A probationary Chicago police officer fired on grounds of having sexually harassed female probationers at the police training academy sued the police superintendent under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The basis of the suit was the ex-officer’s claim that firing him on such a ground has prevented him from obtaining other employment as a police officer and by doing this has curtailed his liberty of employment without due process because, being merely a probationer, he was not granted a hearing before (or for that matter after) he was fired. The district court granted summary judgment for the superintendent.
A line of cases that reaches back to
Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Comm. v. McGrath,
This case is unusual because there is no evidence that the defendant disclosed to anyone the grounds of the plaintiffs discharge. The plaintiff argues that this makes no difference to his employability because no police department will hire him without asking him why he was fired by the Chicago Police Department. If he answers truthfully, he will reveal the ground of the termination as effectively as (actually more effectively than) if the Department had taken out a full-page ad in every newspaper in the nation announcing the termination of Felix A. Olivieri for sexually harassing female probationary officers at the Chicago police training academy. This type of argument has persuaded three circuits that dissemination by the defendant in a case such as this is not required after all.
Donato v. Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District,
We are not disposed to depart from our position in this intercircuit conflict, and not only because stare decisis has its claims. The contrary position resembles the largely discredited doctrine of “compelled republication” or (more vividly) “self-defamation,” which allows the victim of a defamation to satisfy the requirement of publication by publishing it himself, for example to prospective employers as in the present ease.
Rice v. Nova Biomedical Corp.,
A further consideration in favor of the majority position is brought to light by asking what the Chicago Police Department should have done when it decided to discharge Olivieri. His answer is that it should have granted him a hearing. This comes close to arguing that there is no such thing as probationary public employment — that no public employee can be fired without a hearing because if he is, and the ground of the discharge impugns his fitness for employment in a similar job, as it very often will, his employer will have violated his constitutional rights, no matter how secretive the employer is about the ground.
Finally, there is a qualitative difference, bearing on culpability, between publicizing a stigmatizing ground of dismissal and refusing to do so, that the plaintiffs position would erase. The public employer who goes out of his way to publicize the ground of the dismissal is deliberately taking measures to make it difficult or impossible for the employee to obtain comparable employment, and is thus acting with intent to infringe a constitutionally protected liberty. There is no similar intent in the case in which the employer does not disclose, let alone publicize, the ground of its action. The effect on the employee’s future employability is in that case the unavoidable by-product of action taken for a wholly different purpose, that of improving the employer’s own work force. The employer in such a case would be unconcerned if the employee found comparable employment elsewhere. The case is thus at the farthest extreme from the blacklist cases out of which the constitutional doctrine arises.
The appeal presents another issue. The judge refused to permit the plaintiff to depose the defendant until the plaintiff submitted written interrogatories the answers to which would indicate whether deposing the defendant would serve a useful purpose. The judge was influenced in following this course of action by the fact that the superintendent of the Chicago police is a busy official who should not be taken away from his work to spend hours or days answering lawyers’ questions unless there is a real need.
Van Arsdale v. Clemo,
A district judge’s discretion in supervising pretrial discovery is broad,
Gehring v. Case Corp.,
Affirmed.
