Appellant Keith Clayton Brooks, Jr., appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Appellees Steve Gaenzle and Paul Smith — deputies with the El Paso County, Colorado Sheriffs Department — in his civil rights actions against them pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and his state tort action pursuant to Colorado Revised Statute § 13-80-119. 1 The *1215 crux of Mr. Brooks’s appeal centers on his argument Deputies Gaenzle and Smith violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure by use of excessive force when they shot him after he fled the scene of a violent crime — a burglary involving a gun used to shoot close range at the deputies when they responded to a call reporting the burglary. Mr. Brooks claims the district court erred in ruling no Fourth Amendment seizure occurred and, even if a seizure occurred, Deputy Gaenzle acted with objective reasonableness in shooting Mr. Brooks under the circumstances presented. He also contests the district court’s grant of summary judgment on his federal action against the deputies for conspiracy and malicious prosecution and his state tort action against them for assault and battery. We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the federal actions, and decline pendent jurisdiction on the state action, thereby reversing and remanding it to the district court with instructions to dismiss it without prejudice.
I. Factual Background
The underlying, undisputed facts surrounding Mr. Brooks’s appeal are more fully set forth in the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the deputies. 2 We summarize only the material, undisputed facts considered for our disposition of this appeal.
On October 17, 2005, Mr. Brooks and Nick Acevedo forcibly broke into a garage in El Paso County, Colorado, with the intent of burglarizing the attached house. Someone in the neighborhood contacted law enforcement, after which Deputies Gaenzle and Smith arrived on the scene. Both deputies heard what sounded like two or three people talking inside, so they announced their presence and entered the garage, where they saw a white male, later identified as Mr. Acevedo, run into the house and block the door with his body. As the officers tried to breаk down the door, someone from inside the house fired a shot which went through the door, barely missing the officers’ heads and shoulders and spraying them with shrapnel. After the deputies left the garage and entered the back yard to ascertain if either of them was injured, they observed a black male flee the house and begin to climb a fence. The fleeing suspect was Mr. Brooks.
Deputy Gaenzle yelled “stop” as Mr. Brooks began to climb the fence. 3 As Mr. Brooks continued to climb the fence, Deputy Gaenzle shot and struck him. Despite being shot, Mr. Brooks continued his flight by climbing over the fence and fleeing the scene. He joined Mr. Acevedo, who had also fled, and together they escaped in a car parked nearby. Three days later, law enforcement authorities found Mr. Brooks in a Colorado Springs, Colorado mall parking lot and, after chasing him to a nearby home, apprehended him. Thirteen days later, police shot and killed Mr. Acevedo during a gun fight in which he died holding the gun used to fire through the door during the burglary with Mr. Brooks.
With respect to the most contentiously disputed facts, Mr. Brooks claimed he never used or possessed a weapon during the burglary. However, both Deputies Gaenzle and Smith stated they saw a gun in his *1216 possession as he fled the house. In addition, the deputies claim they did not know whether the shot was fired by the person blocking the door with his body or someone else in the house, while Mr. Brooks contends it was Mr. Acevedo and they should have known it was him. While the parties dispute these facts, they are immaterial to our disposition on appeal of the issues presented.
Following his arrest, the State of Colorado charged Mr. Brooks with seven counts, including: (1) criminal attempt to commit murder in the first degree, after deliberation, of a police officer; (2) criminal attempt to commit murder in the second degree; (3) assault in the first degree; (4) first degree burglary — assault or menace; (5) first degree burglary — deadly weapon; (6) menacing; and (7) possession of a weapon by a felon. The jury convicted Mr. Brooks of all charges except the count for possession of a weapon by a felon. The jury also found Mr. Brooks did not use or possess a firearm for the purpose of imposing a sentence enhancement.
Thereafter, Mr. Brooks brought the instant civil action against Deputies Gaenzle and Smith. In his second amended complaint, Mr. Brooks raised three claims for damages, including allegations of: (1) a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 based on the deputies’ use of excessive force in seizing him by gunshot during the burglary; (2) a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 based on their alleged malicious prosecution and a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1985 for their alleged conspiracy to make false reports of his possession of a gun; 4 and (3) assault and battery by Deputy Gaenzle constituting an actionable tort under state law. Thereafter, the district court granted the deputies’ motion for summary judgment on each claim. Mr. Brooks now appeals. We recount the district court’s resolution of each of Mr. Brooks’s claims and the issues the parties raise on appeal as follows in our discussion of those issues.
