Appellant Vessels sued for false arrest. The trial court granted summary judgment for appellees, the District of Columbia (the District) and Eleganza, Inc. (Eleganza). On appeal appellant urges separate grounds for reversal as to each appellee. First, he claims the trial court erred in failing, sua sponte, to discover a disputed issue of fact now urged as requiring a trial of his case against the District. Second, he argues that a correct reading of the law of false arrest bars summary judgment for Eleganza. We reject appellant’s first contention and therefore affirm the judgment of the District. However, we agree that undеr the uncontested facts presented at summary judgment, the unexplained recantation of the accusation that led to the arrest presented a material issue under the controlling principle of law and thus precluded summary judgment. Therefore we reverse for a trial against Eleganza.
I. The District
In support of its motion for summary judgment, the District submitted, pursuant to Super.Ct.Civ.R. 56(e), a statement of material facts to which there was no genuine issue. In sum, the statement and the references therein showed that an employee of Eleganza reported to the police that she had observed appellant enter the Eleganza store on August 12, 1981, аnd leave without paying for certain articles of clothing he had in his possession. The employee not only described appellant to the police but obtained the color, make and tag number of the automobile which he was driving, and which, it turned out, was registered to appellant. Appellant was arrested at his home after admitting that he had been in Georgetown that day. The next day, the employee recanted portions of her story, 1 causing the District to dismiss the charge against appellant.
The District bore the burden at summary judgment of making a prima facie showing that there was no genuine issue of fact in dispute and that it was еntitled to judgment as a matter of law. If it met this burden, appellant had to rebut that prima facie showing with specific evidence.
Wyman v. Roesner,
Now on appeal, Vessels for the first time seeks to contest the District’s recitation of the facts so as to create a triable factual issue. He directs our attention to Elegan-za’s answers to the District’s interrogatories which could be read as asserting that appellant had not been directly observed taking the clothing and that no statement to the contrary had been given to the police. 3 Appellant argues that if this allegation is true, there was no probable cause to arrest. 4
Appellant, however, utterly failed to make any such challenge before the trial court. Rules 12-I(k) and 56(e) required that he set forth in his combined opposition memorandum tо the motions for summary judgment all material facts as to which he contended there existed a genuine issue.
5
Under Rules 12-I(k) and 56(e),
6
the failure of a party opposing summary judgment to provide support for contentions of a factual dispute will result in the court’s acceptance of a movant’s statement as undisputed absent clear support for any such contention from the record.
Williams v. Gerstenfeld,
Appellant argues that although he did not comply with Rule 12-I(k) or 56(e), the trial court was required nonetheless to independently search the reсord, including an examination of the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file, and discover this hidden, potentially material disputed fact he now raises on appeal.
See Spell
*1019
man v. American Security Bank,
Appellant cannot rest on the general allegation in his pleading that the police made the arrest without probable cause to preserve a distinct factual question that was not asserted by appellant in the trial court.
Dilbeck v. Murphy,
We decline to encourage such a practice. Summary judgment is a valuable tool; it facilitates just, speedy and inexpensive determination of every action.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
II. Eleganza
The trial court held that
Smith v. District of Columbia,
To accuse someone of committing a crime, however slanderous it may be, is not enough to sustain a claim of false arrest so long as the decision whether to make the arrest remains with the police officer and is without the persuasion or influencе of the accuser.
Id. at 218. This rule bolsters the social policy which seeks to encourage persons to report criminal activities to the authorities without fear of civil reprisal for an honest mistake. However, Smith explicitly stated' that it did not concern the issue of a malicious reporting of an alleged сrime. We did not deal
with the issue of whether a malicious reporting of alleged criminal activity to law enforcement authorities would, in similar circumstances, give rise to a pri-ma facie claim of false arrest and imprisonment for there is not a scintilla of evidence to sustain the view that [the witnesses] acted maliciously in what they may hаve said to [the police].
Id. at 219.
Here, Eleganza accepted the District’s version of events for the purposes of summary judgment. 10 We think that under the principle of law correctly applicable here, a genuine issue of fact was raised as to the mental state of the employee 11 by the showing that the emрloyee explicitly told the police that she had observed appellant commit a theft and saw him depart with the goods, and then the next day, without explanation, recanted a significant element of the story.
The weight of authority holds that an informer who knowingly gives false information to a police officer necessarily interferes with the intelligent exercise of the officer’s independent judgment and discretion and thereby becomes liable for a false arrest that later occurs. To consciously misstate the facts under such circumstances “must be for the purpose of inducing action by the police.... ” Harper and Jаmes, Law of Torts, § 4.11 at 513 (1986);
see, e.g., Du Lac v. Perma Trans Products, Inc.,
We do not believe that the social policies at stake will be served by immunizing those who knowingly and maliciously make false reports to the police.
