Anita ARRINGTON-BEY, Administratrix of the Estate of Omar K. Arrington-Bey, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. CITY OF BEDFORD HEIGHTS, OHIO; Tim Honsaker; Maurice Ellis; Phillip Chow; David Leonardi; Jeffrey Mudra; Cheryl Sindone; Cynthia Lee; Carolyn Hill, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 16-3317
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
February 24, 2017
Rehearing En Banc Denied July 5, 2017
Argued: February 1, 2017
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM.
Before: BATCHELDER, SUTTON, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge.
When Omar Arrington-Bey died in a Bedford Heights jail cell, that was not an obvious consequence of his arrest for disturbing the peace at a Lowe’s store. The question is whether bad luck, negligence by the relevant local law enforcement officials, or deliberate indifference by them caused his death. In suing the officers involved in his arrest and detention and the City, Omar’s mother, Anita Arrington-Bey, took the position that the officers’ deliberate indifference and lack of adequate training caused her son’s death, making them liable under the Fourteenth Amendment and Ohio law. The district court largely agreed. It denied federal and state immunity to all but one defendant, dismissed the state law and punitive damages claims against the City, and denied summary judgment to the City on the federal constitutional claim. We must reverse, however, because there was no violation of a clearly established constitutional right, and the officers did not act with the recklessness that would permit them to be liable under Ohio law.
Here is what happened. On June 21, 2013, Anita drove Omar to the Lowe’s in Bedford Heights, where he’d recently been fired after failing to show up to work for over a week, to pick up his last paycheck. When the assistant manager, Russell Nelson, came over to see him, Omar “started talking a lot of gibberish,” including about selling $5,000 gloves to Lowe’s or Kohl’s. R. 39-7 at 5. Nelson knew that “something was a little off” and started guiding Omar
The officers spotted Omar’s car pulling out of the Lowe’s parking lot and stopped it nearby. Omar was in the passenger seat, had changed his shirt, and was evasive when they asked him whether he was the one causing trouble at Lowe’s. But he was compliant and calm when they asked him to step out of the car. During the pat-down, the officers discovered pills in a container, which they placed back in Omar’s pocket after handcuffing and detaining him. Honsaker recalled Omar saying that the pills were for a psychiatric condition and that he had not taken his medication for days or weeks. Anita told Ellis that Omar was bipolar, that the pills were Seroquel, and that he had not taken his medication for some time.
Everyone returned to the Lowe’s parking lot while the police continued their investigation. According to Honsaker, Omar “was rambling and ranting and raving about every possible topic he could think of” and became angry if Honsaker interjected. R. 41-4 at 43. Omar claimed, among other things, that he made lots of money through internet businesses, that he had a million-dollar cell phone, and that his father was the son of Satan. That behavior led Honsaker to ask Anita if Omar was on any psychiatric medication, and she told him just what she’d told Ellis: that Omar was bipolar and hadn’t been taking his medicine. Phillip Chow, the supervising officer at the scene, got much of the same information—that Omar had been found with Seroquel, that he was talking non-stop, and that he had claimed to be a state trooper.
Honsaker delivered Omar to the jail, where correctional officers Cynthia Lee and Carolyn Hill processed his intake. Honsaker told Lee and Hill about Omar’s agitated rambling in the back of the cruiser, and they acknowledged that they had already heard that Omar had been arrested for going “crazy” at Lowe’s. R. 38-3 at 15. They found Omar’s pills during a pat-down but did not ask what they were. Hill decided to delay booking (and the included psychological screening) until Omar calmed down, because Hill and Lee, both female, were the only two correctional officers on duty. They put Omar in the segregation room. When they uncuffed him and he removed his belt, Omar acted like he was performing a striptease.
Over the next several hours, Omar would calm down from time to time but then return to rambling, talking to himself, and engaging in other unusual behavior. For example: He kicked the door of the interview room, sang and rapped, and talked some more about his million-dollar music contract. When Honsaker and Chow escorted him to the bathroom, Omar shook his penis and asked Honsaker if he’d like to hold it. He told Chow that he needed his cell phone because there were million dollar plans on it. At one point, Assistant Police Chief David Leonardi—who’d been told about Omar’s pills, bizarre behavior, and possible mental problems—went to find out why Omar was pounding on the door of the interview room. Omar responded with racial slurs until Leonardi threatened to put him in the restraint chair.
