MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
RUFE, District Judge.
On the morning of February 4, 2003, Richard Mohammed was punched in the face by another student while walking in a stairwell at Olney High School (“OHS”) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Richard was enrolled in the tenth grade. On August 1, 2003, Richard’s mother, Sharon Mohammed, filed the instant action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on her son’s behalf in Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, alleging that the School District of Philadelphia (the “School District”) and various individual defendants
subjected Richard to a violation of his right to bodily integrity and safety guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. On August 19, 2003, Defendants properly removed this case to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Now before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.
For the reasons set forth below, -Defendants’ Motion is granted, and the Complaint is dismissed with prejudice.
1. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The Attack on Richard Mohammed
On the morning of February 4, 2003, Richard Mohammed entered OHS and proceeded to stairwell four on his way to his advisory room on the fourth floor. Stairwell four was the only stairwell available at that time in the morning. While Richard was walking between the third and fourth floors, another student attacked a student directly in front of Richard.
The attacker attempted to punch the student in front of Richard, but the student ducked, and the punch struck Richard in the eye, causing severe injury. The stairwell in which the attack occurred was not monitored by video surveillance cameras, and no security personnel were present to witness the attack. Neither the attacker nor the intended target have ever been identified.
B. Violence at OHS
The number of violent incidents at Olney High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania has increased steadily from 1999 through 2003. As Plaintiffs expert James Dallas notes in his report:
According to a summarization of reported acts of violence of all types that was obtained through discovery, Olney High School, at Front and Duncannon Streets, Philadelphia, had during the previous three school years, reported assaults or attacks on students or faculty/staff had increased incrementally from 60 in 99-00 and 00-01 to 87 reports in the 2001-02 school year. For the school year 2002-03, through the end of January, there were 57 incidents of violence reported for just the first half of this school year. This would suggest a figure of well over 100 incidents through the end of the 2002-03 school year.
In addition, Plaintiff cites to evidence that the School District and the other remaining defendants were aware of the increasing problem of violence at OHS and other schools within the district.
Plaintiff also points to several memoranda from Monas-tra regarding the lack of a full complement of school police officers at OHS on most days.
According to Plaintiff, this evidence demonstrates that Defendants allowed OHS to become “a hotbed of escalating violence.”
II. DISCUSSION
The Complaint asserts two counts: 1) a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violation of Richard’s Fourteenth Amendment rights, “in that he suffered a deprivation of his bodily integrity and safety without due process of law”
; and 2) a cause of action for willful misconduct against the individual defendants. The Court addresses both of these counts below.
A. 42 U.S.C. § 1983
Section 1983 states:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress....
This provision does not create substantive rights; rather, “it provides only remedies for deprivations of rights established elsewhere in the Constitution or federal laws.”
“Thus, [t]o establish a prima fa-cie case under section 1983, Plaintiffs must show (1) that a person acting under color of state law (2) deprived them of a right, privilege or immunity secured by the Constitution or federal law.”
Here, Plaintiff claims that Defendants violated Richard’s Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest in his personal integrity and his right to be free of unwarranted assaults on his person. Specifically, Plaintiff argues that “[t]he policies and deliberate conduct of all the defendants allowed a situation to exist at Olney High School that was dangerous and violent and caused Richard Mohammed’s injuries.”
It is well settled that public school districts are included in the definition of state actors for the purposes of § 1983 liability.
Therefore, the only issue is whether De
fendants are responsible for a violation of Richard’s Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Plaintiff contends that Defendants’ failure to protect Richard from the attack in the stairwell constituted a violation of his rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. “[T]he general rule is that the state has no affirmative obligation to protect its citizens from the violent acts of private individuals.”
However, Plaintiff argues that Defendants are liable under one of the recognized exceptions to this rule called the “state-created danger” theory of liability.
To establish liability under this theory, a plaintiff must prove four elements:
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MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
RUFE, District Judge.
On the morning of February 4, 2003, Richard Mohammed was punched in the face by another student while walking in a stairwell at Olney High School (“OHS”) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Richard was enrolled in the tenth grade. On August 1, 2003, Richard’s mother, Sharon Mohammed, filed the instant action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on her son’s behalf in Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, alleging that the School District of Philadelphia (the “School District”) and various individual defendants
subjected Richard to a violation of his right to bodily integrity and safety guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. On August 19, 2003, Defendants properly removed this case to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Now before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.
