MEMORANDUM
Defendants Township of Lower Merion, Township of Lower Merion Police Department, and Officer Michael Bedzela moved for summary judgment as to count one of the amended complaint. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. 1 On September 21, 2000, an order was entered granting the motion. 2
On the afternoon of July 5, 1999, Officer Bedzela, a member of the Lower Merion Township Police Department, was driving his police car on Lancaster Avenue in Ard-more, Pa. He was travelling, in response to a non-emergency radio call, 3 at an excessive rate of speed. 4 Amended complt. at 3. Entering Lancaster Avenue from a parking lot, plaintiff Leddy made a left-hand turn to proceed eastward and the vehicles collided. Id. at 3. Plaintiff sustained personal injuries as a result of the accident. Id. at 4-5.
The issue is whether the officer’s allegedly negligent and reckless operation of the police car amounted to a constitutional tort and, if so, whether there is a basis for municipal liability. 5 Inasmuch, as a matter of law, the officer’s conduct does not appear to have constituted a civil rights violation, it will be unnecessary to go beyond that question.
Officer Bedzela
“In order to state a claim under § 1983, plaintiff must show that defendants, acting under color of state law, deprived [him] of a right secured by the Constitution or federal law.”
Cannon v. City of Philadelphia,
Lewis
established a constitutional injury standard: “[T]he substantive component of the Due Process Clause is violated by executive action only when ‘it can properly be characterized as arbitrary, or conscience shocking, in a constitutional sense.’ ”
Lewis,
Because context is important, whether an official’s actions shock the conscience is analyzed along a “culpability spectrum.”
Lewis
at 849,
In Nicini, the Court of Appeals applied the “deliberate indifference” standard to determine whether a foster care caseworker’s actions shocked the conscience. In this particular situation, there was “time ‘to make unhurried judgments,’ ” Nicini at 811, and so the analysis occupied the lowest end of the culpability spectrum. Nevertheless, the caseworker’s actions did not shock the court’s conscience, and summary judgment was granted for defendants. 8 Id. at 815.
Lewis
involved a high speed police chase, a setting analogized by the Court to a prison riot, using Eighth Amendment analysis. Situations such as a high speed chase or a prison riot, where “unforeseen circumstances demand an officer’s instant judgment, even precipitate recklessness fails to inch close enough to harmful purpose .... Just as a purpose to cause harm is needed for Eighth Amendment liability in a riot case, so it ought to be needed for Due Process liability in a pursuit case.”
Lewis
at 854,
The two ends of the culpability spectrum, in terms of both law and fact, can be defined as follows: “deliberate indifference” when deliberation is “practical” and “purpose to cause harm” when instantaneous decisions and immediate judgments are required.
Last year, in
Miller v. City of Philadelphia,
in order for liability to attach, a social worker need not have acted with the “purpose to cause harm,” but the standard of culpability for substantive due process purposes must exceed both negligence and deliberate indifference, and reach the level of gross negligence or arbitrariness that indeed “shocks the conscience.”
Id. at 375-76.
In
Cannon,
The circumstances of the present case lie between the parameters of deliberate and spontaneous. Unlike the police officer in
Lewis
who was engaged in a pursuit, Officer Bedzela was on a non-emergency call, albeit one that required immediate attention. Also unlike the
Nici-ni
caseworker, he did not have time to make unhurried judgments. More akin to
Miller
and
Cannon,
while full deliberation may not have been practicable, the needs of the situation were not so exigent that only a purpose to cause harm would shock the conscience. As articulated in
Miller,
culpability in an intermediate setting requires at least “gross negligence or arbitrariness.”
Miller,
This conclusion is supported by three pre-Z^cis non-pursuit police vehicle collision decisions from other
Circuit
s—Roo
ney v. Watson,
Municipal Liability
The amended complaint alleges a violation by the Township of plaintiff Ledd/s constitutional rights as a result of its policies, customs, and failure to train or discipline police officers. The familiar rule is that a municipality is not subject to § 1983 liability unless the tort in question was, in effect, the act of that entity.
City of Canton v. Harris,
In
City of Los Angeles v. Heller,
[W]e note that there is some inconsistency in our circuit as to the standard governing the underlying constitutional violation in policy, custom or practice cases.... [T]he Fagan [v. City of Vineland,22 F.3d 1296 (3d Cir.1994) ] panel opinion appeared to hold that a plaintiff can establish a constitutional violation predicate to a claim of municipal liability simply by demonstrating that the policymakers, acting with deliberate indifference, enacted an inadequate policy that caused an injury. It appears that by focusing exclusively on the “deliberate indifference” prong of the Collins test, the panel opinion did not apply the first prong — establishing an underlying constitutional violation.
Mark at 1153 n. 13.
As
Mark
suggests, the first prong is essential to the rationale of
Monell
— that a municipality should be held accountable not on the basis of vicarious liability, but only for misconduct it has approved or fostered. Or as succinctly and metaphorically couched in
Andreios:
“[I]t is impossible on the delivery of a kick to inculpate the head and find no fault with the foot.”
Andrews,
Notes
. Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The movant has the burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of fact. An issue is genuine "if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
Anderson
v.
Liberty Lobby,
. The amended complaint includes four counts on behalf of plaintiff John H. Leddy: count one — a § 1983 claim; counts two and three — negligence and recklessness; count four — battery, against defendant Bedzela. Count five is plaintiff Ruddell’s loss of consortium claim. Since count one was the sole predicate for federal jurisdiction and a protective state action is pending, jurisdiction over the supplemental claims was relinquished.
. See Lower Merion Township Personnel Report completed by Sgt. Michael C. Norman. Pltfs.' mem. ex. G; defs.’ mem. ex. D. The narrative states that Officer Bedzela was dispatched to "assist on a suspicious vehicle parked unoccupied.”
. According to the amended complaint, Officer Bedzela's car was going in excess of 50 miles per hour in a 25 mile per hour zone. Plaintiffs expert placed his speed between 57 and 61 miles per hour. See pltfs.’ mem., ex. E, p. 4. Defendants' expert found it to be a minimum of 49.8 miles per hour. See defs.’, mem., ex. D.
. Given that the police department is a division of the municipality, the two will be treated as a single entity.
See Bonenberger v. Plymouth Township,
. Section 1983 does not create any substantive rights, serving instead as a vehicle for federal violations. See Morse at 906-07.
. Prior to
Lewis,
our Court of Appeals had favored a "shocks the conscience” standard only for police pursuits.
See Davis v. Township of Hillside,
. Nicini involved a child placed in foster care who was abused by the foster father. The Department of Youth and Family Services had a limited opportunity to investigate the suitability of the foster family before the placement decision. The caseworker did complete a basic background check and a social worker found the child to be happy in the home. Nicini at 815.
. These decisions rely in part on
Daniels v. Williams,
