ESTATE OF CHRISTOPHER J. DAVIS, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. JUAN ORTIZ, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 19-3355
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
DECIDED FEBRUARY 5, 2021
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 21, 2020
WOOD, Circuit Judge. Deputy Juan Ortiz shot Christopher Davis in the head on February 24, 2016, during a drug bust that went awry. Arguing that Ortiz unreasonably seized Davis in violation of the Fourth Amendment, Davis‘s Estate sued Ortiz for money damages under
Ortiz has appealed from the denial of qualified immunity. But our appellate jurisdiction is secure only if the relevant material facts are undisputed or (what amounts to the same thing) when the defendant accepts the plaintiff‘s version of the facts as true for now. See Johnson v. Jones, 515 U.S. 304 (1995). Neither condition is present here, and so we must dismiss Ortiz‘s appeal for want of jurisdiction.
I
The underlying facts of the case are depressingly familiar. Police from the Village of East Troy, Wisconsin, were conducting an operation designed to nab drug dealers. Officer Jeffrey Price hoped to conduct a “sting” operation, using a confidential informant (CI) to lure Roberto Juarez-Nieves into delivering cocaine. The CI arranged to meet Nieves at Roma‘s, a local restaurant. Nieves showed up in a Pontiac Bonneville, along with Davis and Jose Lara, who was driving. Lara parked the Bonneville in the crowded restaurant lot, next to an empty Grand Marquis. Just as the police arrived in their marked squad car and started to park behind the Grand Marquis, Lara began slowly to pull out of his parking spot. Officer Craig Knox had to step aside to avoid the car. As Lara headed for the exit, Deputy Juan Ortiz, who was standing 50 feet away to participate in the drug bust, fired four shots into the car. One of those shots hit Davis. Lara kept driving for a brief time, but he crashed the car. The police apprehended both Lara and Nieves as they fled on foot, and medical personnel pronounced Davis dead.
II
A
The Supreme Court has long recognized the private and social costs of dragging government officials into civil litigation. See Harlow, 457 U.S. at 816 (discussing liability and litigation costs, but also the “distraction of officials from their
As the Court recently put it, “officers are entitled to qualified immunity under § 1983 unless (1) they violated a federal statutory or constitutional right, and (2) the unlawfulness of their conduct was clearly established at the time.” District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. 577, 589 (2018) (quotation marks omitted); see also Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223 (2009). Qualified immunity is meant to protect “all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law.” Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7, 8 (2015). It is essential to evaluate the public official‘s conduct at the correct level of granularity. See id.; Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987). The unlawfulness of challenged conduct is “clearly established” for this purpose only if it is “dictated by controlling authority or a robust consensus of cases of persuasive authority,” such that it would be “clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589-90 (quotation marks omitted).
Once a government official invokes qualified immunity in a section 1983 suit, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to defeat the defense by showing (1) that a trier of fact could conclude that the officer violated a federal right, and (2) that the unlawfulness of the conduct was clearly established at the time the officer acted. Id. at 589. If the plaintiff cannot do so, the motion for summary judgment must be granted. See Thompson v. Cope, 900 F.3d 414, 420 (7th Cir. 2018). This reflects the fact that the entitlement that qualified immunity protects is, in the first instance, “an immunity from suit rather than a mere defense to liability.” Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511, 526 (1985). Defendants are authorized to, and often do, invoke qualified immunity in a summary-judgment motion.
B
Collateral orders, such as an order denying a motion for qualified immunity, are immediately appealable “final decisions” under
In Forsyth, the Supreme Court held that a denial of a public official‘s summary-judgment motion asserting qualified immunity was immediately appealable under Cohen “to the extent” that the denial turned “on an issue of law.” 472 U.S. at 530. For example, a court of appeals might review “whether the legal norms allegedly violated by the defendant were clearly established at the time of the challenged action,” or “whether the law clearly proscribed the actions the defendant claims he took.” Id. at 528. Such issues, the Court reasoned, satisfy Cohen‘s requirements for a conclusive and unreviewable determination, because an order denying qualified immunity settles the question and forces the public official to stand trial. Once the trial has taken place, the official has incurred the very costs the doctrine is designed to avoid, and thus any review that can occur at the end of the case is limited at best. Id. at 525-27. The Court concluded that if “qualified immunity is in part an entitlement not to be forced to litigate
But when the district court‘s denial stems from a finding that genuine issues of material fact remain to be resolved, and thus summary judgment is unavailable, the order denying the motion is not immediately appealable. Johnson, 515 U.S. at 313. In these cases, unlike in cases involving “abstract issues of law,” the “fact-related legal issues” pertaining to the immunity defense may collapse into the merits of the plaintiff‘s claim, violating Cohen‘s separability requirement. Id. at 314, 317.