13
A plaintiff in a false arrest or false imprisonment suit cannot avoid summary judgment merely by alleging that the complaining witness acted with such a mental state. As we stated in
Smith v. Tucker,
Judgment for District of Columbia affirmed; judgment for Eleganza, Inc., reversed and remanded.
Notes
. In particular, she recanted her statement that she had seen appellant leaving the store with the items. She also recanted having seen the items in appellant’s car, as she had allegedly told the officers the previous day.
. At summary judgment, appellant’s opposition to the District’s motion focused on other facts which he asserted cast doubt on the officers’ justification in making the arrest: the reasonableness of one arresting officer’s actions in light of that officer’s general reservations about accusations made against young black males by white storekeepers; differences between a description of the alleged thief given by the store employee and appellant’s appearance; and, an accusation that the police had been notified that there was employee theft at the store. Thе trial court did not find these contentions presented a triable issue and appellant does not argue on appeal that the trial court erred in that regard.
. Appellant also suggests in effect that the recantation itself, as testified to in a police officer’s deposition, casts doubt on what the emрloyee originally told the officers.
. We assume for present purposes that if the employee in fact only told the officers that she saw appellant leave the store and then noticed some things missing, as the Eleganza answer to interrogatories suggests, a suit for false arrest would lie against the District.
. Appellаnt’s combined opposition memorandum to appellees’ summary judgment motions apparently was not received by the trial court prior to its order. After this was brought to the trial court’s attention in appellant’s motions to alter summary judgment, the trial court amend ed its order to permit appellant to submit another cоpy. The trial court denied these motions as well.
.Super.Ct.Civ.R. 12-I(k) provides in pertinent part:
Any party opposing a motion [for summary judgment] may, within 10 days after service of the motion upon him, serve and file a concise statement of genuine issues setting forth all material facts as to which it is contended there exists a genuine issue necessary to be litigated. In determining any motion for summary judgment, the Court may assume that facts as claimed by the moving party are admitted to exist without controversy except as and to the extent that such facts are asserted to be actually in good faith controverted in a statement filed pursuant to the motion. Any statement filed pursuant to this section of the Rule shall include therein references to parts of the record relied on to support such statements and shall be a part of the record.
Super.Ct.Civ.R. 56(e) provides in pertinent part:
[A]n adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his pleading, but his response, by affidavit or as otherwise provided in this Rule, must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. If he does not so respond, summary judgment, if appropriate, shall be entered against him.
. Kurth, supra, belongs to a distinct line of cases which govern unopposed motions for summary judgment. We do not address whether, in such cases, a trial court must examine the record more carefully for fаctual disputes that might be material to a general allegation in the complaint. In cases such as this one, where all parties participated in bringing what they felt were the significant factual issues to the court’s attention, the court may expect counsel not to completely overlook a genuine issue. See Lynch, supra and discussion infra.
. In its motion papers, Eleganza made reference to the possible dispute about the contents of the employee's statement to the police but asked the court to assume as true the District’s version of the events for summary judgment purposes. Appellant’s opposition memorandum made no mention of this matter but instead argued the police were unjustified in making the arrest for other distinct reasons not asserted on appeal. See note 1 supra.
.Cf. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
[T]he mere existence of some alleged factual dispute between the parties will not defeat an otherwise properly supported motion for summary judgment; the requirement is that there be no genuine issue of material fact.... Only disputes over facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude the entry of summary. Factual disputes that are irrelevant or unnecessary will not be counted.
[Emphasis in original.]
. At trial, Eleganza is still free to prove its interrogatory answer’s version of the events— that in fact no one from Eleganza ever definitivеly told the police that appellant was in possession of the stolen items.
. Over objection, Officer Jackson stated in deposition testimony that he believed the Eleganza employee might have blamed appellant to cover up her own inattention and picked appellant because he was black.
. Appellee Eleganza’s argument that our case law requires that a plaintiff prove that the defendant asserted some degree of participation and control in the actual arrest of the accused is misplaced. Our previous cases have never considered a properly pleaded assertion of a knowing and malicious false report. In addition, Eleganza’s assertion at oral argument that the police acquired additional information at appellant’s home (the fact that appellant admitted he had been in Georgetown that day) amounted to an independent deсision to arrest is not sufficient to avoid a trial as it is still possible that the alleged false information was a determining factor in the decision to arrest.
Jensen v. Barnett, supra,
.Before us, appellant asserts that the case law supports liability when the defendant knowingly gives false information and for this appeal we go no further. Specifically, we do not rule on the question whether the cause of action will lie when, as in appellant’s complaint, the defendant’s action is labeled "malicious” but not necessarily knowing, cf. Smith v. District of Columbia, supra (defining "malice"), nor when a defendant acts knowingly but nevertheless without malice nor from personal hostility or desire to offend, cf. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 44 (1965) (actor’s motives immaterial in false imprisonment action).
