[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED
________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 06-11826 APRIL 11, 2007
________________________ THOMAS K. KAHN
CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 04-02723-CV-T-24-TGW
DOUGLAS MCCLISH,
EDMUND HOLMBERG,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
versus
RICHARD B. NUGENT,
Sheriff of Hernando County,
in his official capacity,
SHAWN TERRY,
Deputy, individually, et. al,
Defendants-Appellees.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
_________________________
(April 11, 2007)
Before ANDERSON and MARCUS, Circuit Judges and ALTONAGA,* District
Judge.
*
Honorable Cecilia M. Altonaga, United States District Judge for the Southern District of
Florida, sitting by designation.
MARCUS, Circuit Judge:
In this civil rights case, Appellants Edmund Holmberg (“Holmberg”) and
Douglas McClish (“McClish”) appeal from the district court’s entry of final
summary judgment for Appellees Deputy Shawn Terry, Deputy Christopher
Calderone, and Sheriff Richard B. Nugent, all of the Hernando County, Florida
Sheriff’s Office. After thorough review, we affirm the district court’s
determination that Deputy Terry was entitled to qualified immunity for effecting a
warrantless arrest of McClish within his home. However, because Holmberg was
never convicted of a crime, we reverse the district court’s judgment that his § 1983
wrongful arrest claim was barred by Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477 (1994).
Finally, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of Appellants’ state law claims
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) and remand those claims as well.
I.
Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellants, the
essential facts and procedural history are these. Edmund Holmberg and Douglas
McClish lived in a trailer home in Brooksville, Florida. At approximately 4:00 p.m.
on October 13, 2001, Deputies Shawn Terry and Clifford Groves of the Hernando
County Sheriff’s Office responded to a complaint from McClish and Holmberg’s
2
neighbors, the Padzurs, who said that Holmberg had been screaming profanities at
them across the line separating the two properties. The complaint did not mention
McClish, who was not home when the deputies first arrived. The deputies met with
the Padzurs and then, stepping over a downed fence separating the two properties,
informed Holmberg and McClish of the complaint. The underlying conflict
between the neighbors seems to have arisen over a property dispute. McClish
believed that the neighbors had stolen part of his property, and a number of the
incidents involving threats or profanity shouted across the property line seem to
have occurred when Michael Padzur was clearing brush from the disputed area.
Holmberg met the deputies partway between the property line and his home,
and McClish arrived home shortly thereafter. McClish reacted angrily to the
presence of the deputies on his property. According to Terry, McClish said, “[T]he
sheriff’s office is a bunch of Nazis . . . . This is America. A man can have rights on
his own property.” Terry Crim. Depo. 19. After a conversation that Deputy Groves
concluded “wasn’t heading anywhere,” the deputies crossed back over the property
line to the Padzur residence.1
The Padzurs described for the deputies a litany of abuse allegedly suffered at
1
In the pleadings below, appellants alleged that Deputy Terry became hostile when asked
to leave the property, making verbal threats and refusing to leave until Deputy Groves persuaded
him to walk away. Plaintiff’s Statement of Material Fact ¶ 13 (citing Terry Civil Depo. 37-38).
Terry’s civil deposition transcript makes no reference to this.
3
the hands of Holmberg and McClish, including threats to kill members of the
family, epithets (“Fucking white trash”), and firing guns into the air along the
property line. The Padzurs complained that the Sheriff’s Office had failed to
respond to multiple requests for help and that they feared for their safety.
Statements taken from various members of the Padzur family included remarks
such as “Ed [Holmberg] and Doug [McClish] are getting more violent in their
actions and words,” “Doug said he wanted to kill us,” and “I also think that [Doug]
stalks us because at night he drives by are [sic] house at night real slow on his golf
cart and stares . . . .” McClish denied making any threats towards the family and
denied that he or Holmberg ever fired a weapon to harass the Padzurs.
As the deputies spoke with the Padzurs outside the Padzur home, McClish
intermittently observed the interaction from his home. At some point during the
interview, McClish got in his car, drove past the Padzur property, and yelled
something out the window of his car. Deputy Terry claimed that McClish shouted,
“I'm going to kill you, bitch. You’ll see, bitch.” Terry Aff. ¶ 13. McClish flatly
denied this. Rather, McClish said that he yelled, “If they’re telling you some more
lies about us, forget it. She’s a liar,” McClish Aff. ¶ 7, and that this comment was
directed at the officers, not at Mrs. Padzur, McClish Depo. 109. Deputy Groves
testified only that McClish “yelled something from his vehicle,” and said that he
4
did not observe McClish commit any crimes while the officers were present.
Groves Depo. 15.
Upon returning to the Sheriff’s Office, Deputy Terry reviewed the records of
previous calls to the Sheriff’s Office and concluded -- on the basis of his
conversation with the neighbors and his personal observations of McClish’s
behavior -- that he had probable cause to arrest McClish 2 for the crime of
aggravated stalking.3 Although Terry decided to arrest McClish before returning to
McClish’s home, he did not attempt to obtain an arrest warrant from a magistrate
during the six or seven hours separating the two visits,4 and he conceded that there
2
The fact that Terry had “observed some of Mr. McClish’s behavior firsthand” “tipped”
him towards seeking to arrest McClish rather than Holmberg. Terry Civil Depo. 55. At the end
of the investigation, Terry thought that he “probably” could have arrested Holmberg for
aggravated stalking, too. Id. McClish does not contest the district court’s determination that
probable cause existed for his arrest. Because the district court disposed of Holmberg’s claim
under Heck v. Humphrey, as discussed infra, the court did not make a finding as to whether there
was probable cause to arrest Holmberg.
3
The Offense Report filed by Deputy Terry refers to the offense of aggravated stalking
under Florida Statutes section 784.048(3). This section provides:
Any person who willfully, maliciously, and repeatedly follows, harasses, or
cyberstalks another person, and makes a credible threat with the intent to place
that person in reasonable fear of death or bodily injury of the person, or the
person’s child, sibling, spouse, parent, or dependent, commits the offense of
aggravated stalking, a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s.
775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
4
The timing of events is not entirely clear from the record. In his 2002 deposition, Terry
testified that he returned to the Padzur home at 8:00 p.m. Terry Crim. Depo. 38–39. In 2005,
Terry also testified that he returned at 8:00 p.m. Terry Civil Depo. 51. Terry’s affidavit, by
contrast, makes no mention of an 8:00 p.m. visit to the property. It is undisputed, however, that
the actual arrest took place shortly before midnight.
5
were no exigent circumstances to justify a warrantless entry into McClish’s home.5
Deputy Terry and Deputy Calderone returned to the area at approximately
11:30 p.m. that same day to arrest McClish. They were accompanied by Deputy
Martinez, a K-9 handler, and his dog, Magnum. Terry met briefly with the Padzurs
to inform them of his intention to arrest McClish before he proceeded to the
McClish/Holmberg property. Vehicular access to the McClish/Holmberg home is
limited by an electronic gate posted with “No Trespassing” signs. McClish and
Holmberg had given their neighbor Lanny Baum a “clicker” for the gate, which
Baum was permitted to use in order to make periodic deliveries of fill dirt onto the
Holmberg/McClish property. According to McClish, Baum had express
instructions never to give the clicker to anyone else. On the night of the arrest,
Baum either opened the gate for the deputies or loaned the device to Deputy Terry.
5
During his 2005 deposition, Deputy Terry testified in this way:
Q: Now, when you came back at 11:30, did you have a warrant?
A: No.
Q: Had you applied for a warrant?
A: No.
Q: And there was no exigency?
A: No.
Q: And you weren’t in hot pursuit?
A: That’s correct.
Q: Did you know you were going onto the residence of Mr. McClish and Mr.
Holmberg?
A: Yes, I did.
Terry Civil Depo. 54–55.
6
Shortly before midnight, the deputies drove through the gate to the McClish/
Holmberg home. Deputies Terry and Calderone climbed several steps leading to
the screened-in porch at the front of the trailer. Deputy Martinez, the K-9 officer,
hung back with the dog. Terry and Calderone entered the screened porch through a
sliding screen door 6 and proceeded to the front door of the home.
Deputy Terry knocked on the door to the trailer, and at this point the
accounts diverge sharply. As the district court characterized the deputies’ version
of McClish’s arrest:
Deputy Terry and Deputy Calderone went to the McClish and
Holmberg residence to effectuate the arrest of McClish. . . . Deputy
Terry . . . states that he walked onto the front porch and knocked on
the front door. McClish opened the door and asked who it was, and
Deputy Terry told him that it was the Sheriff’s Office. McClish came
out onto the porch and Deputy Terry then placed him under arrest.
Dist. Ct. Order at 5 (emphasis added, citations omitted).
McClish, in contrast, said that he had just gotten out of the shower when he
heard a dog barking followed by a knock at the door. He put on a bathrobe, went to
the door, and opened it.7 McClish averred that Deputy Terry was standing on the
6
Both Holmberg and McClish claimed that the sliding door leading onto the porch was
never left open. McClish Depo. 98. Terry’s affidavit, by contrast, described this sliding screen
door as being “partially open.” Terry Aff. ¶ 16. Although the legality of the officers’ entry onto
the porch was argued in the district court, this issue was not raised on appeal and, in light of our
holding today, does not need to be addressed.
7
It is unclear from the record whether McClish knew at the time that he opened the door
that deputies from the Sheriff’s Office were standing outside. Compare McClish Aff. ¶ 8 (stating
7
porch, directly in front of the open door,8 and that Terry then reached into the
house, grabbed him, and forcibly pulled him out onto the porch. Both Holmberg
and McClish unambiguously stated that McClish had been standing completely
inside the home at the time.
McClish recounted that after Deputy Terry pulled him out of the trailer, the
deputy pushed him down onto a table on the porch and yanked his hands behind
his back “quite forcibly.” According to Terry, McClish requested and was denied
the opportunity to dress. Terry stated that Holmberg’s exit from the home during
McClish’s arrest prevented him from granting McClish’s request to dress, and that
he told McClish the county jail would provide clothing. McClish said that Terry
then spun him around so that the two men were face-to-face and said, “Remember
me?”
After McClish had been handcuffed and was being taken away, Holmberg
came outside the home and was subsequently arrested for resisting an officer
that McClish opened the door following the knock), with McClish Depo. 118–119 (stating that
McClish asked who was there and was told that it was the Sheriff’s Office before opening the
door).
8
The McClish/Holmberg home apparently has both a wooden door and a screen door
separating the interior of the home from the screened-in porch. See Holmberg Depo. 63. Aside
from Holmberg’s statement that the screen door between the porch and the interior was never
left open, id., however, the record on appeal does not make clear who opened this screen door or
at what point during the encounter it was opened. This fact was not argued on appeal, nor is it of
any moment given our resolution of the case.
8
without violence. Again, the accounts differ. Holmberg claimed that he came out
of the home as the deputies were leading McClish to the car and asked McClish
what he should do. McClish told him to call a neighbor, Virginia Knight, for help
in finding a lawyer. Holmberg added that he had turned around to return to the
home and make the call when Deputy Terry told Deputy Calderone to arrest him.
Terry and Calderone, by contrast, claim that Holmberg rushed out of the house
yelling and screaming, and that he approached them with clenched fists. Deputy
Calderone claims that he arrested Holmberg for resisting an officer without
violence only after Holmberg refused several requests to walk away.
The two men were then taken to the county jail.9 Holmberg said that he was
sprayed with mace on two occasions, resulting in lasting damage to his eyes, and
that he was taunted and baited with a camcorder. McClish recounted that he
contracted bronchitis from sitting for hours in a cold cell without any clothes.
McClish also claimed, at a deposition taken some four years after the arrest, that he
still had scars from injuries suffered during the arrest. Finally, McClish said that
the handcuffs were applied too tightly, damaging his wrists and causing him to
partially lose function in both hands. McClish’s hands and wrists were examined
by a doctor, but the study was discontinued because McClish “could not tolerate”
9
The Hernando County Jail is privately operated by the Corrections Corporation of
America, not by the Hernando County Sheriff. Terry Aff. ¶ 18.
9
the tests. At the time of the arrest, McClish was 75 years old.
The charge against McClish was later dismissed. Holmberg entered into
pretrial intervention, completed the program, and the charge against him was also
dismissed.
On December 17, 2004, Holmberg and McClish sued Hernando County
Sheriff Richard Nugent, Deputy Shawn Terry, and Deputy Christopher Calderone
in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida. The amended
complaint contained four counts. In Count I, McClish and Holmberg sued Sheriff
Nugent for state law false arrest and battery. In Count II, McClish charged Deputy
Terry, in his individual capacity, with malicious prosecution, again under state law.
Count III contained McClish’s § 1983 claims against Deputy Terry in his
individual capacity for unreasonable warrantless arrest under the Fourth
Amendment, harassment, arrest without probable cause, and causing his
prosecution upon knowingly false testimony in the preparation of the arrest
affidavit. Finally, in Count IV, Holmberg brought a § 1983 claim against Deputies
Terry and Calderone alleging harassment, arrest without probable cause, and
knowingly using false testimony in the preparation of the arrest affidavit.
Thereafter, Appellees moved for summary judgment, and on January 20,
2006, the district court entered final summary judgment for Deputy Sheriffs
10
Calderone and Terry on Counts II, III, and IV. The district court also dismissed
without prejudice appellants’ state law claims against Sheriff Nugent in Count I.
