These appeals arise from the tragic death of Kim Orlena Hamilton at a Montezuma, Georgia municipal swimming pool. The three plaintiffs — Hamilton’s mother, Hamilton’s minor child, and the Administratrix of Hamilton’s estate — brought this action in federal district court alleging constitutional claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law negligence claims. 1 The complaint named as defendants Macon County, Georgia; Macon County Deputy Sheriff Ronald Duncan (in his individual and official capacities); and Macon County Sheriff Charles Cannon (in his official capacity only). We refer to these defendants as “the county defendants.” The complaint also named as defendants the city of Montezuma; Michael Tookes, a lifeguard at the swimming pool (in his individual and official capacities); and Lonnie Brown, the manager of the pool (in his individual and official capacities). We refer to these defendants as “the city defendants.” 2
The district court granted summary judgment to all of the defendants on the plaintiffs’ state law negligence claims,
Hamilton v. Cannon,
Although two appeals with two different ease numbers are before us, they are based on the same record and the same evidence. The district court disposed of the defendants’ motions for summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ state law negligence claims and the defendants’ motions for summary judgment on the federal claims in a single order. We have consolidated the two appeals for deci-sional purposes.
I. The Facts and Procedural Background
The procedural posture of these cases requires us to view the facts, which are drawn from the pleadings, affidavits, and depositions, in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.
Rodgers v. Horsley,
Tookes assisted in managing the pool and served as lifeguard. He had received no. formal lifeguard training nor any instruction with respect to drownings or other potential *1528 emergencies at the pool. After Hamilton was thrown in the pool, she collapsed trying to get out of the water. All Tookes knew to do was to remove her from the pool and place her on the edge of it. Immediately after Tookes removed Hamilton from the pool, Sharon Simpson, a bystander who was trained in CPR, began administering CPR in an attempt to revive Hamilton. Tookes stood by and wiped Hamilton’s mouth from time to time. After Simpson initiated CPR, Hamilton appeared to begin shallow breathing and to revive slightly. There is testimony that Hamilton held her head up, began to cough, and moved her arm. Simpson felt a pulse and saw Hamilton trying to respond by moving her eyes. Additionally, Hamilton moved her head in response to her name. Tookes believed Hamilton was recovering and in no danger of dying.
While this rescue attempt was underway, Macon County Deputy Sheriff Ronald Duncan arrived at the scene. Duncan ordered everyone to clear the area around Hamilton. Despite Simpson’s objections, Duncan specifically ordered her away from Hamilton. Duncan then examined Hamilton’s condition, but did not himself undertake CPR efforts or take any other medical action on her behalf, apparently believing that Macon County’s emergency medical technicians would arrive immediately after him. Those medical technicians had been called and were enroute, but unfortunately, they were confused about the location and mistakenly went to another public swimming pool located several blocks away. This mistake delayed their arrival by several minutes, and during that time no one provided medical attention to Hamilton.
Once Simpson realized that Deputy Duncan had no intention of administering CPR, she ran to her nearby home to retrieve her Red Cross CPR certification card. Simpson was gone approximately five minutes, and during that time neither Duncan, Tookes, nor the Montezuma police officers who arrived in the interim provided any medical attention to Hamilton. Upon Simpson’s return, the medical technicians still had not arrived, and Duncan permitted Simpson to recommence CPR. Soon afterward, the technicians did arrive, having learned this swimming pool’s location from persons at the other pool. Unfortunately, Hamilton had already passed the point at which medical assistance could be of benefit. She was declared dead soon after.
II. The Section 1983 Claims and Tookes’ and Duncan’s Claims of Qualified Immunity, Appeal No. 94-9098
A. Background
The plaintiffs presented claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, which provides a tort remedy against persons acting under color of state law for deprivations of rights secured by federal law. Before a person, county, or municipality can be held liable under section 1983, a plaintiff must establish that she suffered a constitutional deprivation.
E.g., Bradberry v. Pinellas County,
To overcome the qualified immunity defense, the contours of the right allegedly violated must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he was doing violates that right.
E.g., Anderson v. Creighton,
The district court denied Tookes’ and Duncan’s motions for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds. The court held that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs did *1529 state a claim for the violation of a constitutional right, and that Tookes and Duncan were not protected by qualified immunity because the constitutional right claimed to have been violated was clearly established at the time of them alleged conduct. We will first discuss the plaintiffs’ claim against Duncan, which is stronger than their claim against Tookes.
