OPINION
Anthony Hart, Rodney Berry, and Roger Mortimer each sue Los Angeles County Sheriff Leroy Baca, in his official capacity, for pursuing a policy of deliberate indifference to their constitutional rights that resulted in unlawful periods of over-detention in the Los Angeles County jail. In each case, the plaintiff was detained for a period ranging from twenty-six to twenty-nine hours after the court had authorized his release from jail. Their cases were consolidated before the district court.
On May 29, 2003, the district court grantеd Baca’s motion for summary judgment. The court based its holding on the recently decided Ninth Circuit case,
Brass v. County of Los Angeles,
Because we conclude that Brass is distinguishable, and that the plaintiffs in this case have raised a genuine issue of material fact with regard to the existence of a county policy of deliberate indifference to the constitutional rights of the plaintiffs, we reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
I. Factual and Procedural History
A.Anthony Hart
Anthony Hart was arrested on August 14, 2000, for felony charges of grand theft. On August 17, 2000, the Superior Court ordered his release from jail. At the same time, the court also ordered him to appear at 9:30 a.m. that day in a different department on the same charge. Hart was released from custody on August 18 at 2:02 p.m. This was twenty-nine hours and thirty-two minutes after the court authorized his release.
The paperwork from the Superior Court authorizing Hart’s release did not arrive at the Inmate Reception Cеnter (“IRC”) of the Los Angeles County jail until the end of the day on August 17, and because the release form had an order to appear in a different department, personnel at IRC waited until the following morning to confirm with the court that Hart was to be released. Once the release was confirmed, it was entered into the Automated Justice Information System (“AJIS”), the computer system for booking, tracking, and release of inmates. It took five hours and twenty-five minutes from the time his release was entered into the AJIS until Hart’s rеlease.
B. Rodney Berry
Rodney Berry was arrested on a drug charge on October 5, 1999. After a jury trial resulted in a deadlocked jury and several further amended charges and pleas, the Superior Court ordered the charges dropped and authorized Berry’s release on February 1, 2001, at 11:30 a.m. On February 2, 2001, at 2:02 p.m., Berry was released from jail. This was twenty-six hours and thirty-two minutes after the Superior Court’s order for his release, and sixteen and a half hours after his release order was entered into the AJIS.
C. Roger Mortimer
Roger Mortimer was arrestеd for charges of rape with a foreign object on *767 April 1, 2000. On August 14, 2000, the jury announced a verdict of not guilty. That same morning, at 11:45 a.m., the Superior Court authorized Mortimer’s release. Mortimer was released on August 15, 2000, at 4:57 p.m. This was twenty-nine hours and twelve minutes after the order for his release and seventeen hours after his release order was entered into the AJIS.
D. Procedural History
After their releases, Hart, Berry, and Mortimer each filed suit in the Central District of California, on February 27, 2001, March 1, 2001, and December 12, 2000, respectively. Each plaintiff alleged that his constitutional rights were violated by the hours spent in detention after his court-authorized release from jail. The three cases were consolidated before District Court Judge Dean Pregerson. On September 16, 2002, Defendant/Appellee Sheriff Leroy Baca filed a motion for summary judgment, which the district court granted on May 29, 2003. Each plaintiff timely appealed.
II. Discussion
The plaintiffs sued Los Angeles County Sheriff LeRoy Baca, in his official capacity, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for violating their Fourth and Fourteеnth Amendment rights. County officials can be held liable under § 1983 if they act as “lawmakers or ... those whose edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy.”
Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
In order to hold Baca liable under § 1983, plaintiffs must demonstrate that “ ‘action pursuant to official municipal policy of some nature caused a constitutional tort.’ ”
Brass,
In order to impose liability based on a policy of deliberate inaction, the “plaintiff must establish: (1) that he possessed a constitutional right of which he was deprived; (2) that the municipality had a policy; (3) that this policy ‘amounts to deliberate indifference’ to the plaintiffs constitutional right; and (4) that the policy [was] the ‘moving force behind the constitutional violation.’ ”
Oviatt,
The district court did not discuss this four-step showing, because it did not address the plaintiffs’ claims that the County’s policies amount to a policy of deliberate indifference to their constitutional rights. Instead, the district court found that it “is bound by the holding in Brass and finds that the County’s challenged policies did not result in a violation of the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.”
A. Brass is Distinguishable
While
Brass
is closеly related to the cases at hand, it does not directly control this case. In
Brass,
the plaintiff — also a detainee in a Los Angeles County
*768
jail — was held for thirty-nine hours after the court ordered his release.
The Brass panel affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the County. The panel acknowledged that over-detention after court-ordered release has the potential to violate constitutional rights. See id. at 1200 (“Brass may have had a due process right to be released within a reasonable time after the reason for his detention ended.”). The panel found, however, that the сontested policies could not have caused the deprivation of constitutional rights. As to the first policy, the panel held that “Brass did not have a constitutional right to have his release papers processed in any particular order ....” Id. As to the second policy, the panel held,
To the extent Brass’s claim rests on the County’s policy or custom of not starting to process a particular day’s releases until it has received all information, including wants and holds, relating to the prisoners scheduled for release, we cannot say the County thereby violated Brass’s constitutional rights. To the contrary, we think that that aspect of the County’s release program was justified and reasonable in light of the County’s problems and responsibilities in processing the large number of prisoner releases it handles.
