Plаintiffs-Appellees, Willie and Orene Sev-ier (respectively ‘Willie” and “Orene;” collectively “the Seviers”), brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Kansas state law
I. BACKGROUND
Between 11 p.m. and midnight on the evening of April 20, 1991, Willie and Gregory Sevier went to shoot pool at the West Coast Saloon in Lawrence. On their way to the pool hall, Gregory told his father that he was having problems with his girlfriend. The two drank a modest amount of beer at the saloon and then returned home, where Gregory went to his room with a six-pack of beer and began to play his stereo at a very high volume. Willie went to Gregory’s bedroom to ask him to turn down the stereo, but the door was locked and Gregory did not respond to Willie’s knocking. Willie then retrieved a plastic toothpick from the kitchen to unlock the door. When he opened the door, he saw that Gregory was sitting on the edge of his bed with a knife in his hand resting on his lap. Williе closed the door without speaking to his son and discussed the situation with his wife Orene.
The Seviers were particularly concerned because Gregory had attempted suicide on two previous occasions, and they decided to call 911 for assistance. Orene placed the call at 2:27:50 a.m. on the early morning of April 21, 1991, and engaged in the following conversation with the emergency dispatcher:
... My son is in his bedroom and he’s having a real problem, and my husband seen him with a butcher knife in there and I just want someone to go in and check him out.
Okay, is your husband there now?
Yeah, he’s just standing outside waiting.
And don’t use the siren or anything. I don’t want to alarm him or anything like that. I just want to come out here and—
Okay, have you been arguing tonight?
No, no, no, nothing’s going on.
Okay, why does he have the knife, do you know?
I think he’s having a problem with his girlfriend or something, I think they broke up or something, I don’t know.
All right, I’ll send someone out.
Thank you.
Sevier,
... the mother advising her 22 year old son is in his bedroom. He has a butcher knife. It’s unknown exactly what the problem is. She believes he may be having trouble with his girlfriend, there has been no arguing at the residence. She’d like an officer en route to talk to him.
Bordman arrived at the Sevier home first at 2:34:57 a.m. There is some dispute as to whether Bordman stopped to talk with Willie and Orene or ignored their attempts to discuss the situation. In any event, Willie directed Bordman to Gregory’s bedroom and told him that Gregory was in the room with a knife. After Bordman found the door locked and heard loud music coming from inside, Willie showed Bordman how to unlock the door with a toothpick. Bordman first requested that the police radio airwaves be cleared except for emergency traffic, and then unlocked the bedroom door and opened it approximately four to six inches. Due to the loud music, Bordman remained unable to communicate with Gregory, although Gregory stated that “I didn’t do anything.”
Shortly after Bordman opened the door, Phillips arrived on the scene at 2:36:33 a.m. Bordman warned Phillips that he thought the person in the bedroom had a knife, and both officers drew their weapons. Bordman then looked into the bedroom but could only see the left half of Gregory’s body. Bordman ordered Gregory to show his hands, while Phillips retreated down the hallway away from Gregory’s room. Gregory then emerged from his bedroom and stood in the doorway with the knife in his right hand. In response, Bordman moved backwards into the bedroom directly across from where Gregory was standing.
Bordman and Phillips both repeatedly ordered Gregory to drop the knife. Bordman also told Gregory that they were not going to hurt him. Gregory remained in his bedroom doorway, standing at a forty-five degree angle to Bordman in the bedroom across the hallway and Phillips down the hallway to the right.
Gregory then cried “I love you, Mom. I love you, Mom.” Orene responded, “I love you, Gregg.” According to the three officers, Gregory next turned to his left and lunged at Bordman with the knife in a raised and striking position. The Seviers dispute that Gregory lunged at an officer and maintain that he was standing with the knife at his side. Nevertheless, Bordman and Phillips both fired at Gregory, striking him six times. Gregory fell forward into the bedroom occupied by Phillips. Wheeler radioed for an ambulance, explaining that shots had been fired and that a man was down. Bordman and Phillips attеnded to Gregory, but, according to the later testimony of an expert, two of the shots had been instantly fatal and killed Gregory. Less than five minutes had elapsed since Bordman’s arrival at the Sevier home in response to the 911 call.
