Hare Ex Rel. Hare v. City of Corinth , 135 F.3d 320 ( 1998 )


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  •                            REVISED - March 5, 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    ____________________
    No. 96-60872
    ____________________
    RICHARD HARE, Natural Father and next friend
    of Haley Hare, a minor;
    RICHARD HARE, Individually and in his
    official capacity as administrator of
    the estate of Tina Hare,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    versus
    CITY OF CORINTH, MS; ET AL.,
    Defendants,
    FRED JOHNSON, Individually and
    in his official capacity;
    BILLY CLYDE BURNS, Captain, Individually and
    in his official capacity;
    JAMES DAMONS, Captain, Individually and
    in his official capacity;
    BRENDA MOORE, Individually and
    in her official capacity,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Mississippi
    _________________________________________________________________
    February 12, 1998
    Before JOLLY, DAVIS and BARKSDALE, Circuit Judges.
    RHESA HAWKINS BARKSDALE, Circuit Judge:
    Concerning the suicide of pretrial detainee Tina Hare in July
    1989, at issue in this interlocutory appeal on qualified immunity
    is   whether,   by   not   preventing   the   suicide,   Appellants   acted
    objectively unreasonably in the light of then clearly established
    law. On remand from a similar interlocutory appeal, decided by our
    en banc court, Hare v. City of Corinth, 
    74 F.3d 633
     (5th Cir. 1996)
    (en banc), the district court again denied qualified immunity to
    the individual defendants.   We REVERSE.
    I.
    On remand, additional evidence was not presented. The parties
    to this appeal agree that our en banc opinion accurately states the
    facts in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, Richard Hare:
    Shortly after midnight on the morning of
    July [4], 1989, the Booneville [Mississippi]
    Police Department notified the Corinth Police
    Department that [Tina] Hare had been arrested
    in Booneville on warrants for petty larceny
    and forgery.    Officer Larry Fuqua of the
    Corinth Police Department immediately went to
    Booneville to pick up Ms. Hare, at which time
    the Booneville police informed Fuqua that Ms.
    Hare was a “heavy drug user.” Fuqua took Ms.
    Hare to the Corinth City Jail, where she was
    jailed at approximately 1:45 a.m.
    Ms. Hare’s husband, [Richard] Hare,
    testified in his deposition that Ms. Hare
    called him just after she was jailed.      Mr.
    Hare testified that his wife had never been in
    jail before, and that she seemed scared and
    frightened.   Ms. Hare told her husband that
    nothing could be done to secure her release
    until after 8:00 a.m., so he went back to
    sleep.   Later that morning, at around 6:00
    a.m., Mr. Hare contacted Ms. Hare’s divorced
    parents, Guy Taylor and Patricia Morgan, to
    inform them that their daughter was in the
    Corinth jail and needed help.          Shortly
    thereafter, Mr. Hare met with Ms. Hare’s
    parents; they decided that Ms. Hare’s parents
    would go to the jail at 8:00 a.m. to seek
    their daughter’s release, leaving Mr. Hare at
    home to care for the Hares’ baby daughter.
    When Ms. Hare’s parents went to the jail at
    around 8:00 a.m., however, [Captain Billy
    Clyde]   Burns   [of   the    Corinth   Police
    Department] told them that Ms. Hare was not
    ready for release, and that it would take more
    - 2 -
    time to complete the investigation of their
    daughter. Accordingly, Burns told the parents
    to return home and wait for his call.
    In his deposition, Burns testified that
    he was informed that Ms. Hare was a suspect in
    a check forgery case, and that he first met
    with   Ms.   Hare    to   interview   her   at
    approximately 10:00 a.m. on July [4], 1989.
    During this interview, Ms. Hare told Burns
    that she had been forging checks and cashing
    them to finance her dilaudid addiction.
    According to Burns, Ms. Hare was depressed
    about being in jail, and was sitting with both
    feet in her chair in a defensive, “fetal-type”
    position. Ms. Hare said that she was an unfit
    mother and expressed concern about how her
    husband would react to her predicament. Burns
    observed that Ms. Hare was going through
    withdrawal, which he understood to be a normal
    reaction to her drug use; he also learned at
    that time that Ms. Hare was scheduled to enter
    a drug rehabilitation program the next day,
    July [5], 1989, in Tupelo, Mississippi. Burns
    indicated that Ms. Hare’s mood improved later
    in the interview when she learned that her
    bond amount would not be as high as she
    initially had expected.
    After the interview, Burns placed Ms.
    Hare in a private cell and told the
    dispatcher, Brenda Moore, to monitor Ms. Hare
    in case her withdrawal symptoms required
    medical attention.    Ms. Hare was allowed to
    call her parents to ask them to return to the
    jail to assist with her bond so that she could
    be released that afternoon. These plans never
    materialized, apparently in part because of
    Burns’ displeasure over Ms. Hare’s attempt to
    destroy a videotape on which the interview had
    been recorded.    Also, in the meantime, the
    Corinth police had received word of additional
    charges on Ms. Hare. When Ms. Hare’s parents
    arrived at the jail at around noon, Burns told
    them that Ms. Hare could not go home at that
    time.
    Though Ms. Hare was not released, she was
    allowed to visit with her parents from around
    2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. During this private
    meeting, Ms. Hare’s mother described Ms. Hare
    as “emotionally distraught.” Burns likewise
    - 3 -
    described Ms. Hare’s mood as “hyper” and
    “frantic” while her parents were at the jail.
    Ms. Hare attempted to convince Burns not to
    hold her in jail another night and threatened
    to commit suicide if he did. While Burns did
    not consider the threat serious, Ms. Hare’s
    father testified that he believed that she was
    serious, observing that she had made the
