Melissa Abdouch v. Vicki Burger , 426 F.3d 982 ( 2005 )


Menu:
  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 04-3966
    ___________
    Melissa Abdouch,                         *
    *
    Plaintiff - Appellant,       *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 * District Court for the District of
    * South Dakota.
    Vicki Burger; Raina Boyum; Kathrin       *
    Betzing; Alison Downs, in their          *
    individual capacities and in their       *
    capacities as employees of the South     *
    Dakota Department of Social Services, *
    *
    Defendants - Appellees.      *
    ___________
    Submitted: September 15, 2005
    Filed: October 20, 2005
    ___________
    Before MELLOY, BEAM, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    MELLOY, Circuit Judge.
    Melissa Abdouch brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the
    defendants, a group of South Dakota social workers. She alleged that after the
    defendants discovered her infant son had seventeen broken bones, they violated her
    constitutional rights by removing him from her care for a period of approximately
    seven months. The district court1 found the defendants entitled to qualified immunity
    and granted summary judgment in their favor. We affirm.
    I.
    Melissa Abdouch and her husband, Michael Abdouch, lived with their three
    children: A.A., B.A., and C.A. On August 8, 2002, Melissa took the youngest child,
    eleven week-old C.A., to a cardiologist because of a heart murmur. The cardiologist
    took a chest x-ray that revealed multiple fractured ribs. The next day, August 9, the
    Abdouch’s family physician informed Melissa that the x-ray had revealed “bone
    abnormalities.” He asked her to bring C.A. to a hospital emergency room. A physical
    exam and x-rays taken at the emergency room revealed that C.A. had seventeen
    fractures including fractures of the ribs and clavicle and of the arms and legs, both
    above and below the joints. Despite the severity and extent of C.A.’s injuries, all
    doctors involved with the case later concurred that the injuries would not have been
    apparent to a lay person.
    Two police detectives interviewed Melissa and Michael, starting at the hospital
    and continuing at a police station. The police quickly focused on Michael as the
    suspected abuser, although there was little evidence to suggest what role each parent
    might have played. Melissa and Michael denied harming C.A. and denied having
    knowledge of any abuse. When Michael was later deposed, however, he admitted that
    he had anger management issues and that Melissa had encouraged him to seek anger
    management help or counseling at about the time that the doctors discovered C.A.’s
    injuries.
    1
    The Honorable Karen E. Schreier, United States District Judge for the District
    of South Dakota.
    -2-
    Defendant Alison Downs was the Department’s intake social worker assigned
    to the case. She was present at the police station. Downs permitted Melissa to take
    C.A. home on August 9 on the condition that Michael not stay at the family’s home.
    The following day, August 10, Melissa brought the older children to the
    hospital for evaluation. Although neither exhibited signs of abuse, Downs and her
    supervisor, defendant Raina Boyum, decided to remove all three children from the
    home and place them in a care center. Downs completed a “Child Placement
    Agreement and Case Plan” form for each child to authorize the care center to provide
    services. In addition to noting C.A.’s severe injuries, Downs noted on the forms that
    there was possible sexual abuse. Boyum initialed the forms. There was no evidence
    of sexual abuse.
    Also on August 10, Downs told Melissa that there would be a temporary
    custody hearing the following day and that she would recommend the court send the
    three children home with Melissa. On August 11, at the hearing, Downs did not make
    the recommendation. After the hearing, Downs and Boyum released A.A. and B.A.
    to Michael’s parents and placed C.A. in foster care. Michael returned home to live
    with Melissa. Melissa had urged that C.A. be placed with the children’s grandparents,
    who were willing to take C.A. into their home and/or move to care for C.A. in a
    different location. Following C.A.’s placement in foster care, Melissa and Michael
    were each allowed one one-hour supervised visit per week.
    On August 18, Downs completed an information collection form. She marked
    boxes to indicate that C.A. had suffered physical abuse in the “head, face, genitals,
    stomach or back area.” She marked boxes to indicate that C.A. required “immediate
    medical attention,” that there was “no evidence” of sexual abuse, and that there had
    been “frequent or increasingly harsh physical contact.” She also marked boxes to
    indicate that Melissa was “emotionally handicapped” and had an “uncontrolled mental
    illness.” Finally, without noting which caretaker she was referring to, Downs marked
    -3-
    boxes to indicate that the caretaker had an “unrealistic expectation of [the] child’s
    behavior” and did not “believe that there is a problem.”