II. Discussion
A. Excessive Force Issue
In his first claim for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Mr. Brooks asserted Deputies Gaenzle and Smith violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonаble seizure when they used excessive and deadly force in shooting him as he fled. In ruling on the deputies’ motion for summary judgment, the district court held no excessive force occurred based on its determination Mr. Brooks’s shooting did not constitute a seizure and its alternative determination the force used was objectively reasonable under the circumstances presented.
In addressing the seizure issue, the district court relied on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brower v. County of Inyo,
For a seizure to occur, the government does not have to literally stop the suspect in his tracks or freeze him in place. But, the plain meaning of the word seizure and various Supreme Court interpretations indicate that the government must do something that gives it the opportunity to control the suspect’s ability to evade capture or control. See Brower,489 U.S. at 595-96 [109 S.Ct. 1378 ] (“Violation of the Fourth Amendment requires an intentional acquisition of physical control.”).... In other words, the government must have substantially *1217 precluded the suspect’s ability to loose himself from the government’s control.
Apt.App. at 19. It also observed that in
California v. Hodari D.,
In making its determination, the district court also considered the cases relied on by Mr. Brooks. It pointed out Mr. Brooks relied on mere dicta in
Bella
to assert the shooting of a fleeing suspect automatically or per se constitutes a Fourth Amendment seizure.
See
Alternatively, the district court determined that, even if Mr. Brooks could prove a seizure occurred, the deputies used an objectively reasonable degree of force under the circumstances presented. In making this determination, it pointed out law enforcement officers may reasonably use deadly force when they have probable cause to believe a suspect has committed a crime involving the infliction or threatened infliction of serious physical harm, and, at the time Deputy Gaenzle shot him, Mr. Brooks was involved in the commission of an inherently violent crime where, during the course of a burglary, someone shot at the deputies at close range before fleeing. The district court held Deputy Gaenzle acted reasonably because a reasonable officer in his position would have, under the circumstances presented, feared for his safety and the safety of others.
In making this determination, the district court rejected Mr. Brooks’s claim Deputies Gaenzle and Smith failed to use оbjectively reasonable force: (1) because the jury acquitted him of the charge of being a felon in possession of a weapon; *1218 and (2) based on his allegation he did not possess a weapon or participate in the violent acts for which he was convicted, but merely acted in complicity with Mr. Acevedo. In i-ejecting these arguments, the district court noted that, regardless of whether Mr. Brooks actually possessed a gun or the fact a jury acquitted him of possession of a weapon, he was undisputably involved in a crime where someone involved in the burglary nearly shot the two deputies in the face and that the law does not require he actually carry the gun or commit the shooting.
In addition, the district court determined Mr. Brooks’s reliance on Deputy Gaenzle’s statement — that he believed Mr. Brooks possessed a handgun, which was critical to his decision to use deadly force — was merely a subjective standard instead of the requisite objective reasonableness standard in viewing whether a reasonable officer would have used such force under the circumstances presented. Based on this assessment, the district court concluded sufficient undisputed facts existed in the record to support Deputy Gaenzle’s use of deadly force, notwithstanding his own subjective impression of the situation. Having made a determination the shooting of Mr. Brooks did not constitute a seizure and, alternatively, the force used was objectively reasonable under the circumstances presented, the district court held Deputies Gaenzle and Smith did not use excessive force in violation of Mr. Brooks’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure.
On appeal, Mr. Brooks contends the district court erred in its analysis and resolution of his excessive force claim with regard to both its holding no seizure occurred and its alternative holding Deputy Gaenzle used objectively reasonable force under the circumstances presented. In support of his seizure argument, Mr. Brooks relies on the same or similar arguments he made in opposing the deputies’ motion for summary judgment, including his reliance on
Hodari, Bella, Cole,
and
Lemery,
and another case,
Vaughan v. Cox,
As to his argument concerning the objective reasonableness of the force applied, Mr. Brooks again relies on Deputy Gaenzle’s subjective statеment concerning his assessment of the risk he posed, claiming such a subjective assessment may be considered. He also reasserts his claim his mere involvement in the burglary, where a shot was discharged at the deputies, is insufficient to establish he posed a threat to either Deputy Gaenzle or the community at large.
