Monty Bauch v. Richland Cty. Children Servs. ( 2018 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 18a0253n.06
    No. 17-3435
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    MONTY BAUCH, individually and as father and )                                   FILED
    next friend of a minor, other O.B.; O.B., a minor, )                       May 23, 2018
    )                   DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,                      )
    )
    v.                                                 )
    ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    RICHLAND COUNTY CHILDREN SERVICES; )
    COURT FOR THE
    HOLLY HARTMAN, Individually and in her )
    NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    capacity as agent and/or employee of Richland )
    OHIO
    County Children Services,                          )
    )
    Defendants-Appellants.                     )
    )
    Before: SILER and LARSEN, Circuit Judges; BLACK, District Judge.*
    BLACK, District Judge.     Defendant Holly Hartman (“Hartman”) appeals from the
    judgment entered by the district court denying her motion for summary judgment on Count Four
    of Plaintiffs’ complaint. For the reasons set forth below, we REVERSE the judgment of the
    district court and REMAND the case to the district court for proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    This case arises out of the 2011 removal of minor Plaintiff/Appellee O.B. from the home
    of her father, Plaintiff/Appellee Monty Bauch (“Bauch”), effectuated by Richland County
    * The Honorable Timothy S. Black, United States District Judge for the Southern District of
    Ohio, sitting by designation.
    No. 17-3435
    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    Children Services (“RCCS”). O.B. was removed on Jan. 20, 2011 pursuant to an ex parte
    emergency order issued by an Ohio magistrate under Ohio Revised Code § 2151.31(D) and (E)
    and Ohio Juvenile Rule 6(B).1 Pursuant to statute, a hearing was held the next day. Upon
    consideration of the evidence presented at the hearing, the juvenile court found that there was
    probable cause for the issuance of the emergency order, that RCCS had made reasonable efforts
    to prevent O.B.’s removal, and that it would be “contrary to the child’s best interest and welfare”
    to continue living with Bauch at that time. Over the next two years, Bauch worked with RCCS
    and the juvenile court toward the completion of his case plan, eventually regaining permanent
    custody of O.B. in December 2013.
    Bauch filed suit in federal district court a year after he regained custody of O.B. Bauch’s
    second amended complaint stated fourteen causes of action. The only count relevant to this
    appeal is Count Four, which alleges that the individual defendants named in the complaint
    conspired to interfere with and violate the civil rights of the Plaintiffs, as set forth
    under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, including violation of the Plaintiffs’ rights found in the
    First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, by,
    but not limited to, acting and conspiring to force Plaintiff Mr. Bauch to relent to
    their demands, by retaliating against Plaintiffs for the exercise of his
    constitutional freedoms and by removing, detaining and continuing to detain, the
    person and/or physical and legal custody of minors [sic] Plaintiff O.B. from the
    care, custody, and control of her parents, without proper or just cause and/or
    authority; by the use of intimidation, coercion and duress, and by using false and
    fabricated evidence and testimony, and failing to provide exculpatory evidence,
    during the investigation and initiation and pendency of the abuse and dependency
    proceedings, including the application for a valid warrant for the removal of
    O.B., in violation of, and interference with, the Plaintiffs’ constitutional liberty
    interests under the First Amendment, their fundamental rights to familial
    1
    Section 2151.31(D) provides that “a juvenile judge or a designated referee may grant by
    telephone an ex parte emergency order authorizing the taking of [a] child into custody if there is
    probable cause to believe that” certain specified conditions are present. Section 2151.31(E) and
    Ohio Juvenile Rule of Procedure 6(B) mandate that “the court shall hold a hearing to determine
    whether there is probable cause for the emergency order . . . before the end of the next business
    day” and no later than seventy-two hours after such an order is issued.
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    No. 17-3435
    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    association and due process under the Fourteenth Amendment, and in violation of
    Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches and seizures.
