This case arises from a hostile encounter between a teacher and her student. Plaintiff-Appellant Wendy Peterson (“Plaintiff’), acting on behalf of her minor son Jonathon Peterson (“Jonathon” or “the student”), appeals the district court’s decision granting summary judgment in her Section 1983 suit to Defendants Amber Baker (“Baker” or “the teacher”), Jonathon’s eighth-grade teacher; Eddie Mosley (“the principal”), principal of Jonathon’s school; Trudy Sowar (“the superintendent”), superintendent of the school district; and the Paulding County School District (“the school district”). Seeing no reversible error, we affirm the judgment.
I. Background
This action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 arises from a confrontation between Jonathon and his eighth-grade reading teacher. As a first-year teacher, Baker taught remedial reading at Herschel Jones Middle School. During the 2003-2004 school year, fourteen-year-old Jonathon was assigned to her class.
The incident giving rise to this lawsuit оccurred in February 2004 when Jonathon and classmate Willip Landers arrived late to class. Both students were talking during class; so, the teacher told Landers to leave the classroom. Jonathon testified that he thought the teacher directed him to step outside as well. When Jonathon attempted to leave the room with Landers, the teacher told Jonathon to sit back down; but he refused “[bjecause [he] wanted to leave.” The teacher yelled at Jonathon and shook her finger in his face. As he moved toward the classroom door, the teacher then placed her left arm across the doorframe, again instructing Jonathon to take his seat. Still, Jonathon refused to be seated. The teacher claims that Jonathon pushed her, causing her to stumble, and that he grabbed her hand and knocked her arm from the doorframe. Jonathon admits only that he “moved her hand off the door ... not hard, just pushed it down.” That Jonathon initiated physical contact with the teacher is undisputed.
Then, as Jonathon reached for the doorknob, the teacher grabbed his neck. In his deposition, Jonathon claimed that she “squeez[ed] my neck to where I was starting not to be able to breathe.” According to the teacher, she was afraid that Jonathon was going to strike her; so, she put her hand up to Jonathon’s neck or collarbone and pushed him away.
The record is unclear on the extent to which the teacher “choked” Jonathon. While Jonathon testified that he “was *1335 starting not to be able to breathe,” he also testified more categorically that the teacher “squeezed] me until I couldn’t breath.” Neither party has pointed to evidence indicating the length of time that the teacher squeezed Jonathon’s neck. Nevertheless, according to Jonathon, when the teacher rеlinquished her grasp, “it took me a while to catch my breath.” As Jonathon left the classroom, he turned back to the teacher, cursed at her, and told her never to put her hands on him again.
After leaving the building for a while, Jonathon went to the school administrative office to report the incident. Jonathon testified in his deposition that he was not suffering pain when he arrived at the office; but according to Principal Mosley, red marks were visible on Jonаthon’s neck. On the same day, Plaintiff — Jonathon’s mother — also reported the incident to local police who took photographs of Jonathon and observed blue and red bruises as well as a scratch on his neck. The school district immediately placed the teacher on administrative leave. Soon thereafter, she resigned.
Plaintiff brought this Section 1983 action, with supplemental state law claims, on behalf of her son Jonathon against the teacher. Plaintiff claimed that the teacher administered corporal punishment by grabbing Jonathon’s neck in violation of his substantive due process right to bodily integrity under the Fourteenth Amendment. Plaintiff also sued the principal, the superintendent, the school district, and the Paulding County Board of Education (“the board of education”) 1 for failure to train, to instruct, and to supervise the teacher, which — Plaintiff says — resulted in the constitutional violation.
In granting summary judgment for all defendants, the district court determined that, even assuming the teacher’s act was corporal punishment, it “[did] not rise to the level of a substantive due process violation” because the injury was de minimus and because the teacher did not act with the willful or malicious intent to injure the student. 2 On Plaintiffs state law claims, the district court determined that the teacher was entitled to official immunity under Georgia law because she did not act with malice towаrd the student or otherwise intend to cause the student harm in performing her discretionary duty to maintain discipline in the classroom. 3 Plaintiff now appeals.
