PATRICK J. HANNA, Magistrate Judge.
Currently pending is the re-urged motion for summary judgment (Rec. Doc. 66), which was filed on behalf of the defendants, former Acadia Parish Sheriff Wayne Melancon, Deputy Sheriff Tyler Broussard, and former Deputy Sheriff Conan Smith.
This lawsuit was brought by Shelby Trahan, individually and on behalf of his deceased father, Adam James Trahan (hereinafter "Mr. Trahan") who died after being shot by Deputy Broussard. The shooting occurred during an altercation inside the residence occupied by the decedent and his girlfriend Tammy Bankston on April 6, 2013. In his original complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the defendants violated Mr. Trahan's Constitutional rights, and he asserted state-law claims of assault and battery. The plaintiff also asserted claims, under Louisiana law, for Mr. Trahan's survival between the time he was injured and his death and for his allegedly wrongful death. In his first amended complaint, the plaintiff added a claim against Acadian Ambulance Service, but that claim was dismissed (Rec. Docs. 62, 63).
The defendants contend that the deputies did not violate the Fourth Amendment when they entered Mr. Trahan's residence because the situation presented exigent circumstances, that the force used by the deputies was reasonable under the circumstances, and that the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity, protecting them from suit. The defendants further contend that the claims asserted against Sheriff Melancon and Deputy Smith are unsupported by factual evidence in the record, that there is no basis for awarding punitive damages, and no evidence to support a spoliation claim. They seek dismissal of all of the claims asserted against them in this lawsuit.
The plaintiff contends that there is a genuine issue of material fact concerning (1) whether Ms. Bankston or Mr. Trahan had a preexisting relationship with Deputy Smith; (2) the deputies' arrival at and analysis of the scene; and (3) what happened inside the home at the time of the shooting. The plaintiff further contends that the deputies' warrantless entry into the residence and the use of deadly force violated Mr. Trahan's Constitutional rights; that the unreasonableness of the deputies' actions precludes qualified immunity; and that the unreasonableness of the deputies' actions mandates an award of punitive damages.
Under Rule 56(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A fact is material if proof of its existence or nonexistence might affect the outcome of the lawsuit under the applicable governing law.
The party seeking summary judgment has the initial responsibility of informing the court of the basis for its motion and identifying those parts of the record that demonstrate the absence of genuine issues of material fact.
All facts and inferences are construed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
If the dispositive issue is one on which the nonmoving party will bear the burden of proof at trial, the moving party may satisfy its burden by pointing out that there is insufficient proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party's claim.
The complaint states that the plaintiff's claims are brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988 as well as under Louisiana law. Section 1983 provides a cause of action against anyone who "under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State" violates another person's Constitutional rights. Section 1983 is not itself a source of substantive rights; it merely provides a method for vindicating federal rights conferred elsewhere.
Qualified immunity, an affirmative defense to a suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, protects government officials in their individual capacity, while performing discretionary functions, not only from suit, but from "liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known."
Although qualified immunity is "nominally an affirmative defense, the plaintiff has the burden to negate the defense once properly raised."
In this case, the plaintiff has not presented sufficient evidence to negate the application of qualified immunity as to any of the named defendants. Accordingly, Sheriff Melancon, Deputy Broussard and Deputy Smith are entitled to qualified immunity, and the claims against them in their individual capacities must be dismissed.
The determination of the material facts at issue can, for the most part, be derived from the dashboard camera video recording made by the video camera in Deputy Broussard's vehicle. The United States Supreme Court has stated that, even at the summary judgment stage, the facts should be viewed in the light depicted by a videotape of the incident.
