UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 98-21032
BARBRA PIOTROWSKI,
Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF HOUSTON, ET AL.,
Defendants,
CITY OF HOUSTON
Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Texas
January 17, 2001
Before JONES, BARKSDALE, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.*
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
Barbra Piotrowski (“Piotrowski”) sued the City of Houston
(“City”) for constitutional violations arising from its failure to
prevent her wealthy former boyfriend from attempting to kill her.
Implicated in the boyfriend’s plot was an unsavory private
investigator who had cultivated police and political friendships
and regularly hired off-duty officers to work for him and the
*
Judge Dennis dissents, reserving the right to file a dissenting
opinion at a later date.
boyfriend. In exchange for the detective’s favors, officials in
the Houston Police Department allegedly covered up his and their
coworkers’ misdeeds. Piotrowski persuaded a jury that the City is
liable for her shooting, and she was awarded a judgment of over $20
million. The City has appealed on numerous grounds. This court
finds that despite the misconduct of several City employees, the
evidence does not support municipal liability or liability based on
a state-created danger theory. Additionally, the statute of
limitations ran on Piotrowski’s equal protection claim. We reverse
and render judgment in favor of the City.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This is a disturbing case -- both in terms of what
happened to Piotrowski and how members of the Houston Police
Department (“HPD”) conducted themselves before and after the
shooting. Piotrowski was shot and rendered a paraplegic by a hit
man procured by her ex-boyfriend, Richard Minns. The evidence
connected members of the Houston police and fire departments to
Minns and his hired investigator Dudley Bell in acts that harassed
and threatened Piotrowski before the shooting.
Piotrowski first met Minns while on a ski trip in Aspen,
Colorado during the winter of 1976. She was then a twenty-three
year old nursing student from California; Minns was a forty-six
year old married Texas multi-millionaire, and was the founder of
2
President and First Lady health clubs. Minns was in the process of
divorcing his first wife. In the spring of 1977, Minns persuaded
Piotrowski to move to Houston, and the two began living together.
During this period, Piotrowski worked as a business consultant and
model for Minns’s health clubs.
During the roughly three years they lived together, their
relationship deteriorated. According to Piotrowski, Minns started
attending wild parties and taking drugs. He became increasingly
violent toward her, physically abusing her on at least two
occasions. One of his blows broke her nose and hand. In March
1980, the relationship ended. Piotrowski had become pregnant.
Minns, during an argument, began to push her and told her to have
an abortion or move out. Piotrowski packed up her belongings and
left Minns’s Houston apartment.
Minns continued to harass Piotrowski after she left him.
The harassment took a variety of forms -- threatening Piotrowski
and her family, filing frivolous charges against her, vandalizing
her property as well as her attorney’s office, and even placing a
stalling device on her car. But what makes this domestic dispute
especially unusual is that Minns used the services of at least two
members of the HPD as well as one member of the Houston Fire
Department to harass Piotrowski.
Initially, Minns contacted Mickey Brown, a member of the
Houston Arson Department who also taught boxing to Minns’s
3
children, to concoct an arson charge against Piotrowski. Brown, in
turn, contacted Detective “Spider” Fincher of the HPD to discuss
possible theft charges against Piotrowski. Fincher worked off duty
for Dudley Bell, the central figure in Piotrowski’s case. Bell was
a private investigator with his own criminal record.2 Bell
arranged the murder contract on Piotrowski.
Fincher telephoned Piotrowski and told her she would be
arrested for arson and for felony grand theft (relating to items
Piotrowski took with her upon leaving Minns’s apartment) unless she
signed a document releasing Minns from all common law marriage and
paternity claims. Brown threatened her with the arson charge if
she did not sign such an agreement.3
Piotrowski tried to reach a settlement with Minns. But
instead of waiting for her to review a proposed agreement, Minns
and Bell, with help from their contacts at the HPD, decided to put
more pressure on Piotrowski. Minns invited Piotrowski to meet at
his hotel so that the two could work out their differences.
Piotrowski agreed. Once at the hotel, though, Minns summoned the
2
Bell’s criminal history included charges and/or convictions for
arson, wiretapping, federal perjury, and bribing a police officer to mis-file the
criminal records of one of Bell’s clients. In 1972, Bell owned a night club with
the then-Chief of the Fire Department. When the club burned down, the Fire Chief
allegedly had arson charges against Bell dismissed. Bell was also known to have
other friends in the HPD as well as in Houston politics.
3
Brown allegedly claimed that Piotrowski had tried to blow Minns up
by exposing electrical wires in their apartment and (somehow) rigging a toilet
such that methane and other gases would build up in the home. When Minns turned
on the lights, the gases would ignite, killing Minns.
4
police to arrest Piotrowski on the theft charges -- based on an
arrest warrant that Minns had in his possession. Minns invited the
officers at the scene to contact Fincher and HPD Detective Charles
Wells, who also worked part-time for Bell, if the officers doubted
the warrant’s authenticity. Given the unique circumstance that the
complainant possessed the warrant, the surprised officers accepted
Minns’s offer. After receiving assurances of authenticity from
either Fincher or Wells, on duty at HPD, the officers arrested
Piotrowski.
Piotrowski was interrogated at an HPD station by Fincher
and Wells, who produced the settlement agreement and told her that
she could avoid theft charges by signing it. She refused. As a
result, she was fingerprinted, photographed and forced to spend
time in jail before being released.
Shortly after being released, Piotrowski was returning to
her apartment from a friend’s birthday party. Upon arriving at her
residence, she became alarmed that Minns, Bell, Fincher, and Wells
(among others) were gathered outside. Piotrowski attempted to call
her lawyer from a public phone. Officer Wells prevented her from
completing the call and escorted her to her apartment, which he and
Fincher and Minns then searched. Minns directed the men to remove
various items that he claimed were his. Although Wells and Fincher
implied that they had a search warrant, Piotrowski never saw it.
Bell remained in the parking lot during the search and allegedly
5
vandalized and slashed the tires on the cars of Piotrowski and her
attorney.
