Koulta v. Center Line , 477 F.3d 442 ( 2007 )


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  •                            RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 07a0078p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    -
    HANY F. KOULTA, Personal Representative of the
    Plaintiff-Appellee, -
    Estate of SAMI F. KOULTA,
    -
    -
    No. 06-1539
    ,
    v.                                           >
    -
    -
    -
    OFFICER DANIEL MERCIEZ; OFFICER ROBERT
    Defendants-Appellants, -
    WROBLEWSKI; and OFFICER STEVEN HILLA,
    -
    -
    -
    CITY OF CENTER LINE,
    Defendant. -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Flint.
    No. 04-40343—Paul V. Gadola, District Judge.
    Argued: February 1, 2007
    Decided and Filed: February 26, 2007
    Before: SUHRHEINRICH, SUTTON and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Julie McCann O’Connor, O’CONNOR, DeGRAZIA, TAMM & O’CONNOR,
    Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for Appellants. Iris E. Rubin, RUBIN & RUBIN, Farmington Hills,
    Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Julie McCann O’Connor, O’CONNOR, DeGRAZIA, TAMM
    & O’CONNOR, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for Appellants. Iris E. Rubin, RUBIN & RUBIN,
    Farmington Hills, Michigan, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Shortly before 3:00 a.m. on September 13, 2002, Chrissy Lucero
    drove her 1991 Buick through a red light at 63 miles per hour and broadsided Sami Koulta’s 1998
    Honda. Koulta died from the collision. No one doubts Lucero’s responsibility for the accident: She
    was intoxicated; she was speeding; and she had just run a red light. And no one doubts the utter
    misfortune that befell Koulta and his family that night. The police charged Lucero with second-
    degree murder, to which she pleaded guilty, and she is currently serving a well-deserved sentence
    1
    No. 06-1539           Koulta v. City of Center Line, et al.                                   Page 2
    for the crime. Koulta’s estate also filed a civil action against Lucero and obtained a $750,000
    judgment against her.
    The question here is one of secondary liability. After learning that several police officers
    employed by the City of Center Line had confronted Lucero minutes prior to the accident, Koulta’s
    estate filed this § 1983 claim against the officers and the city, alleging that they had violated
    Koulta’s substantive due process rights by permitting the inebriated Lucero to continue to drive.
    Where a claimant accuses government officials of failing to prevent one private party from injuring
    another, DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services, 
    489 U.S. 189
    (1989), and
    its progeny seldom permit the claim to proceed. This case does not fall within any of the limited
    exceptions to the rule. Because the officers’ actions did not create or increase the risk that an
    innocent victim would be killed by Lucero’s drunken driving and because the officers’ actions in
    dealing with Lucero did not specially place Koulta at risk, our precedents require us to reject this
    claim as a matter of law.
    I.
    As with many claims of this type, this one involves equal doses of private-party foolishness,
    governmental incompetence (assuming, as we must, the truth of the allegations) and public anguish.
    On September 12, 2002, Lucero went to the house of her ex-boyfriend Frank Offrink, hoping to
    reconcile with him. When Offrink did not return, Lucero left the house to purchase a “40 of Bud
    Ice,” JA 165, then returned and “started drinking[,] . . . drinking pretty fast,” 
    id. After feeling
    “a
    little buzzed,” 
    id., Lucero drove
    to a “7-Eleven” and purchased a 40-ounce bottle of “Colt 45,” 
    id. She returned
    to Offrink’s house and started drinking the second 40-ounce bottle. She tried to reach
    Offrink on his cell phone but had no luck. Thoroughly “pissed off,” 
    id., Lucero got
    in her car, “took
    [a] Paxil,” an anti-depressant, “with the rest of the 40,” 
    id., threw the
    bottle “out the window,” JA
    166, and drove to the house of Offrink’s best friend. Offrink was not there, so Lucero drove back
    to his house.
    At this time (by now the early morning hours of September 13), Offrink’s mother, Frances,
    refused to allow Lucero to enter the house again. Undeterred, Lucero “knocked constantly” on the
    door, then “tried to climb up the trellis . . . into [Frances’] bedroom window.” JA 167. In response,
    Frances called the Center Line (Michigan) Police Department to report Lucero as an “unwanted”
    person on her property. JA 72. Three Center Line police officers—Daniel Merciez, Robert
    Wroblewski and Steven Hilla—responded to the call.
