Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION
GARY COLOREZ,
Plaintiff, v. Case No. 1:17–cv–737 JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE CITY OF CINCINNATI,
et al. ,
Defendants.
OPINION AND ORDER
In this action, Gary Colorez, a public employee, claims he was terminated in retaliation for exercising his First Amendment rights. Now before this Court is a Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 21) by the three defendants—the City of Cincinnati and two of its employees, Maraskeshia Smith and Harry Black (the “City Defendants”). The Court heard oral argument on January 22, 2020. For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS the Defendants’ Motion and DISMISSES WITH PREJUDICE the remaining claim against the City Defendants.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. Colorez Begins Employment with the City of Cincinnati.
The City of Cincinnati (the “City”) hired Plaintiff Gary P. Colorez (“Colorez”) on June 18, 2017, as the Superintendent of the Neighborhood Operations Division (“NOD Superintendent”), which is part of the City’s Public Services Department, commonly called “Sanitation.” (Defs.’ Proposed Undisputed Facts (“Defs.’ Prop. *2 Facts”), ¶ 1, Doc. 21-1, #441 [1] ). Colorez’s job duties required him to manage City functions, including sanitation, greenspace, trash collection, and lot abatement. ( Id. at ¶ 7). Colorez understood his “job was to make sure [trash collection and greenspace maintenance] was done efficiently.” ( Id. ). While employed, Colorez reported directly to Joel Koopman (“Koopman”), the Deputy Director of Public Services, who in turn reported to Defendant Maraskeshia Smith (“Smith”), the Director of Public Services. (Colorez Dep., 15–16, Doc. 20, #224–25). Smith reported to the other individual Defendant, then-City Manager Harry Black (“Black”).
Colorez’s official job description and responsibilities were detailed in the position’s Class Specification (a form of job description for City jobs). (Colorez Dep. Ex. 2, Doc. 20-2, #379–83). Colorez maintains he did not see this job description before being hired, and disputes whether some of the functions set forth in that description were in fact part of his job. (Colorez Dep. at 33–35, #242–44). During his deposition, though, he admitted to exercising many of the listed duties, including oversight, professional development, labor, contract interpretation, and payroll as it related to his department. ( See id. at 33–37, #242–46). Colorez stated he “was supposed to work closely with the director and the deputy director … [and was] responsible for development and presentation of information … to a certain extent.” ( Id. at 37, #246).
As more fully discussed below, this dispute regarding the scope of Colorez’s job duties potentially matters to this Motion, in that Colorez is claiming retaliatory discharge in violation of his First Amendment rights. The First Amendment offers *3 substantially less protection for job-related speech by a public employee (which this Opinion calls “employee-speech”) than for non-job-related speech by that same employee (referred to here as “citizen-speech”). Accordingly, the narrower the scope of Colorez’s job, the more likely that the speech at issue falls into the latter category, and thus the more likely it can serve as the basis for a First Amendment retaliation claim.
B. Colorez Raises Concerns About City Practices.
During his short tenure with the City, Colorez expressed several concerns about various City practices. He believes that these comments, whether individually or cumulatively, provided the impetus for his termination. His concerns related to the City’s: (1) recycling program; (2) procurement system; (3) greenspace mowing; (4) street sweeping; and (5) abandoned lot abatement. (Compl., ¶ 12–21, Doc. 1, #6-8). Given the First Amendment framework that applies, due consideration is warranted as to the relationship, if any, between each issue and Colorez’s job. To ascertain that, this Court must first explore more fully the nature of each of the listed concerns and the manner in which Colorez raised them.
