Linnie Kay BERRY, individually and as natural mother and
nеxt friend of her three minor children whose natural father
was Mark A. Berry, deceased; and as Personal Representative
of the Estate of Mark A. Berry, deceased, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CITY OF MUSKOGEE, OKLAHOMA, a Municipal Corporation,
Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 86-1934, 86-2003.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
April 10, 1990.
Jim T. Priest of McKinney, Stringer & Webster, Oklahoma City, Okl., for defendant-appellant.
Wayne Wells, Edmond, Okl., for plaintiff-appellee.
Before McKAY, LOGAN and TACHA, Circuit Judges.
LOGAN, Circuit Judge.
Defendant City of Muskogee (the City) appeals from a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff Linnie Kay Berry (Berry) in this 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 suit. The City alleges that the district court erred by (1) not submitting the case to the jury under an Eighth Amendment standard, (2) denying the City's motions for a directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict for insufficiency of the evidence, (3) improperly instructing the jury on the measure of damages, and (4) granting plaintiff's attorney $31,000 in fees under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1988.
Berry brought this suit on behalf of herself and her children and as the personal representative of the estate of Mark Berry, her deceased husband and father of the children. Mark Berry was murdered by fellow prisoners at the Muskogee City-Federal Jail, while in the custody and control of the City. In statements given to federal authorities, Mark Berry had previously identified two of the murderers as his cohorts in crime. Berry asserted that the City had deprived her husband of his right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment and deprived him of life without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.1 Her complaint alleged that these violations were caused by the City's deliberate indifference to her husband's safety. She sought damages for her husband's pain and suffering and expected loss of earnings, her grief and loss of consortium, and her children's grief and loss of companionship. The case was submitted to the jury under the Due Procеss Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Berry and awarded $100,000 in damages. We vacate the judgment and remand for a new trial.
* A
The district court submitted the case to the jury under a due process instruction as follows:
"A governing body may be sued for monetary relief under the law previously given to you.
However, before a governing body may be held liable under that law, you must find from the evidence:
One: That the governing body implemented or executed or acquiested [sic] in a policy statement, ordinance, regulation, or decision officially adopted or made by those whose acts may fairly be said to represent official policy, including governmental customs, even though such customs have not received formal governmental approval.
And two: That the governing body implemented or executed or acquiested [sic] in such policy, ordinance, regulation, decision or 'custom' with the intention to deprive another of their constitutional rights, or they knew, or should have known that such action would violate or deprive another of their constitutional rights.
The defendant City of Muskogee has a constitutional obligation or duty to have policies and procedures which will not deprive a person of their life while an inmate of defendant's jail.
If you find that the policies and procedures of the defendant caused the plaintiff's decedent's death, then you shall find that the defendant City of Muskogee deprived plaintiff's decedent of a constitutional right under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States."2
II R. 7-8.
Berry argues that, because her husband was awaiting sentencing at the time of his death, he should be treated as a pretrial detainee whose rights are governed by the Due Process Clause and, thus, this instruction was proper. The City contends that the district court should have submitted the case to the jury under a higher Eighth Amendment standard.3
The rights of pretrial detainees, "those persons who have been charged with a crime but who have not yet been tried on the charge," are not controlled by the cruel and unusual punishment clause of the Eighth Amendment because the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit punishment "prior to an adjudication of guilt in accordance with due process of law." Bell v. Wolfish,
We see no reason to treat incarcerated persons whose guilt has been adjudicated formally but who await sentencing like pretrial detainees, who are detained primarily to ensure their presence at trial and who cannot be punished, Bell v. Wolfish,
In Whitley v. Albers,
The Court recently explicitly endorsed the principle, implicit in Whitley, that actions which are protected under specific constitutional provisions should be analyzed under those provisions and not under the more generalized provisions of "substantive due process." See Graham v. Connor, --- U.S. ----,
Berry's claim is grounded in the defendant's conduct in that city officials were responsible for the conditions which permitted the murder to occur. Thus, we conclude that the Eighth Amendment standards are applicable in this case since that Amendment is the "primary source of substantive protection to convicted prisoners," Whitley,
B
We now must determine the proper Eighth Amendment test for claims such as Berry's. Whitley involved a Sec. 1983 suit brought by a prison inmate alleging a violation of his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights when he was injured during the quelling of a prison riot. The Court held that, in the context of a prison riot, where "decisions necessarily [are] made in haste, under pressure, and frequently without the luxury of a second chance," the Eighth Amendment standard is " 'whether force was applied in a gоod faith effort to maintain or restore discipline or maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.' " Id.
