Juzumas v. Nassau County ( 2022 )


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  • 20‐0086-cv
    Juzumas v. Nassau County
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    ______________
    August Term 2020
    No. 20-0086-cv
    ______________
    VICTOR JUZUMAS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    “JOHN DOES 1-5”
    Defendants.
    ______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of New York
    ______________
    ARGUED: DECEMBER 10, 2020
    DECIDED: MAY 12, 2022
    Before: POOLER, WESLEY, CARNEY, Circuit Judges.
    Victor Juzumas sued Nassau County (the “County”) and five “John Doe”
    law enforcement officers (the County and the individuals together, “Defendants”)
    for alleged constitutional violations arising from their enforcement of New York
    Penal Law § 400.00(11)(c). Juzumas alleges that the County’s policy interpreting
    and applying § 400.00(11)(c) is broader than the law itself, and unconstitutional as
    it was applied to him. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of
    New York (Donnelly, J.) disagreed, finding that the County acted to enforce a
    mandatory provision of state law and as a result was not a proper defendant under
    Vives v. City of New York, 
    524 F.3d 346
     (2d Cir. 2008). It granted Defendants’ motion
    for summary judgment on Juzumas’s First, Second, and Fourth Amendment
    claims, related Monell claims, and Section 1983 conspiracy claim. Juzumas appeals
    the district court’s order. We AFFIRM the order of the district court in part, except
    to the extent that it failed to reach an adequate determination on the County’s
    longarms possession policy. We VACATE and REMAND in part for the district
    court to address that aspect of Juzumas’s Second Amendment and Monell claims.
    ______________
    AMY L. BELLANTONI, The
    Bellantoni Law Firm, PLLC,
    Scarsdale, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    JARED A. KASSCHAU, Nassau
    County Attorney, Mineola, NY
    (Robert F. Van der Waag, Deputy
    County Attorney, on the brief), for
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ______________
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Victor Juzumas sued Nassau County (the “County”) and five “John Doe”
    law enforcement officers (the County and the individuals together, “Defendants”)
    for alleged constitutional violations arising from their enforcement of New York
    Penal Law § 400.00(11)(c). Juzumas alleges that the County’s policy interpreting
    § 400.00(11)(c) is broader than the law itself, and unconstitutional as it was applied
    to him. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
    (Donnelly, J.) disagreed, finding that the County acted in large part to enforce a
    mandatory provision of state law and was not a proper defendant under Vives v.
    City of New York, 
    524 F.3d 346
     (2d Cir. 2008). Juzumas v. Nassau Cty., 
    417 F. Supp. 3d 178
     (E.D.N.Y. 2019). It granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on
    Juzumas’s First, Second, and Fourth Amendment claims, related Monell claims,
    and Section 1983 conspiracy claim. We affirm the order of the district court in part,
    except to the extent that it failed to reach an adequate determination on the
    County’s longarms possession policy. We vacate and remand in part for the
    district court to address that aspect of Juzumas’s Second Amendment and Monell
    claims.
    BACKGROUND
    I.     Statutory Framework
    New York Penal Law creates a licensing regime for the possession of pistols,
    revolvers, and certain other handguns, which it refers to as “firearms.” See 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 265.00
    (3). This regime makes it unlawful in New York to possess a
    firearm without a license. See 
    id.
     §§ et seq. 265.20(3), 400.00(2). Eligibility for a
    license is governed by Penal Law § 400.00(1), which provides that “[n]o license
    3
    shall be issued or renewed except for an applicant” who meets several enumerated
    requirements. Among those requirements are that the applicant be “of good moral
    character,” id. § 400.00(1)(b), and that there be “no good cause . . . for the denial of
    the license,” id. § 400.00(1)(n). Under the state law, licenses—colloquially referred
    to as either pistol, handgun, or firearm licenses—are generally issued and
    administered by local governmental units or officers. In Juzumas’s case, Nassau
    County was charged with the licensing responsibility.
