Miranda v. City of Casa Grande, No. 20-16905 (9th Cir. 2021)
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Miranda got into an argument with his son, Matthew who was driving Miranda’s truck. Matthew stopped the truck in traffic near the family’s home. Neighbors called 911. Officers found Miranda in the driver’s seat. At the police station, Miranda admitted to having consumed six beers. He submitted to a portable breath test, which revealed a blood alcohol content of 0.137%. Officers read him a standardized “implied consent affidavit.” Miranda responded three times, “No, I will not," and was told: “If you do not expressly agree to testing ... your Arizona driving privileges will be suspended for 12 months. Officers prepared a search warrant for Miranda’s blood draw. Miranda then stated that he would do a blood draw, but the officers obtained a warrant and told Miranda, “your license is suspended.” The test revealed a blood alcohol concentration above the legal limit. Miranda pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and failure to comply with law enforcement in exchange for dismissal of the DUI.
The Ninth Circuit the summary judgment rejection of Miranda’s 42 U.S.C. 1983 suit alleging that an officer lied during the driver’s license suspension proceeding. There is no constitutional guarantee or federal right to a driver’s license so that its deprivation does not violate substantive due process. Even assuming the officer testified falsely at the administrative hearing as to whether Miranda consented to a blood test, Arizona provided sufficient post-deprivation due process. Miranda was granted a second administrative hearing before a new ALJ, who voided the suspension. Additionally, he was pursuing a state law claim in Arizona state court.
Court Description: Civil Rights. The panel affirmed the district court’s summary judgment in favor of defendants in an action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that a City of Casa Grande police officer lied during an Arizona state administrative proceeding concerning the suspension of plaintiff’s driver’s license. The panel first noted that there is no express constitutional guarantee or other federal right to a driver’s license, so that its deprivation does not violate substantive due process. Plaintiff’s claim therefore sounded, if at all, in procedural due process. The panel held that plaintiff failed to demonstrate a procedural due process violation because, even assuming the officer testified falsely at the administrative hearing as to whether plaintiff consented to a blood test following his arrest for driving under the influence, Arizona provided sufficient post-deprivation process to plaintiff. The panel noted that, following the discovery of the officer’s alleged unauthorized conduct, plaintiff was granted a second administrative hearing before a new ALJ, who ultimately voided the suspension and reinstated plaintiff’s license. Additionally, Arizona also allowed plaintiff to bring a state law claim, which he was pursuing in Arizona state court. The panel held that the post- deprivation procedures were both meaningful and sufficient under the Due Process Clause. MIRANDA V. CITY OF CASA GRANDE 3
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