Toward the end of April 1980, Piotrowski filed a formal
complaint with HPD’s Internal Affairs Division (“IAD”) about the
conduct of Fincher and Wells.4 In fact, Piotrowski and her family
filed several complaints with the HPD about the conduct of Minns,
Bell, Fincher, and Wells in the months after she moved out of
Minns’s apartment. The complaints identified those men as the
perpetrators of harassment and intimidation, and Piotrowski stated
that Minns had threatened her life on several occasions. The HPD
informed Piotrowski that they had investigated the various charges
and found no wrongdoing by the police officers. Thus, despite her
protests, no action was taken to stop the harassment or to
discipline Fincher and Wells.
In May the office of Piotrowski’s attorney was
burglarized and set on fire. Files pertaining to Piotrowski’s case
were removed. At about this time, Minns directed Bell to rent an
apartment below Piotrowski’s in order to keep track of her. From
4
During this time, Minns and his associates also harassed Piotrowski’s
family. Minns and Brown contacted Piotrowski’s father, telling him that his
daughter might go to prison if he did not convince her to work things out with
Minns. A business partner of Minns told Piotrowski’s father that she would get
$20,000 if the father would convince his daughter to leave Texas. On another
occasion, Bell and Wells traveled to California and searched the home of
Piotrowski’s parents, apparently without a warrant. Posing as IRS agents, they
detained Piotrowski’s mother and her guests, searched the house for property
belonging to Minns, and even took a necklace off of the mother’s neck.
Piotrowski’s parents filed IAD complaints following these events. No action was
taken against Wells, and the necklace was never recovered.
6
this apartment, Adrian Franks, who worked for Bell, tapped
Piotrowski’s phone and recorded her calls.5 As Franks also
monitored Piotrowski’s comings and goings, he knew what she looked
like and what car she drove. While Franks was spying on
Piotrowski, Bell offered him $10,000 to kill her. Franks agreed.
Bell supplied Franks with a packet of information on Piotrowski
which included a police-style mug shot of her that could have been
taken when she was interrogated by Fincher and Wells.
Franks installed a kill switch on Piotrowski’s car in
July.6 Fortunately, the device did not function properly.
Piotrowski’s car stalled, but she was not hurt. The police
initially thought the device was a bomb. After determining that it
was a kill switch, HPD investigators turned the matter over to the
burglary and theft division -- the division in which Fincher and
Wells worked. Although Minns was listed as a suspect on at least
one police report, Minns was never questioned about the incident.
Piotrowski knew her life was in danger.
5
Franks began cooperating with the police in 1984 and his testimony
helped to convict Bell of solicitation of capital murder for the attempt on
Piotrowski, for which Bell was sentenced to 38 years in prison. Franks also
confessed to burglarizing the office of Piotrowski’s lawyer but denied starting
a fire in that building. Franks was never charged with any offense related to
Piotrowski’s harassment.
6
Besides placing the kill-switch on Piotrowski’s car, Franks testified
that on another occasion he followed her on his motorcycle with a kitchen knife.
After deciding that he would not kill her himself, Franks tried to “subcontract”
the job to another man in Piotrowski’s apartment complex, known as “Bobby.”
Bobby disguised himself and went to Piotrowski’s apartment with a knife.
Fortunately, Piotrowski was not home at the time, and Bobby did not make another
attempt on her life.
7
Undeterred by Franks’s failure, Bell shopped the murder
contract to other would-be assassins. Bell spoke to at least three
other people about killing Piotrowski: James Perry Dillard, Rick
Waring, and Robert Jess Anderson. Anderson ultimately hired
Nathaniel Ivery, the gunman, and Patrick Steen, the driver of the
getaway car, to kill Piotrowski. On October 20, 1980, Ivery shot
Piotrowski four times while she was sitting in her parked car
outside a doughnut shop in Houston. The shooting paralyzed
Piotrowski from the chest down. Ivery, Steen, Anderson, and Bell
were all eventually convicted for their roles in the shooting.
Whether HPD was forewarned of the possible shooting was
disputed at trial. Approximately five weeks before the shooting,
Waring told his friend John Liles, an officer in the criminal
intelligence division of the HPD, that Bell had solicited Waring
and others to murder Piotrowski. According to Waring, Liles
responded that the matter was now in police hands and that Waring
should not warn Piotrowski.
Liles testified that he took the tip seriously and
reported it to his supervisor, Lieutenant Reece. According to
Liles, Reece prevented Liles from investigating the tip on his own
and told Liles to submit a report to Captain Adams, the head of the
8
homicide division.7 Adams testified that he first became aware of
the tip when Liles called him the morning after the shooting.
Adams said that he never saw a report from Liles and would have
acted on it had he seen it. Detective Kenneth Ray Williamson, who
headed HPD’s investigation of the shooting, testified that he did
not think that Liles ever wrote a report before the shooting given
Liles’s personal connections with Waring and Bell.
Despite assurances that the HPD was conducting a full
investigation, Piotrowski maintains that the HPD was actually
closing ranks and protecting Minns, Bell, Fincher, and Wells.
Despite the facts that (1) Waring, Anderson, and Dillard all told
Williamson that Bell had offered them $10,000 to kill Piotrowski,
and (2) Bell’s ex-wife turned over a note in Bell’s handwriting
that listed a dollar amount of $10,000 and Piotrowski’s name,
address, and type of vehicle, Bell was not charged with
solicitation of capital murder until Franks offered to assist the
police in 1984. Minns was allowed to leave the country without
ever being interrogated, subpoenaed, or charged in relation to the
shooting of Piotrowski.
7
Although Liles contends that he did write and file such a report, the
only reference to a murder-for-hire tip is an entry in a criminal intelligence
division (“CID”) log that ascribes a CID case number, refers to Liles’s name, and
includes the notation “solicitation of capital murder” with the date “9-8 of
‘80.” No officer, including Liles, was able to produce a copy of the report.