    suicide threat in a serious, believable tone
    of voice.    Burns acknowledged that it was
    possible that Ms. Hare said to him that “her
    life was in his hands,” but said that he could
    not specifically remember whether she said
    those words to him. In any event, Ms. Hare’s
    threat prompted her father to seek assurance
    from Burns that Ms. Hare would be safe. Burns
    acknowledges telling Ms. Hare’s father that
    the police would do “everything within [their]
    power to make sure that nothing did happen to
    her.”
    After Ms. Hare’s parents left the jail,
    Burns returned Ms. Hare to her original cell.
    Burns subsequently moved her to an isolated
    cell nearest the camera monitors and trusty
    station, claiming that Police Chief Fred
    Johnson instructed him to do so.       Johnson
    denies that he ever gave Burns such an
    instruction. Since Ms. Hare had been strip-
    searched previously, Burns searched her cell,
    took her shoes, and made sure that she did not
    have a belt. Burns saw a blanket on the bunk
    and considered the possibility that Ms. Hare
    might use it to harm herself, but left it
    there believing that she was not strong enough
    to tear it. Burns instructed dispatcher Moore
    to keep a close check on Ms. Hare and to have
    the trusties check on her.     Accordingly to
    Burns, his primary concern was Ms. Hare’s
    “withdrawal syndrome,” not her suicide threat.
    Moore confirms that Burns told her to
    keep an eye on Ms. Hare, and that he also
    apprised her of Ms. Hare’s threat to harm
    herself. Burns, however, believed that Moore
    would be on duty until 10:00 p.m., when in
    fact she was off duty at 5:00 p.m. Moore thus
    went home at 5:00 p.m., at which time Captain
    James Damons took over her dispatching duties.
    Moore claims that she informed Damons that
    Burns had left instructions to keep an eye on
    - 4 -
    Ms. Hare, though Damons denies receiving such
    information.
    Burns left the station some time after
    3:00 p.m. At around 6:00 p.m., Burns called
    the jail from his home and told Damons to have
    the two trusties check on Ms. Hare at least
    every forty-five minutes.     Damons promptly
    sent a trusty to check on Ms. Hare. When the
    trusty arrived at Ms. Hare’s cell, he found
    her hanging from the bars of her cell with a
    noose that she had fashioned from strips of
    the blanket. As the trusty did not have a key
    to Ms. Hare’s cell, he immediately notified
    Damons.    Damons, in accordance with jail
    procedures, could not leave his post, so he
    called Burns.     Ms. Hare was left there
    hanging, though the summary judgment evidence
    does not establish whether she was alive or
    dead when the trusty first found her. Burns
    told Damons to leave Ms. Hare undisturbed
    until the State Investigator arrived.
    Hare, 
    74 F.3d at 636-38
    .
    Pursuant to 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , Richard Hare sued the City of
    Corinth, as well as the individual defendants bringing this appeal,
    alleging that, inter alia, they were deliberately indifferent to
    the risk of Tina Hare’s suicide. The district court denied summary
    judgment, Hare v. City of Corinth, 
    814 F. Supp. 1312
    , 1314 (N.D.
    Miss. 1993), and the individual defendants appealed, asserting
    qualified immunity.
    Our court’s original panel opinion held that Richard Hare had
    alleged a violation of the clearly established right to medical
    attention for suicidal tendencies, and that material fact issues
    remained as to whether the individual defendants were deliberately
    indifferent.   Hare v. City of Corinth, 
    22 F.3d 612
     (5th Cir. 1994),
    withdrawn and superseded on rehearing by 
    36 F.3d 412
     (5th Cir.
    1994), on rehearing en banc, 
    74 F.3d 633
     (5th Cir. 1996), on
    - 5 -
    remand, 
    949 F. Supp. 456
     (N.D. Miss. 1996).       However, that panel
    revised its opinion, holding: (1) that “the jail officials were
    under a clearly established constitutional duty to provide pretrial
    detainees with reasonable care for serious medical needs, unless
    the   deficiency   reasonably   served    a   legitimate   governmental
    objective”; and (2) that a material fact issue existed as to
    whether the jail officials “knew or should have known of Tina
    Hare’s vulnerability to suicide”.        Hare, 
    36 F.3d at 415-17
    , on
    rehearing en banc, 
    74 F.3d 633
    , on remand, 
    949 F. Supp. 456
    .
    Our court took this case en banc, for the following reasons
    stated in the resulting opinion, and held:
    As our cases suggest, we have traveled a
    peripatetic   route  in   invoking  different
    measures of the constitutional rights of
    pretrial detainees to medical care and
    protection from harm.        Close analysis,
    however, discloses much consistency in our
    treatment of the underlying constitutional
    claims. Our goal in deciding this case today
    is to clarify our case law and to articulate
    the proper legal measure of a State’s duty to
    tend to a pretrial detainee posing a risk of
    suicide.
    * * *
    [W]e conclude that a state jail official’s
    constitutional liability to pretrial detainees
    for episodic acts or omissions should be
    measured   by   a   standard   of   subjective
    deliberate indifference as enunciated by the
    Supreme Court in Farmer [v. Brennan, 
    511 U.S. 825
     (1994)].
    Hare, 
    74 F.3d at 643
    .   This holding is restated at the conclusion
    of the opinion:
    In sum, we hold (1) that the State owes
    the same duty under the Due Process Clause and
    the Eighth Amendment to provide both pretrial
    - 6 -
    detainees and convicted inmates with basic
    human needs, including medical care and
    protection    from    harm,    during    their
    confinement; and (2) that a state jail
    official’s liability for episodic acts or
    omissions cannot attach unless the official
    had subjective knowledge of a substantial risk
    of serious harm to a pretrial detainee but
    responded with deliberate indifference to that
    risk.
    
