ORDER
This matter is before the Court on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The plaintiff has brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging deprivation of her decedent’s life without due process of law, together with pendent state claims arising under the South Carolina wrongful death and survivorship statutes. For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants the defendants’ motion.
I.
On motion for summary judgment, the Court must view the facts and inferences reasonably to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to thе nonmoving party.
United States v. Diebold, Inc.,
The plaintiff’s decedent, David Gulledge, Jr., was killed on September 4, 1985, by Richard Jackson, a deputy sheriff appointed by the York County Sheriff. For several weeks before the killing, Jackson showed signs of depression at work such as acting in a withdrawn manner and, on more than one occasion, breaking down in tears. The sheriff’s department as a whole was unusually tense at that time because the sheriff, defendant J. Elbert Pоpe, was under suspension and the deputies generally were uncertain of the security of their jobs. It was also commonly known that Jackson and his wife were having marital difficulties. On approximately August 25, 1985, Lynn Jackson told her husband that she intended to leave him.
While there is no evidence that Jackson demonstrated violent tendencies at work, Jackson was involved in one incident of domestic violence and threatened suicide. On approximately August 29, 1985, Jackson came home late at night, awakened his wife, handcuffed her and forced her outside. Once outside, he handcuffed her to himself and, with a gun in his hand, threatened to kill himself. The incident ended when their daughter called to them from the house. The next day, August 30, Lynn Jackson left the marital home with their daughter to live with her mother.
On the same day, August 30, Jackson confided to his friend and supervisor, defendant Joe Smart, that his wife was leaving him and that he had threatened suicide the night before. Jackson, however, assured Smart that the threats were a bluff to prevent his wife from leaving him and that he was fine and able to work. He turned down Smart’s suggestions that he seek counselling or take time away from *950 work. They agreed to meet that evening after Jackson finished his shift. Over the next few days, Smart monitored Jackson’s work by listening to the scanner, talking to Jackson in person and by telephone and inquiring of Jackson’s dispatchers and colleagues. Smart, however, did not report Jackson’s suicide threat or any of his related marital difficulties to any superior officer until September 4, 1985, the day of the killing.
There is no evidenсe that Jackson experienced difficulties in performing his duties during this period. He arranged for his wife and daughter to return to the marital home while he went to live with his mother.
On the morning of September 4, Lynn Jackson met her husband, who was off duty, at an automobile repair shop where he left his patrol car to be serviced. During the course of the morning, the Jack-sons discussed their marital problems and Lynn Jackson told her husband that she was having an extramarital affair with David Gulledge, Jr. This was the first Jackson knew of the existence оf Gulledge and of the affair. The same morning, the Jacksons met with a lawyer to discuss a divorce on the ground of adultery. Jackson then requested his wife to drive her car to the Gulledge family business where he engaged in an altercation with David Gulledge, Jr., before leaving.
After he picked up his patrol car from the repair shop, Jackson met his wife at the marital home. He then forced her into the “escape-proof” backseat of the patrol car and drove off. Jackson radioed his dispаtcher, asking to talk to Smart. Smart, however, was out of radio range. Jackson drove to the Gulledge family business. As his wife and Gulledge’s mother watched, Jackson fatally shot Gulledge ten times with a semiautomatic rifle that was in the trunk of the patrol car. The rifle was Jackson’s personal property. His service revolver lay unused on the hood of the patrol car.
At the time of the shooting, Jackson was off duty, dressed in street clothes and carrying his own personal weapon. Although he was off duty, he was driving his patrol car and, in accordance with departmental policy, was carrying his identification card, badge and service revolver while driving the patrol car. The shooting, however, was carried out away from the patrol car and there is no evidence that Jackson employed any of the “tools of his trade” once he left its vicinity. Notwithstanding Jackson’s unsuccessful attempt to talk to Smart by radio, there is no evidence that Jackson actually advised anyone at the sheriff’s department of his whereabouts or intentions until after the shooting had occurred.
II.
Summary judgment is appropriate only when the pleadings, depositions, interrogatory answers, admissions and affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The moving party has the burden of showing the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Diebold,
The defendants in this action are Joe A. Smart, a deputy sheriff with the rank of captain who was Jackson’s supervisor, J. Elbert Pope, the elected sheriff of York County who was under suspension from office pending criminal charges at the time of the shooting, and John Hunsucker, who had been appointed acting sheriff at the time of the shooting. The defendants are being sued in both their individual and official capacities. The plaintiff asserts two grounds for holding the defendants liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983: (1) gross negligence, willfulness, wantonness and recklessness by the defendants in supervising and retaining a deputy who was unfit for duty and who was “on duty” whenever he was in his patrol car, including a failure to *951 promulgate departmental policies for controlling such unfit deputies; and (2) a breach of the defendants’ alleged duty to protect the public at large and the decedent in particular from violence at the hands of a deputy sheriff.
