This appeal is from the district court’s dismissal, for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, of a damages action brought under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988, with pendent state claims for wrongful death. It is alleged in the complaint that plaintiff’s wife, Marilyn J. Harper, a voluntary patient at Medfield State Hospital in Massachusetts, hung herself after a long history of prior suicide attempts, including two such attempts at Medfield. The defendant Superintendent’s purported failure to supervise her movements or take any steps to prevent her taking her own life was claimed to have violated the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment and the prohibition against the infliction of cruel and unusual punishment in the eighth amendment. In dismissing, the court said that the “Civil Rights Act does not create a general federal law of torts.”
In reviewing the disposition of a motion to dismiss, we consider only those facts and allegations set forth in the complaint and must view them in a light most favorable to the plaintiff. A complaint should be dismissed only if plaintiff is not entitled to relief under any set of facts he could prove.
Conley v. Gibson,
I
The question of whether or not plaintiff has a federal cause of action at all is not free from doubt, and the following discussion, in which we conclude that a voluntary inmate in a state institution, or her representative, may in some circumstances have a cause of action under § 1983 for malicious or wanton maltreatment or neglect, cannot be regarded as more than tentative in the present state of the law. However, we think the likelihood sufficient to entitle plaintiff to develop the facts, if he so desires, beyond the pleading stage.
First, we reject the argument that plaintiff can claim for the deceased a “right to treatment” under such cases as
Wyatt v. Aderholt,
A different theory, however, which has been suggested though not fully developed in several cases, is more in point. In
Spence v. Staras,
While this approach is, on humane grounds, hard to fault, its constitutional basis has yet to be defined, especially with respect to inmates whom the state claims no right to confine. In the ease of voluntarily committed persons, it would seem limited to those who by reason of disability are to a great degree helpless; and, if not confined de jure, are at least confined de facto. A prisoner or involuntary mental patient has no alternative to enduring whatever conditions the state provides; if his captors allow him to be beaten or consign him to inhuman conditions, it seems rational to speak not only of a “tort” but an invasion of civil rights by his captors. A voluntary patient, on the other hand, is legally not forced to endure the conditions although, depending on his degree of disability, the availability of other resources and of parents, spouses, friends and guardians, and so on, he may or may not be compelled de facto to endure the conditions.
It is difficult to draw from the foregoing any final conclusions about plaintiff’s *1124 case, knowing as little as we do about the terms of the deceased’s voluntary commitment, her degree of helplessness, and the relative degree of neglect, if any, which resulted in her death. If the deceased was relatively competent, it may be that she would not come within the right to protection doctrine at all. It is also possible that after a more complete development of the facts, it would become apparent that defendant did afford a basically humane and safe living environment, and that any failure to treat or restrain the deceased goes beyond that issue, and is more a complaint as to negligence or malpractice, for which § 1983 would not afford relief. 1 We think, however, that the facts recited by plaintiff — including the allegation that deceased disappeared from her quarters two or three days prior to the discovery of her body and that her disappearance went unnoticed 2 —go far enough to require allowance of some evidentiary input at least. If plaintiff could establish a sufficient combination of helplessness on the part of deceased, and wanton callousness on the part of those caring for her, her case might cross the line from tort to a § 1983 case stating a claim under the eighth amendment or possibly even the due process clause of the fourteenth. We accordingly hold that the complaint cannot be said on its face not to state a federal cause of action.
II
Even assuming a cause of action may exist under § 1983, it does not follow that plaintiff may recover damages. The Supreme Court has recently addressed the question of the standard for allowance of damages, and in O’Connor v. Donaldson, supra, applied the relevant test in a case arising from the illegal detention of an involuntarily confined mental patient. Justice Stewart, writing for the majority, held that in confining the plaintiff, a non-dangerous person, the superintendent had violated the patient’s constitutional rights. However, the Court indicated that the question of monetary damages may not have been properly decided. The test the Supreme Court sets out is the standard applicable in the present lawsuit:
“. . . the relevant question is whether [Dr. Cserr] ‘knew or reasonably should have known that the action he took within his sphere of official responsibility would violate the constitutional rights of [Mrs. Harper], or if he took the action with the malicious intention to cause a deprivation of constitutional rights or other injury to [Mrs. Harper].’ [Wood v. Strickland,420 U.S. 308 at 322,95 S.Ct. 992 ,43 L.Ed.2d 214 ]. See also Scheuer v. Rhodes,416 U.S. 232 , 247-248,94 S.Ct. 1683 , 1692,40 L.Ed.2d 90 ; Wood v. Strickland, supra,420 U.S. at 330 ,95 S.Ct. at 1005 (opinion of Powell, J.). For purposes of this question, an official has, of course, no duty to anticipate unforeseeable constitutional developments. Wood v. Strickland, supra, at420 U.S. 322 ,95 S.Ct. at 1004 .” O’Connor v. Donaldson, supra,422 U.S. at 577 ,95 S.Ct. at 2494 .