9
Piotrowski’s suit against the City is based largely on a
deposition given by Liles in early 1993 for another case.8 In that
deposition, Liles charged that the homicide division “dropped the
ball” on his tip by failing to warn Piotrowski. He claimed that
Reece prevented him and another officer from warning Piotrowski and
that the HPD closed ranks to protect the officers involved in the
investigation, especially those who had a close relationship with
Bell.
Not until September 1993, after learning about the
contents of Liles’s deposition, did Piotrowski file her first
lawsuit against the City. Piotrowski alleged that the City
violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by depriving her of due process and equal
protection rights under the Constitution. In particular, she
asserted that the City violated substantive due process by
maintaining a custom or policy that affirmatively helped Bell to
carry out the attack on her. She also alleged that the City denied
her equal protection of the laws by discriminating against women in
domestic violence disputes while favoring wealthy men in such
suits.
8
Liles sued Williamson (and others) for libel for statements made in
a book written about Piotrowski’s case, entitled Sleeping with the Devil. As
part of that case, Liles’s deposition was taken. Piotrowski claims that Liles’s
deposition revealed new information to her about the HPD preventing Waring from
warning her and the HPD’s “code of silence” regarding possible mistakes in the
investigation. As discussed below, Piotrowski argues that she could not
establish her § 1983 claim before receiving this information.
10
The district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss
the case with prejudice under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) on the
ground that Piotrowski’s complaint was time-barred. On appeal,
this court held that fact issues existed on the statute of
limitations, but it also observed that Piotrowski had failed to
“allege that a causal link existed between a City policy or custom
and the alleged state-created danger.” See Piotrowski v. City of
Houston, 51 F.3d 512, 517 (5th Cir. 1995) (“Piotrowski I”). While
her pleading deficiency warranted dismissal, it was possible that
Piotrowski could allege such a causal connection. Hence, this
court modified the judgment to preserve Piotrowski’s right to file
an amended complaint.
Further procedural jockeying in the district court led
Piotrowski to file a second lawsuit against the City in August
1995. In January 1998, a jury found for Piotrowski on her state-
created danger and equal protection claims. The district court
entered a judgment in excess of $26 million, including attorney
fees.
The City timely appealed. Among many issues it has
raised, we need discuss only the statute of limitations verdict and
the questions surrounding municipal liability.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Statute of Limitations
11
The City first contends that judgment as a matter of law
should have been granted to reverse the jury’s finding that
Piotrowski’s complaint was not time-barred.9 The statute of
limitations for a suit brought under § 1983 is determined by the
general statute of limitations governing personal injuries in the
forum state. See Pete v. Metcalf, 8 F.3d 214, 217 (5th Cir. 1993).
Since Texas has a two year statute of limitations for personal
injury claims, see Burrell v. Newsome, 883 F.2d 416, 418 (5th Cir.
1989),10 Piotrowski had two years to file suit from the date her
claim accrued.
Accrual of a § 1983 claim is governed by federal law:
“Under federal law, the [limitations] period begins to run ‘the
moment the plaintiff becomes aware that he has suffered an injury
or has sufficient information to know that he has been injured.’”
Russell v. Bd. of Trustees, 968 F.2d 489, 493 (5th Cir.
1992)(quoting Helton v. Clements, 832 F.2d 332, 335 (5th Cir.
9
This court reviews a district court’s denial of a motion for judgment
as a matter of law de novo, applying the same standard as the district court.
See Rutherford v. Harris Count, Texas, 197 F.3d 173, 178 (5th Cir. 1999). The
district court properly grants a motion for judgment as a matter of law only if
the facts and inferences point so strongly in favor of one party that reasonable
minds could not disagree. See id. at 179. “In ruling on a rule 50 motion based
upon the sufficiency of the evidence, we ‘consider all of the evidence -- not
just that evidence which supports the non-mover’s case -- but in the light and
with all reasonable inferences most favorable to the party opposed to the
motion.’” Information Communication Corp. v. Unisys Corp., 181 F.3d 629, 633
(5th Cir. 1999)(quoting Boeing Co. v. Shipman, 411 F.2d 365, 374 (5th Cir.
1969)(en banc)).
10
See also Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 16.003(a) (Vernon Supp.
1998).
12
1987)), cert. denied, 507 U.S. 914, 113 S.Ct. 1266 (1993). A
plaintiff’s awareness encompasses two elements: “(1) The existence
of the injury; and (2) causation, that is, the connection between
the injury and the defendant’s actions.” Piotrowski I, 51 F.3d at
516. A plaintiff need not know that she has a legal cause of
action; she need know only the facts that would ultimately support
a claim. See Harrison v. United States, 708 F.2d 1023, 1027 (5th
Cir. 1983). Actual knowledge is not required “if the circumstances
would lead a reasonable person to investigate further.” Piotrowski
I, 51 F.3d at 516.11
The City argues that Piotrowski either knew of the facts
underlying her claims at the time of the attack in 1980 or should
have inquired into the actions of the police officers at that time.
With respect to the state-created danger theory, Piotrowski
responds that the HPD’s “code of silence” precluded her from
knowing pertinent facts until January 1993, when Liles was deposed
in relation to his pending libel suit against Williamson and
others. From that deposition, Piotrowski alleges that she learned
for the first time that the HPD took affirmative steps to suppress
11
See also Jensen v. Snellings, 841 F.2d 600, 606 (5th Cir. 1988)
(“Under federal law, the limitations period commences when ‘the aggrieved party
has either knowledge of the violation or notice of facts which, in the exercise
of due diligence, would have led to actual knowledge’ thereof.” (quoting Vigman
v. Community Nat’l Bank and Trust Co., 635 F..2d 455, 459 (5th Cir. 1981)))
13
any information concerning their investigation and the HPD’s prior
knowledge of the Waring tip.12
At trial, the City did not object to the form of the jury
interrogatory that asked whether the plaintiff knew or should have
known of the causal connection between her injuries and “the
defendant’s actions creating a state-created danger” on or before
September 27, 1991 (two years before suit was filed). The jury
decided that Piotrowski should not have known about the facts
concerning causation before this time.13
There is sufficient evidence for the jury to have
concluded that Piotrowski could not make a case for the City’s
possible affirmative involvement in the contract on her life until
Liles’s 1993 deposition. Only after the deposition could
Piotrowski suspect that the City, as opposed to individual
officers, had actively protected and/or assisted Bell. The
12
The City contends that Piotrowski had all the information relevant
to her § 1983 claims shortly after she was shot. According to the City,
Piotrowski knew the police (1) had received a tip (the book, Sleeping with the
Devil, published in 1991, discussed this tip), (2) had not advised her of the
tip, and (3) failed to prevent the attack on her. Piotrowski maintains that she
did not know until after Liles’s deposition that the City itself, as opposed to
individual officers, had a policy of assisting Bell and keeping information from
Piotrowski.
