                NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
                           File Name: 19a0484n.06

                                        Case No. 18-2024

                          UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                               FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

                                                                                   FILED
DASHUNA RICHARDS; EDDIE HARRIS,                       )                      Sep 17, 2019
                                                      )                  DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
       Plaintiffs-Appellees,                          )
                                                      )
CITY OF JACKSON, MICHIGAN,                            )        ON APPEAL FROM THE
                                                      )        UNITED STATES DISTRICT
       Defendant,                                     )        COURT FOR THE EASTERN
                                                      )        DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
MATTHEW PETERS, in his individual and                 )
official capacity,                                    )
                                                      )                             OPINION
       Defendant-Appellant.                           )



BEFORE:        COLE, Chief Judge; SILER and CLAY, Circuit Judges.
       COLE, Chief Judge. It is undisputed that Officer Matthew Peters had no warrant, exigent
circumstances, or consent to enter the residence of plaintiffs DaShuna Richards and Eddie Harris
on November 28, 2014. But when Peters approached their front door—which Peters claims he
believed would lead to a common area, even though the plaintiffs’ door was clearly marked with
an individual house number and had its own mailbox and doorbell—he opened it without knocking
and walked inside. Once inside, Peters announced his presence, which prompted the plaintiffs’
pet dog Kane to run down the stairs and growl at the officer who was inside his home. Harris
testified that although Kane was well-trained and did not bite or lunge at the officer, Peters shot
Kane as soon as the dog reached the bottom of the staircase.
Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


       Richards and Harris brought a cause of action against Peters, alleging that he unlawfully
entered their home and shot their dog in violation of the Fourth Amendment and Michigan state
law. Peters moved for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity and Michigan
governmental immunity, and the district court denied his motion as to the plaintiffs’ Fourth
Amendment claims and state-law claims of conversion and gross negligence. We affirm.
                                      I. BACKGROUND
       In 2014, DaShuna Richards, Eddie Harris, and their pet dog Kane Lee Chaney (“Kane”)
lived together at 513 South Blackstone Street in Jackson, Michigan. Richards bought Kane in
2009, and Richards and Harris shared responsibility for Kane over the five years that followed:
Harris trained Kane, and Richards fed and cared for him. Richard and Harris describe Kane as a
well-trained American Pit Bull Terrier who had never displayed aggression toward other animals
or people.
       On November 28, 2014, two police officers arrived at 513 South Blackstone Street for
reasons unrelated to Richards, Harris, or Kane. On November 20, 2014, a probate judge had
ordered a man named Donte Cox to report to Allegiance Health Hospital, as he had failed to pick
up his prescribed medication. If Cox did not appear at Allegiance Health, the order stated that
police officers would take Cox into protective custody and transport him to the hospital. When
Cox failed to appear, the Jackson Police Department dispatched Officers Matthew Peters and
Lewis Costley to look for Cox at several addresses in Jackson, including 511 South Blackstone
Street and 513 South Blackstone Street. Cox did not live at 513 South Blackstone Street in 2014,
and it is unclear from the record whether Cox had ever lived at either Blackstone address.
       Peters and Costley began looking for Cox at the addresses provided by dispatch, which led
them to the plaintiffs’ address. Upon arriving at 511 and 513 South Blackstone Street, the officers
found the two units were part of the same building. Each unit had a separate door on the exterior
of the house, and each door was conspicuously labeled with a single, distinct address identifying
the residence inside. Each door was also accompanied by its own mailbox, and the door marked
“513” had its own doorbell as well.


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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


