MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiff Timothy C. Nelson (“Plaintiff’) seeks damages as result of injuries he *981 sustained during law enforcement activities arising from a disturbance at an apartment complex in Davis, California. Defendants include the City of Davis, Davis Chief of Police James Hyde, and Davis Police Sergeant John Wilson. In addition, because University of California, Davis (“U.C. Davis” or “University”) police personnel assisted the City of Davis Police Department in quelling the disturbance, Plaintiff has sued U.C. Davis Officers Calvin Handy, Javier Barragan, and Mary Garcia. Plaintiff alleges that Defendants violated his constitutional rights by subjecting him to unreasonable seizure in violation of both the United States and California Constitutions. Plaintiff further asserts constitutional equal protection claims, as well as additional common law and statutory claims sounding under California law.
By Memorandum and Order dated September 19, 2007, this Court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants on the basis of Plaintiffs own version of events. Plaintiff appealed that decision and the Ninth Circuit reversed, citing potentially conflicting evidence from other witnesses. Following remand of the matter back to this Court for further proceedings, Defendants have filed three renewed Motions for Summary judgment, which alternatively request partial summary judgment of certain issues. The motions are brought on behalf of 1) the City of Davis Defendants (Davis, Hyde and Wilson); 2) the U.C. Davis Defendants with the exception of Calvin Chang (Handy, Barragan and Garcia) and 3) Defendant Calvin Chang, individually.
For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ Motions will be granted in part and denied in part. 1
BACKGROUND
On the evening of April 16, 2004, following the annual Picnic Day festivities held at U.C. Davis, as many as a thousand young people gathered at the Sterling Apartment complex on Cantrill Drive in Davis. One resident of the complex described the gathering as “the biggest party in history”. Plaintiff, a twenty-year old college student, was in attendance.
The City of Davis police became aware of the party after noticing virtually gridlocked traffic along Cantrill Drive, and upon observation of illegally parked cars on both sides of the street for almost its entire length. The police station itself was located near the apartments at the corner of Cantrill and Fifth Street, and the sergeant on duty, Defendant Wilson, dispatched police officers to begin issuing parking citations to clear the improperly parked vehicles. The police also checked the party itself, which Sergeant Wilson described as both unusually large and loud.
Underage alcohol violations were observed, and Wilson claims he observed individuals trying to vandalize vehicles by rocking them back and forth. One resident described a chair being thrown from an upper story window. After apprising an agent for the complex owner of the situation, Sergeant Wilson was asked shortly before midnight to request that all non-residents leave the premises under penalty of trespass.
*982 The crowd did not respond to the police’s initial request to disperse. Sergeant Wilson ordered two of the officers, who had been on foot, to go back to the nearby-station and return with their patrol vehicles for an additional police presence. As one of the vehicles drove through the complex, a group of three to four-story buildings situated on a rectangular lot, Wilson observed partygoers surround the vehicle and begin throwing bottles. Although the patrol vehicle activated its emergency lights and siren, Wilson states that it was unable to exit the complex absent rescue intervention from both himself and other officers. Wilson then called for backup as both he and the officers retreated back to the driveway at entrance to the complex.
About forty officers arrived at the Davis Police station in response to Defendant Wilson’s request, including Lieutenant Darren Patel, who upon arrival assumed the role of incident commander. U.C. Davis police officers, including Defendants Chang, Barragan and Garcia, were among those who responded. Unlike their City counterparts, the U.C. Davis officers had pepperball launchers in their arsenal for crowd dispersal. Pepperball launchers are dual purpose weapons that shoot round plastic balls filled with Oleoresin Capsicum (“OC”) powder, a substance similar to pepperspray. Such launchers combine the shock of kinetic impact (similar to paint-balls) with the sensory discomfort associated with pepperspray. They are designed to break apart and disperse the OC powder upon impact.
