Jones v. McKenzie
Filing
27
///ORDER granting 15 Motion for Summary Judgment; granting 14 Motion for Summary Judgment. The court grants the defendants' motions for summary judgment as to Jones's Section 1983 claim and declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Jones's state law claims. Those claims are remanded to the Coos County Superior Court. The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly and close the case. So Ordered by Chief Judge Joseph N. Laplante.(jb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Margaret Jones
v.
Civil No. 10-cv-152-JL
Opinion No. 2011 DNH 209
Tommie C. McKenzie et al.
O R D E R
This case involves the level of care that police owe to
detainees to prevent them from committing suicide while in
protective custody.
Margaret Jones, acting as the administratrix
of the estate of her brother, Robert Vieara, has sued the Town of
Conway, as well as two of its police officers, and two of its
police dispatchers (the “dispatchers” and, together with the
police officers, the “individual defendants”), on claims of
constitutional violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and negligence
under state law arising out of Vieara’s death.
Vieara took his
own life while in the protective custody of the Conway Police.
Jones alleges that the individual defendants ignored Vieara’s
risk of suicide and that the Town failed to train them properly
to identify and care for potentially suicidal detainees.
The defendants move for summary judgment on a number of
grounds, most notably, the absence of any evidence that the
individual defendants were deliberately indifferent to the risk
of Vieara’s suicide, which Jones must show to prevail on her
§ 1983 claim.
This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331
(federal question) and § 1367 (supplemental jurisdiction).
After hearing oral argument, the court grants the
defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the § 1983 claim and
declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state-law
claims.
As explained fully infra, no rational finder of fact
could conclude that the individual defendants acted with
deliberate indifference to Vieara’s risk of suicide.
He did not
present an unusually strong risk of suicide and, in any event,
the individual defendants were not willfully blind to the risk he
presented.
While this ruling also resolves the § 1983 claim
against the Town, that claim also fails for the independent
reason that there is no evidence of the requisite casual
connection between the Town’s alleged failure to train the
individual defendants and Vieara’s suicide.
I. Applicable legal standard
Summary judgment is appropriate where “the pleadings, the
discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits
show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
2
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2).
An issue is “genuine” if it could
reasonably be resolved in either party's favor at trial, and
“material” if it could sway the outcome under applicable law.
See, e.g., Estrada v. Rhode Island, 594 F.3d 56, 62 (1st Cir.
2010) (citation omitted).
In determining whether summary
judgment is appropriate, the court must “view[ ] all facts and
draw[ ] all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to
the nonmoving party.”
Id.
The following facts are set forth
accordingly, though the court has made an effort to note the
defendants’ version of events where appropriate.
II. Background
On a day in August 2009, Edward Vieara boarded a bus at
South Station in Boston to visit his sister, Margaret Jones, with
whom he planned to stay for approximately one week to help her
paint her house.
Jones originally planned to meet Vieara at the
bus station in Berlin, New Hampshire, at about 9:30 p.m. that
night, but later called him and left him a message to meet her at
the Gorham, New Hampshire stop.
Jones waited at the Gorham
station, but, as it turned out, the bus did not stop there.
Jones then drove to the Berlin station, the final stop on
the route, meeting the bus at approximately 10:00 p.m.
Vieara was not on the bus.
But
When Jones inquired of the driver, he
3
told her that he had removed a passenger at the stop in Conway,
New Hampshire, because that passenger had been drinking.
Jones
then drove to her house in Dummer, New Hampshire, about twelve
miles from the Berlin stop and approximately an hour’s drive from
Conway.
When she arrived, a message on her answering machine
from defendant George Walker, a sergeant with the Conway Police
Department, told her that Vieara was at the police station.
In
the message, Sgt. Walker asked Jones to call the station.
Sgt. Walker had responded to a call from the bus driver
about Vieara, which had been placed at approximately 9:00 p.m.
