[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FILED
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
AUGUST 11, 2000
________________________
THOMAS K. KAHN
CLERK
No. 99-6195
________________________
D. C. Docket No. 97-00778-CV-CB-M
VIOLA TAYLOR, as Administratrix of the Estate
of Jimmie Lee Mason, Jr., deceased,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
LONNIE ADAMS, JAMES CONNICK, et al.,
Defendants-Appellants.
**********************
________________________
No. 99-6201
________________________
D. C. Docket No. 97-00778-CV-CB-M
VIOLA TAYLOR, as Administratrix of the Estate
of Jimmie Lee Mason, Jr., deceased,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
CRYSTAL THREADGILL,
JACK TILLMAN, Sheriff Jack Tillman,
Defendants-Appellants.
________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Alabama
_________________________
(August 11, 2000)
Before COX and HULL, Circuit Judges, and GEORGE*, District Judge.
COX, Circuit Judge:
*
Honorable Lloyd D. George, U.S. District Judge for the District of
Nevada, sitting by designation.
2
This is an appeal from the denial of summary judgment, sought on various
immunity grounds, to three firemen and a jail nurse on claims arising from the death
of Jimmie Lee Mason, Jr. We reverse.
Background
On a hot August day in 1995, employees of a Mobile, Alabama drugstore
chased Jimmie Lee Mason, a suspected shoplifter, several blocks before finally
apprehending him. They held Mason to the ground until police arrived. After the
police handcuffed the sweaty and heavy-breathing Mason, a crew of three medically
trained Mobile firemen – the defendants Driskell, Connick, and Adams (the
“firemedics”) – arrived. Each of the firemedics asked Mason if he was okay or
required help and received a negative response; the firemedics then left the scene
without providing treatment.
A police officer subsequently transported Mason to the Mobile County Jail in
the back of a paddy wagon. After a drive of approximately eleven minutes, the paddy
wagon arrived at the jail courtyard. When police opened the back door of the wagon,
they found Mason unconscious, and they could not rouse him despite shaking his leg,
rubbing his chest, and splashing water on his chest. They then summoned the jail’s
registered nurse.
3
As Nurse Threadgill walked toward the wagon, the police told her about
Mason’s unconsciousness and their attempts to wake him. At a distance of about three
feet from Mason, Threadgill looked inside the van and promptly instructed the police
to take Mason to the University of South Alabama Medical Center. The police did so
without lights or sirens, and Mason died en route.1
Viola Taylor, administratrix of Mason’s estate, sued a host of public officials
involved with the incident. She alleged, in relevant part, violations of the Cruel and
Unusual Punishment Clause, actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and supplemental
negligence claims under Alabama law. Included in the complaint were claims against
the “Sheriff of Mobile County, Alabama.” (R.1-12 at 4.) Despite some ambiguity
that arose at intermediate points during the litigation, counsel for Taylor conceded at
oral argument that she sued the sheriff only in his official capacity; there were no
personal claims against Jack Tillman, the sheriff at the time of Mason’s death. In their
official capacity, however, Alabama sheriffs operating jails are state officers protected
1
The appellants frame their arguments as challenging only the legal
conclusions the district court reached in denying these defendants immunity. They
therefore urge us to “simply take, as given, the facts that the district court assumed
when it denied summary judgment for . . . (purely legal) reason[s].” Johnson v. Jones,
515 U.S. 304, 319, 115 S. Ct. 2151, 2159 (1995). Thus, we have looked no further
than the district court’s opinion for these background facts as well as other facts of the
case we will later discuss. See Johnson v. Clifton, 74 F.3d 1087, 1091 (11th Cir.
1996) (noting this approach as authorized in Johnson v. Jones). We refer to these
facts as the summary-judgment facts.
4
by Eleventh Amendment immunity. See Marsh v. Butler County, Alabama, 212 F.3d
1318, 1321 (11th Cir. 2000). Thus, we affirm summary judgment for the Sheriff of
Mobile County on Eleventh Amendment-immunity grounds. The only remaining
defendants who are parties to this appeal, the three firemedics and Threadgill, seek
review of the district court’s denial of summary judgment in their favor on federal-
and state-law immunity grounds.
