OPINION
Defendant-Appellant Philip Bair (“Bair”) appeals from the denial of qualified immunity in Plaintiff-Appellee David J. Scott’s (“Scott”) § 1983 suit against him. Scott, a prisoner at the Michigan Department of Corrections Carson City Regional Facility, alleges that Bair, a guard at the facility, retaliated against Scott’s exercise of his First Amendment rights by filing a false major misconduct ticket against Scott. This is the third timе this court has heard an appeal in this case on the issue of the proper standard governing prisoner First Amendment retaliation claims; contested in this appeal is the standard that would have been apparent to a reasonable officer when the underlying events took place, in July of 1995. Because this court’s case law in July of 1995 would have put a reasonable officer on fair warning that his conduct was illegal, the denial of qualified immunity is AFFIRMED.
I. BACKGROUND
As the nonmoving party, it is Scott’s version of the facts which must be relied upon. On July 6, 1995, Scott was required to meet with a hearing officer on an unrelated misconduct ticket. Upon Scott’s checking in with Bair to gain entry to the building, Bair said to Scott of his misconduct ticket, “[T]hat doesn’t surprise me.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 174. Scott аsked Bair to explain this remark and indicated that he was considering filing a grievance against Bair. At that point, Bair walked over to where Scott was standing and stated, ‘You don’t know who you’re f — ing with.” J.A. at 34. Bair then grabbed the back of Scott’s neck and continued, “You want to f with me, b_!”. J.A. at 34. Later that day, Scott submitted a grievance against Bair, reciting facts consistent with his later allegations in the сomplaint. The following day, on July 7, Bair filed a Major Misconduct Charge against Scott for insolence. A Major Misconduct Charge can result in a higher security classification, placement in administrative segregation, or forfeiture of good-time credits. On July 27, a hearing was held on the Misconduct Charge, and the charge was “not sustained,” with the hearing officer indicating that Bair’s credibility was “questionable,” relying in part on the fact that the Misconduct Charge was filed “24 hours later, after the inmate had claimed to have been assaulted.” J.A. at 147.
Scott also submitted below an affidavit from a fellow inmate at the facility, Richard F. Thomas (“Thomas”), who claims to have overheard a conversation on July 6 1 between Bair and another guard, Dale Feldpausch (“Feldpаusch”). Thomas stated that Bair described the events of the morning to Feldpausch, consonant with Scott’s version of the facts. Bair told Feldpausch that he did not like Scott, due to Scott’s repeated conflicts with Feld-pausch over Scott’s jailhouse lawyer activities. Feldpausch recommended to Bair *568 that in order to cover up his wrongdoing, Bair should write a- false ticket against Scott, alleging that Bair had patted down Scott after a verbal threat — the version of events Bair would ultimately write up in the Misconduct Charge. Thomas also stated that Feldpausch had told Bair that to conceal more effectively his wrongdoing, Bair should have immediately written the false ticket and taken Scott to administrative segregation.
On August 16, 1995, Scott filed suit pro se аgainst a host of defendants on various claims, including a claim against Bair for retaliation against Scott’s exercise of First Amendment rights. The district court initially dismissed Scott’s complaint, on August 31, 1995. In response to a motion by Scott for rehearing, the district court reinstated Scott’s Fourteenth Amendment and First Amendment retaliation claims but affirmed the dismissal of his Eighth Amendment claim. Scott filed,an amended сomplaint, and on August 19, 1996, the defendants moved to dismiss or for summary judgment, which latter motion was granted on August 28, 1997. This was a grant of summary judgment on the merits, rather than on the basis of qualified immunity. Scott appealed to this court, which initially affirmed the grant of summary judgment in an unpublished order dated December 9, 1999.
See Scott v. Churchill,
The [Bell ] court concluded that as early as 1989, the applicable standard for evaluating an adverse action undertaken in retaliation fоr an individual’s exercise of his or her First Amendment rights is whether it is capable of deterring a person of ordinary firmness from exercising [such] rights
In light of Bell, we REVERSE the district court’s decision, and REMAND to the district court' for reconsideration.
Scott v. Churchill [Scott II
],
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the denial of summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity.
