Patrisha Jones seeks redress under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of her Fourth Amendment rights arising from her seizure by two New Mexico government officials at the Bernalillo High School where Jones was a student. This appeal relates to the dismissal of one of the two state officials on the basis of qualified immunity. The second official, a deputy sheriff, remains a party in the proceedings below. Jones alleges that Alfred Haber-man, a Social Worker Supervisor for the New Mexico Children, Youth, and Families Department (“CYFD”), seized her at her high school with no legitimate justification, demanded that she leave her mother’s care, and insisted that she return to her abusive father. Haberman made these alleged demands in the face of an existing court order assigning temporary custody to Jones’ mother and forbidding the father from contacting Jones. The district court dismissed her claims against Haberman on the basis of qualified immunity, finding that Haberman’s actions did not amount to a seizure and that, even if they did, the law was not clearly established at the time of the incident. Accepting Jones’ allegations as true, we conclude that Haberman violated Jones’ clearly established Fourth Amendment rights and REVERSE the district court’s order dismissing Jones’ suit.
I
When reviewing a dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), we accept the well-pleaded allegations of the complaint as true and view them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
See Yoder v. Honeywell Inc.,
Jones’ mother and father are not married and have been estranged for some time. Jones had been living with her father for several years when, in the course of an argument, Jones’ father and stepmother struck Jones, causing her to sustain cuts on her neck and collarbone and
Based on the incident of violence, Jones’ mother filed for a protective order on her daughter’s behalf and obtained, on January 8, 2003, a Temporary Order of Protection and Order to Appear (“TRO”) against Jones’ father, under the New Mexico Family Violence Protection Act, §§ 40-13-1 to 40-13-8. In the TRO, the state court gave Jones’ mother temporary physical custody of Jones and prohibited the father from having contact with Jones until further order of the court. Jones’ father was not ■aware that Jones was living with her mother until receiving the TRO. On the same day that they received the TRO, Jones’ father and stepmother met with Deputy Hunt to seek his assistance. Hunt then left that meeting and took social worker Haberman with him to the high school. The two officials confronted Jones and told her, contrary to the terms of the TRO, that she could not live with her mother. They insisted that she either choose to live with her father, again in contravention of the TRO, or move into a shelter.
Having made these demands, the officials left Jones at the high school, at which point she went, panic-stricken, to a school resource officer and stated that if she .could not live with her mother she would ■kill herself. Consequently, the resource officer referred Jones to a school counselor and she promptly reported to his office. After conducting a risk assessment, the counselor determined that Jones presented a low risk of suicide. Meanwhile, Hunt and Haberman returned to the high school and, upon finding her in the counselor’s office, proceeded to threaten and harass her in the presence of the counselor for over two hours. The counselor then left, and the two officials — Hunt in uniform— proceeded to tell Jones for an additional “hour or two” that if she did not return to her father’s house, Hunt would arrest her, that her “life would be hell,” that Hunt and Haberman would “be [her] shadow until [she was] eighteen, and maybe longer,” that they would ensure that her mother was sent to prison, that there was a “zero percent” chance that she would live with her mother, and that when she turned eighteen, she and her mother might be “cell mates.” Jones cried throughout the encounter, and alleged that she was “terrified of Hunt and Haberman” and “did not even think of challenging” them.
By prearrangement with Hunt and Haberman, Jones’ father and stepmother were waiting at the school. Jones emerged from the counselor’s office and, complying with Hunt and Haberman’s demands, went to her father’s house. The following day, Hunt called Jones’ mother and informed her that Jones was now living with her father. He also falsely told Jones’ mother that the TRO had been “reversed” and the hearing set for January 22nd was cancelled. Jones’ mother learned subsequently that Hunt had misled her, and she attended the January 22nd hearing, although she did not testify.
Jones later sued Hunt and Haberman under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming a violation of her Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. 1 On the basis of its conclusion that the altercation in the counselor’s office between Jones and the two officials did not amount to an unconstitutional seizure and that, even if it did, Haberman did not violate clearly established law, the district court granted Haberman’s motion to dismiss on the basis of qualified immunity. Jones appeals that order.
