Roy v. Inhabitants ( 1994 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-1260

    MICHAEL G. ROY,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    INHABITANTS OF THE CITY OF LEWISTON, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Cyr and Boudin,

    Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    Walter Hanstein, III with whom William Maselli and Joyce, Dumas, ____________________ ________________ _____________
    David & Hanstein, P.A. were on brief for appellant. ______________________
    Edward R. Benjamin, Jr. with whom Daniel Rapaport and Preti, _________________________ ________________ _____
    Flaherty, Beliveau & Pachios were on brief for appellees. ____________________________


    ____________________

    December 21, 1994
    ____________________




















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. On August 13, 1991, around 9:00 _____________

    p.m., officers Michael Whalen and Richard Mercer of the

    Lewiston Police Department were sent to investigate a

    domestic violence report at the home of Michael and Edith

    Roy. On arriving, Edith Roy told the police officers that

    Michael Roy ("Roy") was armed with two knives and had

    threatened to use them against any policeman who approached

    him. The policemen then went outside to the back of the

    residence and found Roy lying on the ground.

    Roy was roused--he had been drinking--and the officers

    then learned that a third officer, Randy Hausman, was on his

    way to the Roys' home to serve a summons on Michael Roy

    because of a complaint by another woman that Roy had struck

    her earlier that day. When Hausman arrived and read Roy his

    Miranda rights, Roy refused to acknowledge the reading or _______

    accept the summons, so Hausman pushed it into Roy's pocket.

    The latter then became upset, stated "I'll show you," entered

    his home, and then--following out Edith Roy who was

    screaming--returned carrying a steak knife in each hand.

    In broad outline, what happened next is that the

    officers drew their side arms and ordered Roy to put down the

    knives. He advanced, flailing his arms while continuing to

    hold the knives. The officers retreated back to a sharp

    downward incline. After some maneuvering in which the

    officers repeated their warnings and made some effort to



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    distract and disarm Roy, Roy made a kicking-lunging motion

    toward Whalen and Mercer. Whalen shot twice, striking Roy

    both times and injuring him badly. Roy was arrested and

    hospitalized. He ultimately recovered, and then brought the

    present action.

    The law suit, filed in state court and removed to

    federal district court, asserted claims against all three

    officers, the City of Lewiston, and the police chief. The

    claims, under 42 U.S.C. 1983 and state law, were based on

    charges that the three police officers had unreasonably used

    deadly force. The city and its police chief were claimed to

    be liable on the ground that they had not adequately trained

    the officers in non-lethal alternatives for subduing

    dangerous but intoxicated persons.

    The defendants moved for summary judgment based on

    affidavits reciting the facts just set forth and their belief

    that their conduct was reasonable. In response, Roy

    submitted affidavits and deposition materials of his own. He

    did not contradict the events just described but asserted

    that he had intended and was seeking to put the knives down

    when he was shot. He also proffered testimony from two

    witnesses who had seen the event. One, a teenager, said that

    he had not seen the kick or lunge; but Roy did not dispute

    that he had made some gesture of this kind.





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    The other eyewitness had substantial experience with

    drunken prisoners as a corrections officer in the county

    jail. He was arguably qualified to give an opinion as to

    whether unreasonable force had been used, and there is an

    indication that he harbored doubts about the police conduct

    in subduing Roy. But in his deposition this eyewitness

    ultimately declined to go further than to say that he might

    have handled the matter differently. In other respects, his

    testimony confirmed a number of the details offered by the

    officers.

    A third affiant, with qualifications as an expert on

    police procedure, said that the officers could easily have

    arrested Roy without using firearms. He said that the

    officers should have been equipped with a noxious spray,

    colloquially known as red pepper mace. Because this spray

    was not made available to Lewiston police and because the

    expert thought that the police chief placed undue emphasis on

    guns, the expert was prepared to say that the training of the

    officers was inadequate.

    In a thoughtful opinion rendered on February 16, 1994,

    the district court granted the motions for summary judgment

    in favor of each defendant; as to the officers, the court

    said their conduct was objectively reasonable and protected ___

    by qualified immunity. Roy has now appealed, challenging the

    grant of summary judgment as to each of the defendants. For



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    reasons to be explained, we are mainly concerned with the

    section 1983 claim against Whalen; and although we might have

    rested on the district court's opinion, this case raises one

    important issue of general application.

    To lay the groundwork, we invoke the usual boilerplate

    propositions: summary judgment is proper if there is no

    genuine issue of material fact and the law otherwise warrants

    judgment for the moving party; the court must assume that a

    jury would resolve credibility issues and draw reasonable

    inferences in favor of the opposing party; and on appeal

    review of summary judgment is de novo. Fed. R. Civ. P. _______

    56(c); Rivera v. Murphy, 979 F.2d 259 (1st Cir. 1992). ______ ______

    Qualified immunity claims, in particular, are to be resolved

    before trial, where possible. Hunter v. Bryant, 502 U.S. 224 ______ ______

    (1991).

