Cody Hearn v. Lancaster County , 566 F. App'x 231 ( 2014 )


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  •                           UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 13-1588
    CODY A. HEARN; CHRISTOPHER A. HEARN, individually and as
    Personal Representatives of the Estate of Henry C. Hearn,
    Plaintiffs – Appellants,
    v.
    LANCASTER COUNTY; BARRY S. FAILE, individually and in his
    official capacity as the Sheriff of Lancaster County;
    DEBBIE HORNE, individually and in her official capacity as
    Jail Administrator; CHUCK KIRKLEY, individually and in his
    official capacity as Lancaster County Deputy Sheriff;
    DONOVAN SMALL, individually and in his official capacity as
    Lancaster County Deputy Sheriff; MITZI SNIPES, individually
    and in her official capacity as Lancaster County Deputy
    Sheriff; JAMES WHITAKER, individually and in his official
    capacity as Lancaster County Deputy Sheriff; JOHN DOE 1,
    individually and in his official capacity as Lancaster
    County Deputy Sheriff; OFFICER JOHN DOE 2, individually and
    in his official capacity as Lancaster County Deputy
    Sheriff; JOHN DOE 3, individually and in his official
    capacity as Lancaster County Deputy Sheriff; JOHN DOE 4,
    individually and in his official capacity as Lancaster
    County Deputy Sheriff; JOHN DOE 5, individually and in his
    official capacity as Lancaster County Deputy Sheriff; JOHN
    DOE 6, individually and in his official capacity as
    Lancaster County Deputy Sheriff; JOHN DOE 7, individually
    and in his official capacity as Lancaster County Correction
    Officer; JOHN DOE 8, individually and in his official
    capacity as Lancaster County Correction Officer; JOHN DOE
    9, individually and in his official capacity as Lancaster
    County Correction Officer; JOHN DOE 10, individually and in
    his official capacity as Lancaster County Correction
    Officer; JOHN DOE 11, individually and in his official
    capacity as Lancaster County Correction Officer; JOHN DOE
    12, individually and in his official capacity as Lancaster
    County Correction Officer,
    Defendants – Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    South Carolina, at Beaufort. Richard M. Gergel, District Judge.
    (9:11-cv-01074-RMG)
    Argued:   January 30, 2014                Decided:   April 15, 2014
    Before TRAXLER, Chief Judge, DIAZ, Circuit Judge, and Liam
    O’GRADY, United States District Judge for the Eastern District
    of Virginia, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion,
    in which Chief Judge Traxler and Judge O’Grady joined.
    ARGUED: William Angus McKinnon, MCGOWAN, HOOD & FELDER, LLC,
    Rock Hill, South Carolina, for Appellants.     Andrew Lindemann,
    DAVIDSON & LINDEMANN, P.A., Columbia, South Carolina, for
    Appellees.   ON BRIEF: Brent P. Stewart, STEWART LAW OFFICES,
    LLC, Rock Hill, South Carolina, for Appellants. James M. Davis,
    Jr., DAVIDSON & LINDEMANN, P.A., Columbia, South Carolina, for
    Appellees.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    DIAZ, Circuit Judge:
    The personal representatives of Henry Hearn’s estate sued
    several officers of the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    ,     alleging    that      the   officers     acted    with
    deliberate indifference to a substantial risk that Hearn would
    commit suicide while detained in the Lancaster County Detention
    Center.    The district court granted the defendants’ motion for
    summary    judgment,    primarily    because    the   plaintiffs    could    not
    establish that any defendant was subjectively aware of Hearn’s
    suicidal tendencies at the time of his arrest or detention.                 For
    the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I.
    In reviewing an order granting summary judgment, we view
    the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.                   Bland
    v. Roberts, 
    730 F.3d 368
    , 372 (4th Cir. 2013).
    A.
    On September 13, 2009, Henry Hearn’s ex-wife, Darcie Hearn,
    called the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office to report concerns
    about Hearn’s behavior.        Darcie Hearn explained that Hearn was
    living in the woods behind her home, and that she thought he was
    entering   her   home   to   take   things     when   she   was   not   present.