We begin our discussion with our standard of review, as set forth in
Reeves v. Churchich,
We review a grant of summary judgment based on qualified immunity de *1219 novo, applying the same legal standard used by the district court. Summary judgment should be granted if the pleadings ... together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. In conducting our review, we view the evidence and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
In an action under section 1983, individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity unless it is demonstrated that their alleged conduct violated clearly established constitutional rights of which a reasonable person in their positions would have known. Once a defеndant has raised qualified immunity as an affirmative defense, the plaintiff bears the heavy two-part burden of demonstrating that (1) the defendant violated a constitutional right and (2) the constitutional right was clearly established at the time of the alleged conduct.
Id.
at 1250 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In this case, Deputies Gaenzle and Smith raised the affirmative defense of qualified immunity. Thus, the “threshold question” is whether “the officer[s’] conduct violated a constitutional right,” when they shot him as he fled.
Scott v. Harris,
Turning to whether a constitutional right was violated, “[t]he Fourth Amendment protects individuals against ‘unreasonable searches and seizures.’ ”
Bella,
In
Terry v. Ohio,
the Supreme Court held [a] “seizure” triggering the Fourth Amendment’s protections occurs only when the officer has, “by means of physical force or show of authority, ... in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen....”
Subsequent Supreme Court cases determining what constitutes a “seizure” in
*1220
flight situations also do not support Mr. Brooks’s contention use of deadly fоrce against him is enough alone to constitute a “seizure.” In
Brower,
a suspect was killed when the stolen car he was driving at high speeds to elude police crashed into a police roadblock intentionally put in place to stop him.
[A] Fourth Amendment seizure does not occur whenever there is a govern-mentally caused termination of an individual’s freedom of movement (the innocent passerby), nor even where there is a governmentally caused and govern-mentally desired termination of an individual’s freedom of movement (the fleeing felon), but only when there is a governmental termination of freedom of movement through means intentionally applied.
Id.
at 596-97,
Similarly, in
Hodari,
the Supreme Court determined a police officer’s pursuit of a suspect constituted a show of authority enjoining him to halt, but no seizure occurred until the police officer tackled him because, until then, he did not yield or submit to the officer’s show of authority.
This common law dicta is what Mr. Brooks relies on in stating
Hodari
stands for the proposition a seizure occurs per se when there is, as he asserts, an “ ‘application of physical force to restrain movement, even when it is ultimately unsuccessful.’ ”
But, in relying on the Hodari common law dicta, Mr. Brooks and these cases ignore the Hodañ Court’s further explanation:
We have consulted the common-law to explain the meaning of seizure .... [and] neither usage nor common-law tradition makes an attempted seizure a seizure. The common law may have made an attempted seizure unlawful in certain circumstances; but it made many things unlawful, very few of which were elevated to constitutional proscriptions.
Following
Hodari
and
Lewis,
the Supreme Court again considered what constitutes a seizure by summarizing, “[a] person is seized by the police and thus entitled to challenge the government’s action under the Fourth Amendment when the officer, by means of physical force or show of authority,
terminates or restrains his freedom of movement,
through means intentionally applied.”
Brendlin v. California,
Not only have we applied these same principles in considering seizure situations, but none of our holdings suggest the mere
*1222
use of physical force or show of authority alone, without termination of movement or submission, constitutes a seizure. For instance, in
Reeves,
we determined two individuals were not “seized” for the purpose of a Fourth Amendment violation when law enforcement officers pointed their guns at them and ordered them not to move, but they failed to submit to their assertions of authority.
See
While our holding in
Bella
supports the district court’s decision Mr. Brooks was not seized by the gunshot, in that case we generally stated
Hodari
stood for the proposition a “ ‘seizure’ occurs only when a fleeing person is
physically touched
by police or when he or she submits to a show of authority by police.”
As previously mentioned, in the portion of
Hodari
on which we relied in
Bella,
the Court was discussing common law seizures and arrests to explain the Fourth Amendment could not be stretched to cover attempted seizures by unsuccessful shows of authority, such as a pursuit.
Hodari,
[Common law] arrest requires either physical force ... or, where that is absent, submission to the assertion of authority. Mere words will not constitute an arrest, while, on the other hand, no actual, physical touching is essential. The apparent inconsistency in the two parts of this statement is explained by the fact that an assertion of authority and purpose to arrest followed by submission of the arrestee constitutes an arrest. There can be no arrest without either touching or submission.
