DAVID M. EBEL, District Judge.
THIS MATTER comes before the Court on Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 25]. The Court has reviewed the Motion; Plaintiff's Response to Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 36], which contains an implied motion to dismiss Defendant Paul Skattum from this action; Defendants' Reply in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 37]; the affidavits and exhibits, the case file, and the applicable law, and is sufficiently advised in the premises. Also before the Court is the parties' Stipulation of Dismissal with Prejudice of All Claims Asserted by Daisy Rojas and Natalie Rojas [Doc. 24]. The Court DISMISSES with prejudice all claims asserted by Daisy Rojas and Natalie Rojas. For the reasons that follow, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff's implied motion to dismiss Defendant Paul Skattum from this action, and GRANTS the remaining Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment.
This case arises out of the arrest of Plaintiff Oliver Rojas ("Rojas" or "Plaintiff") on May 10, 2009. The undisputed facts are as follows: Early that morning, Defendant Officer Kenneth Anderson ("Anderson") observed Rojas and another man, later identified as Anthony Ochoa, on the front porch of a residence in Northglenn, Colorado, jiggling the doorknob and peering through the mail slot. A third man, later identified as Elvis Ochoa, approached the house but did not go up on the porch. Anderson approached the men and was told, by the Ochoas, that Rojas lived at the house. Anderson observed that Rojas appeared extremely intoxicated. Anderson asked Rojas to confirm whether he lived there, but Rojas refused to do so. Throughout this encounter, Rojas and Anthony Ochoa spoke to each other in Spanish. Anderson does not speak or understand Spanish. Anderson asked Rojas for identification, but Rojas would not provide it. Anderson then told Rojas that he was taking him to a detoxification facility, and he took Rojas by the arm. Rojas and Anthony began pounding on the front door. Rojas's mother answered the door and spoke to Rojas and Anthony Ochoa in Spanish. Anderson continued to try to pull Rojas away from the door and down the porch stairs, and told Rojas not to enter the residence.
Rojas refused to obey Anderson's orders and "lunged back and forth in an effort to free his arm." Apparently successful in freeing his arm, Rojas then ran into the residence, pursued by Anderson, who ordered him to stop. Rojas ran down a flight of stairs, again pursued by Anderson, who tackled him to the ground on the lower level of the house. Rojas forcefully struggled, broke free, and returned to the main level of the house, where Anderson tackled him again. Rojas continued to struggle and ignore orders to stop, and he kicked Anderson in the leg.
A second officer, Defendant Officer Paul Skattum ("Skattum"), had arrived on the scene, and he entered the house to assist Anderson. Skattum observed the struggle between Anderson and Rojas, and the presence of five other persons in the house on or near the stairs, whom Skattum ordered to stay back. Two more officers arrived at the scene, Defendant Officer Nicholas Wilson ("Wilson") and Officer Matt Hindman. Wilson recalls people at the top of the stairs yelling at the officers, telling them to leave Rojas alone. Wilson and Skattum helped Anderson subdue Rojas, by striking Rojas repeatedly in the leg and arm until Rojas could be handcuffed. As Rojas was led out of the residence, a girl approached Rojas and hugged him around the neck. When officers moved the girl aside, Rojas kicked at them with both legs, kicking Skattum in the stomach. Rojas continued to struggle as he was carried out of the house. When he was taken out of the house, Rojas had no observable injuries, nor was he bleeding anywhere.
Officers placed Rojas in a patrol car, where he continued to struggle and kick forcefully against the window. Wilson and Anderson pulled Rojas out of the car by his legs and placed him in a hobble restraint to stop him kicking. At this point the officers saw that Rojas was bleeding from the chin. The cut was not caused by any officer hitting or striking Rojas in the face. Officers removed the hobble restraint, and Rojas's mother came out of the house and sat with Rojas until an ambulance arrived.
Rojas filed this action in May 2011, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. [Doc. 2.] Of the claims asserted in Rojas's First Amended Complaint, only two remain at issue, and only against Defendants Anderson and Wilson: (1) Rojas's unlawful seizure claim related to Anderson's warrantless entry into Rojas's home and (2) Rojas's excessive force claim against Anderson and Wilson for their use of force in connection with pulling Rojas out of the patrol car.