    When the officers arrived at the Offrink’s house between 2:15 and 2:20 a.m., they saw
    Lucero’s vehicle in the driveway. After checking the license plate, Officer Merciez learned that it
    was expired. The officers questioned Frances and Lucero. Frances maintained that she wanted
    Lucero removed from her property; Lucero explained that she hoped to reconcile with her ex-
    boyfriend and says that she told the officers she had drunk a 40-ounce bottle of malt liquor. (She
    did not tell them about the 40-ounce bottle of “Bud Ice” or the Paxil.)
    The officers ordered Lucero to leave the premises. In doing so, they did not cite her for
    having expired license plates, did not conduct any investigation into her driving record and did not
    administer a sobriety test. As far as the police were concerned, she needed to just “get over it,” “go
    home” and accept the fact that Frank was “with somebody else.” JA 168. Lucero told the officers
    she would leave and entered her car. Satisfied, the officers left. While driving away, however, they
    noticed that Lucero remained in the driveway. One of the officers made a U-turn, returned to the
    driveway and informed Lucero that she had “10 seconds to get out of [t]here.” JA 169. Lucero left.
    She drove from the Offrink’s house in Center Line in the direction of the neighboring city
    of Sterling Heights. At 2:35 a.m., a dozen minutes or so after speaking for the last time with the
    No. 06-1539            Koulta v. City of Center Line, et al.                                      Page 3
    police, Lucero crashed into Sami Koulta’s vehicle, killing him instantly. Within minutes of the
    collision, an officer with the Sterling Heights Police Department arrived on the scene. The officer
    observed that Lucero smelled strongly of alcohol, slurred her speech, had red, watery eyes and had
    urinated on herself. Tests confirmed that Lucero’s blood alcohol level was 0.11, which was .01 over
    the then-legal limit.
    Prosecutors charged Lucero with second-degree murder. She pleaded guilty and is currently
    incarcerated. Koulta’s estate filed a civil action against Lucero and obtained a $750,000 judgment.
    Koulta’s estate filed a number of other suits, including a complaint in federal district court
    against the city and the three officers. The federal-court complaint raised several federal and state
    claims, including a § 1983 claim based on the violation of Koulta’s substantive due process rights.
    While the district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state-law claims, it
    concluded, in denying the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, that the claimant had
    established a prima facie case of substantive-due-process liability and that the claimant’s
    constitutional rights were clearly established.
    II.
    Qualified immunity shields police officers from claims of this sort unless (1) they violated
    a “constitutional right” that (2) “was clearly established.” Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 201
    (2001). We “must” address the “initial inquiry,” the Supreme Court has instructed, before we may
    reach the “clearly established” question. 
    Id. A. The
    Due Process Clause does not “require[] the State to protect the life, liberty, and property
    of its citizens against invasion by private actors,” DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc.
    Servs., 
    489 U.S. 189
    , 195 (1989), except in two situations—one recognized by DeShaney, the other
    recognized by our court. Under the DeShaney exception: “[W]hen the State takes a person into its
    custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution imposes upon it a corresponding duty
    to assume some responsibility for his safety and general well-being.” 
    Id. at 199–200.
    Under our
    exception: When the State “cause[s] or greatly increase[s] the risk of harm to its citizens . . .
    through its own affirmative acts,” it has established a “special danger” and a corresponding duty to
    protect its citizens from that risk. Kallstrom v. City of Columbus, 
    136 F.3d 1055
    , 1066 (6th Cir.
    1998). An individual wishing to bring a claim under this second exception, what has come to be
    known as a “state-created danger” claim, must show three things: “‘(1) an affirmative act by the
    state which either created or increased the risk that the plaintiff would be exposed to an act of
    violence by a third party; (2) a special danger to the plaintiff wherein the state’s actions placed the
    plaintiff specifically at risk, as distinguished from a risk that affects the public at large; and (3) the
    state knew or should have known that its actions specifically endangered the plaintiff.’” Jones v.
    Reynolds, 
    438 F.3d 685
    , 690 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting Cartwright v. City of Marine City, 
    336 F.3d 487
    , 493 (6th Cir. 2003)).
    Koulta’s estate cannot bring this claim under the DeShaney exception. The officers never
    placed Koulta in protective custody or otherwise restrained his liberty to the point where he could
    not take care of himself.
    Nor, for the reasons that follow, can Koulta’s estate satisfy the requirements for bringing a
    state-created-danger claim.
    No. 06-1539           Koulta v. City of Center Line, et al.                                    Page 4
    1.
