Case Information
*1 Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, JOHN R. GIBSON, WOLLMAN, ARNOLD,
MURPHY, BYE, RILEY, MELLOY, SMITH, COLLOTON, GRUENDER, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
___________
COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
Henry Szabla appeals the district court’s [1] grant of summary judgment in favor of the appellees on his claims brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Minnesota law. A panel of this court affirmed the dismissal of most claims, but reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Szabla’s claim for municipal liability against the City of Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. Szabla v. City of Brooklyn Park , 429 F.3d 1168 (8th Cir. 2005). We granted the City’s petition for rehearing en banc limited to the question of Brooklyn Park’s municipal liability, and we now affirm that portion of the judgment as well.
I.
At about 1:20 a.m. on August 17, 2000, police officers from the City of Crystal, Minnesota, responded to a report that an automobile had struck a tree near Becker Park. The officers found the car, which had been abandoned, and they saw that the car’s windshield had been shattered and there was an imprint where a person’s head had struck the windshield. The officers called the registered owner of the car, who said he had previously sold it. The officers then began to search for the driver, and one of the officers determined that assistance from a police canine would help to find the driver. The Crystal Police Department did not have a canine unit, so the officers requested assistance from the City of Brooklyn Park. Brooklyn Park dispatched one of its canines, Rafco, with his handler, Officer Steven Baker, to the scene.
When Baker and Rafco arrived at the abandoned car, Baker discovered a screwdriver, which he thought could have been used as a burglary tool or weapon, and observed “property” in the back seat of the car, which Baker believed could have been the fruits of a burglary. Baker testified that because officers did not know whether they were looking for a criminal suspect or an innocent injured person, he gave Rafco *3 the command to “track,” which is the command for Rafco to apprehend or bite the individual he is tracking. Baker said that he chose not to give Rafco the command to “search,” a command that directs the dog to refrain from biting a person, because he was concerned about officer safety in the event the dog led him to a criminal suspect.
Baker began to search Becker Park once Rafco acquired a scent emanating from the crashed automobile. Baker had Rafco on a fifteen-foot leash, but provided the canine with only about a six-foot lead. He did not shout a warning that a police dog was in the area. Rafco led Baker through the park to a shelter within the park. Once Rafco entered the shelter, he bit Szabla, who had been asleep in the shelter. (Szabla slept in the park, which closed at 11 p.m., because it was across the street from a temporary employment agency that hired workers on a daily basis). Szabla kicked Rafco off, and Rafco bit Szabla a second time. Baker ordered Szabla to show his hands, and Baker instructed Rafco to release Szabla once he complied with the order. The Crystal officers arrived moments later, and they temporarily arrested Szabla. The officers released Szabla within two minutes, after verifying that he was not involved in the automobile accident. Szabla testified that when the officers were walking away, he heard one of them say, “I gave the dog too much leash.” Szabla reported that he suffered 23 punctures on his legs and hip.
Szabla brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Minnesota state law against the cities of Crystal and Brooklyn Park, as well as the individual officers involved. The district court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment. The district court concluded that Baker had used excessive force against Szabla, in violation of Szabla’s Fourth Amendment rights, by commanding Rafco to “track,” or bite and hold, without first providing a warning. The court held, however, that Baker was protected by qualified immunity, because the right to a warning was not clearly established at the time of the incident. The court also dismissed Szabla’s claims arising under § 1983 against the Crystal police officers and the City of Crystal, as well as Szabla’s claims under Minnesota law against all of the defendants. A panel of our *4 court affirmed the judgment of the district court on each of these claims, Szabla , 429 F.3d at 1173-75, 1176-77, and they are not within the scope of this rehearing.
Szabla also raised a claim of municipal liability under § 1983 against the City
of Brooklyn Park. The district court held that Szabla failed to specify which of
Brooklyn Park’s policies was allegedly unconstitutional, and ruled that the “isolated
incident” of Rafco biting Szabla could not support a claim that the City acted with
deliberate indifference by failing adequately to train its officers. The district court
concluded that Szabla had not raised an argument, comparable to that discussed in
Kuha v. City of Minnetonka
,
II.
