OPINION
On January 5, 2002, Eugene Lanman was admitted to Kalamazoo Psychiatric Hospital. The next day, while suffering psychiatric delusions, he attacked a staff member. Lanman was immediately restrained by staff and administered medication to calm him down. During the attempt to restrain Lanman, he stopped breathing and never regained consciousness. He died seventeen days later after being taken off life support. His personal representative brought this action against the staff of the hospital, alleging violation of Lanman’s constitutional rights in transgression of 42 U.S.C. § 1983, abuse or neglect in violation of Michigan law, and assault and battery. The district court denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment claiming qualified immunity on all of plaintiffs claims, and defendants brought this interlocutory appeal challenging that ruling.
I.
The decedent-plaintiff, Eugene Lanman, was a veteran with a history of mental illness. On January 5, 2002, he was found wandering the countryside by the Kalkas-ka County Sheriffs Department. He was taken to the Antrim/Kalkaska County Community Mental Health Department for a mental health assessment. Beverly Robinson conducted Lanman’s assessment and determined that he needed in-patient psychiatric care on an emergency basis. She arranged for Lanman to be transported to the Kalamazoo Psychiatric Hospital.
Lanman arrived at the psychiatric hospital at 9:30 p.m. that same night suffering from auditory and visual hallucinations, suicidal ideations, and his legs were shaking uncontrollably. Dr. S.B. Kondapaneni examined Lanman and determined he needed to be admitted to the hospital for immediate psychiatric treatment. Dr. Kondapaneni determined that Lanman was a danger to himself and was in need of intensive in-patient psychiatric care. Lan-man was then admitted on a voluntary basis when he filled out the Adult Formal Voluntary Admission Application.
Kondapaneni prescribed Celebrex for Lanman’s back pain and Vasotec for his blood pressure. Kondapaneni did not prescribe any psychotropic drugs. Kondapan-eni attempted to determine whether Lan-man was suffering from the side effects of having previously received psychotropic drugs, but was unable to perform the requisite test at that late hour. After his admission to the hospital, Lanman was directed to stay in a “quiet room,” a room which allowed hospital staff to closely monitor Lanman. He was not given a room assignment, any psychiatric treatment, or any psychotropic medications.
The next morning, after spending all night in a “quiet room” and still not having received any treatment, Lanman was be *678 coming increasingly agitated. He was pacing in circles in the hallway, talking to himself, and trying to open the doors to other patients’ rooms. By 9:10 a.m., eleven hours after admission, Lanman was extremely upset. He was banging his head and hands on the walls and doors, and not complying with staff requests to calm down and return to the “quiet room.” Finally, staff requested he be medicated to calm him down. Dr. Van Putten ordered 2 mg of Ativan be administered to Lanman. Defendant Nurse Edwina Koehn-Kolden-hof went to the medication room to draw the Ativan.
While Nurse Koldenhof was drawing the medicine, Lanman attacked resident care aide Mike Morey, and attempted to choke him. Another aide, James Siegfried, attempted to grab Lanman from behind, but Siegfried tripped and both Lanman and Siegfried fell to the ground. Siegfried asked Lanman to calm down, but Lanman continued to struggle, flailing his arms and legs. When Siegfried and Lanman fell to the floor, aides Linda Price and Morey immediately tried to restrain Lanman’s legs. A “code easy” alarm had been sounded when Lanman attacked Morey, alerting other hospital staff that help was needed. Aides Jean Prandine, George White, Tom Bissiden, Bob Hinson, and Steve Bronsink all responded to the “code easy.” White relieved Morey and Price who were attempting to control Lanman’s legs, but were being kicked violently by Lanman. Hinson grabbed Lanman’s left arm and extended it up and away from Lanman’s body.
Nurse Koldenhof arrived with the Ati-van and administered it. Nurse Julie Ann Stiver, who had arrived in response to the “code easy,” ordered that Lanman be placed in restraints. While Hinson was attempting to place a restraint on Lan-man’s left wrist, someone stated there was a problem and that Lanman wasn’t breathing. Lanman was turned on his back and Hinson immediately started chest compressions. CPR was administered and paramedics were called. Lanman began breathing again and was taken by ambulance to Bronson Hospital. He never regained consciousness and died after being taken off life support.
