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Jones v. Treubig, 18-3775 (2020)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Number: 18-3775 Visitors: 22
Filed: Jun. 26, 2020
Latest Update: Jun. 26, 2020
Summary: 18-3775 Jones v. Treubig UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term 2019 (Argued: December 11, 2019 Decided: June 26, 2020) No. 18-3775 _ MATTHEW JONES, Plaintiff-Appellant, — v. — LIEUTENANT CHRISTOPHER TREUBIG, Defendant-Appellee, CITY OF NEW YORK, POLICE OFFICER ADAM MUNIZ, POLICE OFFICER MICHAEL VACCARO, UNDERCOVER OFFICER #349, POLICE OFFICER JOHN DOE #1, POLICE OFFICER JOHN DOE #2, POLICE OFFICER JANE DOE, OFFICER JOHN DOE #2, Defendants. _ Before: CABRANES, BIANCO,
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18-3775
Jones v. Treubig

                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                       FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

                                August Term 2019

             (Argued: December 11, 2019        Decided: June 26, 2020)

                                   No. 18-3775

                    _____________________________________

                                MATTHEW JONES,

                                       Plaintiff-Appellant,

                                     — v. —

                       LIEUTENANT CHRISTOPHER TREUBIG,

                                      Defendant-Appellee,

              CITY OF NEW YORK, POLICE OFFICER ADAM MUNIZ, POLICE OFFICER
       MICHAEL VACCARO, UNDERCOVER OFFICER #349, POLICE OFFICER JOHN DOE
       #1, POLICE OFFICER JOHN DOE #2, POLICE OFFICER JANE DOE, OFFICER JOHN
                                       DOE #2,

                                    Defendants.
                    _____________________________________

Before:            CABRANES, BIANCO, Circuit Judges, and REISS, District Judge. *

      Plaintiff-appellant Matthew Jones appeals from a judgment of the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Koeltl, J.). The
complaint, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleged that defendant-appellee

*Judge Christina Reiss, of the United States District Court for the District of
Vermont, sitting by designation.
Lieutenant Christopher Treubig and other police officers used excessive force
during the course of an arrest. The jury found that Lt. Treubig used excessive force
against Jones when he deployed two taser cycles against him, but found that the
other officers were not liable. On November 21, 2018, the district court granted Lt.
Treubig’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on qualified immunity grounds.
Because we conclude that at the time of the incident, the law was clearly
established that a police officer cannot use significant force against an individual
who is no longer resisting arrest and poses no safety threat, and the evidence
allowed the jury to reasonably conclude that Jones was no longer resisting arrest
and was not a safety threat to the officers or others at the time of Lt. Treubig’s
second use of the taser against him, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment
and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                             AMIR ALI, Roderick & Solange
                                             MacArthur        Justice         Center,
                                             Washington, DC (David Zelman, The
                                             Law Office of David Zelman,
                                             Brooklyn, NY, and Alexis Padilla, The
                                             Law Office of Alexis Padilla,
                                             Brooklyn, NY, on the brief) for Plaintiff-
                                             Appellant.

                                             SUSAN PAULSON (Richard Dearing,
                                             Devin Slack, and Eric Lee, on the brief)
                                             for James E. Johnson, Corporation
                                             Counsel of the City of New York,
                                             New York, NY, for Defendant-Appellee.
JOSEPH F. BIANCO, Circuit Judge:

      Matthew Jones (“Jones”) appeals from the judgment entered on November

27, 2018 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York

in favor of Lieutenant Christopher Treubig (“Lt. Treubig”). After a jury found that




                                         2
Lt. Treubig used excessive force against Jones, the district court granted his motion

for judgment as a matter of law on qualified immunity grounds.

      The underlying claims stem from an arrest that occurred on April 7, 2015 in

Jones’s apartment building in East Harlem, New York, during which Jones was

subjected to force by the police, including the use of a taser by Lt. Treubig. Jones

filed the instant lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Lt. Treubig and other

police officers (collectively, “defendants”) deprived him of his rights under the

Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments by using excessive force against him during

the arrest. At the close of evidence at trial, defendants made a motion for judgment

as a matter of law, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a), on qualified

immunity grounds. The district court denied the motion without prejudice and

submitted the case to the jury. The jury returned a verdict, holding Lt. Treubig

liable for excessive force, awarding nominal and punitive damages against Lt.

Treubig, and finding in favor of the remaining defendants. After Lt. Treubig

renewed his Rule 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter of law, the district court

granted the motion, finding Lt. Treubig was entitled to qualified immunity

because, at the time of the arrest, there was no clearly established law that using a

taser two times in rapid succession constituted excessive force under the particular



                                          3
circumstances of this case. Jones appeals from the judgment. Because we conclude

that it was clearly established at the time of the incident that an officer could not

use significant force against an individual who was no longer resisting arrest and

posing no threat to the safety of officers or other individuals, and the evidence

allowed the jury to reasonably conclude that Jones was no longer resisting arrest

and was not a safety threat at the time of Lt. Treubig’s second use of the taser

against him, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                 BACKGROUND

I.    Factual Background

      The following facts are drawn from the record on appeal and are construed

in the light most favorable to Jones unless otherwise noted. See Kerman v. City of

New York, 
374 F.3d 93
, 114 (2d Cir. 2004). Jones lives in an apartment building in

East Harlem, New York. On the evening of April 7, 2015, he was descending the

stairs of his apartment building to meet his uncle to return a bottle of prescription

medication and $70 in cash. As Jones met his uncle in the stairwell, New York

Police Department (“NYPD”) Officers Michael Vaccaro and Adam Muniz

encountered them while patrolling the building. The officers instructed Jones and



                                          4
his uncle to step from the stairwell into the building hallway, and both men

complied. Jones then consented to be searched, and the officers found the bottle

of medication that Jones was returning to his uncle. According to Jones, Officer

Vaccaro said “jackpot” upon finding the pill bottle, and arrested Jones. J. App’x

at 26. At that point, Jones’s uncle ran, and the officers handcuffed Jones’s right

arm as Jones questioned what he did wrong. The officers asserted that Jones then

“tried to turn around” and “take a swing at” Officer Vaccaro, and Officer Vaccaro

conducted a “sweep kick” in response, bringing Jones to the ground. J. App’x at

49-50. As Jones was on the floor, Officer Vaccaro was on top of him, keeping Jones

pinned to the ground face down. Jones’s left arm remained uncuffed during the

incident, despite the officers’ attempts to handcuff it.

      Other police officers quickly arrived at the scene in response to a radio call

from Officer Vaccaro, including Undercover Officer #349 (“UC #349”) and her

partner. As Jones remained pinned down by Officer Vaccaro, another officer hit

Jones with an expandable metal baton (referred to as an “asp”) until Jones’s left

arm went numb. Officer Vaccaro testified that, as the officers attempted to secure

Jones’s left arm for cuffing, Jones stated, “I’m not going to jail.” J. App’x at 51.

One of the officers then pepper-sprayed Jones in his face. The officer who used



                                          5
the asp and the officer who used the pepper spray were never identified.

Although the officers testified that Jones was actively resisting arrest and refusing

to produce his arms for handcuffing, Jones disputed those facts at trial, testifying

that he was beaten with a baton and sprayed in the face with pepper spray after

he had fallen to the ground and could not give them his left arm for handcuffing

because it was under his body.

        Lt. Treubig and his partner then arrived on the scene, and Lt. Treubig

announced that he was going to use his taser. Jones claimed that he did not hear

the warning, and managed to “force [himself] up off the ground” when he heard

someone say, “hit him.” J. App’x at 28, 42. At that point, Lt. Treubig used his taser

against Jones in “cartridge mode.” 1 J. App’x at 87, 89. When Lt. Treubig deployed

the taser the first time, two metal prongs struck Jones in his lower back, and an




1   Lt. Treubig explained “cartridge mode” as follows:
        When you want to deploy it you put the “on” switch on. Depress the
        trigger. The prongs come out of the cartridge and then into the subject
        and then there’s an electrical current that goes through and from the
        two prongs and it completes a circuit so the electric charges [enter]
        into the subject’s body.
J. App’x at 87. Lt. Treubig further testified that the taser model that he deployed
would result in approximately 1,200 to 1,600 volts of electricity entering Jones’s
body when he pressed the trigger.


                                          6
electric charge cycled through him for five seconds. Jones testified that, as a result,

“[he] fell back on the ground with [his] arms sprayed out in the air.” 2 J. App’x at

28.

      According to Lt. Treubig, the initial tasing “didn’t stabilize [Jones] enough

to the point where the officers were able to grab his hands.” J. App’x at 84. Lt.

Treubig then “[r]eassess[ed] the situation” and depressed the trigger of the taser

again, thereby re-cycling the taser and sending another electrical charge into

Jones’s body. 3 J. App’x at 54, 84. After the second tasing cycle, Jones was

handcuffed and brought to the hospital by ambulance. Approximately three

minutes passed between the time that Officer Vaccaro radioed for assistance and

the time that Lt. Treubig called for an ambulance. Jones was later charged with a

controlled substance offense and resisting arrest. He was released without bond,

and all charges were ultimately dismissed.

