Wilber v. Curtis , 872 F.3d 15 ( 2017 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 16-2250
    ROBERT JUDE WILBER,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    ROBERT CURTIS; BRIAN KINSELLA; MICHAEL ROGERS,
    Defendants, Appellees,
    MICHAEL SIMONEAU,
    Defendant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Jennifer C. Boal, Magistrate Judge]
    Before
    Lynch, Kayatta, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Richard K. Latimer for appellant.
    Thomas R. Donahue, with whom Leonard H. Kesten, Deidre Brennan
    Regan, and Brody, Hardoon, Perkins and Kesten, LLP were on brief,
    for appellees.
    September 20, 2017
    BARRON, Circuit Judge.   This appeal concerns a challenge
    to a summary judgment ruling that dismissed a lawsuit that a
    Massachusetts    property   owner    brought   against   three   police
    officers.    The suit addressed the owner's arrest for actions that
    he took in connection with his objection to the clearing of
    vegetation on his property by the work crew for an electrical
    utility, which held an easement to the property.         We affirm the
    grant of summary judgment in part and vacate in part.
    I.
    We first recount the following undisputed facts.         We
    take them from the unchallenged findings that are set forth in the
    Order on the Parties' Motions for Summary Judgment issued by the
    Magistrate Judge assigned to the case.
    The plaintiff is Robert Wilber.      He resides and owns
    property in Falmouth, Massachusetts.     NStar Corporation ("NStar"),
    which is an electrical company, possesses a deeded easement over
    a part of Wilber's property.    The deed grants NStar an "easement
    to erect, operate, maintain and remove a line . . . for the
    transmission of electricity. . . .       [t]ogether with the right to
    trim, cut and remove such trees and underbrush as in the judgment
    of [NStar] may interfere with or endanger said line and equipment
    and to enter upon said land for any of the aforesaid purposes."
    (last modification added).
    - 2 -
    NStar employs Vegetation Control Services ("VCS") "to
    clear vegetation on its easements in order to provide for the
    maintenance of power lines and structures."           The District Court
    recognized that Wilber describes himself as "a vocal opponent of
    NStar's program of spraying herbicides on its utility easements,"
    and that he is of the view that "NStar's program of clear-cutting"
    on those easements "was overly aggressive."
    In early November, 2011, Wilber saw two VCS employees at
    a worksite near his property.       Wilber approached the VCS employees
    and "hassled" them.        As a result of this confrontation, VCS
    requested   a   police   presence   at   future   worksites      on   Wilber's
    property.
    On November 21, 2011, a week after that earlier encounter
    between Wilber and VCS employees, VCS crew members came onto the
    easement on Wilber's property in order to begin their work in
    clearing vegetation from the site.           As a result of VCS's request
    for a police presence, the crew members were accompanied by two
    Barnstable Police Officers, Officer Robert Curtis and Officer
    Brian Kinsella, each of whom is a defendant in this case.
    Two VCS employees "measured the clearing distance from
    the center of the power lines toward the abutting properties and
    marked the clearing area with red tape tied off to tree limbs."
    Upon seeing the crew at work, Wilber went into "a high state of
    agitation."      And,    after   observing    "chainsaws   and    heavy-duty
    - 3 -
    machinery in action within the clearing area; Wilber vocally
    protested and strung yellow caution tape and plastic rope across
    the easement."
    A VCS employee observed Wilber's actions and informed
    the two officers.     "Curtis observed the tape 'zig-zagged' across
    the easement and saw Wilber, who was standing in the easement,
    taking pictures." The officers, together with two VCS crewmembers,
    attempted to remove the yellow caution tape, which "caused an
    interruption to the work of the VCS crew."      Kinsella then told
    Wilber that Wilber would be arrested if he "interfered with the
    removal of the vegetation within the easement."
    Wilber responded that VCS's clear-cutting work on his
    property must stop.    Kinsella, in turn, "informed Wilber that the
    work would not stop absent a court order" and instructed Wilber
    "to stand outside the marked area easement area while the crew was
    working."    Wilber, however, "disregard[ed]" these instructions.
    "[W]hen [Wilber] reentered the worksite, a large machine was in
    use eighty to one hundred feet away, a chainsaw was in use fifty
    feet away, and another chainsaw was being sharpened twelve to
    fifteen feet away."
