Thomas L. Sluman v. State of Washington , 418 P.3d 125 ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    MAY 22, 2018
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    THOMAS L. SLUMAN, a single person,        )
    )            No. 34467-3-III
    Appellant,          )
    )
    v.                                 )
    )
    STATE OF WASHINGTON, by and               )            PUBLISHED OPINION
    through the WASHINGTON STATE              )
    PATROL; BART H. OLSON, individually )
    and in his official capacity as a TROOPER )
    of the WASHINGTON STATE PATROL; )
    and JANE/JOHN DOE I-X, individually       )
    and as Employees/Agents of the            )
    WASHINGTON STATE PATROL                   )
    and/or the STATE OF WASHINGTON,           )
    )
    Respondents.        )
    FEARING, J. — In common parlance, a door check is an attachment used to close a
    door and prevent its slamming. In ice hockey, the term “check” or “checking” refers to a
    defensive move whereby the defenseman moves his body into an opposing player in
    order to disrupt the opponent’s possession of the puck. This lawsuit gives rise to a new
    meaning to the expression “door check” or “door-check,” an import presumably derived
    from hockey.
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    In this appeal, we address the tort liability of a law enforcement officer, to an
    injured motorcyclist, when the officer purposely opens his patrol car door so that the door
    strikes and stops the speeding cyclist. Law enforcement refers to the officer’s tactic as
    door-checking. The defendant officer and other officers pursued the motorcyclist
    because of his speeding. In resolving the appeal, we ask whether some facts support a
    ruling that the law enforcement officer seized the motorcyclist within the meaning of the
    United States Constitution’s Fourth Amendment, and, if so, whether the officer warrants
    qualified immunity from civil liability. We also ask whether the officer and his employer
    gain immunity from state law claims under Washington’s felony bar statute. The trial
    court granted the officer and his employer summary judgment. We reverse.
    FACTS
    The statement of facts arises from deposition testimony and from affidavits in
    support of and in opposition to summary judgment motions filed by defendants State of
    Washington and Washington State Patrol Trooper Bart Olson. Because the trial court
    granted the motions and dismissed plaintiff and motorcyclist Thomas Sluman’s claims,
    we view the facts in a light favorable to Sluman.
    On the sunny morning of Wednesday, July 21, 2010, Thomas Sluman, a Port
    Angeles denizen, rode his motorcycle eastbound on Interstate 90 in lower Kittitas County
    ten miles west of Ellensburg. On that same morning, Washington State Patrol Trooper
    John Montemayor piloted the aircraft “Smokey 6” and patrolled traffic from the craft.
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    Sluman v. State
    An aerial patrol officer employs a series of white stains, known as aerial traffic
    surveillance marks, painted on the road at half-mile intervals to measure the speed of
    vehicles. The officer gauges the speed of a vehicle with a stopwatch as the vehicle
    travels between marks. Trooper Montemayor, by using the surveillance marks, measured
    Sluman as traveling between seventy-six and eighty-nine miles per hour on the seventy
    miles per hour interstate. Montemayor radioed Trooper David Hinchliff, who patrolled
    on the ground, to stop and cite Sluman. Trooper Hinchliff’s patrol car parked facing
    northbound on Thorp Highway near Interstate 90 exit 101, the location of Thorp Fruit
    and Antique Mall.
    Thomas Sluman left Interstate 90 at exit 101. Sluman stopped at the stop sign at
    the end of the off-ramp, activated his motorcycle’s right turn signal, and turned right onto
    South Thorp Highway. According to Trooper David Hinchliff, Sluman did not turn his
    head to the left to see Trooper David Hinchliff’s patrol car before Sluman turned right.
    According to Sluman, he looked to the left and saw the patrol car, but the car faced the
    opposite direction.
    South Thorp Highway mainly travels east and west, but south of Interstate 90.
    Trooper Hinchliff performed a U-turn on Thorp Highway, activated his overhead lights,
    and radioed dispatch to notify it that he would pursue Sluman. After radioing dispatch,
    Hinchliff activated his siren and chased Sluman on South Thorp Highway. Sluman never
    saw Hinchliff reverse directions in order to pursue him.
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    Sluman v. State
    Trooper David Hinchliff soon lost sight of Thomas Sluman because the two-lane
    South Thorp Highway frequently curves. From Interstate 90 exit 101, the highway runs
    five miles before it again crosses the interstate at exit 106, the western exit for
    Ellensburg. Trooper John Montemayor eyed Sluman from the air while maintaining
    contact with Hinchliff. From his vantage point, Trooper Montemayor estimated Sluman
    reached a speed over one hundred and twenty miles per hour. Sluman disputes this speed
    approximation because South Thorp Highway lacks aerial traffic surveillance marks, but
    Sluman does not testify as to his speed. While riding on Thorp Highway, Sluman obeyed
    all traffic laws except the speed limit. Sluman never looked behind him to see Trooper
    Hinchliff in pursuit. Hinchliff concluded that he did not need to pursue Sluman at a high
    rate of speed, since the air patrolman followed Sluman.
    Washington State Trooper Bart Olson also patrolled, in a Dodge Charger, along
    Interstate 90 near exit 101 on the morning of July 21, 2010. Trooper Olson had just
    completed a traffic stop, when he overheard Trooper David Hinchliff notify dispatch
    about Hinchliff’s pursuit of Thomas Sluman. Olson unilaterally joined the pursuit by
    traveling eastbound on Interstate 90, not on South Thorp Highway.
    A Washington State Patrol regulation prohibits a trooper from unilaterally joining
    a suspect’s pursuit. Troopers may join a pursuit only when requested by the first officer
    in pursuit or when directed by a supervising officer. The State Patrol adopted this
    regulation because pursuits pose as one of the riskiest actions that a law enforcement
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    officer undertakes. Trooper Bart Olson denies that he pursued Thomas Sluman since
    Olson did not chase Sluman on South Thorp Highway. Nevertheless, State Patrol rules
    consider an officer as pursuing the suspect, even if the trooper does not chase the suspect
    from behind, if the trooper acts to intercept or stop the pursued driver.
    In his haste, Trooper Bart Olson passed another patrol officer, Trooper Paul
    Blume, on Interstate 90. Blume drove a sports utility vehicle (SUV). Trooper Olson then
    received instruction to end his pursuit since Trooper John Montemayor followed Thomas
    Sluman from the air. Olson ignored the instruction and proceeded to Interstate 90 exit
    106 where Olson anticipated he could intercept Sluman on South Thorp Highway.
    After Olson exited Interstate 90, he turned right on South Thorp Highway and
    journeyed in the opposite direction of Sluman and Trooper David Hinchliff. Olson then
    saw Sluman’s motorcycle rounding a corner in the oncoming lane. According to Olson,
    “nobody was in the area.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 535. Trooper Olson drove his patrol
    car across the centerline of the road, quickly braked, and parked his car, while straddling
    the center line, on a bridge across the Yakima River, with the car’s emergency lights
    activated. Trooper Olson explained his intent:
    And, anyway, the motorcyclist was coming at me. And I could see
    the speed of the motorcycle, which was at a high rate, rapidly slowing. . . .
    I’m going to place this person in custody or worst [sic]—you know, I’m
    going to place him in custody, do a felony-style stop, or they’re going to be
    going slow enough that if it comes down to it I’m going to basically horse
    collar this person off the motorcycle and end this pursuit, so that they don’t
    end up with serious injuries, kill themselves, kill an innocent party.
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    Sluman v. State
    CP at 532. After Trooper Olson parked, Trooper Paul Blume pulled behind Trooper
    Olson’s patrol car and blocked more of the road.
    The Washington State Patrol does not authorize a state trooper to tackle, horse
    collar, or otherwise physically remove a driver from a motorcycle. State Patrol personnel
    deem such a maneuver to be unwise and unsafe. State Patrol regulations do not permit a
    trooper to drive patrol cars into the lane of oncoming traffic or to park in the middle of
    the road. Under a State Patrol regulation, a roadblock occurs when officers position one
    or more vehicles or other obstructions across a roadway in order to prevent the escape of
    a fleeing vehicle. The regulation requires any roadblock to afford an “escape route” for
    the suspect. CP at 246, 662. State Patrol rules allow a roadblock only with supervisory
    approval and only when law enforcement seeks to apprehend the suspect for homicide,
    assault with intent to kill, rape, robbery in the first degree, or prison escape. Trooper
    Olson lacked supervisory approval for blocking the road and law enforcement did not
    pursue Thomas Sluman for any of the requisite crimes. Olson insists that he allowed
    space for Sluman to steer around his patrol car.
    According to Thomas Sluman, he traveled sixty miles an hour as he rounded a
    curve on South Thorp Highway into the straightaway across the Yakima River Bridge.
    Sluman applied his brakes because he saw lights and vehicles on the bridge. He did not
    know that one or more of the cars were police cars. He intended to stop near the cars.
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    After he rounded the curve, he did not accelerate. Suddenly a sports utility vehicle
    entered his lane.
    As Trooper Bart Olson remained parked in the middle of South Thorp Highway,
    he observed Thomas Sluman’s motorcycle rapidly slow. Sluman probably then traveled
    between thirty-one and thirty-seven miles per hour. As Sluman slowed, he steered his
    motorcycle to the right and away from the highway’s centerline in order to pass Trooper
    Olson’s vehicle. According to Trooper Paul Blume, Sluman appeared to be stopping his
    motorcycle. As Sluman attempted to pass, Olson opened his patrol car door into the
    oncoming lane where Sluman traveled. The parties refer to Olson’s maneuver as “door-
    checking.” In his investigation report, Olson did not volunteer that he purposely opened
    the door to cause the door to strike Sluman. Trooper Olson’s open door struck Sluman’s
    motorcycle and propelled Sluman over the Yakima River Bridge to the ground thirty feet
    below and into a campground. A video captured Sluman crossing the Yakima River
    Bridge, Olson opening his patrol car door, and Sluman driving by the side of the door.
    During a deposition, Thomas Sluman testified that he only remembered
    encountering a sports utility vehicle. According to Sluman, the SUV drove toward him in
    his lane and struck him.
    Washington State Patrol regulations consider intentional intervention to be the act
    of ramming or hitting another vehicle with a patrol car in order to damage or force
    another vehicle off the road. During discovery in this suit, State Patrol personnel
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    confirmed that a trooper driving his car into the oncoming lane of traffic on a two-lane
    road with a suspect approaching constitutes the use of intentional intervention. The State
    Patrol equates intentional intervention with lethal force. Intentional intervention should
    only be used as a last resort to apprehend a suspect. Intentional intervention should also
    be used only when the officer knows or has reasonable grounds to believe the suspect
    committed or is attempting to commit a crime that poses a threat of death or serious
    bodily injury.
    A State Patrol regulation declares that intentional intervention “shall not be used to
    apprehend a traffic offender, misdemeanant, or fleeing felon whose only felony is
    attempting to elude a pursuing police vehicle.” CP at 662. The regulation further reads
    that an officer “attempting intentional intervention with a vehicle shall be held to the
    same standards as are applied to any other use of lethal force.” CP at 662.
    When Thomas Sluman hit the ground, he lost consciousness. After Sluman
    regained cognizance, but before receiving treatment for his injuries, Trooper Bart Olson
    asked Sluman why he fled from the police. Sluman answered that he had outstanding
    arrest warrants. An audio recording captured Sluman’s response. Sluman admits he
    uttered the response, but he denies his statement to be correct. According to Sluman, he
    had outstanding warrants but he did not flee the police pursuit particularly since he knew
    not of the pursuit. When responding to Bart Olson’s question, Sluman lay on the ground
    in severe pain.
    8
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    As a result of the collision with the patrol car door and descent into the
    campground, Thomas Sluman sustained fractures of the tibia and fibula of his right leg,
    pubic bone, tailbone, and left elbow. The tibia and fibula breaks required multiple
    surgeries to implant and replace hardware and to graft skin and muscle. Sluman spent
    one year in a wheelchair while recovering. He suffered permanent physical impairments.
    Thomas Sluman later entered an Alford plea to charges of attempting to elude a
    police vehicle. According to Sluman, he entered the plea because he wanted to end the
    prosecution because he still recovered from injuries.
    PROCEDURE
    Thomas Sluman filed suit against Washington State Patrol Trooper Bart Olson and
    the State of Washington. Sluman asserted a federal cause of action for a civil rights
    violation and state law causes of action for false arrest, false imprisonment, negligence,
    gross negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, intentional infliction of
    emotional distress, and negligent training and supervision. He asserted the latter claim
    only against the State. Sluman alleged that Trooper Olson at all times relevant to the suit
    acted within the scope of his employment with the State of Washington.
    In response to the civil rights cause of action, the State of Washington pled the
    defense of Eleventh Amendment immunity and Olson pled the defense of qualified
    immunity. Both the State and Olson raised the felony bar statute in defense of Thomas
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Sluman’s state law claims. The State agreed in its answer that Trooper Bart Olson acted
    within the scope of his employment at all times.
    The State of Washington and Bart Olson moved for summary judgment. In
    response, Thomas Sluman agreed to dismissal of claims for false arrest and false
    imprisonment. The trial court granted summary judgment and dismissed all remaining
    claims.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Civil Rights Cause of Action
    Thomas Sluman asserts a civil rights claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the
    State of Washington and Trooper Bart Olson, and the trial court dismissed the claim
    against each defendant. Sluman only appeals the dismissal of the claim against Olson.
    Therefore, we do not address the merits of a civil rights claim against the State. The
    appeal of this dismissal centers on whether Trooper Olson seized Sluman and imposed
    excessive force within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment and whether Olson
    qualifies for qualified immunity under the federal civil rights statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
    42 U.S.C. § 1983, an often employed, but rarely quoted, statute reads:
    Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation,
    custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia,
    subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other
    person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights,
    privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be
    liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper
    proceeding for redress. . . .
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    Sluman v. State
    Section 1983 is not itself a source of substantive rights. Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 393-94, 
    109 S. Ct. 1865
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 443
    (1989). Section 1983 only fulfills the
    procedural or remedial role of authorizing the assertion of a claim for relief. Graham v.
    
