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- March 1990
-
- PERSONAL LIABILITY: THE QUALIFIED IMMUNITY DEFENSE
-
- By
-
- Daniel L. Schofield, S.J.D.
- Special Agent
- and
- Chief of the Legal Instruction Unit
- FBI Academy
- Quantico, Virginia
-
- Law enforcement officers face many stressful situations
- inherent in their profession, including the threat of being sued
- and held personally liable for money damages because of their
- actions. Since officers are often placed in fast-breaking
- situations, they must decide whether to arrest or search with
- little opportunity to obtain prior legal advice. By its very
- nature, law enforcement inevitably places officers in situations
- where they must make difficult judgments, balancing the extent of
- the authority they exercise with the constitutional rights of the
- citizens they serve. Citizens rightly expect officers to
- understand the constitutional principles that govern their
- conduct. At the same time, law enforcement effectiveness often
- depends on officers' confidence and willingness to act swiftly
- and decisively to combat crime and protect the public.
-
- However, the fear of personal liability can seriously erode
- this necessary confidence and willingness to act. Even worse,
- law enforcement officers who have an unrealistic or exaggerated
- fear of personal liability may become overly timid or indecisive
- and fail to arrest or search to the detriment of the public's
- interest in effective and aggressive law enforcement. In order
- to accurately assess their potential exposure to personal
- liability, law enforcement officials must understand the
- constitutional law that governs their conduct. They must also
- understand the protection of qualified immunity that shields
- officers from personal liability for unconstitutional law
- enforcement activity that is deemed objectively reasonable.
-
- This article discusses recent court decisions that clarify
- the extent of protection from personal liability offered by the
- qualified immunity defense. The article's primary purpose is to
- allay officers' unrealistic concerns for personal liability that
- can inhibit law enforcement effectiveness and undermine morale.
- It discusses the following aspects of the immunity
- defense--immunity rationale and scope, the ``objective legal
- reasonableness'' test, the ``clearly established law''
- requirement, applicability to unconstitutional law enforcement
- conduct, and procedural considerations in asserting the defense.
-
- IMMUNITY RATIONALE AND SCOPE
-
- Immunity is a legally recognized exemption from liability.
- Recently, in the case of Forrester v. White, (1) the Supreme Court
- described the rationale for immunity as follows:
-
- ``Suits for monetary damages are meant to compensate the
- victims of wrongful actions and to discourage conduct that may
- result in liability. Special problems arise, however, when
- government officials are exposed to liability for damages. To
- the extent that the threat of liability encourages these
- officials to carry out their duties in a lawful and appropriate
- manner, and to pay their victims when they do not, it
- accomplishes exactly what it should. By its nature, however,
- the threat of liability can create perverse incentives that
- operate to inhibit officials in the proper performance of their
- duties. In many contexts, government officials are expected to
- make decisions that are impartial or imaginative, and that above
- all are informed by considerations other than the personal
- interests of the decisionmaker. Because government officials are
- engaged by definition in governing, their decisions will often
- have adverse effects on other persons. When officials
- are threatened with personal liability for acts taken pursuant
- to their official duties, they may well be induced to act with
- an excess of caution or otherwise to skew their decisions in
- ways that result in less than full fidelity to the objective and
- independent criteria that ought to guide their conduct. In this
- way, exposing government officials to the same legal hazards
- faced by other citizens may detract from the rule of law instead
- of contributing to it.'' (2)
-
- These considerations have led courts to create both absolute
- and qualified immunity defenses. The Supreme Court has been
- ``...quite sparing in its recognition of claims to absolute
- official immunity,'' (3) which is limited to officials whose
- special functions demand total protection from suit, such as
- judges and prosecutors, ``...intimately associated with the
- judicial phase of the criminal process.'' (4) While law
- enforcement officers do not receive absolute immunity protection,
- the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit held that law
- enforcement officers charged with the duty of executing facially
- valid court orders do enjoy absolute immunity from liability for
- damages resulting from conduct prescribed by that order. (5) The
