Nedd et al v. Meinster et al
Filing
97
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTIONS TO DISMISS 46 ; 82 ; 83 ; 84 ; 85 by Chief Judge Marcia S. Krieger on 1/15/19. (pglov)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Chief Judge Marcia S. Krieger
Civil Action No. 18-cv-00620-MSK-MEH
C.N. by her next friends
ANASTASIA NEDD, and
JOSEPH NORTEY,
Plaintiffs,
v.
HON. ANN GAIL MEINSTER,
KURT A. METSGER,
JEFFERSON COUNTY,
GRAHAM B. PEPER,
AMBER FARNSWORTH,
STEPHEN FARNSWORTH, and
JOHN DOES 1-5,
Defendants.
______________________________________________________________________________
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTIONS TO DISMISS
______________________________________________________________________________
THIS MATTER comes before the Court pursuant to Motions to Dismiss filed by
Defendants Meinster (# 46), Peper (# 82), Jefferson County (# 83), Metsger (# 84), and Amber
and Stephen Farnsworth (# 85). As reflected in the record (# 94), the Plaintiffs have not filed
responses to any of the motions within the deadlines set by the Court, and thus, the Court deems
the Plaintiffs to have waived the opportunity to respond to the motions. Also pending is the
Plaintiffs’ counsel’s Motion to Withdraw from representation (# 96), having taken “disability
inactive status” with the Colorado Supreme Court effective October 18, 2018.
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FACTS
The Plaintiffs’ Complaint (# 1) is somewhat sprawling and unfocused. It contends that in
2015, Jefferson County, Colorado officials commenced a Dependency and Neglect (“D&N”)
proceeding against Plaintiff Joseph Nortey and an unnamed female, the parents of C.N., then a
two-year-old girl.1 Defendant Ann Meinster, a Colorado state District Judge in Jefferson
County, presided over those proceedings. The Complaint takes issue with various aspects of the
proceedings, including assertions that Judge Meinster lacked personal jurisdiction over C.N. or
her parents, that Judge Meinster failed to ensure that C.N.’s mother received adequate notice of
proceedings or accommodations for her mental health issues, and that Judge Meinster failed to
give an adequate opportunity to Plaintiff Anastasia Nedd, C.N.’s grandmother, to request that
C.N. be placed with Ms. Nedd. In June 2016, Judge Meinster terminated C.N.’s mother’s
parental rights; it appears that Mr. Nortey agreed to renounce his parental rights to C.N., albeit in
response to ill-given advice by his attorney, Defendant Graham Peper.
The issue then turned to the placement of C.N. Ms. Nedd had previously expressed an
interest in taking custody of C.N., and at least initially, Jefferson County officials represented to
Ms. Nedd that C.N. would likely be placed with her and that she need not take any further legal
action. However, Ms. Nedd points out that she was not notified of the termination of the parents’
parental rights in June 2016, and it was not until March 2017 that Ms. Nedd formally moved to
be considered as C.N.’s custodian. In April 2017, Judge Meinster denied Ms. Nedd’s motion as
untimely, and in July 2017, Judge Meinster had placed C.N. with foster parents, Defendants
Defendant Metsger was C.N.’s guardian ad litem during the D&N proceedings. He is
specifically mentioned twice in the Complaint, once in Paragraph 7, which identifies the parties,
and once in Paragraph 37, which asserts that Mr. Metsger filed a motion to terminate the rights
of C.N.’s parents, but failed to serve a copy of that motion on Ms. Nedd.
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Amber and Stephen Farnsworth. The Plaintiffs particularly object to the placement of C.N., who
is black, with white foster parents, as Colorado statutory and regulatory laws require “cultural
and familiar considerations” when making placement decisions and because Ms. Nedd (who is
black) stood by willing and able to adopt C.N.
