79 A.L.R.Fed. 495,
ESTATE OF Aleta V. BAILEY, by Richard OARE, Administrator
and Cameron C.R. Bailey, Appellants,
v.
COUNTY OF YORK, York County Children and Youth Services and
Ora G. Gruver, York County Children and Youth
Services Administrator, Individually and
in her official capacity.
No. 84-5231.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued Nov. 26, 1984.
Decided June 27, 1985.
Rehearing Denied July 19, 1985.
Richard Oare (Argued), York, Pa., pro se.
Wentworth Darcy Vedder, Bishop Nichlas Kauffman Morris, Vedder & Ream, York, Pa., for appellants.
Robert G. Schwartz (Argued), Philadelphia, Pa., amicus curiae.
Roger T. Shoop (Argued), Thomas & Thomas, Harrisburg, Pa., for appellee County of York and York County Children and Youth Services.
John B. Mancke (Argued), Mancke, Lightman & Wagner, Harrisburg, Pa., for appellee Gruver, York County Children and Youth Services Administrator, individually and in her official capacity.
Before ADAMS, HIGGINBOTHAM and SLOVITER, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.
I.
This action was brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 by Richard Oare, the administrator of Aleta V. Bailey's estate, and by Cameron C.R. Bailey, father of Aleta V. Bailey, against York County, York County Children and Youth Services (YCCYS), and Ora G. Gruver, the agency's administrator. In the complaint plaintiffs allege that Aleta Bailey's death from child abuse was the result of the actions of defendants who thereby deprived Aleta Bailey and her father of their constitutional rights.
The facts, as set forth in the complaint, are that five-year-old Aleta lived with her mother, Jo Ellen Bailey Naylor, and Larry Hake, Naylor's "paramour and cohabitant". On January 3, 1982 Carol Anne Stough and Theresa Tobling, relatives of Aleta, found severe bruises and other evidence of abuse on the child's body. On January 11, Tobling discovered additional bruises and telephoned the Child Hotline. On the same day another relative notified the police of the same information.
The next day, Beverly Mackerath, a YCCYS employee, took Aleta to York Hospital where the examining physician advised Mackerath that Hake's actions in striking Aleta were excessive, that he should not have access to the child, and that she should be taken from her mother if necessary to deny Hake access to her. That same day, Aleta was released from the hospital and placed with Carol Adams, her mother's aunt. Mackerath told Naylor that she had twenty-four hours to make arrangements for Hake to move from her home and that after arrangements were made to deny Hake access to Aleta, she would be returned to Naylor's custody and control.
The next night, YCCYS returned Aleta to her mother's custody. The complaint alleges that YCCYS undertook no independent investigation to determine the whereabouts of Aleta, Naylor, and Hake, and that they lived together both on a farm and in Naylor's home within the county. A month later Aleta died from physical injuries inflicted on her by Hake and her mother.1
In the complaint, plaintiffs allege that YCCYS disregarded the advice of the examining physician and treated Aleta, her mother, and Hake as a family unit, and failed to invoke the procedures of the state's Child Protective Services Law, 11 Pa.Stat.Ann. Secs. 2208, 2223 (Purdon Supp.1984). These sections provide a mechanism for judicial determination of the necessity for protective custody of abused children and appointment of a guardian ad litem for the child.
The complaint further alleges that YCCYS established, accepted and used "defective institutional policies and/or procedures"; that the County of York failed to properly evaluate the performance, policies and procedures of the agency and its director; and that Ora G. Gruver, the director, abused her position and power by establishing, accepting and employing the policies and procedures. As a result, the defendants are alleged to have deprived Aleta of her constitutional rights to counsel2 and to life and to have deprived her father of his constitutional right to parenthood.
Defendants filed answers to the complaint denying most of the factual allegations and setting forth numerous affirmative defenses. During discovery, defendants filed motions to dismiss arguing, inter alia, that plaintiffs failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, and that they were entitled to immunity on a variety of grounds.
The district court granted the motions, holding that "there was no constitutional deprivation by the state such as would support a cause of action in this court." Estate of Bailey v. County of York,
II.
