17‐296‐cv
McDonough v. Smith
1 In the
2 United States Court of Appeals
3 For the Second Circuit
4
5
6 August Term, 2017
7 No. 17‐296‐cv
8
9 EDWARD G. MCDONOUGH,
10 Plaintiff‐Appellant,
11
12 v.
13
14 YOUEL SMITH, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS SPECIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR
15 THE COUNTY OF RENSSELAER, NEW YORK, AKA TREY SMITH,
16 Defendant‐Appellee,
17
18 JOHN J. OGDEN, RICHARD MCNALLY JR., KEVIN MCGRATH, ALAN
19 ROBILLARD, COUNTY OF RENSSELAER, JOHN F. BROWN, WILLIAM A.
20 MCINERNEY, KEVIN F. OʹMALLEY, DANIEL B. BROWN, ANTHONY J.
21 RENNA,
22 Defendants.*
23
24
25 Appeal from the United States District Court
26 for the Northern District of New York.
27 No. 15‐cv‐1505 ― Mae A. DʹAgostino, Judge.
28
29
The Clerk is directed to amend the caption to conform to the above.
*
1 ARGUED: NOVEMBER 29, 2017
2 DECIDED: AUGUST 3, 2018
3
4
5 Before: JACOBS, RAGGI, and DRONEY, Circuit Judges.
6
7
8 Interlocutory appeal from a judgment of the United States
9 District Court for the Northern District of New York (DʹAgostino, J.)
10 dismissing the Plaintiff‐Appellantʹs claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
11 The Plaintiff‐Appellant alleged that his right to due process had been
12 violated because fabricated evidence was used against him in state
13 criminal proceedings. He also alleged a malicious prosecution claim
14 against the prosecutor. We conclude that his due process claim was
15 untimely as it was filed beyond the applicable limitations period. We
16 also conclude that the prosecutor was entitled to absolute immunity
17 for the malicious prosecution claim. We therefore AFFIRM the
18 judgment of the district court.
19
20
21 BRIAN D. PREMO, Premo Law Firm
22 PLLC, Albany, NY, for Plaintiff‐
23 Appellant.
24
25 THOMAS J. OʹCONNOR, Napierski,
26 VanDenburgh, Napierski &
27 OʹConnor, LLP, Albany, NY, for
28 Defendant‐Appellee Youel Smith.
29
30 Andrew D. Bing, Deputy Solicitor
31 General, Jennifer L. Clark, Assistant
32 Solicitor General, for Barbara D.
2
1 Underwood, Attorney General of the
2 State of New York, for Defendant John
3 G. Ogden.
4
5 DRONEY, Circuit Judge:
6 Plaintiff‐Appellant Edward G. McDonough, the former
7 Democratic Commissioner of the Rensselaer County Board of
8 Elections, was acquitted in New York state court of forging absentee
9 ballots in a local primary election. He appeals from two subsequent
10 decisions of the United States District Court for the Northern District
11 of New York (DʹAgostino, J.) dismissing his claims against
12 Defendant‐Appellee Youel Smith under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 related to
13 that prosecution. He alleged (1) denial of due process based on
14 fabricated evidence and (2) malicious prosecution. The district court
15 determined that (1) McDonoughʹs due process claim was untimely
16 and dismissed it as to all Defendants1 and (2) Smith, a Special District
1 The Defendants are primarily individuals allegedly associated with either the
purported fraudulent scheme that formed the basis for McDonoughʹs prosecution
or members of law enforcement responsible for his investigation and prosecution.
McDonough has alleged conspiracies involving both types of defendants.
3
1 Attorney who prosecuted McDonough, was entitled to absolute
2 prosecutorial immunity on McDonoughʹs malicious prosecution
3 claim and therefore dismissed that claim with respect to Smith. 2
4 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), the district
5 court entered judgment as to Smith and certified the decisions
6 dismissing the two claims against him for interlocutory appeal by
7 McDonough.3
8 For the reasons that follow, we agree with the district courtʹs
9 conclusion that McDonoughʹs due process claim was untimely, and
10 thus barred by the applicable statute of limitations. We also agree
2 McDonoughʹs claims against Smith were brought against him in his official and
individual capacities. The district court dismissed the former on the basis of
Eleventh Amendment immunity. That decision is not challenged in this appeal.