    The State maintains no similar licensing scheme for long-barrel rifles and
    shotguns (“long guns” or “longarms”). 1 However, the Penal Law speaks to
    continued long gun possession by a person whose pistol license has been revoked,
    as we describe below. Pistol license revocation may occur in several different
    circumstances. Among them is that described by Penal Law § 400.00(11)(a), which
    provides that a license holder’s conviction of a “felony” or “serious offense,” or
    the license holders “at any time becoming ineligible to obtain a license under this
    section,” “shall operate as a revocation of the license.” See also 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 265.00
    (17) (defining “serious offense”). In addition, § 400.00(11)(b) requires
    licensing officers to suspend or revoke the license of any person about whom a
    report of mental disturbance has been made pursuant to New York Mental
    Hygiene Law § 9.46.
    The tethering between longarm possession and pistol licenses occurs in
    subsection (c) of Penal Law § 400.00(11). Subsection (c) provides that in “any
    1 Rifles and shotguns whose barrels have been sawed off, however, are treated by the
    Penal Law as “firearms” and are subject to the licensing regime. See 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 265.00
    (3).
    4
    instance in which a person’s license is suspended or revoked under paragraph (a)
    or (b) of this subdivision, such person shall surrender such license to the appropriate
    licensing official and any and all firearms, rifles, or shotguns owned or possessed by such
    person shall be surrendered to an appropriate law enforcement agency.” 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 400.00
    (11)(c) (emphasis added).
    Nassau County adopted a policy implementing this part of the state
    statutory framework. In May 2014, it published a legal bulletin declaring that “a
    person whose handgun license is suspended or revoked for any reason is not only
    required to surrender [his] license and handguns but also [his] rifles and shotguns
    to the licensing authority (Nassau County Police Department).” JA 268–73. 2 The
    written policy does not state whether an individual in Nassau County whose pistol
    license has been revoked and weapons have been surrendered may possess long
    guns again before being issued another pistol license. As Juzumas describes the
    County policy, however, that individual may lawfully possess long guns again
    only after he applies for, and the County issues him, another pistol license. See
    Juzumas, 417 F. Supp. 3d at 182.
    2The County’s written policy interpreting state law is also published in Nassau County
    Police Department Procedure OPS 10023, entitled “Removal and Disposition of
    Weapons—Domestic Incidents/Threats to Public Safety.” Special App’x 4. As
    summarized by the district court, “[u]nder OPS 10023, longarm possession may be
    prohibited if (a) the owner is prohibited from possessing rifles or shotguns under the
    Federal Gun Control Act, (b) the owner has a relevant pending court disposition, (c) the
    owner is a subject of an order of protection, (d) the owner has a relevant Nassau County
    arrest history, (e) domestic incidents have occurred since the time of the confiscation or
    voluntary surrender, or (f) there are other extenuating circumstances that indicate that
    the longarms should not be returned.” Juzumas, 417 F. Supp. 3d at 182 n.6.
    5
    II.    Facts 3
    Juzumas, a customs broker and resident of Nassau County, applied for and
    received a pistol license from the County in January 2003. In May 2008, Juzumas
    was arrested for conspiring to import controlled substances. The arresting officer
    confiscated his pistol license and pistols.       In September 2008, the County
    suspended Juzumas’s pistol license based on the May arrest. Soon after his license
    suspension, law enforcement officers collected Juzumas’s long guns, but returned
    the long guns to him a few weeks later. Almost four years later, in June 2012,
    Juzumas pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor conspiracy to defraud the United
    States, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
    , in connection with his 2008 arrest.
    In November 2015, three years after his guilty plea and seven years after his
    initial license suspension, the County sent Juzumas a letter stating that his pistol
    license had been revoked. It identified three bases for the revocation: (1) “[a]rrest
    history,” (2) “[c]onviction of violation title 18 USC 371 [sic],” and (3) “[l]ack of
    good moral character.” Joint Appendix (“JA”) at 58. It further advised that, as
    “directed by New York State Penal Law section 400, and the New York State
    Secure Ammunitions and Firearm Enforcement Act [SAFE Act], you are
    prohibited from possessing firearms, rifles, shotguns.” 
    Id.