See also Hoitt v. Vitek,
Since the constitutional right of the deceased to be free from harm is by no *1125 means certain, and in the present nascent stage of the law could not have been foreseen, the defendant plainly had no reason to know whether or not what he did would be a constitutional violation. As for malicious intention, it was not alleged. However, the complaint does allege that:
“. . .no effort was made to restrict Mrs. Harper’s activities or to control her movements or to provide for her safety or welfare. Mrs. Harper was permitted to come and go about the premises unattended and was permitted free and easy access to dangerous implements, tools and other instrumentalities potentially dangerous and harmful to her. She was not watched, supervised or afforded the protection and security of the hospital, its staff and facilities.”
We cannot say that if these allegations were all proven that a trier of fact might not be in a position to infer such a degree of wanton neglect as would be tantamount to actual malice.
See Kelley v. Dunne,
“Further proceedings, either by way of summary judgment or by trial on the merits, are required. The complaining parties are entitled to be heard more fully than is possible on a motion to dismiss a complaint.”
Ill
Our determination that the claim under § 1983 should not have been dismissed on the pleadings requires us to consider the status of the pendent state tort claims in the complaint. If it should turn out that the federal claim is not frivolous, the district court may well have responsibility to decide the state claims.
Hagans v. Lavine,
If the district court should reach the pendent claims, we can say no more than the following by way of partial guidance:
While Massachusetts precedent indicates that tort recovery in a case like this could be predicated on a finding of ordinary negligence as well as active misfeasance, it is clear that twenty years ago the state courts did not take kindly to claims of this sort.
Somers v. Osterheld,
“the scope of discretion and responsibilities of the office and all the circumstances as they reasonably appeared at the time of the action on which liability is sought to be based.” Scheuer v. Rhodes, supra,416 U.S. at 247 — 48,94 S.Ct. at 1692 , cited approvingly in Wood v. Strickland, supra,420 U.S. at 318 ,95 S.Ct. 992 ; O’Connor v. Donaldson, supra,422 U.S. at 577 ,95 S.Ct. 2486 .
This standard, although not binding upon a state court, suggests the probability that a court today would review many more factors than did the Somers Court in determining whether a state official’s discretion was exercised reasonably.
In light of the above, if the district court determines that it should proceed to decide the state claims, it may want to consider certification of the controlling legal issue to the Supreme Judicial Court. This would be, however, a matter within its discretion and we do not intimate that it would be the only course open.
The first step, in any event, will be for the district court to require the plaintiff, through affidavits, discovery or both, to clarify the factual basis of his claims so that it may be determined whether there exists any reasonable basis for recovery under federal law. In vacating the judgment below, we do not signify that plaintiff’s federal claim, when its dimensions are better revealed, will necessarily prove substantial, nor do we mean necessarily to guarantee a federal forum for the trial of the pendent state tort claims.
The judgment of the district court is vacated and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has recently gone far to indicate that § 1983 is not a means of ordinary redress for the unintentional infliction of death by a state official, and is not meant to displace or duplicate the tort law of the states. Mr. Justice Rehnquist, writing for a substantial majority of the Court, emphasized in
Paul v. Davis,
. We note that Dr. Cserr strongly denies these and other allegations of the complaint in his affidavit, but we cannot consider any documents outside of the complaint on review of the present dismissal. It may well be that on a motion for summary judgment the defendant should and will prevail. We express no opinion, as to future disposition, one way or the other.