    Connor, 490 U.S. at 393-94
    . The pleader must also allege an independent substantive
    basis for his claim, whether grounded in a federal constitutional or a statutory right.
    Nabozny v. NCS Pearson, Inc., 
    270 F. Supp. 2d 1201
    , 1205 (D. Nev. 2003). Thomas
    Sluman contends Trooper Bart Olson employed excessive force when blocking the path
    of his motorcycle and thereby violated the United States Constitution’s Fourth
    Amendment.
    42 U.S.C. § 1983 admits no immunities. The United States Supreme Court,
    however, has, based on common law and policy grounds, crafted immunities shielding
    government officials and employees from personal liability for damages. We will
    address available immunities later.
    Issue 1: Whether Thomas Sluman presents facts to establish that Washington State
    Trooper Bart Olson seized Sluman?
    Answer 1: Yes.
    We first address whether facts support a conclusion that Trooper Bart Olson
    infringed Thomas Sluman’s Fourth Amendment rights. In doing so, we view the facts in
    the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, Sluman. Saucier v. Katz, 533
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    U.S. 194, 201, 
    121 S. Ct. 2151
    , 
    150 L. Ed. 2d 272
    (2001). Since Sluman sues under the
    federal civil rights statute and since he relies on the United States Constitution, we
    examine only federal cases.
    The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” We
    first determine if Trooper Bart Olson seized Thomas Sluman and later decide whether the
    seizure was reasonable. Olson denies any seizure and characterizes his conduct as
    reasonable as a matter of law.
    Trooper Bart Olson impeded the travel of Thomas Sluman when Olson door-
    checked Sluman’s motorcycle. Whenever an officer restrains the freedom of a person, he
    or she seizes that person for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Tennessee v. Garner,
    
