On May 29, 1993, Marshall Spiegel (“Spiegel”) and his family were disturbed by the clamor of hammering emanating from the apartment above them. This was not the first time that the Spiegels had endured such racket. Spiegel’s wife, Carol, walked upstairs to complain. She soon became embroiled in an argument with the upstairs tenants, Loren Cherny and his common-law wife, Mim Bobbin. 2 Overhearing this argument, Spiegel dashed upstairs holding his young son in his arms. Some time after Spiegel reached the upstairs apartment, Bobbin threatened that Cherny would kill Spiegel. Cherny struck Spiegel in the back, and Bobbin also hit him. The record is not clear as to what occurred between the time of Spiegel’s arrival upstairs and the ensuing threat and blows. We do know, however, that Spiegel never laid his hands on Bobbin or Cherny.
On May 31, 1993, Spiеgel reported the incident to the police. On June 23, Spiegel filed criminal complaints, charging Bobbin and Cherny with battery. When they learned of these charges on June 25, Bobbin and Cherny, in turn, filed criminal battery complaints against Spiegel. Specifically, these complaints charged Spiegel with committing battery against Cherny. On that same day, Spiegel was booked, fingerprinted and plаced in a cell for over an hour before he posted bond and was released.
The two criminal cases were placed on the same court call for August 4, 1993. On that same day, Daniel Rabinovitz, a Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney, was assigned to assess whether the office should pursue one or both of the cases. Rabinovitz reviewed the police reports, spokе with the police officers involved, and questioned all of the players in this case after administering a Miranda warning to each of them. He then submitted his evaluation to his superiors.
The State’s Attorney’s Office decided to pursue only Bobbin’s and Cherny’s ease against Spiegel. Spiegel was tried and acquitted. In the interim, Spiegel claims that he was evicted from his apartment, his employment stаtus with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange was “adversely affected,” and he lost and continues to lose income.
*254 Spiegel brought this action under Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Rabinovitz in his individual capacity. Spiegel alleged that the State’s Attorney’s Office relied on Rabinovitz’s report when it decided not to pursue Spiegel’s battery ease against Bobbin and Cherny and went ahead with Bobbin’s and Cherny’s bаttery case against Spiegel. Spiegel alleged that Rabinovitz conducted a willfully incomplete and inadequate assessment of the case. According to Spiegel, Rabinovitz should have uncovered a signed, written statement by Bobbin which failed to mention that Spiegel touched Cherny. Spiegel also claimed the Rabinovitz should have realized that Cherny manufactured evidеnce by submitting a photograph of a bruise that Spiegel could not have inflicted. Spiegel believed that Rabinovitz overlooked witnesses, including a disinterested neighbor, who could have corroborated Spiegel’s version of the events of May 29. Spiegel further contended that Rabinovitz should have been mindful that Cherny’s and Bobbin’s charges against Spiegel came only after they lеarned of his charges against them. Finally, Spiegel maintained that Rabinovitz was biased against Spiegel because Spiegel at one time had filed charges with the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission against one of Rabinovitz’s co-workers. With Spiegel as the complaining witness, Rabinovitz subsequently prosecuted and lost this case against his co-worker.
Spiegel alleged thаt Rabinovitz’s acts and omissions, conducted under color of state law, violated Spiegel’s Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Spiegel maintained that Rabinovitz’s actions were intentional and malicious and constituted reckless disregard for Spiegel’s constitutional rights. He requested compensatory damages and punitive damages. In response, Rabinovitz brought a 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss, asserting that hе, as a prosecutor, was absolutely immune from suit and that Spiegel failed to raise issues cognizable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court found that Spiegel had stated a claim for malicious prosecution under § 1983 but that Rabinovitz was absolutely immune from suit. The district court dismissed Spiegel’s case. Spiegel now appeals, arguing that the district court erred when it determined that Rabinovitz was absolutely immune from suit.
We review
de novo
a district court’s 12(b)(6) dismissal.
Ledford v. Sullivan,
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983 creates a federal cаuse of action for “the deprivation, under color of [state] law, of a citizen’s rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States.”
Id.
(quoting
Livadas v. Bradshaw,
In this ease, Spiegel presents his claim of malicious prosecution within the confines of substantive due process. The protections of substantive due process have been conferred primarily upon matters relating to marriage, family, procrеation, and the right to bodily integrity.
See, e.g., Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey,
In general, the common law tort of malicious prosecution does not amount to the deprivation of a constitutional right under 42 U.S.C. § 1983; however, malicious prosecution, like the common-law tort of defamation, can be a
component
of a constitutional tort.
Albright v. Oliver,
In Albright, a criminal informаtion was issued charging Albright with drug trafficking. Albright was booked and posted bond. One condition of his bond was that he not leave Illinois without the court’s permission. Shortly before trial was to begin, the court dismissed the information against Albright because it failed to state an offense recognized under Illinois law.
Albright subsequently brought a § 1983 claim in federal district court. Albright alleged that the case had received some рublicity and that he missed a job interview in St. Louis due to the travel restriction of his bond. He argued that these consequences resulted from his prosecution and were sufficiently serious to elevate his common-law malicious prosecution claim to the level of a constitutional tort. On appeal, we disagreed, reasoning:
The medley of harms that a malicious prosecution inflicts when, as in this case, the defendant is exonerated before any punishment is imposed-indeed, before he is even put on trial — is similar to that inflicted by defamation, which by impairing a person’s reputation not only embarrasses and even outrages him but also undermines his ability to make favorable transactions, whether business or personal, thereby subjecting him to costs pecuniary or nonpecuniary or both. It also puts him to the expense of bringing a suit for defamation to recover his good name. If the injuries that defamation imposes do not constitute a deprivation of liberty or property within the meaning of the due process clause, then neither do the injuries that malicious prosecution imposes.
