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Israel Escobar assaulted his wife and fled from the police with a knife. While chasing him, the police were informed—by Escobar’s mother—that they would have to kill him to get him. The police eventually found Escobar in a backyard and released a dog to capture and hold him. Escobar was bitten by the dog until fully handcuffed by the police, even though he avers that he dropped the knife and lay flat on the ground once discovered. Because he claims he was trying to surrender, Escobar contends that both the initial bite and the continued biting were excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amend­ment. He brought those claims, among others, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court dismissed the initial-bite claim on a Federal Rule of Civil Proce­dure 12(b)(6) motion, then denied Officer Lance Montee summary judgment on a claim of qualified immunity (“QI”). Montee appeals the denial of QI; Escobar cross-appeals the dismissal of his initial-bite claim. Finding no Fourth Amend­ment violation, we reverse the denial of qualified immunity, dismiss the cross- appeal for lack of jurisdiction, and remand.I.Escobar assaulted his wife in a restaurant parking lot, and then left her alone in a nearby retail lot. After noticing police vehicles at his house, he fled into the night. He ran through several neighbors’ yards, finally hiding in the backyard of a house a few blocks from his own. He remained there, crouched under an awning near the backdoor, for about twenty minutes while the police searched for him, both on foot and in a helicopter. They eventually located Escobar, and the helicopter circled the house while the police decided on a course of action.While the helicopter monitored Escobar, the police were informed that he had a knife. Furthermore, they were told that Escobar’s mother had called and said the police would have to kill Escobar to catch him; he would not go without a fight. Based on those facts, Montee—the K-9 officer in charge of the police dog “Bullet”—decided not to give his usual warning to the suspect that he would deploy the canine. Instead, he threw Bullet over the fence surround­ing the backyard and only then scaled the fence himself.Montee followed Bullet alongside the house into the backyard, where he claims he saw Escobar standing with the knife. Escobar disagrees; according to him, once he heard the dog and officers approaching, he dropped his knife and lay flat on the ground “like a parachute man.” Either way, Escobar was then bitten by Bullet and wound up lying flat on the ground. Montee agrees that Escobar then dropped the knife but maintains that the knife remained within Escobar’s reach—a fact Escobar never disputes.Escobar claims he remained on the ground in an attempt to convey his surrender. But Montee, believing Escobar still posed a threat because of the knife and warnings by Escobar’s mother, allowed Bullet to continue biting Escobar until Escobar was fully subdued and in handcuffs. All in all, Escobar was bitten for approximately one minute. Once he was cuffed, the officers removed Bullet and took Escobar away; he eventually pleaded guilty of third- degree family assault.Escobar sued Montee under § 1983, alleging that Montee violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force by (1) having Bullet initially bite him without warning and (2) permitting Bullet to continue biting after he surrendered and was not resisting. Montee, claiming QI, moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).The district court granted Montee’s motion as to Escobar’s first claim, i.e., as to the initial bite. As the court reasoned, Montee’s initial decision to release Bullet without warning was objectively reasonable because a reasona­ble officer in Montee’s shoes would not have known Escobar was surrendering. The court denied the motion as to Escobar’s second claim, i.e., as to the contin­ued biting.Montee moved for summary judgment; he and Escobar submitted duel­ing affidavits that provide the factual background above. The district court denied Montee’s motion, reasoning that—with the facts construed in Escobar’s favor—a reasonable officer would have known that Escobar was not resisting and was surrendering. And the court found that such force, in the face of sur­render, is clearly established as violating the Fourth Amendment.Montee appealed, claiming QI. Escobar cross-appealed the Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of his initial-bite claim, contending we have pendent appellate juris­diction over that dismissal.II.We start by assessing our jurisdiction.[1] Montee’s appeal is based on QI and thus, although this is an interlocutory appeal, the order denying QI is appealable. Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511, 524-30 (1985). Beyond the limited right to an interlocutory appeal, the ability to enjoy pendent appellate jurisdiction is carefully circumscribed. The Supreme Court has recognized two exceptions to the bar on court-created interlocutory appeals: (1) If the pendent decision is “inextricably intertwined” with the decision over which the appel­late court otherwise has jurisdiction, pendent appellate jurisdiction may lie, or (2) if “review of the former decision [is] necessary to ensure meaningful review of the latter.” Swint v. Chambers Cty. Comm’n, 514 U.S. 35, 51 (1995).