1 Indiv.Empl.Rts.Cas. 603
Clifford D. FUGATE and Robert Dennis Barnhart, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
PHOENIX CIVIL SERVICE BOARD; Carolyn Carr Smith, Jane
Clark, Harold Klaiber, and Snead Parker, members,
individually and in official capacities; Lawrence Wetzel,
Chief of Police for the City of Phoenix Police Department;
and City of Phoenix, a municipal corporation, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 84-1882.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted June 11, 1985.
Decided June 10, 1986.
Robert E. Jones, Jr., Napier & Jones, Phoenix, Ariz., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Peter G. Kline, Jones, Skelton & Hochuli, Phoenix, Ariz., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona.
Before: GOODWIN, WALLACE, and NELSON, Circuit Judges.
NELSON, Circuit Judge.
Fugate and Barnhart appeal from a summary judgment entered in favor of the Phoenix Civil Service Board in their action for back pay and injunctive relief filed pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 (1982). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291 (1982), and we affirm.
* FACTS
Appellants Fugate and Barnhart are vice officers with the City of Phoenix Police Department. In 1978, a prostitute revealed to Appellants' superiors that sexual relationships had existed between herself and Officer Fugate, and between another prostitute and Officer Barnhart. The department investigated and verified the prostitute's story, and learned, among other things: (1) that the relationships had involved intimate contact while on-duty; (2) that the prostitute involved with Officer Barnhart was accepting city money from him as a paid informant; and (3) that both relationships were carried on openly and publicly, and were well known among prostitutes and in the County Attorney's office. Based on this investigation, the City discharged the officers for violating a general order of the department.
The officers appealed to the Phoenix Civil Service Board, which reinstated the officers but did not order back pay for the period during which the officers had been suspended. The officers then filed an action for backpay and injunctive relief, asserting violations of their constitutional rights.
The City initially defended the action on the ground that the officers violated a statute prohibiting adultery. The officers challenged both the applicability and constitutionality of the statute. The district court entered summary judgment for the City. We remanded the case for the district court to determine: (1) whether the officers had committed "adultery" within the meaning of Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. Sec. 13-1408 (1978); and (2) if not, whether the Civil Service Board would have reached the same result for other specifications of misconduct. See Andrade v. City of Phoenix,
On remand, the district court held that the City had not proven that the officers violated the adultery statute. The Civil Service Board then concluded that, even absent the statutory violation, the undisputed facts would have led the Board to impose the same suspension and loss of pay on the officers for "conduct unbecoming an officer and contrary to the general orders of the police department." The district court granted summary judgment to the Civil Service Board. We are again presented with the officers' claim.1
II
DISCUSSION
The officers claim that the City violated their constitutional right of privacy by punishing them for their private sexual activities. The City claims that its actions were justified, under Kelley v. Johnson,
A. The Officers' Privacy Claim.
We note at the outset that the courts are divided concerning the extent of police officers' constitutional privacy rights. Compare Briggs v. North Muskegon Police Department,
1. The Right of Privacy
The Constitution does not expressly guarantee the right of privacy. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has held that the right is implicitly guaranteed by the Constitution as one aspect of the "liberty" protected by the Due Process clause of the fourteenth amendment, see Carey v. Population Services International,
The right of privacy is closely connected with the integrity and sanctity of the family. Many of the Court's early decisions implicating the right of privacy arose in the context of husband-wife and parent-child relationships. The fundamental rights associated with family relationships, first articulated as privacy rights in Griswold, had their origins in cases such as Meyer v. Nebraska,
In Griswold, the first of the modern Supreme Court decisions defining the right of privacy, the Court struck down legislation that interfered with the rights of married persons to use contraceptives. The Court grounded its opinion in the sanctity of marriage:
Would we allow the police to search the sacred precincts of marital bedrooms for telltale signs of the use of contraceptives? The very idea is repulsive to the notions of privacy surrounding the marriage relationship.
We deal with a right of privacy older than the Bill of Rights--older than our political parties, older than our school system. Marriage is a coming together for better or for worse, hopefully enduring, and intimate to the degree of being sacred. It is an association that promotes a way of life, not causes; a harmony in living, not political faiths; a bilateral loyalty, not commercial or social projects. Yet it is an association for as noble a purpose as any involved in our prior decisions.
