*570 OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal from the judgment entered on behalf of the defendants in an action alleging battery against the City of Philadelphia and an officer of its police force for the excessive use of force in effecting the arrest of the Appellant. Appellant contends that the district court erred in its denial of his motion for a new trial because of several incidents of error in the conduct of the trial, most particularly in the district court’s charge to the jury. We have reviewed each of the contentions raised by the Aрpellant and are unpersuaded that the verdict of the jury, or the judgment entered by the district court in accordance, should be disturbed. Accordingly, we will affirm.
I. Facts
This appeal arises from the action filed by Appellant, Douglas Edwards, against the City of Philadelphia and Philadelphia police officer, James Haworth, for violations of Edwards’s federal civil rights and for battery and negligence which, Edwards alleged, resulted from excessive force that Haworth used in arresting Edwards in January, 1983.
Haworth, acting in his capacity as an on duty police officer, was patrolling an area in the twenty-second police district of Philadelphia in the early morning of January 29. At approximately 1:30 a.m. he received a general radio dispatch advising patrol cars in his area that an auto theft had occurred. Haworth proceeded to the street where the stolen vehicle had been spotted and saw Edwards running into an alley one block away. He pursued Edwards into the alley and shouted for him to stop. Edwards stopped running and Haworth, with his revolver drawn, approached him.
The ocсurrences in the alley immediately following the confrontation are disputed by the parties. Haworth testified that as he pressed Edwards, face forward, against a wall in the alley in order to search him, Edwards pulled a revolver from his right rear pocket and aimed it at Haworth’s groin. Appendix (“App.”) at 354, 368. At that point, Haworth testified, he shot Edwards.
Edwards testified that Haworth ordered him to put his hands on the wall and he complied. Edwards then testified that Ha-worth handcuffed him and, despite the fact that Edwards showed no resistance, Ha-worth “pushed [Edwards’s] face into the wall several times ... [and Haworth’s] revolver inexplicably went off while [Edwards] was being slammed into the wall.” Appellant’s Brief at 2, see also, App. at 117. The bullet struck Edwards in the back and exited through the front part of his body directly beneath his rib cage.
Edwards filed the underlying action alleging that Haworth’s conduct was unwarranted and excessive and constituted a violation of Edwards’s civil rights. 1 The case was tried before a jury which entered a verdict on behalf of the City and Ha-worth. Edwards challenges the judgment that was entered pursuant to the verdict and asserts several pоints of error in the district court’s conduct of the trial and submission of issues to the jury.
II. Burden of Proof of Excessive Force
Edwards asserts that the district court erred in its instructions to the jury regarding privilege and probable cause. He argues that, although Haworth had a privilege to use force in. making a lawful arrest,
cf McKinney v. Whitfield,
In his argument to the district •.'.ourt, it appears that Edwards contended that the burden of demonstrating the reasonableness of the force used was intertwined with the demonstration of probable cause and that each were elements of an affirmative defense for which Haworth had the burden of proof. The district court, correctly, rejected that argument and reasoned that
[i]t would defy logic, if on a plaintiff’s claim оf common law battery, the burden of proof shifted to a defendant police officer and the law required him to demonstrate or to establish that probable cause for an arrest did in fact exist. Under the plaintiff’s view ... each police officer who makes a valid arrest could be subjected to suit for battery and in each instance be required in a civil proceeding to establish that probable cause did in fact exist. Such a requirement could be overly burdensome to law enforcement officers, would spawn needless and frivolous litigation, and would be contrary to the Pennsylvania tort law.
Edwards v. City of Philadelphia et al., No. 85-2057, Order Denying Motion for New Trial at 2-3 (E.D.Pa. Sept. 4, 1987), reprinted in App. at 668-669. On this appeal, Edwards concedes that the burden to negate probable cause in making the arrest falls to him. 2 He argues, however, that there is a distinction between probable cause to arrest and justification of the amount of force that is used in effecting that arrest. As to the latter, he contends that the burden of proof is properly placed upon the defendant:
*572 if the force used by the officer is that which is normally used to effectuate an arrest, and if the arrest was made with probable cause, then the officer would not be liable____[but] if the force used was excessive, then the officer would be liable notwithstanding the existence of probable cause, i.e. “the initial privilege of arrest may be lost through the use of excessive force.”
Appellant’s Brief at 10-11 (quoting
Belcher v. United States,
Certainly, the use of excessive force will negate the privilege to commit a battery that accompanies a lawful arrest.
