Court Opinion

ID: 4671838
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-26 15:00:22.476759+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:48.846192
License: Public Domain

19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York
 1                                           IN THE

 2                United States Court of Appeals
 3                            For the Second Circuit
 4                                          ________

 5                                     AUGUST TERM, 2020
 6
 7                                 ARGUED: SEPTEMBER 23, 2020
 8                                  DECIDED: MARCH 26, 2021
 9
10                                       No. 19-2726-CV
11

12                                   DUSHANNE ASHLEY,
13                                                                          Plaintiff-Appellant,
14
15                                              v.
16
17    CITY OF NEW YORK, DETECTIVE JASON JONES, SHIELD # 6490, DETECTIVE MIKE
18         CIVIL, SHIELD # 2114, SERGEANT LUKE DENESOPOLIS, SHIELD # 392,
19                                                                        Defendants-Appellees,
20
21
22                     POLICE OFFICERS JANE/JOHN DOE(S) NOS. 1-10,
23                                                                                 Defendants.
24
25                                          ________
26
27                         Appeal from the United States District Court
28                            for the Eastern District of New York.
29                            14-cv-5559 – Garaufis, District Judge.
30
31                                          ________
32
33
34
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   Before: CALABRESI, KATZMANN, AND CARNEY, Circuit Judges.
 2                                         ________

 3          Plaintiff-Appellant Dushanne Ashley sued Defendants-Appellees under 42
 4   U.S.C. § 1983 alleging false arrest, malicious prosecution, and the denial of his right
 5   to a fair trial. At summary judgment, the district court concluded that the police
 6   officer who arrested Ashley, Detective Mike Civil, had probable cause to arrest
 7   Ashley. The court therefore granted summary judgment to Defendants-Appellees
 8   on Ashley’s claims for false arrest and malicious prosecution. Ashley’s claim for
 9   the denial of a fair trial—against Civil only—survived summary judgment and
10   was tried before a jury, which found for Civil. Ashley’s motion for judgment as a
11   matter of law was denied by the district court. Ashley appeals the grant of
12   summary judgment to Civil on his false arrest and malicious prosecution claims.
13   He also appeals the denial of his motion for judgment as a matter of law and
14   asserts errors in the jury instructions, both with respect to his fair trial claim.
15          Although we conclude that the district court erred by relying on a credibility
16   determination at summary judgment, we nevertheless AFFIRM its grant of
17   summary judgment to Civil on the claims for false arrest and malicious
18   prosecution. As to Ashley’s claim regarding the denial of his right to a fair trial,
19   we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Ashley’s motion for judgment as a matter
20   of law, but we VACATE the judgment in favor of Civil and remand for a new trial
21   because the jury instructions contained a prejudicial error.
22
23

24             ROB RICKNER, Rickner PLLC, New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

25              JESSE A. TOWNSEND (Richard Dearing, Clause S. Platton, on the brief), for

26                James E. Johnson, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, New

27                York, NY, for Defendants-Appellees.
28

29

30

                                               2
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

 2          Plaintiff-Appellant Dushanne Ashley was arrested and charged in New

 3   York state court for unlawfully possessing marijuana. The original charging

 4   instrument stated that when police executed a search warrant at a Brooklyn

 5   apartment, they there found Ashley with the marijuana. Surveillance images later

 6   showed, instead, that Ashley had arrived at the apartment after the police. This

 7   meant that the original charging instrument was false in its assertion that Ashley

 8   was already in the apartment with the drugs when the police arrived. The

 9   prosecution superseded the original charging instrument to eliminate the false

10   statement. The superseding instrument charged instead that Ashley arrived after

11   the police did but that he referred to the apartment as his apartment. Ashley

12   contends, however, that he never referred to the apartment as his. The state court

13   dismissed the superseding instrument against Ashley for facial insufficiency

14   shortly thereafter. Ashley then filed suit against Defendants-Appellees alleging

15   various violations of his federal constitutional rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. These

16   included claims for false arrest, malicious prosecution, and the denial of his right

17   to a fair trial based on fabricated evidence. The latter claim stemmed from the

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   inclusion of the two allegedly false statements in the original and the superseding

 2   charging instruments (the “fabricated-evidence claim”). 1

 3          The district court (Garaufis, J.) granted summary judgment to all

 4   Defendants-Appellees on Ashley’s claims for false arrest and malicious

 5   prosecution because it concluded there was probable cause both to arrest and to

 6   prosecute Ashley, respectively. Ashley’s fabricated-evidence claim survived

 7   summary judgment, but against only one Defendant-Appellee, Detective Mike

 8   Civil. After trial on that claim, the jury returned a verdict in Civil’s favor, and the

 9   district court denied Ashley’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. On appeal,

10   Ashley challenges the grant of summary judgment to Civil on the false arrest and

11   malicious prosecution claims, as well as the denial of his motion for judgment as

     1Although our Court has frequently referred to this claim as a “fair trial claim,” we adopt the
     term “fabricated-evidence claim” to avoid confusion given the facts of the case. As noted below,
     Ashley’s criminal prosecution was dismissed before trial. Nevertheless, a claim for fabricated
     evidence does not require that a plaintiff have been subjected to a trial; it is enough that the
     fabrication results in a deprivation of the plaintiff’s liberty. See Ricciuti v. N.Y.C. Transit Auth.,
     124 F.3d 123, 130 (2d Cir. 1997) (reversing the grant of summary judgment to defendants against
     a fabricated-evidence claim for charges dismissed before trial). The Supreme Court has similarly
     used the term “fabricated-evidence” to refer to a claim for the denial of the right to a fair trial.
     See McDonough v. Smith, 139 S. Ct. 2149, 2155 (2019).

