OPINION
This matter is before the Court on a motion for summary judgment filed by defendants Anthony Clay, James Haskel, *98 and the District of Columbia. 1 The plaintiff in this case has brought constitutional and common law claims for an incident in which defendant Haskel, an off-duty Metropolitan Police Department officer, accompanied by defendant Clay, another off-duty police officer, shot and killed the plaintiffs fourteen-year old son.
After hearing oral argument on the motion for summary judgment on October 11, 2011, the Court denied the defendants’ summary judgment motion with respect to the claim for assault and battery against defendant Haskel (Count IV) and with respect to the claim for deprivation of civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against defendants Haskel and Clay (Count V). See Rawlings v. District of Columbia, Civil Action No. 07-1914, Minute Order (Oct. 12, 2011). 2 This Opinion addresses the defendants’ summary judgment motion with respect to plaintiffs claims for civil conspiracy against Clay and Haskel (Count VI), assault and battery against Clay and the District of Columbia (Count IV), negligence against all three defendants (Count III), and negligent training and supervision against the District of Columbia under common law and Section 1983 (Counts III and VII).
For the reasons stated below, by Order of October 27, 2011, the Court denied the defendants’ motion with respect to the claim for conspiracy to commit assault and battery and it granted the. motion with respect to the claim for assault and battery against Clay, the claims for negligence against all defendants, and the claims for negligent training and supervision under the common law and Section 1983.
I. BACKGROUND
This lawsuit arises.from an incident in which James Haskel, an off-duty District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”) officer, shot and killed DeOnte Rawlings, a fourteen-year old, near his home in Southeast Washington, D.C.
On September 17, 2007, at 6:00 p.m., Officer Haskel was driving home from an errand in his Chevrolet Tahoe. He was not on duty that day. MSJ Ex. 1 (“Haskel Dep.”), at 27, 29-30. On the way home, Haskel received a call from a neighbor notifying him that his red motorized minibike had been taken from his garage, the door to which had been left open. Id. at 30-31. When Haskel arrived home, he encountered neighbors outside who told him what had happened. These neighbors *99 had called the police to report the incident, and an officer had been dispatched. Id. at 32, 43. Haskel did not wait for the officer to arrive. He testified in his deposition that he had an idea where the bike might be and decided to go looking for it. Id. at 36-37, 39. As he was leaving in his Tahoe, he saw Anthony Clay, a neighbor and fellow MPD officer who was also off duty. Clay said he would accompany Haskel in search of the bike, and before they left Clay went inside his house to retrieve his gun, badge, and police radio. Id. at 49, 50; MSJ Ex. 3 (“Clay Dep.”), at 22, 25-27. Haskel also had his gun and badge. Haskel Dep. at 37. The officers did not inform the Metropolitan Police Department that they were going to look for the minibike. Id. at 39.
A few weeks earlier a bike had been stolen from Clay’s home. When a child was later seen riding the bike and told to drop it, the child complied and ran off. Clay Dep. at 23-24, 91; Haskel Dep. at 37. According to Clay, he anticipated that something similar might occur in regard to Haskel’s minibike or that perhaps they would find the bike lying around somewhere. Clay Dep. at 24. Clay testified that he did not intend to make an arrest and that the two men did not discuss any plan. Id. at 32, 91. Haskel testified that he believed “some kids” had taken the minibike, and that if he confronted them and told them the bike was his, they would drop it and run off. Haskel Dep. at 37.
Clay rode in the passenger seat of Haskel’s Tahoe while Haskel drove and tried to spot his minibike. Clay Dep. at 31, 33. After driving around unsuccessfully for some time, the men turned into the alley of Washington Highland Dwellings. The alley, which is paved and has residential dwellings on either side, enters on 8th Street Southeast and exits on Atlantic Street. Haskel Dep. at 32, 51-54. Haskel was driving through the alley and approaching Atlantic Street when he saw a juvenile on a minibike and told Clay that it was his bike. Id. at 54-56; Clay Dep. at 35-36. The juvenile rode by the truck on the passenger side, going in the opposite direction. Haskel put the truck in reverse and backed up, now going in the same direction as the juvenile on the minibike and trying to catch up with him. Driving in this fashion, the truck and bike covered a distance of about two courtyards; at some point the juvenile crossed over to the other side of the alley, putting him on the driver’s side of the truck. Haskel Dep. at 57-59; Clay Dep. at 36-39.
