After a remand from this court, Terrell Bolton, former police chief of the City of Dallas, Texas, again appeals from the district court’s ruling and judgment that the City of Dallas is not liable, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for his termination by Ted Bena-vides, the Dallas city manager. Because we agree that, even though Benavides was the final decisionmaker, his actions in this respect were not the policy of the City and, as a result, the City is not liable for his termination of Bolton, we AFFIRM. We also DENY the respective motions of the parties as moot.
I.
In August 2003, Terrell Bolton was terminated as the Chief of Police of Dallas by Ted Benavides. Bolton filed a 42 U.S.C. *547 § 1983 suit against both Benavides and the City of Dallas, alleging that his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution had been violated by the termination. Bolton admitted that Benavides had the authority to remove Bolton from his position as Chief of Police but argued that Benavides did not have the authority to terminate him from the police department. Bolton relied on Chapter XII, § 5, of the Dallas City Charter (“the Charter”):
If the chief of the police department ... was selected to that position from the ranks of the police department and is removed from the position on account of unfitness for the discharge of the duties of the position, and not for any cause justifying dismissal from the service, the chief ... shall be restored to the rank and grade held prior to appointment to the position, or reduced to a lower appointive rank.
Bolton initially lost his suit in district court on summary judgment; the district court found that Bolton, as Chief of Police, had no property interest in further employment by the City and therefore could not prevail on a due process claim.
A panel of this court disagreed and held that the Charter did give Bolton a property interest “in continued employment at the rank and grade held before his appointment to the executive position.”
Bolton v. City of Dallas,
II.
Back in the district court, Benavides and the City once again moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion. The district court held that the only remaining claim against Benavides was in his official capacity, and therefore Bolton’s suit contested only the liability- of the City. It further held that the City of Dallas could not be held responsible for Benavides’s actions because Benavides had frustrated the policy of the City by terminating Bolton in violation of Chapter XII, § 5, of the Charter. Bolton filed a motion for reconsideration that included several arguments not initially raised before the district court. The judge denied this motion. Bolton appealed both the grant of summary judgment in favor of Dallas and the denial of his motion for reconsideration.
III.
On appeal, Bolton argues that the discretion that Benavides had to terminate personnel makes him a policymaker for the City with respect to the employment action here. Accordingly, the City is liable for Benavides’s termination of Bolton. Dallas responds that, although Benavides did have discretion to make employment decisions without the direct oversight of the city council, the policies of the City are reflected in the Charter; acts contrary to the Charter cannot be imputed to the City. 1
*548 rv.
A.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Cousin v. Small,
B.
Municipal liability for civil rights violations under § 1983 is based on causation rather than
respondeat superior. See Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
Bolton does not argue that the City has a written policy or unwritten custom that has caused him constitutional harm. Instead, he argues that the single decision and act of Benavides in terminating him constitutes the policy of the City. It is well-established that a single unconstitutional action by a municipal actor may give rise to municipal liability if that actor is a final policymaker.
Woodard v. An-drus,
Our analysis must also take into account the difference between final decisionmak-ing authority and final policymaking authority, a distinction that this circuit recognized as fundamental in
Jett v. Dallas
*549
Independent School District,
In
Jett,
we also recognized support for this position in a Seventh Circuit case,
Auriemma v. Rice,
If it were enough to point to the agent whose act was the final one in a particular case, we would have vicarious liability. Action in the course of one’s duty is the basis of vicarious liability. That a particular agent is the apex of a bureaucracy makes the decision “final” but does not forge a link between “finality” and “policy”.
Id.
at 400. And in this circuit, “[w]e took essentially the same approach ... where ‘we rejected the line of authority ... which would permit policy or custom to be attributed to the city itself by attribution to any
*550
and all officers endowed with final or supervisory power or authority.’ ”
Jett,
Here, where Dallas has a city council and a city manager, the state and local law show that the city manager is an executive and administrative official with final deci-sionmaking authority in certain employment decisions; it does not show that the Charter or the city council delegated poli-cymaking power to the city manager. Nor can Bolton otherwise build a case that Benavides had such power in this instance. Bolton first cites state law:
(a)The city manager shall administer the municipal business and the governing body of the municipality shall ensure that the administration is efficient.