- court found that enforcing a court order is intrinsically
- associated with a judicial proceeding. Also, it determined that
- the public interest in the enforcement of court orders essential
- to the effective function of the judicial process far outweighs
- the benefit to be gained by making law enforcement officers
- liable for decisions they are powerless to control. (6)
-
- Courts generally agree, however, that most law enforcement
- functions do not require absolute immunity protection. For
- example, in Malley v. Briggs, (7) the Supreme Court refused to
- expand the scope of absolute immunity to the decision of a Rhode
- Island State trooper to apply for an arrest warrant. In this
- case, the Court decided that a rule of qualified rather than
- absolute immunity would give police ``ample room for mistaken
- judgments,'' and yet not ``deter an officer from submitting an
- affidavit when probable cause to make an arrest is present.'' (8)
-
- The Court noted that a damages remedy for an arrest
- following an objectively unreasonable request for a warrant
- imposes a cost directly on the officer responsible for the
- unreasonable request and directly benefits the victim of the
- police misconduct. The Court commented on the trooper's
- expansive qualified immunity protection by noting, ``[O]nly where
- the warrant application is so lacking in indicia of probable
- cause as to render official belief in its existence unreasonable
- will the shield of immunity be lost.'' (9)
-
- Qualified immunity is designed to insulate responsible law
- enforcement officers ``from undue interference with their duties
- and from the potentially disabling threat of liability,'' and it
- shields from civil liability ``all but the plainly incompetent or
- those who knowingly violate the law.'' (10)
-
- IMMUNITY BASED ON ``OBJECTIVE LEGAL REASONABLENESS''
-
- In 1982, the Supreme Court adopted an objective standard for
- courts to use in determining whether immunity shields official
- action. The Court described the parameters of qualified immunity
- defense as follows:
-
- ``[G]overnment officials performing discretionary functions
- generally are shielded 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.'' (11)
-
- That standard was further clarified 5 years later when the
- Court defined ``objective legal reasonableness'' as the
- touchstone for a qualified immunity defense. That decision in
- Anderson v. Creighton (12) involved a suit against a Special Agent
- of the Federal Bureau of Investigation alleging an
- unconstitutional warrantless search. The U.S. Court of Appeals
- for the Eighth Circuit had rejected the Agent's claim for
- qualified immunity, concluding that the law was clearly
- established that persons are protected from warrantless searches
- of their homes unless the searching officers have probable cause
- and exigent circumstances. (13) The Agent sought review of that
- court of appeals decision in the Supreme Court. He argued that
- he was entitled to qualified immunity if he could establish as a
- matter of law that a reasonable officer could have believed the
- search to be lawful.
-
- The Supreme Court agreed with the Agent that the court of
- appeals had erroneously refused to consider whether it was
- clearly established that the circumstances confronting the Agent
- did not constitute probable cause and exigent circumstances. The
- Court made clear that the availability of the qualified immunity
- defense generally turns on the ``objective legal reasonableness''
- of the action in question assessed in light of the legal rules
- that were clearly established at the time that action was
- taken. (14)
-
- Law enforcement officers do not lose their qualified
- immunity simply because it is shown that they violated a
- generalized right, such as the right of citizens to be free from
- unreasonable searches and seizures. Instead, it must be shown
- that the law was clearly established in a ``particularized''
- sense, so that ``the contours of the right'' are clear enough for
- any reasonable officer to know that what he or she is doing
- violates that right. (15) This particularity requirement does not
- mean that law enforcement officers will always be protected by
- qualified immunity unless the very action in question has been
- held unlawful. Rather, it means that the illegality must be
- apparent in light of preexisting law before officers lose their
- immunity protection. (16) The Court held that law enforcement
- officials should not be held personally liable when they
- ``...reasonably but mistakenly conclude that probable cause is
- present.'' (17) The ``objective legal reasonableness'' test
- applied to an allegedly unlawful search requires an examination
- of the information possessed by the searching officials. The
- relevant question to be resolved is whether a reasonable officer
- could have believed the Agent's warrantless search to be lawful
- in light of clearly established law and the information that the
- searching Agent possessed.
