Mark Cook brought a civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 against two New York State Troopers in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Louis L. Stanton, Judge). The claims are based on false arrest, malicious prosecution, and malicious abuse of process. Cook alleges that the Troopers first arrested him and then charged him with a felony, both without probable cause. They did this, Cook maintains, because he had the temerity to advise his friend, whо was being interrogated, to remain silent and to get a lawyer. The district court denied the Troopers’ motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, holding that the Troopers’ motive to arrest and prosecute Cook was an issue of fact.
The Troopers appeal, contending that they were entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law because they had probable cause to arrest Cook for knowing possession of a car whоse vehicle identification number (“VIN”) had been removed. Accordingly, they argue, any issues about their motive to arrest Cook were irrelevant.
We conclude that the Troopers have not yet earned qualified immunity as a matter of law because, under the facts alleged by Cook, the Troopers may be held to have violated Cook’s clearly established rights. We, therefore, affirm the denial of summary judgment.
BACKGROUND
Many of the facts are undisputed.
Mark Cook is a paralegal for a small New York City law firm. One Sunday evening in the autumn of 1992, Cook and some friends were driving back to Manhattan after spending the day at a game farm in the CatsWU Mountains. Cook’s friend, Frank Serrano, was driving a 1985 Dodge Aries, which Serrano had recently purchased at an auction. Also in the ear were Serrano’s wife and mother-in-law, as well as his infant son. Cook is an American citizen; Serrano and his family are citizens of Nicaragua. (Serrano and his family wеre originally co-plaintiffs in this action, but withdrew their complaint when they returned to Nicaragua.)
Serrano got off the New York State Thruway around Saugerties and stopped at a gas station. Upon resuming the journey, Serrano missed the southbound entrance to the Thruway. He pulled over to the road’s shoulder and prepared to make a U-turn.
Defendant Roberta Sheldon, a New York State Trooper, noticed the Dodge swerve before pulling over. Her suspicions aroused, she parked her patrol car behind the Dodge and walked up to the driver’s side of the car. She asked Serrano if he needed assistance. Serrano, who speaks limited English, told her he was trying to get back on the Thruway. Trooper Sheldon asked to see his driver’s license and vehicle registration. Serrano could find neither. During this exchange, Cook served as translator when necessary.
Trooрer Sheldon noticed that the Dodge bore California license plates. An on-site computer check revealed that the plates were registered to a Buick and had expired. She opened the two front doors of Serrano’s car to find a VIN, which is usually etched on a plate affixed to the dashboard or to one of the front doors. She could not find one.
*76 Trooper Sheldon asked Serrano about the Dodge. The parties dispute what happened next. According to Cook, Serrano replied that he owned it, and that he had bought it at an auction. According to Sheldon, Cook responded that Serrano borrowed the car from a friend in New York City.
Trooper Sheldon then explained that she would have to take all of them to the police station because the car did not have valid license plates or a VIN. Cook asked hеr to just let them go, but she refused, saying that the vehicle could be stolen, and, in any event, at least one felony (possession of a vehicle with no VIN). had been committed. So, with the assistance of two more patrol cars, Trooper Sheldon transported Cook and the Serrano family (three adults and a baby) to the Saugerties Police Station. Serrano’s Dodge was towed to an impoundment lot.
At the police station, Troopеr Sheldon met fellow Trooper Nelson Saldana, who spoke fluent Spanish. She briefed Trooper Saldana about the situation, and asked him to find out who owned the Dodge. Trooper Sheldon then arranged to have George Hass, a Department of Motor Vehicles inspector, comb the Dodge for a VIN.
While Sheldon was on the phone, Trooper Saldana took Serrano’s wife into an interrogation room and asked her who owned the Dodge. Her response is the subject of disagreement: the Troopers claim that she said she was unsure whether her husband had borrowed the car or was going to purchase it; Cook maintains that she told Trooper Salda-na that her husband had bought the car at an auction.
Trooper Saldana then brought Serrano into a room for questioning. Here again, the parties’ versions differ. According to the Troopers, Sеrrano said he borrowed the car. According to Cook, he overheard Serrano reiterate to Trooper Saldana that he had bought the car at an auction.
During Serrano’s questioning, Cook sat in the hallway right outside the interrogation room. When a police officer told Cook that they would all be arrested, Cook then called out to Serrano in Spanish, “You are being arrested. You have a right to a lawyer. You have a right to remain silent and I think that you should ask for a lawyer now.” (Trooper Sheldon overheard Cook.) Trooper Saldana then brought Serrano out of the room, and took Cook himself inside.
