Alfred Garionis sued Ralph Young, Harriet Newton, and Keith Barr under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that they violated his federal constitutional rights. On Garionis’s motion, Young was dismissed before trial, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Newton and Barr. Garionis moved for a new trial or judgment notwithstanding the verdict, but these werе denied by the District Court, 1 and judgment was entered on the verdict. Newton moved for an award of attorney’s fees against Garionis, but this was also denied. Garionis appeals from the judgment, while Newton cross-appeals from the judgment (contending that the case should nevеr have gone to trial) 2 and from the denial of her motion for fees. We affirm in all respects.
I.
On November 6, 1984, which was a general-election day, Garionis went to his assigned polling place, Westminister Presbyterian Church in Hot Springs, Garland County, Arkansas, to vote. One of the issues on the ballot was a proposed amendment to the State Constitution to legalize casino gambling. Garionis was wearing a small pin on his lapel, demonstrating his opposition to the proposed amendment; the pin depicted a pair of dice inside a red circle, with a red line through the circle.
*308 While Garionis was standing in line to vote, a clerk asked him to remove the button. When he refused, she called the chief election judge at the precinct, Ralph Young, who told Garionis that wearing the button in the polling placе violated the Arkansas Political Practices Act, Ark.Stat. Ann. § 3-1104(k) (Supp.1985), 3 and requested that he remove it. Garionis read a copy of the law and, contending that wearing the button was not “electioneering,” refused to take it off. Young would not let Garionis vote while he worе the pin, and Garionis refused to leave the precinct until he got to vote, but he would not take off the pin.
With the situation at loggerheads, Young telephoned the Election Commission, which told Young to call the police. Young then called on Harriet Newton, who wаs a reserve deputy sheriff, and was parking cars and directing traffic at the precinct, for help. Newton asked Garionis to step out of the voting line, which he did, and either to leave the polling place or remove the button, which he refused to do. Garionis sаid that he would leave the polling place only if he were arrested, and Newton then arrested him and took him outside. There she conferred with Keith Barr, who was a Hot Springs Police officer. After discussing the situation with Newton, Garionis, and Young, Barr took custody of Garionis, booked him at the police station for two misdemeanor violations (disorderly conduct and obstructing governmental operations), and put him in jail. Later that day Garionis was released on bail and went back to the church to vote (this time without the button, which had been seized as evidence). He was not charged under the Political Practices Act, and the other charges were dropped after about a month.
II.
Garionis’s complaint alleged violations of his rights under the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments. On appeal, however, he does not raise any First Amendment issues; we therefore do not consider any issue (such as the validity of a law making electioneering a crime) that might arise under the First Amendment. Instead, Garionis argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury verdict for Barr, and that the District Court erred in failing to instruct the jury on his Fourth Amendment theory, in submitting the issue of qualified immunity to the jury, and in instructing, or refusing to instruct, the jury on several other issues. To dispose of his appeal, we need to discuss only the qualified-immunity question.
The only relief Garionis requested was money damages, Add. A-3 to Appellant’s Brief; he did not seek injunctive or declaratory relief. Thus the threshold issue is whether Newton and Barr are qualifiedly immune from damages, for, if they are, Garionis cannot recover against them, and we must affirm the judgment. Newton and Barr are entitled to qualified immunity unless their actions violated clearly established law.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
At the outset, we note that qualified immunity is a question of law.
Mitchell,
A law-enforcement officer has probable cause to arrest a suspect without a warrant if the “facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge ... are sufficient to warrant a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing, in the circumstances shown, that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.”
Michigan v, DeFillippo,
There was overwhelming evidence of Newton’s probable cause to arrest Garionis for violating this statute. No one disputes that she saw him in a polling place, on an election day, wearing a button urging defeat of the casino-gambling amendment, which was on the ballot. Even Garionis’s brief in this Court contains a concession “that defendant Newton was entitled to [a jury] instruction on good faith
6
because she claimed that she arrested plaintiff for electioneering and the electioneering statute is ... subject to defendant’s interpretation.” Appellant’s Br. at 11-12. Whether wearing the button was in fact “electioneеring” or not may be a difficult question, but that is not the issue, for probable cause to arrest “does not depend on whether the suspect actually committed a crime.”
