Anthony Mots, a firefighter, seeks qualified immunity from a claim that he violated the constitutional rights of Aaron Becerra when his fire truck collided with Becerra’s car. Because Mots was responding to an emergency call and because it is not alleged that Mots intended to harm Becerra, we conclude that Mots is entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. We REVERSE the district court’s denial of summary judgment and REMAND with directions to dismiss Becerra’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims.
I
Mots is a firefighter employed by the Kansas City, Kansas Fire Department, a division of the Unified Government of Wyandotte County/Kansas City, Kansas (“Unified Government”). He was stationed at Pumper Station 9 when a house fire was reported over the dispatch system. He was dispatched to the fire and turned on his fire truck’s emergency lights and siren as soon as he left the station.
To reach the fire, Mots drove his fire truck westbound on Central Avenue, a major thoroughfare. Because it was an emergency call, he was speeding. According to an eye witness, Mots was traveling down Central Avenue at forty miles-per-hour, exceeding the thirty mile-per-hour speed limit.
Where Central Avenue crosses 18th Street is a five-way intersection; another major thoroughfare, Park Drive, shoots off this intersection to the southwest. The configuration of the buildings on this corner can block emergency lights and the sound of a siren. According to several witnesses, there was a red light when Mots approached the intersection. Mots testified that he did not remember whether there was a red light when he reached the corner, but, if there had been, it would have been visible for several blocks as he approached the intersection.
Before he reached 18th Street, Mots moved into the eastbound lane of oncoming traffic on Central Avenue because westbound traffic would not move in response to his siren and emergency lights. He also blew his air horn to warn other cars about his approach.
Becerra entered the intersection going eastbound on Central Avenue. Mots did not see Becerra’s car until a split second before he slammed into it. Several eyewitnesses — including one in a car that Mots swerved around — said that Becerra’s car was visible coming headlong into Mots’s path. An accident reconstruction expert stated that the firetruck hit Becerra’s car in a direct collision at twenty three to twenty four miles per hour. Becerra died as a result of injuries sustained in the accident.
Hector Becerra (“Hector”), administrator of Becerra’s estate, brought suit against Mots and the Unified Government. He was joined as a plaintiff by Angela Perez, who brought her claim on behalf of Sabrina Becerra, Becerra’s daughter and legal heir. 2 They each alleged violations of the Kansas Tort Claims Act, Kan. Stat. Ann. § 75-6101 et seq., and violations of Becerra’s constitutional rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by Mots and by the Unified Government. Hector and Perez claimed that Mots violated Becerra’s Fourteenth Amendment rights and that the Unified Government failed to properly train and supervise Mots and had policies that caused Becerra’s death. The Unified Government and Mots moved for summary judgment on the § 1983 claims. Mots asserted in his motion that the § 1983 claim against him was barred by qualified immunity.
The district court dismissed Perez’s § 1983 claims for lack of standing but held that there were questions of material fact that precluded summary judgment on Hector Becerra’s § 1983 claim against Mots. Specifically, it found that there were questions of material fact about both the proper standard to apply and the result upon the application of the applicable standard. Utilizing a novel reading of the Supreme Court’s decision in
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
II
Government officials who perform discretionary functions are entitled to qualified immunity if their conduct does not violate clearly established rights of which a reasonable government official would have known.
Hulen v. Yates,
Hector alleges that Mots violated the Fourteenth Amendment by crashing into Aaron Becerra’s car. The Due Process Clause has a substantive component, which bars “certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them.”
Lewis,
That said, the Fourteenth Amendment is not a “font of tort law to be superimposed upon whatever systems may already be administered by the States.”
Id.,
In
Lewis,
the Supreme Court clarified how courts should determine whether government action shocks the conscience. The Court held that a police officer who slammed his car into a motorcycle during a high-speed chase did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment because there was no allegation that the officer intended to harm the motorcycle driver.
Lewis
established a clear rule: When governmental officials face a situation “calling for fast action,” only official conduct done with an intent to harm violates the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
at 853,
The Court acknowledged, however, that behavior that would not violate the Fourteenth Amendment if done in a time-sensitive, high-pressure situation may nevertheless shock the conscience if the official has time to deliberate before acting. Thus, the Court held that when a government official has enough time to engage in “actual deliberation,” conduct that shows “deliberate indifference” to a person’s life or security will shock the conscience and thereby violate the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
at 851,
By ‘actual deliberation,’ we do not mean ‘deliberation’ in the narrow, technical sense in which it has sometimes been used in traditional homicide law. See, e.g., Caldwell v. State,203 Ala. 412 ,84 So. 272 , 276 (Ala.1919) (noting that “deliberation here does not mean that the man slayer must ponder over the killing for a long time”; rather, “it may exist and may be entertained while the man slayer is pressing the trigger of the pistol that fired the fatal shot[,] even if it be only for a moment or instant of time”).
Leims,
We have not had occasion to apply Lewis to a situation where a firefighter or police officer is involved in an automobile accident while responding to an emergency ■call. 3 However, it is clear from Lems that the intent to harm standard applies in this .case. A firefighter responding to a house fire has no time to pause. He has no time to engage in calm, reflective deliberation in deciding how to respond to an emergency call. Doing so would risk lives. This case presents a paradigmatic example of a decision that must be made in haste and under pressure.
Two other circuits and one state supreme court have addressed cases nearly identical to this one and have applied
Lewis’s
intent to harm standard as well. In
Carter v. Simpson,
The same result was reached by the Eighth Circuit in
Terrell.
There, police officers decided to provide extra back-up to a reported domestic disturbance. They
Likewise, in
Norton v. Hall,
Determining whether an emergency response provider was reckless in his driving depends on the danger posed by the emergency, the traffic conditions in a locality, and numerous other factors. State and local policy-makers can and do make rules governing how their emergency response providers should drive and the consequences for failing to do so. However, it simply cannot be said that the decision to drive quickly — even recklessly so — -in response to an emergency call shocks the conscience.
In holding that there was a question of material fact as to whether the deliberate indifference standard should apply the district court committed a mistake of law. 4 Under Lewis, the court should have applied the intent to harm standard. We may have remanded the case to the district court for application of the proper standard, but Becerra conceded at oral argument that there were no allegations and no facts in this case that supported a claim that Mots had an intent to harm. Because there is no such allegation in the complaint, we need not reach the question of what showing is necessary to evince an intent to harm. We simply hold that a bystander hit by an emergency response vehicle in the process of responding to an emergency call cannot sustain a claim under the substantive due process clause without alleging an intent to harm. As such, Mots should be granted qualified immunity.
Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s denial of summary judgment and REMAND with directions to dismiss Hector’s § 1983 claims.
Notes
. A negative right-of-way intersection is any intersection at which a driver faces a red light or a stop sign.
. ¿Angela Perez is birth mother, legal guardian and next friend to Sabrina Becerra.
. We did face the question before the Supreme Court decided
Lewis.
Under our preLewis jurisprudence, even extremely reckless driving by an emergency response provider did not constitute a violation of the substantive due process clause. In
Apodaca v. Rio Arriba County Sheriff’s Dep’t,
. Determining the proper legal standard is generally a question of law, not a question of fact.
Terrell,
