Richard Allen was arrested and taken to Howard County Jail for driving while intoxicated and possession of marijuana. During the booking process, Allen indicated that he was medicated for a number of mental ailments, including depression, but that he was not thinking about killing himself at the time. Based on this and other information, jailer Adam Dunlap classified Allen as a “risk” for suicide, meaning that he would be checked every fifteen minutes. Dunlap issued Allen a pair of trousers and a shirt to wear, and he was placed in a holding cell. After approximately one hour, Allen was found hanging from his jail-issued trousers. Attempts to resuscitate Allen failed, and he died.
Allen’s family (“Appellants”) brought this suit against Howard County, Howard County Sheriffs Department, and several
The individual defendants were granted summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, and that judgment is not on appeal. The district court subsequently granted summary judgment in favor of Howard County and its Sheriffs Department (collectively “Howard County”), and Allen’s family appeals that judgment. We AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
I. DISCUSSION
A. The Texas Tort Claims Act and the “Use of Property”.
A Texas governmental unit is generally immune from tort liability unless the legislature has somehow waived immunity.
Texas Dep’t of Crim. Justice v. Miller,
Thus, in evaluating the TTCA claim, the threshold question is whether issuing a suicidal inmate trousers qualifies as a
condition or use of
property sufficient to waive governmental immunity. The district court found that “[mjerely providing Decedent with the trousers does not equate to ‘use’ by [Howard County].” This is a pure question of statutory interpretation which this Court reviews
de novo. United States v. Hanafy,
Appellants argue that “use” means “to put or bring [personal property] into action or service,” and the trousers were put into service by Howard County when they were issued.
See Miller,
Neither party adequately captures the caselaw. This is not entirely their fault, as Justice Hecht of the Texas Supreme Court has obsérved, repeated attempts to clarify this issue “have done so little to infuse the Act’s use-of-property standard with meaning that the task now appears hopeless. The [TTCA] does not define ‘use,’ and nothing in the history of its passage provides a clue as to the standard’s intended meaning.”
Miller,
We have held that failing to provide a hospital patient a bed with rails or a football player a properly protective uniform or an epileptic swimmer with a life preserver is a use of property within the statutory waiver of immunity, but failing to give a patient an injectionable drug or to install a pump to dissipate gas fumesis but a non-use of property outside the waiver. We have held that misreading an electrocardiogram is a use of property, but misreading medical records is not.
Id. at 590 (Hecht, J., concurring).
The best reading of the Texas Supreme Court cases is that a waiver occurs if death or injury results from (1) the direct use of property by a state actor, or (2) a defective condition of state-issued property, even if actively employed by a third-party at the time of injury. That is, when there is some intervening non-state actor that proximately causes the harm, such as Allen in this case, there must be a defective condition in the property itself for a waiver of immunity under the TTCA. This rule generally captures the caselaw 2 and the TTCA’s language regarding either a “condition or use” of the property.
San Antonio State Hosp. v. Cowan
makes it fairly clear that merely issuing non-defective trousers to Allen is not sufficient to waive immunity under the TTCA.
Appellants’ attempt to distinguish
Co-wan
on the basis that the walker and suspenders were owned by the patient, whereas here the trousers were state owned. This distinction is unavailing for several reasons. First,
Cowan’s
analysis places absolutely no reliance on the fact that the walker and suspenders belonged to the patient rather than the state. Second, the TTCA’s waiver provision is entirely indifferent as to whether the property in use is state or privately owned.
See
Tex. Civ. PRAC.
&
Rem.Code § 101.021(2). Finally, the cases Appellant relies on all involve inherently defective property, and none of them relied on the state-owned nature of the property in finding a waiver.
See Lowe,
Because it was Allen’s use of the state-issued trousers that caused his death, and there is no allegation that the trousers were in a defective condition, we agree with the district court that the TTCA’s waiver provision does not apply. Howard County is immune from the TTCA claim. 3
B. Appellants’ Deliberate Indifference Claim
The Appellants next complain that the district court inappropriately granted
The district court granted its § 1983 summary judgment on a number of independent grounds. For instance, it found that Appellants never properly pled their deliberate indifference claim as a due process violation. It also found that any deliberate indifference claim is foreclosed by its earlier unappealed summary judgment in favor of the individual defendants. Appellants now argue that they did raise this as a due process claim and that the earlier summary judgment has no preclusive effect as to the County’s liability. 4
Assuming without deciding that Appellants properly raised this due process claim and that it is not precluded by the earlier summary judgment order, we still find that they raised no genuine issue of material fact sufficient to survive summary judgment. To establish a county’s liability on a § 1983 claim, a plaintiff must show that the County had some inadequate custom or policy that acted as the moving force behind a constitutional violation.
Monell v. New York City Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
It is undisputed that Dunlap, the jailer on duty, received training in suicide prevention and performed the required screening. The primary evidence of inadequate training Appellants point to is the deposition of Dunlap, who stated — contrary to Appellants’ description of the record — that the jailers were repeatedly trained, essentially on a daily basis.
5
Appellants’ conclusory statements that Dunlap could have been trained better are insufficient to raise a genuine issue of fact.
See Douglass v. United Servs. Auto Ass’n,
II. CONCLUSION
We agree with the district court’s conclusions on both the TTCA and the § 1983 claims, and AFFIRM its summary judgment.
Notes
. These concerns are often followed by requests that the legislature clarify this portion of the TTCA.
See, e.g., Miller,
. There are some scenarios where this rule would not do much to inform the analysis. For instance, where a suicidal hospital patient escapes out of an unlocked door and kills himself, whether the door being unlocked qualifies as a "defective condition” is difficult to answer, but the Texas Supreme Court found that there was no waiver of immunity in such a case.
Dallas County Mental Health & Mental Retardation v. Bossley,
. We agree with the district court on this ground, so we do not address Howard County's alternative argument that Appellants could not maintain their TTCA action because the state officials involved have official immunity.
. Because a deliberate indifference claim against a County requires the plaintiff to first "show that the municipal employee violated his clearly established constitutional rights with subjective deliberate indifference,” and the summary judgment in favor of the individual defendants found that none of them acted with such deliberate indifference, the district court found that this claim was foreclosed. Appellants take issue with this line of reasoning and the district court’s application of
Flores
v.
County of Hardeman,
. Appellants curiously rely on Dunlap's statement that, as a jailer, he "never had any in-house training.” Looking at the cited portion of the record, Dunlap is asked if he received "in-house training,” and Dunlap answered, "I would say yes, because we do that on a daily basis.” Rec. Ex. at 1828. While Appellants complain that all of his training was on-the-job training, they never indicate how that constitutes a constitutionally infirm custom or policy.