       Costley went to the door labeled “511,” and Peters went to the door labeled “513.” Costley
knocked on the door at 511 Blackstone, waited, and did not receive a response, so he did not enter
the residence. Peters, in contrast, approached the door at 513 Blackstone and walked inside
without knocking or ringing the doorbell. Peters admits he had no search warrant, no consent to
enter the home, and no exigent circumstances that would have permitted him to enter the home
absent a warrant or consent. But Peters contends that the front screen door was slightly ajar and
there was no solid door behind the screen door, so he presumed that the door led to a common
front entry for multiple apartments, despite his acknowledgement that only one house number—
513—was listed next to the door.
        In contrast, Richards and Harris testified that the door was not a common entry. Instead,
they contend that Peters walked through the front door of their home—a door that did not provide
entry to any unit other than 513, as indicated by the address marked next to the doorway. Both
Richards’s testimony and multiple photographs of the property contradict Peters’s description of
the door. There were actually two doors at the entryway to 513 Blackstone: the screen door that
Peters describes, as well as a second solid white door immediately behind the screen door. Harris
maintains the screen door was closed before Peters entered the home and that he heard the screen
door creak open upon Peters’s entry. The audio recording from Peters’s body microphone captures
a sound consistent with the creaking that Harris describes.
       Upon entering through the doorway, Peters saw a small foyer, a flight of stairs, and an
additional door at the top of the stairs. The door at the top of the stairs opens into Richards’s and
Harris’s living room, where Harris was playing video games with Richards’s younger brother,
Jaquan Caddell. Kane was lying nearby. While Harris and Caddell were playing video games,
they heard the screen door “creep open” and heard “footsteps in the doorway,” alerting them that
someone was inside the home. (Harris Dep., R. 45-4, PageID 572.)
       Standing inside the foyer, Peters knocked on the interior wall of the apartment. After the
knock, the audio recording from Peters’s body microphone captures Harris yelling from the living
room, “Who the f–ck is it?” (Peters Audio at 1:39.) Peters responds, “Police.” (Id. at 1:42.) Right
after Harris yells and Peters responds, the audio recording captures the sound of Kane running and
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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


growling for four seconds. (Id. at 1:43–1:47.) Peters then contends that he said, “Get your f–cking
dog,” but Harris contends that he could not hear Peters saying anything to him. (Peters Dep.,
R. 45-7, PageID 594.) The audio recording captures Peters saying “. . . [expletive] dog,” but the
recording quality makes it difficult to discern the full quote or how loudly Peters was speaking.
(Peters Audio at 1:47–1:48.) Kane continues to make noise, though it is unclear whether the sound
is running, growling, or some combination of the two. Within two seconds of Peters saying
“[expletive] dog,” the audio recording captures him shooting and killing Kane.
       What the audio recording does not capture—and what is hotly contested—is what Kane,
Harris, and Peters were doing during the six seconds between the time Kane began running from
the living room and the time at which he was shot. Both Harris and Peters agree that Kane ran
down the stairs and growled. But from there, the witnesses to the shooting provide differing stories
about what took place.
       Harris testified that Kane began running down the stairs to prevent Peters from coming up
the stairway, because Peters “was trying to creep in and creep upstairs without saying nothing.”
(Harris Dep., R. 45-4, PageID 573.) At the time that Peters shot Kane, Harris contends that he was
going down the stairs to get his dog, but that Peters fired the shots before he could reach Kane.
Harris testified that Peters shot Kane as soon as Kane got to the bottom of the stairway.
       In contrast, Peters wrote in his police report that Kane immediately ran down the stairs,
“came directly to his feet,” and “began growling, snarling, and biting at my feet and ankles.”
(Police Reports, R. 28-2, PageID 174.) Peters wrote that he “yelled for someone to come get the
dog and kicked at it,” but that “[o]ne kick sent the dog back against the bottom of the stairs only
to have it charge back at [Peters] again biting at [his] legs.” (Id.) Peters later testified that he did
not try to exit the apartment during this encounter, and while he is “sure at some point” he could
have exited the apartment, he did not feel he had time to exit after yelling for someone to get the
dog. (Peters Dep., R. 45-7, PageID 594.) Peters contends that, after he yelled, Harris appeared at
the top of the stairway, ran a third of the way down the stairs, and started yelling at Peters, though
the audio recording does not capture Harris yelling at this point. Peters testified that Kane returned


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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


