Sanchez v. Guzman
Citation105 F.4th 1285
Date Filed2024-06-28
Docket22-1322
Cited13 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Appellate Case: 22-1322 Document: 010111072019 Date Filed: 06/28/2024 Page: 1
FILED
United States Court of Appeals
PUBLISH Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS June 28, 2024
Christopher M. Wolpert
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court
_________________________________
MARTA SANCHEZ; THE ESTATE OF
STEPHANIE LOPEZ; DOMINIC
MARTINEZ,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
v. No. 22-1322
ANTHONY GUZMAN, individually;
LUKE MCGRATH, individually; JOSEPH
CARNS, individually; BRIAN
MARTINEZ, individually,
Defendants - Appellees.
_________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Colorado
(D.C. No. 1:19-CV-01871-RMR-MEH)
_________________________________
Robert E. Barnes, Barnes Law, Los Angeles, California, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Jonathan N. Eddy, SGR, LLC, Denver, Colorado (Eric M. Ziporin, SGR, LLC, Denver,
Colorado, and Josh A. Marks and David J. Goldfarb, Berg Hill Greenleaf Ruscitti LLP,
Boulder, Colorado, with him on the brief), for Defendants-Appellees.
_________________________________
Before HOLMES, Chief Judge, McHUGH, and CARSON, Circuit Judges.
_________________________________
HOLMES, Chief Judge.
_________________________________
Appellate Case: 22-1322 Document: 010111072019 Date Filed: 06/28/2024 Page: 2
Plaintiffs Marta Sanchez, the Estate of Stephanie Lopez, and Dominic
Martinez brought a § 1983 excessive-force action against Littleton, Colorado Police
Department Officers Anthony Guzman, Luke McGrath, and Joseph Carns, as well as
Englewood Police Department Officer Brian Martinez (collectively, âDefendantsâ).
The district court granted summary judgment to Defendants on the basis that they
were entitled to qualified immunity. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1291, we affirm.
I
The partiesâ arguments reveal starkly different pictures of the factual
circumstances that form the basis of this action.
On one hand, Plaintiffs describe an incident in which Defendants fired sixty-
six bullets into Plaintiffsâ motionless vehicle while they were attempting to surrender
and presenting no observable threatâactions that killed Stephanie Lopez, rendered
Marta Sanchez a paraplegic, and severely injured Dominic Martinez.
On the other hand, Defendants describe a multifaceted police pursuit and
shooting whereby Plaintiffsâafter fleeing the scene of an armed carjacking in a
stolen vehicleâled police on a high-speed car chase, fleeing after each of
Defendantsâ three attempts to stop Plaintiffsâ vehicle. And, according to Defendants,
Plaintiffs used their vehicle as a weapon against Defendants and, more generally,
endangered the public through their use of the vehicle.
Though we acknowledge the different perspectives of the parties, in our review
of the district courtâs qualified-immunity summary-judgment order, we are obliged to
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accept Plaintiffsâ version of the facts; yet, critically, that is true only insofar as that
version is supported by record evidence. See, e.g., Thomson v. Salt Lake Cnty., 584
F.3d 1304, 1312(10th Cir. 2009) (â[B]ecause at summary judgment we are beyond the pleading phase of the litigation, a plaintiffâs version of the facts must find support in the record . . . .â). Ordinarily, the plaintiffâs version of the facts provides the foundation for our qualified-immunity legal analysis. See, e.g., Palacios v. Fortuna,61 F.4th 1248
, 1256 (10th Cir. 2023) (noting that, in the qualified-immunity summary-judgment context, construing the facts in the plaintiffâs favor âgenerally means adopting the plaintiffâs version of the factsâ). Considering the plaintiffâs record-based facts, ordinarily we would determine whether the plaintiff has satisfied its burden of proofâand thus defeated the defendantâs qualified-immunity defenseâ by showing (1) that the defendant violated the plaintiffâs constitutional rights and (2) that the violation contravened clearly established law. See, e.g., A.M. v. Holmes,830 F.3d 1123, 1136
(10th Cir. 2016) (noting that we look to the plaintiffâs version of the
facts âin determining whether the plaintiff has satisfied the necessary two-pronged
qualified-immunity showingâ).
However, under the unique circumstances of this case, we are unable to make
that qualified-immunity determination because Plaintiffs have failed to identify the
record evidence that supports the version of the facts that they have pleaded and
argued in their briefing. In other words, Plaintiffs have failed to supply the factual
foundation for our qualified-immunity legal analysis. As a necessary consequence,
Plaintiffs have effectively waived our review of their challenge to the district courtâs
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grant of qualified immunity to Defendants. More specifically, this is so because
Plaintiffsâ failure to define the operative factual universeâwith citations to
supportive record evidenceâprevents us from assessing whether Plaintiffs have
carried their two-part qualified-immunity burden. In particular, absent Plaintiffs
identifying for us a record-based factual universe reflecting their version of events,
we cannot opine on whether the district court committed reversible error in
concluding that Plaintiffs did not satisfy the clearly established law prong of the
qualified-immunity test.
