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Per Curiam 

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

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No. 22鈥1025

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SYLVIA GONZALEZ, PETITIONER v. EDWARD TREVINO, II, et al.

on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the fifth circuit

[June 20, 2024]

Per Curiam.

In Nieves v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391, 402 (2019), this Court held that, as a general rule, a plaintiff bringing a retaliatory-arrest claim 鈥渕ust plead and prove the absence of probable cause for the arrest.鈥 At the same time, we recognized a narrow exception to that rule. The existence of probable cause does not defeat a plaintiff 鈥檚 claim if he produces 鈥渙bjective evidence that he was arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 Id., at 407. We granted certiorari in this case to consider whether the Fifth Circuit properly applied these principles. It did not. We therefore vacate that court鈥檚 judgment and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I

In 2019, Sylvia Gonzalez ran for a seat on the city council of Castle Hills, a small town in southern Texas. While she was on the campaign trail, Gonzalez heard multiple complaints about the city manager, Ryan Rapelye. As city manager, Rapelye was responsible for, among other things, enforcing the city鈥檚 laws and managing its budget.

Gonzalez was elected in May 2019. Her first act in office was to help gather signatures for a petition seeking Rapelye鈥檚 removal. Eventually, over 300 residents signed the petition. The petition was introduced at the next city council meeting, where discussions grew heated after various residents rose to Rapelye鈥檚 defense and spoke against Gonzalez. The discussion over the petition continued the next day.

At the end of the second day, Gonzalez was packing up her belongings when the mayor, Edward Trevino, II, asked her for the petition. Gonzalez indicated that the petition was in Trevino鈥檚 possession, which he denied. He then asked Gonzalez to check her binder, where she found the petition. Gonzalez claims that she 鈥渄id not intentionally put the petition in her binder,鈥 and that she was 鈥渟urprise[d]鈥 to find it there. Complaint and Jury Demand in No. 5:20鈥揷v鈥01151 (WD Tex., Sept. 9, 2020), ECF Doc. 1, p. 11.

Trevino brought this incident to the city police鈥檚 attention, and an investigation into these events soon began. Within a month, a private attorney tasked with leading the investigation concluded that Gonzalez had likely violated a Texas anti-tampering statute that, among other things, prohibits a person from intentionally 鈥渞emov[ing] . . . a governmental record.鈥 Tex. Penal Code Ann. 搂搂37.10(a)(3), (c)(1) (West Cum. Supp. 2023).[1]

On the private attorney鈥檚 request, a local Magistrate granted a warrant for Gonzalez鈥檚 arrest. When she heard the news, Gonzalez turned herself in and spent an evening in jail. The district attorney ultimately dismissed the charges. Gonzalez claims that this episode has convinced her to step away from political life.

Gonzalez brought suit under 42 U. S. C. 搂1983, in Federal District Court against Trevino along with the police chief and the private attorney in their individual capacities.[2] Her complaint alleged that she was arrested in retaliation for her role in organizing the petition for Rapelye鈥檚 removal and that the defendants therefore violated her First Amendment rights.

To bolster her claim, Gonzalez alleged that she had reviewed the past decade鈥檚 misdemeanor and felony data for Bexar County (where Castle Hills is located) and that her review had found that the Texas anti-tampering statute had never been used in the county 鈥渢o criminally charge someone for trying to steal a nonbinding or expressive document.鈥 ECF Doc. 1, at 17. Gonzalez鈥檚 search turned up 215 felony indictments, and she characterized the typical indictment as involving 鈥渁ccusations of either using or making fake government identification documents.鈥 Ibid. Other felony indictments included ones for fake checks, hiding murder evidence, or cheating on government exams. Every misdemeanor case, according to Gonzalez, involved 鈥渇ake social security numbers, driver鈥檚 licenses, [or] green cards.鈥 Ibid. Gonzalez pointed to this research as evidence that the defendants had engaged in a political vendetta by bringing a 鈥渟ham charge鈥 against her. Id., at 27.

The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. They argued that the presence of probable cause defeated Gonzalez鈥檚 retaliatory-arrest claims against the individual defendants. The District Court denied the defendants鈥 motion. Although Gonzalez conceded that probable cause supported her arrest, the court allowed her claim to advance after finding that it fell within an exception to the no-probable-cause rule that we recognized in Nieves Gonzalez v. Castle Hills, 2021 WL 4046758, *5, n. 7 (WD Tex., Mar. 12, 2021).

The Fifth Circuit reversed that decision on appeal. The court thought that a plaintiff 鈥檚 claim could fall within the Nieves exception only if the plaintiff proffered 鈥渃omparative evidence鈥 of 鈥渙therwise similarly situated individuals who engaged in the same criminal conduct but were not arrested.鈥 42 F. 4th 487, 493 (2022) (internal quotation marks omitted). Gonzalez鈥檚 claim failed because she did not provide such evidence.

We granted certiorari. 601 U. S. ___ (2023).

II

Gonzalez seeks reversal on two grounds. First, she asks us to reject the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 rule that plaintiffs must use specific comparator evidence to demonstrate that they fall within the Nieves exception. Second, Gonzalez contends that the Nieves no-probable-cause rule applies only to claims predicated on split-second arrests, rather than deliberative ones.

We agree with Gonzalez that the Fifth Circuit took an overly cramped view of Nieves. That court thought Gonzalez had to provide very specific comparator evidence 鈥 that is, examples of identifiable people who 鈥渕ishandled a government petition鈥 in the same way Gonzalez did but were not arrested. 42 F. 4th, at 492. Although the Nieves exception is slim, the demand for virtually identical and identifiable comparators goes too far.

We recognized the Nieves exception to account for 鈥渃ircumstances where officers have probable cause to make arrests, but typically exercise their discretion not to do so.鈥 587 U. S., at 406. To fall within the exception, a plaintiff must produce evidence to prove that his arrest occurred in such circumstances. The only express limit we placed on the sort of evidence a plaintiff may present for that purpose is that it must be objective in order to avoid 鈥渢he significant problems that would arise from reviewing police conduct under a purely subjective standard.鈥 Id., at 407.

Here, Gonzalez provided that sort of evidence. She was charged with intentionally 鈥渞emov[ing] . . . a governmental record.鈥 Tex. Penal Code Ann. 搂37.10(a)(3). Gonzalez鈥檚 survey is a permissible type of evidence because the fact that no one has ever been arrested for engaging in a certain kind of conduct 鈥 especially when the criminal prohibition is longstanding and the conduct at issue is not novel 鈥 makes it more likely that an officer has declined to arrest someone for engaging in such conduct in the past.

Because we agree with Gonzalez鈥檚 first argument, we do not need to reach her second. We vacate the judgment below and remand the case for the lower courts to assess whether Gonzalez鈥檚 evidence suffices to satisfy the Nieves exception.

It is so ordered.