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   a matter of law on his claim for fabricated evidence. He also claims errors in jury

 2   instructions related to the latter claim.

 3          Although we conclude that the district court’s reasoning regarding probable

 4   cause was erroneous, we nonetheless uphold its grant of summary judgment to

 5   Civil on Ashley’s claims for false arrest and malicious prosecution. And while we

 6   agree that there was sufficient evidence to support the jury verdict for Civil on

 7   Ashley’s fabricated-evidence claim, and that therefore his motion for judgment as

 8   a matter of law was properly denied, we conclude that the jury charge was tainted

 9   by prejudicial error.

10          We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment on

11   false-arrest and malicious-prosecution claims. We AFFIRM the district court’s

12   denial of judgment as a matter of law on the fabricated-evidence claim, but we

13   VACATE the judgment for Civil and REMAND for a new trial on that claim.

                                                 5
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1                                       BACKGROUND 2

 2       A. The Arrest and Prosecution

 3          In March 2013, New York City’s 311 hotline received a call from a man

 4   identifying himself as Charles Patrick. The caller claimed that his roommate—a

 5   “black, tall, muscular, dark-skinned” man with a “[b]ald head”—was selling drugs

 6   out of their apartment in Brooklyn and that the roommate refused to move out.

 7   Joint App’x at 757. The complaint was referred to Detective Mike Civil, who began

 8   an investigation. On Civil’s instructions, an undercover officer twice purchased

 9   drugs from Charles Patrick at the Brooklyn apartment. Civil then sought and

10   obtained a warrant to search the apartment for narcotics. The warrant named

11   Patrick and included the telephone description of the alleged roommate.

12          Civil arrived at the apartment and began the search early in the morning of

13   April 19, 2013. 3 He found two people inside the apartment: Charles Patrick, from

14   whom the undercover agent had purchased drugs in the weeks leading up to the

     2 We base this factual statement on the record developed at summary judgment, the transcript
     of the trial held on the fabricated-evidence claim, and other evidence submitted during that
     trial. We note throughout factual issues that remain disputed.
     3 At trial, the parties disputed whether the police arrived around 5:00 AM or 6:00 AM. This

     disagreement does not materially affect the outcome of this appeal, however, because the fact
     remains that Ashley arrived at the apartment after the police.

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   search, and a man named Jose Carlos, who was lying in a sleeping bag on the floor

 2   of the living room. That room was shielded by a curtain and contained an air

 3   mattress, a makeshift closet, a television, some weights, and a dresser with a

 4   picture of Dushanne Ashley together with a woman. In that room, the police found

 5   two ounces of marijuana in eighteen small bags.

 6          Ashley was not in the apartment when the police arrived. The parties

 7   dispute whether Ashley was living at the apartment at the time or whether he lived

 8   elsewhere with his girlfriend, having only previously lived at the apartment.

 9   Regardless, Ashley’s possessions (including his pets) were at the apartment.

10   Ashley later stated that on the morning of April 19, 2013, he had received a phone

11   call from Carlos telling him police were at the apartment. Then, according to

12   Ashley, a police officer got on the phone and told Ashley that if he did not come

13   and get his dog from the apartment, it would be taken away. Civil contests

14   Ashley’s account of the phone call and the alleged warning about the dog. And

15   although Civil testified that he asked Patrick for Ashley’s number, Civil claims he

16   did not call Ashley.

17          When Ashley arrived at the apartment, Civil arrested him. Civil asserts that

18   he had been in the apartment twice before—in November and December of 2012—

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   and that he then had witnessed police officers arrest Ashley there for narcotics

 2   offenses. Civil alleges that he remembered Ashley’s possessions, and that because

 3   the marijuana was found among Ashley’s things, he believed the marijuana

 4   belonged to Ashley. He additionally claims that when he first read the transcript

 5   from the 311 call, he recognized the name “Charles Patrick” from these earlier

 6   arrests. From all this knowledge Civil believed that the person described in the call

 7   allegedly made by Patrick was Ashley.

 8          Civil alleges that on the evening of April 19, 2013—the day of the search and

 9   of Ashley’s arrest—Civil shared all this information with a paralegal or prosecutor

10   with the Kings County District Attorney’s Early Case Assessment Bureau (ECAB).

11   He then received from ECAB a criminal complaint (the “First Complaint”), which

12   stated, in relevant part:

13          The deponent [Civil] states that . . . [he] observed the defendants
14          [Ashley and Carlos] in possession of approximately two ounces of
15          marihuana, in that the informant did recover said quantity of
16          marijuana from the floor inside a room in which the defendants were
17          sitting.

18   Joint App’x at 150. Civil testified that he did not actually tell ECAB that Ashley

19   was in the room when he found the marijuana. He also testified that, upon reading

20   this portion of the First Complaint, he noticed it contained what he described as a

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   “slight discrepancy”—namely, the First Complaint stated that Civil observed

 2   Ashley in possession of the marijuana and that Civil recovered it from the floor in

 3   a room where Ashley was sitting. Joint App’x at 784. Despite noticing this manifest

 4   inaccuracy, Civil signed the complaint and faxed it back to ECAB.

 5          Ashley was prosecuted under the First Complaint in New York state court.

 6   There was no jury indictment because he was charged only with misdemeanors.

 7          In April 2014, Ashley’s defense attorney obtained surveillance images from

 8   the apartment building which showed Ashley arriving at the apartment after the

 9   police. This meant the First Complaint had falsely asserted that Civil, on arriving,

10   found Ashley with the marijuana in the apartment.