The assessment of whether a plaintiff has satisfied that prongâas well as the
first prong of the qualified-immunity test (constitutional violation vel non)âturns on
the nature of the record-based factual universe that a plaintiff has defined. But here
Plaintiffs have failed to define such a universe. Therefore, they have effectively
waived our review of their qualified-immunity challenge. Accordingly, exercising
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we are constrained on this basis to uphold the
district courtâs judgment.
II
On February 4, 2022, Defendants moved for summary judgment on the basis
that they were entitled to qualified immunity. The district court referred the motions
to a magistrate judge. The magistrate judge recommended granting the motions for
summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. See Aplts.â App. at 47 (Mag.
Judgeâs R. & R. on Defs.â Mots. for Summ. J., filed July 29, 2022)
(âRecommendationâ). Specifically, the magistrate judge concluded that Plaintiffs
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had failed to carry their burden on the clearly established law issue, and
recommended that the district court grant Defendantsâ motions for summary
judgment on the ground of qualified immunity.
Plaintiffs filed objections to the magistrate judgeâs Recommendation. In large
part, Plaintiffsâ objections related to the magistrate judgeâs treatment of the facts.
They argued that the Recommendation âignored or marginalizedâ Plaintiffsâ version
of the factsâincluding their sworn testimonyâthus not taking the facts, as the judge
should, in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. Id. at 80(Pls.â Objs. to Mag. Judgeâs R. & R. on Defs.â Mots. for Summ. J., filed Aug. 12, 2022). Specifically, Plaintiffs said that âthe Recommendationâs analysis regarding the second prong of qualified immunity is undermined by improper deference to the Defendantsâ proposed facts, while disregarding contradictory video evidence, weighing the Plaintiffsâ credibility against them, and disregarding the defendantsâ sworn testimony when it conflicts with the Magistrateâs opinion of the video evidence.âId. at 88
. They said that the judgeâs approach was erroneous because the âquestion of qualified immunity demands clearly reasonable inferences in the plaintiffsâ favor. Instead, the Recommendation systematically eliminated all disputes of material fact, finding each in favor of the Defendants without any inferences provided to the Plaintiffs, and concluded that no analysis of the constitutional rights at issue was necessary.âId.
(citation omitted).
The district court nevertheless issued an order adopting the magistrate judgeâs
Recommendation. Significantly, despite Plaintiffsâ vigorous objections, the district
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court fully adopted the Recommendationâs factual statement. In anticipation of
tackling the legal questions that Plaintiffs raised, the district court offered a summary
of the magistrate judgeâs factual findings. It bears repeating here:
On the evening of June 29, 2017, Defendant Officers
Anthony Guzman, Joseph Allen Carns, and Luke McGrath were on
duty with the Littleton Police Department. Just before midnight,
they received a dispatch report that a white Chevy Malibu had been
carjacked by four individuals. One of the suspects was armed and
had fired a shot near the victimâs head, according to the dispatch
report. This constituted felony auto theft in violation of Colorado
Revised Statute § 18-4-409. The officers responded to the report
in full police uniform, each driving a fully marked police SUV.
They observed the suspect Malibu driving northbound on Santa Fe
Drive. There were three suspects in the vehicle at that time:
Plaintiffs Marta Sanchez and Dominic Martinez, as well as
decedent Stephanie Lopez, whose Estate proceeds as the third
Plaintiff in this action. The officers began to follow the Malibu
with lights and sirens activated, but the suspects did not yield.
Plaintiff Martinez estimated that the Malibu was driving âat
leastâ seventy-five miles per hour. The suspects ran red lights at
Oxford Avenue and Dartmouth Avenue and began to weave
between lanes. Officer Carns observed the suspects narrowly
avoid colliding with a motorcycle, but Plaintiff Sanchez testified
that she did not recall almost hitting a motorcycle. Officer Carns
requested and was authorized to perform a Pursuit Intervention
Technique (âPITâ) maneuver once speeds decreased, in order to
stop the Malibu. Eventually, the Malibu appeared to skid and
decelerate, and at that time, Officer Carns performed the
authorized PIT maneuver. The Malibu spun roughly 170 degrees
and came to rest. This was the first of three âstopsâ that took place
during this pursuit, all of which were captured on video that has
been submitted to the Court. Officer Brian Martinez of the
Englewood Police Department joined the other Defendant officers
at the third stop, in response to their dispatch call for assistance.
In total, the pursuit of the suspects in the Malibu covered
more than six miles and spanned three jurisdictions, including
Littleton, Englewood, and Denver. Plaintiff Sanchez, who was the
driver, was shot multiple times. Plaintiff Lopez, who was in the
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front passenger seat, was fatally shot. Plaintiff Martinez, who was
in the back seat, jumped out of the moving vehicle at some point
during the chase between the first and second stops, unbeknownst
to the officers, and had no further involvement. He alleges that he
does not know whether he was hit but had previously told
investigators that he had not been shot during the entirety of the
events.
Id. at 206â207 (Dist. Ct. Order on Defs.â Mots. for Summ. J., filed Aug. 30, 2022)
(citation omitted).
