Paul Campagna (“Campagna”), an employee of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP”) and DEP-certified septic system inspector, claims that six DEP employees 1 subjected him to a retaliatory administrative proceeding that deprived him of his constitutional rights to petition the government for redress of grievances under the First Amendment and to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. Finding that Campagna failed to state a claim for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss Campagna’s federal claims under Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims. We affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
We cull the relevant facts from Campag-na’s amended complaint, taking them in the light most favorable tо the plaintiff. Campagna began working for the DEP in 1985 as an environmental engineer, and was promoted soon thereafter. He unsuccessfully sought a further promotion, while
Campagna brought suit in state court, claiming that he was entitled to preferential hiring because of his status as a veteran of the Vietnam War. The court agreed, and оrdered the DEP to place him in the position unless a better qualified candidate who was also a veteran applied for the job. The DEP appealed, contending that Cam-pagna was not qualified for the position. 2 As part of a 1995 settlement of the dispute, Campagna ultimately accepted a different position that was “less desirable.”
Campagna continued working for thе DEP without incident for more than two years. During this period, Campagna also ran a private after-hours business designing and monitoring septic systems. In April 1997, Campagna was hired to upgrade a septic system of a home in West-field, Massachusetts that had failed an inspection conducted by another inspector, identified in the pleadings as “Mr. Lally” (“Lally”). Lally had concluded that the system was installed too close to the groundwater and that the tank had an unsealed “weep hole,” a small hole allowing drainage of any water that accumulates in the tank prior to installation. Campagna inspected the system and concluded that Lally was incorrect in both respects. Campagna advised Westfield’s board of health to reevaluate the system. The board notified the DEP of the discrepancy, and on October 11, 1997, defendant Cabral, a DEP employee, reinspected the site, accompanied by inspector David Re-coulee (“Recoulee”) and others.
Cabral evaluated the soil in a 10-foot deep inspection hole and found evidence of a high groundwater level of 26 inches.
3
Like Lally, Cabral concluded that the system had been installed too close to the groundwater. Cabral instructed Recoulee to “fail the system.” Recoulee did not make any independent evaluation of the average height of high groundwater.
4
Cabral also concluded that Campagna’s determination that the weep hole had been adequately sealed was invalid because he had not emptied the tank to reach this finding. Cabral initiated an administrative proceeding or “enforcement action” against Campagna “without first sending the plaintiff a Letter of Non Compliance,” charging him with two willful violations of state regulations commonly known as Title 5
5
for (1) inaccurately estimating the
Also in October 1997 (although the precise date is not set forth in the amended complaint), the DEP brought an enforcement aсtion against another inspector, Timothy Maginnis (“Maginnis”). Like Campagna, Maginnis was fined without first receiving a notice of non-compliance. Campagna “actively supported” Maginnis’s subsequent appeal. This support included a March 1999 letter from Campagna to Maginnis’s attorney “exonerating Mr. Maginnis.”
On August 28, 1998, Campagna was fined $1500 for the violations that were the subject of the October 1997 reinspеction. Campagna appealed, and on November 1, 2000, an administrative judge reduced the fine to $100. According to the amended complaint, the judge found that, except for the minor violation of failing to note the owner’s explanation regarding the weep hole, the accusations against Campagna were unfounded. The judge also found that Campagna had been subjeсted to a different standard than other inspectors, basing her conclusion in part on the fact that both Lally and Recoulee failed to include similar information in their inspection forms but had not been accused of violations.
Campagna contends that his groundwater estimate was accurate, and that the findings made by Lally and Cabral were incorrect. According to the amended сomplaint, Cabral (acting “under the direction of the other defendants”) ignored key evidence that would have validated Campag-na’s estimate, including monthly readings from a test hole on the property. Cam-pagna further alleges that only three other inspectors (including Maginnis, the inspector Campagna “actively supported”) have been subjected to enforcement actions by the Western Regional Office of the DEP, and only two of these inspectors were fined.
During the pendency of Campagna’s appeal of the enforcement action, defendant Alan Weinberg advised Campagna not to discuss his case with other DEP employees, and required him to request permission to visit other areas of the DEP’s Western Regional Office in an effort to prevent Cаmpagna from discussing his case with fellow employees. Also, at some time after another DEP employee advised defendant Mary Holland that he intended to testify on Campagna’s behalf, the employee “was falsely accused by the DEP of visiting pornography sites on the Internet during office hours.” This employee left the DEP, accepting a lower-paying position because he “could no longer tolerate the animosity of the defendants.” 6
Campagna brought suit in May 2001, claiming violations of his constitutional rights (under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 12, §§ H-I) and common law defamation.
7
According to Campagna,
II. Analysis
We review the district court’s Rule 12(b)(6) ruling
de novo,
crediting all well pleaded facts in the complaint, and drawing all reasonable inferences in Campagna’s favor.
Nethersole v. Bulger,
A. First Amendment
We begin with Campagna’s claim that the enforcement action violated his right to petition the government for redress of grievances. The district court found that Campagna had failed to allege that his 1992 lawsuit or his support of Maginnis’s appeal implicated matters of public concern.
8
Thus, it concluded, Campagna failed to state a сlaim challenging a retaliatory action by his employer. The district court relied on the principle that, except in unusual circumstances, public employees claiming an adverse employment action in retaliation for exercising their First Amendment rights must allege that their conduct touched on matters of public concern.
