In this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Sheriff Edmunds used excessive and unreasonable force against her in the course of taking her adult daughter into protective custody. The district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, holding that the sheriff was entitled to qualified immunity and that there was no basis for County liability under § 1983. The court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs state constitutional claim. *1221 We have jurisdiction over this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
The following facts are uncontroverted. On January 15, 2003, Sheriff Edmunds and two other officers arrived at Plaintiffs motel, a portion of which serves as her residence, in order to take her adult daughter into protective custody for an emergency mental health evaluation. 1 The officers entered through the office door and asked Plaintiffs daughter to come outside and speak with them. Outside of the motel, the daughter initially argued that she did not need an evaluation, but she eventually agreed to go with the officers. She asked if she could first go inside to tell her children what was happening, and the officers agreed. Once inside, the daughter went into the bathroom and began brushing her teeth. The sheriff stood in the doorway to monitor her actions. Plaintiff then approached the sheriff and asked if she could take her daughter to the hospital herself. He refused, and the daughter became argumentative. Plaintiff turned away and began moving toward the front of the residence.
The sheriff then grabbed Plaintiffs daughter by the arm and began to move quickly toward the front door of the residence. The daughter made a loud noise, and Plaintiff turned to see what was happening. The sheriff, believing that Plaintiff was about to attack him, used his free arm to push Plaintiff out of his path. Either as a direct result of the push or as a result of losing her balance or tripping, Plaintiff stumbled backwards and hit the glass dining room table and a chair. The sheriff continued outside with Plaintiffs daughter, where he ordered her handcuffed and taken to the hospital. He then stepped back inside the motel to explain to Plaintiff the reasons for taking her daughter into custody. Plaintiff did not tell the sheriff she had been injured.
Hospital personnel interviewed Plaintiffs daughter and subsequently released her. Plaintiff drove forty-five minutes to the hospital to pick up her daughter, then returned with her to the motel.
In her complaint, Plaintiff argued that the sheriff used unlawful and unreasonable force against her in violation of her Fourth Amendment and state constitutional rights. She alleged that she suffered significant, permanent, and disabling injury from the sheriffs push and her resultant collision with the table and chair.
Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. In their memorandum in support, they included a statement of material undisputed facts. Plaintiff contested only two of these facts, but asserted several additional facts in her response to the summary judgment motion. The district court granted Defendants’ motion and dismissed Plaintiffs complaint. The court held that Plaintiffs § 1983 claim should be analyzed under the Fourteenth rather than Fourth Amendment and that Plaintiff had not demonstrated that the sheriff violated her Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights. Noting that Plaintiff had not alleged, much less demonstrated, inadequate training or any other policy basis for County liability, the court also dismissed with prejudice Plaintiffs claims against the County. The court then dismissed Plaintiffs state constitutional claim without prejudice, declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the claim. Plaintiff appeals the court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendants.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, “reviewing] the evidence in the light most
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favorable to the nonmoving party.”
Nelson v. McMullen,
Although Plaintiff originally argued that her claim was brought under the Fourth Amendment, she now agrees with the district court’s determination that her claim does not fall under the Fourth Amendment because she was not actually seized by police. We likewise agree.
See Brower v. County of Inyo,
We therefore treat Plaintiffs claim as a Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process claim.
See Childress,
Based on the uncontroverted facts, we agree with the district court’s conclu
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sion that Plaintiff cannot establish that the sheriffs conduct shocks the conscience. As the district court pointed out, the sheriff “had a legitimate interest in maintaining custody of [Plaintiffs] daughter as he escorted her from [Plaintiffs] residence to a waiting law enforcement vehicle. His split-second decision to respond by clearing his path at the moment that [Plaintiff] turned back toward him served that interest, regardless of whether [Plaintiff] actually intended to interfere with his seizure of her daughter or not.”
Clark v. Summit County Sheriff,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The sheriff had heard reports that Plaintiff's daughter might be suicidal. In the two weeks since the sheriff had taken office, there had been three suicides in the county.
