Court Opinion

ID: 4290193
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-06-29 19:08:47.333037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:38:05.189944
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
                                 No. 17–1592

                             Filed June 29, 2018

GREGORY BALDWIN,

      Appellee,

vs.

CITY OF ESTHERVILLE, IOWA; MATT REINEKE, Individually and in his
Official Capacity as an officer of the Estherville Police Department; and
MATT HELLICKSON, Individually and in his Official Capacity as an officer
of the Estherville Police Department,

      Appellant.

      Certified questions of law from the United States District Court for

the Northern District of Iowa, Mark W. Bennett, United States District

Court Judge.

      Plaintiff seeks damages for alleged violations of his rights under

article I, section 1 and article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution following

his arrest under city ATV ordinances.               CERTIFIED      QUESTION

ANSWERED.

      Douglas L. Phillips and René Charles LaPierre of Klass Law Firm,

LLP, Sioux City, for appellants.

      Jack Bjornstad of Jack Bjornstad Law Office, Okoboji, for appellee.
                                    2

      Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Jeffrey S. Thompson, Solicitor

General, Julia S. Kim, Assistant Attorney General, for amicus curiae State

of Iowa.

      Thomas M. Boes and Catherine M. Lucas of Bradshaw, Fowler,

Proctor & Fairgrave, P.C., Des Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa

Communities Assurance Pool.

      Katie Ervin Carlson of Fiedler & Timmer, P.L.L.C., Johnson, Jessica

Zupp of Zupp and Zupp Law Firm, P.C., Denison, and Joel E. Fenton, Law

Offices of Joel E. Fenton, PLC, Des Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa

Association for Justice.
                                      3

MANSFIELD, Justice.

      After receiving citizen complaints about the operation of an ATV

within city limits, police officers reviewed a video of the event, examined

the city’s ordinances, and concluded an ordinance had been violated. They

sought and obtained an arrest warrant from a magistrate and arrested the

ATV operator. An Iowa district court later dismissed the criminal case

against the operator, however, finding that no ordinance actually

prohibited his conduct.

      Thereafter, the ATV operator brought damages claims against the

city and the police officers for common-law false arrest, deprivation of civil

rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2012) based on a violation of the Fourth

Amendment, and directly under article I, sections 1 and 8 of the Iowa

Constitution. The case was removed to federal court, where the federal

district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on the

common law and federal constitutional claims. The federal district court

reasoned that the police officers were acting pursuant to a facially valid

warrant, and it was not clearly established that the ATV operator’s conduct

did not violate an ordinance.

      We have now been asked by the federal district court to answer the

following certified question of Iowa law relating to the Iowa constitutional

claims: “Can a defendant raise a defense of qualified immunity to an

individual’s claim for damages for violation of article I, § 1 and § 8 of the

Iowa Constitution?”

      For the reasons discussed herein, we answer this question as

follows: A defendant who pleads and proves as an affirmative defense that

he or she exercised all due care to conform with the requirements of the

law is entitled to qualified immunity on an individual’s claim for damages

for violation of article I, sections 1 and 8 of the Iowa Constitution.
                                      4

      I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

      When we answer a certified question, we rely upon the facts provided

with the certified question. See Bd. of Water Works Trs. of Des Moines v.

Sac Cty. Bd. of Supervisors, 890 N.W.2d 50, 53 (Iowa 2017); Life Inv’rs Ins.

Co. of Am. v. Estate of Corrado, 838 N.W.2d 640, 643 (Iowa 2013).

Accordingly, we restate the facts as set forth by the federal district court:

             The incidents giving rise to Baldwin’s claims began on
      Sunday, November 10, 2013. At approximately 2:30 p.m. that
      day, Officers Reineke and Hellickson were on patrol in the City
      when they received a dispatch to report to the Law
      Enforcement Center concerning a “4 wheeler complaint.”
      They drove to the Law Enforcement Center. Upon their
      arrival, they spoke with Tenner and Patti Lilland, who live in
      the Estherville area. Mr. Lilland showed the officers a video
      of a 4–wheeler riding in the ditch on the south side of North
      4th Street. The officers were able to identify the driver of the
      ATV as Greg Baldwin. They watched the ATV proceed along
      North 4th Street and turn into a ditch, using the north Joe
      Hoye Park entrance, after which it continued in the ditch until
      it reached West 14th Avenue North, where it returned to the
      roadway. Baldwin acknowledges that he was operating his
      ATV/UTV on that date in the south ditch of North 4th Street
      and on North 4th Street, and the parties agree that the ditch
      and street are within the City’s limits. Baldwin does not recall
      using the north Joe Hoye Park entrance to enter the ditch.

            Officers Reineke and Hellickson reviewed Iowa Code Ch.
      321I, because the City did not reproduce Chapter 321 in
      printed form, only incorporated it by reference, when that
      chapter was adopted into the City Code of Ordinances. Officer
      Reineke then reviewed The Handbook of Iowa All-Terrain
      Vehicle and Off-Highway Motorcycle Regulations (Handbook),
      which the defendants contend is a handbook frequently relied
      upon by police officers when determining whether off road
      vehicles are operating in compliance with applicable laws.
      Baldwin denies, for lack of knowledge, the assertion that
      police officers rely on the Handbook, and denies that it
      addresses the applicable laws of the City. Based upon their
      reading of the State Code and the information contained in
      the video provided by the Lillands, Officers Reineke and
      Hellickson concluded that there had been a violation of what
      they believed was City Ordinance E–321I.10 (operating on
      highways). Before issuing a citation, however, Officer Reineke
      conferred with his supervisor, Captain (now Chief) Brent
      Shatto, and (then) Chief Eric Milburn. Captain Shatto and
                               5

Chief Milburn agreed that they believed that the activity
shown on the video amounted to a violation of the local
ordinance.     The parties now agree, however, that City
Ordinance E–321I.10 was not a valid ordinance in effect at the
time that Baldwin operated his ATV/UTV on November 10,
2013, because it did not exist at that time, and it still is not
part of the City’s Code of Ordinances.

       Officer Reineke prepared a citation (No. 131818 8) to
Greg Baldwin, alleging that “on or about 11/10/2013 at 2:30
PM defendant did unlawfully Operate Motor Vehicle/Boat
RED UTV . . . upon a public highway at NORTH 4TH STREET
located in the county and state aforesaid and did then and
there commit the following offense: Violation ATV OR OFF
ROAD UTIL VEH/OPERATION ON HIGHWAYS AND [sic] . . .
Local Ord E–321I.10 ICIS E–S/321I.10.” Defendants’
Appendix at 17. The citation issued on November 11, 2013.
Officer Reineke went to the Baldwin residence to serve the
citation on November 11, 2013, but no one was home.
Because Reineke was scheduled to be off work in the days that
followed, he e-filed the citation with the notation: “Request
Warrant.”      On November 12, 2013, David D. Forsyth,
Magistrate, Third Judicial District of Iowa, entered an Order
directing that a warrant issue. Defendants’ Appendix at 18.
On November 13, 2013, Officer Hellickson served the warrant
on Baldwin, while he was in the parking lot at his grandchild’s
school, in front of his wife and a large number of people,
arrested him, and took him to jail, where he was booked.
Baldwin’s wife came to the jail and posted bond, and Baldwin
was released. Subsequently, Baldwin entered a written plea
of not guilty to the charge, and trial was set for May 15, 2014.

       The defendants allege that, in the days that followed,
City Attorney Christopher Fuhrman discovered that the City
had not included Iowa Code Ch. 321I when it incorporated
Iowa Code Ch. 321 into the Code of Ordinances. They also
allege that neither Shatto, Reineke, nor Hellickson knew this;
rather, all were operating under the mistaken belief that the
adoption and incorporation of Iowa Code Ch. 321 by the City
Council included Iowa Code Chs. 321A through 321M.
Baldwin disputes these contentions as inconsistent with the
meeting that he had with City police officers in 2006 about
operation of ATVs in the City; the express incorporation of
“chapter 321,” not any other chapter of the Iowa Code, into
the Code of Ordinances; and the existence of Chapter 9 of the
Code of Ordinances. Mr. Fuhrman was granted leave to
amend the charge to allege a violation of a different ordinance,
City Ordinance 219–2(2). Defendants’ Appendix at 28–29.
After Baldwin’s counsel filed a Motion For Adjudication Of Law
Points And To Dismiss, and the City filed its response, the
court found “that the cited act is not in violation of the city
                                      6

      code as written and the case is DISMISSED, costs assessed to
      the City of Estherville.” Defendants’ Appendix at 30–37.

             Baldwin alleges that, because of his arrest, he suffered
      mental and emotional harm and anguish, anxiety, fear,
      degradation,    disgrace,    uncertainty,   apprehensiveness,
      restlessness, dismay, tension, and unease. He contends that
      his wife confirmed the effect on him in her deposition. The
      defendants deny that Baldwin has produced any evidence to
      support these claims of harm.

Baldwin v. Estherville, 218 F. Supp. 3d 987, 992–93 (N.D. Iowa 2016)

(omissions in original) (footnote omitted).

      The Estherville City Code incorporated Iowa Code chapter 321 via

ordinance E-321.1, which stated,

            All sections of the state statutory law, rules of the road,
      Chapter 321 of the Code of Iowa the offense of which
      constitutes a simple misdemeanor, are hereby adopted and
      incorporated by this reference the same as if set forth in full
      herein into the Code of Ordinances of the City of Estherville,
      Iowa, and the violation of such applicable state statutory laws
      of the road shall be a violation of this chapter if the offense
      occurs within the territorial city limits of the City of
      Estherville.

Estherville, Iowa, Code of Ordinances, tit. II, div. 1, ch. 7, § E-321.1

      Iowa Code section 321.234A covers operation of ATVs and provides,

            All-terrain vehicles shall not be operated on a highway
      unless one or more of the following conditions apply:

             ....

             f. The all-terrain vehicle is operated on a county
      roadway in accordance with section 321I.10, subsection 2, or
      a city street in accordance with section 321I.10, subsection 3.

Iowa Code § 321.234A(1)(f) (2013).

      Iowa Code section 321I.10 also covers ATVs and provides,

             1. A person shall not operate an all-terrain vehicle or
      off-road utility vehicle upon roadways or highways except as
      provided in section 321.234A and this section.

            2. A registered all-terrain vehicle or off-road utility
      vehicle may be operated on the roadways of that portion of
                                     7

      county highways designated by the county board of
      supervisors for such use during a specified period. The
      county board of supervisors shall evaluate the traffic
      conditions on all county highways and designate roadways on
      which all-terrain vehicles or off-road utility vehicles may be
      operated for the specified period without unduly interfering
      with or constituting an undue hazard to conventional motor
      vehicle traffic. In designating such roadways, the board may
      authorize all-terrain vehicles and off-road utility vehicles to
      stop at service stations or convenience stores along a
      designated roadway.

              3. Cities may designate streets under the jurisdiction
      of cities within their respective corporate limits which may be
      used for the operation of registered all-terrain vehicles or
      registered off-road utility vehicles.      In designating such
      streets, the city may authorize all-terrain vehicles and off-road
      utility vehicles to stop at service stations or convenience
      stores along a designated street.

Id. § 321I.10.

      The parties now agree that Iowa Code section 321.234A had been

incorporated into the Estherville ordinances by ordinance E-321.1, but

section 321I.10 had not been so incorporated.

      As noted above, City Attorney Fuhrman later amended the charge

against Baldwin to allege a violation of a different, free-standing city

ordinance, 219.2(2). This ordinance reads,

            ATV/UTVs may be operated upon the streets of the City
      of Estherville, Iowa, except as prohibited in Subsection 1 of
      this section, by persons possessing a valid Iowa Driver’s
      License.

            1. Prohibited Streets. ATV/UTVs shall not be operated
      upon any city street which is a primary road extension
      through the city, to wit: Iowa Highway No. 4 and Iowa Highway
      No. 9. However, ATV/UTVs may cross such primary road
      extensions.

            2. Parks and Other Public Lands. ATV/UTVs shall not
      be operated off-road in city parks, playgrounds, or upon any
      publicly-owned property.

           3. Private Property. ATV/UTVs may only be operated
      upon private property with express consent of the owner
                                      8

      thereof or while engaged in snow removal, landscaping, or
      other maintenance activities.

            4. Sidewalk or Parking. No ATV/UTV shall be operated
      upon sidewalks unless engaged in snow removal or
      maintenance activities (except along the south sidewalk from
      South First Street to West South First Street) nor shall they
      be operated upon that portion of the street located between
      the curb line and sidewalk or property line commonly referred
      to as the “parking” except for purposes of snow removal,
      maintenance, or landscaping activities.

Estherville, Iowa, Code of Ordinances, tit. II, div. 1, ch. 9, 219.2(2).

Regardless, as noted above, the district court dismissed the criminal

complaint on the ground that Baldwin’s conduct was “not in violation of

the city code as written.”

      On November 4, 2015, Baldwin filed a civil suit in the Iowa District

Court for Emmet County against the City and Officers Matt and

Hellickson, individually and in their official capacities as officers of the

Estherville Police Department. In addition to a common-law false arrest

claim, Baldwin also alleged violations of his rights under article I, sections

1 and 8 of the Iowa Constitution and his rights under the Fourth

Amendment to the United States Constitution pursuant to 42 U.S.C.

§ 1983. Baldwin sought money damages as relief.

      On November 20, the defendants removed the case to the United

States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa on the basis of

federal question jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331.                The

defendants subsequently filed an answer to Baldwin’s claims, denying

liability and asserting immunity from suit as an affirmative defense. Trial

was set for April 17, 2017.

      On July 19, 2016, the defendants moved for partial summary

judgment on the federal constitutional claim and the common law false

arrest claim, and Baldwin responded with his own motion for partial
                                             9

summary judgment on August 11. On November 18, the federal district

court granted the defendants’ motion as to Baldwin’s § 1983 claim on two

bases: that the officers did not lack probable cause for Baldwin’s arrest

and that they were entitled to qualified immunity. 1 The court also granted

summary judgment to the defendants on the common-law false arrest

claim. The court stayed any ruling on the Iowa constitutional claims until

this court issued its opinion in Godfrey v. State, 898 N.W.2d 844 (Iowa

2017).

       1
         The district court reasoned in part as follows:
               Baldwin argues that Ordinance 219–2, which was actually part of
       the City’s Code of Ordinances, plainly establishes the lack of probable
       cause for his arrest. I believe that the opposite is true. While Ordinance
       219–2 does provide that “ATV/UTVs may be operated upon the streets of
       the City,” it also provides “ATV/UTVs shall not be operated off-road in city
       parks, playgrounds, or upon any publicly-owned property.” The officers
       knew from the video that they reviewed that Baldwin had operated his ATV
       in the ditch of a City street and that ditch was publicly-owned property.
       Indeed, the amended charge against Baldwin, after the City Attorney
       discovered that Ordinance E321I.10 did not exist, was an alleged violation
       of Ordinance 219–2(2) for driving on “publicly-owned property,” because
       the video showed Baldwin driving his ATV in the ditch of a City street,
       which was, at least arguably, publicly-owned property.
               The Iowa District Court ultimately dismissed the amended charge
       against Baldwin, but only after making two key constructions of pertinent
       Ordinances. First, the Iowa District Court construed the plain meaning of
       “street” in City Ordinances to include the “ditch.” This conclusion was
       based on the definition of “street” in City Ordinance 110–102(23) as
       “mean[ing] and includ[ing] any public way, highway, street, avenue,
       boulevard, parkway, or other public thoroughfare . . . and unless otherwise
       indicated in the text, shall include the entire width between the property
       lines.” The Iowa District Court also construed “publicly-owned property”
       in Ordinance 219–2(2), to the extent that it conflicted with Ordinance 110–
       102(23), as not including the “ditch” of a City street. . . . The Iowa District
       Court’s after-the-fact constructions do not establish that a prudent person
       could not have believed, at the time of Baldwin’s alleged offense, that he
       had committed a violation of Ordinance 219–2(2). . . . The officers had
       probable cause to arrest Baldwin for a violation of Ordinance 219–2(2).
Baldwin, 218 F. Supp. 3d at 1000–01 (alterations in original) (first omission in
original) (citations omitted).
                                     10

      On October 4, 2017, after we had issued our Godfrey decision, the

district court certified this question of law to us: “Can a defendant raise a

defense of qualified immunity to an individual’s claim for damages for

violation of article I, § 1 and § 8 of the Iowa Constitution?”

     II. Standard of Review and Criteria for Answering a Certified
Question.

      Iowa Code section 684A.1 provides,

             The supreme court may answer questions of law
      certified to it by the supreme court of the United States, a
      court of appeals of the United States, a United States district
      court or the highest appellate court or the intermediate
      appellate court of another state, when requested by the
      certifying court, if there are involved in a proceeding before it
      questions of law of this state which may be determinative of
      the cause then pending in the certifying court and as to which
      it appears to the certifying court there is no controlling
      precedent in the decisions of the appellate courts of this state.

Iowa Code § 684A.1 (2017).

      Accordingly, we have said,

             It is within our discretion to answer certified questions
      from a United States district court. We may answer a question
      certified to us when (1) a proper court certified the question,
      (2) the question involves a matter of Iowa law, (3) the question
      “may be determinative of the cause . . . pending in the
      certifying court,” and (4) it appears to the certifying court that
      there is no controlling Iowa precedent.

