This appeal principally concerns whether acting Police Chief Robert Henneman (“Henneman”), as a witness testifying at police disciplinary hearings, is absolutely immune from civil liability for offering allegedly perjurious testimony at those hearings. Plaintiff-appellant Dennis Rolon (“Rolon”), a police officer in the town of Wallkill, New York, also alleges that police officer Ari Moskowitz (“Moskowitz”) falsely accused him of misconduct and caused him to suffer humiliation and economic loss. We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of the claims against both Hen-neman and Moskowitz on the ground that Henneman is absolutely immune from civil suit based on his testimony at the disciplinary hearings, and on the ground that Rolon failed to state a constitutionally cognizable deprivation of liberty or property rights as a result of Moskowitz’s alleged false accusations.
BACKGROUND
The facts of this case as they relate to each defendant are set forth more fully in the district court opinions, familiarity of which is presumed.
Rolon v. Henneman (“Rolon I”),
A.
Rolon has served as a police officer in Wallkill, New York, since 1997. On April 7, 2000, then-Chief of Police James Cos-cette signed a notice of disciplinary charges against Rolon (the “April discipline”), specifying that on February 19, 2000, when Henneman asked Rolon a series of questions concerning a harassment claim reported by Police Officer Paul Bes-ser, Rolon replied using “coarse, violent, profane, insolent and/or abusive” language, and refused to respond to Henneman’s inquiry. Coscette suspended Rolon without pay on April 10, 2000, for an indefinite period of time pending resolution of the charges. Rolon subsequently served a five-day unpaid suspension relating to this matter.
In May 2000, Henneman replaced Cos-cette and became Acting Chief of the Town of Wallkill Police Department. Three months later, in August 2000, Henneman served Rolon with a second notice of discipline (the “August discipline”). This notice contained nine charges of misconduct and fifteen specifications arising from events that took place between May 10 and July 24, 2000. Several of these alleged incidents of misconduct were not witnessed by Henneman but were reported to him by Moskowitz. Pursuant to this second notice of discipline, Henneman suspended Rolon without pay pending resolution of the charges.
B.
Prior to the initiation of the August disciplinary proceedings, on May 1, 2000, Rolon filed suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Conner, /.), alleging that defendants Coscette and Henneman, among others, had violated his constitutional right to due process. Moskowitz was not named as a defendant in this suit.
On January 23, 2001, the parties reached a settlement and, with respect to the
C.
The August discipline charges were considered during arbitration hearings held on fourteen days between January 24 and August 31, 2001. Henneman and Moskow-itz both provided testimony at the arbitral hearings. During Moskowitz’s cross-examination, the arbitrator directed Moskow-itz to produce his personal notebooks for the period of February 1 through August 23, 2000. Moskowitz left the hearing with the intention to retrieve the notebooks, explaining that he had taken them home during lunch. He failed to return, and the Town refused to order Moskowitz to return with the notebooks. Because of Mos-kowitz’s actions, the arbitrator struck his testimony in its entirety.
In a sixty-page decision and award dated February 15, 2002, the arbitrator found that neither Henneman nor Moskowitz provided truthful or credible testimony, and that Henneman’s personal hostility toward Rolon motivated many of his actions as Acting Chief of the Department. The arbitrator found Rolon guilty of only three charges of misconduct and ordered two days’ suspension without pay and oral counseling. 1 Rolon was found not guilty of the remaining charges and was ordered reinstated to the police force with full back pay and restoration of his benefits.
D.
On August 13, 2002, Rolon filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (McMahon, /.). Rolon alleged that by “[bearing] false witness” against him, Henneman and Moskowitz caused him anguish and injury, intentionally violated his right to due process of law, and abused their supervisory positions. The injury he alleged included humiliation and economic loss in the form of lost overtime pay. Rolon also claimed that Mos-kowitz lied to Henneman about Rolon’s misconduct, which led to the preferment of disciplinary charges and caused Rolon emotional distress.
In response, Henneman and Moskowitz moved for judgment on the pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), claiming that, as a result of the January 2001 settlement, Rolon’s claims were barred by res judicata. In the alternative, Henneman and Moskowitz claimed either they were protected by qualified or absolute immunity, or Rolon failed to state a cognizable claim for the denial of any substantive due process rights. The district court granted Henneman judgment on the pleadings, ruling that “absolute immunity attaches to Henneman’s witness testimony at the arbitration proceedings at issue” because “testifying wit-
II. Absolute Immunity
The Supreme Court has extended absolute immunity to police officers testifying at judicial proceedings on the ground that this type of immunity existed at common law for citizen-witnesses. It reasoned that without such immunity, “[a] witness’s apprehension of subsequent damages liability might induce ... self-censorship,” either by making witnesses reluctant to come forward in the first place or by distorting their testimony.
