In
Onossian v. Block,
we applied the Supreme Court’s decision in
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
I. BACKGROUND
At approximately 3:41 p.m., on November 29, 2003, officers with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (“LVMPD”) attempted to pull over a stolen Toyota Camry. When the driver refused to stop, a police chase ensued. The chase would last an hour, cover nearly 90 miles, and involve at least a dozen units and a helicopter. Officer Eli Prunchak was at a car dealership “ordering a new door panel for [his] patrol vehicle” when he “heard radio traffic that units were in pursuit of a stolen vehicle ... heading southbound on Boulder Highway.” Based on the radio traffic, Prunchak “thought that [he] was close enough to the pursuit that[he] had a good chance of catching up to it and assisting other officers in apprehension of the suspects.” Ten minutes after LVMPD first attempted to stop the Toyota, it entered the southbound lanes of the U.S. 95, a major north-south freeway. At that point, Prunchak “still thought that [he] was close enough to help and did not know at the time how many other units were in pursuit.” Calculating that he was “still approximately a half mile to a mile behind the pursuit,” Prunchak, with emergency lights active, entered the left lane of southbound U.S. 95.
At about the same time, Edwige Bin-gue, and her mother, Marjorie Bingue (collectively “Bingue”), were traveling on southbound U.S. 95 when they saw several police units in pursuit of the Toyota. 1 Bingue moved to the right to avoid those units, and the units safely passed. Minutes later, Prunchak approached — traveling “somewhere around 100 miles per hour” — and while rounding “a long, wide, left curve ... felt [his] tires slip from underneathfhim] and [his] patrol vehicle ... drift[ ] into the number-two lane.” Though there were no cars in the number two lane when Prunchak attempted to regain control of his car, he quickly drifted into the number-three lane and “sideswiped” the driver’s side of Bingue’s Mercedes. Both vehicles spun out of control and came to rest on the divider between the north and southbound lanes of the freeway. Realizing he was not seriously injured, Prunchak immediately moved to assist Bingue, who was “extremely shaken up, but did not appear to have serious injuries.” Shortly after, another unit arrived and relieved Prunchak. Police ultimately stopped the Toyota with spike strips 2 just a few miles from the California border and arrested its three occupants.
Bingue filed this suit in state court against Prunchak, LVMPD, and others alleging state law negligence and, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, violations of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.
3
The case
II. JURISDICTION
Bingue argues that we lack jurisdiction to adjudicate the issue of whether Prunchak is entitled to qualified immunity as this is an interlocutory appeal, and our review of such appeals is limited to legal issues. Relying on the district court’s characterization of the issue as one of “fact,” Bingue argues that our review is limited to the question of “whether the facts alleged support ... a claim of a violation of clearly established law.”
Perez v. Unified Gov’t of Wyandotte County,
Bingue’s argument, presumably, arises from the general principle that the denial of a motion for judgment on the pleadings or “summary judgment is not ordinarily an appealable order,” and that when such orders are appealable, as in the qualified immunity context, our jurisdiction is “limited to questions of law and does not extend to claims in which the determination of qualified immunity depends on disputed issues of material fact.”
Jeffers v. Gomez,
While this general principle stands, the “denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds is not always unappealable simply because the district court concludes that the issues of fact in dispute are material.”
Thomas v. Gomez,
Applying this rule, we have jurisdiction to determine, based on the facts alleged by Bingue, whether Prunchak is entitled to qualified immunity. Accepting the district court’s implied holding — that a court should wait to determine qualified immunity whenever there is a disputed factual issue-would eviscerate the very purpose of qualified immunity, which is “to protect defendants even from defending the action.”
Jeffers,
III. DISCUSSION
We now turn to the merits of the appeal, whether Prunchak is entitled to qualified immunity on Bingue’s federal claims. In making this determination, we apply the Supreme Court’s two-part sequential test.
See Meyers v. Redwood City,
“As in any action under § 1983, the first step is to identify the exact contours of the underlying right said to have been violated.”
