Appellant Marcus Scales brought suit against the District of Columbia and Officer Eric Young alleging (1) assault; (2) battery; (3) negligence; (4) negligence
per se;
(5) false arrest; (6) false imprisonment; (7) intentional infliction of emotional distress; (8) negligent infliction of emotional distress; (9) negligent hiring, training, supervision and retention; (10) excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment ■ and 42 U.S.C. § 1983; (11) violation of the Fourteenth Amendment through deprivation of liberty; and (12) negligent misuse of weapons. The trial court denied Officer Young’s motion to
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dismiss the Fourth-Amendment-based § 1988 claim against him on the grounds of qualified immunity, but this court reversed in an interlocutory appeal.
Young v. Scales,
I.
In the interlocutory appeal, the court summarized the facts in the light most favorable to Seales:
Shortly after midnight on August 5, 2001, appellee Marcus Scales approached the driver’s side of a parked auto (not a police vehicle) in which appellant Eric Young, a police officer off duty and out of uniform, was seated behind the steering wheel with his window open. Scales did not know Young but did know the woman (the other occupant of the car) sitting in the front passenger seat. He knew her to be a prostitute. Scales spoke to the woman and told her to get out of the car. Then, without speaking a word to Young, he commenced to stab him with a pocket knife which had a blade four to five inches long. Scales stabbed Officer Young several times, wounding him in the neck/face and leg. Nevertheless, Young was able to get out of the car and chase Scales around the auto. During the chase, he then called out to a passing motorist that he was an off-duty police officer and asked that person to contact 911. Young ordered Scales to drop his knife and “stay right there,” showing his badge and drawing his pistol. Scales dropped his knife but advised • Young that he had caught him with a prostitute. Therefore, he said he was going his way and suggested Young go his way. Young again ordered Scales to stay where he was, but Scales cursed Young and recounted later in his pretrial deposition: “I told him ... kill me — not you’re going to have to kill me, kill me.... I turned my back on him and walked away and that’s when I felt the shot in my right buttocks.” Young had fired twice, striking Scales once. Scales was then placed under arrest.
Young, supra,
Scales claims that he stabbed Officer Young in self-defense because he saw Officer Young reaching for a gun. In Young, the court was “unable to conclude that a reasonable jury under these particular circumstances could conclude that Scales was acting in self-defense when he commenced stabbing [Officer] Young.” Id. at 343. Moreover, because Officer Young had probable cause to believe that Scales posed a significant threat to the physical safety of others, the court was “not persuaded ... that it was either unreasonable or unnecessary for Young to fire at Scales to prevent his escape.” Id. at 344.
On remand, the trial court apparently construed the ruling that it was neither *726 unreasonable nor unnecessary for Officer Young to fire at Scales to prevent him from escaping to mean that none of Scales’s claims should proceed. Concluding that when the court in Young discussed the allegations of excessive force used by Officer Young, it was “not talking about qualified immunity,” but rather “talking about ... the reasonableness of the force used by the officer,” the trial court found that the appellate court’s conclusion in Officer Young’s favor constituted a “finding that the officer’s actions [were] reasonable.” The trial court considered itself bound by this “finding,” and therefore granted summary judgment in favor of the District on each of Scales’s claims.
II.
The sole question we must answer in this appeal is the extent to which our decision in Young barred Scales from continuing to pursue his claims. He argues that none of his claims is barred by that opinion, and that the trial court erred by taking the opinion to be binding in any respect other than the determination that Officer Young himself was entitled to qualified immunity. As explained below, we agree with Scales that the effect of Young is limited, but it is not quite so limited as he claims.
A. Standard of Review
This court reviews grants of summary judgment motions
de novo
and applies the same standards as the trial court.
Magwood v. Giddings,
if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This court conducts an independent review of the record, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party ... Once a moving party makes an initial showing that the record presents no genuine issue of material fact, the burden shifts to the opposing party to set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.
Id.
B. Young’s Impact on Scales’s Fourth Amendment and § 1983 Claim
In
Young,
the issue in the interlocutory appeal was whether Officer Young would enjoy qualified immunity for his actions, particularly that of shooting Scales.
2
The trial court interpreted this
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decision to be making a
finding of fact
“that the officer’s actions [were] reasonable.” This court, however, in addressing Scales § 1983 claim for excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment in
Young,
did not resolve any issue of material fact, but rather took Scales’s allegations in the light most favorable to him for purposes of resolving the federal immunity question only. Granting an officer qualified immunity is not a decision on the merits of the claim against him, and doing so does not purport to resolve any factual dispute between the parties. Instead, it exhibits, as the Supreme Court reiterated in
Saucier v. Katz,
Nonetheless, Scales argues that when
Young
decided the qualified immunity issue, it did not decide whether he could proceed with his § 1983 claim for excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, because, as the
Saucier
court held, a “ruling on qualified immunity requires an analysis not susceptible of fusion with the question whether unreasonable force was used in making the arrest.”
As we noted in
Young,
whether a government officer has qualified immunity requires a two-part inquiry. “The threshold inquiry is whether the plaintiffs allegations, if true, show that the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional or statutory right. If so, then a court should decide whether the right that had been violated was clearly established at the time the alleged violation occurred.”
In
Saucier, supra,
the district and appellate courts had “concluded that the sec
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ond step of the qualified immunity inquiry and the merits of the Fourth Amendment excessive force claim are identical, since both concern the objective reasonableness of the officer’s conduct in light of the circumstances the officer faced on the scene.”