II.   Procedural History




2 Although Officer Vaccaro asserted that Jones was still trying to pull his arm
under his body to prevent handcuffing, he agreed that Jones was on the ground
face down after the first tasing.
3 Re-cycling the taser in cartridge mode did not entail deploying the taser a second
time because the taser prongs were already in Jones’s back; rather, Lt. Treubig only
had to press the trigger of the taser again.

                                          7
      On October 16, 2016, Jones commenced this action in the United States

District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging that the police

officers used excessive force in beating him, pepper-spraying him, and tasing him,

in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The officers did not claim qualified immunity at

either the motion to dismiss or summary judgment stage. 4

      A jury trial commenced on May 21, 2018, and the jury reached a verdict on

May 24, 2018. At trial, Jones and the police officers vigorously disputed the degree

of resistance that Jones offered during the incident; Jones claimed that he

repeatedly inquired why he was under arrest, did nothing to resist, and was

unable to provide his arm for cuffing because it was pinned under him on the

ground, while the officers who testified claimed that he resisted arrest

“aggressively and actively.” J. App’x at 82. Defendants argued to the jury that

they should not be held liable for two principal reasons. First, they contended that

Jones could not identify which specific officer beat him with the asp and pepper-

sprayed him, so no one could be held accountable for the force that preceded the

tasing. Second, defendants urged the jury to credit their version of events in which



4“The absence of a motion for summary judgment is not a defect, however, as the
absence of a motion for a directed verdict would be.” Krause v. Bennett, 
887 F.2d 362
, 368 n.3 (2d Cir. 1989).

                                         8
Jones was actively resisting arrest and such resistance justified their reasonable use

of force.

      a. Jury Trial and Verdict

      Following deliberations, the jury found that only Lt. Treubig used excessive

force in violation of Jones’s constitutional rights. 5 It found that Officers Vaccaro,

Muniz, and UC #349 did not use excessive force against Jones. The jury did not

award compensatory damages, and initially awarded Jones solely punitive

damages against Lt. Treubig in the amount of $30,000. After the district court

instructed the jury to reconsider the award of nominal damages, the jury awarded

Jones twenty-five cents.

      At the close of evidence, Lt. Treubig had requested that the district court

dismiss the excessive force claim on qualified immunity grounds, and he renewed

that motion after the jury returned its verdict. Over Jones’s objection, the district

court asked the following questions to the jury in a special verdict form to assist

the district court in resolving the qualified immunity issue, and the jury provided

the following answers:

      1. Did Lieutenant Treubig say he would use the taser before he used
         it?

5On appeal, Lt. Treubig does not contest the jury’s finding that he used excessive
force.
                                          9
              A: Yes.
      2.   Was a second taser cycle needed to gain control of the plaintiff’s
           arms?
              A: No.
      3.   Did Lieutenant Treubig believe that a second taser cycle was
           needed to gain control of the plaintiff’s arms?
              A: Yes.
      4.   Was the plaintiff resisting arrest when Lieutenant Treubig used
           the taser the first time?
              A: Yes.
      5.   Did Lieutenant Treubig believe that the plaintiff was resisting
           arrest when Lieutenant Treubig used the taser the first time?
              A: Yes.
      6.   Was the plaintiff resisting arrest when Lieutenant Treubig used
           the taser the second time?
              A: No.
      7.   Did Lieutenant Treubig believe that the plaintiff was resisting
           arrest when Lieutenant Treubig used the taser the second time?
              A: Yes.

J. App’x at 137-38, 185-88. In short, the jury found that Jones was resisting arrest

at the time that Lt. Treubig first used the taser. The jury also found that Jones was

not resisting when Lt. Treubig used the taser the second time and that the second

taser cycle was not needed to gain control of Jones’s arms for handcuffing, but that

Lt. Treubig believed the opposite to be true as to both facts.

      As to his renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, Lt. Treubig

argued that the jury’s answers demonstrated that he was entitled to qualified

immunity. Given his belief that Jones was resisting arrest throughout the entire



                                         10
incident, Lt. Treubig asserted that the district court should find that his mistaken

belief was reasonable under the circumstances even as it related to the second use

of the taser. In response, Jones argued, in part, that subjective beliefs were not

relevant to qualified immunity; rather, the reasonableness of any perceived facts

related to whether Lt. Treubig used excessive force in the first place—a question

already answered against Lt. Treubig by the jury. Moreover, even though the jury

found that Jones was resisting before the first taser cycle, Jones asserted that it was

not clear from the verdict form whether “resisting arrest” meant passive

resistance, in line with Jones’s theory, or active resistance, in line with defendants’

theory. In particular, Jones highlighted a portion of Lt. Treubig’s testimony when

he was asked for details of Jones’s “active” resistance, to which Lt. Treubig

responded that Jones had refused to “comply with the officers’ orders” and “to

place his hands behind his back and he was refusing those orders.” J. App’x at 82.

Such passive resistance, according to Jones, did not justify the use of force applied.

Jones further contended that, even if qualified immunity applied to the first use of

the taser, it did not apply to the re-cycling of the taser when Jones (as the jury

found in the special interrogatory) was no longer resisting.

      b. The District Court’s Ruling



                                          11
      On November 21, 2018, the district court granted Lt. Treubig’s motion for

judgment as a matter of law on qualified immunity grounds. The district court

stated that the “operative question” was whether “the law was clearly established”

at the time of the incident in April 2015 “such that his use of a taser two times in

rapid succession while assisting in the arrest of the plaintiff constituted excessive

force in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, so that any

reasonable officer in the defendant’s position would have understood that the

officer was violating the plaintiff’s rights.” J. App’x at 159-60. As to the first taser

cycle, the district court found that Lt. Treubig did not violate clearly established

law because he had “no ‘fair warning’ that the first use of the taser violated the

plaintiff’s constitutional rights” given Jones’s resistance. J. App’x at 163 (quoting

Hope v. Pelzer, 
536 U.S. 730
, 741 (2002)).

      Turning to the second tasing, the district court held that Lt. Treubig was

entitled to qualified immunity because “there is nothing in the cases from the

Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that gave ‘fair

warning’ that the second use of the taser was unconstitutional at the time of the

plaintiff’s arrest.” J. App’x at 164. First, the district court found that the re-cycling

of the taser was reasonable because the first tasing did not “subdue the plaintiff



                                             12
sufficiently to finish placing handcuffs on him” and “[t]he plaintiff was rising from

the floor at the time.” J. App’x at 164. Moreover, although the jury found in a

special interrogatory that Jones was not resisting arrest, the district court noted

that the jury also found in those interrogatories that Lt. Treubig mistakenly

believed otherwise.    The district court further concluded that Lt. Treubig’s

mistaken view of resistance at the point when he re-cycled the taser was

“reasonably believed,” and did not preclude his entitlement to qualified

immunity. J. App’x at 174. Thus, after examining the record and the case law, the

district court concluded that “[t]here is no basis to find that Lt. Treubig was an

unreasonable officer.” J. App’x at 165.

      After reaching this reasonableness conclusion, the district court explained

that the punitive damages award did not prevent the court from granting

judgment as a matter of law. Specifically, the district court stated that qualified

immunity is a question of law for courts that pertains to the conduct of reasonable

officers, while punitive damages pertain to the “subjective motivation of a

defendant’s actions.” J. App’x at 177-78.

      This appeal followed.




                                          13
                                   DISCUSSION

      Jones appeals the district court’s order granting judgment as a matter of law

to Lt. Treubig on qualified immunity grounds. Jones argues on appeal that, in its

decision, the district court incorrectly drew inferences in favor of Lt. Treubig,

despite the standard of review that applies to motions for judgment as a matter of

law. For example, Jones asserts that the district court erred when it stated that

“[t]he parties agree that despite being tased, the plaintiff was not incapacitated.”

J. App’x at 153. Jones contends that the parties agreed that Jones attempted to

push himself off the ground at the time of the first tasing, but “whether the initial

deployment of the taser incapacitated Mr. Jones was a hotly disputed issue.”

Appellant Br. at 18 n.6. The district court further stated that, after the first tasing,

“[t]he plaintiff maintained control of his arms and began pushing himself off the

ground.” J. App’x at 153. However, Jones highlights portions of the testimony in

which he asserted that he was lying face down at the time of the second tasing.

Jones argues accordingly that, when the jury’s findings and the evidence

supporting those findings are correctly construed in the light most favorable to

him, Lt. Treubig is not entitled to qualified immunity because he violated clearly

established law by (1) using his taser the first time even though Jones was only



                                          14
engaged in “passive resistance,” and by (2) re-cycling his taser when Jones had

already been subdued on the ground and could not be reasonably perceived as

continuing to resist arrest.

