Shawn Connors appeals an adverse summary judgment on his excessive force, unlawful seizure, and conspiracy claims against law enforcement officers Ben Smith and Brian Smith and the Livingston Parish Sheriffs Office through Sheriff Willie Graves. The district court determined that Connors could not pursue his claims against the defendants because they were entitled to qualified immunity. We affirm the district court’s judgment, but we do so on different grounds than did the district court.
1
We hold that Connors’s civil claims are barred under
Heck v. Humphrey,
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
According to the defendants, Connors attempted to rob Hibernia Bank in Albany, Louisiana, failed in those attempts, and then fled the scene. Law enforcement officers, including officers Ben Smith and Brian Smith, pursued Connors’s vehicle. During the pursuit, Connors allegedly fired his weapon at the officers. After numerous attempts to deflate the tires on Connors’s vehicle failed, he traversed the median of the interstate and began traveling in the opposite direction. At this point, one of the officers fired his weapon, striking Connors in the forearm. Connors then swerved and struck an occupied vehicle.
Connors filed the present lawsuit seeking damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 resulting from the alleged deprivation of his constitutional rights by law enforcement officers acting under the color of state law. In proceedings before the district court in this case, Connors claimed that he never fired at the officers. He alleged that officers Ben Smith and Brian Smith deprived him of his constitutional rights to be free from excessive force and unlawful seizure. He also claimed that the Livingston Parish Sheriffs Office, through Sheriff Willie Graves, acquiesced in and/or condoned this conduct. He also brought a conspiracy claim against the defendants related to this conduct. 2
The district court stayed Connors’s claims pending resolution of state criminal charges arising from the same underlying conduct. Connors subsequently pleaded guilty to discharging a firearm from a *376 motor vehicle under La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 14:94(E) (1995), a felony under Louisiana law. See La.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 933(3). He also pleaded guilty to attempted simple burglary and negligent injury. Connors’s counsel then informed the federal district court of Connors’s guilty pleas, stating that “[t]his completes the criminal aspect of this case.” He also requested that the court set Connors’s claims on an active docket. Connors does not assert in this appeal that he has challenged his criminal convictions, either through a direct appeal or a habeas proceeding, and the record does not indicate that any such action is pending.
The defendants filed a rule 12(b)(6) motion, arguing that Connors’s claims were barred by the Heck doctrine or, alternatively, that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. After notice, the district court converted the rule 12(b)(6) motion into a summary judgment motion and dismissed Connors’s claims on the immunity grounds, expressing no opinion on the applicability of Heck. The district court found that because Connors admitted discharging a weapon at officers when he pleaded guilty under section 14:94(E), the officers necessarily acted reasonably when they used deadly force to effectuate his arrest.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Connors contends that the district court erred in holding that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity for their actions. Despite his guilty plea under section 14:94(E), Connors argues that he never fired his weapon at the officers. Connors bases this contention on statements he made during his state court plea colloquy that purportedly demonstrate that he did not understand the charges he admitted to under section 14:94(E). He also relies on an affidavit, executed after the state court proceedings, in which he claims that he never fired at the officers. Based on this evidence, Connors argues that a fact issue exists concerning whether the officers acted reasonably in using deadly force to ensure his arrest.
We review a district court’s summary judgment de novo, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Ballard v. Burton,
It is well settled under
Heck
that when an individual like Connors brings a section 1983 claim against the arresting officers and their supervisors, “the district court must first ‘consider whether a judgment in favor of the plaintiff would necessarily imply the invalidity of his conviction or sentence.’ ”
Hainze v. Richards,
Thus, in order to determine whether Heck precludes Connors’s section 1983 claims that officers used excessive force and unlawfully seized him, we must first determine whether a judgment in Connors’s favor on these claims would necessarily imply the invalidity of his conviction for discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle under section 14:94(E). We conclude that it would.
*377
To prevail on his section 1983 claim for damages due to the officers’ purported use of excessive force, Connors must prove that the officers’ use of deadly force was objectively unreasonable under the circumstances.
See Graham v. Connor,
This circuit has applied
Heck
to bar a plaintiffs excessive force claim where officers acted pursuant to similar statutory authority authorizing the use of deadly force. Thus, for example, in
Sappington v. Bartee,
Connors’s other section 1983 claims are barred for the same reasons. Connors cannot prevail on his claim for unlawful seizure unless he proves that the officers lacked probable cause.
Fields v. City of South Houston,
Connors protests that Heck should not bar his section 1983 action for excessive force, and presumably his other section 1983 claims, because his guilty plea under section 14:94(E) can be reconciled with the proposition that he did not fire upon the arresting officers. To support this argument, Connors notes that during his state court plea colloquy the judge asked him to state in his own words what he understood the charges under section 14:94(E) to mean. In response, Connors stated that he “put a weapon in a place where it would possibly be in harm’s [way] by other people who could come into contact with it.” Thus, Connors argues that he is not trying to create a conflict between his guilty plea and his present claim of excessive force.
Implicit within Connors’s argument is the proposition that section 14:94(E) criminalizes the conduct of placing a weapon in a dangerous place. That is not the case. The only conduct criminalized by section 14:94(E) is discharging a weapon from a motor vehicle. Connors’s conviction for that crime cannot be reconciled with his current claims that the arresting officers used excessive force.
4
As this circuit has recognized, the
Heck
doctrine emanates from the “policy of finality that prevents the collateral attack of a criminal conviction once that matter has been litigated.”
Ballard,
Accordingly, we hold that Connors’s section 1983 claims are barred under
Heck.
Thus, we do not reach the defendants’ claims that they were entitled to qualified immunity.
Performance Autoplex II Ltd. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See Performance Autoplex II Ltd. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co.,
. Although Connors’s complaint also purports to bring negligence and/or gross negligence claims under Louisiana law, the district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over those claims.
. We note that the
Heck
doctrine would bar Connors’s excessive force claim even in the absence of section 14:20(2). An officer’s use of deadly force does not violate the constitution if "the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others."
Tennessee v. Garner, 471
U.S. 1, 11,
. From this perspective, Connors’s reliance on our recent decision in
Bush v. Strain,