    The estate, to begin, cannot satisfy the “affirmative act” requirement. Under this inquiry,
    an officer’s failure to act will not satisfy the test but an officer’s affirmative acts may satisfy it.
    Because it is sometimes difficult to distinguish action from inaction—does, for example, an officer’s
    decision to permit someone he knows to have been drinking to continue driving without
    administering a breathalyzer test fall on one side of the line or the other?—we have refined the test.
    Rather than focusing on the often metaphysical question of whether officer behavior amounts to
    affirmative conduct or not, we have focused on “whether [the victim] was safer before the state
    action than he was after it.” 
    Cartwright, 336 F.3d at 493
    . If the claimant thus cannot identify
    conduct “by the state which either created or increased the risk” of harm to which Koulta was
    exposed, 
    Jones, 438 F.3d at 690
    ; see 
    Kallstrom, 136 F.3d at 1066
    , our precedents instruct us to
    consider the officers’ “conduct as ‘falling on the inaction side of the line.’” 
    Jones, 438 F.3d at 692
    (quoting Bukowski v. City of Akron, 
    326 F.3d 702
    , 709 (6th Cir. 2003)) (brackets omitted); see also
    May v. Franklin County Comm’rs, 
    437 F.3d 579
    , 586 (6th Cir. 2006); McQueen v. Beecher Cmty.
    Schs., 
    433 F.3d 460
    , 467 (6th Cir. 2006); Jackson v. Schultz, 
    429 F.3d 586
    , 591–92 (6th Cir. 2005);
    Gazette v. City of Pontiac, 
    41 F.3d 1061
    , 1065–66 (6th Cir. 1994).
    The risk of harm in this case was that Lucero’s drinking and driving would injure someone.
    As a matter of law, Koulta’s estate has failed to show that the officers “created” or “increased” that
    risk. Before they arrived on the scene, Lucero (by her own admission) already had gotten in her car
    four times to drive after she got a “little buzzed” from the first 40-ounce beer she consumed, JA 165:
    once to drive to the store to get the second 40-ounce beer; once to drive back to the Offrink’s house
    after buying the beer; once to drive to the house of a friend of Frank Offrink’s, all while finishing
    the second 40-ounce beer, throwing the empty bottle out the window and taking a Paxil; and once
    more to return to the Offrink’s house. On this record, the officers did not “create” or “increase” the
    risk that Lucero would drink and drive. Lucero’s proclivity to engage in risky, and illegal, behavior
    had blossomed long before the officers arrived on the scene.
    The officers’ failure to administer a breathalyzer test (or otherwise to determine the extent
    of Lucero’s drinking) before ordering her to leave the property may well have been negligent, but
    it did not “create” or “increase” the danger—of Lucero drinking and driving—that pre-dated their
    arrival on the scene. The same is true of the officers’ decision to order Lucero to leave the property.
    Consistent with the homeowner’s understandable request, the officers told Lucero to “go home”
    when they arrived at the Offrink’s home, JA 168, and, when Lucero did not leave after saying she
    would, they ordered her to leave the property immediately. The claimant cannot maintain that
    Lucero never would have been drinking and driving that night but for the officers’ conduct—given
    her acknowledged behavior before they arrived. And the claimant cannot maintain that Lucero
    would not have driven to the scene of the accident but for the officers’ conduct. As Lucero
    acknowledges, the officers told her to “go home” when they first arrived and later ordered her to
    leave the property. Neither directive required Lucero to drive home if she lacked the capacity to do
    so. Nothing prevented her either (1) from driving down the block, then calling a cab or waiting to
    drive the rest of the way home after becoming sober or (2) from asking the officers for assistance
    in getting home.
    In the final analysis, Lucero’s admitted proclivity to drink and drive that evening placed
    Koulta (and other people using the roadways) in as much danger before the officers arrived as
    afterwards. And much as the officers were in a position to head off the tragedy that materialized
    minutes later, a reality (and memory) that no court decision will eliminate, their conduct was no
    more an affirmative risk-creating act than the conduct of the officers in DeShaney (who returned an
    abused child to the custody of his abusive father) or Bukowski (who returned a mentally disabled girl
    to the stranger who had been sexually abusing her).
