Samuel COAKLEY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
W. Don WELCH, Executive Director, South Carolina State Ports
Authority and; Henry Tecklenburg, Jr.; H. Don McElveen;
Robert V. Royall, Jr.; James B. Moore; Joseph P. Griffith;
Harry A. Chapman, members of the Board of the South
Carolina State Ports Authority, Defendants-Appellants,
and
South Carolina Ports Authority; Thomas F. Hartnett, member
of the Board of the South Carolina Ports Authority;
Theodore Guerard, member of the Board of the South Carolina
State Ports Authority; Ernest L. Willis, member of the
Board of the South Carolina State Ports Authority, Defendants.
No. 88-2905.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued March 9, 1989.
Decided June 9, 1989.
James Bernard Spears, Jr. (Haynsworth, Baldwin, Miles, Johnson, Greaves and Edwards, Greenville, S.C., William H. Vaughan, Jr., Vaughan, Robson & Lawrence, Charleston, S.C., on brief), defendants-appellants.
Armand Georges Derfner, Charleston, S.C., for plaintiff-appellee.
Before ERVIN, Chief Judge, CHAPMAN, Circuit Judge, and WILLIAMS, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
ERVIN, Chief Judge:
The issue in this appeal is whether the district court correctly refused to dismiss several officials of the South Carolina State Ports Authority ("SPA") from a suit brought by Samuel Coakley, а terminated SPA employee. The court concluded that the officials did not enjoy eleventh amendment immunity from an action for injunctive relief. The court also refused to conclude that the officials had no part in the decision to terminate Coakley. We affirm.
I.
The SPA terminated Coakley, a cargo supervisor, in December, 1986, after three truckers claimed he had forced them to pay bribes to have their trucks unloaded. Coakley demanded a hearing before an SPA panel, as was his right under SPA regulations. The panel recommended that the SPA's executive director confirm Coakley's termination. Confirmation oсcurred in March, 1987.
On June 1, 1987, Coakley initiated this Sec. 1983 action, which includes a number of pendant claims. Coakley's federal claims were that he was terminated without cause, an event Coakley believes violated his right to due process, and that he was denied adequate pre- and post-termination process. Coakley's pendant claims alleged violations of analogous due process rights guaranteеd under the South Carolina Constitution and breach of an employment agreement. Coakley sought compensatory damages and an injunction ordering his reinstatement.
On the defendants' Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion, the district court dismissed the SPA, holding that it was a state agency immune from a damages suit under the eleventh amendment. The court also held that the individual defendants, sued in their capacity as SPA officials, could be subject to an injunction undеr the Ex parte Young,
The remaining individual defendants (collectively "Welch") appeal from the decision excepting them from eleventh amendment immunity and refusing to dismiss them for lack of personal involvement. The district court did not certify its decision, so its order is appealable, if at all, under the collateral order doctrine of Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
II.
A. Appealability
In Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
We reject, however, Welch's contention that the second issue he would have us resolve is appealable at this time. Welch's absolute immunity argument amounts to a claim that he should not have to go through a trial, or indeed any federal judicial proceedings. See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
B. Eleventh Amendment
Coakley granted to the district court that a decisiоn barring his damages action against the SPA on eleventh amendment grounds would equally bar a damages action against Welch. The decision as to damages having favored Welch, the only question for us is whether the court ought also to have held Welch immune from Coakley's claim for the injunctive remedy of reinstatement. We believe the district court was correct to permit Coakley to pursue injunctive relief.
Papasan v. Allain,
Papasan held, though, that "the balance of federal and state interests that [Young ] embodies " recommends applying the Young exception only to cases alleging ongoing violations of federal law. Id. Papasan offered as a final observation on the matter thаt the difference between suits barred and litigable "will not in many instances be that between day and night." Id.
Papasan was an equal protection suit brought by a number of Mississippi municipal school officials and school children against various officials of the State of Mississippi. The suit alleged that a history оf poor treatment by the State, amounting to a breach of trust, had resulted in severe financial disadvantages to the plaintiffs' school districts.
The Court found the defendants subject to suit under the eleventh amendment, hоlding that the "alleged ongoing constitutional violation--the unequal distribution by the State of the benefits of the State's school lands--is precisely the type of continuing violation for which a remedy may permissibly be fashiоned under Young."
McConnell was an action brought by two former Virginia county registrars, both Republicans, who were not reappointed by their electoral boards after a Democratic governor toоk office. A Virginia statute required that a majority of the members of city and county electoral boards be members of the governor's party.
The McConnell panel affirmed a judgment holding that the registrars' rights had beеn violated and ordering reappointment. The panel held, as to the remedial aspect, that "[Virginia's] eleventh amendment immunity does not protect it from suits for injunctive relief governing its officials' future conduct...."
McConnell is similar enough to this case to control, Welch's attempts to distinguish it notwithstanding. In this case, SPA regulations provide the underlying State authority for the conduct Coakley asserts deprived him of federal constitutiоnal rights. We cannot see how Virginia's failure to reappoint the registrars is any more an "ongoing violation" of federal law than South Carolina's decision to fire Coakley.2 For these reasons, McConnell рrovides clear authority for the district court's decision.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we address and affirm the district court's decision denying Welch eleventh amendment immunity from Coakley's claim for injunctive relief. We decline to address at this stage the propriety of the order declining to dismiss Welch for lack of personal involvement in the decision to terminate Coakley.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
We cannot agree with Welch that we havе broad discretion to elect to reach the merits defense now. Kerr Center Parents Assoc. v. Charles,
We recognize that from one point of view, all Coakley has alleged is that for a period in the past the SPA put him through a prоcess that deprived him of due process rights, but that the process, and any relationship between him and SPA, has ended. This would suggest that his suit against Welch is barred for want of an "ongoing" violation. The view we find more consistеnt with Papasan and McConnell is that by his allegations and his prayer for an injunction, Coakley has alleged SPA conduct that, while no longer giving him daily attention, continues to harm him by preventing him from obtaining the benefits of SPA emрloyment. See also Elliott v. Hinds,
Cases from other circuits, as well as McConnell, suggest that few, if any, suits are barred for failure to allege an "ongoing violation" under Papasan. See Elliott,