Plaintiff relies primarily on the deposition testimony of Richard P. Hunter, a fellow patient at the hospital who witnessed the altercation. Hunter testified that he was sitting on a bench approximately five feet from where Lanman was restrained. He stated that at least six individuals held Lanman face down on the floor, and one of those individuals placed his knee in Lanman’s back in attempt to hold him down. Hunter also testified that staff members had Lanman’s legs crossed and were bending his legs back toward his head while Lanman was on his stomach. According to Hunter, Lanman was having obvious difficulty breathing and was crying out for help because he could not breathe. Two or three minutes later, Lanman was noticeably more calm, and a few minutes after that looked as if he had passed out. Hunter stated that the staff ignored Lan-man until one of the nurses noticed he was passed out. Hunter gave a similar account to the Kalamazoo police department when they interviewed him shortly after they arrived on the scene.
The personal representative of Lan-man’s estate, Patricia Lanman, filed suit against defendants Hinson, Siegfried, Mor-ey, Price, White, Stiver, Koldenhof, Pran-dine, and Bronsink, alleging violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983; statutory abuse or neglect under Michigan law; and assault and battery. Defendants moved for summary judgment asserting qualified immunity with regard to Lanman’s § 1983 claim. The district court denied the defendant’s *679 motion, and this interlocutory appeal followed.
II.
This court reviews an order denying summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds
de novo. See v. City of Elyria,
A. Jurisdiction
This Court’s review of interlocutory appeals challenging a district court’s denial of qualified immunity “is confined to the question of whether all of the conduct which the district court deemed sufficiently supported for purposes of summary judgment met the
Harlow
standard of objective legal reasonableness.”
Farm Labor Org. Comm. v. Ohio State Highway Patrol,
In defendants’ reply brief, they concede the most favorable view of the facts to the plaintiff, and state that their appeal involves only the'following purely legal issues: (1) the appropriate standard under which to analyze plaintiffs claims; (2) whether the law related to positional asphyxiation of a patient who was physically struggling during an emergency situation in a mental health institution was clearly established at the time; and (3) whether defendants’ actions were objectively reasonable viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Accordingly, this Court has jurisdiction to review defendants’ interlocutory appeal of the district court’s denial of qualified immunity.
B. Fourth Amendment v. Fourteenth Amendment
The parties dispute what constitutional standard is implicated by the facts of this case. This is not a purely academic question as the standards of liability vary significantly according to which amendment
*680
applies.
See Darrah v. City of Oak Park, 255
F.3d 301, 306 (6th Cir.2001) (“A substantially higher hurdle must be surpassed to make a showing of excessive force under the Fourteenth Amendment than under the ‘objective reasonableness’ test [of the Fourth Amendment].... ”). Defendants here argue that plaintiffs claim is governed by the Fourteenth Amendment based on the holdings of the Supreme Court in
Youngberg v. Romeo,
The district court held that the facts of the case implicated the Fourth Amendment because it read the Supreme Court’s decision in
Graham v. Connor,
We have held that “[w]hich amendment applies depends on the status of the plaintiff at the time of the incident, whether free citizen, convicted prisoner, or something in between.”
Phelps v. Coy,
In
Youngberg,
the Supreme Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment provides involuntarily committed individuals with the right to be free from undue bodily restraint in the course of their treatment by the State.
Likewise, a voluntarily confined individual who is bodily restrained by State actors, related to his consented-to medical treatment, has not been seized for purposes of the Fourth Amendment’s application so long as a reasonable person in the patient’s position would believe that he was free to leave the State’s care.
