Scarlett McDaniel BARTS, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Mike JOYNER and Nelson Blount, individually and in their
official capacities as Deputy Sheriffs of
Jefferson County, Florida, Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 87-3773, 87-3868.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Jan. 27, 1989.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied March 1, 1989.
Julius F. Parker, Parker, Skelding, McVoy & Labasky, Tallahassee, Fla., for defendants-appellants.
Edward S. Stafman, Tallahassee, Fla., for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida.
Before KRAVITCH and EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and HOFFMAN*, Senior District Judge.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:
Because the record demonstrates no violation of a clearly established constitutional right, we reverse, in part, the judgment of the district court in this action based on 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983; and because the damages were not correctly limited, we vacate the remainder of the judgment and remand for a new trial on damages.
Background
Plaintiff Scarlett Barts lived with Billy and Virginia Floyd. Though not related to them, Barts referred to the Floyds as her parents. Billy Floyd and Barts were alone in the Floyd home one afternoon when he was shot and killed. Barts drove to a nearby highway patrol station and reported that her "father" had been shot by an unknown intruder, a black man. Barts then went to the hospital where Billy Floyd had been taken. Floyd's wife, daughter and two family friends were also at the hospital. Deputy Mike Joyner, wearing his deputy sheriff's uniform, spoke with Floyd's wife and daughter, who had apparently found Billy Floyd prostrate on the front lawn of the Floyd home shortly after the shooting. He then read Barts the Miranda warnings and questioned her regarding the shooting. Barts told Joyner the same story of an intruder entering the Floyd home and shooting her "father."
Later, while still at the hospital, Joyner again spoke to Barts and asked her if she owned a gun. Barts answered that she did and that she kept it in the glove compartment of her car. Barts agreed to let Joyner look at it. Joyner obtained the keys to the car and looked in the car for the gun, but the gun was not there. Barts told him that someone must have stolen it. Joyner called his superior, Captain Blount, who was investigating the scene of the shooting. Joyner repeated Barts' story and told Blount that "something didn't sound right." Blount told Joyner, "Y'all get back as quick as possible." Joyner took this statement to mean that Blount wanted Barts, apparently the only eyewitness to the shooting, and the other family members to go with Joyner for more questioning at the sheriff's station in the Jefferson County jail. Barts, Floyd's wife, Floyd's daughter and a family friend accompanied Joyner to the station.
Barts then was again read her Miranda rights, and Joyner and Blount questioned her for about three hours. Barts finally told Joyner that Floyd had come in while she was in the bathroom and started kissing her all over. She said that when she struggled with him he left. Barts admitted that she had shot Floyd when he came at her again. Defendants arrested Barts for the murder of Billy Floyd.
Barts was tried and convicted of second degree murder. Her attorney stated that she was unable to give him any details of the killing because she always became too upset. Barts served eight months of a twenty-five year sentence before her release on appellate bond. She finally was able to tell a psychologist and then her attorneys that she shot Floyd because he had raped her and she thought he was attempting to do so again. Barts was granted a new trial because of her inability to communicate with her attorneys due to Rape Trauma Syndrome and because of her corresponding incompetence to stand trial. Barts was acquitted at her second trial.
Barts brought an action under 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983 against Joyner and Blount individually and in their capacities as deputy sheriffs of Jefferson County, Florida alleging that Barts' detention and transportation to the sheriff's station was an unlawful seizure within the meaning of the fourth amendment. A jury awarded Barts damages of $175,000 from each defendant.
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Qualified Immunity
Appellants contend that they are entitled to qualified immunity because their conduct in March 1983 did not violate clearly established law. To the extent that defendants were sued in their individual capacities, we agree.
We begin our analysis of the qualified immunity defense with Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The Harlow decision sets up a bright-line test that is a powerful constraint on causes of action under section 1983. To defeat a qualified immunity defense, plaintiff bears the burden of showing that "the legal norms allegedly violated by the defendant were clearly established at the time of the challenged actions or, ... the law clearly proscribed the actions the defendant ... took." Mitchell,
"General propositions have little to do with the concept of qualified immunity." Muhammad v. Wainwright,
Appellee relies chiefly on Dunaway v. New York,
While Dunaway, a direct criminal appeal, is pertinent to this civil case, it is too different in its facts to have settled the law applicable to the facts of this case. These differences are especially important when one recalls that Dunaway was decided by a court consisting of only eight Justices, that two Justices dissented, and that two concurred specially, one of whom stressed that in particular cases extraordinary private or public interests might require a different result and that "flexibility" was essential. Id. at 220,
In contrast to Dunaway, the crime here was not months old, but only hours old; and the police did not go in force to a private home to pick up a suspect. Barts made the first contact with police when she drove to the highway patrol station to report the shooting. She then drove to the hospital where she cooperated fully in police questioning about the incident and allowed police to check her car for her gun. When Joyner told Barts, the only known eyewitness, and the others that they were "going to have to ride back to Monticello" with him, Barts never objected or indicated any unwillingness to accompany Joyner and, just as she had since she first contacted the police, gave every indication that she was willingly cooperating with the police in the investigation. Barts never was touched or handcuffed, and she rode in the police car with other family members who were also potential witnesses. This case is too unlike Dunaway for Dunaway to have settled the applicable law; even if we assume that a seizure took place, it was not clearly established that the seizure was impermissible under the circumstances of this case.