    Id. at 650
     (emphasis added).
    Accordingly, this case was remanded to the district court with
    the following instructions:
    Richard Hare alleges that the defendants
    violated the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment by causing Tina Hare to
    be deprived of her right to reasonable care.
    The district court found that there was a
    genuine issue of material fact as to whether
    the defendants knew or should have known of
    Ms. Hare’s suicide risk.          As we have
    explained, however, the correct legal standard
    is not whether the jail officers “knew or
    should have known,” but whether they had
    gained actual knowledge of the substantial
    risk of suicide and responded with deliberate
    indifference. This appeal comes from a denial
    of   summary   judgment   rejecting  qualified
    immunity.    We remand for application of the
    standard announced today.       See Rankin v.
    Klevenhagen, 
    5 F.3d 103
    , 105 (5th Cir. 1993).
    We express no opinion regarding the outcome of
    such further proceedings in the trial court.
    
    Id.
       (Emphasis added).
    As noted, additional evidence was not presented on remand.
    The district court again denied summary judgment, both on the
    merits and on qualified immunity, holding that material fact issues
    remained as to whether the individual defendants had subjective
    knowledge of the risk of Tina Hare’s suicide and whether they acted
    - 7 -
    with deliberate indifference to that risk.   Hare, 
    949 F. Supp. at 460-66
    .
    II.
    The denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity is, of
    course, immediately appealable, even when a genuine issue of
    material fact exists, when the order determines a question of law.
    E.g., Wren v. Towe, No. 96-11388, slip op. at 1193 (5th Cir. Dec.
    30, 1997) (“A district court’s denial of summary judgment is not
    immune from interlocutory appeal simply because the denial rested
    on the fact that a dispute over material issues of fact exists.”)
    (citation omitted); Coleman v. Houston Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    113 F.3d 528
    , 531 (5th Cir. 1997) (discussing Behrens v. Pelletier, 
    516 U.S. 299
     (1996)).
    Along this line, Richard Hare moved to dismiss this appeal.
    In an unpublished opinion, our court held:
    We conclude that these [individual] defendants
    have a right to an interlocutory appeal to
    assert   their    qualified-immunity   defense
    because they are challenging the district
    court’s legal reasoning rather than merely its
    factual findings.
    * * *
    They are not arguing, for example, that there
    was insufficient summary judgment evidence for
    the district court to permit a jury to
    conclude that they left Ms. Hare with the
    blanket that she used to hang herself. They
    claim not that they didn’t do it, but that
    even if they did it, it didn’t violate a
    clearly established constitutional right and
    thus doesn’t defeat their immunity.
    - 8 -
    Hare v. City of Corinth, No. 96-60872, at 2, 6 (5th Cir. filed Mar.
    31, 1997) (unpublished).
    It bears repeating that this appeal is brought only by the
    individual officers, not the City of Corinth, concerning only
    qualified immunity, not the merits.       And, it is well to remember
    that qualified immunity serves a number of quite important goals.
    Courts have expressed a concern over “the deterrent effect that
    civil liability may have on the willingness of public officials to
    fully discharge their professional duties”. Sanchez v. Swyden, No.
    96-40557, slip op. at 1390-91 (5th Cir. Jan. 13, 1998) (citing
    Pierson v. Ray, 
    386 U.S. 547
    , 555 (1967); Anderson v. Creighton,
    
