The district court granted a directed verdict against the plaintiff in this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 because it concluded that the plaintiff had presented no evidence that the defendant’s conduct was “state action.” We affirm.
Security officers in defendant’s store detained plaintiff because they suspected her of shoplifting. A police officer was called; he arrested plaintiff and took her to the police station for booking. The shoplifting charges were subsequently dropped because no representative of the store appeared for the criminal trial.
Plaintiff’s contention that defendant’s conduct was state action because de
Plaintiff presented absolutely no evidence of such an arrangement. Plaintiffs own evidence demonstrated that defendant’s employees called the police. Defendant’s assistant chief of security, called as an adverse witness, testified that the police officer made his own investigation of the incident: the officer interviewed defendant’s employees and plaintiff, wrote out his own report, and made his own determination concerning arrest. Plaintiff herself admitted that the police officer asked her questions. Plaintiff’s only other witness on this issue, the arresting police officer, had no independent recollection of the arrest, but he testified that it had been his custom and he had understood it to be his duty to make an independent determination whether there was cause to arrest. He also testified that he customarily wrote out his own report of the shoplifting incident.
Plaintiff argues that there was evidence of an arrangement with the police because the police officer relied on a report prepared by defendant. Unless he were an eye-witness, a police officer could not make any arrest if he could not rely on information provided by citizens who witnessed the events. Such reliance does not convert the informing party into a state actor. Plaintiff’s reliance on
Smith v. Brookshire Bros., supra,
is thus misplaced. The vice in
Smith
was that the police, pursuant to a “preconceived plan,” would arrest any person merely because he was designated for arrest by the store owner.
See
Thus, there was no “substantial evidence opposed to the motion[]” for directed verdict,
Boeing Co. v. Shipman,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The district court characterized its action as dismissal for lack of jurisdiction.
Compare Menchaca v. Chrysler Credit Corp.,
