Zachary Medlock v. Trustees of Indiana University, et al
Filing
Filed opinion of the court by Judge Posner. AFFIRMED. Richard A. Posner, Circuit Judge; Joel M. Flaum, Circuit Judge and Diane S. Sykes, Circuit Judge. [6541606-1] [6541606] [13-1900]
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In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 13‐1900
ZACHARY MEDLOCK,
Plaintiff‐Appellant,
v.
TRUSTEES OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY, et al.,
Defendants‐Appellees.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
No. 1:11‐cv‐977‐TWP‐DKL — Tanya Walton Pratt, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED NOVEMBER 1, 2013 — DECIDED DECEMBER 30, 2013
____________________
Before POSNER, FLAUM, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge. This is an eye‐opening case, but not
because of any legal profundities or political reverbera‐
tions—rather because of the glimpse it affords into contem‐
porary student and administrative cultures of American
universities.
Zachary Medlock was in the spring of 2011 a sophomore
at Indiana University’s main campus, in Bloomington, living
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by choice in a university dormitory. As a condition of being
allowed to live there he was required to agree to comply
with a long list of rules, one of which was that he allow
health and safety inspections of his dorm room by “resident
leadership specialists” (we’ll call them “student inspectors”).
They are graduate students employed part‐time by the uni‐
versity to assist in dormitory management. Their duties in‐
clude conducting the inspections. The students whose rooms
are to be inspected must be given written notification of the
inspection at least 24 hours in advance; Medlock had been
given a week’s notice by email and in addition the inspec‐
tion of the dorm rooms on his floor was announced over the
building’s intercom on the day of the inspection. (His failure
to use the abundant warning time to clean up his act is one
of the mysteries of this case.) The inspectors inspect for vio‐
lations of prohibitions in the code of conduct for dormitory
residents. Those prohibitions are numerous—“from candles
to cats” as one of the student inspectors testified—and of
course include (illegal) drugs. Medlock does not question
that he was subject to these prohibitions as a condition of be‐
ing allowed to live in a university dormitory, and was sub‐
ject to being penalized for violating them. Suspension and
expulsion are among the authorized penalties.
At about 4 p.m. on the day scheduled for the inspection,
one of the student inspectors entered Medlock’s room (Med‐
lock wasn’t there) to inspect it, and upon entering noticed a
clear plastic tube lying on the desk. Drawing on the training
the university had given him to enable him to conduct a
competent inspection, he surmised that the tube contained
marijuana. Another student inspector, whom the first one
asked to join him in Medlock’s room, concurred.
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One of the student inspectors called the Indiana Univer‐
sity Police Department to report what they thought they’d
discovered in Medlock’s room. Like other large universities
Indiana University has its own police department. It’s a real
police department—its police officers (of whom there are
more than 40 on the Bloomington campus) have the same
powers as police officers employed by cities and towns.
An Indiana University police officer (defendant Christo‐
pher King), summoned by one of the two student inspectors,
arrived in Medlock’s room, looked at the tube of marijuana,
smelled raw marijuana, and left with the tube. The student
inspectors remained, continuing their inspection and notic‐
ing burned candles, an ashtray containing ashes, and a
rolled‐up blanket at the bottom of the door to the bathroom,
presumably intended to keep smoke from wafting into the
bathroom (which Medlock shared with another student)
while he smoked marijuana in his bedroom. Smoking of any
kind is forbidden in the dormitory, as is possessing “open
flame materials,” such as candles.
One of the student inspectors noticed that the door to
Medlock’s closet was ajar, and peering through the opening
he saw what he thought was a large marijuana plant. He
summoned officer King, who looked in the closet and found
himself face to face with a six‐foot‐high marijuana plant. He
left to get a warrant to search the room for drugs and drug
paraphernalia but posted another police officer in the room
to make sure no one moved or destroyed anything that
might be contraband.
The warrant was issued and the further search that King
conducted pursuant to it revealed both paraphernalia com‐
monly used in relation to marijuana—four conventional
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pipes, two bongs (water pipes), and a fluorescent light
(called a “grow light”) for enabling a large marijuana plant
to thrive in a closet—plus a total of 89 grams of marijuana
(not including the plant itself, doubtless the source of the 89
grams). Not that the plant was thriving, despite its height; a
closet is not the optimal environment for a tall plant.
