Case Information
*1 Before WOLLMAN, COLLOTON, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
____________
GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
In this lawsuit brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Daniel Retz claimed that Omaha police detective William Seaton used excessive force when arresting him for disorderly conduct. After a three-day trial, the jury returned a verdict in Retz’s favor, *2 and the district court [1] entered judgment. Detective Seaton now appeals on three grounds. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
I. Background
On November 20, 2008, Retz reported his car stolen to the Bellevue Police Department. Retz called 911 nine days later to advise authorities that his car had been identified in a particular Omaha parking lot. Detective Seaton and two other Omaha police officers responded to the call and found Retz’s ex-girlfriend, Emily Coufal, with the vehicle. Soon thereafter, Retz arrived on the scene. Concerned about a potential domestic violence escalation, Officer Adam Turnbull instructed Retz to sit in the back of a cruiser and to avoid contact with Coufal. The officers released the car to Retz after citing Coufal for unauthorized use of a vehicle. As Retz walked toward his car, he passed in front of the cruiser in which Coufal was detained, gestured with his middle finger, and mouthed the words “Fuck you.” According to Retz, Seaton responded: “Now you did it. You’re under arrest for disorderly conduct. Put your hands on the hood.” Retz complied with these instructions.
When Seaton directed Retz to place his right arm behind his back for handсuffing, Retz informed Seaton that he was unable to do so because of a recent rotator-cuff repair surgery. Retz testified at trial that he said: “I can’t. I just had surgery. I can’t do it.” He also testified that Seaton responded: “I don’t care. I’ll show you how far back it will go.” When Seaton pulled back Retz’s right arm, the shoulder dislocated, and Retz fell to the ground in pain. Officer Turnbull intervened and handcuffed Retz in front of his body. Retz then called Seaton a “cocksucker.” Retz testified that Seaton reacted by pushing Retz back onto the ground. “Nobody calls mе a cocksucker,” Seaton said according to Retz’s testimony. Seaton added, “If *3 you’re going to act like an animal, we’re going to treat you like an animal.” In their trial testimony, all three officers denied that Seaton threw Retz to the ground after being called a “сocksucker.” They ticketed Retz for disorderly conduct and released him.
Retz originally brought suit against Detective Seaton in both his individual and official capacities. Although it was never received into evidence, Retz used Exhibit 30, an Internal Affairs investigation file documenting the department’s investigation into the incident, to impeach Seaton and other officers with their prior inconsistent statements. Both Retz and Seaton testified that the investigation determined the claim to be “unsubstantiated.” Later, while cross-examining Retz, Seaton sought to introduce Exhibit 112, a letter from the Omaha Chief of Police to Retz confirming that the allegation against Seaton had been found to be “not sustained.” In a side-bar conference, Retz objected to the admission of Exhibit 112 on irrelevancy and hearsay grounds. The district court sustained the оbjection. Seaton argued that Exhibit 112 was essential to showing that the police department did not condone Seaton’s activity in order to defend against Retz’s official capacity claims. Retz responded by moving to dismiss the official capacity claims. The distriсt court accepted the dismissal, and the objection to Exhibit 112 was again sustained. Seaton then objected to the dismissal of the official capacity claims due to “the unfairness of having all of [the] evidence come in about the Internal Affairs investigation based upon the official capacity [claim], and then dumping it like that.” The district court overruled the objection to the dismissal.
Retz also elicited testimony from Officer Turnbull concerning whether the officers “could have just left the scene” rather than arrest Retz. Seaton оbjected, arguing: “What they could or could not have done is not the measure. There are all sorts of things they could have done. The measure is if what they did is reasonable.” The district court overruled the objection “because [the officers] did choose to do what they did” and the inquiry was relevant to the “question of reasonableness.”
In Defendant’s Proposed Instruction No. 4, Seaton sought to instruct the jury that “[t]he Constitution . . . does not require the police to do the best job possible or choose the best response to a situation.” The district court rejected that proposed instruction, adopting instead the model instruction telling the jury not to rely on “the benefit of hindsight.”