Appellee also cites United States v. Berry,
Not only were Dunaway and Berry too different on their facts to have settled the law, but other judicial opinions have determined that conduct similar to that of Blount and Joyner was reasonable in the fourth amendment sense. See Daniel v. Taylor,
In People v. Lippert,
One way the Illinois court distinguished the case before it from cases like Dunaway was that, unlike Dunaway, where the seizure occurred long after the crime, the officer in Lippert was conducting a field investigation within a few minutes of the crime. The Illinois court further proclaimed that "the apparently hard rule of Dunaway had been softened somewhat" by Michigan v. Summers,
Another case that demonstrates that the law regarding detention and transportation to a police station was not clearly established is People v. Vena,
These opinions, allowing detention in the absence of probable cause to arrest, seem reasoned and reasonable. We do not rely on them, however, to hold that the seizure of Scarlett Barts complied with the Constitution; we do not address that question. We merely recognize that the law in March 1983 was ambiguous on when the detention of the only suspect/eyewitness to a recent homicide became impermissible. Defendants are entitled to immunity, unless plaintiff demonstrates that it was in March 1983 a settled question of law that the detention and transportation of Barts to the station was unconstitutionally unreasonable in the exceptional circumstances of this case. Because other courts have upheld the detention of suspects for up to five hours, the transportation of suspects and witnesses for identification purposes, and the transportation of people to a police station based on vague knowledge of crimes committed a week earlier, we cannot say the law was settled that on the facts of this case--where the only eyewitness to an extremely recent homicide (with the killer supposedly still at large) initiates contact with the police and remains in contact throughout the investigation, giving every appearance of concern and willingness to help--transporting Barts to the station for further investigation into the crime was an unconstitutional seizure.
In Barts' second criminal trial, she moved to suppress her statements to the police on the ground that the statements were fruits of an illegal arrest3 and seizure in violation of the fourth and fourteenth amendments. The motion was denied. The state judge addressed Dunaway expressly but concluded Dunaway and its progeny did not condemn the actions of the police officers in this case where the officers were faced by a homicide that had just occurred at the residence of Barts and the victim and where a killer described by Barts was still at large. The Florida court said that public safety demanded an aggressive effort to make an apprehension or to make substantial progress in ascertaining what had happened. The Florida court also noted that the events preceding Barts' interrogation were "initiated and largely the result of defendant [Barts] voluntarily proceeding to the Florida Highway Patrol Station" and reporting a burglary and shooting. Cf. Kansas v. Long,
That a state trial judge rejected the claim of unconstitutional police conduct and denied the motion to suppress does not control our decision here. See generally Malley v. Briggs,
In Anderson v. Creighton, the Supreme Court said that the relevant question is whether a reasonable officer could have believed a warrantless search to be lawful "in light of clearly established law and the information the officer possessed."
The line between the lawful and the unlawful is often vague.4 Harlow's "clearly established" standard demands that a bright line be crossed. The line is not to be found in abstractions--to act reasonably, to act with probable cause, and so forth--but in studying how these abstractions have been applied in concrete circumstances. In 1983 the relevant case law was still developing; courts, including the Supreme Court of the United States, talked about flexibility and special law enforcement interests that might apply here. The key issue in this case had not been clearly settled: whether the exigent circumstances surrounding the questioning of the only eyewitness to a fresh homicide where the perpetrator was supposedly still at large were within the "middle ground" between Terry and Dunaway so that the officers investigating the murder could properly detain Barts awhile. See Lippert,
Joyner and Blount have not argued on appeal that their conduct in seizing and initially detaining Barts satisfied the fourth amendment, but have instead argued that various defenses bar the action against them even if they violated the Constitution.5 Because the case comes to us in this way and because we decide constitutional issues as a last resort, we need not and do not decide whether the Constitution was violated, but accept as a given the district court's judgment finding and concluding that the Constitution was violated.
