Appellee Nathan Nolin filed a complaint against Appellant Officer Christopher Is-bell and other defendants not involved in this appeal. The complaint alleged that Appellant violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Alabama law because he unlawfully arrested and detained Appellee and used excessive force in effеctuating Appellee’s arrest. Appellant contends the district court erred in denying his request for summary judgment based on qualified and discretionary immunity or the failure to establish a constitutional violation. We agree the district court erred and reverse in part.
I. BACKGROUND
On May 10, 1997, Appellee, then 17 years old, assisted his friends in erecting and disassembling bаnd equipment during the May Day festival in Springville, Alabama. During the disassembly, Appellee began wrestling with a friend, Shawn Pe-dee. At one point, Appellee landed on top of Pedee on a friend’s car and dragged Pedee by the leg to the ground. A bystander instructed them to stop roughhousing and they did so, apparently to return to work.
Meanwhile, Appellant Officer Isbell and Chief Black were dining in the Springville Café. A waitress in the restaurant saw the commotion and shouted “fight.” Appellant and Chief Black saw Appellee and Pedee struggling in the parking lot. They
The crux of the dispute centers around Appellant’s use of force in arresting Appel-lee. Appellee claims Appellant grabbed him from behind by the shoulder and wrist, threw him against a van three or four feet away, kneed him in the baсk and pushed his head into the side of the van, searched his groin area in an uncomfortable manner, and handcuffed him. Appel-lee maintains he suffered bruising to his forehead, chest, and wrists, although he admits the bruises disappeared quickly and he did not seek medical treatment.
II. DISCUSSION
Appellant argues the district court erred in denying his motion for summary judgment. Appellant based his motion on the premise that the application of de minimis force during an arrest does not, as a matter of law, constitute excessive force and on the related theories of qualified and discretionary immunity. We may exercise jurisdiction over all of these arguments. See Sheth v. Webster,
A. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 — Excessive Force
Appellant argues the district court erred in denying his motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Qualified immunity рrotects from civil liability government officials who perform discretionary functions if the conduct of the officials does not violate “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Appellant contends he used an amount of force insufficient as a matter of law to support an excessive force claim even under Appellee’s version of the events. This Court routinely applied the principle of de minimis force before the Supreme Court’s decision in Graham v. Connor,
[o]nce [the plaintiff] was handcuffed and taken outside, no further forсe was needed. But, even though pushing [the plaintiff] against the wall might have been unnecessary, this pushing was not plainly unlawful. When [the officer] acted, the case law on excessive force looked to, among other things, the need for force, the amount of force used, and the injury inflicted. That the amount of force [the offiсer] used, even if unnecessary, was enough to violate the law was not plain; reasonable doubt existed, and still exists, on whether this amount of unnecessary force was unlawful.
In Gold, the defendant officer arrested the plaintiff for disorderly conduct, which consisted mainly of disrespectful comments to the officer, and placed him in hаndcuffs. The plaintiff complained that the officer had applied the handcuffs too tightly and had refused to loosen them for more than twenty minutes. In granting qualified immunity to the officer, this Court stated that
the facts viewed in the light most favorable to [the plaintiff] show that [the plaintiff] experienced pain from the handcuffs for roughly twenty minutes and that [the plaintiff] suffered only skin abrasions for which he did not seek medical treatment. The minor nature of this injury reflects that minimal force was used to apply the handcuffs. Certainly, these circumstances would not “inevitably lead” a reasonable officer in the officers’ positions to conclude that the force used to apply the handcuffs was unlawful.
Finally, in Jones, the officer “slammed” the plaintiff against a wall, “kicked his legs apart, required him to raise his arms above his head, and pulled his wallet from his pants.”
