether the private
respondent acted under color of law in filing the petition, but as
"whether . . . respondents, who are private parties, may be
appropriately characterized as
state actors.'" Ante at
457 U. S. 939.
It then concludes that they may, on the theory that a private party
who invokes "the aid of state officials to take advantage of
state-created attachment procedures" is a "joint participant" with
the State, and therefore a "state actor." "The rule," the Court
asserts, is as follows:
"Private persons, jointly engaged with state officials in the
prohibited action, are acting 'under color' of law for purposes of
the statute. To act 'under color' of law does not require that the
accused be an officer of the State. It is enough that he is a
willful participant in a joint activity with the State or its
agents."
Ante at
457 U. S. 941,
quoting
Adickes v. S. H. Kress & Co., supra, at
398 U. S. 152,
in turn quoting
United State v. Price, 383 U.
S. 787,
383 U. S. 794
(1966).
Page 457 U. S. 948
There are at least two fallacies in the Court's conclusion.
First, as is apparent from the quotation, our cases have not
established that private "joint participants" with state officials
themselves necessarily become state actors. Where private citizens
interact with state officials in the pursuit of merely private
ends, the appropriate inquiry generally is whether the private
parties have acted "under color of law." Second, even when the
inquiry is whether an action occurred under color of law, our cases
make clear that the "joint participation" standard is not satisfied
when a private citizen does no more than invoke a presumptively
valid judicial process in pursuit only of legitimate private
ends.
II
As this Court recognized in
Monroe v. Pape,
365 U. S. 167,
365 U. S. 172
(1961), the historic purpose of § 1983 was to prevent state
officials from using the cloak of their authority under state law
to violate rights protected against state infringement by the
Fourteenth Amendment. [
Footnote
2/5] The Court accordingly is correct that an important inquiry
in a § 1983 suit against a private party is whether there is an
allegation of wrongful "conduct that can be attributed to the
State."
Ante at
457 U. S. 941.
This is the first question referred to in
Flagg Bros. But
there still remains the second
Flagg Bros. question:
whether this state action fairly can be attributed to the
respondent, whose
Page 457 U. S. 949
only action was to invoke a presumptively valid attachment
statute. This question, unasked by the Court, reveals the fallacy
of its conclusion that respondent may be held accountable for the
attachment of property because he was a "state actor." [
Footnote 2/6] From the occurrence of state
action taken by the Sheriff who sequestered petitioner's property,
it does not follow that respondent became a "state actor" simply
because the Sheriff was. This Court, until today, has never
endorsed this
non sequitur.
It, of course, is true that respondent's private action was
followed by state action, and that the private and the state
actions were not unconnected. But "[t]hat the State responds to
[private] actions by [taking action of its own] does not render it
responsible for those [private] actions."
Blum v. Yaretsky,
post at
457 U. S.
1005.
See Flagg Bros., 436 U.S. at
436 U. S.
164-165;
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
419 U. S. 345,
419 U. S. 357
(1974). And where the State is not responsible for a private
decision to behave in a certain way, the private action generally
cannot be considered "state action" within the meaning of our
cases.
See, e.g., Blum v. Yaretsky, post at
457 U. S.
1004-1005;
Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis,
407 U. S. 163,
407 U. S.
172-173 (1972). As in
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison
Co., supra,
"[r]espondent's exercise of the choice allowed by state law
where
Page 457 U. S. 950
the initiative comes from it and not from the State, does not
make its action in doing so 'state action' for purposes of the
Fourteenth Amendment."
419 U.S. at
419 U. S. 357
(footnote omitted).
This Court, of course, has held that private parties are
amenable to suit under § 1983 when "jointly engaged" with state
officials in the violation of constitutional rights.
See
Adickes v. S. H. Kress & Co., 398 U.
S. 144 (1970). [
Footnote
2/7] Yet the Court, in advancing its "joint participation"
theory, does not cite a single case in which a private decision to
invoke a presumptively valid state legal process has been held to
constitute state action. Even the quotation on which the Court
principally relies for its statement of the applicable "rule,"
ante at
457 U. S. 941,
does not refer to state action. Rather, it states explicitly that
"[p]rivate persons, jointly engaged with state officials in the
prohibited action, are acting
under color' of law for purposes
of the statute."
As illustrated by this quotation, our cases have recognized a
distinction between "state action" and private action under "color
of law." This distinction is sound in principle. It also is
consistent with and supportive of the distinction between "private"
conduct and government action that is subject to the procedural
limitations of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
As the Court itself notes:
"Careful adherence to the 'state action' requirement preserves
an area of individual freedom by limiting the reach of federal law
and federal judicial power. It also avoids imposing on the State,
its agencies or officials, responsibility for conduct for which
they cannot fairly be blamed."
Ante at
457 U. S.
936.
