After learning that the settlement of a medical malpractice claim against him had been reported to state and national professional authorities, Dr. Herand Abcarian filed this suit against the University of Illinois and a number of its employees alleging numerous violations of his constitutional rights. The district court dismissed the amended complaint in its entirety and entered a judgment dismissing the case. Abcarian then moved the district court to reconsider its ruling and allow him to amend his complaint again, but the district court denied that motion.
We affirm in all respects. Abcarian’s own complaint shows that the defendants merely complied with legal requirements for filing notices of medical malpractice settlements with federal and state authorities. By filing those notices, the defendants did not violate Abcarian’s free speech rights or his rights to equal protection of the law and due process of law.
Plaintiffs Allegations
Because the district court granted the defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, we take the complaint’s well-pleaded factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in Abcarian’s favor from those allegations.
London v. RBS Citizens, N.A.,
At all relevant times, Abcarian was Head of the Department of Surgery at the University of Illinois College of Medicine at Chicago and Service Chief of the Department of Surgery of the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago. During his tenure, Abcarian and the individual defendants—who were all University employees—clashed over a number of issues including risk management, faculty recruitment, compensation and fringe benefits, other issues that Abcarian vaguely refers to as managerial obstruction of “numerous needed changes,” and medical malpractice insurance premiums.
In 2005, Abcarian was notified that a lawsuit was being contemplated against him based on the death of John Behzad, a former patient. When the defendants learned of this potential lawsuit, says the complaint, they conspired together to use that suit to discredit Abcarian’s reputation. As part of this alleged conspiracy, the University executed a settlement agreement with John Behzad’s son David Behzad. The agreement released the University and its employees and agents (implicitly but undoubtedly including Abcarian) from any and all claims arising out of John Behzad’s death in exchange for a payment of $950,000. 1
*934 Abcarian alleges that the execution of this settlement agreement was the first step in a conspiracy to destroy his reputation and career. How could a settlement advance the conspirators’ goal of discrediting Abcarian? Abcarian’s answer to this question is that the defendants entered into the settlement agreement and paid Behzad nearly a million dollars merely so they could report the settlement of a medical malpractice claim against Abcarian to the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (“IDFPR”) and the National Practitioner Data Bank (“NPDB”). 2 Upon receiving those reports, both the IDFPR and the NPDB asked Abcarian to provide information about the settlement. 3 The IDFPR told Abcarian that a failure to provide a timely response to its request could result in disciplinary action. Abcarian does not allege, however, that any formal disciplinary proceedings were ever initiated against him, let alone that any formal disciplinary sanctions were imposed.
The alleged conspiracy to destroy Abcarian’s professional reputation did not end with the reporting of the settlement, according to Abcarian. The same day that the settlement agreement was executed, the defendants directed David Behzad’s counsel to file suit against Abcarian in a state trial court. They further directed Behzad’s counsel not to serve Abcarian with process in that suit, but to inform the court that the matter had been settled and to request a dismissal of the lawsuit. Abcarian believes that the defendants did this to prevent him from contesting the merits of the malpractice claim.
The state trial court approved the settlement agreement and dismissed the case with prejudice. When Abcarian learned of the dismissal, he filed a petition to vacate the dismissal. He asked that the settlement be vacated and the settlement funds returned to the defendants. The defendants, through counsel, intervened to oppose this petition. The court vacated the dismissal order but declined to vacate the settlement agreement. Behzad then voluntarily dismissed his lawsuit with prejudice. The trial court’s decision was affirmed on appeal,
Behzad v. Abcarian,
No. 1-07-1357 (Ill.App. May 19, 2008) (unpublished order), and the Illinois Supreme Court declined review,
Behzad v. Abcarian,
Abcarian then brought this lawsuit against the defendants alleging various constitutional claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as well as a number of state law claims. On the defendants’ motion to dismiss Abcarian’s amended complaint, the
*935
district court dismissed all claims against the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois on Eleventh Amendment grounds and dismissed all of Abcarian’s constitutional claims against the individual defendants for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted.
Abcarian v. McDonald,
No. 08 C 3843,
Abcarian appeals the district court’s dismissal of his free speech, equal protection, and procedural due process claims against the individual defendants. He also challenges the court’s refusal to amend its judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) and argues that the court should have permitted him to amend his complaint. He does not appeal the dismissal of his claims against the Board of Trustees or the dismissal of his substantive due process and jury trial claims.
Analysis
I. Dismissal on the Merits
A. First Amendment Retaliation Claim
In Count I of his amended complaint, Abcarian claimed that the defendants violated his First Amendment rights by retaliating against him for exercising his freedom of speech. The district court concluded that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
On appeal, Abcarian’s makes two arguments to avoid the effect of
Garcetti.