After careful consideration, we hold that Whitley's "malicious and sadistic" standard does nоt apply to the facts of this case; rather, the applicable standard is the traditional "deliberate indifference" inquiry of Estelle. Unlike Whitley, here there is no danger that the deliberate indifference standard will fail to "adequately capture the importance of ... competing obligations, or convey the appropriate hesitancy to critique in hindsight decisions necessarily made in haste, under pressure, and frequently without the luxury of a second chance." Whitley,
Deliberate indifference, however, is not self-defining. It does not require a finding of express intent to harm, but "must involve more than ordinary lack of due care for the prisoner's interests or safety." Id. at 319,
Courts have struggled to give a practical meaning to the "deliberate indifference" standard. In Duckworth v. Franzen,
The jury instruction given in this case is grounded in negligence and clearly does not meet the deliberate indifference standard. Thus, because we also find that judgment should not be directed in the City's favor, we must remand for a new trial with proper jury instructions based on the Eighth Amendment standard enunciated here. The instructions should caution the jury that mere negligence is not sufficient to impose liability on the City.
II
The City moved for a directed verdict at the close of Berry's case and renewed its motion at the close of evidencе. Following the verdict in favor of Berry, the City moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The trial court denied both motions. The City argues on appeal that Berry's evidence was legally insufficient under the Eighth Amendment.
We review motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict to determine if there is evidence upon which the jury properly could return a verdict for the nonmoving party. See, e.g., EEOC v. Sperry Corp.,
Mark Berry was arrested for the burglary of a National Guard Armory in Durant, Oklahoma. After his arrest, he implicated as his partners in crime, Tony James and Dennis Brown. James and Brown subsequently were arrested. Mark Berry pleaded guilty to a charge that carried a $10,000 fine and/or five years in prison. James and Brown pleaded guilty to charges that carried penalties of $10,000 and/or ten years in prison. All three were held in the Muskogee City-Federal Jail pending sentencing.
Between 5:00 and 5:30 a.m. February 6, 1983, approximately one month after being placed in the Muskogee facility, Mark Berry was murdered by James, Brown, and another prisoner, Sam Van Woudenburg.10 Using a wire from a broom that had been left in the "day room" of the federal section of the jail, the three men began to strangle the decedent. From the day room, they dragged the decedent into an individual cell and сontinued to strangle him. Finally, they took Mark Berry into the shower area and hung him from a rod, using towel strips. Evidence at trial indicated that Mark Berry did not die until he was hung in the shower, that death could not have occurred for at least four minutes after the attack began, and that Mark Berry might have lived for as long as ten minutes.
Federal prisoners, including those already convicted but awaiting sentence, were held in a separate, maximum security section of the Muskogee jail, and were allowed twenty-four hour access to each other. Jail policy provided for separation of inmates by sex and age, but there was no policy providing for the separation of crime partners or for separation based on the nature of the crime of which the detainee was charged or convicted. Upon obtaining custody of federal prisoners, the City did not inquire whether a prisoner had implicated other prisoners or was a police informant, for instance, but relied completely on federal officials to inform it of any special circumstances that might justify special arrangements. At the very least, it appears the City was aware that Berry's husband, James, and Brown were codefendants.
At the time the murder was committed, the jail was staffed with one detention officer, who was located approximately twenty-five feet from the federal day room. This detention officer was responsible for the thirteen federal prisoners and an unspecified number of city prisoners thеn incarcerated. Among other duties, the detention officer monitored a video screen connected to various surveillance cameras located throughout the facility, including one in the federal detention area. It is undisputed that the murder took place within view of a surveillance camera. Under normal circumstances the detention officer's monitor scanned from camera-to-camera at regular intervals; however, when an arrestee was being brought into the jail, the detention officer was instructed to monitor the arrestee's movements without interruption. Thus, when an arrestee was being booked, the detention officer could view only the booking procedure. The detention officer on duty the night of the murder stated that an unusual number of people were booked that night and surmised that he did not see the murder because he "was busy." V R. 238.
Berry testified at trial that (1) her husband expressed fear for his safety, (2) she informed an unidentified jail employee of her husband's fears, and (3) she "asked him [the jail employee] if there was any way he could be moved out of that cell because the guys he informed on was [sic] going to be put in there with him," VIII R. 86. No preventive action was taken.