A "color of law" inquiry acknowledges that private individuals,
engaged in unlawful joint behavior with state officials, may be
personally responsible for wrongs that they cause to
occur. But it does not confuse private actors with the
Page 457 U. S. 951
State -- the fallacy of the analysis adopted today by the Court.
In this case, involving the private action of the respondent in
petitioning the state courts of Virginia, the appropriate inquiry
as to respondent's liability is not whether he was a state actor,
but whether he acted under color of law. It is to this question
that I therefore turn.
III
Contrary to the position of the Court, our cases do not
establish that a private party's mere invocation of state legal
procedures constitutes "joint participation" or "conspiracy" with
state officials satisfying the § 1983 requirement of action under
color of law. In
Dennis v. Sparks, 449 U. S.
24 (1980), we held that private parties acted under
color of law when corruptly conspiring with a state judge in a
joint scheme to defraud. In so holding, however, we explicitly
stated that "merely resorting to the courts and being on the
winning side of a lawsuit does not make a party a coconspirator or
a joint actor with the judge."
Id. at
449 U. S. 28.
This conclusion is reinforced by our more recent decision in
Polk County v. Dodson, 454 U. S. 312
(1981). As we held to be true with respect to the defense of a
criminal defendant, invocation of state legal process is
"essentially a private function . . . for which state office and
authority are not needed."
Id. at
454 U. S. 319.
These recent decisions make clear that independent, private
decisions made in the context of litigation cannot be said to occur
under color of law. [
Footnote 2/8]
The Court nevertheless advances two principal grounds for its
holding to the contrary.
Page 457 U. S. 952
A
The Court argues that petitioner's action under § 1983 is
supported by cases in which this Court has applied due process
standards to state garnishment and prejudgment attachment
procedures. The Court relies specifically on
Sniadach v. Family
Finance Corp., 395 U. S. 337
(1969);
Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S.
67 (1972);
Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co.,
416 U. S. 600
(1974); and
North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. DiChem, Inc.,
419 U. S. 601
(1975). According to the Court, these cases establish that a
private party acts "under color" of law when seeking the attachment
of property under an unconstitutional state statute. [
Footnote 2/9] In fact, a careful reading
demonstrates that they provide no authority for this
proposition.
Of the cases cited by the Court,
Sniadach, Mitchell,
and
Di-Chem all involved attacks on the validity of state
attachment or garnishment statutes. None of the cases alleged that
the private creditor was a joint actor with the State, and none
involved a claim for damages against the creditor. Each case
involved a state suit, not a federal action under § 1983. It
therefore was unnecessary in any of these cases for this Court to
consider whether the creditor, by virtue of instituting the
attachment or garnishment, became a state actor or acted under
color of state law. There is not one word in any of these cases
that so characterizes the private creditor. [
Footnote 2/10] In
Fuentes v. Shevin, the Court
did consider a
Page 457 U. S. 953
§ 1983 action against a private creditor, as well as the State
Attorney General. [
Footnote 2/11]
Again, however, the only question before this Court was the
validity of a state statute. No claim was made that the creditor
was a joint actor with the State, or had acted under color of law.
No damages were sought from the creditor. Again, there was no
occasion for this Court to consider the status under § 1983 of the
private party, and there is not a word in the opinion that
discusses this. As with
Sniadach, Mitchell, and
Di-Chem, Fuentes thus fails to establish that a
private party's mere invocation of state attachment or garnishment
procedures represents action under color of law -- even in a case
in which those procedures are subsequently held to be
unconstitutional.
B
In addition to relying on cases involving the constitutionality
of state attachment and garnishment statutes, the Court advances a
"joint participation" theory based on
Adickes v. S. H. Kress
& Co., 398 U. S. 144
(1970). In
Adickes, the plaintiff sued a private
restaurant under § 1983, alleging a conspiracy between the
restaurant and local police to deprive her of the right to equal
treatment in a place of public accommodation.
Id. at
398 U. S. 152,
398 U. S. 153.
Reversing the decision below, this Court upheld the cause of
action. It found that the private defendant, in "conspiring" with
local police to obtain official enforcement of a state custom of
racial segregation, engaged in a "
joint activity with the State
or its agents,'"
Page 457 U. S.
954
and therefore acted under color of law within the meaning of
§ 1983. Id. at 398 U. S. 152
(quoting United States v. Price, 383 U.S. at 383 U. S.
794).
Contrary to the suggestion of the Court, however, Justice
Harlan's Court opinion in
Adickes did not purport to
define the term "under color of law." Attending closely to the
facts presented, the Court observed that,
"
[w]hatever else may also be necessary to show that a person
has acted 'under color of [a] statute' for purposes of § 1983,
. . . we think it essential that he act with the knowledge of, and
pursuant to, that statute."