    Deputy Sheriff Donovan Small responded to the call.                     When he
    arrived at Darcie Hearn’s home, she directed him to the area of
    3
    the woods where she believed Hearn had been living.                               In the
    woods, Small found a campsite, which largely consisted of a few
    sheets on the ground.
    Sergeant      James       Whitaker    arrived       at     the    scene     shortly
    thereafter to assist Small.            Although Small and Whitaker did not
    find Hearn at the campsite, they did find a yellow notepad on
    the top of the sheets, the first five pages of which consisted
    of a handwritten note, which was composed by Hearn and addressed
    to Darcie Hearn.           Although the parties debate how thoroughly
    Small and Whitaker reviewed the note, we will assume for summary
    judgment purposes that they both read it.
    After reviewing the note, Small and Whitaker left Hearn’s
    campsite.        Small    returned     alone      after       Darcie     Hearn    placed
    another   call    to     the   Sheriff’s       Office.        This    time   Hearn   was
    present at the site.            Small called his supervisor, Lieutenant
    Chuck   Kirkley,       about    the   situation     and       arrested    Hearn    on   a
    charge of criminal domestic violence.
    Small and Hearn engaged in casual conversation while he
    transported Hearn to the detention center.                     Among other things,
    Small asked Hearn what he did for a living.                     Hearn said that he
    normally worked on oil rigs in Florida but explained that the
    work had slowed down recently.             Small asked Hearn if he had any
    medical   problems,       to   which   Hearn      answered      “‘No,     I’m    fine.’”
    J.A. 113.   Small also questioned Hearn about the meaning of the
    4
    note.      Hearn       reportedly    “said         it    meant    that     . . .   he    was
    leaving; he was going out west, and he was telling his [] wife
    and     [others]       goodbye.”         
    Id.
            At     some    point     during      the
    conversation, Hearn asked Small to retrieve some property that
    he had buried in the woods at a different campsite, which Small
    agreed to do after he dropped Hearn off.
    When they arrived at the detention center, at approximately
    3:20 p.m., Small turned Hearn over to Sergeant Mitzi Snipes for
    booking.        He also gave Snipes the notepad.                   Without reading it,
    she “flipped through the notebook” to look for contraband.                              J.A.
    161.     At no point did Small mention to Snipes that he had any
    concerns about Hearn’s mental or physical wellbeing.
    As booking officer, Snipes was responsible for collecting
    Hearn’s personal information, such as his name, address, and
    contact information.              Hearn declined to provide an emergency
    contact.        Snipes also conducted a standard medical screening of
    Hearn, which required her to ask, among other things, whether
    Hearn was having any suicidal thoughts.                      Hearn responded “‘No’”
    to that question.          J.A. 160.        Snipes described Hearn’s demeanor
    throughout       the    booking    process         as    “calm”    and     “cooperative.”
    J.A. 158.
    While    Snipes    was    booking      Hearn,      Small    consulted      Kirkley
    about what to do with the notepad, as Small thought it might
    have    been    evidence.        After    reviewing        the     note,    Kirkley     told
    5
    Small that it was personal property and instructed him to put it
    with Hearn’s other belongings.        After doing so, Small drove back
    out to retrieve Hearn’s other property.
    At   approximately    6:15   p.m.,     just   three    hours   after   he
    arrived at the detention center, Hearn hanged himself in his
    jail cell.
    B.
    Hearn’s sons, Cody and Christopher Hearn, individually and
    as   representatives   of   his    estate,    filed   suit    against   Small,
    Kirkley, Snipes, and Whitaker, among others, 1 in the Lancaster
    County Court of Common Pleas.         In addition to state-law claims
    alleging gross negligence against Sheriff Faile and Lancaster
    County, the complaint alleged that the defendants acted with
    deliberate indifference to a substantial risk that Hearn would
    commit suicide while detained in the Lancaster County Detention
    Center, in violation of his 14th Amendment right to due process.
