
    Dennis Ray KIDD, Appellant, v. Robert O’NEIL; Mike Lomonaco; Fairfax County Police Dept., Appellees.
    No. 83-6556.
    United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
    Argued July 13, 1984.
    Decided Sept. 23, 1985.
    John T. Jessee, Roanoke, Va. (Woods, Rogers, Muse, Walker & Thornton, Roanoke, Va., on brief), for appellant.
    Edward E. Rose, III, Asst. County Atty., Fairfax, Va. (David T. Stitt, County Atty., Fairfax, Va., on brief), for appellees.
    Before PHILLIPS, MURNAGHAN and ERVIN, Circuit Judges.
   JAMES DICKSON PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:

This appeal presents fundamental issues respecting the source and scope of constitutional rights of protection against, and statutory remedies for, the ■ excessive use of force by state police in making arrests. Here the district court, expressing reservations about both the source and scope of any such right and of any consequent remedy, and professing inability to apply what it considered to be this court’s unclear precedents in the matter, summarily dismissed, on legal grounds, such an excessive force claim brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We reverse, on the basis that the fourth and fourteenth amendments provide general protection against such conduct, and we remand for further proceedings to determine whether the protection is available here.

I

In a pro se complaint, Dennis Ray Kidd alleged that in attempting to arrest him on April 15, 1983, defendants Robert O’Neill and Mike Lomonaco, Fairfax County, Virginia, police officers “brutally” and “severely” beat, kicked, and maced him while he was handcuffed, and that this resulted in bruises, a head gash requiring stitches, and continued headaches, dizziness and blurred vision. By answer and then by summary judgment affidavits, the police officer defendants admitted that one struck Kidd with a nightstick and that both maced him, but they asserted that they used only the force needed to subdue him; that Kidd was violently (and in the end, successfully) resisting arrest, that only one of his hands was handcuffed, and that with the other he was attempting to take a gun from one of the officers. By a responsive counter-affidavit, Kidd added minor factual details to his pleaded version of events, repeated in variant form his conclusory pleading allegations of “brutality” and “excessiveness,” and directly denied, albeit conclusorily, the defendants’ assertions that they acted reasonably and “in self-defense.”

On this state of the record, the district court entertained defendants’ motion for summary judgment, and granted it. Essentially declining to consider whether on the record there existed any genuine issue of material fact respecting the claim of unconstitutionally excessive force, the district court ruled that as a matter of law no cognizable claim of constitutional violation had been advanced by Kidd. This ultimate conclusion was based on the following line of reasoning, which, because of its importance to our decision, we summarize in some detail.