13
In cases where fraudulent concealment is involved, the statute of
limitations does not begin to run until the relevant facts, which are in the
control of the defendant, become known to the plaintiff: “When a defendant
controls the facts surrounding causation such that a reasonable person could not
obtain the information even with a diligent investigation, a cause of action
accrues, but the statute of limitations is tolled.” Piotrowski I, 51 F.3d at
517. See also United States v. Kubrick, 444 U.S. 111, 122, 100 S.Ct. 352, 359
(1979); Frazier v. Garrison Indep. Sch. Dist., 980 F.2d 1514, 1521-22 (5th Cir.
1993).
14
deposition revealed that: (1) Waring and Liles were deterred from
warning her, (2) Franks had received a police mug shot of
Piotrowski from Bell, and (3) the police had a “code of silence”
with respect to the investigation into her shooting. (Whether such
facts, if proved, were sufficient to sustain a claim is another
matter, discussed infra.) Thus, Piotrowski’s first action was
timely filed, within eight months of her learning of the ostensible
causal connection in January 1993.14
However, the same is not true for Piotrowski’s equal
protection claim, a claim not predicated on any facts learned from
Liles’s 1993 deposition. Piotrowski testified that, in 1980, she
“didn’t feel as if [she and Minns] were being treated equally,” and
that she “didn’t feel as if [she] was being treated in the same
manner that Richard Minns was being treated in response to [his]
complaints.” In fact, in an interview with an officer
investigating one of her IAD complaints against Fincher and Wells,
Piotrowski asked the officer “[w]hy all their protection is on
14
The doctrine of equitable tolling protects her second suit, filed in
1995, from untimeliness. When the applicable statute of limitations is borrowed
from the state, that state’s tolling provisions are to be the “primary guide” for
the courts. FDIC v. Dawson, 4 F.3d 1303, 1312 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 512 U.S.
1205, 114 S. Ct. 2673 (1993). Under Texas law, “where a person is prevented from
exercising his legal remedy by the pendency of legal proceedings, the time during
which he is thus prevented should not be counted against him in determining
whether limitations have barred his right.” Jackson v. Johnson, 950 F.2d 263,
265 (5th Cir. 1992)(citing Weisz v. Spindletop Oil and Gas Co., 664 S.W.2d 423,
425 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi 1983, no writ)). Piotrowski was prevented from
filing suit because the trial court had initially dismissed her claim with
prejudice, a disability not removed until the decision of this court in
Piotrowski I.
15
[Minns’s] side.” Piotrowski thus fails to explain what information
in Liles’s deposition was not known or could not have been
discovered through due diligence. Although the deposition may have
revealed information concerning the HPD’s custom or policy of
protecting and assisting Bell, the information is unrelated to
Piotrowski’s equal protection claim.15 As a result, the equal
protection claim is time-barred, and the judgment on that claim
cannot be sustained.
B. The City’s Liability
1. Municipal Policy and Culpability
Under the decisions of the Supreme Court and this court,
municipal liability under section 1983 requires proof of three
elements: a policymaker; an official policy; and a violation of
constitutional rights whose “moving force” is the policy or custom.
Monell v. Dep’t. Of Social Sciences, 436 U.S. 658, 694, 98 S.Ct.
2018, 2037 (1978).16 Monell and later decisions reject municipal
15
The equal protection clause requires that all persons similarly
situated be treated alike. See City of Cleburne, Texas v. Cleburne Living
Center, Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 439, 105 S.Ct. 3249, 3254 (1989). In order to
establish a violation of equal protection, a plaintiff must show “‘the existence
of purposeful discrimination’ motivating the state action which caused the
complained-of injury.” Johnson v. Rodriguez, 110 F.3d 299, 306 (5th Cir.
1997)(quoting McClesky v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279, 292-93, 107 S. Ct. 1756, 1767
(1987)). Piotrowski relies on Liles’s deposition to establish that the HPD had
a policy of protecting Bell and/or other members of the HPD. But Liles’s
deposition simply does not speak to intentional discrimination against Piotrowski
based on an impermissible classification (be it wealth or gender).
16
The municipal policy must cause the violation of another’s rights:
[Section 1983] imposes liability on a government that,
under color of some official policy, “causes” an
16
liability predicated on respondeat superior, because the text of
section 1983 will not bear such a reading. Bd. of Comm’rs of Bryan
County v. Brown, 520 U.S. 397, 403, 117 S.Ct. 1382, 1388 (1997).
Consequently, the unconstitutional conduct must be directly
attributable to the municipality through some sort of official
action or imprimatur;17 isolated unconstitutional actions by
municipal employees will almost never trigger liability. Bennett
v. City of Slidell, 728 F.2d 762, 768 n.3 (5th. Cir. 1984), cert.
denied, 472 U.S. 1016 (1985); McKee v. City of Rockwall, 877 F.2d
409, 415 (5th Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 1023 (1990).18 The
three attribution principles identified here – a policymaker, an
official policy and the “moving force” of the policy – are
necessary to distinguish individual violations perpetrated by local
employee to violate another’s constitutional rights ...