For the reasons set forth below, -Defendants’ Motion is granted, and the Complaint is dismissed with prejudice.
1. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The Attack on Richard Mohammed
On the morning of February 4, 2003, Richard Mohammed entered OHS and proceeded to stairwell four on his way to his advisory room on the fourth floor. Stairwell four was the only stairwell available at that time in the morning. While Richard was walking between the third and fourth floors, another student attacked a student directly in front of Richard.
The attacker attempted to punch the student in front of Richard, but the student ducked, and the punch struck Richard in the eye, causing severe injury. The stairwell in which the attack occurred was not monitored by video surveillance cameras, and no security personnel were present to witness the attack. Neither the attacker nor the intended target have ever been identified.
B. Violence at OHS
The number of violent incidents at Olney High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania has increased steadily from 1999 through 2003. As Plaintiffs expert James Dallas notes in his report:
According to a summarization of reported acts of violence of all types that was obtained through discovery, Olney High School, at Front and Duncannon Streets, Philadelphia, had during the previous three school years, reported assaults or attacks on students or faculty/staff had increased incrementally from 60 in 99-00 and 00-01 to 87 reports in the 2001-02 school year. For the school year 2002-03, through the end of January, there were 57 incidents of violence reported for just the first half of this school year. This would suggest a figure of well over 100 incidents through the end of the 2002-03 school year.
In addition, Plaintiff cites to evidence that the School District and the other remaining defendants were aware of the increasing problem of violence at OHS and other schools within the district.
Plaintiff also points to several memoranda from Monas-tra regarding the lack of a full complement of school police officers at OHS on most days.
According to Plaintiff, this evidence demonstrates that Defendants allowed OHS to become “a hotbed of escalating violence.”
II. DISCUSSION
The Complaint asserts two counts: 1) a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violation of Richard’s Fourteenth Amendment rights, “in that he suffered a deprivation of his bodily integrity and safety without due process of law”
; and 2) a cause of action for willful misconduct against the individual defendants. The Court addresses both of these counts below.
A. 42 U.S.C. § 1983
Section 1983 states:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress....
This provision does not create substantive rights; rather, “it provides only remedies for deprivations of rights established elsewhere in the Constitution or federal laws.”
“Thus, [t]o establish a prima fa-cie case under section 1983, Plaintiffs must show (1) that a person acting under color of state law (2) deprived them of a right, privilege or immunity secured by the Constitution or federal law.”
Here, Plaintiff claims that Defendants violated Richard’s Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest in his personal integrity and his right to be free of unwarranted assaults on his person. Specifically, Plaintiff argues that “[t]he policies and deliberate conduct of all the defendants allowed a situation to exist at Olney High School that was dangerous and violent and caused Richard Mohammed’s injuries.”
It is well settled that public school districts are included in the definition of state actors for the purposes of § 1983 liability.
Therefore, the only issue is whether De
fendants are responsible for a violation of Richard’s Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Plaintiff contends that Defendants’ failure to protect Richard from the attack in the stairwell constituted a violation of his rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. “[T]he general rule is that the state has no affirmative obligation to protect its citizens from the violent acts of private individuals.”
However, Plaintiff argues that Defendants are liable under one of the recognized exceptions to this rule called the “state-created danger” theory of liability.
To establish liability under this theory, a plaintiff must prove four elements:
(1) the harm ultimately caused was foreseeable and fairly direct; (2) the state actor acted in willful disregard for the safety of the plaintiff; (3) there existed some relationship between the state and the plaintiff; (4) the state actors used their authority to create an opportunity that otherwise would not have existed for the third party’s crime to occur.
Upon application of this test to the evidence before the Court, it is clear that Defendants did not violate Richard’s constitutional rights under the state-created danger theory. Therefore, Plaintiffs § 1983 claim must be dismissed.
1. Foreseeable Harm
This element requires Plaintiff to prove that “the harm ultimately caused was a foreseeable and a fairly direct result of the state’s actions.”
