Hohenberg v. Shelby County, Tennessee, No. 22-5783 (6th Cir. 2023)
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Hohenberg and Hanson failed to maintain their Memphis homes. The Environmental Court, a local court that hears cases involving alleged violations of county ordinances, including environmental ordinances, declared Hohenberg’s home a public nuisance and ordered remediation. Hohenberg eventually declared bankruptcy. Her house was auctioned off, mooting the enforcement action. The court found Hanson guilty of code violations and ordered remediations. The violations recurred; Hanson went to jail. The city bulldozed his house. The court dismissed his case as moot.
Each homeowner filed a 42 U.S.C. 1983 action against the court and the county. They claimed that the court’s procedures, including failures to use Tennessee’s Civil and Evidence Rules, to keep complete records, and to consider constitutional claims or defenses, violated their due process rights. The county created, funded, and “fail[ed] to oversee” the court. The district court dismissed their complaint as amounting to improper appeals of state court judgments (28 U.S.C. 1257(a)).
The Sixth Circuit reversed the jurisdictional ruling but affirmed in part. The injuries do not stem from state-court “judgments.” The plaintiffs mainly argued that the Environmental Court dragged out the proceedings and complicated them, targeting ancillary litigation expenses rather than the application of law to fact, outside section 1257(a)’s limited orbit. Damages would not amount to the “review and rejection” of any judgments binding the plaintiffs. Because the Environmental Court is not a “person” but an arm of the state, the Section 1983 action against it fails.
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