Thus, it is only the individual capacity claims that we address.
3 Defendant John J. Ogden, a New York State Police Trooper who worked with
Smith as an investigator in the criminal case against McDonough, has filed a brief
in this court arguing that the district court correctly concluded that McDonoughʹs
due process claim was time‐barred. Although this Court previously granted
Ogdenʹs motion to intervene for the purpose of seeking a stay pending a
reconsideration motion in the district court, the judgment entered by the district
court under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) and authorization for
interlocutory appeal only applied to Defendant‐Appellee Smith.
4
1 with the district court that Smith is entitled to absolute immunity as
2 to the malicious prosecution claim. We therefore AFFIRM the
3 dismissal of those claims.
4 BACKGROUND
5 During the 2009 Working Families Party primary election in the
6 City of Troy, New York, several individuals associated with the
7 Democratic and Working Families Parties forged signatures and
8 provided false information on absentee ballot applications and
9 absentee ballots in order to affect the outcome of that primary. Those
10 individuals then submitted the forged absentee ballot applications to
11 McDonough. McDonough, as a commissioner of the Rensselaer
12 County elections board, was responsible for processing those
13 applications.4 McDonough approved the forged applications, but
14 subsequently claimed he did not know that they had been falsified.
4 McDonough, as the Democratic Rensselaer County Elections Commissioner, is
responsible for ensuring that all qualified voters may exercise their right to vote.
See Board of Elections, www.rensco.com/departments/board‐of‐elections/ (last
visited Jun. 20, 2018). Part of the responsibilities of a Board of Elections, and by
5
1 The plot to influence the primary was eventually discovered.
2 Defendant Richard McNally, the elected District Attorney for
3 Rensselaer County, was disqualified from the ensuing investigation
4 because certain of those allegedly involved in the scheme had worked
5 on his prior campaign. The state court then appointed Smith as a
6 Special District Attorney to lead the investigation and potential
7 prosecution. McDonough claimed that Smith then engaged in an
8 elaborate scheme to frame McDonough for the crimes by, among
9 other things, fabricating evidence. This alleged scheme included
10 using forged affidavits, offering false testimony, and using faulty
11 DNA methods for analyzing materials used in processing the ballot
12 applications, all despite Smith knowing that McDonough was
13 innocent.
extension, a Commissioner, is to receive applications for absentee ballots and
determine whether the applicants are qualified to vote. N.Y. Elec. Law § 8‐402(1).
McDonough, as an elections commissioner, was a full‐time employee of
Rensselaer County.
6
1 McDonough claims that Smith presented the fabricated
2 evidence to a grand jury. The grand jury subsequently indicted
3 McDonough on more than three dozen state law counts of felony
4 forgery in the second degree and a similar number of counts of felony
5 criminal possession of a forged instrument in the second degree. See
6 N.Y. Penal Law §§ 170.10, 170.25. The case against McDonough
7 proceeded to trial but ended in a mistrial. McDonough was then
8 retried, again with Smith as the prosecutor. That trial ended in
9 McDonoughʹs acquittal on December 21, 2012.
10 On December 18, 2015, McDonough filed this action under 42
11 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the Defendants (including Smith) (1) had
12 violated his right to due process by fabricating evidence and later
13 using it against him before the grand jury and in his two trials and (2)
14 were liable for malicious prosecution.
15 Several Defendants filed motions to dismiss McDonoughʹs due
16 process claim. They argued, in part, that it was barred by the
7
1 applicable three‐year statute of limitations because the allegedly
2 fabricated evidence had been disclosed to McDonough, and his claim
3 therefore accrued, well before the second jury acquitted him.5
4 In opposing the Defendantsʹ motions, McDonough argued that
5 because his fabrication of evidence claim was based on the actions of
6 Smith, a prosecutor, it was analogous to a malicious prosecution
7 claim, and therefore did not accrue until the second trial terminated
8 in his favor. McDonough also contended that his due process claim
9 did not accrue until the termination of the second trial under the
10 Supreme Courtʹs decision in Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477 (1994). He
11 argued that his fabrication of evidence claim would challenge the
12 validity of the pending criminal proceedings against him, and thus,
13 under Heck, did not accrue until he was acquitted.