A.
The Fourth Circuit has recognized that a cause of action may arise under § 1983 as interpreted in
Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,
The defendants admit that the York County Sheriff had no policies or procedures for dealing with emotionally impaired officers. The plaintiff asserts that the defendants should have had a policy requiring that any deputy who showed signs of depression, as Jackson had, be compelled to seek treatment and, further, be denied access to firearms and “instruments of coercion, such as [a] patrol vehicle.” (Plaintiff’s Memorandum, p. 15). The Court agrees with the defendants, however, that the essential element of causation is lacking. The defendants’ failure to require that Jackson submit to treatment cannot be found to have proximately caused Gulledge’s death in the absence of evidence that Jackson would have affirmatively responded to such treatment. Moreover, it is clear from the evidence that the rifle used in the shooting was Jackson’s personal weapon, not a firеarm issued or approved by the York County Sheriff. Therefore, any attempt to restrict Jackson’s access to departmental weapons would have been fruitless. Finally, the record is devoid of evidence that Jackson’s use of the patrol car played any role at all in the shooting except to transport Jackson to the scene. 1 Because Jackson could have used his personal car to the same end, the Court concludes that the failure to promulgate a pоlicy denying access to “instruments of coercion” such as the patrol car did not proximately cause Gulledge’s death.
The shooting, tragic though it was, was entirely personal in nature; there was a direct emotional involvement with the victim. The incident was unrelated to Jackson’s law enforcement activities or duties and could have occurred in exactly the same fashion had Jackson no longer been employed by the York County Sheriff or had he taken a leave of absence. For thesе reasons, the Court finds that the plaintiff *952 has failed to establish that the defendants’ alleged omissions in supervising and retaining Jackson proximately resulted in Gulledge’s death as required under Spell.
B.
The defendants further challenge the plaintiff’s assertion that they should be held liable for failing to protect the decedent from violence at the hands of a deputy sheriff. The Court concludes that the defendants owed no duty to the plaintiff or her decedent. It is well established that the Fourteenth Amendment does not impose on the dеfendants a general affirmative duty to the public at large.
See Jensen v. Conrad,
Here, there is no evidence that the defendants had knowledge of the existence of David Gulledge, Jr., muсh less of his relationship with Lynn Jackson and any personal danger arising therefrom. The plaintiff contends that Smart should have known or “failed to learn from Richard Jackson that he [Jackson] was on his way to a confrontation with David Gulledge, Jr.” (Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment, pp. 17-18). It appears that when Jackson attempted to talk to Smart by radio shortly before the shooting, Smart was out of radio range in violation of departmental procedures. The plaintiff’s argument is nevertheless spurious. The reason for and the circumstances of Smart’s unavailability are irrelevant to the determination of whether a special relationship existed between the decedent and the defendants that gave rise to a duty to protect. It is insufficient merely to assert that Smart, in monitoring Jackson, should have discovered that Gulledge was in danger of imminent harm but did not. The sole relevant inquiry is whether a special relationship existed and the record plainly reveals that none of the defendants had actual knowledge that David Gulledge, Jr., was in peril. In the absence of such knowledge, the Court finds no “special relationship” existed between the defendants and Gulledge that differentiated Gulledge from the general public and gave rise to an affirmative duty on the part of the defendants.
For these reasons, the Court concludes that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to the plaintiff’s claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
III.
In addition, even if the defendants could be held liable in their official capacities, and the Court expressly concludes that they cannot, 3 the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity from any liability in their individual capacities.
[Government officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as *953 their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The contоurs of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful; but it is to say that in the light of preexisting law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson v. Creighton,
— U.S. —, —,
The Court first finds that the defendants’ actions in supervising and retaining Jackson did not violate any constitutional right, whether “clearly established” or not, and thus, under
Harlow,
the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity as to that claim. Under
Monell
such liability arises only “when execution of a government’s policy or custom, whether made by its lawmakers or by those whose edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy, inflicts the injury.”
Turning now to the second ground asserted for liability under Section 1983, the Court concludes thаt Gulledge had no “clearly established” right to affirmative protection under the facts of this case. In
Jensen,
the Fourth Circuit addressed the right to affirmative protection previously recognized in
Martinez v. California,
*954 IV.
With respect to the defendants’ liability in their official capacities, the eleventh amendment prohibits a federal court from entertaining an action for any kind of relief where the defendant is a state or a state agency.
