Hunt v. Massi, 1st Cir. (2014)
Hunt v. Massi, 1st Cir. (2014)
Hunt v. Massi, 1st Cir. (2014)
Before
Lynch, Chief Judge,
Stahl and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
have
interlocutory
appellate
jurisdiction
over
the
officers
reasonably
understood
their
actions
in
We reverse the
of
excessive
force
under
1983.
Exercising
pendent
appellate
prosecution
jurisdiction
claims,
and
over
remand
the
those
federal.
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plaintiffs'
claims,
both
We
malicious
state
and
I.
Factual Background
It was
later discovered that Hunt had paid the fine, but that the Town of
New Bedford had mistakenly failed to record the payment.
Id.
2011.
while the two other officers watched the rear of the house.
Hunt's wife, who answered the front door, led Officers
Porter and Massi to the bedroom where Hunt was sitting on the bed.
When informed that he was under arrest, Hunt requested that he be
handcuffed with his hands in front of him.
Id. at 163.
Hunt
Id.
the officers would have seen a "big, long, red mark." The officers
said they saw nothing which dissuaded them from the usual practice
of handcuffing behind the back.
Id.
That's not
possible."
The district court inferred there was no resistance to
arrest, because, "[a]ccording to Mr. Hunt's testimony, he did not
try to defend or protect himself because he was too weak due to the
surgery."2
Id.
clear that he resisted when his request was denied and he was told
to put his arms behind him.
specify that Hunt did not resist "until he was told his arms needed
to be placed behind him."
that Hunt got off the bed with his hands in front of him.
According to the plaintiffs, the officers pushed Hunt onto the bed
and then onto the floor.
He
admitted that his demeanor changed from being calm when he made his
request to being angry after he was brought to the floor.
agreed that he was "extremely upset."
His wife
Id.
report states that nothing could have been damaged during the
altercation because Hunt's recent surgery was a laparoscopic lysis
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of adhesions.
Id.
recognizance.
Id.
The
police
officers
subsequently
charged
Hunt
with
On September
25, 2012, after a two-day trial, Hunt was found not guilty.
See
id.
Hunt alleges that he suffered from knee and back pain
after the arrest, embarrassment after the local newspaper coverage
of the arrest, and emotional distress whenever he now sees Officers
Massi or Porter.
Id.
Procedural Background
Under 1983,
brought
state
law
claims
In addition, the
for
battery,
malicious
the
officers
had
on
the
claim
that
used
excessive force, the district court denied the officers' motion for
summary judgment after concluding that they were not entitled to
qualified immunity.
the
district
court
denied
summary
judgment
on
the
Id. at 169.
Id. at 167.
the
police
officers
had
probable
cause
to
initiate
as
to
the
charges
altercation.
brought
by
the
police
officers
after
the
Id. at 168.
force.
When
defined
at
the
appropriate
level
of
Instead,
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Appellate Jurisdiction
"Ordinarily, we hear appeals only from final orders and
decisions."
We review
Excessive Force
As the Supreme Court recently reiterated, "[a] government
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clearly
established
at
the
time
of
the
challenged
conduct."
'gives
government
officials
breathing
room
"This
to
make
Id.
familiar
two-step
inquiry
determines
whether
the
start
by
defining
the
right
at
issue
at
"an
if
it
reasonableness."
is
excessive
under
objective
standards
of
Id. at 202.
Id.
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that Hunt's abdominal scar would prevent him from putting his hands
behind his back.
the
defendant's
violating it."
shoes
would
have
understood
that
he
was
district
court
undertook
this
analysis
at
the
The district
Id.
Two are
Id. at
Id. at 125.
the view that the published case law clearly established the
plaintiff's "right to be handcuffed with her arms in front of her
even if the injury is not visible," but acknowledged that "various
'unpublished' appellate opinions . . . support[ed] the positions of
both parties."
Id. at 126-27.
Id. at 1333-34.
Crooks v. Hamilton Cnty., Ohio, 458 F. App'x 548, 550 (6th Cir.
2012) (holding same when the defendant handcuffed a 65-year-old
arthritic woman for a non-violent crime with her hands behind her
back despite "persistent claims of pain," which caused the woman to
suffer a broken rib).
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(finding
no
constitutional
violation
when
officers
Id. at
Id. at 425.
Calvi's
Id.
The
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Id.
[the
officer's]
handcuffing
of
Calvi
represented
Id. (citing
Jackson v. City of Bremerton, 268 F.3d 646, 653 (9th Cir. 2001)).
The plaintiffs point to no post-Calvi case that would
have put the officers on notice that their decision to handcuff
Hunt with his hands behind his back was not a "judgment call," but
clearly violated the Constitution.
Like the
Nor was
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See, e.g.,
Malicious Prosecution
In contrast with the excessive force claim, we do not
the
defendants
under
1983
based
on
Hunt's
cause had existed to pursue the state charges against Hunt, and so
they were entitled to qualified immunity.
The district court's denial of immunity rested on its
finding that there were "disputed issues of material fact as to
whether
the
police
officers
had
probable
cause
to
initiate
Hunt, 5 F.
See id.
We take it
that the court implicitly found that there was a dispute over the
assault and battery charge.
This
conclusions,
prosecution claim.
we
choose
not
to
divide
the
malicious
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to cooperate.
See
plaintiffs'
MCRA
claim
is
subject
to
the
same
2010) (citing Duarte v. Healy, 537 N.E.2d 1230, 1232 (Mass. 1989)).
"Because the police officers [were] not protected by qualified
immunity with respect to the section 1983 excessive force claim,"
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the district court held that they were also not protected by
qualified immunity with respect to the MCRA excessive force claim.
Hunt, 5 F. Supp. 3d at 169.
1983
also
"controls
[the]
determination
of
the
reasonableness of the force used under the common law assault and
battery claims."
In
we
remand
the
state
prosecution.
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law
claim
of
malicious
V.
Conclusion
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