Officer Richard Allerton of the City of San Juan Bautista Police Department shot Phillipe Fargo in the back while attempting to handcuff him. At the time Fargo was unarmed and lying on the ground motionless, on his stomach. Fargo sued Allerton under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming a violation of his fourteenth amendment rights. He also sued the Police Chief, as well as the City of San Juan Bautista Police Department and the City of San Juan Bautista. The district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all claims. We reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the fourteenth amendment claim against Allerton, and affirm summary judgment on the rest.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
When Officer Allerton responded to the scene of a shooting, witnesses described the suspects and the vehicle in which they had fled. After the officer left, he was advised, by radio, of a nearby traffic accident involving a vehicle that fit the description. Defendant Hurlbut, the Chief of the San Juan Bautista Police Department, gave Allerton permission to go to the accident site. When he arrived, a witness to the accident pointed out Fargo as the driver of the vehicle involved. The vehicle resembled the one reportedly used by the suspects.
Allerton approached Fargo with his gun drawn and ordered him to lie on his stomach. Fargo complied and Allerton did a pat-down search, as Fargo lay still. Allerton then placed Fargo’s left hand in handcuffs and moved it to the middle of Fargo’s back. He then took Fargo’s right hand in his own, in which he was also holding his gun, and moved it toward the handcuffed hand. As Allerton started to handcuff Fargo’s right hand, the gun discharged. The bullet entered Fargo’s right shoulder.
At his deposition, Officer Allerton testified that the proper method of handcuffing in this situation was to put his gun back in his holster once the handcuffs were placed on the suspect’s left hand. He admitted that he acted contrary to the way that he had been trained. Allerton also contended that when he was putting on the handcuffs his mind went blank, and he forgot everything that he had learned at the training academy. According to Allerton, he did not even hear his gun discharge; only when he stood Fargo up and pulled his shirt down did he realize that he had shot him.
Fargo claims that Allerton’s conduct violated his fourteenth amendment rights. He argues on this appeal that Allerton’s conduct was intentional or, in the alternative, reckless or grossly negligent, and not simply negligent, and so constitutes a deprivation of his liberty interest guaranteed by the due process clause. Fargo is also suing the San Juan Bautista Police Department and its Chief, as well as the City of San Juan Bautista, for not adequately training police officers in violation of the fourteenth amendment. He seeks monetary damages pursuant to section 1983.
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants. The order did not explain the basis of the court’s ruling. It stated only that there were no genuine issues of material fact for trial. Fargo appeals.
II. DUE PROCESS CLAIM AGAINST ALLERTON
Defendants argue that the shooting was accidental and not intentional, that Aller-ton’s conduct constituted at the most mere negligence, and that Fargo has raised no genuine issue of material fact. Defendants rely on
Daniels v. Williams,
474 U.S.
*640
327,
Daniels
involved a prison inmate who brought a section 1983 action alleging that he was injured when he slipped on a pillow that was negligently left on a stairway by a prison official. The Court reasoned that a mere lack of due care “suggests no more than a failure to measure up to the conduct of a reasonable person,”
id.
In the companion case to
Daniels, Davidson v. Cannon,
The majority in
Davidson
did not address the arguments of the dissenting justices. It found that the official conduct constituted mere negligence, and so did not reach the question whether recklessness or gross negligence could constitute a deprivation of a liberty interest under the due process clause.
Id.
at 348,
In Wood, as in the case before us, defendant police officers claimed that their alleged conduct was at most negligent and thus did not constitute a violation of the due process clause under Daniels. The district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. 2 We held that because the police conduct at issue may have constituted “more than mere negligence”, the due process claim was not barred by Daniels. Id. at 1214-15. Under Wood, grossly negligent or reckless official conduct that infringes upon an interest protected by the due process clause is actionable under section 1983. Id. at 1214-15. 3 *641 Accordingly, if Allerton’s conduct constituted gross negligence or recklessness, as opposed to mere negligence, then it constitutes a deprivation of a liberty interest— i.e., the right to be free from excessive force 4 — under the due process clause.