Indeed, the fact that Congress did specifically provide
that A’s tort became B’s liability if B “causes” A to
subject another to a tort suggests that Congress did not
intend § 1983 liability to attach where such causation
was absent.
Monell, 436 U.S. at 692, 98 S.Ct. at 2036.
17
Another way to put this is that there must be both municipal
culpability and causation. See Snyder v. Trepagnier, 142 F.3d 791, 796 (5th Cir.
1998) (no liability for a city where a police officer shot a § 1983 plaintiff).
Culpability includes both the involvement of a municipal policymaker and
affirmative municipal action.
18
Compare Grandstaff v. City of Borger, 767 F.2d 161 (5th Cir. 1985).
This case is often mis-read as suggesting that municipal liability may be imposed
for individual unconstitutional acts of lower-level employees. Grandstaff
recognized that isolated instances of police misbehavior do not prove
acquiescence by a city policymaker in that conduct. The court affirmed municipal
liability, however, because the sheriff’s actions after a police shooting
essentially ratified the officers’ use of excessive force.
17
government employees from those that can be fairly identified as
actions of the government itself. Mistakes in analyzing section
1983 municipal liability cases frequently begin with a failure to
separate the three attribution principles and to consider each in
light of relevant case law.
Here, for instance, the City never insisted that
Piotrowski identify a municipal policymaker who could be held
responsible, through actual or constructive knowledge, for
enforcing a policy that caused Piotrowski’s injuries. This is not
an opaque requirement: several Supreme Court cases have discussed
the policymaker criterion for municipal liability.19 This court’s
seminal decision on municipal section 1983 liability emphasized
that:
Actual or constructive knowledge of [a] custom
must be attributable to the governing body of
the municipality or to an official to whom
that body has delegated policy-making
authority.
Webster v. City of Houston, 735 F.2d 838, 842 (5th Cir. 1984) (en
banc).20
Webster identified the Mayor, City Council and Chief of Police as
Houston’s presumptive policymakers for the police, and stated that
19
See, e.g., Jett v. Dallas Independent School District, 491 U.S. 701,
737 (1989); St. Louis v. Prapotnik, 485 U.S. 112, 126 (1988); Pembaur v. City
of Cincinnati, 475 U.S. 469, 482-83 (1986).
20
Plainly, if a violation is caused by an unconstitutional ordinance
or regulation officially adopted and promulgated by the municipality’s lawmaking
officers or by an official who has been delegated policymaking authority, those
individuals are the policymakers. Webster, 735 F.2d at 841.
18
without proof, it was inconceivable that any officers subordinate
to the Chief “even possibly could have occupied the role of a city
policymaker.” Webster, 735 F.2d at 842. Since the City chose not
to pursue this angle of defense, no more need be said of it.
Instead, the City rests on the other two attribution
principles, those of official policy and moving force, contending
that insufficient evidence supports the verdict on these issues and
that the jury charge was inadequate. To examine these contentions,
it is necessary to sketch the rules governing municipal policy and
causation of constitutional injuries and then to apply those rules
to each of the policies subsumed by Piotrowski’s claim.
Municipal liability for section 1983 violations results
if a deprivation of constitutional rights was inflicted pursuant to
official custom or policy. Official policy is ordinarily contained
in duly promulgated policy statements, ordinances or regulations.
But a policy may also be evidenced by custom, that is:
(2). . . . a persistent, widespread practice
of City officials or employees, which,
although not authorized by officially adopted
and promulgated policy, is so common and well-
settled as to constitute a custom that fairly
represents municipal policy. . . Actions of
officers or employees of a municipality do not
render the municipality liable under section
1983 unless they execute official policy as
above defined.
Webster, 735 F.2d at 841; See also Bryan County, 520 U.S. at 405-
07, 117 S.Ct. at 1387.
19
While an unconstitutional official policy renders a
municipality culpable under § 1983,21 even a facially innocuous
policy will support liability if it was promulgated with deliberate
indifference to the “known or obvious consequences” that
constitutional violations would result. Bryan County, 520 U.S. at
407, 117 S.Ct. at 1389, 1390.22 Deliberate indifference of this
sort is a stringent test, and “a showing of simple or even
heightened negligence will not suffice” to prove municipal
culpability. See id. It follows that each and any policy which
allegedly caused constitutional violations must be specifically
identified by a plaintiff, and it must be determined whether each
one is facially constitutional or unconstitutional.
In addition to culpability, there must be a direct causal
link between the municipal policy and the constitutional
deprivation. Monell describes the high threshold of proof by
stating that the policy must be the “moving force” behind the
violation. Monell, 436 U.S. at 694, 98 S.Ct. at 2037-2038. See
21
See n.18, supra; see also City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, 453 U.S.
247 (1981).
22
“[A] plaintiff seeking to establish municipal liability on the theory
that a facially lawful municipal action has led an employee to violate a
plaintiff’s rights must demonstrate that the municipal action was taken with
‘deliberate indifference’ to its known or obvious consequences.” Bryan County,
520 U.S. at 407, 117 S.Ct. at 1390 (citing Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378, 388
(1989).
20
also Canton, 489 U.S. at 389. This court summed up the relevant
standards as follows:
Bryan County underscores the need for Monell
plaintiffs to establish both the causal link
(“moving force”) and the City’s degree of
culpability (“deliberate indifference” to
federally protected rights). These
requirements must not be diluted, for “[w]here
a court fails to adhere to rigorous
requirements of culpability and causation,
municipal liability collapses into respondeat
superior liability.”
Snyder v. Trepagnier, 142 F.3d at 796, citing Bryan County, 520
U.S. at 410, 117 S.Ct. at 1394.
Unfortunately, Piotrowski’s specification of the policies
she challenges has been vague, and she has hardly addressed their
constitutionality.23 The City denies that any policy or custom is
at all tied to Piotrowski’s injuries and instead tries to lay the
blame on the misconduct of rogue officers. The jury charge did
nothing to sort out the policies or the requirement of deliberate
indifference or to connect each policy as the moving force behind
23
Piotrowski’s reliance on a Title VII retaliation case, Sharp v. City
of Houston, 164 F.3d 923 (5th Cir. 1999), to prove the existence of a municipal
custom or policy in this case is misplaced.