Not every act by a state agent that would constitute a violation of state tort law constitutes a deprivation of constitutional right simply because the act is committed by a state official, citing, inter alia, Baker v. McCollan, 443 U.S. 137, 140 [99 S.Ct. 2689, 2692, 61 L.Ed.2d 433] (1979). Deciding when a “state tort” of battery becomes a “constitutional tort” cannot properly be done simply by attempting to assess the degree of its severity in terms of the state agent’s motivation and the victim’s harm. This has now been demonstrated by the failure of the Fourth Circuit to provide a “workable guideline,” a “practical standard,” for differentiating between a physical striking that amounts to a mere “state tort” and one that involves “constitutional deprivation.” This is illustrated by the standards articulated by that court respectively in King v. Blankenship, 636 F.2d 70, 73 (4th Cir.1980) (excessive force in subduing convicted prisoner) and in Hall v. Tawney, 621 F.2d 607, 613 (4th Cir.1980) (excessive force in disciplining public school student).
This suggests that the underlying theory of Hall and King is flawed, that the degree of severity of batteries by state agents, in terms of agent-motivation and victim harm, is not the proper test of constitutional deprivation. Indeed, to make degree of severity the test in such cases leads to the result forbidden by the Supreme Court of using § 1983 to “create a font of tort law,” citing Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693, 701 [96 S.Ct. 1155, 1160, 47 L.Ed.2d 405] (1976).
The proper test of constitutional deprivation in state agent battery cases is rather to be found in a line of district court decisions out of the Eastern District of Virginia that specifically reject the perceived Fourth Circuit precedents as legally flawed and practically unworkable, e.g., Dandridge v. The Police Department of the City of Richmond, 566 F.Supp. 152 (E.D.Va.1983) (excessive force in arrest); Sellers v. Roper, 554 F.Supp. 202 (E.D.Va.1982) (excessive force in disciplining prison inmate). Under these district court decisions, a battery by a state agent amounts to a constitutional deprivation cognizable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 only if “it infringes a specific constitutional right ... [and] [a] battery by a state officer can only infringe a specific constitutional right if the officer intended to infringe that right through the battery or could reasonably have foreseen ... the result,” citing Dandridge, 566 F.Supp. at 160.
An example of such an “intended deprivation” of “specific right” would be a blow, of whatever degree, consciously intended by the state agent to retaliate for the victim’s taking legal action against the agent; this would constitute a deprivation of the victim’s specific [first amendment] right to petition for “a redress of grievances.” On the other hand, a “guard’s beating of a prisoner, standing alone, does not [constitute] a constitutional [deprivation],” no matter the severity, [presumably because “standing alone” such a “beating” is unrelated in purpose to any known, specific constitutional right].
On the authority of Sellers, 554 F.Supp. 202, this critical requirement of “specific intent to deprive of a known constitutional right” in § 1983 physical battery cases is traceable to Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. 91 [65 S.Ct. 1031, 89 L.Ed. 1495] (1945), and is confirmed in later Supreme Court decisions, e.g., Ingraham v. Wright, 430 U.S. 651 [97 S.Ct. 1401, 51 L.Ed.2d 711] (1977); Baker v. McCollan, 443 U.S. 137 [99 S.Ct. 2689, 61 L.Ed.2d 433] (1979); Parratt v. Taylor, 451 U.S. 527 [101 S.Ct. 1908, 68 L.Ed.2d 420] (1981). In the instant case, it mandates dismissal of Kidd’s § 1983 claim because “there are no facts indicating the violation of a constitutional right or that the defendants intended such an infringement by the allegedly excessive force used in the arrest.”

J.A. 33-39.

Having disposed of the basic claim of a substantive constitutional violation under the foregoing analysis, the district court then held additionally that no procedural due process claim could be proved because Virginia provides an adequate post-deprivation remedy, for “assault and battery,” citing Henderson v. Counts, 544 F.Supp. 149 (E.D.Va.1982). The action was accordingly dismissed as to all defendants and this appeal followed.

On appeal, Kidd does not challenge the district court’s rejection of any claim of procedural due process that might have been pleaded, and that question is accordingly not before us. Challenge is confined to the summary dismissal of his claim of deprivation of substantive constitutional right.

II

The district court’s legal analysis as applied in this case misinterpreted and misapplied binding precedent, not only of this court but of the Supreme Court. The resulting legal error requires reversal and remand for further proceedings. The court’s error has two principal aspects.

The first is the failure to recognize the fourth amendment, through the fourteenth, as a direct source of constitutional protection against uses of excessive physical force by state police officers in arresting suspects. If any doubt has existed that the fourth amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable seizures of the person protects against the use of excessive force in making arrests as well as against making arrests without probable cause, it has now been laid to rest by the Supreme Court’s decision in Tennessee v. Garner, — U.S. —, 105 S.Ct. 1694, 85 L.Ed.2d 1 (1985) (§ 1983 claim for “seizure” of person by deadly force). The Garner Court flatly rejected the argument that the amendment’s protection only runs to the probable cause requirement, holding that “reasonableness depends on not only when a seizure is made, but also how it is carried out.” — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1699. The Court pointed out that the contrary argument “ignores the many cases in which [the Court] ... has examined the reasonableness of the manner in which a search or seizure is conducted.” — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1699.

Not only did the holding in Garner make explicit what has long been at least implicit in such earlier decisions of the Supreme Court as Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 28-29, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 1888-84, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968) (cited for proposition by Garner Court, — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1699), it also confirmed long-standing authority to the same effect in this circuit. See Jenkins v. Averett, 424 F.2d 1228, 1232 (4th Cir.1970) (Sobeloff, J.) (“shield” of the fourth amendment protects “individual physical integrity” against “wanton” infliction of injury by police in attempt to halt fleeing suspect).

