Case Information
*1 BEFORE: KEITH, McKEAGUE and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM. Appellant Martin Rhodes alleges under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that City of Murfreesboro Police Officer Tad Scott arrested him without a warrant and without probable cause, in violation of his constitutional right to freedom from unreasonable seizure. The district court awarded summary judgment to the City of Murfreesboro and Officer Scott. Rhodes contends the record presents a triable fact question as to whether the facts known to Scott established probable cause to arrest him. On due consideration of the parties’ briefs and lower court record, we affirm.
An altercation undisputedly occurred at Rhodes’s residence in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, at about mid-day on May 12, 2007. The altercation was between Rhodes and Jeffrey Pittard, a sales agent who was marketing Orkin residential pest control services. After an exchange of words, Rhodes undisputedly pushed Pittard off the porch of his home, causing him to fall onto his back in the shrubbery next to the porch. Rhodes viewed Pittard as an unwelcome solicitor and claims he used reasonable force to remove the trespasser, as permitted by Tennessee law, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-614(a). Pittard contacted the police and Rhodes admitted to Officer Scott that he pushed Pittard. Scott transported Rhodes to the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department, where Pittard signed a complaint charging Rhodes with assault, and a judicial commissioner issued an arrest warrant on the reduced charge of offensive touching, a misdemeanor. [1]
The charges against Rhodes were later dismissed because Pittard was unavailable to testify. Rhodes then instituted this action, claiming inter alia that Officer Scott and the City of Murfreesboro are liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for subjecting him to an unreasonable seizure, in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. After the district court granted summary judgment to the defendants, Rhodes appealed. [2]
We review the district court’s summary judgment ruling de novo. White v. Baxter
Healthcare Corp.
,
The district court correctly looked to state law to determine whether probable cause existed.
Logsdon v. Hains
,
Rhodes contends the probable cause determination requires an officer to examine available
facts and circumstances in determining whether there is a fair probability that a crime has been
committed.
See Fridley v. Horrighs
,
Once Scott determined, based on the admitted facts and circumstances, that there was
probable cause to believe an assault had been committed, he had no further duty to investigate or
search for exculpatory evidence.
Id.
Scott was not free to “turn a blind eye toward potentially
exculpatory evidence,” but Rhodes has not identified any “readily available” exculpatory evidence
that Scott was obliged to consider.
See id.
at 342-43. Rhodes faults Scott for not giving greater
credence to his contention that the force he admitted using was reasonably necessary to remove
Pittard, a trespasser. In other words, Rhodes faults Scott for not conducting a more thorough testing
of the available information before making his probable cause assessment. Yet, clearly, the law does
not require an officer to conduct a quasi-trial before he can make a warrantless arrest.
Id.
“Even if
the circumstances suggest that a suspect may have an affirmative defense, if a reasonable officer
would not ‘conclusively know’ that the suspect is protected by the defense, then he is free to arrest
the suspect provided there is probable cause to do so.”
Fridley
,
Notes
[1] Although Scott maintains that Rhodes voluntarily accompanied him to the Sheriff’s Department, the City and Scott concede for present purposes that Rhodes was “seized” when transported by Scott in his patrol car.
[2] Rhodes first challenges, as an abuse of discretion, the district court’s refusal to consider his response to defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The district court declined to consider Rhodes’s response because it was untimely under the governing local rule. We need not address this claim of error because Rhodes’s response does not establish the existence of a triable issue. In our analysis of the evidentiary support for Rhodes’s § 1983 claim, below, we have fully considered continue...
[2] ...continue
Rhodes’s response and attachments, and still affirm the summary judgment.
Liberally construed, Rhodes’s appeal may be viewed as also arguing that his arrest was
wrongful because Scott did not have authority under Tennessee law to arrest him for a misdemeanor
that was not committed in his presence. We need not address this claim either. Violations of state
law are not cognizable under § 1983, which provides redress for denial of federally protected civil
rights.
See Stanley v. Vining
,
[3] Rhodes explained in his deposition that he was agitated by Pittard’s waving his solicitation license and pointing his finger in Rhodes’s face. Rhodes admitted, however, that Pittard did not touch him and that when he slapped Pittard’s hand away and pushed Pittard from the porch, he intended to push Pittard off of his feet. Dkt. No. 3:09-cv-181, R. 37-2, Rhodes Dep. at 68-84; Dkt. No. 3:09-cv-780, R. 15-2, Rhodes Dep. at 212. Pittard described the push as “hard enough to where he hit me and my head flew back and my head hit the ground first with my legs flipping over the top of me.” Dkt. No. 3:09-cv-780, R. 15-1, Pittard Dep. at 26.
