Cheriee GAZETTE, Individually and as Personal Representative
of the Estate of Pamela Kay Bandy, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF PONTIAC, a Michigan Municipality; Pontiac Police
Department, a Division of the City of Pontiac; Raymond
Sain, Detective; Gary D. Bass, Sergeant and other members
of the City of Pontiac Police Department, jointly and
severally, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 93-1827.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Sept. 9, 1994.
Decided Dec. 8, 1994.
Barry S. Fagan (argued and briefed), Michael J. Littleworth (briefed) and Nadia Ragheb, Dib & Fagan, Detroit, MI, for plaintiff-appellant.
T. Joseph Seward and Marcia L. Howe (argued and briefed), Cummings, McClorey, Davis & Acho, Livonia, MI, for defendants-appellees.
Before: BROWN, MARTIN and BOGGS, Circuit Judges.
BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge.
Claiming that her decedent's rights of due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment, and her decedent's rights under the Federal Rehabilitation Act were deprived, Cheriee Gazette appeals the dismissal of her 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 claims. We affirm the dismissal.
Accepting Gazette's statement of the facts as true, the relevant events surrounding the tragic death of Pamela Bandy, Gazette's mother, are as follows. On September 18, 1990, Bandy was abducted from a car wash in Pontiac, Michigan by one of the car wash employees. At the time of the abduction, Bandy was a recovering alcoholic and recently had been released from an alcohol treatment program. Bandy's abductor placed Bandy in the trunk of her car, a white 1981 Fleetwood Cadillac, and drove around for six days until he was stopped by Pontiac police officers on an unrelated outstanding bench warrant on September 24. The police officers found Bandy's body in the trunk. She had died from starvation, dehydration, and methanol poisoning from drinking windshield fluid in the trunk. Bandy allegedly died twelve to thirty-six hours before her body was found.
On the morning of Bandy's abduction, Gazette called the City of Pontiac Police Department to report her mother's disappearance. The police knew Bandy prior to this incident and told Gazette that Bandy was an alcoholic and that she would come home when she had finished "bingeing." The police also told Gazette they had investigated the car wash for evidence of Bandy's disappearance when apparently they had not. Gazette asserts that had the police investigated the car wash they would have found obvious and conspicuous evidence of a physical and sexual assault. Also, Bandy's abductor drove Bandy's Cadillac, in which she was trapped, to the car wash and to police headquarters between September 18 and 24, and even engaged police officers in conversation concerning Bandy's disappearance, the status of the investigation, and identifiable features of her car. Gazette also gave the police Bandy's bank account information, but the police did not check to see if any withdrawals had been made from Bandy's account. Sometime between September 18 and 24, a bank camera videotaped Bandy's abductor withdrawing all the funds from her account.
Based on the foregoing events, Gazette filed a three-count complaint on September 23, 1992, against the City of Pontiac, its Police Department, and the named police officers in their individual capacities. The complaint contained federal civil rights claims alleging denial of due process, equal protection and violation of the Federal Rehabilitation Act as well as state law claims. Specifically, Gazette claimed that the defendants had a "special relationship" with Bandy because the police officers had made Bandy's situation much worse by their actions (and inaction). Gazette further claimed that the defendants deprived Bandy of her federal rights by their official policy, custom or practice of refusing, failing or neglecting to investigate missing persons and by lying and misleading the general public, and relatives of a missing person.
On April 26, 1993, the district court granted in part the defendants' Motion to Dismiss and for Judgment on the Pleadings with Sanctions, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), issuing an order dismissing the federal claims and remanding the state claims. For reasons stated at a hearing on the 12(b)(6) motion, the district court dismissed the claims as to the Police Department because it is not a "person" for Section 1983 liability. Next the court dismissed the due process claim against the City on the ground that the state has no affirmative duty to protect citizens from the actions of third parties. DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social Servs.,
On May 6, 1993, Gazette filed a Motion for Reconsideration. The district court denied the motion. This timely appeal followed. On appeal, Gazette renews her due process, Federal Rehabilitation Act, and qualified immunity arguments. Gazette also argues that Bandy was deprived of equal protection by the police because they treated Bandy differently due to her status as an alcoholic. Gazette did not explicitly plead an equal protection claim, but rather chose to list a claim under "Amendment[ ] ... XIV." The district court did not address the substance of Gazette's equal protection claim at the 12(b)(6) hearing other than to proceed to dismiss all federal claims.