Discussion
The firemedics contend that the district court erred by denying them qualified
immunity with respect to the federal-law claim against them and by denying them
both “Good Samaritan” and discretionary-function immunity with respect to the state-
law claims, while Threadgill argues that the district court erred by denying her
qualified immunity. Taylor responds simply that the district court acted correctly in
denying summary judgment. The propriety of summary judgment on each of the
immunity defenses is a question of law, which we review de novo. See Sanders v.
Howze, 177 F.3d 1245, 1248 (11th Cir. 1999) (qualified immunity); Sheth v. Webster,
145 F.3d 1231, 1236-40 (11th Cir. 1998); Griesel v. Hamlin, 963 F.2d 338, 341 (11th
Cir. 1992) (together addressing state-law immunity doctrines).2
2
Taylor also contends that this court lacks appellate jurisdiction over the
federal claim under the collateral-order doctrine. We reject this argument as meritless.
5
Qualified Immunity on the Deliberate-Indifference Claims
We begin our review of a denial of the qualified immunity by discussing
“‘whether the plaintiff has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right at
all,’” Wilson v. Layne, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 119 S. Ct. 1692, 1697 (1999) (quoting Conn
v. Gabbert, 526 U.S. ___, ___, 119 S. Ct. 1292, 1295 (1999)), but we may ultimately
decide the propriety of the denial on either of two alternative bases: first, on our
answer to the question whether there is “an underlying constitutional violation,”
Campbell v. Sikes, 169 F.3d 1353, 1361 (11th Cir. 1999), or second, on our
determination whether the law the public official is alleged to have violated was
“clearly established” at the time of incidents giving rise to the suit, id. See, e.g.,
Layne, ___ U.S. at ___, 119 S. Ct. at 1695 (holding defendants entitled to qualified
immunity despite their unconstitutional conduct because of the lack of clearly
established, preexisting law governing that conduct). If either question is properly
answered in the negative, then qualified immunity must be granted. Campbell. 169
F. 3d at 1361-62. Here, we hold that summary judgment should have been granted to
both the firemedics and Threadgill because they did not violate the Constitution.
6
The Eighth Amendment prohibits infliction of “cruel and unusual
punishments.” U.S. Const. amend. VIII.3 Stating a claim under the clause thus
requires satisfying two minima (from which the case law has ultimately derived four
requirements): First, there must be, objectively speaking, conduct by public officials
“sufficiently serious” to constitute a cruel or unusual deprivation–one “denying ‘the
minimal civilized measure of life’s necessities.’” Wilson v. Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 298,
111 S. Ct. 2321, 2324 (1996) (quoting Rhodes v. Chapman, 452 U.S. 337, 347, 101
S. Ct. 2392, 2399 (1981)). Second, there must be a subjective intent by the public
officials involved to use the sufficiently serious deprivation in order to punish. See
id. at 300, 111 S. Ct. at 2325 (“The source of the intent requirement is not the
predilections of this Court, but the Eighth Amendment itself, which bans only cruel
3
Mason was a pretrial detainee. As such, his Cruel and Unusual
Punishment claims sound properly in the Fourteenth Amendment right to due process
of law rather than in the Eighth Amendment. See Lancaster v. Monroe County,
Alabama, 116 F.3d 1419, 1425 n.6 (11th Cir. 1997) (comparing Bell v. Wolfish, 441
U.S. 520, 535 n.16, 99 S. Ct. 1861, 1872 n.16 (1979) (due process violation), with
Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 104, 97 S. Ct. 285, 291 (1976) (Eighth Amendment
violation)). Nevertheless, his claims – that the firemedics and Threadgill inflicted
cruel or unusual punishment on him through deliberate indifference to his serious
medical needs – are analyzed in identical fashion regardless of whether they arise
under the Due Process Clause or the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause. See id.
(citing Hamm v. DeKalb County, 774 F.2d 1567, 1573-74 (11th Cir. 1985)); Belcher
v. City of Foley, Alabama, 30 F.3d 1390, 1396 (11th Cir. 1994) (also citing Hamm).