    Kinsella again asked Wilber "to stay outside the red
    tape markers" set out by VCS.     Wilber refused and sat down on a
    freshly cut tree stump.     While Wilber was sitting on the stump,
    the VCS crew stopped working.    Wilber shouted to the workers that
    - 4 -
    they "didn't have to do this." Curtis and Kinsella then approached
    Wilber, and Curtis asked Wilber once more to leave the work area.
    The officers warned Wilber to leave the worksite at least three
    more times and notified Wilber that noncompliance could result in
    his arrest. Rather than complying, "Wilber [then] stood up, placed
    his hands behind his back, and did not resist arrest."
    The officers first took Wilber to the police station for
    booking, where he was booked by Curtis and a third Barnstable
    Police Officer, Michael Rogers, who is the other defendant in this
    case.   Wilber was then brought to Falmouth District Court, where
    he was held pending arraignment.        That same day, the Commonwealth
    filed   in   that   court   a   criminal    complaint   for   one   count   of
    disorderly conduct against Wilber.          The Commonwealth dismissed the
    complaint on October 15, 2012.
    This lawsuit followed.         On November 20, 2014, Wilber
    filed suit in Barnstable County Superior Court against Curtis,
    Kinsella, and Rogers.           Wilber's complaint contained one claim
    arising under federal law: an allegation that the officers violated
    Wilber's civil rights under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .           The complaint also
    contained five claims under Massachusetts law: violation of civil
    rights under the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act ("MCRA"), Mass.
    Gen. Laws ch. 12, § 11H, the state analogue to § 1983; malicious
    prosecution; intentional infliction of emotional distress; false
    arrest; and false imprisonment.
    - 5 -
    On January 22, 2015, the defendants removed the case to
    the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
    On February 3 and 4, 2016, the parties filed cross-motions for
    summary judgment, with the defendants moving for summary judgment
    as to all claims and Wilber moving for summary judgment as to four
    of the claims.   The District Court initially assigned a magistrate
    judge to the case to consider the cross-motions.    On the consent
    of both parties, the case proceeded before the Magistrate Judge
    for all purposes.   See LimoLiner, Inc. v. Dattco, Inc., 
    809 F.3d 33
    , 35 n.1 (1st Cir. 2015).      The Magistrate Judge granted the
    defendants' summary judgment motion as to all of the claims.
    The Magistrate Judge first considered Wilber's § 1983
    claim. With respect to that claim, the Magistrate Judge -- relying
    on Soto v. Flores, 
    103 F.3d 1056
    , 1061 (1st Cir. 1997) -- noted
    that a plaintiff must show "two essential elements."   
    Id.
       First,
    "the challenged conduct must be attributable to a person acting
    under color of state law."   Second, "the conduct must have worked
    a denial of rights secured by the Constitution or by federal law."
    
    Id.
    The Magistrate Judge found that the defendants did not
    contest that they were acting under color of state law.        The
    Magistrate Judge then turned to the question whether the officers
    had violated Wilber's constitutional rights -- and specifically
    - 6 -
    whether his Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable seizure
    had been violated by his arrest.
    The defendants contended that Wilber's Fourth Amendment
    right had not been violated because they had probable cause to
    arrest Wilber for having committed any of four separate state law
    offenses -- disorderly conduct, Mass. Gen. Laws ch.       272 § 53
    (2015); disturbing the peace, id.; trespass, Mass. Gen. Laws ch.
    266 § 120 (2001); and interfering with a police officer in the
    performance of his duties, see Commonwealth v. Shave, 
    965 N.E.2d 227
     (Mass. App. Ct. 2012) (affirming the validity of this common
    law crime); Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 279 § 5 (2017) (providing for the
    existence of common law crimes).   They further contended that they
    were entitled to summary judgment because the record showed that
    no reasonable jury could find that the officers lacked probable
    cause to conclude that Wilber had committed at least one of these
    offenses.
    In considering the defendants' summary judgment motion
    on the § 1983 claim, the Magistrate Judge addressed only whether
    there was probable cause to arrest Wilber for disturbing the peace,
    
    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, § 53
    , and for disorderly conduct, 
    id.