*1336 II. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is warranted only when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). We review a district court’s decision granting summary judgment
de novo. Arrington v. Helms,
III. Discussion
A. Section 1983 Claims
Plaintiff contends that the district court erred in finding no genuine issues of material fact on her federal claim against the teacher. The heart of Plaintiffs argument is that a genuine dispute exists about whether the teacher acted in self-defense or whether she administered corporal punishment. Plaintiff asserts that the teacher’s act of grabbing and squeezing Jonathon’s neck was excessive corporal punishment in violation of clearly established constitutional law. In response, the teacher argues that the undisputed facts demonstrate that her act was not excessive and that she merely reacted to Jonathon’s provocation in self-defense. To us, it is unimportant whether the teacher either acted in self-defense or imposed corporal punishment because her conduct, even if we assume it to be motivated solely by an intent to punish, did not violate the Constitution.
Officials acting under the color of state law violate the substantive component of the Due Process Clause only when their conduct “can properly be characterized as arbitrary, or conscience shocking, in a constitutional sense.”
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
Here, Plaintiff does not contend that the teacher’s conduct was wholly unjustified by a government interest. In other words, Plaintiff does not argue that the teacher’s conduct had no legitimate disciplinary purpose. As the district court noted, neither party disputes that the teacher acted within the scope of her discretionary authority when the allegedly wrongful act occurrеd. Instead, Plaintiff claims that the teacher imposed corporal punishment in response to Jonathon’s behavior in an unconstitutionally excessive manner. Because Plaintiff rests her claim on the premise that the teacher intended to administer corporal punishment by grabbing Jonathon’s neck, we assume for the purpose of deciding this appeal that the teacher’s use of force constituted cor *1337 poral punishment. 4
Broadly speaking, the law оf this circuit says that “excessive corporal punishment, at least where not administered in conformity with a valid school policy authorizing corporal punishment ..., may be actionable under the Due Process Clause when it is tantamount to arbitrary, egregious, and conscience-shocking behavior.”
Neal v. Fulton County Bd. of Educ.,
Based on the facts as alleged by Plaintiff, we conclude that the teacher’s use of force was not obviously excessive. The justification for some corporal punishment was considerable given that the student repeatedly disobeyed the teacher’s command to be seated and given that the student first touched the teacher by forcing her hand from the doorframe. Also, the extent of the student’s bodily injury was not serious. Notwithstanding the slight bruising and red marks on his neck as well as his temporary loss of breath, the student’s injury was minor: Plaintiff points to no evidence that medical care was administered or that permanent marks remained on the student’s body, and all pain had passed by the time the student reported the incident to the school office.
Furthermore, although we regard the teacher’s alleged choice of method as inappropriate, we cannot say that the amount of force at issue here was totally unrelated to a need for punishment. The student had defiantly disobeyed the teacher’s repeated instructions to be seated; and, more important, he had used physical force against the teacher by pushing her hand
from the
doorframe. The student’s misconduct, therefore, justified some corporal punishment. The teacher’s alleged means were, to say thе least, untraditional; and we do not condone them. But, given that the extent of the student’s injury was no worse than that suffered under more traditional forms of corporal punishment like paddling, we conclude that the amount of force used here was reasonably related to the need for punishment.
See id.
at 1076 -(“[T]he kind of minor injury suffered
*1338
by a student during the administration of traditional corporal punishment will rarely, if ever, be the kind of injury that would support a federal due process claim .... ”); see
also Saylor v. Bd. of Educ.,
Our conclusion is not out of line with case lаw from this circuit as well as other circuits. In short, the standard is shock the conscience and totality of the circumstances; and when some reason exists for the use of force, constitutional violations do not arise unless the teacher inflicts serious physical injury upon the student.
See, e.g., Kirkland v. Greene County Bd. of Educ.,
B. State Law Claims
We turn now to Plaintiffs state law claims against the teacher for battery and intentional infliction of emotional dis
*1339
tress. Georgia law provides that state officers and employees “are subject to suit only when they negligently perform or fail to perform their ministerial functions or when they act with аctual malice or intent to cause injury in the performance of their official functions.”
Gilbert v. Richardson,
In the context of official immunity, “actual malice requires a deliberate intention to do wrong and denotes express malice or malice in fact.”