    After Downs and Boyum completed their initial investigation and intake, case
    manager Kathrin Betzing and her supervisor, Vicki Burger, took over the case.
    According to Betzing and Burger, C.A. did not tolerate the supervised visits from
    Michael and Melissa well and screamed and refused to eat after the visits. During one
    of Michael’s visits, Michael became frustrated and called C.A. a “little shit.” Melissa
    contests the Department’s claim that C.A. did not tolerate her visits well.
    An Assistant Attorney General involved in the case, Anthony Sanchez,
    recommended that the Department terminate the supervised visits. Sanchez stated that
    Melissa was not cooperative in the abuse investigation and that he did not want her
    to have more visits until he knew “what part [Melissa] had in the child’s injuries,
    whether she actually caused them or . . . knew [Michael] caused them.” Betzing and
    Burger decided in September to terminate the visits. At about the same time, they
    decided to seek the termination of Michael’s and Melissa’s parental rights regarding
    C.A.
    Melissa testified that she wanted to remain married to Michael and have her
    children at home. She initially appeared not to believe that Michael had abused C.A.
    She testified that she was told by the Department that she would not regain custody
    of her children if she remained married to Michael. She requested that C.A. be tested
    for a rare congenital disease that causes brittle bones, osteogenesis imperfecta. C.A.
    was tested in late September and found not to have the disorder. Melissa filed for
    divorce on October 5, 2000, one week after she received the test results. The divorce
    became final on January 20, 2001. The January divorce decree did not resolve any
    issues of child custody and visitation between Michael and Melissa. When asked,
    Melissa could not say whether she would have filed for divorce if the Department had
    not recommended that she do so.
    -4-
    Notwithstanding the fact that Melissa filed for divorce, Michael continued to
    live with Melissa until just before a state court adjudicatory hearing on October 18.
    At the hearing, a state court judge relied on the medical evidence of C.A.’s injuries to
    determine that C.A. was an abused or neglected child. After the hearing, C.A.’s
    placement in foster care continued, and the two older children returned to the family’s
    home to live with Melissa.
    Investigators who visited Melissa’s home after Michael moved out reported that
    it appeared that a married couple still lived at the home. Further, in discussions with
    one of the social workers before Michael moved out, Melissa initially lied about
    Michael’s living arrangements. Melissa first stated that Michael had already moved
    and that he was living with a friend. When pressed to give the friend’s name,
    however, Melissa became flustered and admitted that Michael still lived at home.
    Based on this deception, Melissa’s reluctance to believe that Michael had abused C.A.,
    and her claimed ignorance that abuse had occurred, the defendants believed that
    Melissa had filed for divorce only as a pretext to regain custody of C.A..
    A criminal investigation continued throughout this time. A prosecutor, Pam
    Tiede, filed an abuse and neglect petition. Michael eventually admitted that he had
    treated C.A. roughly, that he “lost his cool,” and that he must have injured C.A.,
    although he said he did not purposely injure C.A. In November, he agreed to plead
    guilty to simple assault. He entered a guilty plea on February 22, 2001.
    Melissa’s visits with C.A. resumed in December 2000. Melissa’s visits were
    initially once per week and later twice per week. In January 2001, she was allowed
    to take C.A. on home visits. In February 2001, Melissa was permitted to begin taking
    C.A. on overnight visits. On March 15, 2001, C.A. was conditionally returned to
    Melissa on a full-time basis. Following a custody hearing on June 13, 2001, all
    conditions on Melissa’s custody of C.A. were removed.
    -5-
    Notwithstanding the transitioning of C.A. back into Melissa’s custody, Betzing
    and Burger continued to seek termination of Melissa’s parental rights. Before the
    June 13 hearing, Prosecutor Tiede told Burger and Betzing that she didn’t believe
    there was sufficient evidence to terminate Melissa’s parental rights. At Burger’s and
    Betzing’s request, Assistant Attorney General Sanchez took the case from Tiede.
    Sanchez reviewed the case, and with Burger and Betzing, decided not to pursue the
    termination of rights. They did not notify Melissa of this decision until June 13, the
    day of the hearing. At the hearing, the Department sought termination of Michael’s
    parental rights and sought continuation of the case against Melissa to permit continued
    monitoring of C.A. The court dismissed all proceedings as against Melissa and
    deferred the case as to Michael.
