Levon Brooks v. Steven Hayne , 860 F.3d 819 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •      Case: 16-60116   Document: 00514051190     Page: 1   Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 16-60116                           FILED
    June 27, 2017
    Lyle W. Cayce
    KENNEDY BREWER
    Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    STEVEN TIMOTHY HAYNE; MICHAEL H. WEST,
    Defendants – Appellees
    Consolidated with No. 16-60342
    LEVON BROOKS
    Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    STEVEN TIMOTHY HAYNE,
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Mississippi
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, JONES, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
    PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
    Case: 16-60116      Document: 00514051190    Page: 2   Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    In 1992, Plaintiff Levon Brooks was convicted of the murder of three-
    year-old Courtney Smith. In 1995, Plaintiff Kennedy Brewer was convicted of
    the murder of three-year-old Christine Jackson. When one Justin Albert
    Johnson later confessed to both crimes, the convictions of Brooks and Brewer
    were vacated. Each then sued Dr. Steven Hayne and Dr. Michael West,
    asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the forensic consultants
    violated their constitutional rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth
    Amendments when, as retained government experts, they provided
    investigators with—and later testified to—baseless findings regarding bite
    marks on the victims’ bodies; that they knew that the evidence was baseless or
    at least acted with reckless disregard of that reality. The district court granted
    summary judgment for both defendants in the Brewer case and for Dr. Hayne
    in the Brooks case. The two cases have been consolidated here on appeal. We
    affirm.
    I.
    A.
    On May 1, 1992, Gloria Jackson left her boyfriend Kennedy Brewer at
    home in charge of her four children. Returning home at approximately 12:30
    AM on May 3, she found the house dark, and Brewer refused to let her check
    on her three-year-old daughter, Christine. The following morning, Jackson
    realized that Christine was missing, and a search began. The police were
    summoned. Scent hounds led investigators to Christine’s body floating in a
    creek.
    Dr. Hayne, a private pathologist who performed autopsies for the State
    of Mississippi, concluded that Christine had been raped and had died from
    strangulation. Noticing what he suspected to be bite marks on the body, Dr.
    Hayne requested the assistance of Dr. West, a dentist and forensic
    2
    Case: 16-60116       Document: 00514051190         Page: 3    Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    odontologist. At Brewer’s trial, Dr. West testified that he found nineteen
    human bite marks on Christine’s body—all made with only the upper arch—
    which he concluded belonged to Brewer.
    Brewer was indicted, convicted of capital murder, and sentenced to die
    by lethal injection. The Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed the conviction. 1
    Four years later that same court held that Brewer was entitled to an
    evidentiary hearing regarding DNA evidence taken from semen found on
    Christine’s body. That testing excluded Brewer as the source, and the trial
    court vacated Brewer’s conviction.
    The DNA evidence was a match for Johnson, who confessed to the rape
    and murder. Elements of Johnson’s confession were inconsistent with evidence
    found in the investigation. 2 Nevertheless, on February 15, 2008, the State of
    Mississippi declined to again prosecute Brewer.
    Just under a year later, Brewer brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 case
    against Dr. Hayne and Dr. West, alleging that their false and misleading
    reports caused his wrongful prosecution and conviction. Dr. Hayne and Dr.
    West moved to dismiss. The district court held that the defendants enjoyed
    absolute immunity for their testimony at trial and qualified immunity for the
    pre-trial reports, and granted summary judgment on the grounds that the suit
    was time barred. The district court granted a Rule 54(b) motion for final
    judgment on all federal claims for both defendants. Brewer timely appealed. 3
    1  Brewer v. State, 
    725 So. 2d 106
    (Miss. 1998).
    2  For example, Johnson confessed to killing Christine by throwing her in a creek, but
    the autopsy had concluded that the cause of death was strangulation and that there was no
    water or foreign material found in her lungs.
    3 Brewer’s state law claims, over which the district court accepted supplemental
    jurisdiction, remain in the district court. Dr. West has submitted no briefing to this Court.
    3
    Case: 16-60116    Document: 00514051190     Page: 4   Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    B.
    Sometime in the evening of September 15, 1990, or early the following
    morning, three-year-old Courtney Smith of Brooksville Mississippi went
    missing. After a night-long search, her body was found floating in a pond.
