Plаintiff Roger Grubbs appeals from the entry of summary judgment for defendants Haskell County, sheriff Manuel Ballard, and undersheriff Ken Bailes in this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff alleged that defendants violated his constitutional rights in two respects: (1) denying him equal protection under the law by failing to enforce trespass laws to protect his property, and (2) causing him to be arrested without justification for а firearm offense, based on misleading information provided to the prosecuting attorney, after he personally confronted three trespassers. The district -court rejected the first claim on alternative grounds, holding that it was barred by a prudential standing principle and that it failed in any event for lack of evidentiary support. The court granted summary judgment on thе second claim for lack of evidentiary support as well. We affirm for the reasons explained below.
Plaintiff is one of some twenty shareholders in the McCurtain Lake Club Inc. (MLC), a corporation formed to acquire and hold certain lakeside land for the use of the shareholders. While all of the details regarding distribution of the land are not fully set out in the materiаls in our record, the parties do not dispute the pertinent facts. MLC owned the land and granted certain possessory rights to all shareholders free of charge. Specifically, each MLC shareholder was “leased” a cabin site for his or her exclusive use and was granted joint use of the remaining common areas. At times relevant to this action, plaintiff was also president of the corporation.
One of the common areas abutted non-MLC property that was used by the public for off-road activities involving dirt bikes, ATVs, and the like. Plaintiff alleges that he complained of frequent trespassing by these off-road enthusiasts over a period of years but that the authorities did not take sufficient action to protect MLC property from trespass. On January 1, 2002, he took matters into his own hands. Armed with a pistol, he confronted three people, a woman, her son, and her nephew, who he insisted were riding four-wheelers onto MLC property. Accounts of this incident differ: plaintiff claims he merely showed the alleged trespassers that he was armed for self-protection; they reported thаt he pointed the pistol at them while ordering them to get off the property. Undersheriff Bailes was directed to investigate the conflicting complaints. He took statements from all parties and passed these on to - assistant district attorney Danita Williams. He did not recommend any particular action, though he did comment that “[t]he property in question in my opiniоn is not posted correctly and I do not believe that there is a clear policy on what [plaintiffs] duties are as the president of [MLC].” ApltApp. at 237. Bailes also made the obvious point that “[plaintiff] definitely has no right to pull a weapon on another person just to assert his opinions.” Id.
Based on the statements and her own interviews with the complaining witnesses, Williаms made the decision to prosecute plaintiff. Id. at 236. 1 She directed Bailes to fill out a probable cause affidavit and *1278 then presented the materials to secure a warrant. Id. Plaintiff was arrested and charged with violating Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 1289.16 (felony pointing firearms), for “wilfully pointing a handgun at 13 year old J.H. his cousin J.A. and his mother Bobbie Jean Anderson for the purpose of threatening and ordering them off the property where they were riding 4 wheеlers.” Aplt. App. at 242. Prior to trial, however, the case was dismissed without prejudice upon payment of court costs by plaintiffs counsel. See id. at 180, 184. Plaintiff then brought this action challenging his arrest and complaining of the Sheriffs failure to enforce the property rights of MLC and its members.
I. False Arrest/Malicious Prosecution
While constitutional claims for wrongful arrest, detention, and prosecution under § 1983 are analyzеd in light of analogous torts, such as false arrest and malicious prosecution, the ultimate and indispensable element of such a claim is the deprivation of a constitutional right.
See Pierce v. Gilchrist,
Plaintiff alleges that his arrest was the product of Bailes’ misleading presentation of the relevant facts. The constitutional inquiry for such a claim focuses on the materiality of the misconduct in relation to the determination of probable cause:
If an arrest warrant affidavit contains false statements, the existence of probable cause is determined by setting aside the false information and reviewing the remaining contents of the affidavit. Where information has been omitted from an affidavit, we determine the existence of probable cause by examining the affidavit as if the omitted information had been included and inquiring if the affidavit would still have given rise to probable cause for the warrant.
Taylor,
A large part of plaintiffs objection to his arrest is simply his insistence that his contrary version of events should have been credited. There are two very basic deficiencies with this approach. First, it is uncontested that Bailes did not conceal or withhold plaintiffs statement, but passed it along with those of the complaining witnesses. Second, as a general matter, a suspect’s contradiction of a witness’ accusation is not sufficient to vitiate probable cause; otherwise it would be virtually impossible to secure a warrant for anyone but a confessed offender. There is nothing compellingly credible or uniquely exculpatory about plaintiffs statement to af *1279 ford it any exceptional significance in this case. The witnesses stated that he pointed his pistol; he stated that he merely showed it to them. Such disputes between accuser and accused are unremarkable in a criminal law setting. In his statement to Bailes, plaintiff claimed that one of the witnesses threatened to retrieve a gun and “get even,” Aplt.App. at 101. Even if credited, however, this fact would nоt justify plaintiff making an earlier threat with his firearm that prompted this reaction.
Plaintiff complains that Bailes did not report certain facts about the incident that he insists would have altered the determination of probable cause. These facts, such as the presence of MLC property markers and the cutting of an MLC fence near a no trespassing sign, relate to his assertion that the complaining witnesses were trespassing when he confronted them. Once again, plaintiffs argument is not directed at a material issue. The operative statute does provide an exception for use of a gun “in defense of ... one’s home or property,” § 1289.16, but threatening mere trespassers at gunpoint is not within its scope. Oklahomа law has long recognized that, absent a threat of felonious activity, the defense of property encompasses only the right to resist trespassers with reasonable non-deadly force and, thus, does not allow a landowner to threaten them with firearms.