Florida Dept. of Health Rehabilitative Servs. v. Florida Nursing Home Ass’n.,
In
McConnell,
the Fourth Circuit held that certain election officials (a county registrar and county electoral board members) were state employees under Virginia law and thus could not be sued in their official capacities because of the eleventh amendment jurisdictional bar. The court reviewed several state statutes and decisions and then analogized the public employee to the private employee in determining the former’s status. It found “traditional principles of employer-employee law” reinforced its conclusion, especially the element of power to control the employee’s actions.
In South Carolina, similar common law principles defining the master and servant relationship apply.
See Daniel v. Swearingen,
Similarly, the position of deputy sheriff in South Carolina is more closely connected to the state than to the county. In
Heath v. Aiken County,
— S.C. —,
The county governing powers set out in Section 4-9-30 are ‘subject to the general law of this State____’ The‘general law’ on deputy sheriffs is well-settled in South Carolina: a deputy serves at his sheriff’s ‘pleasure.’ ... Section 23-13-10 also holds the sheriff ‘answerable for neglect of duty or misconduct in office of any deputy.’ Section 23-13-50 empowers a deputy sheriff to perform ‘any and all of the duties appertaining to the office of his principal,’ i.e. the sheriff, (emphasis added). A deputy, then, acts as his sheriff’s agent under South Carolina law. 3
Imрlementation of such policies [as involved here] would afford Council a degree of day-to-day control over deputies irreconcilable with the common and statutory law of this state. A deputy’s ‘servpce] at the sheriff’s pleasure,’ ..., entails not only how long he serves, but how he serves.
In sum, South Carolina’s county governing bodies “have no measurable control over the appointment, discharge, ..., duties, or policies of the [sheriff and his deputies].”
McConnell v. Adams,
V.
The plaintiff’s remaining causes of action allege negligence and recklessness by the defendants under state law. The allegations on which state tort liability is premised are the same as those already addressed in terms of Section 1983 liability. To maintain an action for negligence, a plaintiff must show the existence of a duty, a breach of that duty and damages.
Brown v. South Carolina Insurance Co.,
With regard to the plaintiff’s allegations of negligent supervision аnd retention of Jackson, the Court finds, for the reasons stated above, that the plaintiff has failed to establish actionable negligence because the facts do not support a causal link *956 between the defendants’ acts or omissions and the decedent’s injury.
With regard to the plaintiff’s allegations concerning the failure to identify and protect the decedent, the Court concludes that ordinarily the common law imposes no affirmative duty to act.
Brown, supra.
The Court is unable to discern the source of thе duty alleged, either from statute, relationship or other circumstance.
See Patel v. McIntyre, supra; Sharpe v. Dept. of Mental Health,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Court grants the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to all causes of action pursuant to Rule 56.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. During his deposition testimony, Smart stated that personal weapons could be carried in a patrol car only with рroper approval pursuant to the department's firearms policy. (Deposition of Joe A. Smart, pp. 93-94; Plaintiff s Exh. 4). Smart opined that this policy applied whether or not the deputy was on duty. “If they’re in the vehicle they’re on duty as far as I’m concerned____ Because they’re to respond to any emergency situations so; therefore, he’s on duty if he’s in the vehicle even if he’s not getting paid to be there. That’s the way I interpret it." (Id., p. 94).
The plaintiff relies heavily on this testimony to establish the defendants’ liability. The Court finds that this statement, however, does not establish that Jackson was “on duty" at the time of the shooting and thus subject immediately and directly to the defendants’ control. Jackson was plainly off duty and on a personal errand.
Cf. Stengel v. Belcher,
. The facts of this case do not establish a “special relationship" between Gulledge and the defendants by virtue of the defendants having legal custody of Gulledge or by virtue of the defendants’ express identification of Gulledge as one whom they sought to protect.
See Jensen v. Conrad,
. See infra, Part IV.
.
Monell
was decided in 1978; the
Tuttle
decision was handed down June 3, 1985, less than three months before the relevant incidents in this case. Both can be distinguished factually from this case. Moreover, neither explored the "full contours” of Section 1983 liability for injuries inflicted pursuant to govеrnment "policy or custom.”
Monell,
. See supra, Part II B.
. Section 23-11-40 provides that a vacancy in the office of sheriff is filled by gubernatorial appointment until either the next general election for county sheriffs or a special election to elect someone to hold the office until the next general election for county sheriffs depending on when the vacancy occurs. Sеction 1-3-220(2) provides that the Governor appoints an officer to fill any vacancy in a “county office” until the next general election. The South Carolina Supreme Court has interpreted these two provisions
in pari materia
to mean that the Governor fills a vacancy in the sheriff’s office until the next general election for county sheriffs.
Privette v. Grinnell,
The federal courts have so recognized. In
Allen v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland,
. The Court further concludes that South Carolina has not waived its eleventh amendment immunity. A Section 1983 claim does not by itself effect a waiver of eleventh amendment immunity.
Quern v. Jordan,