    The Magistrate Judge determined that, although genuine issues of
    material fact existed as to whether probable cause existed with
    regard to whether the officers lacked probable cause to arrest
    Wilber for disorderly conduct, Wilber's § 1983 claim failed because
    - 7 -
    no reasonable jury could find that the officers lacked probable
    cause to arrest Wilber for disturbing the peace.
    The Magistrate Judge then turned to Wilber's claim under
    Massachusetts Civil Rights Act ("MCRA"), Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 12,
    § 11H, which is Massachusetts' analogue to § 1983.     The Magistrate
    Judge explained that because it had "found for the defendants on
    the Section 1983 claims, Wilber’s claims necessarily fail to pass
    the narrower MCRA test."   The Magistrate Judge also noted that, in
    light of its ruling that there was no genuine issue of material
    fact as to whether the officers lacked probable cause to arrest
    Wilber for disturbing the peace, there was no need to "address the
    parties' qualified immunity arguments."
    The Magistrate Judge then turned to a consideration of
    Wilber's   remaining   state   law   claims:   false   arrest,   false
    imprisonment, malicious prosecution, and intentional infliction of
    emotional distress. The Magistrate Judge noted that Wilber's false
    arrest, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution claims could
    survive summary judgment only if there was a genuine dispute of
    material fact as to whether the officers lacked probable cause to
    arrest Wilber.   The Magistrate Judge then entered summary judgment
    for defendants on those three state claims.
    As to the fourth state claim, intentional infliction of
    emotional distress, the Magistrate Judge entered summary judgment
    as well.   The Magistrate Judge found that there was no genuine
    - 8 -
    issue of material fact in dispute as to whether the officers were
    "carrying out their obligations as law enforcement officials."
    Thus, the Magistrate Judge concluded that there was no genuine
    issue of disputed fact concerning whether the officers' conduct
    could be "deemed extreme and dangerous," as, in light of Lund v.
    Henderson, 
    22 F. Supp. 3d 94
    , 106 (D. Mass. 2014), and Godette v.
    Stanley, 
    490 F. Supp. 2d 72
    , 81 (D. Mass. 2007), the officers'
    conduct would have to have been deemed in order for the officers
    to be liable for the intentional infliction of emotional distress.
    Finally,   the   Magistrate   Judge   separately   considered
    whether summary judgment should be granted to the third defendant,
    Rogers, as to all of Wilber's claims, state and federal.            The
    Magistrate Judge determined that the record clearly showed that
    Rogers was not involved in Wilber's arrest and that he did not
    even read the police report on the day of the arrest.              The
    Magistrate Judge thus determined that a reasonable jury could not
    find Rogers to have had a sufficient "personal connection" with
    the underlying arrest to be subject to liability on any of Wilber's
    claims in light of Eason v. Alexis, 
    824 F. Supp. 2d 236
     (D. Mass.
    2011), which holds that, under Massachusetts law, a "police officer
    does not 'arrest' a suspect unless he physically seizes the suspect
    or the suspect submits to his authority and control," 
    id. at 242
    .
    With the summary judgment ruling in place, Wilber then
    filed this timely appeal in which he seeks to have that ruling
    - 9 -
    overturned as to each claim and as to each defendant.                Our review
    of the District Court's grant of summary judgment to the defendants
    is de novo.         Braga v. Hodgson, 
    605 F.3d 58
    , 60 (1st Cir. 2010).
    We must "affirm if the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable
    to [the] plaintiff[], shows that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that the [officers are] entitled to summary
    judgment as a matter of law."           Abreu-Guzmán v. Ford, 
    241 F.3d 69
    ,
    73 (1st Cir. 2001).
    II.