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
A. Bingue’s Fifth Amendment Claim
Bingue first argues that Prunchak’s actions run afoul of the Fifth Amendment. This claim is plainly foreclosed by the Constitution. Prunchak is a local law enforcement official, and the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause only applies to the federal government.
See Betts v. Brady,
B. Bingue’s Fourteenth Amendment Claim
Bingue’s related Fourteenth Amendment claim is controlled by
Lewis,
which concerned an alleged Fourteenth Amendment violation arising out of the death of a motorcycle passenger who was killed after he was hit by a police car during the high-speed pursuit of that motorcycle.
See Lewis,
Bingue attempts to avoid this result and distinguish
Lewis
on two separate grounds. First, she argues that the cases are distinguishable because, unlike the plaintiff in
Lewis,
who was fleeing on the motorcycle, Bingue was a mere innocent bystander and, therefore, owed a greater duty of care. We rejected this argument in
Onossian v. Block,
Second, Bingue argues that
Lends’
“intent to harm” standard only applies to cases involving “emergency and nearly instantaneous pursuits,” and is not applicable to the situation at hand where Prunc-hak allegedly had ample time to deliberate. Drawing on language in
Lewis,
Bingue urges us to adopt the less demanding “deliberate indifference” standard in her case and reserve the “intent to harm” standard for situations where the police “have obligations that tend to tug against each other” and must make decisions “in haste, under pressure, and frequently without the luxury of a second chance.”
Lewis,
523 U.S. at
853, 118 S.Ct.
1708 (internal quotation marks omitted). At first glance, Bingue appears to be correct that our prior decisions and those of some of our sister circuits support her position. See,
e.g., Moreland,
It remains an open question in our circuit whether the “intent to harm” standard applies categorically to Fourteenth Amendment due process claims arising out of all high-speed police chases, or whether there are some kinds of high-speed chases in which a “deliberate indifference” standard applies.
See Onossian,
The en banc court determined that the original panel had read Lewis too narrowly and was focused “on a portion of the Court’s justification for [its] holding” and “paid too little heed to the Supreme Court’s holding.” Id. at 870 (emphasis in original). The court further noted that the original panel’s decision would effectively “eviscerate[ ] the holding of Lewis ” because under that reading courts would be free to reject the intent to harm standard “whenever a judge or a jury could say, with the wisdom of hindsight, that an officer engaged in a high-speed pursuit had ample time to deliberate.” Id. at 871 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The court also noted that drawing such an arbitrary distinction between “emergency” and “non-emergency” situations discounts the split second decisions an officer must make when deciding whether to engage in a high-speed chase. In such circumstances, officers must operate under great pressure and make repeated split-second decisions about how best to apprehend the fleeing suspect in a manner that will minimize risk to their own safety and the safety of the general public. An officer attempting to apprehend a suspect fleeing at high speed does not have the luxury of delay; there is no time for reflection and precious little time for deliberation concerning either the decision to join the chase in the first place or the serial decisions about how best to pursue the suspect. The sheer velocity of a high-speed chase necessarily converts each situation into a genuine “emergency.” Trying to sort high-speed chases into the neat categories of “emergency” and “non-emergency” situations is much like trying to bake a cake and having to distinguish between salt and sugar by sight alone: it is a nearly impossible task that has a high likelihood of producing an unpleasant result. Our colleagues on the Eighth Circuit recognized that such a distinction is unsound under Lewis because:
it ... gives too little recognition to the Court’s other bases for [its] holding — its historical reluctance “to expand the concept of substantive due process,”523 U.S. at 842 [118 S.Ct. 1708 ]; its explicit reliance on Whitley v. Albers,475 U.S. 312 , 320,106 S.Ct. 1078 ,89 L.Ed.2d 251 (1986), which adopted the intent-to-harm standard for a two-hour prison riot,523 U.S. at 853-54 [118 S.Ct. 1708 ,140 L.Ed.2d 1043 (1998)]; its doubt whether “it makes sense to speak of indifference as deliberate in the case of sudden pursuit,”523 U.S. at 851 [118 S.Ct. 1708 ]; its recognition that police officers confronting high-speed lawlessness are “subject to countervailing [law] enforcement considerations,”523 U.S. at 855 [118 S.Ct. 1708 ]; its concern that any standard less than intent-to-harm “might cause suspects to flee more often, increasing accidents of the kind which occurred here,”523 U.S. at 858 [118 S.Ct. 1708 ] (Kennedy, J., concurring); and the belief of at least some Justices that the question of police officer liability for reckless driving during high-speed pursuits should be decided by the elected branches of government,523 U.S. at 864-65 [118 S.Ct. 1708 ] (Scalia, J., concurring).
