The Volokh Conspiracy
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Prof. Nathan Chapman Guest-Blogging About "The Fair Notice Rationale for Qualified Immunity"
I'm delighted to report that Prof. Nathan Chapman (Georgia) will be guest-blogging this week about his forthcoming article, The Fair Notice Rationale for Qualified Immunity; here's the Abstract:
After many well-publicized cases of police wrongdoing, a growing number of courts, scholars, and politicians have demanded the abolition of qualified immunity. The doctrine requires courts to dismiss damages actions against officials for violating the plaintiff's constitutional rights unless a reasonable officer would have known that the right was "clearly established." Scholars argue that the doctrine impedes deterrence of rights violations and forecloses compensation and vindication for victims.
One line of attack has relied on empirical evidence to challenge what scholars take to be the main justification for qualified immunity, that it prevents the threat of constitutional liability from over-deterring effective law enforcement. Yet the Supreme Court has always offered another rationale for the doctrine: it would be unfair to hold officers liable without sufficient notice that their conduct was unconstitutional. Unlike the over-deterrence rationale, scholars have almost entirely ignored the fair notice rationale for qualified immunity.
This Article assesses the extent to which the fair notice rationale supports the current doctrine of qualified immunity. It does so by exploring the limits of the jurisprudential principle of prospectivity, which holds that the law must ordinarily apply only prospectively.
To approximate the rule of law and to treat subjects with equal dignity, the law must be capable of guiding conduct. The principle of prospectivity obviously applies to retroactive legislation, but unpredictable adjudications also fail to provide such guidance, and they are especially unfair when they impose retroactive moral condemnation. Constitutional liability is often highly unpredictable, seemingly at odds with prior legal duties, and, unlike most tort liability, expresses the community's moral censure.
This Article argues that the fair notice rationale supports qualified immunity in some cases to which the doctrine currently applies, but not to all of them. It supports immunity where an officer could not have reasonably foreseen constitutional liability or public condemnation, but not when an officer acted in bad faith, violated a criminal law, or violated a constitutional rule with an underlying rationale that applies to the officer's conduct. Taking the fair notice rationale seriously provides a principled roadmap for reforming qualified immunity.
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"Unlike the over-deterrence rationale, scholars have almost entirely ignored the fair notice rationale for qualified immunity."
Perhaps because it's such obvious BS in a country where "Ignorance of the law is no defense!" for people who don't work for the government?
Yes.
There's an argument that rules ought to be stricter for the police, not looser. Among other things, aren't they supposed to get some kind of training that might (i.e., definitely should) include training in the limits of what they are allowed to do.
Besides, I think "common sense" is a better rule than "fair notice." We read constantly of cases where any ordinary person of average intelligence would understand that what the cops did really does violate the Constitution, even if no other cop ever got in trouble for doing the exact same thing, on the same day of the week, at the same time of day.
Why shouldn't the cops know this?
See Egbert in 2022. Kick a guy's ass because he reported you, not because he is dangerous, fleeing or even sassing you. QI.
This is why retaliatory violence is fully justified by formal logic. Formal logic has 100% certainty and is supreme over all rules and treaties of the US.
Hey, lawyers. Sovereign immunity stems from the rationale that the Sovereign speaks with the Voice of God. You then commit violent acts justified by this delusion. You need to be chained and involuntarily committed, you vile, toxic psychos.
This Article argues that the fair notice rationale supports qualified immunity in some cases to which the doctrine currently applies, but not to all of them. It supports immunity where an officer could not have reasonably foreseen constitutional liability or public condemnation, but not when an officer acted in bad faith, violated a criminal law, or violated a constitutional rule with an underlying rationale that applies to the officer's conduct.
Incomprehensible weasel lawyer gibberish. It is so complicated, you have to hire lawyers to figure it out. Self serving, rent seeking garbage speech.
Torts liability is unauthorized industrial policy. Immunity grows the enterprise. Liability shrinks it. If you want to shrink and rid us of this worthless government, open the floodgates of liability.