    The defendants removed the action to federal court and moved for
    summary    judgment,   arguing     that    they     were    not   deliberately
    1
    The complaint also named as defendants Lancaster County;
    Barry Faile, the County Sheriff; Debbie Horne, the administrator
    of the detention center; and unnamed employees of the Sheriff’s
    Department.   Hearn’s representatives are not challenging the
    grant of summary judgment as to those defendants. The complaint
    also brought claims against the defendants in their official
    capacities, but the plaintiffs are now only pursuing their
    individual-capacity claims.
    6
    indifferent       because      no   officer      knew       that    Hearn    was     having
    suicidal      thoughts      on      September         13.          Alternatively,         the
    defendants argued that they were entitled to qualified immunity.
    Without reaching the latter question, the district court
    granted     the    defendants’        motion.           It       concluded        that   the
    plaintiffs failed to raise a triable issue of fact with respect
    to   an   essential      element     of    a    deliberate-indifference              claim:
    namely, that any defendant had subjective knowledge that there
    was a substantial risk that Hearn would commit suicide while
    detained.          The    court      determined         that       Hearn’s        note    was
    insufficient to support an inference that the officers actually
    knew   that     Hearn    was    suicidal       because      it     lacked    an    explicit
    suicide threat.          It also emphasized that one of the plaintiffs’
    experts testified that the meaning of the note was ambiguous.
    To the extent that any officer perceived any red flags with
    respect    to     Hearn’s      condition,       the    court       concluded      that   the
    defendants’ conduct was, at most, negligent.
    Having dismissed the plaintiffs’ federal claims under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , the court remanded the state-law claims.                                  This
    appeal followed.
    II.
    We review de novo the district court’s decision to grant
    the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.                        Bland, 730 F.3d at
    7
    373.     “Summary judgment is appropriate ‘if the movant shows that
    there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant       is   entitled    to      judgment   as   a    matter   of    law.’”       Id.
    (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)).
    A.
    A government official violates the constitutional rights of
    a pretrial detainee when he knows of but disregards a serious
    risk    of    harm    to   the     detainee.       See    Parrish   ex    rel.   Lee   v.
    Cleveland, 
    372 F.3d 294
    , 302 (4th Cir. 2004) (citing Farmer v.
    Brennan, 
    511 U.S. 825
    , 837 (1994)).                       We consider here whether
    the plaintiffs have raised a genuine issue of fact as to whether
    any of the individual defendants were deliberately indifferent
    to a serious risk that Hearn would commit suicide while detained
    in the Lancaster County Detention Center.
    “Deliberate indifference is a very high standard” that is
    generally only satisfied by government conduct that shocks the
    conscience.          Parrish, 
    372 F.3d at 302
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted).          The     plaintiffs     must     make    a   two-part    showing     to
    satisfy the standard’s high burden.                      
    Id. at 303
    .       First, they
    must establish that the defendant had a “sufficiently culpable
    state of mind.”             Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 834
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted).            Specifically, the plaintiffs must demonstrate
    “that     the      official      in     question      subjectively       recognized     a
    substantial risk of harm” to the detainee.                     Parrish, 
    372 F.3d at
                                          8
    303.       In a prison suicide case, this means that the evidence
    must show that the defendant actually knew of the detainee’s
    suicidal intent, not merely that he should have recognized it.
    Second, even if the plaintiffs can satisfy their burden
    with respect to an official’s subjective awareness, the evidence
    must   also    show    “that    the    official        in    question       subjectively
    recognized that his actions were ‘inappropriate in light of that
    risk.’”      
    Id.
     (quoting Rich v. Bruce, 
    129 F.3d 336
    , 340 n.2 (4th
    Cir. 1997)).      Again, “it is not enough that the official should
    have    recognized      that    his     actions         were    inappropriate;          the
    official actually must have recognized that his actions were
    insufficient.”        
    Id.
    Whether a prison official had the requisite knowledge for
    either prong “is a question of fact subject to demonstration in
    the    usual    ways,       including        inference         from     circumstantial
    evidence.”     Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
    .                Although “it is not enough
    that   a    reasonable      officer    would       have     found     the   risk   to    be
    obvious,” a factfinder may conclude that an officer “‘knew of a
    substantial risk from the very fact that the risk was obvious.’”
