Skip to main content
This work is funded by people like you. Donate β†—
Share this page: 𝕏 Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp βœ‰ Email

Monell: Pleading Multiple Theories

3 min read by Institute for Police Conduct, Inc.
monell municipal-liability complaint drafting rule-12

Yes, one complaint can contain more than one Monell theory.

The problem is not pleading multiple theories. The problem is pleading them so vaguely that the court treats them as one unsupported slogan.

Bad Monell pleading sounds like this:

The City maintained policies, customs, practices, failures to train, failures to supervise, and ratification amounting to deliberate indifference.

That is not a theory. It is a pile of labels.

Start by deciding which theories are real

Before drafting, ask:

  • Do I have facts showing a written policy?
  • Do I have facts showing a pattern?
  • Do I have facts showing notice of training failures?
  • Do I have facts identifying a final policymaker?

If the answer is no, do not add the theory just because it is common.

Separate each theory in the complaint

The cleanest way to do this is to separate them by paragraph group or subsection.

For example:

  • paragraphs 40-44: custom of retaliatory arrests
  • paragraphs 45-48: failure to train on probable cause
  • paragraphs 49-51: final-policymaker notice and approval

That structure tells the judge you know these are different theories with different factual bases.

Give each theory its own facts

Each Monell theory should answer:

  1. what the theory is
  2. what facts support it
  3. how it caused the violation

If you cannot do that for a theory, it probably does not belong in the complaint yet.

Do not recycle the same sentence for every theory

This is the most common drafting mistake. Plaintiffs use the same general factual paragraph and then rename it as:

  • policy
  • custom
  • failure to train
  • ratification

Courts notice that quickly.

The facts for each theory should be tailored:

  • policy theory: quote or describe the policy
  • custom theory: describe repeated incidents
  • failure-to-train theory: identify the missing training and notice
  • final-policymaker theory: identify the person and legal authority

Use overlap carefully

Some facts can support multiple theories.

For example, prior lawsuits may support:

  • custom
  • notice for failure to train
  • notice for failure to supervise or discipline

That is fine. But you still need to explain why those same prior lawsuits matter differently for each theory.

A workable template

One common structure is:

Municipal Liability Under Monell

Custom or Practice

  • describe similar prior incidents
  • describe complaints or lawsuits
  • allege that policymakers knew and tolerated the conduct

Failure to Train

  • identify the missing training
  • identify prior incidents showing notice
  • explain why the lack of training made the violation predictable

Final Policymaker

  • identify the policymaker
  • cite the source of their authority
  • describe the decision or approval that binds the city

Then end with one causation paragraph alleging that these municipal acts were the moving force behind the violation.

Ratification needs caution

Many people add ratification because the city did not discipline the officer afterward.

That is usually weak by itself. If you plead ratification, do not make it the center of the count unless you have unusually strong facts, such as:

  • express approval by a final policymaker
  • public defense of obviously unconstitutional conduct
  • repeated approval of similar misconduct

Kitchen-sink pleading makes the whole Monell count look weak

Judges often react badly when someone pleads every Monell theory available in one generic block. Instead of thinking β€œthis person has many theories,” the judge may think β€œthis person does not know which theory actually fits.”

A focused complaint is more credible.

What this should sound like

Better:

Before Plaintiff’s arrest, the City faced at least five public complaints and two federal lawsuits alleging that officers used disorderly-conduct arrests to suppress public recording of police activity. Despite that notice, the City provided no identified training on the First Amendment right to record police in public. Plaintiff therefore alleges a widespread custom of retaliatory arrest and a failure-to-train theory based on the same notice facts, each of which was a moving force behind Plaintiff’s arrest.

That is still short. But it sounds like a real theory with real facts behind it.

The rule

Multiple Monell theories are allowed.

Multiple unsupported labels are not.

The complaint should make the reader feel that each theory was chosen on purpose.

Have corrections or want to suggest a change?