MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
On September 17, 1970, the City of Jackson adopted an ordinance pursuant to which an area of Hinds County which included the home of Ms. Thelma P. West-brook was annexed by the City. A Petition for Ratification, Approval and Confirmation of Ordinance Extending the Bou»’' *934 aries of the City of Jackson was filed in the Chancery Court for the First Judicial District of Hinds County, and after a hearing by the court, a decree was entered on December 18, 1970 approving the ordinance. The chancery court decree declared “the public and municipal services which the said City of Jackson proposes to render in the newly annexed territory ... and the time within which said services will be rendered ... to be reasonable,” and further declared “that the City of Jackson can and will render the proposed public and municipal services as set forth in the original Petition in this cause.” That decree was thereafter affirmed by the Mississippi Supreme Court, and the ordinance went into effect on December 28, 1970. As will be discussed in greater detail infra, the ordinance provided, inter alia, that the City was to furnish water improvements and services and was to provide fire protection to the annexed area. 1
On February 12, 1989, the Jackson Fire Department responded to a fire at the Westbrook property. The fire department was unable to extinguish the flames and the house and its contents were destroyed by the fire. Plaintiffs, Jack L. Westbrook, Jr., individually and as executor of the estate of Thelma P. Westbrook, and Cambridge Mutual Fire Insurance Company, 2 filed suit in the Circuit Court for the First Judicial District of Hinds County asserting state and federal law claims seeking recovery for their loss against the City of Jackson and a number of municipal officials, in their official and individual capacities, including present and former mayors, city council members and city commissioners. 3 Defendants removed the action to this court where it is now before the court on the motion of defendants to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. There is also before the court a motion by plaintiffs for summary judgment on the issue of defendants’ liability.
Plaintiffs allege in their complaint that the fire department failed to extinguish the fire at the Westbrook home because there was not sufficient water available due to the failure and negligence of the defendants in not having constructed or otherwise having made provision for municipal level water improvements and water service to the property. Plaintiffs further allege that defendants failed to provide adequate fire protection to the property in that defendants knew that special fire fighting equipment was needed at the site but failed to timely dispatch or otherwise provide same. Based on these allegations, plaintiffs charge defendants with negligence and with a breach of duties imposed by state annexation laws, Miss.Code Ann. *935 §§ 21-1-27 to 21-1-41 (1972), 4 along with the annexation ordinance and chancery decree approving same, to provide municipal level water improvements and fire protection. Plaintiffs also assert a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, charging that the defendants’ failure to provide adequate water improvements and service and adequate fire protection violated plaintiffs’ equal protection and due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The City, and the defendant public officials in their official capacities,
5
contend that they enjoy sovereign immunity against plaintiffs’ claims since the provision of water services and fire protection is a governmental function which is discretionary in nature.
See Sykes v. Grantham,
Section 1983
The court begins its analysis of the present motions with the understanding that a loss “does not necessarily presuppose a constitutional violation.”
Griffith v. Johnston,
Due Process
The Due Process Clause provides “nor shall the state deprive a person of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” A section 1983 action can be successfully stated only where the plaintiffs demonstrate that they have asserted a recognized “liberty or property” interest within the purview of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that they were intentionally or recklessly deprived of that interest under color of state law.
Griffith,
[Njothing. in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors. The Clause is phrased as a limitation on the State’s power to act, not as a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and security. It forbids the State itself to deprive individuals of life, liberty, or property without “due process of law,” but its language cannot fairly be extended to impose an affirmative obligation on the State to ensure that those interests do not come to harm through other means.
[0]ur cases have recognized that the Due Process Clauses generally confer no affirmative right to governmental aid, even where such aid may be necessary to secure life, liberty, or property interests of which the government itself may not deprive the individual. See, e.g., Harris v. McRae,448 U.S. 297 , 317-318,100 S.Ct. 2671 , 2688-2689,65 L.Ed.2d 784 (1980) (no obligation to fund abortions or other medical services) (discussing Due Process Clause of Fifth Amendment); Lindsey v. Normet,405 U.S. 56 , 74,92 S.Ct. 862 , 874,31 L.Ed.2d 36 (1972) (no obligation to provide adequate housing) (discussing Due Process Clause of Fourteenth Amendment); see also Youngberg v. Romeo, 457 U.S. [307], 317, 102 S.Ct. [2452], 2458 [73 L.Ed.2d 28 ] (1982) (“As a general matter, a State is under no constitutional duty to. provide substantive services for those within its border”). As we said in Harris v. McRae, “[although the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause affords protection against unwarranted governmental interference ..., it does not confer an entitlement to such [governmental aid] as may be necessary to realize all the advantages of that freedom.”448 U.S., at 317-318 ,100 S.Ct., at 2688-2689 (emphasis added). If the Due Process Clause does not require the State to provide its citizens with particular protective services, it follows that the State cannot be held liable under the Clause for injuries that could have been averted had it chosen to provide them.
