In this case we are asked whether
Heck v. Humphrey,
I. BACKGROUND
Because the case was disposed of on summary judgment, we recite the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the non-moving party.
See Bircoll v. Miami-Dade County,
On March 13, 2003, plaintiff Ruth Dyer (“Dyer”) left the Ridgeport Pub, a restaurant in Naples, Florida, and, while intoxicated, sat down in the driver’s seat of a Toyota Paseo belonging to Dwayne Dyer, her then-boyfriend (and current husband). The manager of the restaurant called a cab for Dyer and also called the Collier County Sheriffs Office to ensure that she did not drive intoxicated. In fact, Dyer was not intending to drive and had called her boyfriend to come get her and drive her home to Fort Myers.
Deputy Truitt arrived on the scene, followed shortly thereafter by Deputies Tutt and Lee. They asked for Dyer’s driver’s license, but she told them that she didn’t have it, and that she was intoxicated and waiting for her boyfriend to come get her. Deputy Humann then arrived and asked Dyer to get out of the car. He attempted to perform field sobriety tests but Dyer refused, repeating that she was not driving, and saying, “Just go ahead and arrest me.” Humann then handcuffed Dyer. Dyer asked that her hands be cuffed in front because of an arm injury, but Hu-mann refused and cuffed her hands behind her back. Humann announced that Dyer was under arrest and began to read her *878 the Florida implied consent notice. 1 Dyer protested that she had not been driving and grew agitated. Truitt and Tutt stood at Dyer’s side to hold her still, while Hu-mann placed his hand over her mouth to quiet her while he read the implied consent notice. Dyer then kicked Humann in the leg. At that point, the deputies told Dyer that she was also under arrest for battery on a police officer, and they placed her in the back of the patrol car.
At this juncture Dwayne Dyer arrived on the scene. Deputy Truitt then noticed that Ruth Dyer had moved her cuffed hands from behind her back to her front, 2 to ease the pain in her arms. Humann pulled Dyer out of the patrol car and, with some struggle, recuffed her hands behind her and returned her to the patrol car. According to Dyer, during this recuffing the defendants shoved her against the car, slammed her head against the car, kneed her in the leg and lower back, and sprayed her with pepper spray. Dyer resisted during the recuffing and again kicked the deputies.
Humann used an unauthorized cuffing technique when he cuffed Dyer the second time, placing both cuffs each around both wrists, with one wrist on top of the other. Once subdued, she was placed back in the rear of the patrol car. According to Dwayne Dyer, after the altercation had ended, Humann opened the door to the patrol car and again sprayed Dyer with pepper spray.
Dyer was transported and charged with driving under the influence (“DUI”) and three counts of battery on a law enforcement officer. The DUI charge was later dropped, and one count of resisting arrest with violence was added. On August 12, 2003, she pled no contest to a single charge of resisting with violence, but because of a subsequent parole violation the verdict was changed to guilty on September 28, 2004. She was sentenced to one year of community control, followed by one year of probation.
On May 18, 2005, Dyer began the current action seeking damages from Lee, Truitt, Humann, and Tutt (the “defendants”) under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Dyer claimed that, through their use of excessive force during her arrest, the defendants deprived her of her constitutional rights under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. On July 26, 2006, the district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment, saying that Dyer’s § 1983 suit was barred by Heck v. Humphrey. This timely appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
We review
de novo
the district court’s grant of summary judgment, drawing all facts and inferences in the light most favorable to Dyer.
See Bircoll,
In Heck v. Humphrey, the Supreme Court held that
when a state prisoner seeks damages in a § 1983 suit, the district court must consider whether a judgment in favor of the plaintiff would necessarily imply the invalidity of his conviction or sentence; if it would, the complaint must be dismissed unless the plaintiff can demon *879 strate that the conviction or sentence has already been invalidated.
A state defendant is convicted of and sentenced for the crime of resisting arrest, defined as intentionally preventing a peace officer from effecting a lawful arrest .... He then brings a § 1983 action against the arresting officer seeking damages for violation of his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. In order to prevail in this § 1983 action, he would have to negate an element of the offense of which he has been convicted. Regardless of the state law concerning res judi-cata the § 1983 action will not lie.
Id.
at 487 n. 6,
This might seem at first to dispose of the issue before us, except that the use of excessive force may not necessarily make Dyer’s arrest unlawful, particularly for the DUI and battery charges.
