Eugene Sparing sued Officer James Keith for alleged Fourth Amendment violations, stemming from his arrest in his home. He also sued Keith and the Village of Olympia Fields under the Illinois tort of malicious prosecution. The Village and Keith moved for summary judgment, with Keith asserting a defense of qualified immunity. Relying on our decision in
United States v. Berkowitz,
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Facts
Sparing’s arrest arose out of an alleged scheme organized by a friend named David Smith. Smith filed a criminal report with the Olympia Fields Police Department on July 23, 1996. In his complaint, Smith alleged that he fired Tom Sanfratello on May 31, 1996, and that Sanfratello later stole files from the office and forged two checks made out to himself. Smith also stated that on the morning of July 9, 1996, Sparing saw Sanfratello in the office. According to Smith, Sparing knocked on the window to get Sanfratello’s attention, but Sanfratello did not respond.
In mid-August, Officer Keith called Sparing to confirm his part of Smith’s story. Sparing did. Keith next interviewed Sanfratello, who disputed the story in several respects but admitted to signing the checks because he was a signatory on the account and was owed money by Smith. He also admitted to taking files, but claimed to have returned them to Smith. Sanfratello also told Keith that he previously had a conversation with Sparing’s secretary, Linda Parker, who told him that she had a facsimile sent by Smith to Sparing and that she believed that they were “up to no good.” Sanfratello provided a copy of that fax to Keith; it read: Gene
July 9, 1996 at 2:45 am observed Tom at office copying files from computer and photocopying. You knocked on windows and Tom ignored you. You left and went home.
Thanks
David
The next day, Keith had a telephone conversation with Parker. According to Keith, Parker said that after receiving the fax from Smith, she made a copy and gave the original to Sparing, who replied, “Dave wants me to perjure myself.”
The following day, Parker telephoned Keith, recounting to him an encounter she recently had with Sparing. She said that Sparing had contacted her to have lunch and that when he picked her up he asked with whom she had been talking that week. Parker initially feigned ignorance, but Sparing persisted. He drove her by the Olympia Fields Police Department- to “refresh [her] memory,” and again asked with whom she had been talking, this time informing her that a friend of Sanfratello had already put him in the know. She then admitted to talking with the police about the fax. Sparing, according to Parker, replied, “I thought you were my friend. How could you do this to me? Don’t you know that this could lead to criminal charges against me?” Parker told Keith that Sparing then took her back home, told her to get out of the car and that she was fired. He also told Parker that he was evicting her from the house she was renting from him and taking back *687 his van on which she was making payments. Later that day, Keith spoke with Parker again, and she told him the same story.
After the meeting with Parker, Keith went to Sparing’s house and knocked on the door. Sparing answered the door, and Keith asked that he identify himself, which he did. At that moment, Sparing was still standing inside his home behind his closed screen door, and Keith was standing outside. Keith then advised Sparing that he was under arrest. 1 To which, Sparing inquired whether he had a warrant. Keith stated that he did not, but rather that he had probable cause. Sparing asked whether he could place something down, then turned, and walked away from the screen door further into his home. Keith entered the residence, taking several steps inside. Sparing came back to Keith, and they both left the house.
B. District Court Proceeding
Sparing filed a lawsuit against the Village, Keith, and Officer William Bendar, alleging violations of federal civil rights law as well as Illinois state law. 2 Sparing alleged in his complaint that his arrest was in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and he sought damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Specifically, Sparing complained that Keith arrested him in his home without a warrant and without probable cause. He also alleged that the Village and Keith maliciously prosecuted him in violation of' Illinois tort law.
The Village and Keith moved for summary judgment. Keith asserted an affirmative defense of qualified immunity. The district court held that Sparing had failed to demonstrate a constitutional violation and that Keith was entitled to qualified immunity. The district court concluded that the arrest did not violate the Fourth Amendment because Sparing acquiesced to Keith’s entry to complete an arrest announced outside his home, and because probable cause existed for an offense closely related to the one for which Sparing was arrested. Having found probable cause for the arrest, the district court also concluded that Sparing could not meet the elements of malicious prosecution. The district court then entered judgment in favor of the Village and Keith. This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Fourth Amendment and Section 1983
Sparing alleges two Fourth Amendment violations pursuant to section 1983 against Officer Keith. He claims that Keith unlawfully entered his home without a warrant to effectuate an arrest and unlawfully arrested him without probable cause. Both claims are subject to a defense of qualified immunity. We begin our analysis with the standard for qualified immunity, and then we proceed to apply that standard to each claim.
