Case Information
*2 Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT and SENTELLE, [*] Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiffs Tony Speight and Felice Cunningham appeal the grant of summary judgment to Fulton County and Fulton Police Corporal Benjamin Griggs on their 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim for violation of their minor son D.M.C.’s Fourth Amendment rights. [1]
I.
We state the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. Mobley v.
Palm Beach Cnty. Sheriff Dep’t,
A.
In the late evening of July 28, 2011, Speight and Cunningham’s sixteen-
year-old son D.M.C. was the passenger in a stolen Honda Accord being driven by
his friend Jontavious Darden. Speight v. Griggs,
Just after midnight on what was now July 29, Fulton County Police Officer Michael Guin (apparently the officer whose car Darden had seen) was patrolling the area and stopped at the Chevron to conduct a “business check,” following up on an incident that had happened earlier in the evening. The Chevron clerk described the suspects in the earlier incident as two young men wearing light- colored shirts, one of whom had a gun in his waistband. Seeing D.M.C. and Darden — both of whom were wearing white shirts — sitting in the parked car, Officer Guin ran a search on the Accord’s plates on the computer in his car. The search indicated that the car was stolen. Guin parked his car, drew his gun, and “in a felony stop manner” approached the Accord with Darden and D.M.C. in it. He pulled open the driver’s door. Darden, preparing to get out of the car, took his foot off the brake, and the Accord began rolling backward toward Officer Guin’s car. Officer Guin reached through the open driver’s door to engage the Accord’s emergency brake. While this was happening, D.M.C. got out of the car and ran. Officer Guin neither chased him nor ordered him to stop.
Officer Guin struggled briefly with Darden and radioed for backup. After Guin put one handcuff bracelet on him, Darden managed to escape and ran toward a Motel 6 located adjacent to the Chevron. Officer Guin briefly gave chase, but then thought better of it and decided to wait for his backup to arrive.
That backup consisted of several officers, including defendant Griggs, Fulton County Sheriff’s Office K-9 Officer Corey Henry and his dog Marco, and Detective Marty McHugh. Officer Guin gave them a description of Darden, including that he was wearing a single handcuff bracelet, but Guin did not describe D.M.C. or even indicate that a second person had fled from the vehicle.
After a brief initial search, Marco indicated that the suspect had fled into a heavily wooded area behind the Motel 6. Griggs, Henry, and McHugh volunteered to search the wooded area. Because the woods were dense and dark the officers had to use flashlights. Soon after entering the woodline, the officers split up, with Griggs and Henry following Marco’s tracking, while McHugh went in a different direction. Griggs had drawn his service firearm and was using the tactical light mounted under its barrel to see his way through the woods.
The two officers and the dog passed through a narrow belt of trees into a clearing with some abandoned buildings in it. Officer Henry heard a voice — which turned out to be D.M.C.’s — call out “Okay, okay, okay, I give.” Marco began barking, and Griggs turned to see Henry looking back the way they had come, toward a large tree. Henry yelled out commands to “get down” and “let me see your hands.” At first, Henry says, he could see only D.M.C.’s raised right hand, but when D.M.C. stepped out from behind the tree Henry saw that both his hands were raised. D.M.C. went down to his knees.
Officer Griggs says he didn’t hear D.M.C. surrender, and says he also couldn’t see D.M.C. because a large tree was in the way. He moved to a position where he could see D.M.C.’s left side, and he told D.M.C. to “get down” and to “get on the ground.” When D.M.C. went to his knees, Griggs says he could see only D.M.C.’s left hand. Griggs told Officer Henry he was going to “go hands- on,” which meant that he was going to put handcuffs on D.M.C. He requested that Henry provide a light because he was going to holster his gun with its attached light.
Instead of waiting for Officer Henry to respond, Officer Griggs with his gun still out and pointed rushed at D.M.C. and forced him to the ground with a “push- kick.” When the two of them fell to the ground, they fell behind the large tree and Henry could no longer see what was happening.
Fulton County regulations prohibit officers from “plac[ing] their fingers inside the trigger guard of their firearms” unless “they reasonably believe their life is in danger or that they will suffer serious bodily injury.” When a Fulton County officer has a drawn gun in his hand, the regulations require that he “index” it — that is, place his index finger along the cocking slide of the gun outside the trigger guard. The regulations also prohibit officers from “going hands-on with arrestees/detainees while their firearms are drawn.” The County trains its officers “to holster their weapons when they lay hands on a suspect to make an arrest.”
Griggs had undergone more than two dozen firearms training exercises, including three in a “Judgmental Pistol Shooting Simulator.” The undisputed facts show, however, that Griggs had his gun drawn and aimed when he rushed at D.M.C. and forced him to the ground. They also show that his finger was not “indexed” outside the trigger guard but was instead inside the trigger guard and on the trigger. Less than five seconds after he forced D.M.C. to the ground, Griggs pulled the trigger of his gun. The gun discharged once. The bullet struck D.M.C. in the left hand and the back of the head. D.M.C. suffered catastrophic injuries including severe brain damage, and his medical expenses have exceeded a million dollars. Officer Griggs contends that the shooting was an accident — that he did not intend to pull the trigger.
B.
On September 19, 2011, Speight and Cunningham filed a complaint in the district court, seeking damages for the violation of D.M.C.’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. [2] They later amended the complaint to assert a Monell claim [3] against Fulton County for defective customs and policies and failure to train. On September 24, 2013, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Officer Griggs on the Fourth Amendment claim, ruling that he was entitled to qualified immunity because he had not violated D.M.C.’s Fourth Amendment rights. Because it found no violation of D.M.C.’s constitutional rights, the district court did not reach the second prong of the qualified immunity test, which asks whether the rights violated were clearly established. The district court also granted summary judgment in favor of Fulton County on the ground that there was no underlying constitutional violation for which the county could be liable. This is the plaintiffs’ appeal.
II.
We review de novo a grant of summary judgment, viewing all evidence and
drawing all inferences in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Mobley,
The Fourth Amendment guarantees that the “right of the people to be
secure . . . against unreasonable . . . seizures[ ] shall not be violated.” U.S. Const.
Amend. IV. That freedom “encompasses the right to be free from excessive force
during the course of a criminal apprehension.” Oliver v. Fiorino,
In this circuit, there is no clearly established right to be free from the
accidental application of force during arrest, even if that force is deadly. But we
have long held that it is a violation of the Fourth Amendment for a police officer to
intentionally “use[] gratuitous and excessive force against a suspect who is under
control, not resisting, and obeying commands.” Saunders v. Duke,
Juries may infer intent, or the lack of it, from the surrounding circumstances
and the defendant’s conduct. See United States v. Bradley,
III.
We turn now to the plaintiffs’ Monell claim. We may affirm a grant of
summary judgment on any ground supported by the record, “regardless of whether
the district court relied on that ground.” McCabe v. Sharrett,
AFFIRMED IN PART , VACATED IN PART , and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. [4]
Notes
[*] Honorable David Bryan Sentelle, United States Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit, sitting by designation.
[1] Because D.M.C. was a minor child at the time of the incident, we identify him by his initials under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5.2(a)(3) and the terms of a protective order issued by the district court in this case.
[2] The plaintiffs also asserted state law claims. In a separate interlocutory appeal we held that those claims were barred under Georgia state law by official immunity. Speight I, 579 F. App’x at 759–60.
[3] In Monell v. Department of Social Services,
[4] Appellees’ Joint Motion to Supplement the Record Pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 10(e) is DENIED .