    483 U.S. 635
    , 638 (1987); Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 814
    (1982); and Scheuer v. Rhodes, 
    416 U.S. 232
    , 239-41 (1974)).
    Moreover, we seek to    “avoid excessive disruption of government”.
    Malley v. Briggs, 
    475 U.S. 335
    , 341 (1986).      To this end, qualified
    immunity serves to terminate a claim against a public official as
    soon as possible in a judicial proceeding, even before discovery.
    See Siegert v. Gilley, 
    500 U.S. 226
    , 232 (1991) (“‘Until this
    threshold [qualified] immunity question is resolved, discovery
    should not be allowed.’”) (quoting Harlow, 
    457 U.S. at 818
    ).
    “Decision   of    this   purely   legal   question   [of   qualified
    immunity] permits courts expeditiously to weed out suits which fail
    the test without requiring a defendant who rightly claims qualified
    immunity to engage in expensive and time consuming preparation to
    defend the suit on its merits.”    Siegert, 
    500 U.S. at 232
     (emphasis
    added).   “One of the purposes of immunity, absolute or qualified,
    - 9 -
    is    to spare   a   defendant   not   only    unwarranted       liability,       but
    unwarranted demands customarily imposed upon those defending a long
    drawn out lawsuit.”      
    Id.
         Accordingly, the doctrine of qualified
    immunity    “provides    ample    protection     to    all   but    the    plainly
    incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law”.                 Malley, 
    475 U.S. at 335
    .         Needless to say, some of these goals are not
    reflected in the instant case; the issue of qualified immunity is
    still unresolved more than six years after the complaint was filed.
    The bifurcated test for qualified immunity is quite familiar:
    (1) whether the plaintiff has alleged a violation of a clearly
    established constitutional right; and, (2) if so,                    whether the
    defendant’s conduct was objectively unreasonable in the light of
    the clearly established law at the time of the incident.                     E.g.,
    Colston v. Barnhart, 
    130 F.3d 96
    , 99 (5th Cir. 1997).                      It goes
    without saying that we review a summary judgment de novo, viewing
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant.                   E.g.,
    Abbott v. Equity Group, Inc., 
    2 F.3d 613
    , 618-19 (5th Cir. 1993).
    A.
    Again, the first step is to determine whether the plaintiff
    has alleged “violation of a clearly established constitutional
    right”. Siegert, 
    500 U.S. at 231
    .           E.g., White v. Taylor, 
    959 F.2d 539
    , 545 n.4 (5th Cir. 1992) (“We have interpreted Siegert to
    require that we examine whether the plaintiff has stated a claim
    for   a   constitutional   violation        before    reaching     the    issue   of
    qualified immunity.”); Connelly v. Comptroller of the Currency, 
    876 F.2d 1209
    , 1212 (5th Cir. 1989) (“It is a common failing in
    - 10 -
    qualified immunity decisions that courts avoid deciding exactly
    what constitutional violation might have occurred if the facts are
    as a plaintiff alleged....                The purpose of requiring careful
    characterization of plaintiff’s claim at the outset of a qualified
    immunity analysis is to effectuate the goal of that defense”).
    This    analysis       is    made     under      the   “currently       applicable
    constitutional standards”.           Rankin v. Klevenhagen, 
    5 F.3d 103
    , 106
    (5th Cir. 1993).
    Richard Hare claims that the individual defendants “violated
    the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by causing Tina
    Hare to be deprived of her right to reasonable care”.                    Hare, 
    74 F.3d at 650
    .    Appellants counter that there is no duty to diagnose
    her with a mental illness that would trigger a duty to protect her
    from suicide.      And, again, our en banc opinion stated:
    We hold that the episodic act or omission of a
    state jail official does not violate a
    pretrial detainee’s constitutional right to be
    secure in his basic human needs, such as
    medical care and safety, unless the detainee
    demonstrates that the official acted or failed
    to act with deliberate indifference to the
    detainee’s needs.
    