    No. 06-1539            Koulta v. City of Center Line, et al.                                      Page 5
    Neither Pena v. DePrisco, 
    432 F.3d 98
    (2d Cir. 2005), nor Reed v. Gardner, 
    986 F.2d 1122
    (7th Cir. 1993), undermines this conclusion. In Pena, the Second Circuit held that the claimant
    satisfied the affirmative-act requirement by showing that an off-duty officer’s colleagues both
    condoned his excessive drinking and driving throughout the course of a day and asked for rides from
    him. 
    See 432 F.3d at 111
    . There, unlike here, the on-duty officers increased the driver’s level of
    impairment (by condoning his drinking) and increased the risk that he would drive while impaired
    (by requesting rides from him). In Reed, the Seventh Circuit held that the claimant satisfied the
    requirement when officers arrested a sober driver, took her into custody and left the keys with her
    visibly drunk husband. 
    See 986 F.2d at 1126
    . There, unlike here, the risk that the husband would
    drive while drunk did not exist until the officers took the wife into custody and prevented her from
    continuing to drive the car. Both cases exhibit the sort of intervening affirmative act—creating a
    risk of harm in the one case (Reed) and exacerbating it in the other (Pena)—that our state-created-
    danger cases require.
    2.
    Even if there were doubt about this point, our cases leave little room for doubt about the
    claimant’s inability to satisfy the “special danger” requirement, which required it to show that “the
    state’s actions placed [Koulta] specifically at risk, as distinguished from a risk that affects the public
    at large.” 
    Jones, 438 F.3d at 690
    ; see 
    Kallstrom, 136 F.3d at 1066
    . In the past, we have noted,
    claimants have satisfied this requirement when “the government could have specified whom it was
    putting at risk, nearly to the point of naming the possible victim or victims.” 
    Jones, 438 F.3d at 696
    ;
    see Caldwell v. City of Louisville, 120 F. App’x 566, 573 (6th Cir. Dec. 9, 2004); Waller v. Trippett,
    49 F. App’x 45, 50 (6th Cir. Oct. 10, 2002); 
    Kallstrom, 136 F.3d at 1067
    . When, by contrast, “the
    victim was not identifiable at the time of the alleged state action/inaction,” we have rejected the
    claim. 
    Jones, 438 F.3d at 697
    ; see Schroder v. City of Fort Thomas, 
    412 F.3d 724
    , 729 (6th Cir.
    2005) (rejecting claim by mother on behalf of her son killed by a car traveling over the speed limit
    because city’s failure either to enforce the existing speed limit on a neighborhood street or to lower
    it did not put a discrete group of people at risk).
    This case falls into the second category. Koulta was exposed to a risk that affected the public
    at large, not a discrete group of individuals. Lucero’s behavior endangered every driver and
    passenger on the road that evening, and Koulta was the unlucky driver who happened to be in the
    wrong place at the wrong time. Nor can the estate overcome this impediment by contending that
    Koulta was a member of a more discrete group—of individuals driving on the streets between
    Frank’s house and Lucero’s house in the early hours of September 13. We have no idea how many
    people would be in that group, and the claimant offers no help in explaining why this group is
    sufficiently discrete to satisfy this requirement.
    Attempting to analogize this fact pattern to McQueen v. Beecher Community Schools,
    
    433 F.3d 460
    (6th Cir. 2006), the claimant does its case more harm than good. There, school
    officials left five children unattended in a classroom with an armed and dangerous student, and we
    held that this group was sufficiently discrete to satisfy the requirement. Yet any driver on the road
    on the evening in question was placed at risk by Lucero’s conduct—a far less discrete group than
    five children and a far less discrete group than, say, the single neighborhood street at issue in
    Schroder. See 
    Schroder, 412 F.3d at 729
    ; Jones v. City of Carlisle, 
    3 F.3d 945
    , 949–50 (6th Cir.
    1993).
    B.
    Even if we assumed for the sake of argument that the officers’ actions violated Koulta’s
    substantive due process rights, his estate cannot show that these rights were “clearly established”
    at the time of the accident. Not just in 2002, but since then as well, our cases have failed to
    No. 06-1539           Koulta v. City of Center Line, et al.                                     Page 6
    recognize a “state-created danger” claim unless the State indeed created the danger—either by
    increasing the risk of harm to third parties by its affirmative conduct or by doing something that
    endangers a discrete member or group of the public. See, e.g., 
    Jones, 438 F.3d at 698
    ; 
    Schroder, 412 F.3d at 729
    . The estate has not identified a case from our circuit or any other that clearly establishes
    the contours of a substantive-due-process right of action on facts like these.
    III.
    For these reasons, we reverse.