Id.
at 626-27,
As to the other eases on which Mr. Brooks relies, the district court aptly noted his successful eluding of the police is different than what occurred in
Brower, Gamer,
or
Cole,
where the officers’ use of deadly force actually terminated the fleeing suspects’ movement, either by killing them or immediately stopping them.
See Brower,
We are not alone in interpreting Supreme Court precedent as requiring intentional termination of movement or acquisition of physical control in flight situations, regardless of the force applied.
See, e.g., United States v. Bradley,
Applying these legal principles concerning flight-type seizures to the instant case, we agree with the district court’s assessment Deputy Gaenzle’s gunshot may have intentionally struck Mr. Brooks but it clearly did not terminate his movement or otherwise cause the government to have physical control over him. This is evidenced by the fact he continued climbing the fence and eluding arrest for three days, after which, as the district court aptly noted, he “still had enough spring in his step to evade police in the mall parking lot” and cause them to chase him to a nearby house. Apt.App. at 23.
As an alternative argument, Mr. Brooks relies on the district court’s pronouncement the gunshot “presumably” “painted]” him or “slowed the pace of his escape” to assert, seemingly for the first time on appeal, his “‘painted] or slowed’ movement” sufficiently constitutes a seizure.
8
The only case he cites which can be construed to remotely support such a proposition is
Lemery,
an unpublished opinion where we relied on the aforementioned statements in
Hodari
and
Bella
to hold the “momentary” stopping of an individual, with a pepper ball shot to the eye before he walked away unpursued by police, constituted a “ ‘governmental termination of freedom of movement through means intentionally applied.’ ”
See Lemery,
We generally will not address issues not supported by citation to legal authority.
See MacArthur v. San Juan County,
As to his reliance on Lemery, even if we applied its non-precedential holding that a suspect’s momentary termination of movement alone, caused by a pepper ball shot, constitutes a seizure, neither the record on appeal nor Mr. Brooks’s arguments indicate Deputy Gaenzle’s bullet momentarily stopped his escape and, instead, as the district court stated, it did not “even temporarily halt[]” it. Apt.App. at 21-22. For these reasons, we agree with the district court’s assessment no genuine issue exists as to any material fact, and Deputies Gaenzle and Smith, as the moving parties, are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Because Mr. Brooks has not demonstrated their alleged conduct violated a constitutional right by means of “seizure,” we need not consider the issue of whether the deputies’ conduct was objectively reasonable, which is also required for a Fourth Amendment excessive force claim.
B. Malicious Prosecution and Conspiracy/False Statements
1. Malicious Prosecution
In his second federal claim- against Deputies Gaenzle and Smith, Mr. Brooks sought relief, in part, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for their alleged violation of his Fourteenth Amendment due process rights by making false reports of his possession of a gun in order to maliciously prosecute him by charging him with possession of a weapon and seeking a sentence enhancement based on his possession or use of a weapon. In opposing the deputies’ motion for summary judgment, Mr. Brooks argued a factual issue existed with respect to whether they made false statements about his possession of a gun as he fled.
The district court agreed a factual dispute existed as to whether the deputies made false statements but determined that such a factual dispute was immaterial to the malicious prosecution issue because, regardless of their statements, probable ■cause still existed for the purpose of trying Mr. Brooks оn the weapon charge and seeking the sentence enhancement. In making this determination, the district court pointed out multiple reports by investigators other than Deputies Gaenzle and Smith supported both the charge and enhancement. 10 Thus, the district court *1226 concluded that if the deputies’ alleged false statements were removed from the analysis, sufficient additional evidence existed for probable cause to charge Mr. Brooks with possession of a gun by a felon and seek a sentence enhancement.
On appeal, Mr. Brooks renews his arguments in support of his malicious prosecution claim, stating the deputies’ false statements tainted the entire investigative and probable cause process. The deputies argue in support of the district court’s grant of summary judgment and point out Mr. Brooks’s public defender conceded in his deposition that sufficient information existed to establish probable cause of weapon possession, even absent the deputies’ statements. 11
As the district court held, to support his malicious prosecutiоn claim Mr. Brooks must show that, absent the deputies’ alleged misrepresented statements, the government lacked probable cause to charge him with weapon possession or to seek a weapon sentence enhancement.