Notes

[1]  The statute also prohibits a person from intentionally 鈥渄estroy[ing],鈥 鈥渃onceal[ing],鈥 or 鈥渙therwise impair[ing] the verity, legibility, or availability鈥 of a governmental record.

[2]  She also pressed a claim in this action against Castle Hills. That claim is not before us.


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

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No. 22鈥1025

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SYLVIA GONZALEZ, PETITIONER v. EDWARD TREVINO, II, et al.

on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the fifth circuit

[June 20, 2024]

Justice Alito, concurring.

The per curiam opinion correctly decides that the Fifth Circuit took an unduly narrow view of the exception we recognized in Nieves v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391 (2019). I write separately to provide further guidance on the scope of that decision.

I

Because the District Court dismissed Sylvia Gonzalez鈥檚 complaint for failure to state a claim, the per curiam opinion properly takes its facts solely from the complaint. But I provide a fuller account of the events leading up to her arrest because they may typify the messy quarrels that courts will have to sift through if we accept Gonzalez鈥檚 reading of our case law.

Upon her election to the city council, Gonzalez launched a campaign to oust Ryan Rapelye from his position as city manager. As part of her efforts, Gonzalez paid personal visits to Castle Hills residents, requesting their signatures and support. According to some accounts, her efforts were aggressive. Chalene Martinez averred that Gonzalez solicited her signature 鈥 鈥榰nder false pretenses鈥 鈥 鈥 specifically by misleading her about the nature of the petitions and by lying about Rapelye鈥檚 performance in office. Record in No. 5:20鈥揷v鈥01151 (WD Tex., Sept. 9, 2020), ECF Doc. 1, p. 9; App. 45, 52. Another resident, Jesus Quilantan, reported that Gonzalez had asked to see his parents. When she learned that they were not home, Gonzalez cajoled him into signing the petition on their behalf. Id., at 57. Her efforts paid off. In a town of roughly 4,000 inhabitants, she helped garner over 300 signatures for her petition seeking Rapelye鈥檚 removal.

At the next city council meeting, just over two weeks after Gonzalez鈥檚 election, one resident submitted a stack of documents representing the petition to remove Rapelye. As the presiding officer of the meeting, Mayor Edward Trevino assumed control of the petition. And as the Court鈥檚 opinion notes, the meeting grew contentious. Multiple residents spoke out in support of Rapelye. Martinez, for instance, accused Gonzalez of misleading residents into signing the petition based on false representations about Rapelye and the campaign for his removal. These allegations disturbed Trevino. The next morning, he arrived before the meeting resumed to see if the petition contained any anomalies. When he was finished, he fastened the documents together with a large black binder clip and placed the stack on top of his other papers on the dais.

What happened next was captured by surveillance videos.[1] Shortly before the meeting began, Trevino was engaged in conversation with two constituents. While he turned away from his papers, Gonzalez approached the dais and took the petition from his pile. After quickly flipping through its pages, Gonzalez placed the petition inside her binder.

During the meeting, Trevino could not find the petition among his papers. He also noticed that Gonzalez鈥檚 binder contained a familiar stack of documents held together with a black binder clip. But Trevino chalked this up to a coincidence, and he assumed that the city secretary had already collected the petition.

Trevino dropped this assumption when the city secretary asked him for the petition after the meeting. At this point, Trevino suspected that Gonzalez had taken the petition. He relayed those suspicions to Captain Esteban Zuniga, a police officer who was present at the meeting. Zuniga walked over to Gonzalez and asked her if she had taken the petition. After Gonzalez denied his accusation, Trevino suggested she check her binder.

This, too, was captured on tape. At Trevino鈥檚 prompting, Gonzalez slowly flipped through her binder. Before she reached the binder-clipped stack, however, she stopped and once again denied possessing the petition. Trevino and Zuniga simultaneously pointed to the visible black binder clip. Forced to produce the petition, Gonzalez told Zuniga that she thought it was an extra copy.

Trevino filed a criminal complaint against Gonzalez, alleging that she had stolen the petition. See ante, at 2. On account of Gonzalez鈥檚 political post, the police chief tasked Alex Wright 鈥 a peace officer and special detective 鈥 with leading the investigation. As a special detective, Wright is assigned cases 鈥渨hich might otherwise be considered sensitive . . . or delicate, either due to the nature of the crime or . . . the parties involved.鈥 App. 43.

Wright conducted a thorough investigation. He interviewed Trevino, Zuniga, and Martinez, each of whom gave him their version of these events. Zuniga said that he found it 鈥渙dd鈥 that Gonzalez claimed that she thought the petition in her binder was an 鈥渆xtr[a],鈥 given that she had strenuously denied having the petition in her possession. Id., at 48. After meeting with Martinez, Wright suspected that Gonzalez took the petition to avoid further scrutiny. Wright contacted Gonzalez several times to hear her side of the story, but she refused to speak with him.

The surveillance videos, moreover, confirmed Trevino and Zuniga鈥檚 account of Gonzalez鈥檚 evasiveness. From this evidence, Wright concluded that Gonzalez had likely violated Texas鈥檚 anti-tampering statute, which makes it a crime for someone to 鈥渞emov[e]鈥 a government document intentionally, Tex. Penal Code Ann. 搂37.10(a)(3) (West Cum. Supp. 2023), and he sought an arrest warrant from the local Magistrate. Wright鈥檚 warrant affidavit included details from his interviews with the witnesses and his review of the surveillance videos. The Magistrate agreed that probable cause supported Gonzalez鈥檚 arrest, and he granted Wright鈥檚 request.

The Court鈥檚 opinion completes the story. After the warrant was issued, Gonzalez spent an evening in jail. A month later, the district attorney dropped all charges against her. But Gonzalez鈥檚 suit against Trevino, Wright, and the police chief is still ongoing five years later. And Gonzalez has never disputed 鈥 at any point of the litigation 鈥 that probable cause supported her arrest.

II

Gonzalez attacks the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 judgment on two fronts. First, she contends that the Fifth Circuit took an unduly restrictive view of the Nieves exception. Second, she asks us to cabin the no-probable-cause requirement to on-the-spot arrests. The Court briskly dispatches this case on the first question, but I think lower courts and litigants deserve additional guidance. I therefore divide my analysis into three parts. First, I provide the relevant legal background for retaliatory-arrest and retaliatory-prosecution claims. Second, I elaborate on the scope of the Nieves exception. Third, I explain why Nieves is not limited to split-second arrests.