Cf. Ivester v. State,
Here, the defendants take a different tack. They argue that, rather than negating an element of the offense, a successful § 1983 suit would establish what would have been an affirmative defense to the underlying offense, namely self-defense. Because a person is entitled to “resist the use of excessive force in making the arrest,”
State v. Holley,
The problem with this approach is that the logical necessity that is at the heart of the
Heck
opinion is not present here. It is not the case that a successful § 1983 suit by the plaintiff would
“necessarily
imply the invalidity of [her] conviction” for resisting arrest with violence.
Heck,
[A] suit for damages attributable to an allegedly unreasonable search may lie even if the challenged search produced evidence that was introduced in a state criminal trial resulting in the § 1983 plaintiffs still-outstanding conviction. Because of doctrines like independent source and inevitable discovery and especially harmless error, such a § 1983 action, even if successful, would not necessarily imply that the plaintiffs conviction was unlawful.
Id.
at 487, n. 7,
The emphasis on logical necessity is a result of the Court’s underlying concern in
Heck:
that § 1983 and the federal habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, were “on a collision course.”
Heck,
*881
Other courts to have addressed the applicability of
Heck
in situations similar to the instant case have emphasized the importance of logical necessity and the limited scope of the
Heck
holding.
See, e.g., Thore v. Howe,
In this circuit, we have previously allowed § 1983 suits for excessive force to proceed in the face of a
Heck
challenge.
See Willingham v. Loughnan,
These cases do not address the specific argument put forward here, that a successful § 1983 suit should be barred because it would establish that the plaintiff would have had an affirmative defense to the underlying charge. They do, however, underscore that courts will allow § 1983 suits to proceed when it is possible that the facts could allow a successful § 1983 suit and the underlying conviction both to stand without contradicting each other.
Turning to the case at hand, Dyer pled guilty to the following charge:
*882 On or About March 13, 2003[,] in Collier County, Florida, did knowingly and willfully resist, obstruct!,] or oppose an officer to wit: Deputy Humann or Deputy Truitt or Deputy Tutt, in the lawful execution of a legal duty, to wit: conducting an arrest, by offering or doing violence to the person of said officer, contrary to Florida Statute 843.01.[ 5 ]
Since the plaintiff pled guilty, this is the only official record of the facts underlying the plaintiffs conviction and sentence, and it does not specify any particular acts of violence, when they occurred, or even to which of the three deputies they were directed. Even assuming that we would bar a § 1983 suit if its success would imply that there would have been an affirmative defense to the underlying charge, to say that Dyer’s claim is Nec/c-barred we would then have to say, to a logical certainty, that every act of violence—every kick, punch, etc.-—-by Dyer during the entire episode is charged in the information. Furthermore, we would have to say that every one of those violent acts was an act of self-defense in response to the officers’ ' use of excessive force and therefore would have been justified. To read the information that way, when it plainly says no such thing, would be going many steps too far.
To demonstrate this, we can simply look at the beginning and at the end of the altercation. Starting with the beginning, the parties agree that Dyer’s first violent act was kicking Deputy Humann in the leg while she was being placed under arrest for DUI (a charge later dropped). The alleged excessive force did not occur until well after that point, when she had already been handcuffed, placed in the patrol car, and then removed from the patrol car. There is therefore no argument that Dyer’s initial kick could have been justified as self-defense. Even if the rest of her kicks were in direct response to the defendants’ excessive force, the conviction and sentence would still be able to stand based on that initial kick. 6
Turning to the end of the altercation, for it to be the case that a successful § 1983 suit would contradict the underlying conviction, each act of excessive force by the officers must have been met by an act of violence by Dyer, which was in turn part of the underlying conviction. 7 Therefore, so long as the last act in the altercation was one of excessive force by the police, 8 a *883 § 1983 suit on that basis would not negate the underlying conviction.
These two scenarios are examples of the more general point that there is no need, based on the information in the underlying conviction, to conclude necessarily that all of plaintiffs acts of violence were also acts of self-defense, or that each act of excessive force by the defendants was met by an act of violence by Dyer that was then charged in the information. A reasonable jury could, without too much trouble, find both that the defendants used excessive force, and that not all of plaintiffs violent acts were justified as self-defense.
9
In other words, the determination is ultimately factual, and thus we cannot say, as a matter of law, that a successful § 1983 suit would necessarily negate the underlying conviction given the facts in the record.
