In this matter, a county jail physician appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for summary judgment as to a prisoner’s claim for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for allegedly unnecessarily and forcibly subjecting him to antipsychotic medication in violation of his constitutional rights. Finding that the district court erred in its refusal to find appellant qualifiedly immune under the instant facts, we reverse.
The facts pertinent to this matter are as follows. On June 1, 1989, Plaintiff-appellee Joseph Leeks was admitted as a pre-trial detainee to the Lake County Jail in Tavares, Lake County, Florida. Subsequent to being informed by appellee’s mother that he was suicidal, jail officials placed appellee on suicide watch. Pursuant to a request by jail officials, on June 7, 1989, Defendant-appellant Dr. Lowell K. Cunningham examined appellee and, finding appellee non-suicidal, removed appellee from suicide watch. On June 28, 1989, the supervising nurse at the Lake County Jail informed appellant by telephone that appellee had become agitated, requiring officers to shackle him to gain control and prevent harm to himself. Based on that information, appellant authorized an intramuscular injection of 25 mg. of Thorazine, an antipsychotic medication. This injection occurred over appellee’s objections.
Again, on July 1, 1989, the nurse phoned appellant to inform him of a similar instance of appellee’s misbehavior, requiring officers to shackle appellee to prevent harm to himself and others. Once again, based on information provided to him, appellant authorized another injection of 25 mg. of Thorazine. Jail officials carried out this injection, once again over the objection of appellee. From July 5, 1989 to October 18, 1989 appellant also prescribed another antipsychotic, Mel-laril, to be taken twice a day by mouth. *1332 Appellee voluntarily consumed this drug pursuant to the prescription.
On October 19, 1990, appellee filed an amended complaint pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution were violated by the involuntary administration of the antipsy-chotic medications.
Appellant, on July 9,1991, moved for summary judgment, asserting the affirmative defense of qualified immunity. On November 19, 1991, the district court denied appellant’s motion for summary judgment.
1
The court reached its conclusion on the basis of a recent decision of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. In
Bee v. Greaves,
The Supreme Court recently considered “whether a judicial hearing is required before the state may treat a mentally ill prisoner with antipsychotic drugs against his will.’ Washington v. Harper, [494] U.S. [210]110 S.Ct. 1028 , 1032,108 L.Ed.2d 178 (1990). In describing the substantive right at stake, the Court stated that it had 'no doubt that ... respondent possesses a significant liberty interest in avoiding the unwanted administration of antipsychotic drugs under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.’ Id., [494 U.S. at 221 ]110 S.Ct. at 1036 (emphasis added). In support of this declaration, the Court cited its opinions in Vitek v. Jones,445 U.S. 480 ,100 S.Ct. 1254 ,63 L.Ed.2d 552 (1980), and Parham v. J.R.,442 U.S. 584 , 600-01,99 S.Ct. 2493 , 2503-04,61 L.Ed.2d 101 (1979), both of which predate Bee’s involuntary medication. If those cases established the law beyond doubt with respect to a convicted prisoner, they indisputably did so with respect to a pretrial detainee as well. See Bell v. Wolfish,441 U.S. 520 , 545,99 S.Ct. 1861 , 1877,60 L.Ed.2d 447 (1979)....
Id. (footnote omitted).
In sum, the district court in the instant case denied appellant’s claim of qualified immunity on the basis of the Tenth Circuit’s Bee opinion, decided thirteen months after appellant’s actions here, and Bee’s interpretation of Washington v. Harper, supra, itself decided some seven months after the Thorazine injections at issue here. The question squarely before this Court is whether this outcome and rationale are proper.
Whether the district court properly denied appellant’s motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity is a question of law we review
de novo. James v. Douglas,
The law attending qualified immunity is well-settled. Officials
3
enjoy immunity from civil damages for their discretionary acts so long as “their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
To this end, we consider the law originating in this Circuit, as well as the Supreme Court, the courts of appeals, arid the district courts.
Greason v. Kemp,
More recently, in
Riggins v. Nevada,
— U.S. -,
As a threshold matter,
Harper,
and the Court’s revisiting of the question of forced administration of antipsychotic drugs in
Riggins v. Nevada,
are not controlling as both cases were decided well after the allegedly improper Thorazine injections involved in this appeal.