The district court recognized that âPlaintiffs argue that there are disputes of
fact as to what took place at each of the three stops, including the circumstances
under which the various officers exerted force and fired their weapons at Plaintiffs
during those stops, that preclude summary judgment.â Id. at 207. Nevertheless, the
district court concluded that âPlaintiffs have failed to satisfy the âclearly establishedâ
prong of the qualified immunity analysisâ and that certain âdisputes of fact are not
material to the motions for summary judgment at issue.â Id. at 208.
More specifically, as relevant to our disposition here, the court reasoned:
Upon de novo review of the motions for summary judgment
and the record evidence, including the video evidence of the events
of that evening, the Court is skeptical whether, absent the qualified
immunity issues discussed herein, there would remain no disputes
of fact that would be suitable for a juryâparticularly regarding the
circumstances under which various officers discharged their
weapons; whether, at those times, Plaintiffs were attempting to
surrender and had brought the Malibu to a full stop; and whether
and in what direction(s) the Malibu was moving at those times.
However, even if the Court were to find in favor of Plaintiffs and
conclude that these disputes of fact raised material issues as to
whether the officersâ conduct was unconstitutional, this would not
be sufficient to defeat summary judgment because Plaintiffs have
not borne their burden on the second prong of the qualified
immunity analysis[.]
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Id. at 226. In other words, the court determined that, even assuming that the potential
disputes of fact that it identified were resolved in Plaintiffsâ favorâsuch that there
were triable factual issues bearing on the alleged unconstitutionality of Defendantsâ
conductâPlaintiffs would nonetheless not succeed because they could not carry their
burden of establishing that Defendants violated clearly established constitutional law.
III
We review a district courtâs grant of summary judgment based on qualified
immunity de novo. See Est. of Taylor v. Salt Lake City, 16 F.4th 744, 756 (10th Cir. 2021). ââThe doctrine of qualified immunity shields officials from civil liability so long as their conduct âdoes not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.âââ Est. of Smart ex rel. Smart v. City of Wichita,951 F.3d 1161
, 1168 (10th Cir. 2020) (quoting Mullenix v. Luna,577 U.S. 7
, 11 (2015)). âWhen a § 1983 defendant asserts qualified immunity, this affirmative defense âcreates a presumption that [the defendant is] immune from suit.ââ Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Perea v. Baca,817 F.3d 1198, 1202
(10th Cir. 2016)). ââTo overcome this presumption,â the plaintiffs bear the burden of âshow[ing] that (1) the officersâ alleged conduct violated a constitutional right, and (2) [that right] was clearly established at the time of the violation, such that âevery reasonable official would have understood,â that such conduct constituted a violation of that right.ââId.
(alterations in original) (quoting Perea,817 F.3d at 1202
).
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This case concerns the second prongâthat is, the clearly established law
prong. âConstitutional rights are clearly established when Tenth Circuit or Supreme
Court precedent particularized to the case at issue exists.â Shepherd v. Robbins, 55
F.4th 810, 815 (10th Cir. 2022) (emphasis added) (citing Apodaca v. Raemisch,864 F.3d 1071, 1076
(10th Cir. 2017)). âMaterially similar facts can make the precedent sufficiently particularized.âId.
(emphasis added). âThus, a right is clearly established when our precedent encompasses ââmaterially similar conductâ or applies âwith obvious clarityâ[1] to the conduct at issue.ââId.
(quoting Apodaca,864 F.3d at 1076
). âWe do not require a case directly on point, but existing precedent must have
placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond debate.â Mullenix, 577 U.S. at
1
In the Recommendation, the magistrate judge acknowledged Plaintiffsâ
attempt to âdraw the Courtâs attention to the âsliding scaleâ [approach to clearly
established law] of the Tenth Circuit.â Aplts.â App. at 65. But the magistrate judge
noted that âthe Supreme Court has [recently] limited the application of such an
approach.â Id. at 66. We observe in this regard that, although the language of the
âsliding scaleâ still exists in our precedent, our recent cases have moved away from
that rubricâquestioning its viability. See Shepherd, 55 F.4th at 818 n.5 (âPlaintiff
argues the âsliding scaleâ approach should apply to show that the unlawfulness of
Defendantâs conduct was apparent. Our more recent jurisprudence has shifted to
consider âobvious clarityâ or âflagrantly unlawful conductâ rather than engage in the
sliding scale approach.â (first citing Lowe v. Raemisch, 864 F.3d 1205, 1210â11 & 1211 n.10 (10th Cir. 2017); and then citing Contreras v. DoĂąa Ana Cnty. Bd. of Cnty. Commârs,965 F.3d 1114
, 1123 (10th Cir. 2020) (Carson, J., concurring))); accord Reyes v. Fowlks, No. 22-4028,2023 WL 4486155
, at *3 (10th Cir. July 12, 2023) (unpublished); see also Luchetti v. N.M. State Pers. Bd., No. 21-2109,2022 WL 2678826
, at *4 (10th Cir. July 12, 2022) (unpublished) (âOur more recent jurisprudence [] has observed that the âsliding scaleâ approach âmay arguably conflict with recent Supreme Court precedent on qualified immunity.ââ (quoting Lowe,864 F.3d at 1211
n.10)). As we do here with Reyes and Luchetti, we cite unpublished cases for their persuasive value only and do not treat them as binding authority. See United States v. Ellis,23 F.4th 1228
, 1238 n.6 (10th Cir. 2022).