between Peters’s legs a second time after being kicked, and that he shot Kane at that point because
he believed Kane was going to bite him.
       Costley, the officer who was initially positioned outside 511 Blackstone, entered the
plaintiffs’ residence after hearing Peters’s voice coming from inside the unit. Costley’s police
report states that, at the time he entered 513 Blackstone, Peters was “backed into the far corner of
the small foyer area,” and Kane “was at his legs growling and barking in a vicious manner.”
(Police Reports, R. 28-2, PageID 175.) Costley wrote that Peters “attempt[ed] to push the dog
away with his foot,” and Kane moved back but then “immediately began advancing toward [Peters]
again, while continuing to growl[] and bark[] aggressively,” at which point Peters shot Kane. (Id.)
       The record is also unclear about the size of the foyer and Peters’s location at the time of
the shooting. The foyer is located between the front door and the stairwell that leads to the living
room, but none of the witness testimony or photographs in the record provide a clear estimate of
the foyer’s dimensions. And the officers’ accounts regarding Peters’s location within the foyer
differ: Peters repeatedly states in his deposition that he was standing just inside the door while he
was inside the plaintiffs’ home, but Costley testified that when he entered the plaintiffs’ home
through that same front door, Peters was backed into the far corner of the foyer area.
       After the shooting, the audio recording captures Harris saying, “Why you shoot my dog,
man?” (Peters Audio at 1:52.) Peters says, “He was [expletive] biting me, man.” (Id. at 1:53.)
But when deposed, Peters admitted that Kane never bit him. There, he testified that Kane was
“biting at [him],” but Kane “did not make physical contact with [his] leg.” (Peters Dep., R. 45-7,
PageID 592, 595.) Harris also contends that Peters was flippant and even laughed during their
conversation after the shooting, though Peters testified that he did not recall having laughed.
       On September 29, 2016, Richards and Harris brought a cause of action against Peters,
alleging that Peters unreasonably searched their home and seized Kane in violation of the Fourth
Amendment and Michigan tort law. Peters moved for summary judgment on grounds of qualified
immunity and Michigan governmental immunity. On August 27, 2018, the district court denied
Peters’s motion as to the Fourth Amendment, conversion, and gross negligence claims. Peters
filed a timely notice of appeal.
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                                           II. ANALYSIS
          We begin with whether the district court erred in denying Peters qualified immunity for the
plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment claims, and then address whether the district court erred in denying
Peters governmental immunity under Michigan law for the plaintiffs’ state-law claims.
   A. Qualified Immunity
          In analyzing whether an official is entitled to qualified immunity, we must make two
determinations: first, whether the plaintiffs have created a genuine dispute of material fact
regarding whether the official deprived them of a constitutional right; and second, whether that
right was clearly established such that a reasonable official would have known his actions were
unconstitutional. Morgan v. Fairfield Cty., 903 F.3d 553, 560 (6th Cir. 2018) (citing Harlow v.
Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982)). Courts can address these inquiries in either order. Id. In
undertaking each inquiry, we accept the “most favorable view of the facts to the plaintiff for
purposes of the appeal.” Thompson v. Grida, 656 F.3d 365, 367 (6th Cir. 2011).
          Here, the district court denied Peters qualified immunity for two Fourth Amendment
claims:     first, the claim that the warrantless entry into the plaintiffs’ home constituted an
unreasonable search; and second, the claim that shooting and killing the plaintiffs’ pet dog
constituted an unreasonable seizure. We address each claim in turn.
          1. Unreasonable Search
          In determining whether the district court erred in denying Peters qualified immunity for
entering the plaintiffs’ home, we begin with the question of whether the plaintiffs have presented
a genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether Peters’s entry into their home deprived them
of their Fourth Amendment rights, and then analyze whether the right at issue was clearly
established on November 28, 2014.
             a. Constitutional Deprivation
          The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches of an individual’s home.
U.S. Const. amend. IV. The Supreme Court has recognized that “physical entry of the home is the
chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.” United States v. U.S.
District Court (Keith), 407 U.S. 297, 313 (1972); see Florida v. Jardines, 569 U.S. 1, 6 (2013).
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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


“In terms that apply equally to seizures of property and to seizures of persons, the Fourth
Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the house.” Payton v. New York, 445 U.S.
573, 589–90 (1980). The Supreme Court has taken this threshold seriously, making clear that “any
physical invasion of the structure of the home, ‘by even a fraction of an inch,’ [is] too much,” and
that “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.” Kyllo v.
United States, 533 U.S. 27, 37 (2001) (quoting Silverman v. United States, 365 U.S. 505, 512
(1961)). “With few exceptions, the question whether a warrantless search of a home is reasonable
and hence constitutional must be answered no.” Id. at 31.
       Peters does not argue that he had a warrant, consent, or exigent circumstances to enter the
home. Instead, his argument turns on whether he had entered the plaintiffs’ home at all. Peters
claims that he reasonably believed the front door led to a common entryway shared by multiple
residences, and he argues that individuals have no “objectively reasonable expectation of privacy
in the unlocked and open common hallway and stairway of [their] duplex.” United States v.
Dillard, 438 F.3d 675, 684 (6th Cir. 2006).
       Peters’s position elides a critical factual dispute: whether the foyer was in fact a common
area. The plaintiffs vigorously dispute that the foyer was a common area—and the record supports
their position. The district court rejected Peters’s suggestion that the foyer was a common area,
finding that each unit had its own door and that the plaintiffs were the only residents of the
Blackstone building who had access to the foyer. We agree that the plaintiffs have demonstrated
that Peters entered their home, not a common area.
       Peters’s remaining argument—that, even if he had entered the plaintiffs’ home, he had
“restricted his movement to the area of the apartment that was generally accessible to visitors to
the property”—is unpersuasive. (Appellant Br. 29–31.) Richards’s deposition makes clear that,
although the living room and bedroom were at the top of the second set of stairs, everything inside
the exterior door that Peters breached is part of the plaintiffs’ apartment. Once Peters entered the
plaintiffs’ home, it did not matter whether he was in the front hallway where they accepted visitors