    Section 1983 protects constitutional rights, and the

    constitutional standard for measuring Whalen's conduct has a

    surface clarity. The Supreme Court has instructed that the

    Fourth Amendment's search and seizure provisions control and

    that the use of deadly force incident to arrest depends

    solely on whether the officer's conduct was "objectively

    reasonable." Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 397 (1989). ______ ______

    Further, the Court has adopted a qualified immunity test for

    section 1983 actions that shields a "reasonable officer"





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    judged by an objective standard. Anderson v. Creighton, 483 ________ _________

    U.S. 635, 641 (1987).

    If these "reasonableness" tests were designed to mirror

    the standards of common-law negligence, it is doubtful

    whether summary judgment would be appropriate in this case,

    even though the underlying facts are fairly clear. After

    all, one might think that a hard look was warranted where

    three officers had to shoot and badly injure an intoxicated

    man who, although armed with two small knives, was flailing

    and stumbling about rather ineffectually. Further, Roy was

    prepared to offer an expert to say that the police conduct,

    quite apart from the lack of mace, was unreasonable.

    The most plausible ground given by the expert for this

    judgment was that the officers had been properly trained to ________

    keep a considerable distance--such as 20 feet--from a suspect

    armed with a knife. In fact, two officers were only a couple

    of feet from Roy when he kicked and lunged; had they been

    further away, shots might not have been needed. The expert

    was prepared to testify that he had reviewed a tape of the

    scene and believed that the officers had room to retreat in

    three different directions.

    Judgments about reasonableness are usually made by

    juries in arguable cases, even if there is no dispute about

    what happened (qualified immunity is a different matter, see ___

    Hall v. Ochs, 817 F.2d 920, 924 (1st Cir. 1987)). Of course, ____ ____



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    the facts might point so clearly toward reasonableness that

    no reasonable jury could decide for the plaintiff. But if

    this case were treated exactly like a case of careless

    driving by a postman, it might well seem to be one suited for

    trial. Most drunks with knives are disarmed without anyone

    shooting them, and here an expert was prepared to opine that

    the officers had been negligent and to explain why.

    But the Supreme Court's standard of reasonableness is

    comparatively generous to the police in cases where potential

    danger, emergency conditions or other exigent circumstances

    are present. In Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386 (1989), the ______ ______

    Court said that the "calculus of reasonableness" must make

    "allowance" for the need of police officers "to make split-

    second judgments--in circumstances that are tense, uncertain,

    and rapidly evolving--about the amount of force that is

    necessary in a particular situation." Id. at 396-97. Cf. ___ ___

    Daniels v. Williams, 474 U.S. 327 (1986) (negligence not a _______ ________

    due process violation).

    Also pertinent is the Court's more general statement in

    Anderson v. Creighton addressed to qualified immunity for a ________ _________

    Fourth Amendment violation. The Court used as its standard

    the "reasonable officer" and what "could reasonably have been

    thought lawful" by such an officer, 483 U.S. at 638, terms

    suggesting a measure of deference. The Court then quoted

    earlier decisions saying that immunity protects "all but the



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    plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law"

    or those who act where "the law clearly proscribed the

    actions" taken. Id. at 638-39. See also Malley v. Briggs, ___ ________ ______ ______

    475 U.S. 335, 343 (1986) (qualified immunity leaves "ample

    room for mistaken judgments").

    What these precedents dictate is this: whether

    substantive liability or qualified immunity is at issue, the

    Supreme Court intends to surround the police who make these

    on-the-spot choices in dangerous situations with a fairly

    wide zone of protection in close cases. Decisions from this

    circuit and other circuits are consistent with that view.1

    And in close cases, a jury does not automatically get to

    second-guess these life and death decisions, even though the

    plaintiff has an expert and a plausible claim that the

    situation could better have been handled differently.

    In theory, substantive liability and qualified immunity

    are two separate questions and, indeed, may be subject to

    somewhat different procedural treatment. In police

    misconduct cases, however, the Supreme Court has used the

    same "objectively reasonable" standard in describing both the

    constitutional test of liability, see Graham, 490 U.S. at ___ ______


    ____________________

    1See, e.g., Gaudreault v. Municipality of Salem, Mass., ___ ____ __________ _____________________________
    923 F.2d 203 (1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 956 _____ ______
    (1991); Krueger v. Fuhr, 991 F.2d 435 (8th Cir.), cert. _______ ____ _____
    denied, 114 S. Ct. 386 (1993); Reese v. Anderson, 926 F.2d ______ _____ ________
    494 (5th Cir. 1991); Ryder v. The City of Topeka, 814 F.2d _____ ___________________
    1412 (10th Cir. 1987).

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    397, and the Court's own standard for qualified immunity.

    Anderson, 483 U.S. at 639. It seems unlikely that this case ________

    would deserve a different outcome even if the qualified

    immunity defense had not been raised.

