In this suit for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Sean Hadley claims that an Indiana police detective named Hilda Williams caused him to be arrested in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant, and Hadley appeals. We construe the facts as favorably to him as the record permits, as we are required to do when an appellant is challenging the grant of summary judgment against him. E.g.,
Mattson v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
After receiving multiple reports that Hadley had had sex with minors, detective Williams ordered police to bring him in for questioning. He was living in his mother’s house at the time and Williams phoned her and asked whether she’d be willing to permit the police to enter her house to arrest her son. She replied, only if they had a warrant, and Williams said, “Yes, we’ve got everything we need. It’s all covered.” So the mother agreed — but Williams did not in fact have a warrant.
The mother didn’t want to be at home when her son was arrested, so at Williams’s suggestion she sent her daughter, Hadley’s sister, to the house to let the police in. When the police approached the house, Hadley saw them and told his sister, “I’m going in my room. Answer the *749 door. Just tell them I ain’t here.” The sister opened the door to the police, who entered the house and, once inside, saw Hadley through the open door to his bedroom, went in, and arrested him. He was charged with and convicted of sexual offenses and sentenced to 20 years in prison. If the arrest was illegal, he is entitled to damages for the violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, though his conviction and sentence would be unaffected.
To arrest a person in his home without a warrant is normally a violation of the Fourth Amendment even if there is probable cause to arrest him, which clearly there was here. E.g.,
Payton v. New York,
Often it is irrelevant to the question of consent whether there was a warrant or not. A valid warrant is an independent basis for arrest, making consent irrelevant. Indeed, if there is a warrant, it will normally provide the only basis for the arrest because it will make consent, if given, involuntary; Hadley’s mother could not refuse to allow the police to execute a warrant,
Bumper v. North Carolina,
Although “the law permits the police to pressure and cajole, conceal material facts, and actively mislead,”
United States v. Rutledge,
Nor is it clear that Hadley consented to the entry of the police when he told his sister, “I’m going in my room. Answer
*750
the door. Just tell them I ain’t here.” The fact that a person answers a knock at the door doesn’t mean that he agrees to let the person who knocked enter.
Sparing v. Village of Olympia Fields,
We are mindful of cases in other circuits which hold that when the front door swings open in response to the knock of the police, the police can, by virtue of the “plain view” doctrine, seize anything they see through the open doorway, since by opening the door the person who opened it consented to their presence on the threshold.
United States v. Gori,
Which is not to say that knowledge obtained by the plain view from the threshold cannot lawfully be used. 'If the officer knocks, sees something inside when the door is opened, and then turns on his heel and uses the information he’s just obtained to get a warrant, no one’s rights have been violated. But that is not what happened here. It is also true that if having seen from the threshold contraband, evidence of crime, or a person who they have probable cause to believe has committed a crime and should be arrested, the police reasonably fear that before they can obtain a warrant the contraband or evidence will be destroyed or the criminal flee the nest, the case becomes one of “exigent circumstances” and the police can take steps to secure the evidence or the person.
Welsh v. Wisconsin,
Summary judgment should not have been granted. The judgment is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The principles on which we reverse are well settled, which precludes a defense of qualified immunity.
Saucier v. Katz,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