To sustain a dismissal of a complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), "we must take all the well pleaded allegations as true, construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff," and determine whether, under any reasonable reading of the pleadings, the plaintiff may be entitled to relief. Helstoski v. Goldstein,
The complaint in this case alleges that the promulgation and implementation by YCCYS of "policies and procedures" led to Aleta Bailey's death. As explained in Monell v. Department of Social Services,
It does not follow from these principles that the mere description of an act as a "policy" or "procedure" meets the threshold for a Sec. 1983 claim. Nor does every agency policy open it to Sec. 1983 liability. In Davidson v. O'Lone, we noted that "Sec. 1983 plays an effective role ... in providing a federal forum to challenge an established state procedure that infringes upon an individual's liberty or property interests."
Plaintiffs here have listed 15 "policies" of YCCYS in their complaint, many of which have little facial connection to the alleged deprivations. At least some of the others are, if proven, a potential basis for a claim of deprivation of a constitutional interest.4 The complaint alleges that Aleta died "as a result of said defective institutional policies and procedures established, accepted and employed by York County Children and Youth Services in investigating the factors harming the child, in determining who was responsible for the child's welfare, and/or in taking appropriate steps to remedy and correct the child's environment so as to secure the child's welfare." Moreover, it does not appear, at least from the complaint, that plaintiffs are seeking to infer such policies through evidence of a single incident of unconstitutional conduct, a claim that would be precluded by the Supreme Court's decision in City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle, --- U.S. ----,
The complaint also alleges that plaintiffs' harm was caused by the actions of Gruver, the administrator of the YCCYS, taken in her official capacity in establishing, accepting and employing the enumerated allegedly defective policies and procedures. It is thus distinguishable from the unauthorized actions of a city employee for which the city cannot be held liable on respondeat superior under the holding in Monell.
Additional insight into the type of policies or practices for which a city may be held liable has been provided by the Supreme Court's recent decision in Brandon v. Holt, --- U.S. ----,
As the Supreme Court has made clear in Brandon v. Holt, the actions of the official acting in his or her official capacity are to be equated with the actions of the city itself.
The allegations of the complaint may fairly be read to allege conduct rising to the level of deliberate indifference, reckless disregard, or gross negligence by the agency and by its supervisory officials fairly attributable to policies and practices of the agency.6 They allege more than the mere "negligent monitoring of the mother's household," as stated by the dissent. They therefore adequately meet the standard of conduct encompassed by Sec. 1983. See, e.g., Voutour v. Vitale,
We reiterate that at this stage of the proceedings we are obliged to accept the complaint's allegations as true. Defendants have filed answers denying the principal allegations of the complaint and presenting a markedly different version of the facts than that of the plaintiffs. In fact, in YCCYS's brief on appeal, it is stated that YCCYS made periodic visits, both announced and unannounced, to Aleta and her mother following the return of Aleta to her mother's custody and that it had ascertained that Hake was no longer residing in that unit. Because we must remand this case, we stress that an error in judgment, an unforeseeable tragic event, a good faith but misinformed professional decision, or mere negligence will not suffice to impose liability under Sec. 1983. Furthermore, to the extent that plaintiffs rely on the professional practices of the YCCYS to prove gross negligence, they will, of course, have to sustain the burden of showing that these practices are so far below the minimum accepted and generally prevailing professional standards as to permit the fact finder to infer deliberate or reckless indifference or unconcern or callous disregard for Aleta's safety. See generally Doe v. New York City Department of Social Services,
III.
The basis for the district court's dismissal of the complaint was that because Aleta's death was directly attributable to her mother and Hake, who were not under the control or supervision of the state, the conduct challenged at most was that of mere omissions by the agency, which would be actionable only if Aleta had been in the "legal custody" of the state when the incident occurred.
In effect, the district court accepted YCCYS's claim that it did not owe a duty to Aleta.7 It recognized that in Doe I, the Second Circuit held that an agency that placed a child in foster care could be liable for the child's sexual abuse by her foster parent because the agency failed to adequately supervise the placement.
The district court relied instead on the opinion in Jensen v. Conrad,
In Jensen the Fourth Circuit rejected the argument that a right of protection can never exist in the absence of a custodial relationship, and instead reaffirmed "that a right to affirmative protection need not be limited by a determination that there was a 'custodial relationship,' "
The genesis of the notion that a duty may be based on the finding of a "special relationship" is the opinion in Martinez v. California,
the parole board was not aware that appellants' decedent, as distinguished from the public at large, faced any special danger. We need not and do not decide that a parole officer could never be deemed to "deprive" someone of life by action taken in connection with the release of a prisoner on parole.