Though decided before
DeShaney,
the court in
Jackson v. Byrne
acknowledged these principles. In that case, the parents of two children who died in a fire which occurred during a fire fighters’ strike, sued the City of Chicago, its mayor and other public officials, charging that the defendants had deprived plaintiffs and
*937
their decedents of rights secured by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Jackson,
[NJothing in the Constitution requires governmental units to act when members of the general public are imperiled____ In our opinion, “the Constitution is a charger of negative liberties; it tells the [government] to let people alone; it does not require the federal government or the state to provide services, even so elementary a service as maintaining law and order.” Beard v. O’Neal,728 F.2d 894 , 899 (7th Cir.1984) (quoting Bowers v. City of DeVito,686 F.2d 616 , 618 (7th Cir.1982). Thus, when the Chicago fire fighters carried out their strike threat and left the city with a fraction of its former protective work force, they did not omit to perform a duty required of them by the Constitution. The Constitution creates no positive entitlement to fire protection. Similarly, when Mayor Byrne dismissed the striking fire fighters, she did not cause the city to default on an obligation recognized by the Constitution. The fire fighters may have violated state law forbidding work stoppages by essential civil servants and could very well be liable to plaintiffs under principles of state tort law. Nonetheless, the fire fighters, standing under no constitutional duty to act, did not effect a deprivation within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id. at 1446. Finally, the court observed:
Government officials did not directly kill the Jackson children, and the Constitution does not guarantee to members of the public at large the adequacy of elementary protective services.
Id.; see also McClary v. O’Hare,
The direct cause of the loss of plaintiffs’ property loss was the fire; the City did not set the fire or cause the fire to be set. However, there appears to be little dispute that the extent of the loss was exacerbated by the fire department’s inability to extinguish the flames as a result of the lack of “an adequate and reliable source of water” with which to fight the fire.
7
Even if a causal link could be established,
8
there would still be no basis for plaintiffs’ recovery under section 1983.
DeShaney
teaches that in the Due Process context, it is the government’s affirmative acts, rather than
*938
its failures to act, that are actionable.
9
See McComb v. Wambaugh,
Even assuming solely for the sake of argument that this alleged failure to provide adequate government services could be actionable despite DeShaney’s explicit holding on that issue, plaintiffs’ claim would still fail. There is in this case the absence of any suggestion that the City’s failure to provide municipal level water service and improvements and fire protection to the Westbrook property placed the West-brooks in any worse position than they were in before the annexation. In
DeShaney,
the Court observed that the State had played no part in creating the dangers faced by the minor victim, Joshua, and did nothing to render him any more vulnerable to those dangers; Joshua, the Court said, was in no worse position by virtue of any actions taken by the State than he would have been had the State not acted at all.
DeShaney,
Plaintiffs could state a claim under the Due Process Clause if their complaint raised a cognizable property interest of which the City deprived them. Though holding explicitly that a right to protective governmental services is not of constitutional origin, the
DeShaney
Court left open the question of whether state law may nevertheless create an entitlement to such services which would enjoy due process protection under
Board of Regents v. Roth,
are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law — rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.
[t]o have a property interest in a benefit, a person clearly must have moré than an abstract need or desire for it. He must have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it.
Id. See also Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
In a case similar to this one, the plaintiffs urged that town officials took their right to fire protection under the color of authority without due process of law. The court in
Reedy v. Mullins,
The Fourteenth Amendment places procedural constraints on governmental actions that work a deprivation of “property” interests encompassed by the meaning of the Due Process Clause. However, plaintiffs have failed to show that expectations of adequate municipal fire protection rise to the stature of “property.” These substantive property interests are not created by the Federal Constitution but by an independent source, such as state law. Once the substantive interest is found, federal law determines whether the interest has constitutional protection.
Reedy,
Plaintiffs in the case at bar suggest that they have a property interest in fire protection, though the source of this alleged property right is somewhat more concrete than a “social contract;” in particular, plaintiffs claim that they have a property interest by virtue of the annexation ordinance which states that the City “shall provide to the ... annexed area ... [fjire protection.”