21
a constitutional violation.24 Our task in analyzing the sufficiency
of evidence on appeal is immensely more complex than it should be.25
What we glean from Piotrowski’s briefs and the record are
several alleged customary policies:
(1) The City’s acquiescence in off-duty
employment of Officers Fincher, Wells and
others by Dudley Bell, a known criminal, and
Richard Minns;26
(2) the City’s failure to investigate properly
or discipline Fincher and Wells based on
Piotrowski’s complaints of their improper acts
in California; threats of prosecution;
pressure to sign an agreement with Minns;
irregular search of her apartment; and false
arrest;
(3) the City’s failure to charge Bell or Minns
for their offenses against Piotrowski,
including illegal searches, baseless
prosecutions, arson, wiretapping, the
installation of the kill switch on her car,
vandalism and theft; and
(4) the City’s affirmative assistance to the
attempted murder of Piotrowski by not
investigating the kill switch incident,
handing out her mug shot, and suppressing
24
Instead, the jury was asked to find only whether “as a result of a
custom, policy or practice, the [City] violated the Plaintiff’s civil rights by
creating a “state created danger,” which resulted in injury to the Plaintiff.”
No specific custom, policy or practice was identified in the charge or
interrogatories.
25
The test that we apply for reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence
is the Boeing standard in n.7 supra.
26
The City persists in asserting that such off-duty employment violated
HPD policies, but that position is belied by the evidence that many people in the
Department were aware of these officers’ connection with Dudley Bell and with
Bell’s hiring of other HPD officers.
22
Waring’s and Liles’s attempts to warn her and
investigate the hit contract.27
The reason the policies or customs must be disaggregated
should be clear. Taken together, they express no single municipal
policy but only a series of adversarial conclusions by Piotrowski
(e.g., “the Houston Police Department was up for sale in 1980")
relating to her individual case. “Isolated violations are not the
persistent, often repeated, constant violations, that constitute
custom and policy as required for municipal section 1983
liability.” Bennett v. City of Slidell, 728 F.2d 762, 768 n.3 (5th
Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 472 U.S. 1016, 105 S.Ct. 3476 (1985). A
customary municipal policy cannot ordinarily be inferred from
single constitutional violations. See, e.g., Webster, 375 F.2d at
851. Further, each of the cited customs concerns a discrete police
department program or area of decision-making, and each invokes
separate aspects of the policy issue. Finally, each alleged policy
may have had a distinct impact as the moving force of her state-
created danger claim. In Bryan County, for example, the Court
carefully distinguished between municipal liability for failure to
27
None of these “policies” was specifically distinguished in the jury
charge or interrogatories, and because Piotrowski’s closing arguments were
colloquial, the policies were not carefully articulated there either. With one
exception, the City did not insist upon greater clarity. It is imperative that
the policies for which municipal section 1983 liability is sought be specified
in the trial court. Otherwise, the line between respondeat superior liability
and truly unconstitutional municipal conduct quickly blurs, and the intent of
section 1983 is forsaken. See Snyder, 142 F.3d at 796.
23
train and liability for a single negligent hiring decision. See
Bryan County, 520 U.S. at 398, 117 S.Ct. at 1391.
Turning first to the City’s acquiescence in police
officers’ moonlighting for Dudley Bell, a policy appears to have
been proven. As the touchstone for establishing customary policy
is a persistent and widespread practice, see Webster, 735 F.2d at
841, the evidence suggested that Bell had hired off-duty policemen,
not just Fincher and Wells, for many years notwithstanding official
police department policy that would have discouraged their
employment by any man with a criminal record. This customary
policy represented the height of poor judgment, inasmuch as it
invited conflicts of interest if and when the police department
should have to investigate Bell, his employees, or the clients of
his private investigation firm. Poor judgment is not, however,
facially unconstitutional. The City could only be liable for
Fincher’s and Wells’s moonlighting if it was deliberately
indifferent to known consequences such as the likelihood that the
officers would assist Bell in committing crimes. The City failed
to insist upon proof of deliberate indifference, however, so that
standard is waived.
Assuming, then, that the moonlighting policy did
demonstrate deliberate indifference, the evidence is nevertheless
insufficient to establish that it was the moving force that caused
24
Piotrowski to be shot, or that it resulted in a “state created
danger” to her life. None of Dudley Bell’s previous misdeeds were
contract killings. As a private investigator and bodyguard,
surveillance and protective duties could be expected of his
employees. Abuses of these services could foreseeably result in
the wiretapping, vandalism, and false charges to which Piotrowski
was exposed. But there is no evidence that the City could have
been deliberately indifferent to the likelihood that officers
moonlighting for Bell would get involved in murder for hire, and
there is also no evidence that Fincher or Wells knew of or had any
role in Bell’s attempt to have Piotrowski killed. The municipal
policy allowing improper moonlighting employment may have been
culpable, but causation was not established.
The second alleged policy resides in the City’s failure
to investigate and discipline Fincher and Wells when Piotrowski and
her family made several IAD complaints about them. On the facts of
this case, no unconstitutional municipal custom or policy was
proven. Self-evidently, a City policy of inadequate officer
discipline could be unconstitutional if it was pursued with
deliberate indifference toward the constitutional rights of
citizens. The question is how to prove the existence of such a
policy. One indication might be a purely formalistic investigation
in which little evidence was taken, the file was bare, and the
conclusions of the investigator were perfunctory. No such
25
deficiency appears on the record before us. The IAD investigator
responded to lengthy complaints by or on behalf of Piotrowski,
received nearly as lengthy responses from Fincher and Wells, and
reviewed relevant police department records like the search
warrant. Regardless whether one agrees or disagrees with the IAD
conclusions exonerating Fincher and Wells, the IAD file reveals no
systematic inattention to the complaints.
