LAUREN WALLIS, by and through her Guardian Ad Litem, REBECCA LYNN WALLIS, Guardian Ad Litem; JESSIE WALLIS, by and through his Guardian Ad Litem, WILLIAM LAWRENCE WALLIS, Guardian Ad Litem; REBECCA LYNN WALLIS; WILLIAM LAWRENCE WALLIS, Plaintiffs-Appellants, No. 97-55579 v. D.C. No. CV-93-00135-MLH MARY SPENCER, M.D.; CANDACE YOUNG, PH.D.; RACHEL STECKS; ORDER AND CITY OF SAN DIEGO; CITY OFAMENDED ESCONDIDO; CHILD PROTECTIVE OPINION SERVICES, A DIVISION OF THE SAN DIEGO COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES; WELLS GARDNER; CATHY MCLENNON; CANELA CAVEDA; SUSAN GOULIAN; GRACE GOODALL; and DOES 1 through 300, Inclusive, Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of California
Marilyn L. Huff, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
November 6, 1998--Pasadena, California
Filed September 14, 1999
Amended February 7, 2000
Before: Myron Bright,* Stephen Reinhardt, and
Pamela Ann Rymer, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Reinhardt;
Dissent by Judge Rymer
1970 in which her father predicted the killing of a child "on the third
full moon after two blue moons." One of Rachel's
multiple personalities told Young that her father's prediction referred to
Jessie's murder on the fall equinox, supposedly a
satanic "high holiday." In 1991, the fall equinox fell on September
23, one day before Jessie's third birthday.
As a marriage and family counselor, Young was required by California law to
report child abuse. Young called Sue Plante at CPS and recounted Rachel's tale.
Plante called a child abuse hotline. The ensuing referral repeated Rachel's
story, noting that she was currently hospitalized for psychiatric reasons, and
manifested multiple personality and "decompensation" during cult
holidays. In addition, the referral stated that according to Rachel, Becky might
be unaware
of Bill's cult activity.
Plante's supervisor told her to call the Escondido Police Department (EPD). EPD
assigned the case to Officer Brian Knodel. Plante told Knodel of Young's
referral, including Young's statement that Rachel's father owned Witch Way, a
boat docked in San Diego. The next day, Knodel told Plant that he could not
locate the Wallises at the address Rachel provided because it was over a year
old--likely due to the estrangement caused by Rachel's earlier false report to
CPS-- and that he did not try to contact them at work because he did not want to
alert them to CPS's intervention activities.
In a recommendation to a CPS caseworker, Plante asserted that taking the Wallis
children into protective custody was the only possible course of action. CPS
social worker Karen Cabico got the assignment of deciding whether the children
should be picked up and placed in foster care pending an investigation. While
trying to locate the Wallis home on September 20, Cabico conferred with Knodel
and Plante; Plante told her that a district attorney had told her that they had
"enough to pick up the kids." Knodel concluded his involvement in the
matter on September 20 by recommending to his superiors that the case be
submitted for investigation or follow-up by Plante. EPD assigned the case to
juvenile detectives Diana Pitcher and Ralph Claytor. According to Pitcher, all
her conversations with Plante and Cabico involved the supposed ritual murder of
Jessie. Young reiterated Rachel's disclosures to Pitcher, who purportedly
believed them because Young possessed "expertise" in the subject of
ritual abuse.
According to Pitcher and Claytor, Plante and Cabico told them that there was a
"pickup order." Claytor also asserted that his involvement in the
matter was limited to enforcement of the order. Pitcher's supervisor later
stated that he believed that CPS had a juvenile court order to pick up the
children, and that EPD would do so in the normal course of its activities. No
pickup order ever existed, and at that point, CPS had not yet made a decision to
seek protective custody of the children.
When Becky left work on September 22, three EPD vehicles followed her. When she
noticed that she was being followed, Becky became frightened and drove around in
a panic. When the police pulled her over and said that they needed to
"check" her children, she took them to her home and consented to their
entry.
At the Wallis home, the children were asleep and apparently well cared for. The
officers noted nothing suspicious. When Pitcher interviewed Lauren, the child
denied that anyone had abused her or touched inappropriately. Pitcher told the
Wallises that she was taking custody of the children. Pitcher later said that
she did so, and did not interview Becky or Bill, because of the nonexistent
pickup order and completed CPS investigation. The officers also told the
Wallises that there was a court order to pick up the children. Pitcher and
Claytor took the children to Hillcrest Receiving Home, a
county shelter.
Without a court order or notice to the Wallises, Pitcher had the children submit
to an evidentiary physical examination at a local hospital. The medical
procedures performed by appellee Dr. Mary Spencer included body cavity
examinations and photographs. Spencer reported to appellee Wells Gardner, CPS's
court intervention worker, that the examinations had revealed evidence of sexual
molestation of both children. According to Spencer, Dr. Susan Horowitz
concurred.
Gardner filed a petition in juvenile court alleging that Bill was going to
sacrifice Jessie to Satan, and that both children had been sexually abused. The
juvenile court referee rejected the allegation of occult sacrifice as a basis
for retaining custody of the children, but concluded that Spencer's report was
sufficient for that purpose.
Two months later, Horowitz informed Gardner that Spencer's statement in her
report that Horowitz supported the finding of sexual abuse was false. According
to Horowitz, her full review of the CPS file showed that there had not been any
abuse of the children, and that there were normal physiological explanations for
what Spencer had concluded were symptoms of sexual molestation. Gardner
immediately released the children to their grandmother and moved to dismiss the
juvenile court case. Lauren and Jessie were returned to their parents on
December 6, 1991. After that date, no one ever contended that either child had
been sexually abused, that there was any evidence to support that charge, or
that Bill had planned to murder Jessie.
The Wallises sued Spencer, Young, Stecks, CPS, Gardner, and appellees County of
San Diego and City of San Diego under 42 U.S.C. S 1983 for violations of their
constitutional rights. CPS, the County and other defendants settled with the
Wallises.
Pitcher gave conflicting versions of her conversation with Young. In deposition,
she said that she believed Rachel's tale because the "expertise" of
Young and a doctor with whom she had not spoken; in the affidavit, she claimed
that she relied on Young's expressed fear for the safety of the children.
On a defense motion for summary judgment, Pitcher, Claytor, and Pitcher's
supervisor testified that there was a practice of enforcing "orders"
to take protective custody of children without seeing the order.
The district court granted summary judgment for the remaining defendants. The
court of appeals reversed as to the City, holding that the action was not barred
by the juvenile court referee's decision.
On remand, the district court again granted summary judgment for the City,
concluding that none of the Wallises' constitutional rights had been violated
because EPD had reasonable cause to remove the children with or without a court
order. The court added that even if the Wallises' rights were violated, they
failed to show that EPD had a policy that caused the violations. In addition,
the court determined that the City was immune from any state-law remedy because
the police acted reasonably in removing the children from their home and
subjecting them to the investigatory body-cavity examinations. Although no
officers had been sued in their individual capacities, the court went on to rule
that the officers were entitled to absolute and qualified immunity, and that
their immunity was transferable to the City. The Wallises appealed.
[1] A municipality can be sued for constitutional deprivations visited pursuant
to governmental custom. To avoid summary judgment, a plaintiff need show only
that there is a question of fact regarding whether there is a custom or policy
that caused a constitutional deprivation. The Wallises were entitled to prevail
if they introduced sufficient evidence to show that there was an issue of
material fact as to whether their constitutional rights were violated, and the
violations were caused by police department custom or practice.
[2] Parents and children have a constitutional right to live together without
governmental interference. That right is an essential liberty interest protected
by the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee that parents and children will not be
separated by the state without due process of law except in an emergency. The
Wallises produced more than enough evidence to create a genuine issue of
material fact as to whether removal of the children from their parents' custody
was violative of their constitutional rights.
[3] No court authorized anyone to remove Lauren and Jessie from their home. [4]
The City did not seriously challenge the contention that the officers took
custody of Lauren and Jessie because they mistakenly believed that there was an
out- standing court order. Nor did the City argue that either a mistaken belief
that a court order exists, or reliance on an erroneous statement to that effect
from a social worker, satisfies the requirement for a court order, or provides
reasonable cause for the seizure of the children.
