Bennie BREWER, Appellee,
v.
Ed CHAUVIN, In official capacity as member of the St.
Francis County Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas;
Carl E. Cisco, Individually and in his official capacity as
County Judge of St. Francis County; Roger Davidson, In
official capacity as member of the St. Francis County Quorum
Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas; Floyd French, In
official capacity as member of the St. Francis County Quorum
Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas; Joe Gattinger, In
official capacity as member of the St. Francis County Quorum
Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas; George Hutcherson, In
official capacity as member of the St. Francis Quorum Court,
St. Francis County, Arkansas; M.C. Jeffers, Sr., In
official capacity as member of the St. Francis County Quorum
Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas; Bonner McCollum, Jr.,
In official capacity as member of the St. Francis County
Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas; Steve Murray,
In official capacity as member of the St. Francis County
Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas;
Dave Parkman, Individually and in his official capacity as
Sheriff of St. Francis County; Appellant,
Isaac Wilbourn, In official capacity as member of the St.
Francis County Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas;
Leodis Williams, In official capacity as member of the St.
Francis County Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas;
Cliff Wise, In official capacity as member of the St.
Francis County Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas;
B. McCollum, in official capacity as member of the St.
Francis County Quorum Court, St. Francis County, Arkansas.
No. 89-2980.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Feb. 1, 1991.
Decided July 10, 1991.
Fletcher Long, Jr., Forrest City, Ark., for appellant.
Roy C. Lewellen, Marianna, Ark., for appellee.
Before LAY, Chief Judge, HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge, and McMILLIAN, ARNOLD, JOHN R. GIBSON, FAGG, BOWMAN, WOLLMAN, MAGILL, BEAM, and LOKEN, en banc.
BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.
Bennie Brewer was discharged from his position as Deputy Sheriff of St. Francis County, Arkansas without being given a hearing. Brewer filed this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 (1988). The District Court, holding that Brewer had a property interest in the deputy sheriff position and that the manner of his discharge violated his Fourteenth Amendment right not to be deprived of property without due process of law, awarded Brewer back pay in the amount of $6,897.00 and ordered the defendants to grant him a hearing.1 The merits of the decision to fire Brewer were not litigated. Defendant Dave Parkman, the Sheriff of St. Francis County, appeals. The main issue in this rehearing en banc is whether the District Court's award of back pay based on the violation of Brewer's right to procedural due process can be sustained in the absence of a finding that Brewer would not have been fired if he had been given a pre-termination hearing consistent with the requirements of the Due Process Clause. We hold that it cannot. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
In Carey v. Piphus,
Carey was not altered by the Court's decision in Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
Examination of cases from our circuit and from our sister circuits decided subsequent to Loudermill reveals that the Carey principle consistently has been applied to employees discharged in a manner that violates their due process rights. In Peery v. Brakke,
[t]he proper remedy for a procedural due process constitutional injury is determined under [Carey ] by measuring the remedy sought against the nature of the interests protected by the constitutional right in question. The constitutional injury [plaintiff] has shown in this case is not the loss of his job, but rather his termination without procedural due process. Reinstatement may not be an appropriate remedy for an employee who was terminated for cause but denied procedural due process.
Id. at 747. Rogers v. Kelly,
Other circuits have followed this approach.
Where there has been a justified deprivation of a protected interest through deficient procedures, the injury caused by the justified loss is not properly compensable under section 1983.... The defendants have presented sufficient evidence to prove that [plaintiff] would have been discharged even if proper pre-deprivation procedures had been employed, and [plaintiff] has presented no proof of particularized injury arising only from the denial of due process. Without proof of actual injury, the denial of procedural due process is actionable only for nominal damages.
Patkus v. Sangamon-Cass Consortium,
The rationale of all these cases is the Carey rationale. The complained-of constitutional violation is the denial of procedural due process, not the plaintiff's discharge from public employment. Damages therefore must be limited to those caused by the due process violation.4 This will include a full award of back pay only when there is a finding that the discharge would not have occurred if the employee's procedural due process rights had been observed.5
We believe that our holding flows inexorably from Carey and the sound principle--that a plaintiff must show that the complained-of wrong is the cause of his injury--upon which Carey rests. Even with the modest, traditional Carey limitation in place, there is no reason to fear that public employers will rush to deny employees their Loudermill rights. First, an award of attorney fees is proper, even when only nominal damages are awarded for the denial of procedural due process. 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1988 (1988); Carey,
We moreover note that a limited award of back pay would seem to be appropriate even in the absence of a Carey-type causation finding favorable to the plaintiff. The aim of a compensatory damages award in a section 1983 case is to put the plaintiff in the same position he would have been in if the constitutional tort had not occurred. It therefore follows logically that an employee who has a due process right to a pre-termination hearing and who is discharged without being given one would be entitled to back pay from the date of his discharge to the earliest date the discharge could have taken effect had the proper procedures been followed. See Carey,
Finally, we hold that the public employer carries the burden of proving that the plaintiff would have been fired even if procedural due process had been observed. Having deprived an employee of a property interest in his job without first satisfying the requirements of procedural due process, the employer must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the discharge would have occurred even if an appropriate pre-termination hearing had been held. As the Third Circuit has observed, "In Carey v. Piphus, the Supreme Court approved at least implicitly the Seventh Circuit's holding that the burden of showing that the plaintiffs would not have prevailed is on the defendants." Alexander v. Polk,
To sum up, we hold that Brewer's present back-pay award cannot stand, as the District Court made no Carey-type causation finding. The District Court must conduct an evidentiary hearing on this issue; for the court to order the defendants to grant Brewer a grievance hearing was error. If the District Court finds that Brewer would have been fired even if procedural due process had been observed, then he is not entitled to an award of back pay except for a limited award based on the earliest date he could have been fired if Loudermill procedures had been followed.6 On the other hand, if the District Court finds that Brewer was fired without proper justification, his back-pay award should be reinstated.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge, with whom LAY, Chief Judge, and McMILLIAN, Circuit Judge, join, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. It is undisputed on this appeal that Brewer had a property interest in his position as deputy sheriff and that defendants deprived him of this interest without providing a pretermination hearing, violating his constitutional right to procedural due process. The majority holds that whether this deprivation caused any actual injury can be determined only after the district court decides whether Brewer's dismissal was justified. I believe this holding reads Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
Loudermill premised the requirement of a pretermination hearing on the Supreme Court's recognition that a public employee's interest in retaining his job until given an opportunity to contest the reasons for his dismissal outweighs the governmental interest in immediate termination of unsatisfactory employees and avoidance of administrative burdens. Id. at 542-45,
It is preferable to keep a qualified employee on than to train a new one. A governmental employer has an interest in keeping citizens usefully employed rather than taking the possibly erroneous and counterproductive step of forcing its employees onto the welfare rolls. Finally, in those situations where the employer perceives a significant hazard in keeping the employee on the job, it can avoid the problem by suspending with pay.