B. Duncan
The sole constitutional right that the plaintiffs allege Duncan violated is the Fourteenth Amendment’s prohibition against the deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. The issue before us is therefore whether, in view of what we take to be the facts for present purposes, Duncan’s failure to provide an adequate rescue, or his action in barring private rescue attempts, ran afoul of a clearly established constitutional right. The district court held it did and therefore denied Duncan’s motion for summary judgment. We review this question of law
de novo. E.g., Swint,
The plaintiffs concede that, absent special circumstances, individuals — even government officials — are under no duty to provide rescue.
4
However, “there are times when the Constitution requires local governmental units to provide basic protective services to individuals with whom the government has created a special relationship.”
Bradberry,
The plaintiffs argue that a special relationship arose, imposing an affirmative constitutional duty upon Duncan, when Duncan cleared the area around Hamilton and instructed Simpson to discontinue CPR efforts, thereby implicitly taking responsibility for Hamilton. The plaintiffs rely on three cases to establish with the requisite clarity that under these circumstances a special relationship was created between Duncan and Hamilton, so that a negligent or reckless rescue attempt, or interference with a bystander’s rescue attempt, violated the Constitution.
The first ease the plaintiffs point to as clearly establishing this proposition of law is
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,
Despite repeated indications that DeSha-ney was abusing his child, county officials had done nothing to protect the child. Even under those egregious circumstances, the Supreme Court held that there was no violation
*1530
of any constitutional duty. In so holding, the Court distinguished cases involving persons who were in custody, such as prisoners and persons committed to mental institutions, from the general public, holding that public officials have no duty to protect individuals, generally.
Id.
at 198-201,
Although DeShaney held that there was no constitutional violation in that case, the plaintiffs attempt to extract from DeShaney a clearly established rule that a state has an affirmative duty to protect people when the state imposes a limitation on the individuars freedom to act on her own behalf. But De-Shaney reached no such holding, and instead held that the failure of the government actors in that case to “rescue” the young child from the abusive father to whom the child had been returned did not violate the Constitution. -If anything, the holding in DeShaney establishes that the rule the plaintiffs seek is far from clearly established.
The plaintiffs also rely upon our decision in
Wideman v. Shallowford Community Hospital, Inc.,
The
Wideman
Court held that the county’s practice of transporting emergency patients only to certain hospitals did not violate the Constitution.
Id.
at 1036. In so holding, the Court discussed at some length the “special relationship” cases. Quoting from a Seventh Circuit decision, the Court observed that “ ‘[t]he contours of what constitutes a “special relationship” between a municipality, acting through its officials, and its citizens are hazy and indistinct.’ ”
Those passages from
Wideman
are clearly dicta, because they were in no way essential to
Wideman’s
holding of no liability. The law cannot be established by dicta. Dicta is particularly unhelpful in qualified immunity cases where we seek to identify clearly established law.
See, e.g., Jones v. White,
The district court thought that the
Wideman
case clearly established that Duncan’s actions in this ease violated Hamilton’s constitutional rights. The district court drew from
Wideman
the general proposition that a constitutional duty can arise when a state or municipality exercises a significant degree of custody or control over an individual and places that individual in a worse situation than if the government had not acted at all.
5
The
Wideman
Court said that such a situation could arise if the government affirmatively placed an individual in a position of danger or cut off potential sources of private aid; but the
Wideman
opinion itself characterized those statements as only “general guidelines.”
Finally, the plaintiffs rely upon our holding in
Cornelius v. Town of Highland Lake,
In summary, the three cases that the plaintiffs rely upon did not develop the law plaintiffs assert in a sufficiently concrete and factually defined context to serve as the basis for the denial of qualified immunity in this case. The concrete and factually defined contexts of those three cases make them distinguishable from this one. 7 We said in *1532 Lassiter that the most common error we encounter in qualified immunity cases involves the point that “courts must not permit plaintiffs to discharge their burden by referring to general rules and to the violation of abstract ‘rights.’ ” Id. at 1150. We emphasized that “[g]eneral propositions have little to do with the concept of qualified immunity” and that the facts of a case relied upon to clearly establish the law must “be materially similar,” because “[p]ublic officials are not obligated to be creative or imaginative in drawing analogies from previously decided cases.” Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted). It would take much creativity and imagination to glean from the factually distinguishable cases upon which the plaintiffs rely a clearly established rule of law that an unsuccessful, negligent, or reckless rescue attempt, or interference with a bystander’s rescue attempt, amounts to a constitutional violation. We' decline to exercise such creativity and imagination, because qualified immunity doctrine prohibits it.
The district court should have granted Duncan’s motion for summary judgment in his individual capacity on qualified immunity grounds.