Pepperball launchers can be aimed reliably to subdue a target suspect at distances up to thirty feet. After that point, however, it is undisputed that their trajectory becomes less reliable. (See PL’s Undisputed Fact (“PUF”) No. 16). According to Plaintiffs expert, Roger Clark, pepperballs should not be fired into occupied areas at distances of more than thirty feet because of the risk of striking unintended targets in vulnerable body areas. PL’s Ex. 25, Clark Dep., 24:ll-27:5. 2 Pepperball launchers may, however, be launched at hard building surfaces like walls, ceilings, doors and windows within a hundred-foot radius for effective dispersal, or “area saturation”, of the OC to the surrounding vicinity. Within these parameters, pepperball use in crowd control and riot situations meets Peace Officer Standards Training (“POST”) guidelines, and further was authorized by U.C. Davis Police Department policy.
Following the officers’ initial retreat, the evidence shows that the Sterling party careened further out of control. Sergeant Wilson could hear individuals shouting “fuck the police” as the officers regrouped at the station. At about 1:00 a.m., after meeting together to form a dispersal plan, between thirty and forty officers proceeded on foot to the southwest corner of the apartment complex in full riot gear (helmets, shields and batons). Four U.C. Davis officers, including Defendants Chang, Garcia and Barragan, as well as another individual, Officer Jones, carried pepperball launchers. Defendants claim that crowd dispersal orders were given, although it appears undisputed that the party was loud the police had no means with which to mechanically amplify any such verbal commands. See PUF No. 6.
After observing the police, Plaintiff testified that he retreated inside one of the complex buildings to a friend’s apartment. Both officers and partygoers attest to the *983 fact that bottles and other objects were being thrown at the police from various vantage points at this juncture, including upper story balconies. At least one officer was injured by a thrown bottle, and several others reported only narrowly being missed on numerous occasions.
There is no dispute that the officer’s initial sweep through the complex in riot gear failed to adequately disperse the partygoers. Bottles and other debris continued to be thrown at the police. A second sweep was thereafter ordered and began from the southwest corner of the complex in front of a breezeway. During that second sweep, officers observed a group of between fifteen and twenty individuals congregated at the back of that southwest breezeway. While Officer Chang claims that bottles were being thrown from the rear of that group, (see Chang Deck, ¶ 14) two of the other officers present, Defendants Garcia and Barragan, testified that they observed no one in the breezeway throw anything at the police. See PL’s Ex. 16, Garcia Dep., 103:10-12; Ex. 17, Barragan Dep., 58:2-18, 66: 2-4 (did not throw bottles, did not come at police; just stood there). Garcia and Barragan’s testimony in this regard is corroborated by one of the individuals present in the breezeway, Lee Lauduski. See PL’s Ex. 6, Lauduski Dep., 26-3-12. In addition, it is undisputed that Plaintiff himself threw nothing at the police. Def. Chang’s Undisputed Fact (“UF”) No. 38.
According to Officer Wilson, after twice ordering those present in the breezeway to disperse without success, 3 he ordered the three U.C. Davis officers with operable pepperball launchers (Chang, Bairagan, and Garcia) to fire. 4 Estimates of the distance between the officers, at the time they began firing, and the crowd in the breezeway range from 45 to 150 feet. Pi’s Ex. 8, Dep. of Alicia Vittitoe, 42:6-19 (50 feet); PL’s Ex. 19; Dep. of Lopamudra Sengupta, 38:17-25 (100 to 150 feet); Pi’s Ex. 10, Dep. of Defendant Wilson, 70:4-13 (45 feet).
It is undisputed that Chang, Garcia and Barragan all fired pepperballs into the breezeway. The officers aimed both at hard surfaces adjacent to the breezeway (the doors, ceiling and walls) and at individuals who they observed throwing bottles (from below the shoulders).
