Plaintiffs, Tara Cartier and Donald Coates, her brother, commenced this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil rights action against Paul D. Lussier, a Connecticut State Trooper. Plaintiffs allege that defendant lacked probable cause to arrest them following the death of Christopher Izzo, who was present in an automobile with plaintiff Cartier when a fatal accident occurred. Coates witnessed the аccident. In his motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ action, Lussier asserted that qualified immunity barred suit against him, and thus he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Nevas, J.) found material issues of fact precluded the application of qualified immunity and therefore denied the motion. The district court believed the mantle of qualified immunity with which public officers are enveloped simply melts away in the heat of controverted facts. We think rather the rule is when, as here, the factual disputes are immaterial to resolving the qualified immunity issue, its protective mantle remains undissolved.
BACKGROUND
On September 9, 1986 a two-car collision occurred at an intersection in the Town of North Stonington, Connecticut. Officer Lussier was dispatched to the scene. There the trooper interviewed Gary Stanley, the driver of one vehicle, Tara Cartier — who was accompanied by Christopher Izzo in the other vehicle — and Donald Coates, who claimed he witnessed the accident. The accident occurred when the vehicle containing Cartier and Izzo went through a stop sign and flashing red light into the intersection where it was broadsided by the Stanley vehicle. Izzo, who was lying on the ground unconscious, never regained consciousness, and died several weeks later. The trooper commenced an investigation of the fatal accident which led to the arrest of Tara Cartier for negligent homicide with a motor vehicle and for filing a false statement, and to the arrest of her brother Donald Coates for filing a false statement. This investigation and the resulting arrests — and the facts that Lussier set forth in the affidavit in support of the arrest warrants — are the focus of the present litigation.
At the scene of the accident, the then 17-year-old plaintiff Cartier told Lussier that 19-year-old Izzo was the driver of her vehicle when the accident occurred. Coates corroborated his sister’s version, stating he observed Izzo driving Cartier’s auto at the time of the accident. Although he originally said “I know my sister stopped because I saw the brake lights,” when the trooper stated “So Tara was driving,” Coates rejoined that he was referring to the car, and that Izzo was driving. This inconsistency led the officer to believe Coates was not telling the truth. Stanley, the driver of the оther car approaching from the right or passenger’s side where the impact occurred declared that he saw the “horrified look on the face of a male” who was in the passenger side of the car prior to impact. During the course of his investigation, which is required under Connecticut law in the case of a fatality, see Conn.Gen.Stat. § 14-108a(b), Lussier obtained written statements from each of these three witnesses.
He also interviewed Catherine Orr, the plaintiffs’ mother, who stated that when Izzo and her daughter Tara left home five minutes before the accident, Izzo was driving. Willard Wilkinson, a friend of Cartier’s and Coates’, signed a statement stating that a few minutes before the fatality — about 1.5 miles from the scene — he saw Tara Cartier drive by in her gray Toyota, and she waved to him. Months later at the criminal trial Wilkinson disputed the accuracy of his signed statement, alleging that he did not tell Lussier who was driving the vehicle and that he did not read the statement that Lussier prepared before signing it.
Following Izzo’s death, Lussier prepared and submitted affidavits on October 9, 1986, seeking arrest warrants from a Connecticut judge for Cartier and Coates. The warrants were executed on October 26. The charges against both plaintiffs for filing false statements eventually were dismissed. In November 1987, after a two-week jury trial, Tara Cartier was acquitted of negligent homicide.
Plaintiffs then commenced the present civil rights action against Trooper Lussier pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Connecticut common law, alleging that he lacked an objective basis to conclude that probable cause existed to support the issuance of the arrest warrants. They challenge the validity of the warrants’ supрorting affidavits, contending Lussier intentionally or recklessly misrepresented certain facts and omitted others, specifically that he misrepresented the statements provided by Coates and Wilkinson and omitted the statement provided by Orr. They also contest Lussier’s accident reconstruction and the conclusions he drew based on the forensic evidence gathered at the scene.
In his summary judgment motion defendant asserted the plaintiffs’ suit was barred by the doctrine of qualified immunity because an objective basis existed for finding probable cause for the arrests. After initially denying the defendant’s motion, the district court granted a motion to reconsider, based on our recent decision in
Magnotti v. Kuntz,
DISCUSSION
A.
The defense of qualified immunity is a well-settled doctrine that protects government officials from civil suits arising from the performance of their discretionary functions when that performance “does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have knоwn.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
A subjective inquiry into an official’s personal belief is rejected in favor of an оbjective analysis of what a reasonable officer in defendant’s position would believe. In the context of an allegedly unconstitutional arrest, the objective reasonableness standard bars the defense of qualified immunity “[ojnly where the warrant application is so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence unreаsonable.”
Malley v. Briggs,
Qualified immunity for government officials — which applies only in suits against officials in their personal capacity,
see generally Kentucky v. Graham,
The Supreme Court has expressly encouraged the use of summary judgment when qualified immunity is raised as a defense. The objective reasonableness test was designed to facilitate this summary device as a means quickly to extricate government officials from defending insubstantial suits.