II
We review de novo a district court’s ruling on qualified immunity.
Farmer v. Perrill,
A
Applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, the Fourth Amendment provides: “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.... ” U.S. Const, amend, iv. Because the Amendment focuses on safeguarding persons from unwarranted intrusion, and not on regulating the behavior of particular governmental actors, the prohibition against unreasonable seizures extends to civil, as well as criminal, investigations by the government.
See, e.g., Dubbs v. Head Start, Inc.,
A seizure occurs for Fourth Amendment purposes when “a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.”
Michigan v. Chester-
1) the threatening presence of several officers; 2) the brandishing of a weapon by an officer; 3) some physical touching by an officer; 4) use of aggressive language or tone of voice indicating that compliance with an officer’s request -is compulsory; 5) prolonged retention of a person’s personal effects ...; 6) a request to accompany the officer to the station; 7) interaction in a nonpublic place or a small, enclosed place; 8) and absence of other members of the public.
Hill,
We must view Jones’ encounter with Haberman and Hunt through the eyes of a reasonable sixteen-year-old.
See Little,
Jones’ encounter with Hunt and Haber-man, two government officials, one of whom was in police uniform, took place in a small, confined school counselor’s office, to which Jones had been sent by a school official after threatening suicide.
See Hitt,
The district court concluded that the threats of arrest did not contribute to the seizure, because “[a]ny compliance Haber-man demanded ... concerned Jones’ future living arrangements and did not con
Additionally, the court below found that Jones went to the counselor’s office voluntarily, which “points away from a seizure.” This finding is at odds with the allegation in' the complaint. Jones claims that the school resource officer referred Jones to the counselor to determine if she were at risk of committing suicide. A reasonable high school student would not have felt free to flaunt a school official’s command, leave an office to which she had been sent, and wander the halls of her high school without permission. It is possible that Jones’ initial encounter with Hunt and Haberman was consensual. Regardless, it was transformed into a seizure through Hunt and Haberman’s alleged threats and demands. See Little, 18 F.3d at1505 (“a consensual encounter between a citizen and police can be transformed into a seizure through persistent and accusatory questioning by police.”). 2
B
Our conclusion that the alleged encounter constituted a seizure is but the first part of the constitutional analysis. We must yet determine if the seizure was reasonable, an inquiry that depends on the context in which it took place.
New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
The court below relied on one such exception recognized by the Supreme Court in T.L.O. In T.L.O., the Supreme Court held that where school officials detain and question a child for the purpose of maintaining or restoring order in the school:
the accommodation of the privacy interests of schoolchildren with the substantial need of teachers and administrators for freedom to maintain order in the schools does not require strict adherence to the requirement that searches be based on probable cause to believe that the subject of the search has violated or is violating the law. Rather, the legality of a search of a student should depend simply on the reasonableness,under all the circumstances, of -the search.
T.L.O.,
Because Haberman and Hunt’s seizure of Jones took place on public school property, the district court erroneously concluded that the relaxed Fourth Amendment standard announced in
T.L.O.
should apply to this case.
3
The Supreme Court fashioned a relaxed standard due to its concern about “unduly burdening] the efforts of school authorities to maintain order in their schools.”
T.L.O.,
It is ultimately unnecessary for us to decide what Fourth Amendment test is most appropriate in this case “because the conduct alleged in [this] case would violate the most minimal standard of which we can conceive.”
Snell v. Tunnell,
Taking the facts as alleged, Haberman’s seizure of Jones was hot “justified at its inception.”
Id.
The complaint does not allege that Haberman suspected Jones’ mother of abusive or neglectful behavior.