    The only Defendant relevant to this appeal is Hartman, a licensed social worker and
    caseworker supervisor employed by RCCS, who supervised the initial RCCS investigation of
    Bauch.     Hartman moved to secure the initial emergency ex parte custody order from the
    magistrate on Jan. 20, 2011. In so doing, Hartman prepared an affidavit in support of emergency
    custody detailing the reasons RCCS was seeking removal. In that affidavit, Hartman stated that
    O.B. was an “abused” child under Ohio Rev. Code § 2151, that reasonable efforts had been made
    to avoid removal, and that removal was in O.B.’s best interest. Bauch alleges that Hartman
    knowingly omitted pertinent information and included false information when completing the
    affidavit, leading to O.B.’s improper removal and the denial of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.
    All parties filed motions for summary judgment before the district court. Hartman argued
    that the claims against her in her individual capacity were barred by both absolute immunity and
    qualified immunity. The district court rejected these immunity claims and denied Hartman
    summary judgment on Count Four. First, the district court stated, without further explanation,
    that Hartman was not shielded by absolute immunity for the act of vouching for the truth of the
    facts she presented in her affidavit in support of emergency custody. Second, the district court
    determined that qualified immunity was inappropriate because a jury had to decide whether
    Hartman’s “omissions and rushed misrepresentations . . . would weigh significantly into the
    magistrate’s decision to issue an order removing a child . . . and whether Hartman . . . had the
    intention to mislead[.]”
    II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The only question before this Court on appeal is whether the district court erred by
    denying Hartman’s claims of absolute and qualified immunity. “Whether a defendant is entitled
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    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    to absolute or qualified immunity from liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is a legal question that
    this Court reviews de novo.” Moldowan v. City of Warren, 
    578 F.3d 351
    , 374 (6th Cir. 2009).2
    III.   ANALYSIS
    A.      Absolute Immunity
    Hartman argues that she is entitled to absolute immunity from prosecution resulting from
    her statements in the affidavit in support of emergency custody. In certain circumstances, social
    workers are “entitled to absolute immunity.” Holloway v. Brush, 
    220 F.3d 767
    , 774 (6th Cir.
    2000) (en banc). “The scope of this immunity is akin to the scope of absolute prosecutorial
    immunity, which applies to conduct ‘intimately associated with the judicial phase of the criminal
    process.’” Pittman v. Cuyahoga Cty. Dep’t. of Children & Family Servs., 
    640 F.3d 716
    , 724 (6th
    Cir. 2011) (quoting Imbler v. Pachtman, 
    424 U.S. 409
    , 430 (1976)). Accordingly, “social
    workers are absolutely immune only when they are acting in their capacity as legal advocates—
    initiating court actions or testifying under oath—not when they are performing administrative,
    investigative, or other functions.” 
    Holloway, 220 F.3d at 775
    . The central dispute over absolute
    immunity therefore concerns whether Hartman was acting in her capacity as a legal advocate
    when she completed and submitted her affidavit in support of emergency custody. As the party
    seeking absolute immunity, Hartman has the burden of demonstrating that the immunity is
    justified for the function being challenged. 
    Moldowan, 578 F.3d at 376
    .
    2
    In addition to Defendants’ appeal, currently pending before this Court is Plaintiffs’ motion to
    dismiss, which argues that the district court’s denial of immunity to Hartman was not a “final
    decision” subject to appeal. However, the Court in Ortiz v. Jordan explained that “immediate
    appeal from the denial of summary judgment on a qualified immunity plea is available when the
    appeal presents a ‘purely legal issue,’ illustratively, the determination of ‘what law was “clearly
    established”’ at the time the defendant acted[.]” Ortiz v. Jordan, 
    562 U.S. 180
    , 188 (2011)
    (quoting Johnson v. Jones, 
    515 U.S. 304
    , 313 (1995)). The question of whether Hartman is
    entitled to absolute immunity is purely a legal one, and we accordingly deny Plaintiffs’ motion to
    dismiss.
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    No. 17-3435
    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    The district court held that Hartman was not acting as a legal advocate in completing the
    affidavit in support of emergency custody, relying primarily on this Court’s previous
    unpublished decision in Young v. Vega, 574 F. App’x 684, 689 (6th Cir. 2014). In Young, a
    father filed a § 1983 action against a Tennessee social worker alleging that the social worker
    violated the plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment due process rights by including false statements
    in a petition for the immediate removal of a child and causing the juvenile court to issue an ex
    parte removal order without probable cause. 