The plaintiff and defendants dispute what happened next. Clay and Haskel have testified that Haskel pulled alongside the juvenile, spoke to him through the driver’s side window, and told him to drop the bike. As Haskel stopped the truck, the juvenile dropped the bike, got off, and said, “What, what?” Haskel Dep. at 58, 60; Clay Dep. at 39. The juvenile was about nine feet away from the truck. Haskel Dep. at 64-67. Haskel testified that he did not intend to make an arrest, but merely wanted to get his bike back. Id. at 61-62. According to Haskel, he then observed the juvenile draw a gun from his pocket. Although Haskel could not identify the make or model of the weapon, he recognized it as a gun. Upon seeing the juvenile pull out a weapon, Haskel drew his own gun. Id. at 62-63. According to Haskel, the juvenile then fired at Haskel. Id. at 64, 67. Haskel fired back, and then fired a second shot while still inside his vehicle. Id. at 74. The juvenile, after firing his first shot, began running away toward an opening between two buildings, firing across his body while running sideways. Id. at 73-74, 76-79. Haskel exited his truck and fired three more times. He then moved positions and fired three more shots, for a *100 total of eight. Id. at 79-80. After the last shot, the juvenile fell. Id. at 80. During the shooting, Haskel testified, he was not aware where Clay was or what he was doing. Id. at 74, 76.
Clay testified that from the passenger seat, he saw the juvenile pull a metal object from his pocket that Clay believed was a gun, and he notified Haskel of this. Clay Dep. at 40-42. Believing that he could not be of assistance from where he was sitting, Clay exited the vehicle through the passenger door to take cover. Id. at 42, 51. As he headed toward the rear of the truck he heard multiple gunshots, but he could not see what was happening on the driver’s side of the truck. Id. at 46. By the time Clay reached the back of the truck and could see around it, the juvenile was running away and firing a weapon across his body. Id. at 48, 45-46, 88-89. Clay pulled his weapon out, but the juvenile was already out of sight, obscured by a dumpster or some other object. Id. at 46-48. Clay never fired his weapon. Id. at 51.
According to the officers, after the shooting Haskel told Clay to call for help on the police radio. Haskel Dep. at 82. Clay testified that he knew shots had been fired but did not know that the juvenile had been hit. Clay Dep. at 54-56. Clay attempted to call for assistance on the radio, and was then assisted by Haskel, who told the dispatcher that a suspect was down. Haskel Dep. at 83-84, 113; Clay Dep. at 50-54. While this was happening, people were coming out into the courtyard, and Haskel did not feel it was safe to approach the body. Haskel Dep. at 82-83, 86, 90. Haskel told Clay to drive his truck away from the scene, later testifying that he was motivated by concern for the safety of his family and a desire not to have his vehicle seen and associated with the shooting. Id. at 93, 115. Although the defendants have offered evidence that Haskel’s truck was hit with a bullet on the driver’s side door, the officers testified that they did not yet know the truck had been hit when Haskel asked Clay to drive it away. Id. at 96; Clay Dep. at 54, 56-57, 61.
Clay complied with Haskel’s request to remove the truck and drove it to Haskel’s house. Clay Dep. at 64. As Clay was leaving the scene of the shooting he encountered police officers responding to the radio call; he waived them on and told them that the juvenile was in the alley with a weapon. Id. at 64. Meanwhile, Haskel had asked that a unit meet him on a nearby street; a cruiser met him there and drove him away from the scene. Haskel Dep. at 99-100. The cruiser sat nearby for a while, and then the officers in the cruiser drove Haskel to his mother’s house where he told her he was involved in a shooting. Id. at 100-02. Subsequently, a sergeant met Haskel there and took away his duty weapon. Haskel then went to the Seventh District police station, where he gave a statement to an investigating officer. Id. at 104, 106-08. Clay testified that when he brought the truck to Haskel’s house, he learned that Haskel had shot someone. Clay Dep. at 74. He called Haskel, who told him he was needed at the station. Id. at 68, 72-73. Clay went to the station and also gave a statement to the investigator. Id. at 70-71, 77.
During the course of the incident, neither Haskel nor Clay ever identified themselves as police officers. Haskel Dep. at 63-64; Clay Dep. at 69. Clay testified that the juvenile was wearing tan pants and a “uniform” shirt, Clay Dep. at 82, but Haskel provided no identifying information about the juvenile. He stated that he did not know DeOnte Rawlings and only learned his identity later from the news. Haskel Dep. at 109-10.
*101 The defendants have provided documentary and physical evidence to corroborate their account. See MSJ Ex. 5-9. They have also offered a third eyewitness to the shooting — the only eyewitness besides the two officers. “C.C.” is a resident of the neighborhood who knew DeOnte Rawlings and was a few years older than him. MSJ Ex. 4 (“C.C. Dep.”), at 17, 19, 23. 3 C.C. testified that before the shooting, he was walking from his house through an opening in the buildings into the alley when he saw Rawlings riding a moped through the alley. Id. at 19-20. C.C.’s account of the ensuing incident largely corroborates the officers’ narrative: he testified that he saw the truck chasing Rawlings in reverse, as testified by the officers, and that when Rawlings and the truck stopped C.C. was only a few feet from Rawlings. Like the officers, C.C. testified that Rawlings was the first person to pull out a gun, which C.C. recognized as a .38 caliber weapon, and that Rawlings fired first. Id. at 23, 25-33, 39, 48, 62, 65, 68, 91-93. After Rawlings fired his first shot, according to C.C., he and Rawlings began running away in the same general direction, and C.C. heard many gunshots. Id. at 33-35, 65-68, 40. C.C. eventually heard Rawlings fall. Id. at 35. When the gunshots ceased, C.C. looked back from his new location and observed the shooter standing near the truck for some time watching the spot where Rawlings had fallen, then making a phone call. A police squad car then met the man and drove off. C.C. also saw a second man drive the truck down the alley, and saw people chasing the truck down the alley while yelling at it. Id, at 39-41, 105-07. C.C. walked back toward Rawlings and saw him lying on the ground, as people crowded around the body. Id. at 39, 42. 4
In October of 2007, the plaintiff filed this lawsuit against Clay, Haskel, and the District of Columbia, alleging constitutionally excessive use of force and negligent supervision under Section 1983 and the common law torts of assault and battery, conspiracy to commit assault and battery, negligence, and negligent supervision. See Complaint ¶¶ 20-46. The plaintiff does not question the officers’ account of their actions before and after the shooting, although he disputes their explanations for their decisions. The plaintiff denies that Rawlings possessed or fired a gun, and has presented evidence to that effect, including the fact that no gun was recovered from the scene and that Rawlings’s clothing tested negative for lead residue. See MSJ Opp. at 6. The plaintiff also challenges the credibility *102 of C.C.’s testimony and his motive for offering it. See MSJ Opp. at 5-6.