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or in their bedroom—“any physical invasion of the structure of the home, ‘by even a fraction of
an inch,’ [is] too much.” Kyllo, 533 U.S. at 37.
             b. Clearly Established
        Even assuming his entry into the plaintiffs’ home was unconstitutional, Peters argues that
he reasonably believed the foyer was an entrance to a common area, and an officer who acts on a
mistaken but reasonable belief is entitled to qualified immunity. This court has held that “a
government employee will be shielded from liability so long as the employee acted under the
objectively reasonable belief that his or her actions were lawful.” Ahlers v. Schebil, 188 F.3d 365,
373 (6th Cir. 1999); see Johnson v. Moseley, 790 F.3d 649, 653 (6th Cir. 2015). Thus, at this stage
of litigation, we must determine whether a jury could reasonably find that Peters’s belief was not
objectively reasonable. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986).
        Peters contends that when he entered through an unlocked door in a multi-occupant
building, he believed that the door would lead to a foyer from which he could access the doors to
multiple interior units. In his deposition, Peters testified that, in Jackson, “[t]here are countless
large homes with multiple apartments inside of that large building most of which you have to go
into to get to the individual apartments, be it one, two, three, A, B, C,” and, in his experience, the
address markings on the exterior of such buildings would not always indicate that there were
multiple units inside. (Peters Dep., R. 45-7, PageID 594.) But Peters also agreed that he had
received no information from dispatch indicating that such subunits existed in this apartment, and
that he was not asked to look for an individual in 513A, B, or C—he was simply told that Cox
might be at 511 or 513 South Blackstone Street, each of which had its own door and address
marking on the exterior of the home. The fact that some houses in Jackson have this design does
not preclude a jury from finding that Peters was unreasonable in assuming that this house had such
a feature.
        The photographs of the home’s exterior further undermine the reasonableness of Peters’s
belief: the clear address markings, individual mailboxes at each door, and the doorbell outside of
the door marked 513 cut against the idea that this front door led to a common area rather than the
entryway of an individual’s home.
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        After considering all of the evidence, the district court found that “[w]hether it was
unreasonable for Officer Peters to assume Plaintiffs’ home consisted of multiple dwelling units,
and he unlawfully entered Plaintiffs’ home presents a genuine issue of material fact, which should
be determined by the factfinder.” (Order, R. 59, PageID 944.) We agree. Because there is a
genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether Peters’s belief that he had not entered the
plaintiffs’ home when he walked through their doorway was reasonable, we affirm the denial of
qualified immunity as to this claim.
        2. Unreasonable Seizure
        In determining whether the district court erred in denying Peters qualified immunity for
shooting Kane, we begin with the question of whether the right at issue was clearly established on
November 28, 2014, and then address whether the plaintiffs have presented a genuine issue of
material fact regarding whether Peters’s seizure of Kane violated the Fourth Amendment.
            a. Clearly Established
        The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable seizures of an individual’s property.
U.S. Const. amend. IV. This court has acknowledged that “there is a constitutional right under the
Fourth Amendment to not have one’s dog unreasonably seized.” Brown v. Battle Creek Police
Dep’t, 844 F.3d 556, 566 (6th Cir. 2016). In describing the contours of that right in Brown, we
began with the premise that a “seizure becomes unlawful when it is more intrusive than necessary.”
Id. at 568 (citing Florida v. Royer, 460 U.S. 491, 504 (1983)). In determining whether a seizure
of a dog was more intrusive than necessary, we reiterated the Supreme Court’s holding that “a
court must ‘balance the nature and quality of the intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment
interests against the importance of the governmental interest alleged to justify the intrusion’ and
determine whether ‘the totality of the circumstances justified [the] particular sort of . . . seizure.’”
Id. (quoting Carroll v. Cty. of Monroe, 712 F.3d 649, 651 (2d Cir. 2013)).
        In Brown, we concluded that shooting a pet dog is a “severe intrusion[,] given the emotional
attachment between a dog and an owner.” Id. at 568; see San Jose Charter of the Hells Angels
Motorcycle Club v. City of San Jose, 402 F.3d 962, 975–78 (9th Cir. 2005) (“The emotional
attachment to a family’s dog is not comparable to a possessory interest in furniture.”). But we also
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found that ensuring “officer safety and preventing the destruction of evidence are particularly
important governmental interests that the courts must strive to protect.” Brown, 844 F.3d at 568.
After balancing these interests, we found that “a police officer’s use of deadly force against a dog
while executing a warrant to search a home for illegal drug activity is reasonable under the Fourth
Amendment when, given the totality of the circumstances and viewed from the perspective of an
objectively reasonable officer, the dog poses an imminent threat to the officer’s safety.” Id. We
defined the requisite imminent threat as “‘[a]n immediate, real threat to one’s safety that justifies
the use of force in self-defense,’ or ‘[t]he danger resulting from an immediate threatened injury
sufficient to cause a reasonable and prudent person to defend himself or herself.’” Id. at 567
(quoting Imminent Danger, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014)).
       In defining the right at issue, we noted that a “large number” of our sister circuits had
“already concluded that, ‘the use of deadly force against a household pet is reasonable only if the
pet poses an [imminent] danger and the use of force is unavoidable,’” and that every circuit to
consider the issue “has concluded that the unreasonable killing of a dog constitutes an
unconstitutional ‘seizure’ of personal property under the Fourth Amendment.” Brown, 844 F.3d
at 566–67 (alterations in original) (collecting cases). Accordingly, we determined that the right
not to have one’s dog unreasonably seized “was clearly established in 2013,” and we proceeded to
determine whether the seizures at hand were reasonable. Id. at 567. We see no reason to depart
from that course here.
       Despite this court’s holding in Brown, Peters argues that the right at issue was not clearly
established for two reasons, neither of which is convincing. First, Peters argued that Brown was
issued in 2016, which is later-in-time than the conduct at issue and therefore cannot suffice to
clearly establish the law. This argument misreads Brown, where we unequivocally stated that the
“constitutional right under the Fourth Amendment to not have one’s dog unreasonably seized . . .
was clearly established in 2013.” Brown, 844 F.3d at 566–67. Because the right was clearly
established in 2013, it was also clearly established when Peters shot Kane on November 28, 2014.
       Second, Peters argues that he could not have been expected to anticipate our recognition in
Smith v. City of Detroit, 751 F. App’x 691, 692 (6th Cir. 2018) that unlicensed dogs are property
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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


