Conn v. City of Reno

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 2010
Docket07-15572
StatusPublished

This text of Conn v. City of Reno (Conn v. City of Reno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conn v. City of Reno, (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

CHARLA CONN; DUSTIN CONN,  No. 07-15572 Plaintiffs-Appellants, D.C. No. v.  Cv-05-00595-HDM CITY OF RENO; RYAN ASHTON; ORDER AND DAVID ROBERTSON, AMENDED Defendants-Appellees.  OPINION

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Nevada Howard D. McKibben, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted October 20, 2008—San Francisco, California

Filed July 24, 2009 Amended January 8, 2010

Before: Mary M. Schroeder, Dorothy W. Nelson and Stephen Reinhardt, Circuit Judges.

Order; Dissent to Order by Chief Judge Kozinski’ Opinion by Judge Reinhardt

633 CONN v. CITY OF RENO 637

COUNSEL

Terri Keyser-Cooper, Reno, Nevada, and Diane K. Vaillan- court, Santa Cruz, California, for the plaintiffs-appellants.

John J. Kadlic, Reno City Attorney, Donald L. Christensen, Deputy City Attorney, Reno, Nevada, for the defendants- appellees. 638 CONN v. CITY OF RENO ORDER

The majority opinion filed July 24, 2009, slip op. 9581, and appearing at 572 F.3d 1047 (9th Cir. 2009), is hereby amended as follows:

1. Slip op. at 9611, line 7: replace with

2. Slip op. at 9611, line 8: after , insert the follow- ing footnote:

The panel has voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc.

The full court was advised of the petition for rehearing en banc. A judge requested a vote on whether to rehear the mat- ter en banc. The matter failed to receive a majority of the votes of the nonrecused active judges in favor of en banc reconsideration. FED. R. APP. P. 35.

The petition for rehearing en banc is denied. No further petitions for rehearing may be filed. CONN v. CITY OF RENO 639 Chief Judge KOZINSKI, with whom Judges O’SCANNLAIN, KLEINFELD, TALLMAN, CALLAHAN, BEA and IKUTA join, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc.

Until this opinion came along, police officers weren’t required to serve as babysitters, psychiatrists or social work- ers, and judges didn’t run suicide-prevention programs. Responsibility for preventing suicide rested with the individ- ual and the family, not the state. But the panel has discovered that the Constitution demands a change in job description: Judges will henceforth micromanage the police, who in turn will serve as mental health professionals. The panel’s reason- ing has no stopping point, and our decision to let it stand threatens unprecedented judicial intervention in our local institutions.

At bottom, this case raises the question of whether the state has a legal (as opposed to moral) obligation to provide for the health of its citizens. We have repeatedly rejected the idea that such an obligation exists. See, e.g., DeShaney v. Winne- bago Cty. Dept. of Soc. Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 200 (1989). This is in part because the benevolent welfare state is in tension with our tradition of liberty and individual dignity: What the state provides for you, you do not provide for yourself, and as the sphere of public largesse grows, the realm of private initiative retreats. It also reflects a judgment that any redefini- tion of the role of the state should occur under the supervision of democratically elected officials, not unaccountable federal judges. States may obligate themselves, but they should not have novel duties thrust upon them by judicial fiat.

We have recognized an exception to this rule when the state places a person in jail, but that exception has been strictly lim- ited by its rationale. “The affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predica- ment or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own 640 CONN v. CITY OF RENO behalf.” DeShaney, 489 U.S. at 200. A prisoner cannot feed or clothe himself, and he cannot get himself to a doctor; it is therefore incumbent on his keeper to do those things for him. See, e.g., id.; Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 103 (1976). And, because the state creates the prisoner’s conditions of incarceration, the state has a duty not to purposefully create a risk of harm—for instance, by placing the prisoner in a cell with a person who intends to do him ill. See, e.g., Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 832-33 (1994). Apart from that ratio- nale, there is no free-floating obligation to safeguard prison- ers’ health. Otherwise, the distinction between prisoners and non-prisoners would become illusory, and we would be forced to recognize a duty of care towards society as a whole.

The panel’s opinion is significant because it cuts the state’s obligation loose from this tether and creates novel duties to train and to report information that bear no relationship to the fact of incarceration. In the process, it strips the guts out of the deliberate indifference standard, as well as the require- ment that plaintiffs show a violation of clearly established law to defeat qualified immunity. In the panel’s hands, standards that are meant to limit liability to all but the most extreme cases become tools for imposing the policy preferences of unelected federal judges. This combination of errors amounts to a toxic recipe for judicial micromanagement of local insti- tutions.

1. In a brief portion of the opinion that will nevertheless have far-reaching consequences, the panel finds the City of Reno potentially liable for failure “to train its officers in sui- cide prevention and the identification of suicide risks.” Conn v. City of Reno, 572 F.3d 1047, 1063 (9th Cir. 2009). To avoid liability under our federal Constitution, police depart- ments throughout the Ninth Circuit must now transform their police officers into suicide prevention experts. This novel holding creates a clear inter-circuit split and is irreconcilable with the standard for liability fashioned by the Supreme Court in City of Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378 (1989). CONN v. CITY OF RENO 641 When ordinary citizens go about their business, they are not monitored by experts in suicide prevention. If you or I waltz up to a government employee— perhaps a mail man, dog catcher or meter maid—and announce, “today’s a good day to kill myself,” the Constitution does not guarantee that our cho- sen confidant will be a Sigmund Freud or Jacques Lacan. If we want to see a psychiatrist, we have to go see a psychiatrist. We certainly don’t have a right to expect that every public servant we encounter will be specially trained to cater to our mental health needs.

According to the panel, citizens who are arrested fall into a different and more rarified class. When Brenda Clustka announced her suicidal thoughts to the officers sent to arrest her, she had the right to an audience trained in “suicide pre- vention and the identification of suicide risks.” Conn, 572 F.3d at 1063. Indeed, the failure to provide that audience was “the functional equivalent of a decision by the city itself to violate the Constitution.” Harris, 489 U.S. at 395 (O’Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).

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