Bukowski v. City of Akron,
326
*569
F.3d 702, 707 (6th Cir.2003). Such a denial, to the extent it turns upon issues of law and not of disputed fact, is immediately appealable as a final order.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
B. The Elements of a Retaliation Claim
Under
Thaddeus-X,
in order to establish a First Amendment retaliation claim, a prisoner must demonstrate that he was (1) engaged in protected conduct; (2) that he suffered an adverse action; and (3) that a causal connection exists between the protected conduct and the adverse action.
C. The Effect of the Prior Panel Decision
Scott argues as a preliminary matter that Scott II, containing the statement that under Bell v. Johnson, the clearly established right at the time of the events underlying the instant case was to be free from adverse action which would have deterred a person of ordinary firmness from exercising First Amendment rights, was binding upon the district court and is binding upon this court. He cites the doctrine of law of the case, in particular the mandate rule, and a line of cases holding that where a party fails to seek reconsideration of an opinion containing a misstatement of law or fact, she forfeits the right to argue that thе opinion was erroneous in subsequent proceedings.
Bell
nowhere makes the explicit statement that the
Thaddeus-X
standard is to be used when judging whether state officers’ actions violated clearly established law at the time of the incidents in
Bell,
and by extension in this case. Instead,
Bell
indicates that the “shocks the conscience” standard is
not
to be used, relies on two cases,
Gibbs v. Hopkins,
The law-of-the-case doctrine “posits that when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case.”
Arizona v. Cali
*570
fornia,
Finally, Scott cites to cases which take a dim view of a party’s assertion that a previous panel opinion made a misstatement of law or fact in a subsequent appeal where no motion for reconsideration under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 40 was filed.
See Campbell v. United States,
D. Qualified Immunity Under Bell
' [6, 7] The district court in the instant case, after this cоurt’s first remand in
Scott I,
held that the clearly established law at the time of the incident was the “shocks the conscience” standard. On appeal,
Scott II
noted that
Bell
had effectively overruled that legal conclusion, and remanded for consideration in light of
Bell. Bell
relied on two cases in concluding that behavior short of that which “shocks the conscience” was clearly established as unlawful in 1994, the time оf the incidents in
Bell: Gibbs,
Particularly destructive to Bair’s claim that the type of adverse action he took against Scott is determinative is
Cale, v. Johnson,
Despite
Cale’s
clear applicability, Bair claims that
Brown v. Crowley,
Under Gibbs and Newsom, which Bell directs this court to look to, and under Cale as well, Scott’s right to be free from retaliation, in the form of the issuance of a false major misconduct ticket, against the exercise of his First Amendment rights was clearly established, and Bair is not entitled to qualified immunity.
E. Other Issues Raised By the Parties
Bair argues on the last full page of his brief that if he is additionally entitled to qualified immunity on his conspiracy claim, which he also seems to argue was dismissed by the district court in an earlier stage of the litigation and never reinstated by the circuit court.
See Scott II,
*573 Finally, Scott claims that Bair’s appeal is frivolous and vexatious, and he requests damagеs and costs because this appeal presents the same issue as Scott II with no change in the law or facts. This is, on its face, a difficult contention to support. While Bell had been decided before Scott II was argued, the Scott II court clearly wished to have the benefit of the district court’s consideration of qualified immunity in light of Bell before a definitive circuit court pronouncement on the issue. The district court having considered qualified immunity, Bair nоw appeals alleging legal error in that consideration. While the legal issue may be the same in the broader sense — qualified immunity — the district court’s decision clearly breaks new ground from Scott II, and Bair is entitled to appeal from that decision, especially in light of the policy considerations underlying qualified immunity.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
Notes
. There seems tо be some confusion in Scott's materials as to when the events took place, on July 6 or July 7. The dates on each of the prison forms indicate that the incident took place and the Misconduct Charge was filed on July 6. Although Thomas's affidavit indicates that he overheard this conversation on the morning of July 7, the conversation itself could only have happened on July 6. Given that Thomas's affidavit was filed a year after the incident, it is reasonable to assume that this was an insignificant error, rather than evidence of unreliability.