    471 U.S. 1
    , 7, 
    105 S. Ct. 1694
    , 
    85 L. Ed. 2d 1
    (1985). Seizure occurs when the
    government official intentionally terminates a suspect’s freedom of movement. Brower
    v. County of Inyo, 
    489 U.S. 593
    , 597, 
    109 S. Ct. 1378
    , 
    103 L. Ed. 2d 628
    (1989).
    Brower v. County of Inyo informs our decision. William Brower died after the
    stolen car he drove at high speeds in an effort to elude pursuing police crashed into a
    police roadblock. The United States Supreme Court held that law enforcement seized
    Brower, within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, by placement of the roadblock.
    Contrary to the Court of Appeals’ holding, the high Court explained that Brower’s
    opportunities to stop the vehicle prior to impact did not preclude violation of the Fourth
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Amendment. The Court explicated:
    [A] roadblock is not just a significant show of authority to induce a
    voluntary stop, but is designed to produce a stop by physical impact if
    voluntary compliance does not occur. It may well be that respondents here
    [law enforcement officers] preferred, and indeed earnestly hoped, that
    Brower would stop on his own, without striking the barrier, but we do not
    think it practicable to conduct such an inquiry into subjective intent. Nor
    do we think it possible, in determining whether there has been a seizure in a
    case such as this, to distinguish between a roadblock that is designed to
    give the oncoming driver the option of a voluntary stop (e.g., one at the end
    of a long straightaway), and a roadblock that is designed precisely to
    produce a collision (e.g., one located just around a bend). In determining
    whether the means that terminates the freedom of movement is the very
    means that the government intended we cannot draw too fine a line, or we
    will be driven to saying that one is not seized who has been stopped by the
    accidental discharge of a gun with which he was meant only to be
    bludgeoned, or by a bullet in the heart that was meant only for the leg. We
    think it enough for a seizure that a person be stopped by the very
    instrumentality set in motion or put in place in order to achieve that result.
    It was enough here, therefore, that, according to the allegations of the
    complaint, Brower was meant to be stopped by the physical obstacle of the
    roadblock—and that he was so stopped.
    Brower v. County of 
    Inyo, 489 U.S. at 598-99
    (internal citations omitted).
    In a footnote in his brief, Trooper Bart Olson denies that he established a
    roadblock. But he presents no argument or case law to the contrary. Looking at the facts
    in the light most favorable to Thomas Sluman and accepting his version of the facts, we
    conclude Trooper Olson orchestrated a roadblock.
    Trooper Bart Olson’s own deposition testimony suggests he implemented a
    roadblock. Olson explained his intent for driving across the centerline of the road and
    parking in the middle of the bridge as placing Sluman in custody by stopping him or
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    horse collaring him. Trooper Olson stationed his patrol car to achieve the result of
    stopping Sluman’s travel. Olson’s supervisor testified that Trooper Olson created a
    roadblock.
    Trooper Bart Olson highlights that a semi-tractor trailer could have squeezed on
    either side of his patrol car parked on the Yakima River Bridge. But this emphasis
    ignores important facts, including his own testimony that he opened his car door at the
    last moment in order to impede Thomas Sluman’s progress. He intended a roadblock and
    effectuated this intent. Any opportunity by Sluman to steer clear of the door does not
    preclude application of the Fourth Amendment.
    We also do not consider the question of whether Trooper Bart Olson erected a
    roadblock as controlling. A Fourth Amendment seizure does not require use of a
    roadblock. For example, a police officer’s fatal shooting of a fleeing suspect constitutes a
    Fourth Amendment seizure presumably because the death impedes the suspect’s
    movement. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 7
    (1985). Even assuming Olson employed
    no roadblock, he, like the officers in Brower v. County of Inyo and Tennessee v. Garner,
    employed means to stop the movement of Thomas Sluman.
    Issue 2: Whether Thomas Sluman presents facts of an unreasonable seizure?
    Answer 2: Yes.
    Seizure alone does not violate the Fourth Amendment. The amount of force used
    to effect the seizure must be unreasonable to amount to a constitutional violation.
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Brower v. County of 
    Inyo, 489 U.S. at 599
    (1989). Courts analyze a claim of excessive
    force in the course of making a seizure of a person under the Fourth Amendment’s
    “objective reasonableness” standard. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
    , 736, 
    131 S. Ct. 2074
    , 
    179 L. Ed. 2d 1149
    (2011); Graham v. 
    Connor, 490 U.S. at 388
    (1989). In
    assessing the reasonableness of the manner of a seizure, courts balance the nature and
    quality of the intrusion on the individual’s liberty interest against the importance of the
    governmental interests alleged to justify the intrusion. Graham v. 
    Connor, 490 U.S. at 396
    . Courts examine the government interest in safely effecting an arrest in light of 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 actively resists arrest or attempts to evade arrest
    by flight. Graham v. 
    Connor, 490 U.S. at 396
    . Even when some force is justified, the
    amount actually used may be excessive. Santo v. Gates, 
    287 F.3d 846
    , 853 (9th Cir.
    2002).
    Determining whether a police officer’s use of force was reasonable or excessive
    requires careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each particular case.
    Drummond ex rel. Drummond v. City of Anaheim, 
    343 F.3d 1052
    , 1056 (9th Cir. 2003).
    Because such balancing nearly always requires a jury to sift through disputed factual
    contentions to draw inferences therefrom and to assess credibility of witnesses, courts
    should grant summary judgment in excessive force cases sparingly. Santos v. 
    Gates, 287 F.3d at 853
    ; Liston v. County of Riverside, 
    120 F.3d 965
    , 976 n.10 (9th Cir. 1997).
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    Courts judge the reasonableness of the force exacted by a law enforcement officer
    from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with hindsight.
    Graham v. 
    Connor, 490 U.S. at 396
    -97 (1989). The calculus of reasonableness must
    recognize that police officers must often render split-second judgments, in tense,
    uncertain, and rapidly evolving circumstances, about the amount of force necessary in a
    particular situation. Graham v. 
    Connor, 490 U.S. at 396
    -97.
    When determining if Trooper Bart Olson exercised unreasonable force, we must
    measure the amount of force employed by Olson. In this regard, Thomas Sluman
    contends that Olson exercised deadly force. Even when law enforcement does not intend
    to kill or does not kill, courts characterize the force employed as deadly if the force could
    cause death or serious injury. Drummond ex rel. Drummond v. City of 
    Anaheim, 343 F.3d at 1056
    . “Deadly force” entails a substantial risk of causing death or serious bodily
    harm. Robinette v. Barnes, 
    854 F.2d 909
    , 911-12 (6th Cir. 1988).
    Bart Olson used his car to impede Thomas Sluman’s progress. In Brosseau v.
    Haugen, 
    543 U.S. 194
    , 200, 
    125 S. Ct. 596
    , 
    160 L. Ed. 2d 583
    (2004), the Supreme Court
    noted that a car can be a deadly weapon, although the Court deemed reasonable the
    officer’s decision to stop the car from possibly injuring others. Brosseau v. 
    Haugen, 543 U.S. at 200
    . We observe that Thomas Sluman rode a motorcycle, rather than drove an
    automobile. A law enforcement officer’s use of a squad car to block a motorcycle’s path
    constitutes deadly and unreasonable force. Walker v. Davis, 
    649 F.3d 502
    , 503-04 (6th
    16
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Cir. 2011); Donovan v. City of Milwaukee, 
    17 F.3d 944
    , 949-50 (7th Cir. 1994).
    Washington State Patrol regulations confirm use of a patrol car to be lethal force.
    The regulations provide “intentional intervention . . . of a vehicle is the deliberate act of
    hitting another vehicle with a patrol vehicle(s) for the purpose of functionally damaging
    or forcing the other vehicle off the road.” CP at 661. The State Patrol rules also declare
    that “intentional intervention is considered the use of lethal force . . . [and] officers
    attempting intentional intervention with a vehicle shall be held to the same standards as
    are applied to any other use of lethal force.” CP at 661-62.
    We proceed on the assumption that Trooper Bart Olson’s door-checking
    constituted deadly force. Although the seizure did not kill Thomas Sluman, the seizure
    imperiled Sluman’s life and caused serious injury. Bart Olson denies that he exerted
    deadly force, but he provides no decision to support the denial.
    We must now address whether Thomas Sluman’s conduct justified Trooper Bart
    Olson’s exercise of deadly force. The balancing process applied in excessive force cases
    demonstrates that, notwithstanding probable cause to seize a suspect, an officer may not
    always do so by killing him. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 9
    (1985). As a subset of
    excessive force claims, the United States Supreme Court has held that police use of
    “deadly force” violates the Fourth Amendment unless the officer has probable cause to
    believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to
    others. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 11
    . The individual interests at stake rise to their
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    zenith when law enforcement seizes a citizen by deadly force because of the fundamental
    interest in one’s life. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 9
    . The use of deadly force by law
    enforcement against a suspect frustrates the interest of the individual, of society, and in
    the judicial determination of guilt and punishment. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 9
    .
    The peaceful submission of suspects holds no priority over the interest in life.
    Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 9
    -10. Employing deadly force to vindicate our criminal
    justice system defeats its purpose since, if successful, that system will not be set in
    motion. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 10
    . Thus, the use of deadly force to prevent
    the escape of all felony suspects, whatever the circumstances, is constitutionally
    unreasonable. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 11
    . On the other hand, if the suspect
    threatens the officer with a weapon or probable cause exists to believe that he committed
    a crime involving the infliction or threatened infliction of serious physical harm, deadly
    force may be used if necessary to prevent escape, and if, when feasible, some warning
    has been given. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 11
    -12. Under Thomas Sluman’s
    version of the facts, he received no warning.
    Even under the State’s version of the facts, Thomas Sluman did not commit a
    crime involving serious physical harm to another. Law enforcement sought to stop
    Sluman for speeding. Washington State Patrol officers did not even seek to capture
    Sluman because of a crime. Sluman was not armed. No officer knew that Sluman
    discerned he was being pursued. According to Trooper Paul Blume, Sluman never
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    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    looked in his direction. Thus, no officer knew that Sluman sought to elude the police.
    Trooper Bart Olson asserts that he held a governmental interest in protecting the
    public from injury or death when stopping Thomas Sluman. Olson emphasizes that the
    motorcycle’s high speed posed a risk to persons in the immediate area.
    Language in Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    (1985) disassembles Bart Olson’s
    argument. In Garner, the Supreme Court noted, based on extensive research and
    consideration, that laws permitting police officers to use deadly force to apprehend
    unarmed, nonviolent fleeing felony suspects do not protect citizens or law enforcement
    officers, do not deter crime or alleviate problems caused by crime, and do not improve
    the crime fighting ability of law enforcement agencies. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 19
    . Thus, the government’s interest in ending a high-speed chase of an unarmed
    perpetrator does not justify deadly force. Accordingly, the Fourth Amendment’s right to
    be free from unreasonable seizure prohibits the use of lethal force to apprehend a fleeing
    felon in the absence of an immediate threat of serious physical harm or death. Tennessee
    v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 11
    .
    Trooper Bart Olson cites three United States Supreme Court decisions to support
    his argument that, as a matter of law, he did not exert excessive force: Mullenix v. Luna,
    ___ U.S. ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    , 
    193 L. Ed. 2d 255
    (2015); Plumhoff v. Rickard, ___ U.S.
    ___, 
    134 S. Ct. 2012
    , 
    188 L. Ed. 2d 1056
    (2014); and Brosseau v. 
    Haugen, 543 U.S. at 200
    (2004). We review each decision and find each factually distinguishable because the
    19
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    person seized actually endangered the lives of officers and others.
    In Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    (2015), the Court only addressed the qualified
    immunity question, not whether the officer breached the Fourth Amendment. Thus, the
    Supreme Court only focused on whether the right at issue was clearly established.
    In Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
    134 S. Ct. 2012
    (2014), a law enforcement officer stopped
    Donald Rickard for an inoperable headlamp on his car. A passenger rode in Rickard’s
    automobile. When the officer asked Rickard to exit the vehicle, he sped away. A chase
    ensued that took Rickard and the pursuing officers to an interstate. The vehicles swerved
    through traffic at speeds over one hundred miles per hour. During the chase, Rickard and
    officers passed more than two dozen vehicles. Eventually Rickard exited the interstate
    and executed a quick turn that caused contact with a police cruiser. As a result of the
    contact, Rickard’s car spun into a parking lot and collided with Officer Plumhoff’s
    vehicle. Two officers exited their vehicles to approach Rickard’s car and pound on the
    passenger’s window. At this point, Rickard’s car struck another police vehicle, causing
    his car to temporarily intertwine with the bumper of the police car. Officer Plumhoff
    exited his patrol car and fired three shots into the car, but an undeterred Rickard unstuck
    and reversed his car. Rickard maneuvered onto the street, while forcing an officer to step
    to the side in order to avoid being hit by Rickard’s vehicle. As Rickard fled down the
    street, two other officers fired twelve shots. Rickard lost control of his car, which
    crashed into a building. A combination of bullets and the impact with the structure killed
    20
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Rickard and his passenger. The high Court held that the Fourth Amendment allowed
    deadly force in this instance because of the high speed, the passing of many vehicles by
    Rickard, Rickard forcing other motorists off the road, the collision with a patrol car, the
    acceleration and escape after the interlocking of Rickard’s car with the patrol car, and
    Rickard’s continued flight after the first shots. Thomas Sluman’s suit possesses none of
    these critical circumstances.
    In Brosseau v. Haugen, 
    543 U.S. 194
    (2004), law enforcement garnered a felony
    warrant for the arrest of Kenneth Haugen on drug and other offenses. Thereafter a
    neighbor of Kenneth Haguen’s mother notified police that Haugen and another man
    fought on the mother’s yard. Officer Rochelle Brosseau responded to the call. When
    Officer Brosseau arrived, Haugen escaped. Brosseau called for assistance and officers
    arrived at the scene and spread through the neighborhood to locate a hiding Haugen.
    Officer Rochelle Brosseau eventually found Kenneth Haugen, who ran from her
    toward his mother’s home’s driveway, jumped into the driver’s seat of a Jeep, and closed
    and locked the door. Brosseau ran to the Jeep, pointed her weapon at Haugen inside the
    vehicle, and ordered Haugen to exit the Jeep. Brosseau repeated the command while
    hitting the window several times with her handgun. The window shattered. Brosseau
    unsuccessfully attempted to grab the Jeep’s keys from Haugen, and she struck Haugen in
    the head with the barrel and butt of her gun. A persistent Haugen started the Jeep.
    Officer Brosseau fired a shot through the rear driver’s side window, which shot struck
    21
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Haugen’s back. An undeterred Haugen left the driveway, swerved across the neighbor’s
    lawn, and drove down the street. A half block later, Haugen noticed his gunshot wound
    and stopped the vehicle.
    Brosseau’s facts differ from the facts of this appeal. Kenneth Haugen posed an
    immediate threat to law enforcement officers. He fought with another man, which
    evidenced his violent nature before officers even arrived at the scene. The violence and
    escape occurred in a neighborhood with other officers in the streets of the neighborhood
    looking for Haugen after Brosseau already located him. People occupied two cars on
    both sides of the Jeep when Haugen maneuvered the car out of the driveway. Haugen
    persisted in escaping after multiple commands to exit the car, after being hit in the head
    with a gun, and after being shot in the back. These actions led the United States Supreme
    Court to find Haugen a threat thereby making Brosseau’s actions reasonable. The Court
    explained that Haugen proved he would take extreme measures to avoid capture and he
    posed a major threat to, among others, the officers at the end of the street. Thomas
    Sluman’s appeal bears none of these critical facts.
    Trooper Bart Olson also mentions Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 374-75, 127 S.
    Ct. 1769, 
    167 L. Ed. 2d 686
    (2007). The speeding motorist also initiated a chase on a
    two-lane highway. But, unlike in Thomas Sluman’s case, the motorist exited the road
    and entered a parking lot of a shopping center because of a crowded roadway. Police
    vehicles nearly trapped the motorist’s car inside the lot. In order to evade the trap, the
    22
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    motorist executed a sharp turn, collided with an officer’s police car, exited the parking
    lot, and again sped away.
    The facts viewed in the light most favorable to Thomas Sluman distinguish this
    appeal from Brosseau, Scott, Mullenix, and Rickard. Thomas Sluman drove on a two-
    lane highway, not in a residential neighborhood. An unpopulated South Thorp Highway
    lacked turns into business parking lots. Sluman did not endanger the public by driving
    erratically through a parking lot. Officers formed the intent to stop Sluman after
    witnessing him speeding on the highway. Sluman bore no arms, did not appear armed,
    and communicated no threats to police officers or anyone else. Sluman did not weave
    through traffic and did not aggressively pass cars in an attempt to elude the police.
    Sluman also did not act as a threat by hitting police cars in an attempt to escape. Sluman
    only struck Trooper Olson’s car when Olson door-checked Sluman and sent him
    careening over the edge of the bridge to the ground below.
    Thomas Sluman obeyed all traffic laws except the speed limit. The one hundred
    miles per hour speed reached in Plumhoff was not disputed. Sluman disputes Bart
    Olson’s claim that Sluman exceeded one hundred miles per hour, and Sluman provides a
    sound reason to discount the plane operator’s estimate of the speed.
    In his argument, Trooper Bart Olson erroneously claims that Thomas Sluman does
    not dispute Olson’s version of the facts. Bart Olson also repeatedly pictures the facts in a
    light favorable to him, while ignoring his own testimony and the testimony of other
    23
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Washington State Patrol troopers.
    Trooper Olson repetitively writes of the safety of pedestrians and other motorists
    imperiled by Thomas Sluman’s flight on a motorcycle. Nevertheless, facts support the
    conclusion that Sluman endangered no pedestrians or other motorists as he drove on
    South Thorp Highway. Olson asserts that he acted, as part of a team, to protect citizens at
    a well-traveled intersection from a motorcyclist traveling at speeds over 120 miles per
    hour. Olson did not act as a team. Instead, the undisputed facts show he performed as a
    rogue officer who violated numerous Washington State Patrol regulations. Olson
    forwards no evidence of the number of travelers, if any, near the point of impact on South
    Thorp Highway. Sluman traveled between 30 and 40 m.p.h. when Trooper Bart Olson
    door-checked him.
    Trooper Bart Olson writes that South Thorp Highway runs through a high density
    residential farm area. We doubt that any farm area, regardless of the presence of some
    residences, to be of high density. Regardless, no facts show the area to be high density.
    The video filed as evidence contradicts this assertion. A photograph cited for this
    proposition shows police cars parked on a bridge, not a high-density farm area.
    Bart Olson contends that Thomas Sluman’s speed on South Thorp Highway
    endangered others. Nevertheless, in his deposition, Trooper Olson testified that “nobody
    was in the area.” CP at 535. The State also mentions the presence of innocent parties at
    the nearby campground. No evidence shows any persons then present in the campground
    24
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    to be endangered. No decision has held that the theoretical possibility that people may be
    in the area qualifies as the type of immediate threat that justifies the use of lethal force.
    Based on the United States Supreme Court decision in Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    (2007), Trooper Bart Olson argues that Thomas Sluman cannot testify or present
    testimony of witnesses contrary to the videotape that recorded Sluman’s collision of
    Olson’s patrol car door. We accept this argument but observe that the video supports
    Sluman’s version of the facts, not the State’s description of the facts.
    Although not United States Supreme Court decisions, we consider two federal
    appeals court decisions, Vaughan v. Cox, 
    343 F.3d 1323
    (11th Cir. 2003) and Walker v.
    Davis, 
    649 F.3d 502
    (6th Cir. 2011), to parallel the facts in Thomas Sluman’s appeal.
    Both decisions support our holding that Thomas Sluman presents facts to establish that
    Trooper Bart Olson exercised unreasonable force. We outline the facts and rulings of the
    two cases in our Appendix A.
    Trooper Bart Olson violated many Washington State Patrol rules when pursuing
    Thomas Sluman and impeding Sluman’s progress. Some federal circuits have held that
    an officer’s violation of department standards lacks relevance to whether the officer
    violated the Fourth Amendment, in part because such a rule would promote law
    enforcement departments to lower their standards. Smith v. Freland, 
    954 F.2d 343
    , 347-
    48 (6th Cir. 1992); see Ford v. Childers, 
    855 F.2d 1271
    (7th Cir. 1988). Other circuits,
    including our home circuit, have ruled that training bulletins, department regulations, and
    25
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    guidelines hold relevance to the reasonableness of an officer’s conduct in applying force.
    Drummond ex rel. Drummond v. City of 
    Anaheim, 343 F.3d at 1059
    (9th Cir. 2003).
    Under this second view, a court may question an officer’s action as reasonably prudent if
    banned by his or her department or of whose dangers he or she had been warned.
    Gutierrez v. City of San Antonio, 
    139 F.3d 441
    , 449 (5th Cir. 1998); Scott v. Henrich, 
    39 F.3d 912
    , 915-16 (9th Cir. 1994). We see no reason to resolve this discrepancy. We
    note, however, that the United States Supreme Court in Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    (1985), considered the regulations of major cities and the Federal Bureau of Investigation
    when ruling deadly force unconstitutional except when the suspect threatens the life of
    another and only after a warning.
    Issue 3: Whether qualified immunity shields Trooper Bart Olson from liability to
    Thomas Sluman as a matter of law?
    Answer 3: No.
    After concluding that facts support a conclusion that Trooper Bart Olson violated
    Thomas Sluman’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures, we
    now address whether disputed facts prevent application of qualified immunity in favor of
    Bart Olson. We again rely on federal cases.
    Under United States Supreme Court precedent, a law enforcement officer receives
    qualified immunity under § 1983 unless (1) he or she violated a federal statutory or
    constitutional right, and (2) the unlawfulness of the conduct was “clearly established at
    26
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    the time.” District of Columbia v. Wesby, ___ U.S. ___, 
    138 S. Ct. 577
    , 589, 
    199 L. Ed. 2d
    453 (2018). A clearly established right constitutes a sufficiently clear right that every
    reasonable official would recognize. Mullenix v. 
    Luna, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    (2015). This
    test may be redundant since a reasonable person, or at least a reasonable government
    officer, should know of all clearly established constitutional rights.
    42 U.S.C. § 1983 immunity balances two important interests, the need to hold
    public officials accountable when exercising power irresponsibly and the need to shield
    officials from harassment, distraction, and liability when they perform their duties
    reasonably. Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 231, 
    129 S. Ct. 808
    , 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 565
    (2009). When government officials abuse their offices, actions for damages may offer
    the only realistic avenue for vindication of constitutional guarantees. Anderson v.
    Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 638, 
    107 S. Ct. 3034
    , 
    97 L. Ed. 2d 523
    (1987).
    The United States Supreme Court has employed various phrases in an endeavor to
    elucidate and define the idiom “clearly established law.” Existing law must have placed
    the constitutionality of the officer’s conduct “beyond debate.” District of Columbia v.
    
