Janet M. DANESE, Personal Representative of the estate of
David Danese, deceased; Louis Danese; Daniel Danese;
Pamela Danese; Margaret Danese; Thomas Danese; Frances
Dаnese; and Louis Danese, individually, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Thomas A. ASMAN, individually and as Chief of Police for the
City of Roseville; Howard Hill, individually and as
Sergeant and Shift Commander for the City of Roseville
Police Department; Frederick Stein, individually and as
Sergeant for the City of Roseville Police Department;
Robert Peters, individually and as Inspector for the City of
Roseville Police Department; Gowsoski, R. Churchran,
Cardinal, Kenyon, individually and as Police Officers for
the City of Roseville Police Department, Jointly and
Severally, Defendants-Appellants.
Keith Pelt, et al., Defendants.
No. 87-2039.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 18, 1988.
Decided May 26, 1989.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Aug. 18, 1989.
Thomas E. Spencer (argued), Grand Rapids, Mich., J. Russell LaBarge, Jr. (argued), Roseville, Mich., for defendants-appellants.
William Povlitz (argued), Petz & Povlitz, P.C., Grosse Pointe Woods, Mich., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Joanne D. Stafford, City of Detroit Law Dept., Asst. Corp. Counsel, Detroit, Mich., amicus curiae, for defendants-appellants.
Before NELSON and BOGGS, Circuit Judges, and EDWARDS, Senior Circuit Judge.
BOGGS, Circuit Judge.
The defendants/appellants are Roseville, Michigan, police officers and police officials who appeal the district court's denial of their motion for summary judgment in the plaintiffs' suit under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. The plaintiffs seek to hold the defendants liable for the suicide, in a Roseville jail, of David Danese. The defendants contend that they should be dismissed as individual defendants on the grounds of qualified immunity. We hold that the dеfendants are entitled to qualified immunity and therefore reverse.
* This case arose out of events in Roseville, Michigan in the early morning hours of November 9, 1982. The Roseville police department received a report of a suspicious car parked in a residential area. Roseville police officers (and defendants) Gowsoski and Chuchran, out on patrol, investigated the report. They discovered a car sitting out in the middle оf a side street. The officers knocked on the window and woke up a man they later found out was David Danese. The officers described Danese as obviously intoxicated. The officers moved the car to the side of the road, put the keys on the floor of the car, and told Danese not to drive.
At about 2:50 a.m., the officers observed Danese driving the same car they had seen earlier. The officer pulled the car over and gave Danese some field sobriety tests. They found that Danese could not walk a straight line or name the alphabet. They arrested Danese for driving while intoxicated, handcuffed him, and took him to the Roseville police station.
When Danese arrived at the station, he was given a breathalyzer test by police officer Cardinal. He was found to have a blood alcohol content of .13%, a reading over the legal limit of .10%. The plaintiffs allege that, after his arrest, Danese cried intermittently and made repeated remarks to Gowsoski, Chuchran, and Cardinal that he wished he were dead. (The officers have stated that they do not recall Danese crying or making such remarks.) The officers searched Danese and found three black and green capsules. Danese stated that the pills were for pain he suffered due to an injury to his face. The officers confiscated the drugs. They alsо removed Danese's belt and shoes.
Both parties agree that Danese told a fellow prisoner that they, meaning the police, take a prisoner's shoelaces because they do not want the prisoner to commit suicide.1 The plaintiffs claim that Danese discussed ways of committing suicide and said that he would commit suicide. (The officers deny that he said he would commit suicide.) The officers state that Danese was 'jovial.' At one point, though, Danese told Cardinal that he was $13,000 in debt and said "I wish I wasn't here." Danese called his mother, and one of the officers noticed that Danese cried toward the end of the call. Danese was then placed in a cell. The cell was not a special detoxification cell, and it had horizontal bars in the caging. The television monitor used to watch the prisoners was inoperative.
Between 5:15 and 5:25 a.m., officer Cardinal heard sсreaming and banging coming from one of the cells. He discovered that Danese was causing the noise. Danese told Cardinal that he wanted a cigarette. Cardinal told him he could not give him one due to the jail rules. Danese then said he would hang himself if he did not get one. Cardinal said he was sorry and left. He then went to his superior, Sergeant Hill, and told him what happened. Hill told Cardinal to watch Danese.
At 5:56 a.m., Cardinal went to check on the prisoners. He found Danese hanging by his shirt from a bar in his cell. Cardinal called Sergeant Stein, who had just come on duty. The two officers, along with officer Kenyon, cut Danese down and called for an ambulance. An ambulance from the fire house next door arrived a couple of minutes later, but Danese was pronounced dead within an hour.
