Onе summer night in 2001, Bill VanGilder was among the revelers at the Linwood Tavern, a watering hole in Lafayette (Tippecanoe County), Indiana. After police responded to a reported brawl at the tavern, VanGilder was arrested for public intoxication by officer Brian Baker. Van-Gilder did not consent to a breath test. Since the Tipрecanoe County Jail had a policy of refusing to accept inmates suspected of intoxication until they are seen by a doctor, Baker transported VanGilder to the emergency room of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital.
VanGilder was not a model patient. After one doctor cleared him for jail, Van-Gilder demanded additional examination and treatment, saying he had been injured in the bar fight. While awaiting further attention, VanGilder tumbled off his gurney and taunted Baker, “I’m going to keep you here all night.” Thе officer handcuffed VanGilder to the gurney.
Eventually a second doctor ordered a blood test. VanGilder resisted, positioning his arm so that hospital personnel could not reach his veins. Unable to free the *691 arm, Baker struck VanGilder (we must, of course, at this stage of the case, assume VanGilder’s view of the facts) several times аbout the face. Baker claims that Van-Gilder kicked him in the side of the head, resulting in a minor concussion for which he later received treatment. (VanGilder denies the kick.) A nurse also said Van-Gilder was belligerent and that she feared he might try to grab Baker’s gun.
According to his police report, Baker responded to the kick by punching Van-Gildеr “repeatedly in the face with a closed fist.” VanGilder says Baker punched him between 7 and 10 times, leaving bruises and breaking the orbital bones around his eyes. In the course of the beating, Van-Gilder says he told Baker, “[S]top ... okay, okay, take the blood.” During this time, VanGilder says his hands were secured to the gurney by handcuffs above his head. Baker characterized his actions as an effort to regain control after VanGilder’s resistance.
In his suit against Baker, VanGilder alleges excessive use of force, an infringement of his civil rights in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court granted Baker’s summary judgment motion because it believed that VanGilder’s claim was barred by
Heck v. Humphrey,
Heck
is grounded in the “strong judicial policy against the creation of two сonflicting resolutions arising out of the same or identical transaction.”
Heck,
To properly apply
Heck’s
bar against certain damage actions, a district court must analyze the relationship between the plaintiffs § 1983 claim and the charge on which he was convicted.
1
As the Supreme Court explained, “the district court must consider whether a judgment in favor of the plaintiff would necessarily imply the invalidity of his conviction or sentence
....’’Id.
at 487,
In a more recent case, the Court emphasized the need for а clear nexus between the plaintiffs conviction and the alleged wrongful government action before the Heck bar applies. As Justice O’Connor wrote for a unanimous Court,
[W]e were careful in Heck to stress the importance of the term “necessarily.” For instance, we acknowledged that an inmate could bring a challenge to the lawfulness of a search pursuant to § 1983 in the first instance, even if the search revealed evidence used to convict the inmate at trial, because success on the merits would not “necessarily imply that the plaintiffs conviction was unlawful.”512 U.S. at 487, n. 7 ,114 S.Ct. 2364 (nоting doctrines such as inevitable discovery, independent source, and harmless error). To hold otherwise would have cut off potentially valid damages actions аs to which a plaintiff might never obtain favorable termination ....
Nelson v. Campbell,
Contrary to the district court’s view in this case, Heck does not automatically bar a § 1983 claim simply because “the processes of the criminal justice system did not end up in [the] plaintiffs favor.” A plaintiff need not prove that any conviction stemming from an incident with the police has been invalidated, only a conviction that could not be reconciled with the claims of his civil action.
Here, VanGilder was originally charged with felony battery on a police officer. After plea bаrgaining, the charge was reduced,- and VanGilder was convicted instead of resisting a law enforcement officer, a misdemeanor. Thus, whether this suit is barred by Heck hinges on whether an action against Baker for excessive use of force necessarily implies the invalidity of VanGilder’s conviction for resisting. The answer is no.
Exactly what happened during the blow-by-blow in the St. Elizabeth’s emergency room, and thus whether VanGilder is entitled to damages, is a question to be decided at trial. But as a threshold matter, it is clear that a judgment for VanGilder, should he prevail, would not create “two conflicting resolutions arising out of the same or identical transaction.”
Heck,
Were we to uphold the application of Heck in this case, it would imply that once a person resists law enforcement, he has invited the police to inflict any reaction or retribution they choose, while forfeiting the right to sue for damages. Put another way, pоlice subduing a suspect could use as much force as they wanted — and be shielded from accountability under civil law — as long as the prosecutor could get the plaintiff convicted on a charge of resisting. This would open the door to undesirable behavior and gut a large share of the protections provided by § 1983.
In support of its holding, the district court cited without analysis three of our cases applying
Heck,
but none of them are relevant to the circumstances of this case. In
Kramer v. Village of North Fond du Lac,
Baker argues that even if the district court’s application of
Heck
was erroneоus, he is protected from suit by qualified immunity under principles of
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case REMANDED for further proceedings.
Notes
. Whatever a plaintiff may originally have been criminally charged with, in applying the
Heck
Court’s holding we examine only the actual conviction.
See Heck,
