Gladden, Jr. v. Richbourg, et al., No. 12-3918 (8th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CasePlaintiff, both individually and as the administrator of Bradley Gladden's estate, filed suit against officers and the police chief, alleging that the officers violated Bradley's rights under 42 U.S.C. 1983 and the Arkansas Civil Rights Act, Ark. Code Ann. 16-123-101 et seq., as well as committed the tort of wrongful death under the Arkansas Wrongful Death Act, Ark. Code Ann. 16-62-101 et seq. Bradley had requested that the officers give him a ride to his sister's house in the next county because he was intoxicated, but the officers instead left him at an isolated off-ramp at the county line, which was the edge of the officers' jurisdiction. The officers instructed Bradley to seek help at a nearby factory. Bradley ended up dying of hypothermia a half-mile from the drop-off, in the opposite direction of the factory. Where the Fourteenth Amendment generally does not give private citizens a constitutional right to police assistance, the court concluded that plaintiff could not establish that a special relationship existed because Bradley accepted a ride from the officers and was sober enough to make this decision rationally; and Bradley cannot avail himself of the constitutional right to police assistance based on a custodial relationship with the state. The court also concluded that Bradley's official capacity claims failed where, assuming that it was the Police Department's custom to give rides to persons in its jurisdictions, plaintiff could not demonstrate an affirmative duty of care. Consequently, plaintiff's state law claims also failed. Accordingly, the court concluded that the district court did not err in granting the officers summary judgment based on qualified immunity, in granting official immunity to all defendants, and dismissing the state-law claims.
Court Description: Civil case - Civil rights. District court did not err in granting defendant police officers summary judgment based on qualified immunity on plaintiff's claim that they violated his decedent's civil rights when they dropped him at an isolated off-ramp on a cold December night knowing that he was intoxicated and unable to care for himself; no special relationship existed entitling the victim to police assistance under the Fourteenth Amendment since the undisputed facts demonstrated he voluntarily accepted a ride to the location and was sober enough to make the decision rationally; with respect to plaintiff's claims against the police chief, assuming the North Little Rock Police Department had a policy of taking intoxicated person to remote locations, plaintiff could not establish the custom implicated either of the special situations where police have an affirmative duty of care - a person is in their custody or the officer affirmatively placed them in danger - and his official capacity claims must fail; as he had failed to establish his federal claims, plaintiff's state law civil rights and wrongful death claims must fail.
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