Clarifying Immunity and Rooker-Feldman in Post-Eviction § 1983 Litigation: A Commentary on Kemp v. Powers (5th Cir. 2025)
Docket No.: 25-30024 | Date: July 9, 2025
Panel: Judges Southwick, Oldham, and Ramirez (per curiam, unpublished)
Result on Appeal: District court’s dismissal AFFIRMED in full
1. Introduction
Kemp v. Powers grows out of a Louisiana landlord-tenant dispute that escalated into a federal civil-rights action. Cameron Kemp, evicted from an apartment leased to family members, sued an array of defendants—state officials, a city, private landlords, and property managers—asserting violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 as well as numerous state-law torts.
The Western District of Louisiana dismissed all federal claims with prejudice and declined supplemental jurisdiction over state claims. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit addressed three principal issues:
- Whether Rooker-Feldman deprived the federal courts of jurisdiction;
- Whether absolute immunity barred claims against the judge and chief deputy clerk;
- Whether the complaint plausibly alleged state action by the private defendants and municipal liability by the City of Shreveport.
2. Summary of the Judgment
The Fifth Circuit affirmed dismissal on all grounds:
- No Rooker-Feldman Bar: The district court reached the merits; its dismissal was for failure to state a claim, not for lack of jurisdiction.
- Absolute Immunity Upheld: The eviction-court judge enjoyed judicial immunity; the deputy clerk enjoyed both absolute quasi-judicial and absolute immunity.
- No State Action: The landlord and management companies were private actors, and Kemp’s conspiracy allegations were conclusory.
- No Municipal Liability: The complaint did not allege a pattern of similar misconduct sufficient to show deliberate indifference by the City.
- State Claims Dismissed Without Prejudice: With no viable federal claim, the district court properly declined supplemental jurisdiction.
3. Analysis
3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co., 263 U.S. 413 (1923) &
D.C. Court of Appeals v. Feldman, 460 U.S. 462 (1983) – foundation of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. - Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Industries Corp., 544 U.S. 280 (2005) – clarified the narrow scope of Rooker-Feldman, permitting “independent claims” even if they deny a state-court legal conclusion. The panel used Exxon Mobil to hold that Kemp’s suit, although entwined with an eviction, sought damages for alleged misconduct, not direct reversal.
- Mireles v. Waco, 502 U.S. 9 (1991); Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.S. 349 (1978) – reiterated that judges are immune unless acting in non-judicial capacity or in clear absence of jurisdiction. The Fifth Circuit found neither exception satisfied.
- Tarter v. Hury, 646 F.2d 1010 (5th Cir. 1981) – extends absolute immunity to court personnel performing duties at a judge’s direction. Applied to shield the deputy clerk.
- Dennis v. Sparks, 449 U.S. 24 (1980); Priester v. Lowndes Cnty., 354 F.3d 414 (5th Cir. 2004) – both require concrete, specific facts to plead a conspiracy; Kemp’s bare allegations fell short.
- Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978) & progeny (Peterson, Davidson, Pena, etc.) – set the standard for municipal liability. Kemp alleged only one prior disciplinary event, insufficient to plead the requisite “pattern.”
- Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007) – plausibility pleading standard, guiding the § 1915(e)(2)(B)(ii) dismissal.
3.2 Court’s Legal Reasoning
- Jurisdictional Posture. The district court’s opinion contained Rooker-Feldman language, but ultimately dismissed on Rule 12(b)(6) analog grounds. The panel held that because Kemp disavowed any request to overturn the state eviction judgment, the doctrine did not deprive federal courts of subject-matter jurisdiction.
- Judicial & Quasi-Judicial Immunity. Even if the judge misapplied Louisiana notice statutes or favored the landlord, such actions were quintessentially judicial. Absolute immunity attaches “however erroneous or even malicious” the rulings may be. The same protective cloak reached the deputy clerk whose refusal to file pleadings stemmed from a judge’s directive.
- State-Action Requirement. Kemp needed to transform the landlord into a state actor through (a) a conspiracy (“joint-action test”) or (b) a symbiotic relationship (“nexus test”). The panel found no “meeting of the minds” nor any governmental interdependence; private resort to eviction procedures or self-help, even if wrongful, is not state action.
- Municipal Liability & Failure-to-Train. The complaint referenced a single prior disciplinary proceeding against the judge (unrelated to evictions) and lacked factual detail tying city policymaking to constitutional violations. Without a “pattern of similar violations,” deliberate indifference could not be inferred.
- Declining Supplemental Jurisdiction. Once federal hooks vanished, 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) left the state-law claims to Louisiana courts—a routine discretionary step endorsed by the Supreme Court in Royal Canin USA v. Wullschleger, 604 U.S. 22 (2025).
3.3 Potential Impact of the Decision
While unpublished, Kemp consolidates and clarifies recurring themes in Fifth Circuit civil-rights litigation:
- Post-Eviction § 1983 suits: Plaintiffs must plead factual, non-conclusory allegations of conspiracy or state action; mere dissatisfaction with adverse eviction rulings is not enough.
- Clerk Immunity Reaffirmed: The opinion underscores that clerks enjoy near-total immunity when executing judicial orders, deterring claims aimed at filing-office gatekeeping decisions.
- Rooker-Feldman Scope: The case illustrates that courts should analyze whether the plaintiff seeks damages for independent wrongdoing (permissible) versus de facto appellate review of a state judgment (barred). Mislabeling jurisdictional versus merits dismissals invites reversal; the Fifth Circuit’s clarification offers a road-map for district courts.
- Municipal Liability Pleading Standard: The panel re-emphasizes that a single anecdote or generalized accusation cannot establish the “pattern” necessary for Monell failure-to-train claims.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Rooker-Feldman Doctrine: Prevents lower federal courts from acting as appellate bodies over final state-court judgments. It does not bar independent federal claims seeking damages from parties, even if those claims arise during state litigation.
- Absolute Judicial Immunity: A doctrinal shield protecting judges from personal liability for acts performed in a judicial capacity, except when acting in complete absence of jurisdiction.
- Quasi-Judicial Immunity: Extends absolute immunity to court staff (clerks, bailiffs) for conduct integrally related to the judicial process.
- “State Action” Requirement (§ 1983): A private defendant is liable under § 1983 only if its conduct is fairly attributable to the State— achieved by tests such as joint action, nexus, public function, or coercion.
- Monell Liability: Municipalities are not vicariously liable for employees. Plaintiffs must show an official policy or chronic pattern that caused the alleged constitutional injury.
5. Conclusion
Kemp v. Powers is a primer on the pleading pitfalls awaiting pro se litigants who attempt to transform state-court landlord-tenant grievances into federal constitutional cases. The Fifth Circuit:
- Reaffirmed the vitality of absolute immunity for judges and court employees;
- Clarified that Rooker-Feldman is jurisdictional only when plaintiffs seek what amounts to appellate review of state judgments;
- Applied stringent plausibility standards to state-action and Monell allegations; and
- Endorsed the routine dismissal of supplemental state claims once federal anchors disappear.
Going forward, litigants and counsel must craft specific factual pleadings— beyond speculative conspiracy theories—when invoking § 1983 in the eviction context, and must identify policy-level failings before municipalities can be tagged with liability. District courts, in turn, can rely on Kemp to streamline immunity analyses and to distinguish jurisdictional dismissals from merit-based ones, ensuring clear appellate paths.
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