Id.
at 815-16,
On the other hand, if a faсtual determination is a necessary predicate to the resolution of whether qualified immunity is a bar, review is postponed.
See Magnotti,
B.
In the present case the district court failed adequately to consider whether the factual disputes were material. It found the affidavits — specifically those submitted to obtain the arrest warrants — had been controverted and failed to establish the existence of probable cause. It therefore held summary judgment inappropriate, and concluded that only after the jury resolved the fact issues and determined what facts “should have been included or excluded in the correctеd warrant application [could the court] decide the issue of qualified immuni
Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides “that summary judgment shall be rendered only when a review of the entire record demonstrates that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.” In deciding the motion, factual allegations backed by affidavits or other evidence madе by the party opposing the motion are regarded as true,
see Burtnieks v. City of New York,
In the procedural context of Rule 56(c), if — even when all facts as alleged by the nonmoving party are regarded as true — the moving party is still entitled to judgment as a matter of law, then factual disputes however genuine are not material, and their prеsence will not preclude summary relief.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
When a mоtion for summary judgment is made in the context of a qualified immunity defense, the question of whether the factual disputes are material is even more critical. Plaintiffs may not unwrap a public officer’s cloak of immunity from suit simply by alleging even meritorious factual disputes relating to probable cause, when those controversies are nevertheless not material to the ultimate resolution of the immunity issue.
In that connection the Supreme Court teaches as follows: allegedly false material is set aside and those facts allegedly omitted — if accompanied by a sufficient statement of supporting reasons — are substituted to see if the contents of the affidavit as amended support a finding of probable cause.
See Franks v. Delaware,
In the case at hand, after the affidavit has been corrected in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the district court should then have determined whether as a matter of law it did or did not support probable cause. Omitted facts that should now be considered include the statement of Cartier’s mother that Izzo was driving when the pair left her home, both plaintiffs’ statements that Tara Cartier was not driving, and Wilkinson’s statement that he only saw the vehicle pass but did not notice who was driving. The undisputed facts that remain include the Stanley statement, the head injury to Izzo, the damaged molding on the passenger side of the vehicle and the apparently matching hair found there.
After performing this correcting process, if there remains an objective basis supporting рrobable cause, no constitutional violation of the plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights has occurred, the factual disputes are not material to the use of the qualified immunity defense, and summary judgment should be granted to the defendant. Only if the corrected affidavit did not support an objective finding of probable cause would the factual disputes be material to resolving the issue of probable cause. In that case, summary judgment must be denied and these factual issues involving the im
When it denied summary judgment and decided to submit interrogatories to the jury, the trial judge recognized the applicable rules of law, but failed to determine expressly whether the facts in the probable cause affidavit altered by the correcting process did or did not support an оbjective basis for finding probable cause. Government officials protected by qualified immunity from litigating insubstantial claims are entitled, at a minimum, to have this threshold determination expressly made in the record. Without such an express finding, we may not assume it was made. This failure by the district court constituted a fundamental error in applying the qualified immunity doctrine.
Cf. Washington Square Post No. 1212,
Plaintiffs also argue that where thе defendant commits deliberate or intentional misrepresentations,
Rivera v. United States,
Implicit in this statement is the proposition that, after the affidavit is corrected for intentional misstatements and omissions, if it still supports probable cause no Fourth Amendment violation has occurred.
Rivera
is not to the contrary. There we recognized that the “allegedly false statement [must be] ‘necessary to the finding of probable cause,’ ”
C.
The law holds that summary judgment is not available if, after amending the probable cause affidavits, no reasonably competent state trooper would have sought an arrest warrant. On the other hand, when reasonable officers could disagree as to whether probable cause exists, the immunity defense is available. This rule governs the instant case. Adding in Cartier’s, her brother’s, and her mother’s, statements that she was not driving at the time of the fatality and excising Wilkinson’s statement does not change the result. The first three are all interested to some extent and Wilkinson, a friend of plaintiffs, gave two different statements — one to the trooper after the accident and another at Tara Cаrtier’s trial for negligent homicide. None of these statements is entitled to as much credibility as that made by Stanley, the driver of the other vehicle, and the only disinterested witness who actually saw the accident unfold.
Plaintiffs urge in essence that testimony of relatives and a friend whose story was changed after the arrest warrant was obtained, and the fact that laboratory results werе inconclusive should have caused Officer Lussier, an 18-year veteran Connecticut State Trooper, to ignore the statement of the eye-witness to this fatality, the damage to the plastic molding on the passenger side, and the accident reconstruction report
In light of what this experienced trooper learned from his investigation it strikes us that the course he pursued was entirely proper under the circumstances. We think sufficient evidence remains, after correcting the affidavits, to constitute probable cause; reasonаble troopers, at the very least, could well disagree whether or not it existed. Such is sufficient to establish the qualified immunity defense as a matter of law in defendant’s favor.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the judgment appealed from denying defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ action is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court for it to grant the motion and to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint.
