Lead Opinion
Brandy Andrews (Andrews) brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against a broad array of defendants for damages arising from the death of her father, Bobby Andrews, while he was an involuntary patient at Fulton State Hospital in Fulton, Missouri. Her case proceeded to trial and judgment in her favor only against the defendants who are here the appellants. The claim tried was that these defendants — all security aides at the hospital— used constitutionally excessive force during the takedown and restraint that resulted in Bobby Andrews’s death. The jury found these defendants liable and awarded damages to Andrews.
The defendant security aides, namely, David Neer, Roy Míreles, Kirk Forgy, Lance Newman, Raymond Baker, David Childs, Rаlph Anderson, Aaron Cole, David Summers, and Paul Harper (hereinafter appellants) appeal from the District Court’s partial denial of their motion for judgment as a matter of law or, in the alternative, a new trial. Appellants argue that Andrews lacks standing in her individual capacity to assert any claim under § 1983, that the District Court improperly instructed the jury, that the court abused its discretion by awarding punitive damages and fading to vacate the general punitive damages award after vacating Andrews’s individual damages award, and that the jury rendered a verdict against the weight of the evidence. Appellants also allege error in numerous evidentiary rulings.
Andrews cross-appeals, challenging the District Court’s adverse grant of judgment as a matter of law as to her claim under § 1983 for damages based on her own injuries. We affirm on the cross-appeal. On the appeal, we vacate the judgment and remand to the District Court for a new trial.
I.
The state of Missouri committed Bobby Andrews to Fulton State Hospital in 1983 after he was found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity. On the evening of April 24, 1995, security aide Raymond Baker was distributing cigarettes in the ward where Bobby Andrews resided. Bobby Andrews wished to purchase a cigarette, but lacked enough tokens. When Baker refused to give him the cigarette, he became agitated and angry, backing into a cоrner and swinging a book at those who tried to approach him and calm him down. Baker pushed the emergency code button, calling an “Orange Code” to which other aides at the hospital responded. The group of security aides responding to the Orange Code included all of the other appellants.
Once the code team had the leather restraints in place, the team got up off Bobby Andrews and attempted to move him to a seclusion room. At that point, team members testified they first noticed that he had stopped moving, his lips were blue, and he did not appear to be breathing. Despite efforts to revive him, he died after being transported to the local community hospital.
Bobby Andrews’s autopsy revealed a small amount of blood in the tissue surrounding the thyroid gland and distention of the veins in his eyes and cranium. The pathologist interpreted these findings as consistent with compression of the airway during the takedown. An expert witness for the plaintiff concurred.
Andrews’s theory of the case was that the security aides used a choke hold or otherwise compressed Bobby Andrews’s airway during the takedown, and as a re-suit he suffered a fatal cardiac arrhythmia cаused by a lack of oxygen. She sought damages on behalf of her father for the injury he suffered as a result of the appellants’ allegedly unconstitutional use of force. She also requested damages for her own injuries as authorized by the Missouri wrongful death statute. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.080-.090 (1994). Finally, she requested punitive damages. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Andrews, awarding $250,000 to Andrews for injuries suffered by her father, $150,000 to Andrews for her own injuries, and $180,000 in punitive damages. The District Court subsequently vacated the award of damages to Andrews for her own injuries, holding that the compensable injuries were limited to those suffered by her father and that § 1983 did not incorporate state wrongful death remedies that wоuld allow Andrews to recover damages for her own injuries.
II.
Appellants argue the District Court erred when it held that Andrews has standing to pursue a § 1983 action to recover damages for injuries suffered by her father. Under § 1983, state actors who infringe the constitutional rights of an individual are liable “to the party injured.” 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1994 & Supp. IV 1998). The appropriate plaintiff is obvious when a party survives his injuries, but the language of § 1983 makes no mention of permissible plaintiffs when the injured party dies. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(a) (1994), in this situation we look to state law to determine who is a proper plaintiff, as long as state law is not inconsistent with the Constitution or federal law. See Robertson v. Wegmann,
The Missouri survival statute provides that “[clauses of action for personal injuries, other than those resulting in death, ... shall not abate by reason of [the injured party’s] death” and it allows the action to survive “to the personal representative of such injured party.” Mo. Rev.Stat. § 537.020(1).
