Kеnneth W. FULTZ v. John S. DUNN, Jr.; Dennis L. Farley; Department of Environmental Resources, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; James M. Seif John S. Dunn, Jr.; Dennis L. Farley, Appellants in No. 97-7378. Kenneth W. Fultz, Appellant in No. 97-7503 v. John S. Dunn, Jr.; Dennis Farley; Department of Environmental Resources, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; James M. Seif.
Nos. 97-7378, 97-7503.
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Decided Dec. 21, 1998.
165 F.3d 215
Argued Nov. 19, 1998.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
ALITO, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I am in general agreement with the opinion of the court. Under
Cletus P. Lyman (argued), Michael S. Fettner, Lyman & Ash, Philadelphia, PA, for Kenneth W. Fultz.
BEFORE: GREENBERG, ALITO, and GODBOLD,* Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
Appellants John S. Dunn, Jr. and Dennis Farley, officers of the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, appeal from a final judgment entered on a jury verdict against them in favor of appellee Kenneth W. Fultz, a Department employee. Fultz asserted a First Amendment retaliation claim in this action under
On this appeal the appellants assert that they are entitled to a judgment as a matter
Fultz appeals from orders which stayed execution on the judgment without requiring the appellants to post a supersedeas bond, and which deferred an award of attorney‘s fees pending disposition of the appellants’ appeal. We have consolidated the two appeals. In view of our disposition of the appellants’ appeal, we will dismiss Fultz‘s appeal, which clearly is moot as he no longer has a judgment in his favor and cannot recover attorney‘s fees under
II. BACKGROUND
A. Factual History
In 1988, the Department fired Fultz from his position as a state park manager after 24 years of employment, in part for running a boat storage business without the Department‘s knowledge. In various fora, Fultz argued that the Department fired him without procedural due process and, in 1990, he filed the Davis action in the district court against the Department and two of its officials, other than Dunn or Farley, challenging his termination. In Davis, the district court granted the defendants summary judgment, but on appeal on July 15, 1991, we reversed, as we held that Fultz had not received the pre-termination hearing required by Cleveland Bd. of Ed. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 105 S.Ct. 1487, 84 L.Ed.2d 494 (1985). Thus, we ordered the defendants to reinstate Fultz to his position. We further provided that the district court could consider additional relief on remand. Significantly, however, we permitted the Department to refile charges against Fultz on the basis of a constitutionally adequate hearing. See Fultz v. Davis, Nos. 90-6039 and 91-5058, slip op. at 14 (3d Cir. July 15, 1991). Thus, our opinion was a procedural victory for Fultz but in no way exоnerated him from the Department‘s misconduct allegations against him.
On May 29, 1992, Fultz and the Department reached a settlement agreement before trial on the remand in Davis. The agreement stated that Fultz acknowledged his error in engaging in the boat storage business and that he regretted his activity. On the other hand, the Department agreed not to re-file charges against him and, as particularly germane here, the Department agreed to “re-employ Fultz in the cаpacity of Park Superintendent IV with re-employment to commence June 15, 1992,” “to provide [Fultz] with 40 days annual leave and 135 days of sick leave,” and to pay $75,000 to Fultz “in settlement of his claims.” The agreement further provided that the defendants would “purge [Fultz‘s personnel] file with respect to matters investigated or charged in 1988.” Significantly, the agreement did not mention seniority.
Dunn, who was not a party in Davis, was responsible for implementing the settlement agreement. The Department reemployed Fultz in the Bureau of State Parks in Harrisburg at an appropriate rank and pay level. To comply with the settlement agreement provision requiring the purging of Fultz‘s personnel file, Dunn deleted the word “terminated” from Fultz‘s computer personnel record and substituted the benign term “voluntary resignation” to describe the break in Fultz‘s work history from 1988-1992. It is undisputed that upon his reemployment the Department did not credit him with seniority for his employment prior to his 1988 termination, or for 1988-1992. In effect, the Department treated Fultz as a newly hired
In November 1992, Fultz applied for a promotion to either of two Department positions at higher levels in rank and with higher salaries than his position at that time. When the Department awarded the positions to other applicants, Fultz learned that he had not recaptured his seniority upon his reemployment, and had been viewed as an employee with five months rаther than 24 years of seniority. Fultz attributes his failure to obtain a position as Park Manager I to his loss of seniority for his service prior to his 1988 termination.