McClish and Holmberg have timely appealed from the order of summary judgment
entered on Counts III and IV and the dismissal of the state law claims in Count I
under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). (The appellants have not appealed from the entry of
final summary judgment on Count II -- the state law malicious prosecution claim.)
II.
We begin with McClish’s appeal from the district court’s order of summary
judgment for Deputy Terry on qualified immunity grounds. The purpose of
qualified immunity is “to allow government officials to carry out their
discretionary duties without the fear of personal liability or harassing litigation.”
Lee v. Ferraro, 284 F.3d 1188, 1194 (11th Cir. 2002). Qualified immunity is an
immunity from suit rather than a mere defense from liability. In order to spare
officials who are entitled to immunity from the burden of litigation, the availability
of qualified immunity should be evaluated early in the proceedings. Saucier v.
Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 200–01 (2001). An official seeking qualified immunity must
initially establish that he was acting within his discretionary authority. If the
official was acting within the scope of his discretionary authority, the burden shifts
11
to the plaintiff.
First, the plaintiff must establish that the defendant’s conduct has violated a
constitutional right. Id. at 201. In evaluating the claimed violation, the court is
obliged to review the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Id. Moreover,
the constitutionality of the alleged violation is evaluated using present-day law.
Then, the plaintiff must show that the violation was “clearly established.” Id. We
have held that decisions of the United States Supreme Court, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, and the highest court of the pertinent
state (here, the Supreme Court of Florida) can clearly establish the law. See Marsh
v. Butler County, 268 F.3d 1014, 1032 n.10 (11th Cir. 2001) (en banc). The law
clearly establishing the violation also must be “pre-existing” -- that is, in effect at
the time of the alleged violation. This requirement ensures that officers will not be
liable for damages unless they had “fair warning” that their conduct violated the
law. Hope v. Pelzer, 536 U.S. 730, 741 (2002).
McClish does not dispute that Deputy Terry was acting within his
discretionary authority at the time of the arrest, so McClish bore the burden of
showing that Terry violated a clearly established statutory or constitutional right to
overcome the qualified immunity defense. The district court did not determine the
constitutionality of Deputy Terry’s actions in arresting McClish. Instead, the court
12
avoided answering whether the arrest violated the Fourth Amendment by assuming
that it did. The court then disposed of the case on the ground that the law was not
clearly established. See Dist. Ct. Order at 12 (“Even if Deputy Terry violated a
constitutional right by reaching across the doorway to arrest McClish, the state of
the law as to doorway arrests was not ‘clearly established’ at the time Deputy Terry
made the arrest.”).
However, as the Supreme Court has made abundantly clear, qualified
immunity determinations may not be disposed of in this arguendo form, by first
simply assuming the violation and then proceeding to address whether the law was
clearly established at the time of the infraction. Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201. Although
both qualified immunity inquiries are logically related, the two inquiries must be
conducted in the proper order. We may not assume an answer to the first question
in order to avoid difficult constitutional issues. The Supreme Court has explained
the requirement in these clear terms:
In the course of determining whether a constitutional right was
violated on the premises alleged, a court might find it necessary to set
forth principles which will become the basis for a holding that a right
is clearly established. This is the process for the law’s elaboration
from case to case, and it is one reason for our insisting upon turning to
the existence or nonexistence of a constitutional right as the first
inquiry. The law might be deprived of this explanation were a court
simply to skip ahead to the question whether the law clearly
established that the officer’s conduct was unlawful in the
circumstances of the case.
13
Id.; see also Bunting v. Mellen, 541 U.S. 1019, 1022 (2004) (Scalia, J., dissenting
from denial of certiorari) (“This Court has established a mandatory order of
priority for resolution of the two standard issues that arise in damages suits brought
against government officers . . . .” (emphasis added)); Siegert v. Gilley, 500 U.S.
226, 232 (1991) (holding that the appellate court should not have assumed, without
deciding, the constitutional question and characterizing this question as a
“necessary concomitant” to the second inquiry); Stanley v. City of Dalton, 219
F.3d 1280, 1285 (11th Cir. 2000) (quoting Siegert’s “necessary concomitant”
language); Crosby v. Paulk, 187 F.3d 1339, 1345 (11th Cir. 1999) (citing Siegert).
We begin, therefore, as we must, with the first qualified immunity inquiry:
whether Deputy Terry violated McClish’s Fourth Amendment rights during the
arrest.
A.
McClish claims that Deputy Terry violated the Fourth Amendment by
entering McClish’s home without a warrant to arrest him. The Amendment
provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place
to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
14
An arrest is quintessentially a seizure of the person, and therefore subject to the
Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness requirement. California v. Hodari D., 499
U.S. 621, 624 (1991). It is by now clear that an arrest conducted in a public place
must be supported by probable cause, but it does not require a warrant. United
States v. Watson, 423 U.S. 411, 417 & n.6 (1976). An arrest in the home, however,
is plainly subject to the warrant requirement; probable cause alone is insufficient.
Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 589–90 (1980). McClish does not contest on
appeal that Deputy Terry had probable cause to arrest him. Instead, he argues that
the arrest was unconstitutional because Terry was not armed with an arrest warrant
when Terry pulled McClish from his home.
The warrant requirement was first applied to cover an arrest inside a
suspect’s home in Payton, where the Court struck down a New York statute that
permitted police to enter a private residence without a warrant, using force if
necessary, to make a felony arrest. In the first of two consolidated cases addressed
in Payton, New York City detectives sought to arrest Theodore Payton in
connection with the murder of a gas station manager two days earlier. Id. at 576–77
& n.5. The police went to Payton’s apartment and, after their knocks went
unanswered, used crowbars to break open the door. Although Payton was not
present, the police found and seized from within the home a shell casing that was
15
later introduced at Payton’s murder trial. Id. In the second case, New York City
police officers went to the apartment of Obie Riddick to arrest him for armed
robbery. The police knocked at the door, and Riddick’s young son answered.
Through the open door, police peered into the house and saw Riddick sitting in bed
covered by a sheet. The police entered Riddick’s apartment and arrested him, again
without a warrant. Id. at 578.
In Payton, the Supreme Court unambiguously held that the Fourth
Amendment “prohibits the police from making a warrantless and nonconsensual
entry into a suspect’s home in order to make a routine felony arrest.” Id. at 576.
Because the police seeking to arrest Payton and Riddick had entered the suspects’
homes without a warrant, the entries were found to be unreasonable, and, therefore,
unlawful. As the Court explained, an arrest warrant was required to enter the home
because the evidentiary inferences used to justify this kind of governmental
intrusion should be drawn by a “neutral and detached magistrate,” not an officer
“engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.” Id. at 586 n.24
(quoting Johnson v. United States, 445 U.S. 10, 13–14 (1948)).
In reaching this holding, the Court gave special attention to the respect
traditionally accorded to the sanctity of the home, an interest “embedded in our
traditions since the origins of the Republic.” Id. at 601; see also Georgia v.
16
Randolph, 126 S. Ct. 1515, 1523–24 (2006):
Since we hold to the centuries-old principle of respect for the privacy
of the home, it is beyond dispute that the home is entitled to special
protection as the center of the private lives of our people. We have,
after all, lived our whole national history with an understanding of the
ancient adage that a man’s home is his castle to the point that the
poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the
Crown.10
(citations and quotations omitted). The problem with a warrantless entry to arrest
was found not only in the governmental intrusion on personal freedom necessarily
involved in any arrest, but also because it involved an intrusion into the sanctity of
the home. Payton, 445 U.S. at 587–89; see also United States v. Reed, 572 F.2d
412, 423 (2d Cir. 1978) (applying this principle, in language quoted with approval
in Payton, to a woman arrested behind the threshold of her apartment after opening
her door in response to a police knock).
The Court thus rejected the idea that an entry to arrest was somehow less
intrusive than an entry to search, reasoning that both intrusions violate the sanctity
of the home. Instead, “the critical point is that any differences in the intrusiveness
10
This statement alludes to the oft-quoted excerpt from a 1763 speech by William Pitt:
The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the Crown. It
may be frail; its roof may shake; the wind may blow through it; the storm may
enter; the rain may enter; but the King of England cannot enter -- all his force
dares not cross the threshold of the ruined tenement!
Miller v. United States, 357 U.S. 301, 307 (1958).
17
of entries to search and entries to arrest are merely ones of degree rather than kind.
The two intrusions share this fundamental characteristic: the breach of the entrance
to an individual’s home.” Payton, 445 U.S. at 589 (emphases added); see also
Minnesota v. Olson, 495 U.S. 91, 95 (1990) (“The purpose of the [Payton] decision
was not to protect the person of the suspect but to protect his home from
entry . . . .”).11
The Supreme Court proceeded to define the scope of the Fourth
Amendment’s protection of the home in very explicit terms:
The Fourth Amendment protects the individual’s privacy in a variety
of settings. In none is the zone of privacy more clearly defined than
when bounded by the unambiguous physical dimensions of an
individual’s home -- a zone that finds its roots in clear and specific
constitutional terms: “The right of the people to be secure in their . . .
houses . . . shall not be violated.” That language unequivocally
establishes the proposition that “[at] the very core [of the Fourth
Amendment] stands the right of a man to retreat into his own home
and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion.”
Silverman v. United States, 365 U.S. 505, 511. In terms that apply
11
As the Court explained in Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27 (2001),
The Fourth Amendment’s protection of the home has never been tied to
measurement of the quality or quantity of information obtained. . . . [F]or
example, we [have] made clear that any physical invasion of the structure of the
home, “by even a fraction of an inch,” was too much, and there is certainly no
exception to the warrant requirement for the officer who barely cracks open the
front door and sees nothing but the nonintimate rug on the vestibule floor. In the
home, our cases show, all details are intimate details, because the entire area is
held safe from prying government eyes.
Id. at 37 (emphases added, citations and quotations omitted).
18
equally to seizures of property and to seizures of persons, the Fourth
Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the house. Absent
exigent circumstances, that threshold may not reasonably be crossed
without a warrant.
Payton, 445 U.S. at 589–90 (emphases added, alterations in original).
Warrantless entry into the home is therefore unreasonable, subject only to a
few “jealously and carefully drawn” exceptions. Randolph, 126 S. Ct. at 1520
(quoting Jones v. United States, 357 U.S. 493, 499 (1958)). Consent provides one
exception to the warrant requirement. See Illinois v. Rodriguez, 497 U.S. 177, 181
(1990); United States v. Edmondson, 791 F.2d 1512, 1515 (11th Cir. 1986). A
second exception to the warrant requirement is made for “exigent circumstances,”
or situations in which “the inevitable delay incident to obtaining a warrant must
give way to an urgent need for immediate action.” United States v. Burgos, 720
F.2d 1520, 1526 (11th Cir. 1983). Thus, for example, the courts have upheld
exigent circumstances entries to break up a violent fight, Brigham City v. Stuart,
126 S. Ct. 1943, 1949 (2006), to prevent the destruction of evidence, United States
v. Mikell, 102 F.3d 470, 476 (11th Cir. 1996), to put out a fire in a burning
building, Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U.S. 499, 509 (1978), to pursue a fleeing suspect,
United States v. Santana, 427 U.S. 38, 42–43 (1976), to rescue a kidnapped infant,
United States v. Laboy, 909 F.2d 581, 586 (1st Cir. 1990), and to attend to a
stabbing victim, United States v. Gillenwaters, 890 F.2d 679, 682 (4th Cir. 1989).
19
Under either consent or exigent circumstances, an officer who conducts a
warrantless search or seizure inside the home bears the burden of proving that his
conduct was justified. See Sammons v. Taylor, 967 F.2d 1533, 1543 (11th Cir.
1992).
McClish’s arrest involved neither consent nor exigent circumstances. The
record does not reveal that McClish consented, and we have held that “whatever
relevance the implied consent doctrine may have in other contexts, it is
inappropriate to sanction entry into the home based upon inferred consent.” United
States v. Gonzalez, 71 F.3d 819, 830 (11th Cir. 1996) (emphasis added, alteration
and quotation marks omitted); cf. Edmondson, 791 F.2d at 1515. This is not to say,
of course, that a suspect may not surrender to the police -- “there is nothing in
Payton that prohibits a person from surrendering to police at his doorway.” United
States v. Berkowitz, 927 F.2d 1376, 1386 (7th Cir. 1991). The problem in this case
is that McClish did not surrender to the police, nor did he have the opportunity to
do so. Rather, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to McClish, he was
pulled from within his home, without warning, as soon as the door was opened.
Neither were exigent circumstances present, as conceded and amply
demonstrated by the fact that many hours passed between the initial contact and the
arrest. Instead, this case presents a different question: whether Deputy Terry
20
violated McClish’s Fourth Amendment rights by reaching through McClish’s open
doorway to effect the arrest when McClish was standing near the doorway but fully
within the confines of his home.
For purposes of this analysis, we are obliged to review the facts in the light
most favorable to McClish, and therefore credit his claim that he stood firmly
within his home but within reach of the open doorway at the time of the arrest. As
McClish explained in his affidavit:
[S]hortly before midnight I heard a loud knock on the door. I opened
the door. Deputy Terry and Deputy Calderon were on the porch.
