MEMORANDUM OPINION GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This сause is before the court on the motion of the defendants for summary judg *509 ment. The court previously entered an order which granted a motion to dismiss as to Austin Stanciel in his individual capacity and denied the motion with regard to the City of Greenwood and Austin Stanciel in his official capacity.
Facts
On May 4, 1991, the plaintiff and her husband, Larry Newsom, were visiting the plaintiffs brother, Danilo Zamora, in Greenwood, Mississippi. By early afternoon, Danilo and Larry had begun drinking alcohol. After dinner Larry Newsom stopped, but Danilo continued. Later in the evening, Danilo and his wife, Nidia, along with the plaintiff and Larry, went to the lounge at the Scottish Inn on Highway 82 in Greenwood. Danilo continued to drink. He become involved in a fight with another patron, and a proprietor of the lounge, Luther French, called the police. Greenwood police officers Steve Bland, Todd Moore, Leon Edwards, Reginald Dean, and auxiliary officer Eugene Walker all responded to the scene. Danilo was handcuffed, removed from the lounge, put into the police vehicle driven by Officer Dean and Officer Walker, and transported to the Greenwood Police Department. Danilo was visibly mad, resisted the police officers, and vowed vengeance against Luther French.
Michelle French, the daughter of an owner of the lounge, told Officer Edwards that Danilo might have a weapon. Edwards radioed this information to police department personnel. The Frenches decided not to press charges against Danilo, after Officer Bland told them that Danilo would nevertheless be held for about six hours. Nidia called the police depai’tment and was told that her husband Danilo would be held until morning. At the police department, Officer Dean removed Danilo’s handcuffs and told him to wash his face at the water faucet. After talking with Danilo, Officer Bland left Danilo in the carport of the police department and went inside. When Officer Edwards walked back outside, both Officer Bland and Danilo were gone.
Danilo returned to his home shortly thereafter, proceeded to a bedside table, and retrieved his gun. He told his sister, the plaintiff, and Larry Newsom to leave his house. He was very angry and appeared to be still intoxicated. Somehow during the confusion, Danilo Zamora shot and killed his brother-in-law, Larry Newsom, the plaintiffs husband.
Summary Judgment Standard
On a motion for summary judgment, the court must ascertain whether there is a‘genuine issue of material fact. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). This requires the court to evaluate “whether there is the need for a trial— whether, in other words, there are any genuine fаctual issues that properly can be resolved only by a finder of fact because they may reasonably be resolved in favor of either party.”
Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby,
Inc., All
U.S. 242, 250,
Discussion
The plaintiff seeks relief through three separate theories. 1 The first alleges a violation of the plaintiffs substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment and brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The second alleges the City of .Greenwood failed to adequately train and/or supervise its police officers which resulted in a violation of the plaintiffs substantive due process rights. Finally, the plaintiff seeks recovery under Mississippi’s wrongful death statute. The defendants assert that they did not violate the plaintiffs due process rights since they did not have a duty to protect the plaintiff from random acts of violence. They argue that the plaintiff has presented no evidence of deliberate indifference in training their law enforcement officers. And finally, defendants state they are protected against аny state law claims by the doctrine of sovereign immunity.
I. Due Process Clause
The plaintiff claims a violation under the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution which provides: “nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” A section 1983 action can be successfully stated only where the plaintiff demonstrates that she has asserted a recognized “liberty or property” interest within the purview of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that she was intentionally or recklessly deprived of that interest under color of state law.
See Westbrook v. City of Jackson, Mississippi,
There generally does not exist a constitutional right to basic governmental services, such as fire and police protection.
See Youngberg v. Romeo,
[Njothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors. The Clause is phrased as a limitation on the State’s power to act, not as a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and security. It forbids the State itself to deprive individuals of life, liberty, or property without “due process of law,” but its language cannot fairly be extended to impose an affirmative obligation оn the State to ensure that those interests do not come to harm through other means.
If the Due Process Clause does not require the State to provide its citizens with particular protective services, it follows that the State cannot be held liable under the Clause for injuries that could have been averted had it chosen to provide them.
DeShaney,
“Section 1983 imposes liability for violations of rights protected by the Constitution, not for violations of duties of care arising out of tort law.”