Colorez was concerned with how the City conducted its metal recycling program. (Colorez Dep. at 96, #305). Namely, he believed the City should be receiving money for its metal recyclables rather than paying a vendor to haul away and recycle metal waste. ( Id . at 95, #304). Colorez raised this issue during a meeting he had with Sue Magness, who Colorez recalled as the City’s “Director of Environmental Services.” ( Id. at 95–96, #304–05). When Magness told him to look into the issue and *4 call her back, Colorez inquired to Chris Callahan (a fellow employee), and then pressed the matter further with Smith, his supervisor two steps up. ( Id. at 96–97, #305–06). He and Smith discussed the recycling program “within that week, [or a] couple days [of him learning about the issue] … but it had to be maybe late July, early August somewhere in there.” ( Id. at 97–98, #306–07). Their discussion occurred “in the hallway” of the “Public Services Hopple Street building.” ( Id. at 98, #307).
Colorez also took issue with the City’s procurement methods, specifically the use of BFX, LLC (“BFX”). (Colorez Dep. at 62–64, #271–73). BFX provided the City with products that Colorez and his team used in connection with their work for the City. ( Id. at 55–56, #264–65). The BFX program was a pilot program, attempting to centralize and streamline City purchasing and third-party facilities services. (Black Dep. Ex. 6, Doc. 18-6, #133–59). Colorez thought that the prices BFX charged the City were exorbitant; he believed procurement through other means, including his employees being able to purchase materials directly, would save money for both his department and the City. (Colorez Dep . at 75–77, #284–86). Specifically, he raised concerns about how much the City was paying for paper towels (Compl. at ¶ 21, #7– 8), paint, (Colorez Dep. at 64–65, #273–74), garbage can liners, ( id. at 54–56, #263– 64), other “inferior goods,” ( id. at 50–51, #259–60), and service fees to pressure wash a garage ( id. at 76, #285).
Colorez asserts that he took these concerns directly to Smith, ( id. at 56–57, 77, #265–66, 286), but it appears from the record he only raised them with her orally, as no one has pointed to any written documentation reflecting these concerns. Colorez *5 could not remember exactly when his conversation with Smith occurred, but he thought it was roughly “during the time when [he] was speaking with [Smith] about all [his] concerns, the three or four occasions [they] had together.” ( Id. at 77, #286). These conversations, some of which also included Koopman, occurred at the Hopple Street Building, during both a staff meeting and in one-off conversations. ( Id. at 57– 58, #266–67).
Colorez was also troubled by the quality and payment structure for contracted greenspace mowers, a system he believed promoted waste. ( See id. at 83, #292). These contractors were responsible for mowing and maintaining particular City greenspaces, including parks, which fell under Colorez’s supervision. ( Id. at 14, 83– 88, #223, 292–97). As Colorez understood it, part of his job was to ensure that grass on City property was cut in an efficient and cost-effective manner; he believed the contractors were working in opposition to this goal. ( Id. at 16, #225). Based on concerns workers in his department raised, Colorez investigated this issue and discovered that the contract mowers were not completing work, but were submitting invoices, which the City often paid without investigation. ( Id. at 88–89, #297–98). As citizen complaints about overgrown grass accumulated, Colorez instructed John Erwin (a City employee) to cross-reference those complaints with the lots assigned to the contract mowers. ( Id. at 88–89, #297–98). Discovering overlap, Colorez took this issue to Smith. ( Id. at 84–85, #293–94).
Colorez similarly questioned the efficiency of contracted street sweepers who cleaned City streets. ( Id. at 53, #262). Colorez claimed he knew the street sweepers *6 were not performing their duties because he lived downtown. ( Id. ). He confirmed his suspicions when he reviewed the sweepers’ contract, which he requested via email from Robert Armacost (a City employee). ( Id. at 78–79, #287–88). Colorez then reviewed GPS tracking data (or lack thereof) that was “supposed to be attached with the [streetsweeper] invoices.” ( Id. at 80, 82, #289, 291). Sensing inefficiency, coupled with a lack of corroborating GPS data, Colorez concluded his employees could do a better job. ( Id. at 79–80, #288–89). He discussed this idea with Smith, to whom he suggested that “if the City would sweep [the streets at issue], that we would save a huge amount of money and it would get done on a nightly basis.” ( Id. at 51, 53–54, 83, #260, 262–63, 292). After being rebuffed, he voiced this same concern during a staff meeting. ( Id. at 79–80, #288–89).
