Lead Opinion
Patti E. Johnson, an inmate at the Jasper County Detention Center (the Deten
Patti Johnson (Johnson), her sisters Laura Johnson (Laura) and Stacey Hall, and Karen Mitchell were incarcerated at the Detention Center. Staff decided to to put the four women in lockdown
What happened after the sisters returned to their cell is the focus of Johnson’s claim for excessive force. We recount these facts in the light most favorable to Johnson as we should when reviewing summary judgment. Johnson produced evidence that after they all reentered their cell, Laura banged a shampoo bottle on the desk and threw toilet paper at the wall. Several officers decided to enter the cell. As some of them moved towards Laura who was in the back of the cell, Johnson stepped in front of Sergeant Blaukat and asked him not to touch her sister, assuring him that the cellmates would be able to calm her down. Sergeant Blaukat told Johnson to move, but she did not. At this point Terry tackled Johnson to the floor and tried to handcuff her. He was able to cuff one of her hands and struggled to get the other one. According to her evidence, Johnson tried to produce her other hand for cuffing but it was caught underneath her. She could not pull the hand out because Officers Terry, Douglas, and Roughton had piled on top of her. Even though Johnson explained that her hand was stuck, Terry placed an Orcutt Police Nonchaku (OPN)
The testimony of the officers varied from Johnson’s account. Terry stated that Laura was throwing objects around the cell, that Johnson lunged at one of the deputies who was trying to restrain Laura, and that Douglas handcuffed one of Johnson’s wrists but could not cuff the other because Johnson kept turning. Terry testified further that after he wrestled Johnson to the ground, she continued to resist and locked her hands under her stomach. He then used the OPN on her forearm to
Johnson and her cellmates brought this civil action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law, asserting that their rights had been violated by the use of excessive force, deliberate indifference, and retaliation. All of the claims except the Johnsons’ excessive force claims were voluntarily dismissed, and the district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on those claims. Only Johnson appeals.
On defendants’ motion for summary judgment, all disputed facts and the inferences that could be drawn from them were to be viewed in the light most favorable to Johnson. See Schoolhouse, Inc. v. Anderson,
The district court cited Johnson’s deposition testimony regarding her reason for approaching the guards as they entered the cell:
It was Captain Blauket3 and Matt Terry was the first ones through that door because I stepped in front of Mr. Blauket to keep him from getting to Laura, and I did — I said, Look, you’re not putting your hands on my sister, and he told me, I’m not going to hurt her. I said, You’re not putting your hands on my sister. All you have to do is step back out and shut that door and we’ll calm her down. You know, she’s just upset. And then after that I was hit. I mean hit like a football player. Matt Terry was the first one that hit me, and I fell to the floor.
The district court found from the evidence that Johnson had “clearly tried to step in and physically prevent the officers from doing their job.” The court went on to say that “[i]t is not an unreasonable inference to find that Plaintiff was actively resisting the efforts of the officers” (emphases added). In the district court’s view the use of force was “quite limited” and “not done in a malicious or sadistic manner.” The court said that it “[did] not find that Plaintiff has established that the use of force was anything more than a good faith effort to maintain and restore discipline” and concluded that Johnson had not presented sufficient evidence of wanton infliction of pain to allow the case to reach a jury. It closed by granting summary judgment to the three remaining officers.
On appeal Johnson argues that the district court improperly construed the evidence in a light favorable to the moving parties instead of her. She asserts that the record demonstrates that she had an actionable claim based on the officers’ elective and avoidable use of force in violation of a number of Detention Center policies. She points out that the officers only entered the cell after the door had been shut, that they admitted they did not have concerns about their safety or that of other inmates, that they applied severe force, and that she suffered actual injuries. Appellees
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Hutson v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
The Eighth Amendment bars correctional officers from imposing unnecessary and wanton pain on inmates, regardless of whether there is evidence of any significant injury. See Hudson v. McMillian,
The Detention Center has regulations restricting the use of force and the use of pepper spray. Force may be used by officers “to defend themselves or another person or to subdue a resisting subject.” Regulation on Use of Force, No. 2-3, at IV.A.1. (Jasper Cty. Sheriffs Dep’t, April 19, 1990) [Detention Center Force Regs.]. Mace may be used for “self-defense, defense of a third person, or to subdue a violently resisting subject”, but it may not be used to “threaten, to elicit information or persuade people to comply with orders” if the individual is handcuffed or properly in custody. Detention Center Force Regs, at IV.C. The pepper spray regulation states that pepper spray may be used when “the aggressor has failed to comply with the Deputie’s [sic] verbal instructions” and the aggressor has been issued a warning that the spray will be used, but it may not be used “in anticipation against mere verbal threats of violence or resistance”. Regulation on Use of OC/Pepper Spray, No. 2-21, at III. (Jasper Cty. Sheriffs Dep’t, May 15,1997).