Baker v. McCollan,
“A substantive due process right to protective services exists when the state holds persons in custody or similarly limits their ability to care for themselves.”
Salas,
The affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf ... in the substantive due process analysis, it is the State’s affirmative act of restraining, the individual’s freedom to act on his own behalf ... which is the “deprivation of liberty” triggering the protection of the Due Process Clause, not its failure to act ,to protect his liberty interest against harms inflicted by other means.
Id.
“Courts have found a denial of due process when the state creates the faced dangers.”
Salas,
at 309
(citing Gregory v. City of Rogers,
a constitutional duty to protect an individual against private violence may exist in a non-custodial setting if the state has taken affirmative action which increases the individual’s danger of, or vulnerability to, such' violence beyond the level it would have been at absent state action.
Freeman v. Ferguson,
If the state puts a man in a position of danger from private persons and then fails to protect him, it will not be heard to say that its role was merely passive; it is as much an active tortfeasor as if it had thrown him into a snake pit.
First, this court does not believe the plaintiff has submitted evidence which raises a genuine issue of fact that Danilo had violent tendencies, or that the police knew or should have known that Danilo had violent tendencies. Second, the court has been presented no evidence that the defendants had reasons to know that the decedent was in any particular danger from Danilo. And third, the plaintiff has not presented any evidence that the defendants either created or increased the decedent’s chances of encountering this random act of violence.
The plaintiff argues that the police knew that Danilo was intoxicated and angry, possibly possessed a firearm, and had a history of violent behavior, and they should have known that Larry Newsom, as a house guest, faced a special danger from Danilo if he were not held for six hours. The court simply cannot agree. Taken as true all of the propositions argued by the plaintiff which the police could have observed or wеre in prior knowledge of, how would the police have known that Larry Newsom somehow was in particular danger? There is no evidence that the Greenwood police knew Larry Newsom was staying at Danilo’s home. Even if they had known, there is no evidence, beyond mere allegations, which would not have been available to the police on the night of May 4, 1991, that Danilo was predisposed to commit an act of such a violent nature. The plaintiff argues vehemently that Danilo’s intoxicated condition mandated his incarceration. Yet the police officers testified during their depositions that arresting an individual for public drunkenness was a decision left to each officer. Officer Bland stated that he knew Danilo had been drinking, but that he did not appear any more intoxicated than the other patrons of the Scottish Inn Lounge. The plaintiffs contrary evidence does not make Danilo’s state of intoxication a material issue. What are material issues, and undisputed, are that Larry Newsom was never in the custody of the defendants and that Danilo Zamora was not an employee of the defendants.
The Supreme Court in DeShaney stated: While the State may have been aware of the dangers that Joshua faced in the free world, it played no part in their creation, nor did it do anything to render him any more vulnerable to them. That the State once took temporary custody of Joshua does no alter the analysis, for when it returned him to his father’s custody, it placed him in no worse position than that which he would have been in had it not acted at all.
Id.
The plaintiff argues that the court should adopt the rulings announced in
Cornelius v. Town of Highland Lake,
The town officials contacted the prison to obtain inmate labor, accepted the inmates assigned to them and undertook to supervise the inmates while they worked. The defendants in this case therefore affirmatively created a potentially dangerous situation. This situation, combined with the culpable actions of the prison and town officials and the status of Mrs. Cornelius as the town clerk, effectively operated to place her in a position of danger distinct from that facing the public at large.
Cornelius,
The case of
Estate of Sinthasomphone v. City of Milwaukee,
[Sinthasomphone] was then taken into what could be termed, at least, as brief police custody. During the time the police were in control, they prevented others from helping him. Then the police returned him to Dahmer’s apartment.
Estate of Sinthasomphone,
In
Wood v. Ostrander,
The fact that Ostrander arrested Bell, impounded his car, and apparently stranded Wood in a high-crime area at 2:30 a.m. distinguishes Wood from the general public and triggers a duty of the police to afford her some measure of peace and safety.
Id.
II. Failure to Train
The plaintiff has sued the City of Greenwood and its chief of police, Austin Stanciel, who would be an official policymaker for Greenwood. For the plaintiffs failure to train claim to survive, she must raise a genuine issue of fact as to the existence of the following thrée elements:
1) the training procedure of the municipality’s policymaker was inadequate; 2) the municipality’s policymaker was deliberately indifferent in adopting the training policy; and 3) the inadequate training policy directly caused the plaintiff to suffеr a constitutional violation.
