Jeremy Nelson was injured when Deputy Sheriff James R. Hudek attempted to arrest him following his flight from the Willmar Regional Treatment Center (Willmar), and he later sued Hudek and Wright County under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Minnesota tort law. Nelson claims that Hudek used excessive force in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights and committed an unjustified battery and that the county should be vicariously liable for the battery. The district court 1 granted summary judgment to the defendants, and Nelson appeals. We affirm.
Nelson was committed to Willmar as chemically dependent and mentally ill in October 1994. Later that month he left the center without permission and returned to his mother’s house in Montieello. When he was found missing, a pickup order was issued and his mother was notified. Nelson’s mother nevertheless allowed him to stay with her while he was waiting to meet with his attorney. After three days, they got into an argument. Nelson became agitated, and his mother called 911 to request assistance. She reported that Nelson was screaming at her and threatening suicide. She also told the operator about the treatment center pickup order. While his mother was on the phone, Nelson ingested approximately eighteen white cross tablets and a half bottle of aspirin. The record indicates that at the time Nelson was eighteen years old and 6’3” in height; he weighed 140 pounds.
The county dispatcher identified the call as a domestic disturbance, and Deputy Hudek was the first officer to respond. The dispatcher indicated that Nelson had been acting violently, that he was believed to be suicidal, and that he had fled from a regional treatment center for mental illness and chemical dependency. When Hudek arrived at the house, he spoke with Nelson’s mother and learned that her son had just taken the pills, that he was in his bedroom, and that he did not have any weapons.
Hudek went into the bedroom and found Nelson lying on the bed. The deputy explained that he needed to arrest Nelson and to handcuff him, but Nelson resisted when he tried to cuff his hands behind his back. Nelson struggled with Hudek as the deputy attempted to gain control over his arms, and Hudek applied his asp as an arm bar. At some point in the continuing struggle, Hudek hit Nelson on the head with the asp and Nelson reached for the deputy’s gun. The parties disagree about which happened first, but Nelson admits that he reached for Hu-dek’s gun early in the struggle and that he also hit the deputy repeatedly, kicked him in the chest, and knocked him down twice, finally pushing him onto the floor of a closet. 2 *989 Hudek admits striking Nelson on the head with his asp several times in an attempt to control him. Nelson admits that he went down after Hudek while the deputy was on the closet floor; he says he lost his balance. Hudek fired two shots from the closet floor; the second hit Nelson in the chest.
The entire incident lasted less than three minutes and was over by the time other officers arrived. Nelson was taken to the hospital where seven staples were used to close a head wound; the bullet remains in his back. Nelson was charged with assaulting an officer and pled guilty under
North Carolina v. Alford,
Nelson subsequently brought this civil action against Hudek and the county, and the district court granted summary judgment for the defendants. The § 1983 claim was dismissed for insufficient evidence that Hudek’s actions were objectively unreasonable. The court also concluded that Hudek was entitled to official immunity on the battery claim under state law and that Nelson could therefore not assert vicarious liability against the county.
Nelson argues on appeal that both claims were improperly dismissed. He argues Deputy Hudek is not entitled to qualified immunity on his constitutional claim for excessive force and that there are genuine issues of material fact. Appellees disagree and also argue that Nelson is barred from bringing this claim because of his conviction for assaulting Deputy Hudek, citing
Heck v. Humphrey,
A district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
Mayard v. Hopwood,
Government officials performing discretionary tasks are entitled to qualified immunity unless their actions violate “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
*990
Excessive force claims arising from arrests are analyzed under the Fourth Amendment,
Graham v. Connor,
The parties agree that either- shooting someone or striking him on the head with an asp can be an application of deadly force, but they disagree on whether Hudek’s actions were objectively reasonable.
4
A reasonable police officer would have known in October 1994 that no greater force should be used in making an arrest than was reasonable under the circumstances and that deadly force would not be justified unless there was probable cause to believe he was faced with a threat of serious physical harm. The standard was clearly established.
5
Whether Hudek is entitled to qualified immunity must be examined from the perspective of the situation as he understood it at the time.
Anderson v. Creighton,
It is undisputed that the entire encounter between Hudek and Nelson lasted less than three minutes and that it escalated rapidly. Hudek could have reasonably believed his safety was threatened as the situation spun out of control. When Hudek went into Nelson’s room, he knew that Nelson had previously been committed to Willmar, had been acting violent and suicidal, and had taken a number of pills. Hudek initially attempted to arrest and cuff Nelson without using force. Nelson actively resisted. A reasonable officer would have known that force may be used to overcome resistance to arrest,
Foster v. Metropolitan Airports Comm’n,
Nelson also challenges the district court’s conclusion that Hudek is immune from suit on the state law battery charge. To qualify for official immunity under Minnesota law, the public official must be “charged by law with duties which call for the exercise of his judgment or discretion” and not be “guilty of a willful or malicious wrong.”
Elwood v. County of Rice,
The Minnesota Supreme Court has indicated that willful and malicious are synonymous in the official immunity context and mean “nothing more than the intentional doing of a wrongful act without legal justification or excuse, or, otherwise stated, the willful violation of a known right.”
Rico v. State,
For these reasons, the judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable David S. Doty, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. In reviewing this grant of summary judgment, we accept Nelson's version of the facts and have *989 not recounted all the conflicting testimony of Deputy Hudek, including his claims that Nelson reached for his gun and unsnapped its holster before he hit him on the head with the asp and that Nelson again attempted to get his gun after he was knocked onto the closet floor.
. The district court did not reach this question, and we need not address it because of our resolution of other issues.
. At oral argument counsel for Nelson stated that even if the gun shots were justified as a matter of law, material questions of fact would remain regarding the reasonableness of the use of the asp.
. Appellees argue, and the district court agreed, that the standard for determining qualified immunity is identical to the standard for deciding if the use of force was excessive. Both involve considerations of objective reasonableness. The Supreme Court expressly declined to comment in
Graham
on the application of qualified immunity in excessive force cases because the defense had not been raised.