A more fundamental point is that the failure to
discipline arises only from this plaintiff’s and her associates’
allegations against the officers. Piotrowski did not offer
evidence of any other IAD complaints made against Fincher and
Wells. There is no pattern of complaints by other citizens. As is
the case with allegations of failure to adequately screen
prospective police officers, it is nearly impossible to impute lax
disciplinary policy to the City without showing a pattern of abuses
that transcends the error made in a single case. See Bryan County,
520 U.S. at 410-11, 117 S.Ct. at 1391. A pattern could evidence
not only the existence of a policy but also official deliberate
indifference.
The City did preserve error to the jury charge on this
policy, as it requested a deliberate indifference instruction if
the jury was instructed that it could find liability for the City’s
failure to act to prevent the misdeeds of its police officers.
26
Consequently, even if we concluded that an unconstitutional policy
of inadequate discipline was sufficiently proved, we would have to
reverse any judgment predicated on this theory because of the
court’s error in omitting the deliberate indifference charge. This
asserted policy fails, however, for lack of proof of a pattern of
unremedied abuses of citizens’ rights by Fincher and Wells.
The third alleged policy is that the police failed to
bring charges against Bell or Minns at Piotrowski’s urging. At one
point, she implied to the jury that her tormentors would have been
locked up and would not have been free to plan her murder had the
police taken action in the first half of 1980. Tragic though it is
in hindsight when the police fail to enforce the law strictly
against wrongdoers, decisions not to prosecute cannot be the
subject of policy determinations for purposes of section 1983
liability. See generally Pinder v. Johnson, 54 F.3d 1169 (4th Cir.
1995) (en banc). The DeShaney decision absolves public officials
of individual section 1983 liability for failure to protect
citizens absent a “special relationship” such as official custody
of the victim. See DeShaney v. Winnebago Cty. Dep’t of Social
Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 201 (1989); Walton v. Alexander, 44 F.3d
1297, 1298 (5th Cir. 1995) (en banc). A city cannot be liable to
a member of the public for failing to prosecute a known wrongdoer
27
if no individual City employee could be liable constitutionally for
the same neglect.28
Finally, Piotrowski charged that City policy extended
even to the unthinkable -- its affirmative assistance of Bell’s
carrying out a murder contract on her life. This appears to be the
essence of what the jury charge described as a City custom or
policy which created a state-created danger. There is no evidence,
however, that any action of any individual City employee, much less
official custom or policy of the City, so assisted Bell.
The existence of this alleged policy turns on two facts.
First, Franks testified that Bell gave him a police mug shot to use
in identifying Piotrowski. Where the mug shot came from, who gave
it to Bell and for what purpose it might have been given to him,
are left unexplained by the record. Hence there is no evidence on
which to base an adverse inference about the City’s custom or
policy.
Second, the jury evidently believed Officer Liles’s
testimony that he reported the threat of a hit contract both to
Lieutenant Reece and to the homicide division. Lieutenant Reece
told him not to get involved personally, and the homicide division
lost Liles’s report. Piotrowski was not officially warned of the
28
As stated in DeShaney of course, a different situation might result
from the wholesale failure to protect a class of people, e.g. minorities, 489
U.S. at 197, n.3, 109 S.Ct. at 1004 n.3.
28
murder contract, and no investigation took place before the
homicide attempt. But again, there is no record evidence of any
connection between Lieutenant Reece or members of the homicide
division and Minns or Bell. On the contrary, the only evidence of
police misconduct involved Fincher and Wells, who intervened
against Piotrowski repeatedly -- short of participating in the
murder contract -- as they provided inside-the-HPD assistance to
their off-duty employer Bell when he harassed Piotrowski. Even as
to Fincher and Wells, there is no evidence that they knew of or
assisted in the attempted murder.
Piotrowski made a compelling case that Bell cultivated
friendships in Houston’s political community, among police and fire
department officials, and even with judges, and that some of these
relationships may have contributed to his avoiding or minimizing
prosecution for some illegal acts. But pinning affirmative
involvement by the City in Piotrowski’s attempted murder is beyond
the inferences afforded in this record.29
29
In her brief, Piotrowski also asserts that the “cooperation between
HPD and Bell” led the department to (a)advise Bell that his kill-switch plan had
been thwarted; (b) stop any investigation of the kill-switch; (c) stop Waring
from warning Piotrowski of her danger; and (d) deliberately refuse to pursue
leads against Minns and Bell. None of these charges adds to the case for a City
policy related to the hit contract. First, Bell did not need to be tipped off
to the kill-switch plan -- Piotrowski had obviously survived it. Second, Fincher
and Wells apparently diverted the kill-switch investigation to their division,
but there is no evidence of involvement by other police officers in this act.
Third, it was Liles who told Waring not to warn Piotrowski – Liles was no pawn
of an allegedly corrupt police department. Fourth, failure to pursue leads
against Minns and Bell is unsustained on this record (prior to the shooting)
apart from the proven inaction of Fincher and Wells. These facts suggest
misconduct by Fincher and Wells, not a general custom or widespread policy within
29
After considering all four of the policies that
Piotrowski alluded to at trial, we must conclude that none of them
furnishes a basis for finding that the City maintained a wide-
spread custom or policy that caused Piotrowski’s injuries. No one
could fail to be moved by the suffering that she has endured or
would hesitate to condemn the police department’s unwillingness to
keep its officers from compromising off-duty employment. Difficult
as these facts are, however, they do not suffice to carry the heavy
burden that a plaintiff must bear in establishing municipal
culpability and causation.
2. State created danger theory
Piotrowski persuaded the jury that unspecified customs or
policies of the City effected a “state-created danger,” causing her
to be injured by third parties. For purposes of this discussion,
we assume arguendo that “the City” could have been the
unconstitutional actor. Even assuming such an
anthropomorphization, however, Piotrowski’s evidence was fatally
deficient.
In general, local governments are under no duty to
provide protective services: “[T]he 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
the police department.
30
of which the government itself may not deprive the individual ...