First, he argues that Garcetti forbids retaliation claims only against employers themselves, not against fellow employees. This is an issue on which we reserved judgment in
Fairley v. Andrews,
Garcetti
held that “when public employees make statements pursuant to their official duties, the employees are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment purposes, and the Constitution does not insulate their communications from employer discipline.”
Id.
The case arose when a state prosecutor brought a First Amendment retaliation claim arising out of discipline imposed on him after he drafted a memorandum questioning the validity of a search warrant obtained in a pending criminal case.
Id.
at 413-15,
Plaintiff Abcarian seeks to narrow
Garcetti
to apply only to claims against the employer as an entity, while still allowing claims against individual co-employees who
*936
acted as agents of the employer. We are not persuaded. It would be difficult to reconcile Garcetti with a broad rule permitting retaliation claims against co-employees in all circumstances. Although the Supreme Court couched its analysis in the context of the employer-employee relationship, it indicated that employees speaking pursuant to their official duties do not speak as citizens for purposes of the First Amendment.
Id.
at 421,
In
Fairley,
on which Abcarian primarily relies, the plaintiffs brought First Amendment retaliation claims against both them employer and their co-employees.
In essence, Fairley held that the reasoning of Garcetti reaches claims against employers and also claims against co-employees whose actions directly advance the employer’s interest in maintaining an orderly workplace. This would apply when the co-employee acts under instructions from, with express approval of, or in clear accordance with the policies set out by the employer itself. In such circumstances, the co-employee’s actions implicate the employer’s administrative interests so squarely as to require application of Garcetti for the benefit of the co-employee. Suppose, for example, that the prosecutor in Garcetti had been reported (in compliance with the employer’s written policies) by a coworker for his behavior and had been disciplined then. Under Abcarian’s proposed narrow interpretation of Garcetti, the employer would be immune from a retaliation claim but the co-worker would not, despite the fact that he acted only to further the employer’s interests. Such a rule would be at least as disruptive to workplace discipline as would a rule allowing retaliation suits against the employer itself—exactly contrary to Garcetti Although employers could still respond to workplace complaints without fear of suit, we could expect that complaints would be made less frequently because of the other employees’ fear of being sued by their coworkers. Less able to rely on its own employees to provide necessary information on which to base its disciplinary decisions, the employer would be in practically the same position, from a managerial standpoint, that it would have occupied if Garcetti had been decided the other way.
Accordingly, we reject Abcarian’s first argument and conclude that Garcetti applies to the retaliation claim against the individual defendants. Abcarian specifical *937 ly alleged that the Board of Trustees “adopt[ed] and ratif[ied] the actions of the conspirators as [its] official policy,” forcing a conclusion that the defendants’ alleged retaliatory acts advanced the Board’s interests as an employer. Because Fairley made clear that Garcetti shelters employee actions in this situation, we need not decide the broader question whether Garcetti applies to all instances of co-employee retaliation.
Abcarian’s second argument against application of
Garcetti
is that his speech was not pursuant to his official responsibilities.
Garcetti
bars retaliation claims only if the plaintiff spoke as an employee rather than as a citizen.
See Chaklos v. Stevens,
A natural reading of the allegations in Abcarian’s amended complaint indicates that he spoke while discharging the responsibilities of his office, not as a member of the general public. Abcarian was not merely a staff physician with limited authority. He was, among other things, the Service Chief of the Department of Surgery at the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago as well as Head of the Department of Surgery at the University of Illinois College of Medicine at Chicago. Abcarian had significant authority and responsibility over a wide range of issues affecting the surgical departments at both institutions and therefore had a broader responsibility to speak in the course of his employment obligations. The subjects on which he spoke—risk management, the fees charged to physicians, and surgeon abuse of prescription medications, among other things—directly affected both surgical departments and fell within the broad ambit of his responsibilities. This alleged speech was within the scope of Abcarian’s responsibilities as an employee. See id. (“An employee with significant and comprehensive responsibility ... certainly has greater responsibility to speak.... ”).
Abcarian’s amended complaint gives us insufficient reason to believe that, despite the likelihood that he spoke in the course of his job responsibilities, he ever stepped outside his administrative role to speak as a citizen. On appeal, Abcarian admits that his amended complaint is “entirely devoid of any job description or other detail of Abcarian’s affirmative duties,” leaving us to speculate whether he spoke as a citizen or in the course of his employment. A mere speculative possibility that Abcarian spoke as a citizen is no longer enough to satisfy federal notice pleading requirements. See
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -, -,
Because any plausible reading of Abcarian’s amended complaint indicates that his speech was made pursuant to his official duties, and because Abcarian failed to make any factual allegations indicating otherwise, Garcetti bars his First Amendment retaliation claim. Dismissal of Count I of the amended complaint was proper.