Berry alleged that the City's policies, practices, and procedures for the operation of its jail caused her husband's death because such policies created the opportunity and means to commit, and resulted in the failure to discover and stop, the murder. Berry's expert witness identified the following City policies11 as deficient:
(1) The policy of not locking down the prisoners at night was "extremely reckless" and an "extremely serious departure from the accepted standards and procedures," which allowed unrestricted contact among prisoners at all times. III R. 21-22; 23-24;
(2) The contraband control policy concerning wire brooms, which did not require these items to be inventoried or used on a check-out basis, provided the murderers with a readily accessible and dangerous weapon.12 Id. at 34-36;
(3) The policy of not separating crime partners and allowing them to intermingle on a twenty-four hour basis was extremely dangerous. III R. 38-39; and
(4) The policy of having only one detention officer supervise the entire prison was "grossly inadequate" because of the officer's other duties, and was exacerbated by the non-lock down policy. Id. at 25-26.13
Berry's expert summarized his testimony by stating that "[t]he ability of these people to roam around, access of crime partners to one another, availability of contraband, [and] lack of staff to oversee the situation, made this murder possible, and the time that it took it was imminently possible." Id. at 40.
To establish the City's deliberate indifference to her husband's safety under the facts of this case, Berry must show that (1) the City had actual knowledge of the specific risk of harm to her husband or that the risk was so substantial or pervasive that knowledge can be inferred, see Goka v. Bobbitt,
Although it is a somewhat close call we believe the deficiencies shown are sufficient that a reasonable jury could find deliberate indifference by the City in the instant case. Berry's case would have been stronger if she had been able to identify the official she allegedly notified of the danger to her husband and he was an official whose knowledge could be imputed to the City.14 Evidence of prior assaults and/or murders in the jail would have strengthened Berry's case to show the City's above-described policies reflected a deliberate indifference to the risk. We note that Berry presented evidence of an altercation the evening of the murder, and the district court excluded evidence of a prior murder in the federal holding facility within ninety days of Mark Berry's death.
The City also claims there was insufficient evidence that its actions caused Mark Berry's death. A person, including a local municipality, is liable under Sec. 1983 only if it "subjects, or causes to be subjected, any ... person ... to the deprivation of any rights ... secured by the Constitution." Although the test has been variously stated, a municipality is liable under Sec. 1983 if there is a direct causal connection between the municipal policies in question and the constitutional deprivation. See, e.g., City of Canton v. Harris, U.S. at ----,
The City, of course, cannot absolutely guarantee the safety of its prisoners, but it has a constitutional duty to take reasonable steps to protect the prisoners' safety and bodily integrity. E.g., DeShaney, U.S. at ---- - ----,
III
The City next argues that the district court improperly instructed the jury on the issue of damages. Its instruction was as follows:
"If you decide for the plaintiff on the question of liability you must then fix the amount of money which will reasonably and fairly compensate the plaintiff for any of the following elements of actual damage proved by the evidence to have resulted from the deprivation of constitutional rights of plaintiff's decedent by the defendant.
One: The nature, extent and duration of damages incurred by plaintiff as a result of the death of Mark A. Berry. In this regard you may consider Mark A. Berry's physical condition prior to his death, his earning capacity, and the contributions he made for the benefit of the plaintiff and his children.
Two: The grief and loss of consortium of the surviving spouse, plaintiff Linnie K. Berry.
Three: The mental pain and anguish suffered by plaintiff's decedent Mark A. Berry.
Four: The pecuniary loss to the surviving plaintiff's spouse and children.
Five: The grief and loss of companionship of plaintiff's decedent's children.
It is the law of the State of Oklahoma that a wife living with her husband is entitled to the consortium, services, companionship, and society of her husband, and she may recover damages from anyonе who through a wrong committed against him may deprive her of such services, consortium, companionship, and society.
The value of the services, consortium, companionship, and society loss, if any, is for the jury to determine from all the evidence."
II R. 10-11. The jury returned a plaintiff's verdict of $100,000, without specifying any allocation of damages.
At trial, the City objected to Berry's testimony outlining her husband's earning capacity. The following bench conference then took place:
"Mr. Priest [counsel for the City]: Your Honor, there has been some testimony, and apparently there is some further anticipated testimony, relating to the issue of damages, specifically previous loss of earning capacity and things like that. I want to register an objection and request a continuing objection, depending on the court's ruling, relating to any damages that would be perhaps proper in a wrongful death case, but which I believe are improper in this case, being a civil rights case....
The Court: This isn't a wrongful death case, this can't be a wrongful death case, do you understand? It is not a wrongful death case.
Mr. Priest: That's correct.
The Court: I just want to make counsel understand that, this isn't a wrongful death case.
Mr. Wells [counsel for Berry]: I understand this is a civil rights case under 1983. But I submit to the court that the measure of the damages and the deprivation is measured by the Oklahoma State Statute on wrongful death...."