It is the Missouri wrongful death statute that addresses the survival of inju
[w]henever the death of a person results from any act ... which, if death had not ensued, would have entitled such person to recover damages in respect thereof, the person or party who ... would have been hable if death had not ensued shall be liable in an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured, which damages may be sued for: (1) By the spouse or children or the surviving lineal descendants ....
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.080. The Missouri Supreme Court has declared the wrongful death statute to be the sole source of a cause of action in Missouri where the injuries sustained by the decedent caused the decedent’s death. In Sullivan v. Carlisle, the court warned that the wrongful death statute “should not be confused with the so-called ‘survival statutes,’ which ensure that pre-existing claims will not abate upon the death of the plaintiff or defendant.”
Finally, we conclude that the purposes of the Missouri wrongful death act are consistent with the goals of § 1983. Compare O’Grady v. Brown,
Appellants next argue that the District Court erred by improperly instructing the jury on Andrews’s claim. They argue that the court’s verdict-directing instructions
We review allegedly erroneous jury instructions for an abuse of discretion, considering whether the instructions, when viewed together in light of the evidence and the applicable law, fairly submitted the issues in the case to the jury. Grain Land Coop v. Kar Kim Farms, Inc.,
The jury instructions directed a verdict for Andrews if the jury first found that each aide “acted with deliberate indifference by restraining Bobby Andrews,” and second, that “as a direct result, Bobby Andrews was fatally injured.” The instructions further defined deliberate indifference as requiring plaintiff to “prove that defendant [security aide] knew that Bobby Andrews faced a substantial risk of serious harm during the restraint ... and disregarded that risk by failing to take reasonable measures under the circumstances to protect Bobby Andrews.” Thus, the court applied a deliberate-indifference standard, defined in terms of a failure-tо-protect theory, to Andrews’s claim. In denying appellants’ post-verdict motion for a new trial, the court explained that it gave such an instruction because Andrews’s claim was “not that Defendants restrained [Bobby Andrews] with unnecessary violence, but rather that Defendants failed to assist him after he was injured by this restraint.” App. at 154.
Neither the verdict-directing instructions nor the District Court’s post-verdict characterization of Andrews’s claim, based upon the record as a whole, accurately states the basis of the claim that Andrews presented to the jury. In the trial record, the court and the parties continually refer to the single claim at issue as an excessivе-force claim. During the discussion of the jury instructions immediately before closing arguments, the court stated that “these are the verdict directing instructions for each of the named appellants on the excessive force claim.” Tr. at 701 (emphasis added). Later in that discussion, the court noted, “I should make it clear in terms of the excessive force claim, and why I have chosen the deliberate indifferent [sic] standard.” Id. at 704 (emphasis added). In response to a defense objection during closing arguments, the court replied that “[c]ertainly an effort to cover something up would go to the excessive force and the credibility” issues in the case. Id. at 726 (emphasis added).
The many references to an excessive-force theory, and the trial record as a whole, undercut the District Court’s post-verdict characterization of the claim submitted to the jury as resting on a failure-to-protect theory. App. at 154-55. The verdict-directing instructions specifically state that the claim submitted was an excessive-force claim, but then proceed to tell the jury to apply a deliberate-indifference standard defined by a failure-to-protect theory. The many references made to an “excessive-force claim” and the dissonance betweеn that characterization of the claim, which was entirely proper in terms of the manner in which the claim was presented and tried, and the constitutional standard applied by the District Court cause us to conclude that the instructions as a whole neither fairly nor adequately submitted the issues in the case to the jury.
