Roger Fairley and Richard Gackowski worked as guards at the Cook County Jail in Chicago. After their peers threatened to kill them, they quit and sued the other guards, complaint handlers, the sheriff, and the County. (In saying that death threats were made, and throughout the opinion, we present the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs. Defendants deny many of plaintiffs’ principal contentions.)
Guards at the Jail regularly beat prisoners without justification. The harm plaintiffs complain of, however, is not the injuries suffered by prisoners but how other guards reacted when plaintiffs opposed the maltreatment. For example, in April 2000 Gackowski objected when Fred Coffey struck inmate Brown. Gackowski followed up with an internal complaint. Coffey and other guards responded by taunting Gackowski, calling him a “snitch” who “had no heart.”
Four months later a fight broke out in Special Incarceration Unit 2, which holds the Jail’s most dangerous inmates. After the prisoners had been subdued and shackled, guards Evan Fermaint, Noberto Bercasio, and Edward Byrne beat them. Fairley told them to stop. Byrne snapped: “They want to hurt my officers.... [Kjill’em. They deserve to die.” Byrne later told Gackowski (who had not seen the altercation) that he had twisted and jumped on an inmate’s leg but couldn’t get the bones to break. Byrne told Fairley not to file an incident report. Bercasio and Fermaint tagged Fairley “inmate lover.”
Though the Department of Corrections’ General Orders require guards to report any misconduct by their peers, plaintiffs say that this does not reflect reality; according to them, the Jail’s real rule is a ban on reporting misconduct — a “code of silence.” At the training academy, instructors told cadets to stick together and “don’t say any bad remarks about anybody.” This attitude pervaded the Jail.
Tensions mounted when the inmates involved in the incident in Special Incarceration Unit 2 filed suit. Fields v. Byrne, No. 00 L 9339 (Cir. Ct. Cook County filed Aug. 16, 2000). Fairley and Gackowski told other guards that, if subpoenaed, they would tell the truth about what they had seen and heard. Fields’s lawyer sent an investigator to Fairley’s home, but Fairley said he hadn’t seen anything. Fairley informed his superiors about the visit. They obtained a court order restricting Fields’s access to guards and told the guards not to talk to anyone about what happened.
Plaintiffs’ willingness to testify in Fields infuriated the other guards. Bercasio and Fermaint forcefully “dry humped” plaintiffs by grabbing them from behind and simulating anal intercourse. Bercasio posted on the Jail’s bulletin boards pornographic cartoons featuring Gackowski. Supervisors repeatedly assigned plaintiffs to Special Incarceration Unit 2 without adequate supplies; other guards refused to let them out to use the restroom. Byrne denied Fairley’s request for paternity leave and refused to pay plaintiffs for overtime they had worked. The taunts “inmate lover” and “social worker” flew freely-
Gackowski submitted an internal-affairs complaint about the bullying in August 2002, two years after Fields was filed. In December Fields served a subpoena on Fairley. Later that month inmate Lipscomb attacked Fairley with a shank, cutting him on the wrist. Bercasio remarked: “You see that, Fairley? You fuck with people, that’s how you get stabbed.” (Plaintiffs do not allege that guards fur *521 nished Lipscomb with the shank.) Internal investigators dragged their heels. Ronald Prohaska told Gackowski, “[I]f Fairley goes into court on this SI-2 case ... and tells the truth, he will fuck everyone involved.... We always knew he was a weak link and when a weak link can fuck everyone in the chain, then we have to bury the weak link. It’s nothing personal. It’s just business.... Just like with your complaint trying to fuck fellow officers.”
Fearing further attacks, plaintiffs used all accrued leave time and then quit on February 4, 2003. Fairley had given his deposition in Fields a few weeks earlier; Gackowski was deposed in mid-February. Both testified at trial. The jury returned a defense verdict.
Fairley and Gackowski seek relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. They contend that defendants violated their speech rights by assaulting and threatening them for reporting abuse to Jail supervisors and for their willingness to testify truthfully in Fields. They also contend some of the defendants violated their rights by preventing their complaints from moving up the chain of command.
Before reaching the merits we must address appellate jurisdiction. Shortly before trial was to begin, the court granted a motion to exclude all evidence of events that took place before Fairley and Gackowski gave their depositions.