II R. 89-90. After taking a recess to research the matter, the trial court ruled that Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, Sec. 1053, the Oklahoma wrongful death statute, upon which the jury instruction ultimately was based, provided the measure of damages in the case. At the jury instruction conference, the City renewed its objection to a wrongful death measure of damages, although we note the proposed substitute damage instruction proffered by the City subsequently was rejected by the Supreme Court in Memphis Community School Dist. v. Stachura,
On appeal, the City argues that the only proper measure of damages is the injury suffered by Mark Berry alone. As we understand its argument, the City would confine damages to those recoverable under Oklahoma's survival statute. See Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, Sec. 1051. This would significantly reduce the amount of damages available to Berry. At least one commentator has asserted that the only damages recoverable in an Oklahoma survival action are for property loss and loss of earnings by decedent between the time of injury and death; the availability of damages for pain and suffering, lost earnings, funeral and burial expenses, and punitive damages in a wrongful death action precludes recovery of such damages in a survival action. Note, Recovery for Wrongful Death, 34 Okla.L.Rev. 659, 671 (1981). Despite this commentator's view, it is not clear whether the 1978 amendments to Oklahoma's wrongful death statute, which greatly expanded the kinds of damages available in a wrongful death action, removed all traditional damages from survival actions in that state. Traditionally at common law a survival action allowed the decedent's estate to recover for (1) decedent's pain and suffering before death, (2) decedent's lost earnings before death, (3) decedent's loss of property before death, and (4) punitive damages. Mathies v. Kittrell,
Berry is the duly appointed administratrix of the Estate of Mark A. Berry, deceased. The complaint clearly asserts a survival action on behalf of the estate under Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12 Sec. 1051, and a wrongful death claim under Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12 Sec. 1053, an option permissible under Oklahoma law. See Hale v. Hale,
The difficult question we face here is whether damages in a Sec. 1983 action in which death occurs are limited to those recoverable under the Oklahoma survival action alone, or to those recoverable by such a survival action and an Oklahoma wrongful death suit, or whether damages are determined by some federal standard either as a survival or wrongful death-type action not defined or limited by state law.
Section 1983, which is derived from Sec. 1 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, creates a cause of action in favor of "the party injured" against "[e]very person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ..., subjects, or causes to be subjected, any ... person ... to the deprivation of any rights ... secured by the Constitution and laws." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. Although Sec. 1983's "unique remedy make[s] it appropriate to accord the statute 'a sweep as broad as its language,' " its lack of detail leaves little to construe. Wilson v. Garcia,
We are satisfied that Congress intended significant recompense when a constitutional violation caused the death of a victim. The general legislative history of the 1871 act makes clear that death was among the civil rights violations that Congress intended to remedy. See Monroe v. Pape,
President Grant's message to Congress in 1871 described conditions in the South that "render[ed] life and property insecure" and urged legislation that would "effectually secure life, liberty, and property, and the enforcement of law in all parts of the United States." Cong.Globe, 42d Cong., 1st Sess. 236 (1871). The floor debates concerning the proposed act reflected the President's concern. Representative Lowe of Kansas commented as follows:
"While murder is stalking abroad in disguise, while whippings and lynchings and banishment have bеen visited upon unoffending American citizens, the local administrations have been found inadequate or unwilling to apply the proper corrective. Combinations, darker than the night that hides them, conspiracies, wicked as the worst of felons could devise, have gone unwhipped of justice. Immunity is given to crime, and the records of the public tribunals are searched in vain for any evidence of effective redress. If there is no remedy for this, if the rights of citizenship may be denied without redress, if the Constitution may not be enforced, if life and liberty may not be effectively protected, then, indeed, is our Government a failure, and instead of enjoying liberty regulated by law, its subjects may live only by the sufferance of lawless and exasperated conspirators."
Id. at 374. Representative Smith of New York noted that "[m]en are murdered; their property is burned or otherwise destroyed; they are scourged, and the local law is not administered so as to demonstrate its power to reach these offenses or to defend the citizens who are subject to them." Id. at 392.
Although Congress clearly envisioned Sec. 1983 to serve as a remedy for wrongful killings that resulted from the proscribed conduct, the statute itself does not provide a mechanism to implement such a remedy. See, e.g., Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
We are not left totally without guidance, however, in that 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1988 authorizes federal courts to undertake a three-step process to determine whether to borrow law from another source to aid their enforcement of federal civil rights statutes. See, e.g., Wilson v. Garcia,
The Supreme Court once granted certiorari to consider whether Sec. 1983, independently or in conjunction with state law, may be used by survivors when the decedent's death resulted from a constitutional violation, and, if so, whether state law must be used as the measure of damages. Jones v. Hildebrant,
In Robertson v. Wegmann,
One other Supreme Court case commands our attention on this issue. Moor v. County of Alameda,
From our analysis, we conclude that Congress envisioned a significant remedy for wrongful killings resulting from conduct proscribed by Sec. 1983 but did not provide specific guidance regarding whether that would be realized under a federal or state survival action or by other means. Moreover, beyond providing compensation for victims of illegal conduct, it is clear that Sec. 1983 was intended to provide special deterrence for civil rights violations. The Supreme Court has not directly considered the issue, but language in Robertson appears to encourage reference to state law in defining the scope and content of remedies available. In contrast, Moor may be read as a caution to plaintiffs and federal courts against borrowing of state-created causes of action.
