Lead Opinion
This ease concerns a search of the home of James C. Jenkins, Sr., and Lula M. Jenkins. Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins sued the defendants pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming the defendants’ participation in the search violated rights secured by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The district court granted the defendants-appellees’ motion for summary judgment, and Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins appealed. We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
I. Standard of Review
We review de novo a grant of summary judgment, applying the same standard used by the district court. Summary judgment is appropriate if the record reveals that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as а matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). When applying this standard, we examine the factual record in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment, extending to that party all reasonable factual inferences. While the movant bears the burden of showing the absence of a genuine issue of material fact, the movant need not negate the nonmovant’s claim. If the movant carries this initial burden, the nonmovant may not rest on its pleadings, but must bring forward specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial as to those dispositive matters for which it carries the burden of proof. An issue of material fact is genuine if a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the non-movant. Vitkus v. Beatrice Co.,
II. Background
When read in the light most favorable to Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins, the record reveals the following facts.
At all times relevant to this dispute, defendants Rick Sabel and Colin Wood were special agents with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (“KBI”). In January 1991, through the use of an informant named James Hayes and in cooperation with the City of Topeka Police Department, the KBI was investigating James Jenkins, Jr., for involvement in narcotics. In mid-January, Mr. Hayes informed KBI Agent Ray Lundin, who is no longer a party to this actiоn, that he had contacted James Jenkins, Jr., at what appeared to be an upstairs apartment in a home located at 1261 S.W. Clay in Topeka. Acting on this information, Agent Lundin observed James Jenkins, Jr., descend an external staircase from the second story of the home at 1261 S.W. Clay and conduct a crack cocaine transaction with the informant, Mr. Hayes. (Id.) When questioned in late January 1991 by an officer of the Topeka Police Department, James Jenkins, Jr., gave 1261 S.W. Clay as his residential address.
On February 18, 1991, Mr. Hayes contacted KBI Agents Lundin and Sabel to inform them that James Jenkins, Jr. and two other men kidnapped him at gunpoint and then took him tо 1201 Lincoln in Topeka, where they robbed, beat and interrogated him about “snitching.” Mr. Hayes was eventually released upon convincing his assailants he worked for James Jenkins, Jr., and was not a snitch. That evening, after treatment at a hospital, Mr. Hayes gave a complete statement to the KBI. Upon consultation with an assistant attorney general assigned to the KBI, Agents Lundin and Sabel decided to obtain search warrants for 1201 Lincoln and what they believed to be an upstairs apart
Blood, $275.00 in cash, a small caliber blue semi auto pistol, a single barrel sawed off shot gun, a black cloth trench coat, a blue sweat shirt with pocket on left sleeve and loop in back, and a sports insignia on the left breast, a key with room 161 engraved on it, and items identifying occupants of the premises including mail and utility bills etc.
At about 11:40 p.m. February 18, 1991, officers of the Topeka Police Department assisted KBI agents in executing the search warrant at 1261 S.W. Clay. The search began with a member of the Topeka Police Department throwing a distraction device known as a “flash bang” through the second story entrance. Another Topeka Police officer rammed open the second story door, allowing the search team to enter the home. As the officers entered the home they yelled, “Police search warrant.” James Jenkins, Sr. (hereinafter Mr. Jenkins), his wife, Lula Jenkins, and their daughters were the only persons in the house when the officers executed the search warrant. According to Mr. Jenkins’ later testimony, James Jenkins, Jr., had not lived in the house for over a year.
As it turned out, there was no upstairs apartment at 1261 S.W. Clay, though the home did have outside stairs that connected to one of three upstairs bedrooms. At the time the Topeka Police officer threw the “flash bang” through the upstairs entrance, Mr. Jenkins was making his way up his home’s internal staircase. As he reached the top of the stairs, the explosion knocked him down the stairs. At this point, Mr. Jenkins became “aware that these people[ ] were all around everywhere shooting and carrying ón.” All told, Mr. Jenkins heard “four or five shots or more,” but his later attempt to find any bullets or bullet holes turned up “maybe a possibility of one” of which he “wasn’t sure.” Upon heаring the commotion and not knowing who was in his home, Mr Jenkins ran to grab a shotgun he kept in his bedroom, which was apparently located in the downstairs half of the house. As he emerged from his bedroom, Mr. Jenkins was met by two law enforcement officers
When Lula Jenkins, Mr. Jenkins’ wife, heard the flash bang, she remembered her dаughters upstairs and started up the stairs to cheek on their safety. An officer met Mrs. Jenkins at gunpoint, ordered her back down the stairs, and yelled at her to get down on the floor in the same room as her husband. Because of a back injury, Mrs. Jenkins did not immediately obey the officer. Finally, Mrs. Jenkins got face-down on the floor in a spread-eagle position as the officer advised.