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589
    . To be clearly established, a legal principle must have a
    sufficiently clear foundation in then-existing precedent. District of Columbia v. 
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589
    . The violated rule must be “settled law.” Hunter v. Bryant, 
    502 U.S. 224
    , 228, 
    112 S. Ct. 534
    , 
    116 L. Ed. 2d 589
    (1991). The law must result from
    “controlling authority” or a robust consensus of “cases of persuasive authority.” Wilson
    27
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    v. Layne, 
    526 U.S. 603
    , 617, 
    119 S. Ct. 1692
    , 
    143 L. Ed. 2d 818
    (1999). The precedent
    must be clear enough that every reasonable official would interpret it to establish the
    particular rule the plaintiff seeks to apply. District of Columbia v. 
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590
    .
    The “clearly established” standard also requires that the legal principle clearly
    prohibit the officer’s conduct in the particular circumstances before him. District of
    Columbia v. 
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590
    . The rule’s contours must be so well defined that a
    reasonable officer will clearly know that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he
    confronted. Carroll v. Carman, ___ U.S. ___, 
    135 S. Ct. 348
    , 350, 
    190 L. Ed. 2d 311
    (2014).
    We encounter some difficulty in discerning clearly established law, since the law
    does not and cannot mathematically quantify the specificity or generality of its tenets, the
    clearness or opaqueness of its rules, or the concreteness or abstraction of its principles.
    Nevertheless, we seek to assess qualified immunity by musing and meditating on the
    facts in reported Fourth Amendment decisions and the closeness of those facts to the
    conduct of Thomas Sluman and Trooper Bart Olson. We also examine and evaluate the
    specificity of the rules announced in the decisions.
    United States Supreme Court jurisprudence has announced some conflicting
    principles with regard to assessing clearly established law. On the one hand, some
    United States Supreme Court decisions caution lower courts when measuring the
    28
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    particularity of a constitutional rule. The Supreme Court has repeatedly admonished
    courts from defining clearly established law at a high level of generality. Mullenix v.
    
    Luna, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    (2015). Withholding immunity requires a high “degree of
    specificity.” Mullenix v. 
    Luna, 136 S. Ct. at 309
    . A rule is too general if the
    unlawfulness of the officer’s conduct does not follow immediately from the conclusion
    that the rule was firmly established. Anderson v. 
    Creighton, 483 U.S. at 641
    (1987). For
    example, the Court has reversed cases when lower courts denied an official qualified
    immunity based on Garner’s general holding that an officer employs unreasonable force
    when he or she uses deadly force on an unarmed fleeing felon. Mullenix v. Luna, 136 S.
    Ct. at 308-09. The general proposition, for example, that an unreasonable search or
    seizure violates the Fourth Amendment helps little in determining whether the law clearly
    establishes the violative nature of particular conduct. Ashcroft v. 
    al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 742
    (2011); Saucier v. 
    Katz, 533 U.S. at 201-02
    (2001).
    On the other hand, the United States Supreme Court has also cautioned lower
    courts not to demand identical facts to prior decisions before withholding qualified
    immunity. Qualified immunity does not automatically protect official action only if a
    court has held unlawful the very action in question. Anderson v. 
    Creighton, 483 U.S. at 640
    (1987). The Court does not require a case directly on point to deny immunity.
    Mullenix v. 
    Luna, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    . There can be the rare “obvious case,” when the
    unlawfulness of the officer’s conduct is sufficiently clear even though existing precedent
    29
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    does not address similar circumstances. Brosseau v. 
    Haugen, 543 U.S. at 199
    (2004).
    Officials can still be on notice that their conduct violates established law even in novel
    factual circumstances. Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 741, 
    122 S. Ct. 2508
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 666
    (2002). The “salient question” is whether the state of the law gave the defendant
    “fair warning” that their alleged conduct was unconstitutional. Hope v. 
    Pelzer, 536 U.S. at 741
    .
    The Supreme Court has outlined steps for a court to undertake when determining
    whether a law enforcement officer charged with excessive force by employing deadly
    force deserves qualified immunity. The court starts by defining the circumstances that
    confronted the law enforcement officer. District of Columbia v. 
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589
    .
    The court then evaluates the constitutionality of the police officer’s use of deadly force in
    light of Garner. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 11
    -12; Vaughan v. 
    Cox, 343 F.3d at 1332
    (11th Cir. 2003). Nevertheless, the court may not base its decision on any “general”
    rule found in Garner as to excessive force. Brosseau v. 
    Haugen, 543 U.S. at 199
    .
    Instead, an officer will be entitled to qualified immunity if he had “arguable probable
    cause” to employ deadly force. Vaughan v. 
    Cox, 343 F.3d at 1332
    (11th Cir. 2003). In
    essence, the court decides whether “the officer reasonably could have believed that
    probable cause existed” to use deadly force. Montoute v. Carr, 
    114 F.3d 181
    , 184 (11th
    Cir. 1997). In evaluating an officer’s assertion of a qualified immunity defense, we apply
    an objective standard, asking whether the officer’s actions are objectively reasonable in
    30
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    light of the facts confronting the officer, regardless of the officer’s underlying intent or
    motivation. Montoute v. 
    Carr, 114 F.3d at 183
    . Judges must be cautious about second
    guessing a police officer’s assessment, made on the scene, of the danger presented by a
    particular situation. Ryburn v. Huff, 
    565 U.S. 469
    , 477, 
    132 S. Ct. 987
    , 
    181 L. Ed. 2d 966
    (2012).
    Although law enforcement officers are not trained lawyers, they are taught search
    and seizure law in training. One decision suggests that officers should be able to reason
    as to what facts are important in a United States Supreme Court decision. Hope v. 
    Pelzer, 536 U.S. at 742
    (2002).
    The United States Supreme Court has yet to decide what precedents, other than its
    own decisions, qualify as controlling authority for purposes of qualified immunity.
    District of Columbia v. 
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 591
    n.8. Therefore, we begin with some
    Supreme Court decisions.
    In Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    (2015), the Court did not address whether the
    officer breached the Fourth Amendment, but instead addressed whether the law had
    clearly established the right at issue. Trooper Bart Olson highlights Mullenix.
    In Mullenix, one officer approached Israel Leija’s vehicle at a drive-in restaurant
    to inform Leija that he was under arrest pursuant to active arrest warrants. After the
    officer spoke, Leija sped toward a Texas interstate highway as other officers joined the
    pursuit. Twice during the chase, Leija called police dispatch and claimed to hold a gun
    31
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    while threatening to shoot police officers if they did not abandon their pursuit. The
    dispatcher relayed Leija’s threats, together with the report that Leija might be intoxicated,
    to all concerned officers.
    While the chase of Israel Leija continued, other officers laid spike strips at three
    locations, the first of which was located beneath an overpass. Trooper Chadrin Mullenix
    was one of the responding officers. He journeyed to the overpass initially intending to
    help lay the spike strip, but upon arrival at the overpass, he switched to a different tactic:
    shooting at Leija’s car in order to disable it. Trooper Mullenix radioed the idea to
    another officer who agreed with the plan so Mullenix asked the dispatcher to inform his
    supervisor in order to gain his approval. Before receiving a response, Mullenix stood on
    top of the overpass and twenty feet above the interstate with his rifle aimed below.
    Mullenix knew that another officer manned the spike strip on the roadway beneath the
    overpass. Three minutes after taking his sniper’s position, Trooper Mullenix spotted
    Leija’s vehicle approaching the overpass and fired six shots, one or more which killed
    Leija.
    The United States Supreme Court, in Mullenix v. Luna, held that the officer did
    not violate a clearly established right but only in the context of the unique facts. The
    Court stated “none of our precedents ‘squarely governs’ the facts here.” Mullenix v.
    
    Luna, 136 S. Ct. at 310
    . Those facts included a suspect threatening to shoot at officers.
    The Court defended Trooper Mullenix’s actions by highlighting that fellow officers stood
    32
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    below the overpass, that Mullenix knew of the officers’ presence, that Leija had twice
    threatened to shoot officers, and that Leija raced toward an officer’s location.
    The facts in our appeal lack any of these or similar details. Thomas Sluman never
    threatened to shoot anyone, let alone officers, and never appeared armed. The Supreme
    Court specifically distinguished Mullenix from four other cases where it found the facts
    too distinct to speak to the circumstances involved in Mullenix.
    We already detailed facts in Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
    134 S. Ct. 2012
    (2014), Scott v.
    Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    (2007), and Brosseau v. Haugen, 
    543 U.S. 194
    (2004). In
    Brosseau, the Court held that an officer did not violate clearly established law when she
    shot a fleeing suspect out of fear that he endangered other officers on foot who she
    believed were in the immediate area, the occupied vehicles in his path, and any other
    citizens who might be in the area. In Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , the Court held that an
    officer did not violate the Fourth Amendment by ramming the car of a fugitive whose
    reckless driving posed an actual and imminent threat to the lives of any pedestrians who
    might have been present, to other civilian motorists, and to the officers involved in the
    chase.
    In Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
    134 S. Ct. 2012
    , the Court reaffirmed Scott by holding that
    an officer acted reasonably when he fatally shot a fugitive who was intent on resuming a
    chase that posed a deadly threat for others on the road. During that chase, Rickard passed
    more than two dozen other vehicles, several of which were forced to alter course.
    33
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Rickard’s outrageously reckless driving posed a grave public safety risk. When
    Rickard’s car eventually collided with a police car and came temporarily to a standstill
    that did not end the chase. Less than three seconds later, Rickard resumed maneuvering
    his car. Just before the shots were fired, when the front bumper of his car was flush with
    that of one of the police cruisers, Rickard was obviously pushing down on the accelerator
    because the car’s wheels were spinning, and then Rickard threw the car into reverse in an
    attempt to escape.
    The law directs us to outline the important facts as seen by the defending law
    enforcement officer when the officer employs force or at least those facts that a
    reasonable officer confronted with the same circumstances would know. Trooper Bart
    Olson underwent training not to block the path of a vehicle on the road. Trooper Olson
    had been directed to end his pursuit of Thomas Sluman. Olson knew that an aircraft
    followed Sluman and could continue to follow Sluman. Olson, as he testified in his
    deposition, knew no one else was in the area where he parked his patrol car and Thomas
    Sluman rode his motorcycle. Therefore, Olson knew that Sluman did not endanger the
    public or officers. Olson had no knowledge that Sluman knew he was being pursued.
    Olson knew that Sluman had made no threats to law enforcement officers. Olson had no
    knowledge of Sluman being armed. By training, Bart Olson knew erecting a roadblock
    or interfering with a motorcyclist’s movement constituted deadly force. Still, Olson
    employed deadly force to stop the movement of Sluman.
    34
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Assuming we must ground our determination of clearly established law only on
    United States Supreme Court precedent, the Supreme Court decided Brower v. County of
    Inyo, 
    489 U.S. 593
    (1989) and Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    (1985) decades before
    Trooper Bart Olson’s conduct in 2010. Both cases warned Trooper Bart Olson that a law
    enforcement officer violates the Fourth Amendment when terminating the citizen’s
    movement with force when the citizen does not violate the law. The high Court rulings
    cautioned Olson that he may not employ deadly force unless he had probable cause to
    believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to
    others. Brower v. County of Inyo imposed liability on an officer for erecting a roadblock
    when the suspect did not pose such a threat. Although Olson may be able to identify
    some distinguishing facts from Brower, he cannot identify any facts that call for a
    different outcome in his suit.
    We find no case involving a door-check. Nevertheless, any reasonable officer by
    2010 should have known not to door-check a motorcyclist traveling on an uncrowded
    road when the motorcyclist had not earlier interfered in the travel of other motorists. No
    reported decision excuses a law enforcement officer’s conduct under these circumstances.
    Four federal circuit court decisions withhold qualified immunity to a law
    enforcement officer in similar cases as presented in this appeal. Walker v. Davis, 
    649 F.3d 502
    (6th Cir. 2011); Adams v. Speers, 
    473 F.3d 989
    (9th Cir. 2007); Vaughan v.
    Cox, 
    343 F.3d 1323
    (11th Cir. 2003); Hawkins v. City of Farmington, 
    189 F.3d 695
    (8th
    35
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Cir. 1999). To shorten a lengthy decision, we outline all decisions in Appendix B.
    Trooper Bart Olson phrases the issue in Thomas Sluman’s appeal as: assuming all
    facts in the light most favorable to Sluman, was the law clearly established in July 2010
    that the Fourth Amendment prohibited a law enforcement officer, making a split-second
    decision concerning the safety of pedestrians and other motorists imperiled by a suspect
    fleeing on a motorcycle, from opening the door of his patrol car into the motorcycle’s
    path, even when the suspect had done no more than elude police? In so framing the
    issue, Trooper Olson assumes facts in the light most favorable to him, not Thomas
    Sluman. Thomas Sluman did not endanger pedestrians or other motorists when Sluman
    drove on South Thorp Highway. Some facts show that Sluman did not elude law
    enforcement.
    Trooper Bart Olson also frames the issue as: does the law afford Olson qualified
    immunity when he performed a traffic stop to prevent Sluman from entering a high traffic
    density highway interchange when Sluman sped over one hundred twenty miles per hour
    to elude law enforcement? Again, Olson views the facts in a glow beneficial to him. No
    facts support a finding that Sluman entered a high traffic density interchange. Olson
    averred that no one else was present. Inferences from facts suggest Sluman did not travel
    even over one hundred miles per hour. Again, some facts question whether Sluman
    sought to elude police. Assuming Sluman knew of the pursuit, his only felony was
    eluding an officer.
    36
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Trooper Bart Olson also emphasizes that he made a split-second judgment when
    parking his car on the Yakima River Bridge and when opening his car door. We
    recognize that the United States Supreme Court wishes police officers leniency when
    rendering split second decisions. Nevertheless, the Court has never held that all quick
    decisions carry qualified immunity. We also question whether Bart Olson engaged in a
    split-second decision. Inference from other facts suggest that, from the time of his notice
    that Trooper David Hinchliff pursued Thomas Sluman, Olson intended to take
    extraordinary steps to end the travel of Sluman. Olson reflected before parking his car in
    the middle of the road in an attempt to horse collar Sluman.
    Trooper Bart Olson presents no testimony relating his knowledge of the law of
    search and seizure. Olson presents no testimony that he relied on any particular court
    decisions or deemed himself compliant with constitutional principles when door-
    checking Thomas Sluman. Under the facts as presented by Thomas Sluman, Trooper
    Bart Olson’s conduct breached clearly established constitutional rights. Federal case law
    interpreting similar claims would have placed a reasonable officer on notice that using
    unauthorized deadly force against a fleeing suspect that is only wanted for traffic
    violations breaches the Fourth Amendment. The only risk posed in this case was the risk
    of an accident which Trooper Olson, not Thomas Sluman, turned into a reality.
    Washington State Trooper Bart Olson emphasizes recent United States Supreme
    Court decisions that reverse lower court decisions denying a law enforcement officer
    37
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    qualified immunity. District of Columbia v. Wesby, 
    138 S. Ct. 577
    (2018); White v.
    Pauly, ___ U.S. ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 548
    , 
    196 L. Ed. 2d 463
    (2017); Mullenix v. Luna, 136 S.
    Ct. 305 (2015); Taylor v. Barkes, ___ U.S. ___, 
    135 S. Ct. 2042
    , 
    192 L. Ed. 2d 78
    (2015);
    City and County of San Francisco v. Sheehan, ___ U.S. ___, 
    135 S. Ct. 1765
    , 
    191 L. Ed. 2d
    856 (2015); Carroll v. Carman, 
    135 S. Ct. 348
    (2014); Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
    134 S. Ct. 2012
    (2014); Wood v. Moss, ___ U.S. ___, 
    134 S. Ct. 2056
    , 
    188 L. Ed. 2d 1039
    (2014);
    Stanton v. Sims, 
    571 U.S. 3
    , 
    134 S. Ct. 3
    , 
    187 L. Ed. 2d 341
    (2013); Reichle v. Howards,
    