Deputy Terry grabbed my arm, pulled me out on the porch, threw me
down over a table and handcuffed me. Prior to being pulled out onto
the porch, I was totally inside my house.
McClish Aff. ¶ 8 (emphasis added). Holmberg, who was standing in the living
room of the trailer, testified that he saw “Officer Terry yank[] Mr. McClish from
the front door.” Holmberg Depo. 62. Holmberg specifically said that, immediately
prior to the arrest, McClish was standing “inside the door of the house, the front
door of the house.” When asked whether “both feet [were] inside the house,”
Holmberg responded, “Yes.” Id.
In Payton, the Supreme Court drew a “firm line” at the threshold of the
home, explicitly observing that this “threshold may not reasonably be crossed
without a warrant.” Payton, 445 U.S. at 590. The Court could not have more
21
clearly defined the breadth of the Fourth Amendment’s protection against
warrantless in-home arrests -- it created a firm line delimiting a zone of privacy
defined by “the unambiguous physical dimensions of an individual’s home.” Id. at
589. Although Deputy Terry may have only briefly intruded into the home,
McClish’s location at the time of the arrest -- firmly standing within his living
room, completely behind the threshold -- means that Deputy Terry crossed
Payton’s firm line. The Fourth Amendment, as interpreted by Payton and its
progeny, does not permit an officer to cross this constitutional line and forcibly
remove a citizen from his home absent an exigency or consent.12
While the plain language of the Payton decision itself virtually compels this
12
Application of this rule does not, as the special concurrence suggests, amount to a
return to some outmoded, pre-Katz Fourth Amendment analysis based on property law and
trespass. Physical boundaries still have relevance to Fourth Amendment analysis, as the Supreme
Court has repeatedly said. See Soldal v. Cook County, 506 U.S. 56, 64 (1992) (rejecting the
proposition that “the Fourth Amendment is only marginally concerned with property rights”);
Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170, 183 (1984) (“The common law may guide consideration
of what areas are protected by the Fourth Amendment by defining areas whose invasion by
others is wrongful.”); Rakas v. Illinois, 439 U.S. 128, 143 n.12 (1978) (“[B]y focusing on
legitimate expectations of privacy in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, the Court has not
altogether abandoned use of property concepts in determining the presence or absence of the
privacy interests protected by that Amendment.”); Alderman v. United States, 394 U.S. 165, 180
(1969) (“Nor do we believe that Katz . . . was intended to withdraw any of the protection which
the Amendment extends to the home . . . .”). The Fourth Amendment focuses on whether society
is prepared to recognize an expectation of privacy as reasonable. Because property law helps
define our social expectations, it should not come as a surprise that property law boundaries may
coincide with those boundaries delimiting physical spaces that society is prepared to respect. See
Georgia v. Randolph, 126 S. Ct. 1515, 1521 (2006) (referring to “the great significance given to
widely shared social expectations, which are naturally enough influenced by the law of
property”); Rakas, 439 U.S. at 143 n.12.
22
conclusion, the Supreme Court has re-inked Payton’s firm line on numerous
subsequent occasions. See, e.g., Kirk v. Louisiana, 536 U.S. 635, 636 (2002) (per
curiam) (“[T]he ‘firm line at the entrance to the house . . . may not reasonably be
crossed without a warrant.’” (quoting Payton, 445 U.S. at 590)); New York v.
Harris, 495 U.S. 14, 18 (1990) (“Payton nevertheless drew a line at the entrance to
the home. This special solicitude was necessary because physical entry of the home
is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.”
(quotation marks omitted)); Steagald v. United States, 451 U.S. 204, 212 (1981)
(“[T]he Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the house.
Absent exigent circumstances, that threshold may not reasonably be crossed
without a warrant.” (quotation marks omitted)).
And were these reiterations of Payton’s “firm line” language insufficient, the
Court has said that Payton set forth a bright-line rule. As Justice Scalia, writing for
the majority in Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27 (2001), observed:
We have said that the Fourth Amendment draws a “firm line at the
entrance to the house,” Payton, 445 U.S. at 590. That line, we think,
must be not only firm, but also bright . . . .”
Id. at 40 (emphasis added); see also id. (“[W]e [have] made clear that any physical
invasion of the structure of the home, ‘by even a fraction of an inch’ [is] too
much.” (emphases added) (quoting Silverman v. United States, 365 U.S. 505, 511
23
(1961))). In short, while the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness jurisprudence is
often inconsistent with the pronouncement of bright-line rules, Ohio v. Robinette,
519 U.S. 33, 39 (1996), we have little doubt that Payton created one.
Our cases have similarly emphasized Payton’s “firm line” and “threshold”
language. In Knight v. Jacobson, 300 F.3d 1272 (11th Cir. 2002), for example, an
officer asked the suspect to step outside his apartment and then arrested him. In
holding that the arrest did not violate the Fourth Amendment, we applied Payton’s
firm line approach in literal and physical terms, not as some literary or
metaphorical device. Writing for the panel, Judge Carnes observed:
The rule of Payton is that there is “a firm line at the entrance to the
house,” and absent exigent circumstances “that threshold may not
reasonably be crossed without a warrant.” Officer Jacobson never
crossed that threshold or went over the line at the entrance to the
house. . . . Payton keeps the officer’s body outside the threshold, not
his voice. It does not prevent a law enforcement officer from telling a
suspect to step outside his home and then arresting him without a
warrant. In that situation, the officer never crosses “the firm line at the
entrance to the house” which is where Payton drew the line.
Id. at 1277 (citation omitted); see also Bashir v. Rockdale County, 445 F.3d 1323,
1327–28 (11th Cir. 2006) (quoting Payton’s “firm line” and “threshold” language)
United States v. Santa, 236 F.3d 662, 675 (11th Cir. 2000) (same); United States v.
Parr, 716 F.2d 796, 814 (11th Cir. 1983) (same). Indeed, we do not see how the
language of Payton itself -- which defines the “zone of privacy” in concrete and
24
physical terms “bounded by the unambiguous physical dimensions of an
individual’s home” and attaching “firm[ly]” “at the entrance to the house,” 445
U.S. at 589–90 -- can be read just as some rhetorical or linguistic flourish.
Appellees suggest, however, that the arrest was nonetheless justified under
United States v. Santana, 427 U.S. 38 (1976), and that Santana, not Payton,
controls. Although the issue is fairly debatable, we remain unpersuaded. To begin
with, Santana, decided four years before Payton, is most often cited as a hot pursuit
case. See, e.g., Brigham City v. Stuart, 126 S. Ct. 1943, 1947 (2006); Welsh v.
Wisconsin, 466 U.S. 740, 750 (1984); Steagald, 451 U.S. at 221; Bashir, 445 F.3d
at 1329–30; United States v. Ramos, 933 F.2d 968, 972 (11th Cir. 1991) (per
curiam); United States v. Satterfield, 743 F.2d 827, 843 (11th Cir. 1984). But see
Illinois v. McArthur, 531 U.S. 326, 335 (2001); United States v. Goddard, 312
F.3d 1360, 1363 (11th Cir. 2002).
In Santana, the Philadelphia police sought to arrest “Mom” Santana
following an undercover narcotics purchase conducted at Santana’s residence. As
the police drove up to the house, “[t]hey saw Santana standing in the doorway of
the house with a brown paper bag in her hand.” Santana, 427 U.S. at 40 (footnote
omitted). The Court characterized Santana’s position as “standing directly in the
doorway -- one step forward would have put her outside, one step backward would
25
have put her in the vestibule of her residence.” Id. at 40 n.1. The police drove to
within 15 feet of where Santana was standing and got out of their van, shouting
“police.” As the officers approached the door, Santana retreated into the house.
The officers chased her through the open door, causing packages of heroin to spill
out of the paper bag she had been holding when they caught and arrested her in the
vestibule. Id. at 40. She was not arrested in the doorway, but rather in the interior
of the home.
The Court upheld the warrantless arrest of Santana in the vestibule of her
home in a two-part holding. The first part concerned Santana’s expectation of
privacy under the Fourth Amendment, and the second addressed the permissibility
of the subsequent police entry into the home. Justice Rehnquist, writing for the
majority, put it this way regarding Santana’s expectation of privacy:
In United States v. Watson, 423 U.S. 411 (1976), we held that
the warrantless arrest of an individual in a public place upon probable
cause did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Thus the first question
we must decide is whether, when the police first sought to arrest
Santana, she was in a public place.
While it may be true that under the common law of property the
threshold of one’s dwelling is “private,” as is the yard surrounding the
house, it is nonetheless clear that under the cases interpreting the
Fourth Amendment Santana was in a “public” place. She was not in
an area where she had any expectation of privacy. “What a person
knowingly exposes to the public, even in his own house or office, is
not a subject of Fourth Amendment protection.” Katz v. United States,
389 U.S. 347, 351 (1967). She was not merely visible to the public but
26
was as exposed to public view, speech, hearing, and touch as if she
had been standing completely outside her house. Hester v. United
States, 265 U.S. 57, 59 (1924). Thus, when the police, who
concededly had probable cause to do so, sought to arrest her, they
merely intended to perform a function which we have approved in
Watson.
Id. at 42. As for the portion of Santana regarding the permissibility of the
subsequent police entry into Santana’s home, the Court stated:
The only remaining question is whether her act of retreating
into her house could thwart an otherwise proper arrest. We hold that it
could not. In Warden v. Hayden, 387 U.S. 294 (1967), we recognized
the right of police, who had probable cause to believe that an armed
robber had entered a house a few minutes before, to make a
warrantless entry to arrest the robber and to search for weapons. . . .
The fact that the pursuit here ended almost as soon as it began did not
render it any the less a “hot pursuit” sufficient to justify the
warrantless entry into Santana’s house. Once Santana saw the police,
there was likewise a realistic expectation that any delay would result
in destruction of evidence.
Id. at 42–43.
Santana is both factually and legally distinguishable from the instant case.
As a factual matter, McClish was not “as exposed to public view, speech, hearing,
and touch as if []he had been standing completely outside [his] house.” Santana’s
“home” (actually a drug house) was on a public street in a major city in broad
daylight; the police drove to within fifteen feet of her front door. Id. at 40.
Moreover, Santana was not clearly inside her home. When the police pulled up to
the house, one officer testified, as summarized by the Court, that Santana was
27
standing “directly in the doorway -- one step forward would have put her outside,
one step backward would have put her in the vestibule of her residence.” Id. at 40
n.1. Notably, McClish, unlike Santana, did not have to take one step backwards in
order to be firmly planted inside his home, a trailer without all of the amenities of a
larger house, such as a definable chamber between the outer door and the interior
of the dwelling. See also United States v. Quaempts, 411 F.3d 1046, 1048 (9th Cir.
2005) (holding that a man who lived in a small trailer and opened his door to
police while remaining in bed did not abandon his expectation of privacy and
noting that “[t]o extend the holding of [a Ninth Circuit case following Santana]
beyond the threshold into the interior of the home would do violence to the
principles laid down in Payton that established a zone of privacy inside the
physical dimensions of one’s home”).
Santana, unlike McClish, was already standing “directly in the doorway”
when the police arrived to arrest her, not as a result of the police knocking on her
door. See Duncan v. Storie, 869 F.2d 1100, 1102 n.5 (8th Cir. 1989) (“In Santana .
. . the suspect was not summoned to the door. In fact, she was already standing in
the open doorway of her home when the police arrived and identified
themselves.”); see also United States v. Reed, 572 F.2d 412, 422–23 (2d Cir. 1978)
(holding that a woman arrested when she opened her door to police was not in the
28
same position as Santana but rather inside her home, in a place protected by the
Fourth Amendment). Moreover, Santana was using her home for the commercial
purpose of narcotics sales. See Minnesota v. Carter, 525 U.S. 83, 90–91 (1998)
(according significance to the fact that a residence had been used for drug sales and
noting that property used for commercial purposes is treated differently under the
Fourth Amendment). Finally, and notably, Santana retreated into her home while
holding a brown paper bag that turned out to be filled with drugs, and she held $70
in marked bills given her just minutes before during a controlled drug transaction
with a police informant -- both facts the Court found significant. See Santana, 427
U.S. at 43 (“Once Santana saw the police, there was likewise a realistic expectation
that any delay would result in destruction of evidence.”); see also id. at 44
(Stevens, J., concurring) (“The decision [to enter] was justified by the significant
risk that the marked money would no longer be in Santana’s possession if the
police waited until a warrant could be obtained.”).
Here, McClish was standing firmly inside the living room of his home -- a
trailer located in a rural area, down a dirt road and behind an electric gate. McClish
and Holmberg receive few, if any, visits from members of the public,13 and we feel
13
Consider the following exchange from McClish’s deposition:
Q: When somebody comes to visit you, --
A: That does not happen.
29
quite safe in concluding that few members of the public would borrow a gate
opener from a neighbor, drive down the dirt road past the “no trespassing” signs,
and enter the screened porch attached to the home -- all after 11:30 at night.
Applying the Santana analysis, McClish was not in a public place. In sharp contrast
to the marked bills and drugs found in Santana, there were no exigent
circumstances here -- no retreat; no hot pursuit; no concerns with spoilation of
evidence, because the alleged crime was not of the type generally involving
physical evidence or contraband; and no hint of any threat to officer safety from an
unarmed, 75-year old man opening the door in his bathrobe at 11:30 p.m. Indeed,
the operative facts of this case established that the police had an extended period of
time within which to obtain a warrant from a neutral and detached magistrate.