Agent Sabel, who was one of the officers in charge of the search, entered the Jenkinses’ home through the second-stоry door that had been rammed open at the search’s inception. As he came through the doorway, an officer informed him the flash bang had left a burn mark on the floor. Agent Sabel stopped momentarily and observed the burn mark. He then walked through the rest of the upstairs of the home, examining the other rooms and closets to assure himself no undiscovered persons were hiding in the residence. After completing his initial walk-through of the upstairs, Agent Sabel heard a request that he come downstairs. It is at this point that Agent Sabel first walked downstairs, saw Mr. Jenkins on the floor, and directed the officers to uncuff Mr. Jenkins and let him sit down. Agent Sabel eventually rеturned upstairs to check with the officers who were conducting the search. Shortly thereafter, he heard an argument break out downstairs between Mrs. Jenkins and another KBI agent. At this point, Agent Sabel went back downstairs and relieved the agent to prevent the situation from getting, in his words, “out of hand.” Agent Sabel stayed downstairs with the Jenkinses for the remainder of the search. He talked with Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins and their two daughters, “trying to keep them calmed down.”
Agent Colin Wood was the KBI agent assigned to lead the search for evidence in what was thought to be the second story apartment at 1261 S.W. Clay. His job was to ensure that evidence was collected and taken into custody, photographs were taken, and the search warrant returned. Agent Wood entered the Jenkinses’ home through the upstairs door after the entry team secured the residence. He walked through each upstairs room to learn the layout of the premises. During the course of this walk-through, Agent Wood noticed the open staircase leading downstairs and quickly realized the upstairs was not a separate apartment.
The discovery that the upstairs was not a separate apartment as described in the warrant led Agents Wood and Sabel, after consultation with an assistant attorney general on the sсene, to seek an amended warrant for the entire residence. The attorney left to get the new warrant and returned sometime after 1:00 a.m. February 19, 1991, with a warrant for “All of the house at 1261 S.W. Clay.” In the meantime, before the attorney returned with the new warrant, Agent Wood and some officers searched the upstairs pursuant to the original warrant. In the course of this search, they seized the following items: a pair of blue jeans with red stains, $250 in cash, a .22 caliber cartridge, a blue and white sweater with an emblem on it, photographs depicting guns and currency on a bed, and several forms of identification: These items were seized before the attorney returned with the second warrant, and all were found in the upstairs bedroom through which the search team originally entered the residence.
Before the second warrant arrived, officers searched the downstairs and basement of the Jenkinses’ home. According to Mr. Jenkins, “they w[ere] going through everything.” This search of the downstairs and basement was occurring at approximately the same time officers uncuffed Mr. Jenkins and permitted him to sit down. There is no evidence to indicate Agent Wood participated in the search of the home’s downstairs or basement. Agent Wood went downstairs a single time, and that was for the purpоse of giving Mir. Jenkins a copy of the search warrant after
Damage caused to Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins’ home during the search and seizure included kicked-in doors, broken windows, broken furniture, damaged ceilings and walls, burned carpeting, a broken glass piggy bank, a turned over aquarium, a broken stereo, and a destroyed shoe. Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins both claim mental pain and suffering.
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins filed suit against, inter alia, Agent Sabel, Agent Wood, and the City of Topeka pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, which provides:
Every person who, under color of аny statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.
The Jenkinses claimed Agents Sabel and Wood deprived them of their rights under the Fourth Amendment by using excessive force and subjecting them to a warrantless search of their residence without probable cause.
