Stephen A. ARVINGER, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE; Baltimore City
Department of Education; Larry Burgan, Baltimore City
Department of Education and; Bernard Stokes, Baltimore City
Department of Education, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 88-2002.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Oct. 6, 1988.
Decided Nov. 23, 1988.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied Dec. 19, 1988.
Phillip G. Dantes (Neal M. Janey, City Sol., Baltimore, Md., on brief), for defendants-appellants.
Kathleen M. Cahill, Baltimore, Md., for plaintiff-appellee.
Before MURNAGHAN and CHAPMAN, Circuit Judges, and WILLIAMS, District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
RICHARD L. WILLIAMS, District Judge:
This case involves the first amendment rights of public employees. The lower court held that the appellants violated the first amendment rights of the appellee when it fired him for a statement he made. Because we hold that the statement in question did not involve a matter of public concern, but was rather made with only private interests in mind, the lower court decision must be reversed.
I.
Stephen A. Arvinger was a school police officer employed by the Department of Education of the City of Baltimore. On the evening of July 14, 1983, he and fellow school police officer Diane Diggs drove in Mr. Arvinger's van to the home of a third person. Ms. Diggs went into the house while Mr. Arvinger remained outside in his van. While he was waiting, Baltimore City police officers approached the van and, because they spotted cigarette rolling papers on the dashboard, searched the van. The search turned up an envelope containing marijuana. At this point, the stories of appellants and appellee begin to differ. Mr. Arvinger claims that, in response to police questioning concerning the marijuana, he told them that it was not his, and that he did not know whether it belonged to Ms. Diggs. The appellants claim that Mr. Arvinger told the police that night that the marijuana belonged to Ms. Diggs. Mr. Arvinger was arrested; Ms. Diggs was not.
Following the arrest, Mr. Arvinger was repeatedly questioned concerning the ownership of the marijuana, and there are several conflicting accounts of his answers. Mr. Arvinger maintains that he did not know whether the marijuana belonged to Ms. Diggs, and that he has so stated consistently. The appellants claim that Mr. Arvinger has twice stated that the marijuana in fact belonged to Ms. Diggs. Criminal charges against Mr. Arvinger were dropped in August. Ms. Diggs was fired in September because the department's investigation led them to believe that the marijuana was hers.
In March of 1984, Ms. Diggs filed sex discrimination charges against the department based on the disparate treatment she and Arvinger received following the discovery of the marijuana. In connection with this suit, Mr. Arvinger was again questioned about the incident by an investigator of the Baltimore Community Relations Commission (CRC) in June, 1984, and he stated that he did not know whether the marijuana was hers. On December 4, 1984, Larry Burgan, Chief of School Security Force and Bernard Stokes, Assistant Chief, informed Mr. Arvinger that he was fired for lying to the CRC investigator.
Mr. Arvinger responded by filing the present suit under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, charging that the department fired him for speaking out on an issue of public concern--sex discrimination--and that this was a violation of his first amendment rights. He also sued under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1985, alleging a conspiracy to violate these same rights. The court below ruled as a matter of law that Mr. Arvinger's statement was about a matter of public concern, and that the defendants had failed to prove that it was disruptive or in any other way impaired Arvinger's or the department's work. The case was tried to a jury on the Sec. 1983 and Sec. 1985 claims. The jury found liability under the former, but not the latter, and assessed damages accordingly. This appeal followed.
II.
A public employee, it has long been held, does not have a constitutional right to his job. This does not mean, however, that any condition, no matter how arbitrary or unconstitutional, may be placed on continued public employment. Keyishian v. Board of Regents,
The effort to resolve this tension in the free speech context began with Pickering v. Board of Education,
Constitutional scholars have discussed many different purposes for the First Amendment. We do not undertake to decide among these today, but rather note that with respect to the Pickering doctrine, one purpose stands out. The Supreme Court, in the Connick case noted that the public concern prong of the Pickering test was rooted in the understanding that " 'speech concerning public affairs is more than self-expression; it is the essence of self-government.' " Connick,
First Amendment protection is invoked most often by a public employee when the employee attempts to contribute to the debate on his or her governmental employer by criticizing that employer. Such criticism is, in turn, both a matter of public concern and an attack on the employer. This is the paradigm situation for which the Pickering balance was designed, and it is one that the Supreme Court and this Court have faced repeatedly. Connick,
The question the court most generally faces, then, is whether the comment in question more closely resembles public debate or private employment grievance. The Connick court specifically stated that the latter are not protected by the first amendment, noting that "government offices could not function if every employment decision became a constitutional matter."
The appellee in this case was fired for stating during a coworker's fair employment hearing that he did not know whether a quantity of marijuana found in his van belonged to the coworker. Charitably construed, this does not constitute a grievance against his employer. The fact that the statement is not an employment grievance does not resolve the case. A statement that does not address the operation of the government entity in question, or in any other way constitute a grievance on the part of the employee, must still involve a matter of public concern in order to be eligible for first amendment protection.
This court's decisions on the issue of public concern reflect this approach. In Berger v. Battaglia,
In deciding that a statement falls within the realm of public concern, it is not sufficient to determine that it does not fall on the "private grievance" end of the spectrum. A statement that involves private interests of any kind, and that is otherwise devoid of public concern, is not entitled to protection under the Pickering test. The statement at issue in this case was made solely to further the interests of Mr. Arvinger and Ms. Diggs. It was not made to further the public debate on employment discrimination, drug policy, or any other topic. By firing Mr. Arvinger for this statement, the Baltimore school police department was not attempting to, and did not, chill any part of that public debate which is the "essence of self-government."
The lower court in this case held that, "Speech given in the course of an official investigation of discrimination unquestionably qualifies as a 'matter of public concern.' " Memorandum Opinion at 2. The public concern determination should be based on the "content, form, and context" of the statement in question. Connick,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court decision is reversed and remanded with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the appellants.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
Mr. Arvinger also sued for retaliatory discharge under Sec. 704. This claim is not presently before us