      We review de novo a district court’s decision on a Rule 50(a) motion for

judgment as a matter of law, as well as its decision to grant qualified immunity,

Dancy v. McGinley, 
843 F.3d 93
, 105 (2d Cir. 2016), and we apply the “same

standard as the district court itself was required to apply,” Diesel v. Town of

Lewisboro, 
232 F.3d 92
, 103 (2d Cir. 2000). Accordingly, in the context of a Rule

50(a) motion, we must “consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the

party against whom the motion was made and . . . give that party the benefit of all

reasonable inferences that the jury might have drawn in his favor from the

evidence.” Black v. Finantra Capital, Inc., 
418 F.3d 203
, 209 (2d Cir. 2005) (quotation

marks omitted).

I.    The Qualified Immunity Standard

      Qualified immunity protects government officials from civil damages

liability “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or

constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Pearson

v. Callahan, 
555 U.S. 223
, 231 (2009) (quoting Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
457 U.S. 800
, 818



                                          15
(1982)). Thus, pursuant to the two-step framework articulated by the Supreme

Court in Saucier v. Katz, 
533 U.S. 194
(2001), when an official raises qualified

immunity as a defense, the court must consider whether: “(1) . . . the official

violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) . . . the right was ‘clearly

established’ at the time of the challenged conduct.” Ricciuti v. Gyzenis, 
834 F.3d 162
, 167 (2d Cir. 2016) (quoting Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
563 U.S. 731
, 735 (2011)).

      As it relates to the second step, the focus is “whether it would be clear to a

reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”

Saucier, 533 U.S. at 202
. 6 The Supreme Court has explained that the “clearly

established right,” particularly in excessive force cases, “must be defined with

specificity.” City of Escondido v. Emmons, 
139 S. Ct. 500
, 503 (2019). Indeed, “[a]n

officer ‘cannot be said to have violated a clearly established right unless the right’s

contours were sufficiently definite that any reasonable official in the defendant’s

shoes would have understood that he was violating it.’” Kisela v. Hughes, 138 S.

Ct. 1148, 1153 (2018) (quoting Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
572 U.S. 765
, 778-79 (2014)).

Although the Supreme Court “do[es] not require a case directly on point, . . .


6We have noted that this question is not a separate inquiry, but rather part of the
second step of the qualified immunity analysis. See Okin v. Vill. of Cornwall-on-
Hudson Police Dep’t, 
577 F.3d 415
, 433 n.11 (2d Cir. 2009); see also Southerland v. City
of New York, 
680 F.3d 127
, 142 (2d Cir. 2012).
                                          16
existing precedent must have placed the statutory or constitutional question

beyond debate.” 
al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 741
. The immunity “protects ‘all but the

plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law.’”
Id. at 743
(quoting Malley v. Briggs, 
475 U.S. 335
, 341 (1986)); see also Francis v. Fiacco, 
942 F.3d 126
, 145-46 (2d Cir. 2019). In determining whether a right is clearly established at

the time of the conduct in question, we can consider Supreme Court decisions and

our own decisions, as well as “a consensus of cases of persuasive authority such

that a reasonable officer could not have believed that his actions were lawful.”

Wilson v. Layne, 
526 U.S. 603
, 617 (1999).

      The Second Circuit has set forth the procedure by which district courts

should resolve disputes on factual issues at trial that are relevant to the qualified

immunity analysis. In particular, “[i]f there are unresolved factual issues which

prevent an early disposition of the defense [of qualified immunity], the jury should

decide these issues on special interrogatories.” Warren v. Dwyer, 
906 F.2d 70
, 76

(2d Cir. 1990); see also Stephenson v. Doe, 
332 F.3d 68
, 81 (2d Cir. 2003) (“We believe

that use of special interrogatories in this case resolves the difficulty of requiring

the jury to decide what the facts were that the officer faced or perceived and




                                             17
requiring the court to make the ultimate legal determination of whether qualified

immunity attaches on those facts.” (quotation marks omitted)).

II.   Clearly Established Law and the Use of Tasers

      The first step of the qualified immunity test—namely, whether the

defendant violated a statutory or constitutional right—was determined by the jury

in this case, which found that Lt. Treubig used excessive force against Jones in

violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. As stated above, Lt. Treubig

does not appeal this finding. Accordingly, our task here is to determine whether

the right at issue was “clearly established”—that is, whether “it was objectively

reasonable for [Lt. Treubig] to believe [his] acts did not violate those rights.” See

Oliveira v. Mayer, 
23 F.3d 642
, 648 (2d Cir. 1994).

      Before the incident at issue here in April 2015, it was clearly established in

this Circuit that it is a Fourth Amendment violation for a police officer to use

significant force against an arrestee who is no longer resisting and poses no threat

to the safety of officers or others. Tracy v. Freshwater, 
623 F.3d 90
, 98-99 (2d Cir.

2010). In Tracy, we confronted an arrest that occurred in 2000 and involved the

use of pepper spray against an individual who asserted that he was already in

handcuffs and “offering no further active resistance.”
Id. at 98.
We concluded that



                                          18
disputed issues of fact regarding the timing and circumstances of the officer’s use

of pepper spray precluded summary judgment on the excessive force claim. See
id. (“[W]e conclude
that a reasonable juror could find that the use of pepper spray

deployed mere inches away from the face of a defendant already in handcuffs and

offering no further active resistance constituted an unreasonable use of force.”).

With respect to step two of the qualified immunity analysis, even though that issue

was not raised by the defendant officer, we “note[d] that it was well established at

the time of the underlying altercation that the use of entirely gratuitous force is

unreasonable and therefore excessive, and in light of this precedent, we

presume[d] that no reasonable officer could have believed that he was entitled to

use pepper spray gratuitously against a restrained and unresisting arrestee.”
Id. at 99
n.5 (citation omitted).

      Notwithstanding that the focus of this appeal is the use of a taser, not pepper

spray, we have warned that “[a]n officer is not entitled to qualified immunity on

the grounds that the law is not clearly established every time a novel method is

used to inflict injury.” Terebesi v. Torreso, 
764 F.3d 217
, 237 (2d Cir. 2014) (quoting

Mendoza v. Block, 
27 F.3d 1357
, 1362 (9th Cir. 1994)); see also 
Hope, 536 U.S. at 741
(“[O]fficials can still be on notice that their conduct violates [clearly] established



                                          19
law even in novel factual circumstances.”). To that end, we have observed that

“[s]ome measure of abstraction and common sense is required with respect to

police methods and weapons in light of rapid innovation in hardware and tactics.”

Terebesi, 764 F.3d at 237
n.20; see also Muschette ex rel. A.M. v. Gionfriddo, 
910 F.3d 65
, 69 n.1 (2d Cir. 2018) (“[N]ovel technology, without more, does not entitle an

officer to qualified immunity.” (quoting Edrei v. Maguire, 
892 F.3d 525
, 542 (2d Cir.

2018))).

      It is beyond doubt that any reasonable police officer would know that the

use of a taser, like pepper spray, constitutes significant force. See, e.g., Abbott v.

Sangamon Cty., 
705 F.3d 706
, 726 (7th Cir. 2013) (“[T]he use of a taser, like the use

of pepper spray or pain-compliance techniques . . . falls somewhere in the middle

of the nonlethal-force spectrum.”); Bryan v. MacPherson, 
630 F.3d 805
, 825 (9th Cir.

2010) (“The physiological effects, the high levels of pain, and foreseeable risk of

physical injury lead us to conclude that the [Taser] X26 and similar devices are a

greater intrusion than other non-lethal methods of force we have confronted”

including, among other things, pepper spray.). This obvious fact was known to

Lt. Treubig, who testified that he was trained to “deploy the taser on individuals

that are actively resisting, active aggression” or for “perceived violent threats.” J.



                                          20
App’x at 87.     It follows then that, after Tracy, any reasonable officer would

understand that, because it violated clearly established law to use pepper spray

against a non-resisting and non-threatening individual, the same would be true

for the use of a taser.

      In fact, Tracy itself made the broad scope of its holding abundantly clear.

For example, in addressing the Fourth Amendment issue in Tracy, we did not only

refer to pepper spray, but rather noted that the use of such a weapon constitutes a

“significant degree of force” and emphasized that “a number of our sister circuits

have made clear that [pepper spray] should not be used lightly or gratuitously

against an arrestee who is complying with police commands or otherwise poses

no immediate threat to the arresting 
officer.” 623 F.3d at 98
(collecting cases).