    Id. at 687,
    691. This Court granted the social
    worker qualified immunity but denied absolute immunity. 
    Id. at 689,
    694. In reaching its
    conclusion, this Court determined that the social worker was not entitled to absolute immunity
    for “the act of personally vouching for the truth of the facts that provide the evidentiary support
    for a finding of probable cause.” 
    Id. at 689.
    This Court reached its conclusion in Young by applying the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
    Kalina v. Fletcher, 
    522 U.S. 118
    (1997), a case involving a prosecutor’s actions, to the social
    worker context. 574 F. App’x at 689.3 In Kalina, a prosecutor contemporaneously filed three
    documents in a criminal prosecution––an information charging respondent with burglary, a
    motion for an arrest warrant, and an affidavit supporting the issuance of the arrest 
    warrant. 522 U.S. at 121
    . The Court granted absolute immunity for the first two documents, but denied
    absolute immunity for the affidavit that was given in support of the arrest warrant because the
    prosecutor was not functioning as “an advocate for the State” when she submitted that affidavit.
    
    Id. at 126
    (citation omitted). Therefore, the prosecutor had stepped into the role of a fact witness
    by attesting to the truth of facts supporting the warrant. 
    Id. at 130.
    Thus, Kalina confirms that
    officials who serve as complaining witnesses receive qualified, not absolute, immunity. See also
    3
    This Court looks to the scope of prosecutorial immunity to determine the scope of social
    worker immunity. 
    Holloway, 220 F.3d at 774
    .
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    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    Malley v. Briggs, 
    475 U.S. 335
    , 340 (1986) (stating that “complaining witnesses were not
    absolutely immune at common law”); Vakilian v. Shaw, 
    335 F.3d 509
    , 513 (6th Cir. 2003) (an
    investigator can be held liable under § 1983 for making material false statements either
    knowingly or recklessly to establish probable cause for arrest). Bauch argues that Hartman’s
    affidavit in support of emergency custody is analogous to the affidavits at issue in Kalina,
    Malley, and Vakilian because, for purposes of the affidavit, Hartman was acting not as an
    advocate but as a witness testifying to the truth of her factual assertions regarding Bauch and
    O.B.
    However, multiple decisions of this Court, issued after both Young and Kalina were
    decided, have held in situations analogous to this case that the submission of an affidavit that
    triggers judicial child-removal proceedings is in fact an act of legal advocacy by social workers.
    In Barber v. Miller, 
    809 F.3d 840
    (6th Cir. 2015), a father contended that a social worker
    included falsehoods and misrepresentations in a petition for protective custody in order to obtain
    an ex parte order for immediate removal pending a hearing.4 
    Id. at 843.
    This Court granted the
    social worker absolute immunity against those allegations because the social worker “offered his
    factual assessment in his capacity as a legal advocate initiating a child-custody proceeding in
    family court.” 
    Id. at 843–44.
    In so doing, this Court held that “[a] social worker acts as a legal
    advocate when initiating court proceedings, filing child-abuse complaints, and testifying under
    oath,” and that “this absolute immunity holds, even under allegations that the social worker
    intentionally misrepresented facts to the family court.”         
    Id. at 844;
    see also Schattilly v.
    4
    The social worker sought a protective custody order pursuant to Mich. Comp. Laws
    §§ 712A.14b and 722.638. 
    Barber, 809 F.3d at 843
    . Mich. Comp. Laws § 712A.14b, similar to
    Ohio Rev. Code § 2151.31(D), authorizes “a judge or referee,” “[u]pon receipt electronically or
    otherwise of a petition or affidavit of facts,” to “issue a written ex parte order . . . authorizing the
    department of human services to immediately take a child into protective custody and place the
    child pending the preliminary hearing if the court finds” that the specified conditions are present.
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    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    Daugharty, 656 F. App’x 123, 135 (6th Cir. 2016) (“[Absolute] immunity includes social
    workers’ statements in complaints or affidavits that they submit to courts—even if the statements
    are false or misleading.” (citing 
    Pittman, 640 F.3d at 724
    –25)).
