Lolita MITCHELL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
James V. ALUISI, Individually and in his official capacity
as Sheriff of Prince George's County; J. Michael O'Ferrall,
Individually and in his official capacity as Administrative
Clerk for the District Court of Maryland; Margaret
Kostritsky, Individually and in her official capacity as the
Chief Clerk for the District Court of Maryland; Prince
George's County, Maryland; Szabo, Inc., Defendants-Appellees,
and
Ronald J. Collins, Individually and in his official capacity
as Deputy Sheriff; Robert Kiker, Individually and in his
official capacity as Deputy Sheriff of Prince George's
County; Samuel F. Saxton, Individually and in his official
capacity as the Administrator of the Prince George's County,
Maryland Detention Center, Defendants.
No. 87-7775.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Dec. 6, 1988.
Decided April 21, 1989.
Susan K. Goering (American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland, on brief) for plaintiff-appellant.
Susan Penny Whiteford, Asst. Atty. Gen. (J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Atty. Gen., James G. Klair, Asst. Atty. Gen., on brief); Thomas Ralston Hendershot, Katherine Sacco Duyer (James P. Gleason, Jr., John F. Breads, Jr., County Attorney's Office, on brief) for defendants-appellees.
Before PHILLIPS and WILKINSON, Circuit Judges, and BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge.
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:
Lolita Mitchell brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 claiming that the Prince George's County Sheriff's Department violated her Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment rights by serving her with a recalled bench warrant and that the Prince George's County Detention Center denied her adequate medical care in violation of the Eighth Amendment. We affirm the grant of summary judgment for the various categories of defendants on the recalled warrant claim, including the court clerks, the deputy sheriffs, and the sheriff. We reverse the grant of summary judgment with respect to Mitchell's medical claim and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Shortly after being discharged from the hospital, Lolita Mitchell, a 53-year old resident of Prince George's County, Maryland, failed to appear for the trial of several traffic offenses. Mitchell's attorney contacted the court regarding her failure to appear and on July 13, 1984 an order was entered withdrawing the bench warrant. Mitchell appeared for trial on September 17, 1984 and all charges were dropped.
On November 2, 1984, despite Mitchell's protests that the warrant had been recalled, defendant deputy sheriffs Collins and Kiker arrested Mitchell pursuant to the cancelled bench warrant. Following her arrest, Mitchell was taken to the Prince George's County Detention Center where her prescription medications for hypertension, diabetes and heart disease were confiscated. Mitchell alleges that during confinement her repeated requests for these medications were denied.
Although the exact length of her stay is disputed, the Center's log indicates that Mitchell was detained for three and one-half hours. Mitchell had a history of hypertension and cardiac difficulties requiring medical attention. Mitchell alleges that she suffered from tachycardia during her confinement and that following her release she experienced nausea, numbness in the tips of her fingers, headaches and heart palpitations. The day after her release, Mitchell went to the emergency room and underwent blood and urine tests and an EKG. The next day she was admitted to the hospital where she remained for eight days. She was diagnosed as having undergone a hypertensive crisis.
This Sec. 1983 action followed. Named as defendants were James V. Aluisi, Sheriff of Prince George's County; Ronald J. Collins, Deputy Sheriff; Robert Kiker, Deputy Sheriff; J. Michael O'Ferrall, Administrative Clerk for the District Court of Maryland for Prince George's County; Margaret Kostritsky, Chief Clerk of the District Court of Maryland for Prince George's County; Samuel F. Saxton, Administrator of the Prince George's County Detention Center (PGCDC); Prince George's County itself; and Szabo, Inc. (Szabo), health care provider to the PGCDC.
After discovery, the magistrate recommended that summary judgment be granted in favor of all defendants. The recommendation was adopted by the district court on October 30, 1987. Mitchell appeals.
II.
We address the claims against each set of defendants in turn. Because Mitchell's arrest was made pursuant to a facially valid warrant, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the deputy sheriffs. In Baker v. McCollan,
The claims against sheriff Aluisi and the clerks are brought against them both personally and in their official capacities. However, construing all facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, these claims fail on two grounds: first, the failure to recall the warrant was nothing more than an act of negligence and second, there was no proof of any policy or practice which would serve as a basis for municipal liability.