When Sgt. Walker met the bus at the Conway stop, he observed that
Vieara was very intoxicated, and took him into protective
custody.
See N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 172-B:3, I (“[w]hen a peace
officer encounters a person who, in the judgment of the officer,
is intoxicated . . . , the officer may take such person into
protective custody”).
After taking Vieara to the Conway Police Station, Sgt.
Walker completed a “suicide evaluation form,” which classifies a
detainee as having a “low,” “medium,” “high,” or “very high” risk
of suicide depending on an officer’s observations, including a
detainee’s answers to certain questions.
Sgt. Walker noted on
the form that Vieara was “tired,” had “no spouse,” had “prior
arrests,” was “intoxicated,” and had “used alcohol” that day.
4
These factors combined to put Vieara in the “low risk” category
for suicide.
Sgt. Walker should have also noted, however, that
Vieara was in “protective custody” and that he was “crying.”1
If
Sgt. Walker had noted these two additional factors, Vieara would
have been placed in the “medium risk” category.2
Sgt. Walker informed Vieara that he could call someone for a
ride or could stay the night to sober up and be released in the
morning.
Vieara asked and was permitted to call Jones but was
unable to reach her.
Sgt. Walker then placed Vieara in a holding
cell, which was equipped with a video camera without an audio
feed.
The camera was being monitored by a dispatcher, defendant
Roberta Roth.
After placing Vieara in the cell, Sgt. Walker
called Jones and left the message on her home answering machine.
1
The defendants admit that Vieara was crying at some point
after being taken into protective custody, but it is unclear
whether he began crying only after Sgt. Walker had completed the
suicide evaluation form. Though not necessarily warranted on
this record, in light of the summary judgment standard, the court
will assume that Sgt. Walker should have recorded that Vieara was
crying at the time Sgt. Walker filled out the suicide evaluation
form.
2
In her opposition to the defendants’ motions, Jones argues
that Sgt. Walker should have also noted that Vieara was
unemployed, confused, and irritable. Jones does not point to any
evidence in the record to support that assertion. Regardless,
even accepting it as true has no effect on the outcome of the
motions, as explained infra, because adding those factors would
not have placed Vieara higher than the “medium risk” category
anyway.
5
Jones returned Sgt. Walker’s call at approximately 10:58
p.m.
Jones recalls that Sgt. Walker told her that Vieara “had
been put into protective custody” and that “the police had
decided that [he] could not be released until the next morning
. . . .
[T]hey were going to let [him] go, but they decided to
keep him over night.”
Sgt. Walker left the station when his
shift ended at 11:00 p.m. and he was relieved by another
sergeant, defendant Tommie McKenzie.
Near the beginning of his shift, Sgt. McKenzie performed a
routine station check, which included personally checking on
Vieara in his holding cell.
Sgt. McKenzie observed Vieara lying
on his cot and “voicing his displeasure at being there,” which
Sgt. McKenzie did not consider to be unusual for a detainee.
Sgt. McKenzie did not speak with Vieara.
After his station
check, Sgt. McKenzie left the station to go out on patrol,
leaving Roth alone in the building with Vieara.
Roth’s duties
were to monitor the holding cells via the closed circuit cameras,
to answer the phones, and to dispatch police, fire, or ambulance
personnel as needed.
During her periodic monitoring, Roth did
not notice Vieara doing much besides sitting or lying down.
The
last time Roth checked the camera prior to 11:30 p.m., Vieara was
lying in his cot.
6
At approximately 11:30 p.m., Roth received a phone call from
a woman who wanted to speak to Sgt. McKenzie about an earlier
incident she had reported.
minutes.
Roth spoke with her for a few
During this time, Roth was turned away from the camera.
It was during this time that Vieara took his own life.
The
video of the holding cell shows Vieara rising from his cot at
11:30:08; removing his shirt and making a “thumbs up” gesture to
the camera at 11:30:50; then removing his underwear, climbing on
his cot, and hanging himself by hooking the waistband of his
underwear onto a screw protruding between 1/8 and 1/4 inch from
the surface above the door.