Based on these facts, the Plaintiffs assert nine claims for relief: (i) a claim, presumably
under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against all Defendants, that the Defendants violated the Plaintiffs’
Substantive Due Process rights by disregarding C.N.’s right to be placed with blood relatives, the
right to “not be placed for a long period of time in foster care without any certainty of
permanency,” and the right of blood relatives to be notified of D&N proceedings, among others;
(ii) a somewhat uncertain claim, apparently under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against all Defendants,
captioned as “First, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution,” and
asserting that “the foregoing actions . . . amount to a policy, pattern, practice, or custom of
failure to exercise professional judgment and of deliberate indifference to Plaintiffs’ . . . liberty
interests, privacy interests, and associational rights not to be deprived of relationships with blood
relatives”; (iii) a claim, apparently under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 asserted against all Defendants,
sounding in Procedural Due Process and alleging that the Defendants deprived the Plaintiffs of
the same rights discussed in the Substantive Due Process claim; (iv) a claim expressly captioned
as “42 U.S.C. § 1983 – all Defendants,” and which seems to invoke the Plaintiffs’ “associational
rights, liberty, equal protection, and due process” rights, but which is otherwise difficult to parse
and to distinguish from the preceding claims; (v) a claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1985 that
“Defendants, or some of them,” conspired to deprive the Plaintiffs of their civil rights; (vi) a
claim against all Defendants pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1986, alleging that the Defendants had
knowledge of the conspiracy alleged in claim (v) and failed to act to prevent it; (vii) and (viii)
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claims, presumably under Colorado’s common law, by Mr. Nortey against Mr. Peper, sounding
in legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty; and (ix) a claim that all Defendants violated
the RICO Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., by forming an association “to perpetrate the various
economic and personal injuries alleged herein.”
Each of the named Defendants has moved to dismiss the claims against him/her/or it.
The Plaintiffs have had several opportunities to file responses, see Docket # 87, 94, but they have
not done so prior to prior to the deadlines imposed. Thus, the Court deems the Plaintiffs to have
waived the opportunity to file responses.
ANALYSIS
A. Domestic Relations Exception
All of the Defendants observe that most of the Plaintiffs’ claims take issue with various
decisions made by Judge Meinster during the Dependence and Neglect proceeding involving
C.N., as well as the subsequent decisions regarding C.N.’s placement. These matters, the
Defendants argue, implicate both the “Domestic Relations Exception” to federal subject-matter
jurisdiction and the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.
The Domestic Relations Exception operates to exclude from federal subject-matter
jurisdiction claims that ask federal courts to issue “divorce, alimony, or child custody decrees.”
Ankenbrandt v. Richards, 504 U.S. 689, 703 (1992). In Leathers v. Leathers, 856 F.3d 729, 756
(10th Cir. 2017), the Court of Appeals described the exception more broadly, preventing federal
courts from hearing claims that seek to “reopen, reissue, correct, or modify” domestic decrees.
A fair argument could be made that most of the Plaintiffs’ claims seek the correction or
modification of Judge Meinster’s custody orders involving C.N., and that the claims are therefore
barred by the Domestic Relations Exception. But it is generally recognized that the Domestic
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Relations Exception is a statutory exception, growing out of the diversity statute, 28 U.S.C. §
1332, and thus applies only in cases where the federal court’s subject-matter jurisdiction is
premised upon diversity. When the plaintiffs invoke the Court’s subject-matter jurisdiction
based on the existence of a federal question under 28 U.S.C. § 1331, the Domestic Relations
Exception does not apply. See e.g. U.S. v. Johnson, 114 F.3d 476, 481 (4th Cir. 2012); Atwood
v. Fort Peck Tribal Court Assiniboine, 513 F.3d 943, 947 (9th Cir. 2008); see also Johnson v.
Rodrigues (Orozco), 225 F.3d 1103, 1111 (10th Cir. 2000) (suggesting that “despite the
unavailability of that remedy in exercising diversity jurisdiction,” due to the Domestic Relations
Exception, “Plaintiff's underlying claims . . . must be considered in the context of federal
question jurisdiction which is also asserted”). Thus, the Court does not agree with the
Defendants that the Domestic Relations Exception precludes the Court’s consideration of the
Plaintiffs’ claims.