B. Procedural History
On November 22, 1994, Fultz filed this suit against the appellants, advancing two arguments: (1) Dunn had miscalculated his seniority to retaliate against him for having successfully brought the 1990 Davis action, and (2) he otherwise would have received one of the promotions. We focus on the first argument because our disposition of it is determinative of this apрeal. The court submitted the case to the jury on written interrogatories. The first question was “Do you find that [Fultz‘s] exercise of his First Amendment rights was a substantial or motivating factor in Defendant Dunn‘s calculation of his seniority?” The court told the jury that if it answered that question “No” it was to return to the courtroom, thus recognizing that unless Fultz was successful on that question he would lose the case. On this appeal, Fultz does not contend that the court was wrong on this point.
The jury, however, answered “Yеs” and went on to answer the remaining interrogatories in Fultz‘s favor and to award him substantial damages. In addition, the court granted Fultz equitable relief which, in view of our disposition, we need not describe at length. On January 16, 1997, the district court denied the appellants’ motions for a judgment as a matter of law or for a new trial, finding the motions untimely filed, but stating that there was sufficient evidence in the record to support the jury‘s verdict. In a subsequent opinion, however, the court acknowledged that the posttrial motion leading to the January 16, 1997 order was timely and Fultz does not contend that the appellants have not preserved the right to contend on this appeal that they were entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
III. DISCUSSION
Our standard of review on this appeal is well established. We exercise plenary review and will overturn a jury verdict “only if, viewing the evidence in the light most favor-able to the nonmovant and giving it the advantage of every fair and reasonable inference, there is insufficient evidence from which a jury reasonably could find liability.” Lightning Lube, Inc. v. Witco Corp., 4 F.3d 1153, 1166 (3d Cir.1993).
Because Fultz alleges that his conduct in having brought the Davis case led the appellants to retaliate against him by wrongly calculating his seniority, the case is governed by the three-prong analysis enunciated by the Supreme Court in Mount Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Ed. v. Doyle, 429 U.S. 274, 97 S.Ct. 568, 50 L.Ed.2d 471 (1977). A public employee alleging an adverse employment action because he engaged in protected First Amendment аctivity must show that (1) he engaged in protected activity, and (2) the protected activity was a substantial or motivating factor for the adverse action. See Swineford v. Snyder County, 15 F.3d 1258, 1270 (3d Cir.1994) (applying Mt. Healthy test). If the plaintiff satisfies the first two prongs, the defendant can escape liability by showing that (3) he would have taken the same action absent the protected activity. See Pro v. Donatucci, 81 F.3d 1283, 1287-88 (3d Cir.1996).
Fultz argues that the protected activity was the successful 1990 Davis suit, and that the adverse action was the miscalculation of seniority.1 While the appellants acknowledge that Fultz‘s Davis action was protected First Amendment activity, they counter that no reasonable jury could have found that Dunn calculated Fultz‘s seniority to retaliate against him for having brought that case, because civil service rules governed Dunn‘s calculation, and because Fultz did not bargain for recapture of his seniority in the settlement agreement.2 Thus, the appellants contend that Fultz did not show that the protected activity was a substantial or motivating factor in Dunn‘s conduct, and that in any case, they demonstrated that the seniority determination would have been the same absent Fultz‘s protected activity.3
Fultz‘s seniority was governed by
(a) Seniority as used in this part shall be continuous service unless broken by one or more of the following: resignation; retirement; failure to report after notification of appointment through mandatory, preferred or optional reemployment rights; expiration of mandatory, preferred or optional reemployment rights; or failure to report after leavе and acceptance of other permanent employment while on leave of absence without pay. If service is broken for one of these reasons, the employe[e] shall lose accrued seniority. If an employe[e] is returned within 1 year after this type of break in service, the employe[e] is entitled to credit for seniority purposes the time accrued up to the time the break in service occurred, but is not entitled to credit for the time represented by the break in service.
(b) Periods of furlough and approved leave of absence without pay shall be deemed continuous employment for seniority purposes, except that the period of furlough or leave of absence without pay will not be counted toward seniority.
(c) Removal for cause shall terminate accrued seniority. Demotion for cause shall terminate seniority in the class from which demoted.
Under this rule, Fultz did not have seniority when the Department reemployed him based on his service prior to his 1988 removal because his service was not “continuous.”
In some circumstances, the legitimate basis for the actions might be so apparent that the plaintiff‘s allegations of retaliatory motive could not alter the conclusion that under the circumstances ... the defendants would have been compelled to reach the same decision even without regard for the protected First Amendment activity.