(The screw had formerly secured a
Plexiglas cover for the cell’s prior video equipment.)
It took
two minutes and thirty-one seconds for Vieara to make the
preparations for hanging himself.
At approximately 11:38 p.m.,
eight minutes after he rose from his cot, Vieara made his last
movement.
At approximately 11:48 p.m., defendant James Mykland,
another police dispatcher, arrived to relieve Roth at the end of
her shift.
At that point, they checked on Vieara via the closed
circuit camera and observed that he appeared to be standing by
the cell door.
Neither went to the cell at that time.
At approximately 12:15 a.m., Sgt. McKenzie returned to the
station to retrieve the message that Roth had recorded.
7
He
noticed that Vieara appeared to be standing by the cell door and
decided to check on him.
Upon arriving, Sgt. McKenzie realized
that Vieara had hanged himself.
Sgt. McKenzie entered the cell,
checked for a pulse, and called an ambulance.
tried to revive Vieara.
He began CPR and
The medical examiner who responded
declared Vieara dead at the scene.
Jones subsequently commenced this action in Coos County
Superior Court, naming as defendants Sgt. Walker, Sgt. McKenzie,
the dispatchers, and the Town.
The defendants, invoking federal
question jurisdiction, removed the case to this court.
See 28
U.S.C. § 1441.
III.
Analysis
Jones brings a number of claims on behalf of Vieara’s
estate:
(1) against all defendants, a claim under § 1983 for
violating Vieara’s substantive due process rights; (2) against
the individual defendants, state-law negligence claims; and
(3) against the Town, theories of municipal liability, respondeat
superior, and negligent training and supervision of the officers
and dispatchers.
In moving for summary judgment on the § 1983
claim, the defendants argue that no reasonable fact finder could
conclude that the individual defendants acted with deliberate
indifference toward Vieara’s risk of suicide.
8
The court agrees.
The court also agrees with the defendants that the § 1983 claim
against the Town fails for the independent reason that there is
no evidence to suggest a causal connection between its alleged
failure to train the officers and Vieara’s suicide.
A.
The § 1983 claims
1.
Individual defendants
An officer violates the due process rights of a pretrial
detainee under the Fourteenth Amendment3 if the officer is
deliberately indifferent “to the unusually strong risk that a
detainee will commit suicide.”
F.2d 13, 16 (1st Cir. 1992).
negligence.
Bowen v. City of Manchester, 966
This standard demands more than
Id. at 17.
Rather, a plaintiff must show:
(1) an unusually serious
risk of self-inflicted harm, (2) the defendant’s actual knowledge
of, or at least willful blindness to, that elevated risk, and (3)
the defendant’s failure to take obvious steps to address that
known, serious risk.
Manarite v. City of Springfield, 957 F.2d
953, 956 (1st Cir. 1992).
“The risk, the knowledge, and the
failure to do the obvious, taken together, must show that the
defendant is ‘deliberately indifferent’ to the harm that
3
See U.S. Const. amend. XIV (“nor shall any State deprive
any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of
law ”).
9
follows.”
Id. (citations omitted).
As discussed infra, no
rational trier of fact could find either that Vieara exhibited an
unusually serious risk of self-inflicted harm, or that the
individual defendants were willfully blind to the risk he did
exhibit.
a.
Strong risk of suicide
Deliberate indifference requires a risk of self-inflicted
harm that is “large and strong.”
Elliott v. Cheshire Cnty.,
N.H., 940 F.2d 7, 11 (1st Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks
and citations omitted).
Thus, a plaintiff must demonstrate that
“[t]he strong likelihood of suicide [was] so obvious that a lay
person would easily recognize the necessity for preventative
action.”
Stewart v. Robinson, 115 F. Supp. 2d 188, 193 (D.N.H.