See Grubbs v. Bailes,
2. Conspiracy
As to the conspiracy claim alleged in his second federal action, Mr. Brooks alleged in his amended complaint Deputies Gaenzle and Smith “conspired to make false reports and statements in the official proceedings investigating [Deputy] Gaenzle’s shooting of [him] in violation of 12 U.S.C. § 1985.” Apt.App. at 10 (emphasis added). However, in responding to their motion for summary judgment, he abandoned his § 1985 conspiracy action, stating “insofar as [Mr.] Brooks alleges conspiracy under § 1985(2), that claim may be dismissed. Mr. Brooks’ § 1988 conspiracy claim is adequately supported by the record to withstand summary judgment.” Id. *1227 at 243. In support, he asserted his expert witness found inconsistencies in the deputies’ statements which established a conspiracy and provided the district court the affidavit of that witness, which stated in relevant part:
The inconsistencies which exist in [Deputies Gaenzle’s and Smith’s] reports are of a quantity and nature that arouse suspicion concerning the veracity of [their] report that [Mr.] Brooks was armed when shot by Deputy Gaenzle. [Deputies] Gaenzle’s and Smith’s report of a gun is inconsistent with their conduct and the known undisputed facts of the case.
Id. at 176-77. Other than this, the record on appeal only includes a portion of the deposition transcript of the same expert, who stated inconsistencies and discrepancies existed in the deputies’ reports which raised “flags,” but only discussed with any specificity one inconsistency concerning Deputy Gaenzle’s first statement they found a black male in the garage, as compared to his subsequent and repeated statements it was a white male. Relying on this and the expert witness’s affidavit, Mr. Brooks surmised that “inconsistencies in [Deputies] Gaenzle’s and Smith’s accounts are ‘red flags’ that they have conspired to ‘whitewash’ the truth.” Id. at 243.
In addressing Mr. Brooks’s conspiracy argument, the district court acknowledged an issue existed as to whether he failed to рroperly plead conspiracy under § 1983 but determined that, regardless of that issue, he failed to raise a triable issue of fact on the necessary elements of his conspiracy claim, including allegations of a shared conspiratorial objective, concerted action, and an actual deprivation of rights. In so holding, it also noted his claim was based on the affidavit of his expert in which the expert merely stated that inconsistencies existed within the deputies’ reports. The district court held Mr. Brooks’s vague claim on the existence of such inconsistencies did not raise a triable issue of fact they participated in a conspiracy to falsely claim he possessed a gun, including the required elements that they had a “shared objective” or acted in “concert! ].” Id. at 38.
On appeal, Mr. Brooks continues to suggest material inconsistencies exist, including the fact each deputy reacted differently to the threat he allegedly posed, as demonstrated by Deputy Gaenzle’s drawing his gun and shooting, while Deputy Smith did not. 12 He also contends he sufficiently pled conspiracy under § 1983 when the entirety of his complaint and its allegations are read together.
In
Dixon v. City of
Lawton, we explained many differences exist between § 1983 and § 1985 for the purpose of alleging an actionable conspiracy.
See
In this case, regardless of whether Mr. Brooks properly alleged a violation under § 1983, rather than § 1985, we agree with the district court that his vague claim in his complaint of an alleged conspiracy does not raise a triable issue of fact the deputies participated in a conspiracy. Moreover, his later assertion his expert found inconsistencies in the deputies’ statements as to his possession of a gun, without expressly outlining those inconsistencies or why they are material in establishing a conspiracy, does not cure his failure to raise a triable issue of fact they participated in a conspiracy. In addition, his discussion on appeal of other perceived inconsistencies, including the deputies’ different reactions during the heat of the moment in which only one raised and shot his gun, also does not cure his failurе to raise a triable issue of fact the deputies participated in a conspiracy by acting in concert or with a general conspiratorial objective. As we previously stated in another civil rights action, an allegation of “[pjarallel action — or inaction ... — does not necessarily indicate an agreement to act in concert.”
Salehpoor,
C. Assault and Battery
In support of his state tort claim for relief against Deputy Gaenzle for assault and battery, Mr. Brooks simply stated Deputy Gaenzle “assaulted and battered” him and he suffered damages. In granting summary judgment to Deputy Gaenzle on Mr. Brooks’s assault and battery claim, the district court recounted Colorado Revised Statute § 13-80-119, which states:
(1) No person ... shall have a ñght to recover damages sustained during the commission of or during immediate flight from an act that is defined by any law of this state or the United States to be a felony, if the conditions stipulated in this section apply.