See Benavides v. County of Wilson,
The City of Greenwood had a written policy which stated:
Any intoxicated person -arrested will be placed in the appropriate drunk tank and kept there until sober. For purposes of his safety and the safety of others, an intoxicated person will not be permitted bond until sober.
Additionally, the police department appears to have evolved an understood custom of maintaining intoxicated individuals for a minimum of six hours. The plaintiff contends that inadequate training, which amounted to deliberate indifferenсe, led to the police officers not following the policies which,-if followed, would have prevented Larry’s death.
Initially, the court notes that “failure to follow procedural guidelines standing alone, does not implicate constitutional liability.”
Evans v. City of Marlin, Tex.,
For a police chief, who was not alleged to have been personally involved in the incident, to incur § 1983 liability “thеre must be a causal connection between an act of the police chief and the constitutional violation sought to be redressed.”
Harvey v. Andrist,
Even if the officers had been trained to perfection, the decision not to incarcerate Danilo is still within the individual discretion of the police officers. Hindsight has provided the plaintiff an opportunity to point an accusing finger at the police officers for not having incarcerated Danilo, but this court cannot say with certainty that the officers were negligent, much less that the training of the police was deliberately indifferent to the rights of the plaintiff. The court is unable to discern the causal connection between the failure to incarcerate Danilo and the shooting of Larry Newsom. The allegation of inadequate training is one step further removed, making any causal connection that much more tenuous. Additionally, if the police had maintained Danilo for six hours, this does not necessarily mean Larry Newsom would not have been shot upon the rеlease of Danilo.
Finally, the plaintiff must raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the decedent suffered a violation of a constitutional right.
See City of Canton,
III. State Law Claims
Plaintiffs remaining theory of liability is pursuant to Mississippi’s wrongful death statute. This court has only supplemental jurisdiction over this claim because of its original jurisdiction over the plaintiffs § 1983 claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). The stаtutory grant of jurisdiction is discretionary, even after the court no longer has original jurisdiction. Section 1367(c) provides:
The district courts may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim under subsection (a) if-
*515 (3) the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction, or
(4) in exceptional circumstances, there are other compelling reasons for declining jurisdiction. ,
If this court were to dismiss the plaintiffs state law claim for lack of jurisdiction, she would have to file her cause of action in a circuit court of the State of Mississippi. Although the parties have prepared for trial, there are presently pending before the court plaintiffs motions for a continuance and to reopen discovery. The court recognizes the tremendous time and expense incurred by the parties to date, but since sovereign immunity bars plaintiffs state law claim of wrongful death, it is appropriate to maintain supplemental jurisdiction in order to disposе of the plaintiffs state law claim on the merits in an expeditious manner.
The defendants allege that the plaintiffs wrongful death claim is barred by sovereign immunity. Mississippi’s sovereign immunity has experienced a tremulous existence since the Mississippi Supreme Court decided
Pruett v. City of Rosedale,
The plaintiffs cause of action occurred or accrued on or about May 4, 1991, prior to the
Presley
decision. Of the five justices in the
Presley
majority finding § 11-46-1 et seq. unconstitutional, three of the justices gave the decision prospective application and two of them, in a concurring opinion, felt it should be applied retrospectively. In
Churchill v. Pearl River Basin Dev. Dist.,
Most recently, the Mississippi Supreme Court, in
Morgan v. City of Ruleville,
Accordingly, the court finds the actions of the police officers, specifically the decision not to incarcerate Danilo, were discretionary matters, and thus defendants are immune from damages for any resulting tortious injuries. Additionally, sovereign immunity is not waived by the City of Greenwood being a member of the MMLP.
See McGee v. Parker,
An order in accordance with this memorandum opinion shall be issued.
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
In accordance with a Memorandum Opinion issued contemporaneously, IT IS ORDERED:
That the defendants’ motion for summary judgment is granted;
That the plaintiffs motion for continuance is moot and therefore denied; and
That the plaintiffs motion to reopen discovery is moot and therefore denied;
That this cause is hereby dismissed with prejudice.
Notes
. The court will refer to Elizabeth Z. Newsom in her derivative, representative and individual capacity as "plaintiff.”
