Lead Opinion
In this appeal, we affirm the district court’s ruling that Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) officials did not deprive a bank of First Amendment, liberty, or property rights when they debarred the bank.
FACTS
The Bank of Jackson County (BJC) is a small bank in northwest Florida. In September, 1981, BJC loaned money to Elmer and Shirley Ferris to purchase forty-six dairy cows. The Farmers Home Administration, a federal agency, guaranteed the loan. In 1982, when the Ferrises began surreptitiously removing their cattle from Florida, BJC took possession of the cows remaining at the Ferrises’ farm. BJC and FmHA sold the cows jointly and put the proceеds into a joint account.
In September, 1984, BJC informed FmHA that it had begun applying funds from the joint account to its debts. FmHA objected, and a dispute followed. In July, 1986, FmHA informed BJC that it would not negotiate further over ownership of the funds until BJC restored the amounts that it had withdrawn from the account.
For nearly two years, FmHA did not communicate again with BJC regarding the Ferris cow dispute. Then, on April 14, 1988, Raymond G. Naeyaert, Florida chief of FmHA farmer programs, instructed the FmHA supervisor in Holmes County not to issue a conditional commitment for an FmHA guarantee on a BJC loan to a local farmer named Adron Miller. Naeyaert told the supervisor that he was not to conduct any further business with BJC because of the unresolved dispute over the Ferris proceeds.
The same day, an Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of Florida, Benjamin Beard, wrote a letter to the General Counsel’s Office of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Atlanta. In relevant part, Beard stated:
[A]s I understand the facts of this case, [BJC] officials intentionally and with knowledge misrepresented their actions in the case and thereafter flatly refused to comply with their represented agreement. At the very least that is civil fraud and in my view demonstrates that thе bank officials do not believe that they are required to deal in a forthright and ethical manner with the government.
If that is their belief, then I believe it is exceedingly unwise to enter into any financial transaction with them wherein the FmHA would have to rely on these officials to conduct servigin [sic] and to deal honestly with the FmHA_ [Emphasis added.]
On May 5,1988, Ted Elders, an Agriculture Department attorney, wrote to L. James Cherry, Florida state director of the FmHA, agreeing with Beard’s opinion. Elders suggested that Cherry consider withdrawing from pending transactions involving BJC and refuse to undertake any new transactions with the bank.
On June 1, 1988, Cherry wrote to BJC stating that (1) FmHA would not “enter into any loan guaranty submitted by [BJC]”; (2) FmHA would honor existing guaranties; and (3) FmHA was terminating its Treasury Limited Account with BJC on July 1, 1988. The reason for these actions, according to Cherry, was BJC’s refusal to negotiate in “good faith” over the Ferris cow dispute. Cherry and Naeyaert, the appellees, admitted that the purpose of the letter was to discontinue all further dealings with BJC in Florida, except those relating to existing guaranties. FmHA’s Alabama office, however, continued to issue guaranties on new BJC loans.
In July, 1988, Glen Wаlden, the acting Florida director of the FmHA, wrote to BJC rejecting its latest settlement offer in the dispute over the Ferris proceeds. Walden reaffirmed FmHA’s earlier settlement offer and encouraged BJC to accept it. In doing so, Walden stated:
*1365 I am confident that when you consider the alternatives you will agree to a settlement more in line with what we are able to accept so we may discontinue the proposed litigation and resume normal relations between the bank and FmHA.
BJC did not accept FmHA’s settlement offer, and on Seрtember 9, 1988, FmHA sued BJC over the Ferris proceeds.
FmHA’s Florida office continued to refuse to issue new guaranties on BJC loans. In February, 1989, Naeyaert wrote the Jackson County FmHA supervisor, rejecting his request for a guaranty on a BJC loan to Charles M. Patrick, a local farmer. Naeyaert stated that FmHA would not issue new guaranties on BJC loans because of the bank’s failure to negotiate in “good faith” in the Ferris cow dispute. Around this same time, Cherry approved two BJC loan renewals, but reiterated that his office would not issue any new guaranties.