    As a matter of legislative policy, one could argue for

    less latitude for armed officers, at least in the case of

    fleeing suspects who are not an immediate threat. But the

    Supreme Court's decisions make the objective reasonableness

    test a minimum constitutional standard for liability; a _______ ______________

    legislature cannot afford less protection for citizens. ____

    Tennessee v. Garner, 471 U.S. 1 (1985). There is nothing _________ ______

    that prevents a legislature from being tougher on its police

    (e.g., by adopting stringent and specific firearms ____

    regulations), or being more generous to victims (through

    compensation), or both. Against this background, we

    think that the district court properly granted summary

    judgment on the section 1983 claim in favor of Whalen.

    Perhaps a jury could rationally have found that Whalen could

    have done a better job; but in our view a jury could not find

    that his conduct was so deficient that no reasonable officer

    could have made the same choice as Whalen--in circumstances

    that were assuredly "tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving .

    . . ." Graham, 490 U.S. at 397. Put differently, Whalen's ______

    actions, even if mistaken, were not unconstitutional.





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    Roy was armed; he apparently tried to kick and strike at

    the officers; he disobeyed repeated instructions to put down

    the weapons; and the officers had other reasons, already

    described, for thinking him capable of assault. Apart from

    the suggestion that mace should be carried by all policemen,

    Roy's expert nowhere explains in his affidavit how the police

    could have subdued Roy; and it is not obvious that it would

    have been a better solution (as the expert seems to suggest)

    for the police to retreat, leaving an intoxicated armed man

    on the premises--one who had just now committed an apparent

    felony in the presence of the police.

    Nor is it at all plain that the police could, or should,

    have kept their distance. Leaving aside the indications that

    Roy moved toward them, one might easily suppose that the best

    chance the police had to subdue him without shooting was to

    get close enough to push him over or wrest the weapons from

    him. The police may have done the wrong thing but they were

    not "plainly incompetent" nor were their actions "clearly

    proscribed." Anderson, 483 U.S. at 638-39. Cf. Floyd v. ________ ___ _____

    Farrell, 765 F.2d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 1985) (conduct "at least _______

    arguabl[y]" justified).

    We have labored over this single point--the Supreme

    Court's objective reasonableness standard--without any hope

    of articulating a more concrete or precise gloss of the

    Court's language. What can be said is that the term



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    reasonableness is used in different ways in different

    contexts; and in this one--the use of deadly force by the

    police in dangerous situations--the Supreme Court has allowed

    more latitude than might be customary in a simple tort case

    involving careless driving. Terms like "plainly incompetent"

    or concepts like what "a reasonable officer could have

    believed" are inherently general, but they add nuance and

    provide a sense of direction.

    These phrases do not automatically lend themselves to

    effective jury instructions. On the contrary, this court has

    held that it would be unsuitable to instruct a jury that

    excessive force must be "clearly" established to justify

    liability; we reasoned that the term could confuse the jury

    into thinking that the burden of proof was something more

    than preponderance of the evidence, as in the formula "clear

    and convincing evidence" often used to heighten the burden of

    proof in fraud cases. Tatro v. Kervin, 1994 WL 663805 (1st _____ ______

    Cir. 1994). But we are concerned here not with proof of raw

    facts but whether, on known or assumed facts, police behavior

    can be deemed egregious enough to submit the matter to a

    jury.

    The remaining defendants and the state claims were

    carefully addressed in the district court's decision, and we

    have little to add. The other officers did not use deadly

    force or encourage Whalen to do so. Compare Gutierrez- _______ __________



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    Rodriguez v. Cartagena, 882 F.2d 553 (1st Cir. 1989). As for _________ _________

    the police chief and the town, nothing in the expert's

    affidavit would make anyone think that the failure to provide

    mace was so unusual or patently improper as to reflect

    "deliberate indifference" under the demanding standard of

    Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378 (1989). The Eleventh Circuit ______ ______

    so held on essentially similar facts in McKinney v. DeKalb ________ ______

    County, Georgia, 997 F.2d 1440 (11th Cir. 1993). _______________

    As for the claims under Maine law, Roy points out that

    14 Maine Rev. Stat. Ann. 8104-A says that a government

    entity, with certain exceptions, is liable for "negligent

    acts" involving unspecified "machinery or equipment whether

    mobile or stationary." Roy asserts that this language must

    include the police use of firearms and establishes a bare

    negligence standard for this case. This is perhaps a

    literally permissible reading of an ambiguous statute but one

    that strikes the reader as a trifle unlikely. Roy's brief

    offers no precedent for reading this statute to apply to

    police weaponry.

    At the same time, another Maine statute provides

    explicit immunity for official discretionary action, 14 Maine

    Rev. Stat. Ann. 8111(1)(c), and Maine case law has

    construed this latter statute to apply to claims of excessive

    force. Leach v. Betters, 599 A.2d 424, 426 (Me. 1991) ("At _____ _______

    best, the records support the conclusion that the officers



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    may have used more force than was necessary but it contains

    no suggestion that they used more force than they reasonably

    thought to be necessary."). Given Leach, we have no reason _____

    to think that Maine imposes more stringent limits on the

    police than does federal law; indeed, the reverse may be

    true. See Leach, 599 A.2d at 426 (possible exception for ___ _____ ________

    "wanton" conduct).

    Affirmed. ________





































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