Thus, the language in Tracy left no question that, on the issue of significant force

against an arrestee no longer posing an immediate threat, we joined our sister

circuits in concluding that summary judgment on the excessive force claim relating

to the use of pepper spray was unwarranted for the defendant officer. See
id. at 99
.
Moreover, in briefly addressing the second step of the qualified immunity

analysis, we restated our holding “that the use of entirely gratuitous force is

unreasonable and therefore excessive,”
id. at 99
n.5, and then, in dicta, noted that



                                         21
our holding “was well established at the time of the underlying altercation,” 7
id. In other
words, the explicit focus of Tracy’s Fourth Amendment analysis was on

the officer’s significant use of force in a gratuitous and excessive manner during

an arrest, rather than the particular mode of that force. Therefore, following Tracy,

it was clearly established that an officer’s significant use of force against an

arrestee who was no longer resisting and who posed no threat to the safety of

officers or others—whether such force was by pepper spray, taser, or any other

similar use of significant force—violates the Fourth Amendment. See generally

Garcia v. Dutchess Cty., 
43 F. Supp. 3d 281
, 297 (S.D.N.Y. 2014) (concluding, after

analyzing Tracy and other case authority, that “[i]t was . . . clearly established law

in the Second Circuit as of April 2000 that it was a Fourth Amendment violation

to use ‘significant’ force against arrestees who no longer actively resisted arrest or

posed a threat to officer safety, regardless of whether that significant force




7 We emphasize that we do not rely on any dicta in Tracy for the purpose of
determining clearly established law; rather, we cite to this portion of the opinion,
which reiterated the Court’s holding under the Fourth Amendment, only to
highlight the pervasive and clear nature of that holding throughout the opinion.
                                         22
emanated from a pepper spray canister or the trigger of a taser”), aff’d in part,

dismissed in part sub nom. Garcia v. Sistarenik, 603 F. App’x 61 (2d Cir. 2015).

      In light of Tracy, we have held, as it relates to tasers, that it was clearly

established before April 2015 that “officers may not use a taser against a compliant

or non-threatening suspect.” 
Muschette, 910 F.3d at 69-70
(citing 
Tracy, 623 F.3d at 96-98
); see also Soto v. Gaudett, 
862 F.3d 148
, 158 (2d Cir. 2017) (“Though the use of

force may be reasonable against a suspect who is fleeing, it may be objectively

unreasonable against that suspect when he has been stopped and no longer poses

a risk of flight.” (citing 
Tracy, 623 F.3d at 96-98
)). Although Lt. Treubig argues that

these decisions are inapposite because they were issued after the conduct at issue

here in April 2015, we disagree. For this argument, Lt. Treubig relies on the

Supreme Court’s decision in Kisela, which emphasized that cases published after

the incident should not be considered in determining clearly established law

“because a reasonable officer is not required to foresee judicial decisions that do

not yet exist.” 
Kisela, 138 S. Ct. at 1154
. However, the Supreme Court’s concern

specifically related to opinions published after the officer’s conduct at issue that

establish the right in the first instance. See
id. Consistent with
the holding in Kisela,

we have considered cases published after the conduct at issue that do not establish



                                           23
a right in the first instance, but rather address whether a right was clearly

established by case authority before the time of such conduct. See Cobb v. Pozzi, 
363 F.3d 89
, 111 (2d Cir. 2004) (concluding that the law “was clearly established in

1999” by relying on a 2002 decision that reaffirmed “a clearly established

constitutional right” based on “conduct that had taken place in 1998” (quotation

marks omitted)); see also 
Terebesi, 764 F.3d at 237
(relying in part on a 2010 decision

that addressed the clearly established law as of 2005, although the conduct at bar

occurred in 2008). In other words, we can rely on decisions that post-date Jones’s

arrest if they address whether the law concerning the use of a taser against a non-

resisting individual was already established by Tracy in connection with police

conduct that occurred prior to April 2015. Therefore, because both Muschette and

Soto concluded that the right of a non-resisting, non-threatening arrestee to be free

from an officer’s use of a taser was clearly established for conduct in 2013 (in

Muschette) and in 2008 (in Soto)—which are both prior to Lt. Treubig’s conduct in

2015—those decisions have precedential force on this issue. In any event, we




                                          24
  independently reach the same conclusion regarding clearly established law under

  Tracy for the reasons already discussed.

III.    Clearly Established Law in the Particular Context of this Case

        Our holding regarding Tracy as it applies to tasers, however, does not end

  our analysis. The Supreme Court has “repeatedly told courts . . . not to define

  clearly established law at a high level of generality.” 
al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 742
.

  Instead, “[t]he dispositive question is whether the violative nature of particular

  conduct is clearly established,” and, thus, “[t]his inquiry must be undertaken in

  light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition.”

  Mullenix v. Luna, 
136 S. Ct. 305
, 308 (2015) (quotations marks omitted).

  Accordingly, we now turn to whether the right articulated in Tracy was clearly

  established in the more particular context in which the challenged conduct

  regarding the taser occurred in this case.

        With respect to the second tasing cycle, the district court concluded that

  “there is nothing in the cases from the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals for

  the Second Circuit that gave ‘fair warning’ that the second use of the taser was

  unconstitutional at the time of the plaintiff’s arrest.” J. App’x at 164. As discussed

  below, in reaching this conclusion, the district court erroneously relied upon a



                                             25
factual finding—namely, that Jones was continuing to resist after the first tasing—

that was rejected by the jury in a special interrogatory and is inconsistent with the

trial evidence as construed most favorably to Jones, which is the applicable

standard on a Rule 50 motion. Moreover, the district court relied upon the fact

that “[t]he jury found that Lt. Treubig believed—although incorrectly—that the

plaintiff was resisting arrest and that the second use of the taser was needed to

gain control of the plaintiff’s arms.”
Id. A mistake
of fact, however, in the absence

of an additional jury finding that the mistake was reasonable (when there are

disputed material facts on that question) is insufficient to support an officer’s claim

that he is entitled to qualified immunity, and no such finding of reasonableness

was made by the jury here. Similarly, for the reasons provided below, the fact that

the re-cycling of the taser followed in rapid succession after the first tasing and

that Jones was unhandcuffed at the time of the re-cycled taser does not undermine

our qualified immunity analysis in this case. For the reasons explained below, we

hold that, after considering the jury’s factual findings in the special interrogatories

and construing the evidence regarding the remaining factual disputes most




                                          26
favorably to Jones, Lt. Treubig’s second use of the taser under the particular

circumstances he confronted violated clearly established law. 8

      a. The Level of Resistance Before the Second Tasing

      A critical fact for purposes of qualified immunity in this case is whether

Jones was resisting arrest in any way at the time of the second tasing, because there

was no clearly established law that would fairly warn police officers that a taser

could not be used against a resisting arrestee. Indeed, to the contrary, “[o]ur

precedents suggest that it is not excessive force to deploy tasers, after a warning,

against arrestees who are dangerous or resisting arrest.” Penree by Penree v. City of

Utica, 694 F. App’x 30, 33 (2d Cir. 2017) (addressing a 2012 incident); see also

MacLeod v. Town of Brattleboro, 548 F. App’x 6, 8 (2d Cir. 2013) (concluding that the

use of a taser “to subdue an actively non-compliant suspect . . . who posed a real

and imminent threat to the safety of the officers and any bystanders” was

objectively reasonable where the officers gave “repeated, clear commands that [the

plaintiff] return to the ground”); Crowell v. Kirkpatrick, 400 F. App’x 592, 595 (2d




8 Jones also argues that the district court erred in holding that Lt. Treubig was
entitled to qualified immunity with respect to the first tasing. Given our
conclusion that there is no qualified immunity for the second tasing and that the
jury’s verdict on the excessive force claim should be reinstated, we need not
address this alternative argument.
                                         27
Cir. 2010) (concluding that the use of taser was reasonable where protestors “were

actively resisting their arrest” when they chained themselves to a barrel drum and

the “apparently imminent arrival of some number of their compatriots added a

degree of urgency” to the situation). On the other hand, if Jones was no longer

resisting arrest and posed no threat to the safety of police officers or others after

the first tasing, then qualified immunity would not protect Lt. Treubig when he

re-cycled the taser in violation of the clearly established law under Tracy.

      Thus, a factual lynchpin to the district court’s qualified immunity analysis

was its post-trial conclusion, with respect to the second tasing cycle, that “[t]he

plaintiff was rising from the floor at the time.” J. App’x at 164. In connection with

this factual finding, the district court suggested that Jones conceded that he still

exhibited a certain level of ongoing resistance after the first tasing:

      The parties agree that despite being tased, the plaintiff was not
      incapacitated. The taser did not stabilize the plaintiff enough for the
      officers to be able to grab his hands. The plaintiff continued to try to
      pull his right arm away from the officers and under his body after the
      first taser cycle. The plaintiff maintained control of his arms and
      began pushing himself off the ground. The defendant reassessed the
      situation and believed that the plaintiff was still resisting arrest. The
      defendant then recycled the taser.

J. App’x at 153 (citations omitted).




                                          28
      There was no such concession, however, to these facts by Jones. It is correct

that the parties agreed that Jones was pushing himself off the ground at the time

of the first tasing. See J. App’x at 148 (defense counsel conceding that “[a]t least

with respect to the initial taser cycle, the record is clear that, from the stipulated

facts, . . . the plaintiff was pushing up off of the ground”). In contrast to the first

tasing, Jones asserts on appeal, and argued to the jury below, that he was already

“subdued face down, arms spread” at the time of the second tasing. Appellant Br.

at 22; see also J. App’x at 107 (plaintiff’s counsel arguing to the jury that Jones was

“lying face down on the ground unarmed posing no threat” at the time of the

second tasing).    Thus, there was no agreement by the parties regarding the

circumstances immediately prior to the second tasing; rather, Jones’s level of

resistance at the time of the second tasing, if any, was a disputed key issue at trial.

