History
  • No items yet
midpage
Spencer v. Jordan
1:22-cv-00557
S.D. Ohio
Aug 8, 2023
Read the full case

Background

  • Plaintiff Jermaine Spencer alleged SOCF guards beat him in an unprovoked attack in 2020 and sued the guards plus SOCF Warden Ronald Erdos and ODRC Director Annette Chambers-Smith in both individual and official capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.\
  • Spencer claimed Erdos and Chambers-Smith were deliberately indifferent to his safety by failing to train/supervise guards and pointed to a 2014 lawsuit asserting similar facts as evidence of a pattern.\
  • Erdos and Chambers-Smith moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), arguing Eleventh Amendment immunity (official capacity), lack of personal involvement, and qualified immunity (individual capacity).\
  • The Magistrate Judge recommended dismissal of the supervisors; Spencer objected only to dismissal of the individual-capacity claims and the district court reviewed that portion de novo.\
  • The court applied Sixth Circuit supervisory-liability standards (requiring active unconstitutional behavior, ratification, or cover-up) and found Spencer’s allegations—knowledge of a 2014 suit and a vague “history of abuse”—insufficient to plausibly allege personal involvement or acquiescence.\
  • The court adopted the R&R, dismissed claims against Erdos and Chambers-Smith without prejudice, terminated them from the case, and left the other claims to proceed.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether Spencer plausibly alleged individual-capacity supervisory liability for deliberate indifference (failure to train/supervise) Spencer: supervisors knew of a 2014 lawsuit alleging similar abuse and thus should be held liable for acquiescence/failure to prevent recurrence Erdos/Chambers-Smith: no allegations they participated in, encouraged, had advance notice of, or covered up the 2020 attack; mere knowledge of past isolated incident insufficient Dismissed: allegations do not plausibly show active participation, authorization, approval, or knowing acquiescence required for personal liability
Whether qualified immunity bars individual-capacity claims Spencer: qualified immunity does not apply because the alleged failure to act in face of known pattern is unconstitutional Defendants: even if alleged, they are entitled to qualified immunity Court did not reach qualified immunity because claims failed on the merits
Whether Eleventh Amendment bars official-capacity claims Spencer did not contest the R&R on official-capacity claims Defendants asserted Eleventh Amendment immunity Court accepted R&R: official-capacity claims barred (Spencer forfeited objection)

Key Cases Cited

  • Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662 (establishes pleading standard requiring factual content to show plausible liability)
  • Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (pleading must state a claim that is plausible on its face)
  • Peatross v. City of Memphis, 818 F.3d 233 (Sixth Circuit: supervisor liability requires encouragement, direct participation, or ratification/cover-up)
  • Coley v. Lucas County, 799 F.3d 530 (Sixth Circuit allowed non-present supervisor claim to survive where cover-up alleged)
  • Crawford v. Tilley, 15 F.4th 752 (Sixth Circuit on supervisory liability and requirement to plausibly allege authorization/approval/acquiescence)
  • Phillips v. Roane County, 534 F.3d 531 (Sixth Circuit distinguishing inadequate-supervision claims from actionable supervisory liability)
  • Zakora v. Chrisman, 44 F.4th 452 (Sixth Circuit recognizing supervisors can be individually liable in certain failure-to-train/supervise scenarios)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Spencer v. Jordan
Court Name: District Court, S.D. Ohio
Date Published: Aug 8, 2023
Citation: 1:22-cv-00557
Docket Number: 1:22-cv-00557
Court Abbreviation: S.D. Ohio