This appeal arises from a barroom brawl. Familiarity with such disturbance of the public peace usually is a product of exposure to movies and TV, although such scenes are designed to entertain and are far removed from the violence of a real free-for-all. But the incredible confusion in such a melee, which makes it difficult to know who did what to whom, is quite accurately captured in the fictional presentation. Because of the confusion that results from a barroom brawl, when factual issues are raised on appeal we generally defer to the trial court, realizing that jurors who heard the witnesses are in a better position than an appellate court to sort out right from wrong. Thus, ordinarily we would simply affirm the order appealed from, but in this case we think it necessary to write because there is a point of law — independent of the brawling activities — that needs to be made. That point addresses the effect of a jury’s verdict— that finds no liability on the part of individual defendant officers — on the liability of the municipality and on other officers who allegedly failed to intervene in due fashion to protect the plaintiffs rights.
Plaintiff Michael Curley was arrested on the night of August 9, 1994 following an altercation earlier that night at Mugg’s Pub in Suffern, New York, an establishment in which he is a part owner. He was charged with assault, resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration, and disorderly conduct. After the felony assault charge against him was dismissed, a jury acquitted him of all the remaining misdemeanor counts.
Curley then brought the instant suit for alleged violations of his civil rights on August 8, 1997 against the Village of Suffern, Suffern Mayor George Parness, Suffern Police Chiefs Leo Costa and Frank Finch, individually, and John Gloede, John McGee, Clarke Osborn, Lance Weinstein, Louis Venturini and John Wilson, individually and as Suffern police officers (collectively, defendants). He claims defendants conspired to deprive him of his rights under the First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. His complaint asserts that he was arrested, without probable cause and through the use of excessive force, in retaliation for his public criticism of defendants Parness and Finch.
After the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Brieant, J.) dismissed defendant Leo Cos-ta from the action at a pre-trial conference held June 26, 1998, the parties agreed to proceed before Magistrate Judge George A. Yanthis. The remaining defendants moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted with respect to all of the claims alleged in plaintiffs complaint, except for the Fourth Amendment excessive force claim against police officers Gloede, McGee, Weinstein and Wilson in their individual capacity. A jury trial on this remaining cause of action was held before the magistrate judge and resulted
Curley’s appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment brings the case before us. He raises his Fourth Amendment false arrest claim (alleging that he was arrested without probable cause) and his First Amendment claim (alleging retaliatory arrest and a chilling of his exercise of his First Amendment rights) as against all defendants, arguing that the complete grant of summary judgment as to both of these causes of action was improper. He further contends that his excessive force claim should be reinstated against the village and officers Ven-turini and Osborn.
DISCUSSION
Since plaintiff appeals only from the dismissal of his claims on summary judgment, we review the district court’s decision de novo. Ricciuti v. N.Y.C. Transit Auth.,
I Fourth Amendment Claims
A. False Arrest
Plaintiffs version of the events that occurred on the night of his arrest is that he tried to break up a fight at his bar. The fight started when a patron named Eric Salzman attempted to strike another patron named Mark Gidula with a glass beer mug. According to plaintiff, he attempted to swat the mug away, then grabbed Gidu-la and dragged him into the kitchen. As he tried to hold Gidula down, a man named Joseph Ramos ran into the kitchen. Plaintiff hit Ramos in the face with his open hand. Salzman told a different story to the police. According to officer McGee’s testimony, Salzman reported that plaintiff had punched him in the arm and thrown an ashtray at him.
Despite this disagreement, plaintiff does not dispute the following: (1) Salzman approached defendant officer McGee and claimed plaintiff assaulted him; (2) after officer McGee came to Mugg’s Pub and asked plaintiff to step outside to talk about the incident, Salzman arrived in the area with blood on his lip; (3) as plaintiff was talking to McGee, Salzman yelled “He hit me. He hit me.”; (4) at the sight of Salzman and upon learning that Salzman accused him of assault, plaintiff became “very irate”; (5) in this excited state, plaintiff may have used obscenities; (6) Ramos approached the officers also yelling that plaintiff hit him; (7) plaintiff admitted to defendant officer Gloede that he did strike Ramos during the struggle in the kitchen; and (8) plaintiff gesticulated with his arms at his sides and his hands in front of him upon being told by officer Gloede— who was about an arm’s length away — that he was under arrest.
These facts establish probable cause for plaintiffs arrest for assault, see N.Y. Penal Law § 120.00(1) (McKinney 1998); id. § 120.05(2) (McKinney 1998 & Supp.2001), disorderly conduct, see id. § 240.20(1) (McKinney 2000), obstructing governmental administration, see id. § 195.05 (McKinney 1999), and resisting arrest, see id. § 205.30 (McKinney 1999). Probable cause exists when an officer has “knowledge or reasonably trustworthy in
Plaintiff tries to undermine Salzman’s and Ramos’ credibility by describing them as drunk on the night in question. Yet, while defendant officer Weinstein thought Ramos “appeared to be intoxicated,” plaintiff confirmed to the police that he struck Ramos. Consequently, Ramos’ intoxication alone cannot cast doubt on his story. With respect to Salzman, although officer McGee knew that he had been drinking in the pub, we are not told to what extent. To defeat summary judgment, plaintiff was required to come forward with more specific facts creating a genuine issue with respect to probable cause.