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12 (quoting Ashcroft v. alâKidd, 563 U.S. 731, 741 (2011)). âTo be clear, we do not require plaintiffs to engage in a scavenger hunt for a prior case with identical facts.â Shepherd, 55 F.4th at 815 (citing Casey v. City of Fed. Heights,509 F.3d 1278, 1284
(10th Cir. 2007)). âWe ask whether the existing law provides fair warning to a defendant.âId.
(citing Est. of Smart, 951 F.3d at 1168).
In recent years, the Supreme Court âhas issued a number of opinions reversing
federal courts in qualified immunity cases.â White v. Pauly, 580 U.S. 73, 79 (2017) (per curiam) (citing City & Cnty. of S.F. v. Sheehan,575 U.S. 600
, 611 n.3 (2015)). âThe Court has found this necessary . . . to reiterate the longstanding principle that âclearly established lawâ should not be defined âat a high level of generality.ââId.
(quoting alâKidd, 563 U.S. at 742). ââ[G]eneral statements of the law are not inherently incapable of giving fair and clear warningâ to officers, . . . but âin the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent[.]ââ Id. at 79â80 (emphasis added) (first quoting United States v. Lanier,520 U.S. 259, 271
(1997); and then quoting Anderson v. Creighton,483 U.S. 635, 640
(1987)). Accordingly, the Supreme Court has held that Tennessee v. Garner,471 U.S. 1
(1985), and Graham v. Connor,490 U.S. 386
(1989)âthe Courtâs seminal cases on Fourth Amendment seizures and excessive forceââdo not by themselves create clearly established law outside âan obvious case.ââ Id. at 80 (first quoting Brosseau v. Haugen,543 U.S. 194, 199
(2004) (per curiam); and then citing Plumhoff v. Rickard,572 U.S. 765, 779
(2014)).
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The specificity of clearly established law is âespecially important in the Fourth
Amendment context, where the Court has recognized that â[i]t is sometimes difficult
for an officer to determine how the relevant legal doctrine, here excessive force, will
apply to the factual situation the officer confronts.ââ Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 12
(quoting Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 205 (2001)). âIt is with reluctance that we second-guess the split-second decisions of trained officers reacting to difficult situations in the line of duty. We are not well-suited to act as a police supervisory board, making finely calibrated determinations of just what type of misbehavior justifies just what level of response.â Cordova v. Aragon,569 F.3d 1183, 1190
(10th
Cir. 2009).
IV
Plaintiffs raise two arguments on appeal that bear on our disposition of this
action.2 We consider them both and reject them.
2
Plaintiffs also argue that the district court erred in its clearly established
law analysis by placing an âeffectively insurmountableâ burden on them. Aplts.â
Opening Br. at 6. Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that the district court improperly
concluded that âqualified immunity defeated all claims [on the second, clearly
established law prong] unless [they] produced precedent from analogous types of
cases with directly analogous facts demonstrating the Constitutional rights alleged to
be violated.â Id. Because we conclude, at the threshold, that Plaintiffs have failed to
provide us with a record-based factual version of events upon which to conduct a
clearly established law analysis on appeal, any error by the district court in placing
too high of a clearly established law burden on Plaintiffs must be deemed harmless.
By failing to establish a record-based factual foundation for our clearly established
law analysis, Plaintiffs have effectively given up the opportunity to demonstrate that
any error in the particulars of the district courtâs clearly established law analysis
harmed them. That is because Plaintiffs cannot show us without such a record-based
factual universe that there actually is any particularized controlling law that
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First, Plaintiffs argue that the district court erred by placing the burden on
them to overcome Defendantsâ assertion of qualified immunity. This argument
crumbles under the weight of our extensive body of caselaw that places the burden on
the plaintiffs in the qualified-immunity context. And second, Plaintiffs argue that the
district court erred in concluding that Defendants were entitled to qualified immunity
because Plaintiffs failed to show that Defendants violated clearly established law.
We conclude that Plaintiffs have effectively waived our review of this argument by
failing to define a factual universe that is supported by record evidence upon which
we can perform the requisite legal analysis. We cannot opine on whether the district
court committed reversible error in concluding that Plaintiffs did not satisfy the
clearly established law prong of the qualified-immunity test without a universe of
record-based facts against which to conduct a particularized assessment of the state
of the law existing at the time of these events. Because they failed to supply us with
this universe of record-based facts, Plaintiffs have effectively waived our review and
we must uphold the district courtâs qualified-immunity determinationâin particular,
its ruling regarding clearly established law.
A
As to Plaintiffsâ first contention that the district court erred by placing the
burden on them to overcome Defendantsâ assertion of qualified immunity, we need
demonstrates the unconstitutionality of Defendantsâ conduct. And, by necessary
extension, they therefore cannot show us that the district court reached the wrong
outcome on the clearly established law question.
