Crystal R. GRAHAM, in her own right and on behalf of John P.
Graham, Deceased, Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,
v.
SAUK PRAIRIE POLICE COMMISSION, Village of Sauk City,
Wisconsin and Village of Prairie Du Sac,
Wisconsin, Defendants-Appellants, Cross-Appellees,
Robert Rentmeester, Defendant, Cross-Appellee.
Nos. 89-1537, 89-1652, and 89-2385.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Dec. 1, 1989.
Decided Oct. 3, 1990.
Ronald J. Kotnik, David E. Rohrer, Lathrop & Clark, Madison, Wis., for Graham.
Carroll Metzner, Jean M. Wiencek, Bell, Metzner, Gierhart & Moore, Madison, Wis., Wayne Mueller, Prairie Du Sac, Wis., for defendants-appellants, cross-appellees.
Before CUMMINGS, FLAUM, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
KANNE, Circuit Judge.
The Villages of Sauk City and Prairie Du Sac, Wisconsin, and their police commission, the Sauk Prairie Police Commission, hired John Mueller as a police officer in April of 1983. On September 16, 1986, while Mueller was on patrol, he received a radio call for assistance from a Department of Natural Resource's conservation warden. The warden informed Mueller about a suspect in a pickup truck who was believed to be carrying controlled substances. Pursuant to the warden's directions, Mueller went to the house of John Graham. Mueller parked his squad car in Graham's driveway behind a pickup truck in which Graham was seated. Mueller repeatedly ordered Graham to get out of his truck and produce a driver's license. After Graham continuously refused, Mueller and the conservation warden removed Graham from the truck, placed him face down on the driveway and handcuffed Graham's hands behind his back. Mueller then drew his service revolver and fired two shots into Graham's head. Graham died from the gunshot wounds shortly thereafter. It is undisputed that Graham was not fleeing and posed no threat of death or serious injury to Mueller or any other person at the time of the shooting. Also undisputed is the fact that Mueller was suffering from chronic paranoid schizophrenia at the time he shot Graham.
Crystal Graham brought this suit on behalf of the deceased, John Graham, and in her individual capacity as his surviving spouse and heir. Graham sued Mueller's estate (Mueller died shortly after Graham initiated this suit) under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 claiming that Mueller violated her rights under the fourteenth amendment and those of her deceased husband under the fourth and fourteenth amendments. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Graham regarding Graham's fourth amendment excessive force claim and fourteenth amendment loss of life claim. The court also granted summary judgment in favor of Graham regarding her fourteenth amendment claim of lost society and companionship. In addition, the district court held on summary judgment that Wisconsin law required the Sauk Prairie Police Commission and the Villages of Sauk City and Prairie Du Sac to indemnify Mueller's estate for any monetary damages that might be entered against Mueller.
Crystal Graham also brought a Sec. 1983 suit directly against the two villages, the police commission and Police Chief Robert Rentmeester under a theory of supervisory liability for Mueller's unconstitutional killing of Graham. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the villages, the police commission and Rentmeester on this claim.
In February, 1989, a jury trial was held solely to determine the amount of damages owed by Mueller's estate. The jury awarded Crystal Graham $300,000 for lost society and companionship and $130,200 in compensatory damages. The jury also awarded the estate of John Graham $550,000 for loss of life. The jury did not award any damages for pain and suffering.
The villages and the police commission appeal the district court's order that they indemnify Mueller's estate; in addition, they appeal the district court's award of attorney fees and loss of life damages in favor of Graham. Crystal Graham cross-appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the villages, the police commission, and Rentmeester on her municipal liability claim. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court on all issues.
Indemnification
The villages and the police commission contend that the district court erred in requiring them to indemnify Mueller's estate. The Wisconsin statute that requires a municipality to indemnify its employees, Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.46, provides in pertinent part:
(1)(a) If the defendant in any action or special proceeding is a public officer or employe and is proceeded against in an official capacity or is proceeded against as an individual because of acts committed while carrying out duties as an officer or employe and the jury or the court finds that the defendant was acting within the scope of employment, the judgment as to damages and costs entered against the officer or employe in excess of any insurance applicable to the officer or employe shall be paid by the state or political subdivision of which the defendant is an officer or employe.
The villages and the police commission advance two arguments why they are not required to indemnify Mueller's estate. First, they argue that the municipal tort immunity statute, Wis.Stat. Sec. 893.80(4), precludes indemnification because Mueller committed an intentional tort when he shot Graham. Alternatively, they argue that indemnification is not required under the indemnity statute because Mueller was not acting "within the scope of employment" when he shot Graham. We will address these arguments in turn.
Wisconsin's municipal tort immunity statute provides that, "[n]o suit may be brought against any ... political corporation, governmental subdivision or any agency thereof for the intentional torts of its officers, officials, agents or employees...." Wis.Stat. Sec. 893.80(4). It is undisputed that Mueller committed an intentional tort when he shot Graham. While recognizing that the Wisconsin indemnity statute contains no explicit exception for employee intentional torts, the defendants contend that a conflict exists between the indemnity statute and the intentional tort immunity statute. The defendants argue that the conflict can be avoided only if we conclude that the Wisconsin legislature intended the immunity statute to preclude indemnity in one type of action--an action based upon a municipal employee's intentional torts. The defendants contend that the Wisconsin Supreme Court's decision in Strong v. City of Milwaukee,
In light of Wisconsin Supreme Court pronouncements, decisions of this court, and the historical context in which the Wisconsin indemnity and immunity statutes were enacted, we conclude that the immunity statute does not absolve the villages and the police commission from indemnifying Mueller's estate.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court discussed the scope of the indemnity statute in Ibrahim v. Samore,
The defendants contend that Ibrahim is inapposite because Ibrahim involved a state rather than a municipal employee. We disagree. While the holding of Ibrahim is inapposite--our case does not involve Wisconsin's 120 day notice statute--the Wisconsin Supreme Court clearly indicated in dictum that the Wisconsin indemnity statute does not distinguish between intentional and nonintentional torts in determining whether a public official or employee qualifies for indemnification. We see no reason why the Supreme Court's pronouncement is dependent on whether an intentional tort is committed by a state as opposed to a municipal employee. The indemnity statute treats municipal employees no differently than state employees. The statute plainly says that judgments "shall be paid by the state or political subdivision of which the defendant is an officer or employe." Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.46(1)(a) (emphasis added).
In Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
During the Bell appeal, the city conceded that the Wisconsin indemnity statute required it to indemnify the police officer and the public officials. Because of the city's concession, the villages and the police commission argue that we should not give Bell precedential effect in deciding this case. However, the city did contest a portion of the indemnity award in Bell. Specifically, the city argued that it was not required to indemnify the police officer and city officials for the punitive damages awarded against them because a municipality is immune from punitive damages in a federal civil rights suit. Id. at 1270. Although the city's challenge in Bell was based on different grounds than those proffered by the defendants in this case, what we said in response to the city's challenge is pertinent to the case at hand. In Bell, we acknowledged that municipalities are immune from punitive damages in federal civil rights suits. Nonetheless, we also pointed out that a state indemnity statute may waive municipal immunity for punitive damages. Id. at 1271 (citing City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc.,
In another case involving the Wisconsin indemnity statute, we held that municipal employees who had committed intentional torts acted "within the scope of their employment," and thus, they were entitled to indemnification under the statute. Hibma v. Odegaard,
In both Bell and Hibma, we held that the Wisconsin indemnity statute required municipalities to indemnify employees who had committed intentional torts. The villages and the police commission argue that neither Bell nor Hibma are dispositive because the municipalities in those cases failed to argue that the indemnity statute does not cover intentional tort actions due to the Wisconsin immunity statute--the statute prohibiting suits against a municipality for the intentional torts of its employees. Neither Bell nor Hibma grappled with the issue of how the immunity statute affects the indemnity statute. Rather, this court in Bell and Hibma, like the Wisconsin Supreme Court in Ibrahim, determined that the indemnity statute applied to intentional tort actions because of the plain language of the statute--the statute states that indemnity is proper in "any action" as long as the state or municipal employee was acting within the scope of employment. The defendants' argument does not affect the conclusion of Ibrahim, Bell or Hibma. By looking at the historical context in which the indemnity statute and the immunity statute were enacted, it becomes clear that the Wisconsin legislature did not intend the immunity statute to create an intentional tort exception to the indemnity statute.
The Wisconsin indemnity statute was originally enacted in 1943. In its original form, the statute read:
Where the defendant in any action, writ, or special proceeding, except in actions for false arrest, is a public officer and is proceeded against in his official capacity and the jury or the court finds that he acted in good faith the judgment as to damages and costs entered against the officer shall be paid by the state or political subdivision of which he is an officer.
Wis.Stat. Sec. 270.58 (1943). When the indemnity statute was enacted in 1943, the state of Wisconsin and its municipalities were protected against all direct tort suits, whether for negligent or intentional torts, by the common law doctrine of government tort immunity. Thus, while municipalities were immune from direct suit and direct liability for the torts of their employees, the Wisconsin legislature nonetheless required municipalities to pay judgments entered in suits brought directly against those employees. See Larson v. Lester,
In the 1962 case of Holytz v. Milwaukee,
The Wisconsin Supreme Court's decision in Strong does not lead to a contrary conclusion. In Strong, the plaintiff sued the city of Milwaukee claiming that one of its police officers wrongfully arrested and imprisoned him. The plaintiff, however, did not sue the officer.
The villages and the police commission mount a second challenge to the district court's indemnity order. They contend that even if the immunity statute does not preclude indemnification, the district court erred in ordering indemnity at the summary judgment stage because a trier of fact could conclude that Officer Mueller did not act "within the scope of his employment" when he shot John Graham.
As a threshold matter, we note all parties agree that when Mueller shot Graham, he was acting under color of law for purposes of Sec. 1983 liability. However, a finding that a public employee acted under "color of law" for purposes of Sec. 1983 does not automatically establish that the employee acted within the "scope of employment" under the Wisconsin indemnity statute. The "under color of law" category is broader than the "scope of employment" category. Cameron v. City of Milwaukee,
Wisconsin courts have stated that an act is deemed to be within the scope of employment only if it is a natural, not disconnected and not extraordinary, part or incident of the service contemplated, Cameron,
[t]here is no requirement that serving the employer must be the employee's only purpose or even the employee's primary purpose. Rather, an employee's conduct is not within the scope of his or her employment if it is too little actuated by a purpose to serve the employer or if it is motivated entirely by the employee's own purposes (that is, the employee stepped aside from the prosecution of the employer's business to accomplish an independent purpose of his or her own).
Id. at 499-500,
Wisconsin courts have stated that it is proper to decide the scope of employment issue on a motion for summary judgment as long as the underlying facts are not in dispute and reasonable inferences leading to conflicting results cannot be drawn from the undisputed facts. Cameron,
The defendants rely on Cameron and Desotelle to support their position. In Cameron, two off-duty police officers and an off-duty fireman (defendants) were cruising the streets of Milwaukee during the early morning hours. All three were dressed in civilian clothes. Although they were off-duty, the two police officers were subject to a Milwaukee Police Department regulation requiring them to take "required police action in any manner ... at any time." The plaintiffs, all of whom were black, were in a car traveling behind the defendants' automobile. The defendants started to heckle the plaintiffs and continuously referred to them as "niggers." Upon reaching an intersection, one of the defendants said, "so you niggers caught us, do you want to fight?" The defendants then got out of their vehicle and became involved in a street fight. After the fight ensued, two of the defendants identified themselves as police officers; one of them then produced his gun and ordered the plaintiffs not to move. Uniformed police officers arrived on the scene and took the plaintiffs into custody. None of the three defendants were taken into custody.
