Appellant Patricia Robertson appeals the district court’s dismissal of her claims against Appellees Jimmy Hecksel and the City of Gainesville. Corey Rice, Robertson’s son, was killed by Officer Hecksel during a traffic stop. As a result of his death, Robertson argues she suffered a deprivation of her constitutionally-protected liberty interest in a continued relationship with her adult son. Whether a parent has such a right vis-á-vis her adult child is a question of first impression for this Court. We hold that the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due process protections do not extend to the relationship between a mother and her adult son and, therefore, affirm the district court’s dismissal of Robertson’s claims.
I. BACKGROUND
The district court succinctly summarized the facts:
On January 30, 2001, Decedent, Corey Rice (“Decedent Rice”) was pulled over in a traffic stop by City of Gainesville police officer Jimmy Hecksel (“Heck-sel”). Hecksel did not use his police sirens to pull over Decedent Rice, nor did he use any lights to illuminate Decedent Rice’s car. When Hecksel approached Decedent Rice’s car, he brandished his gun and struck the window with it. Then, he moved in front of *1256 Decedent Rice’s automobile and pointed the gun at Decedent Rice. Decedent Rice started to drive away in the opposite direction, and Hecksel fired his gun seven times, hitting Decedent Rice with four bullets. Decedent Rice was pronounced dead a few hours later.
Robertson v. Hecksel, Case No. 1:03CV10-SPM at 1-2 (N.D.Fla.2003). Rice was 30 years old at the time of his death.
The personal representative of Rice’s estate reached a settlement with Officer Hecksel and the City of Gainesville, “completely releas[ing] and forever discharging] [the] Defendants] from any and all past, present or future claims .... or any future wrongful death claim of Plaintiffs representatives or heirs, which have resulted or may result from the alleged acts or omissions of the Defendants].” 1 The settlement also stated: “[T]he parties acknowledge and agree that nothing contained in this release is intended nor shall anything be construed to release claims, if any, held by the mother of the decedent, Patricia Robertson.”
On January 27, 2003, Robertson, individually and in her capacity as personal representative, filed a complaint in the Northern District of Florida against Officer Hecksel and the City of Gainesville (Defendants). In her individual capacity, she alleged, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a deprivation of her Fourteenth Amendment right to a relationship with her adult son and sought damages for loss of support, loss of companionship, and past and future mental pain and suffering. 2 The Defendants moved to dismiss the claim pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and the district court granted their motion. Robertson appeals.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim de novo, “accepting the allegations in the complaint as true and construing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.”
Swann v. S. Health Partners, Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Constitutional Right of Companionship
“Section 1983 is no source of substantive federal rights. Instead, to state a section 1983 claim, a plaintiff must point to a violation of a specific federal right.”
Whiting v. Traylor,
A parent’s due process right in the care, custody, and control of her children is “perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized by [the Supreme] Court.”
Troxel v. Granville,
The substantive component of a parent’s right to care, custody, and control of her minor children has been relied upon to strike down several state statutes. The Supreme Court held a Nebraska law, which prohibited the teaching of any foreign languages to students until after the eighth grade, deprived parents of their right to “establish a home and bring up children ... [which has been] long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.”
Meyer v. Nebraska,
A parent’s right to care, custody, and control of her minor children has also been the source of added procedural protections. For example, the Supreme Court struck down an Illinois statute that made children of unwed fathers wards of the state upon the death of their mother.
Stanley v. Illinois,
It is against this backdrop that we analyze Robertson’s claim. She would have us hold that the parental rights already recognized by the Supreme Court include a right to companionship with an adult child. Robertson’s claim could potentially involve two very separate questions: one, whether the asserted right exists; and two, if the asserted right does exist, under what conditions does a deprivation occur, i.e., are we looking for negligent behavior, an intentional act, etc. One must have a right before it can be deprived; therefore, the state-of-mind of the accused party is irrelevant to the initial inquiry.
There appear to be three possible resolutions of Robertson’s claim: (1) she has a right and can recover for incidental deprivations; (2) she has a right, but cannot recover for incidental deprivations; and (3) she does not have a right.
