A jury awarded brothers Victor and Tré McNair $5,000 apiece to compensate them for the fright and indignity they suffered when officer Sean Coffey pulled over their car and, with the aid of seven other officers (a total of eight squad cars), arrested them at gunpoint for the offense of not paying parking tickets. The jury concluded that, by treating these scofflaws as if they were armed bank robbers apprehended after a high speеd chase, officer Coffey used excessive force and thus violated the fourth amendment, as interpreted in
Graham v. Connor,
Taken in the light most favorable to the verdict, as it must be, the evidence shows that the McNairs were driving peaceably to church one evening when officer Coffey put on his lights to signal them to stop. Coffey had adequate reason to do this: a check showed that the license plate had been suspended for nonpayment of parking fines. Although Coffey was not interested in this offense but wanted instead to look into the possibility of drugs, probable cause for the stop was not undercut by Coffey’s desire to investigate a different оffense.
Whren v. United States,
According to Coffey, this was a “high risk traffic stop” — not only because of the neighborhood but also because the McNairs did not stop immediately and the officer was not sure how many persons were in the car. Coffey’s response was to crоuch behind the door of his squad car, point a semiautomatic pistol at the *354 McNairs, and demand over a loudspeaker that they put their hands against the inside roof of the car. They complied without making any suspicious move. When other patrol cars had arrived, and at least four more officers had the McNairs in their sights, Coffey ordered them to get out with their hands in the air; again they complied peaceably. Both MсNairs were handcuffed and arrested — a step that enabled Coffey to search their persons and their car. (He found nothing unlawful.) Tré, who had been the passenger, was released after about 25 minutes, and Victor аfter an hour. Both were shaken by the experience.
Neither McNair was roughed up, and although the officers’ histrionics seem a bit much for a traffic stop, we- do not deprecate the risk that confronts the рolice in these situations. Perhaps Coffey could have argued that an excessive
display
of force must be distinguished from an excessive
use
of force. See
Gumz v. Morrissette,
Public officials must act in the shadow of legal uncertainty. Unlike private actors, who can retire from the fray while legal debate persists, police must protect the public (and themselves) as best they can while coping with complex bodies of law that not only change but also often leave important subjects unresolved for extended periods. When the law is in flux, or when the only applicable norm is a multi-factor balancing test incapable of predictable application, prospective relief is used in lieu of damages. See
Auriemma v. Rice,
For many years the analysis of excessive-force claims was bеset by legal uncertainty. Some courts analyzed these claims under the fourth amendment, some under the fifth (and, if under the fifth, some for “conscience-shocking” conduct, a standard very hard to pin down in practice). Some courts used a subjective approach, others an objective one. Uncertainty about the legal standard ended, however, with the Supreme Court’s opinion in Graham, which adopts an objective apрroach under the fourth amendment. There may still be uncertainty in the application of that standard to particular situations, but this is not the kind of legal uncertainty that Anderson and Wilson discuss. It is enough that the rule of law be specific in its relаtion to the facts — and Graham makes the norm as clear as the judiciary can achieve, more specific than rules of tort law under which juries regularly award large damages against surgeons and auto manufacturеrs.
Still, Coffey insists, he is entitled to immunity unless a reasonable officer in his position would have known that the
Graham
standard labeled his conduct excessive. Six courts of appeals agree with this proposition.
Napier v. Windham,
This is not to say that qualified immunity is inconceivable in an excessive-force case. See
Ellis v. Wynalda,
To say that a public official is not exposed to damages even when all legal issues were authoritаtively resolved before the conduct occurred would be to make a substantial change in the scope of liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Cf.
Johnson v. Jones,
Let us never forget that immunity in § 1983 cases is a judicial invention. Congress provided for liability in absolute terms. Public officials who violate the Constitution or laws must pay; immunity is anti-textual. The justification for immunity is that the scope of liability has grown like topsy since 1871, when § 1983 was enacted, and that to carry out what Congress must have meant a court may depart from what Congress said. That’s a treacherous path for any judge to take, though history may provide a map. The Supreme Court has justified immunity doctrines as approximating the scope of public-official liability that prevailed when § 1983 was enacted. See
Richardson v. McKnight,
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to enter judgment on the jury’s verdict.