Roth v. Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Soc’y, 886 N.W.2d 601, 605

(Iowa 2016) (omission in original) (quoting Estate of Corrado, 838 N.W.2d

at 643).

      We conclude that these four criteria have been met here and we

should answer the certified question. To do so, we will first briefly review

our Godfrey decision and the status of governmental immunity in Iowa.

We will then examine how other jurisdictions that allow constitutional tort
                                       11

damages claims have treated the question of qualified immunity. Finally,

we will consider relevant Iowa precedent and answer the certified question.

      III. Godfrey v. State.

      Last year, in Godfrey, we held that the State of Iowa and state

officials acting in their official capacities could be sued directly for violating

article I, section 6 (the Iowa equal protection clause) and article I, section

9 (the Iowa due process clause), where state law does not provide an

adequate compensatory damage remedy.             See 898 N.W.2d at 846–47

(majority opinion); id. at 880–81 (Cady, C.J., concurring in part and

dissenting in part).    We concluded that with respect to discrimination

based on sexual orientation, the Iowa Civil Rights Act provided an

adequate remedy and thus no claim was available under article I, section

6. Id. at 881. We did not reach the same conclusion with respect to the

due process violations alleged in the petition. Id. at 880–81

      We expressly deferred consideration of whether qualified immunity

applied to these constitutional tort claims. Id. at 879. That is the issue

we are now asked to address.

      IV. Governmental Immunity in Iowa.

      Tort claims against the government in Iowa are governed by chapter

669, for state tort claims, and chapter 670, for municipal tort claims.

These chapters apply both to claims against the governmental entity itself

and to claims against governmental employees acting in their official

capacity.

      Each chapter exempts certain claims from liability.                  These

exemptions include the discretionary function exception.             Iowa Code

§ 669.14(1); id. § 670.4(1)(c). The discretionary function exception in the

state tort claims act exception applies to
                                       12

      [a]ny claim based upon an act or omission of an employee of
      the state, exercising due care, in the execution of a statute or
      regulation, whether or not such statute or regulation be valid,
      or based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to
      exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the
      part of a state agency or an employee of the state, whether or
      not the discretion be abused.

Id. § 669.14(1). The exception in the municipal tort claims act is worded
similarly and applies to

      [a]ny claim based upon an act or omission of an officer or
      employee of the municipality, exercising due care, in the
      execution of a statute, ordinance, or regulation whether the
      statute, ordinance or regulation is valid, or based upon the
      exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a
      discretionary function or duty on the part of the municipality
      or an officer or employee of the municipality, whether or not
      the discretion is abused.

Id. § 670.4(1)(c).

      In addition to this exemption, there are similar exemptions in both

acts for tax claims, claims covered by workers’ compensation, claims for

negligent design or specification or failure to upgrade roads or public

improvements, and punitive damages. See id. §§ 669.4(2), .14(2), (5), (8),

(9); id. § 670.4(1)(a), (b), (e), (g), (h). Still other exemptions can be found in

both chapters.

      V. Review of Other Jurisdictions.

      As we noted in Godfrey, “The states that have considered the issue

are nearly equally divided in whether to recognize implied constitutional

actions for damages or whether to decline to recognize such actions.” 898
N.W.2d at 856–57 (footnotes omitted). We cited fourteen jurisdictions as

recognizing direct damage actions under their state constitutions:

California, Connecticut, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts,

Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,

Texas, and Wisconsin. See id. at 856 n.2.
                                     13

          We will now review these jurisdictions to determine what

immunities, if any, they allow for constitutional tort claims.           Our

conclusion is that most of these jurisdictions either recognize a federal-

type immunity, such as the district court applied to the federal

constitutional claims here, or subject constitutional claims to the defenses

otherwise available under the state’s tort claims act (or similar statute).

          A. States That Recognize Harlow v. Fitzgerald Immunity.

Under federal law, officials are entitled to qualified immunity from

constitutional claims. That is, they cannot be sued when “their conduct

does not violate clearly established . . . constitutional rights of which a

reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S.
800, 818, 102 S. Ct. 2727, 2738 (1982). This immunity applies both to

claims based on 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and to Bivens actions derived directly

from the United States Constitution. See, e.g., Wood v. Moss, ___ U.S. ___,

___, 134 S. Ct. 2056, 2066–67 (2014); Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818, 102 S. Ct.

at 2738 & n.30.

          Two states that allow direct claims under their own state

constitutions—Connecticut and Louisiana—also provide Harlow-type

immunity.

          In Binette v. Sabo, the Connecticut Supreme Court recognized a

damages cause of action for a violation of the state constitution. 710 A.2d
688, 700–01 (Conn. 1998). The individual defendants in that case had

allegedly entered the plaintiffs’ home without permission or a warrant. Id.

at 689. However, the court made an important distinction between the

conduct of the government officials in that case—which it characterized as

“egregious”—and conduct that was undertaken “reasonably and in good

faith.”     See id. at 701 n.23.   In the latter circumstance, the court
                                       14

anticipated that the individual defendants would be shielded from liability.

Id.

        Later, in Fleming v. City of Bridgeport, the Connecticut Supreme

Court found that a Harlow-style qualified immunity was available to

municipal officers for damages actions following illegal searches when “it

was objectively reasonable for them to believe that their actions would not

violate   a   clearly   established   right   of   the   plaintiff’s   under   the

circumstances.” 935 A.2d 126, 144 (Conn. 2007). The plaintiff’s suit was

then found to be barred by this qualified immunity.            Id. at 146 (“[W]e

cannot say . . . that their approach under the circumstances of this case

was so unreasonable as to justify abrogation of their qualified immunity.”).

Harlow was not cited, but the court used a standard similar to that in

Harlow. See id. at 144; see also Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818, 102 S. Ct. at

2738.

        Louisiana also utilizes the federal qualified immunity standard. In

Moresi v. Department of Wildlife & Fisheries, the plaintiffs sought recovery

under the Louisiana constitutional right to be free from unreasonable

searches, seizures, and invasions of privacy. 567 So. 2d 1081, 1091 (La.

1990). The Louisiana Supreme Court “conclude[d] that damages may be

obtained by an individual for injuries or loss caused by a violation of Article

I, § 5 of the 1974 Louisiana Constitution.” Id. at 1093. However, the court

also determined that the plaintiffs could not recover against the state

officers because

        [t]he same factors that compelled the United States Supreme
        Court to recognize a qualified good faith immunity for state
        officers under § 1983 require us to recognize a similar
        immunity for them under any action arising from the state
        constitution.
                                     15

Id. Qualified immunity would be available “if the defendant show[ed] that

the state constitutional right alleged to have been violated was not clearly

established.” Id. at 1094.

      Two other jurisdictions we cited in Godfrey as allowing direct

constitutional damage claims actually authorize such claims through

enabling statutes—Massachusetts and New Jersey.            Both states have

determined that Harlow immunity applies to such claims, in addition to

defenses expressly written into the statutes themselves.

      Thus, in Massachusetts, state constitutional tort claims may be

pursued via the state civil rights act. See Martino v. Hogan, 643 N.E.2d
53, 59–60 (Mass. App. Ct. 1994). This act appears to be the exclusive

avenue for pursuing such claims. See id. at 60. And such constitutional

claims are subject to two separate limits.       First, the Massachusetts

Supreme Judicial Court has concluded that the legislature, “in enacting

the [state civil rights act], intended to adopt the standard of immunity for

public officials developed under [federal law].” Rodriques v. Furtado, 575
N.E.2d 1124, 1127 (Mass. 1991). Furthermore, under the express terms

of the civil rights act, the plaintiff must prove that a constitutional right

has been interfered with “by threats, intimidation, or coercion.” Glovsky

v. Roche Bros. Supermarkets, Inc., 17 N.E.3d 1026, 1035 (Mass. 2014)

(quoting Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 12, § 11H).

      New Jersey has also authorized the bringing of state constitutional

claims by statute through the New Jersey Civil Rights Act. See Gormley v.

Wood-El, 93 A.3d 344, 358 (N.J. 2014).        Yet as in Massachusetts, a

qualified immunity defense is available that “tracks the federal standard”

in Harlow. Brown v. State, 165 A.3d 735, 743 (N.J. 2017). This shields

from liability all public officials except those who are “plainly incompetent

or those who knowingly violate the law.” Morillo v. Torres, 117 A.3d 1206,
                                           16

1215 (N.J. 2015) (quoting Connor v. Powell, 744 A.2d 1158, 1164 (N.J.

2000)). 2

       B. States That Limit Liability to That Authorized by the State

Tort Claims Act. Other states rely on their tort claims acts to demarcate

the outer scope of constitutional damages liability. Officials and the state,

in other words, receive the immunities contained within the tort claims act

and are liable only when the act would render them liable.

       Illinois, one jurisdiction we cited in Godfrey, follows this approach.

In Newell v. City of Elgin, the plaintiff sued over a violation of his right

against unreasonable searches and seizures set forth in the Illinois

Constitution. 340 N.E.2d 344, 346–47 (Ill. App. Ct. 1976). The court

determined that the state tort immunity statute governed. Id. at 347–48.

Under the statute, “a public employee is not liable for his act in the

execution or enforcement of any law unless his act ‘constitutes willful and

wanton negligence.’ ” Id. at 348 (quoting 85 Ill. Rev. Stat. § 2-202 (1973)).

Although this elevated standard applied, the court found that the

defendant police officers had been guilty of willful and wanton negligence

and therefore were not shielded by the statutory immunity. Id.; see also

Commerce Bank, N.A. v. Widger, No. 3–10–0647, 2011 WL 10468212, at *2

(Ill. App. Ct. Nov. 7, 2011) (deciding that a claim under the Illinois

        2Other states not cited in Godfrey for recognizing independent constitutional torts

also provide Harlow-type immunity. For example, Vermont permits constitutional tort
claims if the provision is self-executing and the legislature has fashioned no other
adequate remedial scheme. See Shields v. Gerhart, 658 A.2d 924, 930, 934 (Vt. 1995).
“Where the Legislature has provided a remedy, although it may not be as effective for the
plaintiff as money damages, [the Vermont courts] will ordinarily defer to the statutory
remedy and refuse to supplement it.” Id. at 934. When a constitutional damages claim
is available, the Vermont Supreme Court has recognized Harlow qualified immunity as a
defense. See Stevens v. Stearns, 833 A.2d 835, 842 (Vt. 2003). In Stevens, the plaintiffs
sued for the alleged violation of their rights against unreasonable searches under the
state constitution. Id. at 839, 842. Without deciding whether a cause of action existed,
the Vermont Supreme Court found it was barred by qualified immunity. Id. at 842.
                                     17

Constitution’s search and seizure clause, even if available, was subject to

the terms of the State Lawsuit Immunity Act).

      So too Maryland. In Lee v. Cline, the Maryland Court of Appeals

discussed the interplay between constitutional torts and the immunity

provided by the state tort claims act. 863 A.2d 297, 303–10 (Md. 2004).

In that case, the plaintiff brought suit alleging a violation of his rights

under the Maryland Declaration of Rights after he was unlawfully detained

in his car allegedly because of his race and the kind of car he was driving.

Id. at 301. The court surveyed its prior cases as supporting the position

that “constitutional torts are covered by the Maryland Tort Claims Act,

thereby granting state personnel qualified immunity for such torts.” Id. at

304–05.

      In Maryland, the state tort claims act also limits the state’s liability

for a constitutional tort. See Cooper v. Rodriguez, 118 A.3d 829, 844–45

(Md. 2015).    Under that act, the state is immune from liability for

constitutional claims if the official’s actions stem from malice or gross

negligence. Id. at 854; see also Brooks v. Jenkins, 104 A.3d 899, 908 (Md.

Ct. Spec. App. 2014) (“If the employee is found . . . to have acted with

malice or gross negligence, even though in the course of his employment,

the State does not assume liability for his conduct.”). Furthermore, the

state’s liability cannot exceed $200,000 per claimant per incident. See

Cooper, 118 A.3d at 845.

      Claims against local governments are also limited. In Clea v. Mayor

of Baltimore, the Maryland Court of Appeals originally said that “a public

official who violates a plaintiff’s rights under the Maryland Constitution is

entitled to no immunity.” 541 A.2d 1303, 1312 (Md. 1988). But in a later

case also involving the Baltimore police department, which arose after

Maryland passed its local government tort claims act, the same court
                                     18

indicated that claims against local officials and local governmental entities

are subject to the terms of that act, including a cap on damages per

individual claim. Houghton v. Forrest, 989 A.2d 223, 229–32 & n.5 (Md.

2010); see also D’Aoust v. Diamond, 36 A.3d 941, 962 (Md. 2012) (stating

that Clea has been “super[s]eded by statute”). In short, even as to claims

based on the Maryland Declaration of Rights, “Maryland public officials

may . . . claim immunity for their official acts on statutory grounds.”

Houghton, 989 A.2d at 229.

      Based on Clea, Maryland is sometimes cited as a state that refuses

to extend common law immunities to constitutional tort claims. See, e.g.,

Gary S. Gildin, Redressing Deprivations of Rights Secured by State

Constitutions Outside the Shadow of the Supreme Court’s Constitutional

Remedies Jurisprudence, 115 Penn St. L. Rev. 877, 903–04 (2011). But

this is only part of the story because Maryland’s courts have given effect

to statutory immunities.

      Likewise Mississippi. In City of Jackson v. Sutton, the Mississippi

Supreme Court found that the plaintiff’s constitutional damage claims

were barred by the immunity provisions of the Mississippi tort claims act,

which contained the exclusive avenue for relief. 797 So. 2d 977, 980–81

(Miss. 2001). Only declaratory actions and not damage claims could be

brought outside the act. Id. at 980.

      In addition, as already noted, it appears that constitutional damage

actions in Massachusetts and New Jersey are subject to the limits in the

relevant statute—although in those two states it is the civil rights act

rather than the tort claims act.

      New York also subjects constitutional tort claims to the statutory

framework applicable to other tort claims against the state. In Brown v.

State, the New York Court of Appeals held “that a cause of action to recover
                                     19

damages may be asserted against the State for violation of the Equal

Protection and Search and Seizure Clauses of the State Constitution.” 674
N.E.2d 1129, 1138–39 (N.Y. 1996). The claim arose from a five-day “street

sweep” involving police stops of all nonwhite males in the city after an

elderly white woman reported that a black male attacked her. Id. at 1131–

32. The claimants asked the court to recognize constitutional tort claims

for money damages under the New York Constitution. Id. at 1133.

      The court acknowledged that “if we are to recognize a damage

remedy it must be implied from the Constitution itself.” Id. at 1137. The

court held that “[a] civil damage remedy cannot be implied for a violation

of the State constitutional provision unless the provision is self-executing.”

Id. The court concluded that the search and seizure and equal protection

clauses of the state constitution were self-executing but acknowledged

that a claim for damages also required a determination of “whether the

remedy of damages for the invasion of . . . rights [established by the self-

executing provisions] will be recognized.” Id. at 1137–38.

      The court noted that injunctive or declaratory relief would not help

the claimants, nor would exclusion, because the claimants were not

charged with a crime. Id. at 1141. Therefore, damages were a necessary

deterrent for the State’s misconduct.      Id.   The court concluded, “[b]y

recognizing a narrow remedy for violations of [the state equal protection

and search and seizure clauses], we provide appropriate protection against

official misconduct at the State level.” Id.

      Notably, New York has waived its sovereign immunity for damages

actions against the State. Id.; id. at 1146 (Bellacosa, J., dissenting) (“The

state hereby waives its immunity from liability and action and hereby

assumes liability and consents to have the same determined in accordance

with the same rules of law as applied to actions in the supreme court
                                    20

against individuals or corporations.” (Emphasis omitted.) (quoting N.Y. Ct.

Cl. Act. § 8 (McKinney))). The majority in Brown concluded that this waiver

removed the defense of sovereign immunity for tort actions, including

constitutional torts.   Id. at 1134–36 (majority opinion).     The dissent

disagreed that the waiver should be applied in constitutional tort cases.

See id. at 1147–48 (Bellacosa, J., dissenting).

      However, the majority pointed out that many of the legal defenses

identified by the dissent can be raised by the state “to avoid paying

damages for some tortious conduct because, as a matter of policy, the

courts have foreclosed liability.” Id. at 1141 (majority opinion). These

defenses include legislative or judicial immunity, immunity for “quasi-

judicial or discretionary actions,” the “special duty rule” (under which “a

plaintiff cannot recover against a municipality for failure to supply police

protection or similar services absent a special relationship between the

plaintiff and the police or municipality”), and immunity from punitive

damages. Id.

