Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-19-01119/USCOURTS-ca6-19-01119-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
County of Huron
Appellant
Tammy Korthals
Appellee
Bradley Strozeski
Appellant

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION

File Name: 20a0015n.06

CASE NO. 19-1119

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

TAMMY KORTHALS,

 Plaintiff-Appellee,

 v.

COUNTY of HURON, et al.,

 Defendants-Appellants.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT 

COURT FOR THE EASTERN 

DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN

Before: BATCHELDER, WHITE, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Huron County Deputy Sheriff Bradley 

Strozeski arrested Tammy Korthals for driving under the influence of alcohol. Korthals’s

intoxication was so severe that he took her directly to the hospital and, though the hospital cleared 

her, she still had evident difficulty walking or maintaining her balance. Despite this difficulty, 

when they arrived at the jail, Deputy Strozeski left Korthals’s hands cuffed behind her back as he 

led her from the car, down a hallway, and up two stairs. This created a risk that she could stumble

and, being unable to use her hands to protect herself, suffer a serious injury. Deputy Strozeski 

could have reduced that risk by walking behind or alongside Korthals, watching her carefully, and

holding onto her for physical assistance or support. He did none of these and was atop the stairs, 

about six feet in front of her, when she lost her balance, fell backward from the second step, and 

hit her head on the floor, suffering severe injuries. 

Korthals sued, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that Deputy Strozeski committed a 

constitutional violation when he allowed her to fall on the stairs and that Huron County’s failure

to properly train its officers or implement a policy for handling impaired inmates subjected it to 

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municipal liability for that same violation. The defendants moved for summary judgment based 

on Deputy Strozeski’s assertion of qualified immunity, but the district court denied the motion. 

Korthals v. Cty. of Huron, No. 17-10319, 2019 WL 176722, at *1 (E.D. Mich. Jan. 11, 2019).

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The district court aptly framed the constitutional right at issue as an arrestee’s Fourteenth 

Amendment right to be free from “a substantial risk of serious harm,” id. at *2 (citing Farmer v. 

Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 834 (1994), Richmond v. Huq, 885 F.3d 928, 937 (6th Cir. 2018), and 

Richko v. Wayne Cty., 819 F.3d 907, 915 (6th Cir. 2016)), and properly recited the test as requiring 

the plaintiff to show both an objective “substantial risk of serious harm . . . [and] that the prison 

official [subjectively] knew of and [deliberately] disregarded” that risk, id. (quoting Farmer, 511 

U.S. at 837) (quotation marks omitted). The court found that Korthals’s evidence could persuade 

a jury of a substantial risk of serious harm on the stairs due to her extreme intoxication and 

impaired motor function (balance) while her hands were cuffed behind her back, and that Deputy 

Strozeski subjectively knew of and deliberately disregarded that risk. Id. at *3. In rejecting Deputy 

Strozeski’s claim of qualified immunity, the court held that the particular right under these 

circumstances—and Deputy Strozeski’s violation of that right—were clearly established by 

Carroll v. City of Quincy, 441 F. Supp. 2d 215, 223 (D. Mass. 2006). Id. 

In this interlocutory appeal, Deputy Strozeski claims the district court erred by denying 

him qualified immunity.2 Qualified immunity shields government officials engaged in the 

performance of discretionary functions from standing trial for civil liability unless their actions 

violate clearly established rights of which a reasonable person would have known. Harlow v. 

Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). The plaintiff suing such an official bears the burden of 

1 The court granted summary judgment on Korthals’s state-law gross-negligence claim, finding that Deputy 

Strozeski was not the proximate cause of her injury. Korthals, 2019 WL 176722, at *5. Korthals did not appeal. 

2 We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal from the denial of qualified immunity. See Bunkley v. 

City of Detroit, 902 F.3d 552, 560 (6th Cir. 2018). Our review is de novo, accepting Korthals’s version of the facts 

and drawing all reasonable inferences in her favor. Id. 