    566 U.S. 658
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 2088
    , 
    182 L. Ed. 2d 985
    (2012); Ryburn v. Huff, 
    565 U.S. 469
    (2012); Messerschmidt v. Millender, 
    565 U.S. 535
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 1235
    , 
    182 L. Ed. 2d 47
    (2012); Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
    (2011). Carroll v. Carman concerns the
    application of the knock and talk practice. District of Columbia v. Wesby, 
    138 S. Ct. 577
    (2018) concerns an amusing false arrest claim, not an excessive force allegation, wherein
    partygoers at a bachelor party could not identify the bachelor. Messerschmidt v.
    Millender addressed an arrest pursuant to a search warrant. Reichle v. Howards involves
    a First Amendment retaliatory arrest. Stanton v. Sims and Ryburn v. Huff concern
    warrantless entries into homes. Taylor v. Barkes involves the Eighth Amendment. Wood
    v. Moss is a First Amendment case. In White v. Pauly, the officer used deadly force when
    the injured party said he had a gun. In City and County of San Francisco v. Sheehan,
    officers also used deadly force against a decedent who possessed a knife and threatened
    to use the weapon.
    38
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    We accept the recent decisions as precautionary instructions to carefully review
    the facts of each case and ensure that the facts support a conclusion that the officer
    violated clearly established law. Nevertheless, the decisions do not bestow absolute
    immunity on the officers. In short, Thomas Sluman presents many cases that establish
    that Trooper Bart Olson violated his clearly established Fourth Amendment rights. Bart
    Olson forwards no decision that helps him under these circumstances. All of Olson’s
    promoted decisions involve the speeding person to have endangered the lives of others.
    Felony Bar Statute
    We now begin our review of Thomas Sluman’s state law claims. Since Sluman
    seeks to reverse dismissal of state law claims asserted against both Trooper Bart Olson
    and the State of Washington and since the two defendants’ interests coincide, we
    hereafter refer to both defendants in the aggregate as the State.
    Thomas Sluman pled state causes of action of false arrest, false imprisonment,
    negligence, gross negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, intentional
    infliction of emotional distress, and negligent training and supervision. Sluman agreed to
    dismissal of false arrest and false imprisonment. The trial court dismissed on summary
    judgment the remaining claims over the objection of Sluman. We will later briefly
    analyze each of these remaining claims but must first address a defense common to all
    state law claims, the felony bar rule.
    39
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    In his brief, Thomas Sluman argued against application of the public duty
    doctrine. The State does not contend, in its brief, that the public duty doctrine bars
    Sluman’s state law causes of action. Therefore, we proceed on the assumption the State
    has abandoned any defense, for purposes of a summary judgment motion, based on the
    doctrine. The State may still assert the doctrine before the trial court since Sluman has
    not asked for the dismissal of the defense as a matter of law.
    On appeal, the State asks us to affirm summary judgment dismissal of all state
    claims based on Washington’s felony bar statute. RCW 4.24.420 provides:
    It is a complete defense to any action for damages for personal
    injury or wrongful death that the person injured or killed was engaged in
    the commission of a felony at the time of the occurrence causing the injury
    or death and the felony was a proximate cause of the injury or death.
    However, nothing in this section shall affect a right of action under 42
    U.S.C. Sec. 1983.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Thomas Sluman resists application of the felony bar statute on two grounds. First,
    he did not commit a felony. Second, any crime he committed was not a proximate cause
    of his injuries. We could base our reversal of the application of the statute as a matter of
    law in favor of the State solely on proximate cause, but because the question of Sluman’s
    purported commission of a felony may arise again on remand, we also address this
    second ground.
    40
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Issue 4: Whether collateral estoppel bars Thomas Sluman from denying he
    committed felony eluding a police officer?
    Answer 4: No.
    RCW 46.61.024 declares:
    (1) Any driver of a motor vehicle who willfully fails or refuses to
    immediately bring his or her vehicle to a stop and who drives his or her
    vehicle in a reckless manner while attempting to elude a pursuing police
    vehicle, after being given a visual or audible signal to bring the vehicle to a
    stop, shall be guilty of a class C felony. The signal given by the police
    officer may be by hand, voice, emergency light, or siren. The officer giving
    such a signal shall be in uniform and the vehicle shall be equipped with
    lights and sirens.
    The State relies on RCW 46.61.024 when asserting that Thomas Sluman committed a
    felony. In turn, the State contends that collateral estoppel bars Thomas Sluman from
    denying application of the felony bar statute because Sluman pled guilty to felony
    eluding. Based on Clark v. Baines, 
    150 Wash. 2d 905
    , 
    84 P.3d 245
    (2004), we disagree.
    The doctrine of collateral estoppel prevents a party from relitigating issues raised
    and litigated by the party in an earlier proceeding. Reninger v. Department of
    Corrections, 
    134 Wash. 2d 437
    , 449, 
    951 P.2d 782
    (1998). Washington employs a four-part
    test to determine whether previous litigation should be afforded collateral estoppel effect
    in a subsequent litigation. The party asserting collateral estoppel must prove: (1) the
    issue decided in the prior adjudication is identical to the one presented in the current
    action, (2) the prior adjudication resulted in a final judgment on the merits, (3) the party
    41
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    against whom collateral estoppel is asserted was a party or in privity with a party to the
    prior adjudication, and (4) precluding relitigation of the issue will not work an injustice
    on the party against whom collateral estoppel is to be applied. State v. Harrison, 
    148 Wash. 2d 550
    , 561, 
    61 P.3d 1104
    (2003). We limit our discussion to element four.
    The determination of whether application of collateral estoppel will work an
    injustice on the party against whom the doctrine is asserted depends primarily on whether
    the parties to the earlier proceeding received a full and fair hearing on the issue in
    question. Thompson v. Department of Licensing, 
    138 Wash. 2d 783
    , 795-96, 
    982 P.2d 601
    (1999). Accordingly, a criminal conviction after a trial may, under certain circumstances,
    be given preclusive effect in a subsequent civil action. Kyreacos v. Smith, 
    89 Wash. 2d 425
    ,
    429-30, 
    572 P.2d 723
    (1977). When a criminal conviction results from an Alford plea,
    however, the parties never engaged in a full hearing. Falkner v. Foshaug, 
    108 Wash. App. 113
    , 122-23, 
    29 P.3d 771
    (2001); Safeco Insurance Company of America v. McGrath, 
    42 Wash. App. 58
    , 62-64, 
    708 P.2d 657
    (1985). A criminal defendant convicted on the basis
    of an Alford plea, unlike a defendant convicted after a trial, has not enjoyed a fair
    opportunity to litigate the issues in the criminal case. Safeco Insurance Company of
    America v. 
    McGrath, 42 Wash. App. at 62-63
    .
    The Evergreen State Supreme Court has held that an Alford plea to a criminal
    charge does not act as collateral estoppel so as to preclude the offender from litigating the
    commission of the underlying act in a civil suit. Clark v. 
    Baines, 150 Wash. 2d at 907
    42
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    (2004). Clark controls and compels a ruling that collateral estoppel does not prevent
    Thomas Sluman from denying he committed the felony of eluding an officer.
    Our dissenting in part brother refuses to follow Clark v. Baines. The dissenting
    opinion correctly notes that the plea of guilty may be used as evidence at trial. Based on
    this principle, the dissent decides to accept the plea as evidence and refuses to allow
    Thomas Sluman to contradict the plea, in essence rendering the plea dispositive.
    Indirectly, the dissent applies collateral estoppel to Sluman’s claim because of a dislike of
    Clark.
    The state Supreme Court issued Clark v. Baines. This appellate court remains
    bound by a decision of the Washington Supreme Court. State v. Gore, 
    101 Wash. 2d 481
    ,
    486-87, 
    681 P.2d 227
    (1984). We must follow Supreme Court precedence, regardless of
    any personal disagreement with its premise or correctness. State v. Jussila, 197 Wn.
    App. 908, 931, 
    392 P.3d 1108
    (2017).
    Issue 5: Whether Thomas Sluman may, in response to a summary judgment
    motion, deny that he attempted to elude police because he told Trooper Bart Olson of his
    outstanding warrants for arrest?
    Answer 5: Yes.
    As noted by the concurring opinion, the author of this lead opinion disagrees with
    his two colleagues as to whether an issue of fact lies as to whether Thomas Sluman
    43
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    eluded state troopers such that he violated the felony statute. Therefore, I write in the
    singular with respect to issues five and six, since I am in the minority.
    In addition to pleading guilty to felony eluding a law enforcement officer, Thomas
    Sluman, at the situs of the door-check, responded to a question of Trooper Bart Olson by
    stating he faced outstanding arrest warrants. Trooper Olson had asked Sluman why he
    fled from the police. Although Sluman did not expressly state he fled, I assume that, in
    the context of the question, he conceded the eluding. Sluman admits he uttered the
    response, but he denies the accuracy of the statement. This factual background and
    denial poses a fascinating question: may a party, in response to a summary judgment
    motion, deny a fact to which he previously admitted? In answering this question, I
    emphasize two factors. First, Sluman did not utter his concession under oath in the
    context of litigation. Second, Sluman suffered from serious pain when speaking.
    Washington follows the sham affidavit rule, sometimes known in Washington as
    the Marshall rule. Taylor v. Bell, 
    185 Wash. App. 270
    , 294, 
    340 P.3d 951
    (2014). Under
    the rule, when a party earlier rendered clear answers to unambiguous deposition
    questions that negate the existence of any genuine issue of material fact, that party cannot
    thereafter create such an issue with an affidavit that merely contradicts, without
    explanation, previously given clear testimony. Taylor v. 
    Bell, 185 Wash. App. at 294
    (2014); Marshall v. AC&S, Inc., 
    56 Wash. App. 181
    , 185, 
    782 P.2d 1107
    (1989). This rule
    is a narrow one. Taylor v. 
    Bell, 185 Wash. App. at 294
    . The self-serving affidavit must
    44
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    “directly contradict” the affiant’s “unambiguous sworn testimony” previously given.
    Kaplan v. Northwest Mutual Life Insurance Co., 
    100 Wash. App. 571
    , 576, 
    990 P.2d 991
    (2000). Moreover, if the subsequent affidavit offers an explanation for previously given
    testimony, the trier of fact should determine the explanation’s plausibility. Safeco
    Insurance Co. of America v. McGrath, 
    63 Wash. App. 170
    , 175, 
    817 P.2d 861
    (1991).
    I decline to apply the sham affidavit rule in Thomas Sluman’s appeal for many
    reasons. First, Sluman did not utter his comment to Trooper Bart Olson under oath. All
    cases applying the rule entail earlier deposition testimony or statements under oath, not
    statements outside the context of litigation. When rendering his concession, Thomas
    Sluman underwent excruciating pain from disabling injuries, including numerous broken
    bones. Sluman had just regained consciousness and the inferences suggest Olson
    confronted Sluman immediately after the latter regained cognizance. No decision
    addresses statements uttered, while under debilitating pain, because deponents generally
    avoid questioning immediately after regaining consciousness from having been door-
    checked and after having broken bones without any treatment.
    My dissenting brother emphasizes Marshall v. AC&S, Inc., 
    56 Wash. App. 181
    (1989), in which this court applied the sham affidavit rule to preclude the claimant from
    declaring he lacked knowledge of asbestos exposure more than three years past.
    Although we noted that the claimant’s denial contradicted medical records, we also noted
    that the denial naysaid the claimant’s application for workers compensation from the
    45
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    United States Department of Labor. The applicant must sign such forms, as a witness
    signs a declaration, under the penalty of perjury.
    Our dissenting brother also notes that evidence of speed can suffice to convict one
    of the crime of eluding. Of course, considering evidence as sufficient to convict says
    nothing about whether some evidence contradicts guilt. Sufficient evidence does not
    equate with undisputed evidence.
    Issue 6: Whether an issue of fact exists as to whether Thomas Sluman sought to
    elude law enforcement officers?
    Answer 6: Yes.
    Thomas Sluman testified in his affidavit and his deposition that he knew not that
    police pursued him. The State provides no percipient testimony to the contrary. Trooper
    David Hinchliff agrees that he never observed that Sluman noticed him trailing Sluman.
    Also although Sluman sped, no one testified to any underlying facts that would show
    Sluman operated his motorcycle in a reckless manner. The State argues that Sluman
    endangered the safety of others, but the State provides no testimony or photographic
    evidence supporting this argument. Therefore, a question of fact exists as to whether
    Sluman eluded police officers, and, if so, whether he drove in a reckless manner.
    I have already quoted RCW 46.61.024, the statute creating the crime of felony
    eluding a police officer. The elements of the crime are: a suspect must (1) willfully fail,
    (2) to immediately bring his vehicle to a stop, (3) and drive in a manner indicating a
    46
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    wanton and willful disregard for the lives or property of others, (4) while attempting to
    elude police after being signaled to stop by a uniformed officer. State v. Tandecki, 
    153 Wash. 2d 842
    , 848, 
    109 P.3d 398
    (2005).
    This court reviews a summary judgment order de novo, engaging in the same
    inquiry as the trial court. Highline School District No. 401 v. Port of Seattle, 
    87 Wash. 2d 6
    ,
    15, 
    548 P.2d 1085
    (1976). Summary judgment is proper if the record shows “there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact” and “the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a
    matter of law.” CR 56(c). A genuine issue is one upon which reasonable people may
    disagree; a material fact is one controlling the litigation’s outcome. Ranger Insurance
    Co. v. Pierce County, 
    164 Wash. 2d 545
    , 552, 
    192 P.3d 886
    (2008). This court construes all
    facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
    Barber v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co., 
    81 Wash. 2d 140
    , 142, 
    500 P.2d 88
    (1972). In
    ruling on summary judgment, we do not weigh evidence or assess witness credibility.
    Barker v. Advanced Silicon Materials, LLC, 
    131 Wash. App. 616
    , 624, 
    128 P.3d 633
    (2006).
    The dissent and concurring author weigh the evidence and assess Thomas
    Sluman’s credibility, contrary to summary judgment principles. They present no case
    law that states a witness may not contradict himself for purposes of a summary judgment
    motion, when the claimant did not render the earlier statement under oath or when the
    claimant uttered the earlier statement under extreme circumstances faced by Thomas
    47
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Sluman. Even in trial, a witness may present contradictory testimony and the jury may
    believe that testimony favorable to him or her.
    The dissent may believe that, if a hearsay exception allows a contemporary
    statement to be admitted, that the testimony controls the outcome of the case. The
    exception to the hearsay rule, however, allows only introduction of the statement and
    fails to accord the statement controlling power. The dissent further weighs the evidence
    by writing that Thomas Sluman accelerated on the bridge after feigning a stop.
    Finally, the dissent and the concurring opinion assume that Thomas Sluman
    violated the felony statute merely by speeding and eluding a law enforcement officer.
    Neither recognizes that the crime requires the further element of driving in a manner
    indicating a wanton and willful disregard for the lives or property of others. The record
    lacks facts of such wanton and willful disregard for the lives of others. That is in part
    why all members of the panel have held a question of fact lies as to whether Trooper Bart
    Olson lacked reason to door-check Sluman.
    Issue 7: Whether a question of fact exists as to whether Thomas Sluman’s
    purported eluding of a police officer caused his injuries?
    Answer 7: Yes.
    The concurring author agrees that an issue of fact exists as to whether any felony
    eluding proximately caused Thomas Sluman’s injuries. Therefore, this lead opinion
    returns to writing in the plural, and the remaining portion of the opinion, along with the
    48
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    answers and discussion with regard to issues one to four, should be deemed the majority
    opinion.
    We also hold that questions of fact as to proximate causation also work to preclude
    summary judgment in favor of the State. RCW 4.24.420 allows the defendant a complete
    defense if the plaintiff engaged in a felony that qualifies as a proximate cause of the
    injury. This statutory requirement of proximate cause corresponds with the common law
    rule of proximate cause being an element of negligence. Wuthrich v. King County, 
    185 Wash. 2d 19
    , 25, 
    366 P.3d 926
    (2016).
    Proximate cause consists of two elements: cause in fact and legal causation.
    Hartley v. State, 
    103 Wash. 2d 768
    , 777, 
    698 P.2d 77
    (1985). Cause in fact concerns the
    “‘but for’” consequences of an act: those events the act produced in a direct, unbroken
    sequence, and that would not have resulted had the act not occurred. Smith v.
    Department of Corrections, 
    189 Wash. App. 839
    , 850, 
    359 P.3d 867
    (2015), review denied,
    
