Case Information
*1 BEFORE: BOGGS, BATCHELDER, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
BOGGS, Circuit Judge: Officer Michael Ventre, along with his employers, Union Township and the Union Township Board of Trustees, appeals the district court’s denial of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and its consequent denial of Officer Ventre’s defense of qualified immunity. For the reasons below, we affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment as to the claim of qualified immunity and dismiss the appeal of the remaining claims for lack of jurisdiction.
I
On February 14, 2011, plaintiff-appellee, Tommy Baker, went to the Union Township VFW toward the end of a night of heavy drinking. Shortly after his arrival, Baker was asked to leave by the bartender because he was engaged in a tense, aggressive discussion with another patron. The discussion devolved into a fight, prompting the bartender to call the police and inform Baker that the authorities were on their way.
Baker left the VFW through the front door, saw the police, did an about-face, and immediately reentered the building. Seeking to avoid the police, Baker then exited the building through the back door and, leaving his car in the parking lot, began to run (Baker called it “jogging”) to his house, some 200 yards away. Claiming to have heard and seen nothing of the police as he ran across the parking lot, Baker’s next memory was of being hit in the leg, feeling pain, and falling to the ground, the consequence of a taser shot. Baker, panicked by the taser and his fall, removed the probe and ran the rest of the way to his house with the police in pursuit.
Having arrived at his house, Baker shut and locked the front door and told his girlfriend not to allow the police to enter. Baker heard an immediate knocking and, as he was standing near the doorway to the basement staircase, saw Officer Ventre enter the house. Ventre tased him a second time. Incapacitated and unable to grasp the handrail to arrest his fall, Baker fell down the steps to the basement and suffered severe injuries including a broken neck.
The parties’ narratives diverge sharply at the point of the second tasing. Baker claimed that he stood still in the doorway to the basement stairs and did not move when Ventre entered the house. Baker testified that he only “twisted [his] body” “[a]s he was tasing me.” Baker was emphatic in his testimony that he did not move or attempt to go down the stairs to the basement before he was tased. He was equally emphatic that Ventre issued no warning and gave no verbal commands before deploying his taser. Baker also stated that it was not dark in the house when Ventre entered and that the taser probe hit him in the front, on the left side of his chest.
Officer Ventre, on the other hand, testified that he tased Baker in the back after Baker, who was clenching his fists and ignoring verbal commands, opened the door to the basement in an apparent attempt to flee. Ventre also claimed that the house was dimly lit and that he was *3 unaware that the door led to a staircase until after he had tased Baker and observed him motionless at the bottom of the stairs.
Baker was charged with obstructing official business, disorderly conduct while intoxicated, and resisting arrest. Pursuant to a plea agreement, he entered a guilty plea only to the charge of resisting arrest.
On February 7, 2012, Baker and his girlfriend, Jennifer Jones, filed a complaint against Officer Ventre, Union Township, and the Union Township Board of Trustees. The claim alleged three counts: a claim for excessive force against both Union Township and Ventre under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a claim for assault and battery against Ventre alone, and a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress by Jennifer Jones against Ventre alone. The complaint sought compensatory damages from all defendants and punitive damages from Ventre.
The defendants moved for summary judgment, claiming that Ventre was entitled to qualified immunity and that Baker’s claim against Union Township was meritless. The district court granted in part and denied in part, dismissing the claim of negligent infliction of emotional distress by Jennifer Jones and most of Baker’s claims against Union Township. The district court denied summary judgment as to Baker’s § 1983 and assault and battery claims against Ventre. It also denied summary judgment as to Baker’s § 1983 claim against Union Township under a theory of ratification by failure to meaningfully investigate. This appeal followed.
II
Summary judgment is appropriate when the evidence, “taken in the light most favorable
to the nonmoving party, shows that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that the
moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Hartman v. Great Seneca Fin. Corp.
,
III
The Courts of Appeals have jurisdiction to hear appeals from “all final decisions of
district courts.” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Typically, the Courts of Appeals cannot hear interlocutory
appeals unless the appeal is provided for by statute or the appeal is among the exceptional cases
governed by the collateral-order doctrine.
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.
, 337 U.S.
541 (1949).
Cohen
provides for immediate appeal of a narrow set of “collateral orders” that
“finally determine claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action”
which are “too important to be denied review.”
Cohen
,
Orders that fall within the ambit of
Cohen
are those that “conclusively determine the
disputed question, resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action,
and [are] effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.”