Following Gregory’s death, the Seviers filed suit against Bordman, Phillips, and Wheeler, as well as Chief of Police W. Ronald Olin (“Olin”) and the City of Lawrence, asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Kansas tort law. The Seviers alleged three causes of action under § 1983 on behalf of themselves and Gregory claiming individual and municipal liability based on (1) Bordman and Phillips’ use of excessive force; (2) Lawrence’s failure to provide adequate training to its police officers; and (3) Lawrence’s differential treatment of 911 emergency calls placed by Native Americаns like the Seviers. They also alleged state law causes of action for (1) wrongful death; and (2) the tort of outrage. Defendants moved for summary judgment, and the district court granted Defendants’ motion as to all defendants on the
However, the district court denied Defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to Bordman and Phillips on the Seviers’ § 1983 excessive force claim, ruling that genuine issues of material fact precluded granting summary judgment based on the two officers’ claim of qualified immunity. Id. at 1368. The court also denied summary judgmеnt on the state tort of outrage claim. Id. at 1370. Defendants now appeal the court’s partial denial of their motion for summary judgment as to those two claims.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Excessive Force Claim
Defendants’ use of deadly force was justified under the Fourth Amendment if a reasonable officer in Defendants’ position would have had probable cause to believe that there was a threat of serious physical hаrm to themselves or to others. Graham v. Connor,
Individual defendants like Bordman and Phillips may interlocutorily appeal the denial of qualified immunity. Mitchell v. Forsyth,
In Johnson, the Supreme Court explicitly overruled our previous decisions holding that public officials could collaterally appeal district court rulings denying qualified immunity because of a finding of disputed material facts. See, e.g., Austin v. Hamilton,
Accordingly, in the instant case, we lack jurisdiction to consider Defendants’ collateral appeal because they seek review of the district court’s ruling that summary judgment was inappropriate because the Sеviers raised genuine disputes of fact. Although the district court did not clearly identify those facts upon which it relied to find a genuine dispute of fact, Johnson instructs us to “undertake ... a review of the record to determine what facts the district court, in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, likely assumed.” Id. at -,
B. State Law Claims
As to the Seviers’ state law claim for the tort of outrage, Defendants request that we consider their appeal of the district court’s denial of summary judgment under the discretionary doctrine of pendent appellate jurisdiction. However, the recent Suprеme Court ease of Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n, — U.S. -,
The Swint Court left open the possibility that pendent appellate jurisdiction might still be appropriate in those limited situations where an оtherwise nonappealable decision is “inextricably intertwined” with the appeal-able decision, or where review of the nonap-pealable decision is “necessary to ensure meaningful review” of the appealable one. Id. at -,
However, such a situation does not exist in the present action. As a starting matter, given our holding that we lack jurisdiction over Defendants’ appeal of the district court’s ruling on qualified immunity, no permissible appeal exists upon which to exercise pendent jurisdiction. Moreover, even if we considered Defendants’ appeal on the § 1983 excessive force claim, it is unlikely that the issues presented would be coterminous with those raised by the state law outrage claim, notwithstanding Defendants’ assertion that the Seviers’ state law claims “rise and fall with Bordman’s and Phillips’ claims of qualified immunity,” Appellant Rep.Br. at 8.
III. CONCLUSION
We have an independent duty to inquire into our own jurisdiction, whether or not the issue is raised by the parties. In fulfilling that duty, we DISMISS for lack of jurisdiction Defendants’ appeal of the district court’s denial of summary judgment on both the
Notes
. The claims implicated in the present appeal primarily relate to Defendants-Appellants Ted J. Bordman ("Bordman”) and James H. Phillips (“Phillips”). Accordingly, when we refer to “Defendants” in the context of this appeal, we intend to identify Bordman and Phillips.
. The record before us on appeal does not include a transcript of the 911 call. However, the parties do not dispute the district court’s quotation of the call.
. As with the 911 call, the record before us on appeal does not include a transcript of the police dispatch. However, the parties do not dispute the district court's quotation of the dispatch.
. The hallway was four-feet wide at the point between the two bedrooms and three-feet wide elsewhere.
. Defendants conceded that they could be liable on the Seviers' state wrongful death claim under the Kansas Tort Claims Act, Kan.Stat.Ann. § 75-6101 et seq., to the extent that their use of force was excessive. Sevier, 853 F.Supp. at 1370. Therefore, because the district court dеnied summary judgment on the Seviers' constitutional excessive force claim, as explained in the text, their state wrongful death claim remained valid as premised on the use of excessive force.
. In addition, the court granted summary judgment for Wheeler, because the Seviers dismissed their claims against him. Sevier,
. Mere negligent actions рrecipitating a confrontation would not, of course, be actionable under § 1983. See Daniels v. Williams,
.Of course, if the preceding events are merely negligent or if they are attenuated by time or intervening events, then they are not to be considered in an excessive force case. See Romero v. Board of County Comm’rs,
. For example, the record reveals that the Sevi-ers' expert testified based on the forensics evidence that Gregory either (1) stood in the hallway at a 45-degree angle to Bordman and Phillips; or (2) stood at a 45-degree angle to the officers, was hit by Phillips, and then pivoted toward Bordman in the adjacent bedroom. Neither scenario seems consistent with Defendants’ depiction of Gregory lunging at Bordman before he was shot.
. For example, the record reveals some evidence upon which a jury could conclude that Defendants acted recklessly by confronting Gregory in the manner that they did after knowing that he was armed and distraught over problems he was having with his girlfriend, and without gathering more information on the situation.