The First, Third, Seventh, and District of Columbia Circuits have rejected claims like Robertson’s,
3
where the alleged deprivation was incidental to the defendant’s actions.
Russ v. Watts,
Valdivieso Ortiz began by noting the critical difference between the asserted right and the Supreme Court cases recognizing a parent’s substantive due process right to care, custody, and control her child:
[Those] cases do not hold that family relationships are, in the abstract, pro *1259 tected against all state encroachments, direct and indirect, but only that the state may not interfere with an individual’s right to choose how to conduct his or her family affairs. The emphasis in these cases on choice suggests that the right is one of preemption; rather than an absolute right to a certain family relationship, family members have the right, when confronted with the state’s attempt to make choices for them, to choose for themselves.
Valdivieso Ortiz,
The Third Circuit’s ultimate conclusion in
McCurdy
that “the fundamental guarantees of the Due Process Clause do not extend to a parent’s interest in the companionship of his independent adult child,”
McCurdy,
In Butera, the District of Columbia Circuit specifically noted that it had no reason to consider how the injury occurred:
Because we hold that a parent-child relationship between two independent adults does not invoke constitutional “companionship” interests, we do not reach the District of Columbia’s contention that Terry Butera’s claim fails because the District of Columbia’s actions were not intentionally directed or aimed at her relationship with her son.
Butera,
Like the District of Columbia Circuit, we hold Robertson has not asserted a cognizable due process interest. 5 Robert *1260 son does not allege the state has interfered with how she raises her minor child, as was the case in Meyer and Pierce, nor does she claim the state action targeted her custody of her minor child, as in San-tosky and Stanley. Therefore, her claim finds no support in Supreme Court precedent, and we decline to further expand the substantive protections of the Due Process Clause. 6
B. Brazier/Carringer
Robertson urges us to resolve her claim using a different analytical framework. She argues her claim is controlled by
Brazier v. Cherry,
The Supreme Court has recognized that “inevitably existing federal law will not cover every issue that may arise in the context of a federal civil rights action.”
Moor v. County of Alameda,
The jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters conferred on the district courts by [the Civil Rights Acts] for the protection of all persons in the United States in their civil rights, and for their vindication, shall be exercised and enforced in conformity with the laws of the United States, so far as such laws are suitable to carry the same into effect; but in all cases where they are not adapted to the object, or are deficient in the provisions necessary to furnish suitable remedies ... the common law, as modified and changed by the constitution and statutes of the State wherein the court having jurisdiction of such civil ... cause is held, so far as the same is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States, shall be extended to and govern the said courts in the trial and disposition of the cause....
42 U.S.C. § 1988(a).
“[A]s is plain on the face of the statute, [§ 1988] is intended to complement the various acts which do create federal causes of action for the violation of federal civil rights.”
Moor,
The importation of the policies and purposes of the States on matters of civil rights is not the primary office of the borrowing provision in § 1988; rather, the statute is designed to assure that neutral rules of decision will be available to enforce the civil rights actions, among them § 1983. Congress surely did not intend to assign to state courts and legislatures a conclusive role in the formative function of defining and characterizing the essential elements of a federal cause of action.
Wilson v. Garcia,
Brazier and Carringer were both instances where state law was used to fill gaps in federal law through § 1988’s borrowing provision. Robertson would have us also look to state law through § 1988’s borrowing provision to decide her case. Her argument misses the dispositive difference between Brazier and Carringer and our case. In those cases, the plaintiffs were seeking vindication of the decedent’s rights under § 1983. Here, Robertson alleges a violation of her rights. Regardless of whose rights are being asserted, before § 1983 and § 1988 can come into play, the plaintiff must still establish the existence of a federal right. Because Robertson has failed to establish a federal right, we never reach § 1983, let alone § 1988 and state law.
In
Brazier,
the plaintiff alleged her husband was beaten to death by Georgia police officers, in violation of his “rights and privileges of being secure in his person, of due process and equal protection of the law.”
