Joseph Johnson v. Clair Sootsman
Citation79 F.4th 608
Date Filed2023-08-16
Docket22-1937
Cited54 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 23a0181p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JOSEPH JOHNSON, â
Plaintiff-Appellant, â
â
> No. 22-1937
v. â
â
â
CLAIR SOOTSMAN, â
Defendant-Appellee. â
â
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Michigan at Grand Rapids.
No. 1:20-cv-01102âJane M. Beckering, District Judge.
Argued: July 26, 2023
Decided and Filed: August 16, 2023
Before: McKEAGUE, GRIFFIN, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Adam G. Winn, FIEGER, FIEGER, KENNEY & HARRINGTON, P.C., Southfield,
Michigan, for Appellant. Richard V. Stokan, Jr., KERR, RUSSELL AND WEBER, PLC,
Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Adam G. Winn, Robert G. Kamenec, FIEGER,
FIEGER, KENNEY & HARRINGTON, P.C., Southfield, Michigan, for Appellant. Richard V.
Stokan, Jr., Joanne Geha Swanson, KERR, RUSSELL AND WEBER, PLC, Detroit, Michigan,
for Appellee.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
MURPHY, Circuit Judge. This case shows that just because a correctional officer may
have violated a prison use-of-force policy or committed a state-law tort does not necessarily
mean that the officer violated the Eighth Amendmentâs ban on âcruel and unusual punishments.â
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 2
While serving a short sentence, Joseph Johnson caused a disturbance in a jailâs intake area.
Officers chose to take Johnson to his cell, but he then disobeyed orders to slow down.
So another officer, Deputy Clair Sootsman, stopped him. After a brief exchange, Johnson
stepped in Sootsmanâs general direction. Sootsman testified that he viewed this conduct as a
threat. In response, he immediately grabbed Johnsonâs neck, pushed him against the wall, and
took him to the ground to be handcuffed. This force lasted about seven seconds. Investigators
found that Sootsmanâs actions violated jail policies, and Sootsman pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor battery.
Johnson later sued Sootsman, alleging that his conduct violated the Eighth Amendment.
But this constitutional claim requires Johnson to meet a demanding standard. He must prove that
Sootsman used force âmaliciously and sadistically for the very purpose ofâ inflicting pain.
Hudson v. McMillian, 503 U.S. 1, 6(1992) (citation omitted). Johnsonâs claim will fail, by contrast, if Sootsman used force out of a beliefâeven an unreasonable beliefâthat the force was necessary to control Johnson. Seeid.
We affirm the district courtâs summary-judgment ruling
for Sootsman because Johnson lacks enough evidence to meet this demanding Eighth
Amendment test. That said, the States may impose stricter limits on officers than the
Constitution demands. So our holding does not foreclose all relief for Johnson. It just means
that he must try to seek that relief using his state tort claim that the district court dismissed
without prejudice.
I
In 2019, Johnson pleaded guilty to a domestic-violence offense in Michigan, spent
several days in jail, and began to serve a term of probation. On February 13, 2020, a state court
found that Johnson had violated the conditions of his probation and sentenced him to a few
weeks at the county jail in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Right after this court hearing, Johnson was taken to the jail to begin his sentence. When
detainees first enter the jail, they get processed in its intake area. The intake area contains cells
that hold detainees for a short time until jail staff either transfer them to the general population or
release them. Staff initially housed Johnson in this area.
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 3
The next morning, Deputies Sootsman and Chantel Einhardt worked the first shift in the
intake area. Johnson remained there. About an hour after Einhardt arrived, she heard Johnson
âyelling and bangingâ on his cell door. Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 232â33. Johnson was
upset because he âwanted to be moved to general population.â Id., PageID 232. Einhardt told
him that he would likely get moved soon and that she would have to restrain him if he continued
to hit the door. He stopped.
As Einhardt anticipated, jail staff planned to transfer Johnson to his general-population
cell that afternoon. Shortly before 3:30 p.m., they left an unhandcuffed Johnson in the intake
areaâs unsecured open space as they arranged for his transfer. While waiting, Johnson wrapped a
towel around his head in violation of jail policy. Deputy Alan Miller, who was assisting in the
area, asked him to remove it. Johnson refused and began to argue with Miller. Johnson also
threw his sack lunch.
Deputy Sootsman was in the intake area at this time. Based on Johnsonâs prior
incarcerations, Sootsman knew that he had argued with deputies and disobeyed their orders in
the past. Sootsman also saw Johnsonâs confrontation with Deputy Miller and watched him throw
his lunch. But Sootsman opted not to intervene because he was rounding up two other detainees
to take to their general-population cells. Sootsman walked out of the intake area with these
unrestrained inmates while Johnson continued to argue with Miller.