Adams v. Hazelwood,
Plaintiff contends that a genuine issue of fact exists about the teacher’s state of mind and that the teacher’s state of mind ought to be resolved by a jury. Plaintiff specifically points to disputed facts about whether or not the teacher aсted in self-defense. Plaintiff also relies on testimony recounting earlier incidents in which the teacher made disparaging or humiliating remarks to the student. 7
Even though the official immunity inquiry involves an examination of the teacher’s state of mind, we may still decide this issue at the summary judgment stage if Plaintiff fails to produce evidence
of
actual malice or of an intent to cause injury.
See, e.g., Adams,
That the teacher previously made derogatory comments to the student or otherwise harbored ill will toward the student is not enough to evidence either actual malice or an intent to injure.
See id.
at 898-99 (concluding that nothing evidenced a deliberate intent to commit a wrongful act or to injure the plaintiff student, notwithstanding evidence that the defendant teacher acted with ill will);
see also Butler v. McNeal,
Nor is Plaintiffs allegation, which we accept, that the teacher sought to punish the student, rather than act out of self-defense, evidence of a deliberate intent to do something wrong or to сause injury.
*1340
See Adams,
At the very least, the teacher’s act evinces an intention to regain control of a student who not only refused to follow her directions, but who also deliberately used force against her to leave the classroom. Because the teacher’s response to the student’s defiant misconduct was not entirely unreasonable in the light of Plaintiffs own factual allegations, we cannot infer — withоut more — that the teacher intended to do something wrongful or to cause the student significant injury.
See id.
at 75 (finding “no evidence whatsoever of actual malice” where the teacher “was simply fulfilling her discretionary tasks of monitoring, supervising and controlling the students in her class when she grasped [the student’s] face to get his attention”).
Cf. Tittle v. Corso,
IV. Conclusion
“ ‘Not every push or shove, even if it may later seem unnecessary in the peace of a judge’s chambers, violates a [person’s] constitutional rights.’ ”
Neal,
AFFIRM.
Notes
. Plaintiff concedes that the district court properly granted the board of education's motion for summary judgment. We do not review the district court’s judgment on this issue.
. Although the district court concluded that the teacher committed no constitutional violation, it also determined that she was entitled to qualified immunity because "the law [had] not sufficiently established” that de minimus injuries inflicted by corporal punishment for оbvious student misconduct constituted a due process violation. Furthermore, because the teacher did not infringe the student’s constitutional rights, the district court concluded that the remaining defendants "[were] entitled to summary judgment on all of plaintiff's claims.” Notwithstanding its determination that the teacher had not violated the Constitution, the district court also proceeded to address Plaintiff's supervisory liability claims against the principal, the superintendent, and the school district, concluding that each was entitled to qualified immunity under federal law.
.The district court also decided that the principal and the superintendent were entitled to official immunity under Georgia law because they did not act with malice or with an intent to harm in performing their discretionary duties. In addition, the district court concluded that the school district was not subject to tort liability under state law because it had not waived its sovereign immunity. Because Plaintiff does not purport to challenge these decisions in her brief, we do not address them here.
Sepulveda v. U.S. Att’y Gen.,
. Not all physical injuries to a student caused by a teacher amount to corporal punishment. A range of teacher conduct exists that is neither corporal punishment nor so conscience-shocking as to trigger a substantive due process violation.
See, e.g., Lillard v. Shelby County Bd. of Educ.,
. As we pointed out in
Neal,
"[ejxcessive corporal punishment claims have an objective and a subjective component, both of which must be met before a school official may be subject to liability.”
. Because the punishment was objectively reasonable, to resolve Plaintiff's federal claim, we need not examine the teacher's subjective intent.
See Wise,
Also, absent a predicate constitutional violation, we have no occasion to consider Plaintiff's federal claims against the principal, the superintendent, and the school district for failure to train, to instruct, and to supervise the teacher. See Blyden v. Mancusi,186 F.3d 252 , 265 (2d Cir.1999) ("Of course, for a supervisor to be liable under Section 1983, there must have been an underlying constitutional deprivation.”).
. For example, the student testified that the teacher called him a “klepto'' and said that he was “lazy” and “stupid.”
. Although the Georgia legislature has made express provision for immunity in corporal punishment cases,
see
Ga.Code Ann. § 20-2-732, “not all physical contact instigated by an educator amounts to corporal punishment.”
Daniels v. Gordon,
