MEMORANDUM OPINION
This civil action arises from events involving the Plaintiffs unsuccessful attempts to obtain custody of her two minor grandchildren following the death of her son, who was the children’s biological father. Plaintiff Barbara Rees has asserted a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the alleged violation of her federal civil rights as well as various claims premised on Pennsylvania tort law. She has named as Defendants the Erie County Office of Children and Youth (“OCY”) and several of its employees and/or agents.
The case was originally commenced in the Erie County Court of Common Pleas and removed to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over the case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(a) and 1367(a).
Presently pending before me is the Defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be granted insofar as it relates to Plaintiffs federal claim under § 1983. As to the remaining state law *439 claims, this Court will decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction and will instead remand those claims for further proceedings in state court.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Pearl Dombrowski (“Pearl”) and Ruby Peterson (“Ruby”) are the minor children of Carrie Peterson (“Peterson”) and Joseph Dombrowski, who is now deceased. (Complaint ¶¶ 1-2.) Plaintiff Barbara Rees (“Rees”) is the mother of Joseph Dombrowski and the paternal grandmother of Pearl and Ruby. (Id. at ¶ 4.) Defendants Karleen Vogt (“Vogt”) and Cyndi Valimont (“Valimont”) were employed at all relevant times by OCY as, respectively, a caseworker and a supervisor. (Id. at ¶¶ 8, 11.) Defendant Amy Jones, Esq. is an assistant solicitor for the County of Erie who represented OCY in matters pertinent to this litigation. (Id. at ¶ 14.)
On or about April 5, 2007, Defendant OCY began an investigation of alleged neglect on the part of Pearl and Ruby’s biological mother, Peterson. (Complaint ¶ 20.) Three months later, in July of 2007, the children were taken into custody by OCY and placed into a foster home as the result of a judicial determination that continued placement in Peterson’s home would be contrary to the children’s welfare. (Id. at ¶¶ 21-22.)
Prior to these events and the involvement of OCY, Pearl had spent significant time with Rees and, with the agreement of her biological parents, had been cared for by Rees over a period of seven months. (Complaint ¶ 18.) During this same period of time, Peterson had denied Rees custody over Ruby on the ground that she did not believe Joseph Dombrowski to be Ruby’s biological father. (Id. at ¶ 19.)
On August 4, 2007, shortly after the children had been placed into an OCY foster home, Joseph Dombrowski died unexpectedly. (Complaint ¶¶ 21, 24.) On or about that date, genetic tests were taken by the Domestic Relations Section of the Erie County Court of Common Pleas. (Id. at ¶ 25.)
A few days later, a court hearing was held concerning a Dependent Child Petition filed by OCY on behalf of the children. (Complaint ¶26.) At this hearing, Rees notified Defendant Jones and OCY that she wished to assume the responsibilities of her deceased son and care for the children. (Id. at ¶ 27.) In addition to Rees, several members of the children’s biological family advised OCY that they wished to care for and/or adopt Ruby and Pearl. (Id. at ¶ 28.) Defendants nevertheless refused to allow Rees or other family members to care for or adopt the children on the ground that the paternity of the children had not been officially determined. (Id. at ¶ 29.)
On or about November 29, 2007, the results of the genetic tests revealed Joseph Dombrowski to be the biological father of both Pearl and Ruby. (Complaint ¶ 31.) Rees was then granted permission to visit the children each week for a period of one hour at the home of the foster parents. Later, these visits were expanded to include activities outside of the foster home for a period of up to one and one-half hours, including travel time. (Id. at ¶¶ 32-33.)
On December 12, 2007, Rees completed an Emergency Caregiver Kinship Authorization and Consent form and delivered the same to OCY. (Complaint ¶ 34.) Rees was subsequently notified by Defendants Vogt and Valimont that her form would remain on file and that the children would be placed with her only if they were not reunified with their biological mother. (Id. at ¶ 35.)
*440 On or around January 29, 2008, Rees’s then-attorney, James Gerónimo, Esq., sent correspondence to Defendant Jones and OCY requesting increased visitation time and reiterating Rees’s willingness and ability to take over the care of the children. (Complaint ¶¶ 36-37.) Following this request, Vogt and OCY terminated Rees’s weekly visits with the children without stating any reason. (Id. at ¶ 38.)
Two months later, in March of 2008, Valimont and Vogt advised Rees that her weekly visits would be reinstated under the conditions that they occur at the convenience of the foster parents and that they not exceed two and one-half hours. (Complaint ¶¶ 40-41.) Thereafter, Rees sought overnight visits with the children but was informed by Vogt that such visits would not be allowed as they would interfere with the reunification process between the children and Peterson. (Id. at ¶¶ 42-43.) Notwithstanding this, the children’s foster mother gave Rees verbal approval of her request and indicated that Peterson had never made any attempt to see the children. (Id. at ¶ 44.)
On or around July 7, 2008, Rees was notified by OCY that the reunification process between the children and their mother had been terminated. (Complaint ¶ 45.) That same day, Defendant Valimont telephoned Rees about her interest in pursuing the Kinship Care process, and the process was re-initiated two days later on July 9. (Id. at ¶¶ 46-47.) In spite of the kinship care process having been renewed, Plaintiff was notified later that month by the children’s foster mother that OCY had informed her it would require agency approval for each of Rees’s visits with the children. (Id. at ¶ 48.)
On or around July 28, 2008, the Court of Common Pleas entered an order involuntarily terminating Peterson’s parental rights. (Id. at ¶ 49.) At that hearing, the children’s guardian ad litem recommended that the children be placed with Rees as next of kin; however, Defendant Vogt recommended adoption by the foster parents on the ground that the children’s father, who had been raised by Rees, had committed suicide. (Id. at ¶¶ 50-52.) Notwithstanding these events, Rees’s Kinship Care application was approved on or around August 28, 2008 (Id. at ¶ 53.)