Meanwhile, Deputy Einhardt returned to the intake area after helping transfer other
detainees who had court appearances. She learned from a booking clerk that Johnson had thrown
his lunch and believed that his argument with Miller âwas escalating very quickly.â Id., PageID
234. (Miller claimed that he was not arguing with Johnson but agrees that Johnson was âbeing
loud[.]â Miller Dep., R.45-7, PageID 267.) To reduce tensions, Einhardt decided to move
Johnson to general population herself. Given Johnsonâs animated state, she asked Deputy Talia
Harris to accompany her. Johnson grabbed his things and began to walk with them. After this
group left the intake area, however, Johnson started to speed walk ahead of the two deputies.
Einhardt twice ordered Johnson to slow down so that she could keep control of him, but he
appeared to ignore her.
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 4
To get to the jailâs general population from its intake area, they had to walk down a long
hallway. Three security cameras record video (but not audio) of this hallway. The video
demonstrates that Deputy Sootsman and his two detainees entered this hallway first on their way
to the general-population area. Sootsman recalled hearing Johnson. The video also confirms his
memory: It captures him and his two detainees stopping and looking at a commotion behind
them as they entered the hallway. Given their pause and Johnsonâs fast pace, he quickly caught
up with them and passed them on the right. The video next shows Sootsman pointing toward the
right wall as Johnson passed. Sootsman said that he ordered Johnson to stop.
Johnson took many more steps before eventually stopping with his back against the wall.
Sootsman, who took a position closer to general population in front of Johnson, spoke to him for
about twelve seconds. According to Johnson (whose account we must accept), Sootsman angrily
told him that he was âbeing a pussyâ and that he should look Sootsman âin the eyes.â Johnson
Dep., R.45-3, PageID 187. Johnson allegedly said âI am,â but nothing else. Id. The video then
shows Johnson take a slow step in the direction of Sootsman and the general-population area.
Sootsman testified that he perceived Johnsonâs step âas a threat[.]â Sootsman Dep.,
R.45-5, PageID 217. On the video, Sootsman can be seen forcefully pushing Johnson back
against the wall with his right arm and restraining him there for about two seconds. According to
Johnson, Sootsman grabbed his neck and âchokedâ him. Johnson Dep., R.45-3, PageID 178.
Johnson also claimed that he hit the âback of [his] head on the wallâ when Sootsman pushed
him. Id. Deputies Harris and Einhardt agreed that Sootsman âgrabbed [Johnsonâs] neckâ when
pushing him. Harris Dep., R.45-4, PageID 201; Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 237. Deputy
Miller had also followed the others and caught up with them. He suggested that Sootsman
âsqueezed [Johnsonâs] throatâ in order to gain control of him. Miller Dep., R.45-7, PageID 272.
According to Sootsman, by contrast, he used an âopenâ hand to push Johnson at the base of his
neck. Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 217. The video does not show which of these conflicting
stories is true.
But it does show that Sootsman immediately turned Johnson around and took him to the
ground by putting him in a chokehold and pulling him down. Einhardt assisted in this takedown
by grabbing Johnsonâs arms. The entire use of force from the time that Sootsman pushed
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 5
Johnson to the time that Sootsman got him on the ground lasted about seven seconds. Once
Johnson was on the ground, the officers brought him to a sitting position. Einhardt handcuffed
him. The officers then pulled a handcuffed Johnson up and continued to walk him to the
general-population area.
Sootsmanâs use of force caught the other deputies off guard. Einhardt described his
actions as âout of the blue[.]â Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 236. Harris testified that
Sootsmanâs actions surprised her because she did not think that Johnson did anything to justify
them. Harris Dep., R.45-4, PageID 201, 203. Miller likewise did not believe that Johnsonâs
conduct âwarrantedâ Sootsmanâs use of force. Miller Dep., R.45-8, PageID 280.
Johnson filed a grievance against Sootsman. A jail investigator found that Sootsmanâs
use of force did not follow the use-of-force policy of the sheriffâs department. The investigator
also found that probable cause existed to believe that Sootsman had assaulted Johnson âby
grabbing him by the neck and squeezing his throat.â Rep., R.51-3, PageID 606. The investigator
placed Sootsman on leave, and prosecutors charged him with a battery. Sootsman chose to
retire. He later decided to plead guilty to a battery misdemeanor and pay $546 in fines and court
costs rather than face the greater expense of trial.
As for the harm that this encounter caused Johnson, the investigator found that Johnson
voiced a complaint of âdiscomfort in his throatâ but had âno visible injuries[.]â Rep., R.51-3,
PageID 606. Johnson claimed that he requested to see medical staff but that the jail staff ignored
him. He did not visit any medical personnel while in the jail. He also did not seek medical
attention until a year after this incident and several months after he brought this suit. Johnson
testified that the incident has caused him to have bad headaches and neck pain for which he has
received physical therapy. Johnson Dep., R.45-3, PageID 175â77. He added that his medical
providers have instructed him to wear a brace on his right wrist and to attend physical and
occupational therapy for pain in his wrist and neck. Id., PageID 174â75, 183.