C. Tookes
We now turn to the district court’s order denying Tookes’ motion for summary judgment, in his individual capacity, on qualified immunity grounds. All Tookes did was remove Hamilton from the pool and place her on the ground beside it. The plaintiffs do not contend that Tookes interfered with Simpson’s rescue attempt, or that he affirmatively did anything at all improper. They simply contend that he should have done more.
Everything we said as to Duncan applies equally, or with even more force, to Tookes. There are no decisions clearly establishing that Tookes’ alleged nonfeasance rises to the level of a constitutional violation. At oral argument, the plaintiffs conceded that if Tookes had left Hamilton in the pool to drown, that inaction would not have violated Hamilton’s constitutional rights. However, plaintiffs argue that because Tookes rescued Hamilton from the pool he incurred a constitutional duty to continue rescue efforts even if he was not properly trained to do so. We doubt that the Constitution requires such a rule of law, under which some rescue effort is worse than none from the rescuer’s perspective. Although we do not have occasion to pass on the merits of the plaintiffs’ constitutional claim against Tookes, we note that it does border on the frivolous.
The district court should have granted summary judgment to Tookes in his individual capacity on qualified immunity grounds. We turn now to the plaintiffs state law negligence claims.
III. The State Law Negligence Claims, Appeal No. 94-9158
The plaintiffs brought various state law negligence claims against the city defendants and the county defendants. The district court granted summary judgment to all of the defendants on these negligence claims, relying on Georgia’s “public duty” doctrine as established by
City of Rome v. Jordan,
(1) an explicit assurance by the municipality, through promises or actions, that it would act on behalf of the injured party;
(2) knowledge on the part of the municipality that inaction could lead to harm; and,
(3) justifiable and detrimental reliance by the injured party on the municipality’s affirmative undertaking.
Id. The court adapted this test
from the
rule in a New York case,
Cuffy v. City of New York,
Applying the test to the facts of
Jordan,
the Georgia Supreme Court held that no special relationship existed between the victim and the municipality because the “detrimental reliance” element of the test could not have been met where the victim did not speak to the police and could not have known whether they had made any promise of assistance.
Jordan,
The district court in this case applied the same reasoning in granting summary judgment to the defendants on the state law negligence claims. Turning directly to the third prong of the test, the court reasoned that, because Hamilton was unconscious at the time, she could not have relied on any undertaking of the defendants.
Hamilton,
The plaintiffs argue that the “special relationship” test of Jordan does not control this case. Although they state the argument in several ways, the plaintiffs’ basic position boils down to this syllogism:
(1) Jordan applies to cases of failure to provide police protection;
(2) This case has nothing to do with failure to provide police protection;
(3) Therefore, Jordan is irrelevant to the determination of this case.
With respect to the city defendants, the plaintiffs argue that Jordan is plainly inapplicable because the state law negligence claims against the city defendants have nothing whatsoever to do with police conduct and, additionally, that Jordan only applies to non-feasance, not affirmative acts of negligence.
With respect to the county defendants, the plaintiffs’ argument is a slightly different variation on the same theme. First, the plaintiffs argue that although police conduct is involved in the case against the county defendants, the claims against those defendants are based on negligent interference with a private rescue effort rather than failure to provide police protection. Making the point in a slightly different way, the plaintiffs argue that, quite separate from any “special relationship” duty owed to Hamilton by Duncan under the Jordan analysis, Duncan owed Hamilton an independent duty to exercise ordinary care once he had taken control of the situation and had ordered Simpson to stop administering CPR. Additionally, the plaintiffs argue that, even if Jordan applies to the claims against the county defendants, the district court erred in its application of the reliance prong of the test by requiring “an affirmative act that might signify reliance.” Id. They argue that Jordan did not expressly set up an affirmative act requirement and that, under the circumstances, reliance should be implied or imputed to Hamilton by others at the scene.
In general, the defendants’ arguments are the converse of the plaintiffs’ arguments; the defendants argue for a broad interpretation of Jordan to insulate them from liability. *1534 Both the city defendants and the county defendants contend Jordan applies outside the realm of police conduct and applies both to affirmative acts of negligence as well as non-feasance. The city defendants also point out that the plaintiffs have not alleged that the city defendants committed any affirmative negligent acts with respect to Hamilton and thus even if Jordan only shields defendants in cases of nonfeasance, it still shields them.
The plaintiffs’ position that
Jordan
is limited to failure to provide police protection, or to municipal wcmfeasance, would seem to be a plausible interpretation of the decision. The opinion contains no less than five references that lend support to this view.