     The County’s letter
    informed Juzumas of several options for disposing of his weapons: “a transfer of
    ownership to a properly licensed individual as mandated by the NY Safe Act, sale
    3The facts are taken from the district court’s decision. Except as noted, they are
    undisputed.
    6
    to a New York State licensed gun dealer; or request the destruction of the
    firearm(s).” 
    Id.
    After receiving the letter, Juzumas made gifts of his long guns to his son‐in‐
    law, to a “hunting buddy,” and to a friend. Special App’x 6. (In light of the 2008
    pistol license suspension, he no longer possessed a pistol.) He then unsuccessfully
    attempted to appeal the pistol license revocation using County administrative
    processes. He represented to the district court that he had not tried to buy long
    guns since his license was revoked.
    III.   Procedural History
    In May 2017, Juzumas sued Defendants in the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of New York. He alleged that they violated his First,
    Second, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights by requiring the surrender of
    his long guns upon revocation of his pistol license, by conditioning his
    reacquisition of long guns upon the issuance to him of a new pistol license, and by
    denying his application for a new license on the ground that his misdemeanor
    conviction was a “serious offense” within the meaning of Penal Law § 265.00(17).
    Issue was joined and the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. 4
    The district court granted judgment to the County on Juzumas’s Second
    Amendment claim, finding that the County did not infringe Juzumas’s right to
    bear arms in any way not required by the state law, whose constitutionality
    Juzumas had not challenged. The district court reasoned that, through its policy
    4While the cross-motions were pending, Juzumas abandoned his First Amendment and
    conspiracy claims against the County.
    7
    requiring surrender of the license and longarms, the County was merely enforcing
    Penal Law § 400.00(11).          The district court dismissed Juzumas’s Fourth
    Amendment claim, finding no governmental seizure because Juzumas voluntarily
    “gave away” his long guns. Juzumas, 417 F. Supp. 3d at 187–88. It agreed with
    Juzumas, however, on his Fourteenth Amendment claim, concluding that he
    should have received a hearing before being required to permanently cede
    possession of his long guns. 5
    The district court granted summary judgment to the County on Juzumas’s
    Monell claims arising from his Second and Fourth Amendment allegations. It
    briefly addressed Juzumas’s claim that the County’s open-ended prohibition on
    his possession of longarms contravened his Second Amendment rights by
    commenting that “[a]t oral argument, counsel for the County said that the County
    no longer uses the [revocation] letter that the plaintiff received, and that it is now
    clear that someone whose pistol license has been revoked, and surrenders
    longarms at the time of the revocation, is free after the confiscation of his longarms
    to go out and purchase other longarms.” Juzumas, 417 F. Supp. 3d at 183 (internal
    footnote and quotations omitted). The court noted that, apart from the statement
    made at oral argument, “[t]he County did not explain how the plaintiff would
    have learned of the policy change, or the extent to which a background check,
    which would have alerted a gun dealer that the plaintiff’s license had been
    revoked, would have been an impediment to purchasing a longarm.” Id. It further
    observed that “[a]t oral argument, counsel for the County conceded that the
    5 The parties later settled this Fourteenth Amendment claim and the district court
    dismissed it with prejudice before entering final judgment.
    8
    plaintiff’s continued possession of his longarms did not pose any danger to the
    community.” Id. at 190.
    Juzumas appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the
    County on his Second and Fourth Amendment claims.
    DISCUSSION 6
    I.     Second Amendment Claims
    Juzumas argues that Nassau County’s policy regarding the surrender and
    reacquisition of long guns is homegrown and not merely an enforcement of state
    law. First, he reads state law to require the surrender of long guns only when the
    revocation of a pistol license is based upon the factors specifically mentioned in
    Penal Law § 400.00(11), and not when based on any of the other reasons set forth
    in the rest of Penal Law § 400.00. In other words, he would limit the tethering
    provision to the reasons for revoking a pistol license that are specifically
    enumerated (and not merely referred to) in Penal Law § 400.00(11). He urges that
    the County’s policy extends beyond the mandates of state law and in doing so
    violates his right under the Second Amendment to possess long guns. Second, he
    contests the County’s position—in effect when the County required the surrender
    6 The standard of review here is well known. “We review de novo a district court’s order
    granting summary judgment, construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    non‐moving party. As relevant here, we also review de novo the district court’s legal
    conclusions, including those interpreting and determining the constitutionality of a
    statute. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), summary judgment is
    appropriate where there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” New York State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. Cuomo,
    
    804 F.3d 242
    , 252 (2d Cir. 2015) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    9
    of his longarms in 2015 but now perhaps abandoned—that, despite the absence of
    a state licensing regime for longarms, he is prohibited from possessing a longarm
    unless and until he applies for and obtains a new pistol license. We address each
    contention in turn.
