Lead Opinion
OPINION
Gеnora Jones brings this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against two police officers of the Redford Township, Michigan police department
His estate sued the officers, alleging that they deprived Jones of his Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights when the officers failed to suspend the chase after the suspects extinguished the car’s headlights. The officers asserted quаlified immunity. The district court entered summary judgment for the officers, finding that the officers’ actions did not “shock the conscience” as required by County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
I.
In the early mоrning of January 23, 2006, Officers Byrnes and Lentine of the Redford Township police force were in their patrol car. Officer Lentine was the driver. At approximately 5:00 a.m., the officers received a call from dispatch reporting an armed robbery at a 7-11 convenience store and that two black male suspects were fleeing on foot. The officers drove towards the store.
As they approached the 7-11, the officers saw a Ford Taurus traveling at a high speed for that area, between fifty-fivе and sixty miles per hour. The officers claim that the route the Taurus was driving is a well-known escape route used in previous crimes in that area. Given the proximity to the 7-11, the high speed, and the supposedly well-known escape route, the officers suspected that the Taurus was a getaway car for the robbers.
Officer Lentine turned on the cruiser’s overhead lights and fell in behind the Taurus to attempt to pull it over. Instead of pulling over, the Taurus sped up. Officer Lentine turned on the cruiser’s siren and advised poliсe dispatch that the suspects were attempting to flee. A video of the chase taken by the police cruiser’s on-board camera shows that it was still dark outside at the time. However, there was some ambient light from street lamps and businesses. Traffic was relatively light,
The chase proceeded with speeds reaching sixty to seventy miles per hour. The Taurus ran several red lights and stop signs, and the officers followed suit. The officers witnessed the driver and passenger of the Taurus throwing objects out of the windows at various points during the chase.
Although later acknowledging that the driver’s decision to turn off the headlights escalated the risk to others, the officers continued the chase. The chase proceeded approximately two miles further. The Taurus approached a red light at the intersectiоn of 9 Mile Road and Lahser in Southfield, Michigan. At that time, Jones was driving in the opposite direction on his way to work. As Jones turned left at the stoplight into a gas station, the Taurus ran the red light and collided with Jones’s car. Tragically, Jones died from the collision.
As relevant to this appeal, Jones’s estate filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the officers’ conduct — namely, their decision to continue the high-speed chase after the suspects had turned off the headlights of the Taurus — violated Jones’s Fourteenth Amendment substantive due рrocess right to be free from arbitrary deprivation of life and liberty at the hands of state actors. The estate contends that the officers’ actions violated various local traffic ordinances as well as numerous departmental policies concerning pursuit. The officers dispute this assertion, and there has been no finding that the officers violated any law or policy.
The officers raised the defense of qualified immunity and, after some discovery, the district court entered summary judgment for the officers. The court found no constitutional violation and, in the alternative, that even if there was a violation the right was not clearly established. Jones v. Lentine, No. 07-12756,
II.
This appeal arises from the district court’s order granting summary judgment for defendants. We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Blair v. Henry Filters, Inc.,
III.
Government officials, including police officers, are immune from civil liability unless, in the course of performing their discretionary functions, they violate the plaintiffs clearly established constitutional rights. Hills v. Kentucky,
If, however, the facts established a violation of the plaintiffs constitutional rights, Katz mandated that the next step was to determine whether the constitutional right was “clearly established” at the time of the violation. If not, the officer would be entitled to qualified immunity. Katz,
However, in Pearson v. Callahan, — U.S. -,
IV.
