Mаrtina Montgomery was fired from her job as a court probation .officer after her supervisors learned that she and her fiancé had' purchased a car from a dealership employing a probationer whom she supervised. Montgomery suеd, claiming among other things that her termination infringed her right of intimate association with her fiancé and that she was denied procedural and substantive due process. The district court dismissed all of Montgomery’s wrongful termination claims. She appeals, and we affirm.
I. History
Montgomery sued a number of defendants, including the car dealership, the court for which she worked, and the county in which the court was located. But we can ignore the majority of her complaint because this appeal addresses only Montgomery’s claims against three, judges on the court where she was employed. We recite the facts as they are provided in the complaint and present them in the light
*936
most favorable to Montgomery.
See Cole v. U.S. Capital, Inc.,
Montgomery accompanied her fiancé, Charles Heffner, to Shaver Motors in Merrillville, Indiana. Heffner tried to purchase a car, but his application for financing was denied because he had a poor credit history. Montgomery, however, had better credit than Heffner and the salesman told her that he could arrange financing for her to purchase a Toyota Corolla. Montgomery declined at first, but the salesman ultimately persuaded her to purchase the car. Montgomery and Shaver then signed a sales contract for the Toyota, and the couple left with the car. After Montgomery left the dealership, however, Shaver unilaterally changed the terms of the financing agreement. Specifically, Shaver paid off a balance Montgomery owed on a Mercury automobile she already owned and added that money into the price of the' Toyota. Shaver claims it did so to improve the creditworthiness of Montgomery’s application for financing, but Montgomery says that she never agreed to such an arrangement and that the salesman never told her that the Mercury loan would have any impact on her application. Montgomery learned of Shaver’s action several days later when the finance company to which Shaver had sent her application called to tell her both that the Mercury was now included in. the transaction and that it had approved her loan on significantly less favorable terms than those promised by Shaver.
Montgomery rejected the changes to the agrеed-upon financing terms and immediately returned the Toyota to Shaver. But when she brought back the car, Shaver demanded that Montgomery reimburse the dealership the money it had paid on the Mercury. When Montgomery refused, claiming that she had never аgreed to such an arrangement, Shaver threatened to report her alleged delinquency to her supervisors at the probation office. Eventually Shaver made good on its threat and called Montgomery’s supervisor in an effort to harass Montgomery and pressure her to pay.
Shaver’s call prompted the supervisor to investigate,, and he discovered that a probationer supervised by Montgomery was employed at Shaver. The record does not reflect the nature of the probationer’s employment, but he apparently played no role in the sale, of the Toyota. Nonetheless, the court has a code of conduct that forbids probation officers from transacting business with any company employing probationers under their supervision. Thomas Stefaniak, Jr., Senior Judge of the Criminal Division of the Lake County Superior Court, who ultimately is responsible for probation department personnel, ordered Montgomery suspended and eventually fired for violating this policy. As permitted by the court’s employee grievance system, Montgomery requested administrative hearings to appeal both her suspension and termination. Judge Stefaniak assigned Judge Salvador Vasquez to hear the apрeals, and Judge Vasquez upheld Judge Stefaniak’s decisions. 1
Montgomery raised three claims against the judges. First, she claims that they interfered with her right of intimate association with her fiancé because she says she had a constitutional right to purchase а car for him from Shaver. Montgomery also alleged that the judges denied her substantive and procedural due process by not providing her a pre-termination hearing. The district court dismissed the
*937
judges as defendants,
see
Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), and made its dismissals final, thus permitting this appeal,
see Greenwell v. Aztar Ind. Gaming Corp.,
II. Analysis
A. Freedom of Intimate Association
Montgomery first argues that the judges’ enforcement of the code of conduct interfered with what she describes as her freedom of intimate association with her fiancé. The defendants respond that Montomery’s relationship with Heffner did not excuse her from complying with the rules governing her employment.
The Supreme Court has explained that the Constitution protects two distinct forms of free association. The first, freedom of expressive association, arises from the First Amendment and ensures the right to associate for the purpose of engaging in activities protected by the First Amendment.
See Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
We pause to note that the parties have confused the two forms of free association in their briefs and focus their arguments exclusively on -the balancing test applicable to expressive association claims raised by public employees.
See Connick v. Myers,
The proper analysis for Montgomery’s claim is provided by
Zablocki v. Redhail,
Montgomery’s claim fails the
Zablocki
test. The dеfendants do not dispute that the relationship between two people engaged to be married qualifies as intimate, and we will assume that to be the case. But the defendants here did not “interfere directly and substantially” with Montgomery’s right to associate with Heffner when they fired her for violating the code of conduct.
Compare Zablocki,
We thus review the code of conduct only under a rational basis test and conclude that the portion of code challenged by Montgomery bears a rational relationship to a legitimate government interest.
See Thielman v. Leean,
B. Procedural Due Process
Montgomery next argues that the district court erred in dismissing her procedural due process claim because she says thе court’s personnel policy affords probation officers the right to a pre-termi
*939
nation hearing and argues that this purported policy created a property interest in her continued employment. But Indiana law provides that prоbation officers serve “at the pleasure of the appointing court.” Ind.Code § 11 — 13—1—1 (c);
see also
Ind.Code § 33-33-45-12(a)(2) (Lake County probation officers “serve at the pleasure of the senior judge”);
In re Madison County Probation Officers’ Salaries,
C. Substantive Due Process
Lastly, Montgomery argues in a cursory fashion that the district court erred by dismissing her substantive due process claim. The scope of substantive due process, however, is very limited and protects plaintiffs only against arbitrary government action that “shocks the conscience.”
Tun v. Whitticker,
III. Conclusion
The district court correctly dismissed all of Montgomery’s claims against the three judges. Accordingly, the judgment is Ap-PIRMED.
Notes
. Montgomery’s complaint in the district court also lists Judge Clarence Murray as 'a defendant but neither her complaint nor her brief on appeal makes any further mention of him. Accordingly, all claims against Judge Murray are waived.
