Daniel LUM and Polly Lum, for themselves and for their minor children Joseph Aveoganna, Elizabeth Hawley, Aiyanna Lum, and Jamie Lum, Appellants, v. Gwen KOLES (Grimes), Benjamin Hunsaker, Jose Gutierrez, and North Slope Borough, Appellees.
No. S-14424
Supreme Court of Alaska
Dec. 13, 2013
314 P.3d 546
We have never decided whether it is an abuse of discretion for a trial court to award survivor benefits exceeding what a former spouse was entitled to under a property settlement agreement. In Young v. Lowery, Lowery was awarded 25.34% of Young‘s disposable retired pay.42 The superior court also ordered Young to purchase a 55% survivor benefit.43 Thus, Lowery received a potential survivor benefit that was almost double her retired pay award. We affirmed the survivor benefits, but the specific issue in that case was the allocation of the cost and not the excess benefits.44
[REDACTED] Compelling a survivor annuity award is fair because “[s]uch an award [is] appropriate to ensure that [the survivor] would receive the full benefit of her property interest should [her spouse] predecease her.”45 It is equitable to “award the nonowning spouse survivor benefits equal to the amount of retirement benefits which the nonowning spouse was receiving before the employee spouse‘s death.”46
Here the superior court did not explain how awarding a 55% survivor benefit would impact the parties’ settlement agreement. We therefore remand to the superior court for further consideration of an award guaranteeing Beverly benefits after Jason‘s death equal to the retirement benefits she receives while he lives.
V. CONCLUSION
We REMAND to the superior court for further proceedings on the survivor benefits percentage and to correct the length of marriage determination for the QDRO. We AFFIRM in all other respects.
Peter C. Gamache, Law Office of Peter C. Gamache, Anchorage, for Appellee North Slope Borough, and Brent R. Cole, Law Office of Brent R. Cole, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellees Koles, Hunsaker, and Gutierrez.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, WINFREE, STOWERS, and BOLGER, Justices.
OPINION
WINFREE, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
In response to a domestic disturbance call, police officers entered a residence without a warrant and pepper sprayed and handcuffed a resident. The family sued for excessive force and unlawful entry. The superior court dismissed the claims on summary judgment, granting qualified immunity for the excessive force claims and holding that the family had not raised a cognizable unlawful entry claim. The superior court later denied the family‘s
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
In September 2007 the North Slope Borough (NSB) Police Department received an emergency-line telephone call requesting officers to go to Polly and Daniel Lum‘s residence “for a welfare check on some children.” The caller stated that she was a friend of Polly‘s and had just received a call for help. The caller reported hearing Polly and Daniel “fighting and screaming” and children crying. She also reported that Polly had “bruises and a cut on her head.” She indicated that there were four or five children in the home and that the incident had happened within the last five minutes.
When the officers entered the apartment, Daniel and Polly were in the bathroom with their infant daughter. Daniel told the officers to leave. Officer Grimes told Daniel to come out of the bathroom. Daniel accused Officer Grimes of shooting at him during a previous encounter and attempted to shut the bathroom door, separating himself, Polly, and their infant from the officers. The officers pushed against the door to stop Daniel from closing it. Officer Grimes then sprayed oleoresin capsicum (pepper spray) once in Daniel‘s face to subdue him. Daniel immediately stopped resisting and came out of the bathroom. The officers handcuffed Daniel due to what they later described as his “erratic behavior and resistance.”
Daniel had a strong and immediate reaction to the pepper spray, calling repeatedly for water and saying he could not breathe. Officer Benjamin Hunsaker then arrived, and Officers Hunsaker and Grimes took Daniel outside to defuse the situation and ameliorate the pepper spray‘s effects. Daniel continued saying that he could not breathe and began complaining that he was having or about to have a panic or heart attack. He repeatedly asked for someone to wipe his eyes; he also requested an ambulance. The officers wiped Daniel‘s face multiple times, pointed him into the wind to lessen the pepper spray‘s effects, and informed him that the effects would take some time to wear off naturally.
Daniel also complained that the handcuffs were too tight and asked that they be taken off. The officers declined because of “the way [he was] acting.” Daniel told the officers that his behavior was erratic because he had failed to take prescribed methadone. When Daniel again complained about the handcuffs, the officers switched them for a larger pair and double-locked them so they would not tighten. Daniel stated that the new handcuffs were more comfortable. About eight minutes after the application of the pepper spray, the officers confirmed that Daniel did in fact want to go to the hospital. The officers called an ambulance to transport Daniel, and it arrived ten minutes later.
No charges were filed against Daniel as a result of the encounter.