See Michigan v. Chesternut,
Because at the time of the incident, Lanman was not in a situation where his rights were governed by the particular provisions of the Fourth Amendment, we find that the more generally applicable Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause applies to his excessive force claim. The Fourth Amendment is inapplicable here because defendants did not “seize” Lanman when they bodily restrained him. By requesting voluntary admission to Kalamazoo Psychiatric Hospital, Lanman consented to defendants providing him medical treatment. Defendants physically restrained Lanman to prevent him from harming himself or others and to administer medication to calm him down. A reasonable person in Lanman’s position, as a voluntarily admitted patient in a psychiatric hospital, would believe that the restraint was part of the medical treatment he had authorized, and not an attempt by defendants to keep him there against his will. While the facts viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff suggest that Lanman did ask defendants to get off of him so he could breathe, there is no evidence to suggest that Lanman expressed a desire to leave the hospital and defendants refused to allow him to do so. Therefore, Lanman was not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
We find that the appropriate source for Lanman’s excessive force claim is the Fourteenth Amendment, which provides him, as a patient of a state care institution, with the constitutional right recognized in Youngberg to freedom from undue bodily restraint in the course of his treatment. Basing this right in substantive due process, rather than the Fourth Amendment, allows for balancing the individual’s liberty interest against the State’s *682 asserted reasons for restraining the individual’s liberty while in its care. It also gives proper deference to the decisions of institutional professionals concerning medical treatment.
The district court relied on
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Social Serv.,
DeShaney
does not address a situation in which the State itself, by the affirmative acts of its agents, infringes on an individual’s constitutionally protected liberty interests. The Court in
DeShaney
recognized that the protections of the Due Process Clause may be triggered when the State affirmatively acts and subjects an involuntarily confined individual to deprivations of liberty which are not among those generally authorized by his confinement.
Differentiating Fourteenth Amendment cases from those governed by the Fourth Amendment based on the voluntary or involuntary nature of the state’s custody would lead to arguably inconsistent results. In the present case even though Lanman was technically voluntarily committed, under Michigan law, once he gave the hospital notice of his intent to leave, the hospital could retain him against his will for up to three days. Mioh. Comp. Laws § 330.1419(1). Thus, applying the district court’s reasoning, if Lanman had decided to leave the hospital, and been retained involuntarily under § 330.1419(1), any § 1983 claims arising in those three days of involuntary confinement would fall under the Fourteenth Amendment. But immediately prior to his decision to leave, while his confinement was technically voluntary, the Fourth Amendment would apply to any § 1983 claims. Under such a system, while Lanman’s relationship and dependence on the state would not have changed, his constitutional protection would have. We do not believe such a distinction is warranted.
Accordingly, we find that the Fourteenth Amendment governs plaintiffs claim.
C. Qualified Immunity
Having found that Lanman was protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment while voluntarily committed, we must now determine if his rights were violated. Typically, this Court only has jurisdiction to review final decisions of district courts, and the “denial of summary judgment is ordinarily not a final judgment.”
Armstrong v. City of Melvindale,
Qualified immunity shields public officials who perform discretionary functions from tort liability, so long as their conduct does not violate clearly established rights viewed under the applicable constitutional standard, here, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.; see also Harlow,
In order to determine whether a defendant is entitled to qualified immunity, this Court uses a two-part test: “(1) whether, considering the allegations in a light most favorable to the party injured, a constitutional right has been violated, and (2) whether that right was clearly estab
*684
lished.”
Estate of Carter v. City of Detroit,
A. Violation of a Constitutional Right
In order to determine whether a constitutional right has been violated, we must first decide whether there exists a constitutional right under the Fourteenth Amendment to be free from unnecessary restraint in a mental hospital. Specifically, plaintiff claims that the decedent’s rights were violated when he was held face down even after he had stopped struggling and told them he could not breathe, resulting in positional asphyxiation.
In
Youngberg,
the Supreme Court held that mental patients retain liberty interests in freedom of movement and in personal security under the Fourteenth Amendment.
This Court has consistently held that damage claims against government officials arising from alleged violations of constitutional rights must allege, with particularity, facts that demonstrate what
each
defendant did to violate the asserted constitutional right.