While Plaintiff testified that he remained inside in an interior hallway until just before he was hit by a pepperball as he attempted to exit the building, other witnesses place Plaintiff as being outside in the breezeway for a significant period of time before any pepperballs were launched. Bridget Collins testified, for example, that she was outside with Plaintiff in different parts of the breezeway area for close to thirty minutes before he was shot. PL’s Ex. 2, Collins Dep., 43:13-52:15. Bryan Lee-Lauduski and Alicia Vittitoe appear to concur with that assessment. PL’s Ex. 6, Lee-Lauduski Dep. 13:5-19:22; PL’s Ex. 8, Vittitoe Dep., 24:15-25:9.
As a result of being struck in the left eye by one of the pepperballs, Plaintiff expexdenced temporary blindness in that eye and alleges a permanent loss of visual acuity. He had to undergo multiple surgeries to repair the ocular injury he sustained.
Despite complaints lodged on Plaintiffs behalf against both the City of Davis and the University, no independent investiga *984 tion of the incident was undertaken. Defendant Hyde, as Chief of Police for the City of Davis, approved of the decision not to accept Plaintiffs complaint and relied solely on the assurances of his staff in not ordering that a Use of Force Report be prepared. Pl.’s Ex. 14, Dep. of Chief Hyde, pp. 52-57. In addition, the University’s Use of Force Review was based solely on the officers’ written reports made in conjunction with the incident. Pl.’s Ex. 21, Handy Dep., 34:7-42:14, 95:17-24.
STANDARD
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide for summary judgment when “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). One of the principal purposes of Rule 56 is to dispose of factually unsupported claims or defenses.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Rule 56 also allows a court to grant summary adjudication on part of a claim or defense.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a) (“A party seeking to recover upon a claim ... may ... move ... for a summary judgment in the party’s favor upon all or any part thereof.”);
see also Allstate Ins. Co. v. Madan,
The standard that applies to a motion for summary adjudication is the same as that which applies to a motion for summary judgment. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a), 56(c);
Mora v. Chem-Tronics,
In considering a motion for summary judgment, the court must examine all the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
U.S. v. Diebold, Inc.,
ANALYSIS
A. Unreasonable Seizure Under The Fourth Amendment
1. Whether the requisite seizure occurred
Plaintiffs First and Fourth Claims for Relief assert his right to be free from unreasonable seizures under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 13 of the California Constitution, respectively. The Court must necessarily initially determine whether any “seizure” has occurred giving rise to constitutional protection. 5
*985
“A seizure triggering the Fourth Amendment’s protections occurs only when government actors have, by means of physical force or show of authority, in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen.”
Graham v. Connor,
“[A] Fourth Amendment seizure does not occur whenever there is a govern-mentally caused termination of an individual’s freedom of movement (the innocent passerby), or even whenever there is a governmentally caused and govern-mentally desired termination of an individual’s freedom of movement (the fleeing felon), but only when there is a governmental termination of freedom of movement through means intentionally applied.”
Id.
To constitute a seizure, “the taking or detention itself must be willful. This is implicit in the word ‘seizure,’ which can hardly be applied to an unknowing act.” Id. (internal quotations omitted).
In this case, being struck in the eye by a pepperball clearly constituted an application of force which terminated Plaintiffs movement. The critical issue in determining whether a seizure occurred for Fourth Amendment purposes rests instead with whether or not Plaintiff was an intended object of the fusillade of pepperball bullets launched into the apartment breezeway.
While Plaintiffs own testimony indicates that he literally entered the breezeway as the projectiles were fired and was struck as soon as he exited the double doors leading from an interior hallway into the breezeway (see Pl.’s Dep., 104:18-23, 107:4-109:13), the testimony of other witnesses, as discussed above, suggests that Plaintiff had been outside in the group congregated in the breezeway for some time before the pepperballs at issue were launched. That testimony, if given credence, places Plaintiff squarely within the group of individuals in the breezeway targeted by the police officers. Whether it was to stop certain individuals who may have been throwing bottles at the police or simply to target the walls and ceiling around the group in order to disperse the crowd by way of “area saturation” with OC spray, a reasonable inference can be drawn that the officers intended to fire into the group of which Plaintiff may have been a part.