We thus look to those cases specifying the contours of an Eighth Amendment
deliberate-indifference claim to determine the elements Taylor must satisfy here.
7
and unusual punishment. If the pain inflicted is not formally meted out as punishment
by the statute or the sentencing judge, some mental element must be attributed to the
inflicting officer before it can qualify.” (emphasis in original)).
In the context applicable here, denial of medical care, each of these minima has
been more specifically described as encompassing two subsidiary requirements. To
show an objectively serious deprivation, it is necessary to demonstrate, first, an
objectively “serious medical need[],” Estelle, 429 U.S. at 104, 97 S. Ct. at 291, one
that, if left unattended, “pos[es] a substantial risk of serious harm,” Farmer v.
Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 834, 114 S. Ct. 1970, 1977 (1994),4 and second, that the
response made by public officials to that need was poor enough to constitute “an
unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain,” and not merely accidental inadequacy,
“negligen[ce] in diagnosi[s] or treat[ment],” or even “[m]edical malpractice”
actionable under state law, Estelle, 429 U.S. at 105-06, 97 S. Ct. at 291-92 (internal
quotation marks omitted).5 Similarly, to show the required subjective intent to
4
Neither side here contends that Mason did not have an objectively serious
medical need. Our analysis therefore focuses on the other criteria.
5
A corollary to this requirement for a great deal more than negligence is
that a public official who does act reasonably in response to a serious medical need
“cannot be found liable under the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause,” Farmer,
511 U.S. at 845, 114 S. Ct. at 1983, “even if the harm ultimately was not averted,” id.
at 844, 114 S. Ct. at 1983.
8
punish, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the public official acted with an attitude of
“deliberate indifference,” Estelle, 429 U.S. at 105, 97 S. Ct. at 291, which is in turn
defined as requiring two separate things: “aware[ness] of facts from which the
inference could be drawn that a substantial risk of serious harm exists[] and . . .
draw[ing of] the inference,” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 837, 114 S. Ct. at 1979. Ultimately,
there are thus four requirements: an objectively serious need, an objectively
insufficient response to that need, subjective awareness of facts signaling the need,
and an actual inference of required action from those facts.
Application to the firemedics – Taylor does not challenge the fact that at some
point during their brief presence on the scene, each of the firemedics asked Mason if
he needed or wanted treatment and received a negative response and that, in total,
Mason was asked numerous times if he required medical attention. Instead, she seeks
to focus our attention – as she focused the district court’s attention – on two additional
facts: first, that one of the policemen told firemedic Driskell (apparently the leader of
the crew) that Mason was complaining of stomach pain, and of greater importance,
that Janet Britton, a bystander who knew Mason and knew him to have a history of
seizures, told the firemedics about that history and about saliva or foam around his
mouth that indicated to her that he was seizing or about to seize at that very moment.
9
These facts do not, however, allow Taylor to show a jury punitive intent in the
form of deliberate indifference. Nor do they demonstrate that a jury could find the
firemedics’ response objectively insufficient under Estelle. The firemedics did act on
whatever knowledge they had of Mason’s condition: they tried to check him out and
administer aid. That they questioned him repeatedly regarding his desire for treatment
demonstrates not deliberate indifference, but significant concern about his condition.
On the summary-judgment facts, Mason simply declined treatment. And there is no
indication from the summary-judgment facts that the firemedics perceived him to do
so incoherently or otherwise without the ability to speak for himself.6
Admittedly, as Taylor also argues, the firemedics’ procedures did require taking
the vital signs of seizing patients and calling in paramedics. If the firemedics drew
from Britton’s statements the inference that Mason was having a seizure, then they
failed to act in accordance with their own protocol. But this observation, even if true,
misses the point twice. First, it fails to consider that Taylor must present evidence
from which a jury could find that the firemedics actually drew the inference that
Mason was having a seizure: the drawing of such an inference from the observations
of a layperson bystander is by no means automatic, and the other facts regarding the
6
The summary-judgment facts do indicate that Mason later responded
incoherently when asked by one of the police officers for his social security number.