Because the underlying right at issue throughout this case was Bobby Andrews’s constitutional right to be free from the use of excessive force, we turn to an examination of the appropriate constitutional standard. This Circuit has not addressed the constitutional standard applicable to § 1983 excessive-force claims in the context of involuntarily committed state hospital patients. In other situations in which excessive force is alleged by a person in custody, the constitutional standard applied may vary depending upon whether the victim is an arrestee, a pretrial detainee, or a convicted inmate of a penal institution. If the victim is an arres-tee, the Fourth Amendment’s “objective reasonableness” standard controls. Graham v. Connor,
Andrews’s excessive force claim does not fit neatly into an analysis based on status as an arrestee, a pre-trial detainee, or a prisoner. Bobby Andrews was held in Fulton after having been found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity, аnd thus he was not a “prisoner” subject to punishment. See Bell,
Based on the foregoing discussion, we hold that the District Court
IV.
Because we reverse and remand for a new trial, we briefly address the evidentia-ry objections raised by appellants. United States v. Amerson,
Federal Rule of Evidence 601 governs the competency of witnesses in federal court. “Every person is competent to be a witness except as otherwise provided in these rules.” Fed.R.Evid. 601. Rule 601 contains a single exception to this general rule of competency—state law governs competency when it “supplies the rule of decision.” Id. This proviso has no application, however, “in civil cases in which the substantive law being applied is found in some federal statute. Hence, the federal law of competency governs suits under ... the various federal statutes concerning civil rights.” 27 Charles Alan Wright & Victor James Gold, Federal Practice and Procedure § 6007, at 74 (1990). Furthermore, “[w]here state substantive law is being used ‘to fill the interstices or gaps in federal statutory phrases’ as part of the ‘federal common law,’ the Conference Report [on FRE 601] suggests that state competency law need not be applied under Rule 601.” Id. at 76.
Appellants cannot plausibly argue that state law provides the “rulе of decision” in this case simply because the District Court applied Missouri law to determine the question of standing to sue, as required by 42 U.S.C. § 1988(a). Pleas was competent to testify under Rule 601’s provisions; no other provision of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides to the contrary. Furthermore, the court adequately evaluated his ability to testify truthfully before admitting his videotaped deposition testimony.
We have carefully considered appellants’ other evidentiary objections, evaluating them under the abuse-of-discretion standard. Dominium Mgmt Servs., Inc. v. Nationwide Hous. Group,
V.
In her cross-appeal, Andrews challenges the District Court’s order vacating the damages awarded to her for injuries she suffered as a result of her father’s death. Andrews argues that surviving family members should be allowed to collect damages on their own behalf in a § 1983 claim for the wrongful death of another.
We previously have declined to decide this question. Yellow Horse v. Pennington County,
The Fifth Circuit stands opposite the Tenth Circuit in its treatment of the damages available to a plaintiff in a § 1983 death case. In Brazier v. Cherry,
Our careful consideration of the competing arguments on this issue leads us to conclude that the approach of the Tenth Circuit, as set forth in Berry, represents the correct assessment of the damages available in § 1983 death cases. As the court aptly explained in Berry, adoption of the approach Andrews advocates would “place intо the hands of the state the decision as to allocation of the recovery in
VI.
We hold that Brandy Andrews has standing under the Missouri wrongful death statute, Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.080, to bring this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action for the injury suffered by her father at Fulton State Hospital. We conclude that the District Court committed no abuse of discretion in the evidentiary rulings challenged in this appeal. But we do hold that the court abused its discretion by giving erroneous verdict-directing instructions, and we therefore vacate the judgment for Andrews entered by the District Court and remand for .a new trial. Because we remand for a new trial, we do not reach the merits of the punitive-damages and the weight-of-the-evidence issues raised by appellants. We affirm the judgment of the District Court in Andrews’s cross-appeal.
Notes
. During the trial, whether one of the security aides applied a choke hold was a disputed question of fact. The parties stipulated that the official policy of Fulton Hospital banned the use of choke holds during patient restraints.