Approximately two weeks later, Rees filed a formal grievance against OCY with Mary Ann Daniels, Director of the Erie County Department for Human Services, Office of Children and Youth Services. (Complaint ¶ 54.) The following day, Rees learned that OCY was cancelling her weekly visits with the children and that it had instructed the children’s foster mother not to allow Rees any contact with them. (Id. at ¶ 55.) Rees avers that this action was taken in retaliation for the formal grievance she filed against the Defendants. (Id. at ¶ 56.) This cancellation of visits occurred notwithstanding Defendants’ awareness that Rees was eligible to care for the children and that her kinship care application had been approved. (Id. at ¶ 57.) On or around September 22, 2008, OCY transferred responsibility for the matter to a new caseworker, Greg Phillips. (Complaint ¶ 58.)
The following month, Rees filed a second formal grievance against the Defendants, this time with the United States Department of Health and Human Services, which forwarded the grievance on to the Pennsylvania State Office of Children, Youth and Families. (Id. at ¶¶ 59-61.) By e-mail dated October 30, 2008, Ms. Daniels acknowledged that OCY had been directed to facilitate visitation with Rees and expressed her own uncertainty as to the reason for the “hold-up.” (Id. at ¶ 62, Ex. E.)
*441 On or around November 3, 2008, Rees received a letter from the Director of OCY stating that she had been selected for “random” urine screens for drugs and alcohol requiring her to call the office every day of the week starting immediately to see when she would have to submit to these tests. (Complaint ¶ 63.) The following day, Rees received an email from Cyndi Gariepy, Program Representative, Pennsylvania State Department of Public Welfare, indicating her concern that “[t]his case was handled very poorly by the agency.” (Complaint ¶ 64, Ex. F.)
On or around November 17, 2008, Rees was advised that, as the result of an investigation of OCY at the state level, her case would be assigned to a new caseworker, Nicole Duplanti, and a new supervisor, Kim Warchol. (Id. at ¶ 66.) Rees was further advised that she would have to once again recommence the process of submitting to a home study and undergo additional daily “random” drug screening. (Id. at ¶ 67.) Rees ultimately chose not to participate in the second home study based on her frustration with the process and her treatment by the agency.
Following a “lengthy and thorough review” of OCY’s actions by the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare, Western Region Office of Children, Youth and Families, the latter agency issued a report of its findings as set forth in correspondence dated January 2, 2009 and appended to the Complaint. (Complaint ¶ 68, Ex. G.) That report states, in relevant part, as follows:
The agency removed the children from their mother on July 27, 2007, and placed the children into an approved foster home. On July 30, 2007, the father of Pearl contacted the agency and requested his mother be considered as a placement resource. On July 31, 2007, the paternal grandmother, Ms. Rees, attended the court hearing and requested consideration for kinship approval. The agency failed to consider the grandmother until a paternity test was completed on both children, even though Ms[.] Rees had previously cared for Pearl for seven months. It was not until December 2, 2007, that paternity was verified. A formal kinship referral was not submitted to Family Services until July 9, 2008. Ms. Rees was approved on August 28, 2008. After approval, the children’s goal was changed to adoption and all visits were stopped between the children and their grandmother. The agency’s plan was to recommend the foster parents adopt the children as they had “developed a bond”. Although the grandmother was approved, there was no motion by the agency to move the children, as the bond had already formed between the children and the foster parents.
The Department finds the actions of the agency a direct violation of the Kinship Care Policy and the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. There was no requirement of paternity necessary prior to consideration of Ms[.] Rees as a kinship resource. The agency’s failure to conduct an appropriate and immediate kinship study severely disrupted any bond that would have formed between the children and their grandmother.
(Complaint Ex. G.)
Rees alleges that, despite their awareness that several members of the children’s biological family wished to care for and/or adopt the children, the Defendants refused to allow herself or any other member of the children’s family to adopt or care for them and instead “adamantly and aggressively opposed placement of the children with [her] in favor of the foster parents.” (Complaint ¶¶ 28-29, 91.) This refusal of access, she claims, was without *442 any reasonable basis and in contravention of Defendants’ duty, pursuant to the Kinship Care Policy adopted by the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services and the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997, to “make reasonable efforts and document child specific efforts to place a child for adoption, with a relative or guardian.” (Complaint ¶¶ 30, 74, 77, 88-90, 92.) She further claims that, “[t]o date, the bond and relationship between [herself] and her grandchildren remains irreparably damaged” due to the Defendants’ actions. (Id. at ¶ 83.)
As a result of the foregoing, Rees has alleged several claims premised on the violation of her rights or duties owed her under state and federal law. Counts I and II assert claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the alleged violation of her federal civil rights. Counts III and V assert state law claims for negligence and gross negligence, respectively. Count IV asserts a claim for negligence per se, based on alleged violations of the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. Counts VI and VII assert respective state law claims for the alleged negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Count VIII asserts a claim for municipal liability against OCY pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Defendants have filed a motion which requests, among other things, that this Court dismiss all of the federal § 1983 claims on the basis that they fail to state a cognizable cause of action upon which relief can be granted. Plaintiff has filed a brief in opposition, and the issues are now ripe for disposition.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing a motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), courts must “accept all factual allegations as true, construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, and determine whether, under any reasonable reading of the complaint, the plaintiff may be entitled to relief.”