-
- THE ``CLEARLY ESTABLISHED LAW'' REQUIREMENT
-
- The unlawfulness of the challenged conduct must be apparent
- in light of preexisting law. (18) The Supreme Court has instructed
- that the actions of a reasonably competent officer should be
- assessed in the light of the legal rules that were ``clearly
- established'' at the time the action was taken. (19) A legal
- right is ``clearly established'' if the contours of that right
- are sufficiently clear that reasonable law enforcement officials
- would understand that what they are doing violates that right.
- Therefore, a qualified immunity defense will generally fail if
- the plaintiff proves that the law which an officer allegedly
- violated was ``clearly established'' at the time the challenged
- conduct occurred and that a reasonably competent officer should
- have known of that law.
-
- The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said that a determination
- of whether a legal right was ``clearly established'' requires
- courts to survey the legal landscape that existed at the time of
- the challenged conduct. (20) First, in the absence of binding
- precedent, courts should look to available decisional law from
- courts in other jurisdictions. (21) Second, comparisons to
- previously settled cases should not be limited to ``...looking
- for a repetition of the very action in question.'' (22) Third,
- courts should determine the likelihood that the Supreme Court or
- courts in the relevant jurisdiction would have reached the same
- result as the nonbinding precedent. (23) Fourth, courts should
- determine whether at the time of the incident there was a wide
- diversity of cases arriving at differing results, or any cases
- rejecting a similar claim. (24)
-
- The court said that law enforcement officers are charged
- with knowledge of constitutional enforcement developments and
- should not be allowed ``...to interpose lawyerly distinctions
- that defy common sense in order to distinguish away clearly
- established law.'' (25) However, courts agree that officers
- ``...are not required to predict the future course of
- constitutional law.'' (26)
-
- The lack of binding precedent or the existence of
- conflicting decisions usually results in a finding that a law was
- not ``clearly established.''(27) For example, the 11th Circuit
- Court of Appeals ruled that two deputy sheriffs were protected
- from personal liability by qualified immunity for an allegedly
- unlawful seizure because their conduct did not violate clearly
- established law. (28) The court concluded the plaintiff had the
- burden of proving that the law allegedly violated by the
- deputies was ``clearly established'' at the time the detention
- occurred and that this burden was not met ``...simply by making
- general, conclusory allegations of some constitutional violation
- or by stating broad legal truisms.'' (29) Instead, the court said
- that ``plaintiffs must prove the existence of a clear,
- factually-defined, well-recognized right of which a reasonable
- police officer should have known.'' (30) The right allegedly
- violated must have been sufficiently particularized and clear so
- that reasonable officers in the deputies' position would
- understand that their particular seizure violated that right. (31)
-
- In that regard, the court held that the case authorities
- cited by the plaintiff failed to establish that the law was
- ``clearly established'' because they involved seizures that were
- factually distinguishable from the deputies'. Moreover, other
- court decisions had actually determined that such seizures were
- constitutionally reasonable. Since the ``...line between the
- lawful and the unlawful is often vague, making it difficult for
- officers to know precisely which seizures are constitutional,''
- the court said qualified immunity protection should only be lost
- when a law enforcement officer engages in unconstitutional
- conduct that crosses a bright line. (32) The court then cautioned
- that this bright line is not to be found in legal abstractions,
- such as the general requirement that seizures be reasonable, but
- rather in specific prior cases involving concrete circumstances
- and facts similar to the case at issue.
-
- APPLICABILITY OF IMMUNITY DEFENSE TO UNCONSTITUTIONAL LAW
- ENFORCEMENT CONDUCT
-
- The Supreme Court in Anderson v. Creighton made it clear
- that qualified immunity will protect a law enforcement officer
- from personal liability if unconstitutional conduct meets the
- test of ``objective legal reasonableness.'' The Court held that
- extending qualified immunity to constitutional violations is a
- reasonable accommodation between governmental need and
- individual freedom, and is necessary to give conscientious law
- enforcement officers the assurance of protection that is the
- object of the immunity doctrine. (33) The Court stated that law
- enforcement officers should ``...know that they will not be held
- personally liable as long as their actions are reasonable in
- light of current American law.'' (34)
-
- Applying this ``objective legal reasonableness'' standard,
- Federal appellate courts have recently upheld immunity defenses
- for allegedly unconstitutional law enforcement conduct. For
- example, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a qualified
- immunity defense for a deputy sheriff who allegedly made an
- arrest without probable cause. (35) The court noted that ``even in
- the absence of probable cause for an arrest, qualified immunity
- provides officers with an additional layer of protection against
- civil liability.'' (36) A fourth amendment violation, although by
- definition unreasonable, does not foreclose an additional
- reasonableness inquiry for purposes of qualified immunity. (37)
-
- The court agreed that the right to freedom from arrest
- without probable cause is beyond a doubt clearly established.