A

鈥淸T]he law is settled that as a general matter the First Amendment prohibits government officials from subjecting an individual to retaliatory actions, including criminal prosecutions, for speaking out.鈥 Hartman v. Moore, 547 U.S. 250, 256 (2006). We ordinarily analyze First Amendment retaliation claims under the two-step framework set out in Mt. Healthy City Bd. of Ed. v. Doyle, 429 U.S. 274, 287 (1977). At the first step, the plaintiff must demonstrate that he engaged in protected speech and that his speech was a 鈥 鈥榮ubstantial鈥 鈥 or 鈥 鈥榤otivating鈥 鈥 factor in the defendant鈥檚 decision to take action against him. Ibid. Once the plaintiff makes this showing, the burden shifts to the defendant at the second step to show that he would have taken the same adverse action even in the absence of the protected speech. Ibid. To carry these burdens, parties operating within the Mt. Healthy framework may present a wide range of evidence 鈥 both objective and subjective. See, e.g., id., at 282鈥283 (discussing the plaintiff 鈥檚 behavioral history in the years leading up to the litigation); Texas v. Lesage, 528 U.S. 18, 19 (1999) (per curiam) (the defendants produced an affidavit to explain that the plaintiff 鈥檚 application to graduate school was rejected because of his poor personal statement).

Our cases have admitted, however, that this framework fits uneasily with First Amendment retaliatory-arrest and retaliatory-prosecution claims for at least three reasons. First, it is all too easy for a plaintiff to subject a law- enforcement officer to the crucible of litigation based on allegations about an officer鈥檚 state of mind that are easy to make and difficult to disprove. For example, a driver with an anti-police bumper sticker on his car could claim that any traffic stop was due to his protected speech. Any person who carries a sign while trespassing, blocking traffic, or disturbing the peace could similarly allege that an arrest for these offenses was motivated by the sign鈥檚 message. We are loath to undertake such inquiries into subjective intent in the law-enforcement context. Cf. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 737 (2011); see also Kentucky v. King, 563 U.S. 452, 464 (2011); Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 812 (1996).

Second, protected speech is often a 鈥渨holly legitimate consideration鈥 for officers when deciding whether to file charges or to make an arrest. Reichle v. Howards, 566 U.S. 658, 668 (2012). An 鈥渙fficer may decide to arrest [a] suspect because his speech provides evidence of a crime or suggests a potential threat.鈥 Ibid. The facts of Nieves itself illustrate this point. In that case, the police officers decided to arrest the plaintiff for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest because 鈥渢hey perceived [the plaintiff] to be a threat鈥 based in part on the combative tone and content of his speech. 587 U. S., at 401. And no one suggested that an individual鈥檚 speech is off-limits in this respect. Ibid. (explaining that 鈥渢he content and manner of a suspect鈥檚 speech鈥 may provide important information for law enforcement).

Third, the machinery of criminal justice often works through multiple government officers. An officer who makes an arrest may do so based on his own judgment, orders from a superior, or as in this case, a warrant issued by a magistrate. Thus, it is often challenging to draw a straight line between the plaintiff 鈥檚 protected speech and the defendant from whom he seeks recovery. In such circumstances, it may be difficult to discern whether the officer acted improperly. Cf. Messerschmidt v. Millender, 565 U.S. 535, 546 (2012) (noting that 鈥渢he fact that a neutral magistrate has issued a warrant is the clearest indication that the [arresting] officers acted in an objectively reasonable manner鈥); Bilida v. McCleod, 211 F.3d 166, 174鈥175 (CA1 2000) (Boudin, J.) (鈥淧lausible instructions from a superior or fellow officer support qualified immunity where, viewed objectively in light of the surrounding circumstances, they could lead a reasonable officer to conclude that the necessary legal justification for his actions exists鈥).

For these reasons, we have required plaintiffs pressing such claims to prove the absence of probable cause as a threshold requirement before they can advance their claims under the Mt. Healthy framework. We defended this requirement on the assumption that the 鈥渆xistence of probable cause will be at issue in practically all鈥 retaliatory- arrest or retaliatory-prosecution cases given its obvious evidentiary value. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 400 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, we reasoned that this requirement, which imposes 鈥渓ittle or no added cost鈥 on the parties or the court, was a small price to pay for a plaintiff seeking to discard the presumption of good faith we afford to law-enforcement officials. Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted).

In Nieves, however, we recognized a narrow exception to the no-probable-cause rule. While a showing of probable cause generally defeats a retaliatory-arrest claim, we observed that this requirement should be relaxed 鈥渨here officers have probable cause to make arrests, but typically exercise their discretion not to do so.鈥 Id., at 406. Concerned that some police officers might exploit the arrest power as a means of suppressing disfavored speech, we explained that the no-probable-cause requirement may be set aside 鈥渨hen a plaintiff presents objective evidence that he was arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 Id., at 407; cf. United States v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456, 470 (1996).

In recognizing this exception, we emphasized that it is merely a 鈥渘arrow qualification鈥 to the general rule. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 406. And to illustrate the thinness of this exception, Nieves offered the example of a vocal critic of the police who is arrested for jaywalking. Id., at 407. The unyielding enforcement of a no-probable-cause requirement in this context would be insufficiently protective of the plaintiff 鈥檚 First Amendment rights because the defendant鈥檚 animus is a much likelier explanation for such an arrest than the mere existence of probable cause. We chose this example because jaywalking represents the type of relatively benign offense that is 鈥渆ndemic but rarely results in arrest.鈥 Ibid.

B

Because Gonzalez concedes that her arrest was supported by probable cause, her claim can proceed only if she falls within Nieves鈥檚 exception.[2] Under this exception, a plaintiff 鈥檚 inability to prove the absence of probable cause is excused only if the plaintiff presents 鈥渙bjective evidence that he was arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 Ibid.

The Court is correct to note that a plaintiff must provide objective evidence to fall within the Nieves exception. We enforce this requirement to avoid 鈥渢he significant problems that would arise from reviewing police conduct under a purely subjective standard.鈥 Ibid.; see also Horton v. California, 496 U.S. 128, 138 (1990) (鈥淸E]venhanded law enforcement is best achieved by the application of objective standards of conduct, rather than standards that depend upon the subjective state of mind of the officer鈥). For that reason, evidence regarding an officer鈥檚 state of mind 鈥 e.g., evidence of bad blood between the officer and the plaintiff or allegations that the officer harbored animus 鈥 does not qualify.

The defendants argue that permitting anything other than the kind of strict comparator evidence demanded by the Fifth Circuit will defeat the whole purpose of the no-probable-cause rule. Our decisions reflect our sensitivity to these concerns, see Lozman v. Riviera Beach, 585 U.S. 87, 98 (2018), but a proper application of the Nieves exception will not produce this result for at least two reasons.

First, courts must remember that the exception is just that 鈥 an exception, and a narrow one at that. Judges should not conflate the question whether certain evidence can be considered under the Nieves exception with the entirely distinct question whether the evidence suffices to satisfy this threshold inquiry. We have long recognized 鈥淸t]he deep-rooted nature of law-enforcement discretion,鈥 Castle Rock v. Gonzales, 545 U.S. 748, 761 (2005), and a plaintiff therefore must surmount a very high bar when the official can point to the existence of probable cause underpinning an arrest. The example in Nieves of a police officer arresting a vocal critic for jaywalking serves as a helpful benchmark for courts and litigants. A plaintiff may satisfy the Nieves exception only by providing comparably powerful evidence.