[2] Such exceptions are proper because courts should “extend their Cohen jurisdiction[[3]] to rulings that would not otherwise qualify for expedited consideration” “[o]nly where [those rulings are essential] to the resolution of properly appealed collat­eral orders.” Id. (quoting Riyaz A. Kanji, The Proper Scope of Pendent Appel­late Jurisdiction in the Collateral Order Context, 100 YALE L.J. 511, 530 (1990)).Pendent appellate jurisdiction “is only proper in [the] rare and unique circumstances” articulated by Swint.[4] Escobar believes he has such a “rare” and “unique” case, reasoning that his claim based on the first bite is “inextric­ably intertwined” with the claim for continuing bites. But the claims are obvi­ously severable. The district court considered and decided them separately, finding for Montee on one claim and for Escobar on the other. And the court issued individualized orders on each claim at distinct stages of the proceedings. Plainly the decision to dismiss the first-bite claim was not “inextricably inter­twined” with whether summary judgment was proper on the continued-bite claim.A survey of our caselaw exposes the flaws in Escobar’s position. To sup­port pendent appellate jurisdiction, Escobar cites Anderson v. Valdez, 845 F.3d 580 (5th Cir. 2016), where, as here, the court had interlocutory appellate juris­diction over the appeal of a QI-based motion to dismiss. Id. at 588-89. The court exercised pendent appellate jurisdiction only over an additional appeal of whether the plaintiff had even stated a claim. Id. The question whether a plaintiff has alleged a constitutional violation can be seen as inextricably inter­twined with whether an officer has QI. See Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201 (2001). Read properly, Anderson does not support Escobar’s position.Pendent appellate jurisdiction may be proper where (1) the court will decide some issue in the properly brought interlocutory appeal that necessarily disposes of the pendent claim;[5] (2) addressing the pendent claim will further the purpose of officer-immunities by helping the officer avoid trial;[6] (3) the pen­dent claim would be otherwise unreviewable;[7] or (4) the claims involve pre­cisely the same facts and elements.[8] Escobar’s cross-appeal does not fit any of those categories. Deciding Montee’s appeal will not necessarily dispose of Esco­bar’s cross-appeal, as evidenced by the disposition in the district court. Nor would addressing Escobar’s first-bite claim further the purposes of QI by help­ing Montee avoid trial. And Escobar’s claim is reviewable through the normal course of appellate review.Finally, as explained above, the first-bite claim and continued-bite claim do not involve precisely the same facts in such a way as to be “inextricably intertwined.” Indeed, the claims “were treated separately by the district court,” and differences in facts include whether Montee gave warnings before releasing Bullet and whether the knife remained within grabbing distance once dropped. See Gros, 209 F.3d at 437. Because Congress has provided “stat­utory instructions . . . to control the timing of appellate proceedings,” Swint, 514 U.S. at 45, we must be cautious about creating “ad hoc appellate jurisdic­tional rules.” Byrum, 566 F.3d at 449. This is not the “rare and unique” case to warrant such an ad hoc exception to the normal course of review. Id. Accordingly, we dismiss the cross-appeal for want of jurisdiction.III.We turn to whether the district court properly denied Montee QI and summary judgment on the continued-bite claim. Our review is de novo. Cooper v. Brown, 844 F.3d 517, 522 (5th Cir. 2016). When reviewing the denial of summary judgment based on QI, “we have jurisdiction to ‘review the material­ity of any factual disputes, but not their genuineness.’” Id. (quoting Hogan v. Cunningham, 722 F.3d 725, 730-31 (5th Cir. 2013)). If there are factual dis­putes, “we accept the plaintiffs version.” Id.To overcome QI, Escobar must show (1) “a violation of an actual consti­tutional right,” and (2) that “the right was clearly established at the time of violation.” Id. We may address either prong first. Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 236 (2009). We begin with the former.Escobar alleges his Fourth Amendment right was violated because he was subject to excessive force when arrested. Such excessive force claims “in the context of arrests” are analyzed under the Fourth Amendment’s “objective reasonableness standard.”[9] Because “police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments . . . in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving,” we must not use “the 20/20 vision of hindsight.” Graham, 490 U.S. at 396-97. Instead, we look at the case from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, paying “careful attention to the facts and cir­cumstances of each particular case.” Id. at 396. When viewing “the totality of the circumstances,” we pay particular attention to the Graham factors, i.e. “the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.” Darden v. City of Fort Worth, 880 F.3d 722, 728-29 (5th Cir. 2018) (second quoting Graham, 490 U.S. at 396).Because we construe any disputed facts in Escobar’s favor, we begin by laying out the facts as properly viewed: Escobar had dropped the knife and lay flat on the ground “like a parachute man” just before being bitten; Escobar did not struggle and begged for the dog to be removed; and the bites lasted for about one minute. But the following facts are undisputed: The knife remained within Escobar’s reach; Montee knew about the knife and saw that it was within Escobar’s reach; Escobar’s mother had called and told the police that Escobar would have to be killed; the police were rightly informed that Escobar had committed a felony assault; and Escobar had fled into the night through multiple backyards before hiding