    185 Wash. 2d 1004
    , 
    366 P.3d 1244
    (2016). Legal causation rests on considerations of logic,
    common sense, policy, justice, and precedent as to how far the defendant’s responsibility
    for the consequences of its actions should extend. Hartley v. 
    State, 103 Wash. 2d at 779
    .
    Thomas Sluman argues a question of fact exists because Trooper Bart Olson’s
    parking of the car and opening of the car door superseded any conduct of Sluman in
    causing the injuries. The State argues that Sluman’s engagement in felony eluding was a
    cause, which in direct sequence, produced Sluman’s injuries. According to the State, if
    49
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Sluman had obeyed law enforcement, followed the rules of the road to yield to lights and
    sirens, and stopped the motorcycle, he would not have been injured. Of course, we
    already have ruled that a question of fact exists as to whether Sluman engaged in a
    felony. More importantly, the State provides no response to Sluman’s contention that
    Trooper Olson’s conduct constitutes a superseding cause.
    Proximate cause, in part, involves the concept of superseding causation. An act
    generally is a proximate cause of an injury if it produces the injury. Riojas v. Grant
    County Public Utility District, 
    117 Wash. App. 694
    , 697, 
    72 P.3d 1093
    (2003).
    Nevertheless, if a new, independent intervening act breaks the chain of causation, it
    supersedes the defendant’s original act and is no longer the proximate cause of the injury.
    Campbell v. ITE Imperial Corp., 
    107 Wash. 2d 807
    , 813, 
    733 P.2d 969
    (1987). Whether an
    act may be considered a superseding cause sufficient to relieve a defendant of liability
    depends on whether the intervening act can reasonably be foreseen by the defendant; only
    intervening acts that are not reasonably foreseeable are deemed superseding causes.
    Campbell v. ITE Imperial 
    Corp., 107 Wash. 2d at 813
    . Unforeseeable intervening acts
    break the chain of causation. Washburn v. City of Federal Way, 
    178 Wash. 2d 732
    , 761,
    
    310 P.3d 1275
    (2013).
    When we view the facts in a light favorable to Thomas Sluman, Sluman rode his
    motorcycle without any knowledge that police pursued him or desired him to stop. Based
    on these facts, Sluman need not have reasonably foreseen that someone would park his
    50
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    car in his lane of traffic, let alone open his car door at the last moment in order to strike
    Sluman. Whether an intervening act constitutes a superseding cause is generally a
    question of fact for the jury. Hertog ex rel. S.A.H. v. City of Seattle, 
    138 Wash. 2d 265
    , 275,
    282-83, 
    979 P.2d 400
    (1999); Indoor Billboard/Washington, Inc. v. Integra Telecom of
    Washington, Inc., 
    162 Wash. 2d 59
    , 83, 
    170 P.3d 10
    (2007).
    State Law Claims
    Thomas Sluman assigns error to the trial court’s dismissal of all of his state law
    claims, which include negligence, gross negligence, negligent infliction of emotional
    distress, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligent hiring and supervision.
    Sluman asserts the last claim against only the State of Washington and contends the State
    negligently hired and supervised Trooper Bart Olson.
    We discern no purpose behind Thomas Sluman’s pleading gross negligence in
    addition to negligence, since gross negligence does not improve Sluman’s chance of
    prevailing. Gross negligence provides no exception to the felony bar statute. We also
    discern no purpose of Sluman pleading negligent infliction of emotional distress and
    intentional infliction of emotional distress since the two causes of action allow a plaintiff
    to recover emotional distress damages when the plaintiff suffered no physical injuries.
    Thomas Sluman indisputably suffered serious bodily injury. Finally, the State conceded
    in its answer that Trooper Bart Olson acted within the scope of his employment when
    pursuing and door-checking Sluman. When the employer does not disclaim liability for
    51
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    the employee, claims of negligent hiring, training, and supervising collapse into a direct
    tort claim against the employer. Brownfield v. City of Yakima, 
    178 Wash. App. 850
    , 878,
    
