Honorable Robert J. Shelby.
This case arises from the 2014 shooting of Sean Kendall's dog by Salt Lake City Police Officer Brett Olsen during a search for a missing toddler. After the shooting, Kendall brought various state and federal claims against Olsen, the City, and several other officers. Both sides now move for summary judgment. For the reasons below, the court grants Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Kendall's federal constitutional claims and remands the case back to state court for further proceedings on Kendall's state claims.
On June 18, 2014, Officer Brett Olsen was patrolling the Sugar House neighborhood of Salt Lake City by motorcycle when he received word that a mother had reported her toddler missing from their home. Olsen quickly drove to the home, where several officers were already on the scene setting up a mobile command station. A supervisor, Lieutenant Purvis, instructed Olsen to begin canvassing the neighborhood in search of the missing boy. He alerted Olsen that the boy could not communicate verbally, and instructed that Olsen should therefore search everywhere visually. By the time Olsen began searching, it was believed the child had been missing for about an hour. This was significant, as time is generally thought to be crucial when searching for missing children, with the likelihood of positive outcomes decreasing significantly after about the first hour.
Olsen teamed up with another officer and began traveling north from the missing boy's home, as depicted in the map below. The officers went house to house knocking on doors. Some homeowners invited the officers into their homes and yards to look around. If nobody was home, the officers would briefly check the backyard if it was unfenced or if a fence gate was unlocked. The officers searched several homes in this manner.
Eventually, the officers arrived at Kendall's house, about ten homes away from the missing toddler's home. Olsen's partner went to the front door while Olsen walked to the side gate leading to Kendall's backyard, as depicted in the map above, and in greater detail in the overhead image of the home below. While his partner waited for a response, Olsen looked over the fence into the backyard at the location marked "Gate B" below.
From his vantage point at Gate B, Olsen could not see the entire backyard. He testified that after hearing no response from his partner's knocking at the front door, he tried the gate, which was unlocked, and entered the backyard. Olsen walked through the backyard to a shed in the corner of the property (top right corner in the image above), checked the shed, and found nothing. According to Olsen, as he turned and began to leave, he heard a dog begin barking behind him. He turned back toward the shed and saw a 90-pound dog about 20-25 feet away "running toward [him] and barking loudly." Presumably, the dog had emerged from a dog house wedged between the north side of the shed and the fence. Olsen began retreating quickly toward the gate, but the dog rapidly closed on him. Realizing he would not make it to the gate before the dog reached him, Olsen stopped, turned toward the dog, took "an aggressive stance," and stomped his foot, hoping the dog would back down. He did not, and, according to Olsen, instead continued to charge, barking with teeth bared. As the dog closed in to the point where Olsen felt it was "about to attack and to latch onto [him]," Olsen withdrew his service firearm and fired twice, killing the dog a few feet from where Olsen stood. Olsen secured the area and notified his supervisor of the incident by radio.
Ultimately, the missing boy was found unharmed sleeping in his family's basement underneath a box. Just over a year later, Kendall filed a Complaint in state court alleging federal and state constitutional violations as well as various other violations of state law. Defendants removed the case to federal court. Both parties now move for summary judgment on Kendall's federal constitutional claims.
Both sides contend the undisputed facts entitle them to summary judgment. Kendall
Olsen's invocation of qualified immunity changes the constitutional analysis slightly, so before delving into the constitutional claims, the court first provides a brief discussion of qualified immunity. Kendall sued the City and the officers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, which, in essence, allows a citizen to sue a government official, like a police officer, for any constitutional violations that official commits on the job. Allowing citizens to sue police officers, however, potentially leads to the unintended consequence of deterring officers from taking action in difficult situations for fear they may ultimately be sued. Indeed, "police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments ... in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving."
Courts have developed the doctrine of qualified immunity to balance the competing interests of vindicating citizens' important constitutional rights with affording police officers some necessary leeway to make difficult decisions. Under this doctrine, an officer is liable for violating a constitutional right only if his mistake about what the law requires is unreasonable.
What this means for Kendall is that the law requires not only that he establish that Olsen violated the Fourth Amendment by searching his yard or seizing his dog, but also that any reasonable officer would know that the search or seizure was in violation of the Fourth Amendment in view of the specific circumstances presented. With these principles in mind, the court turns to the constitutional questions.