      No New York decisions after Brown have considered whether a

defendant can assert the defense of qualified immunity.        Instead, the

courts generally turn down constitutional tort claims because other

remedies are available. In a 2001 case, the New York Court of Appeals

rejected a constitutional tort claim arising out of an unlawful search,

reasoning as follows:

             Moreover, plaintiff fails to demonstrate how money
      damages are appropriate to ensure full realization of her
      asserted constitutional rights. Even after years of discovery,
      plaintiff has not distinguished her case from that of any
      criminal defendant who has been granted suppression, or
      reversal of a conviction, based on technical error at the trial
      level. Plaintiff has shown no grounds that would entitle her
      to a damage remedy in addition to the substantial benefit she
      already has received from dismissal of the indictment and
      release from incarceration.
                                      21

Martinez v. City of Schenectady, 761 N.E.2d 560, 564 (N.Y. 2001); see, e.g.,

Shelton v. N.Y. State Liquor Auth., 878 N.Y.S.2d 212, 218 (App. Div. 2009)

(“Although, in limited situations, a private cause of action to recover

monetary damages for state constitutional violations can arise, no such

claim will lie where the claimant has an adequate remedy in an alternate

forum.” (Citations omitted.)).

      C. States That Impose a Higher Burden on Bringing a

Constitutional Tort. In two states referenced in Godfrey, i.e., Michigan

and Wisconsin, courts have determined that constitutional tort damage

claims are available but have subjected such claims to a more demanding

legal standard. In Michigan, the violation must have resulted from a state

custom or policy to hold the state liable. In Wisconsin, the court required

an intentional violation of the state constitution.

      Constitutional torts in Michigan have their genesis in Smith v.

Department of Public Health, 410 N.W.2d 749 (Mich. 1987). There, one

plaintiff brought an action against state and public officials for an alleged

violation of the state and federal constitutions, and another plaintiff sued

the director of state police for alleged violations of his civil rights. Id. at

753–54, 767. Among other holdings, the court explicitly noted two things:

1) “Where it is alleged that the state, by virtue of custom or policy, has

violated a right conferred by the Michigan Constitution, governmental

immunity is not available in a state court action,” and 2) “A claim for

damages against the state arising from violation by the state of the

Michigan Constitution may be recognized in appropriate cases.” Id. at 751.

Although one of the plaintiff–appellants was found not to have preserved

the issue for review, the court remanded the other’s case for a

determination of whether a violation of the constitutional right had been
                                     22

alleged and had occurred and whether a damage remedy would be

available. Id.

      Subsequent cases, however, have limited the reach of Smith. See,

e.g., Lewis v. State, 629 N.W.2d 868, 868, 872 (Mich. 2001) (rejecting a

private cause of action under the equal protection clause of the Michigan

Constitution “because the plain language of this constitutional provision

leaves its implementation to the Legislature”). In Carlton v. Department of

Corrections, the court of appeals emphasized that for the state to be liable

for a constitutional tort, a state “custom or policy” must have mandated

the official or employee’s actions. See 546 N.W.2d 671, 678 (Mich. Ct.

App. 1996). In Jones v. Powell, the supreme court narrowed its holding in

Smith considerably when it held that the “decision in Smith provides no

support for inferring a damage remedy for a violation of the Michigan

Constitution in an action against a municipality or an individual

government employee.” 612 N.W.2d 423, 426 (Mich. 2000) (per curiam).

      Recently in Mays v. Snyder, a case arising out of the lead

contamination of the water supply of Flint, Michigan, the court found the

allegations of plaintiffs’ complaint sufficient to allege a statewide

governmental policy and, thus, sufficient to state a claim for damages

under the due process clause of the Michigan Constitution. ___ N.W.2d

___, ___, 2018 WL 559726, at *2, 19–22 (Mich. Ct. App. Jan. 25, 2018).

      In Wisconsin, where the court of appeals has indicated that

constitutional torts are permissible under the Wisconsin Constitution, the

plaintiff must meet a high burden to recover. See Old Tuckaway Assocs.

Ltd. P’ship v. City of Greenfield, 509 N.W.2d 323, 328–29 & n.4 (Wis. Ct.

App. 1993). In Old Tuckaway, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals found that

the trial court “did not err in allowing plaintiffs to pursue a direct damage

action based on an intentional denial of due process under the state
                                     23

constitution.” Id. at 328 n.4. However, the court ultimately concluded

that the plaintiff did not meet the burden of showing the intentional denial

of due process and therefore did not address whether such a claim might

be barred by statutory immunities. Id. at 330 n.5. Thus, not only did the

court require an intentional tort, but the question of whether immunities—

including the doctrine of qualified immunity—might bar constitutional tort

claims against individual governmental defendants remains open.

      D. States That Do Not Allow a Direct Constitutional Tort. Two

states we cited in Godfrey for recognizing direct damage claims under state

constitutions—California and Texas—no longer appear to do so.

      In Godfrey, we referenced two California cases that date from 1979

and 1982 respectively. 898 N.W.2d at 856 n.2 (citing Gay Law Students

Ass’n v. Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co., 595 P.2d 592, 602 (Cal. 1979); Laguna Publ’g

Co. v. Golden Rain Found. of Laguna Hills, 182 Cal. Rptr. 813, 835 (Ct.

App. 1982)).    But currently in California, there is no constitutional

provision under which a direct claim for damages is clearly available. The

California Supreme Court and other California appellate courts have found

that freestanding damages actions may not be brought for violations of the

state constitutional rights to free speech, due process, equal protection, or

the right to petition the government. See Degrassi v. Cook, 58 P.3d 360,

367 (Cal. 2002) (freedom of speech); Katzberg v. Regents of Univ. of Cal.,

58 P.3d 339, 358 (Cal. 2002) (due process); MHC Fin. Ltd. P’ship Two v.

City of Santee, 107 Cal. Rptr. 3d 87, 98–99 (Ct. App. 2010) (right to

petition); Carlsbad Aquafarm, Inc. v. State Dep’t of Health Servs., 100 Cal.

Rptr. 2d 87, 92 (Ct. App. 2000) (due process); Gates v. Super. Ct., 38 Cal.

Rptr. 2d 489, 512, 517 (Ct. App. 1995) (equal protection).

      In Hernandez v. Hillsides, Inc., the California Supreme Court said it

was “an open question whether the state constitutional privacy provision,
                                            24

which is otherwise self-executing and serves as the basis for injunctive

relief, can also provide direct and sole support for a damages claim.” 211
P.3d 1063, 1072 (Cal. 2009). Iowa has no comparable provision.

       In Godfrey, we also cited Jones v. Memorial Hospital System, a Texas

intermediate appellate decision. See 898 N.W.2d at 857 n.2 (citing Jones,

746 S.W.2d 891, 893–94 (Tex. App. 1988)). But subsequent to Jones, the

Texas Supreme Court has determined there is no right to sue for damages

under the Texas Constitution.            See City of Beaumont v. Bouillion, 896
S.W.2d 143, 149 (Tex. 1995) (“[T]here is no implied private right of action

for damages under the Texas Constitution when an individual alleges the

violation of speech and assembly rights.”). In City of Elsa v. M.A.L., three

former police officers brought a constitutional tort action against the city

when it allegedly disclosed to the media they had left the force following

positive drug tests. 226 S.W.3d 390, 391 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam). The

officers asserted violations of their state constitutional right to privacy and

sought monetary damages and equitable and injunctive relief. Id. The

Texas Supreme Court reaffirmed that governmental entities could not be

sued in damages for violating the Texas Constitution. Id. at 392. 3

       3Two  other jurisdictions that have not recognized direct constitutional damage
claims are Florida and Minnesota.
         Florida intermediate appellate courts have repeatedly found that monetary
damages are unavailable for violations of state constitutional rights. See Bradsheer v.
Fla. Dep’t of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles, 20 So. 3d 915, 921 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.
2009); Fernez v. Calabrese, 760 So. 2d 1144, 1146 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2000); Garcia v.
Reyes, 697 So. 2d 549, 549–50 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1997). The state supreme court has
never directly addressed this issue. See Resha v. Tucker, 670 So. 2d 56, 57 (Fla. 1996)
(finding that a constitutional violation by a state official acting outside the scope of her
official duties did not give rise to an action for money damages under the specific facts of
the case). One intermediate appellate court has said that even if such a cause of action
against state officials existed, it would be barred by statutory immunity. See Garcia, 697
So. 2d at 550 (“We further find that if [a cause of action for money damages against the
state, its agencies or employees acting in their official capacities for police misconduct
arising directly under the due process clause] existed, a lawsuit against the [city] and its
police officer . . . would be barred by sovereign immunity.”).
                                            25

       E. States Where Immunity Is an Open Issue. In two jurisdictions

that permit direct constitutional claims for damages, Montana and North

Carolina, immunity appears to be an open issue. Both jurisdictions allow

constitutional damage claims only when there is no analogous statutory

or common-law cause of action.

       In Dorwart v. Caraway, 58 P.3d 128, 131, 137 (Mont. 2002), the

Montana Supreme Court found that the plaintiff could bring a direct

damages action for violation of the due process, search and seizure, and

privacy clauses of the Montana Constitution. It declined to adopt a Harlow

form of qualified immunity analogous to that available for violations of the

United States Constitution. Id. at 139–40. However, it remains an open

question whether statutory immunities generally available to public

defendants can be used in the defense of constitutional tort actions. See

Nickel v. Faycosh, No. DA 09–0032, 2009 WL 3319990, at *3–4 (Mont. Oct.

14, 2009) (declining to decide the issue).                Furthermore, if adequate

        Twenty-four years ago, in a case involving a tax that violated the Federal
Constitution, the Florida Supreme Court said, “Sovereign immunity does not exempt the
State from a challenge based on violation of the federal or state constitutions, because
any other rule self-evidently would make constitutional law subservient to the State’s
will.” Dep’t of Revenue v. Kuhnlein, 646 So. 2d 717, 721, 724 (Fla. 1994). But Kuhnlein
has not been used for that proposition by a Florida court since it was written. As noted,
no Florida appellate court has actually recognized a direct damages claim under the
Florida Constitution.
        To date, Minnesota similarly has not recognized an action for damages for alleged
violations of the state constitution. See Laliberte v. State, No. A13–0907, 2014 WL
1407808, at *2 (Minn. Ct. App. Apr. 14, 2014); Davis v. Hennepin County, No. A11–1083,
2012 WL 896409, at *2 (Minn. Ct. App. Mar. 19, 2012); see also Dean v. City of Winona,
868 N.W.2d 1, 9 (Minn. 2015) (Lillehaug, J., concurring) (describing the appellants’
rejected theory of recovery of nominal damages under the remedies clause for a violation
of the state constitution as “novel”).
       Thirty years ago, in Elwood v. Rice County, the Minnesota Supreme Court held
that Harlow-style qualified immunity did not apply to state common law claims but that
Minnesota’s own official immunity doctrine applied. 423 N.W.2d 671, 677 (Minn. 1988).
This doctrine requires proof of “a willful or malicious wrong.” Id. (quoting Susla v. State,
247 N.W.2d 907, 912 (Minn. 1976). Regardless, Minnesota has not recognized stand-
alone constitutional damage claims.
                                     26

remedies exist under statutory or common law, the plaintiff is not entitled

to bring a constitutional tort claim. See Sunburst Sch. Dist. No. 2 v. Texaco,

Inc., 165 P.3d 1079, 1093 (Mont. 2007) (finding that the recent adoption

of Restatement (Second) of Torts § 929 to allow for the recovery of

restoration damages meant that the district court “erred in instructing the

jury on the constitutional tort theory where . . . adequate remedies exist

under statutory or common law”); see also Salminen v. Morrison &

Frampton, PLLP, 339 P.3d 602, 611 (Mont. 2014) (“Since the Salminens

have a basis in law for a claim to redress this allegation, they need not

proceed under the Constitution.”).

      North Carolina also falls into this wait-and-see category. In Corum

v. University of North Carolina, the North Carolina Supreme Court decided

that a plaintiff may recover damages for a violation of a state constitutional

right when there is no common law or statutory remedy. 413 S.E.2d 276,

289 (N.C. 1992). That case involved alleged violations of the plaintiff’s

right to free speech, although other cases have involved other

constitutional rights. See id.; Sale v. State Highway & Pub. Works Comm’n,

89 S.E.2d 290, 297 (N.C. 1955) (recognizing a cause of action under the

state due process clause); Adams v. City of Raleigh, 782 S.E.2d 108, 114–

15 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016) (finding that common-law false arrest provided a

sufficiently analogous remedy to preclude a constitutional claim, even if

such a false arrest claim might not succeed in the particular case); Davis

v. Town of S. Pines, 449 S.E.2d 240, 248 (N.C. Ct. App. 1994) (finding

plaintiff’s “constitutional right not to be unlawfully imprisoned and

deprived of her liberty [was] adequately protected by her common law claim

of false imprisonment,” and she could thus not bring a constitutional tort

claim). The Corum court noted that
                                      27

      when public officials invade or threaten to invade the personal
      or property rights of a citizen in disregard of law, they are not
      relieved from responsibility by the doctrine of sovereign
      immunity even though they act or assume to act under the
      authority and pursuant to the directions of the State.
413 S.E.2d at 292. However, although officials could be sued in their

official capacities, they could not be sued in their individual capacities. Id.

at 292–93.

      Later, that court addressed this issue again in Craig ex rel. Craig v.

New Hanover County Board of Education when a plaintiff filed a damages

action against the board of education and the principal of his middle

school in her individual and official capacities after the plaintiff was

sexually assaulted. 678 S.E.2d 351, 352 (N.C. 2009). The court’s holding

indicated that the defense of sovereign immunity cannot be applied to

prevent a plaintiff from redressing a constitutional wrong. Id. at 356–57.

However, the court also limited its ruling by stating,

             This holding does not predetermine the likelihood that
      plaintiff will win other pretrial motions, defeat affirmative
      defenses, or ultimately succeed on the merits of his case.
      Rather, it simply ensures that an adequate remedy must
      provide the possibility of relief under the circumstances.

Id. at 355. Thus, other defenses may not necessarily be precluded, even if

they would leave the plaintiff without a remedy.         As one commentator

queried,

      Does being time-barred by a statute of repose preclude the
      possibility of relief? What about qualified immunity? In Craig,
      a direct constitutional claim was allowed because Craig’s
      claim was precluded by governmental immunity, “regardless
      of his ability to prove his case.” What was left unclear,
      however, is whether any other procedural bar or well-pled
      defense would be treated differently.

Matthew R. Gauthier, Kicking and Screaming: Dragging North Carolina’s

Direct Constitutional Claims into the Twenty-First Century, 95 N.C. L. Rev.
                                       28

1735, 1747–48 (2017) [hereafter Gauthier, Kicking and Screaming]

(footnotes omitted) (quoting Craig, 678 S.E.2d at 355).

       VI. The Proper Approach in Iowa.

       A. Strict Liability Would Go Too Far. This leads us to Iowa law

and the certified question.

       To begin with, we are convinced that constitutional tort claims in

Iowa should be subject to some limit. As we have already seen, the other

states that allow such claims limit liability in some fashion, except for

Montana and North Carolina. Those two states have not decided the issue

yet.

       Consider also the three Iowa precedents we singled out in Godfrey

for having recognized constitutional torts. See 898 N.W.2d at 862–63.

Each involved bad faith conduct, and one of those cases made it clear that

malice and lack of probable cause were elements of the claim.

       McClurg v. Brenton arose when a search party forced their way late

at night into a house suspected of harboring stolen chickens, although the

party lacked a warrant and although nighttime searches were illegal at the

time in the absence of special authority. 123 Iowa 368, 369–70, 372, 98
N.W. 881, 881–82 (1904).           We further described the exceptional

circumstances of the case as follows:

       There is testimony, also, that the search was conducted, by
       some of the party, at least, in a loud and boisterous manner,
       and with little regard for the sensibilities of the plaintiff and
       his family. One of the searchers candidly admits that he was
       a “little enthused,” and did not pay much attention to the
       details; and it is said by one witness that another member of
       the party became somewhat confused as to the real object of
       the search, and demanded to know whether there was “any
       beer in the cellar.” The discouraging answer that there “was
       no cellar” seems not to have been fully credited, for it is further
       testified that the knot holes in the floor were carefully probed
       with a pocket rule, to ascertain the amount of available space
       thereunder. Upon such a state of the record, we think it very
                                           29

       clear that the jury should have been allowed to pass upon the
       issue of fact presented by the pleadings. If plaintiff’s home
       was invaded in the manner claimed by him, he has suffered a
       wrong for which the law will afford him substantial remedy.

Id. at 371, 98 N.W. at 882.

       Krehbiel v. Henkle was another case involving egregious misconduct

in connection with a search. 142 Iowa 677, 678–79 121 N.W. 378, 379
(1909).      There we were explicit that “evidence of malice and want of

probable cause for the prosecution must be shown in order to sustain a

recovery of damages.” Id. at 680, 121 N.W. at 380. After invoking article

I, section 8 we said, “[A] violation of this right without reasonable ground

therefor gives the injured party a right of action.” Id. (emphasis added). 4

       Lastly, in Girard v. Anderson, we held that when two private

individuals broke into a locked home to forcibly repossess property, the

homeowner had a cause of action against them for trespass and

conversion.     219 Iowa 142, 144–45, 148, 257 N.W. 400, 400–01, 403

(1934). The case involves private defendants and therefore does not speak

to the standards for the recovery of damages against government

defendants. See id. at 144; 257 N.W. at 400. Even so, the facts presented

by the plaintiff involved forcibly breaking and entering. Id.