Id. at 1201.
Here, in contrast to Brass, the plaintiffs do not limit their challenge to the County’s specific policies. Rather, as argued in their briefs to this Court, they challenge the policy “in toto ... that simply delays all releases until the system, in its sweet time, and with the resources it chooses ... is ready to make releases.” Stated another way, the plaintiffs in this case challenge the implementation of the County’s policies, rather than the specific policies themselves. They claim that the County’s unreasonably inefficient implementation of its administrative policies amounts to a policy of deliberate indifference to their constitutional rights.
While on first glance this may appear a subtle difference, in fact there is a crucial distinction between the challenge to specific policies in Brass and the challenge to the implementation of the policy “in toto” in this case. It cannot be the case that, if the County’s system of administratively processing releases took several days or weeks to complete, its policy could not be challenged as one of “deliberate indifference” simply because each of the administrative procedures employed is theoretically reasonable. As a matter of law, the County’s system of administrative processing cannot be immune from allegations that, in practice, it amounts to a policy of deliberate indifference. Brass did not raise this type of challenge, because Brass focused his challenge upon the County’s release policies themselves. Tellingly, nowhere in the Brass opinion does the panel discuss the “deliberate indifference” line of Monell cases, because this was not the claim at issue. Here, in contrast, deliberate indifference is precisely the claim at issue.
Wе find the analysis in this case to be more closely related to
Oviatt
than to
Brass.
In
Oviatt,
the plaintiff was held without arraignment for 114 days, and
*769
sued the county on the theory that its policy regarding missed arraignments constituted a policy of deliberate indifference to the inmates’ constitutional rights. The
Oviatt
panel agreed, holding that there was “no question that the decision not to take any action to alleviate the problem of detecting missed arraignments constitutes a policy for purposes of § 1983 municipal liability.”
Here, we are faced with 29 hours of over-detention rather than 114 days. In addition, the County has offered more substantial justifications for its delay than in Oviatt, аrguing that the delays are the reasonable result of necessary administrative procedures. These are issues of fact, however, not matters of law. As discussed below, these considerations will factor heavily into the jury’s determination of whether the County’s policies are reasonable. However, at the summary judgment stage, Oviatt’s framework applies. This analysis differs from Brass because it is not limited to the affirmative policies of the County, but rather, considers the existence of a policy of deliberate inaction underlying the current policies’ implementation.
B. The Role of the Judge at Summary Judgment
There is an additional, related basis for concluding that
Brass
is distinguishable. It is difficult to square the district court’s interpretation of
Brass
with the appropriate role of the judge at summary judgment. The Supreme Court has warned that at summary judgment, “[credibility determinations, the weighing of the evidence, and the drawing of legitimate inferences from the facts are jury functions, not those of a judge .... ”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 255,
In
Blair v. City of Pomona,
Similarly, in the instant case, the County provides explanations and defenses to justify the delays in releases. The County submitted declarations from various county employees describing the administrative processing system and explaining why it reasonably takes twenty-four to forty-eight hours to process each release.
In Brass, the County provided similar information about its administrative processing system in order to defend its con *770 tested policies. 1 Howеver, in light of the different nature of the claims in the two cases, and in order to adopt the proper judicial role at summary judgment, we must adopt a different stance with regard to the information provided by the County than did the panel in Brass. The Brass panel assessed the County’s detailed description of its processing system in order to determine the reasonableness of the policies themselves. It was entirely appropriate for the Brass panel to conclude, as a matter of law, that the County’s policy of processing releases in a certain order is reasonable. It was also an appropriate judgment of law to determine that the County’s policy of waiting until all of the day’s wants and holds are processed is reasonable and, in fact, serves important societal interests. The Brass opinion reached these conclusions and did not go further, since the plaintiff in Brass was contesting the policies themselves, not the reasonableness of their implementation.
In contrast, the plаintiffs here contend that they were over-detained for twenty-six to twenty-nine hours because the County’s policies are being implemented in a manner that is deliberately indifferent to their right to freedom from incarceration. We cannot determine whether the County’s implementation of its policies is in fact reasonably efficient based solely on the defendants’ self-serving declarations. This would be an improper basis for summary judgment, as the County’s explanations and defenses “depend on disputed facts and inferences” that are proper for jury determination.
Blair,
This issue was recently addressed by a district court that considered a seven and a half day over-detention in Los Angeles County jail in light of
Brass. See Green v. Baca,
Brass does not hold that a 39 hour delay between issuance of a release order and actual release is reasonable as a matter of law.... Certainly, [the court] cannot determine reasonableness as a matter of law when defendant has offered only a *771 general аssertion that certain steps must be completed prior to release, and provided no explanation as to why those steps are necessary or why they take a particular period of time to complete.