Since Griswold, the Court has continued to stress the constitutional protection of marital and family integrity. See, e.g., Moore v. City of East Cleveland,
Not all of the Supreme Court's privacy decisions, however, derive from this concern for the sanctity and integrity of marriage and the family. The privacy rights implicated by the desires of single persons to use contraceptives, and by the desires of minor and adult women to obtain abortions, are related to questions of family life but have a different philosophical basis.
In Eisenstadt v. Baird,
The Court in Carey subsequently relied on this language, and on the abortion decision in Roe v. Wade,
Taken as a whole, the Supreme Court cases do not establish a single, clear and unifying principle establishing a unitary right of privacy that provides the lower courts with guidance on its application. See Dronenburg v. Zech,
2. Extensions Of The Personal Autonomy Principle of Privacy
The Supreme Court has specifically extended the personal autonomy principle of privacy to only two situations: (1) the right of unmarried persons to use contraceptives (in Eisenstadt and Carey ); and (2) the right to obtain abortions under certain circumstances (in Roe and Danforth ). Thus, although the contraceptive and abortion decisions may support arguments in favor of extending the right of privacy to include consensual sexual activities, the Supreme Court has not yet made this express interpretation.3
This court chose to extend the right of privacy into the area of private sexual activity in Thorne v. City of El Segundo,
3. The Instant Case
Fugate and Barnhart contend that the City of Phoenix intruded on their constitutionally protected interests in the privacy of their sexual activities, and that the City therefore must meet the same burden of justification that we imposed upon the City of El Segundo in Thorne. We disagree.
In Thorne, we recognized a right of privacy in "private, off-duty" sexual behavior.
Fugate and Barnhart, then, ask us to find that Thorne 's protection of the right of privacy extends to sexual behavior that is not purely private, that compromises a police officer's performance, and that threatens to undermine a police department's internal morale and community reputation. We find that Thorne 's protection does not extend that far.6
B. The City's Position.
The City, citing Kelley v. Johnson,
In Kelley, a police officer challenged the constitutionality of a departmental order establishing hair-grooming standards for male members of the police force. The Supreme Court stated that the county's organizational decisions regarding law enforcement personnel, as legitimate expressions of the State's police power, were entitled to the same "presumption of legislative validity" that would attach to other decisions within that power. Id. at 247,
The threshold question in the present case is thus whether the departmental regulation prohibiting "conduct unbecoming an officer and contrary to the general orders of the police department" is based on the City's method of organizing its police force. If it is based on such a method, then the regulation is presumptively valid, and Officers Fugate and Barnhart carry the burden of demonstrating the absence of any rational connection between the regulation and the promotion of public safety. If the regulation is not based on such a method, then it is not entitled to the presumption of validity accorded legitimate expressions of the State police power, and is subject to whatever level of scrutiny is appropriate for the constitutional interest that is implicated.
The City has legitimate interests in maintaining the morale, integrity, and public acceptance of the police department, and in minimizing conflicts of interest and risks of blackmail. In order to protect these interests, the City must establish regulations governing police officers' behavior:
Discipline and accountability are essential to the police agency. The integrity of the police agency can be maintained by an effective and responsive discipline system. Certainly public support will be strengthened by protecting [the public] from police misconduct and corruption through ... the correction or removal of employees guilty of misconduct.
[D]iscipline ... assists in establishing the prestige of the organization in the specific occupational field and the general community, in maintaining effective agency performance, and preserving employee morale. An inadequate discipline system many times will produce the opposite effect on an organization.
National Advisory Commission of Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report on Police 469-70 (1973). Regulations concerning officers' conduct, then, do not merely fall within a city's method of organizing its police department; they are a vital part of that method.
This case involves just such a regulation. The departmental order prohibiting "conduct unbecoming an officer and contrary to the general orders of the police department," while admittedly vague,7 is clearly intended to protect the legitimate interests of the department from potentially damaging behavior by the department's officers. To the extent that the regulation operates to further this end, it is unquestionably based on the City's method of organizing its police force, and is entitled to a presumption of legislative validity.
