VALENTINE UNDERWOOD v. PATRICK BARRETT; ANTHONY CATALANO; JEFFREY CLEMENT; BRIAN DEVLIN; MICHAEL MCDONALD; ANTHONY FALCIANO; LEO MARCHAND; STUART MCCULLOCH; WILLIAM SHUGRUE, et al.
No. 16-1725
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
May 17, 2019
Torruella, Thompson, and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
DOUGLAS BOWER; CORRECTIONAL OFFICER SWEETS, f/k/a John Doe (Sweets); DONALD DENOMME; JEFFREY FISHER; MICHAEL GRANT; JACK HAUGHEY; JASON LANPHER; ABBY NELLIGAN; JAMES NELSON; DINARTE REGO; JAMES J. SABA; SEAN SMITH; LUIS S. SPENCER, Defendants.
Nancy Ankers White, Special Assistant Attorney General, and Charles W. Anderson Jr., Sentencing Counsel, Department of Correction, on brief for appellants.
Valentine Underwood on brief pro se.
The prison officials eventually moved for summary judgment, contending that, at the very least, they were entitled to qualified immunity. See Gray v. Cummings, 917 F.3d 1, 10 (1st Cir. 2019) (“[G]overnment official[s] may invoke the defense of qualified immunity when [their] actions, though causing injury, did ‘not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.‘“) (quoting Conlogue v. Hamilton, 906 F.3d 150, 154 (1st Cir. 2018)). After the district court denied the motion, the prison officials appealed.
The record contains two versions of the relevant interaction between plaintiff and prison officials as they attempted to move him from the recreation cage. One version is the plaintiff‘s description of what happened. The other version is a videotape of the interaction taken by prison officials. No one disputes the authenticity of the video evidence. Nor is there any claim that it was doctored in any way. The two versions conflict in several apparently crucial respects. Under plainly controlling law, the district court‘s job was to decide whether the video evidence “blatantly contradicted” the plaintiff‘s version of events, in which case the court‘s next job was to determine if, viewing the facts in the light depicted by the video evidence, the prison official violated plaintiff‘s constitutional rights. See Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 377 (2007) (quoting Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201 (2001)); id. at 380-81 (“When opposing parties tell two different stories, one of which is blatantly contradicted by the record, so that no reasonable jury could believe it, a court should not adopt that version of the facts for purposes of ruling on a motion for summary judgment.“).
The district court conceded that the video evidence was “compelling,” but opted to reject the teaching of Scott, explaining that it preferred the contrary view expressed in both Justice Stevens‘s Scott dissent, see id. at 395 (Stevens, J., dissenting) (opining that the Court improperly “usurped the jury‘s factfinding function“), and in what the district court described as an “academic consensus” favoring the dissent.