(b) The governing body by ordinance may delegate to the city manager any additional powers or duties the governing body considers proper for the efficient administration of municipal affairs.
(c) The city manager must execute a bond. The bond must be conditioned that the manager will faithfully perform the duties of manager and must be in an amount prescribed by ordinance.
Texas LoCal Gov’t Code ANN. § 25.029. The repeated references to the city manager’s responsibility for “administration” make clear that the position is executive rather than legislative; that is, state law alone does not give to city managers “the responsibility for making law or setting policy in any given area of a local government’s business.”
Praprotnik,
*551 Nor does the local law that Bolton cites delegate to Dallas’s city manager policy-making authority with respect to the employment decision here. The Charter does give a broad degree of discretion to the city manager in the city manager’s removal and appointment of employees, and it further prohibits the city council from “dictating]” the city manager’s decisions in that regard. Bolton depends on this discretion — and its coordinate lack of review — to demonstrate that Benavides is a final policymaker. But, as we discussed above, neither complete discretionary authority nor the unreviewability of such authority automatically results in municipal liability. 5 There must be more. And Bolton points to no other relevant source of law showing that the City vested Bolton with policymaking power.
Further, Chapter XII, § 5, of the Charter — the relevant local law quoted earlier — prohibits the specific action taken by Benavides. Thus, absent some contrary custom not shown here, Benavides’s action clearly does not represent final policy with respect to the removal of city officials like Bolton. It is the Charter that announces the City’s policy in this regard.
See Barrow,
Y.
Because state and local law demonstrate that Ted Benavides was not a final policymaker with respect to his decision to terminate the employment of Terrell Bolton, the City of Dallas cannot be held liable for that termination. Accordingly, the district court’s grant of summary judgment in fa *552 vor of Dallas is AFFIRMED. The motions before us are DENIED as moot.
Notes
. As we noted above, Bolton also appealed from the district court’s denial of his motion for reconsideration. The district court refused to consider new evidence and arguments that Bolton presented in that motion and accordingly denied it. Bolton has includ
*548
ed some of that evidence in his brief, prompting Dallas to file a motion to strike those portions of Bolton's brief. Bolton does not, however, make any attempt in his brief to argue that the district court made an error in the denial of the motion for reconsideration. Instead, Bolton addresses the motion for reconsideration only in his response to the City’s motion to strike. "We deem abandoned those issues not raised in an appellant's initial brief and we will not consider those issues not raised in the trial court.”
United States
v.
Ragsdale,
. "[Cjustom or usage having the force of law” may also be consulted,
Jett,
. In a footnote, the Pembaur Court illustrated this distinction:
[F]or example, the County Sheriff may have discretion to hire and fire employees without also being the county official responsible for establishing county employment policy. If this were the case, the Sheriff's decisions respecting employment would not give rise to municipal liability, although similar decisions with respect to law enforcement practices, over which the Sheriff is the official policymaker, would give rise to municipal liability. Instead, if county employment policy was set by the Board of County Commissioners, only that body's decisions would provide a basis for county liability. This would be true even if the Board left the Sheriff discretion to hire and fire employees and the Sheriff exercised that discretion in an unconstitutional manner; the decision to act unlawfully would not be a decision of the Board. However, if the Board delegated its power to establish final employment policy to the Sheriff, the Sheriff's decisions would represent county policy and could give rise to municipal liability.
.
Gelin
does note that "we have found the existence of effective administrative review to be relevant in certain contexts."
Gelin
also cites, and Bolton relies on,
Brady v. Fort Bend County,
. Bolton cites
Neubauer v. City of McAllen,
. Bolton makes an ill-defined argument that the City did assert in earlier litigation that Benavides was free to disregard Chapter XII, § 5, of the Charter and that its statements in this respect should now be held against the City lest the integrity of the courts be compromised. Bolton calls these statements "judicial admissions,” although his argument also has the characteristics of a request for estop-pel. In any case, it is evident that the City’s position now is a direct consequence of our earlier ruling in Bolton's favor. We find no reason to prevent the City from advancing such an argument in this case.
