In this consolidated appeal, four officials of the South Dakota Department of Social Services (SDDSS) and a deputy with the Pennington County, South Dakota Sheriffs Department (collectively referred to as “appellants”) appeal two orders entered in the United States District Court for the District of South Dakota denying their respective motions for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. For reversal, appellants argue that the district court erred in denying their motions for summary judgment because: (1) their actions did not violate a constitutional right; (2) the constitutional right asserted was not clearly established at the time of the alleged violation; and (3) there was no genuine issue of material fact as to the objective reasonableness of their conduct. For the reasons discussed below, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
I.
Ed Manzano and Kathleen Brooks were married in 1987. On May 28, 1988, their only child, Abigail Manzano, was born. Man-zano and Brooks were divorced on January 18, 1990. Manzano is an officer in the United States Air Force, and Brooks is a registered nurse. The divorce decree gave them joint custody of Abigail. Brooks had primary physical custody, and Manzano had extensive visitation rights. Since the divorce decree was entered, Brooks and Manzano have had intermittent problems concerning visitation. Upon returning home after a visit
A few days later, Brooks called MeLane and told her that Abigail wanted to speak with her again, and on October 1, 1991, Wilkins and MeLane interviewed Abigail. In this second interview, Abigail told Wilkins and MeLane that Manzano told her not to tell what happened to her. She also told them that Manzano made her vaginal area sore by “stick[ing] his finger way in.” When she was asked why he did that, she answered, “Because I didn’t want him to.” She stated that these things happened when they went camping. Joint Appendix at 1001-05. After this interview, MeLane advised Brooks to get a temporary protection order which could keep Manzano away from Abigail. On that same day, Brooks filed a verified petition with the state court seeking such an order. It is undisputed that neither MeLane nor Wilkins assisted Brooks in the preparation of this petition. In the petition, she alleged that Abigail had begun making statements which suggested Manzano had sexually abused her as early as April or May of 1991 and that Abigail also exhibited physical signs of vaginal irritation such as redness and a strong odor. Brooks also alleged that when she and Manzano were married, he once told her that “if he wanted to abuse his daughter he would put his finger in her vagina and rub it until it was red.” Joint Appendix at 280. Brooks further stated that “professionals” advised her to seek the protection order. The ex parte temporary protection order which prohibited any visitation by Manzano was issued the next day, October 2, 1991, by the state court based solely on “the uncorroborated sex abuse allegation” made by Brooks. Joint Appendix at 285. A hearing was then scheduled for October 28, 1991.
Upon Wilkins’ recommendation, Brooks took Abigail for a physical examination on October 8, 1991. Dr. Lori Strong examined the child and found no physical evidence of abuse. Dr. Strong had previously examined Abigail in April 1991 and at that time as well she found no evidence of abuse. There were medical records, obtained by Wilkins, from an earlier doctor’s appointment at Ellsworth Air Force Base which indicated that Abigail had vaginal irritation in December 1990. On October 9, 1991, Manzano was interrogated by MeLane and Deputy Jerry Moore at the Pennington County Sheriff’s Department. Manzano denied the accusations of abuse. Further, Manzano claimed that, in the petition for the protection order, Brooks mis-characterized his statement regarding child abuse. However, he did admit that he had told Brooks that if a person wanted to abuse a child, he or she would stick a finger inside the child.
On October 10, 1991, MeLane and Wilkins interviewed Abigail for a third time. Unlike the prior two encounters, this interview was not tape-recorded. During this session, Abigail was presented with drawings of a young girl, an adult male, and a hand. According to MeLane, when asked where Manzano touched her, Abigail pointed only to the vaginal and anal areas. MeLane asked Abigail to mark on a hand outline with what part Man-zano had touched her, and she marked three fingers. MeLane also presented Abigail with the outline of an adult male, front view, and asked her to circle the parts with which Manzano had touched her. Abigail drew a large circle that included the stomach, upper thighs, genitalia, and one hand. MeLane then asked her to put an “X” on the parts
On October 15,1991, a hearing was held in the divorce proceeding before the same judge who issued the temporary protection order. As a result, the state court ordered that Manzano be allowed supervised visitation with Abigail at the Department of Social Services office. In an order dated November 19, 1991, the state court granted Manzano two additional hours of supervised visitation per week, and granted Manzano’s request to convert his previously filed motion to modify visitation into a motion to change custody. The state court further ordered that the Pennington County Sheriffs Office and the SDDSS appear in person or in writing on November 25, 1991, to advise the court as to its position regarding its pending investigation and its decision on how it will proceed. The state court required this information because it had suspended proceedings on the custody dispute pending the conclusion of the agencies’ investigation. Joint Appendix at 1018-20. The record is unclear as to the agencies’ response to this request.
