Lead Opinion
Mеlissa Kitzman-Kelley, through Theresa Kitzman-Kelley, brought this § 1983 action against employees of the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (“DCFS”). She claims that in 1985, while a ward of the DCFS, she was sexually abused by a DCFS intern hired and supervised by the defendants. The original action was brought in state court, and the case later was removed to the district court. The defendants then moved for dismissal on the pleadings, contending that they were entitled tо qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion. An interlocutory appeal was then taken to this court. See Johnson v. Fankell,
I
BACKGROUND
A.
When considering a motion to dismiss a complaint on the basis of qualified immunity, we must accept all аllegations in the complaint as true, construing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. See Harrell v. Cook,
In 1981, Melissa Kitzman-Kelley, then 7 years old, was placed in the custody of the DCFS. According to the allegations of the complaint, between early March and late May 1985, Philip Keith Heiden, an intern in the Rock Island County DCFS office, subjected her to a pattern of sexual abuse. Heiden had been taken on as an intern at DCFS despite a history оf mental illness and drug problems. The defendants,
B.
Although clearly recognizing that the issue of qualified immunity may, in some instances, be resolved at the pleadings stage of the litigation, the district court determined that such an adjudication would be inappropriate on the present record. In reaching that decision, the district court acknowledged that there are situаtions in which the state, by virtue of its special relationship with an individual, has a special responsibility, protected by the Due Process Clause of the Constitution, for the welfare of an individual. See DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Soc. Servs.,
*457 The factual allegations in this case remain somewhat cloudy. Based on the DeShaney court’s recognition that certain relationships between a state and a child may place a constitutional duty on the state, this Court finds that it would be premature at this juncture to dismiss the claims. In this case the issue of qualified immunity will have to be finally resolved at the summary judgment stage.
Order of March 30,1998, at 5.
II
DISCUSSION
A.
Qualified immunity protects government officials from monetary liability when their conduct “does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
B.
To state a claim under section 1983, a plaintiff must allege that the defendant has acted under the color of state law and has deprived him of a right secured by the Constitution оr laws of the United States. There is no dispute, in this case, that the alleged conduct of the defendants is under the color of state law. They claim, however, that their actions violated no constitutionally protected rights.
1.
In DeShaney, the Supreme Court of the United States, affirming a decision of this court, held that a state’s failure to protect an individual against private violence generally does not constitute a violation of the Due Process Clause. That clause, reasoned the Supreme Court, imposes no duty on the state to provide members of the general public with adequate protective services. Rather, the Due Process Clause is a limitation on the states’ power to act; it is not a minimum guarantee of certain levels of safety and security. The court did acknowledge, however, that a narrow exceptiоn to the DeShaney doctrine does exist in those instances in which the state has created a “special relationship” with the victimized individual. That affirmative duty arises, the Supreme Court emphasized, not simply from the state’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament but
Our court, in dealing with the “special relationship” exception to the DeShaney doctrinе, has remained faithful to the Supreme’s Court’s rationale that this exception must be grounded in a prior restriction of the individual’s liberty that places that person in a danger that would not have been encountered, at least to the same order of magnitude, in the absence of the state’s action. For instance, in Ross v. United States,
Our most recent cases continue to adhere to the principles enunciated in DeShaney. In Monfils v. Taylor,
2.
In addition to alleging a “special relationship” between the state and the victim, the complaint must also allege several other elements. First, personal involvement is a prerequisite for individual liability; there is no respоndeat superior liability in the § 1983 context. Moreover, to succeed in her claim, the plaintiff must allege that the defendants themselves acted with “deliberate, indifference.” See Gossmeyer v. McDonald,
Similarly, it is also permissible to predicate a § 1983 action on the failure to train adequately the government agent who is alleged to have committed the constitutional violation. In the context of municipal liability, the Second Circuit has approached questions of adequate training under a three-part framework that might serve as a useful guide in assessing the allegations against the individual defendants in a casе such as the present one.
[T]his court [has] listed three showings required to support a claim that a municipality’s failure to train amounted to “deliberate indifference” of the rights of citizens: (1) that “a policy maker ... know[ ] ‘to a moral certainty’ that ... employees will confront a given situation”; (2) that “the situation either presents the employee with a difficult choice of the sort that training or supervision will make less difficult or thаt there is a history of employees mishandling the situation”; and (3) that “the wrong choice by the ... employee will frequently cause the deprivation of a citizen’s constitutional rights.”
Young v. County of Fulton,
With respect to the failure to supervise allegation, the plaintiff must show that these defendants, through their personal actions, were deliberately indifferent in their failure to supervise adequately the alleged pеrpetrator.
3.
If a district court determines that a claim has been stated under § 1983, it must then address whether the defendants are entitled to the defense of qualified immunity. The plaintiff must demonstrate that at the time of the alleged unconstitutional actions of the defendants, there was clearly established law holding that their actions violated rights secured by the Constitution of the United States. See Burgess v. Lowery,
C.