Deputy Broussard was going off shift and Deputy Smith was coming on shift when they received a radio dispatch call for a possible domestic disturbance and shots fired at an address in Acadia Parish, which had been phoned in by a neighbor. Both deputies proceeded to the address, which turned out to be the residence of Mr. Trahan and his girlfriend, Tammy Bankston. Deputy Broussard parked his unit in front of the house so that the unit's spotlight was directed to the open front door and he left his dashboard camera running. Deputy Broussard went to the left side of the open door, and Deputy Smith went to the right side. The contents inside the residence are visibly in disarray on the video. Although both deputies had a hand on their holstered sidearm, neither had his weapon actually drawn.
Ms. Bankston came to the door and told the officers that everything was all right. As Ms. Bankston stepped outside and attempted to pull the door closed behind her, Deputy Smith pushed the door open with his weapon still not drawn. As he did so, Deputy Smith saw Mr. Trahan standing in the house with an empty holster on his hip and his arms crossed over his chest with his hands under his armpits. Deputy Smith asked Mr. Trahan to come outside, and he asked Mr. Trahan to show his hands. Mr. Trahan did not answer. As Deputy Broussard peered into the house from the opposite side of the door, he too could see Mr. Trahan standing with his arms crossed and his hands under his armpits. He also observed the empty holster. Deputy Broussard drew his weapon and instructed Mr. Trahan to come out of the house and to show his hands. Mr. Trahan did not come out of the house. He briefly showed the palms of his hands but did not move his arms away from his sides.
Deputy Broussard holstered his weapon and, as he entered the house, he unholstered his taser. After Mr. Trahan briefly showed his palms but failed to raise his arms, Deputy Broussard threatened to tase Mr. Trahan if he did not show his hands. Mr. Trahan replied, "you're going to have to shoot me in the back," and began walking toward a sofa that was facing away from the door. As Mr. Trahan began to bend over the back of the sofa, Deputy Broussard deployed his taser. The taser did not have the desired effect of incapacitating Mr. Trahan. Mr. Trahan remained standing up but in a bent over position. Mr. Trahan then started coming up, holding a camouflage-patterned shotgun that he had picked up off the sofa. Deputy Broussard observed that the shotgun was being held in both of Mr. Trahan's hands, with the barrel pointing to the left. Deputy Broussard threw the taser to the floor and jumped on Mr. Trahan's back in an attempt to wrestle him to the ground. At this point, for the first time, both deputies were actually in the house and Ms. Bankston was looking in the door. The shotgun went off, shooting Deputy Smith in the leg, and Deputy Smith screamed. Deputy Broussard and Mr. Trahan fell to the ground. Mr. Trahan raised his right arm and began wrapping it around Deputy Broussard's head to put him in a headlock. Deputy Broussard unholstered his weapon and fired a couple of rounds, striking Mr. Trahan once in the chest. Mr. Trahan fell forward, with the barrel of the shotgun under his body. Mr. Trahan began attempting to get up, and Deputy Broussard saw the shotgun moving. Ms. Bankston, who was watching through the doorway, entered the house while Deputy Smith, although suffering from a shotgun blast to his leg, attempted to wrest the shotgun away from Mr. Trahan. At that point, Deputy Broussard fired more rounds, striking Mr. Trahan twice in the back. Deputy Smith pushed the shotgun out of the house. Deputy Broussard reholstered his weapon, rolled Mr. Trahan onto his left side, and used a cloth to stanch the bleeding. Because Mr. Trahan was still moving and Deputy Broussard still did not know where Mr. Trahan's pistol was, Deputy Broussard handcuffed Mr. Trahan. He then went to check on Deputy Smith and used his radio to call for assistance.
The deputies consistently testified that Mr. Trahan failed to comply with their instructions to exit the house and to show his hands. Deputy Broussard twice attempted to de-escalate the situation by first holstering his weapon and using his taser and then using bodily force rather than a weapon in an attempt to stop Mr. Trahan after Mr. Trahan retrieved a shotgun. It was only after Mr. Trahan fired the shotgun and wounded Deputy Smith that Deputy Broussard shot Mr. Trahan.