The cases in which the courts have found this element satisfied generally involve situations where a specific harm to a specific person was foreseeable. For example, in
Kneipp,
the case where the Third Circuit first adopted the state-created danger theory, the police stopped Samantha Kneipp and her husband Joseph as they walked home because they appeared to be inebriated.
The officers then granted Joseph permission to go home to relieve their babysitter, leaving Samantha with the officers.
Instead of accompanying Samantha, who was so drunk that she could hardly stand and had even urinated on herself, to her home less than one block away, the police left her to walk home alone.
Tragically, she never made it home and was eventually found unconscious at the bottom of a stairway
across the street from her home.
As a result of exposure to the cold, Samantha suffered from hypothermia which caused brain damage.
Based on this evidence, the Court found that:
A reasonable trier of fact could conclude that in Samantha’s state of intoxication, she would be more likely to fall and injure herself if left unescorted than someone who was not inebriated. Based on the facts and inferences most favorable to the legal guardians, we hold that a reasonable jury could find that the harm likely to befall Samantha if separated from Joseph while in a highly intoxicated state in cold weather was indeed foreseeable.
In this case, Plaintiff argues that it was foreseeable that Richard would be punched while walking in the stairwell because of the pervasive violence at OHS. In addition, Plaintiff argues that Richard being punched was a direct result of the School District’s failure to properly train school police and the lack of surveillance in the stairwell. This evidence that OHS was a dangerous environment generally is insufficient to establish that it was foreseeable that Richard would be punched in the stairwell.
By Richard’s own account, he did not know the student who threw the punch, and moreover, the punch was intended for someone else.
Furthermore, the harm to Richard was not the result of a lack of surveillance; rather, it was the result of a misguided punch from another student. No reasonable jury could find that this incident was foreseeable.
2. Willful Disregard of Richard’s Safety
To meet this standard, Plaintiff must show that Defendants “acted with willful disregard for or deliberate indifference to plaintiffs safety.”
Although the courts
have struggled to precisely define willful disregard,
no reasonable jury could find that Plaintiffs evidence meets this standard. Plaintiff argues that inadequate numbers of school police officers, inadequate training and supervision of those officers, and an insufficient number of surveillance cameras around OHS and in the stairwells demonstrate Defendants’ deliberate indifference to Richard’s safety. However, “ ‘indefensible passivity,’ and ‘nonfeasance’ do not rise to the level of a constitutional violation.”
At most, the inadequate security and surveillance
at OHS was the result of negligence, and “merely negligent acts cannot support a claim under the state-created danger theory of § 1983.”
Richard Mohammed was “the tragic victim of random criminal conduct rather than of school officials’ deliberate, callous decisions,”
and the evidence cited by Plaintiff does not prove otherwise.
3. Relationship Between the State and Plaintiff
This element of the state-created danger test requires a plaintiff to prove that there was a relationship between the state and the plaintiff. This element might be more aptly labeled the “foreseeable victim” element as it “contemplates some contact such that the plaintiff was a foreseeable victim of a defendant’s acts in a tort sense.”
The intent of this element is to “exclude from the reach of the state-created danger theory those instances where the state actor creates only a threat to the general population.”
A plaintiff, however, need not show that the defendants knew that a particular individual was in harm’s way.
Rather, it is sufficient if the
plaintiff is a member of a discrete group of persons who could have been subject to the harm suffered by the plaintiff.
Here, Plaintiff alleges that Richard was a member of a discrete class of persons consisting of the student body at OHS. Thus, the issue here is whether Richard Mohammed, and all other students present at OHS, “were a sufficiently discrete group of persons who could have been foreseeable victims” of the misguided punch from the unidentified student on the stairwell.
This is a difficult question, but the Court need not decide it here because Plaintiff has failed to satisfy the other three elements of the state-created danger theory.
4. Creating the Opportunity for Harm
The final element of the state-created danger test is whether “the state actors used their authority to create an opportunity that otherwise would not have existed for the third party’s crime to occur.”
“[T]he dispositive factor appears to be whether the state has in some way placed the plaintiff in a dangerous position that was foreseeable, and not whether the act was more appropriately characterized as an affirmative act or an omission.”
For example, in
Kneipp,
the police created the opportunity for Samantha Kneipp to suffer the tragic fall by stopping her and Joseph while on their way home and then allowing Joseph to leave without her. Had the police not interfered, a jury could reasonably find that Joseph would have ensured that Samantha made home safely.