Finally, Colorez took issue with various costs the City incurred for abandoned lot abatement. ( Id. at 89–91, #298–300). After analyzing the before and after photos of a typical abatement project, Colorez determined the small amount of work completed “did not justify the … exorbitant cost.” ( Id. at 92, #301). Then, after reviewing the bills sent to the City from the private contractors, Colorez compared them to what he believed it would cost for his employees to do the same work and he concluded the latter would be more efficient. ( Id. at 93–94, #302–03). He again went to Smith. ( Id. at 91, #300).
C. Colorez’s Employment Ends and He Sues the City.
In the end, Colorez’s tenure with the City lasted approximately ten weeks; Smith terminated his employment on September 8, 2017. (Black Dep. Ex. 3, Doc. 18-3, *7 #116). Colorez believes his inquiries about recycling, procurement, mowing, street sweeping, and lot abatement were the impetus for his discharge.
Based on this belief, on November 3, 2017, Colorez filed his Complaint asserting five claims, all predicated on different theories of liability, but all related to his tenure with the City. These claims included wrongful termination in violation of Ohio public policy (Count One); violation of Ohio’s whistleblower protection laws (Count Two); abuse of power as to Black and Smith (Count Three); and two § 1983 claims: one for retaliatorily discharge in violation of the First Amendment (Count Four), and the other asserting the City Defendants violated his substantive Due Process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment (Count Five). (Compl. at ¶¶ 25–50, #8–11).
After answering, the City Defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings as to all five claims. (Doc. 10). On August 3, 2018, Judge Black, who was then assigned to the case, issued an Order granting the motion in part. (Doc. 14). Specifically, Judge Black granted the City Defendants’ motion as to Counts One, Two, Three and Five, but denied the motion as to Count Four, the First Amendment allegation, because the Complaint did not clearly indicate whether Colorez’s speech was made pursuant to his official duties. ( Id. at #86–87). With discovery now complete, Defendants ask this Court to revisit this remaining question.
PENDING MOTION
In their Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 21), the City Defendants argue Colorez’s claim fails as a matter of law, either on the merits or on qualified immunity *8 grounds. On the merits, they contend that there is no genuine dispute that Colorez’s speech was employee-speech, and thus his termination, whether in retaliation for that speech or not, cannot form the basis for a First Amendment claim. Alternatively, they argue that, even if a constitutional violation occurred, under Monell there can be no municipal liability for the City, and that Black and Smith are individually entitled to qualified immunity.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review on Summary Judgment.
Summary judgment is proper “if the movant shows that there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The burden is on the moving party to conclusively
show no genuine issue of material fact exists.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
This Court does not have the responsibility to
sua sponte
search the record for
genuine issues of material fact.
Betkerur v. Aultman Hosp. Ass’n
,
Whether summary judgment is appropriate depends upon “whether the
evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or
whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.”
Amway
Distribs. Benefits Ass’n v. Northfield Ins. Co.
, 323 F.3d 386, 390 (6th Cir.
2003) (quoting
Anderson
, 477 U.S. at 251–52). In sum, Colorez, at this stage, must
present some “sufficient disagreement” which would necessitate submission to a jury.
See Moore v. Phillip Morris Cos., Inc.
, 8 F.3d 335, 340 (6th Cir. 1993) (quoting
Anderson
, 477 U.S. at 251–52). In making that determination, though, this Court
must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, here
Colorez.
See Cox v. Ky. Dep’t of Transp.
,
The sole remaining claim—retaliatory termination in violation of the First and
Fourteenth Amendments—arises under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This poses two separate
yet related issues for summary judgment, each requiring its own analysis. First, “[t]o
state a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a plaintiff must set forth facts that, when
construed favorably, establish (1) the deprivation of a right secured by the
Constitution or laws of the United States (2) caused by a person acting under the
color of state law.”
