Army Privаte Donald Saucier (“Saucier”), acting as a military police officer, arrested Elliot M. Katz (“Katz”) during a public event at the San Francisco Presidio. Katz was holding up a sign when he was arrested. According to Katz, Saucier and another officer grabbed him, tore the sign out of his hands, dragged him fifty feet, and violently tossed him into a van. Katz brought a Bivens action against Saucier and others for violations of his constitutiоnal rights. See Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Fed. Bureau of Narcotics,
Saucier contends that, although our circuit has a long line of cases in which we have held that the reasonableness inquiry on the merits of a Fourth Amendment excessive force claim is the same as the reasonableness inquiry posed by a qualified immunity defense, these cases conflict with our en banc holding in Hammer v. Gross,
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This case arises out of Katz’s arrest for his conduct during a speech given by Vice President Gore at the Presidio Army base in San Francisco. Katz, an animal rights activist, seeks damages from Saucier for violating his Fourth Amendment rights by using excessive force. This claim is one of multiple claims brought by Katz and In Defense of Animals (“IDA”), an animal rights organization of which Katz is president, against the United States, a national parks official, and various military officials.
On September 24, 1994, the public was invited to attend a special presentation by Vice Presidеnt Gore, followed by other speakers, on the main post at the Presidio. The event was to celebrate the anticipated conversion of most of the Presidio to a national park. The conversion of the Pre-sidio was a subject of public controversy, with animal rights activists concerned about the possibility of animal experimentation at the Army’s Letterman Hospital.
Katz, a veterinаrian who was then sixty years old, and other members of IDA were among the several hundred members of the public who attended the event. Katz arrived early and sat at the front of the public seating area, which was separated from the stage and dignitary seating area by a waist-high cyclone fence. He was wearing a visible, knee-high leg brace because of a broken foot. He was not wearing а shoe on his injured foot.
On the day of the event, Saucier was working as a military police officer. In his deposition, Saucier testified that he had been told by his superiors that demonstrations would not be allowed. He had been instructed to “diffuse the situation if it arises,” but not to “draw that much attention if we didn’t have to.” Saucier admits that Katz was “pointed out as one of the potential, you know, activists” and that he knеw “who this person was ... the person we need[ed] to keep an eye on.”
Either before or as Vice President Gore began speaking, Katz silently removed a cloth banner from his jacket. As Gore was speaking, Katz started to unfold the banner and walked to the barrier. The banner measured approximately four feet by three feet and stated “Please Keep Animal Torture Out of Our National Parks.” Katz intended to hang the banner over the fence so that Vice President Gore and the other speakers could read it.
According to Katz’s deposition, before he could fully unfurl the banner, a military police officer “grabbed [him] from behind and somebody else tore the banner away.” These individuals were Defendants Saucier and Steven Parker, an Army sergeant. Katz did not try to prevent them from taking the banner. The two military police officers then each took one of Katz’s arms and “started sort of picking [Katz] up and kind of walking [him] out, kind of like very hurriedly, sort of like the bum’s rush.” They took Katz to a military van parked behind the seating area and “violently threw” him inside. As the military police officers “shoved” Katz into the vehicle, he was able “to kind of prevent” his head from smashing into the floor of the
The military police officers never spoke to Katz. They closed the door to the van, leaving Katz alone in the vehicle for about twenty minutes. At some point, the military police officers placed another IDA member in the van, and they searched and handcuffed Katz and the other IDA member. They then drove Katz and the other IDA member to a military police station. After being briefly detained, Katz was released and allowed to drive home. Katz was never informed of the basis for his detention or cited with any violation of any law or regulation.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Katz and IDA filed a lawsuit in the district court alleging multiple claims against the United States, a national pаrks official, and various military officials. Against Saucier, Katz alleged claims predicated upon violations of the First Amendment, by depriving Katz of his right to free speech,' and the Fourth Amendment, by arresting Katz without probable cause and with excessive force. Katz asserted the same claims against Sergeant Parker, but at the time of this appeal Parker had not been served.
As to Katz’s First Amendment-based claim, the district court granted summary judgment in favor Saucier and several of the military officials on the ground of qualified immunity. The district court determined that, “[i]n light of the transitional stage of the Presidio on September 24, 1994, ... the [constitutional rights of protestors at the base were not well settled on that date. [Thus], a reasonable military officer could have concluded that preventing protests at the base was [c]onstitutional.” The district court also granted summary judgment in favor of Saucier on Katz’s false arrest claim, holding that Saucier was entitled to qualified immunity. The district court, however, denied Saucier’s motion for summary judgment on Katz’s excessive force claim.
The district court described in detail the factual disputes between the parties concerning the amount of force used, the nature of the risk posed by Katz, and whether and to what degree Katz resisted arrest. The district court concluded that “[a] triable issue of fact exists as to whether [the] defendants employed excessive force in removing Katz from the crowd and placing him in the police van.” On the issue of qualified immunity, the district court held that the law governing the use of force in an arrest was clearly established. Stating that “the qualified immunity inquiry is the same as the inquiry on the merits” in an excessive force claim, the district court concluded that “a question of fact [exists] regarding whether a reasonable officer could believe [Saucier’s] use of force was lawful.”