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overcoming the qualified-immunity defense. Quigley v. Tuong Vinh Thai, 707 F.3d 675, 681 (6th 

Cir. 2013). At the summary-judgment stage, the plaintiff must show that (1) the defendant violated 

a constitutional right and (2) that right was clearly established. Id. at 680. 

Common sense dictates that Deputy Strozeski should have exercised caution in taking the 

drunken, unsteady, and handcuffed Korthals up the stairs. We certainly do not condone his failure 

to do so. It was unreasonable, inexcusable, and, in fact, negligent. But “deliberate indifference 

entails something more than mere negligence,” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 835; it means the official 

actually recognized and then disregarded the risk, id. at 837-38. While Korthals has clearly stated 

a strong negligence case, it is less clear that Deputy Strozeski’s failure to use caution was not 

merely careless, inattentive, or sloppy, but was, instead, a conscious disregard of a recognized 

risk.3 Regardless, let us assume, arguendo, that Deputy Strozeski was deliberately indifferent to 

the risk and that he violated Korthals’s constitutional right to be free from that risk. 

The determinative question becomes whether that right was “clearly established,” so as to 

overcome qualified immunity. See Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818. There are two aspects to qualified

immunity’s “clearly established” element that the district court overlooked or misunderstood. The 

first is that, “to determine if the law is clearly established . . . , we look principally to the law of 

this circuit and to the Supreme Court.” Perez v. Oakland Cty., 466 F.3d 416, 427 (6th Cir. 2006); 

Coley v. Lucas Cty., 799 F.3d 530, 540 (6th Cir. 2015). The district court relied on a single case 

from the District of Massachusetts. As a general principle, it is doubtful that decisions from out3

It is possible that even this ordinary application of deliberate indifference might not apply to the present 

circumstances, given Farmer’s admonition against the use of the deliberate-indifference theory in excessive force

cases, asserting that “where the decisions of prison officials are typically made in haste, under pressure, and frequently 

without the luxury of a second chance, [the plaintiff] must show more than indifference, deliberate or otherwise. The 

[plaintiff] must show that officials [acted] maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm or . . .

that officials [acted] with a knowing willingness that harm occur.” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 835-36 (editorial marks, 

quotation marks, and citations omitted.). This case is not about an excessive-force incident, but an argument could be 

mad that the challenged conduct was “made in haste, under pressure, and [] without the luxury of” contemplation or 

a reasoned decision. Therefore, under this reasoning, the deliberate-indifference analysis might be inapt.

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of-circuit district courts carry such authority. See Camreta v. Greene, 563 U.S. 692, 709 n.7 

(2011). But even assuming that decisions from such other courts can provide “clearly established 

law,” we have explained that, to do so, such “decisions must both [1] point unmistakably to the 

unconstitutionality of the conduct complained of and [2] be so clearly foreshadowed by applicable 

direct authority as to leave no doubt in the mind of a reasonable [official] that his conduct, if 

challenged on constitutional grounds, would be found wanting.” Barber v. Miller, 809 F.3d 840, 

846-47 (6th Cir. 2015) (emphasis added). The second noteworthy aspect is that “[c]learly 

established law is not defined at a high level of generality but must be particularized to the facts 

of the case.” Vanderhoef v. Dixon, 938 F.3d 271, 278 (6th Cir. 2019) (quotation marks omitted). 

The Supreme Court has emphasized:

[T]he legal principle [must] clearly prohibit the offic[ial]’s conduct in the particular 

circumstances before him. The rule’s contours must be so well defined that it is 

clear to a reasonable offic[ial] that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he 

confronted. This requires a high degree of specificity. . . . [C]ourts must not define 

clearly established law at a high level of generality, since doing so avoids the crucial 

question [of] whether the official acted reasonably in the particular circumstances 

that he or she faced. A rule is too general if the unlawfulness of the offic[ial]’s 

conduct does not follow immediately from the conclusion that the rule was firmly 

established.

