This appeal presents the question of whether the “sham affidavit” rule precludes the introduction of testimony from other witnesses that is arguably inconsistent with a plaintiffs deposition testimony. Under the circumstances presented by this case, wе conclude the doctrine does not extend that far, and we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for reconsideration.
I
On the evening of April 16, 2004, 21-year-old University of California, Davis student Timothy Nelson attended a large party at the Sterling Apartment Complex in Davis, California. Police estimated that up to 1000 people were at the party. The party escalated out of control and approximately 30-40 city and school police officers were dispatched to the scene.
The officers formed a skirmish line and attempted to sweep the crowd toward the front of the apartment complex. The officers gave numerous dispersal orders while they moved through the crowd, and multiple officers stated that they were under a constant barrage of thrown bottles while moving through the property, and that many members of the crowd were chanting, yelling, and cursing at them.
Some officers shot pepperballs 1 at bottle-throwing students and also at groups of people that did not move when told to disperse. The purpose of shooting the pepperballs was two-fold: (1) to specifically target those partygoers who were throwing bottles at the police; and (2) to crеate “area denial” or “area saturation” so that the OC would make it uncomfortable for any person to stay in the area.
Nelson and his group of friends eventually left the hallway in which they were standing and entered an outside breezeway. The officers allegedly warned people in the breezeway that they needed to disperse, and Sgt. John Wilson of the Davis Police Department ordered the pepperball unit to fire when he felt that the students were nоt dispersing properly. After receiving the order, “[a]ll of the officers lined up. The four officers lined up in a row and pointed their Pepperball units down range[, and t]hey shot into the area of the crowd.” Two officers testified that no one in the breezeway was throwing bottles.
During his deposition Nelson testified regarding the period when the police started shooting:
A. What I can recall? We were coming out the doors and I heard shots being fired.
Q. What do you mean you heard shots being fired?
A. I heard the mace bullet of hitting of the windows and I — ____
Q. At the moment something impacted your eye what was the position of *927 your body? Were you standing straight up? Were you making— were you in the process of making some kind of motion?
A. I was just walking out. That’s all I remember is walking out and when I saw that, then I got hit.
Q. So you didn’t make a motion to dive into the bushes before that?
A. No, it was instantaneous of the sound. The sounds and the feeling was instantaneous. It wasn’t like five minutes had passed. It was, boom, right then.
Nelson also presented the deposition testimony of Bridget Collins and Aicia Vittitoe. Collins testified that she was standing outside in front of the breezeway door with a group of friends, “[ijncluding Tim,” when the police opened fire. Aicia Vittitoe testified that Nelson was standing “[wjith the group” in front of the door in the brеezeway when the police started shooting. Thus, while Nelson seemed to indicate that he was not in the breezeway before the police fired, two supporting witnesses testified that he was included in the group upon which the police fired the pepperballs, making him an intended target of the shooting.
Nelson filed his lawsuit in the Eastern District of California and made eleven separate claims for relief. He brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging violations of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, and he brought eight claims for relief based on California state law grounds. Nelson claims that he lost his football scholarship after the injury, suffered temporary blindness and permanent disfigurement, and has undergone a number of corrective surgeries. After the conclusion of discovery, all defendants moved for summary judgment or partial summary judgment.
The district court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment and dismissed Nelson’s claims without hearing oral argument. The district court decided that Nelson was not an intended target of the pepperball unit because “[a]ny inference in that regard that may be drawn from the equivocal testimony of others, however, is nullified by Plaintiffs own clear version of what transpired during the period immediаtely surrounding his injury.” The district court relied on
Prosser v. Ross,
We review summary judgment de novo.
Blankenhorn v. City of Orange,
II
“The general rule in the Ninth Circuit is that a party cannot create an issue of fact by an affidavit contradicting his prior deposition testimony.”
Kennedy,
However, this rule has its limits. In Kennedy, we noted that other circuits had “urged caution in applying the rule” and concluded “that the Foster-Radobenko rule does not automatically dispose of every case in which a contradictory affidavit is introduced to explain portions of earlier testimony.” Id. at 266-67. Accordingly, Kennedy required that “before applying the Radobenko sanction, the district court must make a factual determination that the contradiction was actually a ‘sham.’ ” Id. at 267.
In addition, as we have noted in subsequent casеs, the “sham affidavit” rule does not preclude the non-moving party “ ‘from elaborating upon, explaining or clarifying prior testimony elicited by opposing counsel on deposition’ ” and that “ ‘minor inconsistencies that result from an honest discrepancy, a mistake, or newly discovered evidence afford no basis for excluding an opposition affidavit.’ ”
Scamihorn v. Gen. Truck Drivers,
The differences between the evidence tendered in this case and the paradigmatiс “sham affidavit” case are quite evident. There is, of course, no affidavit at issue here, much less the plaintiffs own affidavit. Rather, plaintiff points to deposition testimony given under oath by other percipient witnesses who had a different viеwpoint from the plaintiffs and who had not suffered head injuries sufficient to cause temporary blindness.
The rationale underlying the sham affidavit rule is that a party ought not be allowed to manufacture a bogus dispute with
himself to
defeat summary judgment. That concern does not necessarily apply when the dispute comes from the sworn deposition testimony of another witness.
See Lane v. Celotex Corp.,
The more appropriate analysis is the traditional summary judgment standard. A district court has the responsibility to construe all facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party:
[A]t this stage of the litigation, the judge does not weigh disputed evidence with respect to a disputed material fact. Nor does the judge make credibility determinations with respect to statements made in affidavits, answers to interrogatories, admissions, or depositions. These determinations are within the province of the factfinder at trial.
Dominguez-Curry v. Nevada Transp. Dep’t,
The defendants rely on
Prosser v. Ross,
Because the district court’s entry of summary judgment was predicated on this extension of the “sham affidavit” rule, we must vacate the judgment and remand for further рroceedings. We need not, and do not, reach any other issue in the case, leaving those issues to be determined in the first instance by the district court on remand.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Pepperball launchers are similar to paintball guns in both form and function, but they launch projectiles full of the chemical irritant oleoresin capsicum (“OC") rather than paint. The pepperball launchers used at the party fire the OC projectiles at a velocity of 350 to 380 feet per second. Thе launchers combine the kinetic impact of the projectile with the discomfort of the OC. Training documents submitted to the district court state that suspects "can be accurately targeted up to 30 feet away with ... enough kinetic impact to shatter the projectile and leave a welt or bruise.”
. We emphasize, however, that nothing in this opinion should be read as curbing a trial judge’s existing discretion to grant summary judgment when a party fails to create a legitimate genuinе issue of fact, either with her own affidavit or testimony from supporting witnesses.
See, e.g., Sanders v. Brown,
