Pearson v. Callahan
The case that let courts skip the constitutional question and go straight to 'clearly established' — creating the QI ratchet.
What It Is
Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223 (2009) overruled the mandatory two-step sequence from Saucier v. Katz and gave courts discretion to resolve qualified immunity on either prong without addressing the other.
Before Pearson, under Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194 (2001), courts had to answer the constitutional question first: Did the officer violate a constitutional right? Only then could they ask whether the right was clearly established.
Saucier’s logic was straightforward: if courts always decide the constitutional question, they build precedent. Future plaintiffs can point to those decisions to show the right was “clearly established.”
What Pearson Changed
Pearson let courts skip the constitutional question entirely and jump straight to “not clearly established.” The court can say: “We don’t need to decide whether this was a constitutional violation because even if it was, the law wasn’t clearly established.”
Why It Matters
This is the engine of the qualified immunity ratchet:
- Novel violation occurs
- Court skips the constitutional question → goes to “clearly established”
- No prior case on point → not clearly established → QI granted
- No precedent created because the court never ruled on the constitutional question
- Next plaintiff with the same violation faces the same “not clearly established” problem
Rights that courts refuse to address can never become clearly established. Pearson gave courts permission to avoid hard constitutional questions, and many of them took it.
The Numbers
Studies have shown that after Pearson, courts dramatically reduced their willingness to decide constitutional questions in QI cases. The result: fewer new rights get “clearly established,” making QI harder to overcome over time.
Key Cases
- Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223 (2009) — Discretion to skip constitutional question
- Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194 (2001) — The mandatory two-step sequence Pearson overruled