Johnson sued Sootsman, Einhardt, and Harris under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state tort law.
He alleged that Sootsmanâs and Einhardtâs uses of force violated the Eighth Amendment. He
also alleged that Harris violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments by failing to intervene
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 6
to stop this force. And he alleged that Sootsman and Einhardt committed a battery under
Michigan law.
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 7
After discovery, a magistrate judge recommended that the district court reject the federal
constitutional claims and decline supplemental jurisdiction over the state tort claims. See
Johnson v. Sootsman, 2022 WL 9806957, at *8 (W.D. Mich. July 1, 2022). The judge reasoned that Sootsman had not violated the Eighth Amendment because he used only de minimis force and had a plausible reason to do so.Id.
at *5â6. The judge next held that Einhardt had acted properly in getting Johnson under control to handcuff him.Id. at *7
. At the least, the judge suggested, the law did not clearly establish that Sootsmanâs and Einhardtâs uses of force exceeded constitutional bounds.Id.
at *6â7. The judge lastly found that Harris lacked sufficient time to intervene to stop their force.Id.
at *7â8. The district court adopted these conclusions, granting summary judgment to the deputies on the federal claims and dismissing the state claims without prejudice. See Johnson v. Sootsman,2022 WL 4298230
, at *1â3 (W.D. Mich. Sept. 19,
2022).
Johnson appealed. He raised arguments only about Sootsmanâs conduct, so the parties
agreed to dismiss Einhardt and Harris from the appeal. We review the district courtâs grant of
summary judgment to Sootsman de novo, resolving all evidentiary conflicts in Johnsonâs favor at
this stage. See Griffin v. Hardrick, 604 F.3d 949, 952â53 (6th Cir. 2010).
II
Sootsman has raised a qualified-immunity defense to Johnsonâs Eighth Amendment
claim. That defense required Johnson to show both that Sootsman violated the Eighth
Amendment and that Johnsonâs Eighth Amendment rights were so âclearly establishedâ that any
reasonable officer would have recognized that Sootsmanâs actions infringed them. See Pearson
v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 232(2009). The Supreme Court has held that we may resolve these two qualified-immunity âprongsâ in any orderâeither by holding that a constitutional claim fails on its merits or by holding that a defendantâs conduct did not violate clearly established law. Seeid. at 236
. We find it appropriate to reject Johnsonâs Eighth Amendment claim on the merits in
this case.
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 8
A
The Eighth Amendment provides: âExcessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive
fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.â U.S. Const. amend. VIII. The
Supreme Court has long held that the Fourteenth Amendment incorporates the Eighth
Amendmentâs ban on âcruel and unusual punishmentsâ against the States. See Robinson v.
California, 370 U.S. 660, 666â67 (1962); Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber,329 U.S. 459, 463
(1947) (plurality opinion). The Court has also long held that this ban does not just cover the formal âpunishmentâ that a state court metes out to criminal defendants. The ban also applies to informal harms that prison officials inflict on convicted prisoners during their terms of incarceration. The Eighth Amendment thus regulates the force that prison guards use on prisoners, see Whitley v. Albers,475 U.S. 312, 320
(1986), the medical care that prison doctors provide prisoners, see Estelle v. Gamble,429 U.S. 97
, 102â05 (1976), and the physical facilities in which prison administrators house them, see Rhodes v. Chapman,452 U.S. 337
, 345â47 (1981). In each setting, the ban on cruel and unusual punishments prohibits the âunnecessary and wanton infliction of painâ on prisoners. Hudson,503 U.S. at 5
(quoting Whitley,475 U.S. at 319
); see also Rhodes,452 U.S. at 346
.
What qualifies as the âunnecessary and wanton infliction of painâ? This requirement has
objective and subjective components, both of which follow from the Eighth Amendmentâs text.
See Phillips v. Tangilag, 14 F.4th 524, 535(6th Cir. 2021); Williams v. Curtin,631 F.3d 380, 383
(6th Cir. 2011). Objectively, harm to a prisoner must rise to a sufficiently serious level because the Eighth Amendment prohibits only âcruel and unusualâ deprivations, not just uncomfortable or âeven harshâ ones. Rhodes,452 U.S. at 347
; see Phillips,14 F.4th at 534
. Subjectively, harm to a prisoner must result from a prison officialâs sufficiently volitional actions because the Eighth Amendment bars only willful conduct that âinflict[s]â âpunishment,â not accidental conduct that causes injury. See Phillips,14 F.4th at 535
(citing Wilson v. Seiter,501 U.S. 294, 300
(1991)).