In the plaintiffs' Sec. 1983 suit against the defendants, a federal court found that the defendants acted under color of law and thus, they violated the plaintiffs' constitutional rights. Id. at 452-54,
In Desotelle, a Brown County sheriff's deputy in full uniform and on regular patrol duty suspected a young female (plaintiff) of underage drinking. The deputy removed the plaintiff to his squad car for "questioning." While in the squad car, the deputy sexually assaulted the plaintiff.
A trier of fact could clearly draw competing conclusions from the undisputed facts of Cameron. One such conclusion is that the off-duty officers were out flexing their muscles when they started the brawl and thus, they were outside of the scope of their employment. A competing conclusion, based on the department regulation, would place the officers "on-duty" upon being confronted by a situation (a brawl) requiring "police action." The undisputed facts of Desotelle also permit inferences leading to opposite, but reasonable, conclusions. A jury could reasonably conclude that the deputy's "investigation" of underage drinking was a mere pretext to further his own objective of sexual gratification and thus, the sexual assault was wholly disconnected from the performance of his ordinary duties. Alternatively, a jury could reasonably conclude that the deputy's investigation of underage drinking was an activity for which he was hired and the sexual assault was made possible only by virtue of his status as a police officer.
We believe that this case is distinguishable from Cameron and Desotelle. If a jury could have inferred that Mueller shot Graham because of some private feud between them, a jury might reasonably conclude that Mueller was acting solely for his personal benefit (like the deputy in Desotelle ) and thus, he acted outside the scope of his employment. See Connerly,
This case appears to resemble the district court proceedings in Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
Rentmeester's affidavit merely establishes that Mueller's use of deadly force was improper under the circumstances; the affidavit does not establish that Mueller's shooting was disconnected from the type of services ordinarily contemplated by a police officer. Our focus must be on the nature of the services contemplated, not the outcome of the employee's acts. The use of deadly force incidental to arrest is a recognized and accepted tool of policing. Merely because Mueller misused his authority to use deadly force in apprehending Graham does not put him outside of the scope of his employment. A logical application of a rule focusing on outcome is that any unauthorized use of deadly force by a police officer is outside the scope of employment. Here, as in Bell, Mueller's shooting was unquestionably a method, even though quite an improper one, of carrying out the objects of his employment. See Hibma,
Municipal Liability
In addition to her claim against Mueller, Crystal Graham brought a Sec. 1983 claim against the Villages of Sauk City and Prairie Du Sac, the Sauk Prairie Police Commission and police chief Robert Rentmeester, alleging that these defendants were directly liable for Mueller's unconstitutional killing of John Graham. Graham contends that the defendants are liable under Sec. 1983 because in hiring, supervising, and retaining Mueller, they failed to conduct an adequate investigation into Mueller's background--an investigation that would have revealed Mueller was unfit to use or carry a firearm. It is undisputed that at the time Mueller shot Graham, Mueller was suffering from an acute exacerbation of a condition known as "schizophrenia, chronic paranoid reaction." The acute exacerbation resulted from Mueller's failure to comply with the prescribed use of his medication; this in turn caused Mueller's thoughts to become disorganized, caused him to have delusions about being threatened and resulted in periods of agitation. At the time he shot Graham, Mueller had become psychotic, lost contact with reality and was incapable of exercising reasonable judgment in the use of his weapon. The district court rejected Graham's claim that the villages, the police commission, and Rentmeester directly violated Graham's constitutional rights and granted summary judgment in their favor. In her cross-appeal, Graham contests the grant of summary judgment.
Whether the district court properly granted summary judgment on the issue of municipal liability is a determination that is heavily dependent upon the facts of this case; thus, a rather detailed examination of the facts is in order. John Mueller was one of approximately 40 people who applied for an opening with the Sauk Prairie Police Commission in 1983. Mueller submitted an application which indicated that he was previously employed by the Mazomanie, Wisconsin, Police Department as the chief of police and by the Village of Hazel Green, Wisconsin, as the chief of police. Although not indicated on his application, Mueller had also worked for the Dane County Sheriff's Department as a police officer and with the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department as a police officer.
The defendants required Mueller to take a written examination administered by the Wisconsin City-County Testing Bureau. Mueller's written examination score ranked him tenth among all candidates vying for the position. Mueller and fifteen other candidates then began a two-step interview process. Mueller's first interview was with a panel of three law enforcement officers from various law enforcement agencies; his next interview was with a citizens' panel composed of three members of the Sauk City-Prairie Du Sac community. The candidates with top ten combined written and oral scores--which included Mueller--were then interviewed by the Sauk Prairie Police Commission. During Mueller's interview with the commission, he was asked about an acknowledgement on his application that he was once "treated for stress." Mueller indicated that the stress resulted from the death of his son and a divorce he was going through at the time. Rentmeester and the commission were satisfied with that explanation. After Mueller ultimately emerged as the highest ranked candidate, the commission instructed Rentmeester to offer Mueller the position as long as the investigation into Mueller's background did not reveal anything that would disqualify him.
At the outset of the hiring process, Rentmeester requested each candidate, including Mueller, to undergo a physical examination. Dr. Burr Eichelmann of the Veteran's Administration Hospital examined Mueller and prepared a note of the examination indicating that Mueller was medically fit for the police officer position.8 Rentmeester also required Mueller to execute an "Authorization for Release of Information," empowering the commission to obtain information or records from any clinic, sanitarium or hospital where Mueller had been treated for injuries or illnesses (physical and/or mental in nature).
After narrowing the pool of applicants to ten finalists, Rentmeester requested the Sauk County Sheriff's Department to provide a driver's license report, a National Crime Information Center (NCIC) report, and a Wisconsin Crime Information Bureau (CIB) report for each candidate. Mueller's driver's license report indicated that he had no traffic violations on his record and that there were no outstanding warrants for his arrest. The sheriff's department did not furnish Rentmeester with either a CIB report or a complete NCIC report regarding Mueller.
