Georgia Beddingfield, Surviving Spouse of William Beddingfield, Deceased v. City of Pulaski, Tennessee

861 F.2d 968
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 5, 1989
Docket87-6307
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 861 F.2d 968 (Georgia Beddingfield, Surviving Spouse of William Beddingfield, Deceased v. City of Pulaski, Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Beddingfield, Surviving Spouse of William Beddingfield, Deceased v. City of Pulaski, Tennessee, 861 F.2d 968 (6th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

Defendant City of Pulaski, a municipal corporation located in Giles County, Tennessee, appeals the district court’s order denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict following a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff, Georgia Bed-dingfield, surviving spouse of William Bed-dingfield. William Beddingfield ■ hanged himself with his own belt while being held in the Pulaski City jail on a DUI charge, and plaintiff brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The issues on appeal are: (1) whether the City deliberately promulgated a policy to inadequately train jail facility personnel; and (2) in the absence of such a policy, whether gross negligence or reckless disregard amounting to deliberate indifference to the rights of plaintiffs deceased established § 1983 liability against the City. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.

I.

A.

At approximately 5:45 p.m. on October 9, 1984, Pulaski Officers Doyle Edwards and Randy Keene responded to a report concerning a drunk driver at a local liquor store. The officers saw Beddingfield get into his truck and drive away. After following Beddingfield for some distance, the officers saw the truck run over a curb and then cross the center line of the highway. Edwards stopped Beddingfield’s truck and gave Beddingfield a field sobriety test which Beddingfield failed. The officers placed Beddingfield under arrest and drove him to the City’s holding facility.

Once he arrived at the holding facility, Beddingfield called his wife and asked her to “see what you can do for me.” Shortly after 6:00 p.m., after calling his wife, Bed-dingfield took a breath alcohol test administered by Officer Edwards. Beddingfield registered a reading of 0.27. He then requested a blood alcohol test and was taken by Edwards and Keene to a local hospital where a blood sample was taken. Dr. Burger Haney, the attending physician, reported Beddingfield’s condition upon admission as “good,” his level of consciousness as “oriented,” and his attitude as “cooperative.”

Beddingfield was then returned to the City’s holding facility and at approximately 6:45 p.m., made a second telephone call to his wife and told her he had been informed that he would probably get an “11-29”, by which he apparently meant an eleven-month, twenty-nine-day sentence for his third DUI conviction, and would lose his truck and his job. Mrs. Beddingfield did not communicate the substance of either of her husband’s two phone calls to the police or holding facility personnel.

Edwards then removed a knife, a cigarette lighter, and some money from Bed-dingfield and assisted the staggering Bed-dingfield from the booking area to a holding cell. At approximately 6:50 p.m., Bed-dingfield was placed in a cell by himself. Edwards did not remove Beddingfield’s belt or shoelaces.

Between 7:00 and 8:00 p.m., police Sergeant Pridmore, who was acting as dispatcher, observed Beddingfield approximately four times. During this time, Bed-dingfield yelled for cigarettes and continuously kicked his cell door. Greg Roberts, a civilian dispatcher, relieved Pridmore at 8:00 p.m. Plaintiff stopped by the facility shortly after 8:00 p.m. and asked Roberts to give her husband several packs of cigarettes. She left immediately without having mentioned her husband’s concerns about the anticipated sentence, his truck *970 and his job. At about 8:10 p.m., and again at about 8:15 p.m., Roberts saw Bedding-field alive. At approximately 8:30 p.m., the trustee found Beddingfield hanging by his own belt and notified the City personnel present. Officer Michael Chapman, Officers Edwards and Keene, and dispatcher Roberts went to the cellblock and determined that Beddingfield was dead.

B.

Under Tennessee Law, the Tennessee Corrections Institute (TCI) is empowered “[t]o establish minimum standards for local jails ... including, but not limited to ... standards for the safekeeping, health and welfare of inmates.” Jails that meet TCI standards are deemed “certified.” Jails which are certified by the TCI receive a higher rate of compensation for housing state prisoners.

Prior to October 9,1984, the City used its jail primarily as a five-hour holding facility for persons arrested for alcohol-related offenses in order to give the offenders an opportunity to sober up before being transferred to the Giles County Jail and to make bond. The Police Chief and Mayor of the City had considered sending staff members to TCI training, but decided instead to provide their own forty-hour in-house training program which the City required officers to complete each year. According to Detective John White, the training officer for Pulaski’s police department, the program included, inter alia, instructions on dealing with intoxicated persons, combative persons, persons with mental problems, investigative techniques and interview techniques.

Plaintiff offered Edward Totten as an expert witness on jail procedures. Totten served as TCI Director of Training from 1981 to 1985. Both Totten and Detective White, the City’s training officer, testified that no TCI minimum standard required or even mentioned that belts or shoelaces should be removed from intoxicated detainees. Totten testified, however, that TCI’s forty-hour jailer training program taught officers to remove the belt and shoelaces of an intoxicated detainee and to observe the detainee every fifteen minutes or less. Len Holmes, an expert witness for the City, testified to the contrary. Holmes, an instructor in TCI’s jailer training program, testified that he did not teach either of the two points referred to by Totten.

According to every officer who testified, it was the City’s policy to train its arresting officers to exercise their own best judgment in determining what items to remove from a particular arrestee, taking into account the following factors: whether the arrestee was aggressive, despondent, or irrational, whether the arrestee had harmed police officers or himself, whether any other persons were present in the same jail cell who might be harmed by a violent detainee, and what type of offense the detainee had allegedly committed.

Officer Edwards, the officer who had arrested Beddingfield, testified that under the circumstances he saw no need to remove Beddingfield’s belt. According to Edwards, Beddingfield showed no signs of being suicidal, depressed, or aggressive during the entire time he was in police custody. “He was just very quiet, reserved, didn’t have much to say to anybody. Just a very cooperative fellow_ He wasn’t aggressive towards me and he wasn’t depressed.... He was the only man in the cell.” Moreover, as of October 9, 1984, no detainee had ever committed suicide in the City’s holding facility, and plaintiff offered no evidence of any prior suicide attempts using a belt or shoelaces.

C.

Plaintiff filed suit in September 1985 against the City, Giles County, and various City and County employees, asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law. The only claim which proceeded to trial was plaintiff’s § 1983 claim against the City.

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Bluebook (online)
861 F.2d 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-beddingfield-surviving-spouse-of-william-beddingfield-deceased-v-ca6-1989.