Lead Opinion
In Calvert v. Sharp,
I.
West tore the Achilles tendon in his left leg while playing basketball on July 30, 1983. Dr. Atkins examined West and concluded that surgery could be avoided if the tendon would grow back together by itself. Atkins therefore placed West’s leg in a cast and prescribed medication. West has alleged that the attention given to his injured leg was so inadequate as to be actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
North Carolina Central Prison Hospital, where West is imprisoned, has one full-time staff doctor, with additional medical services provided under “contracts for professional services” with area doctors. Dr. Atkins, by contract, conducted two clinics per week at the prison. Atkins also maintained a private practice. It does appear that, because West is a prisoner in “close custody,” he is not free to seek outside medical assistance.
West’s § 1983 theory alleged a denial of his right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment, as defined by the Eighth Amendment. West sought compensatory and punitive damages from Dr. Atkins, compensatory and punitive damages from Rae McNamara, Director of the Division of Prisons of the North Carolina Department of Corrections, and a declaratory judgment against James B. Hunt, Governor of the State of North Carolina.
II.
The Supreme Court held in Estelle v. Gamble,
In Calvert an inmate sued a private orthopedic specialist for an alleged failure to treat. The defendant was employed by a non-profit professional corporation, which in turn contracted with the state. We held that because private physicians exercise independent, professional judgment and render medical care in accordance with professional obligations, a physician when rendering such medical services does not act under color of state law. The defendant in Calvert had no supervisory or custodial functions.
We find the reasoning suggested by the appellant to differentiate the rule in Dodson from that enunciated in Calvert unpersuasive. Although the opinion in Dodson does point out that a public defender in effect plays a role adversarial to the interests of the state, that reasoning was the basis upon which the Supreme Court concluded that a professional may act without color of state law even when he is a full-time employee. In other words, even a full-time employee who is a professional can act without color of state law where his role in essence is adversarial to the interests of the state. Thus, “a public defender is not amenable to administrative direction in the same sense as other employees of the State.” Dodson at 321,
The appellant is probably correct in his argument that the rule enunciated in Dodson, and followed in Calvert, has the effect of limiting the range of professionals subject to an Estelle action. This effect, however, is entirely consonant with the requirements of § 1983, which statute subjects the individual to liability only where he has acted under color of state law in violating a constitutional right. In any event, it is not for this court to tamper with ■ the limitation of § 1983 liability established
III.
The appellant suggests that should this court decline to overrule its prior decision, we should distinguish it. We decline to do so. The fact that the doctor in Calvert was employed by a professional corporation, which in turn had contracted with the state, whereas Dr. Atkins, a sole practitioner, entered into that contract himself, makes no difference. A professional exercises his professional discretion pursuant to his professional obligations whether he practices alone or in a group. The effect of adopting the distinction suggested by the appellant would be to absolve one professional from liability concerning the same course of conduct and wilful failure to treat undertaken by another professional simply on the grounds that the former had associated himself with a group practice. Liability for a constitutional violation arising from a wrong done to an inmate should not rest on the contractual arrangement entered into by the putative defendant with third parties. The effect of such a rule would be to discourage any professional not associated with a group practice from serving the medical needs of prisoners. Such a rule would have the deleterious effect of increasing the cost and reducing the availability of medical services for prisons.
The other grounds of distinction proffered by the appellant are equally unpersuasive.
IV.
We find no reason to disturb the district court’s dismissal of the appellant’s claims against appellees McNamara and Hunt. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), claims made by pro se litigants can be dismissed if frivolous: that is, if “it appears ‘beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.’ ” Boyce v. Alizaduh,
Respondeat superior is not available for § 1983 actions, and so the appellant must allege personal involvement by appellees Hunt and McNamara in the deprivation of his constitutional rights. Because the alleged deprivation of constitutional rights in this case involved the alleged failure to render medical services properly, the “personal involvement” of these appellees must be relevant to the alleged deprivation. The appellant has alleged no facts which would show that appellees McNamara or Hunt had the authority to overrule the medical judgment of Dr. Atkins. The fact that the appellant had mailed to appellee McNamara two letters complaining about Dr. Atkins’ treatment does not suffice to render McNamara liable for Atkins’ medical judgments. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of these claims.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Dodson held that the employment relationship is only a "relevant factor" in determining whether the professional acted under color of state law. The primary consideration, established in Dodson, is the defendant’s "function.” Thus, the plaintiff would have to prove that the employment relationship created such an overbearing environment that the exercise of the independent professional judgment, the primary test, was impossible. The simple allegation of a close employment relationship between the state and the professional, absent any proof that that relationship had the effect of precluding independent judgment, is insufficient to satisfy the “color of state law” element of a § 1983 claim. The employment relationship is but one factor in determining whether the professional exercised independent judgment.