10
The distinction between this case and the first example in
Heck
is apposite: in the example, a finding of excessive force would have negated an element of the offense— no conviction could stand after that, as a matter of law; here, as in the second example in
Heck,
there is a version of the facts which would allow the conviction to stand. That is sufficient, under
Heck,
to allow the § 1983 suit to proceed.
11
Cf.
*884
Hughes v. Lott,
In summary, for Heck to apply, it must be the case that a successful § 1983 suit and the underlying conviction be logically contradictory. Here, that is not the case. Indeed, the factual scenario that would force the two to contradict each other requires such a tightness of events as to be almost implausible — no violent act of the plaintiff could be unprovoked and no excessive force by the defendants could go unanswered. To allow Heck to bar a § 1983 suit under these circumstances would be to stretch it well beyond its limited holding. As the Seventh Circuit stated:
Were we to uphold the application of Heck in this case, it would imply that once a person resists law enforcement, he has invited the police to inflict any reaction or retribution they choose, while forfeiting the right to sue for damages. Put another way, police subduing a suspect could use as much force as they wanted — and be shielded from accountability under civil law — as long as the prosecutor could get the plaintiff convicted on a charge of resisting. This would open the door to undesirable behavior and gut a large share of the protections provided by § 1983.
VanGilder,
III. CONCLUSION
For the forgoing reasons, we REVERSE the decision of the district court and REMAND with instructions to deny summary judgment to defendants.
Notes
. Under Florida law, those who drive in the state are deemed to have given their implied consent to physical or chemical tests for alcohol levels in their blood or breath, or risk suspension of their driving privileges. Fla. Stat. § 316.1932.
. According to the parties, this is known as "slipping.” The cuffed person steps through her cuffed arms to bring her arms from the back to the front.
. After discussing the
Preiser
decision and the conflicts between habeas and § 1983, the majority ultimately reached its conclusion in
Heck
by analogizing § 1983 to the tort of malicious prosecution.
Heck,
.
See also Wells v. Cramer,
. "Whoever knowingly and willfully resists, obstructs, or opposes any officer as defined in § 943.10(1), (2), (3), (6), (7), (8), or (9); member of the Parole Commission or any administrative aide or supervisor employed by the commission; parole and probation supervisor; county probation officer; personnel or representative of the Department of Law Enforcement; or other person legally authorized to execute process in the execution of legal process or in the lawful execution of any legal duty, by offering or doing violence to the person of such officer or legally authorized person, is guilty of a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in § 775.082, § 775.083, or § 775.084." Fla. Stat. § 843.01.
. The defendants attempt to argue that the information must also have included the kicks at Deputies Truitt and Tutt, which did not occur until later in the altercation. Even if that would change the result here—and we do not see how it would—the information charged the plaintiff in the disjunctive. She was charged with violence against Humann or Truitt or Tutt.
. If the excessive force was not met by resistance by Dyer, then that excessive force could not have been used as a defense to the underlying conviction. Therefore, that force could support a § 1983 suit without negating the underlying conviction.
. It appears that this might have been the case. According to the plaintiff's version of the facts, some of the excessive force occurred after she had been subdued, recuffed, and returned to the patrol car.
. In
Adams v. Dyer,
No. 06-1125.
. In a similar case, the Fifth Circuit held that
Heck
barred a § 1983 claim based on excessive force, because it would imply that the plaintiff could have had a self-defense justification for his underlying conviction, battery of an officer.
Hudson v. Hughes,
.Dyer focuses on the question of what events made up the "arrest” and whether some of the excessive force took place after the arrest, in which case it could not have also been the basis for her charge of resisting arrest. This is another example of how the facts as they stand in the record could be read to allow both the § 1983 suit and the underlying conviction. Thus, it is not necessary for us to reach the specific question of when the arrest was completed. Furthermore, unlike the plaintiff, we do not read the district court’s opinion as relying on a broad definition of the "arrest process” as distinct from the "arrest” (a notion for which there is no authority in the cases on excessive force or resisting arrest). Rather, the district court based its decision on its reasoning that "the facts supporting plaintiff's excessive force claim
could
have formed the basis for a defense to the resisting arrest with violence offense.”
Dyer v. Lee,
No. 05-00237,
. Because of our holding today, we need not address the separate question of whether summary judgment was improper for Deputy Lee even if it were proper for Humann, Truitt, and Tutt. Plaintiff’s § 1983 claim against Lee is derivative of the claims against the other defendants, and therefore summary judgment should be denied as to all four defendants.