To the extent therefore that the district court’s analysis involved the perception that excessive force, “standing alone,” in effecting an arrest implicates no specific constitutional right, the court’s decision is at odds not only with circuit but with Supreme Court precedent. Such police conduct may indeed constitute both a “mere” state law tort and á deprivation of fourth amendment rights; in such circumstances § 1983 provides a cumulative federal civil remedy unaffected by the availability of any state law remedy. Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.S. 167, 183, 81 S.Ct. 473, 481, 5 L.Ed.2d 492 (1961).

The second aspect of the court’s error is the related perception that § 1983 only provides a remedy for excessive use of physical force by state agents (presumably whether or not in arrest situations) if the agents “intended to infringe a specific constitutional right through the battery or could reasonably have foreseen ... the result.” This state-of-mind requirement, whose origin was ascribed by the district court to Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. 91, 65 S.Ct. 1031, 89 L.Ed. 1495 (1945), has long since been rejected by the Supreme Court as being inapplicable to civil actions under § 1983. The rejection indeed occurred at the very outset of the Supreme Court’s development of contemporary § 1983 jurisprudence, in Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.S. 167, 81 S.Ct. 473, 5 L.Ed.2d 492 (1961). To the suggestion there advanced that, following Screws, § 1983 should only reach unauthorized conduct of state officials that was “willful” in the sense that it was intended to deprive of a constitutional right the Court said:

[i]n the Screws case we dealt with a statute [18 U.S.C. § 242] that imposed criminal penalties for acts “wilfully” done. We construed that word in its setting to mean the doing of an act with “a specific intent to deprive a person of a federal right.” 325 U.S. at 103. We do not think that gloss should be placed on [§ 1983] which we have here. The word “wilfully” does not appear in [§ 1983]. Moreover, [§ 1983] provides a civil remedy, while in the Screws case we dealt with a criminal law challenged on the ground of vagueness. [Section 1983] should be read against the background of tort liability that makes a man responsible for the natural consequences of his actions.

365 U.S. at 187, 81 S.Ct. at 484. See also Parratt v. Taylor, 451 U.S. 527, 534-35, 101 S.Ct. 1908, 1912-13, 68 L.Ed.2d 420 (1981) (quoting Monroe as support for hold: ing that § 1983 “has never been found by [the Supreme] Court to contain a state-of-mind requirement”). The district court’s latter-day importation of the Screws scien-ter requirement into § 1983 jurisprudence was therefore legally erroneous and further flaws its dismissal of the claims against the police officers.

Ill

Having indicated specifically wherein we think the district court erred in its legal analysis of the constitutional source and statutory remedy for excessive-force arrests, we turn to the proper analysis for application by the court on remand.

That analysis is most appropriately found in Tennessee v. Garner, as the Supreme Court’s most recent and apposite authority on the fourth amendment as source of constitutional right and § 1983 as the means of remedy for violation of the right.

Garner, dealing specifically only with the extreme example of deadly force, nevertheless makes clear that the use of any significant degree of excessive force in effecting otherwise constitutionally valid arrests may constitute an unreasonable seizure of the person in violation of fourth amendment rights. Whether a particular arrest is constitutionally unreasonable in this sense inescapably depends upon the factual circumstances. Garner, — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1699 (presents “totality of circumstances” question). To determine the question requires that a court “balance the nature and quality of the intrusión on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against the importance of the governmental interests alleged to justify the intrusion.” Garner, — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1699 (quoting United States v. Place, 462 U.S. 696, 703, 103 S.Ct. 2637, 2642, 77 L.Ed.2d 110 (1983).

Garner identified the state’s primary interest as being the apprehension of suspects so as to “set[] the criminal justice mechanism in motion.” Garner, — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1700. Balancing this interest against the fourth amendment rights of suspects, the Garner Court recognized that under some circumstances even deadly force would not be constitutionally unreasonable. Garner, — U.S. at — - —, 105 S.Ct. at 1700-01. Implicit in this is the further proposition that varying degrees of force short of, but up to, deadly force would also not be constitutionally unreasonable.

