Around midnight on a cold December, night, hundreds of students at Chicago State University had to evacuate their dormitory after fire alarms sounded. The students were kept out in the cold while police and dorm personnel made sure the building was safe to reenter. After about 45 minutes outside, the students grew agitated. One student, plaintiff David Penn, began pounding on the dorm’s front door and yelling profanities at the campus officers inside. One of the officers inside the dorm, defendant Veronica Harris, opened the door and directed Penn to come inside. The parties tell different stories about what happened next. Penn claims that as soon as he entered the dorm, Harris and another officer, defendant Melvin Jones, began beating him without provocation. The defendants claim that Penn provoked an altercation upon entering when he shoved Harris up against a wall.
The officers arrested Penn, and the state’s attorney charged him with misdemeanor battery. Before Penn stood trial, however, the state’s attorney asked the trial court to dismiss the charge against Penn with leave to reinstate, which the court did.
Penn then filed this lawsuit. He sued numerous defendants, including the school, its president, its board of trustees, and campus police officers, and alleged numerous claims, including constitutional claims of malicious prosecution, excessive force, and conspiracy, as well as state law claims of battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The district court dismissed most of the claims and defendants, and subsequently granted summary judgment to defendants Jones and Harris on Penn’s claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for malicious prosecution and conspiracy. A jury trial was held on Penn’s remaining excessive force and battery claims. Jurors found that Jones and Harris had used excessive force, but had not committed battery, and in the end awarded Penn no damages.
Penn limits his appeal to challenge only the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Harris and Jones on his malicious prosecution claim, and the jury’s decision to award him no damages on his excessive force claim. He argues that the district court should not have entered summary judgment in the defendants’ favor on his malicious prosecution claim because disputed material facts exist — namely, over whether the defendants had probable cause to arrest him. We review summary judgment decisions
de novo,
determining for ourselves whether, after drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Penn, there are any genuine issues of material fact.
Hall v. Bodine Elec. Co.,
*576
The district court analyzed Penn’s malicious prosecution claim under § 1983 by applying a tripartite formula that until recently had been followed by this court.
See Newsome v. McCabe,
Although the district court’s adherence to the formula was proper at the time, we have since held in
Newsome v. McCabe
that a § 1983 claim of malicious prosecution “should be analyzed not under the substantive due process approach implied by this [tripartite] formula but under the language of the Constitution itself.”
Newsome,
In light of
Newsome,
we determine not whether summary judgment is appropriate based upon the district court’s three-part malicious prosecution inquiry, but rather whether Penn has submitted evidence that defendants violated a constitutional right.
Ienco v. City of Chicago,
Although
Newsome
precludes a malicious prosecution claim brought under § 1983, a state law claim of malicious prosecution is still viable. Penn did not allege such a state claim, but even if he had, the defendants would still be entitled to summary judgment. Under Illinois law, a plaintiff may prove malicious prosecution by showing that (1) the defendant sued the plaintiff maliciously and without probable cause; (2) the suit terminated in the plaintiffs favor; and (3) the plaintiff was injured beyond the cost and annoyance of defending the suit.
Miller v. Rosenberg,
Second, Penn has not shown that the state’s criminal case against him terminated in his favor. A criminal case terminates in an accused’s favor when the circumstances surrounding dismissal reflect innocence.
Cult Awareness Network v. Church of Scientology Int’l,
Penn also argues on appeal that the jurors erred when they did not award him nominal and punitive damages on his claims that the defendants used excessive force when they arrested him. Although the jurors determined through special interrogatories that Harris and Jones had used excessive force, they found that the force caused no injuries and therefore awarded no damages. The jurors also determined through special interrogatories that Harris and Jones did not act with “malice or with reckless indifference” warranting punitive damages. Penn argues that jurors were required to award him at least nominal damages, but he waived the argument because he did not object to the instruction given by the district court that jurors
may
award nominal damages. Fed. R.Civ.P. 51;
Chestnut v. Hall,
For the preceding .reasons, we AffiRM the judgment of the district court.