Defendants' conduct demonstrated at most a lack of due care. "To hold that injury caused by such conduct is a deprivation within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment would trivialize the centuries-old principle of due process of law." Daniels v. Williams,
There is also no proof of any impermissible policy here which would give rise to municipal liability. Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,
Finally, we cannot deduce a municipal policy from bare allegations that state procedures were inadequate to prevent the service of recalled warrants. Plaintiff has suggested various improvements to the County's process for recalling warrants: written lists of all recalled warrants which are phoned into the Sheriff's Department; use of court computers to check the validity of old bench warrants before they are served; cross-checks of outstanding warrants against the district court daily docket sheets. The absence of such procedures hardly denotes an unconstitutional county policy, however.
The Supreme Court has noted that nearly every Sec. 1983 plaintiff will be able to point to something a municipality could have done to prevent an unfortunate incident. Permitting cases to go forward on such a basis "would result in de facto respondeat superior liability." City of Canton, Ohio v. Geraldine Harris, --- U.S. ----, ----,
III.
Mitchell also alleges a denial of adequate medical care while she was held in the detention center. She alleges a denial of care both in her particular case and in the failure of Szabo and Prince George's officials to train correctional officers to undertake health care screening. We believe that both of these claims must be remanded for further factual development.
When Mitchell's claim originally came before the district court, it was unclear whether the relationship between a private health care provider and a prison gave rise to liability under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. Thus much of the argument before the district court concerned the applicability of this circuit's decision in Calvert v. Sharp,
Our decision in Calvert v. Sharp would not entitle defendants to qualified immunity on Mitchell's individual claim despite the fact that it was the law of this circuit in the period prior to West v. Atkins. Calvert espoused a view of state action under the Fourteenth Amendment, not a standard of conduct on which defendants were entitled to rely. The standard of conduct for purposes of qualified immunity--one of "deliberate indifference to serious medical needs"--has been well established since the Supreme Court's decision in Estelle v. Gamble,
Perhaps because of the emphasis put on the question posed by Calvert, the record is incomplete with regard to the critical issues now before this court. Because Mitchell was a pretrial detainee and not a convicted prisoner at the time of the alleged denial of medication, her claim is governed by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment rather than the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, which operates only after the state has secured a conviction. City of Revere v. Massachusetts Gen. Hosp.,
According to the affidavit of defendant Saxton, the processing officer at the PGCDC is to record any current illnesses or medical conditions of the detainee and any type of prescribed medicine. A number of facts, however, remain unclear: whether the way in which this procedure was administered by Szabo or Saxton reached the constitutional threshold for a claim of "deliberate indifference" in Mitchell's particular case; who, if any, of the named defendants were responsible for meeting Mitchell's alleged requests for medication; what response, if any, was made to her requests; and the extent to which the processing officer was or should have been aware of Mitchell's general medical condition. In short, we have no way to determine at this juncture whether summary judgment was appropriate on this claim or whether it was not. Because the issues were not developed in the record under the guidance of the Supreme Court decision in West, we remand for further proceedings.
Mitchell has also alleged that the arrangement in effect at the time of her detention permitted a correctional officer, not a professional health care employee of Szabo, to do the screening. She alleged further that lay correctional officers doing the medical screening at PGCDC had no training whatsoever. We think that this claim must be remanded in light of the Supreme Court's decision in City of Canton, Ohio v. Geraldine Harris, --- U.S. ----,
We recognize, of course, both a legitimate state interest in the confiscation of contraband and the wide latitude officials enjoy in preventing the infiltration of illegal substances into prisons and other centers of detention. Jones v. North Carolina Prisoners' Labor Union,
Whether "any deficiency in training actually caused" the alleged indifference to Mitchell's medical needs is a question that must await remand. Canton, --- U.S. at ----,
AFFIRMED IN PART; REMANDED IN PART.