    Parrish, 
    372 F.3d at 303
     (quoting Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
    ).                             For
    example, the risk of injury might have been “so obvious that the
    factfinder     could    conclude      that       the   [officer]      did   know   of    it
    because he could not have failed to know of it.”                               Brice v.
    Virginia Beach Corr. Ctr., 
    58 F.3d 101
    , 105 (4th Cir. 1995).
    9
    Additionally,       an     official       cannot     escape      liability        under      this
    standard     if    it     is   shown      “that     he     merely      refused     to   verify
    underlying facts that he strongly suspected to be true, which,
    if   verified,      would      have     compelled         him    to    realize      that      the
    claimant needed immediate medical attention, or that he declined
    to   confirm      inferences     of     risk       that    he   strongly         suspected     to
    exist.”      
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    B.
    We turn to examine whether summary judgment was appropriate
    as to each of the defendants.
    1.
    Viewing      the    record      in    the    light       most    favorable       to    the
    plaintiffs, the evidence does not raise a triable issue of fact
    that Deputy Small subjectively knew that there was a serious
    risk that Hearn would commit suicide.
    The plaintiffs argue that Small was subjectively aware of
    Hearn’s suicidal tendencies because he read Hearn’s note.                                    They
    contend that the note so obviously signaled Hearn’s suicidal
    ideation     that    Small     could        not    have    failed      to    recognize       that
    Hearn was suicidal.
    Like the district court, however, we do not believe the
    note    is    so    clear.          The      note    is     a    five-page         stream      of
    consciousness that touches on a variety of subjects.                               Much of it
    details      Hearn’s       regret      over        being     unable         to    repair      his
    10
    relationship    with    his   ex-wife.    Although   the     note    certainly
    reflects Hearn’s disappointment over his situation, it lacks an
    explicit    statement     that   Hearn    was   thinking     about     harming
    himself.
    With the benefit of hindsight, some of the language can
    certainly be construed as macabre.          For example, the note opens
    with the statement that “I just simply can’t take the hurt no
    more.”     J.A. 219.    Later, Hearn reflects on wishing he had been
    “the kind of man and father” Darcie Hearn wanted him to be, and
    states, “I only have 2 options[,] us--or this.”            
    Id.
          The second
    page of the note contains a map of a location in the woods where
    Hearn buried, among other things, $225 in cash, his clothes, and
    a book with an Elvis autograph, and it directs Darcie Hearn to
    retrieve the items.      Near the end of the note, Hearn states: “By
    the way, I don’t want my face sunk in.”              J.A. 221.        It then
    lists four songs that Hearn liked. 2
    Notwithstanding      the    above,   we    emphasize,     as    did   the
    district court, that the note lacks an explicit suicide threat.
    Given that, we cannot say that the note is sufficient to raise a
    triable issue of fact that a police officer in Small’s position-
    2
    The songs listed are: (1) “I can only imagin” [sic], for
    which Hearn did not provide an artist; (2) “The Dance,” by Garth
    Brooks; (3) “It Goes,” by Josh Turner; and (4) “Lay Me to
    Sleep,” by AFI. See J.A. 221-22.
    11
    -without any other knowledge of Hearn’s psychological condition-
    -knew that Hearn was suicidal.                    Cf. Gordon v. Kidd, 
    971 F.2d 1087
    , 1094 (4th Cir. 1992) (“In the absence of a previous threat
    of or an earlier attempt at suicide, we know of no federal court
    in the nation . . . that has concluded that official conduct in
    failing        to     prevent       a      suicide        constitutes       deliberate
    indifference.” (quoting Edwards v. Gilbert, 
    867 F.2d 1271
    , 1275
    (11th Cir. 1989))).          We are especially reluctant to hold as much
    given    that   one     of   the   plaintiffs’       experts     admitted    that   the
    meaning of the note is “open to interpretation.”                       J.A. 207.