Byers v. Intuit, Inc.,
[w]hile a complaint attacked by a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss does not need detailed factual allegations, a plaintiffs obligation to provide the grounds of his entitlement to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do. Factual allegations must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
III. DISCUSSION
A.
Counts I, II, and VIII all involve claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to redress alleged violations of Rees’s federal civil rights. That statute provides, in relevant part, that:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States ... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.
Section 1983 does not create substantive rights; instead, it “provides only remedies for deprivations of rights established elsewhere in the Constitution or federal laws.”
Gordon v. Lowell,
In Count I of the Complaint, Rees alleges that the Defendants have violated her constitutionally protected rights to privacy, familial association and integrity, and the maintenance, custody, care, and management of her grandchildren. In Count II, she alleges that Defendants violated her constitutional right under the Due Process Clause to equal access to the courts. Rees’s theory of liability also incorporates allegations that the Defendants conspired together to deprive her of these rights. Counts I and II appear to be premised, respectively, on the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive and procedural guarantees against “depriv[ations] ... of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” 1 U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. We consider each count in turn.
1. Count I of the Complaint
Where, as here, liberty interests are asserted as a basis for § 1983 liability, the court must initially address the “threshold issue” of “whether the plaintiff has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right at all.”
McCurdy v. Dodd,
(ii) her interest in keeping her extended family intact (ie. “family integrity”) and
(iii) her interest in enjoying the companionship of her grandchildren (ie., “family association”). (See Complaint ¶ 98.) 2 To *444 properly determine whether Rees has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right, it is necessary to review the existing case law discussing and defining the constitutional rights of grandparents vis-a-vis their grandchildren.
We begin with
Moore v. City of East Cleveland,
Ours is by no means a tradition limited to respect for the bonds uniting the members of the nuclear family. The tradition of uncles, aunts, cousins, and especially grandparents sharing a household along with parents and children has roots equally venerable and equally deserving of constitutional recognition. [ ] Over the years millions of our citizens have grown up in just such an environment, and most, surely, have profited from it. Even if conditions of modem society have brought about a decline in extended family households, they have not erased the accumulated wisdom of civilization, gained over the centuries and honored throughout our history, that supports a larger conception of the family. Out of choice, necessity, or a sense of family responsibility, it has been common for close relatives to draw together and participate in the duties and the satisfactions of a common home. Decisions concerning child rearing, which Yoder, Meyer, Pierce and other cases have recognized as entitled to constitutional protection, long have been shared with grandparents or other relatives who occupy the same household' — • indeed who may take on major responsibility for the rearing of the children. [ ] Especially in times of adversity, such as the death of a spouse or economic need, the broader family has tended to come together for mutual sustenance and to maintain or rebuild a secure home life. This is apparently what happened here.[ ]
Whether or not such a household is established because of personal tragedy, the choice of relatives in this degree of kinship to live together may not lightly be denied by the State. Pierce struck down an Oregon law requiring all children to attend the State’s public schools, holding that the Constitution “excludes any general power of the State to standardize its children by forcing them to accept instruction from public teachers only.” ... By the same token the Constitution prevents East Cleveland from standardizing its children and its adults *445 by forcing all to live in certain narrowly defined family patterns.
Id.
at 504-06,
Rees argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Moore
“carved out rights of familial integrity and privacy for grandparents and other non-traditional family types.” (Br. in Opp. of Def.s’ Mot. to Dismiss Compl. [9] at p. 8.) Yet such a reading overstates
Moore’s
central holding. The narrow question resolved in
Moore
was the constitutionality of a city housing ordinance that, on the basis of land-use concerns, “intrude[d] on choices concerning family living arrangements.”
While the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has not defined the substantive due process rights of grandparents and other extended family members relative to custodial matters, several other federal circuit appeals courts have addressed this issue. In the cases which have been decided since Moore, courts addressing the purported due process rights of grandparents and other extended family members seem to place particular emphasis on several factors: to wit, whether the plaintiff is a custodial figure or is otherwise acting in loco parentis to the children; whether and for how long the children were residing with the plaintiff at the time of the alleged deprivation; whether the plaintiff has a biological link to the children; and whether there is a potential conflict between the rights of the plaintiff and the rights or interests of the children’s natural parents. Some courts have also considered whether relevant state law would imbue the plaintiff with certain rights or expectations typically afforded to parents.
In
Ellis v. Hamilton,
In considering the viability of the plaintiffs’ claims on motions for summary judgment, the court began with the premise that “[i]t is plain ... that the ‘liberty’ protected by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment includes the right to the custody of one’s minor children and that it would be a deprivation of that liberty without due process of law for persons acting under color of state law permanently to separate the children from their parents without notice and hearing.”
Ellis,
The
Ellis
court then went on to consider the liberty interests of Mrs. Ellis herself, noting that, while her liberty interest was stronger, the court was “not sure that even it should be accepted.”
Id.,
The Second Circuit recognized a constitutionally protected liberty interest on the part of a biological relative in
Rivera v. Marcus,
Citing to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Smith v. Organization of Foster Families for Equality and Reform,
In a case distinguishable from
Rivera,
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a biological grandmother had no constitutional interest in the adoption or society of her grandchildren where the grandmother had only maintained occasional contact with her grandchildren and lacked any emotional, financial or custodial history with them. In
Mullins v. State of Oregon, 57
F.3d 789 (9th Cir.1995), the subject children were dependents of the state of Oregon when the plaintiffs (the grandmother and her husband) sought, unsuccessfully, to adopt them. Notwithstanding the plaintiffs’ assertion that they possessed a constitutional right to keep their “family” intact, the court of appeals stated that the case was “[not] about breaking up an extant family unit,” but rather “creating a new family unit where none existed before.”