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 9
Yet the nature of these objective and subjective tests âvariesâ depending on the type of
action (or inaction) that injures a prisoner. Hudson, 503 U.S. at 5â6, 8â9. Johnson challenges a
correctional officerâs use of force. In this use-of-force context, the Supreme Court has applied a
more demanding subjective test but a more relaxed objective test. See id.
As a subjective matter, the Court has held that prisoners who challenge a correctional
officerâs use of force must prove more than that the officer acted with âdeliberate indifferenceâ
to whether the force was necessary (the type of intent that prisoners must prove to challenge their
conditions of confinement or medical care). See id.at 5â6; cf. Wilson, 501 U.S. at 302â03. The Court has instead described the âcore judicial inquiryâ in this use-of-force context as distinguishing between force used in a âgood-faith effort to maintain or restore disciplineâ and force used âmaliciously and sadistically to cause harm.â Wilkins v. Gaddy,559 U.S. 34, 37
(2010) (per curiam) (quoting Hudson,503 U.S. at 7
). Only the latter kind of forceâforce exerted maliciously and sadistically to inflict painâviolates the Eighth Amendment. See Hudson, 503 U.S. at 5â7. So even if an officer uses force because of an âunreasonableâ belief that it is necessary to restrain a prisoner, the officer does not violate the Eighth Amendment. Whitley,475 U.S. at 324
.
As an objective matter, the Court has held that prisoners who challenge a correctional
officerâs use of force need not prove âextremeâ or âseriousâ harms (the types of harms that
prisoners must allege to challenge their conditions of confinement or medical care). See Hudson,
503 U.S. at 9. The Court reasoned that the Eighth Amendmentâs âcontextualâ objective element relies on our âcontemporary standards of decencyâ to decide whether specific conduct qualifies as cruel and unusual.Id.
at 8 (quoting Estelle,429 U.S. at 103
). And the malicious and sadistic infliction of pain violates these contemporary standards whether or not the pain leads to any significant injury. Id. at 9. After all, âdiabolicâ torture sometimes may not cause such an injury. Id. At the same time, the Court has added a limiting principle to this conclusion by differentiating an injury from the force that causes it. See Wilkins,559 U.S. at 38
. Although the
Eighth Amendment can reach minor injuries caused by significant force, the Court explained, the
amendment simply does not apply to âde minimis uses of physical forceâ so long as this force
does not repulse âthe conscience of mankind.â Hudson, 503 U.S. at 9â10 (citation omitted).
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 10
B
Johnsonâs Eighth Amendment claim flunks these standards. The magistrate judgeâs
opinionâwhich the district court adopted in a short orderârejected that claim under the
âobjectiveâ element by holding that Sootsman used only de minimis force. Johnson, 2022 WL
9806957, at *5. But we think it easiest to resolve Johnsonâs claim under the subjective element
by holding that Sootsman did not maliciously and sadistically inflict harm.
Objective Element. Before we get to Sootsmanâs subjective intent, though, we start with
the magistrate judgeâs reliance on the objective element. It is debatable whether Sootsmanâs
force rose to a level that could be called âcruel and unusualâ even under the relaxed standards
that the Supreme Court follows in this use-of-force context. See Hudson, 503 U.S. at 9â10. This
element did not require Sootsman to have inflicted a âsignificant injuryâ on Johnson, but it did
require Sootsman to have used more than âde minimisâ force against him. Id.
What divides actionable force from de minimis force? A few examples from both sides
of this line help illuminate the murky border between the two. The Supreme Court has found
actionable force when officers repeatedly punched and kicked a prisoner, causing him to suffer
minor bruises and swelling, loosened teeth, and a cracked dental plate. See id. at 4, 10; see also Wilkins,559 U.S. at 35, 38
. We have likewise found actionable force when an officer rammed a handcuffed inmate headfirst into a concrete wall, putting a large gash in his forehead and requiring an immediate hospital visit. See Cordell v. McKinney,759 F.3d 573
, 577â79, 585â86 (6th Cir. 2014); see also, e.g., United States v. Budd,496 F.3d 517
, 531â32 (6th Cir. 2007); Carlton v. Turner,2006 WL 955886
, at *1 (6th Cir. Apr. 12, 2006). We have also found actionable force when an officer slammed a steel door on a prisoner, Hardy v. Vieta,174 F. Appâx 923, 926
(6th Cir. 2006), or sprayed an inmate with a chemical agent, see Roberson v. Torres,770 F.3d 398, 400
(6th Cir. 2014); Williams,631 F.3d at 384
. And we have found that actions violated the Eighth Amendment even when officers did not use any force. So we held that a prisoner could pursue an Eighth Amendment claim when she alleged that an officer sexually abused her without making physical contact. See Rafferty v. Trumbull County,915 F.3d 1087
, 1095â96 (6th Cir. 2019). And we held that a prisoner could pursue such a claim when he No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 11 alleged that an officer repeatedly threatened to kill him, once while brandishing a knife. See Small v. Brock,963 F.3d 539, 541
(6th Cir. 2020).