5 Although Smith filed a motion to dismiss McDonoughʹs complaint, he did not
argue that McDonoughʹs due process claim was untimely. Nonetheless, the district
court concluded, as other Defendants had raised untimeliness issues as to the
fabrication of evidence claim, that the claim was also untimely as to Smith. Plaintiff
does not challenge that Smith may assert the untimeliness of that claim in this
appeal.
8
1 In two decisions, dated September 30, 2016 and December 30,
2 2016, the district court dismissed McDonoughʹs due process claims
3 against all Defendants as untimely and his malicious prosecution
4 claim against Smith on the basis of absolute prosecutorial immunity.6
5 As to the due process claim, the district court reasoned that
6 McDonoughʹs claim was ʺbased upon the fabrication of evidenceʺ and
7 it ʺaccrued when he knew or should have known that such evidence
8 was being used against him and not upon his acquittal in his criminal
9 case.ʺ J. App. 155. As the district court indicated, McDonoughʹs
10 complaint had alleged ʺthat all of the fabricated evidence was either
11 presented at grand jury proceedings or during his two trials, all of
12 which occurredʺ more than three years before he filed suit. J. App.
13 156.
6 The district court also determined that McDonoughʹs malicious prosecution
claim was timely because it had not accrued until his acquittal. That claim is still
proceeding in the district court as to other Defendants.
9
1 The district court also concluded that Smith was protected by
2 absolute immunity as to the malicious prosecution claim.
3 DISCUSSION
4 I. Standard of Review
5 ʺWe review de novo the grant of a motion to dismiss, accepting
6 all factual allegations in the complaint as true and drawing inferences
7 from those allegations in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.ʺ
8 Bascunan v. Elsaca, 874 F.3d 806, 810 (2d Cir. 2017) (alterations and
9 internal quotation marks omitted); see also Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr. Co.
10 v. Quicken Loans Inc., 810 F.3d 861, 865 (2d Cir. 2015) (ʺWe review de
11 novo a district courtʹs grant of a motion to dismiss, including its legal
12 interpretation and application of a statute of limitations . . . .ʺ).
13 II. The Due Process Claim
14 McDonough argues that his due process claim is timely because
15 he alleged that Smith fabricated evidence in order to file baseless
16 charges against him, and thus his claim is most analogous to a
10
1 malicious prosecution action, which does not accrue until favorable
2 termination of the prosecution, here the verdict of acquittal. See
3 Poventud v. City of New York, 750 F.3d 121, 131 (2d Cir. 2014). In the
4 alternative, McDonough asserts (1) that his claim is timely in light of
5 Heck v. Humphrey, and (2) that the use of fabricated evidence against
6 him constituted a continuing violation that renders his claim timely.
7 We conclude that the nature of McDonoughʹs due process claim
8 is different from a malicious prosecution claim, and that it accrued
9 when (1) McDonough learned that the evidence was false and was
10 used against him during the criminal proceedings; and (2) he suffered
11 a loss of liberty as a result of that evidence. Because both occurred
12 more than three years prior to McDonough filing this action, we agree
13 with the district court that McDonoughʹs due process claim is time‐
11
1 barred.7 We also reject McDonoughʹs additional arguments as to the
2 due process claim.
3 a. The Accrual of § 1983 Actions for Fabrication of Evidence
4 and Malicious Prosecution
5
6 The statute of limitation for claims brought under 42 U.S.C.
7 § 1983 is generally ʺthe statute of limitations for the analogous claim
8 under the law of the state where the cause of action accrued.ʺ Spak v.
9 Phillips, 857 F.3d 458, 462 (2d Cir. 2017). It is undisputed that the
10 applicable statute here is New Yorkʹs three‐year limitations period for
11 personal injury claims. See Smith v. Campbell, 782 F.3d 93, 100 (2d Cir.
12 2015) (applying three‐year personal injury limitations period to
13 retaliatory prosecution claim); see also N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 214(5) (personal
14 injury statute of limitations).
15 ʺHowever, the time at which a claim . . . under [§] 1983 accrues
16 is a question of federal law that is not resolved by reference to state
7 At times, McDonough characterizes the fabrication of evidence claim against
Smith as a conspiracy to fabricate evidence with other Defendants. That does not
affect our conclusion as to the accrual of that claim.