11          At this point, the prosecution filed a superseding information (the “Second

12   Complaint”), which stated in relevant part:

13          The deponent [Civil] states that . . . [he] observed the defendants in
14          possession of approximately two ounces of marihuana, in that the
15          deponent entered [the apartment] and observed defendant Jose
16          Carlos on the floor and defendant Dushanne Ashley did enter said
17          location shortly thereafter and state[d] in sum and substance, see, this
18          is what happens when you let strange people into our apartment, and
19          deponent did recover said quantity of marihuana from the floor.

20   Joint App’x at 975. Ashley denies that he ever said, “this is what happens when

21   you let strange people into our apartment.” The significance of the statement, if

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   made, is, of course, that it would constitute an admission by Ashley that the

 2   apartment in which the marijuana was found was still his apartment.

 3          The origin of this statement is unclear. It appears on an undated “fly page”

 4   in Civil’s memo book. And the statement was included in only the second of two

 5   notices issued by prosecutors under N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 710.30(1)(a), which

 6   detail a defendant’s statements that the prosecution might use at trial. The first

 7   notice attributed to Ashley only the statement “I’m tired of this shit.” Joint App’x

 8   at 976. The second notice, apparently issued around the time the prosecution filed

 9   the Second Complaint, did attribute the disputed statement to Ashley.

10          On July 15, 2014, Ashley’s defense attorney moved to dismiss the Second

11   Complaint as facially insufficient. The state court found the Second Complaint

12   facially insufficient, stating: “Just because it is your home you cannot control what

13   people bring into your home and obviously [the police] said they see somebody

14   with the stuff and [Ashley] comes in subsequently. Superseding information

15   facially insufficient.” Joint App’x at 287. The court gave the prosecution the option

16   of superseding yet again, but the prosecution did not do so.

17          On July 18, the court formally dismissed the Second Complaint:

                                              10
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1          If I come visit you and you have pot in your living room, I am going
 2          to get charged, that is what it says here. Basically if you have
 3          marijuana in your living room and . . . the police are already in the
 4          home, [if] I come after the police[,] . . . I get charged for the marijuana
 5          that you are standing by.
 6          ....
 7          You guys are going to have to appeal this. This is dismissed. No
 8          way . . . .

 9   Joint App’x at 158. The prosecution did not appeal the dismissal.

10      B. The Present Lawsuit

11          On April 20, 2016, Ashley filed this lawsuit in the district court in the Eastern

12   District of New York, claiming violations of his constitutional rights under 42

13   U.S.C. § 1983. Ashley alleged false arrest, malicious prosecution, failure to

14   intervene, illegal strip search, excessive pre-arraignment detention, and fabricated

15   evidence, in violation of his rights under the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth

16   Amendments to the United States Constitution.

17          Defendants-Appellees moved for summary judgment on all of Ashley’s

18   claims, and Ashley cross-moved for summary judgment on his claims for false

19   arrest and fabricated evidence. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis referred the

20   motions to Magistrate Judge Steven Gold. Subsequently adopting Judge Gold’s

21   Report and Recommendation, the district court granted summary judgment to

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   Defendants-Appellees on all of Ashley’s claims, with one exception: Ashley’s

 2   claim for fabricated evidence survived, but only against Civil.

 3          In due course, Ashley’s fabricated-evidence claim was tried before a jury. At

 4   the close of the defense, Ashley moved for judgment as a matter of law. The motion

 5   was denied. Before instructing the jury, the court circulated a proposed jury

 6   charge, which stated, in relevant part:

 7          In order for you to find that Plaintiff’s constitutional right to a fair trial
 8          was violated by the Defendant, Plaintiff must satisfy his burden of
 9          proof as to the following elements: (1) the defendant fabricated
10          evidence that: (2) is likely to influence a jury’s decisions; (3) provided
11          that information to prosecutors; and (4) the plaintiff suffered a
12          deprivation of liberty as a result.

13   Joint App’x at 484. The court then added:

14          Paperwork errors, or a mere mistake, or mistakes, by a police officer
15          in making a written record is not a basis for finding a constitutional
16          violation but can be considered on the question of veracity.

17   Joint App’x at 485.

18          At the jury charge conference, Ashley’s counsel objected to the court’s

19   instructions on fabrication. Ashley’s counsel argued that, because Judge Garaufis

20   had already determined at the summary judgment stage that Civil knew the First

21   Complaint contained a false statement and had nonetheless signed and returned

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   it to ECAB, it was error to put to the jury the question of whether there had been

 2   a fabrication. Civil’s counsel answered that Civil was entitled to his defense on the

 3   question of fabrication—specifically, whether the false statement in the First

 4   Complaint was, as the court’s instructions put it, “a mere mistake” and thus not

 5   constitutionally actionable. The court agreed with Civil’s counsel, explaining that,

 6   in considering the evidence in the light most favorable to Ashley as required at

 7   summary judgment, it had denied summary judgment to Civil because there

 8   remained triable issues of fact as to fabrication. The court stated:

 9          Why would I take this question of whether the error that was made
10          by the prosecutor was the result of a fabrication, when . . . the jury
11          is . . . going to hear from the defendant as to the reason why he did
12          what he did. It’s his right to have his defense on that subject.

13   Joint App’x at 610-11.

14          The court thereafter instructed the jury on all elements of the fabricated-

15   evidence claim, along with the aforementioned instruction on “paperwork errors.”

16   The jury deliberated and found for Civil. Ashley’s counsel renewed his motion for

17   judgment as a matter of law, which the court again denied.

18          Ashley timely appealed the grant of summary judgment to Civil on the

19   false-arrest and malicious-prosecution claims, along with the denial of his motion

                                              13
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   for judgment as a matter of law on the fabricated-evidence claim. Additionally, in

 2   his appeal, Ashley alleged several errors in the district court’s jury charge.