The plaintiffs, consisting of the representative of Danese's estate and members of his family, have sued, among others, all the police officers (Officers) mentioned here, including Gowsoski, Chuchran, Cardinal, and Kenyon, and their supervisors (Officials), including Hill, Stein, police chief Asman, and police inspector Peters. The plaintiffs sued under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, alleging numerous violations of Danese's constitutional rights.
In August 1986, these defendants filed motions to dismiss the suits against themselves as individual defendants on the grounds of qualified immunity. In May 1987, the district court denied most of these motions, allowing, however, the plаintiffs to amend one of their claims before deciding on qualified immunity. After the amendment, the defendants moved for summary judgment on the qualified immunity issue. In September 1987, the district court again found for the plaintiffs, denying that the defendants had qualified immunity. See Danese v. Asman,
II
The Supreme Court, following its decision in Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The right in question, however, cannot be simply a generalized right, like the right to due process. Anderson,
In Anderson, for example, the court of appeals disallowed qualified immunity, holding that the established right was the right to be free from warrantless searches unless the officers have probable cause and there are exigent circumstances. Ibid. The Supreme Court reversed, holding that this right was not sufficiently particularized. It must be clear that the search was illegal under the particular circumstances faced by the police, for there are many cases where the police reasonably believe that a search is legal. Police officers should not be personally liable if they act in ways they reasonably believe are lawful. Ibid. The relevant, fact-specific question in qualified immunity cases is whether any official could have, in light of the preexisting law, reasonably believed that his action was lawful. Id. at 3040; Poe,
III
The district court held that the plaintiffs stated two causes of action against the individual officers. The first wаs an action for the deprivation of Danese's fourteenth amendment due process right not to be punished while in pretrial detention. The second was for the deprivation of a fourteenth amendment due process right to be free from unsafe confinement.
The plaintiffs base their first action on the Supreme Court decision in Bell v. Wolfish,
This conclusion is supported by two Sixth Circuit cases that predate Bell but are consistent with a deliberate indifference standard. In Fitzke v. Shappell,
The district judge found that the plaintiffs' allegations constituted a claim of deliberate indifference against the police. Danese told them that he was going to kill himself and talked about methods of killing himself, but the officers did nothing. He was placed fully clothed in a regular cell. The plaintiffs contend that the situation is no different than one in which a prisoner says his leg is broken but gets no medical care. The officers, they argue, chose to ignore Danese's call for help. They conclude that it was clearly established in Bell, Fitzke, and Wingo that the officers owed him adequate medical carе. Thus, they should be personally liable.
The district court held that the second cause of action stated by the plaintiffs was based on the deprivation of the fourteenth amendment due process right to be free from unjustified intrusions on personal security. This right is derived from the Supreme Court's decision in Youngberg v. Romeo,
The district court found that that the plaintiffs' allegations stated a claim under this clearly established right. By ignoring Danese's threats of suicide and placing him in a regular cell with horizontal bars, as opposed to a detoxification cell, the officеrs, the plaintiffs contend, did not exercise professional judgment in determining whether the conditions of confinement were safe. Youngberg, the plaintiffs conclude, should have told them they were violating Danese's constitutional rights.
We find, however, that the rights the district court cites as having been clearly established were not particularized rights as required by Anderson and, thus, were not sufficient to deny the defendants qualified immunity. The "right" that is truly at issue here is the right of a detainеe to be screened correctly for suicidal tendencies and the right to have steps taken that would have prevented suicide. The general right to medical care, for example, is not sufficient to require a police officer to have known that he had to determine that Danese was seriously contemplating suicide and stop him from following through.
We note that the rights to medical care and physical security were estаblished in cases that were factually quite different. For example, Estelle, Fitzke, and Wingo all dealt with deliberate indifference to a patient who requested medical care. It is one thing to ignore someone who has a serious injury and is asking for medical help; it is another to be required to screen prisoners correctly to find out if they need help. The right established in those cases simply would not give reasonable officers notice thаt their actions in this case were illegal.
Our conclusion is supported by the decision of the Fifth Circuit in Gagne v. City of Galveston,
We reach a similar conclusion as to the unsafe confinement claim. Neither the plaintiffs nor the district court cite any case that hоlds that police officers must detect suicidal prisoners and put them into suicide-proof facilities. The officers had no notice that they were required to place Danese in a detoxification cell with no horizontal bars, All Youngberg says is that involuntarily committed individuals have a right to safe confinement. Beyond this general statement, it offers no guidance as to the duty of an officer concerning suicide detection and prevention.