Rentmeester continued the investigation into Mueller's background after Mueller began working as a police officer with the defendants in April of 1983.9 Rentmeester contacted two of Mueller's former employers, Chief Deputy Stanley Klein and Captain Richard Josephson of the Dane County Sheriff's Department. Although Mueller failed to list the Dane County Sheriff's Department as a former employer and either Klein or Josephson as references, both supplied positive reports about Mueller. Josephson told Rentmeester that Mueller had always acted in a professional manner; Klein told Rentmeester that he knew of nothing which would make him reluctant to hire Mueller as a police officer. Mueller also failed to indicate that he had worked for the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department. However, Rentmeester spoke to Jefferson County Sheriff Keith Mueller (John Mueller's uncle) who told Rentmeester that Mueller had done an excellent job while working for the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department. Keith Mueller stated that he had no reason to believe Mueller would not be a good police officer.
Rentmeester also spoke to John Trager, a businessman in the Mazomanie community, where Mueller was the former chief of police. Trager told Rentmeester that he was personally familiar with Mueller and that he knew of nothing that should preclude Mueller from working as a police officer. Finally, Rentmeester spoke to John Mueller's brother, Wayne. Although Wayne was aware of John Mueller's history of mental problems, he conveyed none of this to Rentmeester. In fact, Wayne told Rentmeester that he knew of nothing which would indicate that Mueller would not make a good police officer.
In November, 1983, a few months after he began working for the defendants, Mueller was hospitalized at the Veteran's Administration Hospital for a period of eight days. Mueller informed Rentmeester that the hospitalization was due to an adverse reaction to medication he was taking. The police commission instructed Rentmeester to obtain a letter from Mueller's treating physician indicating that Mueller was fit to return to work as a police officer. Before Mueller returned to work, Rentmeester spoke to Mueller's treating physician, Dr. Eichelmann. Dr. Eichelmann informed Rentmeester that Mueller had been unable to sleep and suffered from an "imbalance of medication from stress." Rentmeester did not ask Dr. Eichelmann what type of medication caused the problem because in Rentmeester's words, he did not "feel that it was that important for [him] to know what [Mueller] was taking as long as the doctor told [him] that [Mueller] was capable of performing his duties." Dr. Eichelmann provided a letter indicating that Mueller was fit to return to work.
Following his hospitalization, Mueller continued to work as a police officer for approximately three years without incident. Neither Rentmeester nor any members of the Sauk Prairie Police Department received any complaints about Mueller's conduct up to the time Mueller shot John Graham.
During the morning of September 16, 1986, the day Mueller shot Graham, Mueller's fiancee thought that Mueller was acting somewhat out of character. Later that day, she received a telephone call from Mueller. Disturbed by the call, Mueller's fiancee telephoned the Sauk Prairie Police Department and asked the department secretary to check whether Mueller was all right. The secretary radioed Mueller in his police vehicle and instructed him to go to Rentmeester's home with a message to have Rentmeester call the department. Rentmeester was at home, tearing down his garage; he and Mueller spent about ten minutes talking mostly about that project. Rentmeester called the department shortly after Mueller left and told the secretary that he had observed nothing unusual about Mueller. Mueller himself believed that there was nothing about his appearance at Rentmeester's home which would have made either his stress or illness noticeable to Rentmeester. Mueller shot Graham later that afternoon.
In asking us to reverse the district court's grant of summary judgment, Crystal Graham argues that the defendants' failure to take certain steps in investigating Mueller's background could lead a fact finder to reasonably conclude that the defendants directly violated John Graham's constitutional rights. Specifically, Graham points out that Rentmeester failed to obtain an NCIC report or a CIB report regarding Mueller. The Sauk County Sheriff's Department provided Rentmeester with only a driver's license report, which contains no information about a licensee's arrest or conviction record. If Rentmeester had obtained an NCIC or a CIB report, he would have learned that on January 1, 1982, Mueller was arrested by the Dane County Sheriff's Department for disorderly conduct. Graham reasons that if Rentmeester had been aware of Mueller's arrest, he could have reviewed the arrest record; had he done so, he would have been appraised that Mueller suffered from mental problems as of the time of the arrest--the arrest record contained a narrative of statements made by a Dr. Jense, who opined that Mueller suffered from mental problems. Dr. Jense stated that Mueller should be admitted to a mental ward rather than a medical ward and that she was prepared to get an emergency commitment to a mental ward.
Next, Graham argues that Rentmeester should have contacted Mueller's ex-wife. Mueller's ex-wife was aware of Mueller's mental illness and may have conveyed this to Rentmeester. In addition, Graham asserts that Rentmeester should have checked the records of Mueller's divorce. In those records, the guardian ad litem for Mueller's minor child expressed concern over Mueller's history of mental illness.
Graham also points out that, in hiring Mueller, the defendants failed to comply with certain provisions of the Wisconsin Administrative Code. Specifically, the defendants did not check police files in communities where Mueller had lived; they did not verify Mueller's employers' records; and they failed to obtain a "Report of Medical Examination" from Dr. Eichelmann after he had examined Mueller. Wis.Admin.Code Sec. LES 2.01. Graham argues that if Rentmeester had obtained either a "Report of Medical Examination" or a "Report of Medical History" from Dr. Eichelmann, Rentmeester would have been appraised of the severity of Mueller's problem because those forms contain a section pertaining to psychiatric history.
Finally, Graham points to several steps the defendants could have taken to learn more about Mueller's medical history. First, Graham argues that the defendants too easily accepted Mueller's explanation that his past treatment for stress was due to his divorce and the death of his son. Graham argues that the defendants should have inquired further about the nature of that treatment and determined whether it was ongoing.
Second, Graham points out that Mueller completed a form for the Sauk Prairie Police Commission in which he stated he was regularly taking "chlorpromazine." Graham contends that Rentmeester should have made some effort to find out what type of condition chlorpromazine is commonly used to treat. Graham notes that a simple Webster's Dictionary check indicates that chlorpromazine is a synthetic drug used as a sedative, and experimentally, to control anxiety and agitation in certain kinds of mental illness.