Connick v. Myers,
The facts of this case are complicated by Campagna’s dual roles as a DEP employee and a DEP-certified inspector. According to the amended complaint, however, the DEP took action against Campagna in his capacity as a private inspector, not as a DEP employee. Other than the relatively minor allegation that Campagna and his fellow employees were advised not to discuss his appeal of the enforcement action, Campagna alleges no adverse impact on his employment with the DEP, such as a
Our First Amendment inquiry does not end here, however, because we may affirm the district court’s dismissal of the First Amendment claim on any ground supported by the record.
Aldridge v. A.T. Cross Corp.,
In the amended complaint, Campagna gives a chronological account of his relationship with the DEP, both as an employee and as a private inspector. Campagna’s claim turns on the allеgations that Cabral acted “under the direction of the other defendants” 10 when she undertook the enforcement action, and that this was done in retaliation for Campagna’s earlier lawsuit and support of Maginnis. Compl. ¶¶ 24, 27, 34. These are the only allegations that link the critical events in Campagna’s case. But more than five years had passed since Campagna filed his lawsuit, a suit undertaken in the context of his employment with the DEP, not his private inspection business. The allegations in Campagna’s complaint do not support a fact-based inference that the “direction” given to Cabral by the defendants was anything other than routine supervision of Cabral as a DEP employee. 11 Without more, we cannot credit Campagna’s unsupported conclusion that the enforcement action was undertaken to retaliate against Campagna.
Similarly, even if we make the tenuous assumption that Campagna’s support of Maginnis’s appeal is properly characterized as an exercise of Campagna’s rights
As to the First Amendment claim, we find that the amended complaint fails to meet even the minimal requirements to survive a motion to dismiss.
See Coyne v. City of Somerville,
B. Equal Protection
We turn to Campagna’s claim that he was denied equal protection under the law on the ground that he was treated differently frоm inspectors Lally and Re-coulee. Campagna does not allege that he is a member of a protected class or group. Relying on
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
We consider whether Campagna sufficiently alleged that he was treated differently from others “similarly situated” and that there was no rational basis for the treatment. As we read the amended complaint, Lally failed the system on the Westfield property, Campagna arrived at a different result, and Recoulee participated in an investigation intended to resolve the discrepancies between the two conclusions. Recoulee did not make his own independent inspection of the property, but instead failed the system at Cabral’s direction.
Lally and Campagna were not similarly situated for the purposes of determining whether Campagna was treated unfairly: the two inspectors reached different results.
See Barrington Cove Ltd. P’ship v. Rhode Island Hous. & Mortgage Fin. Corp.,
Aside from the dispute over the groundwater calculations, Campagna argues that we should find that his right to equal protection under the law was violated because the DEP fined him, but not Lally or Recoulee, for failing to fill out certain paperwork. The DEP fined Campagna for this technical violation as part of a proceeding that found him responsible for a substantive violation of law. The defendants—who we assume
arguendo
took part
C. State Law Claims
The district court dismissed Campagna’s state law claims without prejudice, finding this an inappropriate case for exercising supplemental jurisdiction.
See Rodriguez v. Doral Mortgage Corp.,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons the order of the district court dismissing the amended complaint is affirmed.
Notes
. Campagna sued David Howland, Deirdre Doherty Cabral, Mary Holland, Edward Kunce, Alan Weinberg, and David Struhs (apparently misidentified in the pleadings as "David Struh”). Campagna initially named the DEP as a defendant in his § 1983 claim, but later assented to its dismissal from the suit.
. Although the significance of the allegation is unclear, Campagna alleges "on information and belief” that defendants Howland and Kunce made a secret agreement that, if forced to hire Campagna for the position he sought, "they would fire him during the six-month probationary period.” These allegations connected to the 1992 lawsuit are the only instances in which Howland and Kunce are singled out in the amended complaint.
. Cabral had taken a 32-hour soil inspection course the previous year, and had not inspected any other sites prior to the October 11, 1997 inspection.
. Campagna alleges that if Recoulee had made his own estimate, it would have been consistent with Campagna's.
. "Title 5” refers to Mass. Regs.Code tit. 310, §§ 15.000, et seq. (state environmental regulations governing on-site sewage treatment and disposal systems), available at http://www.lawlib. state.ma.us/title5.html.
. Like the allegations regarding defendants Howland and Kunce, see note 2, above, and defendant Struhs, see note 6, below, these references to Weinberg and Holland are the only allegations in the amended complаint (other than an initial identification of the defendants) in which Weinberg or Holland are identified by name. All other references to them are only generalized references to “the defendants.”
. Campagna alleges that “the defendants” made defamatory statements about him in connection with the enforcement action, with harmful consequences for his private inspection business.
See Campagna v. Commonwealth,
. In addition to (1) the 1992 lawsuit, and (2) Campagna's support of Maginnis, the district court found that Campagna alleged a third course of conduct, namely his аppeal of the enforcement action, that prompted retaliatory action by the Defendants. See
Campagna,
. To the extent Campagna alleges that the restrictions on discussing his case in the workplace constituted a retaliatory employment action, we uрhold the district court’s application of the public concern doctrine.
. Campagna's frequent references to “the defendants” highlight the generality of his allegations. Taken literally, they would include defendant Struhs, who is named only in Campagna’s common law defamation claim.
. Campagna fails to allege that any defendant other than Cabral directly participated in the enforcement action. To the extent Campagna relies on these defendants' positions within the DEP as a basis for supervisory liability, he has failed to allege facts sufficient to allow such an inference.
See Rogan v. Menino,