Sigley v. City of Parma Heights
,
Second, this Court must address the question of qualified immunity. “Under
the doctrine of qualified immunity, ‘government officials performing discretionary
functions are generally shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their
conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which
a reasonable person should have known.’”
Phillips v. Roane Cty.
,
B. Colorez’s First Amendment Claim Fails as a Matter of Law.
The First Amendment “guarantees freedom of expression” and prohibits
Congress, and by incorporation state actors, from restricting “the rights of individuals
to speak freely.” U.S. C ONST . amend. I;
see Gitlow v. People of State of N.Y.
, 268 U.S.
652, 666 (1925) (incorporating the First Amendment). The First Amendment protects
speech rights of a public employee. As relevant here, a public employer cannot
retaliate against an employee based on the employee’s exercise of his or her First
Amendment rights. If a person acting under color of state law violates this
*11
prohibition, that gives rise to a cause of action under § 1983.
See Okla. City v. Tuttle
,
Here, Colorez asserts claims against Black and Smith in both their individual and official capacities. The latter claims, however, are treated as claims against their
employer, the City of Cincinnati.
See Will v. Mich. Dep’t of State Police
,
1. Not all public employee-speech has First Amendment protection; rather, such protection is reserved for citizen-capacity speech.
To prevail on his First Amendment retaliation claim against Black and Smith
for terminating his employment, Colorez must prove “(1) he was engaged in a
constitutionally protected activity; (2) he was subjected to adverse action or deprived
of some benefit; and (3) the protected speech was a ‘substantial’ or ‘motivating factor’
in the adverse action.”
Haddad v. Gregg
,
“When a citizen enters government service, the citizen by necessity must
accept certain limitations on his or her freedom.”
Garcetti v. Ceballos
,
This Court’s resolution of the pending motion requires a three-step inquiry under Garcetti . The first question is whether the speech at issue was made pursuant to Colorez’s official duties. Garcetti , 547 U.S. at 417. Speech “pursuant to the employee’s official duties” (i.e., “employee-speech”) is unprotected. Garcetti , 547 U.S. at 413. But for speech outside that realm, where the public employee is speaking as a citizen (i.e., “citizen-speech”), the second step asks whether the speech touches on a matter of public concern. Id. (citations omitted). If Colorez’s speech here was either (1) employee-speech or (2) citizen-speech that did not involve a matter of public concern, his First Amendment claim fails as a matter of law. If, however, Colorez can *13 satisfy both inquiries, the third step requires balancing Colorez’s First Amendment right with the City’s need to promote “the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.” Id. at 417 (quotation and citation omitted).
Moreover, in making the pursuant-to inquiry, this Court is also mindful that
Garcetti
is not the Supreme Court’s last word on the employee-speech/citizen-speech
dichotomy. More recently, in
Lane v. Franks
,
2. Whether public employee-speech is protected is a legal question, determined by a multi-factor balancing test.
The initial trick in a public-employee First Amendment retaliatory discharge
case is determining whether the speech at issue constitutes “citizen-speech.” As the
Sixth Circuit observed, “[d]etermining whether an employee speaks as a private
*14
citizen or as a public employee can be challenging,” but the “inquiry is a practical
one.”
Mayhew
,
As the Court is facing this issue in the context of a motion for summary
judgment, a threshold consideration is whether the “pursuant-to inquiry” (i.e.,
whether Colorez’s speech was made pursuant to his “official duties”) constitutes a
question of law or a question of fact. If the latter, there is a greater likelihood that
jury involvement would be warranted to resolve the issue. The Sixth Circuit has
confirmed though, that, notwithstanding some cases from other Circuits suggesting
otherwise, the pursuant-to inquiry is a legal question that this Court must resolve.
See Mayhew
,
Actually
answering
that legal question, however, remains a difficult task.
Despite
Garcetti
,
Lane
, and a substantial body of precedent, there is still no
“comprehensive framework for defining the scope of an employee’s duties.”