       In short, some limits are consistent with the Iowa precedent we

invoked in Godfrey.

       4In  Godfrey, we characterized Krehbiel as a damages action for violation of article
I, section 8, not as a malicious prosecution case. 898 N.W.2d at 862. We quote Krehbiel
again:
       The right of the citizen to security in person and property against wrongful
       seizures and searches is one which the law has ever zealously safeguarded
       and has express recognition in our state Constitution. Const. Iowa, art.
       1, § 8. That a violation of this right without reasonable ground therefor
       gives the injured party a right of action is thoroughly well settled.
142 Iowa at 679–80, 121 N.W. at 379–80. Krehbiel went on to note that “[t]he essence of
the wrong done to [the plaintiff] was the unreasonable invasion of his home.” Id. at 681,
121 N.W. at 380.
                                     30

      We further note that at the time our Constitution was adopted,

public officials received the benefit of a form of qualified immunity. In

Hetfield v. Towsley, we rejected a claim against a justice of the peace and

constable for wrongly taking away the plaintiff’s oxen. 3 Greene 584, 584–

85 (Iowa 1852). We explained,

      The justice and constable, in what they did, were in the
      performance of official duty. Unless they exceeded their
      jurisdiction, or acted corruptly, or without authority of law,
      they are not liable. Although the justice might have acted
      erroneously, still he was not liable as a trespasser. The
      injured party had his remedy by certiorari or appeal. The
      demurrers admit the official character of the officers, and also
      that they acted in good faith, as stated by them in their special
      pleas.

Id. at 585.   Hetfield cannot be explained as a judicial immunity case

because the court also exonerated the constable. See also Howe v. Mason,

12 Iowa 202, 203–04 (1861) (“Officers required by law to exercise their

judgment are not answerable for mistakes in law or mere errors of

judgment without any fraud or malice.”); Plummer v. Harbut, 5 Iowa 308,

311–14 (1857) (finding that where the defendants broke and entered the

plaintiff’s close pursuant to a warrant and took and destroyed the liquors

therein, even though the entry was without proper authority the plaintiff

could not recover the value of the illegal liquors and could recover only

nominal damages for the breaking and entering because the defendants

had acted in good faith).

      In addition, our conclusion in Godfrey that the Iowa Constitution

can sustain a damages remedy without prior action by the Iowa legislature

does not mean the Iowa courts have no role in crafting that remedy. Nor

does it mean that traditional tort rules are irrelevant. The Restatement

(Second) of Torts section 874A makes both of these points. Restatement

(Second) of Torts § 874A (Am. Law Inst. 1979). That particular section
                                       31

covers “Tort Liability for Violation of Legislative Provision,” while including

“constitutional provisions” within its scope. See id. & cmt. a. As we noted

in Godfrey, section 874A has been cited as support for constitutional

damage claims in other jurisdictions. See 898 N.W.2d at 858, 860.

       Section 874A contemplates that a court implying a constitutional (or

statutory) cause of action will “us[e] a suitable existing tort action or a new

cause of action analogous to an existing tort action.” See Restatement

(Second) of Torts § 874A. Comment f reiterates this point and states that

a civil action to effectuate a constitutional provision “will ordinarily be

assimilated to the most similar common law tort.” Id. cmt. f. Comment j

adds that

       [w]hether the tort action provided by the court in furtherance
       of the policy of a legislative [or constitutional] provision is to
       be treated as an intentional tort, as negligence or as a form of
       strict liability, or perhaps as involving all three . . . , depends
       primarily upon construction of the statute [or constitutional
       provision] itself.

Id. cmt. j.

       Moreover, strict damages liability for any constitutional wrong would

lead to untenable results. On this point, it is worth analyzing a few of the

cases where we found state and local officials were entitled to various

immunities when claims had been brought against them under the United

States Constitution through 42 U.S.C. § 1983.               Should all those

immunities vanish just because claims are also brought under the Iowa

Constitution?

       In Minor v. State, the plaintiff asserted that two employees of the

Iowa Department of Human Services had improperly caused her child to

be removed from her care and failed to protect that child once placed in

foster care, in violation of her Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
                                     32

819 N.W.2d 383, 392 (Iowa 2012).           There, we determined that the

employees were entitled to qualified immunity. Id. at 400–04.

      In Teague v. Mosley, the plaintiff sued three of the five members of

a county board of supervisors, alleging they had violated his constitutional

rights by not providing a safe environment at the jail. 552 N.W.2d 646,

647 (Iowa 1996). We adopted a rule of absolute immunity for supervisors

acting in a legislative capacity. Id. at 649.

      In Dickerson v. Mertz, the plaintiff sued after having been issued

citations for hunting without a valid license and later for “taking deer by

auto,” and subsequently having been acquitted of both charges.           547
N.W.2d 208, 210–11 (1996). We determined that the defendant officers of

the Department of Natural Resources were entitled to qualified immunity

from federal constitutional claims because the “plaintiff ha[d] not shown a

factual issue concerning the unreasonableness of defendants’ actions

based on the existing law.” Id. at 215–16.

      We believe the government officials in these cases would be reluctant

to fully perform their jobs if they could be found strictly liable for actions

that happened to violate someone’s constitutional rights.         There is a

danger of overdeterrence. Search and seizure involves judgment calls. For

example, in In re Pardee, 872 N.W.2d 384 (Iowa 2015), this court was

recently divided on whether a twenty-five-minute investigatory stop of a

vehicle was too long. Five members of our court said it was; two said it

wasn’t.   See id. at 397 (concluding the stop had been impermissibly

prolonged); id. at 397–99 (Cady, C.J., dissenting) (concluding the stop had

not been improperly prolonged). The line between good police work and

overzealous police work can be razor thin. It is certainly fair to exclude

the evidence from any ensuing criminal proceeding whenever the line is

crossed, even slightly. But if the law enforcement officer also is subject to
                                            33

a damage action, this could lead him or her to be reluctant to act at all in

a gray area. 5

       And there would be no reason for anyone—including judges—to get

special treatment. For example, in this particular case, the magistrate

who issued the arrest warrant for Baldwin would be subject to a damages

suit as well.

       It is true we said in State v. Tonn that “[a] trespassing officer is liable

for all wrong done in an illegal search or seizure.” 195 Iowa 94, 106, 191
N.W. 530, 535 (1923), abrogated by State v. Cline, 617 N.W.2d 277, 291

(Iowa 2000). But we said this to justify eliminating the exclusionary rule

       5Furthermore,  many lawful searches and seizures do not result in a criminal
prosecution. Thus, when law enforcement chooses to perform a search or seizure, in
many cases there will be no “benefit” to the government, only a risk of being subject to a
damages action based on after-the-fact second-guessing. This may incentivize law
enforcement not to go forward unless there is some protection for good-faith conduct.
       An academic has raised some additional points about incentives:
       Moreover, the incentives facing government officers are skewed by a cause-
       of-action problem. An individual hurt by government conduct usually
       knows exactly whom to blame. The causal connection between the
       plaintiff’s injury and the defendant’s conduct is typically clear, and the
       victim has no trouble stating a cause of action. A person injured by official
       inaction—by the officer who foregoes an arrest or the school principal who
       tolerates a troublemaker—often has difficulty identifying any officer
       responsible for subsequent injury and proving a causal connection. As a
       result, the risk of being sued for erroneous action is much higher than the
       risk of being sued for erroneous inaction, though the two may be equally
       costly. This disparity increases the incentive to protect oneself by doing
       less.
              Even aside from the cause-of-action problem, the incentive
       structure of government officials encourages inaction. The idea is most
       plausible for civil servants, who face punishment or loss for demonstrable
       misconduct but who are rarely able to capture the gains of effective action.
John C. Jeffries Jr., The Liability Rule for Constitutional Torts, 99 Va. L. Rev. 207, 244–45
(2013) (footnotes omitted).
        It is true that public officials are typically indemnified for damage actions against
them. See Joanna C. Schwartz, Police Indemnification, 89 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 885, 890 (2014);
Iowa Code § 669.5(2)(a); id. § 670.8. But the indemnitor has the ability and the motive
to influence the indemnitee’s behavior. See, e.g., John Rappaport, How Private Insurers
Regulate Public Police, 130 Harv. L. Rev. 1539, 1573–95 (2017).
                                            34

in Iowa. Id. at 106–07, 191 N.W. at 535–36. Tonn was not perhaps our

court’s most shining moment. It involved the prosecution of a member of

the labor organization known as the International Workers of the World

(IWW) who was “engaged in spreading the propaganda of the organization.”

Id. at 106, 191 N.W. at 535. Two justices dissented from the abandonment

of the exclusionary rule, one of them also questioning the constitutionality

of the law under which the defendant was prosecuted. Id. at 116, 120–21,
191 N.W. at 539, 541 (Weaver, J., dissenting). Today, we would probably

view the IWW member’s conduct as protected speech.

      More recently, in Cline, we rejected a good-faith exception to the

exclusionary rule under article I, section 8, making essentially the opposite

point from what we had said in Tonn:

      In our early Tonn case, we observed that the exclusionary rule
      was unnecessary to enforce the constitutional right because
      other remedies were available. Whatever truth there may have
      been to this statement when it was made, it is not valid today.
      There is simply no meaningful remedy available to one who
      has suffered an illegal search other than prohibiting the State
      from benefiting from its constitutional violation. A civil
      remedy would probably be unsuccessful because the good
      faith that prevents exclusion would also preclude an action
      for damages.
617 N.W.2d at 291.            Cline is our law today: We have approved a

comprehensive exclusionary rule cognizant of limits on damage actions.

      Thus, the right to recover damages for a constitutional violation does

not need to be congruent with the constitutional violation itself. Such an

approach is not consistent with Iowa precedent or Restatement section

874A, and would result in too little play in the joints. 6           Logically, the

      6According   to Professor Jeffries,
      some gap between constitutional rights and the damages remedy is a good
      thing. It is not a problem to be solved, but an asset to be preserved.
      Eliminating that gap entirely would have a baleful effect on the content
      and development of constitutional law.
                                            35

threshold of proof to stop an unconstitutional course of conduct ought to

be less than the proof required to recover damages for it. Indeed, if a right

of recovery for a constitutional tort existed whenever a constitutional

violation occurred, it stands to reason that such recovery could not be

subject to other limits, such as a statute of limitations. See Gauthier,

Kicking and Screaming, 95 N.C. L. Rev. at 1747–48. 7

       B. Qualified Immunity Based on the Exercise of Due Care

Should Be Available for Damage Claims Under Article I, Sections 1

and 8. If strict liability is not the correct standard, what is? For purposes

of article I, sections 1 and 8, we are convinced that qualified immunity

should be available to those defendants who plead and prove as an

affirmative defense that they exercised all due care to conform to the

requirements of the law.

       As we have noted, a number of states allow Harlow immunity for

direct constitutional claims.           In those jurisdictions, there cannot be

liability    unless     the    defendant       violated      “clearly    established . . .

constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”

Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818, 102 S. Ct. at 2738. Harlow examines objective

Jeffries, 99 Va. L. Rev. at 246. He goes on to explain that limitations on damages facilitate
the evolution of constitutional law:
       At each and every stage, from wholesale innovation to minor adjustment,
       these decisions found unconstitutional acts that previously could have
       been thought lawful. All these acts had victims, and all the victims had
       injuries. If awarding damages had been a necessary corollary of finding
       violations, the potential impact would have been staggering.
Id. at 248 (footnote omitted). Simply stated, “[u]nder current law, the prospect of
awarding money damages does not constrain the definition of constitutional rights.” Id.
       For example, in Iowa, would it inhibit developments of article I, section 17
jurisprudence if every individual whose sentence was later determined to be
unconstitutional could recover constitutional tort damages?
       7Of  course, this does not mean constitutional violations would go unremedied.
The issue is whether a direct damages remedy would be available.
                                      36

reasonableness; thus, in some ways it resembles an immunity for officials

who act with due care. However, it is centered on, and in our view gives

undue weight to, one factor: how clear the underlying constitutional law

was.   Normally we think of due care or objective good faith as more

nuanced and reflecting several considerations.        See, e.g., Hetfield, 3
Greene at 585. Factual good faith may compensate for a legal error, and

factual bad faith may override some lack of clarity in the law.

       Other   jurisdictions   that   have   opened   the   doors    to   direct

constitutional damage claims have done so within the framework of their

existing tort claims acts. Often, these laws shield defendants who act with

due care or even who are guilty of ordinary negligence. See, e.g., Martin v.

Brady, 802 A.2d 814, 819 (Conn. 2002) (finding the defendants would be

liable only if their conduct was “wanton, reckless or malicious”); Newell,
340 N.E.2d at 348 (“[A] public employee is not liable for his act in the

execution or enforcement of any law unless his act ‘constitutes willful and

wanton negligence.’ ” (quoting 85 Ill. Rev. Stat. § 2–202 (1973)).

       Iowa’s tort claims acts already protect government officials in some

instances when they exercise due care. See, e.g., Iowa Code § 669.14(1)

(excepting “[a]ny claim based upon an act or omission of an employee of

the state, exercising due care, in the execution of a statute or regulation,

whether or not such statute or regulation be valid, or based upon the

exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary

function or duty on the part of a state agency or an employee of the state,

whether or not the discretion be abused” (emphasis added)); id.

§ 670.4(1)(c) (excepting “[a]ny claim based upon an act or omission of an

officer or employee of the municipality, exercising due care, in the

execution of a statute, ordinance, or regulation whether the statute,

ordinance or regulation is valid, or based upon the exercise or performance
                                     37

or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the

part of the municipality or an officer or employee of the municipality,

whether or not the discretion is abused” (emphasis added)). The problem

with these acts, though, is that they contain a grab bag of immunities

reflecting certain legislative priorities. Some of those are unsuitable for

constitutional torts.

      A third set of jurisdictions simply impose higher fault standards as

a prerequisite to liability. See Mays, ___ N.W.2d at ___, 2018 WL 559726,

at *19–22 (requiring a showing of a custom or policy); Old Tuckaway

Assocs., 509 N.W.2d at 330 (requiring proof of an intentional denial of due

process).

      We have decided not to follow any of these lines of authority exactly.

We believe instead that qualified immunity should be shaped by the

historical Iowa common law as appreciated by our framers and the

principles discussed in Restatement (Second) of Torts section 874A.

      This means due care as the benchmark. Proof of negligence, i.e.,

lack of due care, was required for comparable claims at common law at

the time of adoption of Iowa’s Constitution. See Hetfield, 3 Greene at 585;

Howe, 12 Iowa at 203–04. And it is still the basic tort standard today. See

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 874A (discussing reliance on analogous

tort standards).

      Because the question is one of immunity, the burden of proof should

be on the defendant. See Anderson v. State, 692 N.W.2d 360, 364 (Iowa

2005) (indicating that the party asserting the discretionary function

immunity has the burden to prove it).       Accordingly, to be entitled to
                                            38

qualified immunity a defendant must plead and prove as an affirmative

defense that she or he exercised all due care to comply with the law. 8

       We find support for our approach in a recent and thoughtful critique

of Harlow. See John C. Jeffries Jr., The Liability Rule for Constitutional

Torts, 99 Va. L. Rev. 207 (2013). Professor Jeffries notes, “The basic and

essential remedy for most constitutional rights is the opportunity to assert

them defensively against government coercion.” Id. at 242. Nevertheless,

Professor Jeffries concludes that “damages are appropriate to the

vindication of constitutional rights, absent countervailing concerns, of

which the most important and obvious would be superseding remedial

legislation.” Id. at 259 (footnotes omitted). “[C]onstitutional tort actions

are presumptively appropriate.” Id. 9

       In the end, Professor Jeffries condemns Harlow as “an overly

legalistic and therefore overly protective shield,” but advocates for a more

straightforward “protection for reasonable error.”               Id. at 258–60.       “The

problem with current law is its implicit equation of reasonable error with

the space between decided cases.” Id. at 260. 10

       8We    have in the past invalidated presumptions rendering one party responsible
for another party’s illegal conduct unless the first party proves he or she exercised due
care. See Westco Agronomy Co. v. Wollesen, 909 N.W.2d 212, 222–23 (Iowa 2017);
Hensler v. City of Davenport, 790 N.W.2d 569, 587–89 (Iowa 2010). That is not the
situation here. The issue is what a defendant to a constitutional damages action under
article I, sections 1 and 8 must show to obtain qualified immunity for his or her own
conduct.
        9Professor Jeffries’s stance here is similar to the one we took in Godfrey on the

basic issue of whether constitutional torts should be allowed. Godfrey generally approved
of direct damages actions under the Iowa Constitution but the special concurrence that
provided the decisive vote determined that a damages remedy under article I, section 6
for discrimination based on sexual orientation was not needed in light of an existing,
adequate remedy within the Iowa Civil Rights Act. See 898 N.W.2d at 880–81 (Cady, C.J.,
specially concurring).
       10Professor     Jeffries acknowledges that “[o]n balance, academic opinion favors
[strict liability for constitutional violations].” 99 Va. L. Rev. at 241. On the other hand,
as we have discussed, no other state judiciary has opted for strict liability.
                                        39

         We agree. Constitutional torts are torts, not generally strict liability

cases.     Accordingly, with respect to a damage claim under article I,

sections 1 and 8, a government official whose conduct is being challenged

will not be subject to damages liability if she or he pleads and proves as

an affirmative defense that she or he exercised all due care to conform to

the requirements of the law.