The jury awarded Retz damages in the amount of $31,505.23. Seaton appeals, arguing the district court abused its discretion: (1) by allowing Retz to dismiss voluntarily his offiсial capacity claim on the second day of trial; (2) by allowing Retz to elicit testimony regarding alternative courses of action available to Seaton; and (3) by rejecting Seaton’s proposed jury instruction.
II. Discussion
A. Voluntary Dismissal of Official Capacity Claims
A district court’s decision to allow a voluntary dismissal is rеviewed for an
abuse of discretion.
Thatcher v. Hanover Ins. Group, Inc.
,
Seaton has not shown that the dismissal of the official capacity claims
prejudiced him. Even if Retz had never brought the official capacity claims, he
nevertheless would have been allowed to use Exhibit 30 to impeach the officers with
their prior inconsistent statements contained in the Internal Affairs investigation file.
See
Fed. R. Evid. 613. And even if the district court had disallowed the voluntary
dismissal of the official capacity claims, Exhibit 112 still would have been
inadmissible as hearsay.
See
Fed. R. Evid. 801. Thus, the dismissal of the official
caрacity claims did not affect the admissibility of Exhibit 30 or that of Exhibit 112.
Moreover, both Seaton and Retz testified to the content of Exhibit 112—that is, that
the Internal Affairs investigation found Retz’s claims to be unsubstantiated.
See
S.E.C. v. Shanahan
,
B. Testimony Regarding Alternative Courses of Action
A district court’s decision to admit testimony is reviewed for an abuse of
discretion.
U.S. Salt, Inc. v. Broken Arrow, Inc.
,
The Supreme Court has established that detеrmining the reasonableness of a
particular use of force under the Fourth Amendment involves “careful attention to the
facts and circumstances of each particular case.”
Graham v. Connor
,
Among the factors that may, in appropriate circumstances, be considered within
the totality of the circumstanсes is “the availability of alternative methods of capturing
or subduing a suspect.”
Chew
,
Seaton observes that the Constitution “requires only that the seizure be
objectively reasonable, not thаt the officer pursue the most prudent course of conduct
*7
as judged by 20/20 hindsight vision.”
Cole v. Bone
,
Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s ruling on the
question concerning whether the officers “could hаve just left the scene.” Because
Seaton failed to object to the other eight lines-of-questioning complained of in
briefing, we review them for plain error.
United States v. NB
,
C. Proposed Jury Instruction
Finally, a district court’s decision to reject a proposed jury instruction also is
reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
Eden Elec., Ltd. v. Amana Co.
,
Here, the district court used a modified version of instruction 4.40 from the
Eighth Circuit Manual of Model Civil Jury Instructions. The jury was instructed that,
“[i]n determining whether the force wаs ‘excessive,’ [it] must consider . . . whether
a reasonable officer on the scene, without the benefit of hindsight, would have used
the same force under similar circumstances.” The jury also was instructed to “keep
in mind that the decision about how much force to use often must be made in
circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly changing.” Seaton contends this
instruction inadequately conveyed the
Graham
and
Cole
rule that police officers are
not required to choose the “most prudent course” available to them. He instead
prоposed language making clear that “[t]he Constitution requires only that the seizure
be objectively reasonable, not that the officer pursue the most prudent course of
conduct.” He also would have instructed that “[t]he Constitution . . . does not require
the police tо do the best job possible or choose the best response to a situation.”
While Seaton’s proposed instruction does not misstate or misrepresent the law
established in
Graham
and
Cole
, the model instruction used by the district
court—which included the caution against using “hindsight”—fairly and accurаtely
presented the law to the jury. Moreover, the district court permitted Seaton to use his
proposed instruction language during closing argument, which he did.
United States
v. Risch
,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm.
______________________________
Notes
[1] The Honorable Laurie Smith Camp, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of Nebraska.