[5] Officials may remove a child from the custody of its parents without prior
judicial authorization only if the information they possess provides reasonable
cause to believe that the child is in imminent danger of serious bodily injury,
and that the scope of the intrusion is reasonably necessary to avert that
injury. The existence of reasonable cause and the related questions are all
questions of fact to be determined by the jury. Summary judgment in favor of the
defendants is improper unless, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable
to the plaintiffs, it is clear that no reasonable jury could conclude that the
plaintiffs' constitutional rights were violated.
[6] Summary judgment was improper in this case if a material question of fact
existed regarding whether there was reasonable cause to believe that the Wallis
children faced an immediate threat of serious physical harm or death, or the
actions taken by the officers exceeded the permissible scope of the action
necessary to protect them from that threat. There were disputes of material fact
with respect to both questions.
[7] The state may not remove children from their parents' custody without a
court order unless there is specific, articulable evidence that provides
reasonable cause to believe that a child is in imminent danger of abuse.
Moreover, police cannot seize children suspected of being abused or neglected
unless reasonable avenues of investigation are first pursued, particularly when
it is not clear that a crime has or will be committed. Whether a reasonable
avenue of investigation exists depends in part on the time element and the
nature of the allegations.
[8] At the time Lauren and Jessie were removed, the police had received a report
from a mental health worker that an institutionalized mental patient, who had an
extensive history of delusional disorders and multiple personalities, had told a
story of anticipated ritual murder by Jessie's father--a story that would appear
to an objective observer clearly to be founded in mental illness. The juvenile
court referee who heard the dependency petition rejected those charges as a
basis for removing Lauren and Jessie from their parents' custody.
[9] Under the circumstances, a reasonable jury could have concluded that the
information possessed by the officers was insufficient to give rise to
reasonable cause, or that the officers' conduct in failing to investigate the
mental patient's bizarre tale before acting was not reasonable. Given the
uncertainty regarding the information possessed by the officers at the time they
removed the children, the contradictions in Pitcher's testimony and sworn
statements, the absence of any significant investigation into the allegations,
and the extraordinary nature of the allegations, it could not be said as a
matter of law that reasonable cause existed, or that the officers acted
reasonably.
[10] Even if state action to protect Jessie from future satanic sacrifice by his
father were reasonable, triable issues of fact would have existed regarding
whether the scope and degree of the state interference was justified by the
alleged exigency. Merely because some intrusion on a child's protected privacy
and security interests may be reasonable does not mean that any intrusion is.
[11] The police had no information that Jessie's father's plot extended beyond
the equinox; the imminent danger to Jessie was to occur only on September 23,
1991, a day after the children's seizure. There was a genuine issue of material
fact as to whether the emergency continued for more that the day or two
following the time of the seizure. [12] Furthermore, the police had no
information that implicated the mother in any abuse. A genuine issue of fact
existed as to whether removal of the children from their mother's custody, and
their placement in an institution for an indefinite period, was sufficiently
strictly circumscribed by the exigency that justified the City's intrusion.
[13] It was for the district court on remand to determine whether any City
policy could be held to have caused any violation of the Wallises' rights after
the date of the juvenile court hearing. With respect to the period between the
removal and the hearing, only one alleged violation merited separate
consideration--the subjecting of Lauren and Jessie to invasive medical
examinations at the behest of the police.
[14] The right to family association includes the right of parents to make
important medical decisions for their children, and of the children to have
those decisions made by their parents rather than the state. Barring a
reasonable concern that material evidence might dissipate, or that urgent
medical problems exist requiring immediate attention, the state is required to
notify parents and to obtain judicial approval before children are subjected to
investigatory physical examinations.
[15] Parents have a right to be with their children while they are receiving
medical attention (or to be nearby if there is a valid reason for excluding
them). Children have a corresponding right to the love, comfort, and reassurance
of their parents while they are undergoing medical procedures, particularly
those that are invasive or upsetting.
[16] The Wallises adduced testimony that there was a practice of enforcing
"orders" to take protective custody of children without ever seeing
the order. This was sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact
regarding the existence of a custom or practice of taking children from their
homes based on telephone calls from CPS without adequate safeguards to ensure
that the removal was legal.
[17] The Wallises presented evidence from which it could be inferred that the
EPD customarily took children that it placed at Hillcrest for invasive
investigatory examinations without obtaining a court order, and without
notifying their parents. A reasonable inference could be drawn that it was a
standard operating procedure. [18] The Wallises also produced sufficient
evidence to create a question of fact as to whether these customs and practices
had a direct causal link to the deprivation of the Wallises' constitutional
rights.
[19] The district court incorrectly held that even if the City had policies that
caused the deprivations, it was not liable because any immunities possessed by
the officers were transferred to the City. There are no personal immunities
available vicariously to municipal actors under S 1983. Immunity under S 1983 is
governed by federal law; state law cannot provide immunity from suit for federal
civil rights violations.
[20] Under Cal. Gov. Code S 820.2, [21] a public employee cannot be held liable
for injury resulting from his act or omission, where the act or omission was the
result of the exercise of discretion vested in him, whether or not such
discretion was abused. However, S 820.2 does not extend to non-discretionary
actions, such as battery and false imprisonment.
[22] As to the removal of the children, many of the relevant facts were in
dispute, including the question of whether the police took Lauren and Jessie
into custody pursuant to a request from CPS, the agency in which the discretion
to make such decisions was vested. Summary judgment would not be proper on the
basis of so unclear and undeveloped a record. With respect to the examinations,
summary judgment on S 820.2 immunity grounds was equally inappropriate. The
Wallises contended that Pitcher was carrying out a mandatory City policy that
did not involve the exercise of any discretion.
Judge Rymer dissented, observing that no triable issue of fact existed regarding
a City policy on physical examinations of children who were taken into custody
on the basis of alleged sexual abuse.
_________________________________________________________________
COUNSEL
Paul Leehey, Fallbrook, California, and Donnie Cox, Carlsbad, California, for
the plaintiffs-appellants.
Jeffrey Epp, City Attorney, and Mark Waggoner, Assistant City Attorney,
Escondido, California, for the defendant-
appellee.
_________________________________________________________________
ORDER
The majority amends the majority opinion, slip opinion filed September 14, 1999,
as follows:
1. Insert the following footnote at the end of the last sentence of the
paragraph following head-note 14, Slip Op. p. 11501:
On rehearing, the City and County of San Diego as amicus curiae
argue that these requirements conflict with a state law regarding the medical
examinations of children in protective custody. This law, California Welfare and
Institutions Code S 324.5, was not enacted until 1998, some seven years after
the Wallis children were subjected to the invasive vaginal and anal
examinations. Thus, we have no occasion to consider whether or to what extent
that law is affected by our decision here. We observe, however, that there is no
apparent conflict between the requirements of this opinion and the statute in
question. See, e.g., Tenenbaum v. Williams, 907 F.Supp. 606 (E.D.N.Y. 1995) (on
denial of rehearing, holding that a New York statute allowing local officials to
give consent for medical services for a child in protective custody did not
affect the court's conclusion that due process required that the Commissioner of
Social Services obtain judicial authorization for a purely investigatory
examination issued after notice and an opportunity to be heard had been
furnished to the parents), aff'd in part and vacated in part, 193 F.3d 581, 604
(2d Cir. 1999) ("it cannot be said that the requirement of obtaining the
equivalent of a warrant where practicable imposes intolerable burdens on the
government officer or the courts, would prevent such an officer from taking
necessary action, or tend to render such action ineffective").
2. Renumber the subsequent footnotes accordingly.
_________________________________________________________________
OPINION
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
This case involves a conflict between the legitimate role of the state in
protecting children from abusive parents, and the rights of children and parents
to be free from arbitrary and undue governmental interference. Such conflicts
occur with increasing frequency these days. The problem of child abuse is a
critical one, with deep personal and social costs. For too long, intra-familial
sexual abuse was considered to be a "private" matter. Today, the law
is changing. As we develop a greater awareness of the extent and severity of
this difficult and painful problem, society has finally begun to treat
intra-familial child abuse as a serious criminal offense.
Because the swing of every pendulum brings with it potential adverse
consequences, it is important to emphasize that in the area of child abuse, as
with the investigation and prosecution of all crimes, the state is constrained
by the substantive and procedural guarantees of the Constitution. The fact that
the suspected crime may be heinous -- whether it involves children or adults --
does not provide cause for the state to ignore the rights of the accused or any
other parties. Otherwise, serious injustices may result. In cases of alleged
child abuse, governmental failure to abide by constitutional constraints may
have deleterious long-term consequences for the child and, indeed, for the
entire family. Ill-considered and improper governmental action may create
significant injury where no problem of any kind previously existed.