Acoff v. Abston,
In Parham, the Court considered the constitutionality of a procedure employed by the State of Georgia in the voluntary commitment of children under the age of eighteen to state mental hospitals. While acknowledging that children have a liberty interest in not being confined unnecessarily for medical treatment, the Court concluded that Georgia’s practices satisfied minimum procedural due process requirements to ensure that such admission decisions were not in error and did so in a way that neither unduly burdened the State nor inhibited parental decisions to seek state help for their children.
We are .not convinced that
Vitek
and
Parham
clearly enunciated that a pretrial detainee such as appellee as of 1989 possessed a protectible liberty interest in not being subjected to involuntary antipsychotic medication. The
Harper
Court’s reference to
Vitek
and
Parham,
cases involving wholly different facts than those in
Harper
and the instant case, in no way can be said to have preordained the result reached in
Harper,
much less render
Harper’s
result “clearly established.” “If the law at that time was not clearly established, an official should not reasonably be expected to anticipate subsequent legal developments, nor could he fairly be said to ‘know that the law forbade conduct not previously identified as unlawful.”
Harlow,
That the law was not clearly established in 1989 is supported by a review of the case law of other jurisdictions. For instance, in
Paul E. Sherman v. Four County Counseling Center, et al.,
A similar result was reached in
Williams v. Anderson,
delineate clearly the right of an inmate or psychiatric patient to refuse antipsychotic drugs, beyond the right to have a physician’s examination and to have the medication prescribed as treatment rather than as given as punishment. In sum, at the time the defendants acted, it was not clearly established that their actions violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id. at 1416.
Finally, in
Felce v. Fiedler,
Still yet, even as of 1989 the courts having concluded that under certain circumstances the involuntary administration of antipsy-chotic drugs were violative of due process, did so with an “emergency exception.”
See, e.g., United States v. Charters,
Q. How about flinging your arms around?
A I had hit — hit a shower in the cell block with my fist.
Q. Had you been shaking your head left and right, back and forth, with your head out like — as I’m kind of doing right now (indicating) — with your head out forward, shaking your head back and forth to the left and right? Had you been doing that?
A I had been shaking my head; whether it was forward or not, I don’t remember.
Q. Okay. So anyway, that — it was flinging your body around and your arms around, shaking your head; that’s what made these guys hold you down in the cell; isn’t that true?
A Yea. Because they thought I was going to hurt myself.
Under the circumstances, we conclude that appellant did not deprive appellee of a pro-tectible liberty interest in 1989 as a result of authorizing the involuntary administration of Thorazine.
In sum, we conclude that the record is devoid of evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether appel *1336 lant violated a clearly established right of appellee as a result of the Thorazine injections in July 1989. Therefore, appellant is entitled to summary judgment based on the doctrine of qualified immunity. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s order and remand this case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court did, however, grant appellant’s motion for summary judgment as to appel-lee's claim that the appellant unnecessarily and wrongfully prescribed the drug Mellaril to be consumed orally, twice a day, from June 28, 1989 to October 1989. The court found no dispute in the record that appellee voluntarily consumed this medication and that the medicine was prescribed on the basis of appellee's statement that the antipsychotic was helpful; further, pursuant to appellee’s statement that he did not need the medication, the prescription was discontinued. Accordingly, the court entered summary judgment in favor of appellant on this basis. The trial court's ruling as to this other contention is not before the Court and therefore will not be reexamined.
. A district court's denial of qualified immunity is an appealable "final decision" within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Hardin v. Hayes,
. A private physician such as appellant who is under contract to provide obligatory medical services to a county jail is considered to be acting under color of state law for § 1983 purposes.
West
v.
Atkins,
. Appellee’s amended complaint makes claims under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Because appellee is a pretrial detainee, the appropriate constitutional provision is the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, rather than the Eighth Amendment.
See City of Revere v. Massachusetts General Hospital,
. Concurring,, Justice Kennedy distinguished
Washington v. Harper,
wherein the "purpose of the involuntary medication was to insure that the incarcerated person ceased to be a physical danger to himself or others."
Riggins v. Nevada,
— U.S. -, —,
.
Rennie,
as the quotation reveals, concerned the medication of involuntary
civil
commitments. Significantly, the Third Circuit, in a case decided February 23, 1990, expressly acknowledged that the right enunciated in
Rennie
had not been extended within the Third Circuit to "prison inmates.”
White
v.
Napoleon,