1. Qualified Immunity.
Public officials performing discretionary functions are generally entitled to qualified immunity and are “shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Wilson v. Layne,
When presented with a defense of qualified immunity, courts must (1) determine whether the plaintiff has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right and (2) if so, determine whether that right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.
Saucier v. Katz,
In this case, the district court, in granting summary judgment, found that Sparing could not establish a deprivation of an actual constitutional right and therefore did not fully address the second part of the standard for qualified immunity. We review the district court’s judgment on the basis of qualified immunity de novo.
Jones v. Watson,
2. Warrantless arrest in the home — the significance of Payton, Watson, Santana, and Berkowitz.
Sparing argues that Keith entered his home without a warrant or his consent to effectuate an arrest, which constituted an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment and in particular the Supreme Court’s holding in
Payton v. New York,
Two Fourth Amendment principles set the backdrop against which we analyze this case. First, police officers may constitutionally arrest an individual in a public place
(e.g.,
outside) without a warrant, if they have probable cause.
United States v. Watson,
At first blush, then, the lines appear clear. Intrusion into the home without a warrant “by even a fraction of an inch,” is too much.
Kyllo v. United States,
The Supreme Court has already considered the question of dividing outside from inside when the home is involved, although not completely resolving the question, in
United States v. Santana, supra.
In
Santana,
the Court held that an individual voluntarily standing in the threshold of her home (ie., in the middle of an open doorway) is outside rather than inside the home for purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
Santana,
But what if the individual is not voluntarily standing
in
an open doorway, but answers a knock at the door, standing by a “fraction of an inch” behind an open doorway? We still apply
Santana-type
“public view, speech, hearing, and touch” analysis to aid in the determination of whether a reasonable expectation of privacy exists. To answer that
Payton
established “a firm line at the entrance to the house,”
Payton,
We addressed precisely this question in
United States v. Berkowitz, supra,
acknowledging that when an individual voluntarily stands behind an open doorway— fractions of an inch “inside the home”— ordinarily, for purposes of the Fourth Amendment, she stands outside, in a public place.
See Berkowitz,
Berkowitz,
however, did not overturn longstanding Fourth Amendment precedent that absent exigent circumstances, police without a warrant must obtain an individual’s valid and voluntary consent before entering the home to effectuate or complete an arrest.
See, e.g., Steagald v. United States,
This case does not fit within the thin middle ground established by
Berkowitz,
but is a case where
Payton
applies. What puts this case beyond
Berkowitz
— as well as
Santana
and
Watson
— and is most critical here, is that Sparing stood inside his home, behind his closed screen door. He was neither in a public place,
e.g.,
outside
(Watson),
5
voluntarily in an open doorway, also a public place
(Santana),
or answering a knock at the door and standing fractions of an inch behind an open doorway
(Berkowitz).
Because we are guided not by the “common law of proper
ty,:’’Santana,
We need not question the validity and voluntariness of consent in this case, because no evidence of consent is present. Because Sparing did not consent to Keith’s entry into his home, Keith’s entry without a warrant to effectuate or complete the arrest in Sparing’s home was unreasonable and a violation of the Fourth Amendment. We pause here, momentarily, to reiterate what seems to have been lost from our discussion in
Berkowitz:
there was no reason in this case not to get a warrant and every reason to obtain one.
See Berkowitz,
Although Sparing has demonstrated a constitutional violation, he cannot show that the violation was clearly established under the second part of the standard for qualified immunity. Indeed, we are in agreement with the First Circuit in concluding that the law surrounding Fourth Amendment “doorway arrest” questions, particularly on the facts of this case, was not sufficiently settled or defined at the time of the arrest to defeat qualified immunity in this case.