Instead, the police created the opportunity for Samantha to injure herself by leaving her to walk home alone.
In contrast, it was not the School District’s actions or inaction that created an opportunity for the unidentified attacker to throw the punch. Although having surveillance or a police officer in the stairwells may have aided in apprehending the attacker, it would not have prohibited him from throwing the punch. As stated above, Defendants’ actions, or lack thereof, did not directly result in Richard becoming the victim of the misguided punch. The evidence cited by Plaintiff cannot prove that Defendants’ actions created the foreseeable risk that Richard would suffer the harm he suffered here. Therefore, Plaintiff cannot satisfy this last element of the state-created danger theory.
B. Monell
Plaintiff asserts a claim for municipal liability under
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
436 U.S. 658, 98 S.Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978), as an alternative theory of liability under § 1983. This attempt is misguided as
Monell
is not an
alternative theory of municipal liability.
The Supreme Court in
Monell
stated that:
a local government may not be sued under § 1983 for an injury inflicted solely by its employees or agents. Instead, it is when execution of a government’s policy or custom, whether made by its lawmakers or by those whose edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy, inflicts the injury that the government as an entity is responsible under § 1983.
Thus,
Monell
does not eliminate the requirement that the state actor must have violated the plaintiffs rights under the Constitution or federal law.
Rather,
Mo-nell
adds an additional hurdle for plaintiffs seeking to sue a local government for injuries inflicted by government employees and agents. Therefore, “[i]t is not enough that [the School District] adopted with deliberate indifference a policy of inadequately training its [school police] officers. There must be a ‘direct causal link’ between the policy and a constitutional violation.”
This is the precise point at which Plaintiffs claim fails. Even drawing, as the Court must, all reasonable inferences in favor of Plaintiff, she has failed to establish that the School District’s policies caused Richard
constitutional
harm. Plaintiff cites to evidence showing that the School District enacted inadequate policies regarding training and supervision of its police officers and other inadequate security policies. However, as discussed above, Plaintiffs evidence does not satisfy the elements of the state-created danger exception to the rule that the state has no affirmative duty to protect citizens from violent acts of private individuals.
Because the School District and its employees did not create the danger that resulted in Richard’s harm, any failure to protect Richard from the misguided punch was not an infringement on his constitutional rights. Because there has been no constitutional harm, the School District cannot be liable under § 1983.
C. Willful Misconduct
In this cause of action, Plaintiff argues that the individual defendants “had ample opportunity to consider and review the failings in the school, and their failure to institute policies providing adequate school police on a regular basis demonstrates their willful disregard for the safety of Richard Mohammed.”
Although the Court is uncertain how this cause of action is separate from Plaintiffs § 1983 claims, it is apparently an attempt by Plaintiff to assert some sort of state law intentional tort liability on the individual defendants. This attempt is futile as the individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity for their actions here.
“Officials exercising discretionary powers are ‘shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
This immunity extends to public school officials.
Therefore, the threshold question here is: “Taken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, do the facts alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right? ... If no constitutional right would have been violated were the allegations established, there is no necessity for further inquiries concerning qualified immunity.”
Since the Court has already determined that the facts here do not show that the individual defendants violated Richard’s constitutional rights, the individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
Accordingly, summary judgment is warranted on Plaintiffs willful misconduct cause of action.
An appropriate order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 4th day of February, 2005, upon consideration Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. #21], Plaintiffs Memorandum of Law in Opposition thereto [Doc. #22], Defendants’ Reply [Doc. #29], and Plaintiffs Sur-reply [Doc. # 32], and for the reasons set forth in the attached memorandum opinion, it is hereby ORDERED as follows:
1. Plaintiffs claims against Defendants Nilva Franco-DeJesus, Joseph Meyer and Frank Roman are voluntarily DISMISSED without prejudice.
2. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED and JUDGMENT is entered for Defendants The School District of Philadelphia, Paul Valias, Edward Monastra and Thomas Smyth, and against Plaintiff. Plaintiffs Complaint is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
3.The Clerk of Court shall mark this case CLOSED for statistical purposes.
It is so ORDERED.