Second, evidence that tends to show only that the plaintiff 鈥檚 constitutionally protected speech was a 鈥渟ubstantial or motivating factor鈥 behind the adverse action should not be considered unless and until the plaintiff can provide other evidence to satisfy the Nieves exception. Lozman, 585 U. S., at 97. This requirement flows from the recognition that the Nieves exception serves only as a gateway to the Mt. Healthy framework. The Nieves exception asks whether the plaintiff engaged in the type of conduct that is unlikely to result in arrest or prosecution. By contrast, the Mt. Healthy inquiry is keyed toward whether the defendant鈥檚 adverse decision was influenced by the plaintiff 鈥檚 constitutionally protected speech.

To see how these principles operate in practice, consider the following hypothetical. Suppose a plaintiff charged with a particular crime brings three pieces of evidence. First, he proffers an affidavit from an officer testifying that no one has been prosecuted in the jurisdiction for engaging in similar conduct. Second, he produces a statistical study corroborating the affidavit. And third, the plaintiff testifies that a police officer has been surveilling his house for several weeks. The first two pieces of evidence count toward the Nieves exception, but the third piece of evidence does not. Instead, the third piece of evidence can be considered only after his claim advances to the Mt. Healthy framework. Any other approach would render the Mt. Healthy framework redundant in most, if not all, cases.

In Nieves, three Justices dissented at least in part and would have permitted plaintiffs in cases with probable cause to proceed to trial if they were able to survive summary judgment under Mt. Healthy. They argued their positions forcefully and well, but it is not faithful to our precedent to use the 鈥渘arrow鈥 Nieves exception as a crowbar for overturning the core of that decision鈥檚 holding, supported by six Justices 鈥 namely, that the existence of probable cause either always or nearly always precludes a suit like this one.

I now turn to the facts of Gonzalez鈥檚 case. Here, her evidence is of the type that plaintiffs can use in making out their case under the Nieves exception. I agree with the Court that a plaintiff does not need to identify another person who was not arrested under the same law for engaging in a carbon-copy course of conduct. Our jaywalking example in Nieves plainly proves this point. We did not suggest that a vocal critic of the police charged with jaywalking had to produce evidence that police officers knowingly refused to arrest other specific jaywalkers. And we certainly did not suggest that this jaywalker had to find others who committed the offense under the same conditions as those in his case 鈥 for example, on a street with the same amount of traffic traveling at the same speed within a certain distance from a crosswalk at the same time of day.

On remand, the Fifth Circuit must determine whether Gonzalez鈥檚 survey is enough for her claim to advance to the Mt. Healthy framework. The Nieves exception is most easily satisfied by strong affirmative evidence that the defendant let other individuals off the hook for comparable behavior. But when a plaintiff 鈥檚 claim hinges on negative evidence, like what Gonzalez offers here, context is key for determining the strength of his case. When a plaintiff 鈥檚 alleged criminal conduct is egregious or novel, for instance, the lack of similar arrests might warrant little weight. Courts must also ensure that they are assessing the plaintiff 鈥檚 conduct at the appropriate level of generality because every arrest, if defined too specifically, can be described as the first of its kind. If a plaintiff could evade the no- probable-cause requirement simply by submitting evidence that no one who engaged in an exact duplicate of his behavior had been arrested, courts will be 鈥渇looded with dubious retaliatory arrest suits,鈥 Lozman, 585 U. S., at 98, and the Nieves鈥檚 exception would drain the no-probable-cause requirement of all force.

C

We also granted certiorari on whether the Nieves no-probable-cause rule applies beyond split-second arrests. The parties vigorously contested this question in briefing and at oral argument, yet the Court today reserves judgment on this issue. I disagree with this course. In my view, Nieves already answered this question in the affirmative after faithfully applying our precedents.

Nothing about Nieves鈥檚 rationale depends on whether the officer made a split-second arrest of the plaintiff.[3] That decision expressly borrowed the no-probable-cause rule and its underlying justifications from Hartman, the seminal case governing retaliatory-prosecution claims. Nieves self-consciously emulated Hartman because both types of retaliation claims share the same critical characteristics.

Three features stand out. For one thing, courts adjudicating either claim face the 鈥渦ltimate problem鈥 of determining 鈥渨hether the adverse government action was caused by the officer鈥檚 malice or the plaintiff 鈥檚 potentially criminal conduct.鈥 Nieves, 587 U. S., at 402; see also Hartman, 547 U. S., at 265. The causal challenge is similarly complex in both contexts because 鈥減rotected speech is often a 鈥榳holly legitimate consideration鈥 鈥 for officers deciding whether to launch a prosecution or to make an arrest. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 401. For another, with or without the no-probable-cause rule, the presence or absence of probable cause plays a similarly vital role in both retaliatory-arrest and retaliatory-prosecution cases. That is because 鈥 鈥榚vidence of the presence or absence of probable cause . . . will be available in virtually every鈥 鈥 retaliatory-prosecution or retaliatory-arrest case and because such evidence speaks volumes about the objective reasonableness of a defendant鈥檚 action. Ibid.; see also Hartman, 547 U. S., at 265. Lastly, by focusing the inquiry on objective indicia of reasonableness, a no-probable-cause rule reflects our general reluctance to probe the subjective intent of law-enforcement officers. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 403; see also Hartman, 547 U. S., at 263鈥265.

This analysis 鈥 none of which turns on whether an arrest was made in a split-second context 鈥 is plainly incompatible with Gonzalez鈥檚 theory. And it would be bizarre to think Nieves silently limited itself to split-second decisions when the reasoning it imported came from the retaliatory- prosecution context, which by definition involves only deliberative government acts.[4]

Gonzalez argues that we should limit Nieves to split- second cases because, in her view, a retaliatory-arrest claim is analogous to the common-law tort of abuse of process, which lacks a no-probable-cause requirement. Tr. of Oral Arg. 5鈥6. She urges us to rely on the abuse-of-process analogy to draw a line between split-second arrests with no process and arrests pursuant to process that can be likened to the common-law tort. Ibid.