Mayhew
,
As is often the case with open-ended, multi-factor balancing tests, the guidance
the
Weisbarth
factors offer can be under-determinative in a given case. While the
factors are clearly stated, the weight and consideration afforded each, and the
manner of resolving conflicts among them, is more ambiguous. That being said, one
recurring theme in Sixth Circuit case law appears to be that employee-speech made
solely “up the chain of command” will not support a First Amendment claim.
See
Mayhew
,
3. Applying the Sixth Circuit’s test, Colorez’s speech constituted employee-speech pursuant to his ordinary job responsibilities.
With the Sixth Circuit’s guidance in hand, the Court now turns to the speech at issue here. To start, the Court notes that, if the “chain of command” factor is dispositive, that presents problems for Colorez, as he points to nothing in the record suggesting he voiced any of the concerns he raised here to anyone but his supervisors or other City employees. And even if it is not dispositive, a trek through the four Weisbarth factors and the Sixth Circuit's precedent regarding each, while perhaps making it a slightly closer call, ultimately leads to the same destination: Colorez’s speech is unprotected.
Colorez alleges several instances of speech that he says give rise to protection. More specifically, he cites to concerns he expressed about street sweeping, abandoned lot abatement, contracted greenspace mowers, metals recycling, and procurement. This Court addresses each of these in turn.
At oral argument, Colorez conceded, and rightly so, that his concerns as to the
first three topics—street sweeping, abandoned lot abatement, and greenspace
mowing—directly related to matters that were part of his ordinary job duties as the
NOD Superintendent. On these,
Garcetti
is dispositive, even without reference to
*17
Weisbarth
: “[W]hen public employees make statements pursuant to their official
duties, the employees are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment purposes[.]”
Garcetti
,
Finally, putting that aside and applying the Weisbarth factors, even in the manner most favorable to Colorez, likewise compels the conclusion that his allegedly-protected speech on these three topics was actually made pursuant to his ordinary job duties. In particular, the impetus for the speech was to make the department he managed more efficient; the setting of the speech was at work; the speech’s audience was his supervisors or the employees who reported to him; and the general subject matter related to his job responsibilities. See Weisbarth , 499 F.3d at 540–41. There is simply no way to conclude otherwise on the facts here. Thus, for any or all of those reasons, Colorez’s speech on those three topics does not support a § 1983 retaliatory termination case.
The remaining two categories of speech on which Colorez relies—his complaints about the metal recycling program and BFX procurement—require a closer look at the Weisbarth factors, but the end result is the same. Admittedly, the first factor—the impetus for the speech—is perhaps equivocal. As to both of these programs, Colorez argued that the changes he was proposing could save the City *18 money—for example, on the BFX issue, he testified that he had reported to his supervisors that direct purchasing could be “a big cost savings to taxpayers.” (Colorez Dep. at 65, #274). On one hand, an interest in saving the City money certainly seems consistent with Colorez’s job responsibilities of assisting the City to operate in an efficient manner, but it is also perhaps consistent, as Colorez argues now, of concerns he has as a taxpayer about the City’s profligate spending. Thus, this factor is perhaps a draw.
The next two Weisbarth factors, though, cut strongly in favor of characterizing his comments here as employee-speech. As for the speech’s setting, Colorez made all his comments on both of these topics while at work; nothing in the record suggests otherwise. The audience for Colorez’s comments included Sue Magness, Chris Callahan, and Smith, all of whom were either City employees or Colorez’s direct or indirect superiors. Moreover, unlike Aquilina (discussed below), Colorez did not have some “ultimate [public] audience” in mind. His comments were not made with the thought, or even the hope, that the person to whom he spoke would inform the public. And despite now arguing that he had concerns about “corruption” regarding the BFX purchasing issue, he did not to speak to a reporter, did not write a “Dear Editor” letter to the Cincinnati Enquirer, and did not publicly raise his concerns at a city council meeting. [3] There are countless ways Colorez could have chosen to speak out, protected by the First Amendment, but he opted for none of them. These factors weigh strongly *19 in favor of finding that his workplace comments constituted employee-speech, rather than speech entitled to First Amendment protection.