Section 1983 provides that “[e]very person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State . . ., subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States . . . to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured.” 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In Monell v. Department of Social Services , 436 U.S. 658 (1978), the Supreme Court held that a municipality is a “person” that can be liable under § 1983. Id . at 690. At the same time, the Court concluded that a municipality may not be found liable “unless action pursuant to official municipal policy of some nature caused a constitutional tort.” Id . at 691. The Court did not address the full contours of municipal liability under § 1983, but established that a *5 municipality cannot be held liable on a respondeat superior theory, that is, solely because it employs a tortfeasor. Id .
Monell
was a case where the city’s policy was itself unconstitutional. The
policy compelled a constitutional violation by requiring pregnant female employees
to take unpaid leaves of absence before their absences from work were medically
necessary.
See Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. LaFleur
,
But where an official policy is lawful on its face and does not compel unconstitutional action by an employee of the municipality, the analysis is different. As a plurality of the Court remarked in Tuttle , “[o]bviously, if one retreats far enough from a constitutional violation some municipal ‘policy’ can be identified behind almost any such harm inflicted by a municipal official.” Id . at 823 (plurality opinion). Accordingly, “some limitation must be placed on establishing municipal liability through policies that are not themselves unconstitutional, or the test set out in Monell [foreclosing respondeat superior liability] will become a dead letter.” Id .
The appropriate limitation was addressed in
City of Canton v. Harris
, 489 U.S.
378 (1989), which involved an allegation that constitutional violations resulted from
*6
a municipality’s failure adequately to train its police force. The Court explained that
“‘[m]unicipal liability under § 1983 attaches where – and only where – a deliberate
choice to follow a course of action is made from among various alternatives’ by city
policymakers.”
Id
. at 389 (quoting
Pembaur
,
Our court has long followed this approach. In
Dick v. Watonwan County
, 738
F.2d 939 (8th Cir. 1984), we held that where a municipality adopted a policy that left
discretion to individual officials, two of whom later acted unconstitutionally, the
policy did not give rise to liability under § 1983.
Id
. at 943. We explained that
*7
because the policy did not “affirmatively sanction” unconstitutional actions, it was not
an unconstitutional policy, and it could not be the “moving force” of any
constitutional violation.
Id
. We said that the municipality’s governing board “might
have chosen to adopt more detailed guidelines, and such rules might have averted the
mistake that was made in this case,” but the board’s decision to rely on the judgment
of its employees was “certainly not unconstitutional in and of itself.”
Id
. at 942. In
Patzner v. Burkett
, 779 F.2d 1363 (8th Cir. 1985), we reiterated that a plaintiff
asserting municipal liability “must show not only that a policy or custom existed, and
that it was causally related to the plaintiff’s injury,
but that the policy itself was
unconstitutional
.”
Id
. at 1367 (emphasis added). We have continued to apply this
reasoning more recently in
Golberg v. Hennepin County
,
Applying these standards to Szabla’s claim, we conclude that the City of Brooklyn Park was entitled to summary judgment on the claim of municipal liability. Brooklyn Park’s written policy concerning the use of dogs is lawful on its face. *8 Directive 331, promulgated by the chief of police, permits the use of canines in five circumstances, including “in arresting known dangerous criminals who will, or might offer physical resistance to the arresting officer or who might attempt to flee or escape custody,” and “in search and apprehension work for” criminals and suspects who might pose a risk to other citizens. (App. at 464). We assume that employment of canines in “arresting known dangerous criminals” or in “apprehension work” will sometimes involve using a dog to bite and hold a suspect, but it is not unconstitutional to use dogs for those purposes. Directive 331 also recognizes that the “use of police dogs may constitute the use of force,” ( id . at 461), but provides that “[u]se of police dogs shall be in accordance with use of force statutes and Department Policy,” ( id . at 464), and another policy, Directive 333, expressly forbids a police officer to use “unreasonable, unnecessary or unlawful force.” ( Id . at 466). These policies as written are not unconstitutional.