B. Proceedings
In December 2007 the Lums sued the officers for use of excessive force and for unlawful entry in violation of the
After oral argument the Lums filed several motions to supplement the evidentiary record, including consolidated appendices of exhibits, a complete transcript of Polly‘s deposition, and evidence showing the officers were aware that Daniel had been in a weak physical state due to back surgery. The court struck the motions and attached evidence as untimely.
In July the superior court granted full summary judgment dismissing all of the Lums’ excessive force claims on the basis of qualified immunity. The superior court later granted summary judgment dismissing the Lums’ unlawful entry claims under the
In January 2011 the Lums filed an
The Lums appeal the summary judgment decisions, including the decision striking submitted evidence and the denial of the
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review [a] grant of summary judgment de novo, reading the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and making all reasonable inferences in its favor.”2 “We will affirm a grant of summary judgment when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”3
Questions involving “both state and federal [qualified] immunity are questions of law subject to de novo review.”4 “Under the de novo standard of review, we will ‘apply our independent judgment to questions of law, adopting the rule of law most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy.‘”5
We will reverse an evidentiary ruling only if an error prejudicially affected a party‘s substantial rights.6 We review orders denying
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Granting Summary Judgment Dismissing The Excessive Force Claims Based On Qualified Immunity.
1. Qualified immunity for excessive force
“In Alaska, questions concerning qualified immunity for claims of excessive
“[A]n officer is entitled to qualified immunity if the officer‘s conduct was an objectively reasonable use of force or the officer reasonably believed that the conduct was lawful.”11 “Under the second part of the inquiry, the reasonableness of an officer‘s belief that his conduct was lawful depends on whether a reasonable officer would have been ‘on notice’ that his particular use of force would be unlawful.”12 If “the officers reasonably believed that the force they used was permissible,” they are entitled to qualified immunity, “even if they were mistaken and actually used excessive force.”13
To determine whether officers were “on notice” that their conduct was unreasonable, we “look to our own jurisdiction and other jurisdictions to see if there are any cases, laws, or regulations which would suggest that the type of action taken by the officer is considered unlawful.”14 Plaintiffs have the burden of showing that clearly established law gave fair notice that the officer‘s conduct was unlawful.15 Although the clearly established law does not need to arise from “an identical factual scenario,” it must offer sufficiently specific guidance to give an officer clear notice of unlawful conduct.16 “Officials are not liable for bad guesses in gray areas; they are liable for transgressing bright lines.”17 But in the absence of “explicit law,” we also may consider whether the conduct was “so egregious, so excessive, that [the officer] should have known it was unlawful.”18
In analyzing qualified immunity questions we “focus on the officers’ perspectives and perceptions, as it is what reasonable officers in their position could have thought that is dispositive of this issue.”19 And we also have recognized that “officers must often make quick judgments which might have unanticipated consequences, [and] we must resist the urge to second guess those actions when things turn out badly.”20
2. The excessive force claim does not require consideration of the allegedly unlawful entry.
In granting qualified immunity regarding the Lums’ excessive force claims, the superior court cited Samaniego v. City of Kodiak21 in ruling that even if the officers’ initial entry were unlawful, they still were privileged to use reasonable force against
The Lums argue that the allegedly unlawful entry22 and subsequent acts of force must be considered together because these episodes are so intertwined as to make it impractical to take a segmented view of the sequence of events. They argue that when the events are viewed in their entirety, the officers had fair notice that provoking the pepper spray incident by an unlawful and unannounced entry constituted excessive force. The officers respond that our reasoning in Samaniego controls and such incidents should be considered sequentially; they argue holding that any force used after an unlawful entry is per se excessive infringes on an officer‘s need to use reasonable force when required by immediate circumstances, regardless of the context.
Our Samaniego decision governs here. In Samaniego we held that even if the officer‘s initial arrest were illegal, “once [the arrestee] resisted [the officer‘s] attempt to grab her wrist, she committed the additional offense of resisting arrest” and the officer was privileged to use reasonable force to arrest her for that offense.23 The same approach applies here—in excessive force claims we look solely at the officers’ use of force in dealing with the situation before them at the time the force was applied.
The Lums attempt to distinguish Samaniego by noting that Daniel was in his home, raising privacy concerns absent in Samaniego, and that he was not placed under arrest before the officers used pepper spray. But an unlawful arrest arguably raises liberty concerns equally as compelling as the privacy concerns raised by unlawful entry into a home. And our reasoning in Samaniego is readily applicable to any situation where officers are met with dangerous circumstances, and does not rely on commission of a crime.