The
Mullins
court went on hold that the grandmother lacked any protected liberty interest for purposes of a procedural due process claim. Here, the court noted, the liberty interest at stake need not be “fundamental,” since the procedural component of due process protects “all liberty interests that are derived from state law or
*448
from the Due Process Clause itself.”
The Ninth Circuit subsequently revisited the issue of grandparents’ substantive due process rights in
Miller v. California,
The
Miller
court held that the plaintiffs possessed neither a substantive due process right to family integrity and association relative to their grandchildren nor a liberty interest in visitation with them. As to the right of family integrity and association, the court observed that “there was no existing family unit of which [the plaintiffs] were a part that Yuba County sought to break asunder; the grandchildren were, in fact, wards of the court at all relevant times.”
The First Circuit Court of Appeals has similarly expressed doubt as to whether non-resident grandparents have a constitutionally protected interest in their grandchildren under substantive due process principles. In
Brown v. Ives,
Although the
Brown
court was willing to indulge in an assumption of the asserted constitutional right for purposes of its discussion, it expressed some skepticism on the point. The court recognized that, in
Watterson v. Page,
Two Circuit Courts of Appeals, however, have ruled that even non-resident grandparents possess a constitutionally protected liberty interests in participating in the upbringing of their grandchildren. In
Johnson v. City of Cincinnati,
The question confronted by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Johnson
was “whether a grandmother has a fundamental freedom of association right to participate in the upbringing of her grandchildren.”
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has gone further by recognizing a “clearly established” constitutional right to familial association as between grandparents and their grandchildren. In
Suasnavas v. Stover,
On the defendants’ appeal from the district court’s denial of qualified immunity, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed and held, in relevant part, that the Luethjes had a constitutionally protected liberty interest in associating with then-grandchildren that was clearly established at the time of the defendants’ challenged conduct. In arriving at this ruling, the
Suasnavas
court relied on the Tenth Circuit’s prior decision in
Trujillo v. Board of County Commissioners,
... that the familial relationships in this case do not form the outer limits of protected intimate relationships. As the Court in [Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees,468 U.S. 609 ,104 S.Ct. 3244 ,82 L.Ed.2d 462 (1984) ] further explained, “a broad range of human relationships ... may make greater or lesser claims to constitutional protection ...,” requiring “a careful assessment of where [a particular] relationship’s objective characteristics locate it on a spectrum from the most intimate to the most attenuated of personal attachments.”104 S.Ct. at 3251 . Those characteristics which would indicate a protected association include smallness, selectivity, and seclusion. Id. at 3250. We need not make such an assessment here, since the relationships at issue clearly fall within the protected range.
Insofar as the Luethje’s relationship with their grandchildren was concerned, the Tenth Circuit agreed with the district court’s finding that the complaint alleged the violation of a clearly established substantive due process right. “Although Trujillo did not explicitly recognize a right of familial association between grandparents and grandchildren,” the court wrote,
we made it clear in Trujillo that the right of familial association extends beyond the context of parent, spouse, or child,’ Trujillo,768 F.2d at 1190 , and we cited specific legal authority recognizing the importance of the familial relationship between grandparents and grandchildren, id., at 1188 (citing Moore v. City of East Cleveland,431 U.S. 494 ,97 S.Ct. 1932 ,52 L.Ed.2d 531 (1977) (plurality opinion) (zoning ordinance could not prohibit grandmother from living with her grandsons who were cousins), and Drollinger v. Milligan,552 F.2d 1220 , 1226-27 (7th Cir.1977) (deprivation of grandfather’s relationship with grandchild actionable under § 1983)).
As the foregoing survey of case law demonstrates, the various circuit courts of appeals have not been uniform in their method of analyzing substantive due process claims involving asserted liberty interests on the part of grandparents or other extended family members relative to their minor kin. Nevertheless, certain common themes seem to figure prominently in the cases, most notably the courts’ emphasis on whether the plaintiff was a custodial figure or otherwise acting in loco parentis to the children at the time of the state’s involvement in their lives; whether and for how long the children had been residing with the plaintiff prior to state intervention; whether the plaintiff has a biological link to the children; whether there is a potential conflict between the rights of the plaintiff and the rights or interests of the children’s natural parents; *452 and whether the plaintiff has any rights or expectations relative to the children under relevant state law.
Based on the foregoing authorities, I conclude that Rees lacks any constitutionally protected liberty interest in associating with her granddaughters. Insofar as her relationship to her younger granddaughter Ruby is concerned, Rees is in a position somewhat similar to the plaintiffs in
Mullins, supra,
where, at the time of the state’s involvement in their lives, the grandparents’ most significant link to their grandchildren was biological. The complaint alleges that, in the time leading up to OCY’s investigation into neglectful conditions in Carrie Peterson’s home, Ruby had been withheld from Rees’s custody on the basis of her disputed paternity. There is no allegation of a significant emotional, financial, or custodial history as between Rees and Ruby pri- or to the time the children were removed from their mother’s home. As with the
Mullins
plaintiffs, the interest asserted here is in “a potential, still undeveloped familial relationship with [a] prospective adopted child[ ].”
Rees’s relationship to her older granddaughter Pearl presents a closer call. On one hand, certain factors are present here that weigh in favor of recognizing a fundamental liberty interest on the part of Rees relative to the custody, care and management of Pearl. Beyond Rees’s biological relationship to her granddaughter, she has alleged that the two spent significant time together to the extent that, at one point, Rees had cared for Pearl over a period of seven months with the agreement of the child’s parents prior to the County’s involvement in their lives. In addition, given the mother’s unavailability to the children and the subsequent termination of her parental rights coupled with the father’s premature death, this case does not present a situation where the rights of the natural parents were in serious conflict with Rees’s interest in taking custody of Pearl.