Based on the evidence submitted, the Court has already determined that a genuine factual dispute exists about whether Rawlings possessed a gun and fired at the officers, facts that are material as to whether Haskel was legally justified in shooting him. The Court therefore has denied summary judgment on the assault and battery claim against Haskel and the Section 1983 claim against Clay and Haskel. See Rawlings v. District of Columbia, Civil Action No. 07-1914, Minute Order (Oct. 12, 2011). This Opinion deals with the plaintiffs remaining claims.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment may be granted if “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits [or declarations] show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Crv. P. 56(c);
see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
When a motion for summary judgment is under consideration, “the evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
*103 III. DISCUSSION
A. Conspiracy to Commit Assault and Battery (Count VI)
In the District of Columbia, civil conspiracy “is not an independent tort but only a means for establishing vicarious liability for an underlying tort.”
Nader v. Democratic Nat’l Committee, 567
F.3d 692, 697 (D.C.Cir.2009) (quoting
Hill v. Medlantic Health Care Group,
1. The Intracorporate Conspiracy Doctrine
The plaintiff has brought claims of civil conspiracy against Clay and Haskel, alleging that they “entered into an agreement to commit the illegal act of assault and battery” against Rawlings. Complaint ¶ 37. The defendants argue that Clay and Haskel cannot be found liable for conspiracy because they “are part of a single entity, the District of Columbia Government.” MSJ at 39 (citing
Gladden v. Barry,
Many circuits have applied the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine in civil rights cases under 42 U.S.C. § 1985 to preclude conspiracy liability for the employees of a municipal entity, while other circuits have declined to apply the doctrine in that context.
See Bowie v. Maddox,
While most federal circuits apply the doctrine in Section 1985 cases, only one seemingly has applied it to Section 1983 claims, and never with respect to claims— such as the use of excessive force — analogous to common law assault and battery.
See, e.g., Grider v. City of Auburn,
Even were this Court to assume that the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine may in some circumstances apply to assault and battery claims, it would not apply in this case. Where courts have recognized the doctrine, they have included an important caveat that is implicated here: for the doctrine to apply, the individual defendants must have been acting within the scope of their shared employment.
See, e.g., Herrmann v. Moore,
Limiting the scope of the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine in this manner is a sensible corollary to the main thrust of the rule. The doctrine is premised on the idea that the behavior of a corporation’s agents is attributable to the corporation itself, “so that all of their acts are considered to be those of a single legal actor, negating the multiplicity of actors necessary to conspiracy.”
Dussouy v. Gulf Coast Investment Corp.,
By contrast, in
Tafler v. District of Columbia,
No. 05-1563,
In this case, Clay and Haskel themselves have asserted that they were acting as private citizens, rather than as police officers, when they went in search of the missing minibike. Unlike the defendants in Tafler, Clay and Haskel were not patrolling officers carrying out an arrest. Instead, they admittedly were pursuing personal rather than official ends while off-duty. The officers have testified that they did not intend to make an arrest or take any police action. They did not notify the MPD that they were going in search of the bike, nor did they wait for the responding officer who had been called to investigate the bike theft. The officers drove in Haskel’s personal, unmarked vehicle, and never identified themselves as police officers during the sequence of events that followed. Furthermore, even if it could be argued that the officers generally were acting within the scope of their duties when they went about searching for the minibike, any conspiracy that Clay and Haskel may have entered into in order to harm the possessor of the stolen minibike or to retrieve it through illegal means was clearly not part of their duties. Such an illicit agreement would not represent a decision made by the MPD and carried out by its two officers. Like the alleged falsification of police reports in Kivanc, such an agreement could not conceivably be classified as the product of routine police department decision-making. Therefore the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine does not shield Clay and Haskel from liability if they conspired to commit an assault and battery upon Rawlings. 5
The Court also finds that the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine should not apply for a second, related reason. Some courts that employ the doctrine “have recognized an exception where an officer or agent has ‘an independent personal stake in achieving the corporation’s illegal objectives.’ ”
Brever v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
Clay and Haskel admittedly had a personal stake in recovering Haskel’s missing minibike and testified in their depositions that they acted only to achieve this goal and without any intent to carry out an *106 arrest. If the two men entered into a conspiracy to behave illegally in pursuit of that goal, the conspiracy was motivated at least in part by their personal interest in retrieval of the bike. Thus, even if it were true that Clay and Haskel acted within the scope of their duties as MPD officers while seeking to recover the minibike, their own personal interest in the accomplishment of that goal — an interest distinct from any interest of the MPD — prevents them from obtaining immunity on the plaintiffs claim for conspiracy to commit assault and battery.
