RULING ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS [DOC. #28]
I.INTRODUCTION
Plaintiffs second amended complaint alleges violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Conn. GemStat. § 52-557n, § 7-465 1 and state common-law, by members of the Hartford Police Department. Defendants City of Hartford, Chief Joseph Croughwell, Officer Brian Foley, and Officer David Polletta move pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) to' dismiss the third, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth counts of plaintiffs complaint. For the reasons set forth below, defendants’ motion is granted in part and denied in part.
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiff сlaims that the Defendant police officers subjected him to false arrest, malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, defamation, and emotional distress, resulting from, among other things, the use of a falsified arrest warrant. Plaintiff claims that as a result of these actions, he was wrongfully incarcerated for nearly two years until he- was acquitted on April 6, 1998. In addition to the individual police officers, plaintiff has named the City of Hartford and Joseph Croughwell, Chief of the Hartford Police Department, as defendants. Apart, from the Fourteenth Amendment claim which plaintiff has withdrawn, 2 the counts against the latter two defendants are the subject of Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss.
III. STANDARD
When considering a motion to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), the court must accept all factual allegations in a complaint as true and draw inferences in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
See Leeds v. Meltz,
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Municipal Liability Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
In
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs complaint is inadequate as a matter of law and must be dismissed because it alleges § 1983 liability of Defendants under a theory of respondeat superior. However, plaintiffs complaint alleges, inter alia, failure or refusal to promulgate appropriate regulations and policies regarding investigations, arrests, narcotics investigations and arrests; to adequately investigate and discipline wrongful cоnduct related to improper arrests; to adequately hire, screen and retain officers; and to .adequately train officers in narcotics investigations, arrests, and “controlled substance buys.” Therefore, it is clear from the face of the complaint that plaintiff is not attempting to plead § 1983 liability under a theory of respondeat superior.
Even though on the face of his complaint plаintiff is not attempting to use re-spondeat superior as a basis for municipal liability, the defendants’ characterization of his claims against the City of Hartford and Chief Croughwell as such is understandable. Plaintiffs complaint recites a number of failures on the part of the municipality, including the failure to adequately promulgate guidelines, and to train, hire, screen, investigate and supervise police officеrs. But with one exception, plaintiff make no factual assertions, other than factual allegations detailing the conduct of the two police officers. The complaint is, for the most part, devoid of any causal nexus between the conduct of the individual police officers and the policy or custom of the Hartford police department. In essence, plaintiffs allegations against the municipal defendants and officials amount to post hoc theorization that because individual officers engaged in misconduct, there must have been some fault on the part of the City, in terms of hiring, training, supervision, or other functions. In his brief, plaintiff describes the City’s inadequacies and failures as the “moving force” behind the individual officer’s conduct, but nowhere in the complaint does plaintiff articulate any factual basis for inferring a causal link between his injuries and the training and supervision of Hartford police officers.
Nonetheless, on the liberal pleading standards set forth in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a), the Court determines that plaintiff has minimally adequately pled
Monell
liability on the part of the City and the Chief of Police. In
Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics,
A month prior to the high court’s decision in
Leatherman,
the Second Circuit had held that “[t]he mere assertion ... that a municipality has such a custom or policy is insufficient in the аbsence of allegations of fact tending to support, at least circumstantially, such an inference.”
Dwares v. City of New York,
The Second Circuit has not returned to the- question of the pleading requirements for a claim alleging
Monell
liability based on a failure to train or supervise since
Leatherman.
In an unpublished opinion, however, the Court of Appeals did affirm dismissal of a § 1983 claim against the City of New York where the plaintiffs complaint “does not provide any facts in support of his conclusory allegation of the City’s failure to properly train and supervise police officers amounts to a custom or policy, or that this custom or policy caused [plaintiffs] injuries,” and that “this conclusion is true even under the liberal notice pleading standard set forth in
Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics.” Oparaji v. City of New York,
The plaintiff does make one allegation, however, that in the Court’s view distinguishes his complaint from the one deemed inadequate in Oparaji. In Count Three, ¶ 29 he alleges that Chief Croughwell failed or refused to- enforce appropriate policies and procedures “regarding the use of Community Police Officers to make controlled substance buys and narcotics arrests; and fail[ed] to properly coordinate and delineate the roles of the Community Response Division and the Narcotics Division within the City of Hartford Police *118 Department.” ¶ 29(f). He makes similar allegations against the City of Hartford in Count Five, ¶ 28(d). The complaint nowhere alleges that the individual defendants were either community policy officers or employed in the Narcotics Division, but based on these barest of allegations, the Court could infer that Officer Foley was a Community Police officer, that he did not receive any training in conducting undercоver “buys” but was not prohibited from doing so due to the lack of coordination between his division and the Narcotics Division, and that these failures led to his botched confrontation with the plaintiff, and his subsequent decision to swear out an arrest warrant and pursue charges. Read this way, the complaint does allege a causal connection between the alleged failures on the part of the defеndant and the ultimate harm visited upon plaintiff. If borne out by the evidence, plaintiff could establish that the City of Hartford’s custom or policy caused his injuries at the hands of the individual officers.