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not linger long: they are flat out wrong. Cases in this circuit are legion that place the
burden on the plaintiffs to negate a qualified-immunity defense. See, e.g., Riggins v.
Goodman, 572 F.3d 1101, 1107(10th Cir. 2009) (âWhen a defendant asserts qualified immunity at summary judgment, the burden shifts to the plaintiff, who must clear two hurdles in order to defeat the defendantâs motion. The plaintiff must demonstrate on the facts alleged both that the defendant violated his constitutional or statutory rights, and that the right was clearly established at the time of the alleged unlawful activity.â (citing Pearson v. Callahan,555 U.S. 223, 232
, 236â37 (2009))); Quinn v. Young,780 F.3d 998, 1013
(10th Cir. 2015) (noting that it is âwell-settledâ that â[t]he plaintiff bears the burden of citing to us what he thinks constitutes clearly established law.â (quoting Thomas v. Durastanti,607 F.3d 655, 669
(10th Cir. 2010))); accord Cox v. Glanz,800 F.3d 1231
, 1245â46 (10th Cir. 2015); Est. of
Taylor, 16 F.4th at 757.3 Therefore, the district court did not err in placing the
burden on Plaintiffs to defeat Defendantsâ assertion of qualified immunityâmore
specifically, to show that Defendantsâ conduct violated clearly established law.
3
We recognize that some circuits interpret the relevant Supreme Court
precedent on this issue differently. Compare McClelland v. Katy Indep. Sch. Dist.,
63 F.4th 996, 1005 (5th Cir. 2023) (placing the burden on plaintiffs to overcome a qualified immunity defense once asserted, as we do), with Mack v. Yost,63 F.4th 211
, 227 (3d Cir. 2023) (ââ[T]he party asserting the affirmative defense of qualified immunityâ bears the burden of persuasion on both prongs at summary judgment.â (quoting Halsey v. Pfeiffer,750 F.3d 273, 288
(3d Cir. 2014))). But we have consistently read the Supreme Courtâs decision in Harlow v. Fitzgerald,457 U.S. 800
(1982), as only placing the burden on government officials to assert a qualified
immunity defense; after that, the burden of proof shifts to the plaintiffs to show that
the officials are not entitled to qualified immunity. See, e.g., Cox, 800 F.3d at 1245â
46. Accordingly, Plaintiffsâ contrary argument here borders on the frivolous.
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B
Our consideration of Plaintiffsâ second argument reveals the fatal flaw in their
appellate challenge: they have not given us an adequate factual foundation to assess
whether the district court erred in determining that they failed to carry their burden
on the clearly established law question. As we see things, we have no occasion to
assay the caselaw that Plaintiff identifies as clearly established law. That is because
Plaintiffs showing of clearly established law fails at the threshold: that is, they have
failed to define a factual universe grounded in record evidence that could form the
foundation for our particularized inquiry into existing clearly established law.
The magistrate judgeâs Recommendationâand by extension the district courtâs
orderârested on extensive factual findings,4 which paint a menacing picture of
Plaintiffsâ conduct that would at the very least supply the Defendants with a solid
4
The magistrate judge purported to rest his extensive findings on
undisputed facts and the record evidence, construed in Plaintiffsâ favor. In this
regard, the judge stated:
On the surface, the partiesâ briefings would seem to indicate that
this case is rife with genuine issues of material fact. However, the
evidence removes reasonable disputes as to the material facts. In
particular, the video evidence of each of the three stops is
particularly insightful into what happened on the night in question.
When the video evidence contradicts the partiesâ versions of
events, the Court adheres as closely as possible to the video
evidence. . . . With that understanding, the following are the
Courtâs findings of material facts that are relevant to the Courtâs
analysis and either undisputed or supported by the record, when
viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs as the non-moving
parties.
Aplts.â App. at 50 (citations omitted).
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basis to argue cogently (if not dispositively) that their use of lethal force did not
violate clearly established law. Indeed, in the âStatement of the Factsâ section of
their response briefâwhich spans approximately nine pagesâDefendants portray
Plaintiffsâ conduct in a similarly threatening light and support their portrait with
extensive citations to evidence in the record. See Aplees.â Resp. Br. at 3â13.
Yet under the governing law, it is Plaintiffsâ version of the factsâinsofar as it
is supported by the summary-judgment recordâthat must frame the legal analysis,
including the clearly established law inquiry. This appeal has presented Plaintiffs
with a platform to explicate their record-based version of the facts. And importantly,
even if we are willing to assume that in some circumstances this act of explication is
simply a matter of best practices, that certainly is not true here: it is a legal obligation
that Plaintiffs had to discharge, if they hoped to demonstrate that Defendantsâ
conduct violated their clearly established rights. This is so where the district court
adopted extensive factual findings that seemingly undercut their version of the facts.5
5
This is not a situation where âthe district court failed to set forth the
facts it believed a reasonable jury could find with respect to the critical question[s]
before us.â Lewis v. Tripp, 604 F.3d 1221, 1226 (10th Cir. 2010). On the contrary,
the district court fully adopted the Recommendationâs factual statement, which
contained extensive factual findings. Though when reviewing a grant of summary
judgment in the qualified-immunity context, âwe need not defer to the district courtâs
performance of this [fact-finding] task,â Est. of Taylor, 16 F.4th at 758 n.5âif
Plaintiffs hope to prevailâit is incumbent on them to give us an alternative universe
of record-based facts upon which to conduct our qualified-immunity analysis. It is
not enough to assert in a conclusory fashion that the district court erred in its fact-
finding mission by failing to construe the record in the light most favorable to them;
instead, Plaintiffs must demonstrate the correctness of this assertion by offering us an
alternative, record-based version of the facts that purportedly adheres more closely to
their version of the events at issue.
