Ronald S. Biddle brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming he was unlawfully arrested and maliciously prosecuted by the defendants, two Normal, Illinois police officers. The district court found that the police had probable cause to arrest Biddle. Accordingly, it found that the officers are entitled to qualified immunity for their actions, and granted their motion for summary judgment on the unlawful arrest claim. The court also determined that the malicious prosecution claim is barred by the finding of probable cause. Biddle appeals. We affirm.
I.
Ronald Biddle, his brother Tim, and two friends, Dana Mitchell and Lori Miller were taking Mitchell home from work shortly after 3 a.m. on September 8, 1990. Ron, Tim, and Miller had been drinking at a wedding reception and a local tavern. Tim and Ron had had enough to drink so neither wanted to drive. Although Miller had also been drinking, she drove Ron Biddle’s van. Officer Cannon stopped the van and administered field sobriety tests to Miller. She failed the tests and Cannon arrested her for driving under the influence of alcohol.
Cannon asked the remaining passengers if any of them had a valid driver’s license and wanted to drive the van. They all declined. Cannon told the passengers that unless someone drove the van home, it would have to be towed. Tim Biddle and Mitchell decided to try to contact two friends from a nearby pay phone to drive the van for them. Ron Biddle stayed with his van. Before Cannon left with Miller, Officer Amy Jo Martin arrived. She assisted Cannon in placing Miller under arrest and then began to complete a tow report on Biddle’s van.
After Cannon left, Biddle began shouting at Martin about towing the van. He believed he was entitled to have someone come to pick it up, and Martin believed that the van would have to be towed. Biddle was intoxicated, and kept arguing with Martin. He shouted and swore at her for almost ten minutes. Biddle Deposition at 26, 38-39. Eventually, Martin asked him for his name and identification, but Biddle refused to give it to her. According to Martin, Biddle walked up and down on the sidewalk, waving his arms, swearing and shouting. Because of Biddle’s continual shouting Martin decided she could not finish the tow report. As she walked toward her squad car, Biddle asked her a question. She did not hear it, so she asked him to repeat it. He yelled at her “You heard what I said — Now answer me!” Incident Report, Martin Deposition Exhibit 1. Because Biddle continued to be very irate and because he is bigger than she is, Martin became concerned for her safety and called *675 for back-up. Officer Paul Lehmann arrived on the scene and Biddle was arrested for obstructing a police officer under 720 ILCS 5/31-1 (formerly Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, para. 31-1). Because Biddle continued to be disruptive and uncontrollable, Biddle was taken from the Normal Police Station to the County Jail. Martin Deposition at 68. The charge against Biddle was eventually dismissed. Biddle admits that he shouted, swore at, and argued with the officers. He also admits that he was intoxicated. He maintains, however, that the officers’ response to his behavior was unreasonable.
Biddle sued Officers Martin and Lehmann under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest and malicious prosecution. The district court granted summary judgment for the officers, finding that Biddle’s unlawful arrest claim was without merit because the officers had probable cause to arrest him for obstruction of justice, disorderly conduct, and for allowing someone to operate his vehicle in a manner contrary to law in violation of 625 ILCS 5/16-202 (formerly Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 95/6, para. 16-202). The court also found that because the arrest was reasonable, the officers violated no clearly established constitutional rights, and consequently were entitled to qualified immunity for their actions. The court also noted that because Biddle’s arrest was supported by probable cause, his malicious prosecution claim must fail under our ruling in
Fernandez v. Perez,
On appeal, Biddle contends that genuine issues of material fact preclude the entry of summary judgment on the probable cause question, and contests the district court’s ruling on his malicious prosecution claim.
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s summary judgment determination
de novo. Marshall v. Allen,
B. Probable Cause to Arrest
The defendant police officers contend that qualified immunity shields them from liability for Biddle’s arrest because they reasonably believed the arrest was supported by probable cause. “[Gjovernment officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The defendants do not dispute that Biddle had a clearly established right in 1990 to be free from arrest without probable cause. This appeal focuses upon the second prong of the analysis. We examine the undisputed facts in the record to evaluate the objective legal reasonableness of the officers’ acts.