. We also reject appellant’s contention that the provision of medical services to the inmates is an "exclusive state function.” Decisions made in the day-to-day rendering of medical services by a physician are not the kind of decisions traditionally and exclusively made by the sovereign for and on behalf of the public. See Blum v. Yaretsky,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting:
When the panel heard this appeal,
An in banc court possesses greater authority. It is free to re-examine the correctness of the court’s precedents and to overrule them if it determines that they were incorrectly decided. As a member of the in banc court, I am of the view that Calvert is an aberration and that it should be overruled. Alternatively, I think that Calvert should be confined to its facts and that this case is sufficiently different so as to render Calvert inapplicable.
I would therefore reverse the summary judgment in favor of Dr. Atkins, and I respectfully dissent from the majority’s contrary decision. I concur, however, in affirming the dismissal of the action against McNamara and Hunt.
I.
There are several grounds for concluding that services rendered by prison doctors— whether permanent members of a prison medical staff, or under limited contract with the prison — constitute action “under color” of state law, for purposes of § 1983, and that, as a consequence, Calvert was wrongly decided.
A. Prison doctors are state actors Without doubt such state employees as prison guards and wardens are “state actors” subject to § 1983 liability. Moreover, the panel in Calvert implicitly conceded that a doctor who is (1) permanently employed on the medical staff of a prison, and (2) who has “custodial and supervisory duties” acts “under color of state law” when treating prisoners. The question then becomes whether the absence of either of these factors requires a different conclusion. I think not.
All employment relationships are regulated by contract. The fact that the contractual arrangement between Dr. Atkins and the prison does not require Dr. Atkins to work exclusively for the prison should not strip his conduct of its essentially governmental nature when he is performing such service. Indeed, as the majority opinion notes, “[liability for a constitutional violation arising from a wrong done to an inmate should not rest on the contractual arrangement entered into by the putative defendant with third parties.” Ante at 996.
The absence of custodial and supervisory functions is equally irrelevant to the state action issue. Although the Supreme Court, in Polk County v. Dodson,
There is no significant difference between the doctor-employees in Estelle and O’Connor, and Drs. Atkins and Sharp. While Dr. Sharp had a contract with a professional association which, in turn, had a contract with the state, it is fair to say that each of these doctors worked under contract with the state, received payment from state funds, were subject to regulation by state and professional review boards, and performed services that the state is obligated to provide to prison inmates.
The majority’s assertion in this case, that where a “professional is acting within the bounds of professional discretion and obligation, his independence from administrative direction is assured” (ante at 995), is supported by nothing in the record, and completely disregards the American Medical Association Standards for Health Services in Prisons (1979), that prescribe the relationship between medical personnel and other prison officials as one of “close cooperation and coordination”; a “joint effort.” Preface at i; Std. 102 & Discussion. The rationale employed by the majority would preclude a § 1983 action against any medical professional who has treated a prison inmate since, by virtue of the exercise of their ‘independent professional’ judgment, they could never be considered state actors — notwithstanding the holding in Estelle v. Gamble.
Defendants’ brief argues that contractual medical service providers are “independent contractors rather 'than ... employees,” noting that no social security taxes are withheld from their paychecks and they receive no benefits enjoyed by state employees. But if this is the basis for delimiting § 1983 liability, the state will be free to contract out all services which it is constitutionally obligated to provide and leave its citizens with no means for vindication of those rights, whose protection has been delegated to “private” actors, when they have been denied. Such a result is intolerable.
B. “Public Function” Rationale
Action “under color” of state law will be found if an otherwise private party performs a function that has been “traditionally the exclusive prerogative of the State.” Blum v. Yaretzky,
The panel in Calvert,
*999 ... we hold that the district court erred as a matter of law in concluding that a physician who contracts with the state to provide medical care to inmates does not act under color of state law. In Ancata v. Prison Health Services, Inc.,769 F.2d 700 (11th Cir.1985), we pointed out that medical personnel need not be state employees in order that their actions be considered state action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We held that the employees of a private entity hired by a county to provide medical care to jail inmates acted under color of state law so as to be subject to liability under § 1983. Id. at 703. Dr. Pinchback similarly performed “a function which is traditionally the exclusive prerogative of the state” when he took over the state’s responsibility for attending to inmate medical needs. Id.; see Morrison v. Washington County, Ala.,700 F.2d 678 , 683 (11th Cir.1983).