Oddly, the court’s docket entry states that plaintiffs’ response to defendants’ motion for summary judgment “is converted to a motion by Plaintiff [to] dismiss.” (A docket entry is an improper substitute for a judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 58 requires a document separate from the statement of reasons supporting the relief granted in the judgment.) Defendants seize on this language, arguing that it shows that the court dismissed the case pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 41(a)(1) (voluntary dismissal by the plaintiff). And defendants read cases such as
Chavez v. Illinois State Police,
Defendants are mistaken. The only prerequisites to appellate jurisdiction are a final judgment and a timely notice of appeal. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Whether a party consented to that judgment (and which particular rule of civil procedure the district court invoked) is irrelevant.
McMillian v. Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers,
That said, if plaintiffs consented to the entry of judgment against them, we must affirm. Litigants aren’t aggrieved when the judge does what they want.
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. v. United States,
On to the merits. Fairley and Gackowski present two theories of recovery under the first amendment: first, that defendants punished them for defying the code of silence by reporting fellow guards’ misconduct; second, that defendants bullied them to keep them from testifying in Fields.
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
The Jail’s General Orders thus pose a problem for plaintiffs’ first theory. Since the General Orders require guards to report misconduct by their colleagues, the guards’ reports are not part of the freedom of speech — and how the sheriff responds is a question for statutes, regulations, and wise management rather than the Constitution. Ceballos reported that his co-workers had likely broken the law; his superior thought that the memo displayed bad judgment and acted accordingly. See also
Vose v. Kliment,
Plaintiffs try to avoid
Garcetti
by arguing that the Jail’s actual rule is the opposite of what’s in the manual: a guard must
not
report a co-worker’s misconduct. Since they did not have an official duty to complain,
Garcetti
is inapplicable, plaintiffs maintain. (Another reason they advance this “code of silence” theory is to establish that the Jail has an official policy of punishing guards who speak out. See
Monell v. New York Department of Social Services,
Alaska v. EEOC,
Yet
Garcetti
is not limited to tasks officially assigned to an employee. Ceballos himself did not have a duty to make the report, or include the accusations, that got him into trouble; communicating with his superiors was simply within the general ambit of his job. The Justices have distinguished between public and private speech by asking about the employer’s real rules and expectations, not just official requirements contained in a manual or formal directive.
Garcetti,
Garcetti
applies to job requirements that limit, as well as those that require, speech. Suppose the Jail put a guard in charge of maintaining a bulletin board, instructing him to post only materials that relate to workplace safety. If the guard puts up something on a different topic, or fails to put up anything, the management may discipline the guard without encountering an objection under the first amendment. See
Guardian Industries Corp. v. NLRB,
And Garcetti can’t be limited to “good” workplace requirements, as the ninth circuit supposed in Alaska. Ceballos was fired for reporting conduct that he believed was illegal. The Justices did not praise the district attorney’s response; they held instead that state law rather than the federal Constitution determines whether a public work force is being well managed. If an employer has instructed the workers to keep their mouths shut during working hours on questions related to performance of their (and co-workers’) jobs, the first amendment does not prevent the employer from enforcing that requirement. Whistle-blower protection statutes or labor law might provide a remedy (particularly if an employee is punished for reporting illegal acts), but the Constitution does not.
The purported code of silence is a ban on filing complaints about guard-on-inmate violence. Such a policy might be foolish; it might expose the County to other lawsuits; but it does not offend the first amendment, because what one guard says about another through the grievance system is part of the job, and the employer can discipline a guard for poor performance of work-related tasks. See
Mayer,
Bercasio, Fermaint, and the other guards are not plaintiffs’ employer, however. Whether Garcetti protects their actions is a novel question. To recover under the first amendment, a plaintiff must prove, among other things, both that his speech was “protected” and that the government’s (more accurately, a given state actor’s) justification for curtailing the speech was inadequate. Garcetti appears to address the first question, but its reasoning focuses on the justification of a particular defendant: the government employer. Thus it is conceivable that the Court might hold the same speech “not protected” vis-á-vis the employer, but “protected” vis-á-vis co-workers.
