This appeal involves the timing and elements of causes of action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged Fourth Amendment violations in the nature of false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. In the course of addressing those matters, however, we must iron out a wrinkle concerning the scope and effect of a judicial admission. Ruling at the summary judgment stage, the district court found for the defendants. The court concluded in substance that the claim of false imprisonment was time-barred and that the claim of malicious prosecution lacked the necessary showing of a predicate Fourth Amendment violation. The court, however, failed to confront the effect of the judicial admission.
We hold that the admission is not controlling because, in pertinent part, the admitted allegation is unclear and, in any event, concerns a matter of law rather than a matter of fact. And, after separating wheat from chaff on the arguments anent the timing and elements of the asserted causes of action, we affirm the judgment below.
I. BACKGROUND
Consistent with the summary judgment standard, we rehearse the facts in the light most flattering to the plaintiff, drawing all reasonable inferences in her favor.
Houlton Citizens’ Coal. v. Town of Houlton,
On June 26, 2003, the plaintiff, Monique J. Harrington, went for a ride with a coworker and then repaired to his apartment in Nashua, New Hampshire. A sexual encounter ensued. The plaintiff alleges that, during this encounter, her co-worker raped her.
Over two months later, the plaintiff told her flaneé about the incident. He pressed her to report it to the authorities, and she went to the police station for that purpose on September 3, 2003. Unbeknownst to her, the co-worker, shortly before, had complained to the police that he had received a menacing telephone call. In it, the caller reportedly accused him of having raped the plaintiff.
Once the plaintiff arrived at the police station, two officers interviewed her for more than an hour, starting at 9:30 p.m. At 10:52 p.m., they turned her over to Detective Mark Schaaf. The plaintiff alleges that, during the ensuing interrogation, Detective Schaaf refused her repeated requests to go home, denied her entreaty for *27 the presence of a female victim/witness advocate, and lied profusely (telling her, for example, that her co-worker had videotaped their sexual encounter and that officers in another room were watching the video).
The interrogation lasted until 12:22 a.m. At the conclusion of the session, the plaintiff waived her
Miranda
rights,
see Miranda v. Arizona,
The plaintiff was arraigned and released on personal recognizance at approximately 2:00 a.m. on September 4. 1 The conditions of her release required her to appear in court, notify the court of any change in address, forbear from committing any crimes, and refrain from using either controlled substances or excessive amounts of alcohol. On September 23, 2004, following a bench trial in state court, a judge acquitted the plaintiff on the false reporting charge.
On September 22, 2007, the plaintiff repaired to the federal district court and sued the City of Nashua, its police department, and Detective Schaaf. Her complaint contained both federal claims and supplemental state-law claims. Although she lumped her federal claims together under the rubric of 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the district court broke them down into two separate claims. The court noted that the plaintiff alleged that the defendants had violated her Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures by (i) restricting her liberty without reasonable suspicion (false imprisonment) and (ii) wrongfully instituting criminal process against her (malicious prosecution).
Following the completion of pretrial discovery, the defendants moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion as to the plaintiffs federal claims and simultaneously dismissed without prejudice the supplemental state-law claims.
Harrington v. City of Nashua,
No. 07-cv-299,
The plaintiff moved to alter or amend the judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e), but to no avail.
See Harrington v. City of Nashua,
No. 07-CV-299,
II. ANALYSIS
A district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
Estate of Hevia v. Portrio Corp.,
On appeal, the plaintiff does not challenge the dismissal of her supplemental state-law claims. Instead she takes dead aim at the district court’s handling of her false imprisonment and malicious prosecution claims. She also criticizes the district court’s denial of her motion to alter or amend the judgment.
As said, each of the plaintiffs federal claims falls under the carapace of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Section 1983 provides a private right of action against a person who, under color of state law, deprives another of rights secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States.
Evans v. Avery,
A. False Imprisonment.
Although section 1983 provides a federal cause of action, the length of the limitations period is drawn from state law.
Wallace v. Kato,
In this instance, the parties agree that the section 1983 claims are governed, temporally, by New Hampshire’s three-year statute of limitations for personal injury tort claims. See N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 508:4. Because the plaintiff commenced her action on September 22, 2007, her false imprisonment claim is time-barred if it accrued more than three years prior to that date.
Unlike the limitations period itself, the accrual date of a section 1983 claim is a matter of federal law and, therefore, is “governed by federal rules conforming in general to common-law tort principles.”
Wallace,
In this case, Detective Schaaf arrested the plaintiff without a warrant and swore out a criminal complaint against her. These actions occurred in the early morning hours of September 4, 2003, and the plaintiff was immediately arraigned and released on personal recognizance. The clustering of these events on a single date leads unerringly to the conclusion that the plaintiffs claim accrued at that time. Because the plaintiff did not file suit until more than three years later — on September 22, 2007 — her false imprisonment claim is barred by the statute of limitations.