    Id. at 647-48
    .
    Richard Hare has consistently alleged that the individual
    defendants     knew,    or   should       have   known,   that   Tina    Hare   was
    exhibiting suicidal tendencies, and that the defendant’s actions,
    and inactions, by, inter alia, placing Tina Hare in an isolated
    cell,    without    removing        the    blanket,    constituted      deliberate
    indifference to Tina Hare’s serious medical/psychiatric needs.
    Therefore, pursuant to the standard established by our en banc
    - 11 -
    opinion, Richard Hare has alleged the violation of a clearly
    established constitutional right.
    B.
    The second prong of the qualified immunity test is better
    understood as two separate inquiries:                whether the allegedly
    violated constitutional rights were clearly established at the time
    of the incident; and, if so, whether the conduct of the defendants
    was objectively unreasonable in the light of that then clearly
    established law.     See Pierce v. Smith, 
    117 F.3d 866
     (5th Cir.
    1997); Rankin, 
    5 F.3d at 108
     (“When evaluating whether a plaintiff
    stated    a   constitutional   violation,       we   looked   to    currently
    applicable    constitutional   standards.         However,    the   objective
    reasonableness of an official’s conduct must be measured with
    reference to the law as it existed at the time of the conduct in
    question.”)    (internal   quotes    and     citations   omitted)   (emphasis
    added).
    1.
    As discussed fully in our en banc opinion, review of the case
    law as of the time of the incident, July 1989, reveals that the
    standard of care owed to pretrial detainees, in protection of their
    due process right to medical care or protection from harm, was
    confused and often conflicting.            See generally Hare, 
    74 F.3d at 639-43
     (detailing the relevant case law on this issue prior to the
    en banc opinion).    We revisit it briefly.
    - 12 -
    In Bell v. Wolfish, 
    441 U.S. 520
    , 539 (1979), the Court
    provided the following standard to be applied in a case involving
    a pretrial detainee’s due process rights:
    [I]f a particular condition or restriction of
    pretrial detention is reasonably related to a
    legitimate governmental objective, it does
    not, without more, amount to ‘punishment.’
    Conversely, if a restriction or condition is
    not reasonably related to a legitimate goal—if
    it is arbitrary or purposeless—a court
    permissibly may infer that the purpose of the
    governmental action is punishment that may not
    constitutionally be inflicted upon detainees
    qua detainees.
    This     standard   is    contrasted    with       the   requirement   of
    “deliberate    indifference”,     which    has   been    employed   in   cases
    involving prisoner claims of Eighth Amendment violations due to
    denial or interference with medical needs.          Estelle v. Gamble, 
    429 U.S. 97
    , 104-05 (1976).       This was explained in our en banc opinion
    in Hare:
    When dealing with a pretrial detainee’s right
    to medical care or protection from harm, it is
    argued,   we   must   apply   the   reasonable
    relationship test of Bell, since that test was
    designed specifically to define the scope of
    due process rights of pretrial detainees.
    With equal fervor it is urged that the
    deliberate indifference standard applied in
    the Court’s Eighth Amendment cases ought to be
    the choice, since those cases have addressed
    the specific type of right asserted in this
    case—the right to medical care or protection
    from harm.
    
    74 F.3d at 640
    .
    The case law in this circuit in the decade following Bell and
    Estelle did little to clarify the proper standard in pretrial
    detainee suicide cases. Johnston v. Lucas, 
    786 F.2d 1254
     (5th Cir.
    - 13 -
    1986), held that a prisoner must show that the jailers acted with
    “conscious or callous indifference” to their duty to protect the
    prisoner from others.       Shortly after Lucas, we held that, in cases
    involving claims by a pretrial detainee under the Eighth Amendment
    right to be free from the constant threat of harm by fellow
    inmates, “[t]he same conditions of violence and sexual abuse which
    constitute    cruel   and   unusual   punishment   may   also   render   the
    confinement of pretrial detainees punishment per se.”           Alberti v.
    Klevenhagen, 
    790 F.2d 1220
    , 1224 (5th Cir. 1986).
    Finally, in Partridge v. Two Unknown Police Officers, 
    791 F.2d 1182
     (5th Cir. 1986), our court was presented with a case involving
    a pretrial detainee suicide.          We held that, under Bell, “the
    defendants had a duty, at a minimum, not to be deliberately
    indifferent to [the pretrial detainee’s] serious medical needs”.
    