In this case, by contrast, when the court in
Young
determined that Officer Young was entitled to qualified immunity, we effectively disposed of the Fourth Amendment excessive force argument upon which Scales’s § 1983 claim is predicated because we held that Scales could not even meet the first prong of the test by “showfing] the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right.”
Saucier, supra,
*729 C. Young’s Impact on Scales’s Common Law Claims
As noted above, the holding of Young, which was based on the law of qualified immunity under § 1983, should not have been construed by the trial court as making any findings of fact because, as discussed above, the issue of whether or not qualified immunity is available is one of law. Actual findings affecting the common law claims could not be made by an appellate court and indeed were not made. Accordingly, the trial court erred by assuming that the discussion in Young of the factual background of the matter had determinative force with respect to the state law claims. Young’s legal conclusions, however, do affect Scales’s common law false arrest claim.
1. False Arrest
There are two affirmative defenses (which are distinct from “qualified privilege,” discussed infra) that an officer can assert to avoid liability for false arrest: (1) the “probable cause test,” which requires an objective showing and is usually harder to meet, or (2) the “partially subjective test,” which is “usually easier-to-meet.”
District of Columbia v. Murphy,
In this case, Scales’s suit for false arrest must fail as a matter of law because there was probable cause to arrest him based on his stabbing officer Young. We held in
Young
that Scales failed to show that “he had a constitutional right to be free from arrest by [Officer] Young.”
Young, supra,
2. Scales’s Other Common Law Claims
Our effort here is to clarify whatever Young may have left ambiguous. The questions of whether Officer Young had a qualified privilege to act as he did or an affirmative defense with respect to any of the remaining common law claims must be remanded because the answers to those questions turn in part upon fact-based analyses under each of his various claims and their applicable tests, and there were not enough findings below to create a sufficient record. To see why such findings were needed, a short discussion of two of *730 Scales’s common law claims — assault and battery, and negligence — and their relationship to a police officer’s qualified privilege or affirmative defenses is instructive.
a. Assault and Battery
A police officer may have a qualified privilege in an assault and battery case. “A police officer has a qualified privilege to use reasonable force to effect an arrest, provided that the means employed are not in excess of those which the actor reasonably believes to be necessary.”
Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia,
b. Negligence
In
Young
we noted that, although Officer Young was entitled to qualified immunity as to Scales’s § 1983 suit, “a municipality may choose to hold its officers to a stricter standard than the Constitution requires.... ”
Young, supra,
Nonetheless, difficulties can arise when, as here, a plaintiff alleges multiple tort claims in connection with the use of force by an arresting police officer. In
Smith, supra,
the plaintiffs suit alleged,
inter alia,
negligence and assault and battery.
if, in a ease involving the intentional use of force by police officers, a negligence count is to be submitted to a jury, that negligence must be distinctly pled and based upon at least one factual scenario that presents an aspect of negligence apart from the use of excessive force itself and violative of a distinct standard of care.
Id.
at 792 (quoting
District of Columbia v. Chinn,
c. Lack of Record on Appeal
As noted above, the record is currently insufficiently developed for us to decide whether summary judgment should have been granted on Scales’s remaining common law claims following
Young.
Although
Young
precludes Scales’s Fourth Amendment-based § 1983 suit and his suit for false arrest,
see
Part II.B,
supra,
the record lacks the findings needed to support disposition of Scales’s remaining claims, including the claims we have not specifically discussed in this opinion. For example, at the very least, it is entirely unclear from the record what motivated Officer Young to shoot Scales. We decline to address whether Officer Young’s motivation is a fact in genuine dispute, and leave that question for the trial court to decide in the first instance.
See New 3145 Deauville, L.L.C. v. First Am. Title Ins. Co.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s grant of summary judgment is affirmed with respect to Scales’s Fourth Amendment — based § 1983 claim, his claim for false arrest, and his Fourteenth Amendment claim, 7 but, with respect to all of his other claims, reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. Before the interlocutory appeal, the trial court had granted the District of Columbia's motion for summary judgment with respect to the count alleging a violation of Scales’s Fourteenth Amendment rights. In his brief in this appeal, Scales at this point appears to have recognized the merit of the trial court's legal conclusion based on
Graham v. Connor,
. Precedent from the Supreme Court has encouraged lower courts to deal with this question as early as possible in the litigation,
see Saucier v. Katz,
We note, however, that from time to time there may be predicate factual issues disputed by the parties regarding the issue of immunity which must be submitted to a trier of fact, "but the 'purely legal question on which [the] claim of immunity turns,' remains an issue
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for the court."
Sabir v. District of Columbia,
. The Supreme Court recently modified the
Saucier
test by permitting courts to begin by determining whether the second prong has not been satisfied rather than being required first to address the first prong.
Pearson v. Callahan,
- U.S. -,
. The District could be liable under § 1983 only if its policies had caused Young to violate Scales's rights under federal law.
See Monell v. Dep't of Social Servs.,
. Indeed, as we have said elsewhere, "qualified immunity from § 1983 does not preclude a suit based on common law negligence,”
District of Columbia v. Evans,
. We also note that, because Scales is suing the District of Columbia, his negligence cause of action, like all of his causes of action, is dependent on his compliance with D.C.Code § 12-309 (2001) ("An action may not be maintained against the District of Columbia for unliquidated damages to person or property unless, within six months after the injury or damage was sustained, the claimant, his agent, or attorney has given notice in writing to the Mayor of the District of Columbia of the approximate time, place, cause, and circumstances of the injury or damage. A report in writing by the Metropolitan Police Department, in regular course of duty, is a sufficient notice under this section.”).
. See note 1.