In determining the critical issue of the officer’s intent in launching the pepperballs, the proper inquiry must be whether any rational trier of fact could conclude that Plaintiff was an intended object of the police action. In assessing the propriety of summary judgment, the court must credit all inferences supported by Plaintiffs evidence.
Blankenhorn v. City of Orange,
If indeed Plaintiff was a member of the breezeway group targeted by the police, as the evidence arguably suggests, the so-called “bystander” line of cases may be inapplicable. In
Landol-Rivera v. Cruz Cosme,
Similarly, in
Rucker v. Harford County,
In
Fisher v. City of Memphis,
Also instructive, and perhaps the closest case factually to the matter at bar, is the Eastern District of Washington’s decision in
Logan v. City of Pullman,
While the Logan opinion is clear in indicating that those present on the first floor, who were not within the group of fighting individuals, were not deliberately targeted for purposes of a Fourth Amendment seizure, it also appears that the group against whom spraying was directed included both fighting and non-fighting students (the *987 case described the first floor “melee” as involving six to eight people along with twenty to thirty others, id. at 1256). Consequently this Court reads Logan as standing for the proposition that OC intentionally directed towards a group of individuals may indeed effectuate a seizure of all those present in the group to whom the dispersal is aimed. That is the very situation present here.
Given evidence indicating that Plaintiff in this case was present in a group intentionally targeted by the Defendant Officers with pepperspray launchers, the Court cannot conclude as a matter of law that no seizure of Plaintiff was effectuated here.
The fact that the pepperspray bullet that hit Plaintiff necessarily came from only one of the officers does not, as suggested by Defendant Chang, necessarily absolve everyone from liability since Plaintiff cannot show which officer fired the bullet that struck him. Excessive force liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 may be predicated on an officer’s “integral participation” in the alleged violation.
Blankenhorn v. City of
Orange,
2. Whether unreasonable force was employed
Even though the Court has concluded that Defendants cannot avoid potential liability under the Fourth Amendment on grounds that no qualifying seizure occurred, a seizure still does not qualify for Fourth Amendment protection unless it also deemed unreasonable. This is because the Fourth Amendment permits police officers to use such force as is “objectively reasonable in light of the facts and circumstances confronting them.”
Graham v. Connor,
According to Defendants, the use of pepperball launchers was objectively reasonable because the police was faced with a large crowd of partygoers, some of whom were throwing bottles and other items at the police.
Plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that various disputed issues preclude the grant of summary judgment as to excessive force, including the propriety of launching pepperballs against a group of individuals located beyond the accurate target range of the weapons, and evidence suggesting that proper crowd dispersal orders may not have been issued before the fusillade began.
Defendants’ request that the issue of excessive force be determined by the Court through summary judgment must, as a fundamental matter, be considered narrowly given clear precedent to the effect that unreasonable force claims are generally questions of fact for the jury.
Hervey v. Estes,
As indicated above, it is undisputed that the ability to reliably aim a pepperball launcher decreases once the distance to an intended target exceeds thirty feet. PUF No. 16. Officer Chang himself admitted at deposition that accuracy of fired pepper-balls decreases after that point. Pl.’s Ex. 15, Chang Dep., 26:22-27:9.
Defendant Garcia, another officer who launched pepperballs on the evening in question, agreed that the ability to strike an individual safely at center mass decreases after thirty feet, explaining that at such distance one “would not have any precision to striking what you were trying to hit.” Pi’s Ex. 16, Garcia Dep., 27:10-29:9. Plaintiff has also produced expert testimony that pepperballs should not be fired towards individuals beyond that thirty-foot range because the anticipated trajectory of the bullet degrades beyond that point, with an increased risk of striking vulnerable body parts. Pl.’s Ex. 25. Clark Dep., 24:11-27:5.