Terrance,
1.James Siegfried
Plaintiffs allegations create a material issue of fact as to whether defendant, and resident care aide, James Siegfried was deliberately indifferent to Lanman’s serious medical needs. The altercation at issue began when Lanman lunged at defendant Mike Morey, a fellow resident care aide, in an apparent attempt to choke him. In response, Siegfried attempted to restrain Lanman from behind. The two fell to the floor with Lanman on top of Siegfried. Siegfried rolled Lanman onto his side. Lanman resisted restraint by violently thrashing and kicking at Siegfried and Morey. The code easy alarm was sounded and other staff members arrived on the scene to assist. Siegfried tried to gain control of Lanman’s arms by grabbing his wrists. Siegfried was relieved by another staff member moments later. He remained on his knees behind Lanman, however, throughout the altercation. Siegfried denies placing his hands on Lanman’s back to hold him down at any time. Siegfried’s kneeling position at the top half of Lanman’s body, coupled with Richard Hunter’s testimony that a staff member used his knees on Lanman’s back to hold him down creates an issue of fact as to whether Siegfried restrained Lanamn in a manner that was deliberately indifferent to his medical needs.
2.Mike Morey
Plaintiff has also alleged sufficient facts to support a finding that defendant Mike Morey was deliberately indifferent to Lan-man’s serious medical needs. Morey attempted to restrain Lanman’s legs during the struggle. Despite Morey’s testimony that it was not proper restraint technique to cross a patient’s ankles and lift his feet towards the back of the patient’s head, defendant Robert Hinson testified that he saw Morey employ such a technique. The affidavit of Gerald Shiener, M.D., states that this restraint position is unsafe for the patient because it interferes with his ability to breathe. Therefore, these facts create a material issue as to whether Morey was deliberately indifferent to Lanman’s medical needs.
3. George White
There is also a material issue of fact as to whether defendant George White’s actions violated Lanman’s constitutional rights. White responded to the code easy alarm and came to the aid of the other staff members trying to control Lanman’s legs. White testified that Lanman was being restrained face down. In an attempt to restrain Lanman’s legs, White laid himself across Lanman’s buttocks and legs. White testified that he continued to hold Lanman down despite hearing him say that he could not breathe. These facts, coupled with the testimony of Richard Hunter, that the staff members continued to restrain Lanman face down on the floor despite the fact that he was having obvious difficulty breathing, he was noticeably more calm after two to three minutes, and he wasn’t breathing at all after about five minutes, reveal a genuine issue of fact as to whether White was deliberately indifferent to Lanman’s medical needs.
4. Robert Hinson
Furthermore, plaintiff has alleged facts that create an issue as to whether defendant Robert Hinson’s actions violated Lan-man’s constitutional rights. Hinson arrived on the scene shortly after the code easy alarm sounded. He grabbed Lan- *686 man’s left arm and wrist and extended it above his head. Hinson was attempting to place a leather restraint on Lanman’s left wrist when he was alerted to the fact that Lanman had stopped breathing. The fact that Hinson had physical contact with Lan-man at the time he ceased breathing and he was positioned near the top of Lan-man’s body, where Richard Hunter testified that he saw someone place their knee on Lanman’s back and use his body weight to hold Lanman face down, is enough to create an issue as to whether Hinson was deliberately indifferent to Lanman’s medical needs.
5. Julie Stiver, R.N.
Moreover, even though defendant Julie Stiver, R.N., did not physically participate in the restraint of Lanman, she may still be liable for a violation of Lan-man’s constitutional rights under a supervisory liability theory. As the supervisor of the restraint procedure, she can be held liable for the actions of the resident care aides if she “at least implicitly authorized, approved or knowingly acquiesced in the unconstitutional conduct of the offending subordinate[s].”