Fourth and finally, subject matter: This is again a closer call, but again tips in favor of characterizing the speech here as employee-speech. On the BFX procurement front, there is no dispute that, as the NOD Superintendent, Colorez necessarily oversaw, instructed, or was involved with procurement in connection with his ordinary or de facto job duties. ( See, e.g. , Colorez Dep . at 50–51, 54–56, 64–65, 75–77, #259–60, 263–64, 273–74, 284–86). Indeed, the principal concerns Colorez expressed about BFX procurement related to the allegedly exorbitant prices being charged for products used in his department. That strikes this Court as necessarily job related. Metal recycling, on the other hand, was neither part of Colorez’s “official duties,” nor his de facto job responsibilities as NOD Superintendent. But trash collection was among his official duties and recycling is at least somewhat related to that issue.
Given all of the facts here, a holistic application of the four Weisbarth factors ineluctably leads to the conclusion that Colorez’s comments on recycling, as well as his comments on the BFX procurement matter, constitute speech pursuant to his official capacity as a public employee, not speech as a private citizen. In reaching this result, the Court is mindful that one concern about multi-factor balancing tests is that they can often serve as a type of judicial Rorschach test. That is especially true in close cases, but this is not such a case. Considering the undisputed facts, the speech here firmly falls on the employee-speech side of the Garcetti divide, and therefore does not give rise to First Amendment protection.
A review of Sixth Circuit First-Amendment-retaliatory-discharge case law further confirms this result. In Holbrook v. Dumas , 658 F. App’x 280, 281–83 (6th Cir. 2016), for example, the court concluded a fire chief’s speech, which consisted of an email to his firefighters, was unprotected because the email primarily addressed the department’s potential closure and firefighter job cuts. Affirming summary judgment in the employer’s favor, the court found Holbrook “communicated … with fire department employees in furtherance of his responsibilities as Fire Chief.” Id. at 288. In reaching that result, the court noted Holbrook signed the email as “Fire Chief,” sent the email from his official account, addressed it to fire department employees, and the content was an employment matter. Id. The who, what, when, where, why, and how all indicated “Holbrook communicated pursuant to his official duties,” and “his speech was therefore not protected.” Id. at 289. The district court’s weighing of the Weisbarth factors supported this conclusion. Id. at 288. What seemed to particularly drive the court’s decision was that the speech ultimately “owe[d] its existence to a public employee’s professional responsibilities.” Id. at 288 (quotation omitted). Given that fact, Holbrook’s claims that he communicated “as a concerned friend or citizen” did not fly. Id. at 289. Just so here. Colorez’s complaints “owed their existence” to his professional responsibilities and thus constituted employee-speech.
Moreover,
Holbrook
is just one example of many cases applying the
Weisbarth
factors that ultimately hold speech unprotected when it occurs at work and is related,
even if sometimes loosely, to the employee’s job.
See, e.g.
,
Henderson v. City of Flint
,
751 F. App’x 618, 622 (6th Cir. 2018) (denying protection to a city administrator
*21
because reporting financial mismanagement to the city’s chief legal officer “bore all
the markers of official action”);
Mayhew
,
To be sure, there are also cases in which the pursuant-to analysis comes out
the other way. But typically that is so only if there is some specific fact that the
employee identifies that serves to cleanly divorce the speech at issue in the particular
case from the public employee’s workplace duties. In
Aquilina v. Wrigglesworth
, 759
F. App’x 340, 346 (6th Cir. 2018), for example, the Sixth Circuit found that a judge
was engaged in citizen-speech when she permitted a reporter to view a video, largely
*22
because
the reporter’s involvement implied an eventual public audience for the video
materials. Similarly, in
Boulton v. Swanson
,
Here, there is no such clear delineation. This means that Colorez’s speech is decidedly more like the speech at issue in Weisbarth , Mayhew , Holbrook , Haynes , or Fox than it is to the speech in Aquilina , Boulton , or Sutherland . Unlike the latter cases, Colorez has not identified any specific factor clearly divorcing his speech from his job duties. Accordingly, Colorez has not raised a genuine dispute of material fact as to Garcetti ’s first prong. It is unnecessary, therefore, to determine whether his speech involved a matter of public concern, [4] or to engage in the employee/employer *23 balancing test. [5] As a result, there is no constitutional violation, meaning that Black and Smith are entitled to summary judgment on the individual-capacity claims against them.
