Bill McFadden, Shane Stone, Leigh Foreman, Tommy Moore, DeWayne Kyle, Rhonda Gustin, and Matt Birch, who are police officers employed by the City of Paris, Texas, along with Chris Brooks, a Deputy Sheriff of Lamar Country, Texas (collectively the “defendants”), appeal the district court’s interlocutory order which partially denied their motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. The district court found that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity on the plaintiffs’ claims against the defendants for their mistaken entry into the plaintiffs’ house, but the court denied summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ claims arising from the defendants’ alleged failure to immediately terminate their search when the defendants realized they were in the wrong house. 1 Since we agree that material issues of fact prevent granting summary judgment to McFadden, Stone, Foreman, Moore, Kyle, and Brooks on the narrow issue of whether the defendants reasonably terminated their search immediately after learning that they were in the wrong house, we affirm the district court as to those defendants. However, with respect to defendants Gustin and Birch, no factual dispute exists as to whether they engaged in conduct that could subject them to liability. Accordingly, as to these two defendants, we reverse the district court’s denial of summary judgment and remand the proceeding for their dismissal.
Charlie Simmons, Charlotte Handley, and their two children Dustin and Angelica Handley, filed suit against the law enforcement defendants for their actions in mistakenly executing a “no knock” search warrant on the plaintiffs’ home on June 29, 2002. The search warrant was for 400 N.W. 14th Street. Plaintiffs were residents of 410 N.W. 14th Street.
The basic facts are these: On June 29, 2002, as part of a broader drug interdiction effort, Deputy Sheriff Brooks and Officer Shane Stone obtained a “no knock” warrant to search the home of a suspected drug dealer residing at 400 N.W. 14th Street. Upon receiving the warrant, Brooks and Stone assembled the other defendants into a search warrant execution team to conduct the search. According to the plan devised by Officer McFadden, the officers would be divided into two teams: an “entry team” and a “perimeter team.” The entry team’s job was to enter the target residence and detain the occupants. The perimeter team’s job was to secure the grounds in front of and behind the house to prevent any occupants from fleeing. The plan called for the officers to approach the house from the south in two vehicles: a pick-up truck and a squad car. The officers were to park their vehicles at the property immediately to the south of 400 N.W. 14th Street. There, the members of the entry team were to assemble into a single-file line to approach and enter the residence at 400 N.W. 14th Street.
Instead of stopping one house to the south of 400 N.W. 14th Street, Officer Birch, the driver of the warrant team’s pick-up truck, stopped the car directly in front of 400 N.W. 14th Street. This caused Officer McFadden, the entry team leader, to confuse 410 N.W. 14th Street, the home of the plaintiffs which is immediately north of where Birch stopped the pick-up, with the home of the suspected drug dealer.
When the entry team members assembled into a single file line, two of the plaintiffs, Charlotte and Dustin Handley, were on their front porch. Seeing Ms. Handley and her son on the front porch, Officer McFadden sprinted toward them, and the rest of the entry team followed. Charlotte and Dustin, not realizing who the officers were, quickly retreated back inside their home. Officer McFadden followed Ms. Handley into her house through the still open front door. He immediately detained Ms. Handley and Mr. Simmons in the front room. The other members of the entry team followed Officer McFadden into the house and detained the children, Dustin and Angelica, either in Angelica’s bedroom or the kitchen.
The officers quickly realized they were in the wrong home. In fact, at least two of the officers behind Officer McFadden knew that they were approaching the wrong house, but they thought perhaps Officer McFadden had seen the suspected drug dealer run into the Handley home and that he was in pursuit. The district court found that there were factual disputes as to how long the officers remained in the Handleys’ house and whether the officers continued searching the residence after they knew it was the wrong house. Based on this finding of factual disputes, the district court denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment for qualified immunity on the sole issue of whether the law enforcement officers remained in the Handley home for an unreasonable period of time after they discovered they were in the wrong house. It is from this interlocutory order partially denying their motion from summary judgment that the defendants now appeal.