Finally, Graham points out that the letter Dr. Eichelmann submitted to the defendants following Mueller's November 1983 stay in the Veteran's Hospital was signed by Dr. Eichelmann as "Chief, Psychiatry Service." Although Dr. Eichelmann assured Rentmeester that Mueller was able to return to work, Graham argues that Dr. Eichelmann's title should have caused Rentmeester to specifically ask Dr. Eichelmann whether Mueller was free from any mental condition which might adversely affect his performance as a police officer. In addition, Graham argues that Rentmeester should have used Mueller's "Authorization for Release of Information" to personally examine Mueller's medical records before allowing him to return to work.
In Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,
On the other hand, the Court has struggled over the issue of municipal liability in cases such as ours where a non-policymaking official committed a constitutional violation and where no explicit city action or policy directly caused the violation. An example is City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
The plurality opinion characterized Oklahoma City's training policy as not itself unconstitutional--the city did not have a "custom" or "policy" of authorizing its police officers to use excessive force in the apprehension of suspects. Id. at 820,
Three years later, the Court resolved the question left open in Tuttle by holding that under certain limited circumstances, a municipality can be liable for constitutional violations resulting from its failure to train municipal employees. City of Canton, Ohio v. Harris,
The constitutional violation here, as in Canton, was committed by a non-policymaking official (Mueller). In addition, this case, like Canton, does not involve an explicit city action or policy that directly violates constitutional rights. The defendants' hiring procedure consists of a written examination, interviews, medical examinations and certain pre-employment and post-employment background checks. The defendants also have a policy of requiring a hospitalized employee to obtain a letter from his or her physician stating that the employee is capable of returning to work. Clearly, these procedures do not directly violate any constitutional guarantees.
Like the plaintiff in Canton, Graham bases her Sec. 1983 municipal liability claim solely on the defendants' allegedly inadequate acts as "policy." Accordingly, the standard of fault and the principles which applied to the claim of inadequate training in Canton must guide our determination of municipal liability in this case. See Gibson v. City of Chicago,
In Canton, the Court set forth certain principles to help expand upon the meaning of the "deliberate indifference" standard of fault. For instance, the Court stated that:
it may happen that in light of the duties assigned to specific officers or employees the need for more or different training is so obvious, and the inadequacy so likely to result in the violation of constitutional rights, that the policymakers of the city can reasonably be said to have been deliberately indifferent to the need.
489 U.S. at ----,
suffice to prove that an injury or accident could have been avoided if an officer had had better or more training, sufficient to equip him to avoid the particular injury-causing conduct. Such a claim could be made about almost any encounter resulting in injury, yet not condemn the adequacy of the program to enable officers to respond properly to the usual and recurring situations with which they must deal.
Id. at ----,
Applying the principles of Canton, we must determine whether the district court properly granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment on Graham's municipal liability claim.11 We review the district court's decision to grant summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as employed by the district court. McMillian v. Svetanoff,
In light of the information the defendants gathered about Mueller from Mueller's former employers and from Dr. Eichelmann, we do not believe a jury could reasonably conclude that the need for further investigation into Mueller's background was so obvious and the lack of further investigation so likely to result in the violation of constitutional rights, that the defendants were deliberately indifferent to the rights of the citizens of Prairie Du Sac and Sauk City. Graham's argument consists of pointing out specific steps that she contends the defendants should have taken to discover more about Mueller. As the Court stated in Canton, however, merely because a Sec. 1983 plaintiff can point to something a city could have done to prevent the unfortunate incident does not condemn the procedures the city did undertake as deliberately indifferent. 489 U.S. at ----,
Mueller's application and resume revealed that he had extensive experience in the field of law enforcement, serving as the chief of police for two different police departments and as a police officer in two other police departments. During all times that Mueller served as a law enforcement officer with those four different police departments, he suffered from the same psychological affliction that he suffered from at the time he shot Graham; in addition, he was being treated with the same medication that he was taking at the time he shot Graham. Nonetheless, none of the law enforcement officials that Rentmeester contacted professed to have any knowledge of why Mueller should not be a police officer. Perhaps these references did not know of Mueller's psychological problems because Mueller was never involved in an incident that would have revealed his problems to them. On the other hand, they may have known about Mueller's problems but did not think they would affect his performance as a police officer. Either way, the relevant fact for our purpose is that Rentmeester contacted persons who had worked with Mueller and who were in a good position to inform Rentmeester of any condition, psychological or otherwise, that would affect Mueller's performance as a police officer.
Finally, Rentmeester contacted Mueller's brother, Wayne, who did know of Mueller's psychological problems. Although Wayne was in a position to relate how he thought those problems might affect Mueller's performance as a police officer, he never mentioned Mueller's psychological problems to Rentmeester. In light of the fact that Rentmeester contacted several persons who were in a position to know how Mueller would perform as a police officer, we do not see how Rentmeester's failure to contact Mueller's ex-wife amounts to evidence of deliberate indifference. The fact that Mueller's psychological problems were not reported to Rentmeester does not change the fact that he conducted an investigation which should have revealed any serious problem that might affect Mueller's performance as a police officer.
Graham makes much of the fact that the defendants failed to obtain a "Report of Medical Examination" from Dr. Eichelmann as required by the Wisconsin Administrative Code. It is well established, however, that a violation of state law is not synonymous with a violation of the constitution. Davis v. Scherer,
Rentmeester was also justified in relying on Dr. Eichelmann's oral and written assurances that Mueller was able to return to work following his hospitalization in 1983. Dr. Eichelmann informed Rentmeester that Mueller was being treated merely for "an imbalance of medicine from stress." We do not see why Rentmeester should have believed it was necessary for him to conduct his own investigation into Mueller's ailment once he received this assurance from Dr. Eichelmann. More important, it is not clear to us why Rentmeester, as a layman, was in a position to evaluate Mueller's medical information and reach a conclusion different from Dr. Eichelmann's. In addition, there was no ongoing reason for Rentmeester to suspect that the condition which led to Mueller's hospitalization would in any way endanger the public--Mueller returned to work for three years without incident or complaints after the 1983 hospitalization but before shooting John Graham.
