Jeff HATCHER, Individually and as the lawful heirs of the Estate of Jordan Ross Hatcher, deceased; Michelle Hansford, Individually and as the lawful heirs of the Estate of Jordan Ross Hatcher, deceased, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Wesley BEMENT, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 16-10488
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
January 19, 2017
Before KING, OWEN, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
Accordingly, Safeway‘s purported knowledge is no substitute for compliance with the express negligence doctrine.
IV
Safeway urges us to reverse the lower court‘s judgment and enter judgment in its favor if we conclude, as we have, that the district court erred in its application of the express negligence rule. PDX has not disputed the propriety of this step. Because the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment and “neither party argues that this case presents any genuine issue of material fact,” we need not remand for further consideration of the merits and instead grant partial summary judgment in Safeway‘s favor.30
Additionally, the district court awarded attorneys’ fees in favor of PDX under a provision of the Agreement providing that, “[i]n any legal action . . . concerning this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be awarded its reasonable attorneys’ fees [and] costs.” PDX does not contest that if this court reverses the district court and enters judgment in Safeway‘s favor, Safeway would be the prevailing party and entitled to its fees. Accordingly, we remand to the district court for the purpose of considering the fees and costs to which Safeway is entitled under the Agreement.31
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For the reasons set forth above, we REVERSE the district court‘s entry of summary judgment in favor of PDX, VACATE the district court‘s award of fees and costs, RENDER partial summary judgment in Safeway‘s favor, and REMAND for consideration of the fees and costs that Safeway seeks to recover.
Christianne Lenore Edlund, Darren Ray Wolf, Law Office of Darren Wolf, P.C., Dallas, TX, for Plaintiffs-Appellees
James Thomas Jeffrey, Jr., Esq., Law Offices of Jim Jeffrey, Arlington, TX, for Defendant-Appellant
Jeff Hatcher and Michelle Hansford, in their individual and representative capacities as heirs, and to whom we will refer as Hatcher‘s Estate, sued Grand Prairie Police Department (GPPD) Officer Wesley Bement pursuant to
I
On January 24, 2013, Bement received a report that an unidentified male, potentially armed with a knife and later identified as Hatcher, had committed the crime of shoplifting by stealing a video-game remote from a store and, after struggling with a GPPD police officer, had fled on foot. Bement spotted Hatcher on a highway median, but Hatcher was able to evade Bement and continued to flee. Bement then drove to nearby Tarrant County College, where he believed Hatcher could be found. Bement was successful in locating Hatcher and ordered him to stop moving and to get on the ground. Hatcher did not obey Bement‘s commands and, instead, ran from Bement toward a parking lot of the college, past a Tarrant County College Police Department (TCCPD) officer who was pointing a pistol at Hatcher and ordering him to stop. In the parking lot, five TCCPD officers approached Hatcher, who
Bement approached the TCCPD officers and Hatcher, who was about six feet tall and weighed 200 to 220 pounds, with his Conductive Energy Weapon, commonly known as a Taser, drawn. Hatcher turned from the TCCPD officers to face the approaching Bement, who fired a Taser cartridge consisting of two barbs carrying an electrical charge. One barb attached to Hatcher, but the other likely did not. The Taser did not incapacitate Hatcher.
Bement then approached Hatcher and used his Taser to deliver a close-quarters drive stun to Hatcher‘s arm. Hatcher knocked the Taser away from his arm and turned his back to Bement, at which point Bement put his right arm around Hatcher‘s neck and delivered a drive stun to Hatcher‘s back. Despite Bement‘s hold, Hatcher was able to spin in Bement‘s arms until they faced each other. As Bement and Hatcher continued to struggle in this position, TCCPD Officer Denson and another TCCPD officer sprayed Hatcher in the face with pepper spray, some of which Bement claims burned Bement‘s skin and eyes. The parties’ versions of the events after this point diverge.
Bement claims that the pepper spray had no effect on Hatcher. During the struggle, Bement maintains that Hatcher ripped the Taser from Bement‘s hands and then began moving toward Denson, who was retreating, with the Taser “in his hand in a way that he could ‘fire’ or deploy the Taser.” Bement states that he then drew his pistol and ordered Hatcher to stop. Bement equivocates on what happened next, initially asserting that Hatcher started attacking Denson but omitting this assertion in a later affidavit. Regardless, Bement claims that Hatcher then turned toward Bement with “a crazed look in his eyes” and either pointed the Taser at Bement or appeared as though he would use the Taser on Bement. Fearing that the Taser would ignite the pepper spray on his skin, Bement shot Hatcher three or four times, fatally wounding him.