    We begin our consideration of the challenge to the ruling
    below by addressing the portion of that ruling that addresses
    Wilber's only federal law claim, which Wilber brings pursuant to
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .         The District Court based its ruling on this
    claim on its determination that the record clearly showed that
    there was probable cause to arrest Wilber for disturbing the peace,
    see 
    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, § 53
    , and that no reasonable jury
    could find otherwise.          Wilber contends on appeal, as he did below,
    that   this       conclusion   is   wrong.     And   he   also   challenges   the
    defendants' arguments regarding the other state law offenses that
    the defendants identify as ones for which no reasonable jury could
    find the officers lacked probable cause to arrest Wilber.1                    But,
    1
    Wilber does not dispute the defendants' contention
    that, notwithstanding that Wilber was ultimately charged only with
    disorderly conduct, the grant of summary judgment on his § 1983
    claim must be affirmed so long as there was probable cause to
    - 10 -
    we need not address the merits of Wilber's various arguments on
    this score because, as the defendants contend, we may affirm the
    grant of summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds. See Sands
    v. Ridefilm Corp., 
    212 F.3d 657
    , 662 (1st Cir. 2000) ("There can
    be no question of our power to rely on a different ground than the
    district court did in affirming its judgment[.]").
    In determining whether a government official is entitled
    to qualified immunity under § 1983, we must determine not only
    whether   the   official   violated    a   federal   statutory   or
    constitutional right, Ciolino v. Gikas, 
    861 F.3d 296
    , 302 (1st
    Cir. 2017), but also "whether the right was 'clearly established'
    at the time of" the challenged governmental conduct, 
    id. at 303
    .
    A clearly established right is one that is "sufficiently clear
    that every reasonable official would have understood that what he
    is doing violates that right."   Reichle v. Howards, 
    566 U.S. 658
    ,
    664 (2012) (citations and alterations omitted).   And, a government
    official, in consequence of qualified immunity, may not be held
    liable under § 1983 unless the official is found to have violated
    a federal law right that is clearly established. Id.
    We have explained that, with respect to a § 1983 claim
    that seeks to hold a police officer liable for making a warrantless
    arrest without probable cause, "if the presence of probable cause
    arrest Wilber for any of the state law offenses that the defendants
    identify.
    - 11 -
    is arguable or subject to legitimate question, qualified immunity
    will attach."      Cox v. Hainey, 
    391 F.3d 25
    , 31 (1st Cir. 2004).             We
    also have made clear that police officers are, in determining
    whether probable cause exists to make a state law arrest, entitled
    to   qualified       immunity   for     their    reasonable       but   mistaken
    assessments of the bounds of state law.             Cortés-Reyes v. Salas-
    Quintana,    
    608 F.3d 41
    ,   51–52    (1st   Cir.    2010)   (holding     that
    defendants    were    protected   by    qualified      immunity    because    the
    underlying state law was uncertain, and "any conclusions we might
    draw about the relevant Commonwealth law would be uncertain at
    best").
    Here, as we have noted, the defendants identify two state
    law offenses for which an officer reasonably could have determined
    that there was probable cause to arrest Wilber beyond the two state
    law offenses (disorderly conduct and disturbing the peace) that
    the Magistrate Judge considered. In affirming the grant of summary
    judgment on qualified immunity grounds, we focus on only one of
    these two other state law offenses:             interfering with the duties
    of a police officer, which is a common law crime in Massachusetts.
    See Shave, 965 N.E.2d at 227 (affirming the validity of this common
    law crime); Mass. Gen. Laws 279 § 5 (2017) (providing for the
    existence of common law crimes); see also Commonwealth v. Tobin,
    
    108 Mass. 426
    , 426 (1871) (affirming a conviction for a defendant
    - 12 -
    who had "knowingly and designedly . . . hinder[ed], resist[ed] and
    oppose[d] a police officer").
    The defendants contend that the record shows that there
    was probable cause to arrest Wilber for this offense for the
    following reasons.     They argue that the record shows that, at the
    time of the arrest, Kinsella and Curtis "were engaged in the lawful
    performance of their duties to keep citizens out of the easement
    area and worksite for the safety of the public and the VCS
    crewmembers."    And, the defendants further argue, Wilber "refused
    numerous requests to leave the worksite."        Thus, they contend that
    the officers had probable cause to arrest Wilber for this offense,
    given that state law supports the conclusion that an individual
    commits         this      offense         by        "knowingly          and
    designedly . . . hinder[ing], resist[ing], and oppos[ing], against
    the peace of the Commonwealth."     See Tobin, 108 Mass. at 426; see
    also Docket No. 1557 CR 000243 (Wrentham Dist. Ct. 2015) (charging
    a defendant with the crime of interference with a police officer
    for   "intimidat[ing],    hinder[ing]    or    interrupt[ing]    a   police
    officer in the lawful course of his or her duty."). The defendants
    go on to assert that, at the least, the record indisputably shows
    that they acted reasonably in so concluding.          As a result, they
    contend that, at a minimum, the record shows that they are entitled
    to summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds and thus that
    - 13 -
    the ruling below granting them summary judgment on this claim must
    be affirmed.