. The statute also provides that "[clauses of action for death shall not abаte by reason of the death of any party to any such cause of action, but shall survive to the personal representative of such party bringing such cause of action.” Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.020(1). Appellants attempt to employ this language to distinguish actions for “wrongful death” from actions "for death” under Missouri law. They assert that the phrase "action for death” in the survival statute means an action brought for damages inflicted when a personal injury causes the decedent's death. The Missouri Supreme Court has held that the statute's reference to a "cause of action for death” does not refer to the type of action at issue in Andrews's casе; rather, it refers to a situation where a cause of action for the wrongful death of another accrued to the decedent before the decedent's death. See Cameron v. Morrison,
. Appellants argue that our decision in Frey v. City of Herculaneum,
Each of the other cases appellants cite for the proposition that the Missouri survival statute governs the issue of standing is distinguishable on its facts from this case. E.g., Small v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
. Appellants' argument, that because Brandy Andrews dismissed her pendent state-law wrоngful death claim before trial her remain
. Appellants challenge instructions 16 through 26. Each of these instructions contains identical language; the only difference among them is the insertion of a different defendant’s name.
. Furthermore, although given our disposition of the case we need not and do not address appellants' argument that the jury verdict was against the weight of the evidence, we express some concern оn that point. Liability for Bobby Andrews's injuries was attributed to each of the appellants without delineation as to which aide or aides actually compressed Bobby Andrews's airway or otherwise used excessive force. We find this troublesome, considering the evidence at trial suggesting that not every security aide present at the takedown participated equally in Bobby Andrews’s restraint and that each of them was fully occupied with his own contribution to the joint effort to subdue this large and violent man.
. We note that the appellants' proposed verdict-directing instruction, rejected by the District Court, contained the constitutional standard we hold should have applied to Andrews's excessive-force claim. Their proposed instruction tracked the language of the Eighth Circuit Model Instruction 4.20 on Excessive Use of Force — Pretrial Detainees— Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. Manual of Model Civil Jury Instructions 4.20 (1999). We believe that an instruction similar to 4.20 would have accurately stated the law and the theory of Andrews's case. For convenient reference, we set forth the text of Model Instruction 4.20:
Your verdict must be for plaintiff [and against defendant__] [here generally describe the claim] if all the following elements have been proved by the [(greater weight) or (preponderance)] of the evidence:
First, defendant [here describe an act such as "struck, hit, or kicked”] plaintiff, and
Second, the use of force was excessive because it was not reasonably necessary to [here describe the purpose for which force was used such as "restore order," or "maintain discipline,”], and
Third, as a direct result, plaintiff was damaged, and
[Fourth, defendant was acting under col- or of state law.]
In determining whether such force [if any] was excessive, you must consider such factors as the need for the application of force, the relationship between the need and the amount of force that was used, the extent of the injury inflicted, and whether it was used for punishment or instead to achieve a legitimate purpose such as maintaining order or security within [here describe the facility in which plaintiff was incarcerated] and whether a reasonable officer on the scene would have used such force under similar circumstances.
If any of the above elements has not been proved by the [(greater weight) or (preponderance)] of the evidence, then your verdict must be for defendant.
Manual of Model Civil Jury Instructions 4.20 (1999) (footnotes omitted).
. We recognize that failure to protect can be a viable substantive-due-process claim as applied to involuntarily committed mental patients. See Youngberg v. Romeo,
. At the time of trial, Pleas was no longer confined at Fulton. The court admitted his
Concurrence Opinion
I join in the opinion of the court with the exception of footnote 8. The majority adopts a blanket rule which seems to foreclose failure-to-protect claims against security staff at an institution whenever they must act quickly to guard staff, other patients, or themselves against a patient’s sudden outbursts. I disagree with this approach. Security staff at prison and mental institutions are invariably trained and retrained to respond to sudden prisoner and patient outbursts. Because of this training, we must expect that their conduct will usually include some level of deliberation. Therefore, I believe a claim alleging deliberate indifference under a failure-to-protect theory can be viable in some situations involving sudden outbursts. Each case should stand on its own facts.
Not only do I disagree that we can аdopt a blanket rule, I believe the majority’s rule is overinclusive. I can envision situations involving sudden outbursts where we should recognize a failure-to-protect claim under a deliberate indifference standard. For example, security staff might adopt a practice of employing unconstitutional restraint measures when responding to sudden outbursts. Or a staff member, as a result of sufficient animus against a particularly troublesome patient, could fail to protect the patient from unreasonable restraint by deliberately standing by idly while a coworker employs a prohibited chokehold.
I agree that the facts of this particular case do not support a failure-to-protect claim, and therefore join the majority opinion in all other respects.