A. Has the Estate Established a Violation of Jones’s Right to Substantive Due Process?
The first question in the qualified immunity analysis is whether the plaintiff
Generally speaking, the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process provision has a substantive component that guarantees “protection of the individual against arbitrary action of governmеnt.” Wolff v. McDonnell,
The seminal case on point is the Supreme Court’s 1998 decision in Lewis. In Lewis, the Court confronted a scenario in which the police chased suspects fleeing on a motorcycle. The individuals on the motorcyclе were not suspected of any felony; instead, the officers had seen the motorcycle speeding and had told its driver to stop. When the motorcycle sped off, the officers initiated a chase. The chase lasted over one minute and reached speeds of one hundred miles per hour, with the police officer following very closely behind the motorcycle. When the driver attempted to turn, the motorcycle flipped and threw both the driver and his passenger. The chasing police officer could not slow down or veer in time to avoid hitting the passenger, who was pronounced dead at the scene.
The estate of the deceased passenger brought a section 1983 claim alleging violation of the passenger’s substantive due process rights. The Ninth Circuit had held that recklessness or deliberate indifference was the test for finding a substantive due process violation. The Supreme Court reversed and held that, in the context of a police chase that results in injury, the test is whether the officer’s actions “shock the conscience.” Id. at 846-47,
The Court explained that the “shock the conscience” standard is unrelated to tort concepts of fault, “but rather points clearly away from liability, or clearly towards it, only at the ends of the tort law’s spectrum of culpability” and that “the due process guarantee does not entail a body of constitutional law imposing liability whenever someone cloaked with state authority causes harm.” Id. at 848,
In the context of police chases, the Cоurt stated that “[a] police officer deciding whether to give chase must balance on one hand the need to stop a suspect and show that flight from the law is no way to freedom, and, on the other, the high-speed threat to everyone within stopping range, be they suspects, their passengers, other drivers, or bystanders.” Id. at 853,
[The officer] was faced with a course of lawless behavior for which the police were not to blame. They had done nothing to cause [the driver’s] high-speed driving in the first place, nothing to excuse his flouting of the commonly understood law enforcement authority to control traffic, and nothing (beyond a refusal to call off the chase) to encourage him to race through traffic at breakneck speed forcing other drivers out of their travel lanes. [Thе driver’s] outrageous behavior was practically instantaneous, and so was [the officer’s] instinctive response. While prudence would have repressed the reaction, the officer’s instinct was to do his job as a law enforcement officer, not to induce [the driver’s] lawlessness, or to terrorize, cause harm, or kill. Prudence, that is, was subject to countervailing enforcement considerations, and while [the officer] exaggerated their demands, there is no reason to believe that they were tаinted by an improper or malicious motive on his part.
Id. at 855,
We recently applied Lewis in Meals v. City of Memphis,
The estates brought substantive due process claims, and the district court denied the officer’s motion for summary judgment because it found that a jury could believe the officer’s conduct, which violated many departmental regulations, shocked the conscience. Id. at 726. We reversed, finding that there was no evidence of an intent on the officer’s part to harm the fleeing suspect or to worsen his legal plight. Id. at 730-31. We specifically rejected the argument that the officer’s multiple violations of departmental policy at the very least raised a question of fact from which one could infer malice on the officer’s part. Id.
In this case, the estate’s argument is essentially that the officers should have suspended the chase when the suspects extinguished the Taurus’s headlights. Their failure to do so, the estate argues, violated departmental policies and gives rise to an inference that the officers actually intended to harm the suspects, separate from the legitimate object of arrest, in a manner that shocks the conscience. However, if the officers’ actions in Lewis and Meals did not rise to the level of shocking the conscience, then neither do the actions of the officers in this case.
First, it was undisputed that the officers in Lems and Meals violated departmental policies regarding chases, whereas the allegеd violations in this case are not so clear. And, second, this case involves a chase of suspected armed robbers whereas Lewis and Meals involved high-speed chases over mere traffic offenses. As the Supreme Court has indicated, the chase-or-not-to-chase question involves balancing the risk to human life against the need to enforce the law against offenders. Lewis,
B. Did the Officers Violate a Clearly Established Right?
In the alternativе, even if the officers’ actions did rise to the level of violating Jones’s constitutional rights, it was not clearly established at the time of the incident that actions of that sort crossed the constitutional line. Neither side has cited any case, from any circuit or district court, in which an officer’s actions in a police chase have ultimately been found to shock the conscience, nor are we aware of any such case.