         We leave open a number of other issues.            These include the

possibility that constitutional claims other than unlawful search and

seizure may have a higher mens rea requirement, such as intent,

embedded within the constitutional provision itself. In other words, it may

take more than negligence just to violate the Iowa Constitution. They also

include the possibility that common law absolute immunities, such as

judicial immunity or quasi-judicial immunity, could apply to state

constitutional claims.      And they include the potential applicability of

provisions in chapters 669 and 670 other than sections 669.14 and 670.4.

We do not address those issues today.

         VII. Conclusion.

         We have provided the answer to the certified question as set forth

above.     Costs shall be divided equally among the parties.         Iowa Code

§ 684A.5.

         CERTIFIED QUESTION ANSWERED.

         All justices concur except Appel and Hecht, JJ., who dissent.
                                     40

                                   #17–1592, Baldwin v. City of Estherville

APPEL, Justice (dissenting).

      I dissent. The controversy in this case involves an allegation of a

specific   constitutional   violation,    namely,   whether       an   allegedly

unconstitutional seizure of a person by local law enforcement gives rise to

a claim of damages. I would answer the certified question by stating that

there is no immunity available to shield the defendants from liability for

the alleged harm caused by their constitutional torts arising out of article

I, section 1 and article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution.

      I. Liability of the City for Money Damages.

      There is a preliminary issue in the case. The City of Estherville (the

City) is a defendant in this case. The State of Iowa, as an amicus, urges

us to consider whether a local government entity may be sued for money

damages for constitutional violations. The question of the City’s liability

for constitutional violations of its employees is a distinctly different

question than whether individual officers employed by the City are entitled

to some form of qualified immunity for their unconstitutional conduct.

      The United States Supreme Court has addressed the question in

Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658, 98 S. Ct. 2018

(1978). In Monell, the United States Supreme Court held that although

local governments are “persons” under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, they cannot be

held liable under a respondeat superior theory for the constitutional

deprivations arising from the conduct of their employees unless the

conduct was as a result of a government custom or practice. Id. at 690–

91, 98 S. Ct. at 2035–36. The Monell Court did not specifically expand on

the circumstances where a municipality could be found liable under the

statute, but as a matter of practice, when a plaintiff attempts to prove an

unwritten policy or municipal inaction, proof of liability under Monell is
                                      41

“exceptionally difficult.”    John M. Greabe, Remedial Discretion in

Constitutional Adjudication, 62 Buff. L. Rev. 881, 907 n.142 (2014).

      In an important subsequent case, Owen v. City of Independence, the

United   States   Supreme     Court   determined    that   when    a   plaintiff

successfully demonstrates that a municipality has a custom or policy that

violated his or her constitutional rights, the municipality is strictly liable

for the violation. 445 U.S. 622, 638, 100 S. Ct. 1398, 1409 (1980). The

Owen Court noted that “in the hundreds of cases from [the common law]

era awarding damages against municipal governments for wrongs

committed by them, one searches in vain for much mention of a qualified

immunity based on the good faith of municipal officers.” Id. at 641, 100

S. Ct. at 1410.

      The Owen Court emphasized that the strict-liability approach to

unconstitutional municipal policies and customs has sound policy footing.

Id. at 650, 100 S. Ct. at 1415.

      How “uniquely amiss” it would be . . . if the government
      itself—“the social organ to which all in our society look for the
      promotion of liberty, justice, fair and equal treatment, and the
      setting of worthy norms and goals for social conduct”—were
      permitted to disavow liability for the injury it has begotten.

Id. at 651, 100 S. Ct. at 1415 (quoting Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398
U.S. 144, 190, 90 S. Ct. 1590, 1620 (1970) (Brennan, J., concurring in

part and dissenting in part)). According to the Court,

      The knowledge that a municipality will be liable for all of its
      injurious conduct, whether committed in good faith or not,
      should create an incentive for officials who may harbor doubts
      about the lawfulness of their intended actions to err on the
      side of protecting citizens’ constitutional rights.

Id. at 651–52, 100 S. Ct. at 1416.

      The Owen Court sharply distinguished between the liability of

municipalities and liability of individual officials. Id. at 655–56, 100 S. Ct.
42

at 1418. The Court noted that the justification for qualified immunity for

individual officials is based upon the threat of personal liability. Id. Where

liability of municipalities is involved, however, “[t]he inhibiting effect is

significantly reduced, if not eliminated . . . [because] the threat of personal

liability is removed.” Id. at 656, 100 S. Ct. at 1418.

      There are substantial reasons for following Owen but not Monell in

determining municipalities’ potential liability for the constitutional wrongs

of their employees. Monell does not involve a constitutional issue, but only

a statutory issue under federal law. See 436 U.S. at 660 & n.1, 98 S. Ct.

at 2020 & n.1. Further, the substantive holding in Monell has been subject

to substantial criticism. See, e.g., David Jacks Achtenberg, Taking History

Seriously: Municipal Liability Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Debate over

Respondeat Superior, 73 Fordham L. Rev. 2183, 2196 (2005); Michael J.

Gerhardt, The Monell Legacy: Balancing Federalism Concerns and

Municipal Accountability Under Section 1983, 62 S. Cal. L. Rev. 539, 540–

41 (1989); Myriam E. Gilles, Breaking the Code of Silence: Rediscovering

“Custom” in Section 1983 Municipal Liability, 80 B.U. L. Rev. 17, 29–31

(2000). As a result, it is not surprising that several state courts have

declined to follow the statutory interpretation in Monell on the

constitutional question of whether a city is liable for the torts of its

employees under a respondeat superior theory. See, e.g., Town of Port

Deposit v. Petetit, 688 A.2d 54, 65 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1992) (holding

municipality may be liable for constitutional torts under respondeat

superior theory); Washington v. Robertson County, 29 S.W.3d 466, 475–77

(Tenn. 2000) (same).

      However, the parties, in this case, do not directly address the Monell

issue or the application of Monell in Owen but concentrate their advocacy

on the question of whether individual city employees are entitled to
                                     43

qualified immunity with respect to damage claims arising from their

unconstitutional conduct. Ordinarily, we do not consider issues raised

only by amici and not by the parties themselves. See Press-Citizen Co. v.

Univ. of Iowa, 817 N.W.2d 480, 493 (Iowa 2012); Mueller v. St. Ansgar State

Bank, 465 N.W.2d 659, 660 (Iowa 1991).

      The majority in this case has now judicially created a type of

immunity for individual officers. As explained below, I dissent from the

majority’s approach to individual liability for constitutional wrongs. The

majority’s approach, however, increases the pressure to reject the

limitations in Monell and apply the strict-liability approach in Owen across

the board to claims against municipalities.

      Nevertheless, the issue of municipal liability for damages caused by

the unconstitutional conduct of its employees was not presented by the

parties in this case, is not addressed in the majority opinion, and is

reserved for another day.

      II. Qualified Immunity of Individual Officers.

      A. Introduction. I next address the fighting issue joined by the

parties, namely, whether Iowa should adopt a qualified immunity doctrine

patterned after the one adopted by the United States Supreme Court in its

cases under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The City and the individual defendants

present us with a compendium of federal statutory immunity cases that

they suggest should guide us in determining whether the individual

defendants are entitled to an immunity shield to prevent an award of

damages for injuries they caused through their unconstitutional conduct.

Similarly, the State urges us to follow federal quasi-immunity doctrine for

claims brought against state officers under the Iowa Constitution. The

plaintiff takes the challenge head on, urging us not to follow federal quasi-
                                     44

immunity law. That is the issue that the parties have briefed and asked

us to decide.

      B. Rejection of Federal Statutory Qualified Immunity as a

Model for Iowa Constitutional Law.

      1. Overview. I begin by emphasizing that the policy-oriented federal

doctrine of statutory qualified immunity does not provide a model for

determining whether individuals are entitled to qualified immunity for

Iowa constitutional torts.    The federal doctrine of statutory qualified

immunity progressively dilutes legal norms, embraces numerous false

assumptions, fails to recognize the important role of juries in restraining

government, and is inconsistent with important tenants of Iowa law. We

should not voluntarily drape our constitutional law with the heavy chains

of indefensible doctrine. We should aim to eliminate fictions in our law

and be honest and forthright on the important question of what happens

when officers of the law commit constitutional wrongs that inflict serious

reputational, emotional, and financial harms on our citizens.

      2. It’s not the tail of the dog; it’s the dog. First, one must recognize

what is at stake when a doctrine limits remedies available for a legal

violation. The limitation of remedies is not a sideshow, collateral issue, or

footnote in the development of the law. Remedial doctrine is at the heart

of substantive law. As Karl Llewellyn wrote, a “[d]efect of remedy is [a]

defect of right.” Aaron Belzer, Comment, The Audacity of Ignoring Hope:

How the Existing Qualified Immunity Analysis Leads to Unremedied Rights,

90 Denv. U. L. Rev. 647, 673 (2012) [hereinafter Belzer] (quoting Karl N.

Llewellyn, The Bramble Bush 88 (1930)). As Chief Justice Marshall stated

in Marbury v. Madison, “[I]t is a general and indisputable rule, that where

there is a legal right, there is also a legal remedy by suit or action at law,

whenever that right is invaded.”      5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 163 (1803)
                                     45

(quoting 3 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 23

(1765–1769)). As Professor Akhil Reed Amar has more recently observed,

governments acting unconstitutionally “must in some way undo the

violation by ensuring that victims are made whole.” Akhil Reed Amar, Of

Sovereignty and Federalism, 96 Yale L.J. 1425, 1427 (1987) [hereinafter

Amar].

       A lack of remedy drives a stake in the heart of a substantive legal

doctrine. In the words of Justice Harlan in Bivens v. Six Unknown Named

Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics, contemporary modes of thought at

the time of the United States Constitutional Convention reflected “modes

of jurisprudential thought which appeared to link ‘rights’ and ‘remedies’ in

a 1:1 correlation.” 403 U.S. 388, 400 n.3, 91 S. Ct. 1999, 2007 n.3 (1971)

(Harlan, J., concurring in the judgment). We should tread very carefully

before we limit the scope of remedies for unconstitutional conduct because

we are, in effect, cutting down the scope of the substantive rights involved.

Make no mistake, this case is not about the tail on the dog. It is about the

dog.

       The notion that judges may create a “gap” between constitutional

rights and the remedies afforded is untenable. The consequence of such

a gap is to effectively reduce the constitutional protections afforded to the

public.     To the extent they are not enforced, the nice words in the

constitution do not mean what they seem to mean.

       3. Search and seizure: the wrong place for trenching on remedies for

constitutional torts. Of all the places to engage in constitutional dilution

through sharp remedial restriction, search and seizure law is the last place

to do so.    Constitutional protections related to search and seizure are

fundamental to liberty. Under article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution,

searches and seizures, subject to a few “jealously and carefully drawn
                                    46

exceptions” where a warrant cannot practicably be obtained, are subject

to the warrant requirement. State v. Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d 260, 285 (Iowa

2010) (quoting State v. Strong, 493 N.W.2d 834, 836 (Iowa 1992)). The

warrant requirement means that the application must be in writing and

not based on ephemeral oral assertions. See Battani v. Grund, 244 Iowa
623, 628, 56 N.W.2d 166, 170 (1952).      The warrant application must

establish the basis for the government’s intrusive search and seizure

action before the action is taken—the state may not rely on after-the-fact

recasting of reasons to conform to the results of the search. See State v.

Angel, 893 N.W.2d 904, 915 (Iowa 2017) (Appel, J., dissenting). The search

or seizure must be based upon probable cause and not mere hunches.

See State v. McNeal, 867 N.W.2d 91, 99 (Iowa 2015); State v. Gogg, 561
N.W.2d 360, 363 (Iowa 1997).

      The importance of effective enforcement of search and seizure

restrictions on government was not lost on the generation of lawyers and

judges who witnessed the collapse of the rule of law in central Europe in

the 1930s. As Chief Nuremburg Prosecutor Justice Robert Jackson so

eloquently opined after his return from his assignment in immediate

postwar Germany, search and seizure rights

      are not mere second-class rights but belong in the catalog of
      indispensable freedoms. Among deprivations of rights, none
      is so effective in cowing a population, crushing the spirit of
      the individual and putting terror in every heart. Uncontrolled
      search and seizure is one of the first and most effective
      weapons in the arsenal of every arbitrary government.

Brinegar v. United States, 338 U.S. 160, 180, 69 S. Ct. 1302, 1313 (1949)

(Jackson, J., dissenting).   See generally Victoria A. Graffeo, Robert H.

Jackson: His Years as a Public Servant “Learned in the Law,” 68 Albany L.

Rev. 539, 546 (2005).
                                      47

      Regrettably, the United States Supreme Court has in recent decades

announced a series of opinions that undercut search and seizure

protections. See Silas J. Wasserstrom, The Incredible Shrinking Fourth

Amendment, 21 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 257, 259–61 (1984). The limitation of

constitutional remedies by the Supreme Court has been part of the trend

of the Court to restrict the scope of constitutional protections in the

context of search and seizure. See id. at 291–94, 292 nn.186–87, 300 &

n.216. We must recognize that this case falls squarely within the recent

efforts to limit protections that citizens have from arbitrary government

search and seizure actions. The question cannot be avoided: should we

dilute the search and seizure protections of our citizens enshrined in

article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution through a judicially or

legislatively created constitutional immunity of some kind?

      The importance of claims brought under article I, section 1 of the

Iowa Constitution cannot be rendered a mere appendage either. Article I,

section 1 was purposefully placed at the beginning of the Bill of Rights.

See 1 The Debates of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Iowa 103–

04   (W.    Blair   Lord     rep.   1857),    [hereinafter   The    Debates],

http://www.statelibraryofiowa.org/services/collections/law-library/iaconst.

It makes the point of emphasizing “inalienable rights,” which, I take it,

includes rights that cannot be abrogated by the legislature, or this court.

Further, the “free and equal” provision of article I, section 1 is at the heart

of our government structure and provided the constitutional foundation to

Coger v. Northwestern Union Packet Co., an important and highly

celebrated case prohibiting discrimination by a steamboat operator

against a female passenger “partly of African descent.” 37 Iowa 145, 147,

153–55 (1873). Like article I, section 8, this constitutional provision is not
                                     48

the place to cut remedial corners.        Indeed, it is an area requiring

exceptional remedial vigilance.

      In short, when citizens suffer potentially grievous harms from

unconstitutional conduct in violation of article I, section 1 or article I,

section 8, we should require the officials who engaged in the

unconstitutional conduct to bear the burden of the loss. We should not

allow the officials who engage in unconstitutional conduct to respond to

the prayer of the harmed citizen with, “Aw, tough luck. Tut tut. Bye bye.”

      4. Sandy foundation: historical common law fiction in federal

statutory immunity cases.      In interpreting whether 42 U.S.C. § 1983

provides statutory qualified immunity, the United States Supreme Court

has sometimes stated that the qualified immunity defense simply follows

the common law that existed at the time of the legislation’s passage in

1871. See Nixon v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 731, 745–46, 102 S. Ct. 2690,

2699 (1982). But this overbroad generality is simply wrong.

      It is true that at common law, judges and legislators acting within

their appropriate authority were entitled to robust immunity. See Pierson

v. Ray, 386 U.S. 547, 553–54, 87 S. Ct. 1213, 1217–18 (1967) (acts of

judges); Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. 367, 376, 71 S. Ct. 783, 788 (1951)

(acts of legislators).   But the same degree of protection simply did not

extend to officers of the Crown, who were expected “to be mulcted in

damages for their errors of judgment.” Ilan Wurman, Qualified Immunity

and Statutory Interpretation, 37 Seattle U. L. Rev. 939, 987 (2014)

[hereinafter Wurman].        As noted by Justice Brennan in Bivens,

“Historically, damages have been regarded as the ordinary remedy for an

invasion of personal interests in liberty.” 403 U.S. at 395, 91 S. Ct. at

2004 (majority opinion).
                                      49

      For example, the outrage of lawless search and seizure by

government officials was recognized at common law in the Wilkes cases,

where very large money judgments were entered against officials who, at

the direction of Lord Halifax, ransacked private premises looking for tell-

tale signs of who authored a scurrilous broadside critical of the Crown.

Wilkes v. Wood (1763) 98 Eng. Rep. 489, 489, 498–99; Huckle v. Money

(1763) 95 Eng. Rep. 768, 768–69; Entick v. Carrington (1765) 95 Eng. Rep.

807, 807–08, 811, 818; see Godfrey v. State, 898 N.W.2d 844, 866–67

(Iowa 2017) (describing the cases).        These unlawful searches cost the

officials involved a lot of money.    Schoolchildren know about the shot

heard around the world, but we seem to have forgotten about the cases

heard around the world—the Wilkes cases.