Bellamy v. Bradley,
In the present case, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, there is a genuine issue as to whether defendant Julie Stiver, R.N., is liable for the deliberately indifferent conduct of her subordinates and whether she is liable for her own actions as a professional decisionmaker. Stiver ordered the staff to place ankle and wrist restraints on Lanman and supervised the actions of the staff in attempting to do so. Because plaintiff has shown that Stiver was physically present and directly supervising the staff as they restrained Lanman, plaintiff has demonstrated that Stiver at least knowingly acquiesced in the alleged unconstitutional conduct of her subordinates. Also, because the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff demonstrates that at least some of the defendant resident care aides were deliberately indifferent, there is a genuine issue as to whether Stiver’s actions show that she failed to exercise professional judgment in ordering and supervising Lanman’s restraint.
6. Edwina Koehn-Koldenhof
In contrast to the above defendants, plaintiff has failed to allege sufficient facts to support a finding that the actions of defendant Edwina Koehn-Kol-denhof, R.N., violated Lanman’s constitutional rights. Koehn-Koldenhofs only physical contact with Lanman consisted of administering an injection of Ativan to calm him down. Plaintiff has not alleged that the injection violated Lanman’s constitutional rights nor has plaintiff alleged *687 that Koehn-Koldenhof supervised the staff during the restraint procedure. Without more, Koehn-Koldenhof s presence at the scene and administration of Ativan are insufficient to support a finding that she violated Lanman’s constitutional rights. Therefore, summary judgment should be granted in her favor.
7.Jean Prandine
Similarly, plaintiff has failed to allege sufficient facts to establish that defendant Jean Prandine’s actions violated Lan-man’s constitutional rights. According to her deposition testimony, Prandine was one of the first to respond to the code easy alarm. She attempted to gain control of one of Lanman’s kicking legs, but was almost immediately relieved by another staff member. Prandine’s limited involvement in Lanman’s restraint does not subject her to individual liability for any alleged constitutional violation that occurred. She should also be dismissed from the case.
8.Linda Shaffer-Price
Like Prandine, defendant Linda Shaffer-Price’s attempts to control Lanman’s legs for a few moments before being relieved by defendant George White do not subject her to individual liability. Because of her limited involvement, no material issue of fact exists as to whether Shaffer-Price was deliberately indifferent to the decedent’s serious medical needs. Summary judgment should be granted in her favor as well.
9.Steve Bronsink
Plaintiff has failed to allege sufficient facts to prove that defendant Steve Bronsink violated Lanman’s constitutional rights. While it is alleged that Bronsink was present and perhaps involved in Lan-man’s restraint, plaintiff has failed to allege, with any particularity, the unconstitutionality of Bronsink’s individual actions. Thus, summary judgment should be granted in his favor.
In sum, drawing all inferences in favor of plaintiff, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hin-son, and Julie Stiver, R.N., restrained Lanman in a dangerous face-down position, with pressure on his back and possibly his neck, with his ankles crossed and extended towards his head. They also could conclude that these defendants ignored Lanman’s pleas for them to get off so he could breathe and failed to notice that he was having “obvious difficulty breathing.” Indeed, under plaintiffs version of the facts given by eyewitness patient Richard Hunter, Lanman was “noticeably more calm” after two to three minutes of struggling, and five minutes later, “he wasn’t resisting at all. He looked like he was passed out.” According to Hunter’s account of the events, it was not until that point, when Lanman had become unconscious, that one of the hospital staff members noticed he wasn’t breathing and the hospital staff slowly got off of him, rolled him on his back, and began CPR. Again, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, a jury could conclude based on the affidavit of Dr. Werner U. Spitz that Lanman “died as a result of the consequences of positional asphyxia committed by the defendant Hospital staff members,” and not as a result of Lanman’s underlying cardiovascular disease, doxepin toxicity and extreme physical exertion as defendants assert.
Defendants had been trained under NAPPI (Nonabusive Physical and Psychological Intervention) to never restrain a patient face down on the floor or put pressure on the patient’s back because of the danger of suffocation. They also had been *688 taught that they should cross a patient’s ankles and pull the feet up towards the back of the head only as a technique to exit a seclusion room. The facts taken in the light most favorable to plaintiff reveal that defendants used unapproved and dangerous restraint techniques to control Lan-man. The facts also show that defendants continued to use these dangerous techniques after two to three minutes of struggling when Lanman was “noticeably more calm,” and five minutes later, when “he wasn’t resisting at all ... [h]e looked like he was passed out.”