Id. at 285,
Later cases have relied on this language to reject limiting Sec. 1983 to cases in which there was a custodial relationship. In Bowers v. DeVito,
In one sense, then, Fox represented the culmination of a line of analysis that had begun in Martinez, for it firmly established that a right of affirmative protection could arise under the fourteenth amendment. But at the same time Fox left the inquiry nearly as open-ended as Martinez, for it did not purport to delimit the scope of the right.
Jensen v. Conrad,
A duty of protection has been found owing by the state and local entities to persons who were not in custody. For example, in White v. Rochford,
As alleged in the complaint, YCCYS not only had notice that there was evidence of child abuse, but it actually took Aleta in custody, received specific confirmation of child abuse by the physician whom it had examine her, was aware of the source of the abuse, placed her in the protective custody of another relative, informed Aleta's mother that Aleta would be returned to her custody when she made arrangements to have Hake move and to deny him access to Aleta, and returned her without adequately investigating the whereabouts of Aleta, her mother, and Hake. The facts as pleaded allege that the agency was aware that Aleta "as distinguished from the public at large, faced a[ ] special danger." Martinez,
Thus we cannot hold that, as a matter of law, the agency had no duty to Aleta, but we will also, as did the other Courts of Appeals, eschew any comprehensive limning of the parameters of the "special relationship" that suffices to place on an agency an affirmative obligation to persons not in custody. We find it sufficient to hold that in the special circumstances pleaded here, this case falls on the other side of the line suggested in Martinez.
IV.
The district court did not expressly address the issue of proximate cause although it cited the page in the Martinez opinion on which the Supreme Court's holding appears. We believe that it is incumbent on us to consider whether Aleta's death was so remote a result of the alleged conduct by the defendants that we must dismiss the complaint on that ground as a matter of law. In Martinez, the Court held that the murder by the parolee of a member of the public at large five months after he was released from prison was "too remote a consequence of the parole officers' action to hold them responsible under the federal civil rights law."
Ordinarily, proximate cause cannot be determined on the basis of pleadings but instead requires a factual development at trial. Thus, for example, in Black v. Stephens,
The significant difference between this case and Martinez is the fact that the victim in Martinez was a member of the public at large while here the agency was aware of a "special danger" to Aleta. Again, we cannot hold that as a matter of law, plaintiffs will be unable to prove the necessary causal nexus between the conduct and the injury.
V.
We have concluded that this case cannot be dismissed on the basis of the pleadings, unless there are other dispositive legal defenses which the district court did not reach. Although as we have made clear, plaintiffs will have difficult burdens with respect to each of the issues discussed above before they can recover, we are obliged to give them the opportunity to prove their case.
Accordingly, the order of the district court dismissing the complaint will be vacated and the case will be remanded for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
ADAMS, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
Like the majority, I agree that it is incumbent upon us to determine whether the alleged misconduct by the defendants--here the negligent monitoring of the mother's household to which Aleta had been returned--was so removed from Aleta's death that as a matter of law the dismissal of the complaint should be affirmed. Because I differ from the majority's conclusion that the plaintiff's allegations in this case relating to causation distinguish it significantly from Martinez v. California,
By its express terms Sec. 1983 creates liability for state action that has caused a plaintiff to be subjected to the deprivation of a constitutional right. When, for example, liability is urged on the theory of a defective institutional policy, the causation requirement of the statute mandates that the plaintiff demonstrate "a causal link between execution of the policy and the injury suffered." See Losch v. Borough of Parkesburg,
The Supreme Court has stated that questions of causation under Sec. 1983 do not turn on the determination whether, as a matter of state tort law, the defendant had a duty to the plaintiff, or could be said to have proximately caused the injury. Martinez,
The present case arises from the district court's dismissal of the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. A line of cases in this Court has held plaintiffs in civil rights cases to a heightened standard of specificity in pleading. E.g., Rhodes,
In Martinez, which involved a Sec. 1983 suit against members of a state parole board that had released a person who eventually assaulted and killed the victim, the Supreme Court held that, although the plaintiff may have alleged sufficient facts to demonstrate that the parole board could be said to have a duty to the decedent or to have proximately caused the injury as a matter of state law, the state action nevertheless had not deprived the victim of her constitutional rights. The Supreme Court stressed in its discussion of causation that the alleged deprivation occurred some five months after the challenged state conduct, and that the victim's life was taken by a person, the parolee, who "was in no sense an agent of" the defendant.