Here, the plaintiffs -- two young children and their parents -- have sued the
City of Escondido, among others, for violations of their constitutional rights.
Escondido police officers, evidently acting on the basis of a non-existent court
order, seized the children, aged two and five, placed them in a county-run
institution, and several days later, without obtaining judicial authorization
and without notifying their parents, took them to a hospital for the performance
of highly intrusive anal and vaginal physical examinations. The children were
not returned to their parents for approximately two and one-half months. All of
this occurred after a mental patient who had a long history of delusional
disorders and was confined to a mental institution told her therapist a
fantastic tale of Satanic witchcraft within her family and an impending child
sacrifice. The district court initially granted the City's motion for summary
judgment on the erroneous theory that the action was collaterally estopped by a
preliminary ruling of the juvenile court referee, and we reversed. Subsequently,
the district court again granted the City summary judgment, this time on the
merits. Again, we reverse.
BACKGROUND
In September, 1991, Bill and Becky Wallis lived in San Diego with their
five-year-old daughter Lauren and their two-year-old son, Jessie. At that time,
Bill had worked at the Lucky Supermarket in San Marcos for over ten years; Becky
had worked for a similar period of time at Lucky's in the nearby community of
Escondido.1 Although Bill and Becky Wallis maintained relationships with their
parents, the family had had no contact with Becky's sister, Rachel Stecks, for
the previous 18 months. Rachel, who suffers from a long history of psychiatric
problems, including severe dissociative and multiple personality disorders, had
made a false report to the San Diego County Child Protective Services
("CPS") in April of 1990, alleging that Bill was sexually abusing
Lauren. CPS had investigated the report and found that there was no credible
evidence to support the allegations and no action was taken against the Wallises.
Bill and Becky remained angry at Rachel, however, and terminated their
relationship with her. The following year, Rachel was hospitalized in a
psychiatric facility because she was suicidal and was afraid that she would be
murdered. She reported to her therapist in the hospital, Candace Young, that
Bill Wallis was planning to sacrifice his young son Jessie to Satan at the
"Fall Equinox ritual," and that Bill had told her that Jessie's ritual
murder would be covered up by staging a car accident in which his body would be
burned. Rachel also told Young that both her parents were in a satanic cult, and
that Bill Wallis was also in the cult, but that Becky was not, and indeed
"might not know" about her husband's and parents' cult membership.
Rachel recounted her recently recovered memory "of being with her father in
the woods, with him wearing a cult robe reciting hypnotically `On the third full
moon after two blue moons a child will be killed.' " Rachel believed that
this incident occurred in 1970, some 20 years before Jessie's birth. One of
Rachel's "alter" multiple personalities told Young that the
incantation referred to Jessie and meant that he would be sacrificed to Satan on
the "Fall Equinox," supposedly one of the Satanic "High
Holidays."2 In 1991, the Fall Equinox evidently fell upon September 23, one
day before Jessie's third birthday.
Young, a marriage and family counselor, was at the time a mandated reporter of
child abuse under California law. Rachel's tale (and that of her alters)
apparently caused Young some concern; in any event, she telephoned Sue Plante at
CPS on September 17, 1991. Plante told Young that she needed more information
before she could refer the matter to the child abuse investigation unit. After
two days, Young sent Plante a letter. Plante then phoned the child abuse
hotline, on September 19, 1991. The referral filled out by the hotline worker --
by now a third-hand account of a story told by an institutionalized mental
patient -- indicates that Rachel reported to her therapist that Bill Wallis was
going to sacrifice Jessie to Satan on September 23, 1991. The referral also says
that Rachel was currently hospitalized for psychiatric reasons, and that she has
"multiple personality and decompensates during cult holidays." In
addition, the referral clearly states that, according to the mental patient,
Becky "may not know of husband's cult activity," and noted where Bill
and Becky worked.
Plante also called her supervisor, who advised her to contact the Escondido
Police Department, which she did. The Police Department, in turn, assigned the
case to Officer Brian Knodel. Plante told Knodel the contents of the referral
from Young, including the fact that Rachel wasn't sure that her sister Becky
knew about the cult, and also that Young had told her that Rachel's father owned
a boat docked in San Diego called "Witch Way." The next day, Knodel
reported to Plante that he could not locate the family at the address provided
by Rachel because it was over a year old -- likely due to the fact that Bill and
Becky had cut off contact with Rachel after her earlier false report to CPS --
and that he did not attempt to find them at their jobs "because he did not
want to alert them to the possibility that we were trying to find the child to
intervene."
Plante wrote up her recommendations for the CPS case- worker who would be
assigned to the matter, stating that she felt "we have no choice but to
take the children into protective custody until an investigation can be
done." Plante later testified, however, that she had no recollection of
telling anyone at the Escondido Police Department or at CPS that the children
should be picked up. On September 20, 1991, CPS assigned Karen Cabico to be the
"emergency response social worker." In that capacity, she was the
case-worker charged with deciding whether the circumstances warranted removing
the Wallis children from their home and placing them in foster care. Cabico's
notes from September 20 show that she communicated with both Knodel and Plante
during the effort to locate the family's home. At some point that day, Plante
told Cabico that a district attorney named Jane Via told Plante that "we
have enough to pick up the kids."
Also on September 20, Knodel wrapped up his involvement in the matter by
recommending to his superiors at the Police Department that "this case be
submitted to investigations or be followed up by CPS case worker Sue Plante."
The Police Department assigned the case to juvenile detectives Diana Pitcher and
Ralph Claytor, who continued to search for the family. Cabico testified that she
never told Pitcher or anyone else at the Police Department that it was
authorized to pick up Lauren or Jessie, but that she did not know whether anyone
else at CPS told the police to do so. Pitcher testified that she had no
discussion with anyone from CPS about any allegations of sexual abuse concerning
either Wallis child, and that all of her conversations with Plante and Cabico
involved the supposed "ritual murder" of Jessie. Pitcher also
contacted Young, who reiterated the tale told to her by her institutionalized
patient. Pitcher later said that "in her mind" she believed Rachel's
story because Young had some "expertise " in the area of ritualistic
abuse.3 Pitcher and Claytor both contend that CPS workers Plante and Cabico told
them -- though neither officer can recall the precise facts or circumstances --
that "there was a pickup order." Pitcher testified at her deposition
that she did not believe she was responsible for investigating the case, but
"was really looking at just picking up the children on the order." She
testified that she "knew" that there was a court order though she
never saw one and repeated that she was not conducting an investigation but only
enforcing the supposed order.4 Claytor also testified that he was involved in
investigating the location of the children in order to enforce the CPS pickup
order, but that he was not involved in any investigation of abuse. Pitcher's
supervisor, Ken Burkett, also testified that he believed that there was a
juvenile court order to pick up the children that had previously been obtained
by CPS, and that the Police Department picked them up as it would
"normally" do in that circumstance. It is undisputed that no order
ever existed and that CPS had not yet even reached a decision about whether to
seek protective custody of the children when the police picked them up.
During discovery, Pitcher, Claytor, and Burkett all testified that, at the time
the Wallis children were seized, the Police Department had in effect a practice
of taking "at face value" telephonic representations from CPS that
there was a court order to remove children from their parents' custody. Claytor
testified that "it was not unusual for CPS workers to call and ask for our
units to respond to a particular scene, and tell them that `we have a petition
that's been filed,' or kids have already been made a ward of the court in
response to a petition. That happened fairly often." Burkett, the
supervisor, testified that the Police Department did nothing to verify that a
pickup order existed because there's been a longstanding agreement between law
enforcement agencies, that if I tell you I have a search warrant, up until
recent times, you would be taken at face value that you did, in fact, have a
search warrant. Same way as when I call down to verify that there is a warrant
in the system for someone and make the arrest, I don't physically see it.
Unlike arrest warrants, however, court orders to seize children were not at that
time part of any computerized database and there was no established procedure
for verifying such orders, by xerox, fax, computer, or otherwise. Indeed,
Pitcher testified that in September of 1991 the Department had a settled
practice of not confirming CPS representations that there was a court order to
pick up children. Pitcher was identified by the Police Department as the person
most knowledgeable about the Department's practices regarding taking protective
custody of minors, and she was deposed as such.