See Jordan,
For example, in
City of Lawrenceville v. Macko,
The only other reported Georgia case we have found that involves
Jordan
is
Georgia Department of Transportation v. Brown,
Determining the applicability of Jordan to this case is problematic. The Jordan decision itself represents the only time the Georgia Supreme Court has spoken to the issue, but the language of the opinion may not delineate the limits of the doctrine it announces. One Georgia appellate court case, Macko, seems to signal an expansive application while the more recent decision in Brown declined to extend the doctrine. Although both the plaintiffs and defendants cite to extra-territorial case law to buttress their Jordan arguments, those cases are not particularly helpful because they do not determine the correct rule in Georgia and because they are in conflict.
Application of the
Jordan
public duty doctrine outside the police nonfeasance context has significant public policy ramifications, and we are in doubt about the matter. When such doubt exists as to the application of state law, a federal court should certify the question to the state supreme court to avoid making unnecessary state law guesses and to offer the state court the opportunity to interpret or change existing law.
Mosher v. Speedstar Div. of AMCA Int’l, Inc.,
*1535 While we could make an Erie 8 guess as to the applicability of the Jordan public duty doctrine to this case, we have determined that the more prudent course is to submit the issue to the Georgia Supreme Court. Accordingly, we respectfully certify the following questions of law to the Supreme Court of Georgia: 9
(1) Does the “public duty doctrine” established in
City of Rome v. Jordan,
(2) Does the Jordan public duty doctrine apply to affirmative acts of negligence, such as those alleged in this case, in addition to failures to act?
(3) Does the “reliance prong” of the Jordan special relationship test require an objective manifestation of assent by the plaintiff, or may assent be inferred from the reliance of others or from the circumstances of this case?
(4) Does the Jordan special relationship test apply when a law enforcement officer acts with gross negligence in performing duties at the scene of an emergency, as is alleged in this case, such that the officer would not otherwise be shielded from liability by Ga.Code Ann. § 35-1-7 (1993)?
Our statement of the questions is not meant to limit the scope of inquiry by the Supreme Court of Georgia. On the contrary:
[T]he particular phrasing used in the certified questions] [are] not to restrict the Supreme Court’s consideration of the problems involved and the issues as the Supreme Court perceives them to be in its analysis of the record certified in this case. This latitude extends to the Supreme Court’s restatement of the issue or issues and the manner in which the answers are to be given....
Martinez v. Rodriquez,
QUESTIONS CERTIFIED.
IV. Conclusion
We REVERSE the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Tookes and Duncan in their individual capacities insofar as the federal constitutional claims are concerned. We CERTIFY the state law issues to the Georgia Supreme Court, and we WITHHOLD any decision about the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the state law claims until we receive the answers to that certification. 10
Notes
. Hamilton’s mother has since been dismissed from the case and is not a party to this appeal.
. Additional defendants were also named, but the claims against those defendants have been settled.
. Macon County attempts to piggyback onto the interlocutory appeal by Tookes and Duncan an appeal from the district court’s denial of summary judgment for the county. But we do not have jurisdiction over the district court's denial of summary judgment to the county, which was not a final judgment on the merits, an interlocutory appeal certified pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), or a decision denying qualified immunity.
. There is no general duty to rescue a stranger in distress, even if the rescue can easily be accomplished.
See, e.g., Jackson v. City of Joliet,
.This Court and others have extended the state custody exception beyond actual incarceration or involuntary institutionalization only when there is some kind of physical restraint by the state that triggers an affirmative constitutional duty of care and protection. We explained in
Lovins v.
¿eg that "special relationship decisions stand only for the proposition that when the State takes a person into its custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution imposes upon it a corresponding duty to assume some responsibility for his safety and general well-being. The duty in such cases arises from the limitations which the government has imposed on the freedom of the individual to act on his own behalf.”
. Further,
Cornelius'
viability is questionable in light of the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in
Collins v. City of Harker Heights,
. The case that most strongly lends support to plaintiffs' position is the Seventh Circuit decision in
Ross v. United States,
.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
. Additionally, the defendants argue that even if the Jordan public duty doctrine is inapplicable to these facts, we should affirm the summary judgment in their favor on the basis of lack of causation, or the Georgia "good Samaritan” statute. The district court relied solely on the Jordan public duty doctrine in granting summary judgment to the defendants on the state law negligence claims. The district court declined to reach the merits of these additional defenses, and so do we. If it is necessary to consider these defenses after the Georgia Supreme Court answers our certified questions regarding the applicability of the Jordan doctrine, we will do so at that time.
.The time for any rehearing petitions and suggestions will not begin to run in either of these two appeals, which we have consolidated, until we have disposed of the state law claim issues following the Georgia Supreme Court’s decision of the certified questions.
