OPINION ON REHEARING
Bruce Robert Fox petitions for rehearing of our November 4, 2010 opinion. In that opinion, we affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of West Central Community Corrections (“WCCC”) on Fox’s claims of false arrest, false imprisonment, violation of rights under the Indiana Constitution and, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. section 1983, under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Fox v. Rice,
On rehearing, Fox first argues our conclusion that an arrest warrant ended his alleged false imprisonment is inconsistent with
Malley v. Briggs,
We disagree. While we held the arrest warrant ended Fox’s alleged false imprisonment, we did not hold that it necessarily extinguished all wrongful conduct such that he had no legal redress. We discussed
Wallace v. Koto,
The holding that Fox’s false imprisonment ended when he was served with an arrest warrant is indeed consistent with
Wallace
and
Johnson,
and also
Malley.
Although judicial error in granting an arrest warrant might not extinguish the improper actions of an officer,
Malley,
In addition, Malley involved an officer’s immunity and not, as here, a statute of limitations. Therefore, while Malley was especially concerned with foreclosing all forms of a plaintiffs legal redress from allegedly improper conduct, our conclusion here would not foreclose all forms of redress in a similar case, if filed timely. As mentioned, it would simply split a plaintiffs redress between an officer and a prosecutor. 1
Fox next challenges our conclusion that Willis did not have final policymaking authority. Fox points to Willis’s deposition testimony that prior to seeking the arrest warrant Willis conferred with the director, who for the sake of argument we will presume had final policymaking authority, about what to do regarding Fox. However, conferring or consulting with one who has final policymaking authority does not mean Willis himself was bestowed with final policymaking authority. “The question is whether the promulgator, or the actor, as the case may be — in other words, the decisionmaker — was at the apex of au
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thority for the action in question.”
Gernetzke v. Kenosha Unified Sch. Dist. No. 1,
Here, Willis and the director discussed what to do and Willis subsequently acted. There is no evidence the director delegated to Willis final policymaking authority itself or that WCCC subsequently took deliberate inaction to ratify Willis’s act. Therefore, Willis lacked final policymaking authority.
Subject to the foregoing clarifications, our opinion is in all respects affirmed.
Notes
. Admittedly, our holding that Fox’s false imprisonment ended when he was served with an arrest warrant effectively forecloses Fox's claims against any officials. However, this would not be the case had he pursued a malicious prosecution claim.