B. Equal Protection Class-of-One Claim
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment most typically reaches state action that treats a person poorly because of the person’s race or other suspect classification, such as sex, national origin, religion, political affiliation, among others, or because the person has exercised a “fundamental right,” or because the person is a member of a group that is the target of irrational government discrimination. See generally
Engquist v. Oregon Dep’t of Agriculture,
Abcarian tries to take advantage of this theory in Count VI of the amended complaint, which alleges that defendants violated his equal protection rights by reporting the Behzad settlement but not the settlement of a malpractice claim against another physician. The district court dismissed Count VI and the related claim for equitable relief on the ground that Abcarian’s claim was barred by the Supreme Court’s decision in Engquist. Abcarian contends that Engquist applies only to class-of-one claims against governmental employers but not to claims against other government employees.
We conclude that the district court correctly dismissed the equal protection claim, but for another reason: under the law, defendants had no discretion in deciding whether to report the Behzad settlement.
Engquist
held that class-of-one claims cannot be based on the highly discretionary and individualized sorts of decisions that public employers must make about their employees. The Court pointed out that its decision in
Olech,
which first recognized class-of-one equal protection claims, rested on “the existence of a clear standard against which departures, even for a single plaintiff, could be readily assessed.” 553 U.S. at -,
We have interpreted
Engquist
to stand for the broad proposition that inherently subjective discretionary governmental decisions may be immune from class-of-one claims. See, e.g.,
Avila,
But when the law gives a state actor no discretion, it is hard to see how a person can claim irrational discrimination when the law is applied to him. State and federal law required the defendants to report the settlement of Behzad’s malpractice claim to the relevant federal and state authorities—no matter however frivolous or insubstantial that claim may have been. See 42 U.S.C. § 11131(a) (requiring any entity making a payment in settlement of a medical malpractice claim to report certain information to the NPDB); 225 ILCS 60/23(A)(3) (requiring any entity which indemnifies a physician for his professional liability to report the settlement of a claim). 7
*940
Abcarian’s complaint seeks to assert a claim of selective enforcement—the enforcement of a law against only disfavored individuals—a claim long familiar in equal protection jurisprudence when based on race, national origin, or other suspect classifications. See
Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
But Abcarian’s claim here has little in common with a typical selective enforcement claim. As we noted above, the defendants were
required
to report the settlement of Behzad’s claim to the authorities. See 42 U.S.C. § 11131(a); 225 ILCS 60/23(A)(3). They had neither “naked and arbitrary” power,
Yick Wo,
C. Procedural Due Process Claims
Abcarian’s last constitutional claim is that defendants violated his right to procedural due process by reporting the Behzad settlement to state and national authori *941 ties. He now challenges the district court’s dismissal of Counts II and IV and his related request for equitable relief.
A procedural due process claim involves a two-step analysis: “First, we determine whether the defendants deprived the plaintiff of a protected liberty or property interest, and if so, then we assess what process was due.”
Brokaw v. Mercer County,
Abcarian claims that the defendants defamed him and thereby infringed his liberty to pursue his chosen occupation. The Supreme Court has made it clear that defamation alone, even by a state actor, does not violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Paul v. Davis,
Abcarian’s amended complaint shows that he cannot satisfy the third prong of this test. It is true that he has a protected liberty interest in pursuing his chosen profession, of course, but that right is not infringed by ordinary defamation or even by a serious deprivation of one’s future employment prospects.
Dupuy v. Samuels,
Abcarian cannot meet this burden for a simple and benign reason: he still has his job in his chosen profession! According to his amended complaint, he remains gainfully employed as a University of Illinois physician and professor. Although he allegedly fears that he will not be employed at
additional
health care institutions in the future, “[i]t is the liberty to pursue a calling or occupation, and not the right to a specific job, that is secured by the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Wroblewski v. City of Washburn,
We pause to clarify one additional point. We have been focusing on the absence of any infringement of a liberty interest. The district court also addressed Abcariaris property interest theory. In addressing that theory, the district court erroneously concluded that our decision in
Fleury v. Clayton,
Read in context, the language in Fleury means only that an Illinois physician has a property interest in a medical license free from formal disciplinary sanction imposed without due process. A physician does not have a due process right to be exempt from the formal disciplinary processes themselves. In other words, the relevant “blemishes” are actual formal disciplinary sanctions, not the use of formal processes to resolve mere allegations of unprofessional conduct. Key to our analysis in Fleury was the formality of disciplinary sanctions and their possible legal consequences, contrasted with the lesser, informal consequences of mere defamatory statements. Id. at 1232. This distinction was significant because the defendants were members of the state medical disciplinary board that had censured Fleury. Accordingly, the “blemish-free license” language in Fleury is limited to defendants actually able to impose formal disciplinary sanctions and bound by the relevant substantive decision-making criteria governing the imposition of such sanctions. Only such defendants may actually “blemish” a physician’s medical license in a constitutionally relevant way.