Nevertheless, certain countervailing factors are also present in this case which, in my opinion, have dispositive importance. Most significantly, this is not a ease in which Rees had physical or legal custody of Pearl at the time that the Defendants commenced their child welfare proceedings.
(See
Complaint ¶ 18 (“Pearl Dombrowski had spent significant time with and was cared for by Plaintiff over a period of seven months prior [to] any involvement by OCY.”).) Rather, as Plaintiffs counsel has laudably and candidly clarified, Pearl had been returned to her mother’s custody for a period of 1 or 2 months prior to her removal from Carrie Peterson’s home, and Ms. Peterson was therefore the children’s legal guardian and custodian at the time of the agency’s intervention. After being removed from their mother’s home, both children, according to the complaint, were placed in an OCY foster home where they remained following the juvenile court’s determination that a return to their mother’s residence would be contrary to the children’s welfare. Thus, there is no allegation that Rees was acting
in loco parentis
to Pearl
5
or as her custodian at
*453
the time the agency became involved in their lives, although Rees may have desired that status. Nor was Rees the only biological relative available to assist with the children, as the complaint alleges that “several members of the Children’s biological family wished to care for and/or adopt the Children.” (Complaint ¶ 28.) Under these circumstances, it is unlikely that Pennsylvania law would have afforded Rees a right of action relative to Pearl, had the child been tortiously injured following OCY’s involvement in the case,
see In re D.M.,
I find that these circumstances collectively weigh against recognition of a fundamental liberty interest on the part of Rees. Like the situation in
Miller,
and quite unlike the situations in
Moore, Ellis,
and
Rivera,
“there was no existing family unit of which [the plaintiffs] were a part that [the Defendants] sought to break asunder; the grandchildren were, in fact, wards of the [county] at all relevant times.”
Miller,
Although there is little law on the point within this circuit, support for my conclusion can be found in the District Court’s decision in
Gordon v. Lowell,
On review of the defendants’ Rule 56 motion, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, ruling, in relevant part, that the plaintiffs lacked any constitutionally protected liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of their grandchildren.
To the extent my conclusion as to Rees’s lack of a constitutionally protected liberty interest is contradicted by the decisions of the Sixth and Tenth Circuits in Johnson and Suasnavas, I decline to follow those rulings.
In
Johnson,
it will be recalled, the court distinguished between the idea of a fundamental associational right to merely visit one’s family verses an associational right to participate in child-rearing, giving recognition to the latter but not the former.
See
More persuasive, in my view, is the dissenting opinion authored by Judge Gilman, who would have held that nonresident, noncustodial grandparents like Mrs. Johnson lack a fundamental liberty interest in visiting or assisting in the upbringing of their grandchildren. In Judge Gilman’s view, the majority’s reliance on Moore v. East Cleveland, as well as Pierce and Meyer, to support the existence of such a right was misplaced. As Judge Gilman explained,
Where grandparents reside with their grandchildren, as was the case in Moore, the circumstances are such that recognizing the grandparents’ right to live in that household is a logical outgrowth of relevant Supreme Court precedent. Recognizing the right to visit grandchildren as a fundamental liberty interest, in contrast, represents an expansion of previously recognized fundamental rights and presents the risk of imposing this court’s policy preferences in the guise of Due Process.
I am similarly unpersuaded by the reasoning of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals as set forth in
Suasnavas, supra.
In that case, the court’s analysis relative to the associational rights of the grandparents was brief, but the court did indicate its reliance on
Trujillo v. Board of County Commissioners,
In sum, the conclusion that Rees lacked any substantive due process right relative to her associational interest with her granddaughters is, in my view, consistent with the prevailing position among the federal courts of appeals. I also consider this result to be consistent with the Supreme Court’s admonition that courts should proceed cautiously when entertaining claims that would broaden the scope of substantive due process protection. As the Court has previously stated,
[W]e “ha[ve] always been reluctant to expand the concept of substantive due process because guideposts for responsible decisionmaking in this unchartered area are scarce and open-ended.” Collins,503 U.S., at 125 ,112 S.Ct., at 1068 . By extending constitutional protection to an asserted right or liberty interest, we, to a great extent, place the matter outside the arena of public debate and legislative action. We must therefore “exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field,” ibid., lest the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause be subtly transformed into the policy preferences of the Members of this Court, Moore, 431 U.S., *456 at 502,97 S.Ct., at 1937 (plurality opinion).
Washington v. Glucksberg,
2. Count II of the Complaint
In Count II of her complaint, Rees alleges that the Defendants collectively violated her rights under the Due Process Clause by denying her equal access to the courts. Although the complaint does not elaborate on this theory, it is clear from Rees’s brief in opposition to the pending motion that her claim is intended to be construed as a procedural due process claim.
When analyzing a procedural due process claim, a court’s first step is to determine whether the nature of the interest is encompassed within the Fourteenth Amendment’s protection.
Pressley v. Blaine,
Procedural due process rights are triggered by the deprivation of a legally cognizable liberty or property interest.
See Pressley v. Blaine,
Nevertheless, “[t]he procedural component of the Due Process Clause does not protect everything that might be described as a “benefit.”
Town of Castle Rock, Colorado v. Gonzales,
Here, the asserted liberty interest is the right to family integrity. Rees complains in her brief in opposition to the pending motion that she was not afforded any proper proceeding regarding her suitability as a custodian or as a candidate for the children’s adoption. (See Pl.’s Br. in Opp. [9] at p. 16 (“[N]o dependency hearing or any other similar process occurred to determine whether or not Ms. Rees was suitable as a candidate for adoption of the children.....These denials of procedures, particularly those related to gaining custody of the children in the face of established rights, amount to violations of due process.”).)