DeFillippo,
Garionis argues further that Barr also arrested him, and that there was no probable cause for that arrest. The factual basis for this contention is that Barr, after discussing the situation with Garionis, told him to be quiet while he spoke with Young outside the polling place. When Garionis tried to interject a word or two, Barr became angry, told Garionis he was under arrest, and placed him in the back seat of the police car. Garionis claims that, regardless of whether Newton had probable cause to arrest for electioneering, there must be new and independent probable cause to support Barr’s later arrest.
The flaw in this argument is that a person who is already under arrest and in police custody cannot be “rearrested.” An arrest presumes that the person arrеsted was at liberty, free from police custody, before the arrest. This premise does not hold when the subject is already in custody of law-enforcement officers, see
Kelley v. Swenson,
There is no real dispute over the facts relating to Newton’s arrest of Garionis, and these facts estаblish that Newton had probable cause to arrest. That being so, it must follow that neither Newton nor Barr violated Garionis’s clearly established rights when they arrested and detained him. Therefore both defendants are entitled, as a matter of law, to qualified immunity from damages. This сonclusion entirely disposes of Garionis’s appeal, for his only claim, which is for damages for violation of his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights, is barred by immunity. Thus we need not reach the other issues he raises here.
III.
In addition to her appeal from the judgment, which we have addressed already,
supra
n. 4, Newton claims that the District Court erred by denying her motion for attorney’s fees. As a prevailing defendant, she is entitled to attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 only if Garionis’s action was “ ‘frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation, even though not brought in subjective bad faith.’ ”
Hughes v. Rowe,
We find no abuse of discretion in the denial of fees here. Garionis's complaint alleged claims that on their face had ample legal and factual foundation. Although we have disposed of his action on а threshold legal issue, the fact that we have done so does not mean that the action wholly lacked foundation or was frivolous or unreasonable. See
Hughes,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is, in all respects,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Hon. Oren Harris, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern and Western Districts of Arkansas.
. It was not necessary for Newton to cross-appeal in order to argue in this Court that the District Court should have granted her motion for summary judgment, or directed a verdict in her favor. The jury returned a verdict for defendants, and judgment has been enterеd on that verdict. The prevailing party below may urge, in support of the judgment, any ground appearing in the record, whether or not she prevailed on that ground in the trial court. No cross-appeal is necessary to enable an appellee to mаke that kind of argument. Newton would still have cross-appealed, of course, to contest the denial of fees.
. The statute reads in part:
The violation of any of the following shall be deemed misdemeanors punishable as hereinafter provided:
******
(k) No officer of election shall do any electioneering on any election day. No person shall hand out or distribute or offer to hand out or distribute any campaign literature or any literature regarding any candidate or issue on the ballot, to solicit signatures on any petition, to solicit contributions for any charitable or other purpose, to do any electioneering of any kind whatsoever within one hundred (100) feet of any polling place on election day.
. Part of Newton's cross-appeal contends that the District Court erred in not entering summary judgment for her. The Court refused to do so because it thought material fact issues remained in dispute. Because we hold that she was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the basis of the facts proved at trial, the issue of summary judgment is now moot. We note that Newtоn could have taken an interlocutory appeal from the denial of summary judgment on her claim of qualified immunity, see
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
. We have phrased the ground of affirmance as "qualified immunity" primarily because the case has been argued in those terms. There are in fact two separate possible defenses in this kind of case: (1) defendants in fact had probable cause; (2) though defendants did not have probable cause, a reasonable officer could have thought they did. In form, the first defense is on the merits. The second onе is an affirmative defense of qualified immunity, good only in actions for damages against individual officers. On the facts of the present case, the two defenses coalesce. Because defendants had probable cause in fact, it must also be true that a rеasonable officer could have thought they did.
. The use of the phrase "good faith” in this context, though common, is mistaken. "Good faith” is a subjective concept. Since
Harlow
v.
Fitzgerald,