The Lums also point to Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals precedent holding that “where an officer intentionally or recklessly provokes a violent confrontation, if the provocation is an independent Fourth Amendment violation, [the officer] may be held liable for [an] otherwise defensive use of deadly force.”24 They argue that even if the officers acted reasonably in spraying and handcuffing Daniel, their unlawful entry provoked the confrontation and rendered the officers liable for excessive force.25 We have not accepted such a theory and, as the Ninth Circuit has acknowledged, the federal circuits have split on the validity of similar provocation-of-violence theories.26 We recently declined to adopt the provocation theory in a qualified immunity case,27 and we decline to do so here.
Samaniego‘s segmented approach may not fully acknowledge that citizens might react strongly, and sometimes violently, to an unwarranted intrusion on their privacy and liberty. But “it is of great societal importance that officers be able to perform their investigatory and law enforcement duties, without fear of retribution for mistakes made in good faith.”28 Officers
3. The officers are entitled to qualified immunity for their application of force.
The questions then are (1) whether the officers’ use of pepper spray, use of handcuffs, and actions after the altercation were reasonable; and (2) if the officers’ actions were unreasonable, whether the officers were on notice their conduct constituted excessive force. We have stated that when analyzing multiple applications of nondeadly force, a court may consider each sequential application of force separately.29 The superior court considered the officers’ actions separately; they therefore are considered in turn.
Officers are permitted to use pepper spray when an individual is “resisting arrest or refusing police requests.”30 Pepper spray is “of limited intrusiveness” and is “designed to disable a suspect without causing permanent physical injury.”31 Pepper spray generally is considered reasonable for bringing a person under control, but not when the person already has surrendered and been rendered helpless.32 In Russell ex rel. J.N. v. Virg-In we noted that the use of a taser, another non-deadly disabling device, is reasonable against a person actively resisting or not cooperating with the police, but not against nonviolent, nonthreatening subjects.33 Because Daniel resisted the officers’ commands to come out of the bathroom and their attempts to ensure the other family members’ safety, we affirm the superior court‘s holding that the officers were entitled to qualified immunity for their reasonable use of pepper spray.
The use of handcuffs is reasonable “to control the scene and protect [officer] safety” and is improper only when “suspects are cooperative and officers have no objective concerns for safety.”34 Here the officers handcuffed Daniel due to his “erratic behavior” and because he had been actively resisting them moments prior. The Ninth Circuit has held that prolonged use of handcuffs that are too tight, resulting in pain or injury, may be unreasonable,35 but here the officers switched to looser handcuffs after Daniel complained and when they believed it was safe to do so. We therefore affirm the superior court‘s holding that the officers were entitled to qualified immunity for their reasonable use of handcuffs.
The Lums argue that the officers’ failure to provide water to ameliorate the effects of the pepper spray violated NSB Police Department guidelines and was unreasonable. But the NSB Police Department guidelines state that the subject may be allowed cool water to rinse eyes. The officers wiped Daniel‘s face, brought him into the wind, and reassured him that the effects would wear off naturally. The officers’ conduct was reasonable and certainly does not violate clearly established law, unlike that of the officers in Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt who unreasonably re
Finally, the Lums argue that the officers erred in failing to call for an ambulance immediately after Daniel complained of a possible heart attack. NSB Police Department guidelines instruct that medical attention should be given for pepper spray if the subject requests it or if symptoms persist past 45 minutes; the officers called an ambulance about eight minutes after spraying Daniel, and it arrived ten minutes later. Because Daniel variously complained of a panic attack, heart attack, “freaking out,” and hyperventilating during that time, the officers reasonably could have concluded that Daniel did not immediately need an ambulance to treat an ongoing heart attack, and because they called for an ambulance when it was clear that Daniel wanted one, we affirm the superior court‘s holding that the officers are entitled to qualified immunity for their response to Daniel‘s request for an ambulance.
We therefore affirm the superior court‘s summary judgment granting the officers qualified immunity for all of the Lums’ excessive force claims.
B. The Superior Court Did Not Err By Granting Summary Judgment On The Stated Unlawful Entry Claims, But It Should Have Considered The Trespass And Invasion Of Privacy Claims Raised In The Summary Judgment Proceedings.
The superior court granted summary judgment for the officers on the Lums’ claims for unlawful entry in violation of
First, the superior court was correct to separate the unlawful entry claims from the excessive force claims addressed above. The Lums fail to point to any case where an unlawful entry was considered under an excessive force analysis. Although both claims have their roots in the Fourth Amendment and article 1, section 14 of the
Next, the superior court was correct in rejecting the Lums’ constitutional tort claim. We have stated that we “will not allow a constitutional claim for damages, except in cases of flagrant constitutional violations where little or no alternative remedies are available.”39 The alternative remedies
Finally, the superior court was correct in ruling that the Lums may not recover tort damages under
The Lums raised trespass and invasion of privacy claims for the first time in their opposition to summary judgment on the unlawful entry claims. The Lums did not seek leave to amend their complaint to include these claims, and the superior court did not consider them in granting summary judgment on the Lums’ unlawful entry claims. The Lums argue that these claims were sufficiently raised in their complaint through their claim that the officers invaded the Lums’ privacy by unlawfully entering their home.
