Janice Washington v. City of St. Louis, Missouri

84 F.4th 770
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 2023
Docket22-1843
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 84 F.4th 770 (Janice Washington v. City of St. Louis, Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janice Washington v. City of St. Louis, Missouri, 84 F.4th 770 (8th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 22-1843 ___________________________

Janice Washington, Personal Representative of the Estate of Velma Payton; Louis Lyen Payton, deceased

Plaintiffs - Appellees

v.

City of St. Louis, Missouri; Philander Hughes, in his Individual and Official Capacities

Defendants - Appellants

Dale Glass, in his Individual and Official Capacities; Jeffrey Carson, in his Individual and Official Capacities

Defendants

Ryan Martel Branson, in his Individual and Official Capacities; Matthias Arthur, in his Individual and Official Capacities

Defendants - Appellants ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis ____________

Submitted: April 13, 2023 Filed: October 19, 2023 ____________ Before BENTON, GRASZ, and STRAS, Circuit Judges. ____________

STRAS, Circuit Judge.

In this qualified-immunity appeal, the district court misstated the burden and relied on allegations from an unverified complaint to deny summary judgment to three guards who allegedly failed to assist Louis Payton before he died. Based on these errors, we vacate and remand.

I.

Unable to afford bail, Payton spent several months at a medium-security facility in St. Louis called “the Workhouse.” It had dormitory-style sleeping quarters connected to a recreation room with tables and chairs. Inmates could move freely between the two rooms, and officers kept watch from a nearby guard station.

Unfortunately, none of them saw Payton receive or take fentanyl, the drug that killed him. Inmates tried to help by rubbing ice on him once he lost consciousness, but it did not work.

Upon arriving a few minutes later, Officers Matthias Arthur, Philander Hughes, and Ryan Branson radioed for medical assistance. In the meantime, rather than try to resuscitate Payton themselves, they stood by and watched as two inmates tried to help him. When trained medical personnel finally arrived four minutes later, it was too late: they were unable to revive Payton, who died from an overdose. Surveillance footage captured some, but not all, of these events.

Payton’s mother sued the City of St. Louis, the three responding officers, 1 and two supervisors for their deliberate indifference during the emergency. See 42

1 A fourth officer, Tannaka Boler, was once a defendant in the lawsuit but has since passed away. -2- U.S.C. § 1983; see also Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 691 (1978). She also alleged that several of them had wrongfully caused his death. See Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.080.

The defendants moved for summary judgment and a stay of discovery on the same day they filed their answer. Payton’s mother, for her part, opposed both motions. Granting the stay would prevent her from getting the evidence she needed from discovery, and without learning more, she could not adequately respond to the summary-judgment motion.

The district court kept the case moving. After two rounds of summary- judgment briefing—during which Payton’s aunt, Janice Washington, replaced his mother as personal representative—the court narrowed the case down to the deliberate-indifference and wrongful-death claims against the responding officers and the municipal-liability claim against the City of St. Louis. For those, it denied summary judgment.

II.

Bypassing discovery put this case in a strange procedural posture. In denying summary judgment, the district court filled some of the holes in the record with allegations from the plaintiff’s unverified complaint. Usually, in a qualified- immunity appeal, the district court has already given us the “plaintiff-friendly version of the facts” based on the evidence. N.S. v. Kansas City Bd. of Comm’rs, 933 F.3d 967, 969 (8th Cir. 2019). The difficulty here is figuring out what we can review when the plaintiff has no evidence.

Going back to the basics is a good place to start. An order denying summary judgment is typically nonfinal because it does not “end[] the litigation on the merits.” Green Tree Fin. Corp.–Ala. v. Randolph, 531 U.S. 79, 86 (2000) (citation omitted); see also 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (granting appellate courts jurisdiction over “final decisions of the district courts”). In fact, almost by definition, it keeps the litigation -3- going, which means that the party who loses must generally wait until the case is over to appeal. See Langford v. Norris, 614 F.3d 445, 455 (8th Cir. 2010).

Collateral orders, even when they arise out of the denial of summary judgment, are different. They are a “small class of [immediately appealable] rulings, not concluding the litigation, but conclusively resolving claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action.” Will v. Hallock, 546 U.S. 345, 349 (2006) (citation omitted). Included among them is a decision denying qualified immunity—precisely the situation we face here. See Johnson v. Jones, 515 U.S. 304, 311–12 (1995).

When we review collateral orders, not everything in the case is before us. “[A]bstract issues of law,” id. at 317, like whether the “plaintiff-friendly version of the facts” states a constitutional violation and the law clearly establishes a right, are reviewable, N.S. ex rel. Lee v. Kansas City Bd. of Comm’rs, 35 F.4th 1111, 1113 (8th Cir. 2022). The sufficiency of the evidence underlying the district court’s findings, however, is not. See Johnson, 515 U.S. at 313; see also Dean v. Bearden, 79 F.4th 986, 988 (8th Cir. 2023). To the extent the defendants ask us to assess sufficiency, we cannot.

This case also includes two other issues, ones we do not normally see in qualified-immunity appeals. The first is whether the district court picked and applied the right summary-judgment standard. The second is whether unverified factual allegations can substitute for actual evidence in determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists. In our view, both raise pure “legal issues” that fall within our jurisdiction, as limited as it may be. Plumhoff v. Rickard, 572 U.S. 765, 773 (2014); see Scott v. Benson, 742 F.3d 335, 340 (8th Cir. 2014) (remanding the case to the district court because it “applied the wrong constitutional standard in denying qualified immunity”); see also Vette v. K-9 United Deputy Sanders, 989 F.3d 1154, 1163 (10th Cir. 2021) (assessing in an interlocutory appeal whether the

-4- district court appropriately treated the plaintiff’s verified complaint as “competent evidence”).

A.

The first legal error was not applying the correct summary-judgment standard. A party moving for summary judgment need not “produce evidence showing the absence of a genuine issue of material fact” when “the nonmoving party bears the burden of proof.” Celotex Corp. v.

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