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And where, to make matters worse, Defendants have offered on appeal a detailed
âStatement of the Facts,â that likewise is at odds with Plaintiffsâ contentions
regarding the allegedly non-threatening nature of their conduct.
Far from discharging their legal obligation, however, Plaintiffs have failed to
define in any meaningful manner a factual universe grounded in record evidence that
could form the foundation for our inquiry into existing clearly established law. In
other words, Plaintiffs have failed to present their record-based version of the events
that bear on Defendantsâ use of force for our use in evaluating the merits of their
legal challenge. Indeed, Plaintiffs did not even include a âStatement of Factsâ
section in their Opening Brief. Accordingly, we conclude that Plaintiffs have
effectively waived our review of their appellate challenge to the district courtâs
clearly established law ruling. And for that reason, we reject Plaintiffsâ appellate
challenge and uphold the district courtâs judgment.
As our discussion of the governing law supra should have made patent, the
clearly established law inquiry is fact-intensive because it ordinarily focuses on
determining whether there is caselaw with materially similar facts to the facts of the
case before the court. See, e.g., Hemry v. Ross, 62 F.4th 1248, 1256 (10th Cir. 2023) (âAs with the force inquiry, our evaluation is fact-intensive, and in the qualified immunity context, we look for âa case where an officer acting under similar circumstances was held to have violated the Fourth Amendment.ââ (quoting District of Columbia v. Wesby,583 U.S. 48
, 64 (2018))); accord Thomson,584 F.3d at 1312
.
And, in the summary-judgment context, the plaintiff is obliged to define the factual
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universe by reference to record evidence. That is, the plaintiff has the burden of
supporting her version of events, as reflected in the plaintiffâs complaint and
arguments, with record evidence. See Thomson, 584 F.3d at 1312; accord Koch v. City of Del City,660 F.3d 1228, 1238
(10th Cir. 2011). Absent this record-based
picture of the case facts, there is no foundation for the court to conduct a clearly
established law inquiryâthat is, there are no facts grounded in the evidence against
which the court can compare the facts of the caselaw that comprises clearly
established law. Stated otherwise, the plaintiff is obliged to offer a record-supported
version of the facts that would reveal the unlawfulness of the defendantsâ conductâ
when those facts are viewed through the prism of clearly established law. Here,
Plaintiffs have completely failed to fulfill this obligation.
In the course of their briefing on the clearly established law question, Plaintiffs
cite to only two portions of the record. First, they cite to a section where the district
court questioned whether there were disputes of fact that would raise triable factual
issues bearing on the alleged unconstitutionality of Defendantsâ conduct but noted
that, even if it were to resolve those disputes in Plaintiffsâ favor, they would not
prevail on the issue of clearly established law. Second, Plaintiffs seekâin a
roundabout, indirect fashionâto rely on a portion of the record in which the district
court, in resolving Defendantsâ motions to dismiss, accepted as true the facts of
Plaintiffsâ complaint. However, these citations are not enough to satisfy Plaintiffsâ
obligation to define a record-based factual universe that we may use in resolving the
clearly established law question.
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Regarding the first cited portion of the record, recall that in resolving the
clearly established law question, the district court said the following:
Upon de novo review of the motions for summary judgment
and the record evidence, including the video evidence of the events
of that evening, the Court is skeptical whether, absent the qualified
immunity issues discussed herein, there would remain no disputes
of fact that would be suitable for a juryâparticularly regarding the
circumstances under which various officers discharged their
weapons; whether, at those times, Plaintiffs were attempting to
surrender and had brought the Malibu to a full stop; and whether
and in what direction(s) the Malibu was moving at those times.
However, even if the Court were to find in favor of Plaintiffs and
conclude that these disputes of fact raised material issues as to
whether the officersâ conduct was unconstitutional, this would not
be sufficient to defeat summary judgment because Plaintiffs have
not borne their burden on the second prong of the qualified
immunity analysis[.]
Aplts.â App. at 226.