After extensive discovery, the City of Topeka and Agents Sabel and Wood filed motions, for summary judgment. In its motion, the City argued there was no evidentia-ry support for the Jenkinses’ claims the City had customs or practices of using excessive force during searches; permitting or condoning warrantless, pretextual searchеs; or failing to supervise adequately its police officers during searches. Agents Sabel and Wood argued: (1) there was no evidentiary basis showing they personally participated in any of the alleged unconstitutional conduct; (2) the search warrants were valid and not secured by illegal means or for an illegal pre-textual purpose; (3) no excessive force was used in execution of the search; (4) they are, in their official capacities, entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity; and (5) they are, in their individual capacities, entitled to qualified immunity.
The district court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, and Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins filed this appеal.
III. Discussion
A. City of Topeka
We begin our review of the district court’s decision with the Jenkinses’ claim against the City of Topeka. A municipality may not be held liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 simply because it employs a person who violated a plaintiffs federally protected rights. Monell v. New York City Dep’t of Social Servs.,
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins have pointed to no evidence or reasonable inferences therefrom which could lead a reasonable jury to find for them on their claim against the City of Topeka. Neither the Jenkinses’ brief nor the record admits to any evidence that the City of Topeka had a custom or policy of permitting its officers to use excessive force or execute illegal warrants. Even if we assume for the limited purposes of this discussion that incidents of excessive force took place, during the search of the Jenkinses’ home, there is no evidence to indicate a direct causal link between any municipal custom or policy and the violations alleged. See Harris,
B. Agents Sabel and Wood
We now turn to Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins’ claims against Agents Sabel and Wood. To prevail on a claim for damages for a constitutional violation pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a plaintiff must establish the defendant acted under color of state law and caused or contributed to the alleged violation. Ruark v. Solano,
With respect to Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins’ claims against Agent Wood, they have not come forward with evidence indicating he personally participated in any of the alleged violations. First, Agent Wood did not participate in obtaining the search warrant. Second, he did not enter the residence until after it had been secured. Third, he confined his searching activities to the upstairs portion of the home and focused particularly on the room into which the upstairs entrance entered. Fourth, he did not go down to the first story of the Jenkinses’ home until after he had completed his gathering of evidence. Neither Mr. nor Mrs. Jenkins identified Agent Wood as one of the officers who threatened them or subjected them to excessive force. Also, they have not directed us to any evidence personally linking Agent Wood to any of the damage in their home. With respect to the Jenkinses’ claim the search was actually a pretext for finding and arresting their son, James Jenkins, Jr., there is no evidence connecting Agent Wood to such a motive. Actually, the fact that Agent Wood seized and carefully catalogued several items matching items described in the warrant directly contradicts the Jenkinses’ allegation he participated in a pretextual search. Because the Jenkinses’ brief does not argue Agent Wood became liable as a supervisor of the alleged violations, we will not consider this theory as it might apply to him. See State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. Mhoon,
Turning to the Jenkinses’ claims against Agent Sabel, we conclude the evidence is not sufficient to implicate Agent Sabel as a personal pаrticipant in the alleged violations. First, Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins have brought forward no evidence indicating Agent Sabel participated in the use of excessive force against them personally. Agent Sabel entered the residence after the entry team. Upon first going downstairs, he directed the officers to uncuff Mr. Jenkins and allow him to sit down. By this time, Mrs. Jenkins was already off the floor and seated on the couch. Though Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins have detailed some disturbing behavior to support their claims of excessive force, their allegations relate to the time period when they were held face-down on the floor at gunpoint. Agent Sabel was partly rеsponsible for curing this situation, and there is no logical or evidentiary support for the proposition that Agent Sabel participated in what happened before he came downstairs and directed the officers to uncuff Mr. Jenkins. As with Agent Wood, neither Mr. nor Mrs. Jenkins identified Agent Sabel as one of the officers who subjected them personally to excessive force. With respect to the damage done to their property, there is no evidence indicating Agent Sabel personally participated in any of the destruction.