under the Fourth Amendment. Had Peters argued that he shot Kane because he believed Kane was
unlicensed and that Harris and Richards had no property interest in an unlicensed dog, this
argument might have some force. But Peters gives no indication that he knew or even considered
whether Kane was unlicensed at the time of the shooting. Cf. Smith, 751 F. App’x at 697 (“As the
district court observed, ‘the officers did not shoot the dogs because they were unlicensed. Rather,
the officers . . . were not even aware that the dogs were unlicensed.’”). Thus, Peters’s ability to
anticipate this court’s ruling in Smith has no bearing on whether Peters should reasonably have
known that his actions were unconstitutional.
           b. Constitutional Deprivation
        We must next determine whether plaintiffs have raised a genuine dispute of material fact
regarding whether Kane presented an imminent threat that justified Peters’s decision to shoot
Kane. At this stage of the case, we are required to view the facts in the light most favorable to the
plaintiffs, even where the only genuine dispute is created by the plaintiffs’ “uncorroborated
testimony” regarding the incident. Brown, 844 F.3d at 571; see Robinson, 818 F.3d at 8–10
(finding that the district court erred in holding that the dog owner’s uncorroborated testimony
failed to create a genuine dispute of material fact). Thus, for the purposes of the appeal, we must
assume that when Peters announced his presence from inside the home, Kane ran down the stairs
and growled but never advanced past the foot of the stairwell; that Kane did not lunge or bite at
Peters; and that Harris was on his way down the stairs to get Kane at the time that Peters shot
Kane.
        We begin our analysis of whether the seizure in this case was reasonable with a closer look
at Brown. The specific facts in Brown led this court to conclude that no genuine dispute of material
fact existed regarding the reasonableness of shooting two dogs. In Brown, officers were executing
a raid on the home of a suspect who “posed a serious threat to the officers’ safety”: officers knew
that the suspect had a criminal history, used firearms, and had deep ties to a large, tightly-knit
gang. 844 F.3d at 568–69. These circumstances placed the officers in Brown “on high alert going
into the raid that other members of the gang could be in the residence and that they could be armed
and dangerous.” Id. at 569.
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       In Brown, it was also undisputed that the dogs displayed signs of aggression beyond
growling. The dogs began lunging toward the windows as the officers approached the front door.
Id. at 569. The 97-pound dog jumped off the couch and lunged at the officers again as they entered
the residence, which prompted an officer to fire at the dog. Id. at 563. Still, the dogs continued to
obstruct the officers’ path in the basement of the home. Id. Given the high risk presented by the
suspect’s firearm and gang activity, the officers’ priority was to secure the basement and conduct
a sweep for other potentially dangerous people in the home, and the officers testified they could
not safely accomplish this goal with both dogs present. Id. at 563, 570. Despite having been shot
once, the 97-pound dog turned toward the officers in the basement and started barking again, so
another officer fired a round of shots, killing the dog. Id. at 563. The 53-pound dog was also in
the middle of the basement, barking at officers as they attempted to enter and clear the area. Id.
The same officer who had just shot the first dog fired at the second dog when he saw it barking at
the officers, and a second officer fired at the dog again when it began moving toward him. Id.
       In determining that shooting the dogs was not unreasonable, we emphasized that the
plaintiffs in Brown failed to rebut several undisputed material facts: namely, that a “large” dog
had “lunged” at the officer before he shot the dog, and that the officers were “unable to safely clear
the basement with both dogs there.” Id. at 570. The court also reiterated the suspect’s criminal
history and gang affiliations, “the fact that the officers had no time to plan for the dogs,” “the
nature and size of the dogs,” and “the fact that the dogs were unleashed and loose in a small
residence.” Id. at 572. Considering each of these factors as part of the totality of the circumstances,
we found the plaintiffs failed to create a genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether a dog
that was “barking and lunging at the officers as they breached the entryway” posed such an
imminent threat to the officers that “it was necessary to shoot the dog in order for them to safely
sweep the residence” and ensure no dangerous people were present. Id. at 570.
       The facts of Brown bear some similarities to those presented here. Like in Brown, Peters
did not know about the dog in advance and had no time to plan for how to handle the dog’s
presence. Brown, 844 F.3d at 572. Additionally, Kane was off-leash in what appears to have been
a small area. But several meaningful differences make this case distinguishable from Brown.
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       First, the level of aggression described in Brown is a common theme in cases where courts
have found that a seizure of a dog was reasonable. See Robinson v. Pezzat, 818 F.3d 1, 12 (D.C.
Cir. 2016) (“Given that [the dog] bit [an officer] hard enough to puncture her leather boots, [the
officer’s] belief—just seconds later—that the dog continued to pose an imminent threat even
absent additional aggressive behavior was hardly unreasonable.”); Altman v. City of High Point,
330 F.3d 194, 206 (4th Cir. 2003) (finding seizures were reasonable where officers had knowledge
that the dogs had previously attacked or behaved aggressively toward other humans). Taking the
facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, Kane displayed a significantly lower level of
aggression. Here, Peters’s only reason to believe that Kane presented an imminent threat was that
he ran down the stairs and growled when an unknown person entered his home. As the district
court noted, this behavior is distinguishable from more serious displays of aggression akin to
lunging or biting because “descending stairs, barking, and growling” is “naturally expected of a
dog when a stranger enters its home.” (Order, R. 59, PageID 945.) See Robinson, 818 F.3d at 11
(“A jury could regard . . . Wrinkles’ barking at the police—as would most any self-respecting
dog—to be of limited probative value[.]”). We do not hold today that a dog must bite an officer
before he can fire his weapon. But a jury could reasonably find that the absence of any aggression
apart from growling is a factor that cuts toward unreasonableness in assessing the totality of the
circumstances.
       Furthermore, the context of the seizure is dramatically different from that in Brown. Unlike
the officers in Brown, Peters was dealing with only one dog. Id. at 570, 572; Altman, 330 F.3d at
206 (“Obviously, the danger presented by a dog increases significantly when that dog joins others
in a pack.”). And, here, there was no intimation of high-risk gang activity or any similar level of
threat inside the home that would require Peters to conduct a sweep to ensure his safety. Rather,
Peters had been dispatched to look for a man who had failed to pick up his medication from a local
hospital. As discussed above, Peters did not even have a warrant to enter the home in question, let
alone a need to conduct a thorough search or sweep of the premises that might necessitate seizing
the dog to safely clear the scene. Cf. Brown, 844 F.3d at 563, 570.