District of Columbia v. Wesby, 583 U.S. --, 138 S. Ct. 577, 590 (2018) (quotation and editorial 

marks omitted). “The dispositive inquiry, undertaken in light of the specific context of the case, 

and not as a broad general proposition, is whether the violative nature of particular conduct [wa]s 

clearly established.” Sumpter v. Wayne Cty., 868 F.3d 473, 485 (6th Cir. 2017) (quotation and 

editorial marks omitted) (quoting Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. --, 136 S. Ct. 305, 308 (2015)).

As mentioned, the district court relied exclusively on Carroll v. City of Quincy, 441 F. 

Supp. 2d 215 (D. Mass. 2006). In Carroll, the officers knew that the arrestee was intoxicated, 

“unsteady on his feet[,] and had difficulty walking without assistance,” but they “placed [him] in 

a holding area while he waited to be booked,” with “his hands [] handcuffed behind his back.” Id. 

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at 218. When the officers called him out of the cell to be booked, he fell backwards and hit his 

head on the floor, suffering injury. Id. The court held that “the decision to place him in a holding 

area with his hands cuffed behind his back put him in a situation where there was a substantial risk 

of harm,” id. at 221, and it found evidence that the officers were aware of the risk, id. at 222, but 

failed to respond reasonably, in “that they took no precautionary measures,” id. at 223, so the court 

concluded that a jury could find deliberate indifference. The court also found that, while “it was 

the usual practice to put an inebriated arrestee in a cell until such time as the arrestee sobered up 

and could be booked . . . , in the majority of such cases, the cuffs would be taken off the arrestee 

unless he or she was acting violently.” Id. The court did not opine about any other precautionary 

measures. In denying qualified immunity, the Massachusetts district court said that an arrestee’s 

right to be protected from a substantial risk of serious harm was clearly established because 

“[c]onduct that is deliberately indifferent to an excessive risk to [an arrestee] cannot be objectively 

reasonable conduct” and, therefore, “a reasonable officer could not believe that his actions 

comported with clearly established law.” Id. In essence then, the court held that deliberate 

indifference alone is enough to show that the right was clearly established. 

It is doubtful that this circular reasoning is a correct statement or application of the law, 

making it likely that this opinion is simply wrong (and oft ignored for good reason4), but even if 

Carroll were correct, it fits only at the “high level of generality” that is clearly improper. See

Vanderhoef, 938 F.3d at 278. While the predicate facts are certainly on point with the present case 

(e.g., a drunken and wobbly arrestee, hands cuffed behind his back, left unattended, and fell, 

suffering seriously injuring), Carroll did not describe the right with particularity or explain 

4 Carroll had theretofore been cited a total of 13 times in 13 years and only once for the same substantive 

proposition asserted here. See Podgurski v. Dep’t of Corr., No. 13-11751, 2014 WL 4772218, at *7 (D. Mass. Sept. 

23, 2014) (quoting Carroll, 441 F. Supp. 2d at 223, as stating: “Conduct that is deliberately indifferent to an excessive 

risk to [an inmate] cannot be objectively reasonable conduct.”). 

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precisely how the officers’ actions violated that right. Plainly, the general right is the arrestee’s 

right to protection, by reasonable measures, from a recognized substantial risk of serious harm. 

That is the general right in every inmate-at-risk case. Read closely, Carroll suggests that the 

officers violated that general right by leaving the arrestee handcuffed in the holding cell, drunk 

and unattended, making the right, as “particularized to the facts of the case,” an arrestee’s right to 

be uncuffed when placed in a holding cell, drunk and unattended. That is certainly not the right 

Korthals claims in the present case, nor would it appear supportable in the present circumstances, 

given that an arrestee’s being uncuffed during transit from the car to booking is different from an 

arrestee’s being uncuffed in a confined holding cell. See, e.g., Schack v. City of Taylor, 177 F. 