Hatcher‘s Estate‘s depiction of the events relies on a voluntary witness statement from TCCPD Officer Denson, whom Bement claims Hatcher approached with the Taser. Denson attests that after she and another TCCPD officer sprayed Hatcher with pepper spray, Hatcher “then tried to walk slowly away from all of us.” Denson stated that Hatcher “appeared like he was squinting and had his head down and was attempting to wipe away the residue from his eyes.” She also stated that she “was about to spray [Hatcher] again when all the sudden, without any warning, or notice, [she] heard a gunshot come from [her] right and saw the suspect get hit in his upper left side.” She was close enough that she “could see the blood coming out of the wound in his chest.” This event “startled [her] so much that [she] started backing up.” As she backed up, she “heard two more shots being fired.” She “was so close to the suspect . . . [that she] worried about getting shot” and “backed up so quickly that [she] lost [her] balance and fell backwards to the ground.”
Hatcher‘s Estate also relies on two eyewitness statements given to police investigators following the incident. In both statements, the eyewitnesses note that they did not see a weapon in Hatcher‘s hand at any time. One of the eye-witness confirms that he did not notice Hatcher attempt to “go after any weapons” while Bement and Hatcher struggled. The other eyewitnesses corroborates Denson‘s account, stating that Hatcher was “bent over” immediately before the eye-witness heard gunfire.
The magistrate judge assigned for pretrial management considered the eye-wit-
a reasonable officer was on notice that it is objectively unreasonable to use deadly force against an arrestee who is not armed but is, at the time deadly force is employed, instead reacting to being pepper sprayed by trying to walk slowly away from all of the officers, squinting with his head down, and attempting to wipe away the residue from his eyes.
“After making an independent review of the pleadings, files, and records” in the case, the district court accepted most of the magistrate judge‘s recommendations, but rejected the recommendation to exclude the eye-witness statements. The district court noted, however, that the inclusion of these statements “merely strengthen the Magistrate Judge‘s conclusion,” and, accordingly, the district court denied Bement‘s motion for summary judgment. Bement appealed.
II
Summary judgment is appropriate if “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”1 Although qualified immunity is “nominally an affirmative defense, the plaintiff has the burden to negate the defense once properly raised.”2 When addressing a qualified immunity claim on summary judgment, the “evidence of the nonmovant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in [the nonmovant‘s] favor.”3
In reviewing a denial of qualified immunity on summary judgment, we may not question whether a factual dispute is genuine—i.e., whether “the evidence is sufficient to permit a reasonable factfinder to return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”4 Instead, we must confine our inquiry to whether the factual dispute is material, meaning that we must affirm the denial if “resolution of the issues might affect the outcome of the suit under governing law.”5
We typically conduct this review de novo,6 but Hatcher‘s Estate contends that “Bement failed to file specific written objections to the Magistrate Judge‘s findings that the issues of fact Hatcher presented were material” and that, as a result, this court must review the district court‘s decision for plain error. Hatcher‘s Estate‘s construction of the law is correct but incomplete, for “when the district court engages in an independent evaluation of the record,” we review a summary judgment decision de novo regardless of whether the appealing party timely objected.7 The dis-
trict court explicitly stated that it had made “an independent review of the pleadings, files, and records in this case,” and, accordingly, even if Bement did not file specific written objections, we review the district court‘s decision de novo.