Applying the principles set out in Sec. 1988 for borrowing law from another sоurce, we are satisfied that the Oklahoma survival action alone does not meet the stated criteria. As applied to the instant case, it would provide extraordinarily limited recovery, possibly only damages to property loss, of which there were none, and loss of decedent's earnings between the time of injury and death, of which there also were none. See Note, 34 Okla.L.Rev. at 671. Thus, the Oklahoma survival action is clearly deficient in both its remedy and its deterrent effect.
The more difficult question is whether the Oklahoma law on survival actions, as supplemented by Oklahoma's wrongful death statute, sufficiently meets the Sec. 1988 criteria to satisfy the test for borrowing state law. We must be careful in answering this question to avoid transgressing Moor 's prohibition of borrowing complete causes of action under the guise of vindicating rights under Sec. 1983.
This circuit has not fully considered the question. In Trujillo v. Board of County Commissioners,
In other cases this circuit has entertained Sec. 1983 suits spurred by allegedly unconstitutional state action that resulted in death, but has failed to discuss the source of plaintiffs' representative or survivor standing because no one raised the question on appeal. See, e.g., Perrin v. Anderson,
One problem with looking to the wrongful death statute is that traditionally these statutes have been viewed as creating a new cause of action for the benefit of survivors. See, e.g., L.E. Whitman Constr. Co. v. Remer,
We believe a strong argument can be made that borrowing state wrongful death statutes simply provides remedial assistance "to effectuate well-established primary rules of behavior" that are enforceable under Sec. 1983. Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc.,
"Used, as it was in parallel with the phrase 'and punish offenses against law,' it comprehends those facilities available in local state law but unavailable in federal legislation, which will permit the full effectual enforcement of the policy sought to be achieved by the statutes. And in a very real sense the utilization of local death and survival statutes does not do more than create an effective remedy. This is so because the right is surely a federally protected one--the right to be free from deprivation of constitutional civil rights. The local death or survival statute adopted by reference in this fashion does not add to that substantive right. It merely assures that there will be a 'remedy'--a way by which that right will be vindicated--if there is a violation of it."
On the other hand, if we were to define Sec. 1983 remedies in terms of the state survival action, supplemented by the state wrongful death act, we place into the hands of the state the decision as to allocation of the recovery in a Sec. 1983 case, and, indeed, whether there can be any recovery at all. In an Oklahoma wrongful death action nearly all recoverable damages are expressly funneled to the decedent's surviving spouse and children to the exclusion of decedent's creditors or the beneficiaries of the decedent's will, if he or she has one. See Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, Sec. 1053(B). The statute also permits recovery for loss of consortium and grief of the surviving spouse, grief and loss of companionship of the children and parents, id., items decedent could not have recovered had he lived to sue for himself.
Allowing the state determinations to prevail also permits the state to define the scope and extent of recovery. For instance, some states may preclude, or limit, recovery for pain and suffering or for punitive damages. In addition, some state laws may deny all recovery in particular circumstances, as when wrongful death actions must be for dependents and there are none.
In Smith v. Wade,
In the case before us the recovery permitted under the Oklahoma wrongful death act duplicates, in many respects, the recovery Mark Berry might have obtained had he lived to sue for his injuries. But, as we have noted, the act permits recovery of the loss of consortium and grief of the surviving spouse, children, and parents, which Mark Berry could not have recovered had he lived. Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12 Sec. 1053(B). In considering whether the purposes of Sec. 1983 are satisfied by adoption of state survival and wrongful death actions, we must consider that different states will define them differently, thus requiring individual analyses of each state's law. We might have to find that a state's law works satisfactorily in some instances, as when there are surviving dependents, but not in other cases, as when there is no one with a right to sue.
Weighing these concerns, and considering the Supreme Court's approach in Smith, Memphis Community School District, and Garcia, we conclude that supplementing a state survival action with a state wrongful death action does not satisfy the criteria of Sec. 1988 for borrowing state law. The laws are not suitable to carry out the full effects intended for Sec. 1983 cases ending in death of the victim; they are deficient in some respects to punish the offenses. Application of state law, at least in some instances, will be inconsistent with the predominance of the federal interest.