But this took place after the firemedics departed.
10
exchange between the firemedics and Mason himself do not indicate that they drew
such an inference. Second, failure to follow procedures does not, by itself, rise to the
level of deliberate indifference because doing so is at most a form of negligence.
Application to Threadgill – In Taylor’s view, two aspects of Threadgill’s
conduct indicate deliberate indifference. First, Threadgill never examined Mason at
all; she simply observed him from a distance of three feet and sent the paddy wagon
to the hospital.7 Second, according to the testimony of the police officer who drove
the paddy wagon, Threadgill made comments indicating that she did not view it as
part of her duty to help Mason, and made those comments in such a casual manner
that the officer did not perceive any necessity to hurry to the hospital. Specifically,
the summary-judgment facts include a quote from the officer in which Threadgill
made “comments about bringing folks in that needs [sic] to go to the hospital and this
and that, it’s not her duty to, I guess, treat them or whatever.” (R.3-120 at 5 n.8
(quoting Depo. of Officer Harvey).) Threadgill, on the other hand, contends that her
7
Taylor’s expert observed that it is “‘inconceivable that . . . a registered
nurse . . . never touched [Mason] and . . . didn’t give him first aid and did not call an
ambulance after realizing that Mason was unconscious.’” (R.3-122 at 7 (quoting
Depo. of Dr. Pfortmiller) (omissions in original).) Taylor’s expert also testified that
given the cause of Mason’s death, “acute pulmonary edema, with subsequent acute
respiratory failure,” (R.3-122 at 6), Mason’s death “could have been prevented if first
aid had been administered and an ambulance had been called” at the jail, (R.3-122 at
7).
11
comments were merely manifestations of her desire to follow written jail policy
requiring incoming unconscious detainees to be “referred immediately for emergency
care.” (R.3-122 at 6 (quoting Br. of Plaintiff at 10).)8
We begin and end our analysis by asking whether Threadgill’s actions –
regardless of her mental state – were so objectively inadequate that they satisfy
Estelle’s high standard. We conclude that they were not. As Taylor’s expert testified,
a jury might very well find that Threadgill’s course of action violated professional
standards applicable to her as a registered nurse. But that observation can only serve
as a starting point for analysis that requires much more than negligence or
malpractice. Whatever her motivation, it is clear that Threadgill did order that some
medical care be provided to Mason: She sent him to the hospital. And on the
summary-judgment facts, she did so in compliance with jail policy. Our task is to
determine whether a jury could find this choice – made in lieu of conducting an
8
As quoted in the summary-judgment facts, that policy was:
Written and defined procedures requires receiving screening to be
performed by health-trained or qualified health care personnel on
all inmates . . . immediately upon their arrival at the jail. Persons
who are unconscious, semi-conscious, bleeding, mental, unstable
or otherwise urgently in need of medical attention are referred
immediately for emergency care. If they are referred to a
community hospital, their admission or return to the jail is
predicated upon written medical clearance.
(R.3-122 at 6 (quoting Br. of Plaintiff at 10).)
12
examination at the scene and awaiting an ambulance – to be sufficiently worse than
negligent.
As Taylor argues, treatment “so cursory as to amount to no treatment at all”
rises to this level. Ancata v. Prison Health Servs., Inc., 769 F.2d 700, 704 (11th Cir.
1985). So too does the delay of treatment for obviously serious conditions where “it
is apparent that delay would detrimentally exacerbate the medical problem,” the delay
does seriously exacerbate the medical problem, and the delay is medically unjustified.
Hill v. Dekalb Reg’l Youth Detention Ctr., 40 F.3d 1176, 1187, 1187-89 (11th Cir.
1994). These principles were, however, developed in contexts involving much longer
time frames than the incident at issue here, and with those longer time frames, greater
periods for reflection upon a course of action. See Lancaster, 116 F.3d at 1420-23
(detailing a sequence of failures leading to death over the course of a long night of
incarceration); Hill, 40 F.3d at 1187 n.21 (collecting and describing cases).