    Willie Willie, the Coroner and Medical Examiner of Noxubee County, asked
    Dr. Hayne to perform an autopsy. Dr. Hayne concluded that Courtney had been
    raped and that the cause of death had been freshwater drowning, finding
    contusions on Courtney’s body, including one on the back of her right wrist that
    he believed could have been a human bite mark. Dr. West was brought in for
    an expert opinion, and he took dental impressions of a total of thirteen people,
    including Johnson, who would later confess to the crime. As the alleged bite
    mark consisted of only two imprints, Dr. West believed they were from an
    upper arch, and were made by the perpetrator’s two front teeth. After
    excluding the other twelve individuals, Dr. West concluded that Levon Brooks,
    an ex-boyfriend of Courtney’s mother, had inflicted the marks. Brooks was
    indicted, tried, convicted, and sentenced to life in prison. The Mississippi
    Supreme Court denied Brooks’ direct appeals.
    While being interviewed about the death of Christine Jackson, Johnson
    also confessed to the abduction, murder, and rape of Courtney Smith. On
    February 20, 2008, a Mississippi Circuit Court vacated Brooks’ conviction, and
    the state dismissed the case.
    On February 13, 2009, Brooks filed his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit against Dr.
    Hayne and Dr. West, alleging that they had violated his right to due process
    by providing testimony and reports about the alleged bite mark that were
    either intentionally or recklessly fraudulent and which directly led to his
    indictment and conviction. Dr. Hayne and Dr. West moved to dismiss. Brooks
    amended his complaint. Dr. Hayne again moved to dismiss. Dr. West did not.
    4
    Case: 16-60116       Document: 00514051190          Page: 5     Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    The district court granted summary judgment, dismissing all federal
    claims against Dr. Hayne. The district court granted a Rule 54(b) motion for
    final judgment on all federal claims for Dr. Hayne only. Brooks timely noticed
    his appeal. 4 Dr. West is not a party to Brooks’ appeal.
    II.
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo,
    applying the same standard as the trial court. 5 Summary judgment is
    appropriate where there is no genuine dispute of material fact and the movant
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 6 On summary judgment, a court
    must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant and draw
    all reasonable inferences in the non-movant’s favor. 7 To survive summary
    judgment, the non-movant must supply evidence “such that a reasonable jury
    could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” 8
    “In resolving questions of qualified immunity at summary judgment,
    courts engage in a two-pronged inquiry. The first asks whether the facts,
    ‘[t]aken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury . . . show
    the officer’s conduct violated a [federal] right.’” 9 “The second prong of the
    qualified-immunity analysis asks whether the right in question was ‘clearly
    established’ at the time of the violation.” 10
    4 Brooks’ state law claims against Dr. Hayne, over which the district court accepted
    supplemental jurisdiction, remain in the district court.
    5 Milton v. Tex. Dept. of Criminal Justice, 
    707 F.3d 570
    , 572 (5th Cir. 2013) (citing
    Griffin v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 
    661 F.3d 216
    , 221 (5th Cir. 2011)).
    6 FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a).
    7 Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 378 (2007) (citing U.S. v. Diebold, Inc., 
    369 U.S. 654
    ,
    655 (1962) (per curiam)).
    8 Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248 (1986).
    9 Tolan v. Cotton, 
    134 S. Ct. 1861
    , 1865 (2014) (quoting Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    ,
    201 (2001)).
    10 
    Tolan, 134 S. Ct. at 1866
    (quoting Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 739 (2002)).
    5
    Case: 16-60116       Document: 00514051190         Page: 6    Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    III.
    A.
    As an initial matter, Brewer argues that the district court erred in
    holding his claim time barred; that the proper accrual date for his claim was
    the date the prosecution dismissed the charges. This is a thorny question, one
    which we decline to reach because our principles of immunity so plainly resolve
    the controversy. For the purposes of this appeal, we can assume without
    deciding that Brewer’s claims are timely.
    B.
    Plaintiffs argue the Defendants enjoy no qualified immunity. A
    defendant may act under color of state law for the purposes of § 1983 without
    receiving the related protections of qualified immunity. 11 At the same time,
    “[t]he government’s need to attract talented individuals is not limited to full-
    time public employees. Indeed, it is often when there is a particular need for
    specialized knowledge or expertise that the government must look outside its
    permanent work force to secure the services of private individuals.” 12 In
    determining whether a private individual performing a government function
    is entitled to qualified immunity, we consider whether the service performed
    was of the type protected at common law at the time § 1983 was passed in 1871
    and whether granting immunity in a given case is consistent with the policies
    underlying § 1983. 13
    Plaintiffs point to McCullum v. Tepe, a Sixth Circuit case holding that a
    part-time prison psychiatrist was not entitled to assert qualified immunity
    because there was “no common-law tradition of immunity for a private doctor
    11See Richardson v. McKnight, 
    521 U.S. 399
    , 408-09 (1997). Richardson denied
    immunity to private prison guards in, what the Court described as, a “narrow” context. 
    Id. at 413.
         12 Filarsky v. Delia, 
    566 U.S. 377
    , 390 (2012).