See also Hall v. Ashley,
C. “Joint Action” Rationale
“It is enough that [a private party] is a willful participant in joint activity with the State or its agents” to render him liable under § 1983. United States v. Price,
It is significant to note that the Supreme Court in Polk recognized the viability of the joint participation rationale, but found it inapplicable to the adversarial relationship between the state and the public defender in that case.
D. Impact of relationship with the state
Critical to Calvert’s conclusion that the doctor did not act under color of state law was the panel’s repeated assertion that the doctor-patient relationship was in no way changed by virtue of the doctor’s employment by the state.
Thus I conclude that Calvert is fatally flawed. It should not be followed here. Indeed, it should be overruled. Consistent with Estelle and O’Connor, Dr. Atkins should be found to have acted under color of state law in providing medical care to West.
II.
Even if my rejection of Calvert is not well-founded, I do not believe that decision controls the outcome here. I perceive the
A. Absence of prisoner-patient choice of doctor/medical care
Although it argued that diagnosis and treatment are not the exclusive prerogative of the state, the Calvert panel answered the “public function” argument primarily by stressing that Maryland law allows inmates to go outside the prison and obtain medical care of their choice. In this case, however, North Carolina law bars all but minimum security prisoners (which West is not) from exercising such an option. West was thus totally dependent on the state’s chosen medical care providers; for West, that meant Dr. Atkins. If there was any uncertainty in Calvert that the medical care received by that plaintiff was exclusively within the state’s control, such uncertainty is not present in this case. Dr. Atkins was chosen by North Carolina to fulfill the state’s constitutional obligation to provide inmates like West with adequate medical care. North Carolina should not be permitted to plead a lack of responsibility because it delegated the task to a “private” party.
The Fifth Circuit adopted this view in Robinson v. Jordan,
The trial judge alternatively stated: “It additionally appears that a doctor hired to treat prisoners is not acting under color of state law____ This holding was erroneous since Dr. Gates acted solely in his official capacity as a county health officer in treating appellant. This was state action____ Dr. Gates was not acting as a private physician but treated Robinson at the Sheriff’s request because of his official employment.
The cases relied on by the district judge holding that suits may not be maintained under Section 1983 against privately retained attorneys or court-appointed attorneys are inapposite. Robinson’s detention prevented his seeking a physician of his choice. He did not enjoy the option of dismissing his doctor and securing another such as that open to a client dissatisfied with an attorney, appointed or retained. He was required to depend totally upon Dr. Gates, the county physician, (citations omitted)
B. Dependence on the state
Although Calvert found Dr. Sharp to have abundant non-state resources,
C. Absence of an intermediary
Dr. Atkins was employed directly by the state, much as any other state employee, including the doctors in Estelle and O’Connor. Dr. Sharp, however, was employed by a private association, which in turn was under contract to the state — a factor emphasized in Calvert,
These considerations serve to distinguish Calvert and to limit it to its discrete facts. If Calvert is not to be overruled, and it is my preference to do so, I think that it should be so limited.
For these reasons, I would reverse the summary judgment for Dr. Atkins that was granted by the district court and remand the case for further proceedings. In short, I would hold that Dr. Atkins acted under color of state law in treating West, and I would direct the district court to determine if Dr. Atkins is chargeable with deliberate indifference to West’s medical needs.
Judge PHILLIPS and Judge ERVIN authorize me to say that they join in this opinion.
. The record contains no evidence that Hunt had notice of West’s complaints and, in my view, such evidence is so scant as to McNamara's notice that I perceive no basis on which to hold them liable. Of course, § 1983 does not recognize liability under the doctrine of respon-deat superior.
. Although Calvert asserts that "[t]he loyalty owed by Dr. Sharp was potentially adverse to the interests of the state,”
. Although in Calvert, and unlike the situation in this case, the prisoners were allowed to go outside the prison to a doctor of their choice, this privilege was available only by virtue of a state statute.