    Id. at 1187
     (emphasis added).         This decision clearly held that
    negligence is an insufficient basis on which to state a claim, and
    pointed to a standard of deliberate indifference to a pretrial
    detainee’s medical needs.        However, the applicable standard was
    again obfuscated by our decision in Cupit v. Jones, 
    835 F.2d 82
    , 85
    (5th Cir. 1987), which signaled a return to the Bell test by
    requiring that an official’s failure to provide reasonable medical
    care must be “reasonably related to a legitimate governmental
    objective”.
    These cases show that the parameters of the law in 1989 were
    far from clearly defined. But, on the other hand, they demonstrate
    that it was clearly established that, at a minimum, the standard of
    - 14 -
    care was as described in our 1996 en banc opinion in this case.
    See Hare, 
    949 F. Supp. at 464
     (“[T]he duty of law enforcement
    officials not to be deliberately indifferent to serious medical
    needs of pre-trial detainees has long since been the minimum duty
    owed to a pre-trial detainee.”) (citing as authority Estelle, 
    429 U.S. 97
    ;   Bell,   
    441 U.S. at
       535   n.16;    City   of   Revere   v.
    Massachusetts Gen. Hosp., 
    463 U.S. 239
    , 244 (1983); Jones v.
    Diamond, 
    636 F.2d 1364
    , 1378 (5th Cir. 1981), overruled on other
    grounds by International Woodworkers of Am., AFL-CIO and its Local
    No. 5-376 v. Champion Int’l. Corp., 
    790 F.2d 1174
     (5th Cir. 1986);
    and Partridge, 
    791 F.2d at 1187
    ).
    Therefore, the deliberate indifference test enunciated in our
    1996 en banc opinion was a clearly established minimum standard of
    conduct when the incident occurred in 1989.            In other words, at the
    very least, that standard was clearly established as of then.
    Therefore, it is that standard to which we hold the individual
    defendants in determining, objectively, the reasonableness of their
    conduct.      See Anderson, 
    483 U.S. at 640
     (“[T]he ‘contours’ of the
    right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would
    understand that what he is doing violates that right.”); Sanchez,
    No.96-40557, slip op. at 1390 (“[T]he official’s knowledge of the
    relevant law need not rise to the level of a ‘constitutional
    scholar.’”) (citing Harlow, 
    457 U.S. at 815-17
    ).
    2.
    Accordingly, we turn to whether the conduct of the individual
    defendants was objectively reasonable in the light of the then
    - 15 -
    clearly established law.            E.g., Rankin, 
    5 F.3d at 108
    ; Spann v.
    Rainey, 
    987 F.2d 1110
    , 1114 (5th Cir. 1993).               “The stated purpose
    underlying     adoption   of    an   objective     test    was      to   ‘permit      the
    resolution of many insubstantial claims on summary judgment’ and to
    avoid ‘subject[ing] government officials either to the costs of
    trial or to the burdens of broad-reaching discovery’ in cases in
    which the legal norms the officials are alleged to have violated
    were not clearly established at the time the events occurred.”
    Lynch v. Cannatella, 
    810 F.2d 1363
    , 1374 (5th Cir. 1987) (citing
    Harlow, 
    457 U.S. at 817-18
    ) (emphasis added).
    On this appeal, objective reasonableness has been confused
    with the separate subjective standard of deliberate indifference.
    This is understandable.         As the district court recognized, other
    courts have experienced difficulty determining the relationship
    between these two standards in the context of qualified immunity.
    See, e.g., Scott v. Abate, No. CV-93-4589, 
    1995 WL 591306
    , at *10
    n.5 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 27, 1995) (“It is ... difficult to imagine
    factual   circumstances        in    which   a   trier    of     fact    could     find
    deliberate indifference as defined by Farmer and nevertheless
    conclude that a reasonable person in [the] defendant’s position was
    not chargeable with knowledge that his or her actions violated the
    plaintiff’s clearly established constitutional rights.”) (quoting
    Briecke   v.   Coughlin,   No.       92-CV-1211,    
    1994 WL 705328
    ,      at   *6
    (N.D.N.Y. Dec. 16, 1994)).
    Again, this appeal is brought only by the individual officers,
    not the City of Corinth, contesting the qualified immunity denial,
    - 16 -
    not the merits.     And, again, in addressing qualified immunity, the
    test    is   objective       reasonableness.           And,   again,      objective
    reasonableness is a question of law for the court.                 E.g., Mangieri
    v. Clifton, 
    29 F.3d 1012
    , 1016 (5th Cir. 1994) (“[I]n evaluating a
    claim of qualified immunity, the district court is to make a
    determination of the objective reasonableness of the official’s act
    as a matter of law.”)
    Obviously,     the   analysis     for    objective     reasonableness      is
    different from that for deliberate indifference (the subjective
    test for addressing the merits).          Otherwise, a successful claim of
    qualified immunity in this context would require defendants to
    demonstrate    that    they    prevail    on    the    merits,    thus    rendering
    qualified immunity an empty doctrine.                 See Hart v. O’Brien, 
    127 F.3d 424
    , 454 (5th Cir. 1997) (“A public official who attacks a
    plaintiff’s ability to prove her case is not raising a qualified
    immunity defense, which is ‘conceptually distinct from the merits
    of the plaintiff’s claim.’”) (quoting Johnson v. Jones, 
    515 U.S. 304
    , 314 (1995)).
    Accordingly,    for    this   appeal     on    qualified    immunity,     the
    subjective    deliberate       indifference       standard       serves   only    to
    demonstrate the clearly established law in effect at the time of
    the incident, as discussed supra.              And, under that standard — the
    minimum standard not to be deliberately indifferent — the actions
