*1023 OPINION
Defendant police officers Patrick Brady and Shawn Murphy appeal the district court’s denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds. The plaintiff, Stev-erson Davis, alleges that the defendants violated his substantive due process rights by placing him at risk of harm when they abandoned him in an inebriated condition on an unfamiliar highway. The district court found that the record presented a claim sufficient to defeat summary judgment, including the establishment of a duty not to subject Davis to danger, and that the defendant officers acted with deliberate indifference to the threat of injury to Davis. We agree and affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Having consumed a substantial amount’ of Thunderbird wine and a half-pint of vodka, Davis attempted to enter the Carriage Town Mission in Flint, where he had been living. The mission staff refused him entry due to his inebriated condition. Davis became violent and broke some of the mission’s windows. The mission staff called the police.
Officers Murphy and Brady responded to the call. At 6:48 that evening, they arrested Davis for intoxication and disorderly conduct and brought him to the Flint police station. Davis was subsequently transferred to the county jail, but that facility was full. The desk sergeant therefore instructed Officers Murphy and Brady to “release Davis at the county jail if he was not so drunk that he would be a hazard to himself.” No permission to transport Davis was requested by the officers nor given by their sergeant. Disregarding these instructions, the officers handcuffed Davis and placed him back in the squad car.
The officers then drove Davis to Bray Road in Genesee Township, which was located outside the city limits of Flint, and let Davis out of the squad car at the entrance to Bluebell Beach. Bray Road is a 55-mile-per-hour speed limit area, with few street lights and no sidewalk. The officers insist that they released Davis at this location at Davis’s request, but Davis denies making such a request, and contends that the officers brought him to Genesee Township to “teach [him] a lesson.” In his account of the situation, the officers threw him out of the car, forced him to the ground, called him a “smart ass,” and told him to find his own way back into the city.
After the officers left, Davis headed for some nearby houses, where he asked one of the residents to call the police. Genesee Township Police Officer Bruce Carlson responded to the call at 9:03 p.m. According to Officer Carlson, he offered to give Davis a ride or to call someone for him, suggesting an ambulance, a taxi, and a friend or relative. Officer Carlson insists that Davis rejected assistance, calling him “just another damn white officer.” In contrast, Davis maintains that he asked Officer Carlson for a ride back to Flint and that Carlson refused. Officer Carlson testified that he did not have sufficient contact during this time to ascertain whether Davis was drunk.
Officer Carlson left at 9:12 p.m., and Davis was hit by a car approximately seven minutes later, sustaining serious permanent injuries. One of his legs was amputated, and he is now a semi-quadriplegic.
Officers Brady and Murphy contend that Davis was sober when they released him on Bray Road. However, the parties have stipulated that Davis’s blood alcohol level was still .176 at 10:00 p.m., when he arrived at the hospital after the accident. A toxicologist testified that at the time Davis was released on Bray Road, his blood alcohol would have been between .191 and .206, and that at that level, he would have shown signs of perception impairment, disorientation, confusion, and lack of coordination. In addition, other witnesses who saw Davis on Bray Road testified. at . trial that he was staggering, slurring his words, seemed drunk, and could hardly stand up.
Davis filed a lawsuit against Officers Brady and Murphy for alleged violations of his civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, The officers moved for summary judgment, which was granted in part and denied in part. The *1024 officers now appeal the district court’s denial of summary judgment.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds is reviewed de novo.
Washington v. Newsom,
DISCUSSION
Davis alleges that the officers violated his right to “substantive due process” under the Fourteenth Amendment when they deposited him on a dark, busy highway. . Because Davis seeks to hold the officers liable in their individual capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, he must show not only that the officers’ actions were unconstitutional, but also that they should have known at that time that they were violating his rights. “[G]ov-emment officials' performing discretionary functions generally are shielded 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.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
We must therefore determine whether' the individual' officers violated law that was clearly established in 1994 when they abandoned Davis on the dark, busy highway. When, as here, a plaintiff alleges that state actors violated substantive due process by placing him at risk of harm from a third party, the court is presented with two distinct, though interrelated inquiries:
First, in order to find for the plaintiff, the court must conclude , that the plaintiff and the state actors had a sufficiently direct relationship such that the defendants owed [him or] her a duty not to subject [him or] her to danger. Second, the court must also conclude that the officers were sufficiently culpable to be liable under a substantive due process theory.