From the foregoing cases, we conclude this Circuit has established the principle that the application of de minimis force, without more, will not support а claim for excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment. The district court disagreed, determining it should ignore the binding authority of three separate opinions of this Court based on its view that those opinions failed to follow an earlier, controlling case. In doing so, the district court erred in rejecting the de minimis force prinсiple as merely “a holdover from the Eleventh Circuit’s pr e-Graham, case-law,” Nolin v. Town of Springville,
The district court believed that an opinion of this Court in the wake of Graham, Ortega v. Schramm,
The district court maintained that Ortega foreclosed future reliance on a de min-imis force principle because the officers in Ortega used little force and this Court upheld a jury verdict in favor of thе plaintiffs. We conclude the district court created tension where none existed. The Ortega Court merely recited the factors mentioned by the Supreme Court in Graham and never considered a de minimis force principle. The Ortega opinion does not address the issue of whether the force used was de minimis. Perhaps the Ortega Court concluded the amount of force used, which included kicking and pointing weaрons, rose above a certain level; perhaps the parties, in the early stages of the development of the Graham standard, did not raise the issue; or perhaps, most likely, the Court relied on the notion that the police illegally performed the initial search and arrest such that the use of any force was unlawful. For whatever reason, the Ortega Court did not reach, much less decide, the idea of a de minimis force principle. It merely cited the Supreme Court’s embryonic formulation of what the reasonableness determination should “include,” not to what it should be limited. See Graham v. Connor,
Both Thornton and Sheth involved more force than Appellant used in this case. More tellingly, hоwever, both cases also involved arrests without probable cause in which any use of force was inappropriate. This fact distinguishes those cases from Post and its progeny. In fact, Sheth explicitly recognized the validity of Post, Gold, and Jones and distinguished its factual setting to bring the case within Ortega. See Sheth,
In short, the district court misinterpreted the cases of this Court by concluding that Ortega foreclosed a de minim-is force principle. We again hold, as we did in a line of cases beginning with Post, that a minimal amount of force and injury, as present in the facts of this case,
B. State Law Claims
The district court declined to dismiss Appellee’s state law tort claims for assault and battery-and false imprisonment. At the time the distriсt court made this decision it believed that federal jurisdiction remained. At this time, the case retains no independent basis for federal jurisdiction and the only claims that remain deal with complex questions of discretionary function immunity in the state of Alabama. A proper resolution of the two state law causes of action will rеquire a careful analysis of Alabama law — something the courts of Alabama are in the best position to undertake and, for reasons of federalism, should undertake in this sensitive area. We conclude that the district court should dismiss the state law claims so that Appellee may pursue them in state court.
III. CONCLUSION
Appellee’s allegations failed to support a claim for excessive force and the district
REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Sheth also establishes our ability to exercise jurisdiction over Appellant's challenge to the denial of discretionary function immunity with respect to Appellee's state law claims. The Sheth Court decided, as a matter of first impression, that an Appellant may take an interlocutory aрpeal from the denial of discretionary function immunity under Alabama law. See Sheth,
. Graham v. Connor primarily stands for the proposition that a § 1983 claim based on excessive force in the context of an "arrest or investigatory stop of a free citizen” arises from the Fourth Amendment.
The Graham Court did not establish a precise test for identifying excessive force but announced that the test looked to reasonableness and that "the calculus of reasonableness must embody allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-secоnd judgments — in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving — about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation.” Id. at 396-97,
. We reject the district court's suggestion that we should disregard Post because it relied on the pr e-Graham case of Leslie v. Ingram,
. As described above, Appellant, pursuant to what the district court found to be a lawful arrest, merely grabbed Appellee and shoved him a few feet against a vehicle, pushed Appellant’s knee into Appellee’s back and Appel-lee's head against the van, searched Appel-lee's groin area in an uncomfortable manner, and placed Appellee in handcuffs. Appellee had minor bruising which quickly disappeared without treatment. This factual recitation by Appellee falls well within the ambit of the de minimis force principle of Post, Gold, and Jones. In fact, the facts sound little different from the minimal amount of force and injury involved in a typical arrest.