    In response, Wilber chiefly trains his focus on whether
    there was probable cause to arrest him for disturbing the peace or
    for disorderly conduct, and he gives only scant attention to this
    independent ground for effecting his arrest, in which interfering
    with the duties of a police office is the relevant offense.     Wilber
    does assert that his actions challenging the clearing of the
    vegetation are protected by the First Amendment and that the cases
    that the defendants cite to show that his conduct at the worksite
    suffices to support an arrest for the crime of interfering with
    the duties of a police officer each involved the use of physical
    force against the officer, which did not occur here.
    But, for purposes of qualified immunity, it is not enough
    to show that the officers may have made a mistaken determination
    about whether Wilber's conduct provided probable cause to conclude
    that he had committed the offense for which he was arrested.
    Wilber must show that it was clear under state law that there was
    not probable cause to arrest him for this crime.        See Cox, 
    391 F.3d at 31
    .    And, with respect to that question, Wilber cites no
    authority -- and we are aware of none -- that would suggest that
    it was clear at the time of his arrest that this offense does not
    encompass     the   particular   circumstances   that   the   officers
    confronted.
    - 14 -
    After all, Wilber does not dispute that Kinsella and
    Curtis   were   present   at   the   worksite   for   a   legitimate   law
    enforcement reason, that he placed yellow tape across the worksite
    which the officers had to take down, or that he then remained on
    the site after those officers repeatedly requested that he leave
    in consequence of his actions and even after the officers had
    informed him that he would be arrested if he failed to comply with
    their request that he leave.         To be sure, Wilber is right that
    there is nothing in the record to suggest that he had any physical
    contact with the officers.      But Wilber cites to no Massachusetts
    authority that would indicate such contact is a requirement of the
    crime, nor does he make any argument as to why it would be
    unreasonable to conclude that no such requirement exists.        Rather,
    the cases he does cite for the proposition that physical contact
    is required merely show that one can commit the crime by engaging
    in such conduct, see Shave, 
    81 Mass. App. Ct. 1131
    ; Tobin, 108
    Mass. at 429 (describing this crime to include an "affray or
    assault," but failing to say that such physical contact is a
    requirement of the offense), and not that this offense imposes any
    requirement that such conduct must have occurred. See Tobin, 108
    Mass. at 426.
    Thus, while the defendants bear the burden of proving
    that they are entitled to summary judgment on qualified immunity
    grounds, we conclude that that they have met that burden here.
    - 15 -
    Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment on this
    ground.
    III.
    We turn next to the portions of the summary judgment
    order that concerns Wilber's five state law claims.          Those claims
    are,   to    recap,   for   deprivation    of   civil   rights   under   the
    Massachusetts Civil Rights Act (MCRA), intentional infliction of
    emotional distress, malicious prosecution, false arrest, and false
    imprisonment.
    The District Court granted the defendants' motion for
    summary judgment to all three defendants on all five state law
    claims.     On appeal, Wilber asks us to reverse the summary judgment
    ruling as to each of these state law claims as to each defendant.
    He does so on the ground that there is a genuine issue of material
    fact as to each claim that precludes the grant of summary judgment.
    We begin by noting that each of the state law claims at
    issue is in federal court solely as a result of an exercise of
    supplemental jurisdiction.        See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    .          Given our
    decision to affirm the grant of summary judgment as to the § 1983
    claim, however, there is no longer any federal claim in this case.
    And the Supreme Court has instructed that "in the usual case in
    which all federal-law claims are eliminated before trial, the
    balance of factors to be considered under the pendent jurisdiction
    doctrine     --   judicial    economy,     convenience,    fairness,     and
    - 16 -
    comity -- will point toward declining to exercise jurisdiction
    over the remaining state-law claims."            Carnegie–Mellon Univ. v.
