Denise Hughes v. Monique Locure

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 2026
Docket23-10954
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Denise Hughes v. Monique Locure, (11th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 23-10954 Document: 42-1 Date Filed: 01/29/2026 Page: 1 of 23

FOR PUBLICATION

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit ____________________ No. 23-10954 ____________________

DENISE HUGHES, as Administrator of the Estate of Edwin Dewayne Moss, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus

DARIAN K. LOCURE, an individual, Defendant, MONIQUE N. LOCURE, Administratrix of the Estate of Darian K. Locure, Defendant-Appellant. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama D.C. Docket No. 3:22-cv-00312-RAH-JTA ____________________

Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, and JORDAN and BRASHER, Cir- cuit Judges. USCA11 Case: 23-10954 Document: 42-1 Date Filed: 01/29/2026 Page: 2 of 23

2 Opinion of the Court 23-10954

BRASHER, Circuit Judge: Darian Locure, a sheriff’s deputy, drove drunk, struck the car in which Edwin Moss was riding, and fled the scene, leaving Moss to die. We are constrained to assume that Locure was acting under color of state law and in his official capacity when he com- mitted these acts. The question before us is whether Locure is en- titled to qualified immunity to a section 1983 claim. Because of our circuit precedent, we cannot say that Locure’s conduct was clearly unconstitutional at the time of the violation. So we must reverse the denial of qualified immunity. I.

The following facts come from the operative complaint, and we must assume they are correct. Darian Locure was a Macon County deputy sheriff in Tuskegee, Alabama. One evening, while he was off duty, he came to the sheriff’s office to care for his police dog. Sometime during the evening—we don’t know when—he got drunk (or otherwise intoxicated). Later that night, still blind drunk, he left the office in his police truck to drive back home. It was pitch black out. Locure’s police truck was pitch black, too. And he had no lights on—neither his emergency lights nor his headlights. Nearly invisible to the naked eye, he sped down a 25- miles-per-hour zone at roughly 70 miles per hour. USCA11 Case: 23-10954 Document: 42-1 Date Filed: 01/29/2026 Page: 3 of 23

23-10954 Opinion of the Court 3

At the same time, in the opposing lane of traffic, Edwin Moss was being driven home by Antonio Daniels. Neither Moss nor Dan- iels could see that someone was barreling down the other lane, so Daniels turned left across it, unknowingly putting his car in front of Locure’s. Locure did not slow, stop, or turn away. Instead, he collided into Daniels’s car, causing it to flip repeatedly before land- ing in a ditch. Sometime later, first responders arrived and pro- nounced Moss dead at the scene. In the aftermath of the collision, Locure faced criminal and civil liability. An Alabama grand jury indicted him for felony reck- less manslaughter. And Denise Hughes, the administratrix of Moss’s estate, sued Locure in state court. She brought three state law claims for wrongful death, and one federal claim under section 1983. This appeal is about that last claim. In her section 1983 claim, Hughes alleged that Locure vio- lated Moss’s “substantive due process right to life” under the Four- teenth Amendment by driving “with deliberate indifference to the great risk of harm that would—and did—result to Mr. Moss.” Doc. 36 at 15. Because Hughes brought a federal claim, Locure removed the case to the Middle District of Alabama and moved to dismiss the federal claim. In Locure’s motion to dismiss, he argued that Hughes failed to plausibly allege that Locure (1) violated Moss’s clearly established constitutional rights and (2) acted under color of law. So he argued that he was entitled to qualified immunity and that the section 1983 claim must be dismissed. The district court disagreed and denied Locure’s motion to dismiss, concluding that USCA11 Case: 23-10954 Document: 42-1 Date Filed: 01/29/2026 Page: 4 of 23

4 Opinion of the Court 23-10954

Locure was not entitled to qualified immunity and that Hughes had plausibly alleged her section 1983 claim. Locure appealed the district court’s qualified immunity de- nial and its section 1983 color of law determination. Locure died from unrelated causes. Monique Locure, Darian Locure’s widow and administratrix of his estate, was substituted as the appellant. II.

“We have a threshold obligation to ensure that we have ju- risdiction to hear an appeal, for without jurisdiction we cannot pro- ceed at all in any cause.” English v. City of Gainesville, 75 F.4th 1151, 1155 (11th Cir. 2023) (citation modified). Though we typically re- view only final decisions, “the question of whether a complaint states a violation of clearly established law sufficient to overcome a qualified immunity defense does present an abstract issue of law reviewable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.” Jackson v. City of Atlanta, 97 F.4th 1343, 1351 (11th Cir. 2024). Thus, we have jurisdiction to de- termine whether a district court was right to deny qualified im- munity. See Spencer v. Benison, 5 F.4th 1222, 1230 (11th Cir. 2021). As an element of a section 1983 claim, the plaintiff must es- tablish that the tortfeasor was acting under color of law. Charles v. Johnson, 18 F.4th 686, 694 (11th Cir. 2021) (explaining that “[t]he requirement that the deprivation be made ‘under color of state law’ . . . is an element of a § 1983 claim that the plaintiff must prove in order to prevail”). We have not explicitly decided whether we can review the district court’s determination on that question on an interlocutory basis. But cf. Est. of Cummings v. Davenport, 906 F.3d USCA11 Case: 23-10954 Document: 42-1 Date Filed: 01/29/2026 Page: 5 of 23

23-10954 Opinion of the Court 5

934, 943–44 (11th Cir. 2018) (explaining that we lack interlocutory jurisdiction to decide whether the “complaint states a claim” under section 1983). But two of our sister circuits have concluded that, when considering interlocutory appeals of denials of qualified im- munity, the courts of appeals lack jurisdiction to determine whether a government official was acting under color of law. See Nelson v. Streeter, 16 F.3d 145, 149 (7th Cir. 1994); Sturdivant v. Fine, 22 F.4th 930, 935 (10th Cir. 2022). We now join them, largely for reasons they persuasively laid out. The Seventh Circuit reasoned that the color-of-law question has no bearing on the question of immunity: “[i]t does not bear on the defense of immunity. In fact it contradicts it. If the defendants were not acting under color of state law, that is, as officials, they are not entitled to official immunity. Official immunity is for offi- cials.” Nelson, 16 F.3d at 149. The Tenth Circuit has likewise ex- plained that, in interlocutory appeals like this one, a court of ap- peals has “jurisdiction only to consider the district court’s denial of qualified immunity.” Sturdivant, 22 F.4th at 935. But “[a]ction un- der color of state law is an element of § 1983 . . . [a]nd a challenge to the elements of § 1983 does not involve qualified immunity.” Id. Both circuits persuade us that we lack jurisdiction to con- sider whether Locure was acting under color of law. Whether the defendant was acting under color of law is about the applicability of section 1983, not about whether he is entitled to qualified im- munity. Sturdivant, 22 F.4th at 935–36. The defense of qualified im- munity is relevant only if the elements of a section 1983 claim exist. USCA11 Case: 23-10954 Document: 42-1 Date Filed: 01/29/2026 Page: 6 of 23

6 Opinion of the Court 23-10954

So, for the purpose of an interlocutory appeal, a defendant takes the color of law issue off the table by asserting qualified immunity. Nelson, 16 F.3d at 149.

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