See Sherrill v. State,
Plaintiff also advances two very general objections to the district court’s treatment of his arrest claim. Neither has merit. He first complains that the court failed to set forth a rationale for rejecting the claim. To the contrary, the court invoked the controlling probable cause inquiry, explained that Bailes had not made any false statements to factor into the analysis, and concluded that the asserted omissions would not have vitiated probable cause. ApltApp. at 254. Its rationale is essentially the same as this court’s. Plaintiff next insists that probable cause is a question for the finder of fact and, as such, is inappropriate for summary judgment. His premise is correct but his cоnclusion is unwarranted. Where, as here, there is no genuine dispute about its existence, probable cause, like any material fact, is amenable to summary judgment.
See, e.g., Wolford v. Lasater,
At points in his appellate briefing, plaintiff interjects his suspicion that Bailes acted in retaliation for plaintiffs confrontation with a county excise board member whom plaintiff had exposed for illegally dumping trash. It is true that a criminal prosecution undertaken “to discourage protected speech or expression violates the First Amendment and is actionable under § 1983.”
Wolford,
*1280 II. Denial of Equal Protection under Trespass Laws
Plaintiff alleged that the Haskell County-Sheriffs Office failed to enforce the trespass laws with respect to the MLC common area and thereby denied him equal protection under the law. This claim implicates two distinct issues on summary judgment.
A. Prudential Standing
As a generаl matter, shareholders suffer injury in the Article III sense when the corporation incurs significant harm, reducing the return on their investment and lowering the value of their stockholdings.
Franchise Tax Bd. of Cal. v. Alcan Aluminium, Ltd.,
The more difficult issue is whether [shareholders] can meet the prudential requirements of the standing doctrine. One of these is the requirеment that the plaintiff generally must assert his own legal rights and interest, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third parties. Related to this principle we think is the so-called shareholder standing rule.... [T]he rule is a longstanding equitable restriction that generally prohibits shareholders from initiating actions to enforce the rights of the corporation unless the corporation’s management has refused to pursue the same action for reasons other than good-faith business judgment.
Id.
at 336,
The district court invoked the shareholder-standing prohibition to hold that plaintiff lacked standing to complain of law enforcement’s inadequate response to trespassing on MLC property. If plaintiffs only connection with the property had been his ownership of MLC stock, so that any injury to him was solely a function of injury to the corporation’s property holding, such a purely derivative interest would fall within the scope of the prudential prohibition on shareholder standing. Plaintiff, however, has a distinct legally recognized interest in the property.
As noted earlier, MLC shareholders held their own possessory interest in MLC property: an individual leasehold in their particular cabin site and a joint interest in the common areas. Oklahoma law has long recognized that a possessory interest is sufficient to invoke a right against trespass.
See Lambert v. Rainbolt,
It thus appears that plaintiff has asserted a direct injury sufficient to satisfy the prudential standing principles in
Alcan.
2
We need not, however, definitively resolve
*1281
the matter here. It has been noted on many occasions that the Supreme Court’s rejection of the practice of “hypothetical jurisdiction” in
Steel Company v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
B. Merits of Equal Protection Claim
Plaintiffs allegations regarding inadequate investigаtion/prosecution of those trespassing on MLC property do not implicate either a suspect class or a fundamental right.
3
As such, they fall under the rubric of a “class-of-one” equal protection claim, explicitly recognized in
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
Here, plaintiff and other MLC shareholders/lessees have only testified or averred in general terms that defendants have failed to take sufficient action in response to a handful of trespassing complaints. The district court held that this evidence was insufficient to create a triable issue оf constitutionally significant inadequate law enforcement per se. Without gainsaying that conclusion, we note the more glaring absence of evidence showing that defendants enforced trespassing laws in any different fashion with respect to other, similarly situated residents of the county. The entry of summary judgment based on the legal insufficiency of plaintiffs evidentiary showing оn his equal protection claim was correct.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Williams submitted two affidavits on defendants’ behalf in this case. The first noted the statements she obtained from Bailes, while the second clarified that she had also personally spoken to the witnesses,
compare
Aplt. App. at 106
with id.
at 236. Plaintiff "finds the latest affidavit to be suspicious,” Aplt. Opening Br. at 8, but this kind of clarification, as distinguished from contradiction, is not a basis for discounting later testimony.
See Selenke v. Med. Imaging of Colo.,
.
Plaintiffs standing, however, is not wholly without doubt. In
Guides, Ltd. v. Yarmouth Group Property Management, Inc., 295
F.3d 1065 (10th Cir.2002), which did not reference
Alcan,
a shareholder alleged that his corporation had been denied a lease based on his
*1281
race in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981. His claim for emotional distress resulting from this corporate contractual discrimination was dismissed for lack of standing. We affirmed, rejecting his effort to avoid the shareholder-standing prohibition. That holding is consistent with
Alcan,
given the derivative nature of the alleged injury. However, we framed the operative exception differently, qualifying the requisite individual injury with a uniqueness element not included in
Alcan:
"the actions of the third party that injure the corporation [must] also cause injury to the shareholder
which is unique to himself or herself as a shareholder
of the corporation and
not suffered by the other shareholders.” Guides,
. Wе note there is no evidence in the record that defendants’ alleged failure to enforce trespassing laws with respect to MLC property was related to plaintiff’s clash with the excise board member he turned in for illegally dumping trash.
. "Class of one” is somewhat of a misnomer, in that what distinguishes such claims is the
*1282
absence of a constitutionally salient class identification, not the number of plaintiffs per se. See
Olech,