    A.     Does state law require surrender of longarms upon revocation of
    pistol license?
    As to his first argument, we conclude that Juzumas misreads Penal Law
    § 400.00. The subsection of Penal Law § 400.00 that addresses long gun surrender
    provides that in “any instance in which a person’s license is suspended or revoked
    under paragraph (a) or (b) of this subdivision . . . any and all firearms, rifles, or
    shotguns owned or possessed by such person shall be surrendered.” 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 400.00
    (11)(c). Thus, by the statute’s express terms, when an individual’s
    pistol license is suspended or revoked for any reason set forth in Penal Law
    § 400.00(11)(a) or (b), the licensee must surrender his long guns.
    Penal Law § 400.00(11)(a) does the work in Juzumas’s case: it covers the
    reasons Juzumas’s pistol license was revoked. It provides that “a licensee at any
    time becoming ineligible to obtain a license under this section shall operate as a
    revocation of the license.” Id. § 400.00(11)(a) (emphasis added). In other words,
    under subsection (a), any change in the licensee’s life that would have resulted in
    the denial of her application for a pistol license (had she applied at the time of the
    change) effects a revocation of the license. Thus, the question presented by
    Juzumas turns on the meaning of the phrase “under this section” in Penal Law
    § 400.00(11)(a). If that phrase refers to the whole of Penal Law § 400.00 and any of
    the reasons stated in § 400.00 that a person may be ineligible to obtain a handgun
    10
    license, then the County’s policy is congruent with state law. Juzumas contends,
    however, that “this section” refers to Penal Law § 400.00(11) only, and not to Penal
    Law § 400.00.
    It takes no leap of logic to realize that the County is correct in arguing that
    the phrase “this section” refers to the whole of Penal Law § 400.00 and not merely
    its subsection (11). In reaching that conclusion, we look first to the text of the
    statute. Matter of Peyton v. N.Y.C. Bd. of Standards & Appeals, 
    36 N.Y.3d 271
    , 279
    (2020). The first hint occurs in the title of § 400.00, which is identified by the
    symbol “§,” a mark well understood to mean “section.” The second indication is
    found in the language of the Penal Law: Section 400.00(11)(c) refers to itself as a
    “subdivision.” It states, “[i]n any instance in which a person’s license is suspended
    or revoked under paragraph (a) or (b) of this subdivision, such person shall surrender
    such license to the appropriate licensing official and any and all firearms, rifles, or
    shotguns owned or possessed by such person shall be surrendered.” 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 400.00
    (11)(c) (emphasis added). We take these words and symbols for their
    plain meaning: the legislature intended the word “section” as used in § 400.00(11)
    to refer to Penal Law § 400.00. See People v. Pabon, 
    28 N.Y.3d 147
    , 152 (2016).
    The structure and legislative history of Penal Law § 400.00 also support the
    County’s reading. See Nadkos Inc. v. Preferred Constr. Ins. Co. Risk Retention Grp.