Obviously, the legitimate interest of the state in apprehending suspects is threatened whenever the suspect forcibly resists arrest or, with or without force, attempts to avoid arrest by fleeing. To accommodate this reality, Garner recognizes, for example, that “if the suspect threatens the officer with a weapon ... deadly force may be used if necessary to prevent escape.” Id. On the other hand, the use of deadly force to overcome milder forms of resistance, or to prevent nonforcible flight where there was no probable cause to fear danger to others from the fleeing suspect, might be constitutionally unreasonable. Id. (Tennessee statute held unconstitutional as applied to authorize deadly force in latter circumstance.) By necessary implication from Garner’s analysis then, the use of any significant force, up to and including deadly force, not reasonably necessary to effect an arrest — as where the suspect neither resists nor flees or where the force is used after a suspect’s resistance has been overcome or his flight thwarted—would be constitutionally unreasonable.

Whether the force used in this case in attempting to arrest Kidd constituted a constitutionally unreasonable seizure of his person must be decided under this general standard. Because that standard has not yet been applied, the case must be remanded for its application to the facts as they may be established in the district court.

IV

Though the dispositive essence of the district court’s error—failure to recognize the fourth amendment’s specific applicability and the imposition of a willfulness requirement—has been sufficiently identified, the error’s basis ran wider. Because of the resulting potential for correspondingly wider future applications of the error, we think it appropriate also to address its wider basis. In the process, we take the opportunity to put some of our decisions respecting § 1983 excessive-force claims in what may be a better, more integrated perspective than appeared to the district court.

As indicated, the district court, picking up on the Sellers-Dandridge analysis of those decisions that it considered the most apposite (though flawed) circuit authority respecting the claim here at issue, looked to Hall v. Tawney, 621 F.2d 607 (4th Cir.1980) and King v. Blankenship, 636 F.2d 70 (4th Cir.1980). As our discussion has now revealed, those two decisions were not the most apposite to the specific fourth amendment claim here in issue. Neither involved a claim of excessive force in an arrest situation: Hall dealt with an allegedly brutal beating of a public school child; King, with an allegedly excessive use of force in subduing a convicted prisoner. The most directly apposite circuit authority was, as noted, Judge Sobeloff’s panel opinion in Jenkins v. Averett, 424 F.2d 1228 (4th Cir.1970), which pre-dated both Hall and King and dealt specifically, on fourth amendment grounds, with a claim of excessive force in arresting a fleeing suspect. For whatever reason, the district court did not consider Jenkins’ most obvious relevance.

We point this up not gratuitously to chide the district court, but as a basis for attempting now to put those decisions and this one in proper perspective and relationship under developed 42 U.S.C. § 1983 jurisprudence. We start by observing that they all have this in common: . each involved a § 1983 claim that a state agent acting under color of state law used excessive force that inflicted bodily harm upon a claimant. They differ, however, and critically, in the factual contexts in which force was applied: Jenkins and the instant case involved the arrests of resisting or fleeing suspects; Hall, the corporal punishment of a public school student; King, the forcible subduing of a convicted prisoner. Within those different factual contexts, however, there is again a critical similarity: in each, the state agent’s use of force was arguably a privileged use in furtherance of a legitimate state interest.

Taking into account the critical differences and similarities in these cases in light of evolving § 1983 jurisprudence, we think the following legal synthesis emerges. The legal right asserted in each case is the right to be free of bodily harm, of physical abuse, at the hands of government’s agents. In terms of common law origins, the core right is that recognized in the tort and crime of battery. The vexing conceptual problem in the evolution of § 1983 “constitutional tort” jurisprudence has been whether, and if so where, the constitution provides specific protection against the infliction of bodily harm by state agents, i.e., whether there is any constitutional, as opposed to state common law, right to be free of such inflicted harms.

No provision of the bill of rights speaks literally in terms of bodily harm or personal security or the like. But two amendments, the fourth and the eighth, do so clearly prohibit conduct that may involve bodily harm — “unreasonable seizures” of the “person,” (fourth), “cruel ... punishments” (eighth) — that they have been held to embody specific protections, vindicable under § 1983, against the infliction of bodily harm in those contexts. Tennessee v. Garner, supra (fourth amendment); Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 97 S.Ct. 285, 50 L.Ed.2d 251 (1976) (eighth amendment); see also Jackson v. Bishop, 404 F.2d 571 (8th Cir.1968) (same). Because no other provision of the bill of rights speaks directly, as do the fourth and eighth amendments, to conduct that may cause bodily harm, it has been possible to question whether the constitution provides any other direct protection against the infliction of bodily harm “standing alone,” i.e., unrelated to the deprivation of other specifically secured rights. This presumably was the view applied by the district court here, either overlooking that in the arrest situation the fourth amendment does provide direct protection, or considering that even its protection runs only to “willful” deprivations. See Part II, supra.