      Even in the absence of an agreement on this factual issue, Lt. Treubig

suggests that the uncontroverted evidence still demonstrated that Jones continued

to resist arrest at the time of the second tasing. Lt. Treubig supports his position

by pointing to Jones’s own trial testimony in which he stated that, after the first

tasing, though he felt the muscles in his legs and his back “lock[] up,” the muscles

in his arms did not. J. App’x at 43. Accepting Lt. Treubig’s argument, the district



                                          29
court failed to view that fact, and the other evidence surrounding the

circumstances of the second tasing, in the light most favorable to Jones. As an

initial matter, there was testimony that a single taser use has the capacity to

completely incapacitate an individual. See, e.g., J. App’x at 53-54 (explaining that

the electricity from a single taser cycle can contract the victim’s muscles or “lock

up a person” to make them “go stiff”); J. App’x at 84 (Lt. Treubig affirming that a

single tasing can “fully incapacitate a grown man”). More importantly, consistent

with that capacity, Jones specifically testified that, after the first tasing, he “fell

out” and dropped “on the ground with [his] arms sprayed out.” J. App’x at 28.

Testimony from Officer Vaccaro also established that Jones was face down at the

time of the second tasing (although Officer Vaccaro disputed other aspects of

Jones’s account).

      Although Lt. Treubig places great weight on the fact that Jones also testified

that his arm muscles did not lock up when he was on the ground after the first

tasing, that alone cannot possibly establish that he was resisting arrest in any way

at the time of the second tasing. Indeed, Jones counters that “the jury plainly could

have inferred that a man lying face down with his back and legs locked up is

incapacitated irrespective of the sensation he recalled in his arms.” Reply Br. at 8.



                                          30
We agree with Jones’s assertion regarding this permissible inference by the jury

from the record. In other words, the question is not how Jones’s arms felt, but

rather what, if anything, his arms were doing as he lay on the ground after the first

tasing, and what Lt. Treubig reasonably observed in that regard. On that issue,

Jones testified that his arms were “sprayed out” as he dropped to the ground, J.

App’x at 28, and thus doing nothing, which would not have provided a reasonable

officer with any basis to conclude from the outward appearance of Jones’s arms

that he was resisting arrest or posing any ongoing threat to the officers after the

initial tasing. 9

       Not only was there evidence in the record to support that Jones was no

longer resisting arrest at the time of second tasing, but the jury made that specific

factual finding in a special interrogatory. Because that jury finding was rationally

supported by the above-referenced evidence in the record (if credited), it must be

accepted for purposes of the qualified immunity analysis utilizing, to the extent

any other factual issues remain, the underlying evidence in the light most

favorable to Jones. See 
Kerman, 374 F.3d at 114
. Upon doing so here, our qualified


9 In addition, the testimony at trial established that there were six officers on the
scene when Lt. Treubig used his taser both the first and second time, thus allowing
for the reasonable inference that even if the charge did not fully incapacitate
Jones’s arms, there was a sufficient number of officers present to effect the arrest.
                                         31
immunity analysis must assume that, even though Jones may have been resisting

arrest during the initial parts of the police encounter up to the time of the first

tasing, when Lt. Treubig re-cycled his taser and sent another electric shock through

Jones, he was no longer trying to get off the ground, no longer actively resisting

arrest, and no longer posing a threat to the police officers. Instead, construing the

evidence most favorably to Jones, at that point, he was face down on the ground

with his arms spread. On those facts, no reasonable officer could believe that the

use of the taser a second time against Jones was lawful.

      b. Lt. Treubig’s Belief Regarding the Level of Resistance Before the
         Second Tasing

      In reaching this conclusion, we have also carefully considered the second

ground for qualified immunity articulated by the district court—namely, even

though the jury found that Jones was not resisting arrest at the time of the second

tasing, Lt. Treubig is still entitled to qualified immunity because the jury also

found Lt. Treubig mistakenly believed that Jones was continuing to resist. The

district court explained that Lt. Treubig’s mistaken belief in that regard “does not

preclude a determination that Lt. Treubig is entitled to qualified immunity.” J.

App’x at 164. However, in the absence of more detailed findings by the jury, we

conclude that this mistaken belief does not shield Lt. Treubig from liability because

                                         32
the evidence in the record, when construed most favorably to Jones, would have

allowed the jury to rationally find that Lt. Treubig’s subjective belief regarding

ongoing resistance at the time of the second tasing was unreasonable.

      The Supreme Court has made clear that “[t]he protection of qualified

immunity applies regardless of whether the government official’s error is a

mistake of law, a mistake of fact, or a mistake based on mixed questions of law

and fact.” 
Pearson, 555 U.S. at 231
(quotation marks omitted). However, qualified

immunity only protects “reasonable mistakes.” 
Saucier, 533 U.S. at 206
; Moore v.

Vega, 
371 F.3d 110
, 117 (2d Cir. 2004) (“[D]efendants believed they were entering

the residence of an absconded parolee. If such belief was reasonable, qualified

immunity protects them from liability, even if that belief was mistaken.”); accord

Singh v. Cordle, 
936 F.3d 1022
, 1033 (10th Cir. 2019) (“A mistake of fact must, of

course, be a reasonable one.”); Henry v. Purnell, 
652 F.3d 524
, 532 (4th Cir. 2011)

(“[I]t is not the honesty of [the police officer’s] intentions that determines the

constitutionality of his conduct; rather it is the objective reasonableness of his

actions. It is certainly true that mistaken, but reasonable, decisions do not

transgress constitutional bounds. All actions, however, mistaken or otherwise, are

subject to an objective test.” (citation omitted)).



                                           33
         Here, after finding in a special interrogatory that Jones was not resisting

arrest at the time of the second tasing, the jury also found that Lt. Treubig believed

that Jones was resisting arrest. J. App’x at 187. The jury was not asked, however,

whether that mistaken belief was reasonable. Instead, the district court, in its post-

trial Rule 50 decision, independently concluded that Lt. Treubig “reasonably

believed that the plaintiff was still actively resisting arrest when he cycled the taser

the second time,” J. App’x at 174, without any additional findings by the jury in

the special interrogatories to support the reasonableness determination. That was

error.

         As a threshold matter, we have explained that the reasonableness of a

mistake of fact regarding the use of force does not pertain to the ultimate qualified

immunity determination, but rather whether there was a constitutional violation

in the first instance—which is “step one” of the Saucier inquiry. See 
Stephenson, 332 F.3d at 78
(“[A]s the Supreme Court clarified in Saucier, claims that an officer made

a reasonable mistake of fact that justified the use of force go to the question of

whether the plaintiff’s constitutional rights were violated, not the question of

whether the officer was entitled to qualified immunity.”); see also 
Saucier, 533 U.S. at 205
(“If an officer reasonably, but mistakenly, believed that a suspect was likely



                                          34
to fight back, for instance, the officer would be justified in using more force than

in fact was needed.”). This question is in contrast to an officer’s mistaken belief

about the legality of the conduct, which is analyzed at “step two” in the Saucier

framework. See Cowan ex rel. Estate of Cooper v. Breen, 
352 F.3d 756
, 762 (2d Cir.

2003) (“Whether the officer is entitled to qualified immunity is resolved by the

latter part of the Saucier analysis, which looks at an ‘officer’s mistake as to what

the law requires[.]’” (quoting 
Saucier, 533 U.S. at 205
)); see also 
Stephenson, 332 F.3d at 80
n.15 (“Qualified immunity is a difficult concept; it looks to the reasonableness

of an officer’s belief that he acted lawfully after the officer is found to have been

unreasonable in his conduct.”).

      And, importantly, disputed material issues regarding the reasonableness of

an officer’s perception of the facts (whether mistaken or not) is the province of the

jury, while the reasonableness of an officer’s view of the law is decided by the

district court. See Green v. City of New York, 
465 F.3d 65
, 83 (2d Cir. 2006) (“If there

is a material question of fact as to the relevant surrounding circumstances, the

question of objective reasonableness is for the jury. If there is no material question

of fact, the court decides the qualified immunity issue as a matter of law.”

(citations omitted)); see also Cugini v. City of New York, 
941 F.3d 604
, 614 n.6 (2d Cir.



                                           35
2019) (concluding that, with respect to an excessive force claim regarding

handcuffing, “[a] reasonable jury could also find that it was unreasonable for [the

officer] to assume that the plaintiff was all right based on her silence following the

handcuffing”).

      For example, in Wilkins v. City of Oakland, 
350 F.3d 949
, 953, 956 (9th Cir.

