Plaintiffs-appellants Leila Francés-Colón and Juan Enrique Rodriguez brought a malpractice action on behalf of their minor son Eric Rodriguez-Frances (“Eric”) against two doctors, a municipal hospital and the municipality of San Juan, on both federal and state law grounds. They alleged that the doctors’
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mishandling of Eric’s delivery
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amounted to a violation of Eric’s substantive due process rights, actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and that the defendants were liable for negligence under Puerto Rico tort law. The district court granted defendants’ summary judgment motion as to all counts, for the following reasons: (1) the plaintiffs failed to identify a protected substantive due process liberty interest giving rise to their federal civil rights claim; (2) the defendants’ actions were not state conduct that shocks the conscience for the purposes of sustaining their federal civil rights claim; (3) the defendant doctors are immune from liability under Puerto Rico law; (4) the tort claim against the municipality was time-barred under Puerto Rico law.
See Colón v. Ramirez,
Having reviewed the record and the parties’ briefs on appeal, we are satisfied with the reasoning of the decision below and affirm the judgment for substantially the reasons elucidated in the district court opinion.
Cf. Lawton v. State Mut. Life Assurance Co.,
I. The Federal Civil Rights Claim
The district court correctly held that plaintiffs-appellants failed to establish a violation of constitutional rights actionable under section 1983. Appellants claim on appeal that, in making this determination, the district court improperly resolved an issue of fact in favor of defendants by holding that the doctors failed to act with the requisite degree of culpability to sustain a section 1983 claim.
See Colón,
It is surprising, in light of clear Supreme Court and First Circuit precedent, that appellants would consider it worth their while to try their luck, or, rather, waste time and energy, with what is essentially a malpractice claim clothed in section 1983, civil rights, language. This is plainly not a situation in which the state “takes a person into custody and holds him there against his will,” thereby implicating a possible constitutional due process interest in adequate medical care.
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social Servs.,
A proximate causal link between a government agent’s actions and a personal injury does not, in itself, bring a case out of the realm of tort law and into the domain of constitutional due process.
Daniels v. Williams,
Enormous economic consequences could follow from the reading of the fourteenth amendment that plaintiff here urges. Firemen who have been alerted to a victim’s peril but fail to take effective action; municipal ambulances which, when called, arrive late; and myriad other errors by state officials in providing protective services, could all be found to violate the Constitution. It would seem appropriate that the citizenry, acting through state legislatures and state courts, should determine how far it wishes to go in reimbursing claims of this type. We can see no justification for rewriting the due process clause of the federal Constitution so as to construct a basis for relief that can be more flexibly provided elsewhere, if that is deemed advisable.
II. Defendants’ Immunity under Puerto Rico Law
It is undisputed that the defendant doctors were acting as government employees when they were attending to Eric’s birth. The district court correctly held that the doctors are protected under the immunity for government health care professionals provided by P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 4105 (1989). On appeal, appellants repeat their argument that the doctors’ alleged recklessness brings them outside of this immunity provision. We note that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court’s decision in
Vasquez Negrón v. E.L.A.,
This much said, we allow the district court opinion to speak for itself.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The essential mistake alleged was the doctor's failure to perform a caesarian section. Plaintiffs allege that the defendant doctors acted with reckless disregard and deliberate indifference by delivering Eric vaginally, using forceps, even though his mother told the doctors that she could not deliver vaginally. Eric was bom in poor physical condition, suffered severe perinatal asphyxia, and has suffered permanent disabilities.
. See Brief for Appellants at 17.