On September 21 and 22, the police continued to look for the family in order to
enforce the purported court order, but still did not go to either parent's place
of work. An officer finally went to the Lucky's in Escondido on the afternoon of
September 22 and discovered that Becky did in fact work there and that she was
scheduled to work that evening. The manager of the Lucky's did not have a
current home address for Becky. At some point that day, the police also
discovered that a boat called "Witch's Way" was berthed at a harbor in
the city of Oceanside. They made no inquiry, however, as to the name of the
person or persons who owned or used the boat. The officers decided to have a
"stake out " in the parking lot of the Escondido Lucky's grocery
store. When Becky got off work late that night, three unmarked police cars
followed her. Becky later said that she had become frightened when she realized
that she was being followed, and even went to the Escondido police station in an
effort to get help; however, she was afraid to get out of her car, and drove
around in a panic for two hours. At that point, the police realized that their
"surveillance had been compromised," and pulled her over in the
parking lot of a 7-11 store. There, according to Detective Supervisor Burkett,
the officers identified themselves, told her that they needed to "check
on" the children, and said that if she took them to her house, they would
be able to "sit down and talk about it." Burkett testified, however,
that when the officers made these statements to Becky, they did not want only to
"check on" the children or talk with the Wallises but they intended to
pick up the children based on their belief that there was a court order to do
so. In response to the officers' representations, Becky took the officers to the
family's home and agreed to their entry.
When Becky arrived at her house, accompanied by the police, at around midnight,
her children were asleep. The children appeared well-cared for, and Detective
Claytor acknowledged that there was no sign of anything suspicious.
Nevertheless, Pitcher decided to "interview" Lauren. She required Bill
and Becky to awaken Lauren so that she could question her. According to Pitcher,
the sleepy five year old was "evasive," but told her that they had to
move from the apartment in which they had previously lived because of
"spiders on the walls." Although Pitcher acknowledged that she had no
information from any source that Lauren had ever been sexually abused, she asked
her whether "anybody had ever given her bad touches or abused her."
Lauren denied that anyone had.
Pitcher then told the parents that their children were being taken away from
them. She testified that she took custody of Lauren and Jessie "because of
the order . . .[b]ecause of the investigation that had already taken place in
CPS. " She stated that she "did not know the specifics of how they[CPS]
laid the groundwork to get the kids removed." Pitcher did not interview
Becky or Bill because "we had an order and so I wasn't that concerned with
it." According to Detective Burkett, who was also present at the time, the
police probably told Bill and Becky that there was a court order requiring the
police to pick up the children. At 1:00 a.m. on September 22, 1991, Detectives
Pitcher and Claytor took Lauren and Jessie to the Hillcrest Receiving Home, a
county institution. The children were not allowed to see their parents and cried
for them constantly. Lauren and Jessie were not returned to their parents for
two and one-half months.
Three days after the children were removed from their home, Detective Pitcher
picked them up from the county institution and took them to Palomar Hospital,
where she ordered, on behalf of the Escondido Police Department, an evidentiary
physical examination of both children. No court order was obtained prior to this
examination, which was performed in order to determine whether either child had
been sexually abused. Nor were the parents notified in advance that the
examinations would be conducted. They were not given any opportunity to object
to the intrusive examinations, to suggest conditions under which they might take
place, or to be present when they occurred. Pitcher testified that she took the
children for the examinations "as the officer who had placed the children
in protective custody, or at the request of Child Protective Services, or
both." CPS insists that the exams were conducted at the City's behest, and
the medical report form reflects that the Escondido Police Department was the
"requesting agency."
The medical procedures, conducted by Dr. Mary Spencer, included internal body
cavity examinations of the children, vaginal and anal. Dr. Spencer also took
photographs of both the inside and outside of Lauren's vagina and rectum and
Jessie's rectum. These examinations were conducted on Jessie's third birthday. A
social worker who observed the examinations reported, not surprisingly, that
Lauren was very upset by the procedures and asked for her parents. Following the
examinations, Dr. Spencer reported to Wells Gardner, CPS's "court
intervention worker" that the results disclosed medical evidence that both
children had been molested, and that Dr. Susan Horowitz, a specialist from
Children's Hospital's Sexual Abuse Unit concurred with her findings. On
September 25, 1991, Gardner filed a petition in Juvenile Court alleging that
Bill was going to sacrifice Jessie to Satan and that both children had been
sexually abused. The Juvenile Court referee specifically rejected the
allegations regarding occult sacrifice as a basis for retaining custody of the
children, but determined that Dr. Spencer's report provided sufficient evidence
of sexual abuse to keep them in county custody. Bill and Becky were granted only
one supervised visit per week.
Two months went by. Then, on November 25, Dr. Horowitz sent Gardner a letter
that changed the lives of the Wallis family. It informed CPS that Dr. Spencer's
statement in her report that Dr. Horowitz supported the finding of sexual abuse
was false. In fact, Dr. Horowitz wrote, as of the time of Dr. Spencer's report,
she (Dr. Horowitz) had not had access to the records of Dr. Spencer's
examination, had not performed a full review, and had not offered any
conclusion. Dr. Horowitz's letter further stated that she now had reviewed the
full file and, based on all the evidence, she did not agree with Dr. Spencer's
conclusion that the children had been abused. To the contrary, Dr. Horowitz
concluded that there was no evidence of abuse and that there were alternative,
normal physiological explanations for what Dr. Spencer had observed. Dr.
Horowitz's explanations were based on Lauren's history of vaginal irritation and
infection, as documented in her medical records, as well as other information
contained in those records. Gardner, to his credit, immediately released the
children to their maternal grandmother, and moved swiftly to dismiss the case in
Juvenile Court. On December 6, 1991, Lauren and Jessie were returned by court
order to the custody of their parents. No one now contends that either child was
ever sexually or physically abused, that there was ever any evidence of any
abuse by their parents, or that Bill Wallis had ever had any intention of
sacrificing Jessie to Satan.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
All four members of the Wallis family joined in an action alleging the violation
of their federal constitutional rights to be free from unreasonable, arbitrary,
and undue intrusions on their privacy, person, and home, as well as setting
forth various state law claims. CPS, the County, and several other defendants
settled with the Wallises; the district court then granted summary judgment to
the remaining defendants. The Wallises appealed the district court's ruling. In
an unpublished disposition, we reversed as to the City of Escondido, holding
that the Wallises' action was not precluded by the juvenile court referee's
decision to retain the children in temporary custody on the basis of Dr.
Spencer's false report of sexual abuse. We remanded the matter for further
proceedings.
The district court granted the City's second motion for summary judgment on the
theory that none of the Wallises' constitutional rights were violated because
the Police Department had reasonable cause to remove the children from their
parents' custody with or without a court order, and that the officers had,
therefore, acted reasonably. The court then said that even if the Wallises'
rights were violated, they had not offered any facts or evidence proving that
the Police Department had a policy that caused the violation. The district judge
also concluded that the City was immune from any state law remedy because the
police officers were "reasonable" both in removing the children from
their parents' custody and in subjecting them to the investigatory body cavity
examinations.
Then, despite the fact that the Wallis family did not sue any officers in their
individual capacities, the district court went on to conclude that even if the
Wallises' constitutional rights had been violated, the officers were entitled to
both absolute and qualified immunity, and that this personal immunity was
transferrable to the City itself: "[C]onsequently the city [is] entitled to
qualified immunity for their actions in regards to all S 1983 actions alleged by
plaintiff." The Wallises appealed.
ANALYSIS
I. Constitutional Claims
[1] The Wallises allege that the City of Escondido, through the actions of its
Police Department, violated the family's constitutional rights by the unlawful
removal of Lauren and Jessie from their home in the middle of the night and by
the subsequent unlawful detention of the children, including the invasive
vaginal and anal examinations. A municipality like the City can be sued for
"constitutional deprivations visited pursuant to governmental custom."
Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Servs.,
436
U.S. 658, 690 (1978). In order to avoid summary judgment, a plaintiff
need only show that there is a question of fact regarding whether there is a
city custom or policy that caused a constitutional deprivation.
Chew v. Gates, 27 F.3d 1432, 1444 (9th Cir. 1994); Jackson v. Gates, 975 F.2d 648 (9th Cir. 1992) (city may be liable when its policy is the moving force behind constitutional violation). The Wallises are entitled to prevail on this appeal, therefore, if they introduced sufficient evidence to show that there is an issue of material fact as to whether (1) their constitutional rights were violated; and (2) the violations were caused by a Police Department custom or practice. 5
A. The Alleged Violations
[2] The Wallises argue that the seizure and removal of the children from their
parents' custody in the middle of the night pursuant to a non-existent court
order violated their rights under the Constitution. Parents and children have a
well-elaborated constitutional right to live together without governmental
interference. Santosky v. Kramer,
455 U.S. 745
, 753
(1982); Stanley v. Illinois,
405 U.S. 645
(1972); Pierce v.