Despite the fact that Mueller possessed a record unblemished by incident or citizen complaints, the defendants did not summarily dismiss a message from Mueller's fiancee that Mueller had acted strangely during the morning of the day he shot Graham. Rather, the police dispatcher directed Mueller to Rentmeester's house where Rentmeester was given an opportunity to observe Mueller. Mueller himself confirmed that he had not given Rentmeester any appearance of illness when the two had spoken together on that day. Because Rentmeester observed nothing abnormal about Mueller, we cannot say that Rentmeester's decision to allow Mueller to return to work evidences deliberate indifference to the rights of the citizens of the two villages.
Finally, the defendants' failure to obtain either a CIB or NCIC report is not critical under the circumstances of this case. These reports are merely one method that may have led the defendants to discover Mueller's psychological problems. The defendants' failure to utilize this method does not alter the fact that they took several steps that were just as likely to reveal Mueller's problems as were these reports. We agree with the Fifth Circuit's conclusion in Stokes v. Bullins,
If the defendants had randomly chosen Mueller and without any background investigation allowed him to become a police officer, this case would, of course, go to a jury. But that is not the case here. The villages took a number of reasonable steps to investigate an applicant's background. We believe that no reasonable jury could conclude that failure to take additional screening steps can said to be "so obvious" as to constitute "deliberate indifference" to constitutional rights. If the defendants had actual knowledge of the severity of Mueller's psychological problems, his history of noncompliance with his medication, and the violence that could result from these problems, and yet closed their eyes to all these facts and hired and retained Mueller, then we would allow this case to go to a jury. However, from the perspective of the villages, the police commission, and Rentmeester, they were furnished with satisfactory information about Mueller's health and background at the time he was hired up until the time he shot Graham in 1986. Likewise, if the defendants' hiring and supervision policies had resulted in a pattern of hiring dangerous police officers and yet the defendants continued to employ these policies, this would be a jury case. However, there is no evidence of any such pattern in this case. Accordingly, the district court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of the villages, the police commission, and Rentmeester.
Loss of Life Damages
The villages and the police commission contend that the district court erred in allowing John Graham's estate to recover loss of life damages. In Bell, we held that Sec. 1983 provides Wisconsin plaintiffs with an unqualified right to bring an action to recover loss of life damages even though Wisconsin wrongful death statutes do not permit a victim's estate to recover damages for loss of life.
Section 1983 damages are considered to be appropriate as long as those damages generally effectuate the policies underlying Sec. 1983. See Carey v. Piphus,
First, the defendants argue that the deterrent rationale is not as compelling in this case as it was in Bell because Mueller's shooting, unlike that in Bell, was not motivated by racial animus--both Mueller and Graham are caucasians. While the loss of life damages in Bell may have been directed partially towards deterring deprivations of life that are motivated by racial animus, we emphasized that the legislative history underlying Sec. 1983 expresses an unequivocal concern for protecting life.
Second, the defendants argue that the deterrence rationale is not compelling in this case because Mueller's death obviates the need to deter any further conduct on his behalf; in addition, they argue that even if Mueller was still alive, his mental condition would render him incapable of understanding the reason for which loss of life damages were being imposed. In a similar contention, the defendants argue that conduct such as Mueller's cannot be deterred because Mueller was suffering from a condition which rendered him mentally incapable of exercising reasonable judgment at the time he shot Graham.
The fact that Mueller can no longer be deterred is quite irrelevant. The deterrence objective of Sec. 1983 damages is directed at a broader category of persons than the individual perpetrator alone. In Bell, this court stated that loss of life damages are intended to have a deterrent effect on "potentially unconstitutional actors."
In addition, there is no reason to conclude that the loss of life award in this case is directed only at persons with a condition similar to Mueller's--those who may act under an "insane delusion." The loss of life award to Graham's estate is directed towards deterring any police officer who would contemplate taking the life of a person who poses no threat of harm to the officer or the public.
Finally, the defendants argue that, in the final analysis, the deterrence rationale is completely inapplicable in this case because the parties that will ultimately pay the loss of life damages--the villages and the police commission--need not be deterred because they did not violate any of Graham's constitutional rights; rather, they have been found liable only by reason of indemnity pursuant to Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.46.
In Bell, we allowed loss of life damages to be awarded against the offending officer even though the city of Milwaukee was ultimately responsible for paying those damages under the indemnity statute.
While the loss of life damages may be directed at deterring Mueller's conduct, this does not address the defendants' argument that damages will not deter a person who ultimately does not pay those damages. Even assuming that the defendants' argument is correct in all cases, however, it is still not determinative. It is important to reemphasize that the loss of life damages in this case are not merely directed at deterring actors identically situated to Mueller. Not all Wisconsin employees who deprive citizens of life under color of law will be covered by the Wisconsin indemnity statute--that is, not all will be deemed to be acting within the scope of their employment. More important, Sec. 1983 is a federal statute, and thus, its interpretation should not vary from state to state depending on state indemnity rules. Not all potential unconstitutional actors live in states with liberal indemnity statutes. The deterrent effect on these actors should not be sacrificed merely because the Wisconsin legislature decided to provide broad indemnity coverage. See Carlson v. Green,
Finally, the defendants contend that the district court tendered an erroneous jury instruction regarding loss of life damages. Specifically, the defendants argue that the instruction was so broad and vague that it failed to guide the jury on how to evaluate and award damages for loss of life. However, due to the defendants' failure to comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 51, they have waived this argument on appeal. Rule 51 states that "[n]o party may assign as error the giving or the failure to give an instruction unless that party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter objected to and the grounds of the objection." Fed.R.Civ.P. 51.
