Manders v. Lee

285 F.3d 983, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169, 2002 WL 397221
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 2002
DocketNo. 01-13606
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 285 F.3d 983 (Manders v. Lee) 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
Manders v. Lee, 285 F.3d 983, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169, 2002 WL 397221 (11th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

HULL, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff Willie Santonio Manders sued the defendant Winston Peterson, individually and as Sheriff of Clinch County, Georgia, for injuries caused by excessive force against Manders while detained in the county jail. This interlocutory appeal presents the question of whether a Georgia sheriff in his official capacity is an agent for the state, not the county, when performing his law enforcement duties as to use of force, and thus is entitled to Eleventh Anendment immunity from suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

[987]*987In the past, our circuit has treated § 1983 suits against Georgia sheriffs in their official capacities as suits against counties. Although those decisions did not analyze whether a sheriff under Georgia law actually represents the state or the county, we are constrained to follow them and must affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Sheriff Peterson in his official capacity.

However, as explained herein, we question the correctness of those decisions. We believe that Sheriff Peterson in his official capacity is an agent for the State of Georgia, not Clinch County, when performing his law enforcement duties as to use of force, and is protected by Eleventh Amendment immunity.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

Clinch County, Georgia, is a small rural county with a population of approximately 6,000. As the elected Sheriff, the defendant Winston Peterson (“Sheriff Peterson”) is responsible for the operation of the jail in Clinch County, for establishing the policies and procedures at the jail, and for hiring, training, and supervising his deputies who work in the jail. Sheriff Peterson’s deputy and chief jailer was the defendant Alan Brown.

On May 18,1997, police officers from the City of Homerville arrested the plaintiff Willie Santonio Manders (“Manders”) and transported him to the jail. As Manders was being escorted into the holding cell at the jail, one of the City police officers stated that Manders had “hit him” earlier.1 According to Manders, deputy Brown and a City police officer then repeatedly struck him across the head, neck, and face and banged his head against a wall. Manders suffered from a bruised, swollen face, and the beating affected him emotionally, eventually leading to a stay in a mental hospital.

The morning after the beating, Manders wrote a statement for jail officials, wherein he stated, “They had to be rough with me to let me know that they mean business.” In his deposition, Manders testified that Sheriff Peterson and some other officer forced him to write this statement. That same day Manders was released from jail. Afterwards, Manders’s mother met with Sheriff Peterson to discuss the beating of her son. According to Manders’s mother, Sheriff Peterson responded to her concerns about the beating as follows: “[T]hat happens sometimes when they bite and scratch.” Sheriff Peterson did not investigate the beating incident.

Manders also introduced into evidence the Policy and Procedural Manual (the “Manual”) of the Clinch County Sheriffs Department. In his deposition, Sheriff Peterson testified that he published the Manual in either 1989 or 1990, drafting some of the policies himself and adopting some state policies. The Manual requires that “[e]aeh case involving physical or defensive force be reported in writing to the Sheriff,” as follows:

(A) Notification of Supervisor
1. The Sheriff shall be immediately informed of each incident involving the use of force by officers of this Department. Such notification shall be on the same date of the incident.
2. Each ease involving physical or defensive force shall be reported in writing to the Sheriff.
[988]*9883. Each officer present or assisting in an arrest or incident requiring force shall be prepared to submit a report supplement describing the incident if requested.

Deputy Brown, however, never submitted a written report indicating he used force with Manders, and Sheriff Peterson never required deputy Brown to do so even after having met with Manders’s mother.

In addition to the report requirement, the Manual discusses both non-deadly and deadly force by an officer in the performance of his duties. The Manual provides that non-deadly force may be used by an officer in these situations:

1. When necessary to preserve the peace, prevent commission of offenses, or prevent suicide or self-inflicted injury.
2. When preventing or interrupting a crime or attempted crime against property.
3. When making lawful arrests and searches, overcoming resistance to such arrest and searches, and preventing escapes from custody.
4. When in self defense, or defense of another against unlawful violence to his person.

The Manual also discusses in detail when use of deadly force is justified. Sheriff Peterson does not have any other written or standard operating procedures for the use of force at the jail or for formal citizen complaints.

B. Amended Complaint

On March 24, 1999, Plaintiff Manders filed his complaint. He promptly amended it on April 20, 1999, naming numerous defendants. The only two remaining defendants, however, are Clinch County, Georgia, and Sheriff Peterson in his official capacity.2 The amended complaint asserted that at the time of the acts complained of, the defendant Peterson was acting both individually and as an agent of and representative of Clinch County and was operating under the color of state law.

In his amended complaint, Manders further claims that Clinch County and Sheriff Peterson were responsible for establishing policies regarding the use of force at the jail and for implementing those policies by training, monitoring, and disciplining deputies to ensure that the use-of-foree policies were followed. According to Manders, deputy Brown beat him, and Clinch County and Sheriff Peterson permitted deputy Brown’s use of excessive force. Manders also asserts that Clinch County and Sheriff Peterson failed to provide deputies proper training and oversight regarding use of force at the jail and failed to promulgate rules and regulations adequate to regulate deputies’ conduct, and that this failure caused the beating suffered by Manders.

In addition, the amended complaint alleged that Sheriff Peterson had negligently hired and retained deputy Brown. More specifically, it alleged that Sheriff Peterson knew or should have known that deputy Brown had a history and reputation for violent treatment of prisoners both during and prior to his employment as a deputy sheriff at the jail. The amended complaint asserted that the beating of the plaintiff Manders would not have occurred [989]*989but for Sheriff Peterson’s negligent hiring and retention of deputy Brown.

Manders sought damages against Clinch County and Sheriff Peterson, including punitive damages from Sheriff Peterson. Manders further requested a mandatory injunction whereby the County would be required to revise its policies, guidelines, and regulations on the use of force.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 F.3d 983, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169, 2002 WL 397221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manders-v-lee-ca11-2002.