Soc'y of Sisters,
268
U.S. 510, 534
-35 (1925); Meyer v.
Nebraska,
262 U.S. 390
(1923). That right is an essential liberty interest protected by the
Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee that parents and children will not be separated
by the state without due process of law except in an emergency.
Stanley,
405 U.S. at 651
; Campbell v. Burt , 141 F.3d 927 (9th
Cir. 1998); Ram v. Rubin, 118 F.3d 1306, 1310 (9th Cir.
1996); Caldwell v. LeFaver, 928 F.2d 331, 333 (9th Cir.
1991); Baker v. Racansky, 887 F.2d 183, 186 (9th Cir. 1988);
accord, J.B., 127 F.3d at 927; Croft , 103 F.3d at 1125;
Hurlman v. Rice, 927 F.2d74, 79 (2d Cir. 1991); Duchesne v.
Sugarman, 556 F.2d 817, 824 (2d Cir. 1977). The Wallises have produced more than
enough evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the
removal of the children from their parents' custody was violative of their
constitutional rights.
1. The Non-Existent "Pick-Up" Order
[3] It is now beyond dispute that no court authorized anyone to remove Lauren
and Jessie from their home on September 21, 1991. The Wallises contend that the
City's police officers removed the children on the basis of a non-existent court
order, and have produced substantial evidence that this is what actually
happened. Detectives Pitcher, Claytor, and Burkett all testified that they were
told by someone at CPS that there was a "pick-up" order and that their
task was to locate the family and enforce the order. Detective Pitcher testified
in her deposition that she told Bill and Becky Wallis that she was taking their
small children away in the middle of the night "because of the order . . .
because of the investigation that had already taken place in CPS."
Detective Burkett confirmed that the officers probably told Bill and Becky that
there was an order requiring the removal of the children. Indeed, the only
evidence that could be construed as offering any other reason for the
"pick-up" is Detective Pitcher's subsequent statements that appear to
contradict her earlier testimony.6
The testimony of CPS workers regarding what they told the police is somewhat
different. Sue Plante testified that she could not recall telling the officers
that there was a court order to remove the children; her contemporaneous notes
indicate, however, that it is possible that she did advise the police to pick
them up. Karen Cabico, the official case-worker, flatly denied conveying any
such information to the police; her notes report, however, a phone call from
Plante informing her that a district attorney had stated that there was enough
evidence to "pick up the kids."
[4] The City does not seriously challenge the contention that the officers took
custody of Lauren and Jessie because they mistakenly believed that there was an
outstanding court order. Nor on this appeal do they separately argue that either
a mistaken belief that a court order exists, or reliance on an erroneous
statement to that effect from a social service agency worker, satisfies the
requirement for a court order or provides reasonable cause, in itself, for the
seizure of the children.7 Instead, confronted with the fact that there was no
court order to remove the children from their parents' control, the City
contends that the removals were nonetheless lawful, essentially because the
facts of which the police were aware regarding the impending Satanic sacrifice
of Jessie provided "reasonable cause" to seize the children. 8
2. Reasonable Cause and Imminent Danger
[5] Officials may remove a child from the custody of its parent without prior
judicial authorization only if the information they possess at the time of the
seizure is such as provides reasonable cause to believe that the child is in
imminent danger of serious bodily injury and that the scope of the intrusion is
reasonably necessary to avert that specific injury. Good,
891 F.2d at 1093 (citing Mincey v. Arizona,
437 U.S. 385
, 393
(1978)); see also Campbell, 141 F.3d at 927; Franz v. Lytle,
997 F.2d 784 (10th Cir. 1993); Hurlman v. Rice , 927 F.2d 74,
80 (2d Cir. 1991) (collecting cases). The existence of reasonable cause, and the
related questions, are all questions of fact to be determined by the jury.
McKenzie v. Lamb , 738 F.2d
1005, 1008 (9th Cir. 1984) (per Kennedy, J.); Smiddy v.
Varney, 665 F.2d 261, 265 (9th Cir. 1981) (per Sneed, J.)
Summary judgment in favor of the defendants is improper unless, viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, it is clear that no
reasonable jury could conclude that the plaintiffs' constitutional rights were
violated.
[6] Thus, summary judgment was improper here if a material question of fact
exists regarding whether (1) there was reasonable cause to believe, on the basis
of the information in the possession of the Escondido police officers, that the
Wallis children faced an immediate threat of serious physical injury or death;
or (2) the actions taken by the officers --removing the children from their
mother and placing them in an institution -- exceeded the permissible scope of
the action necessary to protect them from that immediate threat. We conclude
that there are material disputes of fact with respect to both questions.
[7] First, the state may not remove children from their parents' custody without
a court order unless there is specific, articulable evidence that provides
reasonable cause to believe that a child is in imminent danger of abuse. Croft
v. West-moreland County Children and Youth Servs., 103 F.3d 1123,
1125; Ram v. Rubin, 118 F.3d 1306, 1311 (9th Cir. 1997)
("An indictment or serious allegations of abuse which are investigated and
corroborated usually gives rise to a reason
able inference of imminent danger."); Good , 891 F.2d 1087,
1093 (3d Cir. 1989) (citing Mincey v. Arizona ,
437 U.S. 385
,
393 (1978)); see also Campbell, 141 F.3d at 927; Franz, 997
F.2d 784; Hurlman v. Rice, 927 F.2d 74, 80 (2d Cir. 1991)
(collecting cases). Moreover, the police cannot seize children suspected of
being abused or neglected unless reasonable avenues of investigation are first
pursued, particularly where it is not clear that a crime has been -- or will be
-- committed.
See Sevigny v. Dicksey, 846 F.2d 953, 957 (4th Cir. 1988)
(holding that child abuse investigator has duty to investigate information that
would have clarified matters prior to separating children from their parents);
BeVier v. Hucal, 806 F.2d
123, 128 (7th Cir. 1986) (officer has duty to "make a thorough
investigation and exercise reasonable judgment before invoking the awesome power
of arrest and detention"). Whether a reasonable avenue of investigation
exists, however, depends in part upon the time element and the nature of the
allegations.
[8] At the time Lauren and Jessie were removed, the police department had
received a report from a mental health worker that an institutionalized mental
patient, who had an extensive history of severe delusional disorders and
multiple personalities, had told a story of anticipated ritual murder by
Jessie's father -- a story that would appear to an objective observer clearly to
be founded in mental illness. In fact, Detective Claytor later testified that
the allegations "sounded a little bizarre" to him, and that he had
expressed that opinion to Detective Pitcher at the time. Applying a reasonable
cause standard, the juvenile court judge who subsequently heard the dependency
petition in this case explicitly rejected those charges as a basis for removing
Lauren and Jessie from their parents' custody. Detective Pitcher, however,
stated that "in her mind" she believed the story because it was
conveyed to her by Young, an "expert."
The only other facts on which the City relies to demonstrate that the officers
had reasonable cause to believe that there was an imminent threat to the
children's welfare at the very most help the City establish that a genuine issue
of material fact exists and that summary judgment should not be awarded to the
Wallises. See McKenzie, 738 F.2d at 1008. Those "facts," taken
together with Rachel's tale as reported by Young, do not by any means justify
the conclusion that a reasonable jury would be required to find that the
officers had reasonable cause for taking the children into custody. The
additional "facts" are as follows: First, the City claims that the
officers confirmed that Rachel's and Becky's father, David Stecks, owned a boat
named "Witch Way." In fact, the police did not confirm any such thing;
according to Detective Claytor, who was the officer searching for the boat, he
learned only that a boat with a similar name (Witch's Way) was docked in
Oceanside. He did not, however, confirm that the boat was owned, or used, by
David Stecks, or by any member of Becky's family. Moreover, the police never
conducted any investigation whatsoever into how the boat acquired its name, or
whether Stecks had anything to do with naming it. Next, the City relies on the
fact that the Wallises had moved from the address Rachel supplied, which the
City characterizes as "disappearing from where they were supposed to
be." An equally valid inference is that the Wallises' change of address
demonstrates the unreliability of Rachel's tip, because important information
Rachel provided proved false, and because Rachel lacked knowledge regarding
important family matters. Third, Detective Pitcher testified that she accorded
significance to five-year-old Lauren's statement about spiders and her
"elusive" behavior on being awakened at 1:00 a.m. The Wallises are
entitled to the inference that Lauren was drowsy and had nothing adverse to
report. In any event, when asked by Pitcher if anyone had ever given her
"bad touches," Lauren denied that anyone ever had, which is hardly
"elusive."9
Finally, we note that the tip itself stated that Becky Wallis was probably
unaware that Bill was contemplating harming Jessie and was not part of the
"plot" to kill her son.10 Nevertheless, the City acknowledges that its
officers did not interview Becky because they mistakenly thought they were
enforcing a court order. More important, for this reason, the officers also did
not undertake any significant investigation into the underlying charge,
specifically, the allegation that Jessie would be sacrificed.