The plaintiff is correct that the dashcam video does not depict what occurred inside the house once the deputies entered and before the shots were fired. However, there was no evidence presented that rebuts the deputies' version of events. The plaintiff argues that the video shows "flashes from multiple gunshots that occur almost simultaneously before the wadding and pellets from the shotgun blast can be seen leaving the home." (Rec. Doc. 69 at 7). Having viewed the video many times, the Court observed no such flashes.
Ms. Bankston's testimony concerning what happened does not create any material factual disputes. Ms. Bankston confirmed that the shotgun was on the sofa before the deputies entered the house. Ms. Bankston can be seen on the video looking in the door when the deputies entered. She testified that Mr. Trahan had the shotgun in his hand before shots were fired and that the deputies told him to put the shotgun down. She confirmed that there was a struggle between Mr. Trahan and one of the deputies. Although she heard gunshots, she did not know which gun was shot first. Consequently, her testimony does not refute the version of events related by the deputies.
The entire sequence of events from the time of the deputies' arrival until the shotgun was removed from the house occurred over seventy-five seconds as indicated in the following time line taken from the video:
Of particular significance to the Court is that only three to four seconds elapsed between the time that Deputy Broussard and Deputy Smith moved into the house out of view and the shotgun was discharged. During those critical seconds, Deputy Broussard testified he saw the shotgun, dropped his taser and tried to tackle Mr. Trahan. He had no form of lethal force deployed. At the time Deputy Smith entered the residence out of view of the camera, he also had no form of lethal force deployed. In the next ten seconds, during which the fatal shots were fired by Deputy Broussard, the video demonstrates that Deputy Smith was fighting to gain control of the shotgun at the same time a civilian was in the immediate area of the altercation in the house. During that ten seconds, the testimony is consistent that Deputy Broussard was struggling unsuccessfully to gain control of the individual who had just fired the shotgun and who possibly could have been in possession of a handgun. The Court finds the video depiction of the removal of the shotgun from the house to be consistent with the deputies' testimony.
The plaintiff alleged that the deputies violated Mr. Trahan's Fourth Amendment rights by entering his home without a warrant. This argument lacks merit.
"[T]he underlying command of the Fourth Amendment is always that searches and seizures be reasonable, [but] what is reasonable depends on the context within which a search takes place."
It is undisputed that the deputies entered Mr. Trahan's residence without a warrant; however, the Court finds that the exigencies of the situation made their entry into the residence objectively reasonable. The deputies were responding to a domestic dispute with a report of shots fired. The video shows Deputy Broussard arriving at the house where the door is standing open. Deputy Smith walks around to the right side of the carport where he has a clear sight line into the house where the contents are visibly in disarray. Ms. Bankston steps out of the house and pulls the door to close it behind her, but the door does not completely close. Deputy Smith taps the door, and it reopens. Deputy Broussard sticks his head in the door, and at that point both deputies observed Mr. Trahan wearing an empty holster. They did not know the location of the handgun that fit the holster. Although Ms. Bankston attempted to assure the deputies that everything was all right when they encountered her at the door of the house, it was reasonable for the deputies to suspect that Mr. Trahan might be intending to harm Ms. Bankston or himself once they saw inside. When Mr. Trahan refused to show his hands, it was reasonable for them to enter the home in order to attempt to diffuse the situation.
Viewing the summary judgment evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, as is required, the Court concludes that there were exigent circumstances that made it reasonable for the deputies to enter the home. Accordingly, both deputies are entitled to qualified immunity with regard to their warrantless entry into Mr. Trahan's residence.
In this case, Mr. Trahan's death was caused by the deadly force employed by Deputy Broussard. There is no allegation — and no evidence — that Deputy Smith employed any force against Mr. Trahan except for his attempts to get the shotgun away from Mr. Trahan after Mr. Trahan had already shot him. Therefore, the issue to be resolved is whether Deputy Broussard's use of deadly force was reasonable. The Court finds that it was.