App’x 469, 472-73 (6th Cir. 2006) (placing a highly intoxicated arrestee in a holding cell was not 

deliberately indifferent). Regardless, Korthals’s claim is that Deputy Strozeski violated the 

general right by walking in front of her (rather than behind or alongside her), failing to watch her 

carefully for a trip or stumble, and offering her no physical assistance or support—making the 

“particularized” constitutional right the right to be closely guided, intently watched, and physically 

supported when walked from the car to booking, drunk and physically wobbly. Nothing in Carroll

suggests the existence of such a constitutional right or that Deputy Strozeski necessarily violated 

such a right by failing to undertake those particular precautions. That is, Carroll would not 

forewarn Deputy Strozeski that, by walking in front of the drunken, wobbly, and handcuffed 

Korthals, without watching or holding onto her, he was necessarily—or even likely—violating the 

Constitution. To finish the point, if Deputy Strozeski had undertaken those precautions but 

Korthals had fallen anyway, she could have framed the alleged right differently, so as to fit that 

different scenario, perhaps as a constitutional right to a wheelchair in those circumstances. This 

exemplifies the concern with describing the right at a “high level of generality”; it “avoids the 

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crucial question [of] whether the official acted reasonably in the particular circumstances that he 

or she faced.” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590.

The decisive questions about the Carroll precedent, however, would be (1) whether it 

“point[s] unmistakably to the unconstitutionality of” Deputy Strozeski’s conduct, and (2) whether 

it was “so clearly foreshadowed by applicable direct authority” that Deputy Strozeski would have 

“no doubt” that his conduct was unconstitutional. See Barber, 809 F.3d at 846-47. In short, the 

answer to both is no: Carroll does not show unmistakably that Deputy Strozeski’s conduct was 

unconstitutional, nor was it “foreshadowed by applicable direct authority.” Therefore, as a district 

court case from within another Circuit, Carroll is not clearly established law. Id.

The district court also cited two Sixth Circuit cases in reference to the Farmer test, which

warrant mention because each of them does state some clearly established right as “particularized 

to the facts of th[ose] case[s].” In Richko, 819 F.3d at 915, we said: “The constitutional right at 

issue in this case—Horvath’s right to be free from violence at the hands of other inmates—was 

clearly established by the Supreme Court in Farmer [].” And in Richmond, 885 F.3d at 948, we 

said: “Thus, it was clearly established at the time of Richmond’s incarceration in Wayne County 

Jail that neglecting to provide a prisoner with needed medication, intentionally scrubbing her 

wound to cause unnecessary pain, and failing implement the prescribed plan of treatment could 

constitute a constitutional violation.” Both statements, which define very different particularized 

rights, fall equally within the general rule of an inmate’s or arrestee’s right to be protected, by 

reasonable measures, from a recognized substantial risk of serious harm. As the Supreme Court 

has explained, this level of “specificity” is necessary to make it “clear to a reasonable officer” 

whether “his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590.

Korthals’s contention is that Deputy Strozeski violated her constitutional right to be 

protected from a substantial risk of serious harm because he failed to walk behind or alongside 

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her, failed to watch her carefully for a stumble or fall, and failed to hold her or provide physical 

support when she attempted to mount the stairs, drunk and physically wobbly. “The dispositive 

inquiry . . . is whether the violative nature of [that] particular conduct [wa]s clearly established.” 

Sumpter, 868 F.3d at 485. Korthals has pointed us to no clearly established precedent from the 

Supreme Court or this Circuit to support that contention, and the cited out-of-circuit district court 

case (Carroll) does not qualify as clearly established law. Even if Deputy Strozeski’s failure to 

exercise caution when taking the drunken and handcuffed Korthals up the stairs were not merely 

negligent, but deliberately indifferent, such that it rose to the level of a constitutional violation, we 

cannot conclude that the constitutional impropriety of that particular conduct was clearly 

established.

Deputy Strozeski is entitled to qualified immunity on this claim. Consequently, we 

REVERSE the portion of the district court’s order in which it denied Deputy Strozeski’s claim of 

qualified immunity and REMAND for entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.

