ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
Plaintiff, Crystal Grendell, sued Sergeant James Gillway, the Town of Searsport, Maine (“the Town”), the Maine School Administrative District 56 (“SAD 56”), and Charisse Stanko, a guidance counselor at the Sears-port Elementary School in SAD 56, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of her civil rights under the United States Constitution. Grendell also alleged supplemental state claims under the Maine Constitution. Specifically, Grendell contends that Defendants violated her substantive due process rights as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 6-A of the Maine Constitution. Grendell further alleges that Defendants Gillway and the Town are liable for an unreasonable seizure of her person executed by Gillway in violation of her rights under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 5 of the Maine Constitution.
Defendants Gillway and the Town and Defendants SAD 56 and Stanko moved separately for summary judgment as to the respective claims asserted against them. For the reasons set forth in detail below, the Court denies Gillway’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to the substantive due process claims asserted against him, and grants summary judgment as to the substantive due
I. Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate in the absence of a genuine issue as to any material fact and when the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). An issue is genuine for these purposes if “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II. Background
In April 1991, Crystal Grendell was a sixth grade student at the Searsport Elementary School in SAD 56. She was eleven years old at the time. In mid-April Charisse Stanko, the guidance counselor at the school, called Grendell out of class and for reasons unknown to Grendell asked her whether her parents abused drugs. Grendell alleges that although she was hesitant to answer, Stanko assured her that “nothing would happen.” Aff. of Crystal Grendell, May 13,1997, at ¶ 3. Grendell thereafter explained that her parents smoked marijuana “[ojnee in a while.”
During the days subsequent to this initial meeting, Stanko removed Grendell from class several times to inquire further into her relationship with her parents and to determine how Grendell was feeling. Stanko finally suggested that Grendell go to the police station so that she could talk with Sergeant James Gillway about her parents’ use of marijuana. Grendell was familiar with Gillway because Gillway was the DARE officer at Grendell’s school and had been to Grendell’s class. On April 29, 1991, Grendell went to the police station to talk to Gillway; however, Gillway was too busy to talk so Grendell left before she could discuss her parents’ use of marijuana. Id. at ¶ 5.
The next day, April 30,1991, Stanko again called Grendell out of class and brought Grendell to her office. There Gillway and two other DARE police officers, in the presence of Stanko, questioned Grendell about her parents’ drug use. Gillway told Grendell that “if [she] ‘cooperated’ and told him about [her] parents’ use of marijuana, nothing would happen to [her] parents, but that, if [she] did not ‘cooperate,’ [her] parents would be arrested.” Id. at ¶ 7. Gillway also told Grendell that “if [she] did not tell him about [her] parents’ use of marijuana, [her] parents and [she] would be ‘in a lot of trouble.’ ” Id. Further, Gillway warned Grendell not to tell her parents about her talking to the police officers because “often parents beat their children after the children talk to police.” Id. Grendell proceeded to answer Gillway’s questions about her parents’ schedules, where they worked, and the architectural plan of her house. Additionally, she told him and the other officers that her parents were growing marijuana plants under grow lights in a closet, that her parents smoked the marijuana in the house, that there was a bag of marijuana behind the couch in the living room, and that her parents kept guns in their bedroom. Id. at ¶ 9. Gillway told Grendell that the police would go to her house that afternoon to look for drugs and that the police would be there when she got off the school bus. Id. at ¶ 8. He told her that she would not be permitted to stay at her home at that time because “in most cases like this, children are beaten by their parents.” Id.
When Grendell and her younger sister emerged from the school bus at their home that afternoon, police cars were positioned around their house. Gillway put Grendell in a police car and she was taken immediately to the police station. Gillway contends that Grendell was taken, to the police station in order to create a “cooling off period” because he was advised by DHS personnel that it
After- Grendell was taken to Nelson’s home, Kent Wyman, Grendell’s uncle, discovered where Grendell was and came to retrieve her. Grendell told Gillway that she wanted to leave with Wyman. Gillway, believing that the “cooling off” period had passed, told Wyman that Grendell was not in police custody and therefore did not oppose this suggestion. Aff. of James Gillway, at ¶ 15. Grendell left with Wyman. She contends- that although her parents came by Wyman’s house to see her that night, she did not return home until the next morning.
III. Substantive Due Process
The Court begins by noting that Defendants assert the affirmative defense of qualified immunity. Such immunity relieves public officials performing discretionary functions 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 Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[n]o state shall ... deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law....” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. Unlike its procedural counterpart, substantive due process protects citizens from “certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them____”
Daniels v. Williams,
Grendell argues that Defendants violated her substantive due process rights by using her, or by allowing her to be used, to elicit incriminating information about her parents. The Court is persuaded that only Defendant Gillway may be liable for a substantive due process violation and therefore grants summary judgment as to Defendants Stanko, SAD 56, and the Town on this issue.
A. Shocks the Conscience
In
Rochin v. California,
the Supreme Court held that the forcible pumping of a suspect’s stomach by police to obtain evidence that would inculpate the suspect at trial “shocks the conscienee[,]” thus violating the suspect’s due process rights.
