OPINION
The plaintiff Homero Leite alleges that five Providence policemen verbally and physically abused and mistreated him. Leite brings the present action pursuant to numerous federal civil rights statutes, relying primarily upon 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and asserting a cause of action under various constitutional amendments as they are incorporated into the fourteenth amendment with jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
1
The complaint names the five unknown officers, in their official and individual capacities, and the City of Providence; the complaint solely seeks monetary damages. The City of Providence has filed a motion to dismiss and primarily depends upon the inability to sue a municipality under section 1983.
See Monroe v. Pape,
In deciding this motion to dismiss, it is necessary to examine the effect of Monell upon the body of precedent spawned by Monroe v. Pape. Essentially this Court must begin to define, in the wake of Monell, the contours of municipal immunity and pendent jurisdiction under section 1983.
The ramifications of Monell are significant. The decision reconsidered the legislative history of section 1983 and overruled that portion of Monroe v. Pape holding that municipalities are not “persons” in the context of section 1983. The Court held that local governments can be sued directly under section 1983 for allegedly unconstitutional acts that are the result of implementing or executing an officially sanctioned policy, ordinance, regulation, or custom. The action sued upon must be taken “pursuant to official municipal policy”; the liability cannot be based solely upon a respondeat superior theory.
The plaintiff in this case first argues that he need not rely upon section 1983 or the
Monell
decision because he asserts a claim based directly upon the fourteenth amendment with jurisdiction grounded in 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Leite cites this Court’s decision in
Panzarella v. Boyle,
Leite has asserted a section 1983 claim recognizable under Monell. Although Leite’s complaint is largely phrased in terms of a respondeat superior claim, he does assert that “the City of Providence is liable to your petitioner in that it was negligent in hiring, training, continuing to employ and/or failing to discipline and/or supervise its employees . . .” Such a claim asserts that official municipal policy was one of the direct causes of the alleged harm. Therefore, the City of Providence is not being sued solely on the basis of a respondeat superior theory.
Because
Monell
makes the City a proper party to this sort of section 1983 action, the Court must consider whether the City is immune to suit due to the complaint’s failure to allege a lack of “good faith” or a sufficient degree of culpability. In
Wood v. Strickland,
The good faith defense is composed of both objective and subjective standards. An officer is only entitled to this defense if his conduct is motivated by “permissible intentions”; however, an officer’s subjective intentions do not invoke the good faith defense if he “knew or reasonably should have known that the action he took within his sphere of official responsibility would violate” a person’s “clearly established constitutional rights”.
Wood v. Strickland,
This case, however, involves a municipality which, in its supervisory capacity, was allegedly negligent. Traditional “good faith defense” analysis is not particularly helpful in these circumstances; 2 instead, *589 the Court must determine whether or not the municipality’s alleged conduct rises to a level of culpability sufficient to state a claim under section 1983.
The question of whether negligence gives rise to a section 1983 action is hardly novel. Various federal courts have considered the question and reached varying results.
3
The United States Supreme Court has yet to decide the issue of whether section 1983 affords “a remedy for negligent deprivation of constitutional rights”.
Procunier v. Navarette,
The statutory language and history of section 1983 provides no clue as to whether officials with supervisory or training responsibilities should be liable on a theory of negligence. The broad language of section 1983 — which provides for liability for any person “causing” a constitutional deprivation — is certainly broad enough to include negligent deprivations, particularly in light of
Monroe v. Pape’s
declaration that 1983 liability should be determined by reference to “the background of tort liability that makes a man responsible for the natural consequences of his actions”.
In light of Monell, this Court now examines the degree of culpability a municipality must exhibit in order to be liable under section 1983. It is elementary that a municipality can only act through its high level, supervisory officials. Thus, although a municipality cannot be held liable under section 1983 on the theory of respondeat superior, it may be held liable if it acts “directly” through those officials who set and supervise municipal policy. In this case, City officials did set the policies involved in hiring, training and supervising the police force and allegedly were negligent in structuring or enforcing these policies. Because a municipality acts through its high level officials and occupies a supervisory position, this Court may determine the scope of municipal liability by relying upon those precedents which discuss the degree of culpability required under section 1983 by one in a supervisory position.