- However, it also concluded that the Supreme Court's decision in
- Anderson ``mandates an inquiry into the facts surrounding the
- officer's action in order to determine whether in the light of
- preexisting law the unlawfulness was apparent.'' (38) Similarly,
- the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the defense of
- qualified immunity protects law enforcement officers in cases
- where they mistakenly conclude that probable cause to arrest is
- present. (39) Since actual probable cause is not necessary for an
- arrest to be objectively reasonable, the court said the issue is
- ``not probable cause in fact but arguable probable cause.'' (40)
-
- Of course, unconstitutional police conduct that fails to
- meet the test of ``objective legal reasonableness'' is not
- entitled to immunity protection. In that regard, the Fifth
- Circuit Court of Appeals held that immunity is lost where it is
- objectively determined that no reasonable law enforcement officer
- could have believed that the action was constitutionally
- justified in light of clearly established law. (41)
-
- PROCEDURAL CONSIDERATIONS IN ASSERTING THE IMMUNITY DEFENSE
-
- In many cases, the ``objective legal reasonableness'' test,
- as clarified by the Supreme Court in Anderson v. Creighton, will
- allow law enforcement officers to successfully assert their
- qualified immunity from personal liability in a motion for
- summary judgment, thereby avoiding the protracted and
- time-consuming processes of litigation. (42) The Supreme Court has
- stated that a law enforcement officer's entitlement to qualified
- immunity is not a mere defense to liability, but an immunity from
- suit itself and the concomitant burdens of discovery. (43)
- Accordingly, a trial court's denial of an officer's motion for
- summary judgment based on qualified immunity raises a question of
- law that can be immediately appealed by the officer. (44) However,
- the defense of qualified immunity is not waived if an officer
- chooses not to take an immediate appeal; officers retain the
- right to assert at trial their qualified immunity based on
- ``objective legal reasonableness.''(45)
-
- The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals described the two-step
- process that courts should follow in deciding whether to grant
- qualified immunity on a motion for summary judgment prior to
- allowing a plaintiff the opportunity to conduct discovery:
-
- ``...the trial court must first determine whether the
- law prohibiting the alleged police conduct was clearly
- established at the time it occurred....Second, a trial court
- must determine whether the police conduct, as alleged by the
- plaintiff, constituted actions that a reasonable officer could
- have believed lawful.'' (46)
-
- A law enforcement officer is entitled to dismissal of a suit
- prior to discovery where the trial court determines either: 1)
- That the relevant law was not clearly established, or 2) that
- another reasonable officer possessing the specific information
- available to the officer in question could have reasonably
- believed the actions taken were lawful. The court observed that
- when the litigants disagree as to the actions taken, some
- discovery may be necessary before a motion for summary judgment
- can be granted. (47) However, such discovery should only occur if
- there is a substantial factual disagreement as to what actions
- the law enforcement officers actually took, and should be
- limited to determining the applicability of the qualified
- immunity defense. (48)
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The threat of personal liability is one of many risks
- associated with the law enforcement profession. An officer's
- discretionary decision to arrest or search inevitably increases
- the risk of a subsequent lawsuit. While this risk can be
- minimized by comprehensive departmental policies, thorough
- training, and attentive managerial controls, officers ultimately
- have a personal responsibility to insure that their conduct
- conforms to constitutional requirements. The qualified immunity
- defense does not excuse clearly unconstitutional or offensive
- police misconduct. It does, however, offer generous protection
- to conscientious officers who make objectively reasonable
- mistakes. The availability of a qualified immunity defense
- should be encouragement to responsible officers that they can
- perform their vital law enforcement functions without a constant
- fear of personal liability.