On October 17,1991, Wilkins discussed the Manzano case with Deputy State’s Attorney Jay Miller. It was Miller’s belief that, without corroborating medical evidence, the case would be difficult to prosecute. On the following day, Wilkins wrote a letter to Ron Campbell, an attorney for SDDSS, informing him of her opinion that Abigail had been sexually abused by Manzano and of the possibility that the State’s Attorney office might not prosecute the case. On April 24, 1992, a representative of the SDDSS contacted Miller and discussed a possible Abuse and Neglect Petition against Manzano. Separately, on April 27, 1992, McLane forwarded a warrant request to Pennington County State’s Attorney Dennis Groff asking that Manzano be charged with one count of first degree rape. On May 5, 1992, Miller interviewed Abigail, and on May 11,1992, a summons and petition alleging abuse and neglect against Manzano was served on his attorney. This petition was dismissed by the State’s Attorney office on July 6, 1992. Manzano was never arrested nor charged with any crime involving Abigail. Manzano was never questioned by SDDSS personnel regarding the alleged sexual abuse, and was interviewed by McLane only once on October 10, 1991.
Manzano’s weekly visits were supervised by SDDSS from October 1991 through May 1992. The record unfortunately does not provide a very clear picture of the events of that time period. On February 18, 1992, Brooks notified Manzano that she would be leaving the state for approximately ten days to look for employment and that Abigail would accompany her. Manzano asked for permission to keep the child while Brooks was away. On February 25, 1992, Nancy Fleming, an SDDSS employee in part responsible for overseeing the investigation, wrote a letter to the state trial judge expressing strong opposition to Manzano’s proposed unsupervised visitation. Apparently, this visitation did not take place. On March 2, 1992, the state court appointed Kay Lin-gren, M.S.W.,
In mid-May 1992, a four-day hearing was held in the divorce proceeding to consider the visitation and custody issues. At that hearing, Lingren testified that, among other things, the investigative work of the SDDSS was not thorough and lacked the requisite objectivity. In an order dated August 17, 1992, the state court concluded that sexual abuse had not been proven by a preponderance of the evidence. The state court found that Abigail’s statements left much room for alternative interpretation and noted that even the experts who testified at the hearing reached widely varying views on the significance of Abigail’s remarks. Further, the state court noted that there was no medical
Following the resolution of the custody dispute, Manzano filed the instant civil rights action, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985, in federal district court against the SDDSS, James Ellenbecker, Director of the SDDSS, Nancy Fleming and Susan Walsh, SDDSS employees who supervised the Man-zano investigation, and Wilkins (“SDDSS defendants”), and Pennington County, South Dakota, the Pennington County Sheriff’s Department, Don Holloway, the sheriff, and McLane (“County defendants”). Manzano alleged that the defendant officials had im-permissibly interfered with his Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest in the companionship of his daughter. He also alleged a number of pendent state law claims, which were subsequently dismissed by the district court. The SDDSS defendants moved for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. This motion was cursorily denied by the district court because it found that there were material issues of fact as to whether defendants conducted themselves in an objectively reasonable manner in light of clearly established constitutional law. Manzano v. South Dakota Department of Social Services, Civ. No. 93-5024 (D.S.D. Jan. 23, 1994). The County defendants also moved for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity, and that motion was denied as well for the reasons stated in the district court’s earlier order. Id. (May 13, 1994). The interlocutory appeals of the SDDSS defendants (No. 94-1572) and County defendant Lynn McLane (No. 94-2494) followed.
II.
“Qualified or ‘good faith’ immunity is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded by a defendant official.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
For a constitutional right to be clearly established, “[t]he contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right.” Anderson v. Creighton,
Manzano argues that appellants deprived him of his constitutionally protected interest in “familial relations with his daughter, Abigail, in violation of his substantive due process rights.” Brief for Appellee at 25. Appellants do not dispute that parents have a protected liberty interest in familial integrity, but they contend that, in the present case, this right has not been violated because the countervailing state interest in the protection of the child’s welfare justified their conduct.
Our court has recognized the liberty interest which parents have in the care, custody, and management of their children. Myers v. Morris,
The need to continually subject the assertion of this abstract substantive due process right to a balancing test which weighs the interest of the parent against the interests of the child and the state makes the qualified immunity defense difficult to overcome. Moreover, the requirement that the right be clearly established at the time of the alleged violation is particularly formidable. See Martinez,
Our difficulty with the present case principally arises because we fail to see how the actions of the defendant state officials rose to the level of a constitutional violation, even when viewing the record in the light most favorable to Manzano. His parental rights were clearly disrupted, but it is not clear that this disruption was caused by the unreasonable or unconstitutional actions of state officials. Initially, Manzano makes much of the fact that, after the second interview with Abigail, McLane advised Brooks to seek a temporary protection order. He argues that this was done without a reasonable suspicion of child abuse, and McLane thereby unconstitutionally interfered with Manzano’s relationship with his daughter.
The Fifth Circuit in Stem v. Ahearn,
This civil rights action follows an acrimonious child-custody dispute, with one parent leveling charges of child molestation against her former husband. Child protective services workers investigated and concluded, despite medical evidence to the contrary, that the father had sexually abused his minor daughter. As a consequence of this investigation, the mother secured a temporary state court order certifying herself as the exclusive conservator of the child.
