GRIMM V. CITY OF PORTLAND, No. 23-35235 (9th Cir. 2025)
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Andrew Grimm parked his car on a downtown street in Portland, Oregon, and paid for parking through a mobile app for a limited time. He left the car there for seven days, during which City parking enforcement officers issued multiple parking citations and placed them on the car’s windshield. After five days, an officer added a red slip warning that the car would be towed if not moved. Grimm did not move the car, and two days later, the car was towed.
Grimm sued the City of Portland, claiming that the City’s procedures for notifying him of the impending tow were deficient under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. The United States District Court for the District of Oregon granted summary judgment in favor of the City, holding that the City’s notice procedures were reasonable. The court found that although the accumulation of citations might have indicated that Grimm did not receive notice, no other form of notice was practicable.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reviewed the case and affirmed the district court’s decision. The Ninth Circuit held that the City’s notice, which included a red warning slip placed on the car’s windshield two days before the tow, was reasonably calculated to inform Grimm of the impending tow, satisfying the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment. The court further held that the City did not have actual knowledge that its attempt to provide notice had failed simply because the citations and warning slip remained undisturbed on the car’s windshield. Therefore, the City was not required to take additional steps to notify Grimm. The court affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the City.
Court Description: Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause/Vehicular Tows The panel affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the City of Portland in an action brought by Andrew Grimm alleging that the City’s procedures for notifying him that his car would be towed were deficient under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
Grimm parked a car on the side of a downtown street, paid for an hour and 19 minutes of parking through a mobile app, and then left the car on the street for seven days. During that time, City parking enforcement officers issued multiple parking citations, which they placed on the car’s windshield.
After the car sat on the street for five days, a parking enforcement officer added a red slip warning that the car would be towed. Grimm did not move the car, and, two days after the warning slip was placed on the windshield, the car was towed.
The panel held that the City conformed with the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment by providing notice reasonably calculated to alert Grimm of the impending tow. The warning slip placed on the car’s windshield five days after Grimm had parked the car and two days before the car was towed, which explicitly stated that the car would be towed if it were not moved, was reasonably calculated to inform Grimm of the impending tow. The panel further held that Grimm’s failure to remove the citations and warning slip from the windshield did not provide the City with actual knowledge that its attempt to provide notice had failed.
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