Thus, the protected activity was not a substantial or motivating factor in Dunn‘s conduct with respect to Fultz‘s seniority and the appellants are entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
In reaching our result, we reiterate that we recognize that when the Department reemployеd Fultz, Dunn removed the word “terminated” from his personnel record in the Department‘s computer system, as directed by the settlement agreement, and entered “voluntary resignation.” Fultz characterizes the change as “falsely” entered and retaliatory. Dunn‘s action was literally “false” in that Fultz did not voluntarily resign in 1988 but had been terminated improperly. Yet the evidence showed that inasmuch as Dunn was directed by the settlement agreement to delete “terminated,” another term had to be entered, and none of the available terms characterized what had occurred more accurately.
In any event, Fultz could not rebut Dunn‘s testimony that the result—loss of seniority—would have been the same regardless of what term he used. Dunn testified that he selected the term “voluntary resignation” from a set of terms or “transaction codes” used at that time by the Department to describe various changes in employment status, such as transfers or lеaves. While he had discretion in labeling the four-year break in service as a “voluntary resignation,” versus such other plausible, available terms as “involuntary resignation” or even “retirement,” he testified that his choice of label was in any case immaterial because, whatever the label—“voluntary resignation” or “involuntary resignation” or “wrongly terminated and now reinstated“—under the civil service rules Fultz would have lost his seniority.
As we have indicated, our reading of the civil service rules convinces us that Dunn was correct. The applicable civil service rule states that seniority is lost whenever there is a break in an employee‘s service of more than one year,
We find it highly significant that if Dunn had circumvented the Department‘s transaction codes and more accurately indicated that Fultz had been “wrongfully terminated and was now reemployed” Fultz nevertheless would not have recaptured the pre-1988 service for seniority purposes, because his service would not have been continuous and the break in service still would not have been attributable to a circumstance under the civil service rules allowing seniority recapture. It
Moreover, if Dunn attempted to invent a term to recapture Fultz‘s seniority for his service prior to the 1988 termination, he would have been giving Fultz more than he bargained for when he came to an agreement with the Department settling the Davis action. The settlement agreement did not mention seniority, so when Fultz was returned to work, Dunn had no directive to give Fultz more than he had bargained for or to which he was entitled as, in effect, a new employee.6 The plain fact is that Fultz is misusing this First Amendment retaliation case as a vehicle to enhance his settlement.
The only evidence Fultz presented to show that Dunn retaliated against him by “incorrectly” reinstating him without accrued seniority was his own belief that under the settlement agreement he would be reinstated with accrued seniority, and his conversation with John Wilk, Executive Director of the Civil Service Commission, when he did not receive a promotion. Fultz asserts that Wilk had told him that “the depаrtment had the right to interpret[the seniority rule] however they wanted.” But that vague evidence cannot be permitted to overcome the unambiguous rule provisions so as to permit a conclusion that Dunn could have circumvented the rule. The rule is clear and leaves no room for “interpretation.” Moreover, there was no evidence to show that Fultz had been promised the opportunity to return to work with his seniority preserved. Finally, we point out that inasmuch as Fultz apparently recognized that there was a seniority question when the 1990 case was settled, he should have clarified that point at that time. If he had done so, this case could have been avoided.
In sum, it is perfectly clear that Fultz has not shown that Dunn would have—or could have—done other than view the four-year interruption as a break in service leading to the elimination of accrued seniority, given that Fultz did not bargain for anything else. We find that Fultz failed to provide sufficient evidence to show that his protected activity was a substantial or motivating factor for the seniority decision. Thus, Fultz‘s evidence as to retaliatory conduct was insufficient to support the verdict and the appellants are entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, in the appellants’ appeal, No. 97-7378, we will reverse the judgment and orders in favor of Fultz granting him damages and equitable relief, and will remand the case to the district court to enter a judgment as a matter of law in favor of appellants Dunn and Farley. We will dismiss Fultz‘s appeal in No. 97-7503 as moot.
CONTE BROS. AUTOMOTIVE, INC. and Hi/Tor Automotive, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated, Appellants, v. QUAKER STATE-SLICK 50, INC., Slick 50 Management, Inc., Slick 50 Products Corp., Slick 50 Corp., Blue Coral-Slick 50, Inc., Blue Coral, Inc., Blue Coral-Slick 50, Ltd. No. 98-5136. United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit. Argued Nov. 4, 1998. Decided Dec. 30, 1998.
GREENBERG
CIRCUIT JUDGE