[9] Under the circumstances, a jury could reasonably conclude that the
information possessed by the officers was insufficient to give rise to
reasonable cause or that the officers' conduct in failing to investigate the
mental patient's bizarre tale before acting was not reasonable. While ordinarily
a close relative's tip that a child is about to be killed might provide
reasonable cause to believe that an emergency exists and justify a seizure of
the child without prior judicial authorization, the facts in this case are far
from ordinary. They are, indeed, extraordinary in every sense of the word,
including the fact that the close relative had a long history of psychiatric
disorders, was confined to a mental institution, and told a tale that was wholly
incredible. In any event, given the factual uncertainty regarding the
information actually possessed by the officers at the time they removed the
children, the contradictions in Detective Pitcher's testimony and sworn
statements, the absence of any significant investigation into the allegations,
and the extraordinary nature of the allegations, it cannot be said as a matter
of law that reasonable cause existed, or that the officers acted reasonably.
Viewing the evidence in the record in the light most favorable to the Wallises,
we conclude that a reasonable jury could find that the officers did not have
reasonable cause to remove the children without a court order.
3. Permissible Scope of the Removal
[10] Even if state action to protect Jessie against future Satanic sacrifice by
his father were reasonable under the circumstances, triable issues of fact would
exist regarding whether the scope and degree of the state interference was
justified by the alleged exigency. Bell,
441 U.S. at 559
;
Barlow, 943 F.2d at 1138 ("Police officers can proceed without a warrant if
they reasonably believe they are confronted with an emergency that threatens
life or limb, but the [intrusion] must be strictly circumscribed by the
exigencies which justify its initiation."); Franz, 997 F.2d at 791
(intrusion must be "reasonably necessary to alleviate the threat");
Good, 891 F.2d at 1093 (under "very limited exception" to warrant
rule, intrusion must be reasonably necessary to alleviate the threat of
immediate harm); Hebein, 37 F. Supp.2d at 1043 (holding that danger must justify
the degree of interference imposed). Merely because some intrusion on a child's
protected privacy and security interests may be reasonable does not mean that
any intrusion is.
[11] Here, the City asserts that the exigency motivating the officers' decision
to remove the children without a court order was the belief that Bill Wallis
would sacrifice Jessie to Satan on the "Fall Equinox," which was to
occur on September 23, 1991. The City argues in its brief that part of its
"reasonable" belief in the credibility of this threat was the
information that the "Equinox" is one of the "high holidays
" for devil worshipers, "when cultists perform human sacrifices and .
. . believe that they derive energy from abusing children on that day."
(emphasis added). By the City's own admission, then, the police had no
information that Jessie's father's plot extended beyond the Equinox; the
imminent danger to Jessie was to occur specifically and only on September 23,
1991, a day after the children's seizure. Thus, there is a genuine issue of
material fact as to whether the emergency continued to exist for more than the
brief day or two following the time of the children's seizure.
[12] Furthermore, as previously noted, the police had no information whatsoever
that implicated the children's mother in any past or future abuse. There is no
evidence that the children could not have been taken with their mother to
a shelter, or placed under some other form of protective custody with her until
after the Equinox, or even until some later date. A genuine issue of material
fact exists therefore as to whether the removal of the children from their
mother's custody, and their placement in a county institution for an indefinite
period, was sufficiently "strictly circumscribed by the exigency that
justified" the City's intrusion into the children's lives. Good, 891 F.2d
at 1093. Such questions are also to be decided by a jury. McKenzie, 738 F.2d at
1008.
4. Subsequent Conduct
[13] The Wallises contend that the violation of their rights occasioned by the
City's removal of the children continued for the more than two month period
during which the children were detained. During that time, the children were
held in Hillcrest Receiving Home, and moved through at least three different
"confidential" foster homes. Their parents were not permitted to know
their whereabouts and were only allowed one hour of supervised visitation per
week. There is evidence in the record that the children were traumatized by the
separation and cried constantly for their parents. The Wallises contended below
that the City was liable for all the damages that flowed from this entire ordeal
because the City's policy was the legal cause of the separation. The City, in
response, contended that it could not be held liable for any detention of the
children after their removal was approved by the juvenile court. We leave it to
the district court on remand to determine whether any City policy could be held
to have caused any violation of the Wallises' rights after the date of the
juvenile court hearing. With respect to the four-day period between the removal
and the court hearing, only one alleged violation of the Wallises' rights merits
separate consideration -- the subjecting of Lauren and Jessie to invasive
vaginal and anal medical examinations at the behest of the Escondido police
department.
[14] The right to family association includes the right of parents to make
important medical decisions for their children, and of children to have those
decisions made by their parents rather than the state. See Parham v. J.R., 442
U.S. 584, 602 (1979) (holding that it is in the interest of both parents and
children that parents have ultimate authority to make medical decisions for
their children unless "neutral fact finder" determines, through due
process hearing, that parent is not acting in child's best interests); see also
Calabretta v.Floyd, _______ F.3d _______ (9th Cir. 1999) (holding that "[t]he
government's interest in the welfare of children embraces not only protecting
children from physical abuse, but also protecting children's interest in the
privacy and dignity of their homes and in the lawfully exercised authority of
their parents."). We agree with the Second Circuit which held, in van
Emrick v. Chemung County Dept. of Social Servs. , that the "Constitution
assures parents that, in the absence of parental consent, [physical
examinations] of their child may not be undertaken for investigative purposes at
the behest of state officials unless a judicial officer has determined, upon
notice to the parents, and an opportunity to be heard, that grounds for such an
examination exist and that the administration of the procedure is reasonable
under all the circumstances."11 911 F.2d 863, 867 (2d Cir. 1990). Barring a
reasonable concern that material physical evidence might dissipate, see
Schmerber, 384
U.S. at 770
, or that some urgent medical problem exists requiring immediate attention,
the state is required to notify parents and to obtain judicial approval before
children are subjected to investigatory physical examinations.12
[15] Moreover, parents have a right arising from the liberty interest in family
association to be with their children while they are receiving medical attention
(or to be in a waiting room or other nearby area if there is a valid reason for
excluding them while all or a part of the medical procedure is being conducted).
Likewise, children have a corresponding right to the love, comfort, and
reassurance of their parents while they are undergoing medical procedures,
including examinations -- particularly those, such as here, that are invasive or
upsetting.13 The interest in family association is particularly compelling at
such times, in part because of the possibility that a need to make medical
decisions will arise, and in part because of the family's right to be together
during such difficult and often traumatic events.14
5. Conclusion
In light of the above, we conclude that there are genuine issues of fact as to
whether the Wallises' constitutional rights were violated when the Escondido
police officers took the children into custody, placed them in a county
institution, and subjected them to invasive medical procedures. We must still
consider, however, whether the City is entitled to summary judgment on the
ground that the police officers did not engage in the conduct at issue pursuant
to any municipal policy, custom, or practice.
B. Municipal Policy, Custom, or Practice
[16] Next, we must consider whether a material question of fact exists regarding
whether the constitutional deprivations (which for purposes of summary judgment
we must assume occurred) were caused by a "practice or custom which
constitutes . . . standard operating procedure." Trevino v. Gates, 99 F.3d
911, 918 (9th Cir. 1996). The Wallises adduced testimony from Pitcher, Burkett,
and Claytor that there was a practice -- a "longstanding agreement,"
in Burkett's words -- of enforcing "orders" to take protective custody
of children without ever seeing the order. This is sufficient to raise a genuine
issue of material fact regarding the existence of a custom or practice of taking
children from their homes based on telephone calls from CPS without adequate
safeguards to ensure that the removal is legal.