We turn now to the situation before us. As we have noted, the district court, in declining to dismiss the case, held tersely that the “factual allegations in this case remain somewhat cloudy” and that factor, coupled with DeShaney’s recognition that certain relationships between a state and the child, may place a constitutional duty on the state, make dismissal “premature.” This ambiguity in the district court’s decision is further complicated by the nature of the complaint itself. The second amended complaint, which is still the oрerative complaint for purposes of this appeal, was filed by Larry A. Woodward, then Ms. Kitzman-Kelley’s attorney, in the Rock Island County Circuit Court.
After Ms. Kitzman-Kelley obtained several postponemеnts, her new attorney, Richard Dahl, filed an appearance on January 20, 1998, and filed a memorandum objecting to the magistrate judge’s report. In that filing, Dahl requested time to file supplemental authority, and to enter an amended complaint. On January 28, the district court ordered Dahl to explain why it should allow the complaint to be amended. Dahl responded that the complaint “is not pled as a complaint in federal court should be pled, with the federal claims first and a statement for the basis of federal jurisdiction. Plaintiff wanted to correct this and otherwise clean up the language in the complaint to keep the record clear.” Filing of February 11,1998.
The district court, rather than grant leave to file an amended complaint, ordered Kitzman-Kelley on March 18 to file a “Statement of Facts” to determine whether qualified immunity attached. Kitzman-Kelley filed the statement on March 24. The district court issued the order that is the subject of this appeal on March 30, and defendants took their appeal on April 29.
The combination of these circumstances make the prudent course to vacate the judgment before us and to remand the case to the district court. The district court ought to address first counsel’s request to amend the comрlaint. After that matter has been resolved, the court ought to revisit, employing the methodology set forth by the Supreme Court in Lewis and its progeny, the question of whether the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is vacated and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opin
Remanded with Instructions
Notes
. Al the time relevant to the events at issue, Donald Warner was the supervisor of the Rock Island County office of the DCFS; Gordon Johnson was the director of the entire department; Gary Morgan was the department’s guardianship administrator.
. It cannot be said that allegations that the government failed to act are necessarily allegations of mere nеgligence, because the government’s failure to act sometimes rises to the level of deliberate indifference. See Robles v. City of Fort Wayne,
. This case was initially filed in August 1993 in the state court, was promptly removed to federal court, was remanded back to the state court in March 1995, and then in August 1996 was again rеmoved to federal court.
. We assume that the defendants will once again ask for a ruling on this issue at the pleading stage of the litigation. Under the circumstances presented here, we do not believe that such a request could be considered frivolous. See Bakalis v. Golembeski, 125 F.3d.576, 578 (7th Cir.1997).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
There is no purpose to be served by remanding this case, since it is obvious that the district judge will have to grant the defendants immunity — indeed will have to dismiss the suit for failure to state a claim. Far from being clearly established when the events giving rise to the suit took place, Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Melissa Kitzman-Kelley was in 1985 an eleven-year-old ward of thе State of Illinois, which had placed her with foster parents. The supervisory employees of the state’s welfare department who are sued in this case hired Philip Heiden, a college student, as an intern and assigned him to work with the caseworker assigned to Melissa. (Heiden is also named as a defendant, but he is not an appellant.) Heiden was hired on the recommendation of one of his professors, and the defendants did not bother to investigate his background; had they done so, they would have discovered that he had a history of mental illness and drug abuse. After he was hired, on several occasions he took Melissa to his home and there sexually abused her. The defendants did not monitor his work with Melissa. He kept detailed notes of his sessions with her and turned them into his supervisors, but they didn’t bother to read them. Had they done so, they would have discovered that he was taking her to his home, though not that he was sexually abusing her.
The defendants were negligent in failing to investigate Heiden’s background and to monitor his work with Melissa, but negligence, as the plaintiff fails to understand but my colleagues rightly emphasize, is not a basis for liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. E.g., West v. Waymire,
Running through all the plaintiffs filings is a fundamental misconception: that negligence and deliberate indifference are the same thing. They are not, and the plaintiff has made no effort to establish the latter. At argument her lawyer disclaimed any intention of alleging new facts in thе amended complaint that the district judge did not permit him to file. (In response to my question, “So we have all your allegations before us, do we not?” the lawyer answered, “Yeah, I guess you do.”) Instead he repeated what he had told the district court, that the original complaint had not been “pled as a complaint in federal court should be pled, with the federal claims first and a statement for the basis of federal jurisdiction. Plaintiff wanted to correct this and otherwise clean up. the .language in the complaint to keep the-record clear.” Period. And so I do not understand the significance that my colleagues attach to the district court’s refusal to permit the amended complaint to be. filed. They do not point to any facts, whether in the plaintiffs statement of facts or elsewhere, that might support liability or defeat immunity. Thе only ground for the remand that the majority opinion mentions besides the irrelevant amended complaint is the district judge’s failure to explain, why he denied the defendant’s plea of immunity. That failure may be regrettable but it is irrelevant, because .the. question whether a right upon which a suit is based is clearly established is a question of law and we do not defer to the answers that district judges give to such questions.
A remand will serve only to keep a doomed case alive for a little while longer. I don’t see the point.
