Robert Hill was killed when Wallace Shobe, an on-duty Indianapolis police officer, ran a red light and struck Hill’s ear. A state court acquitted Shobe of charges of negligent homicide, while Hill’s estate reached a $250,-000 settlement with Shobe in a state tort case. In spite of the settlement, Hill's estate sued Shobe, the city of Indianapolis, and
I.
According to plaintiffs, whose version of events we accept as true for the purposes of a motion to dismiss, Flynn v. Kornwolf,
When other police officers arrived at the scene, plaintiffs claim that they tended to Shobe’s minor injuries while ignoring Hill, who remained in his overturned car. Once medical personnel аrrived, the police allegedly told them to treat Shobe before they examined Hill, and then allegedly directed them to bypass nearby hospitals and transport Hill to a more distant trauma unit. Plaintiffs also allege that the police then turned on the emergency lights in the police cruiser, adjusted the traffic signal to make it appear that Hill ran a flashing red light, encouraged witnessеs to tell a version of events favoring Shobe, and demanded that witnesses sign their statements before letting them read them.
Plaintiffs, claiming that their rights under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amеndment had been violated, sued (1) Officer Shobe, for recklessly depriving Hill of his life, and Hill’s parents of their continued family relationship with Hill; (2) the city of Indianapolis and its Chief of Police, for inadequately training and disciplining their officers, effectively establishing a custom of encouraging them to drive aggressively and at high speeds in nonemergency situations; and (3) the police officers at the scene of the accident, for conspiring to cover up Officer Shobe’s role in the accident. Plaintiffs also claimed that the conspiracy deprived them of their right of access to the courts. Defendants moved to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), claiming that plaintiffs failed to show that they were deprived of a constitutional right or, alternatively, that defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. The distriсt court dismissed the suit against the Chief of Police in his individual capacity, and the claim based on access to the courts, but denied the rest of the motion. Defendants then filed an appeal, seeking interlocutory review of the district court’s order.
II.
We review de novo the district court’s decision to deny a motion to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Covington Court, Ltd. v. Village of Oak Brook,
A.
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is that Shobe, a state actor, was driving recklessly, and knew that such reckless driving could cause a fatal collision with persons lawfully driving the streets at the same time. They conclude the resultant accident de
Plaintiffs counter that Parratt was rejecting negligence as a basis for liability under § 1983, in contrast to their claim that Shоbe drove recklessly. A conclusory allegation of recklessness, however, is insufficient to defeat a motion to dismiss. See Palda v. General Dynamics Corp.,
In other words, the state actor must have sufficient knowledge of the danger that one can infer he intended to inflict the resultant injury. Salazar v. City of Chicago,
The fact that a public official committed a common law tort with tragic results fails to rise to thе level of a violation of substantive due process. See Daniels v. Williams,
B.
Plaintiffs next claim that the city of Indianapolis shares responsibility for Hill’s death because it failed аdequately to train its officers. Because Hill’s death did not result from a violation of the federal constitution, this claim cannot stand. Plaintiffs’ claim that defendants conspired to cover up Shоbe’s allegedly unconstitutional actions similarly must fall. For liability under § 1983 to attach to a conspiracy claim, defendants must conspire to deny plaintiffs their constitutional rights: there is no constitutional violation in conspiring to cover up an action which does not itself violate the constitution. See House v. Belford,
There remains the claim that defendants conspired to deny medical treatment to Hill. The government, however, has no affirmative constitutional duty to provide emergency medical services to its citizens. Salazar,
CONCLUSION
There is no doubt that the accident which cost Robert Hill his life was most tragic. Nonetheless, the fact that a government employee caused the accident falls short of transforming it into a violation of the federal constitution. Whatever role defendants played in Hill’s death, their actions did not implicate the substantive provisions of the due process clause. This must not be taken to infer that we in any way condone the officer’s conduct in his operation of the city vehicle. It simply means that his actions did not violate a right which the federal constitution guarantees. Because no constitutional deprivation occurred, the district court should have granted the defendants’ timely motion to dismiss.
Reversed.
Notes
. Farmer is an Eighth Amendment case. We have long recognized, however, that the Eighth Amendment's definition of "criminal recklessness” is relevant in Fourteenth Amendment challenges under § 1983. Salazar v. City of Chicago,
. The key word is "accident.” A plaintiff who asserts that he is the deliberate object of state action which caused injury may state a claim under § 1983. Ross v. United States,