      Plainly, as Lord Halifax learned to his financial embarrassment in

the Wilkes cases, common law absolute immunities for judges and

legislators did not apply “across the board” to officers of the Crown. As

Professor Jaffe pointed out many years ago, the claims of official immunity

exclude “the historic liability of sheriffs and peace officers.” Louis L. Jaffe,

Suits Against Governments and Officers: Damage Actions, 77 Harv. L. Rev.

209, 221–22 (1963); see also Max P. Rapacz, Protection of Officers Who Act

Under Unconstitutional Statutes, 11 Minn. L. Rev. 585, 585 (1927) (“Prior

to 1880 there seems to have been absolute uniformity in holding officers

liable for injuries resulting from the enforcement of unconstitutional

acts.”). The common law provenance of broad-brushed statutory qualified

immunity asserted by the United States Supreme Court in its statutory

qualified immunity cases is based on an incorrect view of common law

history.

      John Wilkes was a folk hero in the American colonies. As noted by

a leading Wilkes biographer, his “every move was followed in the American
                                       50

press, and his victories over government celebrated in the colonies.”

Arthur H. Cash, John Wilkes: The Scandalous Father of Civil Liberty 2

(2006) [hereinafter Cash]. Wilkes corresponded with Samuel Adams and

John Hancock, among others.           Id.   “The Commons House of South

Carolina sent him fifteen hundred pounds and closed down the provincial

government rather than obey the royal governor’s demand to rescind the

gift.”   Id.   According to historian Merrill Jensen, by the end of 1768,

“ ‘Wilkes and Liberty’ was a toast from one end of the colonies to the other.”

Id. at 232 (quoting Merrill Jensen, The Founding of a Nation: A History of

the American Revolution, 1763–1776, at 260 (1968)). Paul Revere made a

silver punch bowl with the engraving “No General Warrants” and “Wilkes

and Liberty.” See Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d at 270. “Wilkes received letters of

support from John Adams and Joseph Warren.” Id. And in a deeply tragic

example of irony, the parents of John Wilkes Booth named their son after

Wilkes as a tribute to freedom against tyranny.           See Josh Chafetz,

Impeachment and Assassination, 95 Minn. L. Rev. 347, 389 (2010). While

Wilkes may not be a celebrity today, he and the Wilkes cases were well-

known by the founding and antebellum generations.

         The interesting case of Little v. Barreme demonstrates recognition of

the general common law approach to liability for unlawful searches and

seizures. 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 170 (1804). A Danish vessel, the Flying Fish,

was seized by Captain George Little.        Id. at 176.   The underlying law

authorized seizure only if the vessel was going to a French port. Id. at 177–

78. The Flying Fish was coming from a French port. Id. at 176. President

Adams, however, had issued instructions that vessels that were coming

from French ports could be seized. Id. at 170.

         Chief Justice Marshall observed that “[t]he first bias of my mind was

very strong in favor of the opinion that though the instructions of the
                                     51

executive could not give a right, they might yet excuse from damages.” Id.

at 179.   He questioned whether a distinction could be drawn between

military officers and civil officers, and between proceedings “in the country

and those on the high seas.” Id. In the end, though, Chief Justice Marshall

recognized that civil officers generally are liable for their wrongs. See id.

He determined that while the ship was “seized with pure intention” as a

“consequence of orders from the legitimate authority,” nevertheless “the

[executive] instructions cannot change the nature of the transaction, or

legalize an act which without those instructions would have been a plain

trespass.” Id. As noted by Professor William Baude, the thrust of the case

is that “good-faith reliance did not create a defense to liability—what

mattered was legality.” William Baude, Is Qualified Immunity Unlawful?,

106 Calif. L. Rev. 45, 56 (2018) [hereinafter Baude].

      Further, the Supreme Court has, in its constitutional immunity

cases, confused the role of good faith as an element of a specific offense

with the different and much broader notion of good-faith immunity. For

instance, in Pierson, the Supreme Court cited the elements of the tort of

false arrest at common law. 386 U.S. at 555, 87 S. Ct. at 1218. But the

fact that bad faith and flagrancy are elements of certain common law torts

is not a basis for a broadly framed, across-the-board constitutional

immunity doctrine. See Baude, 45 Cal. L. Rev. at 59. And in Harlow v.

Fitzgerald, the Court jettisoned subjective bad faith for objective bad faith,

a clear departure from any approach to the common law immunities. 457
U.S. 800, 818–19, 102 S. Ct. 2727, 2738–39 (1982). This innovation had

no basis at all in common law.

      Even among members of the Supreme Court, the fiction that broad

statutory qualified immunity under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is supported by the

common law is unraveling. At least three Justices have recognized that
                                     52

the statutory qualified immunities caselaw, in fact, departs from common

law precedents. For example, in Wyatt v. Cole, Justice Kennedy noted that

the Court had “diverged to a substantial degree from the historical

standards” of the common law and observed that statutory immunity was

not supposed to be based upon “freewheeling policy choice[s].” 504 U.S.
158, 170, 112 S. Ct. 1827, 1835 (1992) (Kennedy, J., concurring)

(alteration in original) (quoting Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 342, 106
S. Ct. 1092, 1096 (1986)).     In a dissenting opinion in Crawford-El v.

Britton, Justice Scalia noted that “our treatment of qualified immunity

under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 has not purported to be faithful to the common-

law immunities that existed when § 1983 was enacted.” 523 U.S. 574,

611, 118 S. Ct. 1584, 1603 (1998) (Scalia, J., dissenting). Most recently,

in Ziglar v. Abbasi, Justice Thomas observed that “we have diverged from

the historical inquiry mandated by the statute.” 582 U.S. ___, ___, 137
S. Ct. 1843, 1871 (2017) (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring

in the judgment).    The sandy foundation of federal statutory qualified

immunity is not withstanding the test of time but rather is being washed

away.

        5. Square pegs in round holes. Using federal statutory qualified

immunity doctrine to shape the immunity doctrine for state constitutional

torts is forcing a square peg into a round hole. The federal law on qualified

immunity has developed in the context of interpretation of 42 U.S.C.

§ 1983. There is no persuasive reason why federal statutory interpretation

should be hurriedly, or deliberately, ripped out of the federal caselaw and

frantically, or carefully, pasted into the North Western Reporter as Iowa

state constitutional law. There is simply no reason to believe that the

statutory interpretation provided by the United States Supreme Court is

constitutionally required on the federal level, let alone required in an
                                      53

interpretation of state constitutional provisions. See Seth P. Waxman &

Trevor W. Morrison, What Kind of Immunity? Federal Officers, State

Criminal Law, and the Supremacy Clause, 112 Yale L.J. 2195, 2209 (2003)

(“It bears emphasizing that qualified immunity does not appear to be

constitutionally required.”).

      6. Missing the point: incorrect statutory interpretation of the Ku Klux

Klan Act. In any event, there is reason to question the prevailing federal

statutory interpretation. Congress enacted 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in 1871 to

fight the Ku Klux Klan. See generally Michael H. LeRoy, Targeting White

Supremacy in the Workplace, 29 Stan. L. & Pol’y Rev. 107, 120–23 (2018)

[hereinafter LeRoy] (describing the history surrounding the enactment of

the Act). The statute, of course, says not one word about governmental

immunities. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2012). In early American history, the

“strict rule of personal official liability” was well-established, “even though

its harshness to officials was quite clear.” David E. Engdahl, Immunity

and Accountability for Positive Governmental Wrongs, 44 U. Colo. L. Rev. 1,

19 (1972).    To the extent the statute merely captured common law

precedent existing in the United States in 1871, it would not include broad

qualified immunity for officers engaging in unlawful searches and seizures.

      Further, the Reconstruction Era Congress was determined, at least

in 1871, to address the horrific intimidation, terror, and violence visited

on African-Americans by white supremacists who gained control of state

and local governments in the states of the former confederacy. See LeRoy,

29 Stan. L. & Pol’y Rev. at 121–23. We should never forget that while the

Civil War ended in 1865 for most Iowans, a bitter and brutal battle

continued against African-Americans in the former slave states.            See

Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343, 353, 123 S. Ct. 1536, 1544 (2003) (“Soon

the Klan imposed ‘a veritable reign of terror” throughout the South.”
                                      54

(quoting Stetson Kennedy, Southern Exposure 31 (1991))); Wadie E. Said,

Humanitarian Law Project and the Supreme Court’s Construction of

Terrorism, 2011 BYU L. Rev. 1455, 1471–72 (characterizing the brutal

tactics of the Klan to enforce white supremacy as organized terrorism).

      The Civil Rights Act of 1866, which initiated the series of legislation

that eventually included 42 U.S.C. § 1983, declared that it was “An Act to

protect all Persons in the United States in their Civil Rights, and furnish

the Means of their Vindication.” Civil Rights Act of 1866, ch. 31, 14 Stat.

27, 27. As Professor Gary Gildin has stressed, § 1983 “provides that ‘every

person’ acting under color of state law who deprives an individual of federal

constitutional rights ‘shall be liable to the party injured.’ ” Gary S. Gildin,

Redressing Deprivations of Rights Secured by State Constitutions Outside

the Shadow of the Supreme Court’s Constitutional Remedies Jurisprudence,

115 Pa. St. L. Rev. 877, 888–89 (2011) (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 1983). The

legislative history includes a declaration from an opponent of the bill that

the legislation has “no limitation whatsoever upon the terms that are

employed.” Id. at 889 (quoting Monell, 436 U.S. at 685 n.45, 98 S. Ct. at

2033 n.45). Representative Bingham saw the bill as embracing Justice

Harlan’s one-to-one relationship between rights and remedies and

“declared the bill’s purpose to be ‘enforcement . . . of the Constitution on

behalf of every individual citizen of the Republic . . . to the extent of the

rights guaranteed to him by the Constitution.’ ” Id. at 888 n.39 (quoting

Monell, 436 U.S. at 685 n.45, 98 S. Ct. at 2033 n.45). A supporter in the

House of Representatives noted that the § 1983 is remedial and should be

“liberally and beneficently construed” to afford a remedy to the victim of

constitutional wrongs. Id. at 889 & n.41 (quoting Monell, 436 U.S. at 684,

98 S. Ct. at 2032). Robust qualified immunity for individuals committing
                                       55

constitutional wrongs is completely inconsistent with the wording, the

legislative history, and the challenging historical purpose of the statute.

      7. Unbalanced policy analysis.         Aside from erroneous appeals to

common law and misconceptions about the contours of American history,

qualified immunity for individual government officials is defended on

policy grounds.    It is suggested that without qualified immunity, the

officials will be frozen because of fear of potential liability. This claim is

unbalanced. If we are going to accept the premise that potential liability

affects behavior, as advocates of immunities so fervently do, we need to

look at the opposite side of the coin too, namely, if behavior is

fundamentally affected by the imposition of tort liability, the removal of tort

liability will also similarly impact behavior. If it is true that police conduct

will be chilled by tort rules, then the granting of immunity will lead police

to engage in more unconstitutional activities because they do not have to

worry about potential liabilities.    We must consider both halves of the

deterrence walnut.

      Indeed, at common law, an official’s exposure to “being mulcted in

damages was precisely the deterrent for errors of judgment.” Wurman, 37

Seattle U. L. Rev. at 965. More recently, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund

has explicitly called for a reexamination of the legal standards governing

qualified immunity in light of police violence involving African-Americans.

NAACP Legal Def. Fund, Statement on U.S. Supreme Court Decision

Expanding      Qualified    Immunity        for   Police   (Apr.   2,    2018),

www.naacpldf.org/files/about-us/Kisela%20Hughes%20Decision%20Sta

tement.pdf [https://perma.cc/2ACT-QPP5]. According to the NAACP view,

more deterrence is needed. Id. Judge Jon Newman agrees, calling upon

Congress to abolish the defense of qualified immunity in order to better

control police misconduct. Jon O. Newman, Here’s a Better Way to Punish
                                     56

the Police: Sue Them for Money, Wash. Post (June 23, 2016),

http://wapo.st/28R2Np4?tid=ss_mail&utm_term=.16d65eac7e49y

[https://perma.cc/2CSG-2ERG]. The libertarian Cato Institute has joined

the fray, noting “the deleterious effect [that qualified immunity] has on the

ability of citizens to vindicate their constitutional rights, and the

subsequent erosion of accountability among public officials that the

doctrine encourages.”     Brief of the Cato Institute as Amicus Curiae

Supporting Plaintiffs-Appellees and Affirmance at 1, Williams v. Cline, ___

F.3d. ___ (7th Cir. 2018) (No. 17–2603), https://object.cato.org/

sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/williams-v-cline-cato-amicus-brief-motion.pdf

[https://perma.cc/R6UU-E7AB]; see also Devon W. Carbado, Blue-on-

Black Violence: A Provisional Model of Some of the Causes, 104 Geo. L.J.

1479, 1519–24 (2016) (examining problems presented by qualified

immunity and indemnification).

      8. Stay in your own lane: judicial legislation. Further, the jeremiads

about chilling official conduct ring hollow. Advocates of sharp restrictions

on judicial protection of individual rights generally are also advocates of

legislative supremacy. Well, then let’s give the legislature the power to

enact policy. To the extent that the legislature wishes to prevent lack of

constitutional immunity from chilling police conduct, it may enact an

indemnity statute. See Wurman, 37 Seattle U. L. Rev. at 965–66, 987.

Indeed, in the antebellum years, the question of whether to indemnify

public officers for their illegal conduct was assigned to the legislative

branch. See James E. Pfander & Jonathan L. Hunt, Public Wrongs and

Private Bills: Indemnification and Government Accountability in the Early

Republic, 85 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1862, 1925 (2010) [hereinafter Pfander &

Hunt].   The nineteenth century approach “was to hold the officer
                                     57

accountable in court for violations of the victim’s legal rights but then to

indemnify the officer . . . through the legislative process.” Id.

      The federal courts have deprived the legislature of this policy choice

by an aggressive imposition of judicially created immunity.                The

handwringing of the United States Supreme Court in its qualified

immunity cases shows a dissatisfaction with the common law and with the

failure of the legislative branch to enact policy preferences that the

majority of the Court seems to prefer. Qualified immunity is thus simply

judicial legislation—it reflects dissatisfaction with the failure of the

legislative process to relieve individual officers of liability through

indemnification and the achievement of the desired policy result through

judicially legislating a policy of qualified immunity.

      9. The chewing and choking of constitutional rights.          The federal

approach to statutory qualified immunity embraces a dynamic that has

progressively chewed and choked potential remedies for constitutional

violations. The federal approach requires a plaintiff to overcome qualified

immunity by demonstrating that the officials involved engaged in

violations of “clearly established rights.” Harlow, 457 U.S. at 819, 102

S. Ct. at 2739. A key question, of course, is at what level of generality is

this test imposed? The federal caselaw suggests that the level of generality

has become increasingly specific—namely, that unless there is an

authoritative, reported case that is nearly factually identical to the case in

question, the constitutional right is not clearly established. See Kerns v.

Bader, 663 F.3d 1173, 1191, 1198–99 (10th Cir. 2011) (Holloway, J.,

dissenting) (observing plaintiff would need to find a case nearly identical

on the facts, a virtually impossible task); Belzer, 90 Denv. U. L. Rev. at 650

(arguing that the caselaw creates “an insurmountable hurdle” for
                                     58

plaintiffs); Wurman, 37 Seattle U. L. Rev. at 944 (noting level of generality

is crucial in qualified immunity context).

      Further, in determining whether there has been a violation of

constitutional rights, the federal courts jettisoned any subjective test in

favor of a “reasonableness” test in determining whether the actions of the

officers qualify for immunity. See Harlow, 457 U.S. at 819, 102 S. Ct. at

2739. The objective reasonableness test is, of course, so amorphous that

some liability might have emerged for officials, so the federal caselaw has

now tightened the screw another turn by replacing or supplementing the

objectively reasonable standard with the new formulation of “entirely

unreasonable.” Messerschmidt v. Millender, 565 U.S. 535, 547, 132 S. Ct.
1235, 1245 (2012).

      And, there is more. By now allowing, if not encouraging, courts not

to reach the question of whether a constitutional violation actually

occurred, but only whether the right involved was “clearly established,”

the constitutional immunity doctrine has prevented the development of

substantive constitutional law by reducing the number of cases that

address claims on the constitutional merits. See Camreta v. Greene, 563
U.S. 692, 705–06, 131 S. Ct. 2020, 2031 (2011) (“[O]ur usual adjudicatory

rules suggest that a court should forbear resolving the [constitutional]

issue. . . . Small wonder then, that a court might leave that issue for

another day. But we have long recognized that this day may never come—

that our regular policy of avoidance sometimes does not fit the qualified

immunity situation because it threatens to leave standards of official

conduct permanently in limbo.”         (Citations omitted.)).    The federal

constitutional immunity doctrine thus serves to limit the development of

constitutional   law   by   eliminating   consideration   of    constitutional

uncertainties in filed cases. Belzer, 90 Denv. U. L. Rev. at 685. Further,
                                      59

the presence of difficult-to-meet constitutional immunity standards has

dramatic impact in law offices where lawyers and putative clients weight

the practicalities of bringing constitutionally based legal actions in the face

of strong immunity headwinds. See Alexander A. Reinert, Does Qualified

Immunity Matter?, 8 U. St. Thomas L.J. 477, 494–95 (2011) (noting

“qualified immunity plays a large role in case selection” and “limit[s] the

extent to which civil rights litigation tests the boundaries of the law”). The

creation of artificial immunities for constitutional violations is bad news

for the development of state constitutional law.