12
1 law.ʺ Spak, 857 F.3d at 462 (quoting Wallace v. Kato, 549 U.S. 384, 388
2 (2007)) (emphasis in original). Instead, federal ʺcourts apply general
3 common‐law tort principles to determine the accrual date of a [§] 1983
4 claim.ʺ Spak, 857 F.3d at 462 (alterations and internal quotation marks
5 omitted). It ʺis the standard rule that accrual occurs when a plaintiff
6 has a complete and present cause of action, that is, when the plaintiff
7 can file suit and obtain relief.ʺ Smith, 782 F.3d at 100 (internal
8 quotation marks omitted). Put other ways, an action accrues ʺwhen
9 the wrongful act or omission results in damages,ʺ id., and ʺonce the
10 plaintiff knows or has reason to know of the injury which is the basis
11 of his action,ʺ Veal v. Geraci, 23 F.3d 722, 724 (2d Cir. 1994) (internal
12 quotation marks omitted).
13 We next consider the accrual rules for the two types of claims
14 that McDonough has brought against Smith in this case: fabrication
15 of evidence and malicious prosecution.
16 Under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendmentsʹ Due Process
13
1 Clauses, individuals have ʺthe right not to be deprived of liberty as a
2 result of the fabrication of evidence by a government officer . . . .ʺ
3 Zahrey v. Coffey, 221 F.3d 342, 349 (2d Cir. 2000). The forwarding by
4 an investigating officer to a prosecutor of fabricated evidence, or in
5 this instance, the alleged creation or use of such evidence by both
6 investigating officers and the prosecutor, ʺworks an unacceptable
7 ʹcorruption of the truth‐seeking function of the trial process.ʹʺ Ricciuti
8 v. N.Y.C. Transit Auth., 124 F.3d 123, 130 (2d Cir. 1997) (quoting United
9 States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 104 (1976)).
10 Applying our standard accrual rules, a fabrication of evidence
11 claim accrues (1) when a plaintiff learns of the fabrication and it is
12 used against him, see Veal, 23 F.3d at 724, and (2) his liberty has been
13 deprived in some way, see Zahrey, 221 F.3d at 348. Because there is no
14 dispute in this case that McDonough suffered a liberty deprivation
15 because of that evidence when he was arrested and stood trial, we
16 focus our attention on the first prong. See id.
14
1 The statute of limitations begins to run on a fabrication of
2 evidence claim against law enforcement officials under § 1983 when
3 the plaintiff has ʺʹreason to know of the injury which is the basis of his
4 action.ʹʺ Veal, 23 F.3d at 724 (quoting Singleton v. New York, 632 F.2d
5 185, 191 (2d Cir. 1980)). ʺThe reference to ʹknow[ledge] of the injuryʹ
6 does not suggest that the statute does not begin to run until the
7 claimant has received judicial verification that the defendantsʹ acts
8 were wrongful.ʺ Id. (second alteration in original).
9 In Veal, a police detective manipulated a lineup by arranging
10 for the witness to view the criminal defendant (later the plaintiff in
11 the § 1983 fabrication of evidence lawsuit) entering the police station
12 in handcuffs prior to conducting the lineup. Id. at 723–24. However,
13 at the time of the lineup, the defendant had already been arrested for
14 the crime based on the same witnessʹs identification of him from a
15 prior photo array. Id. at 725. The evidence of the identification from
16 the lineup was later used at trial and the defendant was convicted. Id.
15
1 at 724. The Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court
2 reversed the conviction because of the use of the suggestive lineup
3 and the resulting in‐court identification. Id.
