Lead Opinion
We hold that deadly force under Tennessee v. Garner,
I
1992 did not start well for Robert Vera Cruz. After drinking more than two six-packs of beer on New Year’s Day, he headed over to the local Del Taco restaurant. The Del Taco employees were cleaning up after closing and refused to serve Vera Cruz, who then challenged them to a fight. When the challenge was declined, Vera Cruz angrily hit the restaurant window and went home.
Just after returning home, Vera Cruz’s thirst also returned and so he set out for the liquor store, which happened to be next door to the Del Taco. Before leaving, Vera Cruz strapрed a knife to his hip-to protect himself from the Del Taco employees, he explained.
Responding to a call from the said employees, Escondido Police Officer Eric Distel and his K-9 companion were the first to arrive at the scene. Distel spotted Vеra Cruz in a doorway at the rear of the Del Taco throwing objects out of the building. When the officer identified himself, Vera Cruz began walking away. Distel then warned Vera Cruz to stop or he would release the dog; Vera Cruz started running. After giving another warning, Distel released the dog, who bit Verа Cruz on the right arm, bringing him to the ground. After disarming Vera Cruz, Distel ordered the dog to release his bite, and the dog immediately complied. Vera Cruz sustained a large laceration and several pune-
Vera Cruz sued thе City of Escondido, its chief of police and several police officers, including Distel, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming he was the subject of an unreasonable seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment. The jury found by way of a special verdict that the officer had not used excessive forсe. Vera Cruz moved for a new trial, arguing that the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the deadly force rule of Garner. The Court there announced that police may only use deadly force “[wjhere the officer has probable eause to believe that the suspeсt poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others[.]”
II
While the Supreme Court in Garner established a special rule concerning deadly force, it did not explain what it meant by that phrase.
Vera Cruz urges us to adopt the Mоdel Penal Code’s definition of deadly force. According to the MPC, deadly force means “force that the actor uses with the purpose of causing or that he knows to create a substantial risk of causing death or serious bodily injury.” Model Penal Code § 3.11(2) (1962) (emphasis added). Vera Cruz аrgues that he was entitled to a deadly force instruction because he presented evidence that police dogs can cause serious bodily injury.
Although we have mentioned the “significant risk of death or serious bodily injury” formulation in three other dogbite eases, we havе done so only in dicta. In fact, two of the cases simply refer to the fact that one of our colleagues relied on the MPC in his lonely effort to define deadly force in Chew v. Gates,
Our case squarely presents this question. Vera Cruz himself required surgery and eight days of hospitalization. At trial, four witnesses testified that such injuries are not unusual; pоlice dogs can — and often do— cause serious harm. One witness testified that he knew of cases where dogs had bitten
We now reject the MPC’s definition as inapposite to the Fourth Amendment context. The MPC’s definition and Garner’s deadly force rule serve entirely different purposes: The MPC is designed to govern criminal liability; Garner’s deadly force rule sets the boundaries of reasonable police conduct under the Fourth Amendment. We decline to put police doing thеir jobs in the same category as criminals doing theirs. Because criminal activities serve no legitimate purpose, there is no reason to spare criminals from even remote consequences of their actions; deterrence, by forcing criminals to assume responsibility for all the harm they cause by their anti-social conduct, is the very essence of criminal law. Law enforcement personnel, by contrast, serve important purposes; the risk of personal liability, if taken beyond its proper scope, may make police timid and deter activities necessary for our. protection. Criminals, moreover, can largely control thé circumstances of their crimes and thus minimize the risk that force will be necessary; law enforcement personnel must take the situation as they find it.
The MPC’s definition of dеadly force is also at loggerheads with Fourth Amendment caselaw. A central consideration under the MPC’s definition — the subjective intent of the actor — is an impermissible consideration in the Fourth Amendment context: While it makes perfect sense for criminal law purposes tо consider whether “the actor uses [the force] with the purpose of causing or that he knows to create a substantial risk of causing death or serious bodily injury,” the question in police brutality cases is “whether the officers’ actions are ‘objectively reasonable’ in light of the facts and circumstances сonfronting them, without regard to their underlying intent or motivation.’’ Graham v. Connor,
Other circuits do seem to have adopted the MPC’s definition of deadly force, though none of those cases presented a record like ours. Two of the circuits—the Tenth in Ryder v. City of Topeka,
The most relevant out-of-circuit case is Robinette v. Barnes,
As we read Garner, deadly force is that force which is reasonably likely to cause death. While there are few enough clues in Garner, our interpretation does find support in the Court’s reasoning there. First, Garner noted that use of deadly force actually frustrates the interest of the criminal justice system becаuse it’s a “self-defeating way of apprehending a suspect.... If successful, it guarantees that [the criminal justice] mechanism will not be set in motion.”
Vera Cruz presented no evidence that properly trained police dogs are reasonably capable of causing death. See Don Burton, Inc. v. Aetna Life & Cas. Co.,
Nevertheless, we will assume thаt a properly trained police dog could kill a suspect under highly unusual circumstances. The prospect of such an aberration doesn’t convert otherwise nondeadly force into deadly force. Robinette — the only reported case where a policе dog actually killed a suspect-illustrates our point. In Robinette, the suspect bled to death after a police dog bit him on the neck. Apparently, the dog was trained to bite whatever part of the anatomy was nearest if an arm was unavailable and the suspect had hidden undеr a ear so that only his neck was exposed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We address appellant's other claims in an unpublished disposition.
. This omission most likely is attributable to the fact there was no doubt in Garner that deadly force had been used becausе the police had shot and killed the fleeing suspect. Justice O’Connor in dissent expressed concern that the majority's sweeping language "unnecessarily implies that the Fourth Amendment constrains the use of any police practice that is potentially lethal, no matter how remote the risk.” Id. at 31,
. At oral argument before us, plaintiff’s counsel stated:
Number one there was testimony as to a number of deaths from police dog attacks. It came from Mr. Bogardus and Dr. Meade. There haven’t been many; two or three was their testimony. Secondly, we have the testimony of the capacity of the dog to cause death.
After searching thе record, we can find no such reference either to a number of deaths caused by police dogs or to their capacity to kill. Mr. Bogardus did testify about two incidents in which police officers were allegedly killed by suspects after releasing their dogs. R.T. vol. 3, at 409, June 22, 1995.
. Whether a particular use of force is reasonably likely to cause death is a function of two factors: (1) the degree of force and (2) the accuracy with which it is directed at a vulnerable part of the human anatomy. The greater the force, the less accurately it need be directed to cause death. Thus, a bullet has such killing capacity that it will be deemed lethal if deliberately discharged in the general direction of the victim. But a bullet shot in the air as a warning will not be deemed deadly even if it accidentally hits a tree branch which falls and kills the suspect below.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the judgment.
