ORDER
This сivil rights action involves the constitutional dimensions of pretrial detention and bail, as well as the pleading requirements in § 1983 case against municipalities. Ralph Holder has sued the towns of Newton and East Kingston, their police chiefs, certain of their police officers, the Rockingham County Department of Corrections, and its superintendent, alleging a number of constitutional violations and common-law torts arising out of his arrest, detention, and prosecution on a simple assault charge that was ultimately dismissed. Two of the defendants, the Rockingham County Department of Corrections and its superintendent, Albert J. Wright (the “county defendants”) moved to dismiss Holder’s constitutional claims against them, arguing that they fail to state a claim for relief. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). 1 In particular, the county defendants argue that (1) their сontinued detention of Holder, even after he had allegedly been determined to be eligible for release on bail, was not unconstitutional and (2) Holder has not pled any policy or practice of deliberate indifference to medical needs sufficient to establish a constitutional claim for the county defendants’ allegedly depriving him of access to his prescriptiоn medications.
This court has subject-matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (federal question) and 1367 (supplemental jurisdiction). After oral argument, the motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. 2 There is ample authority that the Constitution prohibits “overdetention” of the kind the court understands Holder to allege. But Holder has not alleged adequate facts to support his other claim: that the county defendants were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs as the result of their policy or practice. So while his complaint states an overdetention claim for which relief can be granted, the medical care claim is dismissed.
1. Applicable legal standard
To state a claim for relief, a complaint must set forth “[fjactual allegations [that
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are] enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level, on the assumption that all of the allegations in the complaint are true (even if doubtful in fact).”
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
II. Background
Following Holder’s arrest by local police in May 2005, he was detained in the Rockingham County House of Corrections. Holder alleges that “after the Bail Commissioner was informed of the charges and determined that [Holder] was eligible for and entitled to release on personal recognizance,” the county defendants “intentionally denied him prompt release, holding him for an additional nine hours on the pretext of a purported policy” that “prohibit[ed] the release of protective custody detainees without a ride.” Holder alleges he was not in protective custody but, even if he had been, “he could have called a cab or otherwise obtained a ride.” Holder also alleges that he “told officers at intake that he was insulin dependant and hypertensive,” but that he was nevertheless deprived of his prescription medications for his whole nine-hour detention.
III. Analysis
A. Claim for denial of release
As clarified by the recent amendment, see note 1, supra, Holder’s complaint asserts a claim against the county defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that they “deprived [him] of his constitutionally and statutorily protected right to reasonable and prompt bail ... in violation of Part I, Articles 15 and 33 of the New Hamрshire Constitution as well as the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.” In moving to dismiss this claim, the county defendants argue that the federal Constitution “contains no right to immediate release after bail” but, even if it did, that right could not have been violated by Holder’s claimed nine-hour detention as a matter of law. 3 That is not correct.
“There is a substantial body of law in support of the proposition that a plaintiff who alleges overdetention, sometimes even for a very short period, states a claim for constitutional violations.”
Barnes v. District of Columbia,
To be sure, these authorities differ on the source of the constitutional right at issue: some locate it in the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, while others locate it in the cruel and unusual punishments clause of the Eighth Amendment.
See Lemarr v. Doe,
No. 05-167,
The county defendants’ contrary view depends entirely on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Baker v. McCollan,
Both claims were rejected. The Supreme Court ruled that, while “mere detention pursuant to a valid warrant but in the face of repeated protests of innocence will after the lapse of a certain amount of time deprive the accused of liberty without due process of law, ... a detention of three days over a ... weekend does not and could not amount to such a deprivation.”
Baker,
The cases’ reasoning, moreover, strongly suggests that overdetention of the sort alleged here raises entirely different considerations: each decision relied heavily on the notion that our constitutional system places responsibility fоr releasing a detainee on the judicial system, rather than on law enforcement officers who have accomplished the detention pursuant to a valid warrant.
Baker,
Two further points of clarification are nеcessary. First, the court has assumed that this is in fact the nature of Holder’s claim, i.e., that the bail commissioner effectively ordered his release on his own recognizance but the county defendants nevertheless continued to hold him in accord with the purported dictates of one of their policies. 5 While this is certainly one plausible reading of the complaint, another plausible reading — at least in light of additional statements in Holder’s motion to strike — is that the county defendants learned, through contact with the bail commissioner on the night of Holder’s arrest, that he would be eligible for release on his own recognizance, but that, for reasons that are not yet clear, the bail commissioner did not in fact order Holder’s release until the next morning.
Whether that amounts to a violаtion of Holder’s constitutional rights would seem to present a different question from the one just considered. Furthermore, the answer could potentially implicate Brady, on the theory that jailers who know their prisoner is eligible for release on yet to be granted bail have no more constitutional duty to arrange a bail hearing immediately than police who know that their arrestee is not the man named in the warrant have to arrange his release.
