Gomes v. Wood

451 F.3d 1122, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 16104, 2006 WL 1739586
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 2006
Docket04-4197
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 451 F.3d 1122 (Gomes v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gomes v. Wood, 451 F.3d 1122, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 16104, 2006 WL 1739586 (10th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

HENRY, Circuit Judge.

On April 30, 2000, Megan Annes, a child protection caseworker with the Utah Division of Child and Family Services, removed nine-month-old Rebekah Gomes from Rebekah’s home and placed her in protective custody. Ms. Annes’s decision was based on a four-inch linear skull frac-toe that Rebekah’s treating physician had reported to Child and Family Services four days earlier. In September 2000, the Division of Child and Family Services found that protective custody was no longer warranted and returned Rebekah to her family-

Rebekah and her parents, Shauna and Domingo Gomes, then filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Ms. Annes, Kerri Ketterer and Tess Blackmer (Ms. Annes’s supervisors), and Assistant Attorney General Deborah Wood. The Gomeses alleged that the removal of Rebekah from then-home without prior notice and a hearing violated their due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.

The district court granted summary judgment to all the defendants. Relying on Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247, 98 S.Ct. 1042, 55 L.Ed.2d 252 (1978), the court reasoned that the state’s affording the Gomeses a post-removal hearing on May 3, 2000 foreclosed their claims for damages for failing to provide a pre-removal hearing. The court also indicated that “it likely would have reached the same result” on alternative grounds — that emergency circumstances justified removal without a hearing and that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. Aplts’ App. at 941 (Dist. Ct. Order, filed July 16, 2004).

We disagree with the district court’s application of Carey to these facts, but we affirm its decision for a different reason: we hold that because Ms. Annes did not violate clearly established law of which a reasonable official would have known, she and the other defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Removal of Rebekah

On April 26, 2000, Shauna Gomes took Rebekah to her pediatrician, Dr. Brent Knorr. She told Dr. Knorr that Rebekah had injured her head on the previous day when she fell off the bed. She reported that Rebekah had slept a lot since the fall and was “cranky” and “clingy.” Aplts’ App. at 585.

Dr. Knorr examined Rebekah and found a large amount of swelling. An x-ray revealed a four-inch parietal fracture on Rebekah’s skull. However, there was no depressed fracture — a significant finding because such fractures are more likely to injure the brain. The fracture was linear, not star-shaped, which suggested to Dr. Knorr that it had been caused by a blunt trauma.

Dr. Knorr found Ms. Gomes’s explanation of the injury “possible but suspicious.” Id. at 930. He stated that the shape of Rebekah’s fracture was “consistent with a fall on a flat object.” Id. at 929. However, in deposition testimony, he explained that he had seen many children who had fallen from beds, or objects of similar heights, but had not suffered the kind of fracture that he had seen on Rebekah. Dr. Knorr was also concerned that Ms. Gomes had waited until the day after Rebekah’s injury to seek medical attention. To Dr. Knorr, the delay in seeking care was “one of the warning signs that maybe *1125 something-wasn’t on par with what I was told.” Id. at 596.

Dr. Knorr prescribed Motrin. He told Ms. Gomes that he was required to report the fracture (and Ms. Gomes’s explanation of it) to the Division of Child and Family Services. Nevertheless, he sent Rebekah home and told Ms. Gomes that he was comfortable doing so.

Dr. Knorr then reported the incident to Child and Family Services by telephone. The intake caseworker responded that, because the matter did not appear to be an emergency, an investigator would call him back on the following day.

On April 27, 2000, Ms. Gomes returned to the doctor’s office with Rebekah. She was concerned that Rebekah had been vomiting. Dr. Knorr was out of the office, but his partner examined Rebekah and concluded that the vomiting was caused by the stomach flu and not by the head injury.

On April 28, 2000, Ms. Gomes again returned to Dr. Knorr’s office for a followup visit. She asked him if he had contacted Child and Family Services, noting that no one had contacted her. Evidently, no one had contacted Dr. Knorr either, as he responded that he would follow up with the agency. He concluded that Rebekah was doing well, and he again “felt comfortable leaving the child in her mother’s care.” Id. at 930-81.

On the same day, Dr. Knorr spoke by telephone with the defendant Megan Annes, a caseworker in the Division of Child and Family Services. He told her that “the mother’s explanation was possible but suspicious” but that he “felt comfortable leaving [Rebekah] in her mother’s care.” Id. at 930.

After speaking with Dr. Knorr, Ms. Annes met with her supervisors, Tess Blackmer and Kerri Ketterer (who are also named as defendants in this ease). They advised Ms. Annes that it might be necessary to take Rebekah into protective custody immediately — without first conducting a hearing. Ms. Blackmer indicated that “there were substantial reasons to believe that there was a substantial danger to Rebekah’s physical health and safety.” Id. at 550. Ms. Blackmer based that conclusion on the severity of Rebekah’s skull fracture, Dr. Knorr’s suspicions regarding Ms. Gomes’s explanation of the fracture, the Gomeses’ apparent delay in seeking medical treatment for the fracture, Rebekah’s young age, and the possibility that further medical treatment for the skull fracture might be delayed. Id. Ms. Ket-terer added that she did not find Ms. Gomes’s explanation of Rebekah’s injury to be credible. See id. at 556 (stating that “[b]ased on my training and experience ... I did not believe it was possible for a nine-month-old child to receive a four-inch skull fracture from a two-foot fall off a bed because of the softness of a baby’s skull bones”). Both supervisors advised Ms. Annes to investigate further and to seek legal advice.

Ms. Annes then telephoned the defendant Deborah Wood, an Assistant Attorney General for the State of Utah in the child services division (and the fourth defendant in this case). Ms. Wood also concluded that Rebekah’s “physical health and safety were in substantial danger.” Id. at 563. Ms. Wood and Ms. Annes agreed that Ms. Annes should conduct a home visit. Ms. Wood advised Ms. Annes that “if [Ms. Annes] concluded there was substantial cause to believe that placing Rebekah Gomes into protective custody was necessary to protect her from a substantial danger to her physical health and safety, the decision would comply with the applicable state statutes.” Id. at 564. Ms. Wood added that she would support the removal by filing a petition in the juvenile *1126 court seeking an out-of-home placement. Id.

On the following day, April 29, 2000, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
451 F.3d 1122, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 16104, 2006 WL 1739586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gomes-v-wood-ca10-2006.