[17] Furthermore, the Wallises presented evidence from which it may reasonably
be inferred that the Escondido Police Department customarily took children that
it placed at Hillcrest Receiving Home for invasive investigatory examinations at
Palomar Hospital without obtaining a court order and without notifying their
parents. Detective Pitcher, who ordered the investigatory examinations,
acknowledged that she may have done so in fulfillment of her function as the
juvenile detective who removed the children from their parents' custody, and
that there was a contract between Palomar and the Escondido Police Department
for the performance of such investigatory examinations. A reasonable inference
may be drawn from this evidence that it was "standard operating
procedure" to obtain those examinations without seeking judicial
authorization or notifying the parents; indeed, given the absence of any
individualized suspicion of sexual abuse, it is difficult to imagine, on the
basis of the record before us, why else the Wallis children would have been
subjected to the invasive examinations.
[18] The Wallises also produced sufficient evidence to create a question of fact
for the jury as to whether these customs and practices had a "direct causal
link" to the deprivations of the Wallises' constitutional rights detailed
above. City of Canton v. Harris, 489
U.S. 378, 385 (1989); Chew v. Gates, 27 F.3d 1432, 1444, 1456 (9th
Cir. 1994) (holding that city may properly be held liable where policy is moving
force behind constitutional violation); Jackson v. Gates, 975 F.2d 648, 654 (9th
Cir. 1992) (holding that city's policy need not be unconstitutional per se, but
need only cause a constitutional violation). A reasonable jury could readily
conclude, viewing the evidence presently in the record in the light most
favorable to the Wallises, that the moving force behind the removal of the
children from the parents' custody was the policy of accepting telephonic
representations from CPS without any procedure for checking on the accuracy or
validity of the supposed orders. See McMurray v. Sheahan, 927 F. Supp. 1082,
1090 (N.D. Ill. 1996) (holding county liable for false arrests when it has no
system to check validity of warrants on computer system). That would be true
whether a CPS employee had erroneously told the police that a pick-up order
existed or whether the police mistakenly believed that a CPS employee had made
such a statement. Similarly, a reasonable jury could conclude that the
investigatory vaginal and anal examinations were performed on the children
pursuant to a Police Department custom and practice of instigating body cavity
examinations without first notifying the parents and without seeking prior court
authorization whenever its officers place children in protective custody.15
[19] The district court incorrectly held that even if the City did have policies
that caused the deprivations, it was not liable because any absolute and
qualified immunities possessed by the individual officers were somehow
transferred to the city itself. There are, however, no personal immunities
available vicariously or otherwise to municipal actors under S 1983. Leatherman
v. Tarrant County Narcotics Unit, 507 U.S. 163, 166 (1993). It appears that the
district court also applied state statutory immunities for child abuse
investigations to the federal constitutional claims and concluded that the City
is immune from a S 1983 action under a state immunity statute. Again, the
district court erred. Immunity under S 1983 is governed by federal law; state
law cannot provide immunity from suit for federal civil rights violations.
Martinez v. California,
444
U.S. 277, 284
(1980); Good v.
Dauphin County Social Serv., 981 F.2d 1087, 1090-91 (3d Cir. 1989) (holding that
state law providing immunity from suit for child abuse investigators has no
application to suits under S 1983). In sum, the City of Escondido has the
benefit of neither federal nor state immunity from liability under S 1983 for
the alleged violations of the Wallises' constitutional rights.
Appellants' evidence regarding municipal custom and practice is sufficient to
permit them to survive summary judgment on the Monell issue. Accordingly, we
reverse the district court's grant of summary judgment to the City of Escondido
with respect to the Wallises' S 1983 claims.
II. State Law Claims
In addition to their constitutional claims, the Wallises sued the City for
abduction, assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The district court granted summary judgment to the City on those claims also,
holding that the police had "reasonable cause" to remove the children
and to subject them to vaginal and anal examinations, and thus violated no state
laws. As discussed above, on the basis of the record before us, whether there
was reasonable cause for the removal of Lauren and Jessie from their home is a
question of fact for the jury; so, too, as we have fully explained, the City is
not entitled to summary judgment regarding the physical examinations.
[20] The officers contend that under Cal. Govt. Code S 820.2, they -- and under
state law, by extension, the City -- are immune from liability on the state law
tort claims.16 The district court concluded that the police had reasonable cause
to seize the children and subject them to the invasive medical examinations, it
did not reach the question of immunity. Given the conclusions we have reached,
however, it is necessary for us to do so.17
[21] Under S 820.2, a public employee cannot be held liable for any injury
resulting from "his act or omission where the act or omission was the
result of the exercise of discretion vested in him, whether or not such
discretion be abused." The City correctly asserts that S 820.2 applies to
county social workers engaged in investigating allegations of child abuse, and
extends to other public employees whom those social workers "reasonably
enlist to assist in the investigation."
Newton v. County of Napa, 266 Cal. Rptr. 682, 687 (Cal. App.
1990); Alicia T. v. County of Los Angeles, 271 Cal. Rptr. 513,
519-20 (Cal. App. 1990) (holding that social workers' immunity is designed to
protect "the continuing exercise of . . . discretion in favor of the
protection of minor children"). This immunity provides complete protection
for the decision to investigate, to make an "in-person response," and
for actions necessary to make a meaningful investigation. It does not extend,
however, to non-discretionary actions or to at least some intentional torts
committed in the course of making the investigation, such as battery and false
imprisonment.
Newton, 266 Cal. Rptr. at 687-88.18
[22] As to the removal of the children, many of the relevant facts are in
dispute, including the question whether the police officers took Lauren and
Jessie into custody pursuant to a request from CPS, the agency in which the
discretion to make such decisions was vested. Summary judgment would not be
proper on the basis of so unclear and undeveloped a record. With respect to the
vaginal and anal examinations, summary judgment on S 820.2 immunity grounds is
equally inappropriate. The Wallises contend that Detective Pitcher was simply
carrying out a mandatory municipal policy that did not involve the exercise of
any discretion. Should they prevail on their theory, S 820.2 would be
inapplicable to that part of their claims.
CONCLUSION
Genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether the City of Escondido is
liable, under Monell, for violating the Wallises' constitutional rights with
respect to the removal of the children from their home and the City's subsequent
conduct, including the invasive body cavity examinations. In addition, genuine
issues of material fact exist regarding the City's assertion of immunity under
Cal. Govt. Code S 820.2 with respect to the state causes of action. Given the
numerous factual disputes in this case, we conclude that summary judgment was
improper, and that the Wallises are entitled to pursue both their federal and
state law claims.
REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
RYMER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Whether the summary judgment should be reversed on the only ground urged by the
Wallises -- that there is a triable issue of fact on whether the City had a
policy to pick up children without verifying the existence of a court order and
without reasonable cause -- is a close question. There is a good argument that,
as the district court held, the officers had accumulated reasonable cause in the
course of investigating Rachel's allegations, thereby making the nonexistence of
the court order immaterial. However, because it is a close question, sending
this issue back for trial is within the ballpark.
But holding that there is a triable issue of fact on a policy with respect to
the medical examinations that was never alleged, never argued, and as to which
no evidence was ever adduced as to the City -- the only party left in the case
-- is not in the ballpark.
For sure there is evidence in the record about the examinations because Dr.
Spencer, CPS, and San Diego County were defendants. However, the Wallises
settled their claims against CPS and the County, and Dr. Spencer was dismissed
from the case on immunity grounds. The City is the only party to this appeal.
Until the majority got its bat on this case, there was no question at all about
liability on the part of the City for the medical examinations.
I therefore dissent. The possibility of a City policy with respect to medical
examinations of children was invented here; the discussion with respect to it is
dicta, as it clearly is not necessary to the decision to reverse; and we have no
business inventing an issue and a constitutional right or two to resolve it.
_______________________________________________________________
FOOTNOTES
*The Honorable Myron Bright, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
1 The record is not entirely clear as to the ownership of the stores at which they worked during this period, but that fact is of no import.
2 In a subsequent letter to CPS, Young stated with respect to the information that Jessie would be sacrificed by his father: "A child alter of Rachel's named _______ relayed this information to me, however it is not clear which alter actually received this information from her own and Jessie's father. Unfortuneately, (sic) the alters wish to remain anonymous out of fear of punishment for disclosure." The blank space above refers to the alter personality that requested the therapist preserve his or her anonymity. The therapist complied with that request.
