The plaintiff, Lauth, a police officer in the Chicago suburb of LaGrange Park, sued his police chief, McCollum, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The suit charged that McCollum (and the Village, but it’s been dropped as a defendant) had deprived Lauth of the equal protection of the laws by asking the Village’s Board of Police Commissioners to sanction him for misfeasance. (The Board obliged.) The district judge granted summary judgment for the defendants, and Lauth appeals.
A woman had reported her 11-year-old son missing, and, though the child was found the next day unharmed, Lauth in responding to the report had failed to comply not only with standard operating procedures for handling missing-persons reports but also with statutory requirements. See Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery Act, 325 ILCS 40/1-8. The Board, upon McCollum’s complaint, ordered Lauth suspended without pay for a total of 60 days. He could have sought judicial
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review of the Board’s decision in the Illinois state courts, 65 ILCS 5/10-2.1-17;
Van Milligan v. Board of Fire & Police Comm’rs,
Lauth claims that McCollum’s action in hauling him before the Board was motivated by animus (hostility, dislike, ill will), and so he is appealing to the “class of one” theory of denial of equal protection. E.g.,
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
There is clearly something wrong with a suit of this character coming into federal court dressed as a constitutional case. At argument one of Lauth’s lawyers candidly described it as a grudge suit, as in fact the latest move in a labor dispute. McCollum may conceivably be guilty of retaliation against Lauth (by having reported him to the Board) for Lauth’s union activities. But, if so, Illinois labor law, which governs the Village’s labor relations, 5 ILCS 315/1-27;
Grchan v. Illinois State Labor Relations Board,
Lauth might lose a retaliation suit. McCollum might be able to show that he would have reported Lauth’s violation of police and statutory regulations intended for the safety of missing persons to the Board whether or not he was on the outs with Lauth over the union; and that would be a complete defense,
City of Burbank v. Illinois State Labor Relations Board,
The reason the case has gotten as far as it has is the uncertainty that attends “class of one” equal protection cases.
Lunini v. Grayeb,
The paradigmatic “class of one” case, more sensibly conceived, is one in which a public official, with no conceivable basis for his action other than spite or some other improper motive (improper because unrelated to his public duties), comes down hard on a hapless private citizen. Perhaps he is the holder of a license from the state to operate a bar or restaurant or other business, and the official deprives him of a valuable property right that identically situated citizens toward whom the official bears no ill will are permitted the unfettered enjoyment of. E.g.,
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech, supra,
We are therefore not surprised to have found no “class of one” cases in which .a public employee has prevailed,
Levenstein v. Salafsky,
As the Tenth Circuit noted in
Jennings v. City of Stillwater, supra,
Since hypothesis is not proof, this test that we have articulated can often be applied in advance of discovery.
Wroblewski v. Washburn,
AFFIRMED.
