Andres M. Martinez appeals the district court’s grant of the Calipatria State Prison correctional officers’ renewed summary judgment motion on his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim. Martinez claims that the correctional officers violated his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by using excessive force against him while breaking up a prison fight in an adjacent cell. We must decide whether summary judgment was errоneously granted, despite the failure of Martinez’s counsel to file a timely opposition to the officers’ motion and the existence of a local rule indicating that such failure may constitute consent to the granting of a motion. Because a district court may grant summary judgment on the basis of the moving papers and “such other papers as may be оn file and specifically referred to,”
Carmen v. S.F. Unified Sch. Dist.,
I. BACKGROUND
On April 23, 1994, a skirmish broke out in the cell adjoining that of Martinez in Calipatria State Prison’s Administrative Segregation Unit. The correctional officers callеd to the scene used pepper spray to disperse the fight. In response, Martinez *1180 and his cellmate attempted to block entry of the noxious gas by covering the opening of their cell with a bed sheet.
Almost all of what happened next is disputed. According to the officers, Martinez and his cellmate proceeded to barricade their door with a mattress. Despite this “barricading,” the officers saw either Martinez or his cellmate brandishing a homemade weapon. (Two such weapons were later found in the cell.) Martinez and his cellmate then “gassed” the officers, a term used to describe an inmate throwing human waste at correctional officers. The officers demanded that Martinez and his cellmate remove the mattress and submit to handcuffing, and when they refused, the officers fired two plastic bullets and a “taser” cartridge into their cell. During the ensuing “extraction process,” the officers claim that Martinez violently resisted, and began punching and kicking the officers, who finally managed to subdue him. Martinez and the other inmates were then sent to be medically exаmined. The extent of Martinez’s injuries is not in dispute: he sustained a small laceration to his left leg, a small laceration to his left middle finger, an abrasion to the right side of his head, a small bruise to his right knee, and red welts to his back.
Martinez’s version of this incident is strikingly different. He denies using anything but a bed sheet to cover his cell door. He denies that he or his cellmate “gassed” the correctional officers. Rather, when asked to remove the sheet from his door, he explained to the officers that the sheet had been placed there to prevent the noxious pepper spray fumes from entering his cell, and that he would remove the sheet when the fumes dissipated. While Martinez admits that there had been, in fact, homemade weаpons in his cell hidden in a mattress, he vehemently denies that he or his cellmate ever “brandished” these weapons, or even that either of them had such a weapon on or near their persons at any time during the incident. According to Martinez, after he told the officers the sheet would be removed when the fumes were gone, the officers fired two plastiс bullets from a gas gun and one taser cartridge into the cell. One of the plastic bullets struck him on the head. Once the officers entered the cell, they pushed him into a seated position, and tasered him twice on his left arm, despite his lack of resistance. The officers then beat him with their fists and a wooden baton on his head, torso, and legs. After they had handcuffed Martinez, one of them kicked him in the shoulder, and another hit him on his back with a baton four or five times. He was then “dragged” out of his cell and taken to the infirmary.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On February 14, 1996, Martinez filed a lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the officers alleging that they violated his constitutional right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The officers moved to dismiss Martinez’s suit as untimely, and the district court agreed, but we reinstated the lawsuit, holding that the relevant statute of limitations had been tolled.
See Martinez v. Gomez,
On June 22, 2001, less than one month before the trial was scheduled to commence, the remaining officers requested leave to renew their motion for summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity, specifically based on the Supreme Court’s then — recently announced decision in
Saucier v. Katz,
What happened on August 27-28, 2001 is in dispute. Martinez’s attorney declares that she assumed that the officers’ motion would be denied because Saucier did not establish the officers’ qualified immunity as a matter of law. She explains that she did not submit an opposition because it was her understanding of the Federal Rulеs of Civil Procedure, the local court rules, and applicable case law that a non-moving party need not respond to a summary judgment motion insufficient on its face to sustain judgment. She believed that the district court would either deny the motion in open court on the date of the hearing, or if inclined to grant the motion, would permit her to file an oppоsition at that point. When she arrived at the court on the day the hearing was scheduled, she was told by the district judge’s law clerk that the judge was planning to grant summary judgment, but that if she wished to file an opposition, she should file it by the end of the day. She therefore prepared an ex parte application for leave to file a late opposition to the summary judgment motion, along with a short opposition reiterating Martinez’s earlier arguments and distinguishing Saucier from the facts of Martinez’s case. She filed it prior to the close of judicial business on the same day.
By that time, however, the district court had issued its order granting the officers’ motion for summary judgment. The order is time- and date-stamped “01 August 27 P.M. 3:37.” The district court cited alternative grounds for granting the motion. First, it сited the Local Civil Rules for the Southern District of California which permit a district court to construe “an opposing party[’s] fail[ure] to file [its opposition] papers [not later than 14 calendar days prior to the noticed hearing, as] consent to the granting of a motion or other request for ruling by the court,” S.D. Cal. Civil Local R. 7.1(f)(3)(c), pursuant to which it “deem[ed] Plaintiffs failure to oppose Defendants’ motion for summary judgment as consent to its merits.”