Gonzalez鈥檚 appeal to the common law is wrong twice over. To start, she is wrong to suggest that the abuse-of-process tort was somehow not before us when we decided Nieves. Our prior decision in Hartman gave full consideration to whether abuse of process was the appropriate analog for a retaliatory-prosecution claim. See 547 U. S., at 258 (noting that 鈥渨e could debate whether the closer common-law analog to retaliatory prosecution is malicious prosecution (with its no-probable-cause element) or abuse of process (without it)鈥). By holding that such a claim requires a plaintiff to prove there was no probable cause for the charge, Hartman necessarily rejected the force of any analogy to abuse of process. In Nieves, the core dispute was whether we should extend the same no-probable-cause requirement to retaliatory-arrest claims. Once we decided to do so, we copied Hartman鈥檚 reasoning. It is therefore quite clear that the Nieves Court was aware of the abuse-of-process tort, as well as the argument that this tort should govern our decision. And if we needed any reminding, the United States argued in Nieves that 鈥淸a] retaliatory-arrest claim is not analogous to the tort of abuse of process.鈥 Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae in Nieves v. Bartlett, O. T. 2018, No. 17鈥1174, p. 10, n. 2.

Gonzalez鈥檚 common-law argument suffers from another defect. It is well settled that common-law principles are meant to serve as helpful guides rather than prefabricated components of a 搂1983 claim. Manuel v. Joliet, 580 U.S. 357, 370 (2017); see also Rehberg v. Paulk, 566 U.S. 356, 366 (2012) (鈥淸T]he Court has not suggested that 搂1983 is simply a federalized amalgamation of pre-existing common-law claims鈥). At the end of the day, none of our decisions in this area has unthinkingly outsourced our analysis to the common law of torts. In Hartman, for instance, we expressly declined the parties鈥 鈥渋nvitation to rely on common-law parallels,鈥 and never took a position on whether malicious prosecution or abuse of process was the better analog to retaliatory prosecution. 547 U. S., at 258. And in Nieves, we looked to the common law only to 鈥渃onfir[m]鈥 what we had already concluded: that the same no-probable-cause requirement we established in Hartman should also apply to retaliatory-arrest claims. 587 U. S., at 405. Common-law torts can assist our analysis, but they do not dictate every dimension of a 搂1983 claim.

And that is for good reason. Many 搂1983 claims 鈥渃an be favorably analogized to more than one of the ancient common-law forms of action.鈥 Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U.S. 261, 272鈥273 (1985). Because any analogy to a common-law cause of action is thus 鈥渂ound to be imperfect,鈥 id., at 272, we necessarily deal in generalities when we look to the common law to define 搂1983 claims.[5] The specific facts of a given case might align more or less well with the chosen common-law analog, but until today no one has suggested that our jurisprudence requires courts to toggle between different tort analogies within the same class of 搂1983 claims. Consider the parties鈥 arguments in Hartman. The defendants urged us to analogize retaliatory-prosecution claims to the malicious-prosecution tort, while the plaintiff suggested that abuse of process might be the more apt analog. Brief for Petitioners 25鈥30 and Brief for Respondent 41鈥42 in Hartman v. Moore, O. T. 2005, No. 04鈥1495. But neither party asked us to adopt the malicious-prosecution analogy for some 搂1983 retaliatory-prosecution claims while relying on the abuse-of-process analogy for others.

Gonzalez, by contrast, invites us to slice and dice every complaint alleging a retaliatory-arrest claim based on a quick skim of the facts at the motion-to-dismiss stage. Under her view, the elements of a plaintiff 鈥檚 meritorious 搂1983 claim may evolve throughout the lawsuit as more facts are discovered and verified. I see little value in endorsing this awkward and predictably inefficient innovation.

Gonzalez鈥檚 proposed limit on Nieves would also be unworkable in practice because it raises thorny line-drawing questions about the meaning of a 鈥渟plit-second鈥 decision to arrest. Consider an officer who surveils a political dissident for many months with the plan of arresting him the moment he broke the law. Would that arrest be considered a split-second decision under Gonzalez鈥檚 view? Or suppose that an arresting officer takes several minutes to confer with another officer on the scene. Would the no-probable-cause requirement apply? What if an officer takes time to ensure that everyone at a crime scene is safe before completing an arrest? These hypotheticals illustrate the vast practical difficulties with Gonzalez鈥檚 theory, and there is no principled basis for drawing such finely grained lines in any event.

A 鈥渟plit-second鈥 rule would also create a perverse incentive for police officers to make quick arrest decisions rather than proceeding in a deliberative manner. Gonzalez鈥檚 test punishes the city officials for seeking a warrant from a neutral magistrate before arresting her. Under her approach, the defendants would have been better off if they had arrested her immediately. I see no good reason to switch out Nieves for a novel doctrinal dichotomy that generates such counterintuitive results.

In sum, Nieves applies to all retaliatory-arrest claims brought under 搂1983. And that decision means what it says. 鈥淸P]robable cause should generally defeat a retaliatory arrest claim,鈥 and a plaintiff bringing such a claim 鈥渕ust plead and prove the absence of probable cause for the arrest鈥 unless he can fit within its narrow exception. 587 U. S., at 402, 406. Nothing in the Court鈥檚 decision today should be understood as casting doubt on this holding.

III

With these observations, I join the Court鈥檚 opinion.

Notes

[1]  These videos are publicly available, and they can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGXht6ARK_4 and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGLIrFiso1c.

[2]  For this reason, I assume for the sake of argument that her alleged conduct constituted a violation of Texas鈥檚 anti-tampering statute.

[3]  Indeed, the plaintiff in Nieves implied that the officer held a grudge against him before he even had an opportunity to take the plaintiff into custody. See 587 U. S., at 396鈥397.

[4]  It is certainly true that we made a fleeting reference to split-second arrests in Nieves. Specifically, we mentioned that officers often must make quick, difficult assessments of a potential arrestee鈥檚 conduct and speech to determine whether the subject poses a threat. 587 U. S., at 401. But we offered that observation as an additional justification for the no-probable-cause rule rather than as a limit on the rule鈥檚 applicability. The 鈥ultimate problem鈥 remains the difficulty of figuring out whether the arrest was motivated by 鈥渢he officer鈥檚 malice or the plaintiff 鈥檚 potentially criminal conduct.鈥 Id., at 402 (emphasis added).

[5]   First Amendment retaliation claims offer a particularly good example of this point. Justice Thomas鈥檚 dissent in this case shows, at a minimum, that there are strong reasons to suspect that the abuse-of-process tort is an inferior analog compared to the torts of false imprisonment, malicious arrest, and malicious prosecution. See post, at 1鈥3.

We also granted certiorari on whether the Nieves no-probable-cause rule applies beyond split-second arrests. The parties vigorously contested this question in briefing and at oral argument, yet the Court today reserves judgment on this issue. I disagree with this course. In my view, Nieves already answered this question in the affirmative after faithfully applying our precedents.

Nothing about Nieves鈥檚 rationale depends on whether the officer made a split-second arrest of the plaintiff.[3] That decision expressly borrowed the no-probable-cause rule and its underlying justifications from Hartman, the seminal case governing retaliatory-prosecution claims. Nieves self-consciously emulated Hartman because both types of retaliation claims share the same critical characteristics.