    Although      Small   testified      that     he    did   not    interpret   the
    letter    as    a     suicide      note,    the    plaintiffs      argue    that    his
    subsequent actions belie that claim.                      They point to the fact
    that Small initiated a discussion with Hearn about the meaning
    of the note, and contend that his questioning suggests that he
    was, in fact, concerned about its contents.
    But even if we accept the plaintiffs’ view that Small’s
    questioning         suggested      that     he     was     concerned       about    the
    implications of the note, that is a far cry from establishing
    that Small knew Hearn was suicidal.                  Moreover, we think Hearn’s
    responses to Small’s questions negate an inference that Small
    must    have    known    that      Hearn    was    contemplating        suicide.    In
    addition to denying any medical problems, Hearn told Small that
    the note was simply a goodbye letter to his ex-wife because he
    12
    was moving away.       As part of the same discussion, Hearn asked
    Small to retrieve his property “‘so [he would] have it.’”       J.A.
    119.       This interaction hardly signaled to Small that Hearn had
    imminent plans to end his life.        See Brown v. Harris, 
    240 F.3d 383
    , 390 (4th Cir. 2001) (evaluating the “substantiality of the
    risk” an officer perceived in light of “everything that he was
    told and observed”). 3
    To the extent that Small appreciated any red flags from the
    note or otherwise, we think Small’s questioning of Hearn defeats
    the plaintiffs’ claim that he was deliberately indifferent to
    Hearn’s medical needs.      See Parrish, 
    372 F.3d at 303
     (“[T]o the
    extent the officers recognized any risk at all, we are concerned
    with the risk as they perceived it, not as a reasonable officer
    under the circumstances should have perceived it . . . .”).       If
    Small recognized any warning signs from Hearn or the note, he
    did not ignore them.      Rather, he specifically asked Hearn about
    3
    The  plaintiffs   argue   that   summary    judgment  is
    inappropriate because there are credibility issues with respect
    to Small’s testimony that he did not read the note but only
    skimmed it.     The plaintiffs are correct, of course, that
    credibility determinations are not appropriate in a summary
    judgment proceeding, see Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 255 (1986), but the district court did not make such
    determinations.   Rather, it concluded that the note was not
    sufficient to support an inference that Small subjectively knew
    Hearn was suicidal even if he did read it.        The plaintiffs’
    other credibility argument is equally unavailing. The mere fact
    that Small questioned Hearn does not raise a credibility issue
    about his testimony writ large.
    13
    his    health     and    the   meaning       of    the     note.       Hearn’s     responses
    seemed    to    dispel     any   concern.            Perhaps       Small’s    reliance      on
    Hearn’s     representations            was        negligent,        but      it     was    not
    constitutionally unreasonable.
    In sum, the plaintiffs have failed to forecast sufficient
    evidence    to    support      the    inference          that    Small    knew     Hearn   was
    suicidal.       To the extent that the evidence suggests that Small
    perceived any risk to Hearn’s wellbeing, Small’s response did
    not amount to deliberate indifference.                           Accordingly, judgment
    for Small was appropriate as a matter of law.
    2.
    The plaintiffs base their claim against Lieutenant Kirkley
    on the fact that he had basically the same information as Deputy
    Small on September 13.               Because he was Small’s supervisor that
    day,    Kirkley    knew    all   of    the        information       leading       to   Hearn’s
    arrest, including his living situation.                          Kirkley also read the
    note.      Although Kirkley, like Small, denied interpreting the
    letter as a suicide note, the plaintiffs say that he could not
    have     failed     to    recognize         that     Hearn       was     suicidal.         His
    subsequent        inaction,          they         argue,        therefore         constituted
    deliberate indifference.
    We do not believe Hearn’s suicide risk was so obvious that
    Kirkley must have recognized it as such.                               As explained with
    respect to Small, the note did not clearly signal that Hearn was
    14
    suicidal.       In fact, the note is fairly read as a letter to
    Hearn’s ex-wife, which is how Kirkley testified to interpreting
    it.