Id. at 345-46. Albright’s case subsequently went before the United States Supreme Court.
Before the Supreme Court, Albright claimed that police violated only his substantive due process right to be free from prosecution without probable cause.
Albright v. Oliver,
Justice Kennedy, joined by Justice Thomas, concurred with the plurality. However, Kennedy wrote separatеly because he believed that the root of Albright’s due process claim concerned not his arrest but instead the malicious initiation of an unfounded criminal prosecution against him.
Id.
at 281,
This Court’s subsequent case of
Smart v. Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
is also instructive.
If liberty is not at stake, it is difficult to see how either tort [malicious prosecution or abuse of process] could be thought to invade an interest protected by the due process clause (life, liberty, property) merely by virtue of its effect on the reputation or, like any suit, the pocketbook of the defendant. Defamation is not actionable in such circumstances, because reputation is not deemed property within the meaning of the due process clause____ How torts so closely related to defamation in the interests that they invade as malicious prosecution and abuse of process could be thought to deprive a defendant of property mystifies us.
Id. We find this reasoning to be particularly aproрos in our case.
On appeal, Spiegel does not discuss whether his claim is cognizable under § 1983. Rabinovitz mentions the issue only in a footnote. The parties instead concentrate their arguments on whether Rabinovitz is absolutely immune from suit. However, from Spiegel’s response to Rabinovitz’s Motion to Dismiss, we get some indication of why Spiegel thinks his malicious prosecution claim is cоgnizable under § 1983. In his response, Spiegel alleged that his subsequent eviction, adverse employment status, and loss of income were deprivations of constitutionally-protected property interests which raised his state-law malicious prosecution claim to that of a constitutional tort. The district court found that our decision in Albright precluded Spiegel’s employment-related claims, but it deemed Spiegel’s eviction to be a “palpable consequence” of his malicious prosecution. We disagree. Although Spiegel’s circumstances are unfortunate, the rationale of Smart instructs that none of them are deprivations of property of a constitutional magnitude. 3
In any event, Rabinovitz is absolutely immune from suit. The determination of whether а prosecutor was acting within his quasi-judicial capacity and thus absolutely immune from suit is a legal question.
Hunt v. Jaglowski,
The Supreme Court has held that “in initiating a prosecution and in presenting the State’s case, the prosecutor is immune from a civil suit for damages.... ”
Imbler v. Pachtman,
*256 When determining which type of immunity a [prosecutor] enjoys, we look to the nature of the function that the [prosecutоr] was performing in the particular case. If a [prosecutor’s] function was quasi-judicial, the [prosecutor] enjoys absolute immunity. If the function was administrative or investigatory, the [prosecutor] enjoys only qualified immunity.
*257
Spiegel contends that Rabinovitz functioned as an investigator, not a prosecutor, and that therefore his actions were subject only to the qualified immunity enjoyed by рolice officers.
See, e.g., Buckley v. Fitzsimmons,
Perhaps Spiegel has chosen this approach because a prosecutor is entitled to absolute immunity for his malicious prosecution of someone whom he lacked probable cause to indict.
See Buckley,
Spiegel’s case also bears some resemblance to
Hunt v. Jaglowski
In this case, two complaints were brought. In response, the police conducted an investigation and wrote up reports. Rabinovitz merely reviewed these documents and interviewed the parties in order to evaluate the value of the cases involved. This is clearly not the same case as
Buckley,
where the Supreme Court found that the prоsecutors were not functioning as “advocates” when they went to the scene of the crime to determine whether a boot print found there was made by the plaintiff, who was a suspect at the time.
See Buckley,
*258 In sum, Spiegel’s claim of malicious prosecution does not constitute a constitutional tort cognizable under § 1983. Even if Spiegel’s claim were cognizable, Rabinovitz is entitled to absolute immunity because he functioned as a prosecutor in this case.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The record is not clear as to whether and how Bobbin and Cherny are common-law husband and wife. Illinois, of course, does not recognize common-law marriages. But if a couple contracts a common-law marriage and that couple is domiciled in another state that recognizes common-law marriage, Illinois will consider that marriage valid if the couple subsequently sets up its domicile here. Generally, those jurisdictiоns that recognize common-law marriages have determined that the essence of a common-law marriage is a present intent to enter into the contract of marriage usually coupled with cohabitation and a holding out of the marital relationship in the couple’s community of residence. Thus, it is possible that Bobbin and Cherny were once domiciled in a state thаt recognizes, or once recognized, common-law marriage. For all we know, the couple may have lived in such a state, consummated their relationship, held themselves out before both God and man to be husband and wife, and then later decided to set up shop in Illinois, all before they got into this scrape with Spiegel. However, suffice it to say that we need not, nor do we wish to, delve into the sordid details as to why Bobbin is referred to as Cherny's “common-law wife” in the proceedings below.
. We also consider that, as Rabinovitz points out, on July 6, 1993, the Hollywood Towers Condominium Association ordered Spiegel to leave his apartment by July 23, 1993. However, Rabinovitz was not assigned to investigate the unneighborly confrontation until August 4, 1993. Spiegel’s notice of eviction thus could not have been a consequence of Rabinovitz’s prosecution.