    LLC, 
    34 N.Y.3d 1
    , 7–11 (2019) (looking at the plain text, statutory structure, and
    legislative history when interpreting a statute). The various reasons why a person
    may be ineligible for a pistol license appear throughout § 400.00. The operative
    clause in Penal Law § 400.00(11)(a)—“or a licensee at any time becoming ineligible
    to obtain a license under this section”—was added in 2013 by the New York State
    11
    Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act (the “SAFE Act”). The other
    reasons for losing a pistol license that are enumerated in the same subsection (that
    is, being convicted of a felony or serious offense and becoming subject to a
    protective order) were already in place when the SAFE Act was passed. The
    operative language added by the SAFE Act would thus be superfluous if it did not
    refer to the additional grounds for ineligibility enumerated in other subsections of
    Penal Law § 400.00. Cf. Leader v. Maroney, Ponzini & Spencer, 
    97 N.Y.2d 95
    , 104
    (2001) (“meaning and effect should be given to every word of a statute”). 7
    In requiring Juzumas to surrender his longarms after his conviction, Nassau
    County was reasonably applying state law, not crafting its own independent
    firearm surrender policy untethered to the Penal Law. As the district court noted,
    our opinion in Vives establishes the framework for assessing asserted
    constitutional violations arising from municipal enforcement of state law. See 
    524 F.3d at 353
    . There, we set out a two-part test that looks generally to the amount of
    7We have not located a case in which a plaintiff asserted claims against a county that are
    analogous to those made by Juzumas. Previous decisions made in related contexts,
    however, lend support to the County’s position. For example, New York courts appear
    to frequently affirm pistol license revocations under Penal Law § 400.00(11) without
    referencing the reasons for revocation that are specifically mentioned in that subdivision.
    See, e.g., Matter of Derry v. Fufidio, 
    192 A.D.3d 1099
     (2d Dep’t 2021) (upholding revocation
    of a pistol license where the licensee’s 11-year-old son posted on social media a video of
    himself brandishing a pistol); Matter of Nash v. Nassau Cty., 
    150 A.D.3d 1120
    , 1121 (2d
    Dep’t 2017) (upholding revocation of a pistol license after licensee was acquitted of
    criminal charges). These decisions imply an understanding of the phrase “or a licensee
    at any time becoming ineligible to obtain a license under this section,” 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 400.00
    (11)(a), that encompasses the other reasons that may render a person ineligible
    under Penal Law § 400.00 to obtain a pistol license. These include, for example, failure to
    meet the requirement of “good moral character,” id. § 400.00(1)(b), and the existence of
    “good cause . . . for the denial of the license,” id. § 400.00(1)(n).
    12
    autonomy enjoyed by the municipality in effectuating the policy in question. See
    id. First, we ask whether the municipality had a “meaningful choice” as to whether
    it would enforce the law. Id. If it did, then we ask whether the municipality
    adopted a “discrete policy” to enforce the law that represented a “conscious
    choice” by one of its policy makers. Id. If both conditions are met, then the
    municipality exercises a sufficient degree of autonomy to face liability for its policy
    choices.
    In Vives, we remanded for further fact-finding on the question whether the
    municipality had a “meaningful choice” as to whether it would enforce the statute.
    We cautioned that the statute in question did “not constitute such a mandate
    because it simply defines an offense without directing municipal officials to take
    any steps to act when the statute is violated.” Id. That is far from the case here:
    Penal Law § 400.00(11)(c) directs that long guns “shall be removed and declared a
    nuisance” in the event that they are not surrendered upon the suspension or
    revocation of a pistol license. The language following “shall” in a statute is
    “mandatory, not precatory.” See Mach Mining, LLC v. EEOC, 
    575 U.S. 480
    , 486
    (2015). This mandatory language ends our inquiry. Juzumas’s dispute rests with
    the state law, whose constitutionality he has not challenged.
    B.     Is the County’s alleged policy conditioning lawful longarm
    possession on reinstatement of a pistol license consistent with the
    Second Amendment?
