Lead Opinion
Bruce Goodman (Goodman), a 67-year-old man suffering from dementia and prone to disorientation and confusion, was severely beaten by his cellmate while detained at the Clayton County Jail (the Jail) in the early morning hours of September 9-10, 2008. By and through his wife and next friend, Goodman filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the two officers charged with his supervision at the Jail in their individual capacities, and against the Sheriff of Clayton County in his official capacity. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. This is the appeal. Although the officers’ dereliction of duty on the night in question concerns us, the law compels that we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
We relate the facts — as we must at this stage of the litigation — in the light most favorable to Goodman. See Goebert v. Lee County,
Upon phoning 911 and learning that her husband had been arrested, Mary Goodman went to the Jail. She showed the officer at the second-floor desk her husband’s medical records, explained that he was cognitively impaired and showing signs of dementia, and asked the officer to ensure that her husband received his medication and that he be placed either in the infirmary or in isolation so that he would not unintentionally insult another inmate and thereby come in harm’s way.
Goodman was assigned to Housing Unit 7, an orientation unit in the Jail. He was specifically placed in Section 6 of Unit 7, the administrative segregation (or “admin”) section, where inmates are placed out of concern for their own safety or the safety of others. Though administrators at the Jail generally endeavor to place only one prisoner per cell in the admin section, Goodman was housed with another inmate, Antonio Raspberry.
Officers Robyn Boland and Herbert Feemster were the officers assigned to Unit 7 on the night in question. Boland worked in the control tower and Feemster served as the “runner,” orienting new detainees and — or so it was thought — performing “head counts” and “cell checks” of all the inmates in the unit. Clayton County Sheriffs Department (Sheriffs Department) policy required that Officers Boland and Feemster perform a “head count,”
The officers claim that the night of September 9 was extraordinarily busy, and that 42 detainees were awaiting orientation when the officers arrived to start their shift. They contend that they asked for additional manpower to assist them in their duties, but a supervisor denied their request. They also claim that during the 6 p.m. head count, an inmate had reported a desire to harm himself, a contingency that required Feemster to escort the troubled inmate to the infirmary and prepare a report about the incident. Despite the officers’ protestations that they were too busy to complete the required head counts and cell checks, Officer Boland made a long visit to another section of the Jail and took two lunch breaks rather than the one lunch break to which she was entitled.
At around 5 a.m. the next morning, Officer Feemster entered Goodman and Raspberry’s cell to deliver breakfast. Goodman was sitting on his bunk, covered in blood. He had contusions about his face. His eyes were swollen shut. The cell was laden with blood. Feemster called a supervisor, who asked Goodman what had caused his injuries. Goodman, clearly bewildered, lifted up his hands and said, “These two right here.” When asked why he had harmed himself, Goodman responded, “They told me to.” Despite Goodman’s statements, a Sheriffs Department investigative report subsequently found that Raspberry, Goodman’s cellmate, had inflicted the beating on Goodman. Goodman’s injuries were severe: he was taken to the intensive care unit at the local hospital and held there for seven days, and he spent two to three weeks in the Jail infirmary after being released from the hospital.
The Internal Affairs Division of the Sheriffs Department subsequently conducted an investigation, which revealed that one inmate, El Hadji Toure, had pushed the emergency call button in his cell several times during the night in question. Toure would later tell a Sheriffs Department investigator that he had pushed the button in order to notify officers that he heard a fight going on in Goodman’s cell. Boland and Feemster both admitted that — contrary to Sheriffs Department policy — they had deactivated Toure’s call button because they believed he was pushing the button so that he could request free time to use the telephone. Boland further testified that she sent an inmate worker to ask Toure what he wanted, and the inmate worker reported back that Toure wanted to use the telephone.
The Sheriffs Department investigative report also included the statements of two other inmates, Darin Slocum and Calandra Carmichael, who both reported that they heard sounds of a man being beaten coming from Goodman’s cell throughout the night. Boland and Feemster both adamantly deny having been aware of any violence or anything out of the ordinary in Goodman’s cell on the night of the incident. Both officers testified that they neither saw nor heard anything that would have made them aware of any risk to Goodman that night. Goodman did not depose any of the inmates who heard the melee in Goodman’s cell that night, nor did
Based in part on the investigative report, the Sheriff’s Department obtained a criminal arrest warrant charging Raspberry with Goodman’s beating. Upon the conclusion of the Internal Affairs investigation, the Sheriffs Department recommended that Officers Boland and Feem-ster be permanently terminated because they had been “neglectful in [their] duties ..., which allowed Bruce Goodman # 3574959 to become injured.” Nonetheless, after further review, the Sheriffs Department reduced Boland and Feemster’s suspensions to 30 days, and these 30-day suspensions were later shortened to 14 days.
Mary Goodman claims that ever since the violent episode at the Jail, her husband has been permanently altered and that, due to the advancement of his dementia, he is now indefinitely confined to a nursing home.