3 As this litigation has progressed over the years, Pitcher's statements about her telephone conversation with Young have grown more elaborate. Thus, at Pitcher's first deposition in May 1994, she stated that she subjectively thought that the report might be credible based solely on the fact that Young and another doctor, to whom Pitcher never spoke, specialized in ritual abuse. Pitcher did not, in that deposition, testify that Young ever told her that this report was credible or that the Wallis children were in any immediate danger. However, when three years later Pitcher submitted an affidavit in support of the defendant's motion for summary judgment, she reported a different version of her conversation with Young -- one in which Young told her that "in her professional opinion Rachel Stecks's report was . . . true and . . . that she had a real fear for the safety of the Wallis children." The two divergent accounts of this telephone conversation, as offered by Pitcher, in themselves create a question of fact and of credibility that can only be resolved by the jury. Moreover, even if Pitcher's most recent account is accurate, whether this conversation supplied sufficient objective facts and information to justify the seizure is a question of fact for the jury. See McKenzie v. Lamb , 738 F.2d 1005, 1008 (9th Cir. 1984) (holding that the existence of probable cause in a S 1983 case is a jury question).
4 Once again, Pitcher's testimony has changed as time has passed. In a subsequent deposition and declaration Pitcher offered a different version of these events, insisting that she had conducted an investigation, and had picked up the children after concluding that she had probable cause for such action. Even then, however, she made it clear that at the time she acted she was relying at least in substantial part on a statement from CPS that a pick-up order existed.
5 "The Wallises" refers to all four plaintiffs, except where the context reflects otherwise.
6 See supra note 4.
7 Although we do not consider here the legal consequences of relying on a non-existent order, see note 10, infra , we note that a number of factual issues exist as to what, if anything, the officers were told about a pick-up order for Lauren and Jessie. Such questions are best resolved at trial.
8 The claims of the parents in this regard should properly be assessed under the Fourteenth Amendment standard for interference with the right to family association. Campbell v. Burt, 141 F.3d 927 (9th Cir. 1998); Ram v. Rubin, 118 F.3d 1306, 1310 (9th Cir. 1991). Because only the children were subjected to a seizure, their claims should properly be assessed under the Fourth Amendment. Donald v. Polk County, 836 F.2d 376 (7th Cir. 1988); but see J.B. v. Washington County , 127 F.3d 919, 928 (10th Cir. 1997) (noting that there may be circumstances in which a parent has standing to bring a Fourth Amendment claim for the seizure of a minor child). As the same legal standard applies in evaluating Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims for the removal of children, we analyze the Wallises' claims together.
9 The City also cites, as a contributing factor in the reasonable cause calculus, the "fact" that the officers were told by CPS workers about the "pick-up" order. There are two problems with this suggestion. First, what, if anything, CPS told the officers is a disputed question of material fact. Second, there is a substantial legal question as to whether a mistaken belief as to the existence of a warrant or court order, even when based on an erroneous report from another law enforcement officer, can in itself constitute a contributing factor. In the recent case of Rogers v. Powell, 120 F.3d 446, 453 (3d Cir. 1997), the Third Circuit appears to have answered this question in the negative. In Rogers, a state trooper mistakenly believed, based on a conversation with a probation officer, that there was a warrant for Rogers's arrest. That trooper then told two fellow officers that there was an arrest warrant, and all three arrested Rogers on that basis. The Third Circuit concluded that all three officers violated the plaintiff's Fourth Amendment rights. The court went on to say, however, that the second two officers were entitled to qualified immunity, because it was objectively reasonable for them to believe that they were authorized to rely on the clear and unambiguous statements of a fellow officer.
10 The tip also stated that Bill supposedly told Rachel that Becky would get over the loss of Jessie, saying "She's not going to miss him. Besides, we've got Lauren. It's not like we don't have our hands full with her. She'll forget about him after a while." This part of the tip suggests that there was never any reasonable cause to remove Lauren even if there were reason to remove Jessie. There were no allegations that anyone planned to harm Lauren or that anyone had ever previously harmed Lauren.
11 In our recent decision in Calabretta, we quoted with approval the following language: "It does not require a constitutional scholar to conclude that a nude search of a thirteen-year-old child is an invasion of constitutional rights of some magnitude. More than that: it is a violation of any known principle of human dignity." Calabretta , _______ F.3d at _______ (quoting Good v. Dauphin County Social Services, 891 F.2d at 1093 (in turn quoting Doe v. Renfrow, 631 F.2d 91, 92-93 (7th Cir. 1980)).
12 On rehearing, the City and County of San Diego as amicus curiae argue that these requirements conflict with a state law regarding the medical examinations of children in protective custody. This law, California Welfare and Institutions Code S 324.5, was not enacted until 1998, some seven years after the Wallis children were subjected to the invasive vaginal and anal examinations. Thus, we have no occasion to consider whether or to what extent that law is affected by our decision here. We observe, however, that there is no apparent conflict between the requirements of this opinion and the statute in question. See , e.g., Tenenbaum v. Williams, 907 F.Supp. 606 (E.D.N.Y. 1995) (on denial of rehearing, holding that a New York statute allowing local officials to give consent for medical services for a child in protective custody did not affect the court's conclusion that due process required that the Commissioner of Social Services obtain judicial authorization for a purely investigatory examination issued after notice and an opportunity to be heard had been furnished to the parents), aff'd in part and vacated in part, 193 F.3d 581, 604 (2d Cir. 1999) ("it cannot be said that the requirement of obtaining the equivalent of a warrant where practicable imposes intolerable burdens on the government officer or the courts, would prevent such an officer from taking necessary action, or tend to render such action ineffective").
13 See R. Lazebnik et al., Preparing Sexually Abused Girls for Genital Evaluation, 13 ISSUES IN COMPREHENSIVE PEDIATRIC NURSING 155 (1990) (concluding that vaginal examinations are highly traumatic to little girls, particularly when their mothers are absent). A social worker who observed five year old Lauren's vaginal and anal examination reported that Lauren was upset and "under stress" during the examination and asked for her parents. Later, Lauren appeared for an interview with this same social worker clutching a security blanket and a stuffed animal and tearfully asked whether her parents wanted her back or were trying to "get rid of her."
14 We note that the claims of each family member must be assessed separately. Here, nothing in the record before us suggests that Becky Wallis was anything other than a fit and loving mother. As the Third Circuit recently held, a state has no interest whatever in protecting children from parents unless it has some reasonable evidence that the parent is unfit and the child is in imminent danger. Croft, 103 F.3d at 1125. The government may not, consistent with the Constitution, interpose itself between a fit parent and her children simply because of the conduct -- real or imagined -- of the other parent.
15 While we determine in the text that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to the existence of a municipal custom or practice of subjecting children, taken into custody due to suspected abuse or neglect, to investigatory anal and vaginal examinations without prior judicial authorization and parental notification, we do not intend to imply that it is necessary for the Wallises to establish the existence of a second and independent municipal policy in order to receive damages for the injuries attributable to the medical examinations of the Wallis children. Rather, we leave it to the district judge and the jury to determine what additional consequences, if any, may flow from the establishment of a separate and additional constitutional violation founded on a separate and independent municipal policy.
16 Under state law, the City may be liable for damages inflicted by its
employees under the doctrine of respondeat superior. Cal. Govt. Code S 815.2(a).
Accordingly, any state law immunity from state law tort claims that is possessed
by the employee run to the benefit of the governmental entity. Cal Govt. Code S
815.2(b). By contrast, municipal entities are not subject to respondeat superior
liability for federal civil rights claims. See Monell, 436
U.S. at 690
.
17 The City suggests on appeal that it may be entitled to prosecutorial immunity
under Cal. Govt. Code S 821.6, as well. We reject this claim for two reasons.
First, the City raised this issue for the first time in its reply brief; it was
not properly preserved below, and we need not consider it here. Second, the City
repeatedly asserts that it had nothing whatever to do with the prosecution of
the juvenile dependency proceeding, which it claims was the responsibility of
CPS, a county agency. Given this disclaimer, the City is not entitled to claim
the state-law prosecutorial or quasi-prosecutorial immunity which may be
available to social workers in child abuse cases.
18 We do not decide here which, if any, of the tort claims asserted by the Wallises are not subject to the provisions of S 820.2, preferring to leave that question initially to the district court.