Kendall first claims that Olsen violated the Fourth Amendment by entering his backyard without a warrant. He contends
The Fourth Amendment generally prohibits searching a home without a warrant.
The question of whether any particular backyard is or is not protected curtilage is not so clear cut. Indeed, it "depends upon a number of facts and factors," including how close the area is to the home, how the area is used, and what steps the homeowner has taken to ensure its privacy.
As discussed, the Fourth Amendment typically requires a warrant to conduct a search, especially of the home, but that requirement is excused when an officer faces exigent circumstances, such as "assist[ing] persons who are seriously injured or threatened with such injury."
As to the first prong of the test, there can be no doubt that when a toddler goes missing there is an immediate need to protect life or safety. Courts have noted that "the problem of missing children is a profoundly serious one,"
What is in dispute is the second prong of the test — the reasonableness of the scope and manner of the search for the child.
The scope of a search is reasonable when the search is limited to "the locations where a victim might likely be found," and the manner of searching is reasonable when the intrusion is no greater than necessary given the exigency.
Kendall's main area of disagreement is with the reasonableness of the scope of the search. According to Kendall, accessibility and proximity to a missing child are not enough to justify searches of neighboring yards. He contends the mere fact that a yard is accessible to a toddler and is within walking distance of the toddler's home, on its own, is insufficient to tie a search of the yard to the exigency of the missing toddler. Instead, Kendall proposes a different rule: that an exigency-based search of a yard for a missing toddler is constitutional only if there is a reasonable basis, aside from access and proximity, to believe the toddler is in that particular yard, as opposed to any other accessible yard within walking distance.
Kendall's interpretation is not borne out by the case law, nor does it comport with the realities of on-the-ground police work. In support of his proposed rule, Kendall cites a line from United States v. Gambino-Zavala, where the Tenth Circuit framed the exigency exception as requiring that "the government must show the officers reasonably believed a person inside the home was in immediate need of aid or protection."
The court disagrees. Gambino-Zavala focused on the home because in that case, the exigency was limited to one home; a neighbor heard gunshots in a particular unit, and officers subsequently searched that unit to determine if anyone inside was injured.
This general reasonableness requirement reflects the reality that not all exigencies are neatly confined to one home. To be sure, in the case of a neighbor reporting gunshots from a particular home, the "locations where a victim might likely be found" may well be limited to that one home.
This simple proposition is lost in Kendall's proposed rule. Indeed, Kendall's strict interpretation of the exigency exception — which would require officers to determine, at each home, whether there's reason to believe the child is actually there, as opposed to any other home — would all but end police assistance in missing child cases like this one, where officers know little more than where the child was last seen and how long he has been missing. Armed only with this information, there is no reason, for example, to believe the child is any more likely to be in an open backyard on the north side of the child's home than he is to be in an open backyard on the south side of the home. According to Kendall, that means neither gets searched. That doesn't comport with what we expect of officers urgently looking for missing children, and is not reflected in the law.
This is not to say, as Kendall's attorney suggested at oral argument, that all Fourth Amendment rights go out the window for any home within walking distance of and accessible to the missing toddler. Quite the contrary — even after establishing the reasonable geographic scope of a search, the Fourth Amendment still demands that the manner of searching any home within that area also be reasonable (meaning the intrusion is no greater than necessary). This reflects the understanding that even among protected Fourth Amendment areas, the intrusiveness of a search can vary greatly. A sweep of the curtilage is less intrusive than breaking down a locked door and searching a living room, which is less intrusive than rummaging through a closet in the bedroom, and so forth. The Fourth Amendment cabins the intrusiveness of any search by demanding that the manner of the search be reasonable.
In sum, the court concludes that even if Olsen's warrantless sweep of Kendall's backyard was a Fourth Amendment search, it was not unconstitutional because it was justified by exigent circumstances. And even in the event it was an unconstitutional search, Olsen would be entitled to qualified immunity because his mistake as to what the law requires would be reasonable. On this point Kendall has the burden of pointing to Tenth Circuit or Supreme Court case law that would put a reasonable officer on notice that when a nonverbal toddler is missing, a searching officer must have a reason, aside from mere proximity, for quickly sweeping any open and accessible nearby backyard. Kendall has provided no such authority. Thus, summary judgment on Kendall's claims related to Olsen's search is granted in Defendants' favor, both on the basis that no constitutional violation occurred and that Olsen is entitled to qualified immunity.