A constitutional problem may arise based on
the manner
in which the canines
are used. We held in 2004 that “a jury could properly find it objectively unreasonable
to use a police dog trained in the bite and hold method without first giving the suspect
a warning and opportunity for peaceful surrender.”
Kuha
,
Indeed, Szabla’s principal contention has been that the City’s “ failure to have a policy ” giving guidance on the use of canines “foster[ed] the use of excessive force,” and thus amounted to a constitutional violation. (Br. of Appellant at 26) (emphasis added). As we have explained, however, a written policy that is facially constitutional, but fails to give detailed guidance that might have averted a constitutional violation by an employee, does not itself give rise to municipal liability. There is still potential for municipal liability based on a policy in that situation, but only where a city’s inaction reflects a deliberate indifference to the constitutional rights of the citizenry, such that inadequate training or supervision actually represents the city’s “policy.” [3]
*10
The evidence presented on this record is insufficient to make a submissible case
of deliberate indifference. The evidence does not show that Brooklyn Park had a
history of police officers unreasonably using canines to apprehend suspects without
advance warning, such that the need for additional training or supervision was plain.
See Brown
,
The Supreme Court has not foreclosed the possibility that a single violation of
constitutional rights could trigger municipal liability, where the violation is
accompanied by a showing that the municipality had “failed to train its employees to
handle recurring situations presenting an obvious potential for such a violation.”
Brown
, 520 U.S. at 409. In determining whether the need for training or other
safeguards was “obvious,” however, we look to whether the employee violated a
“clear constitutional duty” and whether there were “clear constitutional guideposts”
for municipalities in the area.
City of Canton
,
deliberate indifference to the constitutional rights of its citizens by failing to train its
employees with respect to a
clear constitutional duty
implicated in recurrent situations
that a particular employee is certain to face.”) (emphasis added) (internal quotation
omitted);
Young v. City of Augusta
,
In this case, a constitutional requirement that an officer in Baker’s situation give
advance warning before commanding a canine to bite and hold a suspect was not
clearly established as of August 2000.
See Kuha
,
This conclusion is not inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Owen
and
Pembaur
,
cf. post
, at 28, because neither of those cases involved an alleged
municipal policy of deliberate indifference. In
Owen
, municipal liability was based
on official conduct of the city’s lawmakers, which amounted to “official policy”
causing an infringement of constitutional rights.
Where the municipality has not directly inflicted an injury, however, “rigorous
standards of culpability and causation must be applied,”
id
. at 405, and a showing of
deliberate indifference is required. The absence of clearly established constitutional
rights – what Justice O’Connor called “clear constitutional guideposts,”
*13 Finally, Szabla’s deliberate indifference claim also fails for lack of causation.
See City of Canton
,
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Szabla contends that the municipal liability
analysis of our decision in
Kuha
demonstrates that he has presented a submissible
claim against Brooklyn Park.
Kuha
reasoned that because the plaintiff had alleged
that his constitutional rights were violated “by an action taken pursuant to an official
municipal policy (as opposed to a failure to train, for instance),” he was not required
to demonstrate that the city was deliberately indifferent to his constitutional rights.
canine without advance warning to apprehend Kuha was “in accordance with Department policy.” Id . at 606. The opinion concluded that if a jury determined that the canine handler acted unreasonably by failing to give a verbal warning before using a police dog trained to bite and hold a suspect, then “the jury can also reasonably conclude that the City’s policy on police dogs – which authorizes the use of dogs trained only to bite and hold, and which did not mandate a verbal warning in this scenario – caused the constitutional violation.” Id . at 607. Our decision allowed that if the city could establish that its written policies did, in fact, require warnings before the use of a canine trained only to bite and hold, then the city would not be liable. Id .
A case can be made that
Kuha
is distinguishable on its facts,
see
We thus conclude that Szabla’s reliance on Kuha is not persuasive, and his claim against Brooklyn Park fails as a matter of law for the reasons set forth above. Because aspects of the analysis in Kuha are inconsistent with our opinion today, and are likely to sow confusion if left undisturbed, we abandon Part II.C of our opinion in Kuha as circuit precedent.