Appelleеs also continued to use the guaranty program as a lever to force resolution of the Ferris dispute. On May 5, 1989, Cherry met with Thomas W. Wilder, BJC’s president, at a “fish fry” for Agriculture Secretary Clayton Yeutter in Marianna, Florida. Wilder stated his belief that FmHA had “debarred” BJC without following the proper procedural requirements for that penalty. Cherry responded that the Florida FmHA office would resume its business relationship with BJC as soon as the Ferris cow litigation was settled.
In April, 1990, the District Court for the Northern District of Florida entered judgment in the Ferris cow litigation, finding BJC entitled to $25,000 and FmHA entitled to $62,000. Although the dispute was thereby resolved, FmHA did not resume its business relationship with BJC.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
BJC brought this Bivens action against Cherry and Naeyaert alleging that termination of the business relationship with FmHA (“debarment”) deprived BJC of its constitutional rights. See Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
The district court entered summary judgment for appellees on the damages claims and for BJC on the injunctive claim. The court found that FmHA failed to follow its own debarment regulations, and ordered BJC reinstated “as a viable participant in the Florida FmHA programs.” The court found, however, that the debarment did not deрrive BJC of a liberty or property interest. In the alternative, the court held that appellees were immune from suit under the qualified immunity doctrine, because any deprivation did not violate BJC’s clearly established constitutional rights. Similarly, the court held that appellees’ actions did not violate BJC’s clearly established First Amendment rights.
BJC appealed from the district court’s entry of summary judgment for appellees on the damages claims. Appellees do not cross-appeal from the injunction ordering BJC reinstated in FmHA lending programs.
CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
BJC contends that appellees deprived it of clearly established liberty and property interests without due process of law when they debarred it without following FmHA’s debarment procedures. BJC also contends that the debarment violated its clearly established First Amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances. Appellees respond that the debarment did not deprive BJC of liberty or property. To the extent that the debarment did work such a deprivation, however, BJC’s rights were not clearly established. Thus, appel-lees are immune from suit under the quali
ISSUES
The issues presented are:
(1) Whether the debarment deprived BJC of clearly established liberty or property rights without due process of law; (2) whether the debarment violated BJC’s clearly established First Amendment rights.
DISCUSSION
A. Due Process Claim
The government may not deprive any person of “life, liberty or property without due process of law.” U.S. Const, amend. V. BJC argues that it had a property interest in FmHA’s loan guaranty program. Moreover, BJC argues that appellees deprived it of liberty when they debarred it from that program on the basis of “stigmatizing” allegations. Because appellees deprived BJC of these constitutionally protected interests without affording it the process due under the Fifth Amendment, BJC argues it is entitled to damages.
To prevail upon its procedural due process claim, BJC must establish: (1) a constitutionally protected interest in life, liberty or property; (2) governmental deprivation of that interest; and (3) the constitutional inadequacy of procedures accompanying the deprivation. See Lehr v. Robertson,
1. Property Interest
A property interest must rest upon “a legitimate claim of entitlement.” Roth,
BJC relies heavily upon Gonzalez v. Freeman to support the property right it asserts in this case. But Freeman held no more than that debarment works a sufficient economic injury on the plaintiff to confer standing.
Liberty interests are both broader and more difficult to define than property interests. While property exists in concrete entitlements secured by independent sources of law, liberty interests cannot be so easily characterized. As the Supreme Court stated nearly seventy years ago:
[Liberty] denotes not merely freedom from bodily restraint, but also the right of the individual to contract, to engage in any of the common occupations of life, to acquire useful knowledge, to marry, establish a home and bring up children, to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, and generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.
Meyer v. Nebraska,
The Supreme Court defined this liberty interest in reputation in a series of cases decided in the 1970s. In Roth, the Court held that a state university’s refusal to renew the contract of a nontenured professor did not deprive the professor of a liberty interest, because the state made no charges against the professor “that might seriously damage his standing and associations in his community.”