Helseth,
Applying the “intent to harm” standard to the case at hand, we conclude that Prunchak did not act with the requisite intent to harm. The police report filed immediately after the accident reveals that Prunchak joined the high-speed chase in an attempt to do his job and help apprehend the fleeing suspect who posed a danger to the community. He stated that he “heard radio traffic that units were in pursuit of a stolen vehicle.” Shortly thereafter he heard additional traffic that the vehicle was entering U.S. 95, near where Prunchak was parked. He wrote that he “thought that [he] was close enough to help and did not know at the time how many other units were in pursuit.” The police incident recall logs support Prunc-hak’s statement. Nowhere in the record is there any indication that Prunchak acted with an intent to harm, or had any motive other than a desire to do his job. With the benefit of hindsight, Prunchak’s decision to join the pursuit may have been ill-advised and his execution may have been careless, but we cannot say that, from the moment Prunchak heard the call over the radio, he did not believe he was responding to an emergency and acted accordingly; poor judgment alone in a high-speed chase does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment. Because Prunchak’s actions do not meet the “intent to harm” standard, he is entitled to judgment under step one of the Saucier analysis.
IV. CONCLUSION
We conclude that high-speed police chases, by their very nature, do not give the officers involved adequate time to deliberate in either deciding to join the chase or how to drive while in pursuit of the fleeing suspect. We hold, therefore, that
Lewis
requires us to apply the “intent to harm” standard to
all
high-speed chases. Since Prunchak’s actions do not meet this stringent standard, Bingue’s claim fails un
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. A third plaintiff, Donald House, is Edwige Bingue’s husband. He was not involved in the accident.
. Spike strips, also known as tire spikes, are law enforcement devices used to stop suspects fleeing by car. The "spikes” are hollow metal tubes that pierce the tires and cause rapid deflation without explosion.
See, e.g., United States v. Payan-Valenzuela,
Civil No. 06CR2158 JM,
.Bingue originally brought a claim under the Fourth Amendment, but concedes that she
. Prunchak’s motion for qualified immunity arises under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), which, as newly amended, provides that ''[a]fter the pleadings are closed — but early enough not to delay trial — a party may move for judgment on the pleadings.” Since the parties have presented “matters outside the pleadings,” Prunchak's "motion [is] treated as one for summary judgment under Rule 56.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(d). (We quote from the new amendment, effective December 1, 2007. The amendment is "part of the general restyling of the Civil Rules to make them more easily understood.... The[] changes are intended to be stylistic only.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12, advisory committee note (2007 Amendment).)
. As a preliminary matter, we have jurisdiction to determine our own jurisdiction.
See Special Invs., Inc. v. Aero Air, Inc.,
. Bingue argues that other circuits have either rejected
Helseth
or have held that the
Lewis
"intent to harm” standard only applies where officers lack the time necessary to deliberate. A closer examination of these cases reveals that none of those cases involved high-speed car chases. Instead, in applying
Lewis,
those courts merely reasoned from analogy and extracted from
Lewis
the proposition that when deliberation is impossible, the "intent to harm” standard is more likely to apply.
See, e.g., Moreland,