Briscoe v. LaHue,
Because absolute immunity is “justified and defined by the
functions
it protects and serves, not by the person to whom it attaches,”
Forrester v. White,
We are persuaded by the[ ] policy concerns [of the need for independent judgment, protection from undue influence, and protection from reprisals by dissatisfied litigants,] and agree that the nature of the function performed by arbitrators necessitates protection analogous to that traditionally accorded to judges. Furthermore, we note that individuals cannot be expected to volunteer to arbitrate disputes if they can be caught up in the struggle between the litigants and saddled with the burdens of defending a lawsuit. Accordingly, we hold that arbitrators in contractually agreed upon arbitration proceedings are absolutely immune from liability in damages for all acts within the scope of the arbitral process.
Id. at 886 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Rolon urges that our holding in Austem should represent the limit of absolute immunity conferred to participants in the arbitration process; he argues that there is no sound basis for extending the absolute immunity doctrine to witnesses testifying at police disciplinary hearings of the type involved in this case. We do not agree.
As we suggested in
Austem,
the truth-seeking function of arbitration is no less robust than that of the judicial process itself.
Id.
Similar to a fact-finder in the judicial process, the arbitrator here had to determine the propriety of the charges listed in Rolon’s Notice of Discipline of August 2000. The policy rationale for witness immunity, as articulated by the Supreme Court in
Briscoe,
applies with equal or near equal force in the arbitral context: “[T]he truthfinding process is better
In addition to alike policy considerations, Henneman performed substantially the same function as witnesses in judicial proceedings with nearly identical procedural safeguards: he took an oath, offered testimony, responded to questions on direct and cross-examination, and could have been prosecuted for perjury.
See id.
at 342,
III. Claims Against Moskowitz
Rolon alleges that Moskowitz lied to Henneman about his misconduct, which led to the preferment of disciplinary charges and Rolon’s emotional and economic distress. Although Rolon contends that he is not attempting to bring a claim for malicious prosecution, other statements in his brief suggest the contrary. Thus, similar to the district court, we interpret Rolon’s claims against Moskowitz as encompassing two possible causes of action: malicious prosecution or fabrication of evidence.
See Rolon II,
A. Malicious Prosecution
Rolon’s claim for malicious prosecution is foreclosed by our decision in
Washington v. County of Rockland,
The instant case is materially indistinguishable from Washington. Rolon suffered no “seizure” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. He was not imprisoned or detained, and he was never the subject of a criminal prosecution. Rolon, moreover, does not explicitly allege a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights; he only claims that Moskowitz’s conduct violated his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process. Our holding in Washington therefore governs and we affirm the district court’s dismissal of this claim.
B. Fabrication of Evidence
Alternatively, Rolon asserts a § 1983 claim against Moskowitz for the fabrication of evidence. Specifically, he claims a deprivation of liberty interest due to the false
With respect to Rolon’s claim for damages arising from his humiliation, embarrassment, and emotional distress from Moskowitz’s false accusations, such a claim is better left to state defamation law, as the Supreme Court’s decision in
Paul v. Davis,
With respect to Rolon’s claim for economic loss due to his denial of overtime pay, we have not yet examined whether there is a constitutional due process right against the fabrication of evidence where a deprivation of property is alleged. In
Zahrey v. Coffey,
Assuming that a deprivation of property without due process of law could constitute such a constitutional injury, Rolon’s claim still fails because he does not adequately allege an unconstitutional deprivation of property. Property interests are not generally constitutionally established; rather, “they are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law-rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.”
Bd. of Regents of State Colls. v. Roth,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the district court’s judgment dismissing Rolon’s action. We hold that Henneman is entitled to absolute immunity for his testimony. We also hold that Rolon failed to state a legally sufficient claim against Mos-kowitz for his alleged remarks that led to the preferment of the disciplinary charges, because Rolon demonstrated no rules or understandings that proved he had a legitimate claim to overtime.
Notes
. Rolon was found guilty of charges that he (1) failed timely to comply with directives from Acting Chief Henneman ordering Rolon to move his vehicle from the spot in which it was parked; (2) failed timely to respond to a written directive from Henneman ordering Rolon to answer certain questions regarding an arrest he made; and (3) “prepared a memorandum disrespectful of [his] superior, ... Henneman ... in which [Rolon] accuse[d] ... Henneman of 'carelessness and stupidity.’ ”
. To the extent Rolon claims that Henneman should not be viewed as a testifying witness but as a complaining witness because of the role he played in initiating the charges against him,
see White v. Frank,
With respect to Moslcowitz, the district court did not decide whether he was entitled to absolute immunity from liability under § 1983 based on his testimony at the proceedmgs. The court reasoned that because "Moskowitz's testimony ... was struck in its entirety!,] there is no testimony to which immunity can attach,” and therefore any false testimony could not have affected the outcome of Rolon’s arbitration hearings.
Rolon II,
. For the reasons discussed in this opinion, the Supreme Court’s two-step approach for determining whether an immunity defense is available in a § 1983 suit is satisfied.
See White,
. The Supreme Court in
Albright v. Oliver,