An interpretation that the fourth and eighth amendments, but no other bill of rights provisions, directly proscribe the infliction of bodily harm by agents of the state of course leads to palpable practical and constitutional anomalies. Under such an interpretation, constitutional protections against this most egregious form of governmental intrusion exists only in those persons being taken into custody as criminal suspects and those already convicted of crime. On this view no one else in society has the protection, not even those persons in between arrest and conviction as pre-trial detainees, not to say all those sufficiently virtuous or lucky not to have created any probable cause for their arrest and prosecution in the first place. While, as indicated, it is obvious that persons in arrest and post-conviction settings may have the greatest statistical need for this particular protection, it simply defies belief that the framers of the bill of rights considered that only those persons were to have the constitution’s protection against physical brutality.

Reflecting this perception, there has been a conceptual struggle ever since revival of § 1983 to identify the source of a general constitutional right to bodily security comparable to that given special protection in the fourth and eighth amendments and which could be asserted under § 1983 by persons other than arrest suspects and convicts. Perhaps predictably, notions of “substantive due process” judicially developed to void criminal convictions obtained by outrageously “inhumane” police conduct were early drawn upon to extend § 1983’s remedy to persons unable to invoke the specific protections of the fourth or eighth amendments. Judge Friendly’s influential opinion in Johnson v. Glick, 481 F.2d 1028 (2d Cir.1973), did this, drawing on the “substantive due process” analysis in the “stomach-pump” case, Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165, 72 S.Ct. 205, 96 L.Ed. 183 (1952), to find a claim of guard brutality against a pre-trial detainee cognizable under § 1983, and noting in the process that the claimed protection could not be found in either the fourth or eighth amendment or in any “ ‘specific’ of the Bill of Rights.” Id. at 1032.

Notwithstanding the suggestion in Johnson v. Glick that the bodily security right there recognized lay in no “specific” Bill of Rights source, later Supreme Court decisions have now identified a specific source in the fifth amendment’s fundamental guarantee of “liberty.”

In Ingraham v. Wright, 430 U.S. 651, 97 S.Ct. 1401, 51 L.Ed.2d 711 (1977), a § 1983 action claiming, inter alia, a denial of procedural due process in the infliction of corporal punishment on a public school student, the Court had first to address the specific question whether a constitutionally protected liberty interest was implicated. It was, held the Court, finding the source in the “liberty preserved from deprivation” in the due process clause of the fifth amendment as made applicable to the states through the fourteenth. Id. at 672-73, 97 S.Ct. at 1413. Holding specifically that “[a]mong the historic liberties so protected was a right to be free from ... unjustified intrusions on personal security,” id. at 673, 97 S.Ct. at 1413, the Court noted that the fourth amendment’s unclaimed special protection of the same interests was related, but that its “principal concern” was “with intrusions ... in the course of criminal investigations.” Id. at 673 n. 42, 97 S.Ct. at 1413 n. 42. In the context of corporal punishment of school children outside the course of criminal investigations, the Court defined the liberty interest at stake as that of being free of unreasonable punishment as measured by the teacher’s common law privilege. Id. at 674, 97 S.Ct. at 1414.

Later, in Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 99 S.Ct. 1861, 60 L.Ed.2d 447 (1979), the Court recognized that the same liberty interest in bodily security, grounded in the fifth amendment’s due process clause, existed in federal pre-trial detainees. Id. at 535, 99 S.Ct. at 1871; see also id. at 580-81, 99 S.Ct. at 1895-96 (Stevens, J., dissenting) (agreeing that source of interest recognized is “the word ‘liberty’ itself as used in the Due Process Clause”). In respect of such persons, the specific interest at stake is that in being free of “punishment,” id. at 535, 99 S.Ct. at 1871. In the context of valid pre-trial detention this requires inquiry into whether a particular bodily intrusion was “imposed for the purpose of punishment or ... as an incident of some other legitimate governmental purpose.” Id. at 538, 99 S.Ct. at 1873.

