Harris v. Clay County, MS

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 2022
Docket21-60456
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Harris v. Clay County, MS, (5th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

Case: 21-60456 Document: 00516388809 Page: 1 Date Filed: 07/11/2022

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED July 11, 2022 No. 21-60456 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

Rachel Harris, Guardian of Steven Jessie Harris, on behalf of Steven Jessie Harris,

Plaintiff—Appellee,

versus

Clay County, Mississippi; Laddie Huffman, Former Sheriff, in his Individual and Official Capacities; Eddie Scott, Sheriff, in his Individual and Official Capacities,

Defendants—Appellants.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi USDC No. 1:18-CV-167

Before Smith, Costa, and Wilson, Circuit Judges. Gregg Costa, Circuit Judge: When a defendant is found incompetent to stand trial with no reasonable expectation of restored competency, the state must either civilly commit the defendant or release him. Jackson v. Indiana, 406 U.S. 715, 738 (1972). That simple commit-or-release rule was not followed in this case. Steven Harris was found incompetent to stand trial, and his civil commitment proceeding was dismissed. Yet Harris stayed in jail for six more years. This Case: 21-60456 Document: 00516388809 Page: 2 Date Filed: 07/11/2022

No. 21-60456

suit challenges his years-long detention when there was no basis to hold him. We consider whether his jailers are entitled to qualified immunity. I A This case stems from a horrific crime spree in 2005. 1 Harris was charged with murdering his father, shooting three law enforcement officers, shooting into occupied vehicles, carjacking, and kidnapping. He pleaded not guilty in a Clay County circuit court,2 and the court ordered that he be held in custody without bail. While Harris was in custody, his counsel requested a mental evaluation to determine Harris’s competency to face trial. Harris had a long history of suffering from schizophrenia. The circuit court agreed to the evaluation and transferred him to a hospital. There, doctors concluded that there was “no substantial probability that Mr. Harris [could] be restored to competence to proceed legally in the foreseeable future.” Harris returned to jail and awaited competency proceedings. The court held a hearing on October 12, 2010 and agreed with the doctors that Harris was not competent. It therefore ordered Mississippi to pursue civil commitment proceedings in the chancery court. Importantly, the court also

1 Given the summary judgment posture, we recount the facts in the light most favorable to Harris. See Tolan v. Cotton, 572 U.S. 650, 657 (2014) (emphasizing that this basic summary judgment principle applies in qualified immunity cases). 2 Mississippi circuit courts hear felony criminal proceedings and civil lawsuits. About the Courts, STATE OF MISSISSIPPI JUDICIARY, https://courts.ms.gov/ aboutcourts/aboutthecourts.php (last visited June 26, 2022). Chancery courts have jurisdiction over matters of equity, including, as relevant here, civil commitment proceedings. Id.

2 Case: 21-60456 Document: 00516388809 Page: 3 Date Filed: 07/11/2022

ruled on Harris’s detention status: He should be held “until the determination of said civil proceedings.” But the civil commitment case did not last long. On the same day the circuit court removed Harris’s criminal case from its active docket (October 20, 2010), the chancery court dismissed the just-filed commitment proceeding for lack of jurisdiction. It based that dismissal on the pending criminal charges—yes, the charges that had just become inactive—in the circuit court. The circuit court apparently never caught wind of the chancery court’s dismissal, sending Harris into legal limbo. No one disputes that Harris remained in Clay County jail from that point forward. It is hard to explain, then, what happened next. On October 25, 2010, Sheriff Laddie Huffman and Deputy Eddie Scott, the ones in charge of the jail, signed a “Diligence Declaration.” The declaration purportedly related to a separate indictment against Harris for assaulting a jailer while in custody. 3 In that declaration, they said the following: “After diligent search and inquiry, [we] have been unable to find the within named Steven J. Harris in [our] county.” It appears that they submitted the declaration to the circuit court—further misleading the circuit court that the civil commitment proceedings went according to plan. Fast forward to 2012. The district attorney prosecuting Harris’s case, Forrest Allgood, found out about the state court snafu. After putting the pieces together, he went to Sheriff Huffman to inquire about Harris’s confinement. This time Huffman acknowledged that Harris was still in jail but indicated that his mental health seemed to be improving. So Allgood submitted a Motion for Reevaluation to the circuit court, asking the court to

3 That indictment was filed under seal. The seal was never lifted because Harris was never served with the indictment.

3 Case: 21-60456 Document: 00516388809 Page: 4 Date Filed: 07/11/2022

again determine whether Harris was competent to stand trial. The circuit court never ruled on that motion, perhaps because the case was on its inactive docket, and Allgood never followed up. Harris stayed in jail. Four more years passed with no change. That is, until a Mississippi news outlet started asking questions about the case. 4 At that point, Scott, who had been elected Sheriff, reached out to the newly elected district attorney to “try[] to push and get things moving” in Harris’s case. And then—the day before the newspaper published its article—the district attorney filed a motion for the chancery court to reconsider its dismissal of Harris’s civil commitment case. Things moved fast after the reconsideration motion. After holding that its earlier dismissal was inadvertent, the chancery court finally took up the civil case in June 2016. The court determined that Harris was a danger to himself and others, so it committed him to a medical facility. While there, Harris’s mental capacity was reevaluated one last time. The result was the same—he was not competent to stand trial and had no hope of regaining competence. The circuit court dismissed his criminal charges in 2017. Harris was released to his family soon after. He continues to receive medical care for his mental disorders.

4 See Jerry Mitchell, Man in Mississippi Jail 11 Years Without Trial, Clarion Ledger (May 21, 2016), https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2016/05/21/man- still-in-mississippi-jail-11-years-later/84253880/.

4 Case: 21-60456 Document: 00516388809 Page: 5 Date Filed: 07/11/2022

B Harris’s mother, on his behalf, sued District Attorney Allgood, Sheriffs Huffman and Scott, and Clay County under Section 1983. 5 The suit alleges that the defendants violated Harris’s Fourteenth Amendment due process rights by unlawfully detaining him for years. The complaint also contends that, at one point, Huffman held Harris down and forced him to take unwanted medication. As to Clay County, Harris argued that Sheriffs Huffman and Scott were final policymakers, making the county liable under Monell. The defendants sought summary judgment; Harris responded with a motion for partial summary judgment. The district court first dismissed Allgood from the case, concluding he had absolute prosecutorial immunity and qualified immunity. It came out the other way as to Huffman and Scott. It determined that they were not entitled to qualified immunity on the detention claim because—taking Harris’s account as true—their constitutional violations were obvious. It denied summary judgment to Clay County too, finding that there was strong evidence that Huffman and Scott were final policymakers for the county. Next, the court addressed the forced medication claim.

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Harris v. Clay County, MS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-clay-county-ms-ca5-2022.