III. TRIABLE ISSUES OF FACT
We must next decide if there exist any genuine issues of material fact as to whether Allerton’s conduct constituted more than mere negligence. When reasonable persons may disagree as to whether particular conduct constitutes negligence, gross negligence or recklessness, the question is one of fact to be decided by a jury. 5
Admittedly, terms such as negligence, gross negligence and recklessness are at best inexact. As to the difference between negligence and gross negligence, we note that negligence suggests “no more than a failure to measure up to the conduct of a reasonable person,”
Daniels v. Williams,
As to whether a jury could conclude that Allerton’s conduct constitutes gross negligence, we observe that there is no indication that Fargo, while lying on the ground on his stomach with his hands at his side, did anything even remotely threatening to Allerton or anyone else. Once Allerton was atop Fargo, Fargo did not physically or verbally resist any of Allerton’s actions. Aller-ton patted him down and determined that he was unarmed. Nevertheless, after handcuffing Fargo’s left hand and moving it to the middle of his back, Allerton took Fargo’s right hand in the same hand in which he held a gun and, while moving that right hand to the center of Fargo’s back, pointed his gun at his head and then his shoulder. That conduct proximately caused the injury.
The question, ultimately, is whether Allerton’s conduct constituted a greater want of care than ordinary negligence. Certainly, the fact that Allerton violated police procedures when handcuffing Fargo is relevant in determining the existence of gross negligence. The departmental procedures were intended to avert precisely the type of incident that occurred here. 6 Undoubtedly, handcuffing is a difficult exercise, often requiring some use of force under dangerous circumstances. Nevertheless, the department itself recognized the serious risk inherent in a police officer’s holding a gun in his hand when attempting to handcuff a suspect’s free hand.
We cannot conclude as a matter of law that Allerton’s conduct, contrary as it was to proper police procedures, constituted mere inadvertence, and not a greater want of care. While Allerton claims that his mind went blank and that the shooting was accidental, such facts be they true or false are not relevant when determining the degree of negligence. State of mind is not at issue where either negligence or gross negligence are alleged,
see, e.g., Al G. Barnes Amusement Co. v. Olvera,
*643 In light of the above, we conclude that there exists a triable issue as to whether Allerton’s conduct can properly be characterized as grossly negligent. 8 Accordingly, we need not decide whether there exists a triable issue as to whether his conduct might also be reckless. Summary judgment as to Fargo’s fourteenth amendment claim against Allerton was inappropriate. 9
IY. CLAIMS AGAINST OTHER DEFENDANTS
Fargo claims in this appeal that Police Chief Hurlbut and the San Juan Bautista Police Department, as well as the City of San Juan Bautista, also violated his due process rights. He charges that they failed to provide adequate training regarding the lawful use of a revolver, and that this constituted deliberate indifference to the safety of the citizens of San Juan Bau-tista.
In
City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
.The Court recently granted
certiorari
in a case that raises the question whether “reckless, willful and wanton, or grossly negligent misconduct of public officials [is] enough to trigger protections of Due Process Clause.”
Deshaney v. Winnebago,
. The district court denied one of the defendants’ summary judgment motions in which the defendants sought to characterize their actions as merely negligent. The court then granted a second summary judgment motion on a theory of qualified immunity. We reviewed the grant of summary judgment de novo.
. Prior to
Wood,
we had held that a policy of gross negligence in training or supervision gives rise to section 1983 liability.
See Bergquist v. County of Cochise,
The Eighth Circuit has held in a case not involving prison security that an allegation of grossly negligent conduct does not state a claim under section 1983.
See Myers v. Morris,
.
See, e.g., Fernandez v. Leonard,
.
See, e.g., Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Ives,
. The Supreme Court has stated that gross negligence also applies to “neglect of duties imposed for the protection of life or property_”
Smith
v.
Wade,
. We express no view as to whether an innocent state of mind can afford a defense to a charge of recklessness, or whether recklessness may be presumed conclusively from conduct. Recklessness or deliberate indifference generally refers to conduct that involves a “conscious disregard” of public safety.
See, e.g., Grimshaw v. Ford Motor Co.,
. The concept of varying degrees of negligence has been criticized and even abandoned in some jurisdictions, where gross negligence has merged into what has traditionally constituted recklessness.
See, e.g.,
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 500 (1965); Prosser & Keeton,
supra,
§ 34, at 214;
Denham v. United States,
. In his complaint, Fargo claimed that Al-lerton also deprived him of his rights under the fifth and eighth amendments. He does not raise these claims on appeal. However, he argues for the first time on appeal that the use of excessive force in his arrest deprived him of his fourth amendment rights. Issues that are not raised below should not ordinarily be considered
on
appeal.
Grauvogel v. Commissioner,
.Although only a plurality of the Supreme Court joined this opinion in
Tuttle,
Justice Brennan’s partial concurrence, joined by Justices Marshall and Blackmun, also supported the view that "the scope of § 1983 liability does not permit such liability to be imposed merely on evidence of the wrongful actions of a single city employee not authorized to make city policy.”