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       Relatedly, the questionable validity of the search distinguishes this case from Brown.
Although the primary question in an excessive force case is typically “whether the force used to
effect that seizure was reasonable in the totality of the circumstances, not whether it was reasonable
for the police to create the circumstances,” Dickerson v. McClellan, 101 F.3d 1151, 1161 (6th Cir.
1996) (quoting Carter v. Buscher, 973 F.2d 1328, 1332 (7th Cir. 1992)), this court has
acknowledged that where “the events preceding the shooting occurred in close temporal proximity
to the shooting, those events have been considered in analyzing whether excessive force was used.”
Bletz v. Gribble, 641 F.3d 743, 750–52 (6th Cir. 2011) (citing Yates v. City of Cleveland, 941 F.2d
444, 447 (6th Cir. 1991) (noting that the officer’s “actions preceding the shooting were not those
of an objectively reasonable police officer” in finding that the officer’s use of force was objectively
unreasonable)). Because the audio recording suggests that Peters’s relevant conduct—from the
time he entered the home to the time at which he shot Kane—occurred within 17 seconds, a jury
could reasonably find that Peters’s unlawful entry preceding the shooting as an additional factor
cutting against the reasonableness of the seizure.
       Several additional unresolved facts suggest that a genuine dispute of material fact remains
regarding whether the seizure was reasonable. For example, the uncertainty in the record regarding
the size of the foyer and Peters’s location in the foyer at the time of the shooting makes it difficult
to tell whether Kane posed an imminent threat to Peters from the foot of the stairwell. A jury could
reasonably find that a growling dog standing several feet away from the officer does not present
the same type of imminent threat as a dog who is lunging toward the officer.
       The record also contains no information about Kane’s size. In Brown, this court looked to
the “nature and size of the dogs,” noting that the record demonstrated that one dog was 97 pounds
and the other was 53 pounds. In contrast, none of the police reports or depositions in this case
even describes Kane as “large” or “small.” The lack of information about size matters, as a jury
could reasonably find that the threat posed by a 30-pound dog is meaningfully less severe than that
posed by the 97- and 53-pound dogs described in Brown. See United Kennel Club, American Pit
Bull Terrier (May 1, 2017) (describing weight range); American Dog Breeders Association, The
ADBA Heritage American Pit Bull Terrier Conformation Standard (Jan. 27, 2018) (same). And
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as for Kane’s “nature,” the only undisputed facts about Kane’s behavior in the record are that he
had never been aggressive toward other people or animals in the five years he had lived with the
plaintiffs, apart from growling when a stranger unexpectedly entered his home.
       In light of all the considerations enumerated above—the lack of aggression beyond the
common dog behaviors of running down the stairs and growling at a stranger in the home; the
absence of high-risk criminal activity that might require seizing the dog to safely sweep the
premises; Peters’s unlawful entry into the home where he shot the dog; the material disputes in the
record regarding the distance between Peters and the dog; and the lack of any record facts regarding
Kane’s size or weight—we conclude that the plaintiffs have created a genuine dispute of material
fact regarding whether Kane posed an imminent threat that justified Peters’s decision to shoot.
   B. Michigan Governmental Immunity
       Peters next argues that the district court erred in denying Michigan governmental immunity
on the plaintiffs’ state-law claims of gross negligence and conversion. Michigan governmental
immunity functions differently for intentional torts and torts that require only negligence, Odom
v. Wayne Cty., 482 Mich. 459, 470 (2008), so we begin with the intentional tort of conversion and
then proceed to the gross negligence claim.
       1. Conversion
       Richards and Harris alleged that Peters committed the intentional tort of conversion under
Michigan law, because killing Kane was “a distinct act of dominion wrongfully exerted over
Plaintiff’s dog in denial of or inconsistent with Plaintiffs’ rights,” and Peters’s conduct proximately
caused the injuries and damages that resulted. (Compl., R. 1, PageID 10.) See Foremost Ins. Co.
v. Allstate Ins. Co., 439 Mich. 378, 391 (1992) (defining conversion).
       Michigan governmental employees are immune from intentional tort liability when they
can establish that “(1) the employee’s challenged acts were undertaken during the course of
employment and that the employee was acting, or reasonably believed he was acting, within the
scope of his authority, (2) the acts were undertaken in good faith, and (3) the acts were
discretionary, rather than ministerial, in nature.” Odom, 482 Mich. at 461. The parties dispute
only the second element: whether a jury could reasonably find Peters did not act in good faith.
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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