We therefore conclude, as did the Sixth Circuit in Jaco, that the federal courts must fashion a federal remedy to be applied to Sec. 1983 death cases. The remedy should be a survival action, brought by the estate of the deceased victim, in accord with Sec. 1983's express statement that the liability is "to the party injured." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. It must make available to plaintiffs sufficient damages to serve the deterrent function central to the purpose of Sec. 1983. In accord with Smith, punitive damages may be recovered in aрpropriate cases. As for compensatory damages we look to the Supreme Court's statement in Memphis Community School District v. Stachura,
"We have repeatedly noted that 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 creates 'a species of tort liability' in favor of persons who are deprived of 'rights, privileges, or immunities secured' to them by the Constitution. Accordingly, when Sec. 1983 plaintiffs seek damages for violations of constitutional rights, the level of damages is ordinarily determined accordingly to principles derived from the common law of torts.
... [D]amages in tort cases are designed to provide 'compensation for the injury caused to the plaintiff by the defendant's breach of duty.' To that end, compensatory damages may include not only out-of-pocket loss and other monetary harms, but also such injuries as 'impairment of reputation ..., personal humiliation, and mental anguish and suffering.' "
Id. at 305-07,
The state wrongful death actions are not foreclosed by this approach; they remain as pendent state claims. But, of course, there can be no duplication of recovery.
Because the court's instructiоns to the jury were those for a wrongful death action, the court erred in instructing the jury. Since the case must be remanded for a new trial, we do not address whether the award of attorneys' fees to Berry was proper.
The judgment of the district court is VACATED and the cause is REMANDED for a new trial.
McKAY, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and concurring in judgment, and dissenting in part:
I join Judge Logan's opinion insofar as it discusses the appropriate standards to be applied once eighth amendment analysis is triggered. I also join his opinion in that part which deals with the appropriate measure of damages.
I dissent only from that portion of the opinion which concludes that eighth amendment analysis rather than due process analysis under the fourteenth amendment should apply on the facts of this case. While in the end it may make very little difference, under the present state of the law I think it makes enough difference to justify careful delineation of what cases are governed by the eighth amendment and what cases are governed by what I consider to be the more lenient threshold of liability provided by due process analysis. It is true, as the court's opinion points out, that at least in the prison setting after sentencing, most, if not all, cases of abuse by prison officials will be governed by eighth amendment analysis which expressly circumscribes punitive action deliberately or near deliberately taken. However, as the court itself acknowledges, the rights of pretrial detainees are more properly analyzed from the perspective of the duty of care owed to persons who are being processed under some form of government compulsion. In some cases, the results derived from such difference in analysis may be the same. In others, there may be a substantial difference.
Heretofore the cases appear to have discussed the eighth amendment and due process clause dichotomy as though there were only two clean categories of detained persons: "pretrial detainees" and "convicted persons." None of the cases have dealt with this specific nuance of determining precisely what is meant by "pretrial detainee" and "convicted person" for purposes of which constitutional standard appropriately applies to them. Both of those phrases are over-generalized for purposes of the analysis at issue in this case. The context in which the examination takes place governs everything. As this court's own precedent indicates, in the double jeopardy context "[u]ntil entry of judgment and sentencing on the accepted guilty plea, defendant ha[s] not been formally convicted." United States v. Combs,
Unlike the majority, I find substantial reason for drawing the line at sentencing rather than the nonfinal stages of conviction or an accepted plea of guilty. Sentence has a long history as the bright line in the criminal prosecution context. It has finality, it has appealability, it has double jeopardy, etc. By applying this bright line to determine which of the Supreme Court's two standards should apply, we avoid the possibility of the hybrid situation presented in Combs. There, the defendant pled guilty to a lesser included offense in one count but remained incarcerated pending trial on the greater offense in another count contained in the same indictment. I have yet to see an explanation either in the court's opinion or in any other context why following this bright line geared to the imposition of punishment (sentencing) would create any mischief. Because the Supreme Court itself has drawn the line between detainees and sentenced prisoners, we should not extend the analytical collapsing of due process and eighth amendment analyses into what may be described best as a twilight zone.
The question remains what standard of conduct should apply in order properly to analyze due process cases under the fourteenth amendment. The Supreme Court looked at the fourteenth amendment but did not resolve what the appropriate standard should be in Daniels v. Williams,
Since Daniels, the Court has shed little light on the question. In City of Canton v. Harris,
The Court's recent pronouncement in Harris nevertheless fails to establish a rule regarding the standard of conduct required for a due process violation. Indeed, the Court expressly limited its holding to cases involving the failure to train municipal employees. See id. at 1204 n. 8. As to what degree of culpability would be required for a direct due process violation, the Court stated:
The "deliberate indifference" standard we adopt for Sec. 1983 "failurе to train" claims does not turn upon the degree of fault (if any) that a plaintiff must show to make out an underlying claim of a constitutional violation. For example, this Court has never determined what degree of culpability must be shown before the particular constitutional deprivation asserted in this case--a denial of the due process right to medical care while in detention--is established. Indeed, in Revere v. Massachusetts General Hospital,
We need not resolve here the question left open in Revere....