2003), the Ninth Circuit held that summary judgment on qualified immunity

grounds was unwarranted, where officers mistakenly shot a fellow plain-clothes

officer, because the jury needed to decide the reasonableness of that mistake. The

court explained:

      The objective reasonableness of the officers’ conduct in this case turns
      on their mistake of fact with regard to [the plain-clothes officer’s]
      status and purpose at the scene that night. In turn, whether this
      mistake of fact was reasonable depends on which version of the facts
      is accepted by a jury. . . . The only question for resolution is whether
      their belief in the necessity of their actions was objectively reasonable.
      That is, was it reasonable for them not to understand that the person
      they were shooting was another police officer? Because the answer to
      that question depends on disputed issues of material fact, it is not a
      legal inquiry, but rather a question of fact best resolved by a jury.
Id. at 955;
see also Curley v. Klem, 
499 F.3d 199
, 214 (3d Cir. 2007) (“At the risk of

understating the challenges inherent in a qualified immunity analysis, we think

the most helpful approach is to consider the constitutional question as being

whether the officer made a reasonable mistake of fact, while the qualified

                                         36
immunity question is whether the officer was reasonably mistaken about the state

of the law.”).

      Therefore, in determining whether Lt. Treubig used excessive force with

respect to tasering Jones, it was the jury’s role to consider the reasonableness of Lt.

Treubig’s stated belief regarding Jones’s continued resistance at the time of the

second tasing.      See Graham v. Connor, 
490 U.S. 386
, 396 (1989) (“The

‘reasonableness’ of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective

of a reasonable officer on the scene . . . at the moment” the force is used. (citations

omitted)). In the instant case, consistent with that legal framework, the district

court specifically instructed the jury on the need to consider the evidence at the

arrest scene from the perspective of a reasonable officer. See J. App’x at 116

(instructing the jury that, “[b]ecause police officers are often forced to make split-

second judgments about the amount of force that is necessary in a given situation,

the reasonableness of a particular use of force must be judged from the perception

of a reasonable officer on the scene rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight”).

Given that the jury reached its verdict under the correct instructions, the district

court cannot “substitute its view for adequately supported findings that were




                                          37
implicit in the jury’s verdict.” Zellner v. Summerlin, 
494 F.3d 344
, 371 (2d Cir. 2007)

(quoting LeBlanc–Sternberg v. Fletcher, 
67 F.3d 412
, 430 (2d Cir. 1995)).

      Although it is the jury’s province to resolve the reasonableness of an officer’s

perception of the facts that confronted him, we recognize that those same facts, or

some portion thereof, can also sometimes be critical in deciding the qualified

immunity analysis at step two of Saucier. Put another way, the reasonableness of

a particular mistake of fact may dictate whether any reasonable officer would have

understood that his conduct was unlawful. In situations where the court may not

be able to discern from the general verdict how the jury may have resolved a

particular disputed issue that is a dispositive part of the step-two Saucier analysis,

it is necessary (as the district court did here) to ask additional questions to the jury

through special interrogatories. See 
Stephenson, 332 F.3d at 81
.

      Jones argues that, in finding in his favor on the excessive force claim, the

jury necessarily implied that it found unreasonable any mistaken belief by Lt.

Treubig about the facts (including additional resistance after the first taser) that

allegedly prompted him to re-cycle the taser. Jones further asserts that any

conceivable doubt about the jury’s view on the reasonableness of Lt. Treubig’s

beliefs was eliminated by its award of punitive damages which required the jury



                                          38
to conclude, at the very least, Lt. Treubig acted with “reckless disregard” for

Jones’s constitutional rights. J. App’x at 117; see also
id. at 183.
In the proceedings

below, Jones thus objected to the district court even posing questions on this issue

to the jury in the form of special interrogatories following the jury’s general verdict

in Jones’s favor on the excessive force claim.10 See J. App’x at 131 (plaintiff’s

counsel arguing, with respect to submitting special interrogatories to the jury, that

“[i]t seems to me that those questions have already been answered through the

jury’s verdict, your Honor. All of those questions were part of this trial. They

were all put to the jury. . . . So to the extent that I can object to those questions, I

do. They’re unnecessary.”).

      Jones’s argument goes too far. In particular, Jones overlooks the fact that

the jury was considering multiple uses of force by Lt. Treubig as part of one

excessive force claim (i.e., an initial tasing and a re-cycling of the taser), and the


10Although the verdict form returned here by the jury on liability and damages
was labeled as a “Special Verdict Form,” J. App’x at 181, it was in reality a general
verdict because it did not ask the jury for specific findings on any particular issue
of fact on the excessive force claim, but rather simply asked whether the plaintiff
proved the claim as to each defendant, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 49 (distinguishing
between special and general verdicts); see also Babcock v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
299 F.3d 60
, 63 (1st Cir. 2002) (noting that, “[a]lthough the Verdict Form is entitled ‘Special
Verdict Form,’ it seems clear that it was not a true ‘special verdict,’ as described in
Rule 49(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure” because it contained no
questions regarding specific findings of fact).
                                          39
jury’s general verdict against Lt. Treubig did not necessarily find that both acts

violated the Fourth Amendment. Similarly, even assuming the general verdict

against Lt. Treubig related to the second tasing, we would still not necessarily

know from the general verdict how the jury resolved particular disputed issues,

including the reasonableness of Lt. Treubig’s belief that Jones was resisting arrest

after the first tasing. For example, based upon the general verdict alone, the jury

could have concluded that Lt. Treubig reasonably believed Jones was continuing

to resist arrest, but that the re-cycling of the taser was an unreasonable amount of

additional force given the level of resistance.

      Here, for purposes of determining whether Lt. Treubig should have known

that he violated clearly established law under Tracy as it relates to the second

tasing, the critical issues at step two of Saucier are whether: (1) Jones was still

resisting arrest at that time, or (2) even if Jones was no longer resisting arrest at

that point, Lt. Treubig reasonably believed he was still resisting. Thus, in order to

ensure that the jury decided both of those issues against Lt. Treubig within its

general verdict, it was entirely appropriate to utilize special interrogatories to

address those precise questions.       As to the first issue, the jury’s special

interrogatory made clear that the jury concluded that Jones was not resisting arrest



                                         40
at the time of the second tasing. However, as to the second issue regarding any

reasonable mistaken belief as to that fact, the question was incorrectly phrased to

the jury. The jury was asked, “Did Lieutenant Treubig believe that the plaintiff

was resisting arrest when Lieutenant Treubig used the taser the second time?” J.

App’x at 138, 187. Although the jury answered affirmatively to that question, such

an answer is insufficient to shield Lt. Treubig with qualified immunity because his

subjective mistake of fact, like a mistake of law, must be reasonable. See generally

Anderson v. Creighton, 
483 U.S. 635
, 641 (1987) (stating that, for purposes of

qualified immunity, the officer’s “subjective beliefs about the [circumstances] are

irrelevant”); see also Outlaw v. City of Hartford, 
884 F.3d 351
, 369 (2d Cir. 2018)

(“[T]he federal standard for qualified immunity is what a reasonable officer in [the

officer’s] position would have believed, not what [the officer] himself believed.”).

      Thus, the jury should have been asked, “Did Lieutenant Treubig reasonably

believe that the plaintiff was resisting arrest when Lieutenant Treubig used the

taser the second time?” In fact, when considering how to frame these questions

following the jury’s general verdict, defense counsel framed the proposed

question to include the word “reasonable.” See J. App’x at 127 (defense counsel

proposing the question: “[D]id Lieutenant Treubig reasonably believe, even if



                                         41
mistakenly, the plaintiff was resisting arrest when the taser was used?”). In

addition, during discussions with the district court regarding the phrasing of the

questions to submit to the jury, defense counsel stressed the importance of the jury

being asked not only about Lt. Treubig’s subjective belief, but also determining the

reasonableness of that belief. See J. App’x at 131 (defense counsel noting: “And

whether [Lt. Treubig] had a reasonable, even if mistaken, belief is a question of

fact. So the jury could say you were mistaken. He is pushing himself up but you

know perhaps that was some kind of active [resistance]—perhaps you could say

that. . . . He could reasonably, even if mistakenly, interpret that as more resistance

and so it is a fact that needs to be determined.”); see also J. App’x at 134 (defense

counsel noting, after the district court suggested it would decide the

reasonableness of the mistake of fact rather than the jury, that “we do maintain

that the language needs to be reasonable even if mistaken”). Nevertheless, defense

counsel ultimately agreed with the district court that the word “reasonable”

should be removed from the question to the jury.

      Because qualified immunity is an affirmative defense, “[t]o the extent that a

particular finding of fact is essential to a determination by the court that the

defendant is entitled to qualified immunity, it is the responsibility of the defendant



                                         42
to request that the jury be asked the pertinent question.” 
Zellner, 494 F.3d at 368
.

Having agreed to submit the non-pertinent question to the jury, Lt. Treubig cannot

then have the district court, in addressing a Rule 50 motion, usurp the jury’s role

by substituting its own finding on the pertinent question. See 
Outlaw, 884 F.3d at 371
(“[T]he court accordingly made findings as to facts about which the jury was

deliberately not asked. We cannot allow [the officer] now to put words in the

jury’s mouth.”); 
Zellner, 494 F.3d at 368
(“If the defendant does not make such a

request, he is not entitled to have the court, in lieu of the jury, make the needed

factual finding.”).