There is no doubt that Fugate and Barnhart behaved in a manner which threatened the department's legitimate interests. As discussed above, Appellants' activities created conflicts of interest, compromised their performance as officers, raised the possibility of blackmail, threatened the morale of the department, and jeopardized the department's reputation in the community. Under these circumstances, we have no difficulty finding that the regulation in question operated as part of the City's method of organizing its police force, and is presumptively valid.
Fugate and Barnhart thus carry the burden of demonstrating that there is no rational connection between the regulation in question and the promotion of safety of persons and property. See
AFFIRMED.
WALLACE, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur generally in the majority opinion. I agree that the officers' extramarital relationships with the two prostitutes are not protected by the constitutional right of privacy. I further agree that the officers have failed to meet their legal burden under Kelley v. Johnson,
I write separately to present what I believe is the proper approach to the officers' constitutional right of privacy claims. I fully accept the majority's delineation of two separate lines of Supreme Court privacy decisions. In addition, I believe that the differing histories of these two lines provide important guidance in addressing right of privacy claims.
* The principle of privacy that protects the sanctity and integrity of marriage and the family is deeply rooted and has been carefully and fully elaborated, as the long line of cases cited by the majority amply demonstrates. Maj. op. at 738, 739. Marriage is " 'the most important relation in life,' " and " 'the foundation of the family and of society, without which there would be neither civilization nor progress.' " Zablocki v. Redhail,
By contrast, the principle of privacy that protects the exercise of personal autonomy is of recent vintage and uncertain scope. As the majority properly points out, the Supreme Court has extended the personal autonomy principle of privacy to only two situations: the right of unmarried persons to use contraceptives in Eisenstadt v. Baird,
Thus, although an argument could be constructed from the contraceptive and abortion decisions to extend the right of privacy to consensual sexual activities, the Court has expressly refrained from this interpretation. See also Dronenburg I,
II
In light of Supreme Court refusal to extend the personal autonomy principle of privacy, I believe that we should be careful in doing so. See Dronenburg v. Zech,
In this case, the undisputed facts demonstrate that the sexual relationships were not purely private. Both officers saw their girlfriends while on duty, and both officers conducted their boyfriend-girlfriend relationships in public without attempts at concealment. The relationships were a matter of common knowledge within the police department and the county attorney's office. These facts distinguish this case from Thorne, in which we were careful to point out that the affair was not a matter of public knowledge. See
Moreover, contrary to the officers' assertions, a review of the record demonstrates that the officers were not punished for any particular sexual acts, but for their sexual relationships that existed over a long period of time. This is not a case in which the officers were punished for committing a proscribed sexual act in their homes, see Hardwick,
Notes
The separation notice alleged a number of violations of a departmental order, but the actual dismissal, later modified, was based upon the allegation that one or more acts of adultery contrary to Arizona law violated departmental rules requiring all officers to be law abiding. Subsequent proceedings obscured the basis for dismissal. The Civil Service Board apparently sustained the charge of "conduct unbecoming an officer; that which tends to bring discredit upon the department."
The Court's special regard for familial relationships in Moore becomes particularly evident when Moore is contrasted with Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas,
We note, however, that the Court may soon decide whether the right of privacy extends to private sexual conduct between consenting adults. This question is currently before the Court in Hardwick v. Bowers,
Thorne also brought a sex discrimination claim against the City of El Segundo under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 2000e et seq. This aspect of Thorne does not bear on the instant case
The court stated that the City had the burden of showing "that its inquiry into appellant's sex life was justified by the legitimate interests of the police department, that the inquiry was narrowly tailored to meet those legitimate interests, and that the department's use of the information it obtained about [Thorne's] sexual history was proper in light of the state's interests."
We need not, and therefore do not, decide here the exact limits of the right of privacy in sexual activities recognized in Thorne
Because the parties did not raise the question below, we do not reach possible challenges to the departmental regulation based upon vagueness or overbreadth. We note in passing, however, that a similar regulation withstood this type of challenge in Kannisto v. City and County of San Francisco,