Based on its statements in Daniels and Canton, the Court has not resolved the question of what standard of conduct must have been violated in order for plaintiff to demonstrate a due process violation in this case. It is clear, however, that section 1983 is a remedial statute designed to protect individuals from governmental entities whose policies deprive them of their constitutional rights. I believe that the policies underlying the statute are best effectuated by adopting a gross negligence standard. Consequently, I would join those circuits holding that proof of gross negligence is enough to sustain a section 1983 action involving a fourteenth amendment due process claim. See, e.g., Nishiyama v. Dickson County,
Because I agree with the court that there is sufficient evidence in the record to meet its eighth amendment standard, a fortiori, I believe the record evidence is more than sufficient to meet this due process standard. I would direct the court to instruct the jury under a gross negligence standard.
TACHA, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I concur with the majority's conclusion in Part III of the court's opinion concerning the appropriate measure of compensatory damages for Berry's survival claim. I write this special concurrence to make clear my position that a wrongful death action cannot be equated with a survival action under 42 U.S.C. sections 1983 and 1988. In my view the Supreme Court precluded that result in Moor v. County of Alameda,
Berry brought two claims under 42 U.S.C. section 1983; a survival action on behalf of her deceased husband, and a wrongful death action on behalf of herself and her children. The majority ignores the critical threshhold issue of whether Berry's wrongful death claim seeks recompense for a personal deprivation of a federal right secured by the Constitution or by federal laws, see City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
Applying the Supreme Court's three-stеp test analysis for determining an appropriate remedy under section 1988, see Wilson v. Garcia,
At this point in the analysis, having found the Oklahoma state law remedy for a survival action to be inadequate, the court should fashion a federal common law remedy responsive to the federal policies underlying section 1983. See Wilson,
Well aware of the Moor problem raised by its consideration of the Oklahoma wrongful death statute as a remedy for Berry's survival action, the majority dismisses this conсern by asserting that "[w]rongful death statutes create new causes of action [only] in the most technical sense," and that "[t]he substantive right [asserted in a wrongful death action], however, is that of the decedent." Maj. op. at 1504.
I respectfully disagree with the majority's conclusion that federal courts can equate wrongful death and survival actions for purposes of sections 1983 and 1988. See maj. op. at 1505. A survival action seeks to vindicate the decedent's rights. In contrast, a wrongful death action seeks to vindicate the rights of the surviving family members or heirs. See St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Craft,
The Oklahoma wrongful death statute clearly extends beyond the scope of the decedent's rights and creates a state law cause of action on behalf of the survivors to compensate them for their own personal injuries caused by the wrongful killing of the decedent. The Oklahoma wrongful death statute authorizes damages for the loss of consortium and grief of the surviving spouse and the grief and loss of companionship of the children and the parents of the decedent. See Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, Sec. 1053(B) (1988). These damages patently are not vindicating the substantive rights of the decedent. Indeed, the majority implicitly recognizes this point later in the opinion when, in fashioning a federal common law remedy for Berry's survival claim, the сourt essentially adopts the measure of damages authorized by the Oklahoma wrongful death statute, but omits compensation for the injuries to Berry and her children due to the loss of their relationship with the decedent.
In summary, Berry has not shown that her wrongful death rights derive from the Constitution or from federal laws. She therefore cannot make out a federal wrongful death claim under section 1983. It is error for this court to imply otherwise by equating Berry's survival and wrongful death actions in its discussion of an appropriate remedy under section 1988.
Notes
The complaint also alleged unspecified violations of the First, Fourth, and Sixth Amendments, but Berry did not pursue these claims
The court should not have mentioned the Fifth Amendment. Berry did not plead a Fifth Amendment claim and that amendment protects against deprivations of life, liberty, or property by the federal government. The only federal defendant in this case was dismissed before trial
We have discovered only one case addressing this issue. In Hamm v. DeKalb County,
A guilty plea is "itself a conviction; nothing remains but to give judgment and determine punishment." Boykin v. Alabama,
In Harris v. Maynard,
Every circuit that has considered the question has concluded that the Eighth Amendment is the primary source of substantive rights of prisoners and that, with regard to the rights of convicted prisoners, the legal standards under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments generally are congruous. See Meriwether v. Coughlin,
We agree with the views of the other circuits. Thus, we conclude that the safety and bodily integrity of convicted prisoners implicates both the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment and the Fourteenth Amendment's substantive protection against state deprivation of life and liberty without due process of law, and that the legal standards under the two amendments are identical under the facts of this case. Because the Eighth Amendment provides the primary source of protection for prisoners, we will, however, refer to the standard as an Eighth Amendment standard.