Santana also differs from the present case as a matter of law. In the first
place, Santana did not resolve whether entry into the home for purposes of an
arrest was permissible without a warrant in the absence of an exigency such as hot
pursuit. In fact, Payton expressly referenced Santana in a list of cases noting that
the question had not been decided. See Payton, 445 U.S. at 574–575 & n.1 (“The
Q: - - do they knock on the front door?
A: That does not happen, sir.
Q: Okay. But if they were to come, they would knock on the front door to tell
you that they’re there?
A: I assume.
McClish Depo. 98.
30
important constitutional question presented by this challenge has been expressly
left open in a number of our prior opinions.”).14 Second, the police entry into and
arrest of Santana within the vestibule of her home, an area the Court recognized as
a private place,15 was permitted on hot pursuit grounds -- not on the basis that she
had no expectation of privacy in the vestibule. Santana, 427 U.S. at 43; see also
Duncan, 869 F.2d at 1102 n.5 (“It was, however, the existence of exigent
circumstances [in Santana] -- a true hot pursuit -- that permitted the officers to
pursue the suspect inside her house.” (quotation marks omitted)).
Moreover, to the extent that Santana is read as allowing physical entry past
Payton’s firm line, bounded by the “unambiguous physical dimensions of the
14
Before Payton, the Court had previously intimated that warrantless in-home arrests
were unconstitutional, but it had purposely and explicitly reserved the question in a series of
cases dating back more than two decades. See. e.g., United States v. Watson, 423 U.S. 411, 418
n.6 (1976) (noting that Watson’s midday public arrest did not present the “still unsettled
question . . . whether and under what circumstances an officer may enter a suspect’s home to
make a warrantless arrest” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Santana, 427 U.S. at 45
(Marshall, J., dissenting) (“The Court declines today to settle the oft-reserved question of
whether and under what circumstances a police officer may enter the home of a suspect in order
to make a warrantless arrest.”); Gerstein v. Pugh, 420 U.S. 103, 113 n.13 (1975) (“The issue of
warrantless arrest that has generated the most controversy, and that remains unsettled, is whether
and under what circumstances an officer may enter a suspect’s home to make a warrantless
arrest.”); see also Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 480 (1971); Jones v. United States,
357 U.S. 493, 499–500 (1958).
15
In Santana, the officer followed Santana “through the open door, catching her in the
vestibule.” 427 U.S. at 40 (emphasis added). The Court’s holding clearly acknowledged that this
“vestibule” -- a “passage, hall, or chamber between the outer door and the interior of a building:
a porch or entrance into a house,” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2547 (2002) --
was a private place. See Santana, 427 U.S. at 43 (“We thus conclude that a suspect may not
defeat an arrest which has been set in motion in a public place . . . by the expedient of escaping
to a private place.” (emphasis added)).
31
home,” without a warrant or an exigency, this interpretation is inconsistent with
Payton, the Court’s subsequent cases, and our own binding precedent. See Kyllo v.
United States, 533 U.S. 27, 40 (2001); Payton, 445 U.S. at 590; Bashir v. Rockdale
County, 445 F.3d 1323, 1330 (11th Cir. 2006); Knight v. Jacobson, 300 F.3d 1272,
1277–78 (11th Cir. 2002); United States v. Santa, 236 F.3d 662, 675 (11th Cir.
2000); United States v. Parr, 716 F.2d 796, 814 (11th Cir. 1983); see also Loria v.
Gorman, 306 F.3d 1271, 1284 (2d Cir. 2002) (“No invasion of the sanctity of the
home can be dismissed as de minimis.”); id. at 1286 (“Payton did not draw the line
one or two feet into the home; it drew the line at the home’s entrance.”); United
States v. Berkowitz, 927 F.2d, 1376, 1388 (7th Cir. 1991) (same).16
This reading of Santana is also incorrect because, as the Seventh Circuit
observed, it “equate[s] knowledge (what the officer obtains from the plain view)
with a right to enter, and by doing so permit[s] the rule of Payton to be evaded.”
16
We are aware that other courts grappling with the apparent tension between Santana
and Payton have followed Santana’s reasoning to the conclusion that a person opening the door
in response to a knock from police has no reasonable expectation of privacy. See, e.g.,
McKinnon v. Carr, 103 F.3d 934, 935 (10th Cir. 1996) (per curiam); United States v. Vaneaton,
49 F.3d 1423, 1426 (9th Cir. 1995); United States v. Carrion, 809 F.2d 1120, 1128–29 & n.9 (5th
Cir. 1987). However, few, if any, of the cases cited by Appellees involved a situation where
police physically entered the home before the arrest. In Vaneaton, for example, the Ninth Circuit
specifically noted that the police “did not enter the house until they formally placed Vaneaton
under arrest.” 49 F.3d at 1427. In McKinnon, “[t]he officers did not inappropriately enter
McKinnon’s home.” 103 F.3d at 936. Finally, in Carrion, “the arrest was effected before the
agents entered [the suspect’s] hotel room.” 809 F.2d at 1128. Here, by contrast, Deputy Terry
reached across the threshold of the home and grabbed McClish without warning.
32
Hadley v. Williams, 368 F.3d 747, 750 (7th Cir. 2004). It is surely true that an
individual who opens the door to his home may provide an officer with a basis for
finding probable cause. See United States v. Tobin, 923 F.2d 1506, 1512 (11th Cir.
1991) (en banc) (holding that, when officers suspicious of drug activity approached
a house, knocked, and the door was opened, “[t]here is no doubt that the agent’s
suspicions rose to the level of probable cause when, as the door stood open, he
detected what he knew from his law enforcement experience to be the odor of
marijuana”). And, as in Tobin, the opening of the door may also give rise to
exigent circumstances. See id. at 1511–12 (holding that an exigency was created
when the officer at the opened door smelled marijuana and the suspect would have
been aware of the officer’s suspicions); see also United States v. Poe, 462 F.3d
997, 1001 (8th Cir. 2006) (finding that the seizure of a firearm exposed in plain
view after the suspect opened the door was justified by the exigent circumstance of
officer safety). Again, in this case, notwithstanding the suggestion found in the
special concurring opinion, post at 64-66, there is not the slightest indication that
the officers perceived that the 75-year-old McClish, dressed only in a bathrobe,
posed any threat to the officer’s safety.
Thus, although an individual who opens the door may provide an officer
with more information than a person who chooses to remain behind a closed
33
door -- and, therefore, may well provide an officer with a basis for finding
probable cause or an exigency -- this is quite distinct from creating, all in itself, a
right of entry to seize a person from his home without a warrant. McClish did not
completely surrender or forfeit every reasonable expectation of privacy when he
opened the door, including, most notably, the right to be secure within his home
from a warrantless arrest. See Hadley, 368 F.3d at 750 (“The fact that a person
answers a knock at the door doesn’t mean he agrees to let the person who knocked
enter.”); Berkowitz, 927 F.2d at 1387 (“Answering a knock at the door is not an
invitation to come in the house.”); United States v. McCraw, 920 F.2d 224, 228
(4th Cir. 1990) (“We hold that a person does not surrender his expectation of
privacy nor consent to the officers’ entry by [opening the door], and that his arrest
inside his room under such circumstances is contrary to the fourth amendment and
. . . Payton.”); Duncan v. Storie, 869 F.2d 1100, 1103 (8th Cir. 1989); cf. Horton v.
California, 496 U.S. 128, 137 & n.7 (1990). Simply put, the fact that an officer
may view a subject in the interior of a home through an open door does not alter
the basic rule that a warrantless entry into the home to effect an arrest is prohibited
absent consent or exigent circumstances. Payton itself could not have made this
point any clearer in the case of Riddick, who was seen in bed by the police who
peered inside when Riddick’s son voluntarily opened the door. Payton v. New
34
York, 445 U.S. 573, 579 (1980).
In sum, Payton, decided four years after Santana, set forth a bright-line rule:
warrantless intrusions beyond the “zone of privacy” delimited by the threshold are
presumptively unreasonable. Because Deputy Terry crossed Payton’s firm line and
physically hauled McClish out of his home, the arrest was unlawful. The fact that
McClish opened the door does not vitiate the warrant requirement when, as here,
McClish remained entirely within the home. McClish neither consented to the
arrest (indeed, by his account, he was not given the opportunity to consent), nor
were there exigent circumstances involved. In the absence of a warrant, McClish’s
arrest was, therefore, presumptively unreasonable and in violation of his Fourth
Amendment right to be secure in his home.
B.
Having determined that Terry violated McClish’s Fourth Amendment rights
during the warrantless arrest, however, we must still answer whether the violation
was so clearly established that Terry should be stripped of the qualified immunity
customarily granted law enforcement officers engaged in the discretionary
performance of their official duties. The critical inquiry is whether the law
provided Deputy Terry with “fair warning” that his conduct violated the Fourth
35
Amendment. Hope v. Pelzer, 536 U.S. 730, 741 (2002). We think the answer is
no -- the law did not provide the deputy with fair notice when the arrest occurred.
Although exact factual identity with a previously decided case is not
required, the conduct must have been clearly unlawful in light of pre-existing law.
See Vinyard v. Wilson, 311 F.3d 1340, 1350 (11th Cir. 2002) (“[T]he salient
question . . . is whether the state of the law . . . gave [the officers] fair warning that
their alleged treatment of [the plaintiff] was unconstitutional.” (quoting Hope, 536
U.S. at 741 (first alteration added)); see also Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 205
(2001) (noting that a motivating concern of this immunity inquiry is to
“acknowledge that reasonable mistakes can be made as to the legal constraints on
particular police conduct”). As the Supreme Court recently held, qualified
immunity “shields an officer from suit when she makes a decision that, even if
constitutionally deficient, reasonably misapprehends the law governing the
circumstances she confronted.” Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194, 198 (2004).
Were it not for United States v. Santana, 427 U.S. 38 (1976), this might have
been a different case. See United States v. Newbern, 731 F.2d 744, 748 (11th Cir.
1984) (“The law is clear that law enforcement officers are prohibited from making
a warrantless and nonconsensual entry into a suspect’s home in order to make a
felony arrest.”); see also Bashir v. Rockdale County, 445 F.3d 1323, 1331 (11th
36
Cir. 2006) (holding, with regard to an arrest effected ten days before McClish’s
arrest, that Payton “sets forth the law with obvious clarity” (quotation marks
omitted)). In light of Santana, however, and since McClish was standing within
arm’s reach of an officer at the front door, we cannot say that the illegality of
McClish’s arrest was clearly established at the time of the arrest.
No Supreme Court, Eleventh Circuit, or Supreme Court of Florida cases
have resolved the question whether Payton or Santana applies to the arrest of a
person who, while standing firmly inside the house, opens the door in response to a
knock from the police and is then pulled outside the unambiguous physical
dimensions of the home.17 However, the law of other circuits might have permitted
17
Only the Supreme Court of Florida has provided any substantive discussion of the
relation between the two cases. In Byrd v. Florida, 481 So. 2d 468 (Fla. 1985), the court began
by noting the difficulty of deciding whether Payton applied to the warrantless arrest of a person
standing “at or just within” a residence:
There is no question that if appellant had been asked to step outside and had
complied, the warrantless arrest outside the room would have been proper and
Payton would not apply. A significant question arises, however, when a
warrantless arrest occurs at or just within the threshold of a residence.
Id. at 472. The court proceeded to decide the case on the ground that the police entry was
consented to by the arrestee, holding that the suspect “consented to the law enforcement officers’
entry into the threshold area by voluntarily opening the door, stepping back, and standing in the
threshold after knowing who was present.” Id. As Appellants argue, Byrd is undeniably a
consent case. However, it is worth observing that the Supreme Court of Florida did go on to
discuss cases involving nonconsensual arrests made under circumstances similar to McClish’s
arrest:
There is also a line of cases which have held, in situations analogous to that
presented here, that an arrest at or in the threshold of a residence does not involve
an entry and, therefore, does not implicate Payton considerations. These cases
37
an arrest under facts similar to those presented here. See, e.g., United States v.
Vaneaton, 49 F.3d 1423, 1426–27 (9th Cir. 1995); United States v. Carrion, 809
F.2d 1120, 1127–28 (5th Cir. 1987). These decisions from other circuits are not, of
course, determinative of whether existing law in this Circuit was clearly
established. Instead, they are simply further support for our conclusion: that in
light of the apparent tension between Santana and Payton, we have no basis upon
which to conclude that a reasonable law enforcement officer fairly would have
known that the arrest alleged by McClish, within the house yet within reach of an
officer standing outside, was unlawful. In short, “[i]f judges thus disagree on a
constitutional question, it is unfair to subject police to money damages for picking
the losing side of the controversy.” Wilson v. Layne, 526 U.S. 603, 618 (1999).
While we believe that the better answer to the first question is that Deputy
Terry’s conduct was a violation of the Fourth Amendment, we are constrained to
conclude that the unlawfulness of his conduct was not so clearly established as to
justify stripping him of qualified immunity. Although we conclude that Payton set
forth a bright line rule, Appellants have failed to meet their burden of
have characterized the threshold area as a public place wherein a warrant is not
required to effectuate a valid arrest.
