Stewart Ginsberg appeals from Judge Squatrito’s grant of summary judgment to Healey Car & Truck Leasing, Inc. and Michael P. Healey (collectively “Healey”). Appellant claims, inter alia, that Healey violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by depriving him of a property interest without due process of law. The district court held that there was no triable issue as to whether Healey acted under color of law because there was no evidence that it acted jointly with a public official to deprive Ginsberg of his property. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
This case arises out of a contract dispute between Ginsberg and Healey. The various submissions disclose the following *270 events. On June 12, 1996, Ginsberg rented a truck from Healey. According to Ginsberg, Healey agreed that Ginsberg’s automobile insurer would pay the rental fee. However, when Ginsberg returned the truck approximately one month later, the insurer had not paid the fee, and Hea-ley insisted that Ginsberg tender payment. According to Healey, Ginsberg had agreed that he, not his insurer, would pay for the rental. Ginsberg refused to pay, and a heated argument ensued between Ginsberg and Healey’s manager, Gary Listorti. Eventually, Michael Healey asked Ginsberg to leave the showroom because his vulgar language and hostile behavior were disrupting Healey’s business and disturbing its customers. Ginsberg left and went to a nearby gas station to make a telephone call. Meanwhile, Listorti called the Ansonia Police Department to report the disturbance in the showroom and tp request that the Police Department send someone to the showroom in case Ginsberg returned.
Officer John Fitzgerald responded to the call. He met with Listorti, who described Ginsberg’s obstreperous behavior and the payment dispute. Fitzgerald then left Healey’s showroom and went to the gas station where he found Ginsberg. He asked Ginsberg to return to the showroom to “straighten out the matter.” Ginsberg complied, and, upon arriving, resumed his argument with Listorti. Fitzgerald intervened and opined that Ginsberg “owe[d] Healey ... the money for the rental” and that, if Ginsberg did not pay, he could be arrested for larceny. Moreover, when Ginsberg persisted to argue in a loud voice, Fitzgerald threatened to arrest him for breach of the peace.
Ginsberg finally wrote a check to Healey for $1,780.77 and left Healey’s showroom without being arrested. Later, however, he ordered his bank to stop payment on the check. To date, Ginsberg has not made any payment to Healey for the rental.
On March 20, 1997, appellant filed the instant action claiming that Healey and Fitzgerald deprived appellant of his property without due process of law in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and disclosed appellant’s debt to third persons in violation of Conn. Gen.Stat. § 36a-645. Appellant’s claims against Fitzgerald were later ordered dismissed pursuant to a settlement agreement. Judge Squatrito granted Hea-ley’s motion for summary judgment on the Section 1983 claim and dismissed the state-law claim against Healey without prejudice pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). See Ginsberg v. Healey Car & Truck Leasing, Inc., No. 3:97-503(DJS) (D.Conn. Sept. 30, 1998). This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Cronin v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
Of course, the substantive law identifies which facts are material.
See Liberty Lob
*271
by,
We may assume for present purposes that Healey deprived Ginsberg of his property without due process of law. Appellant also had to proffer evidence that Healey was a state actor.
See Adickes,
Private persons, jointly engaged with state officials in the prohibited action are acting “under color” of law for purposes of [Section 1983]. To act “under color” of law does not require that the accused be an officer of the State. It is enough that he is a willful participant in joint activity with the State or its agents.
United States v. Price,
Ginsberg’s complaint alleged that the Ansonia Police Department has a “custom, practice or policy” of dispatching officers to Healey’s premises when its customers are dissatisfied with their service. Although this allegation, if true, would support a finding of state action,
see, e.g., Alexis v. McDonald’s Restaurants,
The only evidence proffered by appellant to show that Healey acted under color of law was Fitzgerald’s active participation in the payment dispute with Ginsberg. Fitzgerald’s conduct is not alone sufficient to create a genuine dispute of material fact on this issue, however. The record shows only that Healey’s manager, Gary Listorti, called the Ansonia Police *272 Department Ginsberg was “causing a scene in the showroom” and that Michael Healey wanted a police officer there to quell a disturbance “£j]ust in case” Ginsberg returned. Appellant has not offered any evidence rebutting the deposition testimony of Listorti and Michael Healey that the dispute with Ginsberg was contentious or that Healey called the police in order to prevent further disruption of the business. Specifically, there is no evidence that Healey sought the assistance of the Ansonia Police Department to resolve the payment dispute rather than to prevent further disturbance in the showroom.
To sure, in explaining the history of the incident to Officer Fitzgerald, Listorti described the payment issue to him. But Healey’s provision of background information to a police officer does not by itself make Healey a joint participant in state action under Section 1983.
See Benavidez v. Gunnell,
Fitzgerald’s active role in attempting to resolve the dispute after Healey requested police assistance in preventing further disturbance also does not, without more, establish that Healey acted under color of law. The sole evidence is that, on his own initiative, Fitzgerald brought Ginsberg back to Healey’s showroom, told him that he was liable to Healey for the full amount of the bill, and warned that Ginsberg would be criminally liable if he failed to pay. Although this evidence would surely allow a trier to find that Fitzgerald acted under color of law in attempting to induce Ginsberg to pay the bill, it does not suffice to support a finding that Healey’s receiving the check was also under color of law. There is no evidence that Fitzgerald undertook to resolve the dispute pursuant to any agreement or plan with Healey, and a trier could not reasonably infer that Healey acted jointly with Fitzgerald simply because Fitzgerald prevailed upon Ginsberg to pay the bill.
Indeed, if Healey can be said to have acted jointly with Fitzgerald on these facts, a private party would be considered a state actor responsible for subsequent, independent actions of a police officer whenever it legitimately calls for official assistance or protection. Where, as here, a police officer exercises independent judgment in how to respond to a private party’s legitimate request for assistance, the private party is not “jointly engaged” in the officer’s conduct so as to render it a state actor under Section 1983.
See Alexis,
The fact that Healey did not ask Fitzgerald to cease his role in inducing Ginsberg to pay, is also not enough to make Healey a state actor absent any evidence of a “plan, prearrangement, conspiracy, custom, or policy.”
Alexis,
We therefore affirm the dismissal of the federal claim with prejudice and the state claim without prejudice.
Notes
. Appellant makes a related argument that, because the issue of whether a private party acts under color of law is a " ‘necessarily fact-bound inquiry,’ " a court cannot grant summary judgment on this issue.
See
Appellant's Brief at 14 (quoting
Lugar,