(2) (a) The court shall dismiss the action for damagеs and award attorney fees and costs to the person against whom the action was brought if the person bringing the action ... has been convicted of the felony or has been adjudicated a delinquent as a result of the commission of the act, unless the damage was caused by the willful and deliberate act of another person; except that such exception shall not apply if the person who caused the injuries acted:
(I) Under a reasonable belief that physical force was reasonable and appropriate to prevent injury to himself or herself or to others, using a degree of force that he or she reasonably believed necessary for that purpose; or
(II) Under a reasonable belief that physical force was reasonable and appropriate to prevent the commission of a felony, using a degree of force that he *1229 or she reasonably believed necessary for that purpose; or
(III) As a peace officer, as such person is described in [§ ] 16-2.5-101, C.R.S., acting within the scope of the officer’s employment and acting pursuant to [§ ] 18-1-707, C.R.S.
Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13-80-119 (emphasis added).
To the extent Deputy Gaenzle was acting in his employ as a peace officer under subsection (2)(a)(III), Colorado Revised Statute § 18-1-707, as referenced above, states in part:
(1) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this section, a peace officer is justified in using reasonable and appropriate physical force upon another person when and to the extent that he reasonably believes it necessary:
(a) To effect an arrest or to prevent the escape from custody of an arrested person unless he knows that the arrest is unauthorized; or
(b) To defend himself or a third person from what he reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of physical force while effecting or attempting to effect such an arrest or while preventing or attempting to prevent such an escape;
(2) A peace officer is justified in using deadly physical force upon another person for a purpose specified in subsection (1) of this section only when he reasonably believes that it is necessary;
(a) To defend himself or a third person from what he reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of deadly physical force; or
(b) To effect an arrest, or to prevent the escape from custody, of a person whom he reasonably believes:
(I) Has committed or attempted to commit a felony involving the use or threatened use of a deadly weapon; or
(II) Is attempting to escape by the use of a deadly weapon;....
Colo.Rev.Stat. § 18-1-707 (emphasis added).
In applying these statutes to the instant action for assault and battery, the district court summarily concluded Mr. Brooks could not recover damages for any injury he sustained because, as prohibited from recovery under § 13-80-119(1) and 2(a),. he committed multiple felonies for which the jury convicted him and, even if the willful and deliberate exception in subsection 2(a) applied, Deputy Gaenzle used a “reasonable degree of force” when he shot him.
On appeal, Mr. Brooks continues to claim Deputy Gaenzle’s shooting him constitutes a compensable tort of assault and battery under Colorado Revised Statute § 13-80-119 because the force used on him as a fleeing felon was unreasonable. He also suggests Deputy Gaenzle’s affirmative response to a hypothetical quеstion — that his shooting of Mr. Brooks constituted excessive force if he was not armed — creates a factual dispute concerning the subjective reasonableness of his shooting sufficient to preclude summary judgment on his assault and battery claim. The deputies argue in support of the district court’s grant of summary judgment, stating Deputy Gaenzle acted with objective reasonableness in shooting Mr. Brooks.
While the district court granted summary judgment to the deputies on Mr. Brooks’s state tort claim, we have ruled pendent jurisdiction over state claims “is exercised on a discretionary basis” and generally held that “[i]f federal claims are dismissed before trial, leaving only issues of state law, ‘the federal court should decline the exercise of jurisdiction by dismissing the case without prejudice.’ ”
Bauchman v. West High Sch.,
Having affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the federal issues, only the supplemental or pendent state tort issue of assault and battery is left. We believe this issue is best left for a state court’s determination, including whether Colorado Revised Statute § 13-80-119 and/or § 18 — 1— 707, as applied specifically to peace officers, require either objective or subjective reasonable force, as disputed by the parties. Accordingly, we decline to exercise jurisdiction over Mr. Brooks’s remaining state law claim, and, instead, reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on that claim and remand with instructions to dismiss it without prejudice.
See Bauchman,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Deputies Gaenzle and Smith on Mr. Brooks’s federal actions for excessive force and conspiracy and malicious prosecution. We REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the deputies on the remaining state law claim of assault and battery and REMAND that claim to the district court with instructions to dismiss it without prejudice.