Kendall also contends that Olsen's shooting of his dog was an unconstitutional seizure under the Fourth Amendment. The Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable seizures.
The intrusion here was quite serious. While Fourth Amendment seizures generally involve property, this case involved a dog, and courts have recognized that most dog owners "think of dogs solely in terms of an emotional relationship, rather than a property relationship."
On the other side of the equation is officer safety, also a weighty concern. Officers face a changing array of threats daily. Among these threats are dogs, some of which "may harass or attack people," and "maim or even kill."
Courts have found a balance between the rights of dog owners and the interests of officer safety by implementing a simple rule: an officer's killing of a dog is reasonable only if the dog poses an "imminent threat."
In this case, the uncontradicted evidence demonstrates that a reasonable officer in Olsen's position would conclude that Kendall's dog posed an imminent threat when it aggressively charged Olsen while simultaneously barking loudly and baring its teeth. That evidence consists entirely of Olsen's testimony about the event, because he was the only one to witness it. In his police report, written hours after the incident, Olsen reported that he "saw a large gray dog running towards [him] and barking loudly," and that he "believed the dog was about to bite [him]."
Kendall takes issue with this conclusion for several reasons. First, he contends that various inconsistencies in Olsen's testimony render him not credible and his testimony not believable. These inconsistencies include: (1) Olsen testified he may have heard his partner ring Kendall's doorbell, while his partner testified that he knocked on the door; (2) Olsen testified he heard a doorbell and knocking from his location at Gate B, but Kendall submits that was too far from the front door to hear knocking or a doorbell; (3) Olsen testified he waited to enter the backyard until it appeared that nobody would answer the door, but his partner testified that he heard gunshots shortly after he started knocking; and (4) Olsen at times reported that it took
Kendall also argues that even taking Olsen's testimony at face value, a reasonable officer could not conclude based on those facts that he faced an imminent threat. Kendall first contends that "Olsen had no lawful reason to be in [the] yard in the first place."
Kendall also argues that Olsen should have known that Weimaraners are typically "friendly, warm, kind dogs who do not bite without being cornered."
When presented with what appears to be an imminent threat, an officer need not wait to be mauled or attacked before employing force in self-defense. Kendall has not demonstrated that Olsen's actions deviated from a what a reasonable officer would have done. And even if Olsen's actions were unreasonable — that is, even if the shooting was an unconstitutional seizure — Olsen would be entitled to qualified immunity because a reasonable officer would not be on notice that shooting a 90-pound dog that is running toward him and barking, with no time for the officer to escape, would violate the Fourth Amendment. Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on the Fourth Amendment claim against Olsen is granted.
In addition to his claim against Olsen, Kendall brought a claim against the City alleging, in essence, that if Olsen violated the Constitution, so too did the City because it had policies or practices in place that permitted or encouraged Olsen to act unconstitutionally. Because the court has now determined that Olsen did not violate the Constitution, neither did the City. Similarly, Kendall brought a claim against Lieutenant Purvis (the officer who ordered Olsen to canvass the neighborhood) alleging that Purvis has liability for any constitutional violation Olsen committed while conducting the canvass because Purvis ordered Olsen to do it. Again, because the court determined Olsen committed no constitutional violation, neither did Purvis. The court grants Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on the federal constitutional claims against the City and Purvis.
Having dismissed all of Kendall's federal claims, the court must now decide what to do with his remaining state law claims. This is a court of limited jurisdiction, meaning it is authorized to hear only certain types of claims.
This case is tragic on several levels. Parents feared their child missing, officers urgently responded, and Kendall lost his beloved companion animal. The court is mindful of the strong reactions this case has aroused among animal owners, parents, law enforcement, and community members. The case has exposed tensions that can arise between important competing interests, and the court has done its best to resolve these tensions while constraining its analysis to the facts presented by the parties and the established law.
For the reasons stated above, the court concludes that Kendall has failed to establish either an unconstitutional search or seizure under the Fourth Amendment. But even if Officer Olsen's search or the shooting of Kendall's companion pet amounted to a violation of a constitutional protection, Kendall has failed on the record before the court to establish that the law concerning officer conduct at the time was clearly established — providing fair notice to reasonable officers under similar circumstances that Officer Olsen's conduct was unconstitutional. The court awards summary judgment to Olsen, Purvis, and the City on Kendall's federal constitutional claims. The case is remanded back to state court to resolve Kendall's state law claims.