Plaintiffs Phyllis B. Liebson and John Liebson filed this action, alleging that defendants, the New Mexico Corrections Department and various department officials, violated Ms. Liebson’s constitutional rights. Plaintiffs also asserted several state law claims, all of which were remanded to state court. Neither the propriety of the district court’s decision to remand plaintiffs’ state law claims nor the merits of those claims is at issue here. The individual defendants in this matter, John Thomas, Dareld Kerby, Lawrence Barreras, Jerome Tafoya, and Barry Hertzog, appeal the district court’s denial of their motion to dismiss Ms. Lieb-son’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims on qualified immunity grounds. We reverse and remand.
Plaintiff Phyllis B. Liebson was employed as a librarian by the Santa Fe Community College. Pursuant to a joint powers agreement between the College and the New Mexico Corrections Department, she was assigned to provide library services to the inmates housed in the maximum security unit of the New Mexico State Penitentiary. A corrections officer was present in the library at all times that she was on duty until March 21, 1992, when defendants changed the library hours and the schedule of the officer assigned to the library. On March 26, 1992, Ms. Liebson was on duty in the library with no officer present. She was kidnapped, held hostage, and sexually assaulted by an inmate library assistant.
Plaintiffs subsequently filed suit, alleging that defendants’ decision to change the schedule of the corrections officer in the library was the proximate cause of Ms. Lieb-son’s injuries, and that defendants’ decision deprived Ms. Liebson of her “right to liberty without due process of law and without equal protection of the law, and deprived her of property, privileges, and immunities secured to her by the laws and Constitution of the United States.”
The question presented by this appeal is whether the district court erred in denying qualified immunity to the individual defendants on Ms. Liebson’s § 1983 due process claim. Because qualified immunity is a question of law, we review the district court’s decision de novo. Martinez v. Mafchir,
Following the Siegert framework, we must first decide whether Ms. Liebson has asserted the violation of her due process rights. Generally, state actors are liable under the due process clause only for their own acts and not for the violent acts of third parties. Uhlrig v. Harder,
Here, plaintiff seeks to invoke both exceptions in pursuit of her § 1983 due process claim. In her complaint, Ms. Liebson alleges that a “special relationship” existed between defendants and herself “[b]y virtue of her assignment to the North Facility of the Penitentiary of New Mexico,” and that defendants breached their duty to provide protection to her by revising the library hours and removing the corrections officer from the library. Ms. Liebson also alleges she was “kidnapped, held hostage and sexually assaulted by a prison inmate,” and that “defendants’ removal of the correction officer from the ... library was a negligent act and was a direct and proximate cause” of her injuries.
We find that Ms. Liebson has failed to allege an actionable due process claim. Although it is perhaps a close question, we reject the assertion that a “special relationship” existed between Ms. Liebson and defendants sufficient to trigger an affirmative duty on the part of defendants to protect Ms. Liebson. In particular, without downplaying the dangerous conditions that undoubtedly existed in the penitentiary, we believe the consensual nature of the employment relationship between Ms. Liebson and defendants differentiates this case from those in which a “special relationship” has been found to exist. Uhlrig,
Likewise, we find that the “danger creation” theory is inapplicable under the alleged facts. Although Ms. Liebson has alleged that defendants acted negligently in changing the hours of the library and removing the corrections officer, there is nothing alleged in the complaint that we believe “shocks the conscience.” Id. More specifically, we are not convinced that Ms. Liebson has alleged any “conduct that was so egregious, outrageous and fraught with unreasonable risk so as to shock the conscience.” Id. at 576.
Here, in contrast, plaintiffs have not alleged any such “conscience-shocking” facts. Although plaintiffs have alleged that defendants’ removal of the security officer was done with “deliberate indifference and in complete disregard” of Ms. Liebson’s rights, they have not alleged any specific facts, as did the plaintiff in Grubbs, to indicate that defendants’ actions were egregious, outrageous, or fraught with unreasonable risk.
Even assuming, for purposes of argument, that Ms. Liebson has alleged an actionable due process claim, we are not convinced the due process rights at issue were so clearly established that reasonable officials in defendants’ situation would have understood their conduct violated those rights. In March 1992, the point in time when defendants changed the schedule of the officer assigned to the library, the law was clearly established that state officials had no constitutional duty to protect citizens from the actions of private parties. DeShaney,
it is the State’s affirmative act of restraining the individual’s freedom to act on his own behalf — through incarceration, institutionalization, or other similar restraint of personal liberty — which is the “deprivation of liberty” triggering the protections of the Due Process Clause, not its failure to act to protect his liberty interests against harms inflicted by other means.
Although Ms. Liebson asserts that DeSha-ney and the cases cited therein clearly established a constitutional duty on the part of defendants to protect her because of their physical control over her while she was working in the prison library, we disagree. Simply put, Ms. Liebson’s situation is not so closely analogous to the custodial relationships addressed by DeShaney or the eases cited therein to consider her constitutional claim clearly established in March 1992.
In Estelle, the Supreme Court held that states are constitutionally required to provide medical care to incarcerated prisoners because they are unable to take care of themselves as a result of the state’s deprivation of their liberty.
While the facts of this ease need not precisely mirror those addressed in prior precedent in order to preclude qualified immunity, Yvonne L. v. New Mexico Dept. of Human Services,
Nor are we persuaded that the law was clearly established in March 1992 that defendants’ decision to change the library hours and the hours of the corrections officer assigned thereto was sufficient to trigger liability under the “danger creation” theory. Although Ms. Liebson cites White v. Rockford,
Both White and Wood involved police officers who, in effecting the arrests of drivers of vehicles, abandoned passengers in the vehicles to fend for themselves in dangerous situations. In White, the passengers were three minor children abandoned on a busy Chicago highway at night and in cold weather.
In White, the Seventh Circuit held that the unjustified and arbitrary refusal of police officers to lend aid to children endangered by the performance of official duty, where that refusal ultimately results in physical and emotional injury to the children, “indisputably breaches the Due Process Clause.”
Similarly, in Wood, the Ninth Circuit held that plaintiff had raised a genuine issue of fact suggesting the defendant officer acted with deliberate indifference to plaintiff’s interest in personal security.
Here, the facts alleged by Ms. Liebson are substantially different than those alleged in White or Wood. Although Ms. Liebson has alleged that defendants acted negligently and with “deliberate indifference” to her rights, we find nothing about defendants’ conduct, as alleged in the complaint, that is comparable to the reckless and conscience-shocking conduct alleged in White and Wood. Accordingly, we find White and Wood wholly insufficient to establish that defendants’ actions were clearly prohibited.
For the reasons set forth above, the decision of the district court denying qualified immunity to defendants is reversed, and this
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