Second, in the alternative, it found “that Defendants’ unopposed motion successfully demonstrates that no genuine issues of material fact remain such that summary judgment is warranted on the merits.” According to Martinez’s counsel, she filed a notice of appeal of the order granting summary judgment in the district court the next day. The notice of appeal bears a date-stamp indicating it was “received” by the district court on August 28, 2001, but also a conflicting date-stamp indicating it was “filed” by the district court on August 27, 2001. On September 12, 2001, the district court denied as moot Martinez’s ex parte application for leave to file a late opposition to the summary judgment motion. Aсcording to the court, because the ex parte motion and the notice of appeal were filed the same day, the district court was divested of jurisdiction to consider the opposition.
*1182 The officers’ version of these events is much simpler: they assert that the district court granted their summary judgment motion as unopposed, before any opposition was filed. It was only later that Martinez’s counsel arrived at the district judge’s chambers on the hearing day and “expressed her desire to take some action with respect to filing[a] late opposition.” And they agree with the district court that the ex parte motion was filed at the same time as the notice of appeal, depriving the district court of jurisdiction to consider the mattеr.
III. DISCUSSION
Martinez challenges each of the alternative bases for the district court’s grant of summary judgment: (1) Martinez’s failure to timely file an opposition in violation of a local rule, and (2) its application of Saucier to the facts at issue. We consider each of these grounds in turn. 1
A. Failure to Oppose as Grounds for Granting Summary Judgment.
We agree with Martinez that the district court should not have relied on its local rule, S.D. Cal. Civil Local R. 7.1(f)(3)(c), as a basis for granting summary judgment in favor of the officers. Several of our prior decisions have made clear that a nonmoving party’s failure to comply with local rules does not excuse the moving party’s affirmative duty under Rule 56 to demonstrate its entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. Short of that, we turn the summary judgment rule into a mere sanction for noncompliance with local rules. For example, in Henry v. Gill Industries, Inc., we stated:
“[I]t is highly questionable that in light of the standards of Rule 56 that a local rule can mandate the granting of summary judgment for the movant based on a failure to file opposing papers where the movant’s papers are themselves insufficient to support a motion for summary judgment or on their face reveal a genuine issue of material fact.” ... The party opposing the motion is under no obligation to offer affidavits or any other materials in support of its opposition. Summary judgment may be resisted and must be denied on no other grounds than that the movant has failed to meet its burden of demonstrating the absence of triable issuеs.
[A] motion for summary judgment cannot be granted simply because the opposing party violated a local rule.... Here the district court’s refusal to consider [the plaintiffs papers opposing summary judgment] led it to conclude that the case “contains no faсtual evidence other than those facts presented by defendants.” This conclusion resulted in summary judgment for [the defendant]. The practical effect, therefore, was to grant summary judgment as a sanction for the late filing, a result inconsistent with our holding in Henry .... For violation of the local rule the district court will be free to devise such sanctions as seem approрriate short of granting summary judgment where the *1183 movant has failed to meet its burden of demonstrating the absence of triable issues.
The officers rely upon two cases,
Brydges v. Lewis,
B. The Officers Were Not Entitled to Judgment as a Matter of Law.
The district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the officers because the moving papers were insufficient to support it. A district court’s decision to grant summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity is reviewed de novo.
See Sorrels v. McKee,
As for the second
Saucier
prong, the law regarding a prison guard’s use of excessive force was clearly established by 1994, the year in which the officers’ alleg
*1184
edly unconstitutional conduct occurred.
See Hudson v. McMillian,
The district court erred in its analysis of the reasonableness inquiry of the second
Saucier
prong because it failed to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff,
Mabe,
Indeed, the district court, reviewing this very evidence, had previously found a triable issue of fact on thе question of excessive force, which defeated the officers’ pri- or summary judgment motion. The same issues of fact — as to whether the degree of force used was so clearly unlawful under the circumstances as to violate established *1185 law — remained on the date of the order granting summary judgment. Although the law had changed, the facts in dispute bearing on the quеstion of qualified immunity had not, and thus the district court erred in granting summary judgment. 3
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the officers, and REMAND to the district court for trial.
Notes
. We note at the outset that Martinez's counsel was remiss in failing to adhere to the district court’s briefing order. She also appeared two hours late for oral argument before us. "Deadlines are inherently arbitrary; fixed dates, however, are often essential to accomplish necessary results.”
United States v. Boyle, 469
U.S. 241, 249,
. Contrary to the officers' suggestion, the Supreme Court in
Saucier
did not modify this aspect of
Hudson.
Although the
Saucier
case involved a § 1983 plaintiff who had suffered nearly no injury — he was merely "shoved” into a vаn,
. Because we reverse, we need not reach the issues of whether Martinez's opposition was actually timely because his counsel may have received a time extension from the district court’s law clerk, or whether the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider Martinez’s late opposition due to the filing of a notice of appeal.