    Melissa brought her claims in the present action under § 1983. She concedes
    that it initially was appropriate for the defendants to remove the children from her
    home. She alleges, however, that the defendants continued to seek the termination of
    her parental rights after it became clear that the defendants could not make the
    showing necessary to terminate her rights. She characterizes this action as a violation
    of her right to be free from prosecution without probable cause. She also alleges that
    the defendants’ protracted placement of C.A. in foster care deprived her of her liberty
    interest in the care and custody of her children.
    As to the prosecution-related claim, the district court found that the social
    workers were analogous to prosecutors and therefore entitled to absolute immunity for
    their initiation of judicial proceedings against Melissa. As to the alleged violation of
    her liberty interest as a parent, the district court found that qualified immunity applied.
    We affirm.
    -6-
    II.
    Qualified immunity protects public officials unless their conduct violates
    clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person
    would have known. Littrell v. Franklin, 
    388 F.3d 578
    , 582 (8th Cir. 2004) (“‘officials
    are not liable for bad guesses in gray areas; they are liable for transgressing bright
    lines.’”) (quoting Maciariello v. Sumner, 
    973 F.2d 295
    , 298 (4th Cir. 1992)).
    Qualified immunity is a question of law that we review de novo. 
    Littrell, 388 F.3d at 584-85
    . In reviewing a grant of qualified immunity, “[t]he sequence of our analysis
    is to ask first whether, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the facts
    alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right; and second,
    whether, in the specific context of the case, the right was clearly established.” Swipies
    v. Kofka, 
    348 F.3d 701
    , 703 (8th Cir. 2003).
    We have previously recognized that parents have an important but limited
    substantive due process right in the care and custody of their children. Manzano v.
    South Dakota Dept. of Soc. Servs., 
    60 F.3d 505
    , 509-10 (8th Cir. 1995). The right is
    limited because the state has a potentially conflicting, compelling interest in the safety
    and welfare of the children. 
    Id. at 510
    (“‘[T]he liberty interest in familial relations is
    limited by the compelling governmental interest in the protection of minor children,
    particularly in circumstances where the protection is considered necessary as against
    the parents themselves.’”) (quoting Myers v. Morris, 
    810 F.3d 1437
    , 1462 (8th Cir.
    1987)). The right is important because of the need to “curb[] overzealous suspicion
    and intervention on the part of health care professionals and government officials,
    particularly where the effect of such overzealousness may have the effect of
    discouraging parents or caretakers from communicating with doctors or seeking
    appropriate medical attention for children with real or potentially life-threatening
    conditions.” Thomason v. SCAN Volunteer Servs., Inc., 
    85 F.3d 1365
    , 1373 (8th Cir.
    1996).
    -7-
    The net result of these competing interests is that we must weigh the interests
    of the state and child against those of the parents to determine whether a constitutional
    violation has occurred. Under this balancing test, the officials’ actions must have been
    based on a reasonable suspicion of abuse and must not have been disproportionate
    under the circumstances. 
    Id. at 1371-72
    (“The difficulty in the present case is not
    whether such a reasonable suspicion can be found, but rather, whether the actions
    taken by the defendants and the resulting disruption to plaintiffs’ familial relations
    with [the child] were so disproportionate under the circumstances as to rise to the level
    of a constitutional deprivation.”).
    “The need to continually subject the assertion of this abstract substantive due
    process right to a balancing test which weighs the interest of the parent against the
    interests of the child and the state makes the qualified immunity defense difficult to
    overcome.” 
    Manzano, 60 F.3d at 510
    . Even where this balancing reveals a
    constitutional violation, qualified immunity still applies unless the constitutional
    violation was so clear that an objectively reasonable official under the circumstances
    would have recognized the disproportionality or lack of reasonable suspicion. In the
    present case, we need not reach this second step of the qualified immunity analysis
    because we conclude that the defendants’ conduct, viewed in a light most favorable
    to the plaintiff, did not violate a constitutional right.