The district court's dismissal of a civil rights complaint on a 12(b)(6) motion is scrutinized with special care. Kent v. Johnson,
On appeal, Gazette insists that she has alleged federal claims against the defendants on two theories: 1) that the defendants, having created the danger, or made Bandy more vulnerable to danger, were required to take special actions on Bandy's behalf, and 2) that the actions and inaction of the police officers prove that the training and supervision they received was "so reckless and grossly negligent" that misconduct was "almost inevitable" or "substantially certain to result."
First, we observe that it is well established that a municipality may be held liable under Section 1983 only for its own unconstitutional or illegal policies. Monell,
It has been recognized that a duty to protect a citizen may arise if the state has a special relationship with a person, such as when it takes a person into custody. Youngberg v. Romeo,
Accepting Gazette's allegations as true, the facts of this case do not show such a special relationship between the City of Pontiac and Bandy. Bandy was never in the custody of the City. At most, the City and the police officers failed to rescue Bandy, and did not "create the danger" in which she found herself. Gazette may have a state law claim for gross negligence against the defendants, but these facts do not give rise to a constitutional tort under Section 1983.
The final part of the DeShaney analysis requires us to ask whether the City or the police officers rendered Bandy any more vulnerable to the danger she was already in by their actions. In Freeman v. Ferguson,
There cannot be Section 1983 liability where the actions of one private individual leading to the injury or death of another individual are too remote from the allegedly wrongful state action. This Court, as well as the Supreme Court, has discussed the proximate cause required to sustain a Section 1983 claim. See Janan v. Trammell,
The argument by appellant here is that there is a sufficient causal connection between the police officers' action of lying and Bandy's death to sustain a Section 1983 claim. We disagree. In this case, the Police Department knew only that Bandy was a missing person. At the time they lied to Gazette and others, the police did not know Bandy's location or whether she was safe or in danger. The only direct consequence of the police officers' actions alleged by Gazette is that Bandy's family and friends refrained from investigating in reliance on the police officers' misrepresentations. The logical weakness of this argument is apparent. There is no close causal connection between the police officers' lies and Bandy's death because many factors could have prevented the police officers, or Bandy's family and friends, from locating Bandy. The causal connection between the police officers' lies and Bandy's death simply is not sufficient to sustain a Section 1983 claim for deprivation of Bandy's due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. Martinez,
Another reason why Gazette fails to state a federal claim concerns whether gross negligence is sufficient for Section 1983 liability. This Court, following the Supreme Court's decision in Collins v. City of Harker Heights, --- U.S. ----,
The nature of the defendants' actions in the instant case are similar to those of defendants in Lewellen. Here, defendants chose not to investigate a missing person complaint. They allegedly lied about the status of the investigation. However, in taking this course of action, they did not know Bandy's situation or where she was. Even if the defendants' actions were the proximate cause of Bandy's death (as we have said they were not), the defendants' actions cannot be characterized as intentional, but at most grossly negligent. Therefore, under Lewellen and Collins, the defendants' allegedly grossly negligent conduct is not sufficient to impose upon them Section 1983 liability. Gazette may have a state law claim for gross negligence, but these facts do not give rise to a constitutional tort under Section 1983.
Our inquiry as to Gazette's equal protection claim, one of several listed in the complaint, is whether the City and its police department had a rational basis for not investigating Bandy's disappearance because she was a known alcoholic. The status of being an alcoholic, or a recovering alcoholic, is not a suspect class for equal protection analysis, and so the lowest level of scrutiny applies to the defendants' action. City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center,
Related to Gazette's equal protection claim is her claim that the Federal Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C Secs. 701-797, requires the defendants to not discriminate against Bandy due to her status as a recovering alcoholic. We agree with the district court that the actions of the defendants are not covered by the Federal Rehabilitation Act inasmuch as the Police Department's alleged "program" for finding missing persons is not a program covered by the Federal Rehabilitation Act.
Gazette also argues that, even absent a special relationship between the City and Bandy, the City had a custom, policy or practice of failing to train, supervise, or discipline its police officers and of failing to investigate missing persons and lying to members of the general public and family members of missing persons which led to the deprivation of Bandy's federal rights. Though no other Circuit has done so, Gazette argues that this Court should adopt the reasoning of the district court in Cerbone v. County of Westchester,
Also, based on the foregoing, it follows that the district court was correct in deciding that the police officers are immune from Section 1983 liability. The Supreme Court has stated that "government officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The judgment of the district court dismissing the complaint is therefore affirmed.