       The good-faith requirement “imposes a subjective test for governmental immunity for
intentional torts, based on the officials’ state of mind, in contrast to the objective test for federal
qualified immunity.” Brown v. Lewis, 779 F.3d 401, 420 (6th Cir. 2015); Odom, 482 Mich. at
481–82. Peters argues that he acted under the good-faith belief that shooting Kane was necessary
to defend himself from imminent harm. But plaintiffs contend Peters’s actions were not taken in
good faith, arguing that the record evidence supports a finding that Peters “took no efforts to bring
to a halt his chain of unlawful conduct that ultimately led to the unjustified destruction of Kane
and resultant wrongful conversion of [plaintiffs]’ personal property,” because Peters “knew or
should have known that he was not permitted to enter into [plaintiffs]’ home, he knew that he was
unlawfully on their premises once inside, and, instead of retreating or giving Plaintiff-Appellee
Eddie the opportunity to grab Kane, [Peters] maliciously executed the pet within 6 seconds.”
(Appellee Br. 40.) We believe that the record supports a jury finding in favor of either party on
this issue. Because a genuine dispute of material fact remains, we affirm.
       2. Gross Negligence
       Richards and Harris also alleged that, as a police officer, Peters “had a duty to perform
[his] employment activities so as not to endanger or cause harm to Plaintiffs,” and he “breached
his duties with deliberate indifference and gross negligence and without regard to Plaintiffs’ rights
and welfare, which caused serious injuries and damages to Plaintiffs.” (Compl., R. 1, PageID 12.)
Peters contends that his intentional acts of entering the foyer and shooting the dog correspond to
the intentional torts of trespass and conversion, and “[g]ross negligence ‘is not an independent
cause of action’ when the underlying claim is an intentional [tort] by an officer.” Presnall v. Huey,
657 F. App’x 508, 513 (6th Cir. 2016) (quoting Bletz, 641 F.3d at 756).
       Peters is correct that “Michigan ‘has rejected attempts to transform claims involving
elements of intentional torts into claims of gross negligence.’” Miller v. Sanilac Cty., 606 F.3d
240, 254 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting VanVorous v. Burmeister, 262 Mich. App. 467, 483 (2004),
overruled on other grounds by Odom, 482 Mich. 459). But “plaintiffs are barred from bringing
gross-negligence claims only if those claims are ‘fully premised’ on alleged intentional torts.”
Brent v. Wayne Cty. Dep’t of Human Servs., 901 F.3d 656, 700–01 (6th Cir. 2018), cert. denied,
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Case No. 18-2024, Richards v. City of Jackson