The only qualification occurs when the officer seeking immunity is willing to take the factual issues off the table and accept (for purposes of the qualified immunity motion) the factual account plaintiff has presented. Johnson does not preclude appellate review in that situation. Jones v. Clark, 630 F.3d 677, 680 (7th Cir. 2011); Thompson, 900 F.3d at 419. We are thus entitled to “consider[] the abstract legal question of whether a given set of undisputed facts demonstrates a violation of clearly established law. ... In reviewing this purely legal question, we take the facts as the district court assumed them when denying summary judgment, Johnson, 515 U.S. at 319, or in [the] light most favorable to the plaintiff, the nonmovant ... .” Gutierrez v. Kermon, 722 F.3d 1003, 1009 (7th Cir. 2013). Nonetheless, if we “detect a back-door effort to contest the facts,” we will dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. Clark, 630 F.3d at 680; see, e.g., Stinson v. Gauger, 868 F.3d 516, 525-26 (7th Cir. 2015) (dismissing on jurisdictional grounds where defendant‘s briefs contradicted the district court‘s
III
The district court identified a number of genuine issues of fact in the summary-judgment record before it. Among other things, the court found it unclear from the record “what Ortiz was actually shooting at when he fired towards the [Bonneville.]” Dist. Ct. at *7. As we pointed out earlier, while Ortiz contended that “he was aiming at Lara to the exclusion of anyone else,” the district court found this assertion undermined by Ortiz‘s own statement that “his ‘intent was to stop the threat that was coming at [him]’ and that ‘firing into the vehicle was the way to stop that threat[.]‘” Dist. Ct. at *5. A rational jury could find, based on that statement, that he intended to hit either the moving Bonneville or any of the people in it. Or the jury might believe him when he said that he was targeting only the driver (although even that much might not resolve the legal issues). This leaves a critical disputed issue of material fact on the question whether Ortiz acted in an objectively reasonable way as he was firing. For purposes of the qualified-immunity inquiry, these facts, taken in the light most favorable to the Estate, suffice to allege a constitutional violation. See, e.g., Leaf v. Shelnutt, 400 F.3d 1070, 1081 (7th Cir. 2005).
Ortiz has not fully accepted the Estate‘s version of the facts, and so he cannot defend our appellate jurisdiction on that basis. Indeed, he comes closer to asking us to accept his version of the facts over the Estate‘s. He characterizes the district court and the parties as “unequivocally agree[ing] that Deputy Ortiz did not intend to shoot Davis, but instead that [Ortiz] was focused on the driver of the vehicle.” Pet. Brief at 13. That is not what the record shows. The district
Given the fact that this is a Fourth Amendment case, all this talk of intent is largely beside the point. The Supreme Court has made it clear that “Fourth Amendment reasonableness is predominantly an objective inquiry.” See, e.g., Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 736 (2011) (quotation marks omitted). The pertinent question is whether a jury could find that Ortiz‘s actions—firing repeatedly at a moving vehicle as it was leaving the parking lot—were objectively unreasonable under all the circumstances, and thus amount to a Fourth Amendment violation. There is evidence to support a finding that Ortiz was aiming at the car as a whole. As part of that effort, he discharged four bullets, one of which fatally injured Davis. At trial, Ortiz will have an opportunity to convince the jury that his actions were objectively reasonable, but we cannot resolve that question at this stage.
IV
Just as in Johnson, the record on summary judgment in this appeal reveals issues that must be resolved by the trier of fact. Ortiz has not raised “a question that is significantly different from the questions underlying plaintiff‘s claim on the merits,” 515 U.S. at 314; rather, he raises the same fact-based question
We DISMISS the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