    13 
    Id. at 384.
    6
    Case: 16-60116     Document: 00514051190       Page: 7   Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    working for a public institution.” 14 But Defendants here, though calling on
    their medical training, were performing a role that more closely parallels
    criminal investigation—“a core government activity” traditionally protected at
    common law by immunity. 15 And while Defendants were not full-time
    government investigators:
    The protections provided by the common law did not turn on
    whether someone we today would call a police officer worked for
    the government full-time or instead for both public and private
    employers. Rather, at common law, “[a] special constable, duly
    appointed according to law, ha[d] all the powers of a regular
    constable so far as may be necessary for the proper discharge of
    the special duties intrusted to him, and in the lawful discharge of
    those duties, [was] as fully protected as any other officer.” 16
    We are persuaded that Defendants, as consulting forensic experts, were
    engaged in the criminal investigative functions of the state protected at
    common law and are here entitled to assert qualified immunity.
    C.
    Qualified immunity is a complete defense, and Defendants are entitled
    to summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity unless Plaintiffs can
    show triable issues as to whether Defendants violated a clearly established
    right of which a reasonable officer would have been aware. 17 Plaintiffs argue
    that the clearly established right at issue here is the due process right to be
    free from fabricated evidence. We have previously held that “deliberate or
    knowing creation of misleading and scientifically inaccurate [evidence]
    amounts to a violation of a defendant’s due process rights,” and that reasonable
    14 
    693 F.3d 696
    , 702-04 (6th Cir. 2012).
    15 
    Filarsky, 599 U.S. at 386-88
    .
    16 
    Id. at 387-88
    (citing W. MURFEE, A TREATISE ON THE LAW OF SHERIFFS AND OTHER
    MINISTERIAL OFFICERS § 1121, p. 609 (1884)).
    17 Brown v. Miller, 
    519 F.3d 231
    , 236 (5th Cir. 2008).
    7
    Case: 16-60116      Document: 00514051190           Page: 8     Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    officers know of this right. 18 The only question that remains is whether
    Plaintiffs have provided competent summary judgment evidence sufficient to
    raise a question of fact for trial as to whether Defendants violated that clearly
    established right.
    As a baseline, we agree with the district court that merely presenting
    forensic odontology evidence in the early 1990s was not unreasonable or
    violative of due process. While that sort of evidence has been called into
    question, 19 at the time of Plaintiffs’ trials, forensic odontology was widely
    accepted. Plaintiffs are thus tasked with demonstrating not that the evidence
    Defendants presented is no longer considered trustworthy, but rather that
    Defendants intentionally created false evidence or intentionally produced
    evidence that they knew to be scientifically inaccurate by the standards of the
    day.
    Plaintiffs argue that deliberate falsehoods “can be, and usually must be,
    proved from circumstantial evidence.” 20 Plaintiffs direct us to the following
    circumstantial evidence, which they contend creates a question for trial as to
    whether Defendants intentionally created false or scientifically inaccurate bite
    mark evidence: (1) other expert opinions that have concluded that there was
    “no scientific basis” for determining the contusions on the bodies were bite
    marks and that “Dr. West knew or should have known that they were not bite
    marks”; (2) other expert opinions that determined that finding nineteen bite
    marks made only with the upper teeth “is unreasonable and unprecedented”;
    (3) a previous case where an expert for the defense testified that he believed
    18Id. at 237; see also Castellano v. Fragozo, 
    352 F.3d 939
    , 955 (5th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
    19See, e.g., Radley Balko, The Latest from the World of Bite Mark Evidence, WASH.
    POST: THE WATCH (Feb. 1, 2016), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-
    watch/wp/2016/02/01/the-latest-from-the-world-of-bite-mark-
    evidence/?utm_term=.cbc786bc2cf0
    20 United States v. Nixon, 
    816 F.2d 1022
    , 1029 (5th Cir. 1987).
    8
    Case: 16-60116        Document: 00514051190           Page: 9     Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    that there was no bite mark present until Dr. West, in an effort to match a
    mold of the accused’s teeth to the supposed mark, pressed the mold into the
    flesh; (4) the “extraordinary frequency” with which Defendants found bite
    mark evidence—over one hundred times and in every so-called “rape overkill”
