In the middle of a night in March 2002, Brian Hundley and a woman were in a car parked outside an apartment complex in Washington, D.C. Off-duty Metropolitan Police Department Officer Marcus Gaines tapped on the window of the car as he walked past. Hundley, who was in the driver’s seat, began to drive the car in the direction of Officer Gaines. Officer Gaines pulled his gun, yelled “police,” and ordered Hundley to stop and get out of the car. Hundley complied and exited the car. According to Officer Gaines, while Hundley was standing outside the car, Hundley suddenly moved his right hand from behind his back and began lunging toward Officer Gaines, who was about 10 to 15 feet away. In apparent self-defense, Officer Gaines shot and killed Hundley.
Hundley’s estate sued Officer Gaines, former police official Terrance Gainer, and the District of Columbia and, as relevant here, brought three claims: (i) a D.C. tort law claim of assault and battery based on the fatal shot; (ii) a corresponding federal § 1983 claim of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, also based on the fatal shot; and (iii) a D.C. tort law claim of negligence based on the initial stop. The jury found for defendants on the assault and battery and excessive force claims, concluding that Officer Gaines was justified in shooting Hundley in self-defense. At the same time, however, the jury in a written interrogatory answer specifically rejеcted Officer Gaines’s version of events regarding the self-defense shooting. The jury found for plaintiffs on the negligence claim, concluding the initial stop was unreasonable; the jury also determined that the negligent stop proximately caused Hundley’s death. The jury awarded damages of $242,400 to plaintiffs.
On appeal, Hundley’s estate challenges the assault and battery and excessive force verdict for the defense, arguing that the jury’s verdict for defendаnts on those two claims was inconsistent with the jury’s written interrogatory answer, in which it directly rejected Officer Gaines’s version of events. And defendants challenge the *1100 negligence verdict, arguing that the negligent stop did not proximately cause the shooting death that formed the basis for the damages award.
We agree with Hundley’s estate that the jury verdict on the assault and battery and excessive force claims was inconsistent with the jury’s answer to the written interrogatory. We agree with defendants that the negligent stop, as a matter of law, did not proximately cause the shooting death and thus cannot justify the damages for the shooting death. We therefore reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand for a new trial for Hundley’s estate on the assault and battery and excessive force claims.
I
At approximately 1:30 a.m. on March 23, 2002, off-duty Metropolitan Police Department Officer Marcus Gaines was riding in a сar driven by his brother Ronald when they arrived in the parking lot of Marcus Gaines’s apartment building near 6th and N Streets, N.W., in Washington, D.C.
According to Officer Gaines, the following events then transpired. As Officer Gaines and his brother drove around the lot looking for a place to park, Officer Gaines observed a man and a woman engaging in sexual activity in a parked car. The man was Brian Hundley (Hundley was previously unknown to Officer Gaines); the woman was known by Officer Gaines to be a prostitute. Ronald Gaines parked his car, and Officer Gaines got out and walked ahead toward the apartment building. As Officer Gaines walked behind Hundley’s car, Hundley began to back out of his parking space — nearly hitting Officer Gaines. Officer Gaines believed that Hundley, the driver of the car, simply had not seen him. Officer Gaines tapped on the passenger-side window of the ear to alert Hundley and his passenger to Officer Gaines’s presenсe.
Officer Gaines then continued walking toward his building. Just after Hundley finished backing his car out of its parking space, Officer Gaines passed in front of the car on his way to the building. At that point, Hundley suddenly drove his car at a rapid speed toward Officer Gaines. Officer Gaines jumped out of the ear’s path and drew his gun. He yelled “police” and ordered Hundley to stop and get out of the car; Officer Gaines based his decision to order Hundley out of the car on what he described as Hundley’s attempted assault with a deadly weapon (namely, assault with the car).
As soon as Officer Gaines ordered Hundley to stop and exit the car, Hundley complied and stood outside of the car with his hands in plain view. But then, according to Officer Gaines, Hundley stopped complying with the officer’s orders. When Officer Gaines first ordered Hundley to place his hands on his car, Hundley instead put his hands in his pockets. Next, Officer Gaines ordеred Hundley to take his hands out of his pockets, which Hundley did. But when Officer Gaines again ordered Hundley to place his hands on the car, Hundley failed to comply and acted as though he planned to re-enter his ear. Officer Gaines then two more times ordered Hundley to place his hands on the car. The first time, Hundley instead put his hands behind his back. The second time, Hundley, with his right arm behind his back, suddenly moved his right hand as he lunged toward Officer Gaines.
Officer Gaines then fired a singlе shot at Hundley, which was fatal. Officer Gaines testified that he fired out of self-defense based on Hundley’s lunge and sudden hand movement.