398 U.S. at
398 U. S. 162,
n. 23 (emphasis added). As indicated by this choice of language,
the Court clearly seems to have contemplated some limiting
principle. A citizen summoning the police to enforce the law
ordinarily would not be considered to have engaged in a
"conspiracy." Nor, presumably, would such a citizen be
characterized as acting under color of law, and thereby risking
amenability to suit for constitutional violations that subsequently
might occur. Surely there is nothing in
Adickes to
indicate that the Court would have found action under color of law
in cases of this kind.
Although
Adickes is distinguishable from these
hypotheticals, the current case is not. The conduct in
Adickes occurred in 1964, 10 years after
Brown v.
Board of Education, 347 U. S. 483
(1954), and after the decade of publicized litigation that followed
in its wake. In view of the intense national focus on issues of
racial discrimination, it is virtually inconceivable that a private
citizen then could have acted in the innocent belief that the state
law and customs involved in
Adickes still were
presumptively valid. As Justice Harlan wrote,
"[f]ew principles of law are more firmly stitched into our
constitutional fabric than the proposition that a State must not
discriminate against a person because of his race or the race of
his companions, or in any way act to compel or encourage
segregation."
398 U.S. at
389 U. S.
150-152. Construed as resting on this basis,
Adickes establishes that a private
Page 457 U. S. 955
party acts under color of law when he conspires with state
officials to secure the application of a state law so plainly
unconstitutional as to enjoy no presumption of validity. In such a
context, the private party
could be characterized as
hiding behind the authority of law, and as engaging in "joint
participation" with the State in the deprivation of constitutional
rights. [
Footnote 2/12] Here,
however, petitioner has alleged no conspiracy. Nor has he even
alleged that respondent was invoking the aid of a law he should
have known to be constitutionally invalid. [
Footnote 2/13] Finally, there is no allegation that
respondent's decision to invoke legal process was in any way
Page 457 U. S. 956
compelled by the law or custom of the State in which he lived.
In this context,
Adickes simply is inapposite.
Today's decision therefore is as unprecedented as it is unjust.
[
Footnote 2/14]
[
Footnote 2/1]
The state action, filed in the name of the Edmondson Oil Co.,
alleged that Lugar owed $41,983 for products and merchandise
previously delivered. App. 22. In the present suit, Lugar has named
as defendants both the Edmondson Oil Co. and its president, Ronald
Barbour. As the respondent Barbour is the sole stockholder of
Edmondson Oil Co.,
id. at 2, and appears to have directed
all its actions in this litigation,
see id. at 26, I refer
throughout to Barbour as if he were the sole respondent.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See Va.Code § 8.01-533
et seq. (1977). At the
time of the attachment in this case, the applicable provisions were
Va.Code § 8-519
et seq. (1973). The Virginia attachment
provisions have remained essentially in their present form despite
numerous recodifications since 1819.
See Va.Code § 8-519
et seq. (1950); Va.Code § 6378
et seq. (1919);
Va.Code § 2959
et seq. (1887); Va.Code, ch. 151 (1849);
Va.Code, ch. 123 (1819).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983, at the time in question, provided:
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory, subjects,
or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or
other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of
any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution
and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law,
suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress."
[
Footnote 2/4]
Judge Phillips' excellent opinion for the en banc Court of
Appeals correctly defined the question presented as
"whether the mere institution by a private litigant of
presumptively valid state judicial proceedings, without any prior
or subsequent collusion or concerted action by that litigant with
the state officials who then proceed with adjudicative,
administrative, or executive enforcement of the proceedings,
constitutes action under color of state law within the
contemplation of § 1983."
639 F.2d 1058, 1061-1062 (CA4 1981) (footnote omitted).
[
Footnote 2/5]
State officials acting in their official capacities, even if in
abuse of their lawful authority, generally are held to act "under
color" of law.
E.g., Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.S. at
365 U. S.
171-172;
Ex parte Virginia, 100 U.
S. 339,
100 U. S.
346-347 (1880). This is because such officials are
"clothed with the authority" of state law, which gives them power
to perpetrate the very wrongs that Congress intended § 1983 to
prevent.
United States v. Classic, 313 U.
S. 299,
313 U. S. 326
(1941);
Ex parte Virginia, supra, at
100 U. S.
346-347.
Cf. Polk County v. Dodson,
454 U. S. 312
(1981) (a public defender, representing an indigent client in a
criminal proceeding, performs a function for which the authority of
his state office is not needed, and therefore does not act under
color of state law when engaged in a defense attorney's
traditionally private roles).
[
Footnote 2/6]
The Court,
ante at
457 U. S. 928,
quotes
United States v. Price, 383 U.
S. 787,
383 U. S. 794,
n. 7 (1966), as establishing that,
"[i]n cases under § 1983, 'under color' of law has consistently
been treated as the same thing as the 'state action' required under
the Fourteenth Amendment."