C. Monell Liability and Qualified Immunity.
With the claims against the individual defendants gone, two issues remain,
but they merit only quick discussion. The first is Colorez’s claim against the City (and
his official-capacity claims against Smith and Black, which, as noted above, are one
and the same with his claim against the City). It is well settled that there is no
respondeat superior
liability under § 1983.
Monell
, 436 U.S. at 691. To be sure, a
political subdivision, here the City, is a “person” under § 1983, and can be liable under
that statute, but only if a plaintiff “show[s] that the alleged federal right violation
occurred because of a municipal policy or custom.”
Thomas v. City of Chattanooga
,
[5] The Supreme Court announced the standard for this balancing test in
Pickering v. Bd. of Educ.
, 391
U.S. 563, 568 (1986). It “requires a court to balance the interests of the public employee ‘as a citizen,
in commenting upon matters of public concern, and the interest of the State, as an employer, in
promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.’”
Handy-Clay
, 695
F.3d at 544 (quoting
id.
at 568). This shifts the burden to the employer, who must “proffer legitimate
grounds for the allegedly retaliatory action at issue.”
Id.
(citing
Hughes v. Region VII Area Agency on
Aging
,
“federal right violation occurred.”
[6]
Id.
For the reasons discussed above, the Court
finds that Black and Smith have not individually violated Colorez’s constitutional
rights; Colorez has not alleged anyone else did either. Given that, the City cannot be
liable.
Monell
,
Separately, apart from the merits of the constitutional claim, there is the
question of whether Black and Smith are entitled to qualified immunity. That is, in
order to prevail on a § 1983 claim, not only must Colorez identify a constitutional
violation, but he must also show the violation was of a “clearly established” right.
See
Saucier v. Katz
,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons above, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 21) and DISMISSES WITH PREJUDICE the remaining claim against the City Defendants. The Court DIRECTS the Clerk to enter judgment accordingly.
SO ORDERED.
February 26, 2020 DATE DOUGLAS R. COLE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Notes
[1] Pin citations are to the corresponding PageID number.
[2] These factors are sometimes referred to as the “
Handy-Clay
” factors.
See Henderson v. City of Flint
,
[3] The Court does not provide these as examples of actions that would necessarily afford First Amendment protection, but rather as examples that may have changed the analysis under the Weisbarth factors.
[4] The framework for deciding whether speech relates to a matter of public concern is “not well defined”
either.
Snyder v. Phelps
, 562 U.S. 443, 452 (quoting
San Diego v. Roe
, 543 U.S. 77, 83 (2004) (per
curiam)). There are, however, guideposts: “Speech involves matters of public concern when it can be
fairly considered as relating to [1] any matter of political, social, or other concern to the community,
or [2] when it is a subject of legitimate news interest; that is, a subject of general interest and of value
and concern to the public.”
Lane v. Franks
,
[6] Whether the governmental actor who actually committed the constitutional violation must be named as a defendant in the action that seeks to impose municipal liability is a separate question. See Anderson v. Jones , No. 1:17-cv-327, slip op. at 20–23 (S.D. Ohio Feb. 19, 2020) (Cole, J.) (discussing Sixth Circuit caselaw on this issue). Here it does not matter though, as Colorez has not suggested some other City employee, whom he did not name as a defendant in this action, violated his constitutional rights.