We conclude, then, that the district court erred in holding that qualified immunity did not apply as to the officers. The court below did not cite any cases showing that the officers had the constitutional duty to determine if Danese was seriously inclined to commit suicide and then stop him. The story might be different if the police were certain that Danese would attempt suicide and just ignored it, or if Danese had told them he needed psychological help. If a рrisoner asks for and needs medical care, it must be supplied. However, in this case, the officers could have reasonably thought that they were acting legally when they treated Danese as they would any prisoner. Without precedent establishing an unambiguous right to have the police diagnose one's condition as prone to suicide, these officers cannot be held liable for not taking extraordinary measures to restrain Danese.
IV
The district court also held that the plaintiffs stated two causes of action against the officials. The first cause of action alleges that the defendants are liable for the deprivation of Danese's rights to adequate medical care and physical security because they, as supervisors of the line officers, failed to institute any procedures regarding the screening of detainees and suicide prevention, as well as not providing training in these matters. This failure constituted deliberate indifference to Danese's medical needs.
In support of this analysis, the court cited Hays v. Jefferson County,
We hold that Hays only establishes the general principle that supervisors are liable for grossly negligent or nonexistent training that leads to the viоlation of constitutional rights. It does not say that suicide procedures and training must be provided.4 The district court's analysis is, in fact, dependent upon its conclusions as to the officers' liability. If the officers were not subject to a clearly established constitutional duty, their supervisors cannot be liable for not training them to meet such a duty.5
The second claim stated by the plaintiffs against the officials was based on the deprivation of Danese's duе process right to personal security, as set out in Youngberg and described above. The plaintiffs allege that the defendants violated Danese's clearly established right to safe confinement by confining decedent in a defective building. They allege that the building should have contained a detoxification cell without horizontal bars and with a working television monitor, maintaining that the grossly negligent failure to provide these things showed that the defendants did nоt apply professional judgment in creating safe confinement conditions.
We must point out, much as we did with the officers, that neither the plaintiffs nor the district court cite any cases holding that there exists a clearly established right to these suicide prevention facilities. Without a showing that the particular rights claimed to be violated were clearly established in law at the time of the alleged injury, we will not find public officials acting within their discretion personally liable for the violations of these rights. No such showing has been made here. Thus, we REVERSE the denial of the defendants' motions for summary judgment and order that the claims against the individual defendants be dismissed.
GEORGE CLIFTON EDWARDS, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
Defendants in this case appeal an order denying their motion to dismiss this civil rights action on the grounds of qualified immunity. This is a case in which the widow of deceased; David Danese, brought an action against the Chief of Police of Rose Hill, Miсhigan, and officers who had been on duty at the Rose Hill Jail when David hung himself in said jail. It is Janet Danese's contention that when the officers on duty had noticed that Danese was both drunk and threatening suicide, they had an obligation to provide either hospitalization or a cell block under observation which might have prevented his suicide. There had been a previous suicide in this same jail.
Judge Harvey denied qualified immunity to the defendants in this case and they appealed. See Danese v. Asman,
The majority relies on the recent Supreme Court case of Anderson v. Creighton,
"This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, but it is to say that in the light of preexisting law the unlawfulness must be apparent." Id. at 3039. (Citations omitted).
In this case, the pre-existing body of both Supreme Court and Sixth Circuit case law cited above made the unlawfulness of defendants' actions apparent.
I would affirm Judge Harvey's denial of qualified immunity and remand the case for trial.
Notes
The other prisoner, David Pastorisa, has stated, in a deposition, that Danese was upset about being arrested but was otherwise calm. He does not recall Danese ever asking for medical attention
The defendants also raise in this appeal the issue of whether Danese's siblings have standing to sue under Sec. 1983. The district judge ruled that they do have such standing and also refused to certify an interlocutory appeal, sensibly holding that resolving this issue would not resolve any of the central issues of the litigation. The lower court also correctly pointed out that any verdict for these plaintiffs is subject to correction on appeal after the trial. Thus, we will not consider this issue
It should be noted, however, that only very recently has this court specifically applied the deliberate indifference standard in a jail suicide case, Molton v. City of Clevelаnd,
Indeed, in a recently decided case that does in fact deal with the training of police as to jail suicide prevention, this court held that a municipality was not liable for inadequate training. Beddingfield v. City of Pulaski,
The plaintiffs argue that certain Michigan regulations required certain suicide prevention procedures, training, and facilities and that the defendants' violation of these regulations demonstrates a breach of duty. However, the state statutes and regulations do not create federal constitutional rights. Davis v. Scherer,
