Mаrshall Spiegel was evicted from his Chicago apartment but left some of his belongings behind. He showed up one day to retrieve them and found the locks had been сhanged. The building manager would not unlock the door and instead called for assistance from the Chicago police. The police prevented Spiеgel from attempting to enter the apartment and threatened to arrest him if he persisted. Spiegel claims that blocking him from re-entering amounted to a seizure in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights; the City of Chicago contends that a person cannot be seized if he is free to go anywhere else except the one place he wants to enter. We decline Spiegel’s invitation to decide a yet undetermined Fourth Amendment issue. Rather, we affirm the district court’s order dismissing Spiegel’s Fourth Amendment claim because the officers are qualifiedly immune from his suit.
I.
In May 1994 Hollywood Towers Condominium Association sued to evict tenant Marshall Spiegel. The Circuit Court of Cook County granted Hollywood Towers possession of Spiegel’s apartment. Spiegel appealed the court’s order to the Illinois Appellаte Court and moved to stay enforcement of the order. The appellate court denied Spiegel’s motion on July 6, 1994. On July 18, Spiegel showed up at his apartment but found the locks had been changed. After a discussion between Spiegel and the building manager, the Chicago police were called. Defendants Lieutenant Jeffrey Wilson, Captain John Martin, and Commander Andrew Martorano responded to the call. According to Spiegel’s complaint;
[D]efendants Wilson, Martin and Martоra-no refused to allow plaintiff to go to or enter his residence, ordering him not to go to or in the residence on that day or at any time in the future, under threat of immediate arrest if he did not obey their command.
First Amended Complaint at ¶ 8.
Spiegel contends that the Chicago police officers knew the Cook County Sheriffs Department had not еvicted him when they barred his entry to the apartment. According to the complaint, the defendants are liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for an unconstitutional seizure of his person “in forcing [him] not to enter his home.” The district court
II.
The single issue before us is whether Spie-gel was “seized” in violation of the Fourth Amendment when the Chicago police officers deniеd him access to the locked apartment. Spiegel concedes that he was not seized in the traditional sense because he was not physically detained. Quite the contrary, Spiegel could have walked away (and eventually did) at any time. However, Spiegel claims that he was seized because his movеment into the apartment was restricted.
We are aware that seizures can take many forms. A person may be seized even though only slightly touched. California v. Hodari D.,
At oral argument, Spiegel’s attorney suggested that the Fourth Amendment was broad enough to cover the type of restriction imposed by the police in this case, and, indеed, contended that any other result would constitute a “remarkable and unprecedented limitation on the scope of the Fourth Amendment.” Hyperbole aside, it is unclear what the officers did that was so remarkable: responding to the landlord’s complaint, the police stood before a locked door and told Spie-gel not to attempt to pass through it. Even without the presence of the police, Spiegel would have been staring at the same locked dоor of an apartment already repossessed by the landlord.
The district court determined that Kernats v. O’Sullivan,
The obvious distinction between this case and Kernats is that the Kernats family already was occupying its dwelling when visited by the police; Spiegel was not. The Kernats were not told (as Spiegel was) that they could go аnywhere but the one place they wanted to go. Rather, they were told that they had to leave the one place they were presently occupying or face arrest. In all events, Spiegel directs us to no case more analogous to the facts of his own than Kernats.
Officers enjoy qualified immunity so long as their conduct did not violate a statutory or constitutional right that was clearly established at the time they acted. Kernats,
III.
The officers are qualifiedly immune from Spiegel’s suit. We recognize that this decision does little to clarify an unsettled question of Fourth Amendment law. But because we can affirm the district court for the reasons stated, there is no need to explore uncharted territory. The decision of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Spiegel brought other claims arising under state law; these were remanded by the district court to the Circuit Court of Cook County.
. The cases he relies heavily upon, Terry v. Ohio,