[Thus,] a State’s failure to protect an individual against private
violence simply does not constitute a violation of the Due Process
Clause.” DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Social Servs., 489
U.S. 189, 196-97, 109 S.Ct. 998, 1003-04 (1989).30 The Constitution
imposes a duty on the state to protect particular individuals only
in “certain limited circumstances.” Id., 489 U.S. at 198, 109
S.Ct. at 1004. Courts have recognized at most two such limited
circumstances -- when the state has a special relationship with the
person or when the state exposes a person to a danger of its own
creation.31
Piotrowski argues that the City violated the Due Process
Clause by failing to protect her from a danger that it created by
affirmatively assisting Bell. Although this court has discussed
the contours of the “state-created danger” theory on several
occasions, we have never adopted that theory. See Randolph v.
Cervantes, 130 F.3d 727, 731 (5th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 525
U.S. 822, 119 S.Ct. 65 (1998); Doe v. Hillsboro Indep. Sch. Dist.,
30
See also Walton v. Alexander, 44 F.3d 1297, 1302 (5th Cir. 1995)(en
banc): “The due Process Clause confers protection to the general public against
unwarranted governmental interference, but it does not confer an entitlement to
governmental aid as may be necessary to realize the advantages of liberty
guaranteed by the Clause.”
31
This court’s decision in Walton precludes Piotrowski from arguing
that the HPD’s actions created a special relationship that required the police
to protect her. Under Walton, a special relationship exists only if the
plaintiff is “involuntarily confine[d] against [the plaintiff’s] will through
affirmative exercise of state power.” 44 F.3d at 1306.
31
113 F.3d 1412, 1415 (5th Cir. 1997)(en banc); Piotrowski I, 51 F.3d
at 515. We need not do so here, since, even if we were to adopt
it, Piotrowski could not recover.
In Piotrowski I, this court set out the basic
requirements of the state-created danger theory: “First, a
plaintiff must show that the state actors increased the danger to
her. Second, a plaintiff must show that the state actors acted
with deliberate indifference.” 51 F.3d at 515.
Piotrowski alleged that the City created a danger by
allowing its employees to affirmatively assist Bell in carrying out
the attack on her. The facts have been summarized. The initial
problem is that no matter what official protection Bell received,
the City actors did not create the danger she faced. See Armijo v.
Wagon Mound Public Schools, 159 F.3d 1253, 1263 n.7 (10th Cir.
1998) (”[i]f the danger to the plaintiff existed prior to the
state’s intervention, then even if the state put the plaintiff back
in that same danger, the state would not be liable because it could
not have created a danger that already existed.”). During her
relationship with Minns, Minns became more violent and started
using drugs. Minns had physically abused her at least twice while
they lived together, breaking her nose and hand on one such
occasion. Piotrowski also testified that Minns asked her to help
him kill his first wife. Shortly after moving out of Minns’s
32
apartment, Piotrowski knew that her life was in danger. The record
clearly demonstrates that Piotrowski was aware of Minns’s
propensity for violence given the various threats and acts of
vandalism directed at Piotrowski, her attorney, and her family.
According to a police report she filed, Minns had threatened her
life on several occasions. And after the kill-switch incident,
Piotrowski knew that Minns was trying to kill her.32 Unlike other
cases in which government officials placed persons in danger, the
City at most left her in an already dangerous position.
Depending on the facts, some cases interpret the state-
created danger theory to result in § 1983 liability if government
actors increase the danger of harm to a private citizen by third
parties. Measured by this standard, the assistance provided to
Bell consisted of furnishing Piotrowski’s mug shot and failing to
warn her of Waring’s tip. Neither of these circumstances, however,
actually increased the danger to her. The kill switch incident
plainly signaled Minns’s intentions and determination. And in the
summer of 1980, before Waring’s tip to Liles, Piotrowski’s attorney
had arranged bodyguard protection for her.
Moreover, the City did not act with deliberate
indifference. To establish deliberate indifference, “[t]he
32
After the kill-switch was discovered, Piotrowski told investigators
that she believed Minns was responsible for this attempt on her life. The police
report even listed Minns as a suspect.
33
environment created by the state actors must be dangerous; they
must know it is dangerous; and ... they must have used their
authority to create an opportunity that would not otherwise have
existed for the third party’s crime to occur.” Johnson v. Dallas
Indep. Sch. Dist., 38 F.3d 198, 201 (5th Cir. 1994). “The key to
the state-created danger cases ... lies in the state actors’
culpable knowledge and conduct in affirmatively placing an
individual in a position of danger, effectively stripping a person
of her ability to defend herself, or cutting off potential sources
of private aid.” Id. (quotations and citations omitted). As has
been discussed, there is no evidence that City actors knew of or
participated in the murder contract, and they did nothing to
prevent her from protecting herself.33
For all these reasons, Piotrowski was the shooting victim
of Richard Minns and Dudley Bell, not of circumstances created by
the City actors.
33
Piotrowski’s case is, therefore, markedly different from cases in
other jurisdictions in which the municipal employees created the dangerous
situation and precluded the plaintiff from protecting herself. See, e.g., Wood
v. Ostrander, 879 F.2d 583 (9th Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 938, 111 S.Ct.
341 (1990)(woman raped after police arrested the drunk driver of the vehicle she
was in and left her alone at night in a high crime area); Cornelius v. Town of
Highland Lake, 880 F.2d 348 (11th Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1066, 110
S.Ct. 1784 (1990)(female city employee abducted by prisoner with a violent
criminal history who was placed in an inmate work program at the town hall where
she worked); White v. Rochford, 592 F.2d 381 (7th Cir. 1979)(children left by
police officers alone in car on busy road after arresting driver).
34
IV. CONCLUSION
Because Piotrowski failed to establish the grounds for
municipal § 1983 liability and the state-created danger theory of
substantive due process violation, and because her equal protection
claim was time-barred, we must reverse and render the judgment.
Nothing in this opinion should be taken as excusing or condoning
any involvement by policemen or firefighters with men like Dudley
Bell and Richard Minns.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
35