Two other witnesses saw at least some of the interaction between Hundley and Officer Gaines and provided additional accounts of that night’s events. Ronald *1101 Gaines did not testify at trial, but his pretrial statements about the incident were read to the jury. Ronald stated that he observed none of the altercation between Hundley and Officer Gaines until he saw Officer Gaines yelling at Hundley to exit Hundley’s car. According to Ronald, Officer Gaines yelled several times for Hund-ley to show the officer his hands. Instead of following those orders, Hundley reached inside his jacket, at which point Officer Gaines shot him.
The prior testimony of a nearby resident, Linda Davis, was also admitted at trial. According to Davis, Officer Gaines seemed angry at Hundley and yelled three times for Hundley to exit his car. As Hundley compliеd and stood outside the car with his hands in the air, Officer Gaines shot him.
Hundley’s estate filed a lawsuit against Officer Gaines, former Executive Assistant Chief of the Metropolitan Police Department Terrance Gainer, and the District of Columbia. The claims against defendants included assault and battery, a § 1983 claim of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and negligence. The first trial resulted in a hung jury.
At the second trial, the jury rejected plaintiffs’ assault and bаttery and excessive force claims with respect to the shooting. But the jury found in a written interrogatory that Hundley was not “shot after placing his right hand behind his back and then making a lunging motion toward Officer Marcus Gaines”—in other words, the jury directly rejected Officer Gaines’s testimony explaining that he had shot Hund-ley in self-defense.
See
Verdict Form at 1,
Hundley v. District of Columbia,
No. 102cv638,
In this Court, Hundley’s estate challenges the assault and battery and excessive force verdict, arguing that the jury’s verdict was inconsistent with the written interrogatory answer. 1 Defendants challenge the judgment for plaintiffs on the negligence claim.
II
We turn first to the jury’s verdict for defendants on the assault and battery and excessive force claims. An officer’s unreasonable use of fоrce violates the Fourth Amendment.
See Graham v. Connor,
Here, Officer Gaines testified that his use of force was reasonable because Hund-ley, with his right hand behind his back, suddenly lunged toward Officer Gaines—in other words, Officer Gaines shot Hundley in self-defense. The plaintiffs argued, with support from an eyewitness, that Officer Gaines was lying and that Offiсer Gaines in fact shot Hundley without justification.
In addition to asking the jury to render a verdict on the assault and battery and excessive force claims, the judge also instructed the jury to answer a written interrogatory: “Do you find that Brian Hundley was shot after placing his right hand behind his back and then making a
*1102
lunging motion toward Officer Marcus Gaines?” Verdict Form at 1,
Hundley v. District of Columbia,
No. 102cv638,
On appeal, Hundley’s estate argues that the jury’s written interrogatory response is inconsistent with the jury’s findings for defendants on the assault and battery and excessive force claims.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 49(b). Claims that a jury verdict is internally inconsistent “impose a special obligation on the court to view the evidence in a manner that reconciles the verdicts if possible, and to grant a new trial if not.”
Smith v. District of Columbia,
Although successful claims of verdict inconsistency are rare, rare does not mean never. And this case is a classic example of an inconsistent verdict that cannot reasonably be reconciled or sustained. Two distinct versions of events were presented to the jury. Thе jury could conclude either that Officer Gaines shot Hundley in self-defense as described by Officer Gaines, or that he shot Hundley without justification. In making their cases to the jury, both sides agreed that liability turned on which version of events the jury believed.
See, e.g.,
Trial Tr. at 86-87,
Hundley v. District of Columbia,
No. 02cv638,
Defendants gamely try to justify the verdict by arguing that the jury could have concluded that Officer Gaines’s use of force was reasonable while concluding that Officer Gaines’s explanation for why he shot Hundley was inaccurate. Defendants argue, for example, that the jury could have found that Hundley lunged toward Gaines but did not place his hand behind his back. Or perhaps the jury found that Hundley’s hand was behind his back, but he did not lunge. Or perhaps Hundley reached inside his jacket. Those hypothetical reconstructions are utterly unpersuasive in light of the record in this case and the way the case was tried to the jury. If the defendants thought the evidence suрported alternative self-defense scenarios other than the one described by Officer Gaines and presented in the written interrogatory, they should have timely made that point in the district court, especially with respect to the written interrogatory presented to the jury. Cf Fed.R.Civ.P. 49(b), 51(c).
*1103 The bottom line is that the written interrogatory called for the jury to decide whether Officer Gaines’s account was true. And the jury rejected his account. Officer Gaines’s testimony was the basis on which defendants argued they were not liable for assault and battery and excessive force. The jury nonetheless found defendants not liable for assault and battery and excessive force. There is no coherent or reasonable way to reconcile the jury’s two conclusions.
In an attempt to sustain the unsustainable, defendants resort to the argument that Hundley’s estate waived its objection to the irreconcilable verdict. This argument takes some chutzpah given that plaintiffs repeatedly objected at trial to the proposed written interrogatory.