Correctional officers Jeffrey Mudra and Cheryl Sindone began their shift at 3:00 PM. Lee and Hill briefed them on Omar’s agitated behavior and warned them to use double-escorting whenever Omar was out of the interview room. When Omar was calm and had stopped talking to himself, Mudra and Sindone went to serve him
At 6:30 PM, Mudra let Omar out of the interrogation room without handcuffs so that Omar could make a phone call. Without warning, Omar threw Mudra to the floor and began choking him. Sindone called for backup, then jumped on Omar’s back. Omar started choking her too. Police officers rushed into the jail and pulled Omar into the restraint chair. At that point, Leonardi noticed something wrong. They took Omar’s pulse: weak. Then they got him out of the restraint chair, laid him prone on the floor, and tried to resuscitate him. Leonardi called the emergency rescue squad, which transported Omar to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The autopsy explained that Omar had “died as a result of a sudden cardiac event during a physical altercation in association with bipolar disease.” R. 39-15 at 4.
Anita Arrington-Bey sued the individual officers, the doctor responsible for medical policies at the jail, and the City for violations of Omar’s federal and state rights. The defendants moved for summary judgment. The district court granted qualified immunity to the doctor, who had never come into contact with Omar, and dismissed the state law claims against the doctor and the City. But it denied qualified immunity to all of the officers and denied the City’s motion for summary judgment on the Fourteenth Amendment due process claim.
Standard of review. Summary judgment is proper if “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Qualified immunity. In
The second prong resolves this case. Because no case clearly established the unlawfulness of the decisions made during Omar’s arrest and detention, the officers involved are entitled to qualified immunity. Yes, “a pretrial detainee’s right to medical treatment for a serious medical need has been established since at least 1987.” Est. of Carter v. City of Detroit, 408 F.3d 305, 313 (6th Cir. 2005). And yes, that right encompasses physiological and psychiatric ailments. See Clark-Murphy v. Foreback, 439 F.3d 280, 292 (6th Cir. 2006).
But these principles do not suffice on their own. “[C]learly established law” may not be defined at such “a high level of generality.” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 742 (2011). It must be more “particularized”
Arrington-Bey has not pointed to, and we have not found, any case like this one—a case showing that the officers at the scene immediately needed to seek medical treatment or that the jailers had to do the same once he arrived at the prison. Start with the arresting officers. No doubt, Honsaker, Ellis, and Chow perceived that Omar was mentally unstable—and rightly so. But no case would have notified them of a constitutional requirement that they take Omar to an emergency room rather than the jail. No case, indeed, clearly required them to do more than what they did—collect Omar’s pills, note his aggressive behavior and his mother’s statement that Omar was bipolar and off his medication, and inform the jailers. In delivering him to the jail, they had no reason to doubt that reasonable procedures would be used at that point, whether with respect to medical screening or separation of him from other arrestees if putting him in the general population might prove dangerous. Taking Omar to the jail under those circumstances did not violate any clearly established law.
Arrington-Bey’s case citations are at least one step removed from this fact pattern. We begin with, and could end with, the reality that she points to no Supreme Court or Sixth Circuit case that requires officers to take a delusional arrestee like Omar to a hospital rather than a jail. Each of Arrington-Bey’s cases fails to address this point, and not one involves remotely comparable facts. Cooper v. County of Washtenaw involved a cognizable claim brought by relatives of a detainee who killed himself. But the detainee in that case expressed suicidal tendencies, and the officers neglected a court order that the individual be placed on suicide watch. 222 Fed.Appx. 459, 465, 468-69 (6th Cir. 2007). No such warnings appeared here, and above all Omar’s delusional behavior did not portend the risk that came to pass: a heart attack. Nor is Estate of Owensby v. City of Cincinnati of any help, as it had nothing to do with psychiatric care. 385 F.Supp.2d 626, 636 (S.D. Ohio 2004). She also looks outside the circuit to Mann v. Taser International, Inc., 588 F.3d 1291 (11th Cir. 2009). But that case ruled for the officers who had taken an arrestee to jail even after witnessing plainly delusional and violent behavior during the arrest. Id. at 1299-1301, 1308. And in Degraw v. Gualtieri, No. 8:11-CV-720-EAK-MAP, 2013 WL 6002837, at *4 (M.D. Fla. Nov. 12, 2013), there was no dispute that a psychotic detainee could be held and treated at the jail rather than at a hospital. In short, no clearly established law, here or anywhere else from what we’ve seen, required the arresting officers to drive Omar to a hospital rather than the jail under these circumstances.