Garner, Gamble, Ingraham and Wolfish, in conjunction therefore have recognized cognate liberty interests in “personal security” grounded respectively in the specific guarantees of the fourth and eighth amendments and in the “liberty” given protection against deprivation without due process in the fifth amendment. While the interests are cognate, they are not perfectly congruent, for each is qualified by the existence of legitimate but different governmental interests that may justify forcible intrusions of varying degrees upon the interest by government officials. Under the fourth amendment, the intrusion may be “reasonable” in relation to the need to effect a particular arrest; under the eighth amendment, it may not amount to “cruel” or “unusual” “punishment.” Under the fundamental “liberty” interest recognized in the fifth amendment, it may not amount to “punishment” of pre-trial detainees or to “unreasonable punishment” of public school students.

This means of course that “excessive force” claims may lie under § 1983 to vindicate either fourth, eighth, or fifth amendment violations of the cognate right to “personal security” in any of the specific factual contexts dealt with in those decisions and certainly in others not touched upon. Our decisions in Jenkins (fourth amendment arrest); King (physical subduing of convicted inmate); Hall (fifth amendment corporal punishment of student), are therefore all consistent with these Supreme Court authorities in their recognition of constitutionally protected interests in “personal security.” Because in each context the interest was qualified by the existence of countervailing governmental interests arguably justifying some degree of forcible intrusion, the issue of violation in each was inevitably one of “degree,” of permissible force under the circumstances.

There is, in consequence, no escaping the necessity lamented by the district court in the instant case to grapple with the "degree” of force applied in determining § 1983 excessive force claims in any context — such as those involved in Hall, in King, and in Jenkins and the instant case — where the force may be “privileged” as furthering a legitimate state interest. Our formulátion of constitutional standards in those cases, employing such terms as “inhumane,” “malicious,” “sadistic,” “shocking to the conscience,” etc., are properly understood therefore as descriptives of degrees of force that inevitably exceed those degrees “privileged” in the various contexts by the legitimate state interests being served. Inquiries into degree and circumstance are not — as the district court saw it — mandated to differentiate between a “mere state tort” and a “constitutional deprivation,” but to determine whether a deprivation of constitutional right to “personal security” has occurred in a context where some degree of force may be justified. As the most apposite Supreme Court decisions—Garner, Wolfish, Ingraham—all illustrate, “personal security” claims in any of these contexts require the adjudication of constitutional rights on a case-by-case basis, with the factual circumstances a major component of the adjudication.

The district court therefore erred broadly in its stated perception that questions of degree are not relevant to proper constitutional inquiry in these related excessive force adjudications under § 1983. That broader error of analysis flawed its specific determination here that a factual inquiry into the degree of force in Kidd’s arrest was not required to determine his § 1983 claim.

REVERSED AND REMANDED. 
      
      . No specific challenge is made to dismissal of the claim against the "Fairfax County Police Department.” Construed as a claim against the county, it was, in any event, properly dismissed. There are no allegations that the challenged actions by the individual police officer defendants were in furtherance of any county policy. See Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658, 98 S.Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978).
     
      
      . While the pro se complaint did not directly invoke the fourth amendment as the specific source of constitutional right, the liberal reading required by Haines v. Kerner, 404 U.S. 519, 92 S.Ct. 594, 30 L.Ed.2d 652 (1972), performs that service. On appeal, Kidd’s counsel has directly pointed to the fourth amendment as ultimate source of the right.
     
      
      . When "good faith” is pleaded as the basis of a qualified immunity defense to monetary liability on a § 1983 claim, a state of mind inquiry of some sort is of course thereby introduced, but only as a means of avoiding a particular remedy, not of negating the substantive claim. See Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 807, 102 S.Ct. 2727, 2732, 73 L.Ed.2d 396 (1982); see also Vizbaras v. Prieber, 761 F.2d 1013 (4th Cir.1985) (panel divided on nature of "good faith” defense).
     
      
      . This constitutional test of reasonableness essentially parallels and indeed ultimately derives from common law principles of police officer privilege in making forcible arrests. See Garner, — U.S. at —, 105 S.Ct. at 1701; see also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 132 and comment a.
      