 3                                      DISCUSSION

 4          For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court’s grant of

 5   summary judgment to Civil on Ashley’s claims for false arrest and malicious

 6   prosecution. We also affirm the district court’s denial of Ashley’s motion for

 7   judgment as a matter of law on his fabricated-evidence claim. The district court,

 8   however, erred in charging the jury that “[p]aperwork errors . . . [are] not a basis

 9   for finding a constitutional violation.” Joint App’x at 955. This error resulted in

10   prejudice to Ashley. Accordingly, we remand for a new trial.

11      A. False Arrest and Malicious Prosecution

12          We begin with Ashley’s claims for false arrest and malicious prosecution.

13   We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, construing the

14   facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and drawing all

15   reasonable inferences in its favor. The movant must show that there is no genuine

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   issue as to any material facts, and that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of

 2   law. June v. Town of Westfield, 370 F.3d 255, 257 (2d Cir. 2004).

 3          Claims for false arrest brought under Section 1983 are “substantially the

 4   same” as claims for false arrest under state law. Jocks v. Tavernier, 316 F.3d 128, 134

 5   (2d Cir. 2003) (quoting Weyant v. Okst, 101 F.3d 845, 852 (2d Cir. 1996)) (internal

 6   quotation marks omitted). Under New York law, to prevail on a claim for false

 7   arrest, a plaintiff must show that “(1) the defendant intended to confine [the

 8   plaintiff], (2) the plaintiff was conscious of the confinement, (3) the plaintiff did

 9   not consent to the confinement, and (4) the confinement was not otherwise

10   privileged.” Id. at 134-35 (quoting Broughton v. State, 37 N.Y.2d 451, 456 (1975)).

11          Probable cause to arrest is a complete defense to an action for false arrest.

12   Weyant, 101 F.3d at 852. Officers have probable cause when they “have knowledge

13   or reasonably trustworthy information of facts and circumstances that are

14   sufficient to warrant a person of reasonable caution in the belief that the person to

15   be arrested has committed or is committing a crime.” Jenkins v. City of New York,

16   478 F.3d 76, 84 (2d Cir. 2007) (quoting Weyant, 101 F.3d at 852). To assess probable

17   cause, a court considers only the facts “available to the officer at the time of the

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   arrest and immediately before it.” Stansbury v. Wertman, 721 F.3d 84, 89 (2d Cir.

 2   2013) (quoting Panetta v. Crowley, 460 F.3d 388, 395 (2d Cir. 2006)).

 3          The district court held that Civil had probable cause to arrest Ashley

 4   because he “knew the room [in which the police found the drugs] was [Ashley’s]

 5   room.” Joint App’x at 378. Civil knew this, the district court concluded, because

 6   he was familiar with Ashley’s room and his possessions, having been present

 7   during Ashley’s arrests there a few months earlier, in late 2012. This conclusion

 8   was erroneous, however, because it required the district court to make an implicit

 9   credibility determination in Civil’s favor, which the district court was not

10   authorized to do on a motion for summary judgment brought by Civil.

11          The record before us supports contrary inferences about the credibility of

12   Civil’s claim that he believed Ashley owned the drugs because he was familiar

13   with Ashley’s room and possessions. In resolving Civil’s summary judgment

14   motion, the district court should have credited these inferences in favor of the non-

15   movant Ashley.

16          First, the Complaint Room Screening Sheet created by the Early Case

17   Assessment Bureau, which reflects a telephone conversation with Civil after the

18   arrest, states that Civil “entered the [apartment], observed [Ashley and Jose

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   Carlos] and [Charles Patrick] in the apartment,” and that “in the room where

 2   [Ashley and Carlos] were located, [Civil] recovered a bag containing 18 smaller

 3   Ziplock baggies containing approximately 2 ounces of marijuana.” Joint App’x at

 4   147. Civil contends that the Screening Sheet does not reflect the full account that

 5   he had relayed to ECAB. He subsequently adopted essentially this version of

 6   events, however, when he signed the First Complaint despite noticing that it

 7   claimed that Civil “observed [Ashley and Carlos] in possession of approximately

 8   two ounces of marihuana, in that [he] did recover said quantity of narcotics from

 9   the floor inside a room in which [Ashley and Carlos] were sitting.” Joint App’x at

10   150.

11          Further, Civil’s familiarity with Ashley’s possessions appears nowhere in

12   the record of Ashley’s state prosecution. After surveillance images established that

13   the First Complaint falsely claimed that Ashley was already at the apartment when

14   the police arrived, the prosecution did not rely on Civil’s alleged knowledge to re-

15   plead the element of possession in the Second Complaint, despite allegedly

16   already having this information. Instead, the Second Complaint alleged that

17   Ashley entered the apartment and said “in sum and substance, see, this is what

18   happens when you let strange people into our apartment.” Joint App’x at 975.

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     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   Moreover, when the state court concluded that the Second Complaint was facially

 2   insufficient, the prosecution declined to supersede a second time, and it did not

 3   allude to any of the information Civil allegedly had already provided to the

 4   prosecution to make the claim that Ashley possessed the marijuana.

 5          Based on this record, a jury could reasonably infer that the prosecution did

 6   not have the information Civil allegedly shared with them, which in turn casts

 7   serious doubt on Civil’s claim that he knew the room in which the police found

 8   the drugs belonged to Ashley. To reach the conclusion that Civil had that

 9   knowledge, the district court necessarily made a credibility determination in

10   Civil’s favor. And this was error, because “credibility, in the ordinary course of

11   things, is for a fact-finder to evaluate.” Globecon Grp., LLC v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,

12   434 F.3d 165, 174 (2d Cir. 2006); see also Rule v. Brine, Inc., 85 F.3d 1002, 1011 (2d

13   Cir. 1996) (“Assessments of credibility and choices between conflicting versions of

14   the events are matters for the jury, not for the court on summary judgment.”).