Though the Jenkinses also contend Agent Sabel subjected them to a warrantless search of their home without probable cause, their brief offers no explanation or argument as to why the original warrant was illegal or not supported by probable cause. We take this omission as a concession that the officers, including Agent Sabel, entered the premises in reliance on a valid warrant. See Mhoon,
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins also contend Agent Sabel used the valid search warrant as a pretext to look for and arrest James Jenkins, Jr. There is scant, if any, evidence Agent Sabel harbored any such intent. While it is true Agent Sabel and other officers seemed concerned whether James Jenkins, Jr., was in the house, there- is no evidence they obtained and executed the search warrant as a pretext for looking for him. Given the officers’ knowledge of James Jenkins, Jr.’s propensity for violence and their belief he lived in the Jenkinses’ home, they had every right to be concerned about his presence. In any event, Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins’ pretext argument relies primarily on our decision in United States v. Guzman,
Finally, Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins contend Agent Sabel is liable as a supervisor in that he “was present, if not actively participating, when excessive force was used in both the search of [the Jenkinses’ home] and the personal seizures of both [Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins]. Defendant Sabel .did nothing to prevent it, and thus the nexus between his supervision and the Fourth Amendment violations is apparent.” In their response to Agent Sabel’s motion for summary judgment, Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins did not assert a supervisor theory of recovery against Agent Sabel. The only arguments in the Jenkinses’ response that could be construed as asserting a theory of supervisor liability relate to Agent Wood, and as we have already discussed, the Jenkinses’ brief to this court omits any argument that Agent Wood should be held liable as a supervisor. Except in cases of “the most manifest error,” this court will not entertain issues on appeal that were not argued to the district court. Sac & Fox Nation v. Hanson,
For the reasons given above, the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the City of Topeka, Colin Wood, and Rick Sabel is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, we use the terms "officer” or "officers” genericaUy to describe unidentified or unknown law enforcement personnel who participated in the search of the Jenkinses' home.
. Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins’ complaint also alleged a due process claim and a stаte' law tort claim. We do not address these claims because, for whatever reason, they have not been raised on, appeal.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the majority’s legally appropriate disposition. I write separately only to emphasize the apparent inappropriateness of the governmental action, which seems to push the envelope of “reasonableness” under the Fourth Amendment dangerously far.
The defense of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the City of Topeka rests upon the fact that neither Mr. nor Mrs. Jenkins could identify the officer or officers responsible for the egregious сonduct that occurred in their home in the middle of the night: The defendants do a good job of pointing the finger at each other, and al
I agree with the district court’s conclusion. The warrant, requested at 10:48 p.m. and executed at 12:30 a.m. (Mem. and Order dated February 16, 1995 at 7, 8), was served in a fashion that would have almost certainly been illegal under federal statutory law. See 18 U.S.C. § 3109 (requiring federal law enforcement officers to announce their authority and purpose prior to breaking doors or windows in the execution of a search warrant); United States v. Stewart,
In determining Fourth Amendment “reasonableness” in excessive force cases, a court must balance “the nature and the quality of the intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests, against the countervailing governmental interests at stake.” Graham v. Connor,
These governmental interests do not outweigh Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins’ Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable flash bang, no-knoek, 12:30 a.m., governmental searches of their home. Noting that the stаndard of review requires this court to examine the factual record in the light most favorable to Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins and extend to them all reasonable factual inferences, the threatening language allegedly used by the police — “You tell me where your son is or I will shoot.” — gives me further pause. (Mem. and Order dated February 16, 1995, at 11.)
Nevertheless, the majority opinion clearly states the law’s requirements. I agree with the district court that Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins have “not identified sufficient evidence or pointed to any authority demonstrating that either Wood or Sabel may be liable for the such [sic] acts.” (Mem. and Order date February 16,1995, at 23.) Nor have they provided support for their claim that the City of Topeka had a custom or policy of using excessive force in the execution of search warrants. Courts cannot apportion § 1983 liability on a market share basis.
I believe the defendants would do well to reevaluate their policies (or lack thereof)— whoever makes them and whatever they are — regarding the use of such tactics in the execution of search warrants. See 1 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 1.4(e), at 96-97 & n. 64. (2d ed. 1987); Wayne R. LaFave, Controlling Discretion by Administrative Regulations: The Use, Misuse, and Nonuse of Police Rules and Policies in Fourth Amendment Adjudication, 89 Mich. L.Rev. 442 (1990) (both arguing that the creation and implementation of adequate standard рrocedures by law enforcement agencies would: (1) assist agents in making
On this record, these plaintiffs, possibly wronged, may not rely on a constitutional tort for solace. Common law or state tort relief is the normal recourse for actions making as little sense as these.