It is sufficient at the moment, though, to reject the county defendants’ argument that “complaints regarding delayed detentions must be based on detentions of 48
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hours, at a minimum” to state a constitutional claim, even though the period of delay follows a release on bail. Indeed, one court of appeals has held that “even a thirty-minute detention after being ordered released could work a violation of a prisoner’s constitutional rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Davis, 375
F.3d at 713 (citing
Young v. City of Little Rock,
That brings the court to the second point of clarification: the Constitution does not invariably require the “immediate” release of a prisoner pursuant to a bail or other judicial order for his release. As one court has recognized:
administrative tasks incident to the release of a prisoner from custody may require some time to accomplish.... Reasonable time must be allowed for such matters as transportation, identity verification, and processing. It is virtually impossible to establish an absolute minimum time to meet all potential circumstances which might exist.
Lewis, 853
F.2d at 1370;
see also Berry,
Thus, there may be some merit to the county defendants’ assertion that they did not violate the constitution by retaining custody over Holder “for nine hours overnight, when [he] would otherwise bе released to rural roadways in the dark, many miles from home,” even if he had been determined to be eligible for release on his own recognizance. 6 Assessing this claim, however, would require the court to consider facts that, as Holder points out in his motion to strike, have not been pled in the complaint and, for that matter, seem to contradict its allegations that he could have arranged for a ride if *157 necessary. So that argument, like any argument that Holder was in fact not even granted bail until the morning, must await disposition in a different procedural context. See, e.g., Fed.R.Civ.P. 55, 56.
B. Claim for denial of medical care
The county defendants also seek dismissal of Holder’s claim that he was denied his prescription medications during his nine-hour detention, even though he told officers at intake of his need for those medications. The county defendants argue that the complaint does not adequately allege that this claimed constitutional violation resulted from any policy or custom of the department of corrections, as would be necessary to establish their liability for it.
See Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
In contrast to its allegations that, even after Holder was granted bail, the county defendants continued to hold him as a result of a purported correctional policy, the complaint does not fairly suggest that such a policy was the reason they allegedly deprived him of his medication. Though the complaint here and there invokes the county’s “customs and usages,” these vague references — unaccompanied by any allegations explaining what these “customs and usages” are or linking them to the claimed denial of medical care — are the sort of “labels and conclusions” insufficient on their own to survive a motion to dismiss.
Twombly,
Furthermore, though the amended complaint specifically names the county defendants in its claims of negligent hiring, retention, training, and supervision, there is likewise nothing linking those omissions to the alleged denial of medical care.
8
In any event, a municipality’s simple negligence in the training and the like of its employees does not amount to a constitutional violation, as the county defendants point out.
See City of Canton v. Harris,
IY. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the county defendants’ motion to dismiss 9 is GRANTED as to the § 1983 claim arising out of the alleged denial of medical care but DENIED as to the § 1983 claim arising out of the alleged denial of release on bail. The county defendants’ supplemental motion to *158 dismiss 10 is also DENIED. See note 2, supra.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Because the county defendants submitted an answer to the complaint before moving to dismiss it, their motion is properly treated as a motion for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c). The distinction, however, is largely academic, as Rule 12(b)(6) and Rule 12(c) impose identical standards.
See, e.g., Gray v. Evercore Restructuring L.L.C.,
. The county defendants also filed a "supplemental motion to dismiss,” joining in a motion to dismiss filed by other defendants that was based on Holder's failure to make initial disclosures in a timely fashion. That motion, as filed by the other defendants, was denied by margin order of March 25, 2009. The county defendants' requеst for the same relief is now denied for the same reasons.
. The county defendants also argue that the New Hampshire constitution likewise confers no such right but that, even if it did, the right would not be enforceable through a § 1983 action. The court need not reach the first of these arguments, because the second one is correct. Section 1983 provides a right of action for "the deprivatiоn of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” of the United States, not the States, so the alleged violations of the New Hampshire constitution (or other state law) cannot support Holder’s § 1983 claim.
See Ortega Cabrera v. Municipality of Bayamon,
. Significantly, this "concerted effort” included summoning a bail commissioner, who offered to release the plaintiff on his own recognizance.
. At oral argument, the county defendants disputed that the amended complaint fairly alleged such a claim, but the court disagrees. In any event, the county defendants’ motion rests on the assumption that this is the nature of Holder's claim; hence their argument that the Constitution “contains no right to immediate release after bail” (emphasis added).
. The county defendants make this point as part of Superintendent Wright's argument for dismissal of the claims against him on qualified immunity grounds. The complaint makes clear, however, that Wright has been sued only in his official capacity, not his individual capacity. He therefore cannot claim qualified immunity, because the suit against him is the equivalent of a suit against the Rockingham County Department of Corrections,
see Hafer v. Melo,
. The county defendants argue that Wright is likewise not responsible for the officers’ alleged actions, absent some indication of a more significant role in them. Again, however, the complaint does not even purport to sue Wright in his individual capacity, so the court need not consider whether such a claim has been adequately stated.
. There is an allegаtion, buried among those set forth in support of a count entitled “Negligence in Performance of Duties,” that the Department of Corrections “negligently continued plaintiff's wrongful detention and deprived him of necessary medical care." Putting aside the problem that there is nothing linking the Department to this alleged negligence aside from the actions of its employees, which is insufficient as just discussed, mere negligence in failing to provide necessary medical care does not amount to a constitutional violation anyway. See
Mahan v. Plymouth County House of Corrs.,
.Document no. 20.
. Document no. 22.
