Jason Banas v. Michael Hagbom

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2020
Docket19-1342
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jason Banas v. Michael Hagbom (Jason Banas v. Michael Hagbom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jason Banas v. Michael Hagbom, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0187n.06

Case No. 19-1342

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Apr 01, 2020 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk JASON BANAS, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR v. ) THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF ) MICHIGAN MICHAEL HAGBOM, Meridian Township ) Police Officer, individually, ) OPINION ) Defendant-Appellant. ) )

BEFORE: SUHRHEINRICH, STRANCH, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. Around 2:00 AM on August 30, 2014, Jason Banas started

walking home after a night of drinking and celebrating a Spartans’ victory. While cruising the

area, Officer Hagbom thought that he saw Banas stumble and fall. So he stopped his car to

investigate. Hagbom noticed that Banas was drunk and tried to assess Banas’s intoxication level

to determine if Hagbom needed to take Banas to the hospital. Unfortunately, the encounter ended

with Hagbom taking down Banas, sitting on top of him, kneeing him at least once, and tasing him

for ten seconds. Banas sued—alleging civil rights violations. And Hagbom claimed qualified

immunity.

The district court granted summary judgment to Hagbom based on qualified immunity for

the initial takedown. But the court denied Hagbom summary judgment for the kneeing and the

tasing. Both parties appealed, but only Hagbom’s appeal of the denial of summary judgment for No. 19-1342, Banas v. Hagbom

the kneeing and the tasing is before us. Because Banas argues only that we should reverse for

factual reasons, we lack jurisdiction to address his arguments. So we DISMISS his appeal.

I.

In the early morning on August 30, 2014, Officer Hagbom drove down the road and thought

he saw Banas fall on the sidewalk.1 Hagbom turned his cruiser around and got out to talk with

Banas. Banas didn’t respond to some of Hagbom’s questions right away, prompting Hagbom to

ask, “Hello?” (R. 37-3, Video at 01:25.) Once Banas responded, he slurred some words. Hagbom

decided that he needed to administer a Preliminary Breath Test (PBT) to determine Banas’s

intoxication level. Banas tried unsuccessfully. His BAC failed to register, despite Hagbom telling

Banas to blow three separate times. Hagbom said he’d try a manual test.

But at that point, Banas started getting frustrated. He insisted he had been walking home

and wanted to keep walking home. Banas began moving away from Hagbom and his car, and

Hagbom told him to “stop . . . stop.” (Id. at 06:13–06:18.) Hagbom caught up to Banas, grabbed

Banas’s arm, told Banas, “Chill . . . all you gotta do is take this PBT,” and suggested, “Why don’t

I call the ambulance to come check you out?” (Id. at 06:26–06:37.) Banas agreed, and Hagbom

said, “Come back to my car.” (Id. at 06:37–06:40.)

Hagbom then tried to guide Banas back toward his car, but Banas hunched over, pushing

his weight back into Hagbom. Banas claims that he was simply trying to sit down right on the

sidewalk. He thought he could wait for an ambulance there instead.

As Banas distributed his weight backwards, the encounter escalated quickly. Hagbom

flung his arm around Banas’s shoulder and pulled Banas over, down a slope, and onto the grass.

1 Alternatively, Banas claims that he did not fall but bent over to pick up his phone.

2 No. 19-1342, Banas v. Hagbom

Although the video only captured the audio of the contact between the men after the tackle, both

parties agree that Banas laid face down on the ground for the next two minutes, with Hagbom

sitting on top of Banas. In the video, Banas continued shouting, “Why are you fighting me?” (Id.

at 06:48–08:20.) And Hagbom constantly repeated, “Put your hands behind your back!” (Id.)

Twice Hagbom also shouted, “Stop resisting!” (Id. at 07:24–07:26.) And about forty-five seconds

after the initial takedown, Hagbom warned, “You’re about to get tased,” and then, “You’re going

to get tased.” (Id. at 07:30, 07:42.) Banas still yelled, “Why are you fighting me?”

Hagbom then tased Banas for ten seconds. Hagbom says he finally got Banas’s hands

behind Banas’s back after the tasing so that Hagbom could cuff him. But conflicting testimony

exists in the record suggesting Hagbom tased Banas after Banas had cuffs on.

And according to Banas, he did not resist Hagbom while Banas laid on the ground with

Hagbom on top of him. Banas claims he did not have his right arm above his head but “somewhere

in between” above his head and at his side. (R. 49-3, Banas Dep., PageID 625.) According to

Banas, he could not put his arms behind his back because he had a “240 pound behemoth on top

of [him].” (Id.) And once Hagbom finally moved Banas’s hands behind Banas’s back, Banas says

he provided “a little assistance” to get the hands in place. (Id.)

Hagbom, on the other hand, explains that Banas did resist Hagbom while Hagbom sat on

top of him. And Hagbom could not get Banas’s hands in a position for cuffing because of this

resistance. Hagbom claims he had to knee Banas one time (although Banas claims at least three

times) and tase Banas to move Banas’s hands behind his back.

Banas was eventually charged with and convicted of obstructing or opposing law

enforcement in violation of Charter Township of Meridian Ordinance § 50-141 in Michigan state

court. And as part of that conviction, the Michigan Court of Appeals found Banas to have resisted

3 No. 19-1342, Banas v. Hagbom

arrest during the encounter immediately following the takedown that led to the kneeing and the

tasing.

Banas sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging a violation of his Fourth Amendment right to

be free of excessive force and unlawful searches and seizures and his Fourteenth Amendment right

to be free from a “deprivation of liberty, property, bodily security, and integrity without due

process of law.” He also argued malicious prosecution. Hagbom moved for summary judgment,

arguing qualified immunity. The district court granted summary judgment to Hagbom for the

initial takedown. But the court denied summary judgment for Hagbom over the knee strikes and

the tasing, since a factual issue exists over whether Banas resisted Hagbom on the ground.

Hagbom filed this appeal, contesting the denial of qualified immunity for the kneeing and the

Banas cross-appealed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Hagbom for the

initial takedown. But this court dismissed Banas’s cross-appeal because the initial takedown was

not so “inextricably intertwined” as to find pendent appellate jurisdiction. We reasoned that the

takedown, the knee strikes, and the tasing constituted three discrete events. We need not analyze

them together under one case, we said. Banas v. Hagbom, No. 19-1373 (6th Cir. Sept. 5, 2019)

(order). So here we do not assess the issue of qualified immunity for the initial takedown. Before

us are only the questions of Hagbom’s entitlement to qualified immunity for the kneeing and the

II.

For a plaintiff to avoid summary judgment for the defendant based on qualified immunity,

the plaintiff must show that the defendant (1) violated a constitutional right and (2) “the violated

right was clearly established when [the defendant] acted.” Shanaberg v. Licking County, 936 F.3d

4 No. 19-1342, Banas v. Hagbom

453, 455 (6th Cir. 2019). A court can address the factors in either order. Hagans v. Franklin Cty.

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