Case Information
*1 Before: MARTIN, GILMAN, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge. This is a case about qualified immunity. Plaintiffs Melanie Cline, Kierre Fuller, Earl Fuller, Thomas Willis, and Kiana Willis, were present in a house located at 347 South Main Street on the night that house was searched by members of the Ontario, Ohio Police and the Allied Special Operations Response Team, a SWAT-like team composed, at least in part, of Ontario Police officers. Plaintiffs sued Detective Riley Snavely and then-Acting Police Chief Dale Myers, both officers of the Ontario Police, under 18 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming the officers had violated Plaintiffs’ Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights during a search of the house by (1) obtaining and executing an invalid warrant; (2) employing excessive force while executing the search; and (3) detaining Plaintiffs for an unconstitutionally unreasonable amount of time despite knowledge that Plaintiffs had not committed a crime. Snavely and Myers moved for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds. The district court denied their motions for *2 summary judgment; Snavely and Myers appeal. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I.
The Ontario police sought to apprehend a man named Joseph Foster, who was suspected of entering a house, brandishing a gun, and stealing property from the house’s residents. Snavely was approached by an unknown informant who stated that Foster was hiding in a house at 618 Burns Street. Snavely prepared an application for a warrant to enter 618 Burns Street and arrest Foster, and the Ontario police, along with the Allied Special Operations Response Team, began making arrangements to conduct surveillance on 618 Burns Street. Sometime thereafter, the informant told Snavely that Foster had moved to a house at 347 South Main Street. Snavely drove past 347 South Main Street with the informant, Detective Ed Schmidt of the Mansfield, Ohio, Police Department, and another unidentified individual familiar with Foster. The informant reported seeing Foster on the porch of 347 South Main Street at this time, but this statement was not corroborated by any police officers, nor does it appear in the search warrant later obtained for 347 South Main Street.
Snavely appeared before a magistrate with an affidavit applying for a “knock-and-announce” warrant for 347 South Main Street. But the affidavit contained facts relating only to 618 Burns Street, the house upon which the police had set up surveillance based on the original tip from the informant. However, the warrant listed 347 South Main Street, where the informant claimed Foster had moved, as the address of the house to be searched. Acting under this warrant, the police entered the house at 347 South Main Street to search for Foster. Plaintiffs testified that members of the entering police team used excessive force on them. Earl Fuller, for example, testified that he was *3 handcuffed and that, after the search had concluded, Myers kicked him twice despite the fact that Fuller was in handcuffs and not a suspect. Fuller also testified that he was detained for at least twenty-five minutes after the search had concluded; Snavely stated that he called the informant within minutes of the commencement of the raid to tell the informant that Foster was not present in the house.
Plaintiffs sued Snavely and then-Acting Chief Myers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the officers had violated Plaintiffs’ Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. They claim that Snavely violated those rights by obtaining and executing an invalid warrant. They claim that Myers violated those rights by employing excessive force while executing the warrant and detaining Plaintiffs for an unreasonable amount of time after realizing Plaintiffs had not committed a crime. Snavely and Myers moved for summary judgment, seeking qualified immunity from those claims. The district court denied their motions for summary judgment; Snavely and Myers appeal.
II.
Plaintiffs first argue that Snavely has waived his right to appeal the district court’s denial of
summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds because the district court found that Snavely
failed to properly object to the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation that recommended
denying him summary judgment on this ground. “[T]he defense of qualified immunity may be
deemed as waived if not properly and timely presented before the district court.”
Brown v. Crowley
,
III.
Before we discuss the merits of the appeals, we must determine whether we have jurisdiction
over these appeals. “[I]nterlocutory appeals—appeals before the end of district court
proceedings—are the exception, not the rule.”
Johnson v. Jones
,
Both Snavely and Myers, however, submit arguments concerning, at least in part, “whether or not certain given facts show[] a violation of clearly established law.” Id. For this reason, we have jurisdiction over both Snavely’s and Myers’s interlocutory appeals.
IV.
“We review the district court's denial of summary judgment de novo.”
Watson v. Solis
,
__F.3d __,
A. Snavely
The district court denied Snavely’s motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity
grounds related to the search warrant that he obtained and executed in the search of 347 South Main
Street. Even though the district court rested its ruling on its finding of waiver, it discussed the merits
of this issue. The district court stated that fact questions remained with respect to whether Snavely
(1) acted with reckless disregard for the truth when obtaining the warrant, and (2) executed the
warrant without “assess[ing] the affidavit upon which the warrant was based.”
See United States v.
Washington
,
“An investigator may be held liable under § 1983 for making material false statements either
knowingly or in reckless disregard for the truth to establish probable cause for an arrest.”
Vakilian
v. Shaw
,
B. Myers
1.
Excessive force
Plaintiffs allege that Myers kicked Fuller “after the conclusion
of the search” of the house, even though Fuller was “cuffed and suspected of no crime.” They allege
the kicks constituted an unreasonable use of force. “This court determines the reasonableness of
[officers’] use of force by performing a careful balancing of the nature and quality of the intrusion
on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against the countervailing governmental interests
at stake.”
Shreve v. Jessamine Cnty. Fiscal Court
,
Here, Fuller was not a suspect, he was in restraining handcuffs, and he was lying on his side on the floor when Myers allegedly kicked him. A jury could reasonably conclude that all of these facts outweigh Myers’s interest in subduing Fuller by kicking him. Myers contends in his briefing that there is no genuine issue of material fact about his use of force, but the opposite is true. Because the testimony presents a question as to whether the kick occurred, there exists a genuine issue of *8 material fact on the excessive force claim. We affirm the district court’s denial of Myers’s motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds on this claim.
2. Excessive period of detention Plaintiffs also contend that Myers detained them for an excessive period of time—at least twenty-five minutes—after Myers knew that Foster was not in the house. In support of their contention that Myers knew that Foster was not in the house being searched, Plaintiffs cite the fact that Snavely called the confidential informant within minutes of the beginning of the raid to tell him that Foster was not in the house. Further, Fuller testified that he was restrained for an estimated twenty-five minutes. Together, this evidence shows that there is at least a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Fuller was restrained for some time after the police realized Foster was not in the house at 347 South Main Street.
The prohibition against extended detention after the conclusion of a search was clearly
established at the time the house at 347 South Main Street was searched. In
Pray v. City of
Sandusky
,
Thus, construing the facts in favor of Plaintiffs, questions of fact remain as to whether the detention continued for twenty-five minutes and whether that was an unreasonably long time after the police realized that Foster was not in the house; both of these factual issues are relevant to determining whether the police violated a clearly established right. For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court on this issue.
V.
Finally, Snavely and Myers claim immunity under Ohio state law, which grants government
employees immunity from civil liability unless,
inter alia
, their “acts or omissions were with
malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless manner.” Ohio Rev. Code § 2744.03.
Ohio courts have held that summary judgment on state-law immunity is improper where fact
questions remain.
See, e.g.
,
Sampson v. Cuyahoga Metro. Housing Auth.
,
VI.
For all of the reasons set forth above, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