139 S. Ct. 1551 (2019) (quoting VanVorous, 262 Mich. App. at 483). This court has sustained
gross-negligence claims premised on allegations that officers were “grossly negligent in failing to
follow certain procedures and statutory obligations” or where the plaintiff can otherwise “show
that the defendant owed him a duty of care.” Id. at 701 (citing Cummins v. Robinson Twp., 283
Mich. App. 677, 692 (2009)).
       In Bell v. Porter, 739 F. Supp. 2d 1005 (W.D. Mich. 2010), the district court upheld a
plaintiff’s gross negligence claim based on an officer’s breach of similar duties: “to avoid
foreseeable injury to plaintiff while investigating or pursuing legitimate police activity” and “to
avoid conduct or failure to act that is so reckless that it demonstrates a substantial lack of concern
for whether injury will result.” Id. at 1015. Like in Bell, the plaintiffs’ allegation of gross
negligence here is “based on the same incident” as the intentional torts Peters describes, but the
plaintiffs have “adequately alleged an alternative basis for the claim.” Id. Thus, the allegation in
the complaint that Peters breached his “duty to perform [his] employment activities so as not to
endanger or cause harm to Plaintiffs” is sufficiently distinct from the separately-pleaded
intentional torts. (Compl., R. 1, PageID 12.)
       Finally, Peters argues that his conduct was not the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ injury,
because he claims that Kane’s aggressive behavior and Harris’s inability to gain control also
contributed to Kane’s death. This argument is uncompelling. The Michigan Supreme Court has
held that a government official can only be deprived of immunity for gross negligence claims if
his actions were “the one most immediate, efficient, and direct cause of the injury or damage.”
Robinson v. City of Detroit, 462 Mich. 439, 462 (2000). Here, the “one most immediate, efficient,
and direct cause of the injury or damage” to Kane (and, consequently, to the plaintiffs) was
undoubtedly Peters’s decision to fire his weapon and kill the plaintiffs’ dog. Id. Thus, we affirm
the denial of Peters’s motion for summary judgment.
                                       III. CONCLUSION
       For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.




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