Three features stand out. For one thing, courts adjudicating either claim face the 鈥渦ltimate problem鈥 of determining 鈥渨hether the adverse government action was caused by the officer鈥檚 malice or the plaintiff 鈥檚 potentially criminal conduct.鈥 Nieves, 587 U. S., at 402; see also Hartman, 547 U. S., at 265. The causal challenge is similarly complex in both contexts because 鈥減rotected speech is often a 鈥榳holly legitimate consideration鈥 鈥 for officers deciding whether to launch a prosecution or to make an arrest. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 401. For another, with or without the no-probable-cause rule, the presence or absence of probable cause plays a similarly vital role in both retaliatory-arrest and retaliatory-prosecution cases. That is because 鈥 鈥榚vidence of the presence or absence of probable cause . . . will be available in virtually every鈥 鈥 retaliatory-prosecution or retaliatory-arrest case and because such evidence speaks volumes about the objective reasonableness of a defendant鈥檚 action. Ibid.; see also Hartman, 547 U. S., at 265. Lastly, by focusing the inquiry on objective indicia of reasonableness, a no-probable-cause rule reflects our general reluctance to probe the subjective intent of law-enforcement officers. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 403; see also Hartman, 547 U. S., at 263鈥265.

This analysis 鈥 none of which turns on whether an arrest was made in a split-second context 鈥 is plainly incompatible with Gonzalez鈥檚 theory. And it would be bizarre to think Nieves silently limited itself to split-second decisions when the reasoning it imported came from the retaliatory- prosecution context, which by definition involves only deliberative government acts.[4]

Gonzalez argues that we should limit Nieves to split- second cases because, in her view, a retaliatory-arrest claim is analogous to the common-law tort of abuse of process, which lacks a no-probable-cause requirement. Tr. of Oral Arg. 5鈥6. She urges us to rely on the abuse-of-process analogy to draw a line between split-second arrests with no process and arrests pursuant to process that can be likened to the common-law tort. Ibid.

Gonzalez鈥檚 appeal to the common law is wrong twice over. To start, she is wrong to suggest that the abuse-of-process tort was somehow not before us when we decided Nieves. Our prior decision in Hartman gave full consideration to whether abuse of process was the appropriate analog for a retaliatory-prosecution claim. See 547 U. S., at 258 (noting that 鈥渨e could debate whether the closer common-law analog to retaliatory prosecution is malicious prosecution (with its no-probable-cause element) or abuse of process (without it)鈥). By holding that such a claim requires a plaintiff to prove there was no probable cause for the charge, Hartman necessarily rejected the force of any analogy to abuse of process. In Nieves, the core dispute was whether we should extend the same no-probable-cause requirement to retaliatory-arrest claims. Once we decided to do so, we copied Hartman鈥檚 reasoning. It is therefore quite clear that the Nieves Court was aware of the abuse-of-process tort, as well as the argument that this tort should govern our decision. And if we needed any reminding, the United States argued in Nieves that 鈥淸a] retaliatory-arrest claim is not analogous to the tort of abuse of process.鈥 Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae in Nieves v. Bartlett, O. T. 2018, No. 17鈥1174, p. 10, n. 2.

Gonzalez鈥檚 common-law argument suffers from another defect. It is well settled that common-law principles are meant to serve as helpful guides rather than prefabricated components of a 搂1983 claim. Manuel v. Joliet, 580 U.S. 357, 370 (2017); see also Rehberg v. Paulk, 566 U.S. 356, 366 (2012) (鈥淸T]he Court has not suggested that 搂1983 is simply a federalized amalgamation of pre-existing common-law claims鈥). At the end of the day, none of our decisions in this area has unthinkingly outsourced our analysis to the common law of torts. In Hartman, for instance, we expressly declined the parties鈥 鈥渋nvitation to rely on common-law parallels,鈥 and never took a position on whether malicious prosecution or abuse of process was the better analog to retaliatory prosecution. 547 U. S., at 258. And in Nieves, we looked to the common law only to 鈥渃onfir[m]鈥 what we had already concluded: that the same no-probable-cause requirement we established in Hartman should also apply to retaliatory-arrest claims. 587 U. S., at 405. Common-law torts can assist our analysis, but they do not dictate every dimension of a 搂1983 claim.

And that is for good reason. Many 搂1983 claims 鈥渃an be favorably analogized to more than one of the ancient common-law forms of action.鈥 Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U.S. 261, 272鈥273 (1985). Because any analogy to a common-law cause of action is thus 鈥渂ound to be imperfect,鈥 id., at 272, we necessarily deal in generalities when we look to the common law to define 搂1983 claims.[5] The specific facts of a given case might align more or less well with the chosen common-law analog, but until today no one has suggested that our jurisprudence requires courts to toggle between different tort analogies within the same class of 搂1983 claims. Consider the parties鈥 arguments in Hartman. The defendants urged us to analogize retaliatory-prosecution claims to the malicious-prosecution tort, while the plaintiff suggested that abuse of process might be the more apt analog. Brief for Petitioners 25鈥30 and Brief for Respondent 41鈥42 in Hartman v. Moore, O. T. 2005, No. 04鈥1495. But neither party asked us to adopt the malicious-prosecution analogy for some 搂1983 retaliatory-prosecution claims while relying on the abuse-of-process analogy for others.

Gonzalez, by contrast, invites us to slice and dice every complaint alleging a retaliatory-arrest claim based on a quick skim of the facts at the motion-to-dismiss stage. Under her view, the elements of a plaintiff 鈥檚 meritorious 搂1983 claim may evolve throughout the lawsuit as more facts are discovered and verified. I see little value in endorsing this awkward and predictably inefficient innovation.

Gonzalez鈥檚 proposed limit on Nieves would also be unworkable in practice because it raises thorny line-drawing questions about the meaning of a 鈥渟plit-second鈥 decision to arrest. Consider an officer who surveils a political dissident for many months with the plan of arresting him the moment he broke the law. Would that arrest be considered a split-second decision under Gonzalez鈥檚 view? Or suppose that an arresting officer takes several minutes to confer with another officer on the scene. Would the no-probable-cause requirement apply? What if an officer takes time to ensure that everyone at a crime scene is safe before completing an arrest? These hypotheticals illustrate the vast practical difficulties with Gonzalez鈥檚 theory, and there is no principled basis for drawing such finely grained lines in any event.

A 鈥渟plit-second鈥 rule would also create a perverse incentive for police officers to make quick arrest decisions rather than proceeding in a deliberative manner. Gonzalez鈥檚 test punishes the city officials for seeking a warrant from a neutral magistrate before arresting her. Under her approach, the defendants would have been better off if they had arrested her immediately. I see no good reason to switch out Nieves for a novel doctrinal dichotomy that generates such counterintuitive results.