Rees’s allegations, however, do not establish the deprivation of any constitutionally protected liberty interest. For the reasons previously explained at length, I do not find support in the case law for the proposition that Ms. Rees had a liberty interest in the custody and care of her grandchildren arising from the Fourteenth Amendment itself.
Moreover, while Pennsylvania law does afford grandparents certain rights vis-a-vis their grandchildren, these rights do not support the type of constitutionally protected liberty interest being asserted here. For example, under § 5311 of what is sometimes referred to as Pennsylvania’s Custody and Grandparents Visitation Act, 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 5301
et seq.,
when a child’s parents are deceased, the parent of the deceased parent may petition the court for partial custody or visitation relative to the child. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5311.
6
Thus, Pennsylvania law conferred upon Rees standing to petition the court to seek partial custody over her granddaughters and/or visitation with them, given her son’s death. Similarly, under § 5313 of the Act, Rees had standing to petition for physical and legal custody of the girls in light of the court’s dependency ruling.
See
23 Pa. C.S.A. § 5313(b)
7
;
R.M. v. Baxter,
These “rights,” however, do not amount to a constitutionally protected interest in family integrity, nor do they guarantee any particular outcome relative to the grandparent’s custody, visitation or adoption request. In any case, the state trial court has the authority to grant or deny the grandparent’s request as the best interests of the child dictate.
See
§ 5311 (allowing reasonable partial custody or visitation rights to grandparents conditioned upon a court finding that such partial custody and/or visitation “would be in the best interest of the child and would not interfere with the parent-child relationship”); § 5313(b) (permitting the court to award physical and legal custody to the grandparent “if it is in the best interest of the child” to be with the grandparent rather than with either parent);
In re Adoption of Hess,
Even if the foregoing state law provisions did create rights entitled to protection under the federal due process clause, however, Rees has not alleged an actionable deprivation of those rights. Despite the fact that Rees had standing to petition for custody and/or visitation rights with her granddaughters, she never filed a petition in that regard. According to the complaint, she eventually abandoned her efforts to obtain custody through a kinship care appointment, and she apparently never attempted to adopt the children.
At oral argument Rees’s counsel refined her theory somewhat by claiming that the Defendants, in effect, prevented her from filing custody and/or visitation petitions, thus interfering with her right to access the courts. It is alleged that the Defendants accomplished this by baiting Rees into pursuing the kinship care process, all the while knowing that they would never support her appointment as a placement source.
Even accepting this averment as true, however, I still find that Rees’s legal theory fails to state a viable constitutional tort. “[T]he right of access to the courts is an aspect of the First Amendment right to petition the Government for redress of grievances.”
Woodford v. Ngo,
Although Rees has cited no precedent to support her denial-of-access-to-the-courts claim, this Court has located one potentially instructive opinion. In
Whisman v. Rinehart,
To the extent the Whisman case is instructive here, I find it to be materially distinguishable from the case at bar. In this case, there is no allegation of circumstances that functionally prohibited Rees from exercising her right to independently petition the court for custody and/or visitation rights. At all relevant times, those legal avenues remained open to her. Moreover, despite counsel’s representations that Rees was baited into foregoing those options, it is clear from her own allegations that she retained legal counsel during this period relative to her interests in the children. Under these circumstances, I find Whisman to be distinguishable and I find Rees’s allegations insufficient to establish a viable denial-of-court-access claim.
Rees’s due process claim also appears to be premised on nebulous rights supposedly guaranteed by the federal Adoption and Safe Families Act and the County’s Kinship Care Policy. On further questioning by the Court, however, Plain
*460
tiffs counsel acknowledged that he could not point to any specific provision within these sources which establish the existence of a particular right violated by the Defendants. Moreover, counsel forthrightly acknowledged that these sources were cited in the complaint primarily because they had been cited in general fashion by Cynthia Gariepy, an agent of the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare, in connection with the Department’s investigation into Rees’s administrative grievances. It goes without saying, however, that Ms. Gariepy’s belief that the Defendants violated a particular statute or policy does not, by itself, establish a due process violation, particularly in the absence of any citation to a specific provision that might fairly be said to have created an entitlement worthy of constitutional protection. Significantly, Rees has cited no provision within these authorities that mandates a particular outcome upon the finding that certain “relevant criteria have been met.”
Kentucky Dept. of Corrections v. Thompson,
Finally, Rees states in her brief in opposition that she was also denied any proceeding “to handle the complaints alleged in her two grievances.” (Br. in Opp. [9] at p. 16.) I do not construe this passing allegation as a separate basis for the assertion of a due process violation. To the extent it is, however, it fails to state a legally cognizable claim. Fundamentally, such a claim fails to identify any underlying liberty or property right which is supposedly clothed with constitutional protection. No entitlement is identified that arises to the level of a constitutionally protected interest.
See Whisman,
B.
Even if Rees’s claims did not fail on their own merits, they would have to be dismissed as against the individual Defendants under the doctrine of qualified immunity. “The doctrine of qualified immunity protects government officials ‘from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
Pearson v. Callahan,
“The relevant, dispositive inquiry in determining whether a right is clearly established is whether it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”
Montanez,
Insofar as Count I of the complaint is concerned, there is no controlling law within the Third Circuit concerning grandparents’ substantive due process rights, if any, relative to the custody and care of their non-resident grandchildren. The one pertinent district court which I have located,
Gordon v. Lowell, supra,
holds that grandparents do not possess such rights.