Id.
(citing
Gramenos v. Jewel Cos.,
While the County in both Brass and the instant cases has provided some explanation of the steps necessary prior to release, its declarations offer only general assertions as to why these steps would reasonably take up to forty-eight hours. In order to determine if this length of time is, in fact, reasonable, the jury must be presented with the administrative processes, the volume of bookings and releases, as well as other considerations that affect the County’s ability to process releases. It may very well be that a reasonable juror would conclude that, given the necessary administrative tasks and voluminоus demands on the county, the delays at issue were justified. However, we conclude that this is a factual determination that is appropriately left to the jury to decide.
C. The Absence of a Per Se Rule of Reasonableness
Courts have not settled on any concrete number of permissible hours of delay in the context of post-release detentions. In contrast, in the context of detentions pending probable cause determinations after warrantless arrests, the Supreme Court has held that jurisdictions that establish probable cause within forty-eight hоurs of arrest will be immune from systemic ehal-lenges.
County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
In Brass, the panel discussed McLaughlin and concluded that, while the two contexts share the same concerns about the need for flexibility in the face of inevitable administrative and logistical delays, they may not share the same precise calculus. The final paragraph of Brass muses:
It is unclear, however, whether the 48-hour period applied to probable cause determinations is appropriate for effectuating the release of prisoners whose basis for confinement has ended. One might conclude that when а court orders a prisoner released — or when, for example, a prisoner’s sentence has been completed — the outer bounds for releasing the prisoner should be less than 48 hours. We need not determine that question here, however, since we have concluded that in the circumstances of this case, the 39-hour delay in releasing Brass was reasonable and did not violate his constitutional rights.
We agree with
Brass
that there are reasons to question the applicability of the forty-eight hour rule in this contеxt. Applying
McLaughlin’s
stringent proof re
*772
quirement to post-release detentions of less than forty-eight hours would be difficult to reconcile with the fact that, for the plaintiffs at issue here, there has been a judicial determination that they are entitled to freedom from the criminal justice system. Thus, the societal interest in the processes that result in delay, while significant, may not be as weighty as in the probable cause context.
Compare McLaughlin,
At the same time, the administrative burden of accelerating the release process' — in particular, running a computer check on wants and holds within less than forty-eight hours — does not seem as weighty as the burden of establishing probable cause under a tight timeline.
Compare McLaughlin,
Adopting the forty-eight hour rule into the context of post-release detentions would also directly conflict with at least one other circuit, which has found no zone of prеsumptive reasonableness in this context. In
Lewis v. O’Grady,
Like Brass and Lewis, we decline to determine a number of hours that is presumptively reasonable for post-release *773 over-detentions. In light of the case law on both post-release over-detentions and Monell claims of deliberate indifference, we find no basis for holding the detentions at issue presumptively reasonable as a matter of law.
D. Applying Oviatt
In light of the foregoing discussion, we return to
Oviatt’s
four-step framework for resolving
Monell
claims of deliberate indifference. In order to impose liability based on a policy of deliberate inaction, the plaintiff must establish that he possessed a constitutional right of which he was deprived. Here, the plaintiffs possessed a constitutional right to freedom from imprisonment a reasonable time after they were judicially determined to be innocent of the charges against them.
See Oviatt,
Step two of Oviatt — the existence of a municipal policy — is uncontested. Both parties agree that the County has a set of administrative policies that guide releases after judicial determinations of innocence. Both parties also agree on step four: these policiеs resulted in delays in the release of each of the plaintiffs, ranging from twenty-six to twenty-nine hours after their court-ordered release.
Step three of
Oviatt
remains: did this set of policies — or, alternatively, the lack of policies to expedite the process— amount to a policy of deliberate indifference to the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights? This question turns on whether the County’s implementation of its policies was reasonable in light of the delay that resulted. Baca concedes that he knew that the implеmentation of the County’s policies was resulting in delays of up to 48 hours. Therefore, if the delays were not reasonably justified, the § 1983 claim against the County has merit, because the County was continuing to adhere to a policy that it knew resulted in unlawful detentions without reasonable cause.
See Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Brown,
III. Conclusion
In light of the foregoing discussion, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants, and remand this case for furthеr proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Drawing from the declaration of Lieutenant Sneed of the Sheriff's Department, the
Brass
panel discussed the facts underlying the County's release procedure: the County books and releases close to 600 inmates per day; many inmates are repeat and/or serious offenders; law enforcement and other government agencies frequently place holds on a particular inmate’s release; holds are updated continuously, which involves sifting and inputting thousands of documents daily; and, given the paperwork involved, it generally takes twenty-four to forty-eight hours to process an inmate's release.
. The Court provided as examples of unreasonable delay "delays for the purpose of gathering additional evidence to justify the arrest, a delay motivated by ill will against the arrested individual, or delay for delay's sake.”
McLaughlin,