    Juzumas also challenges the County’s policy, as described in its 2015
    revocation letter, that the revocation of his pistol license entails the loss of his right
    to possess longarms again until the County issues him a new pistol license. The
    13
    state law, he submits, speaks only to the prompt surrender of longarms that are in
    the possession of a person whose pistol license is suspended or is revoked “at the
    time” of the suspension or revocation. Reply Br. at 2. As explained above, Penal
    Law § 400.00(11) provides that a person whose pistol license has been revoked for
    any of the reasons provided in § 400.00 “shall surrender such license to the
    appropriate licensing official and any and all firearms, rifles, or shotguns owned
    or possessed by such person shall be surrendered to an appropriate law
    enforcement agency.” 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 400.00
    (11)(c). The state law does not by
    its terms prohibit such a person from ever possessing a longarm thereafter, nor
    does it expressly condition renewed longarm possession on the issuance of a new
    pistol license. To the extent that Juzumas accurately interprets the County’s policy
    as effecting an enduring ban on longarm possession by a person whose pistol
    license was revoked, we agree with him that the policy goes beyond what state
    law requires. The district court did not address this aspect of Juzumas’s challenge,
    however, and determined only that it was “not clear” whether Juzumas was
    permitted to possess long guns again under the County’s policy. Juzumas, 417 F.
    Supp. 3d at 182 n.5, 183.
    Throughout this litigation, the County has offered inconsistent declarations
    about its policy on post–license revocation longarm possession. As described
    above, the County advised Juzumas in November 2015 that he was precluded
    from possessing longarms until his license was reinstated, an event that cannot
    occur until at least five years after the revocation. At deposition, a Nassau County
    14
    Police Department (“NCPD”) lieutenant testified variably on the question. 8 The
    NCPD Procedure OPS 10023, “Removal and Disposition of Weapons—Domestic
    8 Lieutenant Timpano testified as follows in response to questioning by Juzumas’s
    counsel:
    Q. Is it the position of the Nassau County Police Department then
    that if any individual has a pistol license that is suspended or
    revoked, that they automatically lose their right to possess shotguns
    or rifles?
    A. That’s correct.
    Q. It doesn’t matter what the ground was for the suspension or the
    revocation of their pistol license; is that correct?
    A. That’s correct.
    JA 153. And then he testified, somewhat confusingly:
    Q. And they can only—the individual would only be able to
    lawfully possess long guns after they reapplied for their pistol
    license and that application was granted?
    A. That is correct.
    Q. And what criteria does the pistol license unit use to determine
    whether an individual’s long guns are returned to them once they
    reapply for the pistol license?
    A. I don’t understand the question.
    Q. In other words, the five years—someone’s pistol license is
    revoked and five years goes by and they reapply for their pistol
    license, then is it the case that the pistol license division is making a
    determination of whether the individual can lawfully possess
    handguns or long guns based on the same criteria?
    A. If at any point they no longer become ineligible to be in
    possession of a firearm, they can be in possession of long guns, as
    well as a handgun, if they get a pistol permit. You don’t need a pistol
    permit by itself to get a—to have a long gun. However, if your pistol
    license is revoked, then during that revocation period, you can be in
    15
    Incidents/Threats to Public Safety,” see supra note 2, describes a process for a
    “Rifles and Shotguns Investigation” to be conducted by a “Precinct Domestic
    Incident Liaison Officer” after surrender of rifles and shotguns. 9 JA 295. It
    provides that the officer’s job is to “[i]nitiate[] an administrative review to
    determine if a legal impediment exists not to return confiscated rifles and
    shotguns.” Id. (emphasis in original). It does not define “legal impediment,” but
    it cites 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
     (the Federal Gun Control Act), Penal Law § 265 (“Firearms
    and other dangerous weapons”), 10 and Penal Law § 400 (“License to carry”) as
    relevant. It elsewhere places a duty on the officer to “[d]etermine[] if any of
    [certain listed] conditions exist” as part of the inquiry on which the return of
    firearms depends. Id. at 294, 296. It then lists these conditions as bearing on the
    return of rifles and shotguns:
    a. the owner is prohibited from possessing rifles or shotguns
    under the Federal Gun Control Act,
    b. the owner has a relevant pending court disposition,
    c. the owner is a subject of an order of protection,
    d. the owner has a relevant Nassau County arrest history,
    possession of a long gun. If a person reapplies and they get their
    pistol license back, then they can be in possession of a long gun.
    Id. at 186–87.
    9The stated effective date of OPS 10023 is “5/11/2012,” before the SAFE Act was enacted,
    but in this litigation the County appears to have relied on it without qualification.