2. Genuine Issues of Material Fact
The plaintiff presents no direct evidence of a conspiracy between Clay and Haskel. Such a shortcoming is neither rare nor fatal in conspiracy eases. By their nature, “conspiracies must generally be inferred from indirect evidence.”
Ungar v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
The plaintiff contends that an agreement between Clay and Haskel to commit an assault and battery can be inferred from their conduct before and after the shooting. Specifically, the plaintiff highlights a number of undisputed facts: The officers went to search for the minibike without waiting for the responding officer who had been called to investigate the theft. They did not advise anyone from the police department of their activities. Both men were armed, and Clay specifically returned to his home to retrieve his gun. Upon confronting a juvenile riding Haskel’s minibike, they did not at any time identify themselves as police officers, nor did they at that point contact the Metropolitan Police Department, although Clay had his police radio with him. After the shooting, the officers did not secure the scene or preserve any evidence, nor did they attempt to offer medical assistance to the juvenile who had been shot. At Haskel’s direction, Clay removed the truck, and both men left the scene.
While these facts may not overwhelmingly imply the existence of a conspiracy to commit assault and battery, they are probative, and the jury should be given the opportunity to assess the evidence presented at a trial and then decide whether an unlawful agreement can be inferred from the officers’ behavior.
6
In their depositions, Clay and Haskel offer explanations for many of their decisions. To evaluate the legitimacy of those explanations, the jury can assess the demeanor and
*107
credibility of the two men on the witness stand, as well as the credibility of other witnesses and the probative value of all the evidence. At the summary judgment stage, the Court “cannot make credibility determinations,”
Johnson v. District of Columbia,
B. Assault and Battery (Count TV)
An assault is “ ‘an intentional and unlawful attempt or threat, either by words or by acts, to do physical harm to the victim.’ ”
Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia,
The Court already has denied summary judgment to Officer Haskel on the assault and battery claim, finding that there are genuinely disputed questions of material fact that must be decided by the jury. See Rawlings v. District of Columbia, Civil Action No. 07-1914, Minute Order (Oct. 12, 2011).
1. Officer Clay
Defendant Clay argues that he cannot be held liable for assault and battery because there is no evidence that he fired his gun or engaged in any other assaultive conduct during the incident. MSJ at 35. According to the defendants, Clay’s mere presence on the scene does not form a basis for liability because he “used no force.” MSJ Reply at 11. The defendants are correct that Clay’s presence at the shooting, without more, cannot render him liable for assault and battery.
Chen v. District of Columbia,
Some limited authority suggests that if Clay encouraged, incited, or assisted the shooting, then he may be liable for aiding and abetting an assault and battery.
See Halberstam v. Welch,
The plaintiffs allegation that Clay entered into an agreement with Haskel to commit an assault and battery is cognizable as a claim for civil conspiracy.
See supra
at 102-07;
Halberstam v. Welch,
2. District of Columbia
The defendants acknowledge that if Haskel is found liable for assault and battery, then the District of Columbia could be vicariously liable based on respondeat superior. MSJ Reply at 18. This is correct, so long as the officers “were acting as agents of the District within the scope of their employment.”
Youngbey v. District of Columbia,
C. Negligence (Count III)
In addition to claims for the intentional torts of assault and battery, the plaintiff has also brought negligence claims against the officers and the District of Columbia, alleging that the defendants “negligently took police action while in an off duty capacity, in an unmarked vehicle, without identifying themselves at all during the course of their negligent stop and chase of the decedent and in subsequently using unlawful, excessive and unreasonable force on decedent, DeOnte Rawlings, inasmuch as no force whatsoever was warranted under the circumstances.” Complaint ¶ 27.
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals has recognized that “it is impossible to negligently commit assault and/or battery as the states of mind are separate and incompatible.”
District of Columbia v. Chinn,
In this case, the plaintiff has satisfied the first requirement of
Chinn
by separately pleading negligence. The next question is whether the plaintiffs claim is based upon at least one factual scenario that presents an aspect of negligence apart from the use of excessive force. The plaintiff has posited several distinct theories of negligence liability, as he is entitled to do, based on at least two alternative factual scenarios. “When an individual is shot by a District of Columbia police officer, and he or his successors in interest decide to bring a lawsuit, they may proceed under one or more different common law theories of legal liability,” including “one or more theories of negligence.”
Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia,
1. Negligence Based on Unreasonable Use of Force (Clay and Haskel)
The plaintiff alleges that the officers were negligent in “using unlawful, excessive and unreasonable force on decedent, DeOnte Rawlings, inasmuch as no force whatsoever was warranted under the circumstances.” Complaint ¶ 27. This conduct allegedly violated the officers’ duty “to employ only reasonable measures in their interaction with and treatment of the decedent.”
Id.
¶26. Plainly, this claim presents no standard of care distinct from the duty not to use unreasonable force, and the claim therefore is indistinguishable from the assault and battery claim.
See District of Columbia v. Chinn,
2. Negligence Based on Provoking Gunfire (Clay and Haskel)
The plaintiff also alleges that the defendants “negligently took police action while in an off duty capacity, in an unmarked vehicle, without identifying themselves at all during the course of their negligence stop and chase of the decedent,” Complaint ¶ 27, and asserts that “a proximate cause” of Rawlings’s death “was the officers [sic] failure to identify themselves; chasing a teenager with a truck and forcing him off the bike, confronting him after he falls, still without identifying themselves and pointing a gun out of the truck at the juvenile.” MSJ Opp. at 23. “Taking such action in a high crime neighborhood,” according to the plaintiff, “was nothing if not negligent.” Id.
The plaintiff appears to suggest, therefore, that even if the juvenile on the minibike fired a gun at the officers in response to their questioning, the officers’ prior de *110 cisión to accost the juvenile in the manner that they did was an act of negligence that proximately caused Rawlings’s death. As plaintiffs counsel stated during oral argument, the officers’ wayward tactics “created the situation” that led to the shooting, and for that they may be held liable. This theory is untenable. Even if it were true that confronting a juvenile in the manner attributed to Clay and Haskel violated an applicable standard of care, the juvenile’s attack with a deadly weapon in response would constitute an intervening force breaking the chain of causation.
In
Hundley v. District of Columbia,
Although the circumstances are different in this case — where a juvenile was confronted by two men in a vehicle who did not identify themselves as police officers — as in
Hundley
it was not reasonably foreseeable, even in “a high crime neighborhood,” that a juvenile would respond to Clay and Haskel’s inquiries by drawing a gun and shooting at them. Therefore even if Clay or Haskel breached a duty of care by accosting the juvenile on the minibike, if the juvenile responded by shooting at them, the officers are not liable for the consequences that followed based on any prior negligence in initiating the encounter. The same principle applies whether it was Rawlings who fired a gun at the officers or whether (as the plaintiff has posited as an alternative scenario) it was a different juvenile whom the officers confronted on the bike and who fired at them.
See Hundley v. District of Columbia,
If, on the other hand, no gun was fired at the officers by any juvenile, then the plaintiff has not identified any standard of care (other than the duty not to use excessive force) the violation of which could have caused Rawlings’s death.
See District of Columbia v. Chinn,
3. Negligence Based on Shooting the Wrong Individual (Haskel)
The plaintiff has presented evidence that Rawlings was not in possession of and did not fire a gun. Based on this evidence, the plaintiffs filings suggest two possible scenarios under which Haskel *111 could be held liable for the shooting: (1) no one fired a gun at the officers; or (2) it was not Rawlings but a different juvenile whom the officers confronted and who shot at them, and in returning fire Haskel inadvertently shot Rawlings. 7 The latter scenario represents the basis for one of the plaintiffs theories of negligence liability.
If the juvenile in this situation initiated the violence by firing a gun at Clay and Haskel, the officers had a right to fire back.
Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia,
It is clear that only Haskel is potentially subject to liability on this theory. The undisputed evidence is that Haskel fired the shot that killed Rawlings, and the plaintiff has not presented any evidence that Clay fired his gun at all. The plaintiff has offered no basis on which Clay could be liable in negligence for Haskel’s inadvertent shooting of the wrong individual while acting in self-defense.
With respect to plaintiffs claim against Haskel on this theory of negligence, it suffers from a fatal flaw. The plaintiff and his expert have not furnished evidence of an applicable standard of care, nor a deviation from it, regarding the inadvertent shooting of the wrong individual in response to a gunfire attack. Plaintiffs expert attests that “if DeOnte Rawlings was armed and fired the shots at the subject officers they were justified in returning fire.” MSJ Opp. Ex. 4 (“Scott Affidavit”), at 1-2; see also id., Att. 1 (“Scott Report”), at 5 (“If Mr. Rawlings was armed with a gun and shot at Officer Haskel, the force used by Officer Haskel against Mr. Rawlings was necessary and objectively reasonable. Officer Haskel’s use of deadly force would be consistent with standard police practices and procedures.”). Plaintiffs expert simply does not discuss what standard of care would apply if a third person fired on Haskel and Haskel accidentally hit Rawlings while returning fire. Instead, the bulk of the expert’s report addresses alleged violations of police practices by Clay and Haskel before and after the shooting. See Scott Report at 8-9, 11-12. Where the report addresses the shooting itself, it speaks only to the question of whether Rawlings himself fired a gun, id. at 9-11, and what standards of behavior would govern if he did or did not have a gun, id. at 5-7. Nor do the remainder of the plaintiffs filings and exhibits identify a standard of care applicable to the scenario discussed here.
