The plaintiff, DiGiovanni, filed a civil action in Connecticut state court alleging that Doehr committed assault and battery. Relying on Connecticut General Statutes § 52-278e, which permitted a prejudgment attachment of real property without prior notice or hearing, DiGiovanni submitted a conclusory affidavit describing the alleged altercation and sought to attach $75,000 of equity in Doehr's home. A state court judge, acting ex parte, found probable cause to sustain the validity of the claim and issued the attachment; the statute did not require the plaintiff to post a bond, and it did not confine such ex parte relief to extraordinary circumstances. Although a post-attachment hearing could be sought, the attachment immediately clouded title, impairing Doehr's ability to sell or encumber his home. Doehr brought a federal action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against DiGiovanni and the State of Connecticut, challenging the statute as violative of the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause. The federal district court declared the statute unconstitutional, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does Connecticut's statute authorizing ex parte prejudgment attachment of a defendant's real property in an ordinary civil action for money damages—without prior notice or hearing, without limiting such relief to extraordinary circumstances, and without requiring a bond—violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment?
Under the Due Process Clause, whether the government may authorize prejudgment deprivation of property without prior notice and an opportunity to be heard is determined by balancing: (1) the private interest affected by the official action; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation through the procedures used and the probable value of additional or substitute safeguards; and (3) the interest of the party seeking the remedy and the government's interest, including any exigencies. See Mathews v. Eldridge. Ex parte prejudgment remedies are constitutionally permissible only where adequate safeguards substantially reduce the risk of error (e.g., a detailed, nonconclusory showing before a neutral judicial officer, a requirement of bond, prompt post-deprivation hearing, and often a preexisting interest in the property), or where truly extraordinary circumstances justify postponing notice and a hearing.
Yes. Connecticut's ex parte attachment procedure for real property in an ordinary tort suit, lacking prior notice and hearing, not limited to exigent circumstances, and not requiring a bond, violates the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause. The judgment holding the statute unconstitutional was affirmed.
Applying the Mathews v. Eldridge framework, the Court first emphasized the substantial private interests at stake. Although the defendant retained possession, an attachment on real property immediately clouds title, impairs the ability to sell or mortgage, affects credit, and can impose tangible financial and reputational harms. The deprivation is thus significant, not merely technical. Second, the Court found a substantial risk of erroneous deprivation under Connecticut's procedures. The statute permitted ex parte attachment based largely on a plaintiff's conclusory affidavit in a dispute—assault and battery—that turns on credibility and contested facts not readily verified by documents. Unlike in Mitchell v. W.T. Grant, the plaintiff here had no preexisting property interest (such as a vendor's lien) and the statute lacked other critical safeguards: it did not require a bond to protect against wrongful attachment, did not demand detailed factual showings demonstrating necessity, and did not condition ex parte relief on extraordinary circumstances. Nor does a post-attachment hearing, triggered only after the deprivation and following the initial one-sided presentation, sufficiently mitigate the risk of error in this context. Third, the interests of the plaintiff and the state did not justify dispensing with prior notice and a hearing. The plaintiff's interest in securing assets for a potential future judgment in an ordinary tort action—where there is no lien or other vested interest in the property—is comparatively weak. The risk of asset dissipation was minimal; the property was real estate, not easily concealed or removed. The state's administrative interest in efficiency is not a compelling reason to permit a significant property restraint without adversarial process. Taken together, these factors parallel the Court's earlier holdings in Sniadach, Fuentes, and Di-Chem, and distinguish Mitchell, where multiple safeguards and a preexisting interest substantially reduced the risk of erroneous deprivation. Additionally, members of the Court noted that historical practice did not support such ex parte attachments in ordinary tort suits lacking a preexisting property interest, further underscoring the constitutional infirmity. Because Connecticut's statute authorized a significant deprivation without adequate safeguards or emergency justification, it failed the demands of procedural due process.
Connecticut v. Doehr crystallizes constitutional limits on prejudgment remedies and is frequently taught with Sniadach, Fuentes, Mitchell, and Di-Chem. It operationalizes the Mathews balancing test in the attachment context and stresses key limiting principles: the importance of a preexisting interest, the necessity of meaningful safeguards (detailed factual showings, judicial scrutiny, bond, prompt hearings), and the requirement of exigency to justify ex parte action. For litigators and legislators, Doehr provides a blueprint for drafting and challenging prejudgment-remedy statutes. For students, it is a prime example of how procedural due process balances accuracy and fairness against efficiency and private collection interests.
Connecticut v. Doehr reaffirms that the Constitution guards against significant deprivations of property through ex parte procedures unless robust safeguards or genuine emergencies justify withholding notice and a hearing. By methodically applying the Mathews v. Eldridge test, the Court underscored the importance of tailoring prejudgment remedies to minimize error and protect defendants from unwarranted restraints.