To prevail on a Fourth Amendment excessive force claim, a plaintiff must establish "(1) injury (2) which resulted directly and only from the use of force that was clearly excessive, and (3) the excessiveness of which was clearly unreasonable."
When deciding the question of whether the force used was unreasonable, the court must determine whether the totality of the circumstances justified the particular use of force.
In this case, viewing the summary judgment evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff and balancing the amount of force used against the need for force, as is required, the Court concludes that the amount of force used was reasonable under the circumstances. Deputy Broussard and Deputy Smith were responding to an alleged domestic violence situation involving gunshots already having been fired. When they first observed Mr. Trahan, he was wearing an empty holster with no sign of the pistol nearby. After refusing their instructions, Mr. Trahan picked up and fired a shotgun, injuring one of the officers, and was in a fight with the other officer over the shotgun while an innocent civilian was in the room. It was not until after Mr. Trahan fired the shotgun and injured Deputy Smith that Deputy Broussard unholstered his weapon and used deadly force against Mr. Trahan. It was reasonable for Deputy Broussard to use deadly force after his attempts to tase and tackle Mr. Trahan proved ineffective, especially since at that point he knew that Deputy Smith had been hit with gunfire and he was engaged in a struggle with Mr. Trahan who remained capable of firing the shotgun.
This Court also finds that there was no clearly established statutory or Constitutional right that gave the Deputy Broussard "fair warning" that he could not use deadly force under the circumstances where (1) in response to a domestic violence call with shots fired, (2) the victim is seen with an empty holster and no sign of the weapon, (3) the victim refuses to follow instructions and retrieves a shotgun which discharges after multiple attempts to use non-deadly force have proved unsuccessful, and (4) the victim does not relinquish the shotgun without resistance.
It is well-established that the excessive force inquiry is confined to whether the officer or another person was in danger at the moment of the threat that resulted in the officer's use of deadly force.
The Fifth Circuit has declined to find excessive force when a police officer shot and killed a robbery suspect after the suspect repeatedly refused to keep his hands raised and appeared to be reaching for an object.
The plaintiff contends that Mason v. Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government
Although Deputy Broussard fired two sets of rounds, striking Mr. Trahan a total of three times, there is no evidence whatsoever that Mr. Trahan was subdued when the second set of rounds were fired. After the shotgun was fired, Deputy Broussard fired a couple of rounds. One of those rounds struck Mr. Trahan in the chest. The testimony is consistent, and the video confirms to some extent, that Deputy Broussard was struggling with Mr. Trahan after the first rounds were fired. Deputy Broussard observed the barrel of the shotgun sticking out of the upper part of Mr. Trahan's body and Mr. Trahan began moving and appeared to be pushing himself up off the floor with the shotgun still underneath him. The video shows Deputy Smith also fighting to gain control of the shotgun. At some point during those few seconds, Deputy Broussard perceived an imminent threat and fired again, this time into Mr. Trahan's back.
The coroner's report showed that Mr. Trahan was struck by three bullets, one in the left chest, one in the right back, and one in the left back.
Thus, this factual scenario is very different from that presented in the Mason case. There is no evidence contradicting Deputy Broussard's version of the events and the coroner corroborated Deputy Broussard's perception that Mr. Trahan still posed a threat after he was wounded by the first set of shots. Therefore, the risk presented by Mr. Trahan did not cease between Deputy Broussard's firing the first set of rounds and firing the second set of rounds. When Deputy Broussard fired the two shots into Mr. Trahan's back, Deputy Broussard still had a reasonable belief that Mr. Trahan posed an imminent risk of serious harm. The Court accordingly concludes that Deputy Broussard's use of deadly force was reasonable under the circumstances in which he found himself at that moment.