According to Johnson, force was applied in violation of these policies at a time when she was not resisting the- officers. She testified that she had gone back to her cell and was trying to calm and protect her sister Laura who had just banged the shampoo bottle on the desk. Then she was suddenly thrown to the floor and buried under three correctional officers, choked, and maced without warning. Her head was banged against the floor while she was trying to comply with the order to produce her second hand after the other one had already been cuffed. She claims that her injuries included a broken thumb and two black eyes. While she was given a towel and taken to the shower after the incident, she was also deprived of hygiene products even though she was menstruating.
The trier of fact might well come to agree with the district court’s assessment of the evidence, but the court erred by finding facts in favor of the defendants on disputed material issues. Instead of viewing the contested facts in favor of Johnson, the district court drew inferences in favor of Terry and Douglas, finding that their actions were done in “good faith” and were “quite limited”. Particularly when considering such fact specific issues, see Treats,
Although force may be used by correction officers in a good faith effort to maintain discipline, see Hudson,
Although Johnson appeals the entire grant of summary judgment, the only officers she cites by name for having used physical force against her are Terry, Douglas, and Roughton. We conclude that the evidence as to Roughton was insufficient to sustain an excessive force claim, and Johnson does not make specific allegations of excessive force against the other remaining officers. The district court did not err in dismissing them.
Johnson asserts that the court erred by ruling in favor of the officers with supervisory authority — Captain Carr, Lieutenant Moback, Sergeant Blaukat, and Sergeant Riley — because they witnessed the actions of their subordinates and failed to stop them. Appellees respond that there is no respondeat superior liability under § 1983 and that there is no basis for a deliberate indifference claim against them. Supervisors can be individually liable if they directly participate in a constitutional violation or if they failed to supervise and train officers. See Andrews v. Fowler,
Finally, we address the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Jasper County. A claim against a county is sustainable only where a constitutional violation has been committed pursuant to an official custom, policy, or practice. See Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of the City of New York,
After a thorough review of the record, we reverse the summary judgment as to Officers Terry and Douglas and remand the claims against them for trial and we affirm the judgment of the district court dismissing the claims against all other defendants.
Notes
. Lockdown is a disciplinary action which confines inmates to their cell for twenty three hours a day.
. The record indicates that an OPN is a device similar to a numchuck, which consists of two polycarbonate sticks connected by a rope.
. Kevin Blaukat was a Sergeant when the incident took place but had been promoted to Captain by the time this action was filed.
. Officer Terry’s name is not included on the brief filed by counsel for the appellees.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the judgment of the Court, but wish to emphasize that the corrections officers were justified in using some force to restore discipline due to Johnson’s initial resistance. Johnson testified in her deposition that she stepped in front of Sergeant Blaukat and told him not to touch her sister, that Blaukat responded by telling Johnson to move and that he was not going to hurt Laura, and that Johnson refused to comply. Accordingly, I see no error in the district court’s statement that Johnson “clearly tried to step in and physically prevent the officers from doing their job.” Because Johnson stepped in front of an officer during a tense situation and failed to comply with his verbal order, the corrections officers were justified in using some level of force in order to control the situation. Cf. Hickey v. Reeder,
I find that summary judgment was not appropriate in this case because there are genuine issues of material fact regarding what happened after the initial use of force against Johnson. As the Court found, there are disputed issues of material fact as to whether Johnson continued to resist and whether the force applied was excessive. See Whitley v. Albers,