    Cohill, 
    484 U.S. 343
    , 350 n.7 (1988); see also 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    (c)(3).
    In accord with that guidance, moreover, we have held
    that, when all federal claims have been dismissed, it is an abuse
    of discretion for a district court to retain jurisdiction over the
    remaining pendent state law claims unless doing so would serve
    “the interests of fairness, judicial economy, convenience, and
    comity.”   See Desjardins v. Willard, 
    777 F.3d 43
    , 45-46 (1st Cir.
    2015) (citation omitted); Rivera-Díaz v. Humana Ins. of Puerto
    Rico, Inc., 
    748 F.3d 387
    , 392 (1st Cir. 2014).             We have also held
    that, under this standard, it can be an abuse of discretion -- if
    no   federal   claim   remains   --   for   a   district   court   to   retain
    jurisdiction over a pendent state law claim when that state law
    claim presents a substantial question of state law that is better
    addressed by the state courts.        Desjardins, 777 F.3d at 45-46.
    Nevertheless, as just noted, Wilber does not argue on
    appeal that, once the federal claim was dismissed on summary
    judgment (as we have determined that the District Court rightly
    held), it was an abuse of discretion for the District Court to
    retain jurisdiction over the pendent state law claims and thus
    that the grant of summary judgment as to the pendent state law
    claims must be vacated per Desjardins.           Wilber instead asks us to
    - 17 -
    overturn the summary judgment ruling as to all of the pendent state
    law claims solely on the ground that the Magistrate Judge erred,
    as to each of those claims, in concluding that there was no genuine
    issue   of   material   fact   that   would   preclude   granting   summary
    judgment to the defendants.       Thus, as we are confronted with only
    this limited challenge to the ruling below as to the five pendent
    state law claims, we see no reason not to affirm at least those
    portions of the ruling granting summary judgment that are so
    plainly correct that no substantial question of state law is
    presented.     See Disher v. Info. Res., Inc., 
    873 F.2d 136
    , 141 (7th
    Cir. 1989) (affirming as "sensibl[e]" a district court's decision
    to "take a quick look" to determine whether remaining state law
    claims "could perhaps be wound up then and there").
    Against this background, we affirm the grant of summary
    judgment as to Wilber's MCRA claim as to all three defendants, as
    our reason for affirming the grant of summary judgment to the
    defendants on Wilber's § 1983 claim necessarily compels that
    result.      See Kelley v. LaForce, 
    288 F.3d 1
    , 10 (1st Cir. 2002)
    (citing Duarte v. Healy, 
    537 N.E.2d 1230
    , 1232 (Mass. 1989) ("The
    same qualified immunity standard that applies under § 1983 has
    also been held to apply to claims under the MCRA[.]")).                 We
    likewise affirm the District Court's grant of summary judgment to
    all defendants on Wilber's claim for intentional infliction of
    emotional distress.     Even if Wilber's cursory treatment on appeal
    - 18 -
    of   the   Magistrate       Judge's    grant    of    summary   judgment    on   the
    intentional infliction of emotional distress claim as to each
    defendant does not amount to a waiver of his challenge to that
    ruling, see United States v. Zannino, 
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st Cir.
    1990)      ("[I]ssues       adverted     to     in     a   perfunctory      manner,
    unaccompanied       by   some   effort   at     developed   argumentation,       are
    deemed waived."), Wilber identifies nothing in the record that
    could support a conclusion that the officers "intended to inflict
    emotional distress or . . . knew or should have known that
    emotional distress was the likely result of [their] conduct[,]"
    Limone v. United States, 
    579 F.3d 79
    , 94 (1st Cir. 2009) (quoting
    Agis v. Howard Johnson Co., 
    355 N.E.2d 315
    , 318 (Mass. 1976)).
    That still leaves, though, the portion of the District
    Court's     order    that    grants    summary       judgment   to   each   of   the
    defendants on Wilber's three remaining pendent state law claims,
    which are for malicious prosecution, false arrest, and false
    imprisonment.       Here, things are a bit more complicated.