In
Price, however, the same conduct by the same actors
constituted both "state action" and the action "under color" of
law.
See 383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 794,
n. 7 (if an indictment alleges "conduct on the part of the
private' defendants which constitutes `state action,' [it also
alleges] action `under color of law' . . ."). The situation in this
case is quite different. The present case involves "state action"
by the Sheriff -- action that also was "under color of law" under
Price. But the real question here is whether the conduct
of the private respondent constituted either state action
or action under color of law. The Price quotation plainly
does not resolve this question. And the cases cited in
Price, on which the Court also relies, are similarly
inapposite.
[
Footnote 2/7]
In
Adickes, the term "jointly engaged" appears to have
been used specifically to connote engagement in a "conspiracy."
See 398 U.S. at
398 U. S.
152-153.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The Court avers that its holding "is limited to the particular
context of prejudgment attachment."
Ante at
457 U. S. 939,
n. 21. However welcome, this limitation lacks a principled basis.
It is unclear why a private party engages in state action when
filing papers seeking an attachment of property, but not when
seeking other relief (
e.g., an injunction), or when
summoning police to investigate a suspected crime.
[
Footnote 2/9]
At one stage in the litigation, the respondent averred that his
lawsuit raised "[n]o question of the constitutional validity of the
State statutes." Plaintiff's Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to
Dismiss 3. The District Court nevertheless concluded that "the
complaint can only be read as challenging the constitutionality of
Virginia's attachment statute." App. to Pet. for Cert. 38. The
Court of Appeals agreed. 639 F.2d at 1060, and n. 1.
[
Footnote 2/10]
The Court finds support for its contrary view only by reading
these cases as implicitly embracing the same fallacy as the Court
does today. In
Sniadach, Mitchell, and
Di-Chem --
as in this case -- there was no question that state action had
occurred. There, as here, some official of the State -- an
undisputed state actor -- had undertaken either to attach property
or garnish wages. For the Court, the occurrence of state action by
these state officials
ipso facto establishes that the
private plaintiffs also must have been viewed as state actors.
Given the presence of state action by the state officials, however,
there was no need to inquire whether the private parties also were
state actors. It is plain from the opinions that the Court did not
do so. Nor, in cases arising in state court, was there any need to
consider whether the private defendants had acted under color of
law within the meaning of § 1983.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Fuentes was consolidated with a case involving similar
facts,
Epps v. Cortese, 326 F.
Supp. 127 (ED Pa.1971).
[
Footnote 2/12]
Arguing that the patent unconstitutionality of racial
discrimination was irrelevant to the "conspiracy" count in
Adickes, the Court charges that this discussion confuses
the conspiracy and the substantive causes of action.
Ante
at
457 U. S. 932,
n. 15. The Court's view is difficult to understand. In
Adickes, the private defendant allegedly conspired with
the police to "deprive plaintiff of her right to enjoy equal
treatment and service in a place of public accommodation," 398 U.S.
at
398 U. S. 150,
n. 5, and apparently to cause her discriminatory and legally
baseless arrest under a vagrancy statute. Because the vagrancy
statute was not challenged as invalid on its face, the Court
concludes that the "joint action" or "conspiracy" count "did not
involve a state law, whether
plainly unconstitutional' or not."
Ante at 457 U. S. 932,
n. 15. This conclusion is simply wrong. In the first place, the
alleged "conspiracy" included an agreement to enforce a state law
requiring racial segregation in restaurants. This law plainly was
unconstitutional. Further, even the vagrancy statute certainly
would have been unconstitutional as applied to enforce racial
segregation. Presumably it was for these reasons that the Court
agreed that the private defendant had "conspir[ed]" with the local
police. 398 U.S. at 398 U. S. 152.
Adickes is entirely a different case from the one at
bar.
[
Footnote 2/13]
At least one scholarly commentator has stated a cautious
conclusion that the Virginia attachment provisions would satisfy
the standards established by this Court's recent due process
decisions.
See Brabham,
Sniadach Through
Di-Chem and Backwards: An Analysis of Virginia's
Attachment and Detinue Statutes, 12 U.Rich.L.Rev. 157, 195-199
(1977). The correctness of this conclusion is not, of course, an
issue in the present posture of the case, nor is it directly
relevant to the case's proper resolution.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The Court suggests that respondent may be entitled to claim good
faith immunity from this suit for civil damages.
Ante at
457 U. S. 942,
n. 23. This is a positive suggestion with which I agree. A holding
of immunity will mitigate the ultimate cost of this litigation. It
would not, however, convert the Court's holding into a just one.
This case already has been in litigation for nearly five years. It
will now be remanded for further proceedings. Respondent, solely
because he undertook to assert rights authorized by a presumptively
valid state statute, will have been subjected to the expense,
distractions, and hazards of a protracted litigation.