Conversely, the Supreme Court has suggested that a malevolent ââpush or shoveâ that
causes no discernible injuryâ will fall short of the force required to violate the Eighth
Amendment. Wilkins, 559 U.S. at 38(citation omitted). Similarly, we have held that an officer used de minimis force when he landed a âkarate chopâ on the âbackâ of a prisonerâs âneckâ but did not harm the prisoner. Leary v. Livingston County,528 F.3d 438, 443
(6th Cir. 2008). We have also held that an officer used de minimis force when he âgrabbed [a prisonerâs] neck and threatened himâ without causing a âphysical injury[.]â Scott v. Churchill,2000 WL 519148
, at *3 (6th Cir. Apr. 6, 2000) (order). And we have held that officers used de minimis force when they harmed a prisonerâs wrists by handcuffing him too tightly, see Jones v. Johnson,2021 WL 1578185
, at *2 (6th Cir. Apr. 21, 2021) (order), and when they strip searched a prisoner, see Evans v. Vinson,427 F. Appâx 437, 443
(6th Cir. 2011). See also, e.g., Johnson v. Unknown Coolman,102 F. Appâx 460, 461
(6th Cir. 2004) (order); Jackson v. Pitcher,1992 WL 133041, at *1
(6th Cir. June 16, 1992) (order).
The amount of force that Sootsman used likely falls somewhere in between these two
precedential poles. On the one hand, Sootsman did not repeatedly kick or punch Johnson (like
the officers in Hudson) or ram Johnson headfirst into a wall with such momentum as to require
an urgent trip to the hospital (like the officer in Cordell). Sootsman instead pushed Johnson back
against a wall by the neck (allegedly choking him in the process) for about two seconds and then
pulled Johnson to the ground in another five seconds. At first blush, this force resembles the
âkarate chopâ that we held did not suffice in Leary, 528 F.3d at 443, or the âgrabb[ing] [of the prisonerâs] neckâ that we held did not suffice in Scott,2000 WL 519148
, at *3. And the average person who watched the video of this encounter would not likely describe Sootsmanâs brief actions as ârepugnant to the conscience of mankind.â Hudson,503 U.S. at 10
(citation omitted).
On the other hand, Leary and Scott both included a disclaimer: they held that the conduct
in these cases did not rise above de minimis force in part because it did not cause âany
objectively verifiable injuryâ to the prisoner. Leary, 528 F.3d at 443; see Scott,2000 WL 519148
, at *3. The magistrate judge here similarly suggested that Johnson lacked any No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 12 âadmissible evidenceâ that Sootsmanâs actions caused a âdiscernible injury[.]â Johnson,2022 WL 9806957
, at *6. The judge described Johnsonâs testimony that he had sought medical care right after the encounter as âself-serving.âId.
She next noted that Johnsonâs medical treatment for his neck and wrist pain occurred in March 2021âover a year after the February 2020 encounter and several months after he sued.Id.
The judge found this treatment too far removed to allow a jury to find it connected to Sootsmanâs actions.Id.
In addition, Johnson admitted that
his wrist pain could have arisen from an earlier incarceration when he was put in an âemergency
restraint chair,â which caused his wrists to swell and bleed. Id.; Johnson Dep., R.45-3, PageID
180, 183. And Johnson noted that any wrist injury would have arisen when Deputy Einhardtâ
not Sootsmanâgrabbed his arm and put it behind his back to handcuff him. See Johnson Dep.,
R.45-3, PageID 176.
If Johnson lacked proof that Sootsman caused any âverifiable injury,â this case may well
be analogous to Leary. 528 F.3d at 443. But the magistrate judge failed to take the facts in the light most favorable to Johnson. See Griffin,604 F.3d at 953
. Most notably, the judge wrongly relied on the âself-servingâ nature of Johnsonâs testimony to reject his claim that he sought immediate medical care. This âself-servingâ label does not provide a valid basis to ignore evidence. See Boykin v. Family Dollar Stores of Mich., LLC,3 F.4th 832
, 841â42 (6th Cir. 2021). Perhaps the judge meant that Johnsonâs testimony was too conclusory to create a genuine issue of material fact on this point, seeid. at 842
, but even Sootsman conceded that Johnsonâs
grievance form requested medical aid, Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 220. Unlike his wrist
pain, moreover, Johnson also testified that he had never had neck pain before this encounter.
Johnson Dep., R.45-3, PageID 176. So the record may well have permitted a reasonable jury to
find that Sootsmanâs use of force caused Johnson to suffer minor neck pain for which he later
sought physical therapy. And that fact might distinguish cases like Leary or Scott that found
force de minimis because it indisputably caused no injury. In the end, though, we will leave it
for future cases to clarify the scope of this objective element because Johnson cannot satisfy the
subjective one.