    316 P.3d 520
    (2013).
    The State of Washington provides no argument in support of summary judgment
    dismissal of the state law claims other than the application of the felony bar rule and the
    unwise argument discussed in the following paragraph that Trooper Paul Blume, not Bart
    Olson, door-checked Thomas Sluman. Because the State does not present arguments to
    dismiss any of the state law claims on their merits, we reverse the summary judgment
    order as to all claims.
    The State raises the injudicious argument that Thomas Sluman sued the wrong
    trooper. In his deposition, Thomas Sluman declared that a sports utility vehicle struck
    him. Trooper Paul Blume drove the SUV, and Olson drove a Dodge Charger.
    Nevertheless, the overwhelming facts establish that Olson’s patrol car, not Blume’s
    vehicle, struck Sluman. All Washington State Patrol witnesses, including Olson, testified
    that Olson, not Blume, door-checked Sluman. Sluman understandably must be confused.
    A confused witness’ testimony presents precarious grounds for granting summary
    judgment.
    52
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse summary judgment dismissal of Thomas Sluman’s federal civil rights
    claims and state law claims.
    _________________________________
    Fearing, J.
    53
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    APPENDIX A
    In Vaughan v. Cox, 
    343 F.3d 1323
    (11th Cir. 2003), a Georgia County’s Sheriff’s
    Department received a report that a red pickup truck with a silver tool box in its bed had
    been stolen from a service station along Interstate 85 south of Atlanta. The report
    included the information that the suspect, a white male wearing a white t-shirt, was
    heading north on Interstate 85. In response to the report, Deputy Fred Lawrence Cox and
    Deputy Jeff Looney headed to the northbound lanes of Interstate 85 in separate vehicles.
    Deputy Looney pulled onto the grass median to observe passing traffic. Deputy Cox
    continued farther north and stopped at the site of a recent accident. Deputy Looney soon
    spotted a truck traveling northward that matched the description of the stolen vehicle but,
    contrary to the report, it towed a trailer loaded with two personal watercraft. Looney
    reported his sighting on his radio and began to follow the truck.
    After hearing Looney’s report, Deputy Lawrence Cox radioed Deputy Jeff Looney
    to inform him of an accident north of Looney’s position and that he should not attempt to
    stop the vehicle until it had passed the accident. As the red pickup and Deputy Looney
    passed him, Deputy Cox joined the pursuit. While tracking the truck, the deputies made
    efforts to determine whether the vehicle was indeed the stolen truck. To this end, Deputy
    Cox passed the truck, which proceeded at or near the speed limit of seventy miles per
    hour. He observed two men in the cab. The man in the passenger’s seat, Jerry Vaughan,
    54
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    matched the description of the suspect. Cox relayed his suspicion to Looney, and the two
    deputies performed a “rolling roadblock” to stop the vehicle. The rolling roadblock
    entails officers blocking a suspect vehicle with their police cruisers and reducing their
    speed, in the hope that the suspect car will slow as well. Deputy Looney positioned his
    cruiser directly behind the pickup. The officers thereby signaled their desire to stop the
    pickup. As soon as he had positioned his vehicle in front of the truck, Cox applied his
    brakes. According to Vaughan and the pickup’s driver, Freddy Rayson, the impact was
    both accidental and insufficient to cause Cox to lose control of his patrol car. After the
    collision, Rayson accelerated while staying in the same lane of traffic.
    Deputy Lawrence Cox decided to reposition his vehicle behind the truck. He
    unholstered his sidearm and rolled down the passenger side window. Cox then shifted
    his cruiser one lane to the left and slowed to allow the truck to pass him. As soon as his
    cruiser was even with the pickup, Deputy Cox turned on his rooftop lights. Rayson
    responded by accelerating to eighty to eighty-five miles per hour in a seventy-mile-per-
    hour zone. Cox fired three rounds into the truck without warning. Deputy Cox sought to
    disable either the truck or Rayson so that he could force the truck off the road.
    Nevertheless, his volley disabled neither the truck nor Rayson. The third bullet instead
    punctured Vaughan’s spine, instantly paralyzing him below the chest. Rayson’s only
    reaction to the shooting was to drive faster and more recklessly. Rayson began a
    55
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    desperate break for freedom that involved weaving in and out of lanes, driving at high
    speeds through exit ramps, and dragging at least one of the watercraft, which had fallen
    off the trailer, along the ground. As the chase continued into more heavily congested
    sections of the highway, Cox fired his weapon again and repositioned his cruiser in front
    of the truck. The truck struck Cox’s cruiser, causing the cruiser to spin out of control and
    ram into a steel guard rail. Cox was injured and his cruiser was badly damaged, but the
    truck continued while dragging the trailer and watercraft behind. Finally, when Rayson
    tried to force the truck between two vehicles, he lost control of the pickup, the trailer
    jack-knifed, and the truck hit the cement median. Both Vaughan and Rayson were taken
    to the hospital.
    Jeffrey Vaughan sued Lawrence Cox. The trial court granted Deputy Cox
    summary judgment on the basis that, since Cox aimed his shots at the driver, he did not
    seize Vaughan. The trial court also concluded that Cox was entitled to qualified
    immunity. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed. Since Cox sought to stop
    Rayson and Vaughan, the deputy seized both when firing his weapon. The appellate
    court also held that a reasonable jury, based on Vaughan’s version of the facts, could
    conclude that Deputy Cox exerted unreasonable force. Neither Vaughan nor his driver
    had threatened the lives of others or committed a violent felony before the shots.
    Evidence showed that Rayson’s truck was easily identifiable and could have been
    56
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    tracked, and that the officers could have sought assistance from other jurisdictions to
    follow the suspects. Also, a jury could have reasonably concluded that Cox had the
    feasibility to warn Vaughan and Rayson of the potential use of deadly force.
    In Walker v. Davis, 
    649 F.3d 502
    (6th Cir. 2011), shortly after midnight in rural
    Kentucky, a police officer clocked Thomas Germany riding his motorcycle at seventy
    miles per hour in a fifty-five mile per hour zone. That officer attempted to pull over
    Germany for speeding, but Germany refused to stop. Deputy Danny Davis heard about
    the pursuit over the radio. As Germany approached Davis’ location, Davis blocked the
    road with his cruiser. Germany maneuvered around him, and Davis gave chase. The
    pursuit lasted five minutes and transpired on empty stretches of highway. Germany never
    went above sixty miles per hour during the chase. He ran one red light.
    Thomas Germany eventually turned off the rural road and journeyed across a
    muddy field. Officer Danny Davis followed in his cruiser. According to a reconstruction
    expert, who analyzed the location of paint transfers between the two vehicles, Davis then
    intentionally rammed Germany’s motorcycle. The ramming threw Germany from the
    motorcycle and dragged him underneath the cruiser, crushing him to death.
    The Sixth Circuit, in Walker v. Davis, focused on whether Officer Danny Davis
    should receive qualified immunity. The court noted, however, that settled law for a
    generation held that, under the Fourth Amendment, when a suspect poses no immediate
    57
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    threat to the officer and no threat to others, the harm resulting from failing to apprehend
    him does not justify the use of deadly force. The court added that ramming a motorcycle
    with a police cruiser involves the application of deadly force.
    58
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    Appendix B
    In Hawkins v. City of Farmington, 
    189 F.3d 695
    (8th Cir. 1999), the court
    disagreed with the officer’s contention that, in September 1994, his actions in creation of
    a partial roadblock violated any constitutional right. Brower v. County of Inyo, decided
    in 1989, held that a roadblock breached the Fourth Amendment.
    While conversing with a senior ranking police sergeant in the Farmington High
    School parking lot, Walters’ dispatcher notified him that the Highway Patrol was in
    pursuit of a motorcycle and that the Highway Patrol requested assistance. Without
    receiving any information as to the description of either the motorcycle or its operator,
    Walters left the high school parking lot and drove to the area of the Bray Road/Maple
    Road intersection with Highway 67. The police sergeant, with whom Walters had been
    conversing, received the same radio transmissions and did not comment on them to
    Walters, nor did he accompany Walters as Walters left the parking lot. Upon arriving at
    Highway 67, Walters positioned his vehicle in the median and waited for any southbound
    motorcycle to appear, during which time Walters overheard another Missouri State Patrol
    radio report stating that a motorcycle was being pursued along southbound Highway 67.
    After Walters idled for two minutes, a southbound motorcycle operated by Donald
    Hawkins traveled in the left hand lane, closest to the median, emerged from around the
    59
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    bend and appeared for the first time in Walters’ line of sight. No other vehicles were in
    the vicinity.
    Donald Hawkins testified that at no point during his journey along Highway 67
    did he hear police sirens or exceed the posted speed limit, nor had he, prior to coming
    upon Walters’ police car, seen activated emergency police lights. As Hawkins traveled in
    the left passing lane along southbound Highway 67, he came around the bend and
    proceeded toward the Bray Road intersection with Highway 67. Hawkins first became
    aware of the police car when the car was thirty yards away. When Hawkins saw the
    police car, it sat in the cut-through median between southbound and northbound Highway
    67 facing west in the direction of, and perpendicular to, the southbound lanes.
    Very shortly thereafter, Hawkins noticed that the police car activated its
    emergency lights and moved. Hawkins thought the vehicle would turn onto the left lane
    and travel southbound on Highway 67, so Hawkins changed lanes to the right lane. The
    police car, however, moved across southbound Highway 67, into Hawkins’ lane and hit
    Hawkins’ motorcycle and Hawkins’ person on the left side. Hawkins, who was wearing
    a helmet, landed head-first on the concrete, lost consciousness, and came to a stop in a
    ditch over 165 feet away from the point of collision. Walters testified that it was his
    intention to stop the motorcycle. Walters also testified that he did not intentionally
    60
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    attempt to ram the motorcycle with his police car. The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed
    a summary judgment ruling in favor of the officer on the basis of qualified immunity.
    In Adams v. 
    Speers, 473 F.3d at 989
    (9th Cir. 2007) an officer observed Alan
    Adams run several stop signs so the officer signaled Adams to stop. Adams did not pull
    to the side, and at least three more officers entered a chase. The court characterized
    Adams’ driving during the pursuit as nonchalant because Adams drove within the speed
    limit, stopped for some stop signs, and rolled slowly through others. Officer Paul Speers
    learned over the radio of the police chase of Adams and joined the pursuit. As he
    associated with the expedition, Speers retrieved as a passenger a county probation officer
    who occasionally partnered in apprehending probation violators. Speers parked at a spot
    he guessed Adams would pass if he continued with his route. When Adams’ vehicle
    reached Speers’ location, Speers, without advising other pursuing law enforcement
    officers of his identity or intentions, tried to ram Adams’ vehicle. Speers missed Adams’
    car so Speers continued at the head of the chase now aided by a police helicopter. Adams
    exited on an off-ramp, turned left over the freeway, and entered the on-ramp to travel in
    the opposite direction. Speers successfully rammed Adams with the two cars entangling.
    A sheriff’s department manual characterized the intertwining as a “significant hazard.”
    Adams continued to drive his car and dragged Speers’ patrol car for some distance before
    the cars separated and the chase continued.
    61
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    Paul Speers again butted his patrol car into Alan Adams’ vehicle, which action
    sent Adams’ car into a ditch. Despite patrol cars completely surrounding him, Adams
    reversed his car toward Speers’ patrol car. Another officer approached Adams’ vehicle,
    struck the window with his baton, and reached in the car to pepper spray Adams. Before
    the officer sprayed, Speers exited his patrol car, stood in front of Adams’ vehicle, and
    without warning fired six shots and killed Adams.
    An investigation by the sheriff’s department found that Paul Speers violated
    department regulations. Speers lacked permission for the probation officer to ride as a
    passenger. Speers did not request or receive permission to enter the pursuit. He did not
    communicate with other officers involved in the chase and did not garner permission to
    ram Adams’ vehicle or to discharge his weapon. The appeals court denied Speers
    qualified immunity while writing he was an officer “on a mission of his own creation,”
    who abandoned his assignment, retrieved a friend for no apparent reason, barged ahead of
    officers already engaged in the pursuit, and used force against Adams that created a
    hazard for both Adams and Speers. The court noted that Tennessee v. Garner had
    decades earlier established a shooting under these circumstances to violate the Fourth
    Amendment. No officer reasonably acting could have believed he could employ deadly
    force. Because an officer may not shoot an unarmed, nondangerous suspect to prevent
    flight, the court denied Paul Speers qualified immunity.
    62
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State
    Appendix
    We previously outlined the facts in Walker v. Davis, 
    649 F.3d 502
    (6th Cir. 2011).
    The court denied qualified immunity to Officer Danny Davis because it had been settled
    law for a generation that, under the Fourth Amendment, when a suspect poses no
    immediate threat to the officer and no threat to others, the harm resulting from failing to
    apprehend him does not justify the use of deadly force to do so. Tennessee v. 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 11
    (1985). Thomas Germany posed no immediate threat to anyone as he rode
    his motorcycle across an empty field in the middle of the night in rural Kentucky. The
    circuit court did not find relevant the fact that, at the time of Davis’ actions, there were
    few, if any, reported cases in which police cruisers intentionally rammed motorcycles. It
    was only common sense—and obviously so—that intentionally ramming a motorcycle
    with a police cruiser involves the application of potentially deadly force.
    We previously reported the facts in Vaughan v. Cox, 
    343 F.3d 1323
    (11th Cir.
    2003). Despite some of these facts being disputed, the court accepted the passenger’s
    version of the facts. The immediacy of threat caused by the driver’s flight was a disputed
    material fact that defeated summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity in favor
    of the officer. The court ruled that the passenger’s Fourth Amendment right was clearly
    established such that an objectively reasonable officer in Deputy Cox’s position would
    not have believed he was entitled to use deadly force. The court reasoned that the danger
    presented in this case by the driver’s flight was the risk of an accident during the pursuit.
    63
    No. 34467-3-III
    LAWRENCE-BERREY, C.J. (concurring in part) — I concur in the lead opinion on
    all issues except issues 5 and 6. Therefore, the majority reverses the summary judgment
    application of the felony bar rule insofar as proximate cause is a question of fact.
    My dissenting colleague claims that the felony bar rule does not allow us to
    inquire whether an intervening act could break the chain of causation. I disagree.
    The felony bar rule applies only if the felony “was a proximate cause of the injury
    or death.” RCW 4.24.420. Proximate cause is absent if an intervening act has broken the
    chain of causation. See, e.g., Campbell v. ITE Imperial Corp., 
    107 Wash. 2d 807
    , 812-13,
    