      C. Iowa Code Chapters 669 and 670. Iowa Code chapters 669

and 670 are the Iowa Tort Claims Act and the Municipal Tort Claims Act.

The Acts begin with the premise that state and local governments are

generally liable for tortious acts as are ordinary citizens.        The Acts,

however, have sweeping exceptions.

      The Iowa Tort Claims Act broadly exempts the state from liability for

claims “arising out of assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest,

malicious prosecution, abuse of process, libel, slander, misrepresentation,

deceit, or interference with contract rights.” Iowa Code § 669.14(4) (2017).

Further, the state is exempt from liability for any claims brought by an

inmate.   Id. § 669.14(6).   These provisions, if enforced with respect to

constitutional claims, would dramatically undermine the scope of

available remedies in a wide variety of actions.

      The Municipal Tort Claims Act also provides for liability of local

government, subject to enumerated exceptions.           Id. § 670.2(1).    The

exceptions are different than under the Iowa Tort Claims Act. Compare id.

§ 669.14, with id. § 670.4. The Municipal Tort Claims Act excludes from

liability any claim arising out of an act or omission of an officer “exercising

due care, in the execution of a statute, ordinance, or regulation . . . or
                                     60

based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or

perform a discretionary function or duty.”      Id. § 670.4(1)(c).    Further,

claims for punitive damages are not allowed. Id. § 670.4(1)(e). Depending

on interpretation, application of these Code provisions to situations where

government officials cause grievous harm could dramatically reduce any

possible recovery.

      These statutory provisions are not of much value in determining

whether there is qualified immunity for officers who commit constitutional

torts. The very purpose of the Bill of Rights is to restrain the majoritarian

branches of government. These provisions are distinctly antimajoritarian.

It would be a fox-in-the-henhouse problem to permit the legislature to

define the scope of protection available to citizens for violation of

constitutional rights. As noted by Professor Amar, “When governments act

ultra vires and transgress the boundaries of their charter, . . . their

sovereign power to immunize themselves is strictly limited by the remedial

imperative.” Amar, 96 Yale L.J. at 1490.

      III. No Immunity Under Iowa Constitutional Law for Search and

Seizure Claims.

      A. Introduction. Having rejected the federal model, I now turn to

consider whether there is a basis for some kind of constitutionally based

immunity for officers who violate state constitutional rights. In doing so,

it is important to emphasize that we are not engaging in an act of statutory

interpretation but instead an act of constitutional interpretation.

      B. First and Foremost: Emphasis in the Iowa Constitution on

Bill of Rights.    As noted in Godfrey, the Iowa constitutional founders

placed strong emphasis on the Bill of Rights provisions of the Iowa

Constitution. 898 N.W.2d at 864.      The Bill of Rights of the Iowa

Constitution was deliberately designed “to put upon record every
                                      61

guarantee that could be legitimately placed [in the constitution].”         Id.

(quoting 1 The Debates at 100 (alteration in original)). The placement of

the Bill of Rights in the very first article in the Iowa Constitution, ahead of

articles describing legislative and executive power, was not a result of

happenstance. According to George Ells, Chair of the Committee on the

Preamble and Bill of Rights, “the Bill of Rights is of more importance than

all the other clauses in the Constitution put together, because it is the

foundation and written security upon which the people rest their rights.”

Id. (quoting The Debates at 103). Given the obvious importance of the Iowa

Bill of Rights in the state constitutional scheme, it must be effectively

enforced. See id. at 865.

      C. “Thoroughly Well-Settled”: Iowa Caselaw Imposing Damages

on Officials for Unconstitutional Searches and Seizures. As we noted

in Godfrey, the Iowa founding generation was well aware of the English

cases where officers of the Crown were liable for substantial damages for

unlawful searches and seizures. Id. at 866–67. In Sanders v. State, the

Iowa Supreme Court cited Entick, using as its source Howell’s State Trials,

a popular compendium of English law cases. 2 Iowa 230, 239 (1855); see

Godfrey, 898 N.W.2d at 867. In McClurg v. Brenton, we reversed a trial

court dismissal of a damages action against a mayor, a chief of police, and

a captain of police where a search was conducted without a warrant. 123
Iowa 368, 369, 371–72, 98 N.W. 881, 881–83 (1904). A few years later, we

reaffirmed the notion that the right of citizens to be secure in person and

property against wrongful searches and seizures is “zealously safeguarded

and has express recognition in our state Constitution.” Krehbiel v. Henkle

(Krehbiel I), 142 Iowa 677, 679–80, 121 N.W. 378, 379–80 (1909). We

further stated that it was “thoroughly well settled” that “a violation of this

right without reasonable ground therefor gives the injured party a right of
                                      62

action.”   Id. at 680, 121 N.W. at 380.      We later affirmed an award of

punitive damages in the case based upon the defendant’s “wanton and

reckless” disregard of the plaintiff’s rights. Krehbiel v. Henkle (Krehbiel II),

152 Iowa 604, 606, 129 N.W. 945, 945, modified on other grounds, 152
Iowa 604, 607, 133 N.W. 115, 115 (1911) (per curiam).

      The majority cites Krehbiel I in support of its view that in Iowa,

malice or want of probable cause must be shown to support a damage

action for unconstitutional search and seizure. 142 Iowa at 680, 121 N.W.

at 380. But the tort involved in Krehbiel was malicious prosecution. Id.

Because the issue was framed as malicious prosecution, malice was an

element of the offense. Id. The reference in the case to whether there was

a reasonable ground for the search does not appear to be an assertion of

immunity but is consistent with the notion that a search is reasonable if

it is undertaken pursuant to a valid warrant or undertaken pursuant to a

valid exception to the warrant requirement.          See Thomas Y. Davies,

Recovering the Original Fourth Amendment, 98 Mich. L. Rev. 547, 576–90

(1999).

      The majority also cites the cases of Hetfield v. Towsley, 3 Greene
584 (Iowa 1852), and Howe v. Mason, 12 Iowa 202 (1861). These cases

involve judicial immunity, Howe, 12 Iowa at 203–04; Hetfield, 3 Greene at

585, a concept well-recognized at common law and distinct from a claim

against officers engaged in search-and-seizure-type activities, see, e.g.,

Pierson, 386 U.S. at 553–54, 87 S. Ct. at 1217–18. The majority opinion

thus conflates apples and oranges.           Judges historically have been

absolutely immune because of the peculiar characteristics of and the

safeguards built into the judicial process, including rights of appeal. See

Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. 478, 512, 98 S. Ct. 2894, 2913 (1978). Such

absolute immunity has not historically been extended to other government
                                       63

officials exercising different governmental functions. It is wrong to suggest

that Hetfield and Howe stand for the proposition that immunity should be

extended to executive branch officials charged with violating article I,

section 1 and article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution when the official

functions involved are materially different. See Butz, 438 U.S. at 511, 98

S. Ct. at 2913 (“Judges have absolute immunity not because of their

particular location within the Government but because of the special

nature of their responsibilities.”).

      The majority also miscites Plummer v. Harbut, 5 Iowa 308 (1857). In

this unlawful search and seizure case, the plaintiff was deprived of

compensatory damages not because of the good faith of the officers, as

claimed by the majority, but because a party seeking to recover damages,

for the seizure and destruction of intoxicating liquors, must show that he

possessed them with a lawful intent. Id. at 312–13. Because possession

of the intoxicating liquor was unlawful, compensatory damages were not

available.   Id. at 313.   The good-faith discussion in the case was not

directed to the issue of compensatory damages, as the majority suggests,

but to the issue of punitive damages. Id. at 314. As the Plummer court

stated, “Where a ministerial officer acts in good faith, he is not liable to

exemplary damages for an injury done.” Id. In the Plummer case, the

proposition that “good faith” in the search and seizure context was not

relevant to the issue of compensatory damages but only to the issue of

punitive damages.

      Finally, the majority dismisses language in Girard v. Anderson that

directly and plainly states, “A violation of the state and federal

constitutional provisions against the unreasonable invasion of a person’s

home gives the injured party a right of action for damages for unlawful

breaking and entering.” 219 Iowa 142, 148, 257 N.W. 400, 403 (1934).
                                      64

The majority rejects the relevance of Girard by stating that the case

involved an intrusion by a private party. That is true enough, but among

the cases cited by the Girard court in support of the statement that an

injured party has a cause of action was McClurg, a case involving

misconduct of officials. See id. at 148, 257 N.W. at 403 (citing McClurg,

123 Iowa 368, 98 N.W. 881). By citing McClurg, it is hard to believe the

Girard court subscribed to the narrow interpretation embraced by the

majority.

      Recently in Godfrey, we stressed the need for effective enforcement

of constitutional norms through private causes of action to recover for

harms caused by unconstitutional conduct. 898 N.W.2d at 865.   We

quoted Justice Harlan’s concurrence in Bivens for the proposition that “the

judiciary has a particular responsibility to assure the vindication of

constitutional interests.” Id. (quoting Bivens, 403 U.S. at 407, 91 S. Ct. at

2010 (Harlan, J., concurring in the judgment)).

      D. Constitutional Caselaw from Other Jurisdictions on the

Question    of   Qualified    Immunity      Under     State   Constitutional

Provisions. The state courts are divided on the question of whether there

should be some kind of immunity doctrine that relieves individual officers

of potential liability for constitutional wrongs.

      Some cases follow the United States Supreme Court approach to

statutory qualified immunity in the interpretation of their state

constitutions. A good example of an unreflective “me too” case is Moresi v.

Department of Wildlife & Fisheries, 567 So. 2d 1081 (La. 1990). There, the

Louisiana court wrote,

      The same factors that compelled the United States Supreme
      Court to recognize a qualified good faith immunity for state
      officers under § 1983 require us to recognize a similar
                                      65

      immunity for them under any action arising from the state
      constitution.

Id. at 1093. Needless to say, this uncritical analysis, for all the reasons

expressed above, is unpersuasive.

      On the other hand, the Maryland Court of Appeals, in Clea v. Mayor

of Baltimore, held that city officials were not entitled to immunity for

violations of individuals’ rights under the Maryland Declaration of Rights.

541 A.2d 1303, 1314 (Md. 1988), superseded by statute on other grounds,

Md. Code Ann., State Gov’t § 12-101(a), as recognized in D’Aoust v.

Diamond, 36 A.3d 941, 962 (Md. 2012). In Clea, the plaintiffs brought

both an ordinary tort suit and a constitutional claim against several

officials including a police officer, for an allegedly unlawful search of the

plaintiffs’ home. Id. at 1304. The defendant police officer asserted he was

entitled to qualified immunity. Id.

      The Clea court held that while the police officer was immune from

the ordinary tort claims because he did not act with malice, the immunity

statute could not be lawful as applied against claims under the Maryland

Declaration of Rights. Id. at 1311, 1312. The court stated that “there are

sound reasons to distinguish actions to remedy constitutional violations
from ordinary tort suits.”    Id. at 1314.    The court emphasized “[t]he

purpose of a negligence or other ordinary tort action is not specifically to

protect individuals against government officials or to restrain government

officials,” but only “to protect one individual against another individual.”

Id.

      On the other hand, the Clea court noted that the constitutional

provisions in the Declaration of Rights of the Maryland Constitution were

“specifically designed to protect citizens against certain types of unlawful

acts by government officials.” Id. According to the Clea court,
                                      66

       To accord immunity to the responsible government officials,
       and leave an individual remediless when his constitutional
       rights are violated, would be inconsistent with the purpose of
       the constitutional provisions. It would also . . . largely render
       nugatory the cause of action for violation of constitutional
       rights recognized [in Maryland’s Godfrey-type cases].

Id.

       The Montana Supreme Court has adopted an approach similar to

that in Clea. In Dorwart v. Caraway, the Montana Supreme Court rejected

qualified immunity for state constitutional torts. 58 P.3d 128, 140 (Mont.

2002). The Dorwart court agreed with the analysis presented in Clea. Id.

at 139.    It also emphasized, however, unique aspects of the state

constitution, including provisions prohibiting local governments from

immunity from suit except as provided by a two-thirds vote of each house

of the legislature. Id. at 139–40.

       Also instructive is Corum v. University of North Carolina ex rel. Board

of Governors, 413 S.E.2d 276 (N.C. 1992). In Corum, the North Carolina

Supreme Court considered an action brought by a discharged faculty

member alleging his termination violated his right to free speech. Id. at

280.   The defendants included the university and various university

officials. Id. at 282. The North Carolina Supreme Court held that a direct

action to enforce free speech under the North Carolina Constitution was

essential to preserve the rights guaranteed by that provision. Id. at 289.

       The Corum court also considered the question of whether the
doctrine of sovereign immunity had any application in the case. Id. at 291.

The court held that it did not. Id. According to the court, “the doctrine of

sovereign immunity cannot stand as a barrier to North Carolina citizens

who seek to remedy violations of their rights guaranteed by the Declaration

of Rights [in the state constitution].”     Id.   The court noted that the

Declaration of Rights is the first article in the state constitution and
                                     67

emphasized its primacy in the minds of the North Carolina framers. Id. at

289–90. The court stated,

      It would indeed be a fanciful gesture to say on the one hand
      that citizens have constitutional individual civil rights that are
      protected from encroachment actions by the State, while on
      the other hand saying that individuals whose constitutional
      rights have been violated by the State cannot sue because of
      the doctrine of sovereign immunity.

Id. at 291. While the Corum court spoke in terms of sovereign immunity

and not qualified immunity, it appeared to be considering an immunity

claim made by an individual defendant, i.e., the plaintiff’s immediate

supervisor and an official at the university involved in the case, and not a

claim made by the university. See id. at 281, 292.

      E. Impact of Godfrey on the Enforcement of Constitutional

Provisions. In Godfrey, we held that the due process and equal protection

provisions of the Iowa Constitution are self-executing and that citizens

have a direct action for damages caused by unconstitutional conduct

under the Iowa Constitution. 898 N.W.2d at 846–47, 871–72. However,

we specifically left open the question of whether government officials were

entitled to qualified immunity with respect to direct claims brought under

the Iowa Constitution. Id. at 879 (plurality opinion). While we reserved

the question of qualified immunity, it is important that the general

principles of Godfrey, which held citizens have the right to bring direct

claims under the Constitution, be consistently applied in this case,

addressing the scope of the direct remedies recognized in Godfrey.

      In Godfrey, we emphasized that “[i]f the[] individual rights in the very

first article of the Iowa Constitution are to be meaningful, they must be

effectively enforced.” Id. at 865 (majority opinion). We quoted Justice

Harlan for the proposition that “the judiciary has a particular

responsibility to assure the vindication of constitutional interests.” Id.
                                     68

(quoting Bivens, 403 U.S. at 407, 91 S. Ct. at 2010). We noted, “It would

be ironic indeed if the enforcement of individual rights and liberties in the

Iowa Constitution, designed to ensure that basic rights and liberties were

immune from majoritarian impulses, were dependent on legislative action

for enforcement.” Id. We explained that the Iowa Constitution put its Bill

of Rights in article I, indicating the Bill of Rights’ primacy, and that the

Iowa Constitution generally tends to limit the scope of legislative powers.

Id. at 864–65. We stated, “We cannot imagine the founders intended to

allow government wrongdoers to set their own terms of accountability

through legislative action or inaction.” Id. at 866. It is plain from Godfrey

that constitutional rights must be effectively enforced, the court is the

principle institution of government to ensure that such effective

enforcement occurs, and action or inaction of the legislature cannot be an

effective barrier to wholesome judicial enforcement of the Iowa Bill of

Rights. See id. at 865–66. We must not abandon these Godfrey principles

today in this companion case.

      In Godfrey, we also discussed the availability of punitive damages

for constitutional wrongs.      Id. at 875–79 (plurality opinion).     Three

members of the court concluded that because the Iowa Civil Rights Act

(ICRA) did not include punitive damages, it did not preempt a direct

constitution claim alleging that the defendants acted unconstitutionally in

violation of the equal protection clause of the Iowa Constitution. Id. at

879. In a separate opinion, Chief Justice Cady came to the conclusion

that while lack of punitive damages could lead to a finding that a statutory

remedy is inadequate, it was not under the specific facts of Godfrey’s case.

Id. at 880–81 (Cady, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).

      There is substantial authority to support the position that, in a

search and seizure case, punitive damages should be allowed.             The
                                   69

damages awarded in the Wilkes cases exceeded the injury. See Godfrey,
898 N.W.2d at 866 (majority opinion) (explaining that Wilkes was awarded

£1000 and Huckle £300); see also 1763 Pounds in 2017, UK Inflation

Calculator, https://www.officialdata.org/1763-GBP-in-2017?amount=1300

[https://perma.cc/CG72-D7HL] (last visited June 26, 2018) (calculating

that £1300 in 1763 is about £245,000 in 2017). In Huckle, the amount of

awarded damages was fifteen times the actual damages, with the court

observing,

      I think they have done right in giving exemplary damages. To
      enter a man’s house by virtue of a nameless warrant, in order
      to procure evidence, is worse than the Spanish Inquisition; a
      law under which no Englishman would wish to live an hour;
      it was a most daring public attack made upon the liberty of
      the subject.