Plaintiffs complaint skates the edge of what constitutes sufficient pleading for § 1983 municipal liability, and plaintiffs brief in opposition to the motion to dismiss does little to enlighten the Court regarding his theories of liability and the manner in which the muniсipal defendants can be said to have caused plaintiffs injuries. However, given the liberal pleading standards articulated in
Leatherman,
and that Court’s reminder that unmeritorious claims may be weeded out “sooner rather than later” through control of discovery and summary judgment,
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Count Three against Chief Joseph Croughwell and Count Five against the City of Hartford is therefore denied.
B. Governmental Immunity
Counts Six and Seven of plaintiffs second amended complaint assert the City’s liability for the actions of defendants Foley and Polletta under Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-557 and respondeat superior.
Count Six is brought under Conn.Gen. Stat. § 52-557n, which provides for the liability of municipalities for the “negligent acts or omissions of such political subdivision or any employee,” except for acts or omissions “which require the exercise of judgment or discretion as an official function of the authority expressly or impliedly granted by law.” Plaintiff asserts the defendant City’s liability for plaintiffs losses suffered “... as a result of the negligent acts and omissions by the defendants, and/or others, complained of’ (Secоnd Amended Complaint, Count Six, ¶ 1) and that “[s]uch conduct, and/or policies, on the part of the defendant City of Hartford constituted a continuing and moving force behind the violation of the civil rights of the plaintiff and the injuries he has suffered....” (¶ 2).
“A municipality’s potential liability for its tortious acts is limited by the common law principle of governmental immunity ... Governmental immunity, however, is not a blanket protection for all official аcts.”
Heigl v. Board of Education,
Plaintiff reasons that since a governmental official has no discretion to “assault, falsely arrest, or falsely imprison a citizen” (Mem. in Opp. p. 10), the conduct alleged in his complaint is not protected by the doctrine of governmental immunity. As indicated in the language of the statute and as discussed above, however, § 52-557n applies only to claims of negligence, not plaintiffs § 1983 claims alleging constitutional violations. To the extent plaintiffs complaint raises claims of negligence, both on the part of the individual defendants and the municipal defendants, governmental immunity and § 52-557n are applicable.
Plaintiff also argues that whether the acts of the defendant City of Hartford in hiring, training, and supervising police officers were ministerial or discretionary is a question of fact, as is the applicability of one of the exceptions to governmental immunity for official discretionary acts. Plaintiff cites
Gauvin v. City of New Haven,
Plaintiff has cited to no cases that would countervail the weight of this precedent. The Court concludes that the acts аlleged in plaintiffs complaint on the part of the City of Hartford and Chief Croughwell are discretionary in nature, and thus protected by governmental immunity.
Plaintiff alternatively argues that if the City of Hartford’s acts were discretionary, they nonetheless fit within the exception which allows for recovery against a municipality “when the circumstances make it apparent to the public officer that his or her failurе to act would likely subject an identifiable person to imminent harm.... ”
Purzycki,
Under this analysis, plaintiff is not an identifiable victim as an individual, nor within a narrowly defined class of foreseeable victims.
See Cook,
7 Conn.L.Rptr. at 271,
As Chief Croughwell and the City of Hartford are thus protected by governmental immunity from plaintiffs allegations of negligence, Cоunt Six will be dismissed, as will any allegations of negligence against these two defendants contained in Count Four (Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress as to all defendants).
Finally, plaintiffs theory of respondeat superior liability in Count Seven will be dismissed, because “a municipality enjoys governmental immunity for common-law negligence unless a statute has limited or abrogated that immunity.”
Williams v. City of New Haven,
C. Indemnification Under Conn.Gen. Stat. § 7-465
Conn.Gen.Stat. § 7-465 obliges municipalities to indemnify their employees for damages awarded against such an employee for infringement of civil rights, or for physical damage to person or property. The statute requires potential plaintiffs to provide notice of the intention to sue the municipality by notifying the clerk of the municipality within six months of the accrual of the cause of action. The statute has been construed to require that plaintiffs plead compliance in their complaints.
See Santiago v. City of New Britain,
V. CONCLUSION
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss [doc. # 28] is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part. As to plaintiffs civil rights claims against Chief Croughwell and the City of Hartford (Counts Three and Five), as well as his claim seeking indemnification under § 7-465 (Count Eight), the motion is DENIED. As to Counts Six and Seven, as well as that portion of Count Four alleging negligence on the part of the Chief Croughwell.and the City of Hartford, the motion is GRANTED.
Plaintiffs amended complaint in compliance with this ruling shall be filed within five days from the filing date of this ruling.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In his complaint plaintiff also cites Conn. Gen.Stat. § 7-101, which requires towns in Connecticut to adopt a town seal. The Court presumes that the plaintiff intended to reference Conn.Gen.Stat. § 7-101a, the statutory-provision requiring municipalities to indemnify elected or appointed officers. None of the counts expressly reference this statute, nor has the defendant sought to have any claims under this statute dismissed.
. As noted by defendant, the Supreme Court has definitively held that the sole source of constitutional protection fоr claims involving unreasonable search and seizure or excessive force in the course of an arrest is the Fourth Amendment.
Graham
v.
Connor,
. Although plaintiff purports to hold Chief Croughwell liable in his individual capacity, all of plaintiffs allegations in Count Three with respect to Croughwell concern his actions in his official role as Chief of the Hartford Police Department.