*112
Because the plaintiff has not identified a standard of care or presented any evidence of a deviation from that standard, summary judgment is warranted on this theory of liability.
See Smith v. District of Columbia,
4. Negligence Based on Failure to Prevent Another Officer’s Assault (Clay)
If Haskel shot Rawlings without justification — an issue that will be determined at trial — then Clay, as a police officer, could potentially be held liable in negligence for failing to intervene on Rawlings’s behalf.
Ordinarily, a police officer has no common law duty to protect any particular member of the public, and therefore officers are not liable for failing to render aid to specific individuals.
Morgan v. District of Columbia,
Although the police have no obligation to act at the behest of any one individual, once they begin to act on behalf of a particular citizen in such a way as to raise significantly the quotient of risk over and above the risks assumed by every other member of the community, additional responsibilities arise.
Id. To find such a special relationship there must be: “(1) a specific undertaking to protect a particular individual, and (2) justifiable reliance by [that individual].” Id. at 1314; see also id. at 1315 (“Liability is established ... if the police have specifically undertaken to protect a particular individual and the individual has specifically relied upon the undertaking.”).
Applying a variant of this theory in
Martin v. Malhoyt,
In
Martin,
a police officer allegedly dragged the plaintiff from her car during a traffic stop, struck her in the face, and handcuffed her while violently grinding her body and face onto the trunk of her car, all while a second officer stood idly by. The first officer then allegedly forced the plaintiff into his own car, dispersed onlookers, rolled up the car windows, and commenced repeatedly punching her.
Martin v. Malhoyt,
*113 We think Officer Stover’s “affirmative undertakings” — forcibly removing Stevens from her car, handcuffing her and placing her in police custody — sufficient to establish a “special relationship” between Stevens and the police. Once Stevens was denied, by Stover’s actions, the most basic means of self-protection, the “quotient of risk” to which she was exposed rose significantly; the officers thus incurred an obligation to take reasonable steps to insure that the physical harm to which Stevens was vulnerable did not materialize.
Id. at 259.
Although the court in
Martin
relied primarily on
Morgan
for its holding, it did not discuss the second half of the “special relationship” test articulated in that opinion — “justifiable reliance, by the plaintiff, upon the actions of the police.”
Morgan v. District of Columbia,
In this case, the plaintiff does not allege or present any evidence that Clay and Haskel apprehended Rawlings and then unjustifiably shot him. Rather, the plaintiffs contention is that Haskel shot Rawlings outright, either without any justification or while attempting to shoot another individual. Since the officers never had Rawlings within their control, they did not engage in the type of affirmative undertaking that would create the protective relationship to which the “special relationship” doctrine is geared.
It may seem counterintuitive that Clay could be liable in negligence if Haskel apprehended Rawlings before shooting him, but not if Haskel shot Rawlings outright without apprehending him. This result, however, is a reflection of the fact that in the District of Columbia a police officer has no duty, as far as negligence liability is concerned, to prevent harm to any particular member of the public. Only when police officers have already established a special relationship with an individual can an officer be held liable in negligence for failing to prevent harm to that individual. The shooting cannot have simultaneously established a special relationship with Rawlings and violated that relationship. To hold that a police officer is liable under common law negligence for failing to prevent another officer from committing any tort against a private citizen would represent an extension of Martin that the Court does not find consistent with the boundaries of the “special relationship” doctrine. 8
*114 5. Negligence Based on Respondeat Superior (District of Columbia)
The District of Columbia is vicariously liable for the negligent acts of its officers, acting within the scope of their employment.
Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia,
6. Negligence Based on Failure to Train or Supervise (District of Columbia)
To prevail on a negligent supervision claim at common law, a plaintiff must show that the employer “ ‘knew or should have known its employee behaved in a dangerous or otherwise incompetent manner, and that the employer, armed with that actual or constructive knowledge, failed to adequately supervise the employee.’ ”
District of Columbia v. Tulin,
Plaintiffs negligent supervision claim is clearly not viable in relation to any actions taken by Clay. Although plaintiffs expert attests that Clay violated police policies before and after the shooting, see Scott Affidavit at 4-5; Scott Report at 8-9, 11-12, neither this expert nor the plaintiff identifies any evidence suggesting that the Metropolitan Police Department knew or should have known that Clay was prone to behave in a dangerous or otherwise incompetent manner. Therefore the plaintiffs *115 negligent supervision claim against the District of Columbia can proceed only with respect to the Metropolitan Police Department’s supervision of Haskel.
To show that the Metropolitan Police Department was negligent in training and supervising Haskel, plaintiff must provide evidence that the Department knew or should have known that Haskel “behaved in a dangerous or otherwise incompetent manner” and nevertheless failed to adequately supervise him.