In sum, Nieves applies to all retaliatory-arrest claims brought under 搂1983. And that decision means what it says. 鈥淸P]robable cause should generally defeat a retaliatory arrest claim,鈥 and a plaintiff bringing such a claim 鈥渕ust plead and prove the absence of probable cause for the arrest鈥 unless he can fit within its narrow exception. 587 U. S., at 402, 406. Nothing in the Court鈥檚 decision today should be understood as casting doubt on this holding.

III

With these observations, I join the Court鈥檚 opinion.

Notes

[1]  These videos are publicly available, and they can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGXht6ARK_4 and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGLIrFiso1c.

[2]  For this reason, I assume for the sake of argument that her alleged conduct constituted a violation of Texas鈥檚 anti-tampering statute.

[3]  Indeed, the plaintiff in Nieves implied that the officer held a grudge against him before he even had an opportunity to take the plaintiff into custody. See 587 U. S., at 396鈥397.

[4]  It is certainly true that we made a fleeting reference to split-second arrests in Nieves. Specifically, we mentioned that officers often must make quick, difficult assessments of a potential arrestee鈥檚 conduct and speech to determine whether the subject poses a threat. 587 U. S., at 401. But we offered that observation as an additional justification for the no-probable-cause rule rather than as a limit on the rule鈥檚 applicability. The 鈥ultimate problem鈥 remains the difficulty of figuring out whether the arrest was motivated by 鈥渢he officer鈥檚 malice or the plaintiff 鈥檚 potentially criminal conduct.鈥 Id., at 402 (emphasis added).

[5]   First Amendment retaliation claims offer a particularly good example of this point. Justice Thomas鈥檚 dissent in this case shows, at a minimum, that there are strong reasons to suspect that the abuse-of-process tort is an inferior analog compared to the torts of false imprisonment, malicious arrest, and malicious prosecution. See post, at 1鈥3.


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

_________________

No. 22鈥1025

_________________

SYLVIA GONZALEZ, PETITIONER v. EDWARD TREVINO, II, et al.

on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the fifth circuit

[June 20, 2024]

Justice Kavanaugh, concurring.

Sylvia Gonzalez was arrested for intentionally stealing a government record. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. 搂37.10(a)(3) (West Cum. Supp. 2023). Gonzalez sued city officials under 42 U. S. C. 搂1983, alleging that she was arrested in retaliation for First Amendment-protected activity.

But Gonzalez conceded that city officials had probable cause to arrest her for intentionally removing the government record. (A video shows Gonzalez putting the government record into her binder at a city council meeting. See ante, at 1鈥4 (Alito, J., concurring).) An arrestee ordinarily cannot sue a public official under 搂1983 for retaliatory arrest if the official had probable cause to make the arrest. See Nieves v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391, 404 (2019). To somehow maintain her 搂1983 suit, Gonzalez invoked what is known as the Nieves exception. That exception applies when an individual is arrested for minor criminal conduct where officers 鈥渢ypically exercise their discretion not鈥 to arrest. Id., at 406. The prime example is jaywalking. Id., at 407.

To come within the Nieves exception, Gonzalez was required to present 鈥渙bjective evidence鈥 that she was arrested when 鈥渟imilarly situated individuals鈥 who engaged in the same conduct would not have been arrested. Ibid. Of course, Gonzalez could not plausibly claim that people in Texas who steal things (or more precisely here, who steal government records) do not get arrested. Instead, she says that she took the government record accidentally, not intentionally, and that people who accidentally remove government documents are not arrested.

Properly understood, that is not a Nieves-exception claim at all. The Nieves exception is a conduct-based comparison. Only if the conduct does not usually trigger an arrest under any statute can you have a Nieves-exception claim 鈥 like jaywalking. Gonzalez鈥檚 argument turns not on her conduct (taking government records) but rather on her mens rea. She essentially argues that an objectively reasonable officer would have known that Gonzalez accidentally rather than intentionally took the government record.

When Gonzalez conceded that the officials had probable cause to arrest her, however, she necessarily conceded that the officers had probable cause to conclude that she 鈥渋ntentionally鈥 removed the document. Tex. Penal Code Ann. 搂37.10(a)(3). That may have been an unwise concession. But it should have foreclosed Gonzalez鈥檚 attempt to contest her mens rea for purposes of her 搂1983 retaliatory arrest claim. And even if Gonzalez had not made the concession, the question here would be whether an objectively reasonable officer would have known that Gonzalez accidentally (rather than intentionally) took the document. In short, this is (at most) a case about probable cause as to mens rea, not about conduct-based comparisons. This case has nothing to do with the Nieves exception.

At this point, the Court鈥檚 grant of certiorari looks ill-advised given that the question presented about the Nieves exception bears no relation to the issue on which Gonzalez鈥檚 suit actually turns. In any event, we are where we are. I concur in the per curiam because the per curiam does not seem to say anything that is harmful to the law, even though the per curiam (in my view) does not really have anything to do with Gonzalez鈥檚 case.


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

_________________

No. 22鈥1025

_________________

SYLVIA GONZALEZ, PETITIONER v. EDWARD TREVINO, II, et al.

on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the fifth circuit

[June 20, 2024]

Justice Jackson, with whom Justice Sotomayor joins, concurring.

Today, the Court rightly recognizes that petitioner Sylvia Gonzalez鈥檚 survey 鈥 showing that, in the last decade, no one charged with the crime for which she was arrested had engaged in conduct similar to hers 鈥 is objective evidence admissible to prove that she 鈥渨as arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 Nieves v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391, 407 (2019); see ante, at 5.

That recognition, however, should not be taken to suggest that plaintiffs cannot use other types of objective evidence to make this showing. The Nieves exception is satisfied in 鈥渃ircumstances where officers have probable cause to make arrests, but typically exercise their discretion not to do so.鈥 587 U. S., at 406. 鈥淭he only express limit we placed on the sort of evidence a plaintiff may present for that purpose is that it must be objective.鈥 Ante, at 4. As the United States explains, such objective evidence could 鈥渋nclude officers鈥 employment of an unusual, irregular, or unnecessarily onerous arrest procedure,鈥 as well as 鈥淸t]he timing of and events leading up to a plaintiff 鈥檚 arrest.鈥 Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 20.[1]* Similarly, 鈥渋f officers falsely document the arrest or include other indicia of retaliatory motive in arrest-related documents, that too might suggest meaningfully differential treatment.鈥 Id., at 21.

Here, in addition to her survey, Gonzalez presented this other kind of evidence as well. Before the District Court, Gonzalez pointed to, among other things, details about the anomalous procedures used for her arrest and statements in the arresting officer鈥檚 warrant affidavit suggesting a retaliatory motive. See Brief for Petitioner 43鈥44. Those categories of evidence, too, can support the conclusion that Gonzalez 鈥渨as arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 Nieves, 587 U. S., at 407. On remand, the lower courts may consider the full scope of objective evidence that Gonzalez has offered to establish differential treatment. See ante, at 4.

