Rushanda Mize v. Ralph Tedford , 375 F. App'x 497 ( 2010 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 10a0258n.06
    09-1775                                      FILED
    Apr 26, 2010
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                         LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    RUSHANDA MIZE,                                    )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                       )
    )
    v.                                                )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    RALPH TEDFORD and the CITY OF FLINT,              )   EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    )
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Before: GUY, BOGGS and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. The district court awarded Rushanda Mize $350,000 on her § 1983
    sexual-assault claim against former police officer Ralph Tedford but found no liability on the part
    of the City of Flint. Mize appeals, arguing that the damages against Tedford should have included
    punitive damages and that the city’s failure to supervise Tedford caused the assault. We affirm.
    I.
    In the early morning of September 2, 2007, Tedford stopped Mize when her car swerved
    across the lane. Tedford drove Mize to an empty police mini-station, telling her that he could arrest
    her but also telling her “how sexy [she] looked and all of that stuff.” R.26-3 27. Then, according
    to Mize, Tedford forcibly raped her.
    09-1775
    Mize v. Tedford
    Later that day, Mize went to the hospital, where a social worker called the police to report
    the rape. Two detectives came to the hospital to talk with Mize, who identified Tedford from a book
    of photographs. That afternoon, the police gathered evidence at the mini-station where the incident
    had occurred, and early the next morning two Flint Police officers and one Michigan State Police
    officer interviewed Tedford. Tedford painted a somewhat more consensual picture of the encounter
    but did not deny that he inappropriately had sex with Mize. At the conclusion of the interview, the
    officers placed Tedford on administrative leave, taking his badge, gun and cruiser. Tedford later
    resigned and pleaded guilty to willful neglect of duty, receiving a sentence of 60 days in jail.
    In February 2008, Mize filed this § 1983 lawsuit against Tedford and the City of Flint in
    federal court, alleging that Tedford’s rape violated her civil rights and that the city’s policies caused
    the rape. Although Mize served Tedford with her complaint in March 2008, and although she
    deposed him in April 2009, Tedford failed to enter an appearance or otherwise defend the case. The
    court issued a default judgment against him in the amount of $350,000. The court granted summary
    judgment in favor of the city, holding that Mize could not establish “a constitutionally deficient
    failure to supervise” Tedford. Mize appeals.
    II.
    Mize first argues that the district court should have broken down the judgment into punitive
    and compensatory damages. Although courts may award punitive damages under § 1983, see Smith
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    09-1775
    Mize v. Tedford
    v. Wade, 
    461 U.S. 30
    , 35 (1983), she notes that the court’s judgment simply states “$350,000,”
    without specifying how much of the sum, if any, constitutes punitive damages.
    The court’s award of damages, however, is consistent with Mize’s generally phrased requests.
    Although she briefly raised the possibility of “punitive and exemplary damages” in her complaint,
    R.1 at 7, she never mentioned them again. Her motion for default judgment and the accompanying
    brief both ended with an entreaty for “a default judgment . . . in the amount of Three Million Five
    Hundred Thousand Dollars ($3,500,000),” without specifying the type of damages sought. R.28 at
    2, 5. Neither document said anything about punitive damages, and the brief focused on the typical
    grounds for compensatory, not punitive, damages, describing the harm to the plaintiff rather than the
    need for punishing the defendant or deterring similar wrongdoing in the future. See Cooper Indus.,
    Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc., 
    532 U.S. 424
    , 432 (2001) (explaining the difference). At the
    hearing on the motion, Mize’s counsel also focused on the harm to the plaintiff instead of the
    conduct of the defendant. When the court asked for an explanation of the damages she requested,
    her counsel did not seek punitives but simply responded, “[w]ell, it’s a request, Your Honor. . . .
    [W]e are not talking . . . in terms of hard damages. There is nothing, nothing I think that can really
    be black-boarded.” R.47 at 34–35.
    We know of no precedent, and neither apparently does Mize, requiring a court independently
    to award punitive damages even when the plaintiff does not ask for them and does not present a
    theory for awarding them. We see no reason to invent any such rule now.
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    09-1775
    Mize v. Tedford
    To the extent Mize means to argue that the district court should have given her more
    damages, whether compensatory or punitive, we disagree. After accounting for the facts of this case
    and various comparable verdicts, the district court reached a number of $350,000, roughly in the
    middle of the range of the other verdicts it examined. The court’s damages were lower than the
    amount Mize requested and below the amount in several cases Mize has subsequently found (Mize
    presented no examples of comparable damage awards to the district court), but that does not make
    the award erroneous and certainly not clearly erroneous, the standard for reversal. See Moorer v.
    Baptist Mem’l Health Care Sys., 
    398 F.3d 469
    , 485 (6th Cir. 2005). We affirm the default judgment.
    III.
    Mize separately contests the district court’s conclusion that the City of Flint bears no liability
    for Tedford’s wrong. To survive a motion for summary judgment on municipal liability, Mize had
    to show that the evidence would allow a reasonable jury to conclude that Mize suffered a
    constitutional injury and that the city’s “policy or custom . . . inflict[ed] the injury.” Monell v. Dep’t
    of Soc. Servs., 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 694 (1978). She cannot meet this last requirement.
