Michael Tully sued Paul Barada and Catherine Custer under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, asserting that they violated his rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments by summoning him into court and initiating juvenile proceedings against him without probable cause. The district court dismissed Tully’s case for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Wayne Elwell was in his home, located about a football field’s length from a county-road bridge in Rush County, Indiana, when he observed that near the bridge were the headlights of a vehicle and a separate spotlight. He heard a gunshot coming from that direction, so he called the Sheriffs Department. He heard a second shot, saw someone go into the ditch, and called the sheriff again.
Deputy Sheriff Randy Chandler chased down a vehicle that had passed him on the way to the bridge. In the vehicle were Michael Tully, his friend Brock Carfield, a spotlight, a .22-caliber rifle, and a dead raccoon. Chandler asked the boys whether they knew it was wrong to shoot from a roadway, and they responded yes.
Tully and Carfield were charged in the Rush County Juvenile Court for shooting on or across a public highway in violation of Indiana Code § 14-22-6-9, with a charging document prepared by prosecutor Paul Barada based on a report com
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pleted by probation officer Catherine Custer. The trial court found that the allegations against Tully were true, and adjudicated him to be a delinquent child. Indiana’s appellate court reversed, finding insufficient evidence to support Tully’s delinquency adjudication.
M.P.T. v. State,
Then Tully complained in the district court that Barada and Custer were liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violating his constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment’s Procedural Due Process Clause not to be summoned into court and prosecuted without probable cause. Barada and Custer each moved to dismiss. The district court granted the motions, finding that a court summons is not a “seizure” under the Fourth Amendment, and that there is “no constitutional right not to be prosecuted without probable cause.”
Tully v. Barada,
II. DISCUSSION
We review de novo the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6);
Tamayo v. Blagojevich,
The Supreme Court has neither recognized nor foreclosed the possibility of plausibly asserting a right not to be prosecuted without probable cause under § 1983, either under the Fourth Amendment,
Wallace v. Kato,
So the Courts of Appeals have taken “a range of approaches” on § 1983 malicious prosecution claims.
See Kato,
But the defendants waived their absolute-immunity defense by failing to raise it in the district court.
See Scruggs v. Moellering,
They also waived the argument that, because Tully’s complaint showed probable cause on its face, it could not plausibly assert prosecution without probable cause. (The complaint recited the report of a gunshot, the sheriff finding Tully and his companion in the area, that they had the gun and the dead raccoon, and that they responded yes when the sheriff asked whether they knew it was illegal to shoot from the road.
Cf. United States v. Arvizu,
Nor can the defendants avoid waiver of the probable-cause affirmative defense by characterizing it as jurisdictional under
Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
In sum, Tully has managed to overcome the affirmative defenses of absolute immunity, the existence of probable cause, and res judicata, because the defendants waived them all. So we must reach the merits of the issue to which the parties devote their arguments, which is whether a plaintiff may assert a federal right not to be summoned into court and prosecuted without probable cause, under either the Fourth Amendment or the Fourteenth Amendment’s Procedural Due Process Clause. The answer is no, as we held in
Bielanski v. County of Kane,
Our holding should not be misconstrued to deny any rights to parties whom prosecutors or other officials falsely accuse by way of fabricating evidence, withholding exculpatory evidence, tampering with witnesses, or committing any other independent constitutional violation, none of which Tully alleged in his complaint. Nor should it be misconstrued to deny any rights to parties unlike Tully who have been wrongfully jailed or imprisoned. These are different types of malicious prosecution claims. See Schwartz, 1 Section 1988 Litigation § 3.18[a], p. 3-596.2 (2008 Supplement) (“It is not particularly helpful to characterize the plaintiffs claim as a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim. In every § 1983 constitutional case, the plaintiff must identify the precise constitutional right or rights relied upon.”). We hold only that a plaintiff cannot initiate a § 1983 claim asserting only that he was summoned and prosecuted without probable cause.
Having found that this particular type of “malicious prosecution” claim is untenable in federal courts — given that Tully alleged no facts to imply malice, his claim might be characterized more aptly as one for “negligent prosecution,”
see Bus. Guides, Inc. v. Chromatic Commc’ns Enters., Inc.,
We find that Tully was not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment merely by being summoned to appear in court, and that he received procedural due process under the Fourteenth Amendment when the state court system vindicated him. To the extent any harm to his reputation remains, his recourse is to expunge the juvenile court’s records. See Indiana Code §§ 31-39-8-1 et seq.
III. CONCLUSION
The district court properly found that a § 1983 claim cannot lie for a mere court summons and prosecution without probable cause. Therefore, its grant of the defendants’ motion to dismiss is Affirmed.