Summary judgment "shall" be granted "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A "genuine dispute" is one that could be resolved in favor of either party.
In support of their motion for summary judgment, Defendants assert the defense of qualified immunity, which will shield them from civil damages liability unless their alleged conduct violated a clearly established constitutional or statutory right.
Section 1983 of Title 42, United States Code, provides, in pertinent part:
To prevail on a claim under § 1983, a plaintiff must prove that (1) a person (2) acting under color of state law (3) violated the plaintiff's federal constitutional or statutory rights. Only two of Plaintiff's original § 1983 claims remain live, and only against Defendants Anderson and Wilson.
Rojas's first claim for relief, as clarified in his Response to the motion for summary judgment, is premised on the assertion that Anderson's warrantless entry into Rojas's home was unsupported by probable cause. Because the Court concludes, based on the undisputed facts, that Anderson had probable cause to suspect Rojas of attempting to assault him, and that Anderson's pursuit of Rojas into Rojas's home therefore did not violate the Fourth Amendment, the Court GRANTS Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Rojas's unlawful entry claim, on the grounds of qualified immunity.
Under the Fourth Amendment, the warrantless entry by police into a person's home is presumptively unreasonable.
Rojas asserts (1) that he did not attempt to assault Anderson; (2) therefore there was no probable cause to arrest him for that offense; (3) therefore the "hot pursuit" exception to the warrant requirement does not apply; and(4) therefore Anderson's warrantless entry into Rojas's home violated the Fourth Amendment. Defendants, for their part, argue that it is undisputed that once Anderson took hold of Rojas's arm, Rojas "lunged back and forth" in an attempt to free his arm, and that Anderson perceived Rojas's actions to be an attempt to hit him. Moreover, Defendants argue, Anderson had reason to believe that Rojas posed a safety threat to the occupants of the house and/or to himself.
The undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to Rojas, support a finding of probable cause to arrest Rojas for attempting to assault Anderson.
Moreover, this case presents a situation in which the alleged victim of the crime and the arresting officer were one and the same. Colorado statute authorizes warrantless arrests in such circumstances,
Because, based on the undisputed facts, no constitutional violation occurred when Anderson entered Rojas's home, Rojas has failed to overcome the Defendants' qualified immunity defense.
The gravamen of Rojas's Fourth Amendment excessive force claim is that Defendants Anderson and Wilson used excessive force when they pulled him from the patrol car and Rojas's chin hit the pavement. Because, based on the undisputed facts, Rojas has not established that a constitutional violation occurred, the Court GRANTS Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Rojas's excessive force claim, on the grounds of qualified immunity.
The Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable seizures continues to govern police treatment of an arrestee who is detained without a warrant, at least until some form of probable cause hearing takes place.
As an initial matter, it is important to clarify that the only use of "force" at issue is the Defendants' grabbing Rojas by the legs and pulling him from the car, and that the "seizure" being effectuated was the placing of a hobble restraint on Rojas. The only volitional act on the part of the officers was to pull Rojas from the car so that they could hobble him and stop him from kicking. It is undisputed that the cut and fracture Rojas suffered were caused by his chin hitting the ground, and not by any officer's intentional application of force to Rojas's chin.
The first
Although in this case the non-exclusive
That Defendants pulled Rojas out of the car in such a manner as to permit his chin to strike the pavement may have been careless, but it does not by itself establish that the Defendants violated Rojas's Fourth Amendment rights.
Plaintiff Rojas has failed to demonstrate that either (1) Defendant Anderson's warrantless entry into Rojas's home to effect arrest or (2) Defendant Anderson's and Defendant Wilson's post-arrest conduct in pulling him from the police car to hobble him violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Accordingly, Defendants Anderson and Wilson are entitled to summary judgment on the grounds of qualified immunity.
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that
In the complaint, Rojas's sisters, Daisy Rojas and Natalie Rojas, each asserted two state-law tort claims against the police officers. The parties have also stipulated to the dismissal with prejudice of all claims by Daisy Rojas and Natalie Rojas. Doc. 24. The Court will order the dismissal of those claims as well.
Finally, Plaintiff's response to Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment purports to "dismiss Officer Skattum from this case." Doc. 36 at 17. The Court construes this part of Plaintiff's Response as a motion to dismiss Defendant Skattum from this action; that motion is GRANTED.