15          Nonetheless, we can affirm the district court’s judgment on any other

16   ground, and we think the summary judgment record before the district court was

17   sufficient to establish probable cause without relying on Civil’s familiarity with

18   Ashley’s possessions and hence on his credibility. Prior to the arrest, Civil stated

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     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   in an affidavit in support of his search warrant application that the police received

 2   a civilian complaint from a person who identified himself as Charles Patrick. The

 3   civilian complaint stated that “a tall, dark skinned, muscular Male Black with bald

 4   head [was living] in [Patrick’s] apartment, refuse[d] to move out and [was]

 5   sell[ing] drugs out of the apartment . . . .” Joint App’x at 268. Although this tip

 6   alone might lack “sufficient indicia of reliability,” it may nonetheless “support a

 7   finding of reasonable suspicion if sufficiently corroborated through independent

 8   police investigation.” United States v. Elmore, 482 F.3d 172, 179 (2d Cir. 2007). At

 9   Civil’s direction, an undercover agent twice succeeded in purchasing drugs from

10   that location, thereby corroborating a material piece of information from the call.

11   And although the drugs were purchased from Charles Patrick, who allegedly

12   placed the call, we do not think this would have required a reasonable officer to

13   ignore the additional information the caller provided.

14          The physical description in the civilian complaint is arguably overbroad,

15   and we have said that “when [a] description could have applied to any number of

16   persons and does not single out the person arrested, probable cause does not

17   exist.” Jenkins, 478 F.3d at 90. But we do not think that the description is a problem

18   here, because the informant described someone who was “liv[ing] in the

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     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   apartment” and “refuse[d] to move out,” Joint App’x at 268—therefore the

 2   description applied specifically to a roommate. Though we do not see anything in

 3   the summary judgment record indicating Ashley’s height, the picture taken after

 4   his arrest shows an African American man with a shaved or bald head. And in the

 5   room where the police found the marijuana, they also found a picture of Ashley

 6   with a woman. Based on the physical description in the civilian complaint, a

 7   reasonable officer could conclude that the person in the picture was the roommate

 8   the informant described, and that the room in which the picture was found was

 9   his. By the time Ashley arrived at the apartment, the police had found marijuana

10   in that room. In these circumstances, a reasonable officer could conclude that the

11   drugs belonged to Ashley.

12          We hold that probable cause to arrest Ashley existed independently of the

13   problems with Civil’s testimony, and therefore affirm the district court’s grant of

14   summary judgment to Civil on Ashley’s claim for false arrest. Further, although

15   the “probable cause standard in the malicious prosecution context is slightly

16   higher than the standard for false arrest cases,” Stansbury, 721 F.3d at 95, we think

17   the facts that supported probable cause to arrest here were sufficient to “lead a

18   reasonably prudent person to believe the plaintiff guilty,” as required for probable

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     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   cause to prosecute a claim. Boyd v. City of New York, 336 F.3d 72, 76 (2d Cir. 2003).

 2   Because probable cause is a complete defense against a claim for malicious

 3   prosecution, Savino v. City of New York, 331 F.3d 63, 72 (2d Cir. 2003), we also affirm

 4   the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Civil on Ashley’s claim for

 5   malicious prosecution.

 6      B. Denial of the Right to a Fair Trial Based on Fabricated Evidence

 7          We turn next to Ashley’s fabricated-evidence claim. To establish this claim,

 8   a plaintiff must show that an investigative officer fabricated information likely to

 9   influence a jury and forwarded that information to the prosecution, causing the

10   plaintiff to suffer a deprivation of liberty. The plaintiff need not have been tried to

11   make out this claim so long as some deprivation of liberty occurred. See Ricciuti,

12   124 F.3d at 130.

13          After a trial on the fabricated-evidence claim, the jury deliberated and

14   returned a verdict in Civil’s favor. Ashley moved for judgment as a matter of law,

15   which the district court denied. We affirm that denial. On appeal, Ashley also

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     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   argues that the jury charge contained several errors. We agree that the charge was

 2   erroneous, and we therefore vacate the jury verdict and remand for a new trial. 4

 3              a. Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law

 4          We review the denial of a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50

 5   de novo. S.E.C. v. Ginder, 752 F.3d 569, 574 (2d Cir. 2014). We affirm the denial of

 6   this motion unless there is “such a complete absence of evidence supporting the

 7   verdict that the jury’s findings could only have been the result of sheer surmise

 8   and conjecture, or the evidence in favor of the movant is so overwhelming that

 9   reasonable and fair minded [persons] could not arrive at a verdict against [it.]” Id.

10   (quoting Tepperwien v. Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., 663 F.3d 556, 567 (2d Cir.

11   2011). We consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant and

12   give that party the benefit of all reasonable inferences that the jury might have

13   drawn in their favor. Id.

14          To succeed on a fabricated-evidence claim, a plaintiff must establish that “an

15   (1) investigating official (2) fabricate[d] information (3) that is likely to influence a

     4We decline to consider Civil’s additional argument, raised for the first time on appeal, that
     probable cause is a defense to Ashley’s fabricated-evidence claim.

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     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   jury’s verdict, (4) forward[ed] that information to prosecutors, and (5) the plaintiff

 2   suffer[red] a deprivation of life, liberty, or property as a result.” Garnett v.