2000) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
In other
words, “the risk of self-inflicted injury must be not only great,
but also sufficiently apparent that a lay custodian’s failure to
appreciate it evidences an absence of any concern for the welfare
of his or her charges.”
Id. (internal quotation marks and
citations omitted).
Jones argues that a rational factfinder could conclude that
Vieara presented an unusually high risk of suicide.
Specifically, she contends that Vieara was unemployed, confused,
crying, and irritable when he was taken into protective custody
10
(even though Sgt. Walker failed to note those facts on the
evaluation form) and that, as a result, Vieara should have been
classified as a “medium risk” for suicide.
But, even putting
aside the lack of record support for much of the alleged behavior
that Sgt. Walker failed to record, see note 2, supra, a “medium
risk” of suicide, by definition, does not equate with the
“unusually strong risk” necessary to sustain Jones’s substantive
due process claim.
More importantly, there is no evidence that
Vieara revealed any intention of harming himself to Sgt. Walker,
let alone to any of the other individual defendants.
Nor is
there any indication that the behavior they observed after
placing Vieara in the cell (such as crying and “voic[ing]
displeasure”) was suggestive of such an intention, or, for that
matter, unusual for someone taken into protective custody for
intoxication.
Indeed, courts have ruled that such behavior is not nearly
enough to suggest an unusually high risk of suicide for purposes
of a substantive due process claim.
See, e.g., Perez v. Town of
Cicero, No. 06-4981, 2011 WL 3626034, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 30,
2011) (and cases cited therein) (“That [the decedent] behaved
strangely in front of [the officer]--saying odd things, not
making sense, using curse words, speaking to himself, and not
acting like a person in control of himself--did not imbue [the
11
officer] with the subjective knowledge that [the decedent] was a
suicide risk.”).
Because no rational trier of fact could
conclude that Vieara presented an unusually high risk of suicide,
the individual defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the
§ 1983 claim against them.
b.
Willful blindness
Even if Vieara’s behavior did present a high risk of
suicide, however, no rational trier of fact could conclude that
the individual defendants were willfully blind to it.4
A showing
of willful blindness requires “‘a level of culpability higher
than a negligent failure to protect from self-inflicted harm.’”
Bowen, 966 F.2d at 17 (quoting Colburn v. Upper Darby Twp., 946
F.2d 1017, 1024 (3d Cir. 1991)).
Thus, “it is not enough for
plaintiff to prove that [the defendants] reasonably should have
known of [the] risk” of suicide.
Wallis v. City of Worcester,
No. 03-11318, 2007 WL 690050, at *4 (D. Mass. Mar. 1, 2007).
It is undisputed that Sgt. Walker filled out a suicide
evaluation form for Vieara and that Sgt. McKenzie checked on him
4
As just discussed, to satisfy the second element of the
“deliberate indifference” standard here, the individual
defendants must have possessed actual knowledge of, or shown
willful blindness to, Vieara’s elevated suicide risk. Manarite,
957 F.2d at 956. Jones does not argue that the individual
defendants had actual knowledge of Vieara’s allegedly high risk
of suicide and, for the reasons just set forth, there is no
evidence to support such a theory.
12
in his cell before going out on patrol.
It is likewise
undisputed that, after Sgt. McKenzie left, Roth periodically
checked on Vieara via the video monitor.
Jones argues,
understandably, that the individual defendants should have done
more:
(1) Sgt. Walker should have filled out the form correctly;
(2) Sgt. McKenzie should not have left Vieara alone in the
station with Roth; (3) Roth should not have failed to check the
video monitor for the twenty minutes or so she spent taking the
phone message; (4) Sgt. Walker should have followed specified
procedures for intoxicated detainees;5 and (5) Sgt. Walker should
have allowed Jones to pick Vieara up at the station rather than
keeping him there overnight.
But these alleged failings “can be characterized, in the
best light for the non-movant, as negligence; [they do] not rise
to the level of a ‘deliberate indifference’ claim.”6
F.2d at 17.