We have held that pleadings adequately raise a claim if they provide the opponent fair notice of the nature of the case.45 “[P]leadings are to be liberally construed, with the goal being to achieve substantial justice.”46 In Gamble v. Northstore Partnership we held that affirmative defenses raised for the first time in an opposition to summary judgment were sufficiently pled because other defenses raised in the party‘s answer “invoke[d] some of the same concerns in more general terms” as those raised in the opposition to summary judgment and thus the opposing party had fair notice of the litigation‘s nature.47 Here the Lums’ trespass and invasion of privacy claims implicate the same privacy concerns arising from the officers’ warrantless entry as the Lums’ other unlawful entry claims, and therefore put the officers on fair notice of the general type of litigation involved. Although these claims were articulated very late in the proceedings, in light of our policy preference that decisions be based on the merits rather than on pleading technicalities,48 we remand this case to the superior court for further proceedings on these claims.
C. It Was Not Reversible Error To Strike Submitted Evidence From The Record.
The Lums challenge the superior court‘s rejection of their attempts to file additional evidence after briefing and oral argument on summary judgment for qualified immunity. They argue that the court should have imposed lesser sanctions before striking the evidence49 and that the evidence was timely
The officers respond that the Lums fail to make the required showing that the decision to exclude the evidence prejudicially affected their substantial rights.50 The officers also argue that the Lums did not comply with timeliness requirements when submitting the evidence and that if they needed additional time to obtain evidence, they should have asked for it under
1. Evidence of Daniel‘s fear of Officer Grimes and Officer Grimes‘s knowledge of Daniel‘s medical condition
The Lums argue that the superior court erred by striking as untimely their submission of supplemental evidence in an opposition to summary judgment. The evidence was offered after oral argument, but before the superior court issued its decision on qualified immunity. The Lums argue the proffered evidence showing that Officer Grimes knew about Daniel‘s back injury rebutted assertions that Daniel was physically threatening to the officers at the time of their confrontation. The Lums also argue that the evidence of prior encounters with police corroborated Daniel‘s testimony that he believed officers had shot at him during a previous incident, which helped explain his fearful and agitated reaction upon seeing the officers in his house.
But Officer Grimes‘s putative knowledge of Daniel‘s back problems and Daniel‘s putative fearful reaction to the officers’ presence do not negate the objective reasonableness of the officers’ conduct in taking control of a potentially dangerous situation in which Daniel was resisting the officers and barricading himself and his family in the bathroom. Rejection of the evidence was not prejudicial because the evidence would not have substantially affected the superior court‘s decision.53
2. Polly Lum‘s deposition
The superior court struck as untimely the Lums’ filing of Polly‘s entire deposition to authenticate the portions of her testimony already submitted and to “complete the record.” The deposition was taken more than six months before the Lums’ summary judgment opposition, but the evidence was offered three months after the deadline for the summary judgment opposition with no explanation for the delay. The Lums fail to explain why the transcript was pertinent or how its exclusion was prejudicial in any manner. We therefore affirm the superior court‘s decision to strike this evidence.
3. Consolidated appendices
The superior court struck as untimely consolidated appendices submitted after the deadline for summary judgment opposition. The appendices consisted of deposition testimony from relevant parties, much of which was already part of the record. The Lums argue that the appendices should have been admitted but do not explain why they delayed in filing them, how the excluded evidence was relevant, or how its exclusion was prejudicial. We therefore affirm the superior court‘s decision to strike this evidence.
4. Rebuttal evidence
The superior court also struck the Lums’ submission of “rebuttal evidence” in response to the officers’ submission of a police officer incident report attached to the NSB‘s opposition to the Lums’ motion for reconsideration of the qualified immunity issue. The Lums argue that the incident re
But the incident report already was in the record because the Lums themselves previously had filed it. And the Lums fail to explain how the new evidence rebutting the report would have affected the superior court‘s determination on qualified immunity. Further, the Lums cannot use reconsideration motions for “presentation of additional evidence on the merits” of the original motion but must argue based on the existing record.54 For these reasons, we affirm the superior court‘s decision to strike this evidence.
D. The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion By Denying The Lums’ Rule 60(b)(2) Motion.
In January 2011 the Lums filed a
The superior court denied the motion, concluding that the evidence did not justify relief under
Motions for relief from judgment under
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court‘s evidentiary rulings and grant of summary judgment on the excessive force and unlawful entry claims. We AFFIRM the superior court‘s denial of the Lums’
MAASSEN, Justice, not participating.