This passage could be liberally readâas Plaintiffs suggestâas indicating that
the court probably believed that there were triable issues in certain factual areas and
that it was prepared to assume that, if those issues were resolved in Plaintiffsâ favor,
they would indicate that Defendantsâ conduct was unconstitutional. See Aplts.â
Opening Br. at 29 (â[E]ven the District Court in the Order of Dismissal appealed
here[] conceded . . . that disputes of material facts precluding [Defendantsâ] summary
judgment motions likely existed . . . .â). But the district court in this passage spoke
in general termsâsimply reciting certain factual areas in which there were probably
disputed issues. The court did not articulate with any specificity a narrativeâ
supported by citations to the recordâ that conformed (at least as Plaintiffs see it) to
Plaintiffsâ version of events. In effect, the court did the contrary, in that the court
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adopted the magistrate judgeâs extensive factual findings, which closely resemble
Defendantsâ version of events. Putting aside our concerns about the district courtâs
approach in that regard,6 its general statement that it was willing to assume certain
6
We do have concerns about the courtâs treatment of the facts in this
case, but those concerns do not ultimately control the outcome here. To start, the
district court acknowledged that it was âskeptical whether, absent the qualified
immunity issues . . . , there would remain no disputes of fact that would be suitable
for a juryââspecifically, disputes that would âraise[] material issues as to whether
the officersâ conduct was unconstitutional.â Aplts.â App. at 226. In effect, the
district court was expressing skepticism about whether the magistrate judgeâs
extensive statement of facts was, in actuality, fully undisputed and favorable to
Plaintiffsâ record-based version of eventsâwhich Plaintiffs vigorously claimed it
was not. That is, the district court was suggesting that if the magistrate judge
actually had taken Plaintiffsâ version into account, it likely would have given rise to
the triable issues of fact of which the district court spoke. Yet rather than using its
skepticism as a basis for rejecting portions of the magistrate judgeâs statement of
undisputed factsâwhich the court seemingly decided was not fully reflective of facts
that were undisputed and favorable to Plaintiffsâ record-based version of eventsâthe
district court simply âincorporatedâ in full the magistrate judgeâs statement of facts.
Id. at 206. Furthermore, though the court seemed to believe that it was likely that
there were triable issues of fact bearing on the alleged unconstitutionality of
Defendantsâ conduct, rather than making a definitive determination as to the
existence of such facts for purposes of summary judgment and, as appropriate,
resolving any material disputes of fact in Plaintiffsâ favor, the court was willing only
to assume the existence of such triable issues of fact and to assume their resolution in
Plaintiffsâ favor.
This approach is problematic under controlling law. The district court was
obliged to âundertake[] the essential task of specifying what a reasonable jury could
find the facts to be.â Lewis, 604 F.3d at 1226. And the district court was required to resolve any disputes of fact in the light most favorable to the plaintiff unless âblatantly contradictedâ by the video evidence, before turning to the issue of clearly established law. Scott v. Harris,550 U.S. 372, 380
(2007); see Est. of Taylor, 16 F.4th at 756 (â[W]here the record does not unequivocally point in one direction and allows for a genuine dispute concerning the facts, â[a]ll disputed facts must be resolved in favor of the party resisting summary judgment.ââ (alteration in original) (quoting McCoy v. Meyers,887 F.3d 1034, 1044
(10th Cir. 2018))); Lewis,604 F.3d at 1226
(âOnly then [after the court has determined the specific facts that a
reasonable jury could infer based on the evidence] can the district court (and we, on
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disputed facts in Plaintiffsâ favor did nothing to relieve Plaintiffs of their burden here
of defining a record-based factual universe as to which we could assess the existence
of clearly established law. For instance, nothing in the courtâs general statements
about the factual disputes it was prepared to resolve in Plaintiffsâ favor equates to the
specific factual findings that Plaintiffs infer from it. Contrary to Plaintiffsâ
assertions, nowhere did the court say that it was assuming as true that Defendants
âfir[ed] 66 bullet shots into a vehicle occupied by three unarmed people who were
attempting to surrender and posed no observable threat to the officers.â Aplts.â
Opening Br. at 26; see also Aplts.â Reply Br. at 22 n.7 (stating conclusorily that
â[Defendants] in the instant case fired 66 bullet shots into a vehicle occupied by three
unarmed people who were attempting to surrender and posed no observable threat to
the officersâ).
In other words, notwithstanding Plaintiffsâ contrary assertions, it cannot be
reasonably argued that the district courtâs summary judgment order âalong with the
relevant record cited and discussed therein, results in it being assumed that none of
appeal) undertake the job of answering the question whether the defendant is entitled
to qualified immunity on those facts as a matter of law.â).
However, these concerns do not control the outcome here. As we have
stressed throughout this opinion, Plaintiffs bear the burden of proof on the clearly
established law issue, and clearly established law does not exist in a vacuum; instead,
such law must be determined in relation to a specific set of facts. Irrespective of the
problems associated with the courtâs approach in finding the relevant facts here, in
order to establish reversible error on the clearly established law issue, it was
incumbent on Plaintiffs to define a universe of record-based facts upon which we
could conduct our clearly established law analysis. And Plaintiffsâ failure to do so
scuppers their appellate challenge. See also supra note 5.