See
As for the other circuit court decisions which touch on this issue, the rulings have been mixed. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that the mere biological link which grandparents share with their grandchildren is insufficient to invoke due process protection.
See Mullins,
As I have previously discussed, the Sixth and Eighth Circuits have each rendered opinions which can be read as supporting the rights which Rees asserts in the present action. See Johnson, supra; Suasnavas, supra. However, it would not have been clear to a reasonable officer confronting the circumstances of this case that the Third Circuit Court of Appeals would follow the rulings of Johnson and Suasnavas or that the holdings of those opinions would govern the outcome of this situation. Accordingly, the individual Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity relative to Count I of the complaint.
I reach the same conclusion with respect to Rees’s due process claim based on lack of access to the courts under Count II. Rees has provided no relevant precedent showing that her theory of liability was clearly established law within the circuit and I have found none. The one case which is arguably instructive,
Whisman, supra,
is not binding authority within this circuit and is materially distinguishable in any event for the reasons previously discussed. Although the constitutional right of access to courts may itself have been well established within the Third Circuit, our inquiry focuses on “whether it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”
Montanez,
603
*462
F.3d at 251
(quoting Saucier v. Katz,
C.
In Count VIII of her complaint, Rees has asserted a municipal liability claim under § 1983 against OCY. Fundamentally, Rees’s claims against OCY fail as a matter of law because, given the facts contained in the complaint, no predicate constitutional violation has been alleged.
See Bittner v. Snyder County, PA,
Moreover, even assuming the existence of an underlying constitutional tort, Rees has failed to sufficiently allege liability on the part of OCY. “When a suit against a municipality is based on § 1983, the municipality can only be liable when the alleged constitutional transgression implements or executes a policy, regulation or decision officially adopted by the governing body or informally adopted by custom.”
Beck v. City of Pittsburgh,
For purposes of § 1983 liability, a municipality may be liable for either its policy or custom:
A government policy or custom can be established in two ways. Policy is made when a decisionmaker possessing final authority to establish a municipal policy with respect to the action issues an official proclamation, policy, or edict. A course of conduct is considered to be a ‘custom’ when, though not authorized by law, such practices of state officials are so permanently and well-settled as to virtually constitute law.
McTernan v. City of York,
Here, there has been no allegation that the individual Defendants’ alleged *463 misconduct was carried out pursuant to any officially adopted policy, regulation or decision. Quite to the contrary, Rees has alleged that the individual Defendants’ misconduct — i.e., their “refusal to allow Plaintiff or any other member of the Children’s family to care for or adopt the Children” (Complaint ¶ 29) — directly violated the County’s official policy of pursuing kinship care placement. (See Complaint ¶ 30 (“Said refusal was in direct violation of the Kinship Care Policy of OCY ... ”).) In other words, Rees’s allegations suggest that, if the individual Defendants had followed OCY’s official kinship care policy, they would have placed the children in Rees’s care as she wished.
Rees’s municipal liability claim is better understood as alleging the existence of an unofficial custom or practice which was the “moving force” behind her injury.
See Berg v. County of Allegheny,
Rees’s more substantive allegations of municipal liability are as follows:
135. Defendant OCY failed to properly staff, train and supervise caseworkers with regard to processing requests under the Kinship Care Policy and Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997.
136. Defendant OCY maintained a policy or custom of failing to adhere to written standards for the agency’s operation with regard to requests made, under the Kinship Care Policy and Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997.
137. It was the practice, policy and/or custom of Defendant OCY to tolerate, enable and/or fail to correct caseworker and supervisor non-compliance with policies and procedures set forth regarding the handling of requests under the Kinship Care Policy and Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 by caseworkers and their supervisors.
138. It was the practice, policy and/or custom of Defendant OCY to tolerate, enable[ ] and/or encourage a pattern of incompetent, dysfunctional and grossly negligent handling of requests under the Kinship Care Policy and Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 by caseworkers and their supervisors.
*464 (Complaint ¶¶ 135-138.) These allegations might go a long way toward establishing a municipal liability claim if generic violations of the underlying Kinship Care Policy and Adoptions of Safe Families Act amounted to a constitutional tort; however, as I have previously discussed, they do not. Accordingly, Rees has failed to allege the existence of a policy or custom for municipal liability purposes.
Also lacking is any allegation that an official with final policy-making authority established the alleged custom or policy. Notably, the named individual Defendants — a caseworker, her supervisor, and an attorney representing OCY at court proceedings' — were not (and are not alleged to be) decisionmakers possessing final policy-making authority for the agency. The only ostensible policy maker for OCY identified in the complaint — Marianne Daniels, the director of OCY — has not been named as a Defendant in this case and is affirmatively identified only in two paragraphs of the complaint. Paragraph 54 alleges that, “[o]n or about September 12, 2008, Plaintiff filed a formal grievance against Defendant OCY with [Daniels], and Paragraph 62 alleges that, on or about October 30, 2008, Daniels sent Rees an email “expressing concern about the ‘hold up’ within OCY concerning Plaintiffs visitation.” ” (Complaint ¶¶ 54, 62.) The actual email, which is appended to the complaint, as Exhibit E, indicates that Daniels copied a member of her own staff, as well as Ms. Gariepy from the state agency, in the same email and essentially directed her own staff member to act upon the state agency’s directive to facilitate Rees’s visitation with her grandchildren. (See Complaint Ex. E[l — 2] at p. 29.)
These allegations are insufficient to establish any misconduct on the part of Daniels that could be attributed to OCY as a “policy” or “custom” of deliberate indifference toward the constitutional rights of those serviced by OCY staff. Simply stated, the complaint fails to link the alleged offending “policies” or “customs” to anyone within OCY with policy-making authority.