Defendant Wilson, the officer who ordered the volley of pepperballs that resulted in Plaintiffs injury, himself provides an estimate of approximately forty-five feet between the officers and the group congregated in the breezeway. Pl.’s Ex. 10, Dep. of Defendant Wilson, 70:4-13 (45 feet) Other evidence suggests that the distance in fact approached 150 feet. See Pl.’s Ex. 19; Dep. of Lopamudra Sengupta, 38:17-25. Since a distance outside the thirty-foot accurate target range of the weapons appears virtually undisputed, Plaintiff argues that the objective effect of the officers’ intentional discharge of their launchers at distances outside that range was to create a risk of striking members of the group, including Plaintiff.
Even though Defendants claim that the weapons can be discharged at greater distances against fixed objects like walls and ceilings in order to achieve “area saturation”, the dispute concerning the propriety of aiming such weapons towards a group under the circumstances still raises triable issues of fact not amenable to disposition on summary judgment. Additional areas of factual dispute include whether anyone in the breezeway group was even throwing bottles at the officers in the first place, thereby calling into question the propriety of firing the potentially lethal pepperballs in the first place into a crowd that may have included Plaintiff. 6 Here, at least some testimony suggests that the group in the breezeway was no more than a frightened group of non-threatening students trying to leave the party. See PUF No. 10.
Chemical irritants like the OC used in pepperballs have been deemed to constitute injuring force that should not be used against passive/non-violent subjects.
Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt,
Further, to the extent that some in the breezeway group (although not apparently
*989
the Plaintiff) deny that they even were able to hear dispersal orders from the police before they resorted to firing the pepperballs, this also creates an issue of fact with respect to the reasonableness of the force employed that cannot be resolved at the present time as a matter of law.
See, e.g., Deorle v. Rutherford,
In sum, given all the factual issues presented by this case, the Court is unable to determine that the force employed here was not excessive as a matter of law. Consequently, Plaintiffs Fourth Amendment claim for unreasonable seizure, as well as his corresponding claim under the California Constitution, as set forth in Plaintiffs First and Fourth Claims for Relief, respectively, survive summary judgment.
B. Qualified Immunity
The qualified immunity doctrine shields public officials liability for the performance of their discretionary functions unless the official violates a clearly established constitutional norm of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Qualified immunity consequently protects an officer from suit for a decision that, even if constitutionally deficient, reasonably misapprehends the law governing the circumstances with which the officer is confronted.
See, e.g., Malley v. Briggs,
In
Saucier v. Katz,
Here, as the preceding sections of this Memorandum and Order already indicate, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff may well allow the trier of fact to determine that Defendant Officers fired their pepperball launchers into a crowd of non-threatening students in the apartment breezeway, without affording adequate warnings. This Court has already found that such conduct may constitute a constitutional violation under the Fourth Amendment.
The dispositive question therefore becomes whether the right abridged by that violation was “clearly established.” To the extent that the force used was excessive, the right of non-dangerous subjects to be free from injuring force has long been clear.
See, e.g., Deorle v. Rutherford,
C. Due Process Claims
In addition to claims under the Fourth Amendment as discussed above, Plaintiff argues, in his Second and Fifth Claims for Relief, that his substantive due process rights were also violated by Defendants’ use of force, citing the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, § 7(a) of the California Constitution.
The concept of substantive due process protects against arbitrary governmental action lacking
“any
reasonable justification in the service of a legitimate governmental objective.”
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
As a preliminary matter, it appears that a due process analysis may well be unnecessary here, since only “constitutional claims asserted by persons ... who were not intended targets of an attempted official seizure are adjudged according to substantive due process norms.”
Claybrook v. Birchwell,
Even if Plaintiff was not an intended target of the officers’ pepperball launchers, however, Defendants’ conduct still cannot be deemed egregious and/or outrageous, as it must in order to trigger due process liability. Where, as here, police officers are called in to restore order in a rapidly evolving, tense environment fraught with potential danger, any due process violation turns on “whether force was applied in a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline or maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.”