4 Veal brought his § 1983 due process claim within three years of
5 the decision by the Appellate Division but more than three years after
6 he had been sentenced following his trial. Id. We concluded that the
7 statute of limitations had expired before the suit was instituted
8 because Veal was made aware of the tainted lineup when its
9 circumstances were disclosed before his trial (and he moved to
10 suppress its use at trial), more than three years before suit was
11 brought. Id. at 724–25. The date of the reversal of the conviction by the
12 Appellate Division was not the accrual date of the due process
13 violation; rather it was as early as when the circumstances of the
14 lineup were disclosed at the pretrial hearing, and certainly no later
15 than the date of conviction and sentencing, because those later dates
16 were when the liberty deprivation occurred based on the effect of the
16
1 tainted evidence at trial. Id. at 725–26.8
2 We acknowledge that the Third, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits have
3 held that the due process fabrication cause of action accrues only after
4 criminal proceedings have terminated because those circuits have
5 concluded that fabrication of evidence claims are analogous to claims
6 of malicious prosecution, which require termination of the criminal
7 proceeding in the defendantʹs favor before suit may be brought. See
8 Floyd v. Attorney Gen. of Pennsylvania, 722 F. Appʹx. 112, 114 (3d Cir.
9 Jan. 8, 2018); Bradford v. Scherschligt, 803 F.3d 382, 388–89 (9th Cir.
10 2015) (ʺTo determine the proper date of accrual, we look to the
11 common law tort most analogous to Bradfordʹs claim. As we have
12 explained, the right at issue. . . is the right to be free from [criminal]
13 charges based on a claim of deliberately fabricated evidence. In this
14 regard, it is like the tort of malicious prosecution, which involves the
8 District courts in this Circuit have followed Veal and concluded that a § 1983 claim
based on fabricated evidence ʺaccrues when the plaintiff learns or should have
learned that the evidence was fabricated and such conduct causes the claimant
some injury.ʺ Mitchell v. Home, 377 F. Supp. 2d 361, 373 (S.D.N.Y. 2005)
17
1 right to be free from the use of legal process that is motivated by
2 malice and unsupported by probable cause.ʺ) (second alteration in
3 original) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted); Mondragon
4 v. Thompson, 519 F.3d 1078, 1083 (10th Cir. 2008) (ʺAfter the institution
5 of legal process, any remaining constitutional claim is analogous to a
6 malicious prosecution claim. . . . Because the statute of limitations
7 does not start running before the elements of a claim are satisfied, the
8 statute of limitations for this due process claim cannot start until the
9 plaintiff has achieved a favorable result in the original action.ʺ). We
10 disagree with those decisions. Because the injury for this
11 constitutional violation occurs at the time the evidence is used against
12 the defendant to deprive him of his liberty, whether it be at the time
13 he is arrested, faces trial, or is convicted, it is when he becomes aware
14 of that tainted evidence and its improper use that the harm is
15 complete and the cause of action accrues. Indeed, the harm—and the
16 due process violation—is in the use of the fabricated evidence to cause
18
1 a liberty deprivation, not in the eventual resolution of the criminal
2 proceeding.
3 We thus conclude that, under the circumstances here, the
4 § 1983 action based on fabrication of evidence accrued when
5 McDonough (1) learned of the fabrication of the evidence and its use
6 against him in criminal proceedings, and (2) was deprived of a liberty
7 interest by his arrest and trial. For McDonough, this was, at the
8 earliest, when he was indicted and arrested and, at the latest, by the
9 end of his first trial, after all of the prosecutionʹs evidence had been
10 presented.9 ʺ[J]udicial verification that the defendantsʹ acts were
11 wrongfulʺ is not required, and thus accrual did not have to await
12 McDonoughʹs acquittal. Veal, 23 F.3d at 724.
13 In contrast, we have long held that malicious prosecution
14 claims brought pursuant to § 1983 do not accrue until the underlying
15 criminal proceedings against the plaintiff terminate in his favor.
9 McDonough does not allege that fabricated evidence was used against him in the
second trial that was not presented in the first.
19
1 Manganiello v. City of New York, 612 F.3d 149, 161 (2d Cir. 2010).
2 Favorable termination is an element of malicious prosecution under
3 New York law and also for the Constitution‐based tort. Id. A plaintiff
4 therefore cannot have a complete cause of action unless and until the
5 criminal proceedings against him terminate favorably.10 Accordingly,
6 the district court properly concluded that the malicious prosecution
7 claims were timely.11
8 That McDonough alleged that a prosecutor, rather than a law
9 enforcement officer, fabricated evidence does not delay the accrual of
10 his due process claim until accrual of his malicious prosecution claim.
11 The constitutional right violated by fabricated evidence is the right
12 not to be arrested or to face trial based on such evidence. See Zahrey,
10 The elements of a malicious prosecution claim require a plaintiff to establish that
ʺ(1) the defendant initiated a prosecution against [the] plaintiff, (2) without
probable cause to believe the proceeding can succeed, (3) the proceeding was
begun with malice and, (4) the matter terminated in plaintiffʹs favor.ʺ Ricciuti, 124
F.3d at 130. The elements are the same for the New York tort and the constitutional
one. See id.; Colon v. City of New York, 60. N.Y.2d 78, 82 (1983).
