Filed: Dec. 04, 1995
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit. No. 94-8258. Gordon HAYGOOD, Judy Haygood, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Randall JOHNSON, in his individual and official capacity as Sheriff of Fayette County, Georgia, Mike Pruitt, Lt., in his individual and official capacity as a law enforcement officer with the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, Scott Savage, in his individual and official capacity as a law enforcement officer with the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, Defendants-Third-Party P
Summary: United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit. No. 94-8258. Gordon HAYGOOD, Judy Haygood, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Randall JOHNSON, in his individual and official capacity as Sheriff of Fayette County, Georgia, Mike Pruitt, Lt., in his individual and official capacity as a law enforcement officer with the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, Scott Savage, in his individual and official capacity as a law enforcement officer with the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, Defendants-Third-Party Pl..
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United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
No. 94-8258.
Gordon HAYGOOD, Judy Haygood, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Randall JOHNSON, in his individual and official capacity as
Sheriff of Fayette County, Georgia, Mike Pruitt, Lt., in his
individual and official capacity as a law enforcement officer with
the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, Scott Savage, in his
individual and official capacity as a law enforcement officer with
the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, Defendants-Third-Party
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
Fayette County, Defendant-Appellant,
Henry Allen Thurston, Third-Party Defendant.
Dec. 4, 1995.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern
District of Georgia. (No. 3:92-CV-123-GET), G. Ernest Tidwell,
Judge.
Before EDMONDSON and COX, Circuit Judges, and FAY, Senior Circuit
Judge.
PER CURIAM:
This case involves several claims brought by Gordon and Judy
Haygood pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking damages arising from
a search allegedly conducted in violation of the Fourth and
Fourteenth Amendments. Appellant-defendants appeal from adverse
rulings on summary judgment motions.
Defendant Savage argues that he was erroneously denied summary
judgment. His motion was based on qualified immunity to the
plaintiffs' claim that he caused an illegal search to occur by
intentionally or recklessly omitting material facts from an
application for a search warrant. Defendants City of Tyrone and
Fayette County argue that they were entitled to summary judgment on
the plaintiffs' section 1983 municipal liability claims against
them, which arose from the same search. We hold that Savage is
entitled to qualified immunity, but refrain from addressing the
municipal liability claims: we lack jurisdiction.
I.
In April 1992, Corporal Scott Savage was on duty at the
Fayette County Sheriff's Department Task Force. He received a call
from a man who informed him that Gordon Haygood—now plaintiff in
this case—was selling cocaine. The caller identified himself as
"Larry Sims." Savage ran a criminal history check on Sims and
found nothing. Savage's supervisor ordered a "controlled buy,"
using Sims as the decoy, to corroborate Sims' story.
Before the controlled buy, Sims was searched to make sure he
took into the buy no drugs, money, weapons, and so on. He then
called plaintiff Haygood and arranged a meeting at a convenience
store nearby. Sims went into the meeting wearing a small tape
recorder and in possession of $200 that had been given to him by
the police. Agents observed Gordon Haygood arrive, park by the gas
pumps, and meet with the informant in the store. Plaintiff and the
informant then got into Plaintiff's van, drove around to the
darkened side of the building, and sat with the lights off for two
minutes. The informant left the van and walked straight to the
officers' vehicle, where he presented a small bag of white powder.
This bag was later determined (before filing the warrant affidavit)
to contain five grams of powder, instead of the 3.5 that the agents
expected the $200 to buy.1
After the buy, the officers realized that the tape recorder
either had been shut off or malfunctioned. They also realized, as
"Sims" filled out paperwork, that he carried papers identifying him
as Henry Hurston. The informant admitted to the officers that
Hurston was his real name; he claimed he had lied because he was
frightened that the police would reveal his name to drug dealers
who would seek retribution. Had the officers run a second criminal
history check at this time, they would have discovered that Hurston
had been arrested and convicted several times for engaging police
in fraudulent "controlled buys."2
After the controlled buy, Savage filed an affidavit requesting
a warrant to search Plaintiff's residence. In the application,
Savage asked for and received a "no-knock" provision based on his
assertion that drugs can be easily disposed. In the affidavit, he
omitted that Hurston had used an alias, that the tape recorder
failed, and that the amount of the white powder (which had not yet
been tested) was more than the money allotted was expected to have
bought. A warrant was issued.
Having received the warrant, Fayette County officers used a
battering ram to go through the plaintiff's front door at about
1
Savage stated during his deposition that a laboratory test
done after the filing of the warrant affidavit showed the
substance not to be cocaine.
2
In this instance, Plaintiff Haygood alleges that Hurston
had contacted him earlier to ask if he would be interested in
buying a couch from Aaron Rental, for whom Hurston claimed to
work; that Haygood chose the couch, which Hurston agreed to
deliver; and that on the night of the controlled buy, Hurston
called Haygood to say the couch was at the convenience store.
11:00 p.m. Plaintiff and his family were detained in nightclothes
while the search of the house and a car took place. The search
turned up no evidence of drugs, nor the two $100 bills that Hurston
was to have used to buy the drugs.