With this understanding, I join the Court鈥檚 per curiam opinion.

Notes

[1] *Justice Alito suggests that evidence of this sort 鈥 such as the fact that 鈥渁 police officer has been surveilling [a plaintiff 鈥檚] house for several weeks鈥 鈥 would not 鈥渃ount towards the Nieves 别虫肠别辫迟颈辞苍.鈥 Ante, at 10 (concurring opinion). He does not explain, however, why such evidence would not be objective, or why such evidence would not be relevant to proving that a plaintiff 鈥渨as arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 Nieves, 587 U. S., at 407.


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

_________________

No. 22鈥1025

_________________

SYLVIA GONZALEZ, PETITIONER v. EDWARD TREVINO, II, et al.

on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the fifth circuit

[June 20, 2024]

Justice Thomas, dissenting.

I continue to believe that 鈥減laintiffs bringing a First Amendment retaliatory-arrest claim under 搂1983 should have to plead and prove a lack of probable cause.鈥 Lozman v. Riviera Beach, 585 U.S. 87, 107 (2018) (Thomas, J., dissenting).[1]* Under the Court鈥檚 precedents, 搂1983 is 鈥渃onstrued in light of common-law principles that were well settled at the time of its enactment.鈥 Kalina v. Fletcher, 522 U.S. 118, 123 (1997). 鈥淏ecause no common-law tort for retaliatory arrest in violation of the freedom of speech existed when 搂1983 was enacted, we look to the common-law torts that provide the closest analogy to this claim.鈥 Nieves v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391, 409 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). As I have previously explained, the common-law torts most analogous to retaliatory-arrest claims are false imprisonment, malicious arrest, and malicious prosecution 鈥 all of which required a plaintiff to prove 鈥渢he absence of probable cause.鈥 Id., at 409鈥410. Gonzalez concedes that there was probable cause for her arrest. Brief for Petitioner 30. Her retaliatory-arrest claim therefore cannot proceed.

Resisting that conclusion, Gonzalez contends that there is still another common-law analogue for a retaliatory- arrest claim: abuse of process. Although the exact contours of that tort are unclear, abuse of process generally addressed the 鈥渆xtortionate perversion of lawfully initiated process to illegitimate ends.鈥 Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 486, n. 5 (1994). Critically for Gonzalez鈥檚 argument, an abuse-of-process claim did not require a plaintiff to establish the absence of probable cause. See C. Addison, Wrongs and Their Remedies 601鈥602 (3d ed. 1870) (Addison); T. Cooley, Law of Torts 356 (3d ed. 1906) (Cooley).

I am not persuaded that an abuse-of-process claim is analogous to Gonzalez鈥檚 retaliatory-arrest claim. Gonzalez鈥檚 central argument is that her arrest was invalid because the defendants had an improper motive. As she sees it, even though the defendants had probable cause to arrest her, they did so only in retaliation for her constitutionally protected speech. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 126a, 129a. Abuse of process, however, appeared to be less concerned with why process was initiated and more with whether process was ultimately used as 鈥渋ntended by the law.鈥 Mayer v. Walter, 64 Pa. 283, 285鈥286 (1870); see Addison 602 (abuse-of-process tort applies where process has been 鈥減rostituted to an illegal purpose鈥). An abuse of process occurred when an ordinary process was distorted 鈥渇or a purpose not justified by the law,鈥 and the tort required 鈥 鈥榓n act in the use of the process not proper in the regular prosecution of the proceeding.鈥 鈥 Cooley 354鈥356. For example, a plaintiff could assert an abuse-of-process claim if an officer arrested and detained him in an oppressive manner as a means of extortion. See id., at 354鈥355 (providing as an example 鈥渃ausing an arrest . . . and keeping [the plaintiff] imprisoned until, by stress thereof, he is compelled to surrender property to which the other is not entitled鈥). Or, a plaintiff could bring an abuse-of-process claim if an officer deprived him of food while he was detained. Wood v. Graves, 144 Mass. 365, 366, 11 N.E. 567, 576 (1887) (describing where a 鈥減erson arrested . . . is treated with cruelty, is deprived of proper food, or is otherwise treated with oppression and undue hardship鈥). Either way, the essential question appears to have been how the process was used 鈥 not whether the process was initiated with an improper motive. See Glidewell v. Murray-Lacy & Co., 124 Va. 563, 569, 98 S.E. 665, 667 (1919) (explaining that the 鈥渄istinctive nature of an action for abuse of process . . . lies for the improper use of a regularly issued process, not for maliciously causing process to issue鈥); Cooley 356 (鈥 鈥楻egular and legitimate use of process, though with a bad intention, is not a malicious abuse of process鈥 鈥). Because Gonzalez鈥檚 retaliatory-arrest claim focuses on the motives behind her arrest and not the process itself, the abuse-of-process tort is a poor fit.

The Court takes an even more dubious route in its attempt to salvage Gonzalez鈥檚 case. In Nieves v. Bartlett, the Court correctly recognized that probable cause precludes a retaliatory-arrest claim. 587 U. S., at 406. But, it introduced one purportedly 鈥渘arrow qualification.鈥 Ibid.; see Lund v. Rockford, 956 F.3d 938, 944 (CA7 2020) (considering whether a plaintiff 鈥檚 鈥渃ase squeeze[d] through the crack of an opening that Nieves left ajar鈥). The Nieves Court concluded that a plaintiff need not show a lack of probable cause if he 鈥減resents objective evidence that he was arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.鈥 587 U. S., at 407.

Today, the Court expands that qualification. Nieves鈥檚 exception can now apply if a plaintiff presents evidence of any objective fact that 鈥渕akes it more likely that an officer has declined to arrest someone for engaging in such conduct in the past.鈥 Ante, at 5 (emphasis deleted). Accordingly, even though Gonzalez鈥檚 proffered evidence does not point to a single 鈥渟imilarly situated individua[l],鈥 the Court nonetheless concludes she may satisfy the Nieves exception. Nieves, 587 U. S., at 407.

There is 鈥渘o basis in either the common law or our First Amendment precedents鈥 for the exception created in Nieves and expanded upon today. Id., at 409 (opinion of Thomas, J.). And, the Court should not craft 搂1983 rules 鈥渁s a matter of policy.鈥 Id., at 411. I would adhere to the only rule grounded in history: Probable cause defeats a retaliatory-arrest claim. I respectfully dissent.

Notes

[1] *I also remain 鈥渟keptical that 42 U. S. C. 搂1983 recognizes a claim for retaliatory arrests under the First Amendment.鈥 Lozman, 585 U. S., at 104, n. 2 (Thomas, J., dissenting). 鈥淏ecause no party questions whether 搂1983 claims for retaliatory arrests under the First Amendment are actionable, I assume that 搂1983 permits such claims.鈥 Nieves v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391, 409, n. (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment).

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