Subjective Element. Johnsonâs Eighth Amendment claim required him also to prove that
Sootsman used the force âmaliciously and sadisticallyâ to inflict pain. Hudson, 503 U.S. at 7. To decide whether a jury could find that an officer acted with this malicious intent, the Supreme No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 13 Court has identified several factors to consider: What was the extent of the prisonerâs injury? What was the nature of the threat that justified the use of force? Was the amount of force proportional to the threat? And did the officer take any actions designed to reduce the required amount of force? See id.; Whitley,475 U.S. at 321
. More generally, we have added that, while judges may review an encounter by slowing down, pausing, and replaying a video, officers have no such luxury. They must make quick decisions in the heat of the moment. So we defer to their decisions and avoid âunreasonable post hoc judicial second-guessingâ of their conduct. Lockett v. Suardini,526 F.3d 866, 875
(6th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted); see also Griffin,604 F.3d at 954
.
As applied here, the Supreme Courtâs factors show that Johnson lacks sufficient evidence
to prove Sootsmanâs malevolent intent. First, although the Eighth Amendment does not require
a prisoner to suffer a âserious injury,â the âabsenceâ of such an injury goes a long way to
disprove any claim that an officer used force with the required intent to harm. Hudson, 503 U.S.
at 7â8. We have thus denied a prisonerâs Eighth Amendment claim when an officerâs use of
force caused the prisoner to suffer âonly some tenderness, bruising, and slight swelling,â
Bullocks v. Hale, 2021 WL 1578198, at *2 (6th Cir. Mar. 1, 2021) (order), or âminor lacerations and cuts,â Lockett,526 F.3d at 876
; see also Richmond v. Settles,450 F. Appâx 448
, 453â54 (6th Cir. 2011). Similar logic applies here. Johnsonâs evidence shows, at most, that Sootsman caused âminor injuries.â Lockett,526 F.3d at 876
. For example, the investigator who reviewed Sootsmanâs conduct noted at the time that Johnson had âno visible injuriesâ and complained only âof discomfort in his throat[.]â Rep., R.51-3, PageID 606. Johnsonâs neck pain started to improve, so he thought his neck would âheal by itself.â Johnson Dep., R.45-3, PageID 180. When he finally received medical care (over a year later), he admitted that his doctors diagnosed his pain as a âfew tight places they want to work onâ with physical therapy.Id.,
PageID 176. âThatâs about it.âId.
Second, Sootsman had a âplausible basisâ to believe that Johnson constituted a threat who
needed to be restrained under all the circumstances. Whitley, 475 U.S. at 323. Consider what Sootsman knew before Johnson entered the hallway. Johnson had disobeyed orders during his prior incarcerations and was âalways . . . trying to be intimidating.â Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 213â14. Sootsman also had just seen Johnson cause a scene in the intake area. Johnson No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 14 âhad been engaged in a loud, lengthy, and animatedâ argument over Deputy Millerâs request that he remove a towel from his head. Griffin,604 F.3d at 955
. Johnson became so âfrustratedâ that he threw his lunch. Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 211â12. Given Johnsonâs combative conduct, the jailâs policies required Deputy Einhardt to handcuff him before moving him to his general-population cell. Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 242. But Einhardt violated the policies by allowing Johnson to walk to his cell unrestrained (and she later received âcounselingâ for this violation).Id.,
PageID 242â43. Sootsman likewise knew that Johnson âshould have been
handcuffedâ before he left the intake area. Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 218.
Next consider what Sootsman knew when Johnson entered the hallway. The hallway
video proves that Johnson continued to be disruptive. For example, it shows the two inmates
who accompanied Sootsman turning around to look at Johnson, leaving no doubt that he was the
one causing a commotion. And it shows Johnson gesticulating and his lips moving as he goes
past them. By quickly walking out of the intake area, moreover, Johnson had put distance
between himself and the deputies who were supposed to have control of him. He then appeared
to ignore Einhardtâs orders to slow down. Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 235â36. Sootsman,
who was already in the hallway, heard her orders. Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 214â15.
Also consider what Sootsman knew when he spoke with Johnson. Sootsman was
confronting an unhandcuffed inmate who had just disobeyed a colleagueâs order. Sootsman also
had two other unhandcuffed inmates in the hallway, adding to the risks. The video next reveals
that Johnson took a step (admittedly, a slow one) in the general direction of Sootsman and the
general-population area during their conversation. Video E3, R.54, at 0:53. Sootsman saw âno
reasonâ for Johnson to move toward him because Sootsman had not ended their conversation.
Sootsman Dep., R.45-5, PageID 224. Sootsman testified that he perceived Johnsonâs step âas a
threatâ and in response used force to restrain (and handcuff) him. Id.,PageID 217. Even if, âin retrospect,â a jury rejected Sootsmanâs testimony as not credible, or found âunreasonableâ his belief that Johnson was a threat, the totality of the circumstances would not permit a reasonable jury to draw the more demanding inference that Sootsman used force for no other reason than to inflict pain or injure him. Whitley,475 U.S. at 319, 324
.