Medlock was arrested and charged with possession of
more than 30 grams of marijuana, a felony (he could also
have been charged with manufacturing marijuana, also a
felony). But for unexplained reasons the charges were
dropped, although there can’t have been any doubt of his
guilt.
The university’s dean of students immediately sus‐
pended Medlock for one year. But Medlock had a hearing
before a university hearing commission 17 days later (spring
break had intervened—otherwise the interval would have
been only 9 or 10 days). The hearing commission affirmed
the suspension (as did the university’s provost, to whom
Medlock appealed the commission’s decision) and ordered
him to vacate the dormitory forthwith. Although called a
“suspension,” this was more like an expulsion, because if he
wanted to be reinstated he had to apply, after the year was
up, and there was no guarantee that the application would
be accepted. He applied for and was offered immediate ad‐
mission to George Mason University, in Virginia (apparently
without telling George Mason of the expulsion), but de‐
clined. Instead, after the year was up, he applied for read‐
mission to IU at Bloomington. His application was granted,
and he was readmitted when the school year began and was
even given a part‐time job by the university, on its informa‐
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tion technology staff—which seems odd, as it might give
him access to the confidential record of his expulsion.
The suit is based on 42 U.S.C. § 1983, which authorizes
suits against state or local officials who violate federally pro‐
tected civil rights. The complaint names the university’s
trustees as defendants along with the dean of students, the
university provost, the two student inspectors who searched
Medlock’s room, and officer King. It seeks a mandatory in‐
junction ordering destruction of the record of his expulsion,
and damages from the two student inspectors and King.
The litigation has attracted media attention. See, e.g.,
Dave Stafford, “7th Circuit Tosses IU Dorm‐Search Law‐
suit,”
Indiana
Lawyer,
June
29,
2012,
www.theindianalawyer.com/‐7th‐circuit‐tosses‐iu‐dorm‐
search‐lawsuit/PARAMS/article/29121 (visited Dec. 28,
2013). Stafford’s article refers to an earlier stage in the litiga‐
tion, when we dismissed as moot Medlock’s appeal from the
denial of his motion for a preliminary injunction against the
enforcement of the one‐year suspension; the appeal was
moot because the year was up, and so the injunction could
have no effect. Medlock v. Trustees of Indiana University, 683
F.3d 880, 882 (7th Cir. 2012).
Medlock claims that the student inspectors plus King vio‐
lated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from an unrea‐
sonable search. He also complains about not having been
given a hearing before he was expelled, and we’ll start there.
The district court granted summary judgment for all defen‐
dants on all charges.
Medlock argues that the due process clause of the Four‐
teenth Amendment entitled him to such a hearing (that is, to
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a “predeprivation hearing”). He is not seeking damages for
that alleged denial of due process of law, but the denial if
proved would be a ground for the expungement of the re‐
cord of his expulsion, which is relief that he does seek.
There is no merit to the due process claim. The in‐your‐
face flagrancy of Medlock’s violation of university rules (he
had plenty of warning of the impending inspection, remem‐
ber), and of Indiana’s criminal law, required the university
to take immediate remedial action if its commitment to its
rules, and to legality, was not to be questioned. See Goss v.
Lopez, 419 U.S. 565, 581–83 (1975).
And even if—as we don’t for a moment believe—the
failure to give him a hearing before he was expelled denied
him due process of law, we can’t understand how the de‐
struction of the record of his expulsion could be thought a
proper remedy. It’s not as if there’s any doubt about his hav‐
ing violated not only the university’s rules but also Indiana’s
criminal law. We have said and we repeat that “we are reluc‐
tant to encourage further bureaucratization by judicializing
university disciplinary proceedings, mindful also that one
dimension of academic freedom is the right of academic in‐
stitutions to operate free of heavy‐handed governmental, in‐
cluding judicial, interference.” Osteen v. Henley, 13 F.3d 221,
225–26 (7th Cir. 1993).