Although we conclude that defendants are entitled to the benefit of qualified immunity under Harlow, this does not require that the judgment be totally reversed. The judgment in this case was against defendants in both their official and individual capacities. Appellants have never contended that the judgment is not in conformity with the pleadings, proof, and issues in the district court. Harlow 's qualified immunity is no defense to an action brought against someone in his official capacity. Fitzgerald v. McDaniel,
Damages
No one disputes that the confession, when linked to the other information6 available to the police, was sufficient to justify a lawful arrest. Once the officers were faced with probable cause to arrest, they had a duty to arrest Barts. See Smith v. Gonzales,
We reject plaintiff's contention that she is entitled to damages for her criminal trials, conviction, incarceration, and the resulting aggravation of her Rape Trauma Syndrome. The intervening acts of the prosecutor, grand jury, judge and jury--assuming that these court officials acted without malice that caused them to abuse their powers--each break the chain of causation unless plaintiff can show that these intervening acts were the result of deception or undue pressure by the defendant policemen.9 See Smiddy v. Varney,
Barts argues that Malley v. Briggs,
In Malley, the police initiated the arrest and were the sole source of the information available to the judge approving the warrant. When the police apply for a warrant and a judge approves a warrant, they use the same legal standard; and the police have as much or more information at that time than does the judge. Arresting suspects is police business. The police have it within their power to avoid the damage caused by a false arrest simply by not seeking the warrant. Thus, because the police have control over the damages, it makes sense to hold the police responsible for damages caused directly by the initial arrest when the police acted clearly unlawfully in arresting someone or in seeking a warrant to arrest someone. Such liability punishes and deters conduct over which the police have control.
Once someone is arrested and then substantial evidence of the suspect's guilt comes to light, the police can do little or nothing to stop further proceedings. Holding the police responsible for damage due to these later proceedings makes little sense. Prosecuting, indicting, finding ultimate guilt, and sentencing criminal defendants are not the business of the police. In addition, arresting police officers do not ordinarily control all the information available to the prosecutor, the grand jury, the trial jury and trial judge. The decisions to prosecute, to indict, to convict, and to sentence are independent from and involve considerations different from the original decision to arrest and result in different harm to a person than the harm caused by the original arrest.
Criminal procedure from arrest to sentencing involves a division of power and duties among several entities, each of which has the responsibility to make its own decisions. To hold that the decisions of the prosecutor, juries and judge do not break the chain of proximate causation trivializes the importance of these post-arrest decisions, which do not merely pass on the correctness of the seizure or arrest by police but which, based on all the information then available to these court officials, determine the likelihood that a potential defendant is guilty of violating the law. Plaintiff has directed our attention to no precedent either under section 1983 or the common-law tort of false arrest in which a recovery has been allowed against arresting officers for everything, including time served in prison following a conviction, that followed the improper seizure or arrest; we will not create that precedent in the absence of a showing that the police officers deceived the court officials or unduly pressured them or that the court officials themselves acted with malice and the police joined with them.
We REVERSE the judgment against defendants in their individual capacities and VACATE the judgment against defendants in their official capacities and REMAND for a new trial on the question of damages due from defendants in their official capacities.11
Notes
Honorable Walter E. Hoffman, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation
Nor was the law applicable to the circumstances of this case settled by the earlier case of Davis v. Mississippi,
Under Terry v. Ohio,
In their brief, defendants concede that they had no probable cause to arrest Barts until after she confessed. We accept this concession without reviewing it
When we decide constitutional issues in the context of criminal proceedings, unlike in section 1983 cases, we know the case is on one side of the line or the other. We simply decide if it is on the wrong side. How close a policeman's act came to being lawful is frequently unimportant if police conduct crossed the line--however vague a line it might be--into the unlawful zone. In decisions holding a police officer's conduct unconstitutional in criminal cases, judicial conclusions are often stated starkly because the gradations are unimportant. Our section 1983 decisions must recognize--in a way that most other judicial decisions do not--that some cases are very near each other but on opposite sides of the line. As a consequence, constitutional law precedents from other than section 1983 actions are helpful but rarely directly decisive on qualified immunity questions in cases brought under 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983
In addition to a defense of qualified immunity, defendants have argued that the first conviction of Barts precludes, as a matter of law, any conclusion that Barts was seized without probable cause to arrest. See generally Goldstein v. Sabella,
For example, by the time Barts admitted shooting Billy Floyd, police had discovered that the caliber of Barts' missing gun matched the caliber of the bullets used in the shooting; and Captain Blount had observed that Barts' "black man intruder" story was inconsistent with the physical evidence at the crime scene. Of course, Barts had already said that she, Billy Floyd and the intruder were the only people there when Billy was shot
Barts does not contend that her case proceeded in an irregular fashion after her confession. She makes no allegation of undue delay in bringing her before a magistrate or any other such improper action. Put simply, nothing suggests that after her confession and before her indictment, Barts' detention became again unlawful
If it appears on retrial that at the sheriff's station the police officers had probable cause to arrest even before Barts confessed, the time of detention that might justify damages should be reduced accordingly
Incidentally, even if we now assume that Barts' confession was the product of an unlawful seizure and ought to have been totally excluded from consideration in her criminal proceedings, we cannot say the use of the confession--even if that use was a mistake--was outside the range of professional competence of court officials: at the pertinent time, the confession was not clearly the result of an unlawful seizure. See discussion of qualified immunity set out earlier in this opinion
At the new trial on damages, plaintiff may introduce evidence on those points if she has any
In an effort to obtain a new trial on liability, Joyner and Blount have also contended that the trial court erred in excluding the expert testimony of a physician. This contention is without merit