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 15
Third, the video of the encounter illustrates that Sootsman used an amount of force
proportional âto the need for forcibly bringing [Johnson] under control.â Lockett, 526 F.3d at
876. Our caselaw has found a similar level of force proportional when it involved, for example, â[s]hovingâ or âgrabbingâ a prisoner to gain control of him, id.; see also, e.g., Begley v. Tyree,2018 WL 3244508
, at *3 (6th Cir. Feb. 13, 2018) (order), pushing and holding a prisoner against a wall to handcuff him, Brooks v. Fed. Bureau of Prisons,1999 WL 427179
, at *2 (6th Cir. June 15, 1999) (order), or using a âleg-sweep maneuverâ to take a prisoner to the ground so that she could be handcuffed and returned to her cell, Griffin, 604 F.3d at 954â56. Similarly, we have repeatedly described the use of a taser or pepper spray as a proportional level of force in response to a prisonerâs refusal to follow orders, including an order to accompany an officer, Sams v. Quinn,2017 WL 4574497
, at *2 (6th Cir. Sept. 7, 2017) (order), and an order to âexit the shower,â Jennings v. Mitchell,93 F. Appâx 723, 5725
(6th Cir. 2004). See also, e.g., Alexander v. Ojala,2018 WL 5905588
, at *3 (6th Cir. May 29, 2018) (order); Caldwell v. Moore,968 F.2d 595
, 601â02 (6th Cir. 1992). Sootsman used a similar level of forceâan
amount designed to gain control of Johnson and handcuff him. He pushed Johnson against the
wall with his right arm (and, under Johnsonâs view, squeezed his neck) for about two seconds
and then pulled Johnson to the ground in order to handcuff him in about five seconds.
Fourth, and finally, that Sootsmanâs use of force lasted all of seven seconds shows that
Sootsman âtemper[ed] the severityâ of the force. Whitley, 475 U.S. at 321. The video discloses that he did not land any blows that could be described as extraneous to the goal of gaining control of Johnson. All told, every reasonable jury would conclude that Sootsman could have âplausiblyâ believed that his use of force was necessary. Griffin,604 F.3d at 954
(quoting Whitley,475 U.S. at 321
). So no reasonable jury could find that Sootsmanâs actions arose from a
sadistic intent to inflict pain on Johnson rather than a (perhaps mistaken) belief of the need to
restrain him.
C
In response, Johnson fails to identify evidence that would allow a reasonable jury to find
that Sootsman harbored the required intent. He initially describes as an âabsurdityâ the
magistrate judgeâs conclusion that the video shows him remaining agitated in the hallway.
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 16
Appellantâs Br. 21. Johnson cites Einhardtâs deposition testimony that âhe was done yellingâ
when he left intake and asserts that nothing in the video (which lacked sound) âblatantly
contradictedâ this testimony. Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 234; Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372,
380 (2007). But he ignores the video evidence showing both his lips moving and Sootsman and
his two detainees stopping and turning around to look behind them in the hallway. Only one
conclusion can be drawn from this footage: Sootsman continued to cause a commotion. In all
events, Einhardtâs testimony separately confirmed what the video showsâthat Johnson
disobeyed her orders by walking quickly away, forcing her to move at almost a âjogging paceâ to
keep up with him. Einhardt Dep., R.45-6, PageID 235. So his improper conduct undisputedly
continued into the hallway.
Johnson thus turns to the testimonies of Deputies Einhardt, Harris, and Miller. Because
they saw âno reasonâ for Sootsmanâs use of force, Johnson argues that a reasonable jury could
find that he acted for malicious and sadistic reasons. Appellantâs Br. 23â24 (quoting Rep., R.51-
3, PageID 600). Yet Johnson provides no record citation at which these deputies state they even
saw Johnson take the visible-on-the-video step that triggered Sootsmanâs force. So they do not
opine on whether Sootsman could have viewed that step as threatening. And while Johnson
responds that the video shows the step to have been slow and just as much in the direction of the
general-population area as Sootsman, he does not claim that Sootsman authorized him to walk
away.
In the end, perhaps the other deputiesâ testimony and Johnsonâs arguments about the
nature of his step suggest that Sootsman acted in an âunreasonableâ manner by using
âunnecessaryâ force to restrain Johnson. Whitley, 475 U.S. at 319. But that inference falls short of what is needed. The negligent use of forceâeven the reckless use of forceâdoes not establish an Eighth Amendment claim; Johnson must prove the malicious use of force for the exclusive purpose to inflict pain. Seeid.
at 320â21. To put things in perspective, this demanding intent element exceeds the âdeliberate indifferenceâ test that the Supreme Court requires for other types of Eighth Amendment claims. See Hudson, 503 U.S. at 5â7. And that deliberate-indifference test is itself demanding, requiring prison officials to have acted with the âsubjective recklessnessâ that could render them liable under âthe criminal law[.]â Farmer v. Brennan,511 U.S. 825, 839
(1994).