Bowen, 966
As this court has observed, if police personnel
5
Even viewing the record in the light most favorable to
Jones, Sgt. Walker did not fail to follow the specified
procedures for intoxicated detainees. Jones’s argument conflates
the specified procedures for intoxicated detainees, such as
Vieara, and those for incapacitated detainees. While Sgt. Walker
arguably would have failed to follow the appropriate procedures
had Vieara been incapacitated, Jones does not contend, and the
record does not suggest, that Vieara was in that state.
6
Of course, this court expresses no view as to the merits of
Jones’s negligence claims, because it is declining to exercise
supplemental jurisdiction over them. See infra Part III(B).
13
“failed to follow rules concerning classification [or the]
supervision of inmates . . . [a] plaintiff may be able to show
that they were negligent in performing their duties.
But the
Court is not persuaded that any such failure gives rise to a
constitutional cause of action.”
Trask v. Cnty. of Strafford,
772 F. Supp. 42, 44 (D.N.H. 1991); see also, e.g., Torraco v.
Maloney, 923 F.2d 231, 234 (1st Cir. 1991).
Indeed, the court of
appeals has held that a 45-minute delay in checking on a
detainee--who was on a 15-minute watch because of his known risk
of self-injury--did not amount to deliberate indifference.
Dobson v. Magnusson, 923 F.2d 229, 231 (1st Cir. 1991).
In light of this authority, Jones cannot show, as a matter
of law, that the individual defendants were deliberately
indifferent to whatever risk of suicide Vieara exhibited.
They
are entitled to summary judgment on the § 1983 claim for that
reason as well.
2.
The Town
As the court of appeals has held, “‘the inadequate training
of a police officer cannot be a basis for a municipal liability
. . . unless a constitutional injury has been inflicted by the
officer or officers whose training was allegedly inferior.’”
Fryar v. Curtis, 485 F.3d 179, 183 (1st Cir. 2007) (quoting Calvi
v. Knox Cnty., 470 F.3d 422, 429 (1st Cir. 2006)); see also Evans
14
v. Avery, 100 F.3d 1033, 1040 (1st Cir. 1996).
Accordingly,
because the individual defendants did not violate Vieara’s
substantive due process rights so as to incur liability under
§ 1983, the Town cannot be liable under § 1983 either.
The Town is entitled to summary judgment on the § 1983 claim
against it for an independent reason.
While a municipality
cannot be held liable for the unconstitutional actions of its
employees on a respondeat superior theory, liability can attach
if those actions resulted from a town’s failure to train or to
supervise its employees.
See City of Canton, Ohio v. Harris, 489
U.S. 378, 388-89 (1989).
That is the basis of Jones’s § 1983
claim against the Town here.
“The liability criteria for
‘failure to train’ claims are exceptionally stringent, however.”
Hayden v. Grayson, 134 F.3d 449, 456 (1st Cir. 1998) (citing
Canton, 489 U.S. at 388-89).
A plaintiff must demonstrate both
that a city’s failure to train the officers “amounts to
deliberate indifference to the rights of persons with whom the
police come into contact,” Canton, 489 U.S. at 388, and that “the
identified deficiency in the city’s training program [was]
closely related to the ultimate injury,” id. at 391.
Here, even
assuming--without deciding--that the Town was deliberately
indifferent in not giving its police personnel proper training
against violating detainees’ substantive due process rights by
15
failing to prevent their suicides, no rational factfinder could
conclude that this failing was closely related to Vieara’s
suicide.7
Jones argues that Sgt. Walker should have been better
trained in screening for suicidal detainees and that Sgt.
McKenzie and the dispatchers should have been better trained in
monitoring such detainees.
As already discussed, however, Jones
has not pointed to any evidence suggesting that even a properly
trained police officer would have identified Vieara as a suicide
risk, given his largely innocuous behavior.