    Even if we accept that Kirkley could not have failed to
    recognize that the note raised red flags about Hearn’s mental
    health, the plaintiffs have not offered evidence suggesting that
    Kirkley       knew     his        inaction     after       reading      the    note    was
    constitutionally unreasonable in light of the risk that he did
    perceive.       There is simply no evidence in the record, in the
    form of contemporaneous statements or otherwise, that Kirkley
    appreciated         that     Hearn    was     in     need    of      immediate   medical
    attention, or that he knew his inaction during the brief window
    between reading the note and Hearn’s death was inadequate.                             See
    Parrish,      
    372 F.3d at 307
         (noting    that    this    court    has    found
    deliberate indifference when the uncontroverted evidence “showed
    that the officials in question responded to a perceived risk
    with      subjective          awareness            that      their      response       was
    inappropriate”).           Perhaps it was negligent for Kirkley not to do
    anything      further,       but    that     does    not    satisfy    the    deliberate-
    indifference threshold.
    3.
    With    respect       to    Sergeant    Whitaker,       the    plaintiffs      argue
    that he was deliberately indifferent because he read Hearn’s
    15
    note but then “made no response to Mr. Hearn’s medical need.”
    Appellant’s Br. at 27.
    As     discussed         above,     we    do        not     believe           the    note    is
    sufficient,        by     itself,    to     establish            subjective          awareness      of
    Hearn’s      suicidal       tendencies.              But    there     is        an    even     bigger
    problem with the plaintiffs’ claim against Whitaker:                                       he was not
    personally involved with Hearn’s arrest or detention.
    “In order for an individual to be liable under § 1983, it
    must    be    affirmatively         shown       that       the    official           charged    acted
    personally         in     the    deprivation          of     the     plaintiff’s             rights.”
    Wright v. Collins, 
    766 F.2d 841
    , 850 (4th Cir. 1985) (internal
    quotation         marks     omitted).           Whitaker           left    Hearn’s           campsite
    shortly after he read the note, and he never came into contact
    with Hearn.         Whitaker was also in no position to direct Small’s
    conduct with respect to Hearn, since there is no evidence that
    he even knew Hearn was arrested on September 13.                                            On these
    facts,       we   cannot        conclude    that       Whitaker           had    any        “personal
    knowledge”         or     “involvement”         in     the       alleged        deprivation         of
    Hearn’s constitutional rights.                   See id.
    4.
    We also find no error in the district court’s decision to
    grant    summary        judgment     to     Sergeant         Snipes,        the       officer      who
    processed Hearn at the detention center.                           It is uncontested that
    Snipes did not read the note, and Small never told her that he
    16
    was concerned about Hearn’s mental or physical condition.                               Hearn
    was calm and cooperative during the booking process, and when
    Snipes asked Hearn if he was having suicidal thoughts, Hearn
    said no.      We hardly think this raises a triable issue of fact as
    to whether Snipes knew Hearn was suicidal.                       Cf. Gordon, 
    971 F.2d at 1095
     (finding that prison officials could not be deliberately
    indifferent because no one warned them that the prisoner had
    made suicide threats).
    The    plaintiffs       nonetheless         contend    that     the    observations
    Snipes made as she was processing Hearn--e.g., his failure to
    provide an emergency contact--should have alerted her to Hearn’s
    condition.          But an officer’s failure to appreciate a warning
    sign    is,   at    most,      negligent   and       not    sufficient       to     establish
    deliberate indifference.              Cf. Ward v. Holmes, 
    28 F.3d 1212
    , 
    1994 WL 313624
    ,      at    *5   (4th    Cir.        June    30,   1994)       (per     curiam)
    (unpublished) (concluding that a prison official was, at most,
    negligent when he failed to realize that a detainee was suicidal
    from the fact that the detainee was drunk, had a large scar
    across his wrist, and spoke of giving away his bike).
    III.
    Henry Hearn’s death was undeniably tragic.                            However, the
    district court correctly determined that none of the officers
    involved       in        Hearn’s      arrest       or      detention     violated         his
    17
    constitutional rights.   We therefore affirm the district court’s
    judgment.
    AFFIRMED
    18