Enjoined by [sic] court-ordered visitation, the father was denied access to his daughter for over four months. He asserts constitutional claims against the child protective services workers, the investigative agency, and the county. Among other charges, the father maintains that his fundamental parental rights were terminated without due process of law and, independently, that the investigation of the alleged molestation was orchestrated negligently and impinged upon various constitutional guarantees.
Id. at 2. As in the present case, in Stem, the investigator concluded that the child was molested despite the lack of medical corroboration. Further, the investigator reached this conclusion without interviewing the father. The plaintiff argued that “the investigation of the charge of child molestation, raised by his estranged wife, was so grossly negligent that it served to terminate fundamental parental rights in contravention of the process minimally due under the Constitution.” Id. at 3. Although Stem is vaguely cast in terms of procedural due process, we find its analysis instructive. In holding that the application of qualified immunity was appropriate, the court noted:
[Plaintiff] ignores the fact that his parental rights were impinged only after a judicial hearing at which he was fully heard. [Defendants] never physically removed [the] child from him or otherwise altered his parental rights under the law, although [a defendant] did testify in court concerning his investigatory conclusions and did advise the mother to keep the daughter away from the plaintiff.
In Stem, the investigating agency itself petitioned to secure the court order conferring exclusive conservatorship on the mother, and the investigating agent advised the mother to keep the child away from the father. Still, the court found no due process violation. In the present case, McLane, in nearly the identical position as the investigator in Stem, merely advised Brooks to seek a temporary protection order. Manzano was denied visitation rights for approximately two weeks because of a petition filed by his former wife in their divorce proceeding. In this petition, Brooks recited her allegations of sexual abuse and then merely stated that “professionals” advised her to take this action. Furthermore, the temporary protection order which prohibited any visitation by Manzano was issued by the state court based solely on “the uncorroborated sex abuse allegation” made by Brooks. Joint Appendix at 285. At the time, McLane advised Brooks to seek the order, she had conducted two interviews of Abigail and one of Brooks. She and Wilkins then agreed that further investigation was warranted. Under these facts and in the absence of evidence of improper motive, we see no constitutional violation resulting from McLane’s mere suggestion that Brooks seek available temporary judicial relief through her divorce proceeding. Further, the supervised visitation, which lasted from October 1991 to May 1992, was ordered by the state court only after a hearing in which Manzano fully participated. To the extent that the testimony of any of the SDDSS or County defendants affected the state court’s decision to allow only supervised visitation from October 1991 through May 1992, that testimony was entitled to absolute immunity from civil rights liability and cannot influence our consideration of Manzano’s constitutional claims.
At oral argument, counsel for Manzano cited, as support for his position, our recent decision in Ripson v. Alles,
Ripson is distinguishable for several reasons. In order for the arrest to have been lawful, it had to be founded on probable cause. Id. at 807. In the present case, we have not imposed the probable cause standard on McLane’s suggestion that Brooks seek a temporary protection order, nor have we even applied the less rigorous reasonable suspicion test. While the reasonable suspicion requirement may apply to some aspects of child abuse investigations, see Myers,
Manzano also contends that the investigative techniques employed by Wilkins and McLane violated many of the procedures set
Myers sheds considerable light on the present ease. In Myers, minor children and their guardians brought a § 1983 action against various state and county prosecutors, therapists, and law enforcement officers for the techniques they used to investigate suspected sexual abuse by parents. As a result of the investigation, some children were physically separated from parents who were never charged with sexual abuse. A number of detectives were accused of engaging in improper interrogation when questioning the children in order to elicit fabricated allegations of sexual abuse. Like the present case, there was evidence in Myers that “some children who were questioned ... consistently denied having been abused and then later made accusations.” Id. at 1459. In reaching the conclusion that qualified immunity was appropriate, we stated that
while the record contain[ed] examples of investigative mistakes and flawed interrogation, ... an imperfect investigation without more does not deprive the investigators of qualified immunity. Immunity is forfeited for the questioning function upon at least a preliminary showing that the interrogation so exceeded clearly established legal norms for this function that reasonable persons in the detectives’ position would have known their conduct was illegal.
Id. at 1460. We further concluded that the interviewing conduct occurred in a “grey area of investigative procedure as to which there were, and probably still are, less than clearly established legal norms.” Id. at 1461. Manzano has cited no authority which would indicate that the area has been clarified by subsequent legal precedent.
Although the record reveals an investigation which appears far from textbook perfect, the record of the investigation pursued by the SDDSS and the Sheriffs Department does not demonstrate conduct so outrageous that it offends the substantive component of the Due Process Clause. See Watterson,
III.
For the reasons discussed above, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
Notes
. Masters of Social Work.
. We recognize that the Supreme Court's decision in Siegert v. Gilley,
. Manzano also argues that Wilkins unreasonably "substantiated” child abuse on October 1, 1991, after the second interview with Abigail. Both parties use the term "substantiation” throughout their briefs, but neither provides a
. Our holding should in no way be interpreted as approval of the conduct of McLane and Wilkins. While we recognize that "[s]ociaI workers face extreme difficulties in trying simultaneously to help preserve families and to serve the child's best interests,” Martinez v. Mafchir, 35 F.3d