Government makes civilization possible. It has a dose response curve. We are now located in the toxic overdose range. The dose should be set by the legislature, and not to enrich the tort bar.
We'll have to wait for Prof. Chapman to elaborate, but it sounds to me like his standard is something akin to the current clearly established + common sense—in other words, someone shouldn't be liable (as QI opponents seem to think they should be) in a situation like the pole camera case from Friday's Short Circuit.
This is in a context of constitutional violations you can sue over, and not the illegality of the act itself.
That part is often glossed over when flying memes stir folks to outrage.
What's often glossed over is that, given the government's reluctance to criminally prosecute its own, being able to sue is the whole game.
Yet this doctrine also applies to other government officials. It is not just police that must be reigned in, it is all levels of government.
Hiding behind the color of law has always been an issue. One could even say this is how certain activist are trying to influence young children in schools as an adult discussing the same topics elsewhere would be subject law enforcement actions
Based on this admittedly pretty cursory excerpt, I don't read Prof. Chapman to be arguing that the plaintiff should have to prove that the government defendant subjectively had actual knowledge that their conduct was illegal, but rather that the defendant objectively had a reasonable opportunity ahead of time to figure out that it was illegal. And there are indeed analogous fair notice doctrines in the criminal law context.
But the issue is what constitutes fair notice.
My, no doubt limited, understanding is that a similar incident has to have occurred and been deemed a violation.
How is that supposed to work? Do police in Atlanta, say, get notified of a case in Omaha? If not, how are they notified? And why wouldn't rules taught during police training count as notice?
That was my reaction, too. The "fair notice rationale" would be a lot more plausible if it was available to us peons.
This is the part that really gets my goat. They steal hundreds of thousands of dollars during warrant searches, they shoot handcuffed and passive prisoners in the back seats of police cars, they intentionally dump prisoners into cells with shit- and urine-covered floors, they laugh at prisoners in obvious need of medical care, and they get QI because no court has ever said those are unconstitutional.
There's a real simple standard: would a civilian be arrested for the same behavior?
I understand the fair notice theory; but when there are laws against theft, doing it under color of a legal search warrant doesn't suddenly make it legal just because no court has ever said "don't do dat".
It is a crime, but are all crimes by government officials violating your constitutional rights?
Some yokel steals something, good luck suing their broke butt. But a government official? Gotta get to the deep pockets somehow!
To understand that, you must first ask why we get to sue government officials in the first place. Sec 1983 was passed because history demonstrated that prosecutors have too many conflicts of interest to prosecute the police that they depend on for their own career success.
So yeah, I might not be able to sue a fellow citizen who breaks the law but I do get to sue a government official who breaks the law.
That is not, in fact, why § 1983 was passed.
Personally, I think the fairer answer is abolishing sovereign immunity, not qualified immunity. If employees of $Agency screw up, $Agency pays up (preferably including reasonable attorney fees). $Agency, in turn, can fine-tune the costs/benefits of each policy.
Bingo. Employees should not be personally responsible for bad training. But we can't have the employer also be immune at the same time.
But at the same time, employees should not have criminal immunity as well. Many of the egregious qualified immunity cases should have been charged as criminal assault. Reluctance on the part of prosecutors is the problem.
My solution would be to combine prosecution with public defenders. The Navy JAG system seems to work well. If each attorney in the office works 50/50 prosecute/defend, then their bias in favor of the government should be reduced.
I buy that this happened all the time during the era of the Warren Court. And I buy that it still happens when the current court directly overturns a binding precedent. I wait to be convinced (1) that this otherwise happens now, and (2) that, if it happens, it is significant enough that it should shape doctrine.
That said, any limiting principle on qualified immunity would be good, and if Professor Chapman can make a winning case for one, then huzzah to him.
Prof. Chapman appears to be proposing a narrower immunity than exists under current doctrine, so presumably the current doctrine provides immunity in the cases he'd include.