See Belcher,
The decision of the appellate court was predicated upon that court’s view that the demonstration of excessive force was an element of the § 1983 claim and, therefore, the burden of proving it fell to the appellant. The court held that
[i]n a § 1983 action, the plaintiff bears the burden of proving that the defendant, while acting under color of state law, deprived him of a right secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States____ Thus, in a case where the alleged deprivation is the use of excessive force in the course of an arrest, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant used excessive force while arresting him.
Wing,
In order to make a
prima facie
case under § 1983, the plaintiff must demonstrate “that some person has deprived him [or her] of a federal right---- [and] that the person who deprived him [or her] of that right acted under color of state or territorial law.”
Gomez v. Toledo,
III. The “Golden Rule”
Edwards also contends that the district court committed reversible error by failing immediately to caution the jury and instruct it regarding the impropriety of Ha-worth’s counsel’s use of a so called “Golden Rule” argument in his opening statement.
5
Edwards asserts that Pennsylvania law is applicable to this procedural question and cites a decision of the state court for the proposition that the use of such an argument is unfairly prejudicial.
See Millen v. Miller,
As an initial matter, we note that federal law, and not the law of Pennsylvania, provides the controlling authority on this question.
See Waldron v. Hardwick,
*574
We are persuaded by the reasoning of the federal courts that have addressed this issue. We agree that the propriety of “put yourself in the defendant’s shoes” argument, as a tool of advocacy, is doubtful because it “encourages the jury to depart from neutrality and to decide the case on the basis of personal interest and bias rather than on the evidence.”
Spray-Rite Service Corp. v. Monsanto Co.,
Significantly, the test most often applied by appellate courts to these cases, holds that the use of a “Golden Rule” argument is rendered harmless either by an immediate curative instruction,
see, e.g., Shultz v. Rice,
In the present case, although the district court did not give an immediate curative instruction to the jury, the instruction that it ultimately gave sufficiently рresented the issues to the jury for its consideration. In its charge, the district court instructed the jurors that they must “perform [their] dut[ies] without bias or prejudice as to any party____ [and that] [o]ur system of law does not permit jurors to be governed by sympathy prejudice, or public opinion.” App. at 491. The district court noted further that “you are to consider only the evidence in the case,” id. at 495, and that the “[statements ... of counsel are not evidence in the case.” Id. In our view, these instructions appropriately advised the jury of its responsibilities and, when reаd in the context of the overall instructions given by the district court, sufficiently negated any prejudice that might have resulted from Haworth’s counsel’s errant arguments to the jury. Accordingly, we will not disturb the judgment entered by the district court on the jury’s verdict. 7
IV. Remaining Issues on Appeal
Edwards raises two other issues on this appeal. He contends that the'district court erred by omitting reference to the aggravated assault charge and referring only to the automobile theft charge, when it instructed the jury on probable cause regarding the claim of false arrest. In light of the facts that Haworth arrеsted Edwards for more than one offense and that the jury, by its verdict on behalf of Haworth, concluded that probable cause to arrest on the automobile charge existed, even if we were to conclude that the failure to charge the jury on aggravated assault with regard to the claim of false arrest was error, we would conclude that the error was harmless.
*576
As we have noted above, Edwards has not succeeded in meeting his burden of demonstrating that Haworth arrested him without probable cause on the charge of auto theft. The existence of probable cause, therefore, justified the arrest — and defeats Edwards’s claim of false arrest— even if there was insufficient cause to arrest on the aggravated assault claim alone.
Cf. Linn v. Garcia,
Finally, Edwards argues that by аllowing Haworth to testify that he was not disciplined by the department’s Internal Affairs Division (IAD), the trial court erroneously permitted the jury to infer that the City had completed an investigation into the case, and concluded that no wrongdoing had occurred. He asserts that this testimony was prejudicial and constituted hearsay. Moreover, Edwards asserts that the testimony was irrelevant because he had withdrawn his complaint against the city for failure to discipline.
Haworth in response, argues that this testimony was proper because Edwards had “opened the door” to it on his direct. Specifically, Haworth points to a series of questions during Edwards’s direct examination of Haworth at which Haworth was asked questions regarding the time between the incident, and the time that he arrived at IAD. Edwards also asked questions regarding the length of time that Haworth spent at IAD. See App. at 286-88. Haworth asserts that Edwards intentionally made the suggestion that Haworth had been investigated by the IAD in order to cause the jury to draw the inference that the department had cause to believe that Haworth had done something wrong.