Under well-settled principles of law, a government official’s entitlement to qualified immunity is evaluated under a two-step analysis. First, the court determines whether the plaintiffs allege a violation of a constitutional right.
See Glenn v. City of Tyler,
On an appeal of an interlocutory order denying a claim of qualified immunity, our review is unusually circumscribed. A party whose claim of qualified immunity is denied is entitled to interlocutory review only to the extent that the denial turns on an issue of law.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
In
Maryland v. Garrison,
The defendants make two arguments that they did not violate the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights: first, the defendants argue that the members of the entry team departed from the Handleys’ home immediately upon discovering that it was the wrong house; and, second, they aver that the plaintiffs failed to establish a constitutional violation because they fail to allege an injury. The defendants’ primary argument is that they departed from the Hand-leys’ home immediately upon discovering that they were in the wrong house. This argument cannot prevail on this appeal, however, because it would require the Court to weigh evidence and review the district court’s factual determinations. The defendants testified that they became aware that they had entered the wrong house immediately upon, or immediately after, entering the plaintiffs’ residence. In contrast, plaintiff Charlotte Handley testified that the officers remained in the house for five to six minutes. Plaintiffs further testified that even after the police realized they were in the wrong house, they searched Simmons and Handley’s bedroom. The district court found that this incompatible testimony created a genuine dispute of material fact as to how long the officers remained in the house after discovering that they had entered the wrong house and detained the wrong individuals. On this interlocutory appeal this Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain the defendants’ argument that Charlotte Handley’s testimony is not credible. Thus, we are precluded from accepting the defendants’ arguments that they left “immediately.”
The defendants’ second argument is that the plaintiffs fail to allege a constitutional violation because they failed to show that they suffered any injury. However, the defendants acknowledge that this argument arises from this Court’s jurisprudence regarding excessive force claims under the Fourth Amendment. They cite no authority establishing an injury requirement to unreasonable search and seizure claims outside of the realm of excessive force claims. The argument has no application to the plaintiffs’ unreasonable search and seizure claims because the only injury necessary to sustain those claims are the unreasonable searches and seizures themselves.
See, e.g., Crowder v. Sinyard,
Defendants argue that they made an honest mistake in going into the Handley home and that they accordingly are enti-
In
Pray v. City of Sandusky,
We deem the principle enunciated by ■these two circuits to be the correct one for this case. The district court found genuine disputes of material fact regarding the conduct of the defendants after they discovered that they had mistakenly entered the Handleys’ home. On this appeal, we lack jurisdiction to second-guess the district court’s evaluation of the evidence. We are called upon only to determine whether the district court correctly identified a course of conduct in which the defendants may have engaged that would subject the defendants to liability. We hold that it did. Accordingly, the district court’s denial of summary judgment as to the defendants who entered the Handleys’ house is affirmed.
III.
In denying the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the district court did not distinguish between the defendants who entered the Handleys’ home and those defendants who indisputably did not. At oral argument, plaintiffs’ counsel conceded that there was no evidence indicating that either Officer Gustin or Officer Birch entered the Handleys’ residence. Based upon this concession, neither of these defendants can be held liable under the theory that they unreasonably -remained in the Handleys’ home.
3
As this was the sole
IV.
For the above reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of summary judgment as to Officers Gustin and Birch, and affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment as to the officers who entered the Handleys’ residence. We remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs allege factual disputes as to a number of issues, but the district court’s factual and legal rulings against the plaintiffs are not before the Court. The only issue subject to an interlocutory appeal and before this Court is the issue of whether or not the district court erred in denying in part defendants' motion for qualified immunity.
. In addition to
Garrison,
the district court relied upon
Pray v. City of Sandusky,
. The plaintiffs contend that Birch and Gustin can be held liable as bystanders. They cite a Fourth Circuit opinion providing for bystander liability upon proof that an alleged bystander (1) knows that a fellow officer is violating an individual’s constitutional rights; (2)