Determining where to draw the line between the constitutional and the
unconstitutional in a split-second, emergency choice between two options of the sort
made here is a distinct task. Taking up this task, we conclude that Threadgill’s choice
was not, under emergency circumstances demanding an immediate decision, “an
unnecessary and wanton infliction” of physical suffering. Estelle, 429 U.S. at 105, 97
S. Ct. at 292 (internal quotation marks omitted). Moreover, that Threadgill made her
13
decision in compliance with written policies is significant: Even if that compliance
was medically unreasonable (presumably, because the policies were themselves
unreasonable or too undetailed to offer guidance in such a difficult situation), the
existence of the policies and their dictates militates against concluding that
Threadgill’s actions were wanton. Thus, on the summary-judgment facts, we cannot
conclude that Threadgill violated the Constitution.
Discretionary-Function Immunity on the State-Law Negligence Claims
The district court denied the firemedics discretionary-function immunity,
because it thought that the immunity applies to municipal officers only if a statute so
states and, as it correctly observed, there is no such statute covering firemen. The
firemedics concede that they are not covered by a statutory form of the immunity, but
argue that they are protected by a common-law variety. Although the case law
addressing Alabama’s discretionary-function-immunity doctrine is muddled, we
conclude that it does, as the firemedics contend, extend to them a common-law form
of discretionary-function immunity.9
9
Because the denial of state-law immunities presents questions regarding
application of the collateral-order doctrine very similar to those raised by Taylor
regarding federal qualified immunity, we question sua sponte, see, e.g., University of
South Ala. v. American Tobacco Co., 168 F.3d 405, 410 (11th Cir.1999), the propriety
of our jurisdiction over the appeal as to discretionary-function immunity, see Sheth
v. Webster, 145 F.3d 1231, 1236-38 (1th Cir. 1998). Discretionary-function immunity
arising under Alabama law is, like qualified immunity arising under federal law,
14
Confusion regarding the application of discretionary-function immunity to
municipal officers in Alabama arises from significant ambiguity in the seminal case
regarding whether discretionary-function immunity applies to all “public officers” as
the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895D, a provision adopted as Alabama law,
contemplates, or only to state officers arguably under the cloak of the sovereign
immunity provision of the Alabama Constitution. In Phillips v. Thomas, 555 So. 2d
81, 83 (Ala. 1989), a case in which the defendants were state employees, the court
apparently viewed discretionary-function immunity as one of two forms of immunity
potentially available to state officials (the other being absolute immunity) under the
Alabama Constitution of 1901, Article I, § 14. Along the way, however, it also noted
that Alabama has adopted, in toto, the language of § 895D of the Restatement, see id.
at 84 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895D (1977)) (citing Barnes v. Dale,
530 So. 2d 770, 783 (Ala. 1988); DeStafney v. University of Alabama, 413 So. 2d 391,
immunity from suit. See Sheth, 145 F.3d at 1237-38 (citing Marnon v. City of Dothan,
677 So. 2d 755, 761 (Ala. 1995); Ex Parte City of Birmingham, 624 So. 2d 1018, 1021
(Ala. 1993); Phillips v. Thomas, 555 So. 2d 81, 86 (Ala. 1989)). Therefore, the same
principles of federal law governing an appeal of the denial of qualified immunity at
the summary judgment stage also govern an appeal of the denial of Alabama
discretionary-function immunity at the same stage. See id. at 1236-38. Because the
firemedics appeal both the denial of discretionary-function immunity and the denial
of qualified immunity from the same procedural posture and under the identical
assumption regarding the validity of the district court’s summary-judgment facts, we
have jurisdiction to review the former just as we have jurisdiction to review the latter.
15
393 (Ala. 1982)). A natural reading of the case (and the reading apparently
underpinning the district court’s opinion) might be that it holds § 895D to be the
standard by which immunity for state officers arising under the Alabama Constitution
is to be applied in an individual case. This reading also comports with the observation
made in Sheth regarding why it was necessary for the Alabama legislature to pass a
statute expressly extending discretionary-function immunity to municipal police
officers. See Sheth, 145 F.3d at 1236 (observing, in dicta, that Ala. Code § 6-5-338,
which grants discretionary-function immunity to “peace officer[s] . . . employed . . .
by . . . a county or municipality” but not to other municipal officers, was enacted in
apparent recognition of the fact that “certain state police officers are entitled to
absolute immunity as constitutional officers and that other state police officers are
entitled to discretionary function immunity, but that county and municipal police
officers arguably had no immunity”).