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the [Plaintiffs] were armed or an imminent threat to any [Defendants], and in fact
were attempting to surrender as the [events] unfolded.â Aplts.â Opening Br. at 28â
29. Rather than relying on the district courtâs general statements regarding the areas
of fact that it was willing to assume in Plaintiffsâ favor, Plaintiffs were obliged to
define here a record-based factual universeâviewing the facts in the light most
favorable to themâwhich we could use in resolving the legal, clearly established law
issue. But Plaintiffs failed to do so.
And, second, Plaintiffsâ roundabout, indirect reliance on the district courtâs
order resolving the motions to dismiss does not advance the ball for them one iota.
In their briefing here, Plaintiffs quote from a portion of the district courtâs summary
judgment order, where the court was reciting the procedural history of this case and
specifically acknowledgingâthrough citations and parentheticals containing quoted
languageâits rulings in resolving the motions to dismiss. In so doing, the district
court quoted the following language: âConstruing these facts as true, the Court finds
that plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that defendants violated clearly established law
by using deadly force, without being in imminent danger, against plaintiffs, who
posed no threat to the officers and were not resisting.â Aplts.â App. at 210 (quoting
Dist. Ct.âs Order on Defs.â Mots. to Dismiss, filed Sept. 30, 2020).
However, Plaintiffsâ reliance on this portion of the record where the district
court was accepting as true certain facts for purposes of resolving Defendantsâ
motions to dismiss is unavailing. It does not help Plaintiffs to carry their burden of
proof of defining a universe of record-based facts to support our clearly established
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law analysis. It is axiomatic that, in resolving motions to dismiss, courts accept the
well-pleaded factual averments of the plaintiffâs complaint as true and construe the
facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. See, e.g., A.N. by & through Ponder
v. Syling, 928 F.3d 1191, 1196(10th Cir. 2019) (âWe review âthe district courtâs denial of a motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity de novo, accepting as true all well-pleaded factual allegations in the complaint and viewing the allegations in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.ââ (quoting Wilson v. Montano,715 F.3d 847, 852
(10th Cir. 2013)). Indeed, the district court recognized as much. See Aplts.â App. at 169 n.1 (noting that the orderâs âfacts are taken from plaintiffsâ Amended Civil Rights Complaint With Request for Trial by Jury and are assumed true for purposes of this order unless otherwise notedâ (citations omitted)). However, this pleading-based approach is inapposite in the summary-judgment context. In that context, as here, the plaintiff cannot rest on her well-pleaded factual averments; rather, the plaintiff must point to record evidence supportive of the plaintiffâs position; this means that, though ordinarily the court accepts plaintiffâs version of the facts as the starting point for the legal analysis, that version will be cognizable only if it is supported by record evidence. See, e.g., Thomson,584 F.3d at 1312
(â[B]ecause
at summary judgment we are beyond the pleading phase of the litigation, a plaintiffâs
version of the facts must find support in the record.â).
As applied here, the upshot is this. The district court properly accepted the
well-pleaded factual averments of Plaintiffsâ complaint in resolving the motions to
dismiss. And those averments did favor Plaintiffsâ argument that the Defendants
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used excessive forceâin that, among other things, they depict Defendants as
shooting at Plaintiffsâ vehicle, even though Plaintiffs supposedly posed no threat to
Defendants and were not resisting. Yet Plaintiffsâ citation to the portion of the
record involving the district courtâs resolution of the motions to dismiss does not help
them carry their summary-judgment burden. Plaintiffs are no longer free to rely on
the district courtâs acceptance of their complaint averments. Rather, Plaintiffs are
obliged to demonstrate that their version of the facts is supported by evidence in the
record. Stated otherwise, they are required to ground their version of the facts in
such evidence. Perhaps that record evidence would support Plaintiffsâ argument that
the Defendants used excessive force, as Plaintiffsâ complaint averments did. Perhaps
not. But either way, Plaintiffs are obliged here to rest their version of the factsâ
upon which they seek to defeat Defendantsâ assertion of qualified immunityâon
record evidence, not pleading averments. Only such a record-based version of the
facts could form the foundation for our clearly established law analysis in the
summary-judgment context. Plaintiffs, however, have failed to provide us with such
a version of the facts; they cannot do so by relying on the well-pleaded factual
averments of the complaint that the district court accepted as true at the motion-to-
dismiss stage of the proceedings.
The inquiry into the existence of clearly established law is not undertaken in a
factual vacuum; rather, it turns on the closeness of the fit of the facts contained in the
controlling caselaw to a universe of record-based facts in the case at bar. Because
Plaintiffs have failed to define for us on summary judgment a universe of record-
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based facts, we have no factual foundation upon which to determine whether
Defendants violated Plaintiffsâ clearly established legal rights. Stated otherwise, by
failing to define for us the operative universe of record-supported facts, Plaintiffs
have prevented us from determining what law was clearly established. And because
Plaintiffs bear the burden of showing that applicable clearly established law defeats
Defendantsâ qualified-immunity defense, this definitional failure as to the operative
factual universe sounds the death knell for their appellate challenge. In short, we
have no basis to disturb the district courtâs determinationâon clearly established law
groundsâthat Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
V
For the above reasons, we AFFIRM the district courtâs judgment.
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