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- (1) 108 S.Ct. 538 (1988).
-
- (2) Id. at 542.
-
- (3) Id.
-
- (4) Imbler v. Pachtman, 96 S.Ct. 984, 995 (1976).
-
- (5) Valdez v. City and County of Denver, 878 F.2d 1285, 1288
- (10th Cir. 1989). In Geter v. Fortenberry, 882 F.2d 167 (5th
- Cir. 1989), a police officer's testimony on the witness stand was
- afforded absolute immunity.
-
- (6) Id. at 1289. In Pleasant v. Lovell, 876 F.2d 787, 805
- (10th Cir. 1989), officers were afforded absolute immunity for
- their actions in assisting prosecutors in serving grand jury
- subpoenas.
-
- (7) 106 S.Ct. 1092 (1986).
-
- (8) Id. at 1097.
-
- (9) Id. at 1098 (citations omitted).
-
- (10) Id. at 1096.
-
- (11) Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 102 S.Ct. 2727, 2738 (1982). For a
- comprehensive analysis of the Harlow decision, see Higginbotham,
- ``Defending Law Enforcement Officers Against Personal Liability
- in Constitutional Tort Litigations,'' FBI Law Enforcement
- Bulletin, vol. 54, Nos. 4-5, April and May 1985.
-
- (12) 107 S.Ct. 3034 (1987).
-
- (13) See, Creighton v. City of St. Paul, 766 F.2d 1269 (8th
- Cir. 1985).
-
- (14) 107 S.Ct. at 3038.
-
- (15) Id. at 3039.
-
- (16) Id.
-
- (17) Id.
-
- (18) Id. at 3038.
-
- (19) Id. at 3039.
-
- (20) Wood v. Ostrander, 879 F.2d 583 (9th Cir. 1989).
-
- (21) Id. at 591.
-
- (22) Id. at 592.
-
- (23) Id. at 593.
-
- (24) Id. at 595.
-
- (25) Id. at 593.
-
- (26) See, Lum v. Jensen, 876 F.2d 1385, 1389 (9th Cir. 1989).
-
- (27) Id.
-
- (28) Barts v. Joyner, 865 F.2d 1187 (11th Cir. 1989).
-
- (29) Id. at 1190.
-
- (30) Id.
-
- (31) Id.
-
- (32) Id. at 1194.
-
- (33) 107 S.Ct. at 3040-1.
-
- (34) Id. at 3042.
-
- (35) Hughes v. Meyer, 880 F.2d 967 (7th Cir. 1989).
-
- (36) Id. at 970.
-
- (37) Id. (citations omitted).
-
- (38) Id.
-
- (39) Gorra v. Hanson, 880 F. 2d 95 (8th Cir. 1989).
-
- (40) Id. at 97.
-
- (41) Melear v. Spears, 862 F.2d 1117, 1185 (5th Cir. 1989).
- See also, Masters v. Crouch, 872 F.2d 1248 (6th Cir. 1989).
-
- (42) The trial judge may determine that a factual dispute
- exists that precludes summary judgment. Id. at 1183.
-
- (43) See, Mitchell v. Forsyth, 105 S.Ct. 2806 (1985).
-
- (44) In Apostol v. Gallion, 970 F.2d 1335 (7th Cir. 1989), the
- court held that absent a finding of frivolity, trial is
- automatically put off pending an appeal of the district court's
- denial of an officer's claim of qualified immunity.
-
- (45) Hamm v. Powell, 874 F.2d 766, 770 (11th Cir. 1989).
-
- (46) Ginter v. Stallcup, 869 F.2d 384, 387 (8th Cir. 1989).
-
- (47) Id. at 387-88.
-
- (48) Id. at 388.
-
- ----------
- Law enforcement officers of other than Federal jurisdiction
- who are interested in any legal issue discussed in this article
- should consult their legal adviser. Some police procedures ruled
- permissible under Federal constitutional law are of questionable
- legality under State law or are not permitted at all.