Before instructing the jury, the district judge held an informal instructions conference without a court reporter being present; counsel for the defendants claims that during this conference, he argued that the proposed loss of life instruction was overbroad and vague. We say "claims" because no record exists of the informal conference and because Graham's counsel told us at oral argument that he does not recall whether or not defense counsel registered vagueness and overbreadth objections during the informal conference. After the informal conference and after instructing the jury, but before the jury began its deliberations, the district judge afforded the parties a full opportunity to record objections to the instructions. While on the record, the court specifically asked whether defendants had any comments, objections or motions in response to the instructions given to the jury. Counsel for the defendant stated: "Nothing other than what we have already put on the record, your honor." Of course, defense counsel had not "already put on the record" any objections as to the overbreadth and vagueness of the loss of life instructions.
Traditionally, an objection to a jury instruction was not considered timely under Rule 51 unless a party registered specific objections to the instruction after the court gave the instruction but before the jury retired to deliberate. See Fey v. Walston & Co., Inc.,
Attorney Fees
In any action or proceeding to enforce Sec. 1983, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1988 allows a district court, in its discretion, to award reasonable attorney fees to a prevailing party as part of its costs. Pursuant to Sec. 1988, the district court awarded $132,228.50 in attorney fees in favor of Crystal Graham and against the estate of John Mueller. Because Mueller's estate is insolvent, Graham brought an action against the Sauk Prairie Police Commission and the Villages of Sauk City and Prairie Du Sac seeking to require them to pay the attorney fees awarded against Mueller's estate. Graham's action to require the villages and police commission to pay the attorney fees was not based on Sec. 1988; rather, it was based on Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.46(1)(a), the Wisconsin statute that requires a municipality to indemnify its employees for judgments entered against them. The district court held that the indemnity statute required the municipal defendants to indemnify Mueller's estate for the award of attorney fees. The defendant villages and police commission appeal the district court's decision.
The defendants contend that the Wisconsin indemnity statute, when read in conjunction with Wis.Stat. Sec. 814.04(1)(a), limits their liability for attorney fees to $100. To reiterate, the indemnity statute provides in relevant part:
If the defendant in any action ... is proceeded against in an official capacity or ... as an individual because of acts committed while carrying out duties as an officer or employe and the jury or the court finds that the defendant was acting within the scope of employment, the judgment as to damages and costs ... shall be paid by the state or political subdivision of which the defendant is an officer or employe....
Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.46(1)(a) (emphasis added). Defendants claim that the "costs" referred to in the indemnity statute are enumerated in Wis.Stat. Sec. 814.04(1)(a), which states that, "[e]xcept as provided in [certain statutes not applicable here], when allowed costs shall be as follows: (1) Attorney's fees. (a) When the amount recovered or the value of the property involved is $1,000 or over, attorney fees shall be $100...." The defendants argue that the district court erred in reading Sec. 1988's definition of costs into the state indemnity statute. The defendants argue that because state law (Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.46) creates their liability for attorney fees, the district court was bound by state law limits to attorney fees--namely, the $100 limit set forth in Wis.Stat. Sec. 814.04(1)(a).
It is true that the right to recover costs, including attorney fees, is statutory in nature and to the extent that a statute does not authorize recovery of specific costs, they are not recoverable. State v. Foster,
The defendants contend that even if they are liable for more than $100 of attorney fees, they are not liable for fees Graham incurred in establishing the defendants' liability under the Wisconsin indemnity statute. In support of their contention, the defendants rely on Hibma v. Odegaard. In Hibma, we held that a district court properly disallowed attorney fees that were attributable to a Sec. 1983 plaintiff's action against a municipal defendant under the Wisconsin indemnity statute.
To the extent that Hibma is inconsistent with Argento, we believe that Argento should govern this case because it is more consistent with the policies underlying Sec. 1988 and the Wisconsin indemnity statute. As mentioned, Mueller's estate is insolvent. Absent indemnification, Graham would not actually recover the money she was awarded in her Sec. 1983 suit against Mueller. Allowing Graham to recover attorney fees for pursuing her indemnity claim furthers Sec. 1988's purpose of ensuring effective access to the judicial process for persons with civil rights grievances. See Blanchard v. Bergeron,
Finally, the defendants contend that the district court erred in awarding Graham the full amount of her fee request. Our review of the size an attorney fees award is very limited. Given the district court's superior understanding of the litigation and the desirability of avoiding appellate review of what are essentially factual matters, the determination of a fee award is left to the sound discretion of the district court. Hensley,
The Supreme Court has stated that the most useful starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable attorney's fee under Sec. 1988 is the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate. This figure, commonly referred to as the "lodestar," is presumed to be reasonable under Sec. 1988. City of Riverside v. Rivera,
While the district court noted that the total number of hours is high, it also found that they were reasonable in light of the work required and the results achieved. The district court found that the time claimed by Graham's attorneys was reasonable and necessary and that the hourly rates were well justified by the attorneys' qualifications and experience. We do not think the district court abused its discretion. As the district court aptly noted, the defendants have conceded nothing at any point in this litigation; their defense was resolute, if not intransigent at times. A defendant cannot litigate tenaciously and then be heard to complain about the time necessarily spent by the plaintiff in response. City of Riverside,
After determining the lodestar to be $132,228.50, the district judge had to determine whether any adjustment to the fee was required. In addition to excluding hours that are not "reasonably expended" on the litigation, where a prevailing plaintiff has succeeded on only some of his claims, it may not be appropriate to award fees for time reasonably expended on the unsuccessful claims. City of Riverside,
On the other hand, where a plaintiff fails to prevail on a claim that is "unrelated" to the plaintiff's successful claims--that is, a claim that is distinct in all respects from the successful claims--the hours expended on the unsuccessful claim should be excluded in determining the amount of a "reasonable fee." Hensley,
The district court found that to the extent unsuccessful claims are included among those for which Graham seeks attorney fees, they share a common core of facts with the successful claims and are based on related legal theories; thus, they are not sufficiently discrete to make it possible to divide up the time spent on a claim by claim basis. The district court concluded that Graham achieved a significant victory on her central claims and that she obtained all that she could have reasonably asked for. We do not believe the district court has abused its discretion. Thus, we agree with the district court that Graham's fee award should not be reduced simply because Graham failed to prevail on every contention raised in the lawsuit.