 3   Undercover Officer C0039, 838 F.3d 265, 279 (2d Cir. 2016). The district court based

 4   its denial of Ashley’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on the third and fifth

 5   elements of the claim—materiality and causation. It held that a reasonable jury

 6   could conclude that Ashley had not met his burden of proof with respect to either

 7   of these elements. Because we agree with the district court’s conclusion regarding

 8   causation, we need not decide whether the evidence presented at trial permitted

 9   the jury to conclude that any false statement was not material.

10          We focus our analysis on the First Complaint. Government officials “may

11   be held liable for fabricating evidence through false statements and omissions that

12   are . . . made knowingly.” Morse v. Fusto, 804 F.3d 538, 547 (2d Cir. 2015). Civil

13   testified that he knew the First Complaint contained a false statement but that he

14   nonetheless signed it and returned it to ECAB. Thus, he knowingly forwarded a

15   false statement to the prosecution. Civil insists that a jury could infer that, because

16   he testified that he did not himself originate or share with ECAB the false

17   statement, Ashley has not proven that Civil sent fabricated information to the

18   prosecution. But this is not a reasonable inference. Even if the jury believed that

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   Civil originally did share correct information with the prosecutors, the jury would

 2   not be entitled to ignore the fact that Civil later signed the First Complaint even

 3   though he knew that it contained a false statement ascribed to him. And Civil’s

 4   claim that any fabrication was attributable only to the prosecution fails for the

 5   same reason. When he knowingly signed the First Complaint—which said that

 6   Civil “state[d]” that he saw Ashley in possession of the marijuana, Joint App’x

 7   150—Civil adopted that statement as his own. We conclude that Ashley has

 8   established fabrication based on the First Complaint as a matter of law.

 9          We hold, however, that the evidence at trial did not establish causation as a

10   matter of law. The jury could have inferred from the fact that the prosecution did

11   not drop the charges against Ashley after Civil’s fabrication came to light, but

12   instead filed the Second Complaint, that this fabrication did not cause Ashley’s

13   deprivation of liberty, i.e. his prosecution. Of course, the fact that the case was

14   dismissed almost immediately thereafter might cast doubt on this inference. But

15   considering the evidence in the light most favorable to Civil and granting him the

16   benefit of all reasonable inferences, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that the

17   fabrication caused the liberty-depriving judicial proceedings. Therefore, Ashley’s

18   motion for judgment as a matter of law was properly denied.

                                              24
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1             b. Favorable Termination

 2          Civil contends that under McDonough v. Smith, 139 S. Ct. 2149 (2019),

 3   plaintiffs asserting a fabricated-evidence claim must establish that the underlying

 4   prosecution terminated in their favor. He asserts that, because Ashley has not

 5   shown a favorable termination, any possible errors in the jury instructions were

 6   harmless. We hold, however, that Ashley’s criminal case did terminate favorably

 7   to him.

 8          Our favorable-termination analysis here relies on our precedents regarding

 9   favorable termination in the malicious-prosecution context. The Supreme Court

10   explained in McDonough that fabricated-evidence claims might merit a “context-

11   specific,” and indeed “more capacious,” understanding of what constitutes a

12   favorable termination. 139 S. Ct. at 2160 n.10. But even assuming, arguendo, that

13   the favorable termination requirement for fabricated-evidence claims is identical

14   to that used for malicious prosecution claims, we believe that our malicious

15   prosecution precedents compel the conclusion that Ashley’s prosecution

16   terminated in his favor.

17          In the malicious prosecution context, we have held that, to be deemed a

18   favorable termination, the prosecution’s “final disposition [must be] such as to

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   indicate the accused is not guilty.” Singleton v. City of New York, 632 F.2d 185, 193

 2   (2d Cir. 1980). This requirement is most easily met with a judgment of acquittal.

 3   But we have long recognized that a termination may be favorable when, although

 4   the termination is “not based on the merits, . . . the failure to proceed implies a lack

 5   of reasonable grounds for the prosecution.” Russo v. State of New York, 672 F.2d

 6   1014, 1019 (2d Cir. 1982) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)

 7   (quoting Loeb v. Teitelbaum, 77 A.D.2d 92, 101 (N.Y. App. Div. 2d Dep‘t 1980);

 8   Halberstadt v. N.Y. Life Ins. Co., 194 N.Y. 1, 10-11 (1909)).

 9          This principle, which we have repeatedly and consistently recognized, 5 is

10   stated most clearly in Murphy v. Lynn, 118 F.3d 938 (2d Cir. 1997). There, we

11   explained that whether a non-merits termination is “indicative of innocence

12   depends on the nature and circumstances of the termination; the dispositive

13   inquiry is whether the failure to proceed implies a lack of reasonable grounds for

     5See, e.g., Conway v. Village of Mount Kisco, 750 F.2d 205, 215 (2d Cir. 1984) (“[W]here [the final
     disposition] is not based on the merits, the dispositive inquiry—to be made factually—was
     found to be whether the failure to proceed implies a lack of reasonable grounds for the
     prosecution.”); Janetka v. Dabe, 892 F.2d 187, 189 (2d Cir. 1989) (“When a termination is
     indecisive because it does not address the merits of the charge, the facts surrounding the
     termination must be examined to determine whether the failure to proceed implies a lack of
     reasonable grounds for the prosecution.”) (quoting Conway, 750 F.2d at 215) (internal quotation
     marks and citation omitted); Rounseville v. Zahl, 13 F.3d 625, 629 (2d Cir. 1994).

