In the early morning of November 29, 1973, Virgil Williams, Jr. was lawfully arrested and taken to the Atlanta Police station. Apparently intoxicated, Williams was violent and unruly. At the police station, Williams successfully refused to be handcuffed. Once inside, he resisted efforts to take his fingerprints, and an ensuing scuffle was subdued only through the efforts of at least four officers. Williams was forcibly carried to a locked holding room, where he was chained to a steel bench. Williams somehow broke the shackle loose from the bench and pounded the room door; his fury subsided when an officer came in to talk. After some further unsuccessful efforts to take his fingerprints, Williams was escorted to the third floor of the station house, where he was placed in the custody of the defendants.
Defendant McIntyre led Williams to a telephone room, and left him there for several minutes. McIntyre returned to the telephone room and requested that Williams go peaceably to his cell. Williams, who then was lying on a bench, did not respond. McIntyre twice tried to have Williams sit up on the bench, but each time Williams lay back down. Finally, McIntyre attempted to lift Williams off the bench by pulling on Williams’ shirt. Williams suddenly twisted out of his shirt, and stood bare chested facing McIntyre, menacing him with clenched fists. At this point defendant Kelley, knowing that McIntyre was unarmed, approached Williams from behind and grasped him in a choke hold. Both men crashed to the floor and Kelley’s hold was broken. Kelley then applied a second choke hold, and commenced carrying Williams out of the telephone room while defendant McIntyre held Williams’ legs. Before the men had gone ten feet, however, Williams lost consciousness; he subsequently died despite defendants’ efforts to revive him. The apparent cause of death was strangula *697 tion, although some expert testimony pointed to ventricular fibrilation (cardiac arrest).
Plaintiff, Williams’ mother, sued Kelley and McIntyre for wrongful death. She claimed that, as a matter of Georgia law, defendants were liable for negligence and battery. Since defendants were government employees, however, plaintiff sought no relief under state law but rested exclusively on 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1976). Even so, plaintiff evidently persuaded the district court that state law governed the extent of defendants’ liability, since the court purported to judge their conduct by the standard announced in
Thomas v. Williams,
The district court correctly observed that § 1983 “should be read against the background of [common law] tort liability.”
Monroe v. Pape,
The deceased’s interest in life plainly was of constitutional dimension. U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1. We thus must ask whether defendants’ conduct — independent of its lawfulness or unlawfulness at state law — was sufficiently egregious as to be “constitutionally” tortious. This question often is resolved under the banner of qualified official immunity, which looks principally to the actors’ good faith.
See, e.g., Procunier v. Navarette,
such factors as the need for the application of force, the relationship between the need and the amount of force that was used, the extent of injury inflicted, and whether force was applied in a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline or maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.
Johnson v. Glick,
Williams’ resistance on the third floor began passively, [but] became violent when Williams faced McIntyre with clenched fists. Fearing that Williams was about to attack McIntyre, Kelly [sic] acted reasonably in attempting to get Williams under his physical control. Thereafter, Williams’ strength revealed itself as he was able to release himself from Kelly’s [sic] hold. The officers’ efforts at that point were clearly made in order to protect their own safety, as well as that of Williams and the third floor in general. .
[T]he situation necessitated spontaneous reaction, and defendants acted without the benefit of hindsight. The chokehold had never caused a death or serious injury in the history of the Atlanta Police Department, and for that reason perhaps defendants were not adequately warned of its potential dangers. In any event, it is clear that the hold was not used to inflict harm on Williams, but was applied in a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline.
Williams v. Kelley and McIntyre,
No. C751685A (N.D. Ga., filed April 29, 1977), at 5-6,
quoting Johnson v. Glick,
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment is
AFFIRMED.