Now consider the jailers. Even if the corrections officers had reason to know
Because a reasonable officer in the situations confronted by officers Honsaker, Ellis, Chow, Hill, Lee, Mudra, Sindone, and Leonardi could have believed their treatment of Omar was lawful, they each are entitled to qualified immunity.
Monell claim. The district court also denied summary judgment to the City on the
The point deserves some elaboration and qualification. Municipalities are not vicariously liable in
There are important differences between these types of claims. When an injury arises directly from a municipal act—such as firing a city official without due process, see Owen v. City of Indep., 445 U.S. 622, 629, 638 (1980), or ordering police to enter a private business without a warrant, see Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati, 475 U.S. 469, 474, 484-85 (1986)—the violated right need not be clearly established because
In Owen and Pembaur, it’s true, the Court held that municipalities may not invoke the qualified immunity hurdle of clearly established rights. But that was because neither case arose from claims of deliberate municipal indifference. The municipalities themselves directly caused each constitutional injury. See Owen, 445 U.S. at 633; Pembaur, 475 U.S. at 485. That contrasts with a deliberate-indifference case, where the causal link between the city’s failure to train and the injury is more attenuated. In a deliberate-indifference case, the claimant must show not only that an employee’s act caused a constitutional tort, but also that the city’s failure to train its employees caused the employee’s violation and that the city culpably declined to train its “employees to handle recurring situations presenting an obvious potential for such a violation.” Brown, 520 U.S. at 409; see Szabla, 486 F.3d at 393. “[O]bvious potential for such a violation” has two elements: It must be obvious that the failure to train will lead to certain conduct, and it must be obvious (i.e., clearly established) that the conduct will violate constitutional rights. As Judge Colloton pointed out in his opinion for the en banc Eighth Circuit in Szabla, requiring that the right be clearly established does not give qualified immunity to municipalities; it simply follows City of Canton’s and Brown’s demand that deliberate indifference in fact be deliberate. Szabla, 486 F.3d at 394.
We likewise agree with the Eighth Circuit that this rule is the only way to thread the needle between permitted failure-to-train liability under City of Canton and impermissible respondeat superior liability under Monell. “[W]ithout some form of notice to the city, and the opportunity to conform to constitutional dictates both what it does and what it chooses not to do, the failure to train theory of liability could completely engulf Monell, imposing liability without regard to fault.” Id. at 393 (quoting City of Canton, 489 U.S. at 395 (O‘Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)). Indeed. The Second Circuit takes the same approach. See Townes v. City of New York, 176 F.3d 138, 143-44 (2d Cir. 1999); Young, 160 F.3d at 904. The First, Seventh, and Eleventh Circuits have noted the same requirement of clear constitutional duties. See Febus-Rodriguez v. Betancourt-Lebron, 14 F.3d 87, 94 n.10 (1st Cir. 1994); Robles v. City of Fort Wayne, 113 F.3d 732, 735 (7th Cir. 1997); Young v. City of Augusta, 59 F.3d 1160, 1172 (11th Cir. 1995). And so have we. See Hagans, 695 F.3d at 511.
Arrington-Bey’s complaint raises a deliberate-indifference claim. She does not point to any allegedly unconstitutional express policy or municipal act, but instead relies on the absence of a policy and the failure of the City or its final policymakers to train police and jailers about mental health care for arrestees. See Appellee’s Br. 55-60. With such a claim, she must show that the allegedly violated right was clearly established. And for the reasons noted earlier, she cannot do so. The absence of a clearly established right spells the end of this Monell claim.
Police officers face tough judgment calls about what to do with the mentally ill. Arrestees do not normally arrive at jail toting their medical records. Psychiatric problems do not always manifest themselves with clarity. And not even clear psychiatric problems always reveal their potential for serious harm—as here a heart attack. Perhaps those truths counsel in favor of more policies and training designed to minimize tragic injuries and deaths like Omar’s. And perhaps police would be wise to err on the side of calling a doctor in cases like this one. But the United States Constitution and Ohio law do not elevate any deviation from wise policy into a cognizable lawsuit for money damages against the City or the relevant law enforcement officers.
For these reasons, we reverse.