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed. JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge, with whom WOLLMAN, BYE, and MELLOY, Circuit Judges, join, dissenting.
Is it constitutional to authorize police to search houses, without requiring a warrant? [5] Is it constitutional to authorize police to dispose of seized property, without requiring notice to persons with claims to the property? [6] Is it constitutional to authorize use of a dog to bite and hold a suspect, without giving a warning first? The Constitution requires that each question be answered with a resounding "no."
If a city's policy affirmatively authorizes a procedure without requiring a safeguard that is constitutionally required, the city authorizes constitutional violations that result when its officers perform the procedure without the safeguard and in the process violate someone's constitutional rights.
This case, like Kuha v. City of Minnetonka,
The opinion of the court today turns on its conclusion that the policy at issue here, which authorizes use of dogs to apprehend, i.e., bite and hold, suspects but does not mention the need to warn first, is constitutional. Whether to warn, we are told, concerns merely "the manner" in which the dogs are used. Slip op. at 8 (emphasis in original). The court considers the policy deficient only in failure to give "detailed *17 guidance that might have averted a constitutional violation by an employee," a deficiency for which Brooklyn Park is not liable. Id.
The need for a warning is not a detail. Under our precedent, it is a generally
required safeguard, which may be dispensed with only if there are exigent
circumstances. In Kuha v. City of Minnetonka,
This case involves a legislative-type, prospective city policy, which is the
prototypic case for municipal liability. Monell v. Department of Social Services of
the City of New York,
Once Monell opened up the possibility of § 1983 liability for city "policy," the question quickly arose whether such liability would be limited to prospective, legislative-type policies or whether it would extend to ad hoc, on the spot decisions by those in high positions within the city. In Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati, 475 U.S. 469, 480 (1986), the Supreme Court held that the city could be liable for a "policy" that consisted of a single decision by municipal policymakers. In that context, the Court defined "policy" as a "deliberate choice to follow a course of action . . . from among various alternatives." Id. at 483.
As municipal liability continued to expand with the elastic meaning of "policy"
to cover situations in which the injurious act was linked to policymakers only by their
failure to prevent it, the Court crafted the "deliberate indifference" standard to
We cannot say. I contend only that the facts that Baker commanded the dog to track
(i.e., bite and hold) without first issuing a warning, that this was authorized by city
policy, and that the dog injured Szabla are enough to go to a jury on causation.
*19
distinguish between cases in which the city's inaction could fairly be said to have
caused the injurious action and those in which it could not. See City of Canton v.
Harris,
In the last of the major Supreme Court cases in this area, Board of
Commissioners of Brown County v. Bryan,
Our court today argues that the deliberate indifference standard must be applied if the city's policy was "lawful on its face and does not compel unconstitutional action by an employee of the municipality." Slip op. at 5. This standard contains an implicit distinction between policies that compel unconstitutional action by an employee (which need not be supplemented by the additional deliberate indifference element) and those that merely authorize such actions (which must be supplemented). I see no reason for this distinction. It is not mandated by the Supreme Court; Justice O'Connor's opinion in Brown puts these two categories on a par when she refers to municipal actions that "directed or authorized the deprivation of federal rights." 502 U.S. at 406. Here, where the municipality authorized an action without a constitutionally required safeguard, I do not think that its policy should be considered "facially lawful"–perhaps a better term would be "superficially lawful."