District of Columbia v. Tulin,
Plaintiff’s expert on police practices offers his opinion that Haskel’s involvement in two previous shootings while off-duty should have prompted an inquiry into whether he required additional training, even if those shootings were found to be justified, and that there is no record that Haskel ever received such attention. See Scott Affidavit at 3 (stating that even when a police shooting is found justified, “the officer’s actions and adherence to all policies and procedures must be properly scrutinized,” and if the officer is found to have violated policy during the shooting, “remedial and/or disciplinary action must be taken”). Further, the expert avers that if Haskel had received proper guidance and remedial training following the earlier shootings, “it is highly unlikely that he would have been involved in the Rawlings shooting.” Id. at 3; see also Scott Report at 14 (“Had Officer Haskel been properly supervised prior to the incident involving Mr. Rawlings it may have mitigated or prevented the death of Mr. Rawlings.”).
Plaintiffs expert provides no support for his view that Haskel should have received additional training after the two previous incidents, which took place more than eleven years before the Rawlings incident, in 1995 and 1996.
10
He notes that both shootings were reviewed by the Metropolitan Police Department and were determined to be justified. Scott Report at 13-14. The expert offers no reason to discredit these conclusions. Nor does he explain why the Department should have concluded that Haskel behaved in a dangerous or incompetent manner in the past.
See District of Columbia v. Tulin,
Plaintiffs expert also asserts that Haskel should have been provided with psychological counseling from the MPD simply by virtue of being involved in a shooting.
See
Scott Affidavit at 3 (“[F]ollow-up psychological counseling is mandatory for an officer who has been involved in any shooting-incident”); Scott Report at 14;
see also
MSJ Opp. at 6 (“[T]he District took no steps to provide ... any counseling of any kind.”). Even assuming that the District’s failure to provide psychological counseling to Haskel after the earlier shootings breached a duty of care, plaintiff must demonstrate that this breach was a “substantial factor” in Rawlings’s injury.
See Tarpeh-Doe v. United States,
Having provided no substantial evidence that the District of Columbia breached any duty of care in supervising Haskel that led to Rawlings’s injuries, the plaintiff cannot proceed to trial on his common law claim for negligent training and supervision. Summary judgment will be granted.
D. Negligent Training and Supervision Under 12 U.S.C. § 1983 (Count VII)
The plaintiff has brought a claim for negligent training and supervision against the District of Columbia under Section 1983 as well as under the common law.
11
Different standards govern the two claims. “In order to hold a municipality liable for a civil rights violation under Section 1983, the municipality must have acted in accordance with a ‘government policy or custom, whether made by its lawmakers or by those whose edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy.’ ”
Chen v. Monk,
Plaintiff and his expert have presented no evidence about any deficiency in the District of Columbia’s training of its police officers except in regard to one officer — defendant Haskel. “That a particular officer may be unsatisfactorily trained will not alone suffice to fasten liability on the city.”
City of Canton v. Harris,
Plaintiffs evidence falls short of the
Monell
standard and is not sufficient to survive summary judgment. A policy or custom “must be pervasive to support municipal liability.”
Tabb v. District of Columbia,
Because the plaintiff has failed to provide evidence upon which a reasonable jury could find a policy of deliberate indifference toward unjustified police shootings on the part of the District of Columbia, plaintiffs negligent training and supervision claim under Section 1983 cannot survive summary judgment.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the motion for summary judgment filed by Anthony Clay, James Haskel, and the District of Columbia was granted in part and denied in part by Order of October 27, 2011. Judgment has been entered for the defendants with respect to the plaintiffs claim for assault and battery against defendant Clay, the plaintiffs claims for negligence against all defendants, and the plaintiffs claim for negligent training and supervision under common law and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the District of Columbia.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The papers reviewed in connection with this motion include: defendants’ memorandum in support of motion for summary judgment ("MSJ") [Dkt. No. 107]; plaintiff's memorandum in opposition to summary judgment ("MSJ Opp.”) [Dkt. No. 110]; defendants' reply to opposition to summary judgment ("MSJ Reply”) [Dkt. No. 114]; defendants’ statement of undisputed facts [Dkt. No. 107-1]; plaintiff’s response to defendants’ statement of undisputed facts [Dkt. No. 110-1]; plaintiff’s motion to strike exhibits to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment [Dkt. No. 109]; defendants' opposition to plaintiff's motion to strike exhibits [Dkt. No. 112]; plaintiff's reply to defendants’ opposition to motion to strike [Dkt. No. 115].
The plaintiff's motion to strike certain exhibits from the defendants’ motion for summary judgment has been denied without prejudice. See Rawlings v. District of Columbia, Civil Action No. 07-1914, Minute Order (Oct. 11, 2011).
. Both sides had proceeded on the assumption that plaintiff's Section 1983 claim might be against both Haskel and Clay, even though Count V of the complaint did not mention Clay. The Court therefore granted plaintiff's oral motion to add Clay to Count V, see Rawlings v. District of Columbia, Civil Action No. 07-1914, Minute Order (Oct. 11, 2011); which has now been accomplished by plaintiff’s amended complaint filed on October 24, 2011.