Again, there is a controversy as to what happened next. According to the Troopers, Trooper Saldana asked Cook whether he knew who owned the Dodge. Cook said no, and demanded an attorney. Trooper Salda-na then аsked Cook why he was being uncooperative, to which Cook replied that he felt he had a right to an attorney.
. By Cook’s account, Trooper Saldana was not nearly so gracious. According to Cook, Trooper Saldana sneered, “Do you want to play hardball with us? Do you want to lawyer up? We will arrest all of you.” Cook tried to calm Trooper Saldana by saying that he was not trying to cause trouble, but wanted to advise Serrano about his rights because Serrano was unfamiliar with American law. Trooper Saldana then told him that everyone would be arraigned because of Cook’s conduct, and that Cook would not be able to make bail.
After this unpleasantry, Trooper Saldana told Trooper Sheldon that Cook and the Ser-ranos did not want to cooperate. The two Troopers made the crucial decision to put Cook and the thrеe other adults under “formal arrest” for knowingly possessing a vehicle that had no VIN, a felony under New York law. The Troopers drove the occupants 15 miles to State Police barracks in the town of Hurley for processing.
Meanwhile, George Hass, the inspector from the Department of Motor Vehicles, had finally found some faded handwriting on the Dodge’s windshield. Hass reconstructed the Dodge’s VIN from this handwriting, traced the number, and learned that thе Dodge was not stolen.
At the Hurley barracks, Cook, Serrano, Serrano’s wife and Serrano’s mother-in-law were placed in separate cells, advised of their rights, fingerprinted and photographed. At some point, according to Cook, Inspector Hass told Cook that he was now aware that the car was not stolen, and that “there would be no problem” if Cook had not opened his *77 mouth about lawyers. Hass apparently never told Troopers Sheldon or Saldana that the car was not stolen.
Both Troopers Sheldon and Saldana assisted in processing Cook and the other three adults. According to Cook, Trooper Saldana showed him Serrano’s signed acknowledgment that he had read and understood his rights, and said to Cook, “See, now this is all nice and legal. Are you satisfied now?”
Troopers Sheldon and Saldana then took Cook and the Serrano family to the Hurley Town Court. The town justice arraigned the four adults on felony charges of knowing possession of a car with no VIN. He set bail for Cook and Frank Serrano at $5,000 each, and released Serrano’s wife and mother-in-law on their own recognizance. Cook and Serrano remained in custody for nearly two days, at which time they made bail. Thereafter, the felony VIN charges were dropped against everyone, and Serrano was сharged only with traffic misdemeanors.
Cook sued Troopers Sheldon and Saldana in the Southern District of New York under section 1983, alleging false arrest, malicious prosecution, and malicious abuse of process. He claimed that the Troopers arrested him without probable cause because they were outraged that he should counsel Serrano to keep silent and request a lawyer.
Troopers Sheldon and Saldana moved for summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity. They argued that it was reasonable to arrest Cook based on the limited facts available to them at the time: (1) they did not know who owned the vehicle; (2) the car did not have a VIN; (3) Serrano did not have a driver’s license or car registration; and (4) the occupants gave conflicting responses about who owned the car.
In a three-paragraph order, the district court denied the Troоpers’ motion, finding that material issues of fact existed regarding the reason for Cook’s arrest. The court stated that “[i]f plaintiff was arrested in retaliation for the exercise of his First Amendment rights, the defense of qualified immunity is unavailable.”
The Troopers now appeal.
DISCUSSION
Cook pleads three causes of action under section 1983: (1) false arrest; (2) malicious prosecution; and (3) malicious abuse of process. The Troopers argue that the district court should have dismissed аll three claims by summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity. Their fundamental position is that, so long as they had probable cause to believe that Cook violated the VIN statute, they are entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law, regardless of their motives. We disagree.
While the denial of summary judgment is not ordinarily appealable, there is an exception when the district court rejects the qualified immunity defense on motion for summary judgment.
See Golino v. City of New Haven,
I. False arrest
It is now black letter law that a common law tort is not cognizable under section 1983 unless it also results in a violation of federal constitutional or statutory law.
See, e.g., Easton v. Sundram,
Qualified immunity protects state officials from civil liability for damages when
*78
they perforin discretionary functions and their conduct does not violate any clearly established federal statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
It is now far too late in our constitutional history to deny that a person has a clearly established right not to be arrested without probable cause.