“clearly established” inquiry “must be undertaken in consideration of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition.... ” Katz,
V.
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM.
Notes
. Redford Township is a suburb of Detroit.
. Though unknown to the officers at that time, the discarded items turned out to be a gun and ammunition and, later, money.
. In a case involving a claim brought by a suspect who had been run off the road by an officer in order to end a сhase, the Supreme Court recently stated "we are loath to lay down a rule requiring the police to allow fleeing suspects to get away whenever they drive so recklessly that they put other people’s lives in danger.... The Constitution assuredly does not impose this invitation to impunity-earned-by-recklessness.” Scott v. Harris,
. Several district courts have denied summary judgment in police-pursuit cases on the basis that a jury could find that the officer’s conduct shocked the conscience, but all of those courts have been reversed on appeal. E.g. Meals,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the Court’s disposition of this case. Mr. Jones’s death, though truly terrible, was not the result of a constitutional violation. I write separately, however, to discuss a troubling problem highlighted by this case and to suggest an approach to apply in future cases that addresses this problem.
As the Court notes, neither party has cited a single examplе of a case, from any
Under Katz, even if a given police-pursuit case did not amount to a constitutional viоlation, the court would still have to go through the exercise of explaining why the police officer’s actions did not shock the conscience. However — at least in theory — sometime in the future a district court will find, and an appellate court will agree, that a police-pursuit ease transgressed the Fourteenth Amendment threshold.
But Katz is no longer the law of the land; Pearson v. Callahan, — U.S. -,
However, police-pursuit cases do not fall within the group of section 1983 cases for which Katz accomplished its goal of developing constitutional precedent because the set of examples of impermissible police-pursuit behavior remains empty. I am therefore concerned about applying Pearson in future police-pursuit cases. Except in the most overwhelmingly egregious case, an officer thаt crosses the Fourteenth Amendment’s threshold likely still would be entitled to qualified immunity because it was not clearly established that his specific actions were of the kind that crossed the line. Under Pearson, the court confronted with this officer’s actions could avoid the constitutional question entirely and resolve the case on the clearly established prong. And so too could all subsequent courts.
This, of course, results in a self-perpetuating cycle in Fourteenth Amendment police-pursuit cases: district courts will skip the constitutional inquiry in favor of disposing of cases on the “clearly established” prong, so there will never be an actual
This is a troubling potential because reflexive exercise of Pearson discretion in police-pursuit cases could result in еssentially writing that cause of action off the books. Thankfully, I believe Pearson anticipates this very scenario and provides a safeguard against the extinction of difficult, but nonetheless valid, constitutional tort claims.
As I understand Pearson, the Supreme Court merely lifted the requirement that lower courts implement the Katz analytical sequence in all qualified immunity cases. However, Pearson “continue[d] to recognize that [the Katz protocol] is often beneficial.”
I therefore read Pearson to encourage and support continued development of the constitutional law using a more targeted approach in small subsets of qualified immunity cases, such as police-pursuit cases, where the body of law still needs fattening.
. As the Court's opinion notes, several district courts have believed that they have stumbled upon the fact pattern that could shock a jury's conscience and have denied qualified immunity at summary judgment, only to be reversed by the court of aрpeals. See supra at 10 n. 4. At some point, a district court will come to the same conclusion as these previous district courts and, this time, the court of appeals will agree.
. Although I have not surveyed the entire body of section 1983 case law to find other constitutional claims for which there are very few or no examples of impermissible state action, I am confident that they exist. My concern about Pearson resulting in a failure to adequately develop the constitutional precedent applies to those other constitutional claims just as strongly as it applies to police-pursuit cases, and so too does my suggestion of applying Katz in future cases that fall within these subsets.
