This false arrest case went to trial in the Eastern District of New York. The plaintiff also asserted an abuse-of-process claim against the police. The case arose when plaintiff was arrested for trespass even thopugh he believed he had a legitimate lease to live in this house on Long Island; actually, he was fooled into thinking the lease was legitimate. When the police came, they threw him out of the house but did not arrest him for trespass until he called his lawyer, who told the police the arrest was illegitimate. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on the abuse-of-process claim on the basis that the arrest was in retribution for plaintiff calling his lawyer. But the case was not over.
The case is Smith v. County of Nassau, a summary order issued on May 12. While the jury ruled in plaintiff's favor on the abuse-of-process claim, awarding him $251,000 in damages, it also said the police had probable cause to arrest him for trespass. So the trial court granted the County's post-trial motion for qualified immunity on the basis that the law is not clear whether probable cause is a full defense to an abuse-of-process claim. The Court of Appeals sustains the dismissal order, and the abuse-of-process verdict is gone for good. I briefed and argued the appeal.
Courts used to hold that false arrest and abuse-of-process claims are separate claims and that probable cause -- which is a full defense to a false arrest claim -- is not necessarily a full defense to an abuse-of-process claim, which requires a showing of malice in arresting someone, along with arresting someone for reasons having nothing to do with the legitimate criminal process, such as retribution. But then, over the years, the distinctions between these claims grew muddy. By 2016, the Second Circuit the law was no longer clear whether probable cause was not a defense to an abuse-of-process claim. That was the Mangano case. The law remains muddy such that the officers in this case are able to avoid liability because a police officer would not know that he cannot initiate legal proceedings against someone in a case like this.
Some trial courts in the Second Circuit got around the Mangano case by stating that probable cause is no defense to an abuse-of-process case if the malice element of the abuse-of-process claim does not solely turn on the lack of probable cause but instead some other illegitimate basis for the arrest, like retribution. We relied on those cases in trying to reinstate the verdict in this case. But after a spirited oral argument in January 2026, the Court of Appeals (Leval, Lynch and Sullivan) silently rejects that theory and stands firm in holding that the distinctions between false arrest and abuse-of-process claims are still too muddy to allow plaintiffs to sue the police when they have probable cause to make the arrest, even if the police also had ulterior motives to make the arrest.