    Because Melissa concedes that it initially was proper for the defendants to
    remove C.A., her allegations of a constitutional violation focus on her extended
    deprivation of custody claim. For a substantial period of time after the discovery of
    C.A.’s severe injuries, the defendants did not know which parent harmed C.A.,
    whether both parents had a role in harming C.A., or whether the injuries were due at
    least in part to one or both parents’ negligence. Even as investigators’ attention
    focused on Michael, a clear picture of the abuse and of Melissa’s role in, or
    knowledge of, the abuse eluded investigators. This uncertainty caused the defendants
    to question Melissa’s ability to care for and protect C.A.
    -8-
    The defendants’ actions, however, were not based solely on speculation or
    uncertainty. Rather, the defendants reasonably believed that Melissa was not being
    honest with them. She attempted to deceive the defendants regarding Michael’s living
    arrangements. In addition, from the defendants’ perspective, she appeared reluctant
    to believe or admit that Michael had abused C.A. and reluctant to file for divorce.
    Also, she continued to live with Michael until shortly before the October 18 hearing.
    All of this information, when viewed against the backdrop of C.A.’s serious and
    unexplained injuries, clearly shows a basis for the defendants’ reasonable suspicion
    that Melissa was complicit in the abuse or guilty of neglect. It was not unreasonable
    to hold C.A. in foster care during this time.
    Further, the state court’s October 18 decision, following notice and a hearing,
    demonstrated the reasonableness of the defendants’ suspicions and did nothing to
    vindicate either Melissa or Michael. The court held that C.A. was an abused or
    neglected child, not that Michael was guilty nor Melissa innocent. Later, when
    Michael agreed to plead guilty, his statements shed little to no light on the events that
    caused C.A.’s injuries. The defendants, nevertheless, began to transition C.A. back
    into Melissa’s care.
    Melissa’s main complaint appears to be that this transition was slower than
    necessary. In balancing the rights of the parents against the interests of the child, we
    disagree. The Department was under a duty to protect C.A. and formulate a transition
    plan that protected C.A. from any further abuse or neglect. This duty required the
    Department to ensure that Michael did not have access to C.A. In that regard, the
    divorce was not final until January, and even then, custody issues were not resolved
    by the divorce decree. Before that time, visitation had resumed. Home visits and
    overnight visits followed, and by March, C.A. was in the plaintiff’s care on a full time
    basis. Given these facts, as well as the severity of the injuries and the uncertainties
    about Michael’s situation, the deprivation of custody from October 18 until full-time
    placement in March was not unreasonable, and certainly did not rise to the level of a
    -9-
    constitutional violation. Accordingly, the defendants are entitled to the protection of
    qualified immunity.2
    As a final matter, we note that the district court correctly applied absolute
    immunity to shield the defendants from liability for initiating or maintaining judicial
    proceedings. See Thomason, 85 F.3d at1373 (“To the extent [a state authorized child
    welfare agency and its worker] are sued for initiating judicial proceedings, [the
    welfare worker’s] role was functionally comparable to that of a prosecutor.”); 
    Myers, 810 F.2d at 1452
    (“Accordingly the decision to file charges is protected, even in the
    face of accusations of: vindictive prosecution, or reckless prosecution without
    jurisdiction, or conspiracy to prosecute for a crime that never occurred.”) (internal
    citations omitted); Martin v. Aubuchon, 
    623 F.2d 1282
    , 1285 (8th Cir. 1980) (finding
    that absolute immunity applied to protect a prosecutor who had initiated the
    termination of parental rights without notice to the parents).
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Appellees’ pending motion to
    strike portions of the Appellant’s brief is denied as moot.
    ______________________________
    2
    Melissa argues that various specific actions by the defendants showed personal
    animosity. For example, Melissa complains that Downs lied about her intention to
    recommend that the children stay with Melissa at the August 11 hearing and that
    Downs and Boyum suggested on forms that there was evidence of sexual abuse when
    no such evidence existed. Finally, Melissa argues that because the physicians
    believed a lay person would not have recognized C.A.’s injuries, she had no notice of
    the injuries and should not have been the target of an abuse and neglect investigation.
    These arguments are misplaced. As discussed above, no constitutional violation
    occurred. Without a violation of constitutional rights, qualified immunity applies
    regardless of whether an official harbors personal animosity. Also the fact that C.A.’s
    injuries were difficult to detect does not disprove the reasonable suspicion as set forth
    above.
    -10-