The district court found that Graham's unsuccessful claims for municipal liability were "unrelated" to Graham's successful claims. However, the district court noted that Graham's counsel carefully separated the time spent on these unsuccessful claims from that spent on successful claims and did not even seek reimbursement for them. We agree with the district court's conclusion that Graham's unsuccessful unrelated claims are not grounds for a fee reduction.
The defendants raise a number of other issues and arguments, but they have no merit and require no discussion. Accordingly, the decision of the district court is, in all respects, AFFIRMED.
Notes
Graham contends that the villages and the police commission failed to preserve the argument that they are not required to indemnify Mueller's estate by reason of the immunity statute. We disagree. The defendants timely raised this argument before the district court and the district court discussed the merits of the argument. Thus, we will decide the issue on appeal
The statute was originally numbered Wis.Stat. Sec. 895.43
While abolishing the common law doctrine of government tort immunity, the Wisconsin Supreme Court in Holytz recognized that the Wisconsin legislature could reinstate government tort immunity if it so pleased. In Holytz, the Supreme Court said, "[i]f the legislature deems it better public policy, it is, of course, free to reinstate immunity."
At the time of Strong, the immunity statute was numbered Sec. 895.43. See Footnote 2, supra. Also, at the time of Strong, the indemnity statute (then numbered Sec. 270.58) contained the "good faith" requirement rather than the "scope of employment" requirement
The defendants raise Wisconsin's municipal tort immunity statute (Wis.Stat. Sec. 893.80(1)) as a defense only to Graham's state law indemnification claim. Defendants recognize, however, that the immunity statute cannot be used as a defense to a federal civil rights claim. See Felder v. Casey,
In both Baranowski v. City of Milwaukee,
This court did not address the "scope of employment" issue on appeal. See Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
Graham contends that a material issue of fact exists as to whether Dr. Eichelmann notified the defendants that Mueller was fit for police employment. Rentmeester claims that he received a telephone call from Dr. Eichelmann's secretary, who informed him that Mueller had been given a physical examination on April 1, 1983. However, Dr. Eichelmann's records do not show that he examined Mueller on April 1, 1983. Whether or not Dr. Eichelmann examined Mueller on April 1, 1983, it is undisputed that Dr. Eichelmann examined Mueller on January 13, 1983--three weeks before Mueller applied for the police officer position with the defendants--and prepared a note stating that Mueller was fit for police work. Thus, Graham's objections regarding the alleged April examination do not put into dispute the fact that Dr. Eichelmann examined Mueller and represented that Mueller was fit for police work. In addition, while Mueller may not have undergone an examination at the request of the defendants, this does not put into dispute the fact that the defendants have a policy of requiring all applicants to undergo a physical examination
At the time Mueller was hired, the Sauk Prairie Police Commission had a practice of hiring police applicants before completing the investigation into an applicant's background. At Rentmeester's request, the commission changed this practice subsequent to Graham's death and now conducts the entire background investigation before hiring an applicant
Gibson v. City of Chicago,
Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), the city moved to dismiss the claim against the police officer on the ground that the officer was not acting under color of law when he shot the victim. The district court denied the motion to dismiss, but limited all discovery to the color of law issue.
On appeal, we reversed the grant of summary judgment on the municipal liability claims.
Noting that the purpose of a motion to dismiss was to test the sufficiency of the complaint and not the merits, we expressly declined to offer an opinion as to the underlying merits of the municipal liability claims. However, we did note that the municipal liability claims were to be tested under Canton's deliberate indifference standard and that this standard of liability was "rigorous."
The defendants do not dispute that they are responsible for establishing policies and procedures with respect to hiring, supervising, and retaining police officers. Thus, it is undisputed that municipal liability may attach to these defendants because of their investigation into Mueller's background. See Pembauer v. Cincinnati,
The district court granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment before the Supreme Court rendered its decision in Canton. Nonetheless, the district court clearly rejected Graham's argument that something less than "deliberate indifference" was required in this case. In granting the defendants' motion, the district court concluded that, "the undisputed facts do not support the reasonable inference of deliberate indifference necessary to survive a motion for summary judgment." Graham does not argue that the district court applied an incorrect standard; rather, she simply argues that the district court erred in not finding "deliberate indifference" under the facts of this case
In Stokes, a citizen who was totally disabled by a police shooting brought a Sec. 1983 action against a town based upon that town's alleged inadequate hiring procedures.
The Fifth Circuit held that the town's failure to conduct a more thorough investigation into the applicant's background did not cause the deprivation of the plaintiff's constitutional rights. Id. at 275. Specifically, the court reasoned that the town's failure to order an NCIC check on the applicant's full arrest history did not constitute gross negligence or conscious indifference to the public welfare. Id.
In Bell, we reasoned that Wisconsin wrongful death statutes did not apply because they were inconsistent with the federal policy (embodied in the fourteenth amendment and Sec. 1983) of deterring unconstitutional acts that deprive persons of life.
The rationale for this rule was that it provided trial courts, upon second thought, an opportunity to correct any errors in the instructions. This included inadvertent errors and, more importantly, errors which could not have been predicted prior to the charge. See United States v. Wright,
On several occasions during the district court proceedings, the defendants argued (on the record) that this was not an appropriate case for a loss of life award and that the jury should not receive an instruction for loss of life damages. However, this court has recognized that an objection to the giving of a damages instruction does not state (or preserve) an objection to the content of those instructions once they are given. Coulter v. Vitale,