The Supreme Court has not had occasion to explain what "facial" lawfulness
means in the Monell context. The term is ordinarily used as a standing test, where it
determines whether a person can mount a challenge to a statute even though the statute
is not unconstitutional as applied to him. See generally Sabri v. United States, 541
U.S. 600, 609-10 (2004). In the strictest formulation, for a measure to be
unconstitutional on its face, there need only be a possibility that it could be applied
*21
constitutionally in some case. See United States v. Salerno,
There is disagreement within the Supreme Court over whether the Salerno test
is a correct formulation. See Janklow v. Planned Parenthood,
Despite the lip service given to the facially constitutional test, courts have in
fact found that liability could be imposed for a municipal policy that affirmatively
authorized a foreseeable constitutional injury, even though the policy was not
unconstitutional on its face, at least according to the Salerno test. A good example is
the municipal policy that authorized using deadly force against fleeing felony suspects
in Garner v. Memphis Police Dep't,
Authorizing a course of action without including constitutionally required
safeguards or exceptions to the authorization has been a sufficient basis for municipal
liability in other cases. In Matthias v. Bingley,
Similarly, in O'Brien v. City of Grand Rapids,
In Gibson v. County of Washoe,
Even if one were to conclude that "deliberate indifference" was prerequisite to
Monell liability in a case of affirmative authorization of the unconstitutional act,
deliberate indifference exists where a city authorizes a course of action without
mandating safeguards that are required in every case or required unless there are
mitigating or exceptional circumstances. In City of Canton, Justice White, writing for
the Court, held that a failure to train theory could conceivably result in municipal
liability, but that the municipality's degree of fault would have to rise to the level of
deliberate indifference to the rights of the persons who will be affected.
[I]t 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. In that event, the failure to provide proper training may fairly be said to represent a policy for which the city is responsible, and for which the city may be liable if it actually causes injury.
Id. at 390. Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825 (1994), explained that "deliberate indifference" in the § 1983 context does not require a subjective consciousness of the risk, even though the same term requires subjective consciousness in the Eighth Amendment context. Id. at 841 ("It would be hard to describe the Canton understanding of deliberate indifference, permitting liability to be premised on obviousness or constructive notice, as anything but objective. Canton's objective standard, however, is not an appropriate test for determining the liability of prison officials under the Eighth Amendment . . . .").
In City of Canton Justice White addressed something like the question before us when he gave the following example:
[C]ity policymakers know to a moral certainty that their police officers will be required to arrest fleeing felons. The city has armed its officers with firearms, in part to allow them to accomplish this task. Thus, the need to train officers in the constitutional limitations on the use of deadly force, see Tennessee v. Garner,471 U.S. 1 (1985), can be said to be "so obvious," that failure to do so could properly be characterized as "deliberate indifference" to constitutional rights.
By Justice White's reasoning in City of Canton, the City of Memphis in Garner, supra at 7, would have been responsible to train its officers not to shoot unarmed, non- dangerous fleeing felons, even if it had not had a policy saying police could shoot them. But since Memphis in fact had a written policy saying police could shoot at all fleeing felons, its responsibility is even more direct than in Justice White's hypothetical, and even more securely within the Monell doctrine. Memphis did not merely know "to a moral certainty" that the officers would shoot fleeing felons (as in Justice White's hypothetical), it told them they could do so. The City's policy was an affirmative link, a moving force, and a direct cause of its officers shooting Garner. Likewise, in this case there is no question that the City of Brooklyn Park knew that *26 its officers would use dogs to apprehend (i.e., bite and hold) people, since the City adopted a written policy telling them they could do so. The need to warn was a "clear constitutional duty" inherent in a situation created by City policy "and it is equally clear that failure to inform city personnel of that duty will create an extremely high risk that constitutional violations will ensue." City of Canton, 489 U.S. at 396 (O'Connor, J., concurring).
We have found deliberate indifference where a municipality ignored an obvious
risk it created. In Hayes v. Faulkner County,
The court today argues that this case is one where the policy did not
"affirmatively sanction" the violation, but the municipality instead properly decided
to rely on the judgment of its employees. Slip op. at 6-7, citing Dick v. Watonwan
*27
County,
One last point. The Supreme Court held in Owen v. City of Independence, 445
U.S. 622, 635-58 (1980), that municipalities are not entitled to qualified immunity
under § 1983. There, the City of Independence failed to provide a name-clearing
hearing for a government employee stigmatized in the course of being fired by the
City, but the City contended that it had acted in good faith because the right to such
*28
a hearing did not become established until two months after the City's actions. Id. at
634. Justice Brennan considered at length the legislative history of § 1983 and the
relevant policy considerations and concluded that good faith would not shield the City
from § 1983 liability. Similarly, in Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati,
In the face of these two Supreme Court holdings, our court today holds that in
cases of municipal liability that depend on a showing of deliberate indifference (i.e.,
most of them), a municipality cannot be liable unless the law was clearly established
at the time of its action. Slip op. at 10-12. Thus, via the words "deliberate
indifference," our court imports the qualified immunity standard into municipal
liability. The court relies on the Second Circuit's statement in Townes v. City of New
York,
Our court also relies on Justice O'Connor's concurring and dissenting opinion
in City of Canton, in which she contended that the constitutional law governing rights
of pre-trial detainees to medical treatment was not sufficiently clear to support
municipal liability. Contrary to Justice O'Connor's view, the majority opinion in City
of Canton does not require that the offending act must be contrary to clearly
established law at the time of the act in order to give rise to municipal liability. The
holding of the majority in City of Canton was to remand the case–as Justice Brennan
*29
pointed out in his concurrence, that meant remanding for new trial.