As the court of
appeals has instructed, “[t]he Constitution does not impose on
custodial officials a duty to undergo extensive psychological
training to guard against unknown suicide risks.”
F.2d at 19.
Bowen, 966
Nor has Jones pointed to evidence suggesting that a
properly trained dispatcher would have seen the beginning of
Vieara’s suicide attempt and been able to intervene in time to
stop it.8
See Stewart, 115 F. Supp. 2d at 199-200 (“It is
7
Jones argues that the Town did not provide the police with
any training in identifying and monitoring potentially suicidal
detainees. That argument is undermined by the affidavits of Sgt.
Walker and Sgt. McKenzie, as well as the existence of the suicide
risk evaluation form. Regardless, as discussed infra, Jones has
not raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a lack
of training was closely related to Vieara’s suicide.
8
Jones has offered a report from his designated expert on
“correctional management and custodial care,” Thomas A. Rosazza,
opining that, had Walker checked “confused,” “crying,”
16
insufficient for [the plaintiff] merely to allege that the
County’s correctional facility could have been better designed or
that additional measures could have been implemented to prevent
inmate suicide attempts.”).
Jones has not raised a genuine issue
of material fact as to whether an alleged deficiency in training
actually caused the individual defendants to violate Vieara’s
substantive due process rights in failing to protect him from
“irritable,” and “protective custody” on the assessment form,
then Vieara would have been classified as “medium risk,” which
the report says “should have required a heightened level of
observation and supervision” and that “[h]ad Vieara been on a
heightened suicide watch . . . Roth would have seen [him] in the
process of committing suicide.” Rosazza goes on to state that
“[t]he standard of care for a potentially suicidal detainee is to
place him on constant observation . . . until he is evaluated by
a mental health professional.” Putting aside Rosazza's mixing
and matching of seemingly inconsistent and unexplained
terminology as to degrees of suicide risk and suicide monitoring,
he does not provide any basis for his opinion that a “medium
risk” of suicide--and Jones does not claim that Vieara should
have been scored any higher than that, even had the form been
properly completed--requires a level of monitoring under which
Roth would have noticed Vieara in the midst of his suicide (if
that is even in fact Rosazza's opinion). Cf. Fed. R. Evid. 702.
While Rosazza's report, in a list of “Documents Reviewed,”
references some published correctional standards, he does not
describe the content of those standards at all or say anything
else even remotely linking them to the conclusion that rating
Vieara just a medium risk of suicide would have required Roth to
watch him closely enough to have prevented his death (indeed, if
Rosazza is in fact opining that a “medium risk” of suicide
demands constant, or near-constant, monitoring, then it begs the
question of why the evaluation form has higher categories of risk
than that). Accordingly, Rosazza's report does not create a
genuine issue of material fact as to whether the allegedly
deficient failure to train Walker to properly complete the
evaluation form caused Vieara's death. See Bowen, 966 F.2d at 19
n.16.
17
suicide.
For this reason, the Town is entitled to summary
judgment on the § 1983 claim against it.
B.
State-law claims
In light of the entry of judgment for the defendants on
Jones’s federal constitutional claim, the court declines to
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over her state-law claims.
See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3).
“[I]n the usual case in which all
federal-law claims are eliminated before trial . . . judicial
economy, convenience, fairness, and comity . . . will point
toward declining to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining
state-law claims.”
343, 350 n.7 (1988).
Carnegie-Mellon Univ. v. Cohill, 484 U.S.
IV.
This is the usual case.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court grants the defendants’
motions for summary judgment9 as to Jones’s § 1983 claim and
declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Jones’s state
law claims.
Those claims are remanded to the Coos County
Superior Court.
The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly and
close the case.
9
Document nos. 14-15.
18
SO ORDERED.
____________________________
Joseph N. LaPlante
United States District Judge
Dated:
cc:
December 16, 2011
Vincent A. Wenners, Jr., Esq.
Brian J.S. Cullen, Esq.
Daniel J. Mullen, Esq.
19
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