    With respect to Rogers, we have no trouble affirming the
    grant of summary judgment as to the malicious prosecution claim
    because Wilber makes no argument as to how Rogers -- who, by
    Wilber's own account, was involved only in booking Wilber -- could
    be liable for malicious prosecution.                 In particular, Wilber has
    not identified any evidence in the record that could support a
    finding that Rogers had an "improper purpose" in taking the action
    - 19 -
    that he did, notwithstanding that proof of such a purpose is an
    essential "element of malicious prosecution."              See Chervin v.
    Travelers   Ins.    Co.,   
    858 N.E.2d 746
    ,   756,   758   (Mass.   2006)
    ("We . . . adopt the 'improper purpose' formulation . . . [for]
    the element of 'malice.'").
    Similarly, we have no trouble affirming the grant of
    summary judgment as to Rogers on the false arrest claim. As Wilber
    acknowledges, Massachusetts law precludes liability for false
    arrest for an officer who does not "participate[] in the arrest"
    and acts "in good faith and in the performance of his duties."
    See 
    Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 263, § 3
    .            But, Wilber argues only
    that Kinsella and Curtis directly participated in the arrest, not
    that Rogers did as well.          Nor does Wilber argue that Rogers'
    involvement in the booking constituted participation in Wilber's
    arrest or, for that matter, that Rogers failed to act "in good
    faith and in the performance of his duties" in undertaking the
    booking.    
    Id.
        Thus, as to this claim against Rogers, we see no
    basis for overturning the grant of summary judgment.
    With respect to the grant of summary judgment to Rogers
    on the claim of false imprisonment, though, we do not affirm, just
    as we do not affirm the grant of summary judgment to Kinsella and
    Curtis with respect to the claims of false imprisonment, false
    arrest, or malicious prosecution.         Unlike the MCRA and intentional
    infliction of emotional distress claims just addressed, the merits
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    of the summary judgment ruling as to these claims -- for false
    imprisonment as to Rogers and for false arrest, false imprisonment,
    and malicious prosecution as to Kinsella and Curtis -- necessarily
    turn on issues that are "best resolved in state court," Desjardins,
    777 F.3d at 46 (quoting Camelio v. Am. Fed'n, 
    137 F.3d 666
    , 672
    (1st Cir. 1998)).
    As to the claims of false arrest and false imprisonment
    against Kinsella and Curtis, the merits of the summary judgment
    ruling depend on whether a jury could reasonably find that the
    officers lacked probable cause to arrest Wilber.                   That question,
    however, necessarily turns in part on a judgment about an issue
    that the parties sharply disagree about and that our resolution of
    the one federal claim did not require us to address -- the right
    definition of the scope of each of the state law offenses that the
    defendants have identified as providing a basis for the arrest.
    And, with respect to the claim of false imprisonment against
    Rogers, yet another contested point of state law presents itself
    -- namely, whether, as Wilber contends, Rogers' role in "booking"
    Wilber precludes Rogers from claiming the protection conferred by
    Mass. Gen. Laws. ch. 272 § 53.
    Finally,      as   to   the    claims    of    malicious   prosecution
    lodged against Kinsella and Curtis, contested state law issues
    arise once again.       For, even if we could bypass the probable cause
    inquiry,   we   still    would     then   have     to    decide   whether   a   jury
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    reasonably could find that the officers had the improper purpose
    required to trigger liability for that tort.
    Thus, rather than attempt, with respect to these issues,
    to resolve the parties' disagreements about how best to construe
    state law in light of the record, we follow our approach in
    Desjardins.      We thus vacate the grant of summary judgment to all
    three officers as to Wilber's claim for false imprisonment, as
    well   as   to   Wilber's    claims   for   false   arrest    and   malicious
    prosecution to Kinsella and Curtis, and remand these claims to
    state court.
    IV.
    We affirm the entry of summary judgment as to Officers
    Kinsella, Curtis, and Rogers on the intentional infliction of
    emotional distress claim and the claims under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     and
    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 12, § 11I, and as to Officer Rogers on the
    malicious prosecution and false arrest claims. We vacate the entry
    of summary judgment as to Officers Kinsella and Curtis on the
    malicious     prosecution,    false   arrest,   and   false    imprisonment
    claims, and as to Officer Rogers on the false imprisonment claim,
    and we remand with instructions that the District Court remand
    those claims to state court.           Each party shall bear their own
    costs.
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