    case; (5) Defendants’ failure to produce any other experts who agreed with their
    conclusions; and (6) the allegedly “checkered” professional histories of
    Defendants. Finally, while Plaintiffs argue that they are not required to
    provide a motive, they contend that a reasonable jury could find that
    Defendants were incentivized to fabricate evidence by the inherent pressures
    forensic analysts face from the State. 21
    Plaintiffs have made a compelling showing that Defendants were
    negligent in their forensic analysis, but negligence alone will not defeat
    qualified immunity. 22 Viewed in the most favorable light, Plaintiffs’ evidence
    is not suggestive of an intent to fabricate. 23 The disagreement voiced by
    Plaintiffs’ experts is evidence that Defendants were mistaken in their
    conclusions or methodologies, but no more. Likewise, the evidence of the
    “extraordinary frequency” with which Defendants found bite mark evidence
    certainly undermines the reliability of the forensic odontology techniques they
    employed—and perhaps the field in general—but does not lead to an inference
    21  See Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 318 (2009).
    22  See Campbell v. City of San Antonio, 
    43 F.3d 973
    , 977 (5th Cir. 1995) (holding “that
    the negligent act of a state official which results in unintended harm to life, liberty, or
    property, does not implicate the Due Process Clause”); see also Mendenhall v. Riser, 
    213 F.3d 226
    , 230 (5th Cir. 2000) (holding that “the qualified immunity standard gives ample room for
    mistaken judgments protecting all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly
    violate the law”).
    23 Plaintiffs also argue that, per a Tenth Circuit case, Pierce v. Gilchrist, recklessness
    is sufficient to defeat qualified immunity under § 1983. 
    359 F.3d 1279
    , 1299 (10th Cir. 2004).
    Because we find that the evidence Plaintiffs have provided does not indicate Defendants were
    more than grossly negligent, we do not reach the question of whether recklessness in
    producing scientific evidence is sufficient to defeat qualified immunity.
    9
    Case: 16-60116       Document: 00514051190          Page: 10     Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    of intentional fabrication. 24 The allegation of a previously false bite mark by
    Dr. West—whether created intentionally or accidentally—gives pause. Yet the
    inference Plaintiffs ask us to draw from that evidence is one generally not
    permitted under the federal rules. 25 The same is true of the evidence regarding
    Defendants’ professional histories—propensity evidence will not sustain an
    inference that the Defendants intentionally fabricated evidence here.
    As to Dr. Hayne specifically, Brewer additionally argues that Dr. Hayne
    either deliberately failed to perform biopsy examinations of the alleged bite
    marks on Christine Jackson’s body or did perform those biopsies and concealed
    the results. According to Brewer, Dr. Hayne did so because an absence of
    hemorrhage in the tissues would indicate that the bite marks were made post-
    mortem and thus could not have been made by human teeth. Brewer argues
    that Dr. Hayne might hesitate to biopsy bite marks after the Brooks case,
    where the biopsies contained no hemorrhaging. 26 Brewer also points to
    Christine Jackson’s autopsy report, which contained a diagram indicting that
    biopsies were taken of the alleged bite marks, as evidence that Dr. Hayne
    deliberately hid exculpatory evidence. 27
    Absent some additional evidence, the autopsy form and the result of the
    biopsy in the Brooks case are not sufficient to raise a reasonable inference that
    24 This is especially true given the lack of any evidence in the record as to what a
    “normal” frequency of bite mark cases would be and given other arguments by Plaintiffs
    regarding the high volume of autopsies Dr. Hayne performed.
    25 Rule 404 does not allow a party to introduce evidence of a person’s character or
    character trait in order to show conformance with that character or character trait on a given
    occasion. FED. R. EVID. 404. Rule 404(b)(2) includes an exception to the propensity evidence
    ban to demonstrate knowledge or lack of mistake, but the inference that Dr. West committed
    the bad act in this case because he committed a bad act in the past is not permitted.
    26 Because the autopsy of Courtney Smith showed that she had died by drowning, Dr.
    Hayne testified that, had the mark occurred after death, it would have to have been caused
    by something in the pond.
    27 Dr. Hayne later claimed that he did not recall taking any biopsies of the bite marks
    on Christine Jackson and, in any event, that he did not examine any bite mark biopsy tissues.
    10
    Case: 16-60116     Document: 00514051190     Page: 11   Date Filed: 06/27/2017
    No. 16-60116
    Cons. w/ No. 16-60342
    Dr. Hayne either deliberately failed to perform biopsies or withheld
    exculpatory evidence. At most, Plaintiffs have presented evidence that Dr.
    Hayne was negligent in failing to perform the biopsies or in failing to examine
    biopsied tissues. Ultimately, we think that true of all the evidence in the
    record: viewed in its entirety and in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, the
    record tends to show that Defendants were negligent—perhaps grossly so—but
    no more.
    Plaintiffs have failed to raise a genuine issue of fact as to whether
    Defendants violated their right to due process by intentionally creating false
    or misleading scientific evidence. Defendants were entitled to summary
    judgment under the defense of qualified immunity. We affirm.
    11