Indiana University is a public university, owned by the
State of Indiana, and the student inspectors and university
police are university employees and therefore state actors.
(We can’t understand the defendants’ argument, accepted by
the district judge, that they were not state actors.) And so
they can be sued under section 1983 for violating the Fourth
Amendment, held protected against state action by interpre‐
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tation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amend‐
ment. But the exclusionary rule—the rule that renders evi‐
dence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment in‐
admissible in (some) judicial proceedings—is applicable on‐
ly to criminal proceedings. See, e.g., Pennsylvania Board of
Probation & Parole v. Scott, 524 U.S. 357, 363–64 (1998); INS v.
Lopez‐Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032, 1050 (1984); United States v. Ca‐
landra, 414 U.S. 338, 349–52 (1974); Thompson v. Carthage
School District, 87 F.3d 979, 981–82 (8th Cir. 1996). The last of
these cases involved, like this case, expulsion from a public
school.
So the marijuana and drug paraphernalia seized from
Medlock’s room were admissible in the suspension proceed‐
ing (which was of course noncriminal)—and for the addi‐
tional reason that Medlock didn’t object to their admission in
that proceeding. The seized items provided compelling evi‐
dence of serious violations of the code of conduct. His giant
marijuana plant (a small tree, really) was providing him
with dealer‐quantity marijuana. And while the criminal
charges against him were dropped, this could not have been
for lack of evidence. The university’s provost testified that
the quantity of marijuana and marijuana paraphernalia
found in Medlock’s room made her suspect that he was dis‐
tributing marijuana to other students. As the dean of stu‐
dents testified, “the quantity that we had here present was
such that it was hard to believe it was for personal use” only.
He added that “in [his] 17 years as being Senior Student Af‐
fairs Officer this ranks maybe first or second in terms of the
amount of marijuana that I’ve seen at any one time taken
from a room.” And this was said when the dean thought that
only 50 grams of marijuana had been found in Medlock’s
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room. When told it had been 89 grams he remarked: “that
placed it certainly number one.”
Although as we noted earlier the fruits of the search were
admissible for disciplinary purposes even if obtained in vio‐
lation of the Fourth Amendment, the violation of the
amendment (if there was a violation) would entitle him to
damages. Hudson v. Michigan, 547 U.S. 586, 597–98 (2006);
Guzman v. City of Chicago, 565 F.3d 393, 398–99 (7th Cir.
2009); Gonzalez v. Entress, 133 F.3d 551, 553–54 (7th Cir. 1998);
Thompson v. Carthage School District, supra, 87 F.3d at 981–82.
But there was no violation. Medlock had consented in ad‐
vance, as a condition of being allowed to live in the dormi‐
tory, to have his room searched for contraband and other
evidence of violation of the health and safety code. He could
have lived off campus and thus have avoided being gov‐
erned by the code. He chose to trade some privacy for a
dorm room. His expulsion amounted to holding him to his
contract.
Even without explicit consent, and even if the student in‐
spectors had been public officers, their search of Medlock’s
dorm room would have been a lawful regulatory search. In‐
diana University’s student‐housing code is the equivalent of
a local housing code, and “it is difficult to enforce such a
code without occasional inspections” and “impossible to rely
on a system of inspections to enforce the code without mak‐
ing them compulsory, since violators will refuse to consent
to being inspected. In these circumstances the Fourth
Amendment’s requirement that all search warrants be sup‐
ported by ‘probable cause’ can be satisfied by demonstrating
the reasonableness of the regulatory package that includes
compulsory inspections.” Platteville Area Apartment Associa‐
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tion v. City of Platteville, 179 F.3d 574, 578 (7th Cir. 1999); see,
e.g., Camara v. Municipal Court, 387 U.S. 523, 536–38 (1967).
Those cases involved warrants, but warrants are not re‐
quired when “special needs, beyond the normal need for law
enforcement, make the warrant and probable‐cause re‐
quirement impracticable.” Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868,
873 (1987). Special needs are found in the school setting,
Board of Education of Independent School District No. 92 v. Earls,
536 U.S. 822, 828–30 (2002); Vernonia School Dist. 47J v. Acton,
515 U.S. 646, 652–53, 664–65 (1995), a setting in which requir‐
ing a search warrant “would unduly interfere with the main‐
tenance of the swift and informal disciplinary procedures
needed.” New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 340 (1985); cf. Os‐
teen v. Henley, supra, 13 F.3d at 225–26.