Taken as а whole, it appears that Edwards’s intent by this line of questioning was to demonstrate that there was inconsistency between the report that Haworth completed regarding the incident and the actual facts, and also that there was an unexplained lapse of time between the occurrence of the incident and Haworth’s reporting to IAD. Notwithstanding Edwards’s intent, however, the questions asked on direct would permit an inference by the jury that Haworth had been investigated for wrongdoing. Haworth’s testimony that he was not disciplined, therefore, was reаsonable rebuttal of inferences that could be drawn from his testimony on direct, and the district court did not abuse its discretion by not disallowing the testimony, or by not granting the motion for new trial based upon that assignment of error.
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the judgment entered by the district court on the verdict of the jury in favor of Haworth need not be disturbed and, accordingly, we will affirm.
Notes
. Edwards was charged with theft of an automobile, aggravated assault and possession of a firearm. The prosecution on the first of these charges was subsequently terminated because the government was unable to make a prima facie case. Edwards was acquitted of the remaining charges.
. Edwards maintains that there was an absence of probable cause to stop him and, therefore, that the detainment was improper and the use of any force unwarranted. On this record, however, we cannot conclude that Edwards has demonstrated that his arrest by Haworth was without justification.
Probable cause to arrest exists where "the facts and circumstances within [an officer’s] knowledge and of which [that officer] had reasonably trustworthy information [are] sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed.”
Brinegar v. United States,
. The officer in Wing had asserted that in employing the force that he had in effecting the arrest of the appellant, he was acting in self-defense. The appellant argued, much in the same way that Edwards argues in the present case, that the officer's response raised an affirmative defense for which he, properly, should bear the burden of proof.
. Our holding allocating the burden of demonstrating excessive force to the plaintiff in § 1983 cases does not appear inсonsistent with Pennsylvania law concerning the allocation of burdens in suits against municipal officers for torts committed during the conduct of their authority and, therefore, a different result is not warranted for Edwards's pendent state common law claims of battery and assault.
Cf. Martinez v. E.J. Korvette, Inc.,
. During the opening statement by Mr. Thorpe, counsel for Haworth, the following exchange occurred:
THORPE: Plaintiff will get to put on its case before we get a chance to produce any evidence. So, keep your minds open and do not formulate any opinions until you have heard all the evidence as submitted by the defendant. Then I ask you to do one other thing. When you hear the testimony of Police Officer Haworth, I ask that you put yourselves in his shoes. When you listen to him try to see through his eyes that evening. Try to hear what he heard and try to experience what he was feeling.
SCHOENER (counsel for Edwards): Your Hon- or, I will object.
COURT: Counsel the opening statements and closing arguments are not evidence. You are not to interrupt further. Proceed.
THORPE: And I ask that while you listen try to experience what his feelings and what his thoughts were at that moment.
App. at 109-110.
. We reject Haworth’s assertion that the “Golden Rule" argument is improper only when used in respect to the issue of damages and not when the issue is liability and, accordingly we reject the rationale of the appellate courts that have reached that conclusion.
See
Appellee’s Brief at 25,
see also, Schultz v. Rice,
. Edwards also alleges that the district court did not properly instruct the jury on negligence and that such an instruction would have cured the prejudicial effect that Haworth’s counsel’s “Golden Rule” argument had on the jury. Appellant’s Brief at 24. As an initial matter, we note that Haworth’s assertions that Edwards waived his right to objеct to the district court’s failure to instruct on this charge is without merit. In order to preserve his objection, Edwards did not need to submit his own charge or raise the request at the charge conference (in fact, if he had only raised the question at an off the record charge conference, that would have been insufficient to support his objection). To preserve his objection, Edwards needed only to object to the charge that the judge proposed, which he did. See App. at 533.
The district court denied Edwards's request for a negligence charge because it found that Edwards had "offered no evidence at trial on how a reasonable law enforcement officer would have acted under circumstances similar to those ... at issue in this litigation!,] • • • [and that,] absent a finding that the defendant ... acted intentionally when he shot the plaintiff, ... there was no evidence from which a reasonable juror could have determined that the defendant's conduct was negligent.” Edwards v. City of Philadelphia, No. 85-2057, Order Denying Motion For New Trial at 1-2 (E.D.Pa. Sept. 4, 1987) reprinted in App. at 667-68.
Certainly, a district court is not obliged to charge as to claims that it believes are unsubstаntiated by the evidence presented.
See Herman v. Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp.,