*676
Apostol,
Biddle’s brief on the appropriateness of summary judgment when probable cause is at issue completely misapprehends the governing law. He asserts, “It is ... well settled that the existence of probable cause to arrest is generally a question for the trier of fact that is inappropriate for resolution by summary judgment.” Appellant’s Brief at 9. To the contrary, the Supreme Court recently explained, this assertion is wrong
for two reasons. First, it routinely places the question of immunity in the hands of the jury. Immunity ordinarily should be decided by the court long before trial. Second, the court should ask whether the agents acted reasonably under settled law in the circumstances, not whether another reasonable, or more reasonable, interpretation of the events can be constructed [long] after the fact.
Hunter v. Bryant,
— U.S. -, -,
We also note that in § 1983 actions for false arrest, probable cause need not have existed for the charge for which the plaintiff was arrested, so long as probable cause existed for arrest on a closely related charge.
While an arresting officer’s subjective knowledge of facts sufficient to constitute probable cause is central to evaluation of the propriety of an arrest, we do not believe that the officer’s view of the legal basis for the arrest is important. Under the principles of Harlow v. Fitzgerald and the fourth amendment, an objective standard applies where the parties present alternative legal justifications for an arrest. The issue is whether a reasonably competent police officer, with knowledge of the facts actually known by the arresting officer, would have concluded that probable cause existed to arrest for the offense offered as justification.
Richardson v. Bonds,
As an initial matter, on these facts we believe that these crimes are sufficiently related to satisfy the requirements of
Richardson.
The charge offered by the defendants to justify the arrest was not an
“ex post facto
extrapolation” of the crimes which might have been charged.
These cases illustrate that so long as probable cause existed for the obstruction charge or for any related offense, Biddle’s false arrest claim must fail. Therefore, we need not consider all the possible charges Biddle’s conduct might support. We believe the officers had probable cause to arrest Biddle for disorderly conduct and for allowing another person to operate his van in a manner contrary to law. Both police officers knew that the driver of the van was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. The basis of the entire confrontation with Biddle was Biddle’s drunken, vociferous objection to the van being towed. The officers were entitled to infer that he objected so strenuously because the van was his. These two facts support a reasonable belief that Biddle was in violation of 625 ILCS 5/16-202.
The facts the officers possessed also were sufficient to establish probable cause to arrest for disorderly conduct. Illinois law provides that a person commits disorderly conduct when he “[d]oes any act in such unreasonable manner as to alarm or disturb another and to provoke a breach of the peace____” 720 ILCS 5/26-1 (formerly Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, para. 26-1(a)(1)). “Disorderly conduct has never had a precise definition; the types of conduct that may be disorderly conduct ‘almost defy definition.’ ”
Lester v. City of Chicago,
Often when a citizen’s argument with a police officer is at issue, the key inquiry is whether there is a clear relationship between the citizen’s conduct and the threat to public order. Id. We believe this inquiry is central in the instant ease. Certainly screaming profanities at an officer for ten minutes is not a reasonable response to the information that your vehicle is to be towed. This is particularly so when the screaming is accompanied by violent arm gestures and the argument is with a physically smaller officer on a deserted roadway at 3:00 a.m. It is also clear that such violent argument will likely disturb the officer. The only question then, is whether the officers in this case reasonably believed that Biddle’s argument threatened a breach of the peace. Biddle was intoxicated and violently opposed to the towing of his van. He launched a ten-minute tirade against Martin, screaming, swearing and waving his arms. He refused to calm down and continued this performance after she called for assistance. This behavior *678 justifies a reasonable belief that his resistance to the tow might escalate once the tow truck arrived, generating a real possibility of physical confrontation between Biddle and the tow truck driver or the police officers. We believe this relationship between Biddle’s unreasonable conduct and a breach of the peace is clear enough to satisfy the requirements of probable cause.
Given the circumstances, we believe a reasonable officer could have believed, even mistakenly, that he had probable cause to arrest Biddle on one of the charges offered in justification.
See Hunter v. Bryant,
— U.S. -, -,
C. Malicious Prosecution
Whether a malicious prosecution action may be brought under § 1983 is still an open question. In a recent opinion, we ruled that such a claim could not be brought in the absence of incarceration or other palpable consequences.
Albright v. Oliver,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed, with Appellant to Bear Costs.
Notes
. The statute was held unconstitutional on its face in another case decided after the officer arrested the plaintiff.
See Spring v. Caldwell,