Under these facts, a reasonable factfin-der could find that defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, and Robert Hinson knew that their actions created a substantial risk of serious harm to Lanman, yet they disregarded this knowledge by continuing to restrain him in a dangerous manner for five minutes after he had ceased resisting. A reasonable factfinder could also conclude that defendant Julie Stiver, R.N., as the nurse in charge of the restraint procedure, is liable for her subordinates’ unconstitutional actions and/or that she substantially departed from professional judgment in her supervision of the resident care aides’ deliberately indifferent actions. Therefore, we find, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, that a reasonable factfinder could conclude that defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hinson, and Julie Stiver, R.N., violated Lanman’s Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process right to freedom from undue bodily restraint. However, we also find that summary judgment should be granted in favor of defendants Edwina Koehn-Koldenhof, R.N., Jean Prandine, Linda Shaffer-Price, and Steve Bronsink because plaintiff has failed to allege sufficient facts demonstrating that their actions violated Lanman’s constitutional rights.
B. Constitutional Right Was Clearly Established
However, even if defendants violated Lanman’s constitutional right, if at the time of the alleged violations it would not have been clear to defendants that their actions were unlawful in the situation they confronted, they are entitled to qualified immunity.
Saucier v. Katz,
Here, at the time of the alleged constitutional violation, it would have been clear to defendants that their actions would violate Lanman’s Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process right to be free from undue bodily restraint. It is not determinative that defendants’ exact conduct has not previously been held unlawful by a court. In
Youngberg,
the Supreme Court recognized that involuntarily confined patients in state institutions enjoy the right to freedom from undue bodily restraint; bodily restraint is undue when and to the extent professional judgment deems this unnecessary to assure safety or to provide treatment.
The facts viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff demonstrate that defendants knew because of their NAPPI training that restraining a patient face-down on the floor and putting pressure on a patient’s back posed a substantial risk of asphyxiation. Despite knowledge of this risk, defendants chose to restrain Lanman using these dangerous restraint techniques. Their actions were objectively unreasonable given the fact that plaintiffs eyewitness testified that defendants continued to restrain Lanman in this dangerous position five minutes after he wasn’t resisting at all and looked like he was passed out. It would have been clear to defendants that it was not necessary to continue restraining a patient who looked like he was passed out with techniques that pose a substantial risk of asphyxiation. A reasonable official in defendants’ positions would understand that his actions violated Lanman’s constitutional right to freedom from undue bodily restraint.
Therefore, we find that the right was clearly established at the time of Lanman’s restraint, and defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hin-son, and Julie Stiver, R.N., are not entitled to qualified immunity.
III.
A. Statutory Abuse and/or Neglect
The district court denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs claim for statutory abuse and/or neglect under Michigan Compiled Law § 330.1722. That statute provides that “[a] recipient of mental health services shall not be subjected to abuse or neglect.” Mich. Comp. Law § 330.1722(1). The statute further provides that “[a] recipient of mental health services who is abused or neglected has a right to pursue injunctive and other appropriate civil relief.” Id. at § 330.1722(3). The district court held that the statute’s plain language created a private cause of action, and that there is sufficient evidence that Lanman was subjected to abuse and neglect to defeat summary judgment.
Defendants argue that there is no evidence of abuse or neglect as those two terms are defined by Michigan law. They also argue that qualified immunity protects them from liability under Michigan law.
With regard to defendants’ first argument, plaintiffs have presented enough evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether abuse or neglect occurred. Michigan law defines abuse as “nonaccidental physical or emotional harm____” Mich. Comp. Law § 330.1100a(2). It defines “neglect” as “an act or failure to act ... that denies a recipient the standard of care or treatment to which he or she is entitled under this act.” Id. at § 330.1100b(18). Plaintiff has shown sufficient evidence that defendants restrained Lanman face down on the ground by possibly placing their bodies or *690 knees on his back following Lanman’s attack on Morey. Plaintiff has also brought forth evidence that defendants ignored Lanman’s claims that he was having trouble breathing, and continued to restrain him, even as he began to pass out. These facts, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, are enough to establish a cause of action for abuse or neglect under Michigan law.