. The defense refers to this witness by his initials only, and has submitted his deposition under seal, in order to protect his identity. See MSJ at 13 n. 1.
. As is evident, C.C.'s account of the incident is generally consistent with that of Clay and Haskel. There is one major discrepancy, however, among the narratives. C.C. testified that after the truck stopped and Rawlings jumped off the bike, he observed a man exit the passenger side of the vehicle with his gun drawn, walk around the back of the truck, and ask Rawlings what he had in his hand ("What you got there?"). Rawlings responded, "Who is you?" Each party repeated his question a few times, and then Rawlings fired. After Rawlings fired his first shot, C.C. and Rawlings both ran away from the truck. According to C.C., he never saw the driver of the vehicle draw a weapon. C.C. Dep. at 26, 28, 31-33, 40, 48, 63-68.
According to the officers, Haskel spoke with Rawlings from the driver’s seat, and Clay did not come around the truck or pull his weapon until Rawlings had already fired and was running away. Clay could not even see the first shots being fired because he was still on the passenger side of the truck. According to C.C., however, the passenger of the truck came around the vehicle with gun drawn, and it was this person, not the driver, who spoke with Rawlings.
. If it were true that Haskel returned fire only in response to the unprovoked brandishing or firing of a weapon by the juvenile on the minibike, then the defendants' conduct at that point could perhaps be viewed as police action taken to halt a crime and ensure public safety. If the jury credits this version of the facts, however, then the plaintiff's conspiracy claim has necessarily already failed, because the shooting was not the result of a prior agreement to commit an assault and battery.
. The jury will be called upon to make this determination only if it first concludes that Haskel or Clay are liable for assault and battery. A claim for civil conspiracy is not viable unless the elements of the underlying tort are satisfied.
Nader v. Democratic Nat’l Committee,
. In support of the latter scenario, the plaintiff points to the fact that neither Clay nor Haskel could specifically identify Rawlings as the juvenile they confronted on the minibike, and that Haskel has admitted that when he fired upon the juvenile there were other people in the vicinity and he was firing toward an area where there were residential buildings. See MSJ at 12; Haskel Dep. at 78-79. Defense counsel, at oral argument, indicated an understanding that these two scenarios represent the plaintiffs alternative theories of what occurred during the shooting, an understanding that plaintiff's counsel subsequently confirmed.
. The requirement of a "special relationship” differentiates this common law negligence theory from the distinct concept of bystander liability under Section 1983. The latter has different elements and requires no special relationship.
See Fernandors v. District of Columbia,
. There has been some confusion about whether plaintiffs common law claim for negligent supervision is presented within Count III or Count VII of the complaint. Count III, which presents claims for common law negligence, refers to the District of Columbia along with the individual defendants, but appears to assert only agency theories of liability. See Complaint ¶¶ 26-29. Count VII clearly alleges negligent training and supervision, but cites only 42 U.S.C. § 1983 as a basis for liability and exclusively discusses the "deliberate indifference” standard applicable to constitutional claims. See Complaint ¶¶ 44-46. Notwithstanding Count VII’s exclusive reference to Section 1983, the defendants interpret that count as including plaintiff's common law negligent supervision claim. See MSJ at 38 ("Count VII ... alleges negligent training and supervision under both the § 1983 'deliberate indifference' standard ... and ordinary negligence.”). When the plaintiff was given leave to amend Count V of his complaint, he also (without authorization) inserted the words "Common Law” to the heading of Count VII.
The Court construes the complaint to allege negligent training as one of several negligence theories encompassed within Count III. The Court clarifies this issue only for the sake of precision: it is evident from the parties’ filings and their comments at the motions hearing held on October 11, 2011, that both parties recognize the plaintiff has alleged negligent training and supervision under both the common law and Section 1983.
. Plaintiff makes several statements about Haskel’s prior shootings that are not supported by the evidence he has submitted, or are contradicted by that evidence. For instance, plaintiff claims that both previous incidents "involved teenage males who were minors.” MSJ Opp. at 17; id. at 6. No evidence in plaintiff's filings supports that contention. Plaintiff also states that "in both previous instances, defendant Haskel shot at individuals who were running away from him and who were supposedly armed but no weapon was found.” Id. at 6; see also id. at 17. According to the account provided by plaintiff's own expert, in the first incident a gun was in fact recovered from the suspects. See Scott Report at 13. In the second incident, the suspect escaped from the scene and was not apprehended until later, at an apartment complex, by different officers. Id. Plaintiff further states that in both previous shootings "the injuries suffered were gunshot wounds to the back," MSJ Opp. at 17, but no one suffered any injuries in the first incident — Haskel shot at the suspect once and missed. Scott Report at 13.
. Although the Court denied without prejudice the defendants’ summary judgment motion with respect to Count VII, pending review of the defendants’ motion in limine addressing the claim, see Rawlings v. District of Columbia, Civil Action No. 07-1914, Minute Order (Oct. 11, 2011), the Court ultimately found it unnecessary to consult that motion in order rule on this claim.