Rochin v. California,
1. Gillway
The conduct alleged here similarly may be characterized as shocking to the conscience. Grendell alleges that Gillway told her in Stanko’s office that if she did not “cooperate” and tell him about her parents’ drug use then she would be “in a lot of trouble” and her parents would be arrested. This, coupled with his other alleged statement that if Grendell did tell him about her parents’ drag use nothing would happen to her parents, shocks the Court’s conscience. The lying to and threatening of an eleven year old girl by the police in order to force her to incriminate her parents is contemptible and exceeds all notions of fair play and decency. It is not as if Grendell alleges that she volunteered the information freely and without reservation; rather, Grendell surely felt as if she had no choice but to answer the policeman's questions. This type of coercive extraction of indicting information from an eleven year old girl about her parents is reprehensible behavior unworthy of constitutional protection.
This finding is not in conflict with relevant First Circuit case law. Although the Circuit has never held that verbal harassment can constitute conscience-shocking behavior, it has never foreclosed this issue either. In
Pittsley v. Warish,
Perhaps the most relevant of this group of cases is the
Pittsley
decision because it involved a policeman, young children, the children’s father, and verbal harassment. Nevertheless, the facts alleged at bar are distinguishable for one specific reason: The children in
Pittsley
were not presented with a “Sophie’s Choice” situation, where they could either “rat” on their parents to the police or ostensibly be “in a lot of trouble.” The villainy of Gillway’s alleged tactics is all the more clear when considering that he told Grendell not to tell her parents about their conversation because “in most cases like this, children are beaten by their parents.” The
Pittsley
children, although naturally traumatized by what was said and by not being permitted to “hug and kiss” their father goodbye, never were bullied or manipulated by the police as a means to incriminate their parents. The alleged conduct here, instead, strikes at the basic fabric of all parent-child relationships: love, trust, and faith. Each of these may have been irreparably harmed, not as a result of independent and voluntary actions by either
Since the Court finds that Grendell has alleged that Gillway violated a constitutional right, it is now appropriate to turn to the issue of qualified immunity and, consequently, the question of whether this right was clearly established at the time Gillway acted.
See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In
Fernandez v. Leonard,
The Court is persuaded that a reasonable person who engages in conscience-shocking behavior should know at the time that he is violating an individual’s substantive due process rights, regardless of whether such conduct has previously been subject to judicial scrutiny. Conduct that clearly shocks the conscience, such as that involved here, does not require quiet deliberations to conclude that it is violative of due process; rather, it is “in and of itself ... egregiously unacceptable [and] outrageous ... [,]”
Amsden v. Moran,
A municipality cannot be held liable under § 1983 absent a showing that it “maintained a policy or custom which caused, or was the moving force behind, a deprivation of constitutional rights.”
McCabe v. Life-Line Ambulance Serv., Inc.,
Further, there is no genuine issue as to whether Stanko’s alleged behavior shocks the conscience. That Stanko did not seek the consent of Grendell’s parents before permitting Gillway to interrogate Grendell can hardly be said to “offend the community’s sense of fair play and decency.”
Rochin v. California,
B. Liberty Interest
As explained above, Defendants also may be liable for violating Grendell’s substantive due process rights if Grendell can demonstrate a violation of a specific liberty or property interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Meyer v. Nebraska,
In
Pittsley v. Warish,
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution declares, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons ... against unreasonable ... seizures, shall not be violated____ ”U.S. Const. Amend. IV. Grendell alleges that Gillway committed an unreasonable seizure of her person when he interrogated her at school without prior parental notification and when he kept her away from her parents after she emerged from the school bus at her house. She also claims that Gillway unreasonably seized her during his questioning of her at the school. Grendell contends that the Town is liable for Gillway’s actions. The Court finds that genuine issues of material fact exist as to Grendell’s Fourth Amendment claim and denies Gillway’s Motion for Summary Judgment on this issue. The Court, however, finds that no genuine issues exist as to the involvement of the Town and grants summary judgment in its favor on this issue.
Gillway argues that he should not be liable for an unreasonable seizure of Grendell because he was merely exercising the function of a police officer commonly referred to as “community caretaking.”
See Cady v. Dombrowski
The Court finds that there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether Gillway’s separation of Grendell from her parents, and his alleged refusal to let Grendell tell her mother where she was located, was in fact a reasonable exercise of his role as a community caretaker, to wit, protecting Grendell from potential bodily harm, This issue is more properly suited for determination by a jury. The Court holds, however, that Gillway’s questioning of Grendell did not constitute a seizure since there is no indication, even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Grendell, that she was not free to leave at any time she chose.
See United States v. Mendenhall,
V. Conclusion
The Court holds that Gillway’s alleged conduct shocks the conscience and thus he may be hable for violating Grendell’s substantive due process rights. The Court also holds that Gillway may be hable for an unreasonable seizure of Grendell. The Court finds, however, that the Town, Stanko, and SAD 56 are reheved from liability regarding Grendell’s substantive due process claims and her unreasonable seizure claims and accordingly grants summary judgment in their favor.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. For other examples of conduct found to be conscience-shocking by district courts within the First Circuit, see
deLeiris v. Scott,