Id. (citing United States v. Santana, 427 U.S. 38 (1976); United States v. Mason, 661 F.2d 45
(5th Cir. Nov. 1981); United States v. Botero, 589 F.2d 430 (9th Cir. 1978); and a number of
non-Florida state supreme court cases).
38
demonstrating that the law was clearly established in 2001 because they have failed
to demonstrate, in light of Santana, that a reasonable officer would have clearly
known that McClish’s arrest was unlawful. If the role of the “clearly established”
prong of the qualified immunity inquiry is to “acknowledge that reasonable
mistakes can be made as to the legal constraints on particular police conduct,”
Saucier, 533 U.S. at 205, the apparent tension between Santana and Payton
requires such an honest acknowledgment here.
III.
In addition to McClish’s § 1983 claim, his roommate Edmund Holmberg
brought an independent § 1983 civil rights claim against Deputies Calderone and
Terry alleging, among other things, arrest without probable cause and the knowing
use of false testimony in the preparation of the arrest affidavit. Holmberg claims
that the district court erred in finding that his § 1983 claim was barred under Heck
v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477 (1994), because of his participation in Florida’s
pretrial intervention (PTI) program. As explained more fully below, we agree that
Heck is inapplicable here and accordingly reverse the final order of summary
judgment and remand Holmberg’s § 1983 claim for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
39
Heck involved the question whether a state prisoner could challenge the
constitutionality of his criminal conviction in a civil suit for damages under
§ 1983. Id. at 478. The Court held that Heck’s claim was not cognizable under
§ 1983 because of the conflict between his civil suit and his criminal conviction:
We hold that, in order to recover damages for allegedly
unconstitutional conviction or imprisonment, or for other harm caused
by actions whose unlawfulness would render a conviction or sentence
invalid, a § 1983 plaintiff must prove that the conviction or sentence
has been reversed on direct appeal, expunged by executive order,
declared invalid by a state tribunal authorized to make such
determination, or called into question by a federal court’s issuance of
a writ of habeas corpus. A claim for damages bearing that relationship
to a conviction or sentence that has not been so invalidated is not
cognizable under § 1983.
Id. at 486–87 (footnote and citation omitted). This rule is designed, the Court
observed, to avoid the problem inherent in two potentially conflicting resolutions
arising out of the same set of events by foreclosing collateral attacks on
convictions through the vehicle of a § 1983 suit. Id. at 484–86.
Heck articulated two different categories of cases where conflicts might
arise. The primary category of cases barred by Heck involved suits seeking
damages for allegedly unconstitutional conviction or imprisonment. However, the
Court also noted that a second category of cases -- suits to recover damages “for
other harm caused by actions whose unlawfulness would render a conviction or
sentence invalid” -- raised similar conflicts. Id. at 486 & n.6; see also Edwards v.
40
Balisok, 520 U.S. 641, 645–46 (1997) (characterizing the first category as
involving challenges to the judgment and the second as involving challenges to
procedures that, if successful, would necessarily imply the invalidity of the
judgment). In a footnote in Heck, the Court gave an example of a case precluded
under the second category: an individual who is convicted and sentenced for the
crime of resisting arrest and subsequently brings a § 1983 claim alleging that the
officer violated the Fourth Amendment during her arrest. Id. at 486 n.6. Although
this individual would not be directly seeking damages for her conviction, as in the
first category, her conviction and her § 1983 claim would share a common
element -- both require a determination of the lawfulness of her arrest.18 More
important, to succeed on her § 1983 claim, she would have to show that her arrest
was unlawful, a showing in conflict with a criminal conviction that necessarily
came to the opposite conclusion on the same issue. To avoid this conflict, the Court
held that “a § 1983 action that does not seek damages directly attributable to
conviction or confinement but whose successful prosecution would necessarily
imply that the plaintiff’s criminal conviction was wrongful” is also not cognizable.
Id. at 486 n.6.
18
Assuming, as the Court did, that the offense of resisting arrest is defined as
“intentionally preventing a peace officer from effecting a lawful arrest.” Heck, 512 U.S. at 486
n.6.
41
Holmberg’s § 1983 claim arose out of his arrest for allegedly interfering
with the ongoing arrest of McClish by Deputies Terry and Calderone. The deputies
arrested Holmberg for “resisting arrest without violence,” see Fla. Stat. § 843.02,
and the charge was eventually dismissed without prejudice pursuant to Florida’s
pretrial intervention program, see Fla. Stat. § 843.02. The district court determined
that Heck barred Holmberg from bringing a § 1983 claim because of his
participation in PTI. Although we have never determined that participation in PTI
barred a subsequent § 1983 claim, the district court cited to Second, Third, and
Fifth Circuit cases holding that a defendant’s participation in PTI barred
subsequent § 1983 claims. Dist. Ct. Order at 19–20 (citing Gilles v. Davis, 427
F.3d 197 (3d Cir. 2005); Taylor v. Gregg, 36 F.3d 453 (5th Cir. 1994); Roesch v.
Otarola, 980 F.2d 850 (2d Cir. 1992)). The district court then concluded that
“Holmberg’s participation in PTI, which resulted in a dismissal of the charge of
resisting arrest without violence, is not a termination in his favor, and therefore, he
is barred from bringing a § 1983 claim for false arrest.” We disagree.
Heck is inapposite. The issue is not, as the district court saw it, whether
Holmberg’s participation in PTI amounted to a favorable termination on the merits.
Instead, the question is an antecedent one -- whether Heck applies at all since
Holmberg was never convicted of any crime. The primary category of cases barred
42
by Heck -- suits seeking damages for an allegedly unconstitutional conviction or
imprisonment -- is plainly inapplicable. Instead, the district court based its Heck
ruling on the second, indirect category of cases barred by Heck: suits to recover
damages “for other harm caused by actions whose unlawfulness would render a
conviction or sentence invalid.” Heck, 512 U.S. at 486; see Dist. Ct. Order at 18.
The problem with using this second Heck category to bar Holmberg’s § 1983 suit
is definitional -- to prevail in his § 1983 suit, Holmberg would not have to “negate
an element of the offense of which he has been convicted,” because he was never
convicted of any offense. See Heck, 512 U.S. at 487 n.6; see also Wallace v. Kato,
127 S. Ct. 1091, 1097–98 (2007) (observing, in a different context, that Heck only
comes into play when there has been an “outstanding criminal judgment” or
“extant conviction,” and that Heck was not raised when “there was in existence no
criminal conviction that the cause of action would impugn”).
The district court may have been correct that dismissal of the charge against
Holmberg pursuant to PTI was not a favorable termination on the merits, but
neither was it a conviction or sentence. Holmberg’s § 1983 suit does not represent
the sort of collateral attack foreclosed by Heck for the straightforward reason that it
is not collateral to anything -- the § 1983/habeas conflict addressed in Heck is
43
nonexistent when, as here, there was never a conviction in the first place.19 In short,
to dismiss this § 1983 claim as barred by Heck because of a potential conflict that
we know now with certainty will never materialize would stretch Heck beyond the
limits of its reasoning. Cf. Wallace, 127 S. Ct. at 1098 (explaining that Heck does
not bar “an action which would impugn an anticipated future conviction” and
characterizing this theory as a “bizarre extension of Heck”). During oral argument,
however, we asked whether probable cause to arrest Holmberg would, in any
event, vitiate Holmberg’s claims in whole or in part. See Kingsland v. City of
Miami, 382 F.3d 1220, 1226 (11th Cir. 2004). But inasmuch as this issue was not
addressed in the district court, we leave this too for the district court to examine on
19
Even if we were to assume that Heck somehow applies to this case, Holmberg correctly
cites to Abusaid v. Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners, 405 F.3d 1298 (11th
Cir. 2005), for the proposition that the Supreme Court has apparently receded from the idea that
Heck’s favorable-termination requirement also applies to non-incarcerated individuals. In
Abusaid, we addressed the Court’s holding in Spencer v. Kemna, 523 U.S. 1 (1998), and noted,
in dicta, that Spencer indicated that a majority of the Court had “expressed the view that § 1983
claims are barred only when the alternative remedy of habeas relief is available.” Abusaid, 405
F.3d at 1316 n.9 (citing the Spencer concurrence of Justice Souter, joined by Justices O’Connor,
Ginsburg, and Breyer, along with the dissent of Justice Stevens).
The logic of our reasoning in Abusaid, although dicta, is clear: If Heck only bars § 1983
claims when the alternative remedy of habeas corpus is available, then Heck has no application
to Holmberg’s claim. Holmberg was never in custody at all, and the remedy of habeas corpus is
not currently available to him. Even if the district court was correct in concluding that Florida
law would permit a prosecutor to later “resurrect” a charge dismissed pursuant to PTI, a matter
upon which we express no opinion, the statute of limitations for Holmberg’s alleged violation is
now long past. See Fla. Stat. § 843.02 (2006) (defining the offense of resisting an officer without
violence as a first-degree misdemeanor); Fla. Stat. § 775.15(2)(c) (providing for a two-year
statute of limitations for first-degree misdemeanors).
44
remand. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s determination that Holmberg’s
§ 1983 claim was barred under Heck v. Humphrey and remand this claim for
further proceedings.
After dismissing the federal claims, the district court also dismissed without
prejudice the state law claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3), which provides
that a district court “may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim
under subsection (a) if . . . the district court has dismissed all claims over which it
has original jurisdiction . . . .” Having reversed the district court’s grant of
summary judgment entered in favor of Terry and Calderone as to Holmberg’s
§ 1983 claim, however, we must also reverse this dismissal and remand the state
law claims for further proceedings.
IV.
In short, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for
Deputy Terry as to McClish’s § 1983 claim on qualified immunity grounds,
reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment for Deputies Terry and
Calderone on the grounds that Holmberg’s § 1983 claim was Heck-barred, reverse
the district court’s dismissal of Appellants’ state law claims, and remand for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
45
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED IN
PART.
46
ANDERSON, Circuit Judge, concurring specially:
I concur in the result and agree with the opinion of the majority insofar as it
determines that the Fourth Amendment right at issue was not clearly established,
and insofar as it determines that Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 114 S. Ct. 2364
(1994), does not bar Holmberg’s suit. However, I respectfully disagree with the
majority opinion insofar as it concludes that there has been a violation of
McClish’s Fourth Amendment rights.1 This is an issue with which courts have
struggled, and on which there is a split of authority.
In my judgment, the controlling case is United States v. Santana, 427 U.S.
38, 96 S. Ct. 2406 (1976). In Santana, police officers saw the suspect perched on
1
Because we hold that the law was not clearly established at the time of the relevant
conduct, it would not be necessary to address the constitutional issue in this case but for the
Supreme Court’s admonition in Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201, 121 S. Ct. 2151, 2156 (2001)
(“A court required to rule upon the qualified immunity issue must consider, then, this threshold
question: Taken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, do the facts alleged
show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right? This must be the initial inquiry.”).
Unfortunately, in this case, because the defendants prevailed on the clearly established prong,
the Saucier rule not only requires a constitutional holding that would be unnecessary otherwise;
it also operates to insulate from further appellate review an erroneous constitutional ruling that
will guide the conduct of police officers in three states. See Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194,
202, 125 S. Ct. 596, 601 (2004) (Breyer, J., joined by Scalia & Ginsburg, JJ., concurring). Also,
under the Saucier approach, a court is handicapped in addressing the constitutional issue because
at least one party often has little incentive to litigate the issue vigorously, especially when it is
apparent that the law is not clearly established, as in this case. Similarly, only the Supreme
Court’s mandate provides an incentive for busy federal judges to focus intently on the issue; they
lack the usual incentive that proper resolution of the matter will make a real difference to a real
party. For these reasons and others, twenty-eight states and Puerto Rico have recently urged the
Supreme Court in an amicus brief to reconsider its mandatory Saucier approach to qualified
immunity. See Brief for 28 States and Puerto Rico as Amici Curiae in Support of Petitioner,
Scott v. Harris, No. 05-1631 (Supreme Court, December 2006).
47
the threshold of her doorway, where “one step forward would have put her outside,
one step backward would have put her in the vestibule of her residence.” Id. at 40
n.1, 96 S. Ct. at 2408 n.1. The Court, on its way to a hot pursuit holding, held that
it would have been legal for the officers to arrest Santana in her initial position,
even though they only had probable cause and had not obtained a warrant. The
Court concluded that Santana was in a public place, which meant that no warrant
would have been required, pursuant to United States v. Watson, 423 U.S. 411, 96
S. Ct. 820 (1976). The Court reasoned:
While it may be true that under the common law of property the
threshold of one’s dwelling is “private,” as is the yard surrounding the
house, it is nonetheless clear that under the cases interpreting the
Fourth Amendment Santana was in a “public” place. She was not in
an area where she had any expectation of privacy. “What a person
knowingly exposes to the public, even in his own house or office, is
not a subject of Fourth Amendment protection.” Katz v. United
States, 389 U.S. 347, 351, 88 S. Ct. 507, 511 (1967). She was not
merely visible to the public but was as exposed to public view,
speech, hearing, and touch as if she had been standing completely
outside her house. . . . Thus, when the police, who concededly had
probable cause to do so, sought to arrest her, they merely intended to
perform a function which we have approved in Watson.