In adopting its recklessness standard, the Seventh Circuit has chosen the highest recklessness standard stated in any case, i.e., that necessary for a conviction of second degree murder. See, e.g., Duckworth,
In adopting this standard, we recognize a possible conflict with the language in our earlier opinion, Wise v. Bravo,
We note that the Supreme Court has never ruled on the precise relationship among gross negligence, deliberate indifference and recklessness in the Eighth Amendment context. See, e.g., Daniels,
All three subsequently were convicted of Mark Berry's murder
The City does not dispute that these were official city policies for purposes of Sec. 1983
The City's expert witness agreed that a check-out system or formal inventory process would have been more reasonable. In contrast, the plastic eating utensils used by the inmates were inventoried after each meal
Berry also alleged that the detention officer's training was so deficient as to violate the Constitution. Plaintiff presented no evidence, however, to suggest that more extensive training could have prevented the murder. See City of Canton, U.S. at ----,
Berry testified at trial that she informed a jail employee of her husband's fear for his safety, but she was unable to identify the employee. The City argues that "no one [sic] at trial provided credible information that Berry['s] husband was a 'snitch' and, thus, in danger." Brief of Appellant at 4 (emphasis in original). The City refers to Berry's testimony as an "inherently incredible story," id. at 5, but such credibility determinations are for the jury
As Justice O'Connor noted in Kibbe, "the law has been willing to trace more distant causation when there is a cognitive component to the defendant's fault than when the defendant's conduct results from simple or heightened negligence."
Representative Shellabarger of Ohio, who presented the bill to the House and served as its floor manager, described how the act should be interpreted by courts:
"This act is remedial, and in aid of the preservation of human liberty and human rights. All statutes and constitutional provisions authorizing such statutes are liberally and beneficently construed. It would be most strange and, in civilized law, monstrous were this not the rule of interpretation. As has been again and again described by your own Supreme Court of the United States, and everywhere else where there is wise judicial interpretation, the largest latitude consistent with the words employed is uniformly given in construing such statutes and constitutional provisions as are meant to protect and defend and give remedies for their wrongs to all the people."
Cong.Globe, 42d Cong., 1st Sess., app. at 68 (1871).
Additional support for reading Sec. 1983 as intending a remedy for wrongful killings under color of law comes from an examination of a criminal civil rights act counterpart. Section 1 of the 1871 act was modeled after the criminal provision contained in Sec. 2 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 (current version at 18 U.S.C. Sec. 242). See Monroe,
Section 1988 does not specify when federal law is deficient or what federal law courts must look to before making a deficiency finding. See generally Eisenberg, State Law in Federal Civil Rights Cases: The Proper Scope of Section 1988, 128 U.Pa.L.Rev. 499 (1980); Kreimer, The Source of Law in Civil Rights Actions: Some Old Light on Section 1988, 133 U.Pa.L.Rev. 601 (1985); Steinglass, supra at 612-25. Nor has the Supreme Court helped us, thus far, in construing the deficiency clause. We are confident, however, that federal law, whatever its scope may be, is deficient here because the Supreme Court in Robertson v. Wegmann,
The Supreme Court, however, has had before it at least one Sec. 1983 case brought by the personal representatives of decedents, that sought wrongful death damages. See Scheuer v. Rhodes,
Dohaish v. Tooley,
As Professor Steinglass has noted,
"At one time wrongful death claims were viewed as new and independent actions, and they must still be distinguished from survival claims to keep clear the different interests at stake and the different measure of damages. Nonetheless, the claims are integrally related, and a number of states do not even maintain independent wrongful death remedies; rather, they simply permit wrongful death claims to be pursued in enlarged survival actions."
Steinglass, supra at 621 (footnotes omitted). With the wide divergence among states in the handling of survival and wrongful death actions, the blanket characterization of wrongful death remedies as new causes of action that cannot be incorporated under Sec. 1988 is a gross oversimplification. Such аrchaic and formalistic distinctions led to the adoption in this country of the English common law rules refusing to recognize survival or wrongful death actions. See generally Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc.,
If wrongful death statutes truly created new causes of action, one might expect that actions of the decedent before death concerning his cause of action would not affect his survivors' statutorily created cause of action. But, as is true in most states, Oklahoma views wrongful death actions as derivative claims that depend upon the existence of a right of action in the decedent before death. Rios,