The vast majority of those courts which have considered the issue have not held high level officials liable for failing to supervise, correct and control the actions of their subordinates. As one court stated:
Public officials cannot be held liable for monetary damages under 1983 purely for an alleged failure to exercise proper supervisory control over their subordinates. *590 Many cases, in the specific context of alleged abuse of police power, have held offending officers themselves liable, while dismissing complaints against superiors who had no personal involvement in the alleged misconduct.
Delaney v. Dias,
Instead of simply a negligent failure to supervise, the supervising official must have participated in some way in the alleged constitutional deprivation or acted in such a way as to exhibit a “deliberate indifference” to the deprivation of the plaintiff’s constitutional rights. Two recent Supreme Court decisions, although not precisely on point, substantially support this interpretation of section 1983.
In
Rizzo v. Goode,
Estelle v. Gamble,
Although a city cannot be held liable for simple negligent training of its police force, the city’s citizens do not have to endure a “pattern” of past police misconduct before they can sue the city under section 1983. If a municipality completely fails to train its police force, or trains its officers in a reckless or grossly negligent manner so that future police misconduct is almost inevitable, the municipality exhibits a “deliberate indifference” to the resulting violations of a citizen’s constitutional rights. In such a case, the municipality may fairly be termed as acquiescing in and implicitly authorizing such violations. In light of the responsibility, authority, and force that po
*591
lice normally wield, a municipality is fairly considered to have actual or imputed knowledge of the almost inevitable consequences that arise from the nonexistent or grossly inadequate training and supervising of a police force. If the plaintiff’s injury results from the complete lack of training or grossly inadequate training of a police force, such an injury is not the result of mere negligence but the result of a deliberate^, and conscious indifference by the city. The training and supervising of these police officers must be so inadequate and the resulting misconduct so probable, that the city can fairly be considered to have acquiesced . in the probability of serious police miscon- ‘ ¡ duct.
Cf. Delaney v. Dias, supra
at 1354;
Perry v. Elrod,
Oversights in the training process or simple negligence in some of the training procedures will not give rise to section 1983 liability; instead, the training must be nonexistent or reckless, or grossly, palpably, and culpably negligent. The plaintiff in this case does not allege the requisite intentional conduct, or recklessness, or gross negligence necessary to state a claim against a municipality under section 1983. Aside from plaintiff’s respondeat superior claims, he only alleges that the city was negligent in its training and hiring of the police force. Such allegations of simple negligence do not state a claim under section 1983. . To distinguish between negligence and “gross negligence” is not to indulge in technicalities. There is a clear and significant difference between these two standards; one requires only a showing of unreasonableness while the other demands evidence of near recklessness or shockingly J unjustified and unreasonable action. Because the plaintiff has only alleged negligence, his section 1983 claim against the City of Providence fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and must be dismissed.
The Court recognizes that the degree of culpability required before a municipality can be sued under section 1983 is a novel question.- In fairness to the litigants, the Court dismisses plaintiff’s claims against the City without prejudice and gives plaintiff leave to amend his pleadings within thirty days. If such an amendment is undertaken, it must, of course, be done with utmost care and analysis of the facts.
The plaintiff also requests that this Court take jurisdiction over the respondeat superior claims against the City that are based upon state law. Because this Court has dismissed the federal claims against the municipality, there is no longer an independent basis of federal jurisdiction over the City of Providence. Therefore, this Court can hear the state-law claims only if it can properly exercise ancillary jurisdiction over the City. In order to invoke this Court’s ancillary jurisdiction, plaintiff must overcome a substantial precedential roadblock.
Aldinger v. Howards
Notes
. The complaint also asserts causes of action under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1985, 1986 and 1988. The section 1988 claim is quickly dismissed on the authority of
Moor v. County of Alameda,
. Many acts of negligence are not done with an intent whose “permissibility” can be fairly measured under the traditional
Wood
analysis. In the context of negligence actions, many courts have imposed a required level of culpability before imposing section 1983 liability.
See, e. g., Bonner v. Coughlin,
.
See, e. g., Carter v.
Carlson,
