Hansen v. Black, No. 16-4162 (8th Cir. 2017)
Annotate this CaseThe Eighth Circuit reversed the district court's denial of qualified immunity against a trooper who shot and killed plaintiff's dog when the dog ran onto a highway and obstructed traffic. The court held that the issue was not whether the trooper had the authority to seize the dog, but whether the degree of force he employed was reasonable to accomplish the necessary seizure. In this case, the trooper's actions were objectively reasonable under the circumstances and he was entitled to qualified immunity. Even assuming a constitutional violation, the trooper was entitled to qualified immunity because his conduct did not violate a clearly established Fourth Amendment right. Plaintiff has not cited, and the court has not found, any case concluding that an officer violated the Fourth Amendment when he shot and killed an unrestrained, unsupervised dog creating a serious risk to public safety and avoiding numerous attempts to control him without force.
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Court Description: Loken, Author, with Wollman, Circuit Judge, and Nelson, District Judge] Civil case - Civil rights. In action alleging defendant, a Missouri State Trooper, unreasonably seized plaintiff's dog in violation of the Fourth Amendment when he shot and killed the dog after it strayed from a yard, the district court erred in denying the trooper's motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity; the question in the case is not whether the trooper committed an unconstitutional seizure, as the trooper unquestionably had a public duty to seize a large, unleashed dog running unrestrained on a busy, high-speed interstate highway; the question is the amount of force employed and whether it was excessive; under the circumstances, the force employed was objectively reasonable; even if a constitutional violation is assumed, the trooper's conduct did not violate a clearly established Fourth Amendment right. [ September 15, 2017
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