The district court denied Huron County’s motion for summary judgment because Korthals 

had “raised a genuine issue of material fact regarding Huron County’s liability.” Korthals, 2019 

WL 176722, at *4. Huron County attempts to appeal that decision, but such a routine denial of a 

motion for summary judgment is not an appealable final order under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Nor can 

Huron County establish “pendent appellate jurisdiction,” which requires that the challenge be 

“inextricably intertwined” with the collateral (qualified-immunity) analysis properly before us; “in 

other words, only when the appellate resolution of the collateral appeal necessarily resolves the 

pendent claim as well.” Hopper v. Plummer, 887 F.3d 744, 760-61 (6th Cir. 2018) (quotation 

marks omitted). Our resolution of Deputy Strozeski’s qualified-immunity appeal does not 

necessarily resolve the municipal liability claim against Huron County. Therefore, we lack 

jurisdiction and must DISMISS Huron County’s interlocutory appeal. 

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HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge, concurring. I write separately because, although 

I agree that we must reverse as to Deputy Strozeski, I am not in complete agreement with the 

majority opinion. 

The majority suggests in footnote 3 that Farmer’s deliberate indifference standard may not 

apply in this case in light of the Supreme Court’s recognition of a more demanding 

malicious/sadistic/willing-harm test in Eighth Amendment excessive force claims against prison 

officials whose decisions “are typically made in haste, under pressure, and frequently without the 

luxury of a second chance.” Farmer v Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 835-36 (1994) (quotations and 

citations omitted). I do not agree that Deputy Strozeski’s situation is comparable to that of a prison 

official acting in haste and under pressure. Deputy Strozeski was under no immediate pressure 

and had hours to consider the appropriate means of escorting Korthals into the booking area. 

As to the question of qualified immunity, I agree that Deputy Strozeski’s conduct, while 

surely negligent, likely did not rise to the level of conscious disregard of a substantial risk of 

serious harm. And I agree that even assuming it did, Korthals has not shown that Strozeski’s 

actions violated her clearly established constitutional rights. I do not agree, however, with my 

colleagues’ characterization of Korthals’s asserted constitutional right as a “right to be closely 

guided, intently watched, and physically supported when walked from the car to booking, drunk 

and physically wobbly,” (Maj. Op. at 6.), because precedent does not require a plaintiff to define 

her constitutional right so exactly. Although “[a] plaintiff can meet [her] burden . . . by presenting 

caselaw ‘with a fact pattern similar enough to have given “fair and clear warning to officers” about 

what the law requires,’ [t]hat case ‘need not be on all fours’ with the instant fact pattern to form 

the basis of a clearly established right.” Vanderhoef v. Dixon, 938 F.3d 271, 278 (6th Cir. 2019) 

(quoting Hopper v. Plummer, 887 F.3d 744, 755 (6th Cir. 2018)). “And ‘an action’s unlawfulness 

can be “clearly established” from direct holdings, from specific examples describing certain 

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conduct as prohibited or from the general reasoning that a court employs.” Id. at 279 (quoting 

Baynes v. Cleland, 799 F.3d 600, 612 (6th Cir. 2015)) (emphasis added). Thus, Korthals could 

have met her burden by relying on case law establishing the right of intoxicated detainees to be 

free from conditions similar—though not identical—to those surrounding her own fall and injury.

That said, Korthals has not identified such precedent. Only one case from this court, 

Schack v. City of Taylor, involved facts similar to those here—facts describing conditions of 

confinement that increased the risk that an intoxicated detainee would be injured in a fall. 177 F. 

App’x 469 (6th Cir. 2006). In Schack, the plaintiff was arrested while drunk and placed in a 

concrete detoxification cell. Id. at 472. When the plaintiff stood up, he fell to the concrete floor 

and sustained serious injuries. Id. We found no constitutional violation, concluding that although 

leaving an intoxicated person sitting in a cell while awaiting booking may increase the risk of harm 

due to falling, it does not create a substantial risk of serious harm. Id. at 472-73. We did not 

speculate regarding what, if any, additional conditions of confinement would have elevated the 

risk to the plaintiff to a level that would violate contemporary standards of decency. See id. Thus, 

Schack did not establish law that would have given Strozeski clear notice that his actions violated 

the Fourteenth Amendment. And, for the reasons stated in the majority opinion, Carroll v. City of 

Quincy, 441 F. Supp. 2d 215 (D. Mass. 2006), provides inadequate support for Korthals’s claim.

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