Use of Force & Arrest · §9.51

Peace Officer Use of Force in Arrest

An officer is justified in using force to make or assist in arrest/search or to prevent escape after arrest when (1) reasonable belief that arrest/search is lawful (or warrant), AND (2) before using force, manifests purpose to arrest/search and identifies as peace officer (with reasonable-belief exception), AND (3) reasonably believes force is immediately necessary.

To prove this offense, the State must establish each of the following elements: Reasonable belief force is immediately necessary; To make or assist in arrest or search; or to prevent or assist in preventing escape after arrest; Lawful arrest/search (or pursuant to warrant) reasonable belief; Manifests purpose and identifies as peace officer (with exception).

The base classification is Justification defense for peace officers, with possible enhancements depending on the conduct, victim, location, or prior history of the actor.

Elements you must prove

  • Reasonable belief force is immediately necessary
  • To make or assist in arrest or search; or to prevent or assist in preventing escape after arrest
  • Lawful arrest/search (or pursuant to warrant) reasonable belief
  • Manifests purpose and identifies as peace officer (with exception)
Texas Law — Charge Details
Justification Defense
Offense
Peace Officer Use of Force in Arrest
Statute
Tex. Penal Code §9.51
Classification
Justification defense for peace officers

An officer is justified in using force to make or assist in arrest/search or to prevent escape after arrest when (1) reasonable belief that arrest/search is lawful (or warrant), AND (2) before using force, manifests purpose to arrest/search and identifies as peace officer (with reasonable-belief exception), AND (3) reasonably believes force is immediately necessary.

Potential Penalty Enhancements
If this condition applies…Charge escalates toStatute
Deadly force: conduct for which arrest authorized included use/attempted use of deadly forceDeadly force authorized§9.51(c)(1)
Deadly force: substantial risk that person will cause death/SBI if arrest delayedDeadly force authorized§9.51(c)(2)
Officer's reasonable belief that arrest/search was lawful (even if unlawful)Force still protected§9.51(b)

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Worked examples

Worked example 1

Under §9.51(a), a peace officer is justified in using force against another when and to the degree the actor reasonably believes the force is immediately necessary to:

  1. Make the suspect respect authority
  2. Make or assist in making an arrest or search, or to prevent or assist in preventing escape after arrest, IF (1) the actor reasonably believes the arrest or search is lawful (or the arrest is pursuant to a warrant) AND (2) BEFORE using force, the actor manifests his purpose to arrest or search and identifies himself as a peace officer (unless reasonably believing his purpose and identity are already known by or cannot reasonably be made known to the person) Correct
  3. End any disturbance
  4. Issue a citation
Why: Peace officer force standard: lawful (or warrant-based) arrest/search; manifested purpose and identification (with reasonable-belief exception); reasonable belief the force is immediately necessary.
Statute: Tex. Penal Code §9.51(a)
Worked example 2

Under §9.51(c), DEADLY force by a peace officer to make an arrest or prevent escape after arrest is justified when:

  1. Anyone runs from the officer
  2. The use of force would be justified under §9.51(a), AND (1) the actor reasonably believes the conduct for which arrest is authorized included the use or attempted use of deadly force; OR (2) the actor reasonably believes there is a substantial risk that the person to be arrested will cause death or serious bodily injury to the actor or another if arrest is delayed Correct
  3. The arrest is for a Class A misdemeanor
  4. The officer is in pursuit
Why: Texas's deadly-force-to-arrest standard parallels (and is subject to) the federal Garner / Graham frameworks: only when the conduct for which arrest is authorized included deadly force, OR the suspect poses a substantial risk of death/SBI if not immediately stopped.
Statute: Tex. Penal Code §9.51(c)
Worked example 3

Under §9.51(b), force in making or assisting in an arrest is justified even if the arrest or search is later determined to be UNLAWFUL when:

  1. Always
  2. The actor reasonably believes the arrest or search is lawful Correct
  3. Never
  4. Only with a warrant
Why: Texas protects officers acting on a reasonable belief that the arrest or search is lawful — even if it later turns out to be unlawful — from criminal liability for force used.
Statute: Tex. Penal Code §9.51(b)

Statutory definitions for this topic

Immediately necessary Tex. Penal Code §§9.31, 9.32, 9.51
Required at the present moment, with no reasonable opportunity to use lesser means, to prevent the threatened harm. The 'immediately necessary' standard governs the use of force under §§9.31, 9.32, 9.41, 9.42, and 9.51.
Peace officer use of force (§9.51) Tex. Penal Code §9.51(a)
An officer is justified in using force to make or assist in making an arrest or search, or to prevent escape after arrest, when (1) the actor reasonably believes the arrest/search is lawful (or pursuant to warrant), AND (2) BEFORE using force, the actor manifests his purpose to arrest/search and identifies as a peace officer (with reasonable-belief exception), AND (3) reasonably believes the force is immediately necessary.
Peace officer deadly force (§9.51(c)) Tex. Penal Code §9.51(c)
Justified when use of force would be justified under §9.51(a), AND (1) the actor reasonably believes the conduct for which arrest is authorized included the use or attempted use of deadly force; OR (2) the actor reasonably believes there is a substantial risk that the person to be arrested will cause death or SBI to the actor or another if arrest is delayed.