Thus, to prevail on a claim that government action deprived the plaintiff of a liberty interest in reputation, the plaintiff must show: (1) a stigmatizing allegation, Roth,
Federal circuit courts of appeal have applied this line of cases to hold that suspension or debarment of a government contractor on the basis of stigmatizing allegations deprives the contractor of liberty under the due process clause. See ATL, Inc. v. United States,
Although the question is a close one, we hold that appellees’ actions in this case did not deprive BJC of any constitutionally protected liberty interest. Assuming for purposes of this discussion that FmHA’s accusation of bad faith constituted a stigmatizing allegation, that allegation was neither sufficiently publicized, nor sufficiently injurious, to deprive BJC of liberty under the Due Process Clause.
A stigmatizing allegation does not implicate liberty interests unless it is publicized.
BJC argues that the scope of рublication was sufficiently broad to impose a tangible injury. BJC’s president stated in an affidavit that he “felt obliged” to disclose to potential qualified borrowers that BJC was ineligible for FmHA loan guaranties. In addition, communication of the bad faith charges to FmHA’s county supervisors ensured that BJC would receive no new loan guaranties in Florida. According to BJC, the allegation of bad faith, coupled with the tangible loss of the opportunity to participate in FmHA’s Florida loan program, was sufficient to deprive it of liberty under the Due Process Clause.
We disagrеe. All of the cases upon which BJC relies involved a much broader injury to the contractor than BJC suffered in this case. In Old Dominion, the court found that the contractor relied upon the Department of Defense for nearly “100 percent” of its business; that suspension “effectively put Old Dominion out of business”; and that “the government action in this case effectively foreclosed Old Dominion’s freedom to take advantage of other government employment opportunities and barred [it] from all public employment.”
The injury to BJC pales in comparison to the injuries found in the above-cited cases. BJC’s president testified that “twenty to twenty-five percent” of BJC’s outstanding loans were “made for agricultural purposes.” Even if all of those loans involved FmHA guaranties, a fact not borne out by the record, BJC would not be as dependent upоn the foreclosed government program as were the plaintiff contractors in ATL, Transco, and Old Dominion. Appellees’ debarment of BJC from Florida FmHA loan programs had only a limited impact on BJC. FmHA continued to guaranty BJC’s loan renewals in Florida, and it continued to guaranty all of BJC’s loans in Alabama. BJC introduced no evidence that appellees’ actions affected its dealings with any other government agency besides the Florida FmHA office.
The affidavit of BJC’s president stating that he “felt obliged” to disclose BJC’s debarment does not compensate for the defiсiencies in BJC’s case. The bare statement of the affidavit does not tell us how many potential customers the bank lost because of these disclosures. In addition, the government imposed no duty upon BJC to disclose the reason for its debarment. Without disclosure of the stigmatizing allegation, the mere loss of BJC’s government benefit did not infringe upon its liberty interests. Bishop,
These distinctions from prior cases amount to an important difference. Simply put, appellees’ actions in this case did not deprive BJC of its constitutionally protected liberty. BJC remained free to obtain FmHA guaranties for loan renewals in Florida, and for all loans in Alabama. It remained free to do business with any of the numerous federal agencies that deal with banks. And finally, BJC remained fully free to conduct the seventy-five to eighty percent of its business that was unrelated to agriculture.
Although we hold that BJC is not entitled to damages under the Due Process Clause, our opinion does not undermine the district court’s determination that BJC was entitled to injunctive relief. Appellees do not cross-appeal that decision. Cherry and Naeyaert debarred BJC from an FmHA prоgram without following FmHA’s own procedures for such a penalty. As the district court found, neither statutory law nor the Due Process Clause entitled BJC to a damages remedy. Nonetheless, the message to FmHA officials must be clear: They may not grant or deny the opportunity to participate in FmHA programs without following the agency’s regulations. Conditioning important benefits upon a person’s compliance with the arbitrary demands of government officials presents precisely the kind of potential power abuse that the debarment procedures are intended to prevent.