The search that officer King conducted before he ob‐
tained a warrant stands on a somewhat different footing. He
was not a student inspector whom Medlock by deciding to
live in the dorm had authorized to search his room. The A to
Z Guide—the university’s student‐housing handbook—states
that “authorized university personnel performing safety in‐
spections may enter a room or apartment to ensure that
health, fire, and safety regulations are being maintained” but
that “no provision in the housing contract gives residence
hall officials the authority to consent to a search of a resi‐
dent’s room or apartment by police or other government of‐
ficials” and “any law enforcement agency having jurisdic‐
tion may, in performing its statutory duties, conduct a
search [only] in accordance with legally defined procedures
governing search and seizure.”
But King’s entry and search were superfluous events so
far as harm to Medlock was concerned. The student inspec‐
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tors had already searched the room and found marijuana
and other contraband. The closet door was open (Medlock
does not deny this) and so the plant was in plain view—not
all of it, but enough to make its character unmistakable.
What King saw the student inspectors had seen. The intru‐
sion on Medlock’s privacy was complete before King en‐
tered. And if this is wrong and a third person’s glimpse of
the incriminating scene could be thought an incremental in‐
trusion, liability would be blocked by the venerable principle
of de minimis non curat lex, which has been held applicable to
a variety of constitutional settings. E.g., United States v. Jacob‐
sen, 466 U.S. 109, 120–21, 126 (1984); Washington v. Hively, 695
F.3d 641, 643 (7th Cir. 2012); Brandt v. Board of Education, 480
F.3d 460, 465 (7th Cir. 2007); Hessel v. OʹHearn, 977 F.2d 299,
302‐04 (7th Cir. 1992); Artes‐Roy v. City of Aspen, 31 F.3d 958,
962–63 (10th Cir. 1994) (a case factually rather similar to the
present one).
Moreover, reasonableness is the touchstone of the Fourth
Amendment, Kentucky v. King, 131 S. Ct. 1849, 1856 (2011);
Brigham City v. Stuart, 547 U.S. 398, 403 (2006); Hamilton v.
Village of Oak Lawn, 735 F.3d 967, 971 (7th Cir. 2013), and of‐
ficer King was acting reasonably in backing up the student
inspectors. They had entered Medlock’s dorm room lawfully
and a plain‐view search had revealed marijuana. What were
they to do? Remove the suspected marijuana from the room?
But they are just students, and the university administration
may not want its student inspectors to be seen in the hall‐
ways of the dorm carrying quantities of illegal drugs (espe‐
cially a six‐foot‐tall marijuana plant) and drug parapherna‐
lia, and may want their suspicions of possible criminal activ‐
ity confirmed or dispelled forthwith by a police officer. It
thus was sensible of the students to summon a university
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police officer to confirm their suspicion that they had found
marijuana and other contraband and to remove the stuff.
There is no suggestion of pretext or bad faith on the part
of any of the defendants. Officer King did not set out to take
advantage of a pre‐existing student inspection, and the stu‐
dents did not enter Medlock’s dorm room for law enforce‐
ment purposes. By the time King became aware of the in‐
spection and entered the room, the student inspectors had
searched it—lawfully.
In short, the case is near frivolous, the decision to sue the
two student inspectors offensive, and the most surprising
feature of the entire episode is the exceptional lenity with
which a state university (in a state that does not allow me‐
dicinal, let alone recreational, use of marijuana) treated a
brazen violator of its rules of conduct and of the criminal
law. But as we noted some years ago, “the danger that with‐
out the procedural safeguards deemed appropriate in civil
and criminal litigation public universities will engage in an
orgy of expulsions is slight. The relation of students to uni‐
versities is, after all, essentially that of customer to seller.”
Osteen v. Henley, supra, 13 F.3d at 226. And if we may judge
from the happy ending of the marijuana bust for Medlock,
the customer is indeed always right.
AFFIRMED.
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