    Far from “inflict[ing]” Tedford’s assault on Mize, the city’s police department forbade such
    conduct. The internal investigation of the incident found that Tedford had violated no fewer than
    fourteen departmental policies. Tedford himself understood that he “would [get] in trouble” if
    caught. R.31-3 at 68. And the department promptly removed him from duty, forced him to resign
    and obtained a commitment from him that he would never serve in law enforcement again.
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    09-1775
    Mize v. Tedford
    Acknowledging that the department did not encourage or condone Tedford’s behavior, Mize
    maintains that the department’s lack of supervision allowed the incident to happen. This “failure to
    supervise” theory of municipal liability is a rare one. Most agree that it exists and some allege they
    have seen it, but few actual specimens have been proved. It appears to relate to two more common
    theories of municipal liability: an inadequate-training theory, see, e.g., Ellis ex rel. Pendergrass v.
    Cleveland Mun. Sch. Dist., 
    455 F.3d 690
    , 700 (6th Cir. 2006), or an “acquiesce[nce]” theory, e.g.,
    Leach v. Shelby County Sheriff, 
    891 F.2d 1241
    , 1246, 1248 (6th Cir. 1989). We need not develop
    a precise classification, however, because Mize’s claim against the city, whatever its form, cannot
    succeed.
    However characterized, Mize’s claim must meet the “rigorous standards of culpability and
    causation” that the Supreme Court has required when a plaintiff claims that a municipality has
    indirectly caused a violation of federal rights in spite of its “facially lawful” policies. Bd. of County
    Comm’rs of Bryan County v. Brown, 
    520 U.S. 397
    , 405, 407 (1997). She must show that the city
    acted with “deliberate indifference” to the risk of sexual assault and that its deliberate indifference
    was the “moving force” behind the assault. 
    Id. at 404, 407
    ; City of Canton v. Harris, 
    489 U.S. 378
    ,
    388–89 (1989). To put it another way, she must show that the relevant policymaker, whether the
    police chief or the mayor, disregarded a “known or obvious consequence of his action,” which
    caused the constitutional violation. Bryan County, 
    520 U.S. at 404, 410
    .
    No reasonable jury could find that Tedford’s superiors were deliberately indifferent to the
    danger that he might rape someone like Mize. Tedford had no history of misconduct that gave the
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    09-1775
    Mize v. Tedford
    department notice of the risks of putting him on patrol duty. He had served the department for
    eighteen years, all the while maintaining a good reputation and a clean record. The Flint Police
    Department did not have a pattern of sexual assaults by its officers, as the preceding two decades saw
    no more than a handful of sexual-assault allegations against its officers. And uncontested evidence
    showed that the department investigated every allegation and, as in Tedford’s case, fired the officer
    in question if it found substance behind the allegation. What we said in a prior case applies with
    equal force here:
    There is no basis to conclude on this record . . . that there was a “high degree of
    predictability” that [Tedford] or any other employee was likely to rape anyone,
    especially considering that [Tedford’s] background does not reveal any inclination
    to assault another sexually. The intentional, violent act that a [police officer]
    performed far outside the scope of his duties cannot be something that was “obvious”
    to occur.
    Doe v. Magoffin County Fiscal Court, 174 F. App’x 962, 970 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting Bryan
    County, 
    520 U.S. at
    409–10).
    Mize responds that the department did not supervise Tedford closely and that, had the
    department given him less free rein, he might not have had the opportunity to rape her. Maybe so.
    But opportunity alone, without reason to suspect that it will lead to a constitutional violation, does
    not establish deliberate indifference. At best, it establishes negligence, which “will not suffice.”
    Bryan County, 
    520 U.S. at 407
    ; see 
    id. at 421
     (Souter, J., dissenting) (“The Court is certainly correct
    in emphasizing the need to show more than mere negligence.”). The Supreme Court has required
    the higher standard precisely because of cases like this one, recognizing that “[i]n virtually every
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    09-1775
    Mize v. Tedford
    instance where a person has had his or her constitutional rights violated by a city employee, a § 1983
    plaintiff will be able to point to something the city ‘could have done’ to prevent the unfortunate
    incident.” City of Canton, 
    489 U.S. at 392
    . To allow such claims, without more, would create the
    kind of “de facto respondeat superior liability” that the Court has made clear does not exist in this
    area. 
    Id.
    Mize adds that her expert concluded that the department “ratifi[ed] . . . misconduct” by
    Tedford and the members of his unit. Mize Br. at 27. Yet neither Mize nor her expert specify this
    “misconduct,” and the record turns up little. Mize notes that Tedford often failed to check in with
    police dispatch as required and did not even work during some shifts.             For example, the
    investigators, in following up on Mize’s rape accusations, found him at home when he was supposed
    to be working. On a broader scale, Tedford’s supervisor remembered four to five complaints made
    against Tedford’s fellow inspectors in his unit, ranging from “parking in a wrong spot behind the
    police station” to having “too many cars at a restaurant.” R.30-4 at 48. Perhaps these facts suggest
    that the department “ratifi[ed]” skipping work or parking improperly, but none suggest a danger of
    rape, much less ratification of such egregious conduct. On this record, a jury could not reasonably
    conclude that this admittedly egregious assault stemmed from the city’s deliberate indifference to
    Mize’s constitutional rights.
    IV.
    For these reasons, we affirm.
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