ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
The Supreme Court decision in
Hope v. Pelzer,
*1301
We — in our earlier decision,
Willingham v. Loughnan,
[T]hat Plaintiff obtained a number of objects from the kitchen and threw them at Panucci and Loughnan. She threw a glass at Loughnan, striking him in the shoulder; and then she picked up a knife in the kitchen and threw it at Panucci’s back in an attempt to kill him. She immediately thereafter raised her hands to her head and, at that time, was shot four times by each of the Offiсer Defendants. The shots were fired within a split-second of her assault on Loughnan and of her attempt to kill Panucci, but while she was unarmed. She was also standing in the doorway to the kitchen where she had obtained the bottles and knife she had already thrown at thе officers.
Id. at 1185-86.
The Officer Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity for their acts unless they — -given the circumstances — violated a “clearly established statutory or constitutional right[] of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Hope,
“For a constitutional right to be clearly established, its contours ‘must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that
what he is doing
violates that right.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Anderson v. Creighton,
The Supreme Court in the Hope opinion stresses that preexisting caselaw with “materially similar” or “fundamentally similar” facts is not always necessary to give an official “fair warning” of unlawful behavior. Id. at 2516. “Although earlier cases involving ‘fundamentally similar’ facts can provide especially strong support for a conclusion that the law is clearly established, they are not necessary to such a finding.” Id. General statements of the law contained within the Constitution, statute, or caselaw may sometimes providе “fair warning” of unlawful conduct:
[G]eneral statements of the law are not inherently incapable of giving fair and clear warning, and in other instances a general constitutional rule already identified in the decisional law may apply with obvious clarity to the specific conduct in question, even though the very action in question has [not] previously been held unlawful.
*1302
Id.
(quoting
United States v. Lanier,
Decisions of this Court before the Supreme Court’s Hope decision demonstrate that the law of the Circuit harmoniously complies with the Supreme Court’s reminder. We have repeatedly acknowledged the possibility that a general statement of the lаw might provide adequate notice of unlawfulness in the right circumstances. For example, before the Supreme Court’s decision in Hope, this Court en banc specifically stated that “general statements of law” were capable of giving fair warning of unconstitutional officiаl behavior:
We acknowledge that preexisting case law, tied to the precise facts, is not in every situation essential to establish clearly the law applying to the circumstances facing a public official so that a reasonable оfficial would be put on fair and clear notice that specific conduct would be unlawful in the faced, specific circumstances. Some general statements of law are capable of giving fair and clear warning in some circumstancеs: the occasional “obvious clarity” cases per Lanier.
Marsh v. Butler County, Alabama,
The Supreme Court has said the Fourth Amendment permits only those applications of force by law enforcement as are
*1303
“reasonable.”
Graham v. Connor,
We have said that preexisting, factually similar cases are — not always, but (in our experience) usually — needed to demonstrate that officials were fairly warned that their application of force violated the victim’s constitutional rights. Officers facing split-second decisions in dangerous or life-threatening situations are seldom provided with fair warning, notice or guidance by a general requirement of “reasonableness.”
See Priester,
The Supreme Court, in
Hope,
cautions against a “rigid gloss on the qualified immunity standard” that would require materially similar, preexisting casеs in all circumstances when the qualified immunity defense is to be overcome.
Hope,
We have said, in the context of excessive force cases, that an official’s conduct could run so afoul of constitutional protections that fair warning was present even when particularized caselaw was absent: “the official’s conduct was so far beyond the hazy border between excessive and acceptable force that [the official] had to know he was violating the Constitution even without caselaw on point.”
Priester,
The specific question before us here is whether, considering the pertinent facts, the Officer Defendants violated federal law that was alreаdy clearly established in 1987, by shooting Plaintiff within a “split second” after she attempted to kill one officer and assaulted another. In our earlier opinion, we considered and rejected the argument that, even in the absence of a case with materially similar facts, Fourth Amendment law fairly warned these officers that their conduct was clearly unlawful: this incident was no clearly egregious shooting that was far beyond the hazy border of acceptable force.
Willingham,
Our earlier cоnclusion remains unaffected by the Supreme Court’s decision in Hope. We must still conclude the Officer Defendants are entitled to the defense of quahfied immunity. We reinstate our pri- or opinion and judgment and supplement our earlier discussion of qualified immunity with this opinion.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Supreme Court's decision in
Hope
definitely did change the law of the Circuit some.
Hope
is а case that passed through this Court on its way to the Supreme Court. Our Court concluded that the individual defendants were due qualified immunity. The Supreme Court decided that our Court had reached the wrong conclusion in the light of
Gates v. Collier,
. For a recent opinion discussing generаl statements of law and “fair warning” after
Hope,
see
Vinyard v. Wilson,
. "Our own survey of the case law indicates that in 1987 it was not clearly established that it constituted excessive force to shoot a person under the circumstances presented in this case.”
Willingham,
. At our invitation, the parties submitted supplemental briefs on the impact of the Supreme Court’s decision in Hope to this case. Plaintiff cited several cases she claimed clearly established the law in these circumstances. None of these cases were close to this one in time or fact.