See generally Joyce v. Town of Tewksbury,
3. Arrest without probable cause.
Sparing next argues that the district court employed a “fanciful view of Illinois law and a warped reading of the record” in concluding that his participation in Smith’s scheme could have provided Keith with probable cause to believe that he had committed the offense of disorderly conduct. Therefore, he argues, the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Keith on his Fourth Amendment probable cause claim. 7 Sparing contends that the section of the Illinois disorderly conduct statute under which the district court found probable cause for the arrest requires a written report and that the report must falsely identify an offense, not simply acts that may be part of an offense.
The disorderly conduct statute provides:
(a) A person commits disorderly conduct when he knowingly:
*692 (4) Transmits or causes to be transmitted in any manner to any peace officer, public officer or public employee a report to the effect that an offense will be committed, is being committed, or has been committed, knowing at the time of such transmission that there is no reasonable ground for believing that such an offense will be committed, is being committed, or has been committed!;.]
720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/26—1(a)(4). Illinois case law, in particular
People v. Stevens,
Sparing attempts to distinguish Stevens, while at the same time advancing his second argument, by stating that the defendant in Stevens reported a “robbery.” He argues that he only relayed information to Keith about what he had seen and never stated that an “offense” had been committed. This is a fanciful interpretation of both Stevens and the disorderly conduct statute. The plain language of the statute is not limited to false reports of an offense, as Sparing argues, but covers false reports “to the effect that an offense ... has been committed.” 720 III. Comp. Stat. 5/26-1(a)(4). When Sparing told Keith that he had seen Sanfratello in the office copying files from a computer and photocopying, it was to corroborate Smith’s accusation of theft and trespass. Clearly, the report had the effect of falsely conveying to a police officer that an offense had been committed.
Thus, Keith was also appropriately entitled to summary judgment for Sparing’s Fourth Amendment probable cause claim under section 1983.
B. Malicious Prosecution
Sparing argues that for the reasons articulated in his probable cause discussion addressed above, the district court wrongly granted summary judgment to the Village and Keith on his state law malicious prosecution claim. Because we have disposed of his arguments on probable cause, Sparing is left empty-handed. However, we will address this issue because we uphold summary judgment on the second ground offered by the district court. We review this claim, like the others, de novo.
We are not convinced, as was the district court, that because probable cause existed for the offense of disorderly conduct, Sparing could not maintain a state law malicious prosecution cause of action for resisting or obstructing a police officer — the offense actually charged. We are aware of no Illinois case that adopts the closely related offense rule, which we apply in qualified immunity cases, in state law malicious prosecution tort cases. Therefore,- we do not rest our opinion on this ground.
However, Illinois law does require that the criminal proceeding upon which a malicious prosecution action is predicated was terminated in a manner indicative of the innocence of the accused.
Joiner v. Benton Cmty. Bank,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. In his deposition, Keith indicated that he arrested Sparing for obstructing a police officer, although he also had in mind the offense of disorderly conduct.
. Sparing voluntarily dismissed his claim against Officer Bendar.
. Other courts have reached similar conclusions.
See United States v. McCraw,
.
Berkowitz
actually states this proposition using the words “and the person acquiesces
to the arrest.”
.Watson actually was arrested in a restaurant.
. Sparing presents an additional Fourth Amendment argument based on the Illinois resisting arrest statute: Sparing argues that he was required by Illinois law to acquiesce to Keith’s entry to complete the arrest, and if he resisted by not acquiescing to the entry, he was subject to additional charges for resisting arrest. He argues that if he acquiesced, the Illinois statute compelled his acquiescence and as a consequence that acquiescence is constitutionally defective. Having decided that Berkowitz does not apply, we need not consider this issue.
. The district court did not find probable cause for the charge of obstructing a police officer — the offense for which Sparing was arrested and charged — because Sparing's conduct could not be considered physical obstruction, which is a necessary element of the offense.
See People v. Hilgenberg,
. We do not reach the issues of damages raised on this appeal, because we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the Village and Keith on all counts alleged in the complaint.