Archie v. Lanier
, 95 F.3d
438, 441–42 (6th Cir. 1996). Typically, denials of summary judgment, which are interlocutory,
do not come under the collateral-order doctrine and are therefore rarely immediately appealable.
See Harrison v. Ash
,
Despite this, district court orders denying motions for summary judgment based on
claims of qualified immunity are an exception. Such denials of summary judgment are
immediately appealable under the collateral-order doctrine because qualified immunity, (which
is an immunity from suit, not merely from liability) “is effectively lost if a case is erroneously
permitted to go to trial.”
Mitchell v. Forsyth
,
But that does not settle the matter. The Supreme Court has limited the central holding of
Mitchell
so that a district court’s denial of a motion for summary judgment based on a
defendant’s claim of qualified immunity is immediately appealable, but only “to the extent that it
turns on an issue of law.”
Id.
at 530. This limitation was later cited by the Supreme Court in
Johnson v. Jones
, 515 U.S. 304, 313 (1995), when it held that a defendant “may not appeal a
district court’s summary judgment order insofar as that order determines whether or not the
pretrial record sets forth a “genuine” issue of fact for trial.”
Id.
at 319–20. In fact, for the
Supreme Court to have held otherwise would have been to require the appellate courts to pass on
the accuracy of the district courts’ interpretation of the pretrial record, thereby inserting the
appellate courts into the district courts’ realm of fact-finding.
See Romo v. Largen
, 723 F.3d
670, 678 (6th Cir. 2013) (stating that the district courts “have more experience sifting through
convoluted factual records”). Thus, “a district court’s determination that there exists a triable
issue of fact
cannot
be appealed on an interlocutory basis, even when that finding arises in the
context of an assertion of qualified immunity.”
Gregory v. City of Louisville
,
The rule that an appeal of a district court’s denial of summary judgment based on a claim
of qualified immunity will lie insofar as it raises purely legal questions has come to mean that “if
the defendant disputes the plaintiff's version of the story, the defendant must nonetheless be
willing to concede the most favorable view of the facts to the plaintiff for purposes of the
appeal.”
Moldowan v. City of Warren
,
The defendant must be willing to concede the plaintiff’s version of the facts. This
requirement is so stringent that this court has held that “[o]nce a defendant’s argument drifts
from the purely legal into the factual realm . . . our jurisdiction ends and the case should proceed
to trial.”
Berryman v. Rieger
,
Here, though the appellant defendants refer to the disputed facts in their brief on appeal, they concede the plaintiffs’ version of the facts for the purposes of the appeal in their reply brief. This court can, therefore, exercise jurisdiction over the defendants’ interlocutory appeal.
IV
Examination of a qualified-immunity claim is a two-part inquiry. First, the panel must
determine, “whether a constitutional right would have been violated on the facts alleged.”
“[A]ssuming the violation is established,” the second part of the inquiry is whether the “right was
clearly established” at the time of the violation.
Saucier v. Katz
,
Following Saucier , we must first determine whether the plaintiff’s constitutional rights were violated at all. In the context of Fourth Amendment excessive-force claims, this question is answered under the “objective reasonableness” test articulated in Graham v. Connor , 490 U.S. 386, 396–97 (1989). The Graham test requires a “careful balancing of the nature and quality of the intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against the countervailing government interests . . . .” Id . at 396. When conducting this test, the reviewing court cannot use “the 20/20 vision of hindsight.” Ibid . Instead, the official’s actions must be viewed from “the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene.” Ibid . Graham requires the court to examine “the facts and circumstances of each particular case” balancing “the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.” Ibid .
In conducting the second inquiry, determining whether the rights violated were “clearly
established,” we must first define the right at issue. In doing so, the Supreme Court has warned
that we should not define the right in question at “a high level of generality.”
Ashcroft v. al-
Kidd
,
In summary: if, in light of the facts as alleged by the plaintiff, we conclude that the plaintiff’s constitutional rights were violated under Graham’s “objective unreasonableness” test and further conclude that the right violated was “clearly established,” then we must affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment because a potential set of facts warranting recovery has been demonstrated as a matter of law. If, on the other hand, the plaintiff fails on either or both parts of the qualified immunity inquiry, we should reverse because no set of facts could be proven that warrant recovery and the defendant’s qualified-immunity right not to stand trial should be protected.