    of the individual defendants are examined to determine whether, as
    a matter of law, they were objectively unreasonable.
    - 17 -
    Officer Burns was present at a meeting between Tina Hare and
    her parents, at which Tina Hare threatened suicide.   Officer Burns
    placed her in the private cell closest to the monitor and the
    trusty’s station, searched the cell, ensured that Tina Hare did not
    have a belt, and removed her shoes because they had laces.   Officer
    Burns did not remove the blanket from the cell because he believed
    that Tina Hare, who weighed only approximately 100 pounds, was not
    strong enough to tear it.   Officer Burns instructed Officer Moore
    to keep a close check on Tina Hare.      On the afternoon of the
    suicide, Appellants, or the jail trusties, checked on Tina Hare
    when she went to her cell at 3:00 p.m., when Officer Damons came on
    duty at 4:00 p.m., when Tina Hare was fed at 5:00 p.m., and when
    Officer Burns called at 6:00 p.m.   Moreover, the only evidence in
    the record concerning Tina Hare’s physical state when she was found
    is Officer Burn’s report, which states that Officer Damons reported
    that she was dead.1
    1
    Richard Hare contends that the failure to check Tina
    Hare’s pulse or body temperature when she was found hanging in the
    cell could, by itself, allow a reasonable juror to find that the
    defendants were deliberately indifferent to Tina Hare’s medical
    needs. This contention was not made in the pleadings. In fact,
    the complaint alleges that Tina Hare was found hanging in her cell
    at approximately 6:00 p.m. on 4 July 1989, but that she “died at
    approximately 5:30 p.m. ... while in the custody of the
    Defendants”. The only reference whatsoever in the record vis-a-vis
    this argument is in the plaintiff’s motion to amend the pretrial
    order to include a conflict of law as to “[w]hether the
    Constitution requires a municipality or its employees to ensure
    that inmates receive care for their serious medical needs,
    specifically, emergency care for inmates discovered hanging in
    their cells.” Because Richard Hare did not make this contention in
    district court in response to the summary judgment motion, much
    less present any supporting evidence, it is not properly presented
    on appeal.
    - 18 -
    Needless to say, in this context, the objective reasonableness
    standard does not afford a simple bright-line test.      See, e.g.,
    Rellergert v. Cape Girardeau County, 
    924 F.2d 794
    , 797 (8th Cir.
    1991) (“While we conclude that the law is clearly established that
    jailers must take measures to prevent inmate suicides once they
    know of the suicide risk, we cannot say that the law is established
    with any clarity as to what those measures must be.”).   However, we
    conclude that, against the backdrop of the deliberate indifference
    standard enunciated in the en banc opinion, which was the only
    clearly established standard in 1989, the actions of the individual
    defendants are within the parameters of objective reasonableness.
    Cf. Rhyne v. Henderson County, 
    973 F.2d 386
    , 393 (5th Cir. 1992)
    (holding that giving a blanket to an inmate who had twice attempted
    suicide and was diagnosed as suicidal, and not placing the inmate
    under continuous observation, is not a constitutional violation);
    State Bank of St. Charles v. Camic, 
    712 F.2d 1140
    , 1146 (7th Cir.)
    (removing belt and shoelaces were “reasonable precautions” even
    though inmate was placed in a cell not visible from the booking
    area and later hanged himself with his shirt), cert. denied, 
    464 U.S. 995
     (1983); Popham v. City of Talladega, 
    908 F.2d 1561
    , 1564
    (11th Cir. 1990) (holding that removing shoes and ensuring detainee
    had no belt demonstrate a lack of deliberate indifference); Schmelz
    v. Monroe County, 
    954 F.2d 1540
    , 1545 (11th Cir. 1992) (finding no
    deliberate indifference when officers failed to remove a blanket as
    part of a suicide watch, even though the detainee had previously
    - 19 -
    requested to see the jail psychologist, because such conduct “can
    be characterized at best as mere negligence”).
    It is important to underline our narrow holding: we do not
    address arguments concerning the material fact issues designated by
    the district court.       Instead, we hold that the undisputed facts,
    viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, do not
    constitute objectively unreasonable conduct when applied against
    the deliberate indifference standard.
    In this regard, it should be noted that our holding does not
    insulate all public officials from liability for suicides by
    pretrial    detainees.         Based    on   evidence        that   an   officer     was
    subjectively, deliberately indifferent, as described in our en banc
    opinion, the objective reasonableness analysis may well result in
    that officer not being entitled to qualified immunity.                         It goes
    without saying that each case will turn on the evidence to which
    the   objective      standard    is     applied.        On    the   other    hand,    as
    discussed,     and    where     appropriate,       qualified        immunity    serves
    important    purposes     by     terminating       an    action      early     in    the
    proceedings.      E.g, Hunter v. Bryant, 
    502 U.S. 224
    , 227 (1991)
    (“Immunity ordinarily should be decided by the court long before
    trial.”).
    III.
    In sum, as a matter of law, the district court should have
    granted    summary    judgment     to    Appellants      on    qualified     immunity
    - 20 -
    grounds.2   Accordingly, the denial of summary judgment is REVERSED
    as to Appellants; judgment is RENDERED for them; and this matter is
    REMANDED for further proceedings.
    2
    Obviously, the sanctions sought against Appellants for
    claimed undue delay and frivolousness of the appeal are DENIED.
    - 21 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 96-60872