Saucier timely filed this interlocutory appeal of the district court’s order denying him qualified immunity.
DISCUSSION
I.
Standard of Review
We review de novo a denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity. See Knox v. Southwest Airlines,
II.
Jurisdiction
We have jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine to review an interlocutory appeal of the district court’s
III.
Qualified Immunity Analysis in an Excessive Force Case
Saucier argues that our en banc holding in Hammer,
“The doctrine of qualified immunity protects ‘government officiаls performing discretionary functions ... from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ” Somers v. Thurman,
Qualified immunity is a defense. In a civil rights action in which qualified immunity is asserted, the reasonableness of an officer’s cоnduct comes into play under the second prong of that defense. In a civil rights action founded on the use of excessive force under the Fourth Amendment, the reasonableness of the officer’s conduct also comes into play, not as an element of the officer’s defense, but as an element of the plaintiffs case. The Supreme Court held in Graham v. Connor,
The essence of the Graham reasonableness inquiry is a balancing of the “force which was applied ... against the need for that force.” Liston v. County of Riverside,
Both the second prong of the qualified immunity defense (whether a reasonable officer could have believed his conduct was lawful), and the merits of an excessive force claim focus on the objective reasonableness of the officer’s conduct. To determine whether an officer is entitled to the defense of qualified immunity when the use of force is in issue, the question asked is whether a hypothetical officer reasonably could have believed that the amount of force used was reasonable. To resolve the merits of an excessive force claim, the question is whether a reasonable officer could have believed that the force used was necessary under the сircumstances. See Graham,
The majority of other circuits have taken similar positions. See Bass v. Robinson,
As the district court recognized, in an excessive force case, a material issue of
We reject Saucier’s assertion that our many and consistent panel opinions on this subject are in conflict with our en banc opinion in Hammer,
[The plaintiff] suggested at oral argument that an officer who has used unreasonable force cannot, by definition, have acted reasonably. A similar contention was rejected, however, in [Anderson v. Creighton,483 U.S. 635 ,107 S.Ct. 3034 ,97 L.Ed.2d 523 (1987) ]. Whether a search is “unreasonable” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment is an entirely different question from whether an officer could have believed his actions lawful under the Fourth Amendment. [See id] at 643-44,107 S.Ct. 3034 . To accept [the plaintiffs] contention would be to eliminate all possibility of immunity for violations of the Fourth Amendment, an unacceptable outcome. See id. at 643,107 S.Ct. 3034 .
Id.
Saucier contends this passage contradicts and invalidates our subsequent holdings that the “objective reasonableness” tests for excessive force and qualified immunity are the same. It does not. Hammer involved circumstances not at issue here or in the subsequent line of cases Sаucier challenges. Graham articulated a new objective reasonableness test that was different from what had been the clearly-established “shock-the-conscience” test. The amount of force used in Hammer violated the Fourth Amendment because it was objectively unreasonable, but an objectively reasonable officer could have believed that his conduct did not “shock the consсience” and thus was in fact lawful under the legal test used at the time. Such an outcome is specifically contemplated by the qualified immunity test, particularly the first prong.
Unlike the situation in Hammer, our subsequent line of cases which have equated the merits of the “objective reasonableness” inquiry in a use-of-force ease with the “objective reasonableness” inquiry in a qualified immunity defense do not eliminate the availability of qualified immunity as a defense in excessive force cases. A defendant will always be entitled to qualified immunity when the law governing his or her conduct was not clearly established — the first prong of the qualified immunity defense.
As a fallback position, Saucier argues that even if the district court applied the correct legal test to his qualified immunity defense, the amount of force he used in arresting Katz was so minimal that it was per se reasonable.
In sum, taking the facts as asserted by Katz in the light most favorable to him, no reasonable officer could have believed that the amount of force used was lawful. See, e.g., Sheth v. Webster,
CONCLUSION
The district court correctly relied on our long line of cases consistently holding that the reasonableness inquiry as to whether a defendant is entitled tо the defense of qualified immunity in a claim of excessive
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Consistent with the standard of review on summаry judgment, the facts are presented in the light most favorable to Katz. See Margolis v. Ryan,
. Because of the lack of a link between the actions of Defendants General Glynn Mallory, Jr., and Major Corbin Lee and Saucier’s use of force, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of those defendants on Katz’s Fourth Amendment-based claims.
. Most of the Supreme Court's qualified immunity discussion in Anderson focuses on the proper formulation of the "clearly established” prong. See Anderson, 483 U.S. at
. The question of the reasonableness of force is usually a question of fact for the jury. "However, on summary judgment, the court may make a determination as to reasonableness when, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to [the plaintiff], the evidence compels the conclusion that [the officer's] use of force was reasonable.” Hopkins,