                                                     26
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   the prosecution.” Id. at 948 (internal quotation marks, alterations, and citations

 2   omitted); cf. Conway, 750 F.2d at 215 (concluding that, although the village court

 3   docket noted the termination was “not on the merits,” the circumstances

 4   surrounding the termination gave rise to a question of fact over whether the

 5   prosecution actually terminated in the plaintiff’s favor). And although we held in

 6   Murphy that, as a “general[]” matter, “certain types of dispositions”—such as

 7   dismissals for facial insufficiency in which the prosecution has “fail[ed] to allege

 8   sufficient facts to support the charge”—do not qualify as favorable terminations,

 9   we emphasized that the determination is context-specific. See Murphy, 118 F.3d at

10   948.

11          Here, the circumstances surrounding the termination of Ashley’s

12   prosecution show favorable termination, even though the disposition was denoted

13   as a dismissal for facial insufficiency. The circumstances are not disputed. The First

14   Complaint was dismissed after surveillance images showed Ashley arriving at the

15   apartment building after the police. In April 2014, the prosecution filed the Second

16   Complaint. On July 15, 2014, the court found that the Second Complaint was also

17   facially insufficient, noting that “[j]ust because it is your home you cannot control

18   what people bring into your home and obviously [the police] said they [saw]

                                              27
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   somebody with the stuff and [Ashley came] in subsequently.” Joint App’x at 287.

 2   The prosecution was then given the opportunity to supersede a second time and

 3   adduce further allegations to support the charges, but declined to do so. And on

 4   July 18, 2014, the court dismissed the Second Complaint, noting that unless the

 5   prosecution appealed the dismissal within thirty days, the case would be sealed.

 6   The prosecution did not appeal.

 7          Significantly, at the latter hearing the court voiced severe criticism of the

 8   prosecution’s case: “[I]f you have marijuana in your living room and . . . the police

 9   are already in the home [and] . . . I come in after the police[,] . . . I get charged for

10   the marijuana you are standing by.” Joint App’x at 158. The court went on to

11   compare the case against Ashley to other cases where the mere presence of the

12   defendant close to the marijuana was not enough to establish possession, noting

13   that there were “a lot of these search warrant cases” that turned out to be

14   groundless prosecutions. Joint App’x at 159.

15          In other words, the problem with the prosecution’s case did not stem from

16   a deficiency in the pleading, but rather from the court’s sense that the

17   prosecution’s case without more simply did not support a charge of unlawful

18   possession of marijuana against Ashley. Indeed, although the prosecution was

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    19-2726-cv
    Ashley v. City of New York

1   offered multiple opportunities to strengthen its case and supersede the deficient

2   pleading, it declined to do so. Cf. Murphy, 118 F.3d at 948 (holding that dismissal

3   for facial insufficiency tends not to indicate favorable termination where the

4   prosecution remains able to institute a “renewed prosecution . . . on a facially

5   sufficient pleading”). It follows that the prosecution’s dismissal would “indicate

6   [that Ashley is] not guilty.” Singleton, 632 F.2d at 193. 6 As a result, we need not

7   decide whether and how the favorable-termination standard for fabricated-

8   evidence claims may be “more capacious” than the favorable-termination

9   standard for malicious prosecution claims, McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2160 n.10,

    6Of course, not every dismissal for facial insufficiency will satisfy the favorable termination
    requirement. See MacFawn v. Kresler, 214 A.D.2d 925, 926 (N.Y. App. Div. 3d Dep’t 1995) (“Even
    looking beyond [the designation of facial insufficiency] and considering the actual basis for the
    decision, . . . plaintiff’s supporting affidavits fail[ed] to allege any facts indicating the dismissal
    of the information was either a favorable termination or that the dismissal implied his
    innocence.”) (internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted), aff’d, 88 N.Y.2d 859
    (1996).

    We have explained that procedural dismissals might not satisfy the favorable termination
    requirement because they “may not end the state’s pursuit of the accused on the same charges,”
    Murphy, 118 F.3d at 949–50. But that rationale does not apply here because the statute of
    limitations period in which the government could bring these charges against Ashley has
    elapsed without any further attempt to charge him. See N.Y. Penal Law § 221.10 (McKinney
    2018) (amended 2019) (defining criminal unlawful possession of marijuana in the fifth degree as
    a class B misdemeanor); N.Y. Penal Law § 221.15 (McKinney 2020) (defining criminal possession
    of marijuana in the fourth degree as a class A misdemeanor); N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 30.10(2)(c)
    (McKinney 2020) (requiring commencement of prosecution for misdemeanors within two years
    of their alleged commission).

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     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   because we hold that in the circumstances before us, Ashley’s state criminal case

 2   terminated favorably to him even under our malicious prosecution precedents.

 3             c. Jury Instructions

 4          We therefore must consider Ashley’s contention that the district court erred

 5   in its charge to the jury.

 6          Where the challenging party failed to object to the charge at trial, we review

 7   the jury instructions for plain error, and will grant a new trial only where the

 8   charge “contravene[s] an established rule of law . . . and go[es] to the very essence

 9   of the case.” Rasanen v. Doe, 723 F.3d 325, 333 (2d Cir. 2013). On the other hand,

10   where the challenging party objects to the charge at trial, we review the instruction

11   de novo. An instruction is erroneous if it misleads the jury as to the correct legal

12   standard or does not “adequately inform the jury of the law.” Hudson v. New York

13   City, 271 F.3d 62, 67 (2d Cir. 2001) (quoting Hathaway v. Coughlin, 99 F.3d 550, 552

14   (2d Cir. 1996)). We reverse only if, “based on a review of the record as a

15   whole, . . . the error was prejudicial or the charge was highly confusing.” Id. at 68

16   (quoting Terminate Control Corp. v. Horowitz, 28 F.3d 1335, 1345 (2d Cir. 1994)).