See Denny v. Ford Motor Co.,
After the jury delivered its verdict, the District Court dismissed the jury almost immediately. Consistent with ordinary practice, the District Court did not ask the parties whether they further “objected” in some way to that verdict. In their post-trial motion, plaintiffs raised the argument that the verdict was inconsistent.
Defendants have cited no case supporting waiver when: (i) a party objected to a written interrogatory; (ii) the district court dismissed the jury after receiving the verdict without asking the- parties whether they had any objections to the verdict; and (iii) the party raised an inconsistent verdict argument—based on the previously objected-to written interrogatory—in its post-trial motion for a judgment as a matter of law or new trial. 2 Under these narrow circumstances, we agree with Hundley’s estate that a party has not waived its objection to an inconsistent verdict caused in part by a written interrogatory. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 49(b), 51(c). 3
We hold that the assault and battery and excessive force verdict was inconsis *1104 tent with the written interrogatory answer and that a new trial is warranted for Hundley’s estate on the assault and battery and excessive force claims.
III
Even assuming defendants were not liable for assault and battery and excessive force (because Gaines fired the shot, in self-defense),-plaintiffs offered a separate theory of liability at trial: that Officer Gaines was liable for the shooting death because he was negligent in stopping Hundley in the first place, and was therefore responsible for the harm that followed.
The jury found that defendants were not liable for assault and battery and excessive force, but the jury found for plaintiffs on the negligence claim—namely, that Officer Gaines acted unreasonably in initially approaching Hundley in the parking lot. The jury also found that the negligent stop proximately caused Hundley’s death.
On appeal, defendants contend that the initial stop—even if negligent—was not a proximate cause of Hundley’s death as a matter of law. We agree.
Given the procedural posture of this case, the precise question before us is whether plaintiffs can recover damages arising out of Hundley’s death because of Officer Gaines’s initial negligent stop even if defendants are not liable on the assault and battery and excessive force claims—in other words, even if Officer Gaines shot Hundley in self-defense.
4
We think the answer to that question is quite clear: In such a scenario, it cannot be sаid that Officer Gaines’s negligence in approaching Hundley proximately caused the shooting death of Hundley.
See District of Columbia v. Price,
D.C. follows the black-letter tort law principle that an intervening force breaks the сhain of proximate causation when that intervening force is sufficiently unforeseeable as to constitute a superseding cause.
See Butts,
The strained nature of plaintiffs’ negligence-and-proximate-cause theory in this case is also underscored by comparison to the contributory negligence doctrine. Under that doctrine, which the District of Columbia follows, the plaintiffs contributory negligence ordinarily “bars recovery against a defendant whose negligent conduct would otherwise make him liable to the plaintiff for the harm sustained by him.” Restatement (Second) of ToRts § 467;
see Massengale v. Pitts,
The flaw in plaintiffs’ negligence-and-proximate-cause theory is perhaps best illustrated by a hypothetical rather than by dry recitation of black-letter tort principles. Suppose, for example, that A unintentionally but negligently drives into B’s ear. Suppose that B then gets out of his car and attacks A with a knife. What can A do in those circumstanсes? Under plaintiffs’ theory, A could not lawfully defend herself and thus would be liable for any injuries she inflicted on B while fending off B’s attack. Such a result is obviously absurd, and further makes clear that the negligent stop here cannot be the basis for plaintiffs to recover damages for the shooting death.
One final point warrants mention. Hundley’s estate cites D.C. precedent indicating that officers may be liable when they negligently approach or detain mentally ill or оtherwise mentally impaired individuals, who in turn cause a disturbance requiring the use of force against them.
See District of Columbia v. Evans,
In sum, applying D.C. law, we conclude as a matter of law that plaintiffs cannot establish that the initial negligent stop proximately caused the shooting death. 5
*1106 We reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand for a new trial for Hundley’s estate on the assault and battery and excessive force claims.
So ordered.
Notes
. Another plaintiff, Lynne Hundley in her individual capacity, did not timely appeal the assault and battery and excessive force verdict.
. This Court has not resolved whether we can consider an inconsistent verdict claim, other than for plain error, when a party failed to object in any way before the district court's entry of judgment.
Cf. Smith,
. Because of our holding, we need not decide whether the inconsistency in the verdict constituted plain error.
Cf. Armstrong v. Brookdale Univ. Hosp. & Med. Ctr.,
. If the jury had found for plaintiffs on assault and battery and excessive force, the negligence claim would be irrelevant because it would add nothing to plaintiffs' damages for the shooting death.
. Even if Officer Gaines had shot Hundley without justification, the negligent stop could not be considered the proximate cause of the shooting death. Rather, in such a scenario, Officer Gaines's intentional shooting would be *1106 analogous to the intervening act. Of course, this point is somewhat theoretical because defendants in such a scenario would be directly liable for assault and battery with respect to the wrongful intentional shooting.
