delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff Sylvia Daniel, after leaving her position as administrative secretary for the Village of Hoffman Estates Fire Department, filed a complaint against the village and two village officials seeking both relief under a Federal statute for violation of her constitutional rights and common law relief for retaliatory discharge. The trial court entered summary judgment for the defendant employers on all counts; plaintiff appeals.
Defendants had sought discharge of a fire department lieutenant from his civil service appointment. At issue in that proceeding was the lieutenant’s alleged failure to have department equipment tested; he claimed that the required tests had been performed and that the department had the bill for the tests which would prove his claim. The board of fire and police commissioners, which conducted the proceeding, ordered the department to comply with the lieutenant’s requests for information. As administrative secretary, plaintiff handled bills, records and correspondence of the department. The department’s assistant chief, Richard Cordova, told plaintiff and a co-worker, Sandra Humpfer, to give the lieutenant any item he requested and to give a copy of any such item to Cordova.
Two months later, after defendants had reported to the board of commissioners that no record of the equipment test existed, the lieutenant called plaintiff and asked if she could locate the bill. Plaintiff, on vacation at the time, called the village finance department and was informed that the bill was there. She asked that department to send the bill to the fire department and told the lieutenant that the bill was being forwarded. She then called Sandra Humpfer and told her to give a copy of the bill to Cordova when it arrived. The lieutenant informed his attorney that that bill had been located, the attorney asked village officials to produce the bill, the bill was produced at a subsequent commission hearing, and the allegation against the lieutenant was dropped.
On December 15, 1981, the day after the final commission hearing, Cordova asked plaintiff to resign. She tendered her resignation the next day.
Plaintiff’s complaint was based in part on a Federal statute which creates a cause of action against any person who under color of State law deprives another of a constitutional right. (41 U.S.C. §1983 (1982).) She contends that her firing was an infringement of her first amendment rights of.free speech and free association.
The trial court recorded no explanation for its grant of summary judgment for defendants on the constitutional claim. The parties agree that plaintiff, to receive full first amendment protection for her speech, must have both addressed a matter of concern to the public and done so for reasons related to the public’s interest, not her own. (See Connick v. Myers (1983),
The trial court also granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s retaliatory discharge claim. An employer commits the tort of retaliatory discharge when he terminates an employee for the exercise of a right or compliance with a duty protected by public policy. (Palmateer v. International Harvester Co. (1981),
The next argument offered in support of the grant of defendants’ motion on the retaliatory discharge claim is that plaintiff, rather than being discharged, resigned voluntarily. However, defendants do not dispute her contention that her superior, Cordova, demanded her resignation. Such a demand is sufficient to support a claim of retaliatory discharge; a more express statement of dismissal is not required. Hinthorn v. Roland’s of Bloomington, Inc. (1987),
The defendants also contend that an unemployment compensation board’s determination that plaintiff had been properly terminated for misconduct estops her from relitigating the reasons for her dismissal. They concede, however, that they presented false testimony to that board, indicating that plaintiff had violated a department policy that in fact did not exist, in order to avoid payment of a compensation claim. The doctrine of collateral estoppel will apply only when the party against whom it is asserted had a fall and fair opportunity to litigate the issue in a prior proceeding and will not be applied if an injustice results to that party. (Fearon v. Mobil Joliet Refining Corp. (1984),
Finally, an individual defendant, village safety director James Taylor, claims that summary judgment was proper in his case because he was not personally involved in plaintiff’s dismissal. Though plaintiff concedes that Taylor never spoke to her, she has presented testimony which indicates that he may have ordered her termination. If Taylor directed or consented to plaintiff’s dismissal, he is liable if that dismissal is held to be violative of her constitutional rights. (Perry v. Elrod (N.D. Ill. 1977),
We conclude that none of the arguments advanced by defendants support the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on either aspect of plaintiff’s complaint. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand the cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
RIZZI and FREEMAN, JJ., concur.