    10Penal Law § 265.01, “Criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree,” makes it
    a crime for persons who have been “convicted of a felony or serious offense” to possess
    such guns. Id. § 265.01(4); see also 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 265.00
    (17) (defining “serious
    offense”). It also criminalizes possession by persons who are “certified not suitable to
    possess a rifle or shotgun.” 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 265.01
    (6).
    16
    e. domestic incidents have occurred since the time of the
    confiscation of voluntary surrender,
    f. other extenuating circumstances which indicate that rifles
    and shotguns should not be returned.
    
    Id. at 296
    . Perhaps this list can be read as setting forth the relevant “legal
    impediments,”     but   the   phrasing   of   condition   (f),   “other   extenuating
    circumstances,” is so broad as to make it hard to call it a “legal impediment.” If
    no legal impediment exists, however, then the written NCPD policy does not
    appear to prohibit a licensee from acquiring new long guns even if his or her pistol
    license was and remains revoked. See 
    id.
     at 301 ¶ 26.
    In its submissions to the district court, the County described its policy
    according to the terms of OPS 10023 and averred that this policy “was in effect,
    and was applied to Plaintiff, when Plaintiff’s pistol license was revoked by [the
    County].” 
    Id.
     at 301 ¶ 27. But, as mentioned above, the County declared at oral
    argument in the district court that it “no longer uses the letter that the plaintiff
    received,” and that it was at that point “clear” that a person whose longarms were
    surrendered after license revocation is “free . . . to go out and purchase other
    longarms.” Juzumas, 417 F. Supp. 3d at 183; see id. at 182 n.5, 183 (recognizing that
    the County’s policy appeared to have changed during the course of the litigation).
    No new standard revocation letter stating the policy or other document reflecting
    a new policy was presented by the County. Id. at 183 n.11.
    In its brief on appeal, the County submits that “[i]f no legal impediment
    exists, NCPD does not automatically prohibit a licensee from possessing long guns
    even if his or her pistol license is revoked.” Appellee Br. at 11 (discussing
    administrative review process under OPS 10023). It adds that “[i]f no such
    17
    impediment existed, NCPD would not automatically prohibit [Juzumas] from
    possessing long guns even if his pistol license was still revoked, as possession of a
    pistol license and possession of long guns are subject to two (2) separate
    determinations based upon two (2) distinct standards of review.” Id. at 12–13, 14.
    But the County also declares without qualification that “[t]he SAFE Act amended
    Penal Law § 400.00(11) to include the prohibition of ownership of longarms by
    individuals whose pistol license were suspended or revoked.” Id. at 19 (emphasis
    added).
    Our Court was presented with similarly inconsistent assertions on Nassau
    County’s longarm possession policy in concurrent litigation. In Henry v. County of
    Nassau, 
    6 F.4th 324
     (2d Cir. 2021), we heard a parallel challenge to the County’s
    policy that was mounted by another individual who was required to surrender his
    firearms and longarms after losing his pistol license based on an alleged domestic
    incident. 11 In reversing the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss, we
    observed that the County’s written policies were such that the plaintiff there
    “cannot apply for reinstatement of his pistol license—or possess any firearms—
    until” at least “five (5) years from the date or revocation or from the appeal
    decision upholding revocation, whichever is later.” Id. at 330. As did the district
    court here, however, we noted that “counsel for the County announced a change
    in the County’s position [in this respect] at oral argument by claiming that [the
    11Our Court conducted oral argument in Henry in October 2020; the district court
    conducted oral argument in this case in September 2019.
    18
    plaintiff] is free to purchase longarms.” Id. at 330 n.2. 12 Evaluating the absolute
    prohibition that the plaintiff had pleaded, we determined that such a policy—if
    proven—would impose a “substantial burden” on the plaintiff’s Second
    Amendment rights and therefore be subject to heightened scrutiny. Id. at 332.