County of Sacramento v. Lewis, supra,
Plaintiff argues that the officers’ conduct in attempting to disperse the crowd was deliberately indifferent. He alleges that “firing indiscriminately into a crowd was outrageous”, and that the police had time to consider other means available at their disposal before resorting to the use of pepperball bullets. Plaintiffs position that this equates into egregious behavior sufficient to shock the conscience simply cannot be maintained under the circumstances. Initial verbal requests for dispersal went unheeded, and the size of the crowd, violence in the form of throwing objects and vandalizing property, and threats against the police officers (chants of “fuck the cops”) made it necessary for *991 the police to regroup before returning in force and in riot gear to quell what was rapidly devolving into full-blown riot conditions. Launching pepperballs, under those circumstances, even if ultimately misplaced, simply does not amount to the egregious indifference needed to state a due process claim. Consequently, Plaintiffs claim under the Fourteenth Amendment must fail, either because it is unavailable in the first place or because it lacks merit on a substantive basis.
Moreover, given the fact that the California Supreme Court has held that damages claims cannot be stated for violations of Article I, § 7(a) of the California Constitution in any event, Plaintiffs due process claim founded on the state constitution is also unavailing.
Katzberg v. Regents,
D.Violation of Equal Protection Rights
Plaintiffs Third and Sixth Claims for Relief are asserted on equal protection grounds, also pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, § 7(a) of the California Constitution. This claim is based on Plaintiffs contention that the police shot him in the eye with a pepperball “due to the fact that he was a University student.” See Defendant Chang’s Undisputed Fact No. 47.
Because Plaintiffs Oppositions to Defendants’ Motions concede any cause of action premised on equal protection, stating that he does not oppose dismissal of either the Third and Sixth Claims for relief (see, e.g., Pl.’s Opp. to Def. Chang’s Mot. for Summ. J., p. 25, n. 2) summary adjudication as to those claims will consequently be granted.
E.Supervisory/Moneii Liability
Defendant Calvin Handy, as Chief of the University of California, Davis Police Department, seeks summary adjudication as to any claims against him on grounds of negligent hiring, training supervision, and/or discipline, as set forth in the Plaintiffs Eleventh Claim for Relief.
Defendant Handy further seeks summary adjudication as to any claim that he is otherwise liable for the alleged constitutional violations of his subordinates. Defendant James Hyde, as Chief of the City of Davis Police Department, requests similar relief. In addition, The City of Davis, which has also been named as a Defendant by Plaintiff, argues that there is no basis for any liability against it, either.
The argument with respect to Handy’s liability under the Eleventh Claim for Relief is easily disposed of since Plaintiffs Opposition papers unequivocally express Plaintiffs agreement to dismiss that claim. See Pl.’s Opp. to Def. Handy’s Mot. for Summ. J., p. 26, n. 2.
Defendant Handy, however, as well as Chief Hyde, may still incur personal liability if they are found to have ratified the use of excessive force, even if they did not otherwise participate in any wrongful activity.
Larez v. City of Los Angeles,
Plaintiff has produced evidence that a complaint was submitted to the University Police Department following his injury in the subject incident. Although
*992
Defendant Handy ostensibly ordered that an investigation be conducted, none of the officers who fired the pepperballs were questioned; instead, according to Plaintiff, the incident report itself was accepted without any further internal investigation.
See
PUF 27-29. Since Handy knew that pepperballs could not be accurately launched at distances greater than thirty feet (Pl.’s Exh. 21, Handy Dep., 74:21-76:3), Plaintiff argues that Handy in effect ratified what he knew, or should have known, amounted to excessive force. Evidence that a supervisor failed to act on information which supported an inference of unconstitutional conduct is sufficient to defeat summary judgment.