Plaintiff argues in the alternative that the conflicting accounts from him, Salzman and Ramos should have prompted a more thorough investigation. But, we have found probable cause where a police officer was presented with different stories from an alleged victim and the arrestee. See id. at 113, 119. Moreover, we rejected an argument similar to that made by plaintiff here in Ricciuti, where an arresting officer chose to believe the claimed victim’s account of a fight based on his visible injuries, notwithstanding the alleged assailant’s cries of innocence. We observed that “[ojnce a police officer has a reasonable basis for believing there is probable cause, he is not required to explore and eliminate every theoretically plausible claim of innocence before making an arrest.” Ricciuti,
Although a better procedure may have been for the officers to investigate plaintiffs version of events more completely, the arresting officer does not have to prove plaintiffs version wrong before arresting him. See Krause v. Bennett,
B. Excessive Force
Plaintiff challenges the dismissal of his excessive force claim only as against the defendants Village of Suffern and officers Venturini and Osborn. He faults the two officers for failing to intervene in his arrest, alleging the village maintained policies or customs, including a failure to train and supervise, which caused the use of excessive force. We note initially that the district court correctly reclassified plaintiffs claim as one brought under the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable seizures of persons, as opposed to the Fourteenth Amendment, which guarantees substantive due process. See Thomas v. Roach,
Rather than determine the propriety of the district court’s grant of summary judgment, our analysis is now informed by the jury verdict on the excessive force claims against officers McGee, Gloede, Weinstein and Wilson. In that verdict, the jury determined that
In Heller, the jury in a bifurcated trial returned a verdict for the defendant police officer on claims of false arrest and excessive force. Id. at 797-98. In light of this verdict, the Supreme Court reasoned that no liability could attach to the City of Los Angeles and members of the Los Angeles Police Commission, who were sued as being legally responsible for the officer under an alleged unconstitutional municipal policy of using escalating force to effect arrests. The Court observed that “[i]f a person has suffered no constitutional injury at the hands of the individual police officer, the fact that the departmental regulations might have authorized the use of constitutionally excessive force is quite beside the point.” Id. at 799,
Following Heller, we have recognized that a municipality cannot be liable for inadequate training or supervision when the officers involved in making an arrest did not violate the plaintiffs constitutional rights. Amato v. City of Saratoga Springs,
No such concerns are raised by this case. The village is implicated in plaintiffs amended complaint only by way of the individual defendants’ conduct. Plaintiff alleges that the “policies and/or customs of [the village] were the moving force behind the actions of the individual Defendant police officers, resulting in the injuries to the Plaintiff as described above.” Am. Compl. ¶ 66. The complaint further suggests that all of the village police officers involved in plaintiffs arrest were named as defendants, leaving no question with respect to whether another officer violated plaintiffs rights for which the village might be liable. To the extent plaintiff alleges defendants Parness and Finch ratified the actions of the officers, plaintiff is not appealing the dismissal of the excessive force claim against these supervisory officials. Cf. Gentile v. County of Suffolk,
Further, the verdict form in this case reveals the jury found no deprivation of rights in the first instance, without ever reaching the question of whether qualified immunity insulated defendants’ conduct as objectively legally reasonable. This point is significant because case law further suggests Heller will not save a defendant municipality from liability where an individual officer is found not liable because of qualified immunity. See, e.g., Myers v. Okla. County Bd. of County Comm’rs,
Because the claim against defendants Venturini and Osborn in their official capacity is essentially a claim against the village, see Hafer v. Melo,
Nonetheless, where, as here, the arresting officers committed no infringement, the logic of Heller would appear to preclude liability against Venturini and Osborn individually. Although we could find no case applying Heller to such a set of facts, the Tenth Circuit has written on the subject expressing a view similar to the conclusion we reach. See Hinton v. City of Elwood,
Even if Heller were inapplicable, we would affirm on the ground that plaintiff cannot create a triable issue of fact to defeat defendants’ motion for summary judgment by asserting in conclusory fashion that Venturini and Osborn had a duty to intercede but failed to do so. Cf. Allen v. Coughlin,
C. Conspiracy
Since plaintiff cannot establish a claim for false arrest or the use of excessive force, he may not maintain a § 1983 cause of action for conspiracy. See Singer,
II First Amendment Claim
We turn now to appellant’s First Amendment retaliation claim. Curley ran unsuccessfully against defendant Parness for the office of mayor of the Village of
To prevail on this free speech claim, plaintiff must prove: (1) he has an interest protected by the First Amendment; (2) defendants’ actions were motivated or substantially caused by his exercise of that right; and (3) defendants’ actions effectively chilled the exercise of his First Amendment right. Connell v. Signoracci,
As to the second element, because defendants had probable cause to arrest plaintiff, an inquiry into the underlying motive for the arrest need not be undertaken. Singer,
Further, plaintiff must show, with respect to the third element, that his First Amendment rights were “actually chilled.” Davis v. Vill. Park II Realty Co.,
Since plaintiffs arrest was made on probable cause and had no effect on his exercise of First Amendment rights, summary judgment was properly granted to defendants on this cause of action.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the judgment entered by the district court is affirmed.