A
In determining whether a constitutional right was violated, we must ask whether Ventre’s
actions were “objectively unreasonable” under
Graham
, understanding that “[l]aw enforcement
officers are inevitably required to make difficult, split-second decisions regarding the amount of
force needed in a particular situation, and not every push or shove, even if it may later seem
unnecessary in the peace of a judge’s chambers, violates the Fourth Amendment.”
Kostrzewa v.
City of Troy
,
In this case, taking the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, Ventre’s actions were objectively unreasonable and therefore violated Baker’s constitutional rights. According to the facts as alleged and conceded, Ventre confronted a non-violent misdemeanant suspect who had been, but was no longer, fleeing, standing at the top of an observable staircase and offering no resistance or indication of aggression. Further, under the facts conceded, Ventre said nothing, *9 gave no warnings or commands—he simply shot Baker with his taser, incapacitating Baker and causing him to fall down the staircase to the basement and suffer a broken neck.
None of the three
Graham
factors militate toward a use of violent force to apprehend
Baker.
See Graham
,
Second, when Ventre tased Baker, Baker was not threatening Ventre or anyone else.
Under the conceded facts, Baker “did not have his fists clenched or assume a fighting stance”
and demonstrated no danger to anyone, and, although it is true that Baker was highly intoxicated
and that a suspect’s intoxication can add to a situation’s volatility, under the facts conceded,
Baker was not behaving aggressively at the time of his second tasing.
Marvin v. City of Taylor
,
Finally, Baker was no longer resisting arrest or attempting to flee at the time Ventre tased him at the top of the staircase. The defendants specifically conceded that Baker “did not move once Officer Ventre entered the home” and that Baker “did not have his fists clenched or assume a fighting stance.” (Reply Br. at 3). Although Baker had been fleeing before, he was not fleeing at the time of the second tasing. Under the facts conceded, Baker did not move until after Ventre deployed the taser.
Even looking at the second tasing from the vantage point of a reasonable officer on the scene, making as many allowances as possible for the split-second decision-making we ask of our law-enforcement officers, Ventre should not have tased Baker. According to the facts conceded, Baker “was standing in the middle of the hallway with the area lit and the door to the *10 stairs open.” (Reply Br. at 3). It is widely known among law enforcement and was even a subject of Ventre’s police training that tasers should not be employed against suspects on elevated surfaces because of the risk of serious injury from a resulting fall.
Graham
admonishes courts to conduct “careful balancing of the nature and quality of the
intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against the countervailing government
interests . . . .”
Graham
,
B
Having established that Officer Ventre violated Baker’s Fourth Amendment rights under
Graham
, we now turn to the second part of qualified-immunity analysis: the determination of
whether the right violated was clearly established at the time of the incident. In making this
determination the “dispositive inquiry . . . is whether it would be clear to a reasonable officer that
his conduct was unlawful in the situation confronted.”
Saucier
,
The right at issue can be expressed as Baker’s right not to be shot with a taser without warning, while offering no resistance to arrest, and while standing on an observably elevated surface. This articulation comports with al-Kidd’s mandate that rights not be defined at “a high level of generality” at the second step of qualified immunity analysis. Al-Kidd , 131 S. Ct. at 2084.
Examining the incident under the facts conceded, it is fairly certain that a reasonable
officer would have been “on notice that [this] conduct violates established law” at the time
Ventre tased Baker.
Hope v. Pelzer
,
Baker was suspected of, at most, a minor, non-violent misdemeanor at the time he was tased. The police were called to the scene of a disturbance at the VFW. It is unclear what, exactly, the police suspected him of at the time they gave chase. The police did not even positively identify Baker as the suspect of the reported incident, they merely chased someone they saw running away. This is a far cry from the scenarios implicitly contemplated by Graham in which a heightened level of caution may be warranted in the apprehension of someone suspected of a violent felony.
Under the facts conceded, Baker did not resist arrest before Ventre deployed his taser the
second time. “[T]he right to be free from physical force when one is not resisting the police is a
clearly established right.”
Wysong v. City of Heath
, 260 F.App’x 848, 856 (6th Cir. 2008). In
the past, this court has held that an officer violates a suspect’s clearly-established Fourth
Amendment rights when “he pepper sprays a suspect who has not been told she is under arrest
and is not resisting arrest.”