     
      
      . We do not direct the means by which the dispositive excessive force issue may appropriately be determined on remand, whether by reconsideration of the summary judgment motion or by trial. Without expressing any view on the merits, however addressed on remand, we observe that such an issue may of course in appropriate cases be determined by summary judgment. See, e.g., Prosise v. Haring, 667 F.2d 1133, 1136 (4th Cir.1981), aff’d on other grounds sub. nom. Haring v. Prosise, 462 U.S. 306, 103 S.Ct. 2368, 76 L.Ed.2d 595 (1983). With the same disclaimer, we further observe that a claim that more force was used than was reasonably necessary to make an arrest is drawn in rather serious question by the mere fact (which may be conceded here) that despite the force applied the suspect sufficiently overcame it to escape arrest. Of course there may be other facts here that would make that circumstance not dispositive, but that is for the trial court.
     
      
      . See, e.g., the grapplings with the problem by two perceptive district judges in, respectively, Barnier v. Szentmiklosi, 565 F.Supp. 869 (E.D.Mich.1983) (Joiner, J.), and Schiller v. Strangis, 540 F.Supp. 605 (D.Mass.1982) (Keeton, J.); see abo Comment, Due Process: Application of the Parratt Doctrine to Random and Unauthorized Deprivations of Life and Liberty, 52 Fordham L.Rev. 887, 891-95 (1984).
     
      
      . The provision of specific constitutional protection against bodily harm in these two contexts presumably reflects the teachings of experience that suspects being arrested and convicts in custody have special vulnerabilities. Certainly it cannot reflect any notion of “favored status” for such persons in relation to persons not suspected or convicted of crime.
     
      
      . See, e.g., Comment, supra note 6.
     
      
      . That the "liberty” interest recognized in the fifth amendment’s due process clause is not "created” by that amendment, as are the specific "rights” created by such provisions as the sixth amendment's confrontation clause or the first amendment’s religion clauses, has created a conceptual problem for some. On this view, the due process clause creates only the right to procedural due process. As indicated in text, Ingraham avoids, or solves, this possible conceptual problem by simply accepting that the “liberty” interest is there as a matter of substantive right, whether created or merely recognized, in the fifth amendment's due process clause. With the question therefore settled as a practical matter, the conceptual question of sources becomes largely academic. But cf. Justice Stevens’ perceptive view about sources in Meachum v. Fano, 427 U.S. 215, 230, 96 S.Ct. 2532, 2541, 49 L.Ed.2d 451 (1976) (Stevens, J., dissenting) (source is in "unalienable rights” with which persons are "endowed” by their Creator, as simply declared in basic charters).
     
      
      . After finding a substantive liberty interest implicated, the Ingraham Court, addressing only the claimed denial of procedural due process, found due process supplied by the state’s provision of adequate post-deprivation tort remedies. A parallel eighth amendment claim was rejected, not because that amendment does not also, in its domain, protect the personal security liberty interest, but because its domain is exclusively that of persons convicted of crime. In-graham, 430 U.S. at 664-71, 97 S.Ct. at 1408-12. Deliberately avoided by the Court’s limited review was a third, parallel claim of a “substantive due process" denial. Left unanswered therefore was the question whether the state’s post-deprivation remedy supplied due process for all conceivable instances of corporal punishment. See Ingraham, 430 U.S. at 689 n. 5, 97 S.Ct. at 1421 n. 5 (White, J., dissenting) (pointing up conceptual problem thereby left unresolved). We necessarily addressed Ingraham’s unresolved question in Hall v. Tawney, 621 F.2d 607 (4th Cir.1980), holding there that some corporal punishment might be so excessive that no state post-deprivation remedy could be held to afford due process for the deprivation of liberty involved. Id. at 613.
     
      
      . Wolfish, involving federal pre-trial detainees, was not of course a § 1983 action, but its recognition of a constitutionally protected liberty interest in the fifth amendment's due process clause of course thereby identifies an interest protected against state action by the fourteenth amendment, hence vindicable under § 1983. In Wolfish, applying its "punishment" test to a number of alleged violations of detainees’ rights to personal security, the Court rejected all on the basis that as to each, legitimate state custodial and security interests justified the conduct as not “punitive.”
     