      In other words, in light of Jones’s testimony that he offered no resistance

after the first tasing because he was on the ground with his arms spread, the

district court could only find that Lt. Treubig’s mistaken belief regarding

continued resistance was reasonable by construing the conflicting evidence in the

light most favorable to Lt. Treubig rather than Jones, which the district court was

not permitted to do. See 
Zellner, 494 F.3d at 371
(emphasizing that the district court

is not “permitted to make findings on factual questions not submitted to the jury

where those findings take the evidence in the light most favorable to the moving

party, rather than the opposing party”); 
Stephenson, 332 F.3d at 78
(refusing to



                                         43
“reweigh the evidence in [the officer’s] favor” where the officer argued that the

jury may have concluded that “[the plaintiff] did not objectively pose a threat of

harm to [the officer] but that [the officer’s] subjective belief of threatened harm

was a mistake of fact that, in view of the evidence, the jury credited as

reasonable”); see also 
Curley, 499 F.3d at 213
(noting that, on a Rule 50(a) motion,

“any ambiguity in the interrogatories and the answers to them must, at this stage,

be interpreted against [the moving party]”). 11

      Accordingly, given the absence of any finding by the jury as to the

reasonableness of the mistaken factual belief by Lt. Treubig regarding resistance


11We emphasize that, in connection with a summary judgment or Rule 50 motion,
a district court is not required to have the jury make this reasonableness
determination if no rational jury could find the officer’s belief regarding the facts
at issue to be unreasonable even when the evidence is construed in the light most
favorable to the plaintiff, and that such facts—reasonably perceived by the
defendant—establish the reasonableness of the use of force under the Fourth
Amendment. See 
Tracy, 623 F.3d at 97
(concluding that the officer’s use of
flashlight before the arrest was reasonable as a matter of law based upon the
uncontroverted facts relating to the officer’s perspective, and warranted summary
judgment in his favor on that particular claim); see also Estate of Larsen ex rel.
Sturdivan v. Murr, 
511 F.3d 1255
, 1261 (10th Cir. 2008) (affirming grant of summary
judgment where the undisputed facts demonstrated that, “even if [the officer’s]
assessment of the threat was mistaken, it was not objectively unreasonable”). Such
is not the case here because, as 
discussed supra
, the jury could have rationally
found Lt. Treubig’s belief regarding ongoing resistance to be unreasonable if,
crediting Jones’s version of events, it determined that Jones was face down on the
ground with his arms spread out at the time of the second tasing.


                                         44
by Jones after the first tasing, and given that a jury could find such a mistaken

belief unreasonable when the facts are construed most favorably to Jones, any such

mistake cannot be a proper basis for affording Lt. Treubig qualified immunity on

the Rule 50 motion. 12

      c. Two Taser Cycles in Rapid Succession

      Lt. Treubig also contends, and the district court agreed, that the two taser

cycles occurred within rapid succession of each other, and as a result, it was

reasonable for Lt. Treubig to act in the heat of the moment as he did with respect

to re-cycling the taser against Jones. However, we conclude that, in light of the

undisputed facts in this record, the rapid succession of the two taser cycles does

not change the qualified immunity analysis.

      We certainly recognize that “police officers are often forced to make split-

second judgments—in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly

evolving.” 
Graham, 490 U.S. at 396-97
. As the Supreme Court has emphasized, it




12We note that the jury’s separate finding in the special interrogatories that Lt.
Treubig also mistakenly believed that a second taser cycle was needed to gain
control of Jones’s arm suffers from the same legal defect for purposes of a qualified
immunity defense. That is, the lack of a finding of the reasonableness of that belief
by the jury, and the evidence presented at trial on that issue, would have allowed
the jury to find that subjective belief was unreasonable. Thus, that mistaken fact
similarly cannot be a basis for qualified immunity here.
                                         45
is extremely important to evaluate the record “from the perspective of a reasonable

officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight.”
Id. at 396;
see

also
id. (“Not every
push or shove, even if it may later seem unnecessary in the

peace of a judge’s chambers, violates the Fourth Amendment.” (quotation marks

and citation omitted)). It is equally important that courts not isolate a particular

act of force by an officer if it was intertwined with other acts of force in rapid

succession where there was no reasonable opportunity to re-assess. However,

where such an opportunity to re-assess reasonably exists, officers must consider

whether additional force is necessary under the circumstances confronting the

officer—a point made clear under the circumstances in Tracy. See 
Tracy, 623 F.3d at 97
-99 (granting summary judgment on, inter alia, the use of force while the

fugitive plaintiff was still resisting arrest, but denying summary judgment

regarding the use of pepper spray because it was disputed whether the plaintiff

was actively resisting arrest at that point).

      This is not a case where a police officer did not have a reasonable

opportunity to re-assess the circumstances before utilizing additional force.

Notwithstanding the fact that Lt. Treubig’s two uses of the taser occurred in rapid

succession, there was clear evidence that he had enough time to re-assess the



                                          46
situation between the first and second use of the taser. Specifically, Lt. Treubig

testified that, after the first use of the taser for five seconds, he “[r]eassess[ed] the

situation” and then re-cycled the taser. J. App’x at 84; see also
id. (“You had
to

depress the trigger for five cycles and then re-assess and then press the trigger

again for five seconds.”).

      It was clearly established at the time of the incident here that, under the

Fourth Amendment, the reasonableness of the amount of force used is assessed

“at the moment” the force is used. 
Graham, 490 U.S. at 396
; see also Salim v. Proulx,

93 F.3d 86
, 92 (2d Cir. 1996) (“The reasonableness inquiry depends only upon the

officer’s knowledge of circumstances immediately prior to and at the moment that

he made the split-second decision to employ deadly force.”). Thus, any reasonable

officer would have understood in April 2015 that, if he or she has an opportunity

to re-assess a situation after firing a taser, any additional force (such as re-cycling

the taser) must be justified under the Fourth Amendment based upon the totality

of the circumstances that existed at the time of the re-assessment.

      This fundamental Fourth Amendment rule of law was not only clear at the

time of Lt. Treubig’s conduct from Supreme Court cases and this Court’s decisions,

but also was reinforced by a compelling consensus of cases in our sister circuits,



                                           47
including cases where courts held that additional tasing(s) in a rapidly evolving

situation could violate the Fourth Amendment if the prior tasing(s) of the suspect

would have been sufficient in light of the circumstances. 13 See Meyers v. Baltimore

Cty., 
713 F.3d 723
, 733 (4th Cir. 2013) (“Our conclusion that [the officer’s] first three

uses of the taser were objectively reasonable does not resolve our inquiry into the

reasonableness of the seven additional taser shocks that he administered, because

force justified at the beginning of an encounter is not justified even seconds later

if the justification for the initial force has been eliminated.” (quotation marks

omitted)); 
Abbott, 705 F.3d at 729
, 731, 733 (holding, in a “rapidly unfolding

situation,” that qualified immunity did not protect an officer who squeezed the

taser trigger a second time after the tased suspect, prone on the ground, did not




13 Although Lt. Treubig objects to reliance on cases outside this Circuit for
purposes of the qualified immunity, we have previously held that “[e]ven if this
or other circuit courts have not explicitly held a law or course of conduct to be
unconstitutional, the unconstitutionality of that law or course of conduct will
nonetheless be treated as clearly established if decisions by this or other courts
‘clearly foreshadow a particular ruling on the issue.’” Scott v. Fischer, 
616 F.3d 100
,
105 (2d Cir. 2010) (quoting Varrone v. Bilotti, 
123 F.3d 75
, 79 (2d Cir. 1997)); see also
Terebesi, 764 F.3d at 231
n.12 (“Though not directly binding on this Court, the
decisions of other circuits may reflect that the contours of the right in question are
clearly established.”). Therefore, we are permitted to consider this consensus of
authority outside the Circuit although, as noted above, we conclude that the right
was clearly established by Supreme Court and Second Circuit precedent
independent of this consensus of other circuits.
                                           48
follow an order to roll over, and emphasizing that “the fact that an initial use of

force may have been justified does not mean that all subsequent uses of that force

were similarly justified”); Mattos v. Agarano, 
661 F.3d 433
, 445 (9th Cir. 2011)

(finding that reasonable factfinder could conclude force was excessive because

“[t]hree tasings in such rapid succession provided no time for [the plaintiff] to

recover from the extreme pain she experienced, gather herself, and reconsider her

refusal to comply”); see also Goodwin v. City of Painesville, 
781 F.3d 314
, 324 (6th Cir.

2015) (“Even if a jury were to credit the Officers’ assertions that [the suspect] posed

a danger to them and that he had resisted at the apartment door, the force used

against him could still be found to be excessive.           We have held that even

previously-resisting suspects have a constitutional right to be free of a gratuitous

application of a Taser once they have stopped all resistance.”).

      Accordingly, because there was evidence (from Lt. Treubig himself) that he

had time to re-assess whether Jones was still resisting arrest before using the taser

a second time against Jones, the rapidly evolving nature of the situation as a whole

does not cloak Lt. Treubig with qualified immunity for the unreasonable use of

force following that re-assessment.