Santana, 427 U.S. at 42, 96 S. Ct. at 2409.
The instant case is legally indistinguishable from Santana. When the police
officers knocked, McClish voluntarily opened the door, thereby exposing the
48
doorway area to the view of the police.2 Then, under McClish’s version of the
facts, the police officers reached in and grabbed him for the purpose of drawing
him onto the porch and arresting him. Because the police officers only reached
across the plane of the door, it is clear that it was physically impossible for them to
see any more of the home than McClish allowed them to see when he opened the
door. Like Santana, McClish “knowingly expose[d]” both himself and the
immediate area behind his threshold to public view. McClish no longer had an
“expectation of privacy” that the officers could have violated. He was therefore in
a “public” place, just as Santana was, and under Watson the police needed only
probable cause, and not a warrant, to arrest him. The officers admittedly had
probable cause to arrest, so they did not violate McClish’s rights under the Fourth
Amendment.
The majority opinion relies on Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 100 S.
Ct. 1371 (1980), to conclude that the police officers violated McClish’s
constitutional rights because their arms passed the physical plane of the door to his
home, and a warrant would have been necessary to justify this intrusion. Payton
2
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to McClish, no reasonable jury could
conclude that the door was not opened voluntarily. Under McClish’s version of the facts, the
officers knocked on the door; McClish asked who was there; the officers answered “Sheriff’s
Office”; and McClish opened the door and asked “What happened?” before being arrested.
There is no evidence of any show of force by the police that could have coerced McClish into
opening the door, nor is there any evidence that McClish felt coerced.
49
held that officers must, absent exigent circumstances, obtain a warrant before they
may enter a suspect’s home to arrest that suspect. Id. at 590, 100 S. Ct. at 1382.
Payton, however, was not a doorway arrest case. The issue in Payton was
simply “whether and under what circumstances an officer may enter a suspect’s
home to make a warrantless arrest.” Id. at 575, 100 S. Ct. at 1374. The Court
characterized this issue as “narrow.” Id. at 582, 100 S. Ct. at 1378. And the facts
in Payton involved officers penetrating well into the interior of a suspect’s home,
not simply reaching through an opened door. In Payton’s case, officers knocked
down the door and entered well into the interior of the dwelling. In the companion
case of Riddick, the suspect’s son answered the door, and in order to arrest the
suspect, officers had to enter well into the interior of the home. The Court
therefore did not have an occasion to express a holding on the doorway arrest
scenario, which lies on the boundary between Payton and Watson.
Santana, on the other hand, was a doorway arrest case, and is the Supreme
Court’s last and only word on the Fourth Amendment rule at the opened door. It
explicitly rejected a test at the threshold that would depend on the plane of the
door. The Court said, “While it may be true that under the common law of
property the threshold of one’s dwelling is ‘private,’ as is the yard surrounding the
house, it is nonetheless clear that under the cases interpreting the Fourth
50
Amendment Santana was in a ‘public’ place.” Santana, 427 U.S. at 42, 96 S. Ct. at
2409. The Court, in stating its holding, specifically used the word “threshold”;
acknowledged that the threshold was a significant property law concept; declined
to accord that concept any significance in defining the scope of the warrant
requirement; and, even though Santana’s body was partially inside that property-
law threshold, adopted an expectation-of-privacy test and held that the arrest would
have been constitutional. Id. Santana therefore states the proper test at the
voluntarily opened doorway.
Instead of following Santana’s expectation of privacy holding, the majority
opinion relies on language drawn from the Payton opinion that, in its view, adopted
a plane-of-the-door rule at the opened doorway. See Payton, 445 U.S. at 589, 100
S. Ct. at 1381 (“[T]he critical point is that any differences in the intrusiveness of
entries to search and entries to arrest are merely ones of degree rather than kind.
The two intrusions share this fundamental characteristic: the breach of the
entrance to an individual’s home.”) (emphasis added); id. at 590, 100 S. Ct. at
1382 (“[T]he Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the
house. Absent exigent circumstances, that threshold may not reasonably be
crossed without a warrant.”) (emphasis added).
This language from Payton did not overrule the clear holding in Santana.
51
The Court said nothing specific about arrests at the opened doorway, and did not
make any choice between a plane-of-the-door or an expectation-of-privacy rule. In
fact, the language about threshold is best read as dicta. Its rhetorical source is
William Pitt’s famous quote about the home, cited in Payton:
There can be no doubt that Pitt’s address in the House of Commons in
March 1763 echoed and re-echoed throughout the Colonies: “The
poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the
Crown. It may be frail; its roof may shake; the wind may blow
through it; the storm may enter; the rain may enter; but the King of
England cannot enter–all his force dares not cross the threshold of
the ruined tenement!”
Payton, 445 U.S. at 601 n.54, 100 S. Ct. at 1388 n.54 (emphasis added). Payton’s
language about crossing the threshold seems to have been drawn directly from this
speech. And neither Payton nor Pitt expressed an opinion on open doorway
arrests.3 Rather, they were using “crossing the threshold” to mean “entering the
3
As Pitt was speaking at a debate about searches incident to the excise tax on cider, see
Miller v. United States, 357 U.S. 301, 307, 78 S. Ct. 1190, 1195 (1958), he was not intending to
make any nuanced legal point. See Steagald v. United States, 451 U.S. 204, 229-30, 101 S. Ct.
1642, 1656 (1981) (Rehnquist, J., dissenting) (making the point that Pitt’s statement was
rhetoric, not legal opinion, and noting that “parliamentary speaking ability and analytical legal
ability ought not to be equated with one another”).
52
home.” Both Pitt and Payton were engaging in the literary device of synecdoche,
whereby a part of a thing is used to refer to the whole, as in the phrase “all hands
on deck” to refer to “all sailors on deck.” They both used “threshold” to refer in a
rhetorical way to the “home.”
Payton simply did not speak to the doorway arrest scenario, and the
rhetorical use of the word “threshold” should not be relied upon as having decided
the question of the appropriate test at the opened doorway. Payton nowhere opined
about whether a plane-of-the-door or an expectation-of-privacy test governs at the
opened doorway. The Payton holding is thus essentially neutral with respect to the
proper rule for doorway arrests. Santana, on the other hand, explicitly rejected a
property law, plane-of-the-door rule, and said that a warrantless arrest is proper so
long as the suspect has no expectation of privacy. It therefore contains the
controlling principle of law in the doorway arrest situation.
In order to choose the dicta of Payton over the holding in Santana, the
majority must and apparently does argue that Payton overruled Santana, or at least
confined it to its specific facts.4 This conclusion is unwarranted. In the first place,
4
The majority also characterizes Santana as a “hot pursuit” case. It is true that Santana’s
second holding, the hot pursuit holding, is the one more often cited. But that is simply a function
of the relative frequency of litigated doorway arrest cases versus litigated hot pursuit cases. For
example, it took more than thirty years for the doorway arrest scenario to be squarely presented
to this Court. The Santana Court clearly considered the first holding to be a necessary one: it
had to address the legality of the arrest because it established that the officers did not
impermissibly create the hot pursuit exigency. See Santana, 427 U.S. at 42, 96 S. Ct. at 2409.
53
it is clear that Payton did not overrule Santana. The Court does not overrule
precedents sub silentio. See Agostini v. Felton, 521 U.S. 203, 237, 117 S. Ct.
1997, 2017 (1997) (“We reaffirm that if a precedent of this Court has direct
application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of
decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case which directly controls,
leaving to this Court the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.”). Nor is it
appropriate to read Payton as overruling Santana. At the time of Payton, Santana
was only four years old, and postdated Watson, the seminal public arrest case, by a
mere six months.
Moreover, in Payton the Court actually cited Santana, without overruling or
even questioning it, in its string cite of prior cases dealing with “public” arrests.
See Payton, 445 U.S. at 575 n.1, 100 S. Ct. at 1374 n.1. The Santana Court had
been aware of the issue of warrantless in-home arrests: Justice White specially
concurred to make it clear that he believed warrantless in-home arrests were
constitutional as a general matter so long as officers had probable cause. See
Santana, 427 U.S. at 43-44, 96 S. Ct. at 2410 (White, J., concurring). Despite this
awareness of the home issue, Santana adopted an expectation-of-privacy test at the
opened doorway. Yet Payton did not overrule Santana, and its arrest holding has
never been questioned since. The best reading of this history is that Santana sets
54
forth the proper rule at the opened doorway.5
It is also clear that the reasoning of Payton did not implicitly undermine the
Santana holding. The rationale for Payton was the protection of the privacy of the
home. The Court concluded that, even though probable cause gives officers a right
to arrest the suspect, the privacy of the home justifies the additional protection of
the warrant in a home arrest situation. Payton, 445 U.S. at 588, 100 S. Ct. at 1381.
As a result, the Payton opinion is suffused with privacy-protection reasoning. See
id. (“an entry to arrest and an entry to search for and to seize property implicate the
same interest in preserving the privacy and the sanctity of the home, and justify
the same level of constitutional protection”) (emphasis added); id. at 588 n.26, 100
S. Ct. at 1381 n.26 (“The decisions of this Court have time and again underscored
the essential purpose of the Fourth Amendment to shield the citizen from
unwarranted intrusions into his privacy”) (emphasis added); id. at 589, 100 S. Ct.
at 1381 (“The Fourth Amendment protects the individual’s privacy in a variety of
settings. In none is the zone of privacy more clearly defined than when bounded
by the unambiguous physical dimensions of an individual’s home–a zone that finds
5
The fact that the Court did not overrule Santana is itself reason enough to reject the
majority opinion’s rule. The Court in Santana said that arrests on the threshold without a
warrant are legal. But common sense tells us that an officer conducting an arrest at the literal
threshold would necessarily cross the plane of the door in a great many threshold arrests. The
majority rule is thus facially inconsistent with Santana’s holding, and in effect overrules a
Supreme Court precedent on the basis of dicta in another Supreme Court opinion.
55
its roots in clear and specific constitutional terms.”) (emphasis added); id. at 596,
100 S. Ct. at 1385 (“The common-law sources display a sensitivity to privacy
interests that could not have been lost on the Framers.”) (emphasis added).
The Santana rule is consistent with Payton’s privacy-protection rationale.
Santana simply says that when a suspect has voluntarily relinquished the privacy of
the home in the doorway area, the Payton concern for the privacy of the home is
not present and the public arrest rule of Watson applies. The suspect need not open
the door. But if he chooses to do so, the officers do not offend the rationale of
Payton by simply reaching in and grabbing him.6
6
To a lesser extent, Payton relied on the status of warrantless in-home arrests under the
common law. Watson, which established that warrantless public arrests are constitutional, relied
in significant part on the common law’s acceptance of such seizures. See Watson, 423 U.S. at
418, 96 S. Ct. at 825. Payton, on the other hand, concluded that the common law sources were at
best equivocal as to the status of arrests without a warrant inside the home. Payton, 445 U.S. at
596-98, 100 S. Ct. at 1385-86. This was another reason, in addition to the special privacy of the
home, for departing from the Watson rule.
The Supreme Court has recognized, however, that the common law generally permitted a
warrantless arrest inside the home when the outer door was open. See Steagald v. United States,
451 U.S. 204, 217 n.11, 101 S. Ct. 1642, 1650 n.11 (1981) (“Under the common law, a privilege
attaches to the outer door of a dwelling, because. . . it is the owner’s castle. . . . Thus, an open
outer door was apparently regarded as the equivalent of a consent of the occupant for the
constable to enter the home and conduct a search.”) (internal punctuation omitted). The
common law sources appear to confirm the Court’s statement. For example, Coke, who was
interpreted in Payton as proscribing warrantless in-home arrests, appeared to accept such arrests
where the door was open. See 4 E. Coke, Institutes *178 (“[I]f the door of the house be open,
[the constable] may enter into the same, and arrest the party.”). See also Semayne’s Case, 5 Co.
Rep. 91a, 77 Eng. Rep. 194 (K. B. 1603) (cited in Payton, 445 U.S. at 592, 100 S. Ct. at 1383)
(“That in all cases when the door is open, the sheriff may enter the house and do execution at the
suit of any subject, either of the body or of the goods, and so may the lord in such case enter the
house and distrain for his rent or service.”); M. Foster, Crown Law 319-20 (1762); 4 W.
Blackstone, Commentaries *289. Because the common law apparently permitted open door
arrests without a warrant, Santana is as consistent with Payton’s common-law rationale as it is
56
The majority opinion argues that the Santana approach erodes the protection
of Payton because it allows officers to seize whatever they can see inside a home
through an opened door. But the Santana approach does not extend that far. The
Santana rule operates only insofar as the suspect voluntarily relinquishes some of
the privacy of the home. In other words, the Santana rule subjects to seizure only
what the officer can seize without seeing more of the home than was voluntarily
exposed. Thus, the officer can seize the suspect who is within reach of the officer
standing at the threshold because the officer does not thereby intrude further on the
suspect’s privacy than what the suspect had voluntarily relinquished. On the other
hand, the officer who arrested Riddick in Payton could not reach Riddick while
standing at the opened door. He walked past the opened door, into the house, thus
intruding further upon privacy than the voluntary opening of the door exposed.