B. Rooker-Feldman/Younger
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine provides that a losing party in state court may not “seek[ ]
what in substance would be appellate review of the state judgment in a United States district
court, based on the losing party's claim that the state judgment itself violates the loser's federal
rights.” Morkel v. Davis, 513 Fed.Appx. 724, 727 (10th Cir. 2013). Rooker-Feldman is not
implicated simply because the plaintiff requests relief that is inconsistent with the state court
judgment; it applies only where the claim essentially requires a finding that the state court
wrongfully entered its judgment. Adams v. EMC Mortgage Corp., 549 Fed.Appx. 718, 720 (10th
Cir. 2013).
Here, the Plaintiffs’ claims essentially spring from the contention that Judge Meinster’s
rulings – terminating C.N.’s parents’ rights and rejecting Ms. Nedd’s application for custody of
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C.N. – violated their federal rights. Were this Court to entertain those claims and ultimately rule
in the Plaintiffs’ favor, it would necessarily have to conclude that Judge Meinster’s rulings were
incorrect, insufficiently-informed, premature, or otherwise reversible. Indeed, among the items
of relief that the Plaintiffs seek in their Prayer for Relief are for this Court to “declare
unconstitutional and unlawful . . . the above-noted constitutional violations” relating to Judge
Meinster’s orders and “enter a permanent injunction requiring that [C.N.] be placed with
appropriate and willing blood relatives,” instead of the Farnsworths as directed by Judge
Meinster. In such circumstances, Rooker-Feldman prohibits the Court from hearing those
claims.
Alternatively, if the proceedings before Judge Meinster are ongoing, rather than fullyconcluded, the Court would abstain from hearing the Plaintiffs’ claims here pursuant to Younger
abstention instead. Morkel, 513 Fed.Appx. at 727-29 (reversing Rooker-Feldman dismissal but
affirming Younger abstention in challenge to state court child custody proceeding that was
ongoing).
C. Remaining claims
Because abstention doctrines prevent the Court from hearing any claims that seek,
directly or indirectly, to undo Judge Meinster’s custody rulings, the Court’s next task is to
determine whether any of the Plaintiffs’ claims are not affected by those rulings.
All but one of the Plaintiffs’ constitutional claims must be dismissed on abstention
grounds, as the injuries that appear to underlie those claims were allegedly caused by orders of
the state court that terminate the parental rights of C.N.’s parents and rejected Ms. Nedd as a
foster parent/custodian in favor of the Farnsworths. The one exception is Ms. Nedd’s contention
that, between July 2015 and December 2016, unspecified persons within the Jefferson County
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Division of Children, Youth, and Families (“the Division”) “led [Ms. Nedd] to believe that . . .
she should not take any legal action for the child to be placed with her.” Docket # 1, ¶ 47.
When Ms. Nedd ultimately realized that she needed to formally petition for custody of C.N., the
state court judge rejected her request as untimely. This ruling was premised upon Ms. Nedd’s
inaction which was allegedly in reliance on the Division’s directions. Thus, this claim is
properly brought against Jefferson County on the theory that it violated one or more of Ms.
Nedd’s constitutional rights by giving incorrect advice about petitioning for custody, and it
survives dismissal based upon abstention principles.
In addition, the Plaintiffs’ RICO claim could – at least conceivably – assert a conspiracy
among parties that caused an injury distinct from the injuries caused by Judge Meinster’s orders.
Finally, Mr. Nortney’s claims of legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty against
Mr. Peper, arising from legal advice he gave, also survives application of abstention doctrines.
Thus, the Court will proceed to consider the Defendants’ arguments directed at these
claims.
1. Claim against the Division/Jefferson County
As noted above, Ms. Nedd asserts that unspecified persons at the Division gave her
incorrect legal advice about whether she should file a formal petition to seek custody of C.N. It
is difficult to correlate this specific allegation with the Plaintiffs’ vague and amorphous
allegations of constitutional violations, however. This Court can conceive of no constitutional
right that is implicated when a state or county agency dispenses incorrect legal advice about how
a person should proceed in a pending judicial matter. See e.g. Hutcherson v. Smith, 908 F.2d
243, 246 (7th Cir. 1990) (“the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment does not transform
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every tort committed by a state actor into a constitutional violation . . . Hutcherson's claim here is
but a state law tort claim of attorney malpractice masquerading as a constitutional tort”).