In order to defeat defendants’ claims for qualified immunity under Michigan law, plaintiff must offer sufficient evidence of gross negligence. See Mich. Comp. Law § 691.1407(2)(c). Gross negligence is defined as conduct “so reckless as to demonstrate a substantial lack of concern for whether an injury results.” Id. at § 691.1407(7)(a). Plaintiff has provided the following facts to show defendants were grossly negligent under Michigan law: (1) defendants improperly restrained Lanman face-down; (2) defendants applied significant pressure to his backside, with knowledge that such pressure would make it difficult for Lanman to breathe; (3) defendants also disregarded his pleas for help and his statements that he was having trouble breathing; and (4) defendants did not notice that Lanman was passing out and continued to restrain him once he had gone limp. Relying on our factual analysis under federal law with respect to each individual defendant, we hold that the facts alleged are sufficient to establish a genuine issue of material fact and defeat defendants’ motion for summary judgment and claims for qualified immunity under Michigan law with regard to defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hinson and Julie Stiver, R.N. However, plaintiff has failed to allege sufficient facts showing defendants Edwina Koehn-Koldenhof, R.N., Jean Prandine, Linda Shaffer-Price, and Steve Bronsink were grossly negligent in attempting to restrain Lanman.
B. Assault and Battery
Plaintiff also brought a claim for assault and battery under Michigan law. The district court denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment. On appeal, defendants argue that they were legally justified in attempting to restrain Lanman because they were acting to protect themselves as well as others from violence.
As the district court noted, in Michigan, an officer may use such force as is reasonably necessary to effect a lawful arrest or seizure.
Young v. Barker,
IV.
We find that the Fourteenth Amendment governs the constitutional right of voluntarily committed mental health patients to be free from undue bodily re *691 straint. We also find that the plaintiff in this case has established a genuine issue of material fact under both his federal claim and his state law claims with regard to defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hinson and Julie Stiver, R.N. However, plaintiff has failed to allege sufficient facts to maintain his claims against defendants Edwina Koehn-Koldenhof, R.N., Jean Prandine, Linda Shaffer-Price, and Steve Bronsink. Thus, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment claiming qualified immunity to plaintiffs § 1983 claim with regard to defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hinson and Julie Stiver, R.N., and REVERSE with regard to defendants Edwina Koehn-Koldenhof, R.N., Jean Prandine, Linda Shaffer-Price, and Steve Bronsink. We AFFIRM the district court’s denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs two state law claims with regard to defendants James Siegfried, Mike Morey, George White, Robert Hinson and Julie Stiver, R.N., and REVERSE with regard to defendants Edwina Koehn-Koldenhof, R.N., Jean Prandine, Linda Shaffer-Price, and Steve Bronsink.
Notes
. The district court found the involuntariness argument determinative by reading
DeShaney
to mean that the Constitution only imposes a duty on the State to assume responsibility for the safety of an individual when it has "take[n] a person into its custody and
holds him there against his will." DeShaney,
At this time, we do not need to decide whether the State owes the same affirmative constitutional duties of care and protection to its voluntarily admitted residents as it owes to its involuntarily committed residents under
Youngberg.
In an unpublished disposition, however, a panel of this Court held that because the plaintiff had been voluntarily admitted to the state mental hospital, the State’s constitutional duty to protect those it renders helpless by confinement was not triggered.
Higgs v. Latham,
No. 91-5273,
. We note, though, that the Second Circuit has found that Youngberg’s affirmative duties of care and protection from third-party harm extend to voluntary and involuntary residents alike. Society for Good Will to Retarded Children v. Cuomo, Til F.2d 1239, 1245-46 (2d Cir.1984).