11
The question thus presented is whether the ordinance upon which plaintiffs rely as their source of entitlement to adequate fire protection grants them a property right in the provision of that service. In this regard, the court in
Wooters v. Jornlin,
It is often said that for any right to exist, there must be some corresponding duty. Hence, if one wishes to claim a right to a general governmental service, he must show that the provider of the service has a duty to provide that service. If the furnishing of the service is left to the discretion of the provider then there can be no entitlement. The party claiming the right must further show that the duty is owed to him as an individual rather than to the public at large. Of course, there could be some service which is owed to each and every individuial in a political unit and hence could be considered a property interest. Nevertheless, in order to become property the service must be owed to discrete individuals or individual entities____ [I]t has been held that laws providing the *940 general public with police or fire protection do not grant individuals a property right in that protection. Shortino v. Wheeler,531 F.2d 938 , 939 (C.A.8, 1976); Reedy v. Mullins,456 F.Supp. 955 , 958 (W.D.Va.1978); Reiff v. City of Philadelphia,471 F.Supp. 1262 (E.D.Pa.1979). All of these cases involved claims of entitlement to the provision of governmental services. Moreover, in all cases the defendants had a duty to provide the services____ The duty [though,] was owed to the undifferentiated general public. Thus, ... in order to establish the existence of a property interest in [a general governmental service,] the plaintiffs must point to (1) an independent source of authority (2) that establishes an absolute duty (3) that is owed to them as individuals rather than as members of the undifferentiated public.
Wooters,
The ordinance at issue in the case at bar states that the City
“shall
furnish ... [fjire protection,” and might therefore be read to create a mandatory duty on the part of the City, (emphasis added).
12
However, the fire protection afforded plaintiffs was allegedly inadequate for the reason that the City had failed to run water lines to the property, resulting in an unavailability of water with which to fight the fire. Regarding the provision of water services, the annexation ordinance states that “the City ... shall ... [i]nstall water lines ... where necessary and economically feasible,” thus making the decision whether to lay water lines dependent on the judgment and discretion of city officials and giving the impression of a distinctly discretionary function. In the court’s view, the ordinance can only be reasonably interpreted by reading these two provisions together. So construing the ordinance, it would appear that the decision whether to furnish water lines was discretionary unless the water line was essential to the provision of adequate fire protection; if needed for adequate fire protection, then the City was required by the ordinance to provide the lines. Even assuming, however, that the ordinance placed an affirmative obligation on the City to provide these governmental services,
cf. Hynson v. City of Chester,
It has been consistently held, as was recognized by the court in
Wooters,
that a duty to provide general governmental services, such as police and fire protection, is owed to the public in general rather than to particular individuals.
Wooters,
In the court’s view, it is apparent that the intent of the annexation ordinance was that persons in the annexed area be placed on equal footing with residents of all other areas of the City vis-a-vis the provision of municipal services. To hold that the ordinance granted specific rights to persons in the annexed area would present rather an anomaly: Only residents of annexed areas would possess a property interest in receiving the described protective governmental services, entitling them to due process protection; no such right would be afforded the residents of any other areas of the city. The court can perceive no reasoned basis for such a distinction. It was intended by the ordinance only that persons in the annexed territory would receive municipal services on the same basis as other city residents. It certainly was not the intent of the ordinance that the annexed residents be placed in a more favorable position than other residents. Therefore, plaintiffs cannot be said to have a property interest in the provision of these services.
In summary, though plaintiffs maintain that theirs is a viable federal claim, their putative section 1983 claim is, in the court’s opinion, nothing more than a state law claim for breach by defendants of their state law duties.
See Archie v. City of Racine,
Equal Protection
The Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause provides that no State “shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” The Court’s opinion in
DeShaney
did not foreclose claims for failure to provide governmental services predicated on the Equal Protection Clause rather than the Due Process Clause. The Court observed that “[t]he State may not, of course, selectively deny its protective services to certain disfavored minorities without violating the Equal Protection Clause.”
DeShaney,
Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim is set forth in their complaint, as follows: “[T]he Defendants provided improvements and services to other individuals and property owners in the area that was annexed pursuant to said ordinance, without providing said improvements and services to Plaintiffs and Plaintiffs’ property.” In other words, plaintiffs claim that despite a law which required that a certain level of services be provided to all residents of a defined area of the city, such services were provided to some, but not all residents of that area. Thus, plaintiffs are apparently challenging as discriminatory and arbitrary the administration of the duties alleged to be imposed by the ordinance.
See McKee,
In any event, judgment for defendants is in order as to this claim. In
Philadelphia Police and Fire Association for Handicapped Children, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia,
But, of course, you must — you must accept the fact that there were many demands on the same funds. You could have taken the $50,000.00 that you could have used to lay water to 25 houses and used it to lay water to one house.
He indicated that the wisdom of doing that was questionable, and stated that while the City probably could have “found the money” from somewhere, i.e., cutting funds for other programs, the determination as to what city money will be spent on is a question of priorities. Davis went on to say that
The city is always under a constraint for funds. Even though they have money, they don’t have money to do everything that they need to do or that they ought to do.
