Steven Hill brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Sergeant William She-lander of the Tazewell County Sheriffs Department to recover damages for injuries he sustained while incarcerated at the Tazewell County Jail (the “jail”). Hill alleged that Shelander beat him without provocation and thereby deprived him of his eighth amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. Hill sued Shelander in his individual capacity, 1 and Shelander sought shelter under the qualified immunity doctrine. The district court denied Shelander’s motion for summary judgment, and he appeals. We affirm in part and dismiss in part.
I. FACTS
We describe the facts in the light most favorable to Hill, drawing all reasonable inferences in his favor. Hill had been convicted of burglary and was being held at the jail while awaiting imposition of his sentence. On December 14, 1983, Paul Schmidt, a jailer, attempted to place Kim Black, a new inmate, into a cell occupied by Hill and others. The inmates objected to sharing their cellblock with Black because they believed he was gay. When Schmidt ordered the inmates to clear their personal belongings from an unoccupied bunk to make room for Black, they refused to do so. Schmidt then decided to move Hill and another inmate, Tim Carpenter, to a disciplinary cell, and he sought Shelander’s assistance in moving the two. Schmidt told Shelander that Hill and Carpenter objected to Black’s placement in the cellblock, and another jailer told Shelander that the inmates had threatened Black. She-lander went to the cellblock and ordered Hill and Carpenter to step out of the cell. Hill came to the doorway and stopped, questioning why he should have to leave the cell. Shelander responded by grabbing Hill’s hair and shoulder, pulling him out of the cell, and slamming his head and back against the metal bars of the cellblock directly across the hall. While Hill was still dazed from this collision, Shelander struck him twice in the face with his fist and kicked him in the groin, until Hill finally grabbed Shelander’s wrist to prevent further blows. Hill sustained injuries to his head, face, and back and still suffers headaches as a result of the beating.
The district court rejected Shelander’s invocation of qualified immunity, concluding that clearly established authority prohibited the type of excessive force Shelander allegedly used against Hill and that a reasonable prison official would or should have known that such a beating violated Hill’s eighth amendment rights. The district court therefore held that Shelander was not immune from suit.
II. ANALYSIS
A denial of qualified immunity, to the extent that it turns on an issue of law, is an appealable “final decision” within the mean
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ing of 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472
U.S. 511, 526-30,
A. Qualified Immunity After Harlow.
In
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Harlow
eliminated the subjective component of the qualified immunity analysis because the Court found that an examination of the defendant’s subjective intent was incompatible with the goal of resolving insubstantial claims against government officials short of trial.
Harlow,
Harlow
has created a “conundrum,” however, in cases where the alleged constitutional violation requires a showing of intent.
See Hansen,
Thus, despite
Harlow’s
focus on a purely objective inquiry, the plaintiff must be afforded an adequate opportunity to establish intent when it is an element of the alleged constitutional violation.
See Elliott,
B. Shelander’s Intent.
To determine whether a prison official used excessive force in violation of the eighth amendment, we must consider “ ‘whether force was applied in a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline, or maliciously and sadistically to cause harm.’ ”
Whitley v. Albers,
Yet we find that Hill has produced evidence going beyond only the amount of force applied by Shelander. Hill presented evidence from which a finder of fact could infer that Shelander applied force with the intent to punish. In his deposition, Hill characterized the incident as an unprovoked assault occasioned solely by his asking why he was being moved. Moreover, Hill maintains that he did not fight back once Shelander threw him against the bars of the cell across the hall. If the fact-finder were to accept Hill’s story, then Shelander arguably acted without justification because there would have been no need for Shelander to physically assault Hill in order to maintain or restore discipline in the cell. Thus, Hill’s evidence could support a finding that Shelander acted maliciously in violation of the eighth amendment. Shelander, on the other hand, characterizes the encounter wdth Hill as a “struggle” that began after Hill swung his arms to break the sergeant’s grip on his shoulder. He contends that the use of force was necessary to ensure order because the incident occurred in front of an open door to a cell holding other prisoners.
We cannot choose between these differing accounts of the incident on a paper record. If a finder of fact were to accept Hill’s version, it could infer that Shelander acted with malicious intent, meaning that Hill could establish an eighth amendment viola
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tion. Accepting Shelander’s version, on the other hand, the fact-finder could find that Shelander simply was acting in good faith to restore order in the cellblock. In that instance, Shelander would not have violated Hill’s clearly established constitutional rights, and he would be entitled to qualified immunity. Shelander’s argument therefore raises a disputed issue of fact on the question of his intent.
See Hansen,
C. Clearly Established Constitutional Standards.
Shelander also argues that, even accepting Hill’s version of the incident, the state of the law on the use of force by prison officials was ambiguous so that he did not violate Hill’s “clearly established” constitutional rights. According to Shelander, the ambiguity arises because the force appropriate to any given circumstance depends on a balancing of institutional security concerns against possible harm to the inmate, meaning that no generalizable parameters exist. Because this argument suggests that Shelander acted “in the shadow of legal uncertainty,” we have jurisdiction to review it.
See Marshall,
The right allegedly violated must be “ ‘clearly established in a particularized sense.’ ”
Juriss v. McGowan,
The notion that “ ‘unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain constitutes cruel and unusual punishment forbidden by the Eighth Amendment’ ” is not a new or unusual constitutional principle.
See Whitley,
III. CONCLUSION
The district court properly denied Shelan-der’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity.
Affirmed in Part, Dismissed in Part.
Notes
. Hill originally sued Shelander in his official capacity, but his appointed counsel amended the complaint to state only an individual capacity claim. The district court dismissed that claim as time-barred, but we reversed on the basis of Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c), holding that the amended complaint related back to the filing date of the original complaint.
See Hill v. Shelander,
. As we explained in
Hansen v. Bennett,
presents a curious situation. If a district court denies summary judgment because it finds a factual dispute, and the appellate court agrees, then the appellate court is forced to hold that it lacks jurisdiction. As a result, it is impossible for an appellate court to affirm such a ruling. Though curious, this situation makes sense. Dismissing the appeal is equivalent to affirming the denial; either way, the case and the issue proceed to trial. The situation seems curious only because we do not often face it outside the context of immunities, as denials of summary judgment are not ordinarily appeal-able.
. Shelander’s argument that the balancing process itself prevents the law from being "clearly established” would result in a finding of immunity whenever a prisoner makes an excessive force claim against a prison official.