Watkins v. City of Oakland,
Defendant Hyde and the City of Davis fare no better. Hyde appears to have approved of the decision not to order a citizen’s complaint investigation into the allegations Plaintiff lodged against the City (see Pl.’s Exh. 14, Hyde Dep., 54:7-56:15), despite the fact that two of the students present at the time of Plaintiffs injury, Bridget Collins and Bryan LeeLaudusky, went to the Davis Police Department and submitted statements to the effect that Plaintiff had simply been trying to leave the party and had done nothing to threaten the police at the time he was shot. PUF No. 23.
That ratification on Hyde’s part is enough to support an inference that the allegedly unconstitutional conduct was consistent with the policies of the City of Davis itself.
St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
F. Causes of Action Premised Upon State Law
Pendent state claims asserted by Plaintiff include claims for assault and battery, negligence, violation of the Bane Act, California Civil Code § 52.1, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Court’s findings with respect to potential Fourth Amendment liability for unreasonable seizure largely mandate that Defendants’ requests for summary adjudication as to the state claims fail as well.
Turning first to assault and battery, it is clear that an assault and battery claim against a police officer requires that unreasonable force be established.
Edson v. City of Anaheim,
See, e.g., Susag v. City of Lake Forest,
Second, Plaintiffs negligence claim requires an assessment of whether the officers used reasonable care in quelling the subject disturbance.
Miller v. Kennedy,
Third, with respect to California Civil Code § 52.1, that section enables individuals to sue for damages as a result of constitutional violations.
Reynolds v. County of San Diego,
The analogous nature of the state law claims to violations sounding under the Fourth Amendment, however, does not extend to Plaintiffs claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. Under California law, the tort of intentional infliction requires Defendants to have engaged in extreme and outrageous conduct with the intention of causing severe emotional distress.
Potter v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.,
Finally, while Defendants also argue that statutory immunity under California Government Code § 820.2 should also apply to bar Plaintiffs state law claims, that contention too is misplaced. Section 820.2 shields governmental employees from liability for exercising their discretionary functions. The discretionary immunity conferred by the statute, however, is reserved for basic policy-level decision-making.
Johnson v. State,
See Bell v. State of California,
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment (Docket Nos. 136, 137 and 139) are DENIED. To the extent that said motions also request summary adjudication as to certain claims, however, they are GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. 8 Summary adjudication is granted as to the Second, Third, Sixth, Ninth and Eleventh Claims for Relief.
*994 Defendants’ requests for summary adjudication are, however, otherwise denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In conjunction with their Motions, the attorneys for Defendant Chang and the other U.C. Davis Defendants have asked the Court to take judicial notice, pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 201, of certain documents filed in support of the initial round of summary judgment motions filed in this case, along with the Court’s prior Order of September 21, 2007 and the Ninth Circuit’s subsequent decision of July 7, 2009. Those requests are unopposed and well-taken, and are accordingly granted.
. For purposes of summary judgment, Defendants’ objections to the Clark deposition are hereby overruled. As discussed infra, Clark’s testimony with respect to the accurate range of the pepperball launchers appears to be corroborated by at least two of the officers who used the launchers during the incident in question.
. This testimony is countered from students present in the breezeway who claim neither heard nor understood that any such commands have been given before the launchers were employed. See PUF No. 12.
. The launcher of the Officer Jones, the fourth U.C. Davis Police officer equipped with the weapon, was apparently inoperable.
. Because the instant federal constitutional protections parallel those afforded by state constitution in this regard, the discussion that follows relies upon Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.
See Sanchez v. County of San Diego,
. Here, the fact that evidence has been proffered suggesting that no one in the breezeway group had been throwing bottles distinguishes the present case from the circumstances confronted by the police in
Jackson v. Bremerton,
. While Defendants argue that the Ninth Circuit's decision in
Boyd v. Benton,
. Because oral argument will not be of material assistance, the Court ordered this matter submitted on the briefing. E.D. Cal. Local Rule 230(g).