See Soares v. State of Connecticut,
If an officer arrests the plaintiff without probable cause, the officer is, nevertheless, immune if he can show either that: (1) it was objectively reasonable for him to believe he had probable cause; or (2) officers of reasonable competence could disаgree whether probable cause existed.
See Golino,
Turning to the facts before us, we must determine whether, as a mattеr of law, it was objectively reasonable for Troopers Sheldon and Saldana to believe they had probable cause to arrest Cook, or, at least, that officers of reasonable competence could disagree over the issue.
See Mozzochi
Cook alleges, and the defendants do not dispute, that the arrest occurred after Cook yelled to Serrano that he should assert his rights. We thus presume, as the parties seеm to, that the custodial period preceding this event was consensual. The Troopers argue that it was reasonable to arrest Cook, as well as the other passengers, for violating the VIN statute because the Troopers did not know who owned the car. (Significantly, they do not argue that they had probable cause to arrest the car’s occupants for possession of a stolen vehicle.) The Troopers contend that, being unsure who the owner was, it was reasonable to arrest every adult passenger as a potential owner. This is the nub of the case.
We find the Troopers’ position unsupportable. A person violates the VIN statute by
“knowingly
possessing] ... a vehicle or vehicle part from which a [VIN] plate has been removed.... ” N.Y. Penal Law § 170.70(2) (emphasis added). Knowing possession means what it says: the person must know the vehicle is missing the VIN plate.
See People v. Von Werne,
Historically, the VIN statute was “designed primarily to provide the police with means of addressing those who run ‘chop shops’ or sell their wares.”
McCabe,
If Cook is believed, Serrano and Serrano’s wife separately told the Troopers that Serrano, who was driving the car, owned it. Thus, Serrano would be the only person the Troopers could reasonably believe to own the Dodge. There would be nо basis to believe that Cook, a mere passenger, knew the ear was missing a VIN plate. That Serrano could not prove his ownership to Trooper Sheldon does not metastasize into probable cause to arrest all the passengers. If Cook is right that the Troopers employed a “shoot ’em all, and let God sort ’em out” arrest psychology, their actions were abhorrent to the Fourth Amendment.
For these reasons, as tо the false arrest claim, the Troopers are not entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law; and the district court properly denied their motion for summary judgment.
II. Malicious prosecution
Section 1983 liability may also be anchored in a claim for malicious prosecution, as this tort “typically implicates constitutional rights secured by the fourteenth amendment, such as deprivation of liberty.”
Easton,
Though section 1983 provides the federal claim, we borrow the elements of the underlying malicious prosecution tort from state law.
See Raysor v. Port Authority of New York and New Jersey,
On the facts pled by Cook, he has demonstrated these elements. (1) The Troopers commenced a criminal proceeding against him by formally charging Cook with violating the VIN statute and having him arraigned before the town justice.
See Carl v. Ayers,
Taking Cook’s allegations to be true, it is unquеstionable that these acts violated Cook’s clearly established procedural due process rights: No reasonable law enforcement officer could think it lawful to charge a person with a crime without probable cause and for the sole purpose of retaliation.
See Jeffries,
III. Malicious abuse of process
As a preliminary matter, we note that this Circuit has not specifically decided whether the tort of malicious abuse of criminal process will support a claim under section 1983.
See Easton,
The distinction between civil and criminal abuse of process is critical for section 1983 purposes.
Cf. Easton,
The torts of malicious prosecution and abuse of process are closely allied. While malicious prosecution concerns the improper issuance of process, “[t]he gist of abuse of process is the improper use of process after it is regularly issued.” 2 Committee on Pattern Jury Instructions, Association of Supreme Court Justices, New York Pattern Jury Instructions § 3:51 at 816 (1968). Since this Circuit аlready recognizes malicious prosecution claims under section 1983,
see White v. Frank,
We next examine whether Cook’s abuse of process claim alleges a violation of Cook’s clearly established rights under federal law.
As
with malicious prosecution, we turn to state law to find the elements of the malicious abuse of process claim.
See Raysor,
Here, the Troopers clearly еmployed criminal process against Cook by having him arraigned on charges of illegal possession of a car with no VIN. This arraignment caused Cook to be held in custody.
See Mormon v. Baran,
Procedural due process forbids the use of legal process for a wrongful purpose.
See Torres v. Superintendent of Police,
*81 CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