    733 P.2d 969
    (1987); Washburn v. City of Federal Way, 
    178 Wash. 2d 732
    , 761, 
    310 P.3d 1275
    (2013). Were we to ignore the concept that an intervening act can break the chain
    of causation, we would be ignoring the meaning of proximate cause, and therefore the
    statute.
    ________________________________
    Lawrence-Berrey, C.J.
    No. 34467-3-III
    KORSMO, J. (dissenting in part)- While I agree that the plaintiffs allegations 1
    were sufficient to let the excessive force claim go to trial, I disagree with the majority's
    reversal of the felony bar ruling. Mr. Sluman presented nothing other than a self-serving
    denial that the trial court correctly concluded was insufficient. I would affirm that ruling.
    As to the excessive force claim, I agree that Mr. Sluman had a clearly recognized
    right to be free from the use of excessive force during this arrest for eluding a pursuing
    officer. He endangered no one during the pursuit. The mechanism by which force was
    applied should not change the analysis. The fact that a "door check" might not have been
    the subject to a prior § 1983 2 action is not a basis for immunity merely because it was the
    first time such an action was predicated on that particular use of force. The right was
    1
    While we must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the losing party in
    an appeal from an order granting summary judgment, it does not mean we need disparage
    the other side's evidence or dismiss it because it conflicts with the losing party's view of
    the facts. That is particularly true where, as here, the issues on appeal revolve around
    legal issues rather than factual questions. The factual disputes between the parties, while
    not truly relevant to this appeal, boil down to whether the trooper assaulted the plaintiff
    with the door of his patrol car or whether Mr. Sluman struck the bridge while attempting
    to negotiate his way around the patrol vehicle as he accelerated after feigning a stop.
    2
    42 U.S.C. § 1983.
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State-Dissent in Part
    clearly established, even if the particular method by which it was infringed was novel.
    Accordingly, I agree that summary judgment was improperly granted on that issue.
    However, the trial court correctly granted summary judgment on the felony bar
    statute and dismissed the state law claims. All of the admissible evidence on this issue
    was on the State's side and there was no material question of fact presented.
    There are a few basic principles that should guide this discussion. First among
    them are those principles involving responses to a motion for summary judgment. A
    party opposing a motion for summary judgment may not rely on speculation or
    argumentative assertions that unresolved factual issues remain. Seven Gables Corp. v.
    MGMIUA Entm 't Co., 
    106 Wash. 2d 1
    , 13, 
    721 P.2d 1
    (1986). Likewise, a party may not
    rely on having its own affidavits accepted at face value. 
    Id. Instead, the
    nonmoving
    party must set forth specific facts that sufficiently rebut the moving parties' contentions
    and disclose that a genuine issue as to a material fact exists. 
    Id. Ultimate facts
    or
    conclusions of fact are insufficient; conclusory statements of fact will not suffice.
    Grimwood v. Univ. of Puget Sound, Inc., 
    110 Wash. 2d 355
    , 359-60, 
    753 P.2d 517
    (1988).
    Also important is the fact that a party may not contradict itself in order to create a
    question of material fact. This is a corollary to the principle that one cannot rely on
    having affidavits taken at face value. It is recognized in a few different contexts, but
    perhaps the most common-and the one relevant here-is where a self-serving affidavit
    contradicts prior statements or sworn testimony. E.g., Overton v. Consol. Ins. Co., 145
    2
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State-Dissent in Part
    Wn.2d 417, 429-30, 
    38 P.3d 322
    (2002) (affidavit denying event due to lack of memory
    whether it occurred); McCormick v. Lake Wash. Sch. Dist., 
    99 Wash. App. 107
    , 111, 
    992 P.2d 511
    (1999) (affidavit contradicting deposition testimony); Marshall v. AC&S, Inc.,
    
    56 Wash. App. 181
    , 184-85, 782 P:2d 1107 (1989) (affidavit contradicting hospital and
    Department of Labor record). In such circumstances, the later ("sham") affidavit is
    insufficient to overcome the earlier evidence.
    Here, the State established its defense. The troopers described the felony flight 3
    (aided by the car video that captured the final moments) and Mr. Sluman confirmed that
    he was committing a felony by his recorded admission at the scene and by his guilty plea.
    The only contradiction offered in response was Mr. Sluman's deposition testimony that
    he did not know the officer was chasing him. That is belied by his statement at the time
    of the accident and his guilty plea. Under Overton and Marshall, the belated change of
    3  Although the lead opinion questions whether the speed of the motorcycle during
    the chase constituted driving in a reckless manner, that fact is well settled in our case law,
    just as it was under the former reckless driving standard. E.g., State v. Young, 158 Wn.
    App. 707, 723-24, 
    243 P.3d 172
    (2010), review denied, 
    171 Wash. 2d 1013
    (2011)
    ("overwhelming" evidence of driving in reckless manner, including speed of 85 m.p.h. in
    a 30 m.p.h. zone); State v. Randhawa, 
    133 Wash. 2d 67
    , 77-78, 
    941 P.2d 661
    (1997) (proof
    of sufficiently excessive speed can permit a rational inference of reckless driving); State
    v. Hanna, 
    123 Wash. 2d 704
    , 713, 
    871 P.2d 135
    , cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 919
    (1994) ("the
    presumed fact of reckless driving more likely than not flows from the proved fact of
    Hanna's excessive speed."). Our statute is to the same effect. RCW 46.61.465 ("The
    unlawful operation of a vehicle in excess of the maximum lawful speeds provided in this
    chapter at the point of operation and under the circumstances described shall be prima
    facie evidence of the operation of a motor vehicle in a reckless manner by the operator
    thereof.").
    3
    No. 34467-3-111
    Sluman v. State-Dissent in Part
    view is insufficient. However, the lead opinion dismisses his admission on the basis that
    he was injured, in pain, and not under oath when he made it. The lead opinion also
    rejects use of his guilty plea due to reading too much into the decision in Clark v. Baines,
    
    150 Wash. 2d 905
    , 
    84 P.3d 245
    (2004). Neither justification has merit.
    As the lead opinion properly noted, RCW 4.24.420 provides that it is "a complete
    defense" to a damages action that the injured party was engaged in the commission of a
    felony and that the felony was the proximate cause of the injury. This is a legislative
    policy determination that a person injured in the course of committing a felony is solely
    responsible for his injury. As the trial court correctly recognized, it applies here.
    There should be no question that the injury occurred at the conclusion of the
    incident and resulted from his crime. The causation element is thus easily satisfied. 4 The
    remaining question is whether Mr. Sluman was committing a felony at the time of the
    accident.
    The lead opinion dismisses Mr. Sluman's statement at the scene on the basis that it
    was not made under oath. While many previous cases have involved prior statements
    made under oath that subsequently were contradicted by a more self-serving version of
    the facts, the majority cites no authority requiring that a prior oath is a requirement.
    4 Although the concurrence agrees that Mr. Sluman was committing a felony, that
    opinion believes the "door check" was an intervening cause of injury. That approach
    appears to write an intentional tort exception into the felony bar rule, something that the
    legislature did not do.
    4
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State-Dissent in Part
    Indeed, the seminal case on this topic appears to be Marshall. There, the defendant's
    affidavit contradicted two official records and was deemed unreasonable and, therefore,
    
    insufficient. 56 Wash. App. at 184-85
    . While Marshall itself invalidates the lead opinion's
    position, there are additional reasons for disregarding the deposition testimony.
    A contemporaneous statement typically is considered so reliable that multiple
    hearsay exceptions exist to allow consideration of that type of evidence. E.g., ER
    803(a)(l)-(3) (present sense impressions, excited utterance, then existing condition). 5 For
    purposes of the "sham affidavit" argument, I do not see why the defendant's
    contemporaneous nonhearsay statement against his own interest is not considered at least
    as truthful as one given under oath at some later time. In either circumstance, it should
    defeat a self-serving version of events given years after the fact. If an earlier statement
    under oath is sufficient to defeat a later affidavit under the sham affidavit rule, an
    uncontested and contemporaneous admission against interest should do the same.
    That is particularly the case where the earlier statement is clearly reliable. The
    statement was captured on video. The statement accurately reported that Mr. Sluman had
    outstanding warrants. He also followed up on that statement by pleading guilty and
    admitting that he had fled from the troopers.
    5
    Of course, Mr. Sluman's statement was admissible as a non-hearsay statement
    against his own interest. ER 80l(d)(2).
    5
    No. 34467-3-III
    Sluman v. State-Dissent in Part
    The lead opinion disregards this evidence due to its reading of Clark. That
    decision does not really aid resolution of this problem. Recognizing the ambiguous
    nature of an Alford plea, the court was very straight-forward in stating its holding: "We
    hold an Alford plea cannot be used as the basis for collateral estoppel in a subsequent
    civil action." 
    Clark, 150 Wash. 2d at 907
    (emphasis added). That holding merely prevents
    giving the plea binding effect in subsequent litigation; the plea still may be admitted into
    evidence as an admission of the defendant. 6 State v. Price, 
    126 Wash. App. 617
    , 634-35,
    
    109 P.3d 27
    (2005) (citing cases); 5A KARL B. TEGLAND, WASHINGTON PRACTICE:
    EVIDENCE LAW AND PRACTICE§ 410.3, at 87 (6th ed. 2016). 7 The judgment itself also is
    admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. Tegland, supra; ER 803(a)(22) (felony
    judgment admissible against the former criminal defendant in a subsequent action).
    Under Washington law, an Alford plea is a guilty plea. State v. Hubbard, 106 Wn.
    App. 149, 156, 
    22 P.3d 296
    (2001). Accord CrR 4.2(a) (recognizing the existence of only
    three types of pleas: "not guilty, not guilty by reason of insanity, and guilty.") Criminal
    defendants have a right to plead guilty under our court rules. State v. Martin, 
    94 Wash. 2d 1
    , 4, 
    614 P.2d 164
    (1980). The right to plead guilty extends to entering an Alford plea.
    6
    A three justice concurrence noted this fact in 
    Clark. 150 Wash. 2d at 918
    (Ireland,
    J ., concurring).
    7
    Even evidence from a criminal case that ended in acquittal can be used in a
    subsequent civil case. E.g., In re Det. ofStout, 
    159 Wash. 2d 357
    , 377-78, 
    150 P.3d 86
    (2007).
    6
    No. 34467-3-111
    Sluman v. State-Dissent in Part
    
    Hubbard, 106 Wash. App. at 155-56
    . Felony judgments are admissible evidence. ER
    803(a)(22). Mr. Sluman's plea was properly admitted into evidence.
    While not being conclusive due to the holding in Clark, the plea and the criminal
    judgment both are admissible against Mr. Sluman in this civil action. 8 They support Mr.
    Sluman's initial statement at the time of the accident that he was fleeing police due to the
    warrants for his arrest. Under the Marshall (or "sham affidavit") rule, Mr. Sluman's
    deposition is insufficient to overcome his earlier statements and admissions that he was
    running from the police.
    The trial court correctly determined that the evidence established the felony bar
    because there was no reasonable material evidence in opposition. Summary judgment
    was properly granted on the state law claims. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from the
    majority's contrary holding.
    8
    The lead opinion misperceives this point. Clark held at an Alford plea will not
    be given preclusive 
    effect. 150 Wash. 2d at 917
    (emphasis added). It did not forbid
    evidentiary use of an Alford plea, and that is all that this opinion does-considers the
    Alford plea and the ensuing judgment along with Mr. Sluman's original statement as part
    of the evidence that the State used to establish its affirmative defense. It is the sham
    affidavit rule that, under these facts, renders Mr. Sluman's belated assertions from being
    considered weighty enough to raise a triable question of fact about his crime.
    Accordingly, the trial court correctly looked at the evidence before it and saw that the
    State had established its defense because it had sufficient evidence and Mr. Sluman did
    not have contrary evidence sufficient to raise a jury question.
    7