Notes
. The other named defendants in Mr. Brooks’s action included the El Paso County Sheriff's Department, El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa, and the El Paso County Board *1215 of Commissioners. The parties later stipulated to dismissal of the claims against them.
. Like the district court, we rely on the parties’ statement of undisputed facts, as amended by Mr. Brooks in his response to the deputies’ motion for summary judgment.
. Mr. Brooks states he did not hear such a command. Similarly, while the record indicates Mr. Brooks was hit by a bullet in the buttock, he contends it was his lower back area. Neither of these disputed facts is material to our disposition.
. Although Mr. Brooks initially raised his conspiracy claim expressly under 42 U.S.C. § 1985, he later proceeded with the claim under § 1983, as discussed hereafter.
. "Apprehension” generally means “capture,” “arrest,” or "seizure in the name of the law.” See Black’s Law Dictionary 97 (7th ed.1999); Webster’s II New Riverside Univ. Dictionary 119 (1984 ed.).
. As further illustration, the deputies point out that in our unpublished opinion,
United States
v.
Quintana-Grijalva,
. Deputies Gaenzle and Smith suggest using mere “physical touch” to constitute a seizure in flight situations could cause illogical results. To illustrate this point, they assert that if a police officer throws a hand grenade intending to stop a suspect and misses, causing the suspect to continue to flee, no seizure would occur because the officer’s show of authority did not cause his submission. In contrast, they point out that if the same police officer throws a snowball and hits the same suspect without stopping him as he flees, a seizure would occur because he was "physically touched.” In turn, Mr. Brooks argues a seizure occurs merely from physical touch by a snowball, or even a feather. However, under the Brower analysis, neither a touch by a feather nor a snowball would constitute a seizure unless intentional acquisition of control over the suspect occurred.
. In his appeal brief, Mr. Brooks states the deputies saw him "hobbling” and “limping" through the neighborhood, but provides no record citation to support his statement. Even assuming his statement is true and construing it in the light most favorable to Mr. Brooks as the nonmoving party, it does not demonstrate he terminated his flight, even momentarily, but merely that the bullet slowed his pace, as suggested by the district court.
. In
Morgan,
we determined a person's momentary yielding to an officer’s apparent show of authority before fleeing was relevant to our seizure determination. See
While we indicated in
Morgan
that momentary yielding to a show of authority may be relevant to a seizure determination, we recognize other circuits have held momentary termination of movement does not constitute a seizure.
See United States v. Baldwin,
. These reports included: (1) Detective G. Cliff Porter's report on Mr. Brooks’s admission to carrying a 9mm pistol on the day of the burglary, even though he later recanted his admission; (2) Detective Ralph Losasso's report on his interview with Amanda Hall during which she stated she saw Mr. Brooks sitting in the back of a car with a rifle in his hands on the day of the burglary and that he later told her he shot at police as he and Mr. Acevedo attempted to flee the scene; (3) Detective Rick Frady's report corroborating Detective Losasso's report about Ms. Hall's in *1226 terview; (4) Detective Michael Simler’s report on his interview of Daniel Mileto, who acted as an accomplice to the burglary after the fact, during which he stated Mr. Brooks admitted to firing on police during the burglary; (5) other district attorney investigative reports containing numerous statements by these and other witnesses that Mr. Brooks admitted to shooting at the officers during the burglary; and (6) an affidavit by the assistant district attorney stating the decision to bring a weapon charge and seek a sentence enhancement was based on multiple sources of information, so the deputies' statements as to Mr. Brooks’s possession of a weapon were immaterial to that decision.
. Deputies Gaenzle and Smith alternatively point out that while this circuit has addressed malicious prosecution as a constitutional tort, the Supreme Court has not expressly recognized such a constitutional tort, and therefore, it seeks to preserve such an issue for future appeal. However, we need not address their alternative malicious prosecution argument given our affirmation of the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Deputies Gaenzle and Smith.
. Other perceived inconsistencies he points to include: (1) the fact the deputies initially omitted the fact the fleeing suspect was black and the one in the garage was white; (2) their statements they did not know who shot them, even though they knew the white male was blocking the door; and (3) their statements they did not continue to pursue Mr. Brooks because they did not see another party exit the house, even though Deputy Smith later stated he saw a white male flee behind Mr. Brooks.