All our discussions about the refinements of Supreme Court cases considering municipal liability in § 1983 cases can obscure the point of the line of cases as a whole, which is to ask who should be liable for the constitutional tort–the city or only its employee. The rights and wrongs of this case can be clarified by asking whether the city could blame Baker for commanding the dog to bite and hold without giving a warning first. Baker would respond, in all justice, that he just did what the city told him to do. Here, the city had an official, legislative-type policy that authorized Baker to do what he did and Szabla was harmed in just the way one would expect from looking at the policy. Who did something wrong, who caused the tort? The jury could find that the city did. That should be enough to send this case to trial.
I respectfully dissent.
______________________________
Notes
[1] The Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
[2] Authorities from other circuits cited by the dissent are not inconsistent with our
conclusion, because they involve instances in which a municipality affirmatively
sanctioned unconstitutional conduct by its employees. The city in
Garner v. Memphis
Police Dep’t
,
[3] The separate doctrine providing for municipal liability in a case of widespread unconstitutional practices that constitute a “custom or usage with the force of law” is
[4] That the Supreme Court in
City of Canton
remanded the case for further
proceedings does not mean the Court rejected Justice O’Connor’s view that clear
constitutional duties and guideposts are vital to a showing of deliberate indifference.
Cf. post
, at 29. While the precise obligations of city employees to pre-trial detainees
under the Due Process Clause were unsettled when
City of Canton
was decided, it was
clearly established that a detainee was entitled to protections
at least
as great as those
available to convicted prisoners under the Eighth Amendment.
Revere v. Mass. Gen.
Hosp.
,
[6] See Matthias v. Bingley,
[7] Brooklyn Park Directive No. 331 gives five areas in which "dogs may be properly used." The areas include: "b. To use in arresting known dangerous criminals who will, or might offer physical resistance to the arresting officer or who might attempt to flee or escape custody" and "c. To use in search and apprehension work for intruders, prowlers, escapees, burglars, window peepers, persons known or believed to have committed a crime of violence, persons attempting to flee or escape from police, and to use in trail work to locate missing persons." Officer Baker said item c was the one that covered the situation in issue. The policy does not state that a warning is necessary or, indeed, mention warnings at all.
[8] Baker, the officer who handled the dog, gave testimony that equates apprehensions and biting: Q:"What does 'bitework' mean? A: Apprehensions." Baker talked about the difference between "search," which does not include apprehension, and "track," which does include apprehension. "Track" was the command he used.
[9] If this case proceeded to trial, a jury might find that this was one of those exceptional cases in which, for some reason, a warning was not feasible, or that even if Baker had given a warning, the same harm would have occurred. This depends on the resolution of fact issues that are entrusted to the jury: Would Szabla have heard a shouted warning? Would he have been able to surrender before the dog got to him?
[10] Szabla's underlying constitutional claim, is of course, for use of excessive
force in violation of the Fourth Amendment. A Fourth Amendment claim for use of
excessive force in making an arrest requires a seizure, consisting of (1) "an intentional
acquisition of physical control," (2) through means intentionally applied. Brower v.
Inyo County,
[11] We should use caution in relying on Dick because Dick stated that municipal
liability depended on whether the policy in question was constitutional.