Further, Davis expressed that the City was “doing all that could be done with the resources that we had to comply with the ordinance;” “with the resources we had, we did as much as we could do.” For these reasons, Davis agreed that the City should “be very careful when they start annexing property.”
In
Dandridge v. Williams,
Of course, nothing herein should be interpreted to suggest that plaintiffs do not have a cause of action under state law, for that is an issue not reached by the court. The court simply holds that defendants’ omission to provide the services at issue is not an omission of constitutional dimension; defendants, being under no constitutional duty to provide such services, cannot incur liability under section 1983 for any loss which may have been occasioned by that omission.
Having concluded that plaintiffs’ federal claims which supported the removal of this action should be dismissed, the court declines to exercise pendent jurisdieiton over plaintiffs’ state law claims.
Carnegie-Mellon Univ. v. Cohill,
Based on the foregoing, it is ordered that plaintiffs’ section 1983 claim is dismissed. It is further ordered that this cause is remanded to the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County.
ORDERED.
Notes
. As is pertinent to this litigation, the ordinance made the following provisions:
SECTION 3. That the City of Jackson shall make the following improvements in the said annexed territory, to-wit:
(b) Install water lines, sewer lines and street lighting where necessary and economically feasible.
Said improvements shall be completed within a reasonable time, not to exceed five (5) years from .the effective date of this ordinance, unless delayed by war or military preparedness restrictions.
SECTION 4. That the said City of Jackson shall furnish to the said annexed territory the following municipal or public services beginning on the effective date of this ordinance, to-wit:
(b) Fire protection.
. Cambridge had written a policy of insurance on the house and, under the terms of the policy, paid the Westbrooks $300,000. Cambridge asserts that it is subrogated to the rights of the Westbrooks to the extent of its payment under the insurance policy.
. Defendants are City of Jackson; Russell C. Davis, Dale Danks, Jr. and Kane Ditto, individually and in their official capacities as mayor or former mayors of the City of Jackson; Thomas B. Kelly, Edward L. Cates, Douglas W. Shanks, Nielson H. Cochran, Fred C. Johnson, Luther L. Roan, Jr. and George Porter, individually and in their official capacities as former city commissioners of the City of Jackson; and Louis E. Armstrong, Margaret C. Barrett, Derwood R. Boyles, E.C. Foster, Luther L. Roan, Jr., Doris P. Smith, Marcia Weaver and Kenneth I. Stokes, individually and in their official capacities as members or former members of the Jackson City Council.
. These code sections set forth the procedure to be followed by a municipality when expanding or contracting its boundaries.
. For federal claims, officials in their official capacities can be sued only to the extent that the City itself can be sued, since a suit against them in their official capacities is the equivalent of a suit against the City.
Kentucky v. Graham,
. Prior to
DeShaney,
a number of courts had held that citizens had no right to fundamental governmental services, unless there was some “special relationship” between the government and the victim that distinguished the victim from the general public, as, for example, where there existed a custodial relationship created or assumed by the state, where the state was aware of a specific risk of harm to the victim, or where the state had affirmatively placed the victim in a position of danger.
See DeShaney,
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____ In the substantive due process analysis, it is the State’s affirmative act of restraining the individual’s freedom to act on his own behalf ... which is the “deprivation of liberty” triggering the protections of the Due Process Clause, not its failure to act to protect his liberty interest against harms inflicted by other means.
Id. Plaintiffs’ complaint in the case at bar alleges that City officials were explicitly advised by the Westbrook family of the lack of adequate water improvements and services and fire protection for the property. To the extent that this allegation could be interpreted as alleging a “special relationship” existing by virtue of the City’s knowledge of the Westbrooks’ predicament, DeShaney makes clear that such a claim is not viable as a constitutional matter.
. Chief Chamblee testified by deposition that the fire department could not provide adequate fire protection to the Westbrook property because there was no adequate and reliable source of water. A document entitled "Chiefs Run Report," which was prepared by District Chief J.C. Layton regarding the Westbrook fire, under the heading “List unusual condition(s) ...", stated, "No available water.”
. Compare
Martinez v. California,
. This, of course, is except for those specific and narrow instances described by the
DeShaney
court as where the State has custody or control of the person, or where the state creates the danger. The Supreme Court in
DeShaney
limited the circumstances giving rise to a special relationship to the following situation: "when the State takes a person into custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution imposes upon it a corresponding duty to assume some responsibility for his safety and general wellbeing."
. The Court declined to address that argument since it was advanced for the first time on appeal.
. The court notes that plaintiffs’ complaint does contain the affirmative allegation that plaintiffs have at all times paid their taxes to the City of Jackson which is vaguely suggestive of the same type argument advanced in Reedy.
.
But cf. Wooters,