5
On the other hand, there was sufficient evidence of her father’s abusiveness' to both warrant transfer from his custody (which Haberman himself facilitated two
After the defendants have the opportunity to develop the factual record, the picture confronting the court may look very different. Haberman may have had legitimate concerns for Jones’ safety and welfare, he may have played a minor role in the encounter and been ignorant of Hunt’s motives, and Jones may have consented to the questioning throughout the encounter. Viewing the totality of the circumstances as alleged in the complaint in the light most favorable to Jones, however, we conclude that she has alleged sufficient facts to demonstrate at the 12(b)(6) stage that she was unreasonably seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
C
Although his alleged actions, if true, violated Jones’ Fourth Amendment rights, Haberman nonetheless gains qualified immunity if his “actions did not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Hope,
Without doubt, it was clearly established by January 2003 that a seizure must be reasonable.
See, e.g., United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
Therefore, by January 10, 2003, Haber-man was on notice that the Fourth Amendment’s requirements applied to him, that a seizure would occur within the meaning of that Amendment if at any point the person believed that she was not free to terminate an encounter with him, that the “free to leave” determination would be informed by the Hill factors, and that any seizure of a child at a public school must be justified at its inception. Because Haberman’s conduct as alleged constituted a seizure under Hill and was unreasonable under Terry, Haberman violated a clearly established constitutional right of which a reasonable person would have known.
Our conclusion is based on clearly and narrowly articulated Fourth Amendment principles. In
Anderson v. Creighton,
The tests enunciated in Hill and Terry are far more specific than the general standard set forth in Graham. Furthermore, the Court’s recent qualified immunity jurisprudence does not allow public officials such as Haberman, who are alleged to have committed blatant Fourth Amendment violations, to obtain immunity from suit. The Brosseau Court acknowledged that even with regard to highly general standards, “in an obvious case, these standards can ‘clearly establish’ the answer, even without a body of relevant case law.” Id. Implicit in the Court’s reasoning is the recognition that officials committing outrageous, yet sui generis, constitutional violations ought not to shield their behavior behind qualified immunity simply because another official has not previously had the audacity to commit a similar transgression.
We conclude that the Fourth Amendment violation as alleged in-this case is both obvious and outrageous, and that “it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”
Saucier v. Katz,
Ill
Jones’ allegations, if true, establish that Haberman violated her clearly established Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. We therefore REVERSE the district court’s order granting Haberman’s motion to dismiss on the basis of qualified immunity and REMAND for further proceedings.
Notes
. Not relevant to this appeal, Jones also asserted claims against the Sandoval County Board of Commissioners for failure to adequately supervise and train, and sued all defendants claiming the state tort of false imprisonment.
. We need not determine the precise moment in time that a seizure occurred. Although it may have occurred earlier, we are satisfied that after Hunt and Haberman threatened Jones with her own arrest, as well, as her mother’s arrest, and promised that her "life would be hell" because the two officials would "be [her] shadow until [she was] eighteen, and maybe longer,” she was seized.
. The district court in error applied the relaxed standard when deciding if the altercation constituted a seizure. The relaxed standard announced in T.L.O. and extended by this court in Rees is irrelevant to determining if a seizure occurred, and applies only to an inquiry into the reasonableness of a search or seizure.
. We do not imply that a social worker investigating allegations of abuse or neglect necessarily requires a warrant, probable cause, or exigent circumstances before questioning a child on public school property. Where a social worker merely conducted an interview of a child at a public school, and thus did not remove the child nor interfere with the sanctity of the private home, we have applied the
Terry
standard.
Doe v. Bagan,
.Of course, discovery could develop facts indicating that Haberman had legitimate concerns for Jones’ welfare, which would be highly relevant to the constitutional analysis.
. According to the complaint, Jones' father had been charged by CYFD with abusing two of his other children, and he lost custody as a result of those charges. Haberman, as an employee of CYFD, allegedly had access to information about these charges before the seizure.
. We emphasize that our disposition of this case is largely dictated by the Rule 12(b)(6) standard. Jones' complaint effectively portrays the encounter at issue as an unjustified seizure in light of clearly established law, and we must accept her allegations as true. As such, we conclude that the district court erred in granting qualified immunity at this stage in the litigation.