Id. at 544-45,
The Court thus held that due process entitles a tenured public employee, at a minimum, to "oral or written notice of the charges against him, an explanation of the employer's evidence, and an opportunity to present his side of the story" before termination. Id. at 546,
As is plain from the record, Brewer received neither. The deprivation of Brewer's right to a pretermination hearing caused, at a minimum, the premature cessation of his salary. This is true regardless of whether Brewer's dismissal was otherwise justified. Loudermill's language recommending the suspension with pay of problem employees until they receive an opportunity to respond to charges suggests that the employee's entitlement to his salary continues until such time as due process requirements are met, however unsatisfactory his performance may be.
The majority bows to the logic of this conclusion when it notes the propriety of a limited award of back pay "even in the absence of a Carey-type causation finding favorable to the plaintiff." In such a case, the majority would limit back pay to the period from the date of discharge to the earliest date the discharge could have taken effect had adequate procedures been followed. While this measure approaches the proper analysis of the true harm caused by a deprivation of procedural due process, the majority's remedy likely would provide only illusory relief in many cases.
Loudermill requires notice and an opportunity to respond prior to termination. The notice may be oral and the opportunity to respond need only be "an initial check against mistaken decisions," provided the employee receives a full post-termination hearing.
Given Loudermill's proviso that the scope of pretermination procedural requirements hinges in part on the post-termination process available, id. at 547 n. 12,
Moreover, I do not believe that the distinction between an equitable award of back pay and compensatory damages is as meaningless as the majority suggests. In another context, the Supreme Court has noted "[t]he fact that a judicial remedy may require one party to pay money to another is not a sufficient reason to characterize the relief as 'money damages.' " Bowen v. Massachusetts,
Our cases have long recognized the distinction between an action at law for damages--which are intended to provide a victim with monetary compensation for an injury to his person, property, or reputation--and an equitable action for specific relief--which may include an order providing for the reinstatement of an employee with back pay ...
. . . . .
'Damages are given to the plaintiff to substitute for a suffered loss, whereas specific remedies "are not substitute remedies at all, but attempt to give the plaintiff the very thing to which he was entitled." '
Id. at 893, 895,
I believe the district court's award of back pay to Brewer represents, rather than compensatory damages, specific relief in the form of wages to which Brewer is entitled. This entitlement exists by virtue of the defendants' failure to accord Brewer his due process rights, and depends on the manner in which Brewer was fired rather than on the reasons for his discharge. The defendants could have cut off Brewer's entitlement to those wages by establishing through proper procedures, either before or after his termination, that Brewer's dismissal was justified. Thus far, the defendants have failed to do so. The back pay award is not premature compensation for a dismissal whose justification has yet to be determined, but the livelihood to which Brewer was entitled until the defendants followed constitutionally sufficient procedures to establish cause for Brewer's dismissal.
I agree with the majority's conclusion that whether Brewer's termination was otherwise justified should be determined by the district court after an evidentiary hearing. I also agree that the defendants bear the burden of proof on this issue. If the defendants fail to show cause for Brewer's dismissal, appropriate compensatory damages should be awarded and the propriety of punitive damages considered. I would uphold the back pay award, however, as relief to which Brewer is entitled irrespective of the propriety of his discharge. Accordingly, I dissent.
Notes
A more complete discussion of the underlying facts can be found in the opinion of the three-judge panel that initially heard this appeal. See Brewer v. Parkman,
Although Carey was a case concerning public school students suspended from school without a hearing, the Court mentioned with apparent disapproval four court of appeals decisions in which public employees who were discharged with cause but denied procedural due process were awarded back pay. Carey v. Piphus,
In 1950, the Court noted that deprivation of property must "be preceded by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case." Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust,
We see nothing in the case law or in principle to justify a distinction based on the characterization of back pay as equitable relief rather than compensatory damages
The finding on this issue of causation is to be made by the trial court after an appropriate evidentiary hearing into the merits of the decision to fire the plaintiff. There is no need or justification for the trial court to order that a hearing be conducted by the public officials who failed to hold such a hearing in the first place
It does not appear that Brewer has alleged any other damages resulting from the denial of his procedural due process rights, as distinguished from damages caused by the loss of his job