An application of these same factors to the present case would suggest that the tragic death of Aleta Bailey was too remote a consequence of the agency's actions to hold the defendants responsible under the civil rights statute. A substantial period, five weeks, elapsed between the agency's control of Aleta and her subsequent death. More importantly, Aleta was killed by two persons who were in no sense agents of the state. Cf. Doe v. New York City Department of Social Services,
Although as the majority notes the child welfare agency may have been aware that Aleta faced dangers not shared by all children in Pennsylvania, cf. Martinez,
Finally, it bears emphasis that Sec. 1983 was enacted to deal primarily with acts of discrimination by state officials. There is a danger that by extending this important legislation to contexts far removed from Congress' original and overarching purposes, a national state tort claims act administered in the federal courts in effect will be created. Steps in that direction should not be lightly taken since the ultimate outcome of such a course might well be incongruent with our role as federal judges. When a court extends a statute far beyond what was contemplated by Congress, it transgresses the concept of separation of powers.
For the foregoing reasons, and primarily because I believe Martinez to be controlling, I respectfully dissent.
Before ALDISERT, Chief Judge, and SEITZ, ADAMS, GIBBONS, HUNTER, WEIS, GARTH, HIGGINBOTHAM, SLOVITER, BECKER, STAPLETON and MANSMANN, Circuit Judges.
SUR PETITION FOR REHEARING
The petition for rehearing filed by Appellees: COUNTY OF YORK, YORK COUNTY CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES in the above entitled case having been submitted to the judges who participated in the decision of this court and to all other available circuit judges of the circuit in regular active service, and no judge who concurred in the decision having asked for rehearing, and a majority of the circuit judges of the circuit in regular active service not having voted for rehearing by the court in banc, the petition for rehearing is denied.
Circuit Judge ADAMS votes for rehearing in banc for the reasons set forth in his dissenting opinion, and because he believes that expanding the scope of Sec. 1983 beyond the confines of the statute imprudently burdens the federal courts and encroaches on jurisdiction reserved for the state court system.
Circuit Judges JAMES HUNTER, III and GARTH would grant the petition for rehearing in banc.
Notes
The district court noted that Hake was convicted of first degree murder and Aleta's mother was convicted of third degree murder. Estate of Bailey v. County of York,
The district court held that the right to counsel claim was inappropriate in the context of civil proceedings and plaintiffs do not challenge that holding on appeal
Following the appeal, we appointed Robert G. Schwartz, Esq. of the Juvenile Law Center of Philadelphia as amicus curiae, and, after argument, held the case in a pending status until filing of this court's in banc decision in Davidson v. O'Lone,
The complaint includes allegations that such defective institutional policies and/or procedures include, "not seeking judicial intervention in cases of serious child abuse where there was only one incident of said abuse"; "giving advance notice of home visits"; "failing to check observations of independent witnesses"; and "not notifying a natural parent of the nature and extent of the child abuse and the child's whereabouts"
Gruver, who was sued individually and in her official capacity, argues that we should affirm the dismissal as to her on the ground that she is entitled to qualified immunity. She asserts that no facts are alleged that would indicate that she is liable in her individual capacity. That issue was not addressed by the district court and we believe it should have the opportunity to do so in the first instance. Of course, the decision of the Supreme Court in Brandon v. Holt,
In a letter requested by the court, the amicus curiae stated: "Taken as a whole, the complaint in this case alleges deprivations caused by gross negligence or deliberate indifference, all of which were the product of defective state policies or practices." Letter from Robert G. Schwartz, Esq., Juvenile Law Center (Jan. 23, 1985)
Significantly, the court did not hold that Aleta or her father did not have a cognizable constitutional right. There is a liberty interest in being free from physical assault that can be fairly attributed to the action of a state. See Ingraham v. Wright,
Aleta Bailey's father also has a cognizable liberty interest in preserving the life and physical safety of his child from deprivations caused by state action, a right that logically extends from his recognized liberty interest in the custody of his children and the maintenance and integrity of the family, see Santosky v. Kramer,
To remand a legally insufficient claim for trial wastes the time and resources of the litigants as well as those of the courts, in addition to creating the risk of an erroneous result
Neither Black v. Stephens,
The Supreme Court's recent decision in Brandon v. Holt, --- U.S. ----,
