This is but another in what seems like an ever-increasing flow of interlocutory appeals in cases where district courts deny motions for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Although the appeal is certainly permissible,
Behrens v. Pelletier,
Finsel was 68 years old in December 1999 when he left Findlay, Ohio, for Dan-ville, where he hoped to sell hardware equipment at machinery auctions. On December 15 he arrived at a Knight’s Inn — a motel set up as a series of cottages, each with two units and a designated carport. Finsel paid for two nights lodging, and because the carport could only accommodate average-size vehicles, he parked his 36-foot truck on a drive next to his room.
Everything was fine the first night of his stay, but on the second night Rosella Payne, the motel manager, came on duty. She wanted his truck moved. She said there were signs posted which prohibited parking trucks over 20 feet long in the area where Finsel’s truck was parked and that it was blocking access to parking for another room at the motel, even though that room was unoccupied. Payne said she called Finsel’s room and told him he would have to move his truck but he refused unless he received a refund of his payment for the room. He told her she was engaging in “harassment.” Payne sent two security people to the door, but Finsel refused to answer. She tried to telephone him again but he refused to answer his phone.
Payne then called the local county sheriff for assistance. Deputy Tom Cruppen-ink responded and spoke with Payne. We will save the details of their conversation for later. For now, it is enough to know that, as a result of his meeting with Payne, Cruppenink went to Finsel’s room and knocked, first with his hand and then with his flashlight. He said he identified himself as a deputy. Payne, who was with Cruppenink, then tried to open the door with her key but the inside chain on the door was engaged. Payne then agreed that Cruppenink should kick the door in. He did, and when he entered the room, he said he shone his flashlight and identified himself. Cruppenink’s story is that Finsel came at him holding a knife. There was a struggle and Cruppenink took Finsel to the ground and pointed his gun at him. Cruppenink radioed for help. By the time another deputy arrived at the motel, Fin-sel was in custody in the back of Cruppen-ink’s squad car.
Finsel’s story is quite different. He says he did not see any signs regarding parking restrictions based on truck size and, furthermore, his truck was not interfering with anyone. Finsel also says no one from the motel, including Payne, talked to him about moving the truck. He says he went to bed at around 6 p.m. after taking off his hearing aid. He claims the first thing he heard was banging on the door. Then he saw a man standing in the doorway, and he thought he was being robbed. He acknowledged that he had an electrician’s knife in his room, but he said he was not holding it. He says he was beaten, and when he came to, he heard someone say, “I’m going to kill you.”
Finsel was taken to the county jail and charged with resisting a police officer and criminal damage to property. The charges were later dropped.
Finsel filed this case pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and moved for summary judgment as to liability against Cruppen-ink. Cruppenink filed a motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity as to his entry into the motel room. Finsel’s motion was granted as it went to liability on his claim based on an unlawful search but, because there were disputed material facts, it was denied on his excessive force and false imprisonment claims. The deputy’s motion for qualified immunity was also denied. That decision is the
We engage in a two-part inquiry in civil rights actions to assess whether a defendant is entitled to qualified immunity. We first determine whether a plaintiff has alleged a deprivation of a constitutional right. The question is whether, taken in the fight most favorable to the party asserting the injury, the facts show that the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right.
Saucier v. Katz,
The question whether a clearly established constitutional right was violated in this case depends on what Cruppenink knew when he forced his way into the room, which in turn depends on what Payne told him. The two do not always agree on what was said. Deputy Cruppen-ink says that Payne told him that Finsel was argumentative and verbally abusive on the telephone when she called to ask him to move his truck; in fact, that Finsel refused to move his truck. According to Cruppenink, Payne told him she was afraid of Finsel, did not feel safe with him in the motel, and she wanted him evicted; she said that her attempts to reach Finsel by telephone were unsuccessful, as were attempts to reach Finsel by knocking on the door of his room. Cruppenink said Payne gave him permission to force the door open: “she still wanted to go that route. She wanted him evicted. She was very concerned about criminal damage to the motel room, and that she requested that I force the door open.”
At her deposition, Payne did not entirely support Cruppenink’s story, and her version is itself somewhat contradictory. She testified that Finsel never said “one way or the other” whether he would move his truck. She also said there was nothing unusual about Finsel’s voice on the phone. But later she said Finsel was argumentative that he wasn’t going to move his truck and said he wanted the money back that he had used to pay for his room. She said that what she told Cruppenink was that “we had a gentleman back there that would not move his truck and I needed his truck moved.” She also testified that, in fact, the truck had been moved twice, but apparently not to the location she desired. She said that she did not tell Cruppenink that she was afraid Finsel had damaged the room. In fact, she said she had no reason to think he had. She admitted saying, however, that if there was criminal
Despite the differences in these stories, no one argues that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal.
See Johnson v. Jones,
Given these facts, the issue is whether entry into the room violated Finsel’s constitutional rights and whether those rights were clearly established so that Cruppenink would understand that what he was doing would be a violation of those rights. It has long been established that protection against unreasonable searches and seizures is not limited to one’s home but extends as well to a person’s privacy in temporary dwelling places such as hotel or motel rooms.
Stoner v. California,
However, as in
Stoner,
courts recognize that motel and hotel tenancy is ordinarily short-term. If the tenancy is terminated for legitimate reasons, the constitutional protection may vanish. In
United States v. Rahme,
These cases, however, do not tell the whole story. They involve motions in criminal trials to suppress evidence seized after an entry into a motel (or hotel) room. But in addition to chasing criminals, law enforcement officers have another role in our society, a “community caretaking” function. The Illinois Supreme Court has set out the various police functions in
People v. Murray,
In
People v. Dale,
In this case, the motel manager’s desire to avoid a confrontation with a guest under these circumstances is entirely reasonable, and his decision to terminate defendant’s occupation of the motel room, once he suspected that defendant was trafficking drugs from the room, is commendable. Likewise, we commend the police officers for their willingness to facilitate defendant’s peaceful removal from the motel. Such activity is entirely consistent with their duties as “peace officers” (720 ILCS 5/2-13 (West 1994) (defining a “peace officer” as one “vested by law with a duty to maintain public order”)), and it comports with the discussion of the community caretaking function of the police discussed in Murray.
The court was clearly sanctioning the actions of the police in facilitating the removal of the defendant even though the evidence seized during the removal was inadmissible at a subsequent criminal trial.
The issue for us is whether Cruppenink could reasonably have thought that Payne’s desire to have a truck moved by an uncooperative guest allowed him to kick the door in. Cruppenink can be charged with knowledge that it is clearly established that a person is entitled to protection against unreasonable searches and invasions of privacy in a motel room and that motel personnel cannot give permission to enter a room. Stoner. Here, on the facts as we must view them, it is clear that Finsel was not doing anything to disturb the public order. He was breaking no laws. And it was Cruppenink’s actions which were far from peaceful. Surely a reasonable officer should know there are limits to what he can do in the name of caretaking. Caretaking cannot reasonably be seen as license to take outrageous steps to get a truck moved. Calling a tow truck would have been a more reasonable way to solve the problem.
We have found no case specifically outlawing Cruppenink’s conduct. But as the Court recently said in Hope, even in novel situations, in an appropriate case, officials can be on notice that their conduct violates established law. This is such a case. Given the facts as we must interpret them, Cruppenink should have known that he could not break down the door and forcibly enter Finsel’s motel room.
Accordingly, the decision of the district court denying Deputy Cruppenink’s motion for qualified immunity is Affirmed.