Nevertheless, in light of subsequent decisions by Alabama courts, we must
conclude that this reading is wrong. At least four times, Alabama appeals courts have
held § 895D immunity applicable to municipal officers. See Roden v. Wright, 646 So.
2d 605, 609-11 (Ala. 1994) (holding that plaintiff suing a county commissioner was
collaterally estopped from denying the commissioner’s § 895D immunity because all
of the issues necessary to resolving that immunity were already litigated in a federal
16
suit involving an issue of qualified immunity); Ex parte City of Birmingham, 624 So.
2d 1018, 1021 (Ala. 1993) (applying the immunity to various city officials); Crowe
v. City of Athens, 733 So. 2d 447, 449, 451 (Ala. Civ. App. 1999) (applying the
immunity to a city officer and observing that “[n]either party has provided authority,
and we are aware of none, for the proposition that the operation of § 895D as an
affirmative defense with respect to state officials differs from its operation as to
municipal officials”); Marnon v. City of Dothan, 677 So. 2d 755, 761 (Ala. Civ. App.
1995) (applying the immunity to city commissioners). See also Crouch v. Whatley,
900 F. Supp. 1567, 1571-73 (M.D. Ala. 1995) (treating § 6-5-338 and common-law
§ 895D immunities as independent doctrines, both available to a municipal police
officer); Williams v. Crook, 741 So. 2d 1074, 1076-78 (Ala. 1999) (denying a
municipal police officer immunity under § 6-5-338, but also recognizing in dicta that
“public officials, including municipal employees” have access to the immunity
recognized in Phillips). Alabama’s discretionary-function immunity doctrine thus
applies to the municipal firemen in this case, and we must consider whether they have,
on the summary-judgment facts, satisfied its requirements.
The firemedics are entitled to discretionary-function immunity if, on the
summary-judgment facts, their acts at the scene were discretionary and Taylor has not
presented evidence sufficient to create a jury question regarding whether they “acted
17
in bad faith, [or] with malice or willfulness.” Sheth, 145 F.3d at 1239 (citing Wright
v. Wynn, 682 So. 2d 1, 2 (Ala. 1996)). For the same reason we found the firemedics
entitled to qualified immunity from the federal claims against them, we also conclude
that Taylor could not show a jury that they acted with the mental state necessary to
preclude discretionary-function immunity. Thus, we have only to ask whether their
acts were discretionary where discretionary acts are defined as “‘those . . . as to which
there is no hard and fast rule as to the course of conduct that one must or must not take
and those acts requiring exercise in judgment and choice and involving what is just
and proper under the circumstances.’” Id. (quoting Wright, 682 So. 2d at 2). As we
noted in our qualified-immunity analysis, the summary-judgment facts indicate that
department procedure for a seizing patient required taking vital signs and calling for
paramedics. But in the face of Mason’s having repeatedly refused treatment, no
reasonable jury could conclude that the procedure provided a “hard and fast rule” for
handling the situation; this was clearly an instance in which the firemedics had to
exercise “judgment and choice,” and they are therefore entitled to discretionary-
function immunity.10
10
Because the firemedics are entitled to discretionary-function immunity,
we need not decide whether the district court erred when it decided that the firemen,
because they were on duty, were not entitled to the “Good Samaritan” immunity
conferred by Ala. Code § 6-5-339 (Michie 1993), or whether we even have
jurisdiction to consider the question.
18
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of qualified
immunity and discretionary-function immunity to the firemedics and denial of
qualified immunity to Threadgill.11
REVERSED and REMANDED.12
11
Appellant’s motion for certification of unresolved state-law questions is
DENIED.
12
The City of Mobile remains a defendant in this case but is not a party to
this appeal.
19