      
      . All of these Supreme Court decisions have involved claims of violation where some degree of force was privileged or justified by legitimate state interests. There has accordingly been no occasion in them to determine whether the infliction of bodily harm by state officials in wholly non-privileged circumstances, i.e., where any force is per se "excessive,” violates a liberty interest in personal security without regard to degree of harm, .motivation or other circumstance. Professor Dobbs, with usual insight, recently has suggested that in such cases inquiry might begin and end with the infliction of some legally cognizable bodily harm, with questions of "degree” having relevance only in privileged-force circumstances. D. Dobbs, Torts and Compensation pp. 64, 78-79 (West 1985). But cf. Shillingford v. Holmes, 634 F.2d 263 (5th Cir.1981) (police officer’s wholly non-privileged physical assault on bystander photographing arrest sufficiently egregious in terms of motivation and harm to constitute violation of § 1983).
      We have no need to address that question here, and can reserve it for another day, because the instant case and all those being discussed in connection with it do involve privilege situations.
     
      
      . In King, we noted that courts had variously identified the specific source of the pre-trial detainee’s constitutional right as either the eighth amendment or "due process." King, 636 F.2d at 72. As our textual discussion here indicates, both Ingraham and Wolfish have indicated that eighth amendment protections apply only to convicted persons, with Wolfish identifying the source of pre-trial detainee’s comparable personal security interest as the fifth amendment’s due process clause. The standard actually applied in King was however conformable to the "cruel punishment” inquiry, i.e., whether the force used was excessive in relation to the state’s interest in maintaining secure custody of prisoners. See id. at 72-73.
     
      
      . In Hall, we noted the conceptual problem presented by Ingraham’s holding that state post-deprivation remedies might afford due process for some inflictions of corporal punishment, without deciding the further question whether some punishment might be so excessive as to constitute a "substantive due process" violation. Hall, 621 F.2d at 610, 611 & n. 4. By our holding that some corporal punishment might constitute a “substantive due process” violation, we necessarily implied that for such punishment no state remedy could be found to afford adequate process under the fourteenth amendment. See id. at 611 n. 5; see also Parratt v. Taylor, 451 U.S. at 552-53 & n. 11, 101 S.Ct. at 1921-22 & n. 11 (Powell, J., concurring) (citing Hall for holding); Barnier v. Szentmiklosi, 565 F.Supp. at 879. This inevitably suggests that where claims of both procedural and "substantive due process" are made in fifth amendment "liberty” deprivation cases, a two-stage inquiry into excessiveness may be required of district courts. If excessive force — in relation to the applicable privilege — is found as fact by the trier of fact, that may then necessitate a further determination of whether the force applied was so excessive in relation to the particular government interest as to “shock the conscience,” making any state post-deprivation remedy inadequate as fourteenth amendment process due. Though that matter is not even peripherally before us in this case, we note that this latter determination may be one of constitutional law, for the court. Cf. Connick v. Myers, 461 U.S. 138, 103 S.Ct. 1684, 75 L.Ed.2d 708 (1983) (questions whether government employee speech is a matter of “public concern” and whether speech rights outweigh government employer’s interests are constitutional, not factual, issues).
     
      
      . So considered, these descriptives of state agent conduct are therefore not the substantive tests of deprivation of constitutional right in the different factual contexts to which they refer; they simply describe conduct that would necessarily exceed any privileged use of force in those different contexts. Because the nature of the state interests, hence agent privilege, differs depending upon the context, the nature of conduct necessarily exceeding privilege may also differ in "degree” or severity from context to context. Thus, in the school paddling context some degree of “punishment” is justified or privileged, see Ingraham, 430 U.S. at 675-76, 97 S.Ct. at 1414-15, whereas in the pre-trial detainee context, "punishment” defines the very point at which privilege, or justification, ceases and deprivation of right begins, see Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 535, 99 S.Ct. at 1871. These contextual differences may therefore explain some differences in our formulation of privilege-exceeding conduct in different contexts. See Ladnier v. Murray, 769 F.2d 195, 199 n. 4 (4th Cir.1985). They also make inevitable a degree of imprecision of “guidelines” in this area with which the courts simply have to live as doctrine evolves.
     