Plaintiffs filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, bringing
state law claims as well. The district court held that there was
no probable cause to search and that Savage was unentitled to
summary judgment based on qualified immunity. For defendants
Pruitt and Johnson (Fayette County police officers sued in their
official and personal capacities) the district court granted them
summary judgment in their individual capacities based on qualified
immunity. The district court refused to grant summary judgment to
Fayette County and the City of Tyrone on the plaintiffs' municipal
liability claims. The district court dismissed Plaintiffs' state
law claims. Savage appeals the denial of qualified immunity; the
local governments appeal the denial of summary judgment on
Plaintiffs' claims against them under section 1983.
II.
We review the denial of summary judgment to determine whether
Savage's conduct violated "clearly established statutory or
constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have
known." Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
457 U.S. 800, 818,
102 S. Ct. 2727,
2738,
73 L. Ed. 2d 396 (1982). The question is one of law, and our
review is de novo. Elder v. Holloway, --- U.S. ----, ----,
114
S. Ct. 1019, 1023,
127 L. Ed. 2d 344 (1994).
The district court held that the facts omitted from the
warrant by defendant Savage negated probable cause and that a
reasonable officer in Savage's position would have known of the
clearly established law forbidding the omission of material facts
from a warrant application. Based on these conclusions, the
district court determined that Savage caused an illegal search in
violation of clearly established law and was, therefore, entitled
to no immunity.
The reasoning underlying the district court's holding
contravenes that of Lassiter v. Alabama A & M Univ.,
28 F.3d 1146
(11th Cir.1994) (en banc).3 There, we stressed that denial of
qualified immunity should occur only when the actual conduct in
which the defendant was alleged to have engaged violated clearly
established federal law.
Lassiter, 28 F.3d at 1149-50 (qualified
immunity unavailable only if all reasonable government agents in
same situation would know that act "violates federal law in the
circumstances "). Here, the district court concluded that clearly
established law holds that a search is invalid when facts
deliberately omitted from the warrant would have negated probable
cause. We accept this reading of Supreme Court and Eleventh
Circuit precedent for motions to suppress. E.g., West Point-
Pepperell, Inc. v. Donovan,
689 F.2d 950, 960 (11th Cir.1982);
United States v. Martin,
615 F.2d 318, 328 (5th Cir.1980). But, it
does not end the analysis in this civil action.
The district court never concluded that what Savage
specifically did violated clearly established law. In reality,
3
Lassiter approved no new rules, but did attempt to restate
and to clarify the principles of qualified immunity. The
district court's decision in this case predates our Lassiter
decision.
probable cause is not a precise concept. The district court did
not conclude (nor could it rightly have) that Plaintiff met the
burden of showing that, in the light of pre-existing law, the facts
omitted in this case were clearly material (that is, that the facts
omitted clearly would have negated probable cause if those facts
had been included). We, looking at the pre-existing law, hold that
the facts omitted here were not so clearly material that every
reasonable law officer would have known that their omission would
lead to a search in violation of federal law.
Savage omitted from his warrant application that Hurston had
used an alias, that the tape recorder had shut off, and that the
quantity of cocaine allegedly purchased exceeded the expected
quantity by about fifty percent. Savage points out that these
facts, taken individually, have rational explanations and do not
mean much. Informants commonly use aliases when dealing with the
police, tape recorders frequently malfunction, and variations in
quantity occur in drug sales (and are difficult to identify by
sight when they do). Thus, none of these facts was sufficient in
itself to cast the kind of doubt on the credibility of the informer
that would overcome the qualified immunity defense.
More important, however, we conclude that the combination of
omitted facts might for some reasonable police officers be
insufficient to negate probable cause in these uncommon and
specific circumstances. Savage had been physically present at what
looked by all appearances to be a typical drug deal: he had
witnessed a meeting in a convenience store, a brief drive with no
destination, a conversation in a darkened automobile in a darkened
corner of a parking lot, and the presentation of what looked to be
the drugs promised by the informant (who had been searched just
before the "buy"). Having seen those occurrences firsthand, a
reasonable officer in Savage's position could have concluded that
the facts about the alias, tape recorder and weight of the
substance would not negate probable cause and, thus, were not
material. See, e.g., United States v. Martin,
920 F.2d 393, 398-99
(6th Cir.1990) (observation of controlled buy can overcome
questions about informer's credibility).
No pre-April 1992 decisions from this court, Georgia's Supreme
Court, or the United States Supreme Court involve facts that are
much like the facts of this case. See generally Courson v.
McMillian,
939 F.2d 1479, 1497-98 & n. 32 (11th Cir.1991) (law can
be "clearly established" for qualified immunity purposes by
decisions of U.S. Supreme Court, Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals,
or highest court of state where case arose); D'Aguanno v.
Gallagher,
50 F.3d 877, 880 n. 5 (11th Cir.1995). Savage's conduct
was not so obviously wrong, in the light of pre-existing law, that
only a plainly incompetent officer or one who was knowingly
violating the law would have done what Savage did.
Lassiter, 28
F.3d at 1149. Defendant Savage is due immunity.
III.
The governmental parties argued two other questions in briefs
to this Court: the merits of the plaintiffs' constitutional claims
and the liability of the local governments under Monell v.
Department of Social Services,
436 U.S. 658,
98 S. Ct. 2018,
56
L. Ed. 2d 611 (1978). For these claims, we no longer have
jurisdiction in the light of the Supreme Court's decision in Swint
v. Chambers County Comm'n, --- U.S. ----,
115 S. Ct. 1203,
131
L. Ed. 2d 60 (1995).
REVERSED in part and REMANDED.