17          Ashley argues that the district court erred in three regards: (1) it allowed the

18   jury to consider whether there was fabrication and whether such fabrication was

                                               30
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   forwarded to the prosecution, even though the court had held—as a matter of

 2   law—that Ashley had established those elements of the claim; (2) it instructed the

 3   jury that “paperwork errors” or “mere mistakes” by a police officer do not amount

 4   to fabrication; and (3) its instructions on materiality were “so incomplete that they

 5   [misled] the jury as to the correct law.” Appellant’s Br. at 47.

 6          To begin with the third and simplest issue, we assess the materiality

 7   instruction under plain error because Ashley did not raise this challenge before

 8   the trial court. The district court instructed the jury that, to establish materiality,

 9   Ashley needed to show that the fabrication was “likely to influence a jury’s

10   decision.” Joint App’x at 954. This instruction appears to adhere with how this

11   Court has in the past articulated the materiality standard, see, e.g., Garnett, 838 F.3d

12   at 279, and therefore the instruction was not plainly erroneous.

13          We review de novo the other two instructions that Ashley claims were

14   erroneous. Ashley expressly objected to the district court’s inclusion of an

15   instruction on fabrication. Although Ashley did not object to the “paperwork

16   error” language specifically, we are satisfied, after reviewing the record, that his

17   objection to the fabrication instruction sufficiently called the court’s attention to

18   the problem. As we have held, “no particular formality is required of the objection

                                               31
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   so long as it is clear that the trial judge was informed of possible errors in the

 2   charge and was given an opportunity to correct them.” Medforms, Inc. v. Healthcare

 3   Mgmt. Solutions, Inc., 290 F.3d 98, 112 (2d Cir. 2002) (quoting Fogarty v. Near N. Ins.

 4   Brokerage, Inc., 162 F.3d 74, 79 (2d Cir. 1998)). When Ashley objected to the element

 5   of fabrication being put to the jury, both Civil’s counsel and the court understood

 6   that this objection also implicated the court’s instructions regarding paperwork

 7   errors. Indeed, in response to Ashley’s objection, the court stated:

 8          Why would I take this question of whether the error that was made
 9          by the prosecutor was the result of a fabrication, when they’re going
10          to hear from the defendant, when the jury is . . . going to hear from
11          the defendant as to the reason why he did what he did. It’s [Civil’s]
12          right to have his defense on that subject.

13   Joint App’x at 610-11. We conclude that the district court was made sufficiently

14   aware of possible errors to preserve Ashley’s challenge to these two instructions

15   in full.

16          Ashley contends that the jury instruction on fabrication was erroneous

17   because, at summary judgment, the district court had concluded that Ashley had

18   established fabrication with regard to the First Complaint. We take him to be

19   arguing that, in not expressly distinguishing between the allegations concerning

20   the First and Second Complaints, the general instruction on fabrication misled the

                                               32
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   jury and permitted it, improperly, to find no fabrication with respect to the First

 2   Complaint. 7 We need not, however, decide the point because we agree with

 3   Ashley that a remand for a new trial is necessary as a result of the other

 4   instructional error that he raises.

 5          The district court erred in charging the jury that “[p]aperwork errors, or

 6   mere mistake, or mistakes, by a police officer in making a written record is not a

 7   basis for finding a constitutional violation.” Joint App’x at 955. This instruction

 8   was severely misleading.

 9          The fabrication element requires only that the defendant knowingly make a

10   false statement or omission. Morse, 804 F.3d at 547. The testimony at trial

11   established as a matter of law that Civil did just that when he signed the First

12   Complaint knowing that it contained a false statement. Civil, however, testified

13   that he thought the statement was a “slight discrepancy.” Joint App’x at 784. This

14   testimony, taken together with the court’s instruction, could have led the jury

     7It would have been proper for the jury to consider whether Civil had fabricated evidence and
     whether he had forwarded that evidence to the prosecutor with respect to the Second
     Complaint. As to that complaint, the issue of whether there was a fabrication is not settled. It
     turns on the origin of the phrase “this is what happens when you let strange people into our
     apartment,” Joint App’x at 975, and whether Ashley did in fact say those words—questions that
     are disputed.

                                                   33
     19-2726-cv
     Ashley v. City of New York

 1   mistakenly to believe that fabrication turns in part on the severity of the error

 2   rather than simply on the knowing falsity of the statement. Indeed, this is precisely

 3   what Civil’s counsel argued at summation: “Plaintiff wants you to believe that just

 4   because there was a mistake in the paperwork, his constitutional rights were

 5   violated, but that’s not true.” Joint App’x at 926. With respect to the First

 6   Complaint, the jury therefore may have mistakenly concluded that the false

 7   statement was a non-actionable “paperwork error” even though, as we have

 8   explained, the fabrication element requires only a knowing falsity. As to the

 9   Second Complaint, we agree that whether the disputed statement it included was

10   a fabrication was a jury question. Nevertheless, the “paperwork error” instruction

11   was erroneous with respect to this complaint as well.

12          There therefore was error. And it was clearly prejudicial, for we cannot say

13   “whether a correctly charged jury would have rendered a different verdict.”

14   Hudson, 271 F.3d at 71. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand for a

15   new trial.

16                                     CONCLUSION

17          We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Ashley’s

18   claims for false arrest and malicious prosecution. On Ashley’s fabricated-evidence

                                              34
    19-2726-cv
    Ashley v. City of New York

1   claim, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of judgment as a matter of law, but

2   VACATE the judgment in favor of Civil, and REMAND for a new trial.

                                          35