Godfrey, 898 N.W.2d at 866 (quoting Huckle, 95 Eng. Rep. at 769); see

also Simpson v. McCaffrey, 13 Ohio 508, 522–23 (1844) (en banc) (allowing

“damages beyond compensation” for search and seizure violations). Iowa

followed the common law approach to punitive damages in Krehbiel II, 152
Iowa at 606, 129 N.W. at 945. In Krehbiel II, the court affirmed an award

of punitive damages on the ground that such damages were available for

conduct that “was wanton and reckless and in disregard of the plaintiff’s

rights.” Id.

      Chief Justice Cady’s concurring opinion in Godfrey provided the

deciding vote on the question of whether the lack of a punitive damages

remedy in the ICRA prevented the Act from preempting a direct

constitutional claim. 898 N.W.2d at 880–81 (Cady, C.J., concurring in

part and dissenting in part). Chief Justice Cady concluded that on the

facts of the Godfrey case, the lack of a punitive damages remedy did not

cause the remedies in the ICRA to be inadequate. Id. Chief Justice Cady

noted that the ICRA provides attorney’s fees, a remedy that might
                                     70

compensate for a lack of availability of punitive damages. Id. at 881. He

acknowledged, however, that “[i]n the appropriate case, a remedy of

punitive damages may be necessary to vindicate a plaintiff’s constitutional

rights.” Id. But, according to Chief Justice Cady,

      when the claimed harm is largely monetary in nature and does
      not involve any infringement of physical security, privacy,
      bodily integrity, or the right to participate in government, and
      instead is against the State in its capacity as an employer,

punitive damages are not a necessary remedy. Id. This search and seizure

case, of course, does involve infringement of physical security and bodily

integrity.   Under Chief Justice Cady’s concurring opinion, punitive

damages may well be necessary to vindicate the plaintiff’s constitutional

rights, just as it was in Krehbiel. See id.; Krehbiel II, 152 Iowa at 606, 129

N.W. at 945.

      F. Discussion.      The mere lifting of federal statutory qualified

immunity doctrine and supplanting it into analysis of constitutional

claims under the Iowa Constitution is a nonstarter.         The question is

whether we should independently develop a judge-made doctrine of

qualified immunity to relieve public officials from liability for damages

arising from their unlawful conduct as a supplement to the constitutional
text contained in article I of the Iowa Constitution.

      I conclude that we should not manufacture a qualified immunity

doctrine for constitutional wrongs of public officials.           Our state

constitutional tradition places strong emphasis on the Bill of Rights. See

Godfrey, 898 N.W.2d at 864 (majority opinion). There can simply be no

doubt that limiting the remedies available for violations of constitutional

provisions limits the substantive protections of those constitutional

provisions for all practical purposes. Justice Harlan was spot-on when he

observed that the relationship between substance and remedy is one-on-
                                      71

one. See Bivens, 403 U.S. at 400 n.3, 91 S. Ct. at 2007 n.3. No one can

plausibly argue otherwise.

      There can be little doubt that the Bill of Rights in the Iowa

Constitution was intentionally placed in article I to emphasize its primacy

in the constitutional scheme. It precedes articles establishing executive

and legislative powers. The notion that legislative powers in article III of

the Iowa Constitution could eviscerate the Bill of Rights in article I is a

topsy-turvy approach to our state constitutional structure. Further, the

prominent English common law cases where government officials were

found liable for search and seizure violations were well known in the

colonies and to lawyers and judges at the time of the Iowa constitutional

convention, as demonstrated by a citation to Entick by the Iowa Supreme

Court in 1855. See, e.g., Godfrey, 898 N.W.2d at 866–67; Sanders, 2 Iowa

at 239. Our early search and seizure cases tend to reinforce the notion

that money judgments against officials were an appropriate way to

compensate plaintiffs and deter future misconduct. See, e.g., Krehbiel II,
152 Iowa at 606, 129 N.W. at 945; McClurg, 123 Iowa at 369–70, 98 N.W.

at 881–82. We should not dilute the remedy with a qualified immunity

doctrine.

      This is especially true when it comes to search and seizure issues.

In State v. Tonn, we noted that “[a] trespassing officer is liable for all wrong

done in an illegal search or seizure.” 195 Iowa 94, 106, 191 N.W. 530, 535

(1923), overruled on other grounds by State v. Cline, 617 N.W.2d 277, 291

(Iowa 2000) (en banc), overruled on other grounds by State v. Turner, 630
N.W.2d 601, 606 n.2 (2001). Echoing the sentiments of judges in the

Wilkes cases and anticipating the later views of Justice Jackson in

Brinegar, we emphasized that the right against unreasonable searches and

seizures was “a sacred right, and one which the courts will rigidly enforce.”
                                       72

Id. To embrace qualified immunity diluting the ability to enforce search

and seizure law hardly elevates the right to “sacred status” or provides

“rigid enforcement.”

         The “rigid enforcement” of search and seizure law was reflected in

Cline.    In Cline, we considered whether we should adopt a good-faith

exception to the exclusionary rule for search and seizure violations under

article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution. Id. at 288. We refused to do

so. Id. at 292–93. If we adopted such a rule, we pointed out, the standard

would be “close enough is good enough.”         Id. at 290 (quoting State v.

Marsala, 579 A.2d 58, 68 (Conn. 1990)). It would, “in effect, remove the

probable cause requirement from [article I, section 8].” Id. (quoting People

v. Sundling, 395 N.W.2d 308, 314 (Mich. Ct. App. 1986), abrogated on other

grounds by People v. Russo, 487 N.W.2d 698, 706 & n.31 (Mich. 1992)).

Quoting a New Mexico court, we emphasized that the constitution was

designed “to create more than ‘a code of ethics under an honor system.’ ”

Id. at 291 (quoting State v. Gutierrez, 863 P.2d 1052, 1067 (N.M. 1993)).

Further, we noted that “[t]he reasonableness of a police officer’s belief” in

the lawfulness of his or her conduct “does not lessen the constitutional

violation.” Id. at 292.

         This case is the civil counterpart of Cline. If we disallowed a good-

faith defense in a criminal case on the question of admission of evidence,

we certainly ought to allow a wronged citizen to seek damages for harm

caused by the unconstitutional conduct of state or local government

officials.   And we should not lightly glide over the cautions of Justice

Jackson that “[u]ncontrolled search and seizure is one of the first and most

effective weapons in the arsenal of every arbitrary government.” Brinegar,
338 U.S. at 180, 69 S. Ct. at 1313.
                                      73

      Further, it is critically important that state officials are not above

the law or even perceived to be above the law when it comes to enforcement

of provisions of article I against state and local governments. As noted by

the New York Court of Appeals in Brown v. State,

      no government can sustain itself, much less flourish, unless
      it affirms and reinforces the fundamental values that define it
      by placing the moral and coercive powers of the State behind
      those values. When the law immunizes official violations of
      substantive rules because the cost or bother of doing
      otherwise is too great, thereby leaving victims without any
      realistic remedy, the integrity of the rules and their underlying
      public values are called into serious question.

674 N.E.2d 1129, 1144 (N.Y. 1996).

      As noted above, the claim that local officials will be deterred by the

possibility of tort liability, is unbalanced. The opposite view—that without

tort liability there will be less incentive to follow constitutional dictates—

must be considered as well.

      In any event, the basic premise that qualified immunity is needed to

prevent overdeterrence of official conduct has little support.       A recent
study by Professor Joanna Schwartz confirms what one might suspect,

namely, that at least with respect to police officers, local governments

almost always indemnify for settlements and judgments arising out of

misconduct lawsuits. See Joanna C. Schwartz, Police Indemnification, 89

N.Y.U. L. Rev. 885, 912 (2014). Specifically, the Schwartz study found

that in the forty-four largest jurisdictions studied, police officers paid .02%

of the over $730 million paid for misconduct suits between 2006 and 2011.

Id. at 960. In the thirty-seven smaller police departments included in the

study, Schwartz found there were no officer contributions towards

settlements and judgments during that time. Id. In short, according to

Schwartz, in many jurisdictions “officers are more likely to be struck by
                                      74

lightning than they are to contribute to a settlement or judgment in a

police misconduct suit.”      Id. at 914.   The fact that officers are almost

always indemnified undercuts one of the primary arguments in favor of

the immunity doctrine—that without it, officers will be deterred from

engaging in appropriate activities for fear of the financial consequences of

a wrong decision.

      Whether or not to indemnify local officials for their unconstitutional

conduct is a policy matter that the Iowa legislature has already decided.

Iowa Code section 669.21 indemnifies state officials against claims,

including constitutional claims, subject to a few exceptions. Iowa Code

§ 669.21. Likewise, section 670.8 indemnifies municipal officials “against

any tort claim or demand,” subject to a few exceptions. Id. § 670.8. We

have no occasion to develop a doctrine to relieve individual municipal

officers from potential liability for constitutional wrongs—that has been

done by other branches of government, just as it was in the antebellum

period before the modern United States Supreme Court developed its

innovative approach to qualified immunity. See Pfander & Hunt, 85 N.Y.U.

L. Rev. at 1925–26.

      The majority has created a “negligence” immunity to violations of

search and seizure prohibitions under article I, section 8 of the Iowa

Constitution, largely based on the work of Professor John Jeffries. As

Professor Jeffries himself has noted, his approach “is opposed by the

weight of academic opinion, which favors strict liability for all

constitutional violations.”     See John C. Jeffries Jr., Disaggregating

Constitutional Torts, 110 Yale L.J. 259, 262 n.16 (2000); see also Amar, 96

Yale L.J. at 1490–91; Mark R. Brown, The Demise of Constitutional

Prospectivity: New Life for Owen?, 79 Iowa L. Rev. 273, 311–12 (1994);

Harold S. Lewis Jr. & Theodore Y. Blumoff, Reshaping Section 1983’s
                                     75

Asymmetry, 140 U. Pa. L. Rev. 755, 756 (1992); Sheldon Nahmod,

Constitutional Damages and Corrective Justice: A Different View, 76 Va. L.

Rev. 997, 1019 (1990); Christina B. Whitman, Government Responsibility

for Constitutional Torts, 85 Mich. L. Rev. 225, 229–30 (1987) (endorsing

strict governmental liability for constitutional violations). There is nothing

wrong with following the minority view in academia or, for that matter, the

minority view in the courts. But the reasoning of the majority view, which

is largely expressed in the body of this opinion, is worth considering. The

majority in this case pretty much ignores it.

      Rather than follow the state’s motto, “Our Liberties We Prize and

Our Rights We Will Maintain,” the majority follows an approach that

suggests “Our Liberties Are Transient and Our Rights Are Expendable.”

There is no sound policy basis to adopt such a negligence exception under

article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution, particularly when individual

municipal officers are indemnified for most claims that arise out of their

official acts. See Iowa Code § 670.8. The majority has no response to this

point. And how interesting it is that while the majority is concerned that

government conduct will be chilled, it is not at all concerned that by

granting immunity, unconstitutional conduct may be encouraged. And

wholly absent from the majority opinion is any concern at all for a citizen

who may suffer grievous harm as a result of the unconstitutional conduct

of a government official. In effect, the majority has moved article I of the

Iowa Constitution from its place of primacy and made it article V, behind

the provisions establishing executive and legislative power. According to

the majority, the emphasis in the Iowa Constitution is not on rights but

government power.

      In addition, the negligence standard could be applied in an unsound

fashion to chew and choke potential liability.      The search and seizure
                                     76

provision of article I, section 8 uses the term “unreasonable.” We have

observed that the term cannot be regarded as an open-ended, stand-alone

“reasonableness” test shorn from its linguistic and historical context. See

Ochoa, 792 N.W.2d at 289. I fear, however, that some members of the

court will take the ahistorical approach and see reasonableness as the

touchstone of search and seizure law and then will, in light of this opinion,

frame the immunity question in the search and seizure context as, “Was

it reasonable for the officer to believe his or her conduct was reasonable?”

See Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 664 & n.20, 107 S. Ct. 3034,

3052 & n.20 (1987) (Stevens, J., dissenting). Such double counting of

“reasonableness,” if it occurs, would eviscerate enforcement of article I,

section 8. Double counting reasonableness seems to be a fantastic result,

but the lack of sensitive in the majority opinion to the enforcement of

search and seizure rights does not give me high confidence that a highly

distorted approach to immunity will not be applied in future search and

seizure cases under article I, section 8.         If a reasonableness-on-

reasonableness approach does apply, the enforceability of the search and

seizure provisions of the Iowa Constitution will be geometrically

undermined.

      Further, although the majority eschews Harlow, it will be interesting

to see whether the concept of “clearly established rights” creeps back in

under the banner of negligence on an as-needed basis to defeat claims of

compensation. See 457 U.S. at 818, 102 S. Ct. at 2738. If it does, of

course, the claim in the majority rejecting Harlow as having no place in

Iowa law will be overstated.

      In any event, for search and seizure cases in Iowa individual officers

will now have a judge-created immunity based upon a due-care or

negligence standard.     The judge-created negligence standard is an
                                      77

amorphous one but presumably follows the law of torts. If so, whether

immunity is available will, in many cases, depend upon the fact finder’s

evaluation of the reasonableness of police compliance with constitutional

requirements under all the facts and circumstances.

      In the future, it will be interesting to see if the majority fashions

additional judge-made rules in the application of its negligence standard

to further prevent persons from obtaining remedies for constitutional

harms inflicted by government officials. Specifically, we must wait and see

if under the rubric of negligence, the court allows the return of either

“clearly   established   rights”   approach   of   Harlow,   or   applies   the

reasonableness-on-reasonableness approach to undercut constitutional

claims, as I have described above. If so, the substantial harm caused by

this majority opinion will be worse than advertised and liability for serious

article I, section 1 and article I, section 8 violations may be more fictitious

than real.

      There is also some ominous language in the majority opinion

suggesting that various provisions of Iowa Code chapters 669 and 670

might be used to ensure that Iowa citizens cannot recover for the

constitutional harms caused by government officials. As indicated above,

application of legislative restrictions on the ability of private citizens to

recover for constitutional harms imposed on them by the government has

a fox-in-the-henhouse quality. The very suggestion, for instance, that Iowa

Code section 669.14(4), which prohibits “[a]ny claim [for damages] arising

out of assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, malicious

prosecution, abuse of process, libel, slander, misrepresentation, deceit, or

interference with contract rights,” is a legislatively created vehicle to

prevent citizens from recovering from grievous constitutional harm is

astounding. The idea that the government might be immune from liability
                                    78

for an unconstitutional beating using excessive force, for example, is what

one might expect in an authoritarian state, not a democracy. Further, the

suggestion that punitive damages may not be awarded for constitutional

torts, as suggested in Iowa Code section 670.4(1)(e), would be absolutely

astounding to the founding and antebellum generations so familiar with

the Wilkes cases. If there are to be any cases where private citizens who

are harmed by unconstitutional conduct are to be prevented from being

compensated by the officers who caused the harm, that decision should

be determined by the court and not the legislature.

      IV. Conclusion.

      The majority opinion is misguided. It does not mention the role of

the historic Wilkes cases and the dramatic impact these cases had on

American law—a part of history, apparently, that is best forgotten.      It

embraces a constitutional “gap” theory and fails to recognize that rights

and remedies, as Justice Harlan so eloquently pointed out in Bivens, have

a 1:1 correlation and that the reduction in the scope of remedies

necessarily involves a reduction in the scope of the constitutional

protections for citizens. See 403 U.S. at 400 n.3, 91 S. Ct. at 2007 n.3.

The majority speculatively declares that liability for damage caused by

unconstitutional conduct may overdeter officials from engaging in their

duties but remarkably fails to recognize that a nonliability rule may have

an equal and opposite effect: underdeterence of unconstitutional conduct.

The majority’s finding that the speculative overdeterrence of actions of

officials is weighty while the risk of underdeterrence of unconstitutional

conduct infringing on individual rights is not mentioned at all, suggests a

results-oriented jurisprudence that favors government officials who inflict

unconstitutional harms over citizens who endure them.         Further, the

majority opinion ignores the fact that if overdeterrence is a problem, the
                                       79

legislature is free to provide indemnity for individual officers, which the

Iowa legislature has largely done. See Iowa Code § 669.21; id. § 670.8.

The majority’s vague suggestion that sweeping statutory immunities might

be a source of law to undermine the protections of article I of the

Constitution is unsound as a matter of constitutional law and fails to

recognize the fundamental role that article I rights play in limiting the

exercise of government power by the executive and legislative branches of

government. The majority fails to recognize that granting immunity to

officials for unconstitutional conduct leaves the burden of the harm from

that unconstitutional conduct on the injured citizen instead of on the

officials acting unconstitutionally.

      The majority states that it has thrown Harlow overboard. Whether

the ghost of Harlow will reemerge in another form remains to be seen. And

just how great a barrier the negligence immunity standard will be to

prevent injured citizens attempting to recover from the unconstitutional

conduct of government officers will depend on future caselaw.

      For the above reasons and the other reasons expressed in this

opinion, I dissent.

      Hecht, J., joins this dissent.