B. First Amendment Claim
BJC argues that the debarment infringed upon its First Amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances. According to BJC, appellees debarred it in retaliation for vigorously defending its rights in the Ferris cow dispute. BJC relies upon cases holding that retaliatory prosecution against individuals who pursue claims against the government infringes upon their First Amendment rights. See, e.g., Haynesworth v. Miller,
The record plainly reveals that appellees used the opportunity to participate in the Florida loan guaranty program as a lever to coеrce favorable settlement of the Ferris cow dispute. While such a tactic may be the norm between private parties, it has no place in government. FmHA’s debarment regulations provide procedural protection against such tactics. If FmHA’s claim that BJC acted dishonestly had merit, then ap-pellees could have used the debarment procedure to reach the intended result. Alternatively, if FmHA’s claims lacked merit, then the procedure would have helped protect BJC from an erroneous debarment. These arguments provide additional justification for the district court’s decision, reached on other grounds, to order BJC reinstated in the Florida loan guaranty program.
Whether BJC may recover damages against Cherry and Naeyaert, however, presents a distinct question. The doctrine of qualified immunity protects government officials from civil liability for any action which “does not violate clearly established or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The First Amendment right to petition the government for a redress of grievances includes a right of аccess to the courts. See, e.g., NAACP v. Button,
BJC offers no precedent upon which this court could base a holding that the government’s use of debarment to coerce the favorable settlement of a civil dispute unconstitutionally infringes upon a civil litigant’s First Amendment rights. We do not reach that question, however, because we may hold appellees liable in this case only if the First Amendment right BJC asserts was clearly established at the time appellees engaged in the challenged conduct. Anderson,
As the name implies, retaliatory prosecution involves criminal prosecution. Criminal prosecution triggers an array of constitutional, historical, and statutory considerations inapplicable to the specific situation prеsented here. Neither BJC nor its officers faced the loss of freedom or lasting stigma associated with criminal prosecution. Any legal similarity between BJC’s debarment, on the one hand, and criminal prosecution, on the other, would not have been readily apparent to government officials attempting to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis. In the absence of such an apparent similarity, viewed through the eyes of reasonable, objective government officials, BJC cannot overcome appellees’ qualified immunity defense. See Anderson,
Wе believe that one additional factor supports the district court’s finding of qualified immunity in this case. In Haynes-worth, the court noted that prosecutors appeared not to have any legitimate law enforcement objective in seeking release of the plaintiff’s civil claims against the government.
Nonetheless, the link between appellees’ actions and BJC’s First Amendment rights is tenuous at best. Appellees’ actions did not in fact dissuade BJC from fully defending its position in the Ferris cow dispute. The penalty of debarment in this case was not so severe as to infringe upon BJC’s First Amendment rights in any way. More importantly, to prevail on its First Amendment claim, BJC must demonstrate that appellees’ actions violated BJC’s clearly established First Amendment rights. Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
In its petition for rehearing, BJC directs the court’s attention to Matzker v. Herr,
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I concur in the court’s opinion insofar as it affirms the conclusion reached on summary judgment that BJC suffered no loss of property- interest.
I concur in the decision that no liberty interest was denied. I do so because plaintiff did not demonstrate the kind of injury to support a liberty interest. Its evidence showed only that it lost the benefit of the particular government loan program. BJC did not prove that its loan-making ability was impaired in other respects (or in general) or that its banking activities other than the making of government guaranteed loans was injured.
I concur in the decision concerning alleged denial of right of access to the courts. The defendants tried to force the bank to settle the dispute concerning the cows before suit was filed, by using as a lever the threat of cutting off loan guarantees. This court’s opinion recognizes that this was improper. But the attempt was unsuccessful. The agency filed suit against the bank, and the case was tried. BJC did not lose the benefit of access to the courts but rather, as a defendant, enjoyed the benefit of the court as a forum in which to settle its dispute.