Grawey v. Drury
,
Moreover, Ventre should not have tased Baker without a warning. The tasing of a
suspect without warning is, at the very least, an additional factor useful in determining whether
an officer violated a suspect’s Fourth Amendment right to be free of excessive force.
See Asten
v. City of Boulder
,
Further, Baker was not fleeing at the time of the second tasing. Flight is a form of
resisting arrest and flight alone has been held to warrant deployment of a taser, even for non-
violent misdemeanants.
See McKenney v. Harrison
,
Finally, Baker posed no danger to Ventre at the time that Ventre tased him. Under the facts conceded, Baker was standing still in a well-lit hallway and did not adopt an aggressive posture toward Ventre. By the time of Baker’s tasing, case law had clearly established that police may not tase a non-threatening suspect. See Kijowski v. City of Niles , 372 F. App’x. 595, 600 (6th Cir. 2010) (finding it a violation of plaintiff’s Fourth Amendment rights for officer to tase him in his truck for failing to end a phone call to 911 when plaintiff showed no indication that he was violent or dangerous); Michaels v. City of Vermillion , 539 F. Supp. 2d 975, 986 (N.D. Ohio 2008) (affirming denial of summary judgment to defendant officer accused of having “gratuitously tased” a handcuffed, non-dangerous suspect accused of a minor crime).
Since Baker’s Fourth Amendment right to be free of excessive force was violated under the facts conceded and since that right was clearly established at the time of its violation, the plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts to defeat a grant of qualified immunity at the summary judgment stage. We therefore affirm the denial of summary judgment and remand the case to the district court to proceed to trial.
V
The appeals of the remaining two claims are dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. The first is Baker’s § 1983 claim against Union Township and the Union Township Board of Trustees for ratification by failure to investigate. As explained above, denials of summary judgment are not final orders and usually do not come under the collateral-order doctrine. Instead, they are interlocutory and are therefore not immediately appealable in their own right. It is for this reason that the appellants have tried to bring Union Township’s claim alongside Ventre’s.
Other than the exceptionally rare cases in which a second claim on interlocutory appeal is
“inextricably intertwined” with the question of qualified immunity, there is no “pendent
appellate jurisdiction” for third parties trying to piggyback on an appeal challenging a district
court’s denial of qualified immunity at the summary judgment stage.
See Swint v. Chambers
County Com’n
,
This is not such a case. The determination of Ventre’s qualified-immunity claim does not
necessarily dispose of the municipal-liability claim. Ventre could have successfully appealed the
denial of his motion for summary judgment by demonstrating that he had a right to qualified
immunity without that finding necessarily precluding liability for Union Township. Since
Baker’s § 1983 claim against Union Township rests on a theory of ratification by failure to
investigate, an ultimate finding of municipal liability would be possible even if Ventre were to
have been found to be protected by qualified immunity. This could happen, for example, if the
district court were to find that the Union Township ratified Ventre’s misconduct which, though
unconstitutional, was not in violation of clearly-established law. In such a case, provided the
requirements of
Monell
and
Marchese
are met, Ventre would be entitled to qualified immunity
but the municipality could still be found independently liable.
Monell v. New York City Dept. of
Social Services
,
Finally, Ventre appeals the denial of summary judgment as to Baker’s claim for assault and battery. This too is an interlocutory appeal over which the court has no jurisdiction. Like the municipal-liability claim above, Ventre’s defense of qualified immunity is neither “inextricably intertwined” nor “coterminous with” the claim for assault and battery. The two claims can be considered, in fact must be considered, independently.
In Ohio, officials acting within the scope of their official responsibilities and who do not have liability otherwise imposed upon them by statute can only be found liable for their wrongdoing under state law if “[t]he employee’s acts or omissions were with malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless manner.” O.R.C. § 2744.03.
This inquiry has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not an official is entitled to
qualified immunity under federal law and success as to one does not guarantee success as to the
other. Subjective intent, the basis by which Ventre could defeat liability under Ohio law, has no
place in federal qualified-immunity analysis. In conducting Fourth Amendment inquiries, the
Supreme Court has “almost uniformly rejected invitations to probe subjective intent” because the
Fourth Amendment “regulates conduct rather than thoughts.”
Al-Kidd
,
VI
For the reasons above, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of summary judgment as to the defendant’s qualified immunity claim and DISMISS the appeal of the denial of summary judgment as to appellants’ municipal-liability and assault-and-battery claims for lack of jurisdiction.