From the interior of the house, where the officer seized Riddick, the officer could
see details and areas of the house not voluntarily exposed by the opening of the
front door. That was the constitutional violation in Riddick’s case. See also Kyllo
v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 37, 121 S. Ct. 2038, 2045 (2001) (“In the home, our
cases show, all details are intimate details, because the entire area is held safe from
prying government eyes) (emphasis in original).
with Payton’s privacy-protection rationale.
57
The scope of Santana is thus consistent with Riddick’s case and does not
undermine the Payton rule, contrary to the majority’s suggestion. In fact, by
leaving the door closed, a suspect can always, in the absence of exigent
circumstances or some other exception to the warrant requirement, force officers to
obtain a warrant before entering the home to arrest. And by opening the door, the
suspect loses the protection of the Payton rule only insofar as the officers can
accomplish the arrest without seeing any detail that the suspect did not voluntarily
expose.
Not only has Santana never been overruled or even questioned by the
Supreme Court, and not only is it in harmony with the rationale of the Payton
decision: it is also more consistent with Fourth Amendment jurisprudence in
general than the majority opinion’s approach. The majority opinion reads Payton
to support a bright-line rule at the property-law plane of the opened door. But
bright-line rules are generally disfavored under the Fourth Amendment’s global
command of “reasonableness.” In Ohio v. Robinette, 519 U.S. 33, 117 S. Ct. 417
(1996), the Court said, “We have long held that the touchstone of the Fourth
Amendment is reasonableness. Reasonableness, in turn, is measured in objective
terms by examining the totality of the circumstances. In applying this test we have
consistently eschewed bright-line rules, instead emphasizing the fact-specific
58
nature of the reasonableness inquiry.” Id. at 39, 117 S. Ct. at 421 (citing Florida v.
Bostick, 501 U.S. 429, 111 S. Ct. 2382 (1991); Michigan v. Chesternut, 486 U.S.
567, 108 S. Ct. 1975 (1988); Florida v. Royer, 460 U.S. 491, 103 S. Ct. 1319
(1983); and Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 93 S. Ct. 2041 (1973)).
The disfavored status of bright-line rules in the Fourth Amendment area
means that the Court never adopts such rules by implication or sub silentio. In
every case where the Court has adopted a bright-line rule, the Court has taken great
pains to justify why the normal presumption against such rules should be
disregarded in the particular context. For example, in New York v. Belton, 453
U.S. 454, 460, 101 S. Ct. 2860, 2864 (1981), the Court held that the entire interior
of an automobile is within the grab area of an arrestee for purposes of the Chimel
search-incident-to-arrest rule. The Court explicitly discussed why other more
nuanced rules were unworkable, and ultimately decided in no uncertain terms “to
establish the workable rule this category of cases requires.” Id. See also Oliver v.
United States, 466 U.S. 170, 181-82, 104 S. Ct. 1735, 1743 (1984) (explicitly
justifying bright-line rule that open fields are not protected by Fourth
Amendment); United States v. Robinson, 414 U.S. 218, 234-35, 94 S. Ct. 467, 476
(1973) (explicitly justifying search incident to arrest without regard to
individualized assessment of dangerousness).
59
Payton, by contrast, contains no discussion at all of the bright-line-rule issue.
It did not explicitly state that the law at the opened doorway would be governed by
the plane of the door. Nor did it contain any reasoning to justify such a result.
Rather, it simply contained the language about “entrance” and “threshold,” which
it used rhetorically to refer to “the home.” Payton therefore cannot be read to
establish a disfavored bright-line rule at the plane of the opened doorway,
especially in light of Santana’s countervailing holding that is directly on point.7
7
The majority opinion not only asserts that Payton established a bright-line rule, but also
argues that the line has been “re-inked” many times. But the cited cases all simply quoted the
language of Payton on their way to holdings that did not involve a voluntarily opened door. In
Kirk v. Louisiana, 536 U.S. 635, 636, 122 S. Ct. 2458, 2458 (2002), the officers entered well
into the interior of the home, without the justification of exigent circumstances. In New York v.
Harris, 495 U.S. 14, 15, 110 S. Ct. 1640, 1642 (1990), the suspect did not open the door
voluntarily, as the police displayed their guns and badges to get the suspect to open the door. In
Steagald v. United States, 451 U.S. 204, 101 S. Ct. 1642 (1981), the issue was whether police
need a search warrant (in addition to an arrest warrant) to arrest a third party in someone else’s
home; the Court concluded that police do need a search warrant. But police intruded well inside
the home, and the case merely repeated the rhetoric from Payton in a quotation, without
expressing a view on the doorway arrest situation. Id. at 206, 101 S. Ct. at 1644.
The majority finds its strongest language in Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 121 S.
Ct. 2038 (2001). But Kyllo involved neither a doorway nor an arrest. The majority opinion’s
quotes from Kyllo were also not talking about a bright line at the door. The first quote says that
“the Fourth Amendment draws a firm line at the entrance to the house. . . . That line, we think,
must be not only firm, but also bright–which requires clear specification of those methods of
surveillance that require a warrant.” Id. at 40, 121 S. Ct. at 2046. There the Court was not
talking about a plane-of-the-door rule at the opened door, but rather was choosing the relatively
bright-line, categorical test for when surveillance equipment can be used to observe a home. As
in other Fourth Amendment bright-line-rule cases, the Court explicitly justified its bright-line
rule.
The second quote is, “[W]e [have] made clear that any physical invasion of the structure
of the home, by even a fraction of an inch, [is] too much, and there is certainly no exception to
the warrant requirement for the officer who barely cracks open the front door and sees nothing
but the nonintimate rug on the vestibule floor.” Id. at 37, 121 S. Ct. at 2045. Here too the Court
was not ratifying a bright-line rule at the opened doorway, but rather responding to an argument
60
A plane-of-the-door rule is doubly disfavored because the Court does not
ordinarily define Fourth Amendment protections by reference to property-law
concepts. Since Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 88 S. Ct. 507 (1967), it has
been clear that the Fourth Amendment protects privacy, not property. See id. at
353, 88 S. Ct. at 512 (“[T]he premise that property interests control the right of the
Government to search and seize has been discredited. . . . [T]he reach of [the]
Amendment cannot turn upon the presence or absence of a physical intrusion into
any given enclosure.”). The warrant requirement too ordinarily serves to protect
privacy. See Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10, 14, 68 S. Ct. 367, 369 (“When
the right of privacy must reasonably yield to the right of search is, as a rule, to be
decided by a judicial officer, not by a policeman or Government enforcement
by the government that only techniques that detect “private details” of home life are searches.
The Court was making the point that any detail, even one a fraction of an inch inside the door, is
considered private. The Court did not opine on what happens at the opened door, where the
suspect voluntarily reveals some of those private details. Kyllo, like Payton, simply was not an
opened doorway arrest case. And its rationale, like Payton’s, does not apply where the suspect
has voluntarily relinquished some of the privacy of the home.
The Eleventh Circuit cases cited in the constitutional section of the majority’s opinion are
also inapposite (as they must be, since we hold that the law was not clearly established in Florida
at the time of the relevant conduct). See Bashir v. Rockdale County, 445 F.3d 1323, 1326 (11th
Cir. 2006) (suspect entered home without inviting police, police followed him inside, penetrating
well into interior before arresting); Knight v. Jacobson, 300 F.3d 1272, 1277-78 (11th Cir. 2002)
(arrest took place after suspect left the home, therefore Payton did not apply); United States v.
Santa, 236 F.3d 662, 666 (11th Cir. 2000) (officers entered well into interior of home without
warrant, no exigent circumstances); United States v. Parr, 716 F.2d 796, 814 (11th Cir. 1983) (no
exigent circumstances where firefighter intruded well inside home). These cases simply
repeated the Payton dicta as a figurative or shorthand way of referring to “the home.” Just as the
Payton Court did.
61
agent.”) (emphasis added). Payton was well within this tradition when it relied on
the special privacy of the home to justify a warrant requirement for arrests inside
the home. Santana was also within this tradition when it held that an arrest was
“public” where the suspect had relinquished that expectation of privacy.
But it would be inconsistent with these cases to extend Payton to cases
where privacy is not implicated, simply because the officer crossed the property-
law plane of the door. The Court has eschewed such a property-based approach.
See, e.g., Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170, 183-84, 104 S. Ct. 1735, 1743-44
(1984); Frazier v. Cupp, 394 U.S. 731, 740, 89 S. Ct. 1420, 1425 (1969).
Moreover, it has avoided relying on property law concepts even when analyzing
cases that involve the home. See, e.g., Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 32, 121
S. Ct. 2038, 2042 (2001) (“We have. . . decoupled violation of a person’s Fourth
Amendment rights from trespassory violations of his property”); United States v.
Karo, 468 U.S. 705, 712-13, 104 S. Ct. 3296, 3302 (1984) (“The existence of a
physical trespass is only marginally relevant to the question of whether the Fourth
Amendment has been violated. . . for an actual trespass is neither necessary nor
sufficient to establish a constitutional violation.”); Warden v. Hayden, 387 U.S.
294, 304, 87 S. Ct. 1642, 1648 (1967); Silverman v. United States, 365 U.S. 505,
511, 81 S. Ct. 679, 682 (1961). It would thus be inconsistent with the Court’s
62
overall approach to adopt a plane-of-the-door rule here. Santana is consistent with
the Court’s dominant Katz approach, and even cited Katz in its reasoning section.
It recognizes that where the privacy of the home has been relinquished, the home
arrest rule has no application.
Finally, Santana contains the correct reading of the Fourth Amendment
because that reading is the more reasonable one. The “touchstone” of the Fourth
Amendment is reasonableness. See, e.g., Samson v. California, 126 S. Ct. 2193,
2201 (2006); Brigham City v. Stuart, 126 S. Ct. 1943, 1947 (2006); Bd. of Educ. v.
Earls, 536 U.S. 822, 828, 122 S. Ct. 2559, 2564 (2002). The reasonableness
requirement applies with equal force to the home. In Maryland v. Buie, 494 U.S.
325, 110 S. Ct. 1093 (1990), the Court stated:
Our cases show that in determining reasonableness, we have balanced
the intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against
its promotion of legitimate governmental interests. . . . Under this test,
a search of the house or office is generally not reasonable without a
warrant issued on probable cause. There are other contexts, however,
where the public interest is such that neither a warrant nor probable
cause is required.
Id. at 331, 110 S. Ct. at 1096-97. See also Stuart, 126 S. Ct. at 1947; Illinois v.
McArthur, 531 U.S. 326, 331, 121 S. Ct. 946, 950 (2001) (where search “avoid[ed]
significant intrusion into the home itself,” the Court said, “rather than employing a
per se rule of unreasonableness, we balance the privacy-related and law
63
enforcement-related concerns to determine if the intrusion was reasonable.”).
Here, the balance of privacy-related and law-enforcement-related concerns
clearly points in favor of the Santana rule. By hypothesis, the privacy interest is
minimal or nonexistent because the suspect has exposed his doorway to the officers
and relinquished any privacy interest therein. On the government side of the
balance, in addition to the government’s obvious interest in arresting the suspect,
there is a strong governmental interest in officer safety. The Court has long
recognized that officer safety is a concern whenever officers and arrestees or
potential arrestees are in close proximity. See, e.g., United States v. Robinson, 414
U.S. 218, 226, 94 S. Ct. 467, 472 (1973) (adopting search-incident-to-arrest rule in
part for officer-safety rationale); Chimel v. California, 395 U.S. 752, 763, 89 S. Ct.
2034, 2040 (1969) (authorizing limited warrantless and suspicionless search of
home incident to lawful arrest of suspect for officer-protection rationale).
In Buie the Court candidly acknowledged the risks officers face when they
arrest a suspect in the home. There the Court allowed a limited warrantless safety
sweep of the home, incident to arrest of a suspect, upon reasonable suspicion, and
noted:
The risk of danger in the context of an arrest in the home is as great
as, if not greater than, it is in an on-the-street or roadside investigatory
encounter. A Terry or Long frisk occurs before a police-citizen
confrontation has escalated to the point of arrest. A protective sweep,
64
in contrast, occurs as an adjunct to the serious step of taking a person
into custody for the purpose of prosecuting him for a crime.
Moreover, unlike an encounter on the street or along a highway, an in-
home arrest puts the officer at the disadvantage of being on his
adversary’s “turf.” An ambush in a confined setting of unknown
configuration is more to be feared than it is in open, more familiar
surroundings.
Buie, 494 U.S. at 333, 110 S. Ct. at 1098. When a suspect answers a knock at the
door, and probable cause exists to arrest that suspect, this same officer safety
rationale is if anything more pressing. The officers and the actual suspect are
separated by arm’s length only. Requiring actual exigent circumstances to
develop, say by the suspect drawing a gun, could be fatal in many situations. And
there is little or no price for ensuring officer safety by allowing the arrest, because
there is no privacy interest at stake.
By contrast, the majority opinion’s rule allows a suspect for whom there is
probable cause to open the door and thumb his nose in officers’ faces so long as
exigent circumstances do not exist. The majority rule serves no Fourth
Amendment interest, because by hypothesis the privacy interest has been
relinquished. And it subjects officers to the risk of danger. Nor is it improper for
officers to knock on a door without a warrant when the public could do so. See
United States v. Taylor, 458 F.3d 1201, 1204 (11th Cir. 2006). In some cases there
may not even have been a prior opportunity to get a warrant. Cases show that
65
officers legitimately find themselves at an open door with probable cause and no
warrant in a variety of situations where exigent circumstances are not yet present.