Stemler v. City of Florence,
A. Taking Davis Into Custody Established a Duty
With respect to the first question, we start from the proposition that although the state does not owe its citizens a constitutional duty to keep them from harm in all circumstances, such a duty will arise when the state has acted to deprive an individual of certain indicia of liberty:
When the State by the affirmative exercise of its power so restrains an individual’s liberty that it renders him unable to care for himself, and at the same time fails to provide for his basic human needs — e.g., food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and reasonable safety — it transgresses the substantive limits on state action set by the Eighth Amendment and the Due Process Clause. The affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf.
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
In the present case, Davis’s complaint alleges — and the record can reasonably be read to show — -that after taking Davis into chstody, the defendant officers dropped Davis off on a dark, busy highway and left him there against his will. In so doing, the *1025 defendant officers took the affirmative act of restraining Davis’s freedom to act on his own behalf, and consequently imposed upon themselves a duty to ensure that they were not placing him in danger.
The defendants rely on
Foy v. City of Berea,
The defendant officers argue that they owed no duty of care to Davis because his injuries occurred after they released him from custody and they did nothing to prevent Davis from caring for himself. The defendant officers cite
DeShaney,
DeShaney, however, is not dispositive here. Language in that opinion suggests that the state may owe a duty to individuals in certain non-custodial settings:
While the State may have been aware of the dangers that Joshua faced in the free world, it played no part in their creation, nor did it do anything to render him any more vulnerable to them. That the State once took temporary custody of Joshua does not alter the analysis, for when it returned him to his father’s custody, it placed him in no worse position than that in which he would have been had it not acted at all; the State does not become the permanent guarantor of an individual’s safety by having once offered him shelter.
Likewise, thé defendant officers’ contention that the release of Davis from their custody terminated their duty is unavailing. The holding in
Stemler,
Just as the police in Stemler had a duty to the plaintiff because they put her in harm’s way, the defendant officers here owed Davis a duty. Based on Stemler, the fact that Davis’s injuries resulted after the defendant officers released him from custody is not controlling. What is key is that the defendant officers put Davis in a situation, while in custody, and allegedly against his will, that caused his injuries.
Finally, the defendant officers assert that in 1994 there was no clearly established right not to be abandoned by the police and rely on
Walton v. City of Southfield,
Unlike the children in Walton, Davis was in custody when he was abandoned. Because the defendant officers had custody of Davis, they owed him a 'duty of protection that was violated when they abandoned him, in the words of Walton, in a “forlorn place.”
B. Defendants Violated Their Duty to Davis by Exhibiting Deliberate Indifference
The determination that the officers owed Davis a duty of care does not end the court’s inquiry, for it must also assess what duty of care they owed, and whether they breached that duty.
In cases such as this one, where the plaintiff suffered injury as a result of being placed in the state’s custody, it has consistently and uncontroversially been the rule that a constitutional claim arises when the injury occurred as a result of the state’s deliberate indifference to the risk of such an injury.
See Farmer v. Brennan,
In the present case, Davis’s complaint, as well as the evidence in the record, when read in the light most favorable to Davis, supports a claim that the defendant officers acted with deliberate indifference to the threat of injury .to him. They knew, or reasonably should have known, that Davis was drunk and.unable to care for himself. Independent witnesses testified under oath that Davis was staggering after the defendant officers released him, slurring his words, seemed drunk, and could hardly stand up. It was stipulated at trial that Davis’s *1027 blood alcohol level was .176 percent at 10:00 p.m. when he arrived at the hospital after the accident. Additionally, a toxicologist placed his blood alcohol level at the time of the improper police release at approximately .20 percent. At such a level, expert testimony indicated, Davis would have had perception impairment, disorientation, confusion, and lack of coordination. Nevertheless, the defendant officers chose to act affirmatively to place Davis in harm’s way.
CONCLUSION
When a plaintiff alleges that state actors violated substantive due process by placing him at risk of harm from a third party, he must demonstrate, first, that the defendants owed him a duty not to subject him to danger and, second, that the defendants violated this duty by exhibiting deliberate indifference to the plaintiffs well-being. In this case, the taking of Davis into custody triggered the defendant officers’ duty to protect Davis. There is sufficient evidence in the record to demonstrate that the defendant officers violated this duty when they exhibited deliberate indifference to Davis’s well-being by abandoning him, in his inebriated state, on an unfamiliar, dark, and busy highway. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of the defendant officers’ motion for summary judgment and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