                                           49
      d. The Need to Handcuff Jones

      Lt. Treubig’s argument that qualified immunity should also attach here

because Jones was still uncuffed at the time of the second use of the taser is

similarly flawed. In making this assertion, Lt. Treubig points to the fact that the

holding in Tracy addressed a situation where there was evidence that the plaintiff

was already handcuffed at the time the pepper spray was used. Thus, Lt. Treubig

suggests that a reasonable officer would not understand from Tracy that the officer

could violate the Fourth Amendment by re-cycling a taser into an arrestee who

had been resisting and was still uncuffed. As discussed earlier, such a narrow

reading of Tracy is simply incompatible with the language in Tracy which, while

referencing the evidence that the plaintiff was handcuffed when pepper sprayed,

made clear that it was relying on a broader Fourth Amendment principle that “a

significant degree of force . . . should not be used lightly or gratuitously against an

arrestee who is complying with police commands or otherwise poses no

immediate threat to the arresting officer.” 
Tracy, 623 F.3d at 98
. It was established

long before Tracy that, although the fact that an individual initially resists arrest

“no doubt justifies the officer’s use of some degree of force, . . . it does not give the




                                           50
officer license to use force without limit.” Sullivan v. Gagnier, 
225 F.3d 161
, 165-66

(2d Cir. 2000).

      Thus, although the fact that a previously resisting arrestee had not yet been

handcuffed may be an important factor in assessing the reasonableness of an

officer’s force, we have never held that the need to complete the arrest authorizes

an additional level of force which would not be reasonably necessary to allow the

officers to handcuff that arrestee safely and without further incident. See generally

Brown v. City of New York, 
798 F.3d 94
, 102 (2d Cir. 2015) (“The officers could be

entitled to a summary judgment only if there existed a per se rule that an arrestee’s

refusal to submit to the easy application of handcuffs always permitted police

officers to use substantial force, including taking a person to the ground and

incapacitating her with pepper s[p]ray, to accomplish handcuffing. We know of

no such rule.”).

      Here, even though Jones’s hands were not yet cuffed at the time of the

second tasing, there was more than sufficient evidence for a rational jury to

conclude that he was no longer resisting arrest after the first tasing or posing an

ongoing threat to the safety of the officers or others. Thus, any belief by Lt. Treubig

that the second tasing was necessary to effectuate handcuffing Jones was



                                          51
unreasonable. Accordingly, we conclude that, at the time of Lt. Treubig’s conduct

in April 2015, no reasonable officer would believe that, if an arrestee was no longer

resisting and face down on the ground with his arms spread after the first tasing

(as Jones testified here), the Fourth Amendment would permit an additional use

of the taser simply because the arrestee still needed to be handcuffed by the

surrounding officers. Therefore, construing the evidence most favorably to Jones,

the fact that he was not yet handcuffed at the time of the second tasing provides

no grounds for the doctrine of qualified immunity to disturb the jury’s finding of

excessive force relating to Lt. Treubig’s conduct in this case.

      This Court’s analysis as it relates to the scope of Tracy’s holding for purposes

of qualified immunity, as applied to the particular factual circumstances of this

case (including the need to handcuff an arrestee who had been resisting), is

completely consistent with our decision in Soto v. Gaudett, 
862 F.3d 148
(2d Cir.

2017). In Soto, we held that one officer, who tased a fleeing suspect, was entitled

to qualified immunity as a matter of law.
Id. at 156.
On the other hand, the Court

found that two different officers who tased the suspect a second time after he fell

“flat on his face” were not entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law at the

summary judgment stage because of disputed issues of material fact.
Id. at 153,


                                         52
156, 161. With respect to the latter officers, the complaint alleged that Officer

Robinson “tased Soto ‘[w]hen Mr. Soto, who posed no physical threat to the

officers pursuing him, attempted to return to his feet.’”
Id. at 159
(alteration in

original). Although Soto was decided after the events in this case, the incident in

Soto occurred in 2008, seven years before the incident here, and we held it was

clearly established at that time that officers violated the Fourth Amendment when

they tased a subject who was already “on the ground, completely entangled in

taser wires,” in close proximity to the officers, and “struggling even to get into a

push-up position.”
Id. at 160.
In so holding, citing Tracy, we emphasized that

“[t]hough the use of force may be reasonable against a suspect who is fleeing, it

may be objectively unreasonable against that suspect when he has been stopped

and no longer poses a risk of flight.”
Id. at 158
(citing 
Tracy, 623 F.3d at 96-98
).

Therefore, in Soto, as is the situation here, we concluded that qualified immunity

would not immunize an officer for tasing an uncuffed arrestee a second time

where the arrestee was no longer resisting and was not posing a threat to the safety

of officers or others.

      Lt. Treubig seeks to distinguish Soto because, unlike the plaintiff there,

“Jones suffered no injuries from the taser at all.” Appellee Br. at 32. We find that



                                         53
argument unpersuasive. Jones testified to temporary injury—that is, he felt numb

for 30 to 40 minutes after being tased by Lt. Treubig. And, in any event, it is well

established that, although the absence of significant injury is relevant to the

question of excessive force, it is not dispositive under a Fourth Amendment

analysis. See Amato v. City of Saratoga Springs, 
170 F.3d 311
, 317 (2d Cir. 1999)

(“While the main purpose of a § 1983 damages award is to compensate individuals

for injuries caused by the deprivation of constitutional rights, a litigant is entitled

to an award of nominal damages upon proof of a violation of a substantive

constitutional right even in the absence of actual compensable injury.”); Robison v.

Via, 
821 F.2d 913
, 923-24 (2d Cir. 1987) (concluding that excessive force claim

survived summary judgment where bruising resulted from the arrest, but

required no medical treatment).        Thus, if the jury rationally finds that a

constitutional violation occurred because the officer’s significant use of force was

excessive and awards nominal damages (as the jury did here), the absence of a

compensable injury does not alone provide a ground for qualified immunity.

      Although we hold that Lt. Treubig had fair warning of this clearly

established law based upon our decision in Tracy years before his conduct, we

again note the additional warning provided by the overwhelming persuasive



                                          54
authority in other circuits that, prior to Lt. Treubig’s conduct in April 2015,

consistently reached the same conclusion with respect to the use of a taser, even

where a formerly resisting suspect had not yet been handcuffed. See, e.g., Smith v.

Conway Cty., 
759 F.3d 853
, 860-61 (8th Cir. 2014) (holding that, even though the

first tasing of the prisoner was justified because he had just kicked a guard, the

second tasing would be unreasonable if he was no longer actively resisting, posing

a security concern, or disobeying orders); 
Abbott, 705 F.3d at 732
(concluding that

“it was clearly established on June 25, 2007, that it is unlawful to deploy a taser in

dart mode against a nonviolent misdemeanant who had just been tased . . . and

made no movement when, after the first tasing, the officer instructed her to turn

over”); 
Meyers, 713 F.3d at 735
(concluding, in a case involving ten tasing incidents

against mentally ill man initially holding a baseball bat, that, although the first

three tasings were reasonable because of the threat the man posed, it was clearly

established in 2007 that it was excessive force to use a taser against a suspect once

he was “unarmed and effectively . . . secured with several officers sitting on his

back”); 
Bryan, 630 F.3d at 828
, 830 (finding it unreasonable to use a taser against

an uncuffed suspect who was unarmed, non-threatening, and not resisting); Brown

v. City of Golden Valley, 
574 F.3d 491
, 499 (8th Cir. 2009) (“[T]he law was sufficiently



                                          55
clear to inform a reasonable officer that it was unlawful to Taser a nonviolent,

suspected misdemeanant who was not fleeing or resisting arrest, who posed little

to no threat to anyone’s safety, and whose only noncompliance with the officer’s

commands was to disobey two orders . . . .”). Accordingly, existing precedent

from this Court, as well as the overwhelming consensus of cases from other

circuits, “placed the . . . constitutional question beyond debate,” such that it was

“‘sufficiently clear’ that every ‘reasonable official would [have understood] that

what he [was] doing violate[d] that right,’” 
al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 741
(first alteration

in original) (quoting 
Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640
), under the factual circumstances

that we must assume for purposes of the Rule 50 motion in this case.

      In sum, upon a review of the relevant legal authority, we hold that it was

clearly established as of April 2015 that a police officer cannot use significant force,

such as a taser, against an individual who is no longer resisting or posing a threat

to the officers or others. In light of the jury’s findings and viewing the record on

the remaining factual disputes in the light most favorable to Jones, we must

assume for the qualified immunity analysis that Jones was subdued when Lt.

Treubig re-cycled his taser, in that Jones was no longer resisting arrest or posing a

threat to the officers or others, but rather lying face down on the ground with his



                                          56
arms spread. No qualified immunity can thus exist on those facts. As a result, we

reverse the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law, and instruct that

the jury verdict against Lt. Treubig should be reinstated.

                                 CONCLUSION

      Based on the foregoing, we conclude that Lt. Treubig is not entitled to

qualified immunity for the second tasing of Jones. Accordingly, the judgment of

the district court is REVERSED, and this case is REMANDED for proceedings

consistent with this opinion.




                                         57

Source:  CourtListener

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