This case illustrates the importance of properly characterizing Garcetti’s holding. If plaintiffs’ speech is categorically not protected, any state actor can punish plaintiffs in any way he wishes without incurring liability under the first amendment. But if the Justices instead dealt with the justification of a particular state actor, the acts of one defendant (the sheriff) might be justified, while the acts of others (fellow guards) might not, for guards cannot assert the same interest in maintaining smooth operations as the Jail’s administrators. Imagine that Cook County’s in-house counsel, furious about the snitching, beat up Fairley after work. Why should the County’s need for flexibility in running its Jail insulate the actions of all state actors? Though we have treated
Garcetti
as dealing with the question whether speech is protected, see, e.g.,
Chaklos v. Stevens,
Unfortunately for Fairley and Gackowski, them Monell argument — that the Jail has a policy forbidding complaints about guards who abuse inmates — links the guards’ fates to the sheriffs. If a code of silence is the rule, then the guards were merely enforcing the Jail’s policy. Although the guards’ conduct might have been tortious or even criminal, see 720 ILCS 5/32-4 (witness tampering), plaintiffs do not want tort damages. They have framed their case in a way that can yield one of only two results: either everyone is liable under the first amendment or no one is liable. Since the first amendment does not support a claim against the sheriff, all defendants win.
Fairley and Gackowski might have contended that the General Orders, rather than an unwritten code of silence, were the official rule. As this argument would go, some guards set out to violate the Orders by punishing anyone who informs on another guard. The Jail’s employment policies would be out of the picture, and we would have to decide whether Garcetti shields non-employer state actors who try to subvert the employer’s policies. But plaintiffs argue only the inverse — that the Jail’s policy is silence, and that guards enforce this through threats condoned, if not commanded, by management — so this theory is off the table. We reserve the question how Garcetti applies to punishments meted out by non-employers. (We emphasize that we express no opinion on the legality of defendants’ conduct. We merely reject the argument that prohibiting guards from complaining to supervisors violates the first amendment.)
Plaintiffs’ second theory is that they were bullied and threatened in order to deter them from testifying in Fields. This claim falls outside Garcetti. The Jail likely requires guards to testify on its behalf and pays them for time at court. Tes *525 tifying against the Jail might not be part of the job, but that doesn’t matter. Even if offering (adverse) testimony is a job duty, courts rather than employers are entitled to supervise the process. A government cannot tell its employees what to say in court, see 18 U.S.C. § 1512, nor can it prevent them from testifying against it.
Defendants’ only contention is that no one “retaliated” against plaintiffs for testifying, because the insults, assaults, and threats all preceded plaintiffs’ depositions in
Fields.
This misapprehends the nature of plaintiffs’ claim. The Constitution prevents governmental actors from forbidding, or penalizing, speech that is protected under the first amendment. Penalties that follow speech are forbidden. This includes, but certainly is not limited to, reactions to what has already been said. E.g.,
Milwaukee Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Clarke,
Threatening penalties for future speech goes by the name “prior restraint,” and a prior restraint is the quintessential first-amendment violation.
Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart,
The word “retaliation” has the potential, realized here, to divert attention from the rule that both threats designed to deter future speech and penalties for past speech are forbidden. “Retaliation” as a legal theory comes from employment-discrimination suits. See, e.g., 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h); 42 U.S.C. § 12203. We have borrowed the word in eases where an employer punishes an employee on account of speech. E.g.,
Chaklos,
The first amendment protects speakers from threats of punishment that are designed to discourage future speech. Fairley and Gackowski can recover from any defendants who made such threats— though there are two additional requirements.
One is proof of causation. Plaintiffs must show that their potential testimony, not their internal complaints, caused the assaults and threats. This means but-for causation. See
Gross v. FBL Financial Services, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
The second requirement is proof of damages. The largest item will be lost income, if plaintiffs can establish that the threats caused them to quit. Cf.
Pennsylvania State Police v. Suders,
One final observation. Plaintiffs pleaded a conspiracy claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3), but it’s superfluous. _ The function of § 1985(3) is to permit recovery from a private actor who has conspired with state actors. See
Dennis v. Sparks,
The judgment is affirmed to the extent that the district court dismissed plaintiffs’ “code of silence” claim and the conspiracy claim. To the extent that it dismissed the prior-restraint claim, the judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