See, e.g., United States v. Gori, 230 F.3d 44, 47 (2d Cir. 2000) (officers conducting
stakeout observed by delivery person, accompanied delivery person to door
because worried that delivery person would notify suspects); United States v.
Vaneaton, 49 F.3d 1423, 1425 (9th Cir. 1995) (officers investigating notorious
itinerant burglar happened to come across him staying at the same motel where
crime committed); United States v. Sewell, 942 F.2d 1209, 1211 (7th Cir. 1991)
(probable cause developed at the open door). In addition, the Santana rule does not
discourage officers from obtaining warrants, as there is no guarantee that anyone
(much less the suspect) will answer the door when officers come knocking. By
contrast, the plane-of-the-door rule ties officers’ hands in a potentially volatile
situation, and precludes them from taking preventive action that might save
officers’ lives. It is thus unreasonable, in addition to being inconsistent with
precedent.
Because of all of the reasons supporting the Santana rule–its precedential
authority, its consistency with Payton, its consistency with Fourth Amendment
jurisprudence, and its reasonableness–most courts considering the doorway arrest
situation have followed the Santana rule. See United States v. Gori, 230 F.3d 44,
66
52 (2d Cir. 2000);8 McKinnon v. Carr, 103 F.3d 934, 935 (10th Cir. 1996); United
States v. Vaneaton, 49 F.3d 1423, 1427 (9th Cir. 1995); United States v. Sewell,
942 F.2d 1209, 1212 (7th Cir. 1991); Duncan v. Storie, 869 F.2d 1100, 1102 (8th
Cir. 1989) (but finding fact issue on voluntariness); United States v. Carrion, 809
F.2d 1120, 1128 (5th Cir. 1987) (following Santana and United States v. Mason,
661 F.2d 45, 47 (5th Cir. Nov. 9, 1981)); City of Fargo v. Steffan, 639 N.W.2d
482, 484 (N.D. 2002); State v. Santiago, 619 A.2d 1132, 1135 (Conn. 1993);
People v. Morgan, 447 N.E.2d 1025, 1028 (Ill. 1983); State v. Patricelli, 324
N.W.2d 351, 354 (Minn. 1982).9 The cases following the plane-of-the-door
approach are less numerous and, on the whole, less well reasoned. See United
States v. Bradley, 922 F.2d 1290, 1295 (6th Cir. 1991); State v. Clark, 844 S.W.2d
597, 599 (Tenn. 1992) (following Payton, though without citing Santana); State v.
8
I acknowledge there is some tension between Gori and a pre-Payton Second Circuit
decision, United States v. Reed, 572 F.2d 412 (2d Cir. 1978). In any event, my position is
considerably narrower than Gori: I would hold that an officer may intrude no further than the
area that has been voluntarily exposed, whereas Gori appeared to allow an officer to seize
anyone who might be visible through the opened door, even if located outside the immediate
doorway area.
9
The majority opinion cites Loria v. Gorman, 306 F.3d 1271, 1284 (2d Cir. 2002). This
case dealt with a classic Payton situation, where the officer pushed open the door and forced his
way inside to arrest the suspect. See Loria, 306 F.3d at 1286 (“Loria was not in the doorway.
Rather, he was at least a door’s width inside the house when he attempted to close the door.”).
The Second Circuit appears to adhere to the Santana rule at the open door. See United States v.
Gori, 230 F.3d 44, 52 (2d Cir. 2000) (“The facts critical to the analysis are that the interior of
Apartment 1M was exposed to public view when the door was voluntarily opened. And the
principle that governs those facts is found in United States v. Santana, not Payton.”). But cf.
United States v. Reed, 572 F.2d 412 (2d Cir. 1978).
67
Ault, 724 P.2d 545, 552 (Ariz. 1986) (holding doorway arrest illegal, though
without citing Payton or Santana); State v. Holeman, 693 P.2d 89, 91 (Wash. 1985)
(following Payton, though without citing Santana); State v. Morse, 480 A.2d 183,
186 (N.H. 1984) (following Payton); State v. George, 317 N.W.2d 76, 80 (Neb.
1982) (same, without citing Santana). For example, only two of the cases
following the plane-of-the-door approach even cited Santana: Bradley and Morse.10
10
The majority opinion also argues that “few, if any” of the cases cited in this paragraph
involved a physical crossing of the plane of the door. One of the cases definitively involved a
reaching across the plane of the door. See City of Fargo v. Steffan, 639 N.W.2d 482, 483 (N.D.
2002). Other cases did not specify whether the arrest was physical or non-physical, instead
simply stating that an “arrest” occurred. See United States v. Whitten, 706 F.2d 1000, 1015 (9th
Cir. 1983); United States v. Mason, 661 F.2d 45, 47 (5th Cir. Nov. 9, 1981); State v. Santiago,
619 A.2d 1132, 1135 (Conn. 1993); State v. Patricelli, 324 N.W.2d 351, 352 (Minn. 1982).
Because the cases involved doorway arrests, common sense indicates that at least some of them
are bound to have involved a physical crossing. Moreover, it makes sense that those opinions
did not specify the precise means of the arrest, because they relied not on whether the plane of
the door was crossed, but rather on the absence of an expectation of privacy.
Still other cases involved facts where the suspect opened the door and the officers
accomplished the arrest by non-physical means. For example, in some cases the officer arrested
the suspect by telling the suspect he was under arrest; in others by pointing a gun at the suspect.
But in almost all of these cases, the reasoning was not based on the absence of a physical
crossing. These courts upheld the arrest not because it was non-physical, but rather because the
suspect no longer had an expectation of privacy. See United States v. Gori, 230 F.3d 44, 47 (2d
Cir. 2000) (officer said “Everyone step out into the hallway!”); McKinnon v. Carr, 103 F.3d 934,
935 (10th Cir. 1996) (officers told suspect he was under arrest, then followed him into home to
retrieve his clothes); United States v. Vaneaton, 49 F.3d 1423, 1425 (9th Cir. 1995) (officer told
suspect he was under arrest, then entered hotel room); United States v. Carrion, 809 F.2d 1120,
1123 (5th Cir. 1987) (officer pointing gun ordered suspect to raise hands, then entered room to
physically arrest); People v. Morgan, 447 N.E.2d 1025, 1027 (Ill. 1983) (officers told suspect he
was under arrest, then accompanied into home to obtain clothes). In fact, in McKinnon,
Vaneaton, Carrion, and Morgan, the officers physically crossed the plane of the door
immediately after initiating the arrest. These cases are thus legally indistinguishable from the
instant case, where the officers also violated no expectation of privacy.
Only two jurisdictions appear to recognize a distinction between physical and non-
68
The Santana approach should be the law of this circuit, for the reasons discussed in
detail above.11
As Santana is so clearly on point, the majority opinion also attempts to
distinguish Santana on its facts. The majority opinion asserts that McClish was not
as exposed to public view as Santana was; that Santana was not clearly inside her
physical arrests. The Seventh and Eighth Circuits require officers to announce their intention to
arrest before physically crossing the plane of the door. Compare United States v. Sewell, 942
F.2d 1209, 1210 (7th Cir. 1991) (arrest constitutional where officers arrested suspect at the door,
before entering the apartment) with United States v. Berkowitz, 927 F.2d 1376, 1385-88 (7th
Cir. 1991) (arrest unconstitutional where officers crossed plane before announcing suspect was
under arrest). See also Duncan v. Storie, 869 F.2d 1100, 1103 (8th Cir. 1989) (version of facts
where officers told suspect he was under arrest and told him to come out of house would state no
constitutional violation, but version where officers physically arrested before telling suspect he
was under arrest would be unconstitutional). However, the distinction made in these cases is not
well founded. Whether the officer accomplishes the arrest by reaching across the plane of the
door or by pointing a gun, if the officer has not violated an expectation of privacy, he has not
violated the Fourth Amendment under Santana.
11
The Fourth Circuit dealt with a doorway arrest scenario in United States v. McCraw,
920 F.2d 224 (4th Cir. 1990), a case cited in the majority opinion. But there the suspect opened
the door only a crack, and therefore did not relinquish his Payton expectation of privacy. Id. at
228. As a result, the Court was not dealing with a true Santana situation, and did not have
occasion to consider what rule should apply at the voluntarily opened doorway. In fact, the
Fourth Circuit explicitly recognized that “Mathis did not relinquish completely his expectation
of privacy.” Id. at 229. McCraw therefore did not settle whether Santana or Payton applies in
the Fourth Circuit.
As discussed supra, note 10, the Seventh and Eighth Circuits have adopted a modified
Santana approach. They require officers to announce an intention to arrest before physically
crossing the plane of the door. But since these circuits allow an arrest to occur at the open door
without a warrant where the suspect is firmly inside the home, and since they appear to allow
officers to cross the plane so long as they first announce their intention to arrest, they should be
counted as having substantially adopted the Santana approach.
The majority opinion also attempts to distinguish some of the cases adopting the Santana
approach on their facts. But these factual distinctions are of limited relevance, given that the
cases clearly adopted the reasoning of Santana at the open doorway: reasoning based only on the
expectation of privacy or lack thereof.
69
home; that Santana’s home was on a public street; that Santana was already on the
threshold when police arrived; and that Santana’s home was being used for drug
activity. But Santana’s holding did not rely on any of these facts.12 Even the fact
12
Moreover, many of these factual distinctions cannot play any role under the Fourth
Amendment. The location of Santana’s home in an urban area cannot have reduced her Fourth
Amendment protection: distinctions among kinds of homes would give less Fourth Amendment
protection to the “ruined tenement,” in violation of the Pitt quote. The presence of drug activity
cannot be relevant: that would eviscerate the Payton rule by allowing officers to enter when they
have probable cause of criminal activity, when Payton’s whole purpose is to require a warrant
even when officers have the strongest suspicion of criminal activity. Finally, the majority
opinion says that the “Court found significant” the fact that Santana retreated into her home and
held money given to her in a drug transaction. These facts, however, were relevant to the hot
pursuit portion of the opinion, not the arrest portion. See Santana, 427 U.S. at 40-41, 96 S. Ct. at
2408-09.
The majority opinion also suggests that Santana might be distinguishable because of the
route the officers took to get to McClish’s front door. However, McClish has waived any
argument based on the officers’ approach, and therefore cannot contend that they did not have a
right to be in their location on the porch. As the majority opinion notes, “[a]lthough the legality
of the officers’ entry onto the porch was argued in the district court, this issue was not raised on
appeal and, in light of our holding today, does not need to be addressed.”
Such an argument, even if raised, likely would have been unsuccessful. According to the
district court, the gate that the officers opened, and that had a “no trespassing” sign on it, was not
even on McClish’s property and thus was not located within the curtilage of his home. It
therefore most likely was not protected by the Fourth Amendment. See Oliver v. United States,
466 U.S. 170, 178, 104 S. Ct. 1735, 1741 (1984) (“[A]n individual may not legitimately demand
privacy for activities conducted out of doors in fields, except in the area immediately
surrounding the home.”); United States v. Taylor, 458 F.3d 1201, 1208 (11th Cir. 2006) (“A
perimeter fence around property does not create a constitutionally protected interest in all the
open fields on the property.”).
Then, when the officers did cross McClish’s curtilage to reach his front door, they in all
likelihood did not violate the Fourth Amendment because they took the path that any visitor
would have taken to knock on the front door. See Taylor, 458 F.3d at 1204 (“The Fourth
Amendment. . . is not implicated by entry upon private land to knock on a citizen’s door for
legitimate police purposes unconnected with a search of the premises. . . . Absent express orders
from the person in possession, an officer may walk up the steps and knock on the front door of
any man’s ‘castle,’ with the honest intent of asking questions of the occupant thereof.”). In any
event, because McClish waived any reliance on those facts, we need not decide whether the
70
that Santana was half inside and half outside the home was not relied upon in the
opinion. That fact was mentioned in the facts section of the opinion, not the
reasoning section. See Santana, 427 U.S. at 40 n.1, 96 S. Ct. at 2408 n.1. The
reasoning of Santana was brief and to the point: “She was not in an area where she
had any expectation of privacy.” Id. at 42, 96 S. Ct. at 2409. The case relied
simply on the absence of an expectation of privacy.
Similarly, McClish had no expectation of privacy in the immediate doorway
area after he voluntarily opened the door. In my judgment, the Santana rule
controls the instant case. It contains a holding that is directly on point, in contrast
to the dicta about “threshold” in Payton. It allows a warrantless arrest only when
the suspect has voluntarily relinquished the privacy protected by Payton, and is
thus consistent with Payton’s privacy-protection rationale. It is more consistent
with Fourth Amendment law in general, as it does not create a bright-line rule, or
rely on the property law concept of the plane of the door. Finally, it achieves a
workable balance between the public and private interests at stake. I submit that
the officers did not violate McClish’s Fourth Amendment rights by reaching
through the plane of the voluntarily opened door. I therefore respectfully dissent
from that portion of the opinion holding that the officers violated the Constitution.
approach to the door violated the Fourth Amendment.
71