Citation Numbers: 135 F.3d 320

Judges: Barksdale, Davis, Jolly

Filed Date: 3/5/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/1/2023

Authorities (36)

robert-schmelz-as-guardian-of-the-incompetent-james-michael-schmelz , 954 F.2d 1540 ( 1992 )

kathy-roberts-popham-as-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-robert-popham-v , 908 F.2d 1561 ( 1990 )

Mangieri v. Clifton , 29 F.3d 1012 ( 1994 )

David A. Connelly v. Comptroller of the Currency , 876 F.2d 1209 ( 1989 )

Hare v. City of Corinth, Miss. , 74 F.3d 633 ( 1996 )

Errol Lynch v. Joseph S. Cannatella, Jr. , 810 F.2d 1363 ( 1987 )

Rankin v. Klevenhagen , 5 F.3d 103 ( 1993 )

Marvin Jones, on His Own Behalf and on Behalf of Those ... , 636 F.2d 1364 ( 1981 )

International Woodworkers of America, Afl-Cio and Its Local ... , 790 F.2d 1174 ( 1986 )

Ann Rhyne v. Henderson County , 973 F.2d 386 ( 1992 )

Milton Eugene Cupit v. James \"Sonny\" Jones , 835 F.2d 82 ( 1987 )

Hart v. O'Brien , 127 F.3d 424 ( 1997 )

lawrence-r-alberti-v-johnny-klevenhagen-sheriff-of-harris-county-texas , 790 F.2d 1220 ( 1986 )

Aaron Spann v. Police Officer A.G. Rainey, Aaron Spann v. A.... , 987 F.2d 1110 ( 1993 )

richard-hare-natural-father-and-next-friend-of-haley-hare-a-minor-v-city , 36 F.3d 412 ( 1994 )

Pierce v. Smith , 117 F.3d 866 ( 1997 )

chester-jordan-johnston-jr-v-eddie-lucas-aaron-jagers-major-fred , 786 F.2d 1254 ( 1986 )

Ralph Partridge and Betty Partridge v. Two Unknown Police ... , 791 F.2d 1182 ( 1986 )

James E. White v. Leon Taylor, Etc., Clell Harrell , 959 F.2d 539 ( 1992 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-97772-walter-r-abbott-md-and-mrs-e-elizabeth , 2 F.3d 613 ( 1993 )

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