The plaintiff does not go quietly into this dark night. She suggests that the accrual of her false imprisonment claim should not be measured by the usual metrics for such claims but, rather, by the metrics applicable to malicious prosecution claims. In service of this suggestion, she argues that, from the officers’ point of view, the main objective of her detention was to supply probable cause for the ensuing prosecution and, therefore, that malicious prosecution
*29
furnishes the most appropriate model from which to determine an accrual date. If that argument prevails, her false imprisonment claim would not have accrued until her acquittal on September 23, 2004,
see Nieves v. McSweeney,
This suggestion is clever, but it ignores a critical distinction between false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. The Supreme Court has held that when a plaintiffs claim arises out of “detention
without legal process,”
the tort of false imprisonment provides the appropriate analogy from which to ascertain the accrual date of a cause of action under section 1983.
Wallace,
The plaintiffs argument runs aground on these shoals. Consequently, her claim that the defendants restricted her liberty without reasonable suspicion begins with her detention at the police station and ends with her release on personal recognizance. The essence of her claim, therefore, is detention without legal process.
2
That is a classic claim of false imprisonment, and its timeliness is to be measured by the metrics applicable to the tort of false imprisonment.
See Wallace,
The plaintiff has a fallback position. She muses that her false imprisonment claim is timely under a “continuing wrong” theory. She argues, in effect, that her two claims — false imprisonment and malicious prosecution — are inextricably intertwined because the defendants’ conduct was part of a single plan to deprive her of her liberty interests. Thus, her false imprisonment claim accrued at the same time as her malicious prosecution claim, and not before.
In support of this reasoning, the plaintiff relies chiefly on
Robinson v. Maruffi,
The attempt to prop up an untimely claim by invoking
Robinson
is not original. We made short shrift of a substantially similar argument in
Nieves,
where we pointed out that
Robinson
was an “unusual case in which the malicious prosecution
*30
conspiracy began before the victim’s arrest and encompassed it.”
Nieves,
Nieves is the beacon by which we must steer. In this case, as in Nieves, there is absolutely no evidence of a conspiracy that began before the date of the plaintiffs arrest. The plaintiff and the officers were strangers, and the plaintiff has never alleged a preexisting conspiracy. Robinson is, therefore, inapposite.
The plaintiff grasps at one last straw. She notes that, in
Nieves,
we left open the possibility of “rare and exotic circumstances in which a section 1983 claim based on a warrantless arrest will not accrue at the time of the arrest.”
Id.
at 52 n.
4; accord Calero-Colón v. Betancourt-Lebrón,
That ends this aspect of the matter. We hold that the plaintiffs false imprisonment claim, which accrued on September 4, 2003, is barred by the applicable three-year statute of limitations.
B. Malicious Prosecution.
The plaintiffs remaining cause of action posits that the defendants violated her Fourth Amendment rights by wrongfully instituting legal process against her. It remains an unanswered question whether a malicious prosecution claim is cognizable under the Fourth Amendment and section 1983,
see Wallace,
To succeed in maintaining a section 1983 claim for malicious prosecution, a plaintiff must show a deprivation of liberty, pursuant to legal process, that is consistent with the concept of a Fourth Amendment seizure.
Nieves,
The plaintiff tries to support her claim that a seizure occurred in several different ways. Her first effort hinges on the assertion that her arrest was based on the detective’s wrongful procurement of a criminal complaint. The evidence is to the contrary. Detective Schaaf swore in an *31 affidavit that the arrest preceded the swearing out and filing of the complaint, and there are no facts in the record to contradict this sequence of events.
The plaintiff nonetheless derives support for her argument from a procedural anomaly. She points to the answer to her complaint in this civil action, in which the defendants admitted the following allegation: “Defendant Schaaf then instituted legal process in the form of a criminal complaint charging the plaintiff with making a False Report to Law Enforcement ... based upon which legal process the plaintiff was arrested.” Even though this argument was made below, the district court did not grapple with the effect of the judicial admission. We must do so.
Ordinarily, a pleading admitting a fact alleged in an antecedent pleading is treated as a binding judicial admission, removing the fact from contention for the duration of the litigation.
See, e.g., Crest Hill Land Dev., LLC v. City of Joliet,
We have no difficulty in holding the defendants to the factual component of the admitted allegation: that the detective instituted legal process against the plaintiff in the form of a criminal complaint. The remainder of the allegation, however, speaks to a matter of law: whether the relationship between the arrest and the complaint was such as to constitute a seizure pursuant to legal process. Admitting that the plaintiffs arrest was “based upon” the complaint does not answer that legal question. The allegation, as framed, can fairly be read to mean that the arrest was based upon the events described in the complaint.