The plaintiff suggests that there might have been a preexisting relationship between Mr. Trahan and Deputy Smith due to Deputy Smith and Mr. Trahan's son Shelby having been in a prior altercation. The plaintiff also suggests that there might have been a preexisting relationship between Deputy Smith and Ms. Bankston due to certain social media posts. No competent evidence was presented to establish the existence of either claimed relationship, and no competent evidence was presented to establish that either claimed relationship resulted in the deputies acting unreasonably after entering the plaintiff's home. Therefore, the Court finds that, even if the alleged relationships did exist, those relationships were not material to the reasonableness of the deputies' actions on the night in question.
In addition to his claims against Deputy Broussard and Deputy Smith, the plaintiff also asserted claims against Acadia Parish Sheriff Wayne Melancon in both his individual capacity and his official capacity. "Under section 1983, supervisory officials are not liable for the actions of subordinates on any theory of vicarious liability."
In this case, there is no allegation that Sheriff Melancon was present at Mr. Trahan's residence on the night in question. Furthermore, no evidence was presented to show that Sheriff Melancon instituted an unconstitutional policy that was being followed by the two deputies when they responded to the dispatcher's call and then encountered Mr. Trahan. Finally, there is no evidence that Sheriff Melancon acted or failed to act with deliberate indifference to the constitutional violations allegedly committed by the two deputies. "A complete failure of proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party's case is fatal and entitles the moving party to judgment as a matter of law."
The complaint seeks the imposition of punitive damages against Deputy Broussard and Deputy Smith in their individual capacities. Although punitive damages are not recoverable in Section 1983 claims against a municipality
The plaintiff asserted state-law claims of assault and battery against the two deputies, as well as state-law survival and wrongful death claims against the defendants, based on the allegations of warrantless entry and use of excessive force. In support of the motion for summary judgment, the defendants argued that these claims should be dismissed. Having concluded that the plaintiff's federal-law claims against the defendants should be dismissed, there is no remaining federal question before the court. Although this fact alone does not divest the court of jurisdiction, "in the usual case in which all federal-law claims are eliminated before trial, the balance of factors to be considered under the pendent jurisdiction doctrine — judicial economy, convenience, fairness, and comity — will point toward declining to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims."
In his complaint, the plaintiff asserted a spoliation claim, arguing that some evidence was either withheld or intentionally destroyed. Black's Law Dictionary defines spoliation as "[t]he intentional destruction, mutilation, alteration, or concealment of evidence."
The Court finds that, aside from the plaintiff's conjecture, no evidence of spoliation has been presented that would have any impact on the Court's decision. Any photographs taken at the scene after the shooting had already occurred would not likely be relevant to figuring out what happened during the altercation or whether the deputies' actions were or were not reasonable. The mere fact that a sofa was flipped over (as depicted in some of the photographs) after the incident occurred does not prove that the scene was staged to make it look like a pistol was readily at hand, as the plaintiff suggests. Moreover, the Court's decision on the reasonableness of the deputies' actions does not take into consideration the location of Mr. Trahan's handgun at any time — except for the fact that it was not in his holster.
Accordingly, the Court finds that there is insufficient evidence to support a conclusion that anyone materially altered, lost, or destroyed any relevant evidence that would have any impact on the Court's decision applicable to the federal claims.
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants' motion for summary judgment (Rec. Doc. 38) is GRANTED IN PART. The motion is granted with regard to the plaintiff's Section 1983 claims against defendant Deputy Broussard and defendant Deputy Smith because they are entitled to qualified immunity, and those claims are dismissed with prejudice. The motion is GRANTED with regard to the Section 1983 claims against Sheriff Melancon in his official and individual capacities because the plaintiff failed to prove that Sheriff Melancon violated the decedent's Constitutional rights, and those claims are dismissed with prejudice. The motion is GRANTED with regard to the punitive damages claims asserted against the deputies under Section 1983 because the plaintiff failed to prove that the deputies acted with evil motive or reckless disregard for the decedent's rights, and those claims are dismissed with prejudice.
The court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the plaintiff's state-law claims, and those claims are dismissed without prejudice.