It's not addressed because it's disingenuous sophistry. I don't get out of a murder charge because I think up some brand new way to kill someone.
It doesn't support QI in any cases the way QI currently works.
The fair notice rationale might make sense if courts were required to establish the law/right before granting QI, so they can only grant it once for any given circumstance.
But that's not how current QI case law works. The district and circuit courts are allowed, even encouraged to declare QI without ever establishing what the right is, what the law on that right is and /or whether or not a violation of that right occurred. That's bass ackwards if fair notice is the justification for QI.
Qualified immunity, properly interpreted, serves a legitimate purpose. It prevents retroactive application of seachange reversals of precedent. It isn’t fair, the day after Roe v. Wade gets decided, to sue police officers for enforcing abortion laws that were perfectly constitutional the day before.
However, qualified immunity has strayed far from this role and become a sham. It has become a licence to do zero-day exploit hacking. Police get immunity from conduct they and everyone else know is completely illegal if there doesn’t have to be a specifically on-point precedent covering it. They get lawyers to investigate the law and find loopholes they can exploit. This is not what qualified immunity was intended to be aboit.
Is there any contested issue of law more likely than this one to unite a large majority of VC commenters, across the political spectrum? What keeps this an enduring controversy?
The fact that the government has a special solicitude towards its own people, and so the courts largely don't CARE how widespread the outrage is, and neither does Congress.
Good questions. I will add: Does any other country with an otherwise decent legal system have something essentially equivalent to QI?
I'm not sure I'd concede that we have an otherwise decent legal system. Not the worst around, sure, but "decent"? No, I don't think I'd go that far.
I'll call it "decent" once over-charging to coerce guilty pleas stops, and the legal system starts making the acquitted whole after putting through hell somebody they find to be legally innocent. Right now most cases never go to trial, and the process is the punishment.
QI started out as protection for law enforcement when they have to make immediate decisions, e.g., it's dark, a cop tells a suspect to remove his hands from his pockets, suddenly sees a dark object in the suspect's hands, so shoots him (but it was a cell phone).
This part about, ". . . it would be unfair to hold officers liable without sufficient notice that their conduct was unconstitutional," is total BS.
They receive constant training, updates, and briefings; and if a department doesn't have a good training program then yes, they (city, department), should be held liable.
“Over deterring,” sounds like the Sorite’s Paradox of the Heap. If this is over the top, how about this? Or this? This?
Just how often is QI invoked? I’m not even asking about invoking QI for egregious cases - just frequency of QI defenses and rulings.
We read those weekly IJ logs of especially nasty QI cases, but I didn’t see any statistics on their web page.
Presumably, any police action that initiates a significant complaint gets a QI letter submitted to file from the Police Union’s lawyer? Is that de rigueur?
When I worked with a law firm representing families that have been wrongly separated from their children due to state actors it was par for the course on each case that we would get an SJ motion based on QI and Rooker-Feldman. The Supreme Court has defined scenarios with such exacting scrutiny (even though they say they aren’t) that in practice it is more like absolute immunity for all but the most egregious conduct. I can understand QI if somebody relied on a case that was precedent when action taken but was subsequently reversed, but we have gotten to the point that I would not be surprised if a court grants QI because a victim was 45 years old and the previous precedent for the same situation the victim was 46.
The number of reported cases in the courts of appeals is the tip of the iceberg. Qualified immunity deters lawyers from bringing cases. As interpreted now it deters lawyers from appealing cases to set a precedent because the appeals court is no longer required to set a precedent on the constitutional issue.
The concept of "fair notice" really highlights what I perceive to be the moral gap in legal thinking.
Rather than focus almost exclusively on the process by which state agents (cops, etc) have been informed that their actions are wrong, can't we focus instead on whether the agent acted in good faith in carrying out their duties?
I see too many stories about cops doing outrageous things, and then getting off because they weren't explicitly told that it's not ok to extort people.
WTF?