11 The district court, however, concluded that Smith was entitled to absolute
immunity from the malicious prosecution claim. That decision is addressed later
in this opinion.
20
1 221 F.3d at 348. That violation and its harm were complete when the
2 fabricated evidence was used by Smith against McDonough in those
3 ways. It matters not, in the circumstances here, whether it was Smith
4 or a law enforcement officer who created and used the allegedly false
5 evidence; whoever causes that deprivation of liberty is a proper
6 defendant for this constitutional cause of action. But the defendantʹs
7 role makes no difference when the claim accrues. The separate and
8 distinct harm that malicious prosecution claims are designed to
9 address afforded McDonough a remedy to the extent that he alleged
10 that fabricated evidence was created to prosecute him maliciously
11 and without probable cause.12 See id. (discussing claim based on
12 prosecutorʹs fabrication of evidence).
13 McDonough argues that, notwithstanding its date of accrual,
14 his due process claim is timely as a result of the Supreme Court’s
12 As one district court in this Circuit aptly explained: ʺA right to a fair trial claim is
distinct from a malicious prosecution claim.ʺ Bailey v. City of New York, 79 F. Supp.
3d 424, 446 (E.D.N.Y. 2015) (emphasis added).
21
1 decision in Heck, 512 U.S. at 486–87 (concluding that civil complaint
2 must be dismissed in a malicious prosecution‐type case if a judgment
3 in favor of the plaintiff would “imply the invalidity of his
4 conviction”). That argument, however, is foreclosed by the Supreme
5 Courtʹs subsequent decision in Wallace, 549 U.S. at 393–94. In Wallace,
6 the plaintiff brought a false arrest claim under § 1983. The conviction
7 following that arrest was reversed by the state appeals court because
8 the arrest was without probable cause, thus invalidating a subsequent
9 confession admitted at trial. Id. at 386–87. The Supreme Court held
10 that the civil false arrest claim accrued at the time of the initial arrest
11 and the ultimate reversal of the conviction was not necessary to
12 complete the false arrest constitutional tort. Id. at 394. Even though
13 the false arrest claim might impugn a future conviction, Heck did not
14 delay its accrual date, and the civil action could proceed even though
22
1 the criminal case had not been resolved at that time.13 Id. at 393. Thus,
2 the Court clarified that, ʺthe Heck rule for deferred accrual is called
3 into play only when there exists a conviction or sentence that has not
4 been invalidated, that is to say, an outstanding criminal judgment.ʺ
5 Wallace, 549 U.S. at 393 (internal punctuation and quotation marks
6 omitted) (emphasis in original). McDonough was never convicted, so
7 Heck is not ʺcalled into play.ʺ Id.
8 Finally, McDonough argues that his due process claim is timely
9 because his ʺwrongful prosecution [constituted] a continuing
10 violation,ʺ that only ceased on his acquittal. Appellantʹs Br. 50. We
11 are not persuaded. As we have explained: ʺCharacterizing
12 defendantsʹ separate wrongful acts as having been committed in
13 furtherance of a conspiracy or as a single series of interlocking events
14 does not postpone accrual of claims based on individual wrongful
13
The Supreme Court in Wallace stated that there may be circumstances where the
district court might exercise its discretion to stay the civil action until the criminal
case is resolved, but that is not relevant here. Wallace, 594 U.S. at 393–94.
23
1 acts.ʺ Pinaud v. County of Suffolk, 52 F.3d 1139, 1156 (2d Cir. 1995)
2 (internal quotation marks omitted). Smith allegedly fabricated
3 evidence, then presented that evidence to a grand jury, and later used
4 it at McDonoughʹs trials. The cause of action accrued when
5 McDonough became aware of the fabricated evidence, which was, at
6 the latest, during the first trial. The continuation of the prosecution
7 does not, by itself, constitute a continuing violation that would
8 postpone the running of the statute of limitations until his acquittal.14
9 III. The Malicious Prosecution Claim
10 Prosecutors are protected by absolute immunity for their acts
11 that are ʺintimately associated with the judicial phase of the criminal
We are also not persuaded by McDonoughʹs reliance on the Supreme Courtʹs
14
recent decision in Manuel v. City of Joliet, Ill., which held that a plaintiff (formerly
a criminal defendant) may seek damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 concerning his
pretrial detention on the ground that it violated the Fourth Amendment for the
period of pretrial detention after his arrest. 137 S. Ct. 911, 914 (2017). That a claim
under the Fourth Amendment may be based on events occurring after an arrest
does not affect our conclusion that McDonoughʹs due process claim accrued well
before his acquittal, and the Supreme Court stated in Manuel that its recognition
that the Fourth Amendment applies to a period after the arrest did not necessarily
alter the accrual date of that and other causes of action, and left the question for
the Courts of Appeals to resolve. Id. at 922.