No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 17
Johnson also points to the factual dispute over what was said between him and Sootsman
before the use of force. Sootsman claims that Johnson argued with him in a threatening manner,
while Johnson claims that he meekly said âI amâ in response to Sootsmanâs demand to look
Sootsman in the eyes. Johnson also claims that Sootsman was screaming at him and using
offensive language. And the video shows Sootsman shaking his finger at Johnson. Although we
must resolve this factual dispute in Johnsonâs favor, it does not change things. In Griffin, for
example, we accepted the prisonerâs claim that the correctional officer said that âshe was going
to live in his hellâ and that she âwas his bitchâ before he used a leg-sweep maneuver that ended
up breaking her tibia. 604 F.3d at 955. But we held that this version of the conversation did not matter given the undisputed video evidence that the prisoner was âstrugglingâ with the officer before the use of force.Id.
Similarly, in Alexander, we held that a prisoner did not satisfy the subjective component of his Eighth Amendment claim when an officer used his taser on the prisoner to break up a fight.2018 WL 5905588
, at *3. That was so even though the officer told the prisoner that he had âbeen waiting to get your assâ after using the taser.Id. at *1
. This logic applies here too. The video undisputedly shows that Johnson stepped toward Sootsman before he pushed Johnson against the wall. So Sootsman used âlimitedâ force âto preserve internal orderâ after Johnson had repeatedly violated the officersâ instructions.Id. at *3
.
Although Johnson equates the facts of his case with those of Cordell, that decision
undercuts his Eighth Amendment claim. The inmate in Cordell could not have plausibly posed a
threat because he was handcuffed and in a submission hold. 759 F.3d at 583. Johnson was neither. The officer in Cordell also used the plaintiff âas a human battering ramâ by slamming him headfirst into a concrete wall.Id. at 582
. This action is not one to gain âcontrolâ of a prisoner. Sootsman, by contrast, took that type of action. And the plaintiff in Cordell suffered âsever[e]â injuries that required an immediate hospital visit, shifted his vertebrae, and led to a diagnosis of chronic pain syndrome.Id.
at 582â83. Johnsonâs purported injuries of headaches
and neck pain (and diagnosis a year later of tightness in the neck) are not on the same level.
Finally, Johnson stresses that Sootsman violated the jailâs use-of-force policy and pleaded
guilty to a misdemeanor battery. These factors cannot save his claim. As for the policy
violation, a sheriffâs department may âchoose to hold its officers to a higher standard than that
required by the Constitution[.]â Smith v. Freland, 954 F.2d 343, 347(6th Cir. 1992); see No. 22-1937 Johnson v. Sootsman Page 18 Burwell v. City of Lansing,7 F.4th 456, 471
(6th Cir. 2021). As for the battery conviction, Johnson does not dispute the magistrate judgeâs conclusion that he forfeited any attempt to invoke issue preclusion. See Johnson,2022 WL 9806957
, at *4. And he did not even tell us the elements of this offense until his reply briefâa point in time that âcomes too late.â Bannister v. Knox Cnty. Bd of Educ.,49 F.4th 1000, 1017
(6th Cir. 2022); Reply Br. 2â3. Even under Johnsonâs view of Michigan law, Sootsmanâs conviction meant that he admitted only that he did not âhonestly and reasonablyâ believe that his force was necessary. Reply Br. 3 (emphasis added) (quoting Mich. Crim. J. Inst. 7.22). So Sootsmanâs âunreasonableâ belief about the need for the force might have sufficed for a conviction under this criminal law. Whitley,475 U.S. at 319
. But that belief falls well short of showing that Sootsman used force âmaliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.âId.
at 320â21 (citation omitted).
* * *
One should not misunderstand our holding. A conclusion that Sootsmanâs conduct did
not violate the Eighth Amendment as a matter of neutral constitutional interpretation says
nothing about whether his conduct was proper as a matter of good policy. Just because the
Constitution does not bar certain actions does not make those actions right. The Constitution
instead leaves this policy question to Michigan, which may regulate its correctional officers in
the way that it thinks best through its prison rules or tort laws. So nothing we say here affects
whether Johnson may pursue the tort claim against Sootsman that the district court left for state
court. Our holding only means that federal judges are not free to turn the Eighth Amendment
into a âfont of tort lawâ by imposing their own views about the optimal balance between
protecting the liberty of a stateâs prisoners and ensuring the security of its prisons. Leary,
528 F.3d at 445 (citation omitted).
We affirm.