The court spent the bulk of its opinion addressing the incorporation of Georgia’s survival statute, which allowed the decedent’s claims to survive his death, but it also incorporated Georgia’s wrongful death statute, a “separate and distinct cause[ ] of action” allowing certain survivors to recover the full value of the life of the decedent, id. at 407 n. 15, because “regard has to be taken of both classes of victims.” Id. at 409. The incorporation of Georgia’s wrongful death statute was not done in response to a violation of the wife’s rights: it was done to remedy the violation of the decedent’s rights. See id. at 408-09.
In
Carringer,
the plaintiffs son was shot and killed by the son’s wife, a police officer, with her service revolver. The decedent’s mother brought “a § 1983 claim for the wrongful death of the decedent whose constitutional rights were violated.”
The plaintiffs in Brazier and Carringer passed the first hurdle of bringing a § 1983 suit — identifying a federal right— by relying on the rights of the decedent. Cf. Steven H. Steinglass, Wrongful Death Actions and Section 1983, 60 Ind. L.J. 559, 621 (1985) (“Wrongful death statutes permit survivors to sue when a killing violated their decedent’s rights.... [B]oth survival and wrongful death actions assert the identical legal rights of the decedent.”). In essence, they were bringing wrongful death suits under federal law. Although the survivors’ claims were separate from the claims of the decedents’ estates, the Brazier and Carringer plaintiffs’ claims necessarily required a finding that the decedents’ deaths were wrongful in some way. Conversely, whether the decedent’s rights in our case were violated has no bearing on the ability of his mother to argue a loss of companionship, because her alleged cause of action is based on a viola *1262 tion of rights personal to her, not rights personal to the decedent. For that reason, Brazier and Carringer are not controlling. 9
IV. CONCLUSION
Our holding that a parent does not have a constitutional right of companionship with an adult child is in no way meant to minimize the loss of an adult child as compared to a minor child. The loss of a child at any age, under any circumstances, is one of the most difficult experiences a parent can endure. While the parent/adult child relationship is an important one, the Constitution does not protect against all encroachments by the state onto the interests of individuals. Instead, it is the province of the Florida legislature to decide when a parent can recover for the loss of an adult child. We will not circumvent its authority through an unsupported reading of the Fourteenth Amendment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Vicki Lynn McDonald was the personal representative of the Decedent’s estate at the time of the settlement. Decedent’s mother, Patricia Robertson, has since become the personal representative.
. This appeal does not involve Robertson’s claims brought as personal representative of the decedent's estate.
. The Tenth Circuit has recognized a parent's constitutionally protected liberty interest with her adult son, but did so under the First Amendment’s right of intimate association, which contains “an intrinsic element of personal liberty.”
Trujillo
v.
Bd. of County Comm’rs,
. The Ninth Circuit appears to have recognized the asserted right where the state action had the incidental affect of ending the parent/adult child relationship. In
Kelson v. City of Springfield, 161
F.2d 651 (9th Cir. 1985), the Ninth Circuit held, in the context of a minor child, that "a parent has a constitutionally protected liberty interest in the companionship and society of his or her child.”
Id.
at 655. Unlike
Kelson, Strandberg v. City of Helena,
. Although we hold the asserted right does not exist, even if we agreed with Robertson, we still must remember that the "Due Process Clause is simply not implicated by a negligent act of an official causing unintended loss of or injury to life, liberty, or property.”
Daniels v. Williams,
. As the plaintiff has not contended the decedent (who was 30 years old at the time of death) was a minor, we do not need to decide when a child crosses the threshold from minor to adult.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. Brazier’s suit was brought under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983, 1985, and 1986.
Brazier,
. Robertson’s belief that
Brazier
and
Cairinger
were controlling may have been caused in part by dicta in
Carringer.
Footnote nine of
Carringer
begins by noting that the "right to wrongful death recovery under § 1983 has generated considerable debate amongst our sister circuits” and then compares the
Brazier
analysis with the analysis of the circuits that "allow a claimant to argue that he had a relationship with the deceased that was constitutionally protected and that the homicide of the decedent destroyed that relationship and, therefore, violated the claimant's own protected constitutional rights.”
Carringer,
