Muick, at the time an employee of Gle-nayre Electronics, was arrested on charges of receiving and possessing child pornography in violation of federal law. At the request of federal law enforcement authorities, Glenayre seized from Muick’s work area the laptop computer that it had furnished him for use at work and held it until a warrant to search it could be obtained. He was later convicted and imprisoned. He has now sued his former employer, claiming that Glenayre, acting under color of federal law, seized “proprietary and privileged personal financial and contact data” contained in files in the computer, in violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. He also charges that Gle-nayre violated rights conferred on him by Illinois law. The district court had diversity as well as supplemental jurisdiction over these claims.
[1-3] The district judge rightly granted summary judgment to Glenayre on Muick’s federal claims. The only basis for a federal suit against Glenayre, that is, a suit for damages for violation of a federal constitutional right, is the
Bivens
doctrine, which the Supreme Court has held to be inapplicable to corporate defendants even when they are acting under color of federal law.
Correctional Services Corp. v. Malesko,
Anyway Muick had no right of privacy in the computer that Glenayre had lent him for use in the workplace. Not that there can’t be a right of privacy (enforceable under the Fourth Amendment if the employer is a public entity, which Gle-nayre we have just held was not) in employer-owned equipment furnished to an employee for use in his place of employment. If the employer equips the employee’s office with a safe or file cabinet or other receptacle in which to keep his private papers, he can assume that the contents of the safe are private.
O’Connor v. Ortega,
Muick’s state claims were dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6), that is, for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. He challenges the dismissal of two of these claims, the first for promissory estoppel. He alleges that Gle-nayre “committed promissory estoppel by assigning and transferring Plaintiff to Defendant’s Milton Keynes UK operation.” (Milton Keynes is an English city.) Although federal pleading requirements (which of course are applicable even when the claim pleaded arises under state rather than federal law) are lax, a claim of promissory estoppel requires the allegation of a promise,
Fischer v. First Chicago Capital Markets, Inc.,
The second state-law claim is for invasion of the branch of the right of privacy that is called the right of seclusion and, among other things, protects an individual from intrusive surveillance.
Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 652B and comments a, b (1977). It is unsettled whether the common law of Illinois recognizes such a claim,
Lovgren v. Citizens First Nat’l Bank of Princeton,
ApfiRmed In Part, Vacated In Part, And Remanded.