24
1 processʺ and their role as advocates, but they receive only qualified
2 immunity for acts that are investigatory in nature. Simon v. City of New
3 York, 727 F.3d 167, 171–72 (2d Cir. 2013) (internal quotation marks
4 omitted). The district court concluded that Smith was entitled to
5 absolute immunity from McDonoughʹs malicious prosecution claim
6 because even though McDonoughʹs complaint suggests that, at times,
7 Smith was acting in an investigatory capacity, ʺthe distinction
8 between a prosecutorʹs investigative and prosecutorial functions is
9 immaterial to a malicious prosecution claim, since prosecutors are
10 generally immune from such claims.ʺ J. App. 204; see also Shmueli v.
11 New York, 424 F.3d 231, 238 (2d Cir. 2005). We agree. Although
12 prosecutors may be eligible only for qualified immunity when
13 functioning in an investigative capacity, they are entitled to absolute
14 immunity when acting as advocates for the state, such as initiating
15 prosecutions or at trial. See Zahrey, 221 F.3d at 346 (holding, in § 1983
16 cases, that prosecutorial ʺ[a]ctions taken as an advocate enjoy
25
1 absolute immunity, while actions taken as an investigator enjoy only
2 qualified immunityʺ (internal citation omitted)); see also Shmueli, 424
3 F.3d at 237 (ʺ[T]he initiation and pursuit of a criminal prosecution are
4 quintessential prosecutorial functions . . . .ʺ). As the malicious
5 prosecution claim relates only to Smithʹs prosecutorial function, it is
6 barred by absolute immunity.15
7
15 McDonough also asserts on appeal that Smithʹs appointment as Special District
Attorney was invalid under New York law and that the conduct McDonough was
charged with in the indictment could not meet the elements of the various state
criminal statutes. In order to strip Smith of his absolute prosecutorial immunity,
McDonough would be required to show Smith proceeded despite a “clear absence
of all jurisdiction” for the prosecution. Barr v. Abrams, 810 F.2d 358, 361 (2d Cir.
1987). He has not done so. Also, as to the claim that Smith was not properly
appointed, the correct forum for such a claim would be in the New York courts. In
Working Families Party v. Fisher, 23 N.Y.3d 539 (2014), the New York Court of
Appeals held that the method for challenging the appointment of a special
prosecutor is through a N.Y. C.P.L.R. Article 78 proceeding. McDonough did not
pursue the Article 78 course to invalidate Smithʹs appointment. Rather,
McDonough alleged in his complaint that he sought to have Smith disqualified by
petitioning the County to file an action in the state courts to nullify Smithʹs
appointment, and later filing a motion in his criminal case to dismiss the charges
on the basis that Smithʹs appointment was unlawful. That motion was denied. As
to the claim concerning the New York criminal statutes, the appropriate forum for
challenging the application of the state criminal statutes to McDonoughʹs alleged
conduct was in McDonoughʹs two state criminal trials, not during this subsequent
civil action under § 1983. To the extent he argues that this should support his
malicious prosecution claim, the argument does not affect Smithʹs absolute
26
1 CONCLUSION
2 McDonoughʹs due process claim accrued when (1) the
3 purportedly fabricated evidence was used against him and he had
4 knowledge of that use, and (2) he was deprived of a liberty interest.
5 Because that occurred more than three years before he filed suit, we
6 AFFIRM the decision of the district court dismissing that claim. We
7 also AFFIRM the decision of the district court that Smith was entitled
8 to absolute immunity for the malicious prosecution claim.
immunity for his prosecutorial conduct, as it is the heartland of such a protection.
See Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409, 430–31 (1976) (holding that absolute immunity
protects prosecutors for their conduct “intimately associated with the judicial
phase of the criminal process . . . .”).
27