Of course, the plaintiff seeks to have us read the admitted allegation to mean that the complaint was the instrument through which the arrest was effected. That reading is not compelled by the language of the allegation, and we are not aware of any authority that
requires
us to give it credence. To be binding, a judicial admission must be “clear,”
Comm’l Money Ctr., Inc. v. Ill. Union Ins. Co.,
In all events, a court is not obliged to accept a proposition of law simply because one party elects not to contest it.
See id.
(explaining that “legal conclusions are rarely considered to be binding judicial admissions”);
In re Teleglobe Commc’ns Corp.,
Here, moreover, the absurdity of the plaintiffs interpretation of the admission is manifest. For one thing, that interpretation is counter-factual; the record is pellucid that the plaintiffs arrest antedated the issuance of the complaint. Thus, as a temporal matter, the former could not have been “based upon” the latter in the sense that the plaintiff now suggests.
For another thing, the admitted allegation does not purport to contradict the undisputed fact that Detective Schaaf arrested the plaintiff without a warrant. This is important to an understanding of the legal underpinnings of the arrest: although a criminal complaint may, under New Hampshire law, provide grounds for the issuance of an arrest warrant, see N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 592-A:8, a complaint alone cannot serve as a surrogate for a warrant.
*32 The arrest in this case was both warrantless and for a misdemeanor, and New Hampshire law cedes to police officers the power to make warrantless misdemeanor arrests under only three sets of circumstances. See id. § 594:10. None of these paradigms includes the mere existence of a criminal complaint. Thus, the plaintiffs warrantless misdemeanor arrest could not have been “based upon” the complaint in any relevant sense.
Seen in this perspective, .the plaintiffs interpretation of the admitted allegation is unpersuasive. Consequently, we reject her argument that, because of the admission, it must be assumed that a seizure pursuant to legal process took place. On the record as a whole, it plainly did not.
Once we strip away the plaintiffs misplaced reliance on the judicial admission, the frailty of her “arrest-based” malicious prosecution claim becomes apparent. Where, as here, a person is arrested without a warrant and before the issuance of any legal process, that arrest does not form part of a Fourth Amendment seizure upon which a section 1983 malicious prosecution claim may be premised.
See Nieves,
This leaves the plaintiff with the task of showing some post-arraignment deprivation of liberty that amounts to a Fourth Amendment seizure.
See Nieves,
In this regard, the plaintiff contends that she suffered post-arraignment deprivations of liberty associated with the conditions of her pretrial release. Relatedly, she complains of loss of her job, degradation of her prospects for employment elsewhere, harm to her reputation, and stress (emotional and financial) attendant to trial preparation.
The plaintiffs contention that the conditions of her pretrial release constituted a Fourth Amendment seizure is foreclosed by precedent. Those conditions required her to attend court proceedings, notify the court of any change in address, refrain from committing crimes, and forebear from consuming either controlled substances or excessive quantities of alcohol. These are standard fare — what we have termed “run-of-the-mill conditions of pretrial release.”
Nieves,
In this case, there is no indication that the plaintiff was detained after the initiation of the criminal charge, forced to post a pecuniary bond, subjected to travel restrictions, or otherwise burdened with any significant deprivation of liberty. In the absence of any such impositions, the standard conditions of pretrial release do not rise to the level of a Fourth Amendment
*33
seizure.
4
See Nieves,
The argument that loss of employment, reputational harm, and stress can collectively constitute a seizure is equally shopworn. We rebuffed that argument in
Nieves,
To say more on this issue would be supererogatory. We agree with the court below that the plaintiff failed to make out the Fourth Amendment violation needed to sustain her section 1983 malicious prosecution claim.
C. The Rule 59(e) Motion.
In view of the foregoing, we need not discuss the denial of the plaintiffs motion to alter or amend the judgment. The denial of such a motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Negrón-Almeda v. Santiago,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above, we reject the plaintiffs appeal.
Affirmed.
Notes
.
The record does not show when, after the arrest, the detective actually filed the complaint. That information might have been important.
See State v. Chaisson,
. The plaintiff contends that her warrantless arrest and subsequent detention constituted detention pursuant to legal process because she actually was arrested based on the criminal complaint. We deal with this contention in our discussion of her malicious prosecution claim. See infra Part 11(B).
. In an abundance of caution, we add that even if the possibility of a later accrual date still exists — which we doubt — this case does not present the rare or exotic circumstances that would be needed to trigger the possibility.
. Justice Ginsburg’s concurring opinion in
Albright v. Oliver,