III
Qualified immunity balances “the need to hold public officials accountable when they exercise power irresponsibly” against “the need to shield officials from harassment, distraction, and liability when they perform their duties reasonably.”8 To that end, it “shields officials from civil liability so long as their conduct ‘does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”9
We will not hold that a right is clearly established unless it is “sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would have understood that what he is doing violates that right.”10 We resolve whether a right is clearly established “in light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition.”11 Although a right may be clearly established without “a case directly on point, . . . existing precedent must have placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond debate.”12 This “demanding standard”13 protects “all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law”14 “from the sometimes ‘hazy border between excessive and acceptable force.’ ”15
An officer‘s use of deadly force “is a seizure subject to the reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment.”16 To establish that an officer‘s use of force contravened the Fourth Amendment, “a plaintiff must show ‘(1) an injury, (2) which resulted directly and only from the use of force that was clearly excessive, and (3) the excessiveness of which was clearly unreasonable.’ ”17 To assess whether an officer‘s use of force was clearly unreasonable,
Although it is clearly established that deadly force is permissible only if the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, we cannot rely on this ” ‘general’ test,”22 detached from factual application, to hold that an officer‘s conduct was clearly established as unlawful in the situation the officer confronted except “in an obvious case.”23 Instead, this general test must be tethered to precedent containing facts “analogous or near-analogous” to the facts in the case under consideration to suffice as clearly established law.24 We must nevertheless remain cognizant that “[t]he central concept [of qualified immunity] is that of fair warning: [t]he law can be clearly established despite notable factual distinctions between the precedents relied on and the cases then before the Court, so long as the prior decisions gave reasonable warning that the conduct then at issue violated constitutional rights.”25
In this circuit, Fourth Amendment cases clearly establish—and did so by 2013—that when a suspect is on foot, an officer may shoot the suspect only if a reasonable officer could reasonably perceive that the suspect posed an immediate and significant threat to the officer or others. Our application of this clearly established law in analogous or near-analogous cases provided fair warning to Bement that it would violate the Fourth Amendment to shoot a suspect that, at the time of the shooting, is bent over, squinting, wiping pepper spray from his eyes, and slowly walking away from all the officers. In Meadours v. Ermel, this court refused to grant summary judgment to an officer asserting qualified immunity because it was material whether the six-foot-two-inch, 203 pound suspect—who was armed with a ten-and-three-quarter-inch screwdriver,26 experiencing “a
Conversely, in other cases, this court has held that it was not a violation of a clearly established Fourth Amendment right for an officer to shoot a suspect while the suspect was on foot when it was reasonable for the officer to perceive that the suspect posed a serious and immediate threat when the officer fired. The four cases upon which Bement mistakenly relies are exemplary: Davenport v. Causey,31 Mendez v. Poitevent,32 Salazar-Limon v. City of Houston,33 and Colston v. Barnhart.34 In Davenport, the suspect was actively striking an officer when a second officer fired;35 in Mendez, the suspect had concussed the sole officer on the scene, leaving the officer nearly unconscious and alone with fading vision;36 in Salazar-Limon, the suspect reached toward his waistband, which the officer believed hid a concealed weapon;37 and in Colston, the suspect was moving toward a car containing a shotgun and was “in a position to inflict serious harm on the officers with or without a weapon.”38
These cases are consistent with other Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit precedent. For example, in White v. Pauly, the Supreme Court determined that an officer did not violate a clearly established right when the officer shot a suspect who, after shouting “we have guns,” walked out of his house and pointed a pistol in the direction of the officer.39 Similarly, in Manis v. Lawson, we held that an officer acted reasonably when the officer shot a suspect after the suspect reached under the seat of a vehicle and “appeared to retrieve an object that [the officer] reasonably believed to be a weapon.”40 We held the same in Ramirez v. Knoulton, a case in which the officer shot the suspect, who was armed with a pistol, when the suspect “brought his hands together in what . . . could reasonably be interpreted as a threatening gesture, as if to grip the handgun with both hands in preparation to aim it at the offi-
Hatcher‘s Estate is not “alleging violation of [an] extremely abstract right[].”43 As illuminated above, this case does not present a novel situation in which we cannot “identify a case where an officer acting under similar circumstances as [Bement] was held to have violated the Fourth Amendment.”44 Assuming the facts in the light most favorable to Hatcher‘s Estate, as we must in reviewing a summary judgment ruling, Hatcher posed an objectively lesser threat than the suspect in Meadours, who held a weapon when the officer fired. This court rejected the officer‘s claim of qualified immunity because there was a genuine, material dispute regarding whether the suspect nevertheless posed a threat at the time of the shooting. A similar material factual dispute exists here. If Hatcher was bent over, squinting, wiping pepper spray from his eyes, and slowly walking away from all the officers, then it would be unreasonable for Bement to believe that he posed a threat. Accordingly, Hatcher‘s Estate has presented a genuine dispute of material fact, precluding summary judgment.
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For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