Moreover, even if Ms. Nedd had a colorable constitutional claim, she has not identified
any individual employee of the Division who gave her the incorrect advice, and she has failed to
plead sufficient facts to permit her to assert that claim against Jefferson County instead.
Jefferson County is not subject to liability simply because employees within the Division gave
inaccurate advice to Ms. Nedd; Jefferson County’s liability is limited to those circumstances in
which its own customs or policies relating to the Division caused the Division’s employees to
give inaccurate information. See generally Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S.
658 (1978). The Complaint offers only conclusory and boilerplate assertions of Jefferson
County’s failure to train or supervise employees. Such conclusory assertions fail to meet the
pleading requirements on the Plaintiffs imposed by Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678-79
(2009). Accordingly, the Court dismisses any claim by Ms. Nedd relating to the Division giving
her incorrect legal advice.
2. RICO claim
To adequately plead a RICO claim, the Plaintiffs must allege facts showing: (i) conduct,
(ii) of an enterprise, (iii) through a pattern of racketeering activity. Salinas v. U.S. 522 U.S. 52,
62 (1997). RICO expressly defines the term “racketeering activity” to include violations of a
wide range of federal criminal statutes, including mail fraud. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1). A “pattern of
racketeering activity” requires allegations of at least two such acts, plus some indication of a
threat of continuing racketeering activity. Bixler v. Foster, 596 F.3d 751, 761 (10th Cir. 2010).
A RICO “enterprise,” in the context here, can consist of “a group of individuals associated in
fact,” even if not a legal entity, so long as it has: (i) a decision-making framework or mechanism
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for controlling the group; (ii) individuals involved functioning as a continuing unit; and (iii) an
existence separate and apart from the pattern of racketeering activity itself (that is, that the
question “would [the enterprise] still exist were the predicate acts removed from the equation?”
would be answered in the affirmative). U.S. v. Smith, 413 F.3d 1253, 1266-67 (10th Cir. 2005);
Amaya v. Bregman, 149 F.Supp.3d 1312, 1231 (D.N.M. 2015).
Plaintiffs’ RICO allegations are insufficient for multiple reasons. Nearly every allegation
related to this claim is entirely conclusory. Moreover, even if the Plaintiffs’ vague and
conclusory allegations in the Complaint could be said to allege the existence of an enterprise,
nothing in the Complaint seems to suggest that this enterprise had any existence separate from
the D&N proceedings involving C.N., much less a threat that the parties involved would
continue to engage in criminal activity in the future. For these and numerous other reasons, the
RICO claim is dismissed.
3. Malpractice claim against Mr. Peper
The dismissal of all claims sounding in federal law terminates this Court’s federal
question subject-matter jurisdiction over this matter.2 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Although the Court can
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Mr. Nortey’s malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty
claims that arise under state law, 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) suggests that the Court should decline to
exercise supplemental jurisdiction where all federal claims have been dismissed. Accordingly,
Although Mr. Nortey is identified as a citizen of Texas, the Complaint does not identify
the citizenship of Mr. Peper, nor attempt to assert that the Court should exercise subject-matter
jurisdiction premised on diversity of citizenship under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Even assuming the
Court did, it would nevertheless dismiss Mr. Nortey’s claims against Mr. Peper pursuant to
C.R.S. § 13-20-602, as Mr. Nortey has not filed the “Certificate of Review” required under
Colorado law when a party asserts claims sounding in professional malpractice.
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the Court dismisses Mr. Nortey’s state law claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Mr.
Nortey is free to pursue his state law claims against Mr. Peper in state court.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS each of the Defendants’ Motions to
Dismiss (# 46, 82, 83, 84, and 85), and all the claims in the Complaint are DISMISSED as set
forth herein. Mr. Ingold’s Motion to Withdraw as Counsel (# 96) is GRANTED upon Mr.
Ingold serving his clients with a copy of this Opinion and Order. All claims having been
dismissed, the Clerk of the Court shall close this case.
Dated this 15th day of January, 2019.
BY THE COURT:
Marcia S. Krieger
Chief United States District Judge
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