Acting as next friend to her husband, Mary Goodman sued Boland and Feemster in their individual capacities for violating Goodman’s Fourteenth Amendment rights by demonstrating a deliberate indifference to a substantial risk that he would be seriously injured at the Jail. She also sued Sheriff Kimbrough in his official capacity for her husband’s injuries and, lastly, sued on her own behalf for loss of support and consortium. The district court granted summary judgment as to all claims, and Goodman appeals.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to Goodman, the nonmoving party. Liese v. Indian River Cnty. Hosp. Dist.,
1. Individual Capacity Claims Against Boland and Feemster
“A prison official’s deliberate indifference to a known, substantial risk of serious harm to an inmate violates the Fourteenth Amendment.” Cottone v. Jenne,
The second element — that Boland and Feemster have evidenced a deliberate indifference to a serious risk that Goodman would be injured — forms the crux of the matter at hand. To prove that
In other words, a plaintiff in Goodman’s position must show not only that there was a substantial risk of serious harm, but also that Boland and Feemster “subjectively knew of the substantial risk of serious harm and that [they] knowingly or recklessly disregarded that risk.” Hale,
We turn then to the facts of this case. Viewing the facts and taking all reasonable inferences in Goodman’s favor, the evidence shows that: (1) Boland and Feem-ster failed to perform the required cell checks and the midnight head count in Section 6; (2) Feemster reported having completed the 6 p.m. head count even though he did not actually enter the cells in Section 6; (3) Boland and Feemster deactivated emergency call buttons that evening without investigating the reason the buttons had been pressed; (4) Toure told an inmate worker that there was a fight in Goodman’s cell; (5) three inmates, including Toure, heard sounds of violence emanating from Goodman’s cell; and (6) despite claiming that she was swamped with inmates awaiting orientation, Boland took two lunch breaks and made a long visit to intake on the night Goodman was attacked.
In our view, the problem with this case is that no evidence presented would support a reasonable jury’s finding that Boland and Feemster harbored a subjective awareness that Goodman was in serious danger while in his cell on the night of September 9-10, 2008. The failure to conduct the cell checks and head counts is negligence of the purest form; it is of no value in answering the key question here — namely, whether Boland and Feemster knew of a substantial risk of serious harm to Goodman. The deactivation of the emergency call buttons is more egregious, but here too we find evidence of
Make no mistake — we do not quarrel with the proposition that, by failing to diligently carry out their duties at the Jail, Boland and Feemster wronged Goodman. See Purcell,
That subtle distinction is dispositive of this appeal. Our cases are clear that to survive summary judgment on a deliberate indifference claim, the plaintiff must present some evidence of prison officials’
Our decision in this case should not be taken to condone Boland and Feemster’s actions. To the contrary, we are disturbed by the dereliction of duty that facilitated the violence visited upon Goodman while he was under the officers’ charge. But we are federal judges, not prison administrators, and the standards for coloring a constitutional claim in this area of the law are exacting for the very purpose of preventing federal judges like us from meddling, even by our best lights, in the administration of our nation’s prisons. Cf. Rhodes v. Chapman,
2. Official Capacity Claims Against Sheriff Kimbrough
Goodman’s claim against Sheriff Kimbrough in his official capacity fares
Goodman does not allege that any official Sheriffs Department policy violated his constitutional rights. In fact, he concedes that the Sheriffs Department’s written policy required Boland and Feemster to conduct head counts inside every cell at 6 p.m. and midnight, and to conduct visual cell checks once per hour after midnight. He also concedes that Sheriffs Department policy expressly forbade Boland and Feemster from deactivating emergency call buttons in the cells at the Jail. Therefore, Goodman cannot claim that an official action or policy of the Sheriffs Department caused his injury. Nonetheless, Goodman contends on appeal that Boland and Feemster’s violation of written Sheriffs Department policies was so widespread that it constituted a custom with the force of law. See Sewell v. Town of Lake Hamilton,
“Our decisions establish that supervisory liability for deliberate indifference based on the implementation of a facially constitutional policy requires the plaintiff to show that the defendant had actual or constructive notice of a flagrant, persistent pattern of violations.” Goebert,
As we see it, the fact that jailers in Clayton County did not enter every cell in accordance with policy and commonly deactivated emergency call buttons is simply insufficient to meet the “extremely rigorous standard for supervisory liability” that our cases demand in cases such as these. See Goebert,
3. Mary Goodman’s Loss of Consortium Claim
Having resolved Goodman’s constitutional claims, Mary Goodman’s state-law loss of consortium claim falls neatly into place. Under Georgia law, a claim for loss of consortium by one spouse is derivative and dependent upon the existence of some viable claim by the other spouse. Henderson v. Hercules, Inc.,
Ill. Conclusion
Although the facts of this case are disturbing, we conclude that the district court did not err in granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Technically, the deliberate indifference cause of action grew up in Eighth Amendment jurisprudence and applies only to convicted prisoners. See Purcell ex rel. Estate of Morgan v. Toombs County,
. To boot, all of this ignores the fact that Toure’s statements, included as part of the Sheriff's Department investigative report, are rank hearsay. Even accepting that the conclusions drawn in the report itself are admissible under the public records exception to the hearsay rule, see Fed.R.Evid. 803(8), the statements of third-parties within that report are double hearsay not within any exception to the rule. "[PJlacing otherwise inadmissible hearsay statements by third-parties into a government report does not make the statements admissible.” United Techs. Corp. v. Mazer,
. Because Goodman’s deliberate indifference claim fails, Boland and Feemster have no need of qualified immunity, and we do not address it. See Carter,
. Though Sheriff Kimbrough is the named defendant, "a suit against a governmental official in his official capacity is deemed a suit against the entity that he represents.” Brown v, Neumann,
. Goodman also brought a claim against Kim-brough for negligent hiring, supervision, and retention. The district court granted summary judgment as to this claim, and Goodman does not raise it in his briefs. We deem it abandoned. Access Now, Inc. v. Sw. Airlines Co.,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I do not join Judge Wilson’s opinion, but I concur in the result.