Abcarian failed to allege a deprivation of the property interest in his medical license we recognized in Fleury. None of the defendants named in this suit had the ability to impose sanctions. They could only report Abcarian (or, actually, report the group settlement of the malpractice claim) to the authorities, as required by law. Standing alone, such a report has no formal effect on Abcarian’s license to practice medicine. Even if we suppose that the report defamed him, which is a very long stretch, mere defamation is insufficient to create a constitutionally actionable “blemish.” The district court did not err by dismissing Counts II and IV of the amended complaint and the related claim for equitable relief.
II. The Rule 59(e) Motion and the Second Amended Complaint
Abcarian also asserts that the district court should have granted his motion to amend or alter its judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e). He argues in the alternative that he did not need to bring a Rule 59(e) motion before request *943 ing leave to amend his complaint because the district court had dismissed only his amended complaint but never entered final judgment disposing of the entire civil action.
As to Abearian’s first argument, a Rule 59(e) motion will be granted only in the case of a manifest error of law or fact, or newly discovered evidence.
Bordelon v. Chicago Sch. Reform Bd. of Trs.,
As to his second argument, a plaintiff may amend his pleading once as a matter of course, but any additional amendments may be made only with the opposing party’s consent or by leave of court. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a). If the plaintiff wants to amend his complaint following the entry of judgment, however, he may do so only after a motion under Rule 59(e) or 60(b) has been granted.
Sparrow v. Heller,
We have often held that the “simple dismissal of a complaint does not terminate the litigation.”
E.g., Benjamin v. United States,
Here, the district court’s intent was obvious. When the court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, a separate entry was immediately made in the court docket on Form AO 450, the form specifically used for entry of a separate final judgment under Rule 58. See
Martinez v. City of Chicago,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Abcarian alleges that there was no settlement on his behalf, but this allegation need not be taken as true because it is directly contradicted by the settlement agreement attached to his amended complaint.
See Northern Indiana Gun & Outdoor Shows,
. The NPDB is "an alert or flagging system” intended to assist state licensing boards and other entities conduct independent investigations into the qualifications of health care practitioners. U.S. Dep't of Health and Human Services, NPDB Guidebook, A-3, available at http://www.npdb-hipdb.hrsa.gov/pubs/ gb/NPDB_Guidebook.pdf.
. Abcarian alleges that the reports were false because there was no settlement on his behalf. Again, because the settlement agreement attached to his complaint makes clear that a settlement was made on his behalf, we do not assume the truth of this allegation. See
Northern Indiana Gun & Outdoor Shows,
.Abcarian’s allegation in his amended complaint that the Illinois appellate court held that "no settlement of any such medical negligence lawsuit has been made” misrepresents that court’s holding. Abcarian's briefs make similarly misleading assertions. The appellate court noted that Abcarian "was not a party to the settlement,” but it rejected Abcarian’s challenge to the order approving that settlement and never addressed the validity of the settlement itself. Behzad, No. 1-07-1357, slip op. at 5-6. The Illinois court similarly found that Abcarian's briefs did not "convey a complete picture of the facts,” in violation of state court rules. Id. at 6.
. We also reject Abcarian’s unsupported assertion that his speech could be considered "expression related to academic scholarship or classroom instruction" possibly exempt from Garcetti. See
. We do not read our cases to say, nor do we mean to imply, that
Engquist
precludes
all
class-of-one claims brought in regard to subjective governmental decisions no matter the context in which those decisions were rendered. ' After all,
Engquist
rested on two key premises, only one of which involved the subjectivity of employment decisions. See
. The Illinois Supreme Court recently invalidated Public Act 94-677, which amended certain sections of 225 ILCS 60/23, on nonseverability grounds.
Lebrón v. Gottlieb Memorial Hosp.,
. For example, the Joint Committee on Reconstruction recognized that discrimination against freed slaves and Union sympathizers was being effected not by facially discriminatory laws, but by the failure to enforce facially neutral laws in an even-handed way. See
McCleskey v. Kemp,
. Abcarian claims that the defendants waived any argument regarding the existence of a protected interest by failing to raise that argument before the district court. This contenlion is absolutely without merit, given that the defendants devoted nearly a page of their Rule 12(b)(6) memorandum to that precise argument.