    The district court did not address how Barber or Schattilly affect the analysis of absolute
    immunity in the present case. We concur with the analysis of these two cases. Like the social
    worker’s petition in Barber, Hartman’s affidavit offered her factual assessment as a legal
    advocate initiating a child-custody proceeding. See 
    Barber, 809 F.3d at 843
    –44. Unlike a police
    officer’s application for a search warrant, Hartman’s affidavit for emergency custody necessarily
    triggered a subsequent custody proceeding in court pursuant to Ohio law. The Ohio Revised
    Code states that
    If a judge or referee pursuant to division (D) of this section issues an ex
    parte emergency order for taking a child into custody, the court shall hold a
    hearing to determine whether there is probable cause for the emergency order.
    The hearing shall be held before the end of the next business day after the day on
    which the emergency order is issued, except that it shall not be held later than
    seventy-two hours after the emergency order is issued.
    Ohio Rev. Code § 2151.31(E) (emphasis added). Accordingly, Hartman’s actions were more
    analogous to a prosecutor’s decision to prosecute than a police officer’s testifying by affidavit in
    support of probable cause. This case is also distinguishable from the facts of Kalina—although
    the affidavit submitted by the prosecutor in Kalina was “filed as part of an ex parte process prior
    to the indictment that begins the criminal case,” Hartman’s affidavit in support of emergency
    custody was “an undeniable part of the judicial process” because “the [affidavit] initiated the
    [removal] action” and subsequent hearing. Gray v. Poole, 
    275 F.3d 1113
    , 1118 (D.C. Cir. 2002).
    Absolute immunity represents “a balance between . . . evils,” as “it has been thought in
    the end better to leave unredressed the wrongs done by dishonest officers than to subject those
    who try to do their duty to the constant dread of retaliation.” Gregoire v. Biddle, 
    177 F.2d 579
    ,
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    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    581 (2d Cir. 1949). Weighing this balance in the case of child advocates such as Hartman
    demonstrates the clear need to provide that same heightened protection to children’s services
    advocates charged with determining whether to initiate child-removal proceedings. See 
    Pittman, 640 F.3d at 725
    –26 (explaining the necessity of extending absolute immunity to social workers).
    Nearly every instance in which a children’s services advocate must act to remove a child from
    his or her home promises to be contentious and emotionally charged. If absolute immunity were
    denied to these advocates, a flood of litigation against individual advocates would follow as
    parents challenged the factual assertions of each affidavit in support of emergency custody. See
    
    Barber, 809 F.3d at 843
    (explaining that absolute immunity is necessary to “enable[] social
    workers to ‘protect the health and well-being of the children . . . without the worry of
    intimidation and harassment from dissatisfied parents’” (citation omitted)). This in turn could
    negatively affect children’s services in the future, as advocates, fearing individual reprisal, might
    fail to act expediently in situations where a child’s welfare is at risk. Just as absolute immunity
    is essential for prosecutors engaged in legal advocacy because “any lesser degree of immunity
    could impair the judicial process itself,” 
    Malley, 475 U.S. at 342
    , that same immunity must be
    given to a children’s services advocate as the initiator of home-removal actions; any lesser
    protection would jeopardize the essential process that has been established to provide protection
    to those children who need it most.
    Accordingly, Hartman is entitled to absolute immunity for claims related to her affidavit
    in support of emergency custody.
    B.      Qualified Immunity
    We have held that Defendant/Appellant Holly Hartman is entitled to absolute immunity
    from claims arising from her affidavit in support of emergency custody.            This defeats all
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    Bauch v. Richland County Children Services
    Plaintiffs’ claims against Hartman that are before us on appeal. Accordingly, we need not, and
    shall not, review the district court’s determination regarding Hartman’s assertion that she is also
    entitled to qualified immunity from Plaintiffs’ claims.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    As this Court properly has jurisdiction over Defendants’ appeal, Plaintiffs’ motion to
    dismiss the appeal is DENIED. Furthermore, we conclude that the district court erred in holding
    that Defendant/Appellant Holly Hartman was not entitled to absolute immunity in this case. We
    therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND this case to the district
    court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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