    In his post-argument briefing addressing Henry, Juzumas appears to
    consider the County’s absolute prohibition on longarm possession to still be in
    effect and targets it with his Second Amendment challenge. 13 The County, in
    contrast, cites a change in its policy from an absolute prohibition to the virtual
    opposite, writing, “[T]he Deputy County Attorney advised Judge Donnelly that
    the Police Department subsequently changed its interpretation of § 400.00, so that
    any person whose pistol license was revoked was free to obtain longarms (other
    than the longarms that were initially confiscated).” Appellee Ltr. Br. at 3 (Aug. 25,
    2021). Having twice reversed its basic position, the County has yet to provide a
    complete description of when it will be lawful for Juzumas to reacquire longarms.
    It proposed that “these facts will be explored and a full determination regarding
    12 We continued, “The County’s reversal at oral argument does not affect our decision in
    this appeal because Henry plausibly alleged that the County’s policy was to forbid
    firearm ownership completely after the revocation of a pistol license . . . .” Henry, 6 F.4th
    at 330 n.2.
    13In his post-argument briefing, Juzumas makes the additional argument that the County
    could only bar him from possessing longarms if he were guilty of a “serious offense,” as
    defined by Penal Law § 265.00(17), and therefore ineligible for possession of any firearms.
    See Appellant Ltr. Br. at 4–5 (Aug. 25, 2021). His misdemeanor offense, he avers, is not
    within the category of per se disqualifying “serious offenses” that would make him
    ineligible for possession under state law. Id.
    19
    them and their application to any claim, pursuant to the Second Circuit[’s]
    analysis, will be made,” presumably on remand. Id. at 6.
    In light of the absence of explicit state law constraints on Juzumas’s renewed
    possession of longarms, the shapeshifting record as to the County’s actual policy,
    and the constitutional nature of Juzumas’s challenge to the policy that was applied
    to him, we find it necessary to vacate the district court’s decision in this respect
    and remand the matter for further fact-finding and adjudication of this aspect of
    the Second Amendment challenge.
    II.   Fourth Amendment Claim
    Juzumas’s Fourth Amendment claim fails for the same reason that his
    Second Amendment claim regarding the County’s policy requiring longarm
    surrender fails. As explained in Section I.A above, this aspect of the County’s
    policy constituted a straightforward enforcement of Penal Law § 400.00(11), which
    requires a person to surrender his longarms when his pistol license is revoked for
    any of the reasons provided in § 400.00. To the extent that the County was merely
    complying with a state directive that is not challenged here, the County is not the
    proper defendant to Juzumas’s Fourth Amendment claim. See Vives, 
    524 F.3d at 352
    .
    Even if the County were the proper defendant to this challenge, it is at best
    uncertain that the County “seized” his longarms within the meaning of the Fourth
    Amendment at all, much less unreasonably seized them. See, e.g., Fernandez v.
    California, 
    571 U.S. 292
    , 298 (2014) (“[T]he ultimate touchstone of the Fourth
    Amendment is reasonableness.”); Kaminsky v. Schriro, 760 F. App’x 69, 72 (2d Cir.
    2019) (summary order) (holding that a gun owner who surrendered his firearms
    20
    to police officers after being notified that, as a felon, he was prohibited from
    possessing them could not state a Fourth Amendment claim when they were not
    returned).   Cf. Maryland v. Macon, 
    472 U.S. 463
    , 469 (1985) (holding that an
    undercover officer’s purchase of adult magazines was not a seizure of the
    magazines from a vendor). While the government may seize a person by a mere
    “show of authority” so long as the person submits, Brendlin v. California, 
    551 U.S. 249
    , 254 (2007), the “show of authority” doctrine does not appear to have been
    extended to cover the seizure of personal effects. See Maureen E. Brady, The Lost
    “Effects” of the Fourth Amendment: Giving Personal Property Due Protection, 125 YALE
    L.J. 946, 957–64 (2016) (discussing the limited jurisprudence addressing the
    “effects” provision of the Fourth Amendment).
    This claim was thus properly dismissed.
    CONCLUSION
    The order of the district court granting Nassau County’s motion for
    summary judgment is AFFIRMED in part and VACATED in part, and the case
    is REMANDED for further consideration of Juzumas’s challenge to the
    County’s post-surrender longarm policy.
    21