See McTernan,
*465 D.
Rees’s complaint also includes numerous state law theories of liability, as set forth in Counts III (negligence), Count IV (negligence per se), Count V (gross negligence), Count VI (negligent infliction of emotional distress), and Count VII (intentional infliction of emotional distress). As the parties here are not diverse for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1332, the Court’s sole basis of jurisdiction over these claim is 28 U.S.C. § 1367, which provides that “the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same ease or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). A district court may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim if “the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.”
Id.
at § 1367(c)(3). See
Elkadrawy v. Vanguard Group, Inc.,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, I conclude that Rees has failed to state a viable § 1983 claim under Counts I, II, and VUI. I find that the complaint fails to allege the deprivation of a constitutional right for purposes of Counts I and II. For the same reason, the complaint fail to state a predicate for municipal liability as against OCY under Count VIII. Alternatively, I conclude that Rees’s § 1983 claims against the individual Defendants must fail because the individual Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity as set forth above. I further conclude that Rees’s claims against the County are independently insufficient under § 1983 in that they fail to allege that an official policy, practice or custom was the “moving force” behind her injury. Thus, there is no federal cause of action remaining in this case.
As to the remaining state law claims, I decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction for the reasons set forth above. Accordingly, those claims will be remanded to state court for further adjudication.
An appropriate order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, to wit, this 30th day of September, 2010, for the reasons set forth *466 in the accompanying Memorandum Opinion,
IT IS ORDERED that the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) [4] be, and hereby is, GRANTED in part, as follows:
1. Said motion is granted with respect to Counts I, II, and VIII of the Complaint; and
2. In all other respects, the motion is DENIED as moot.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the above-captioned case shall be REMANDED, forthwith, to the Erie County Court of Common Pleas for further proceedings.
Notes
. Although Rees makes passing reference in her brief to the First Amendment’s guarantee of intimate family association, we construe this claim as one more properly analyzed consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process guarantees. The First Amendment guarantees the right to "[t]wo sometimes overlapping types of protected association,”
Rode v. Dellarciprete,
.
Although Rees also asserts that Defendants have infringed upon her "constitutional right to privacy”
(see
Complaint 98), I do not view this allegation as implicating a distinct constitutional right. The Supreme Court has acknowledged, in a long line of cases, that the "liberty” interests protected by the Due Process Clause include the rights to marry, to have children, to direct the education and upbringing of one’s children, to marital privacy, to use contraception, to bodily integrity, and to abortion.
See Washington v. Glucksberg,
. One of the appellant's grandchildren, who had come to live at the residence following the death of his own mother, was deemed an "illegal occupant” and appellant was criminally charged with violating the ordinance after failing to remove him from her home.
. Despite a willingness to recognize the asserted liberty interest in brother-sister association, the
Trujillo
court affirmed the lower court’s dismissal of the claim because the plaintiffs had failed to allege an intent on the part of the defendants to deprive them of their protected relationship with their brother/son. Thus, under Tenth Circuit law, the right to recover damages under § 1983 for alleged deprivations of the right of intimate association is limited by the requirement that there be an allegation of intent to interfere with a particular relationship. See
Suasnavas,
. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has defined in loco parentis status as follows:
The phrase "in loco parentis” refers to a person who puts oneself in the situation of a lawful parent by assuming the obligations incident to the parental relationship without going through the formality of a legal adoption. The status of in loco parentis *453 embodies two ideas; first, the assumption of a parental status, and, second, the discharge of parental duties.... The rights and liabilities arising out of an in loco parentis relationship are, as the words imply, exactly the same as between parent and child.
Peters v. Costello,
. Section 5311 states:
If a parent of an unmarried child is deceased, the parents or grandparents of the deceased parent may be granted reasonable partial custody or visitation rights, or both, to the unmarried child by the court upon a finding that partial custody or visitation rights, or both, would be in the best interest of the child and would not interfere with the parent-child relationship....
23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5311.
. Section 5313 provides, in relevant part, that:
A grandparent has standing to bring a petition for physical and legal custody of a grandchild. If it is in the best interest of the child not to be in the custody of either parent and if it is in the best interest of the child to be in the custody of the grandparent, the court may award physical and legal custody to the grandparent. This subsection applies to a grandparent:
(1) who has genuine care and concern for the child;
(2) whose relationship with the child begem with the consent of a parent of the child or pursuant to an order of court; and
(3) ... who assumes or deems it necessary to assume responsibility for a child who is substantially at risk due to parental ... neglect....
23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5313(b).
. The individual Defendants have alternatively claimed that they are entitled to absolute immunity relative to their involvement in any juvenile court proceedings involving determinations as to dependency and placement of the children. Although we technically need not address this argument, Defendants Jones, Valimont and Vogt are correct that they enjoy absolute immunity relative to their respective conduct on behalf of OCY in preparing for, initiating, and prosecuting dependency proceedings and/or proceedings to terminate the parental rights of Carrie Peterson.
See generally Ernst v. Child and Youth Services of Chester County,
. The exhibits to the complaint demonstrate that, after the State Department of Public Welfare completed its investigation into Rees’s grievance, it contacted Daniels by let
*465
ter to indicate its determination that OCY had violated the Kinship Care Policy and the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. Thereafter, Daniels was required to, and did, submit a plan of correction, which was approved by the state agency.
(See
Complaint Ex. G.) Although these documents might arguably establish Daniels's responsibility, under
respondeat superior
principles, for the alleged deficiencies within her agency, they are insufficient to establish either the existence of a constitutional tort or that the wrongdoing resulted from a sanctioned policy or custom as required for liability under § 1983.
See Rode v. Dellarciprete,