for approximately twenty minutes.On those facts, the totality of the circumstances and the Graham factors establish that Montee’s use of force was not objectively unreasonable. The first Graham factor—the severity of the offense—favors Montee. This court recently held in Cooper, 844 F.3d at 522, that driving under the influence is a serious offense, favoring officers. If DUI is serious, then a fortiori so is felony assault.The second factor—whether Escobar posed a threat—is the focus of the dispute. According to Escobar and the district court, a reasonable jury could find that Montee allowed Bullet to continue biting after it would have been apparent “that Escobar was no longer armed and was not resisting arrest.” That reasoning overlooks several key facts: The chase was at night; Escobar had hidden from the police for twenty minutes in a neighbor’s backyard; the chase, along with the warnings from Escobar’s mother, would lead a reasonable officer to believe that, as he had apparently promised, Escobar would not go without a fight; and the knife remained within Escobar’s reach, ready to be used. In the face of such facts, a reasonable officer could believe that Escobar’s “surrender” was a ploy and that he was ready to snatch the knife again once the dog was removed. See Crenshaw v. Lister, 556 F.3d 1283, 1292-93 (11th Cir. 2009) (per curiam) (discussed infra).The cases cited by Escobar are not to the contrary. As Escobar rightly notes, we have consistently held that a suspect does not pose an immediate threat where he unambiguously surrenders by, for example, placing his hands in the air and complying with the officers’ commands. See Darden, 880 F.3d at 729; Cooper, 844 F.3d at 521-23. Thus, in Cooper, 844 F.3d at 522-23, we held that officers used excessive force by permitting a dog to continue biting a suspect when they had no reason to think he had a weapon, his hands were visible, and he complied with officers’ commands. Yet even there, we cautioned that “we do not say that any application of force to a compliant arrestee is per se unreasonable.” Id. at 524. And we explicitly declined to “opine on the line of reasonableness”—with good reason, as the present case reveals. Id.Although, as with the suspect in Cooper, Escobar’s hands were visible and he complied with Montee’s commands, much unlike the situation in Cooper, Escobar had a knife within reach, and Montee had reason to believe he still posed a threat. Also unlike Cooper, Montee had been told that Escobar would have to be killed—by Escobar’s own mother no less. A reasonable officer could easily conclude that Escobar’s surrender was not genuine.The other cases cited by Escobar are similarly distinguishable. In Dar- den, 880 F.3d at 729, the suspect had done nothing to indicate violence, and there was no suggestion of a threat. In Newman v. Guedry, 703 F.3d 757, 762­63 (5th Cir. 2012), the plaintiff alleged that he was tased in response to telling a joke; according to him, he was a passenger in a car pulled over for a minor traffic violation, did not attempt to flee or resist, and disobeyed no commands. And in Bush v. Strain, 513 F.3d 492, 501-02 (5th Cir. 2008), the suspect had been handcuffed and subdued when officers slammed her face into a car door; there was nothing to indicate she posed a threat. Although in each case we found a Fourth Amendment violation because the suspect was compliant or surrendering, in none of them would an officer have reason to doubt the sus­pect’s compliance and still perceive a threat.[10]Further support for that conclusion is the Eleventh Circuit’s opinion in Crenshaw, 556 F.3d at 1292-93. There, an officer responded to reports of pos­sibly two armed robberies; after a chase, the suspect abandoned his vehicle and fled into the woods. The suspect then yelled his location and intent to surrender, but the officer released a canine without warning. And despite screams of pain, the officer did not remove the canine until the suspect was handcuffed. Yet the court held that the officer’s use of force was not excessive. Id. at 1292. The officer had reason to believe that the suspect of an armed robbery was armed and, given the nature of the flight and location in the woods, “it was objectively reasonable for [the officer] to question the sincerity” of the surrender. Id. at 1293. Moreover, although the suspect was not actively resisting while being handcuffed, the officer was not required to call off the dog until the suspect was secured because he “had no reason to trust that [the suspect] would not suddenly attempt to do him harm.” Id.The same is true here. Given the information from Escobar’s mother and the nature of the chase (at night, through multiple backyards in a residential neighborhood), Montee had reason to doubt the sincerity of Escobar’s sur­render. And because the knife remained within reach, Montee could reasona­bly believe that Escobar—if the dog was called off before handcuffing—would then try to harm someone.[11] Accordingly, a reasonable officer could think Escobar posed a threat.Finally, the third Graham factor—whether the suspect was resisting or attempting to flee—largely folds into the second. If Escobar may have posed a threat, then he also might have attempted to flee once released by the dog. Accordingly, based on all the circumstances, it was objectively reasonable to permit Bullet to continue biting Escobar until he was fully handcuffed and subdued. Montee did not violate Escobar’s Fourth Amendment rights.The order denying QI is REVERSED, the cross-appeal is DISMISSED, and this matter is REMANDED.

 
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