David A. GARRAGHTY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Fred E. JORDAN, Jr., individually and as Regional
Administrator, Central Region, Virginia Department of
Corrections; Edward Murray, individually and as Deputy
Director, Virginia Department of Corrections; Allyn R.
Sielaff, individually and as Director, Virginia Department
of Corrections, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 86-3718.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued April 8, 1987.
Decided Oct. 9, 1987.
Craig Becker (John C. Dempsey, Kirschner, Weinberg & Dеmpsey, Washington, D.C., on brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
H. Aubrey Ford, III (Philip B. Morris, John D. Epps, Browder, Russell, Morris & Butcher, P.C., Richmond, Va., on brief), for defendants-appellees.
Before RUSSELL and WILKINSON, Circuit Judges, and JOSEPH F. ANDERSON, United States District Judge for the District of South Carolina, sitting by designation.
DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:
David Garraghty, a Virginia prison Warden, sued his superiors, defendants Jordan, Murray and Sielaff, under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, alleging that they violated his first amendment and due process rights by suspending him from his job without due process and solely to punish him for exercising his first amendment rights of free speech and assоciation. A three day jury trial commenced on August 15, 1986. In its order with respect to the defendants' motion in limine and in subsequent rulings during the trial, the court deemed inadmissible certain evidence offered by Garraghty to show an impermissible motive for the suspension and to show Jordan's harsher treatment of Garraghty than of other subordinates for comparable discipline problems. After Garraghty rested his case, the Court directed a verdict for defendants Murray and Sielaff on all claims and for Jordan on the due process сlaim. The jury subsequently found for Jordan on the first amendment claim as well. On appeal, Garraghty challenges the court's exclusion of certain evidence and the directed verdicts for the defendants. Garraghty does not directly challenge the jury's verdict on his first amendment claim so we will not address the first amendment issues involved in the case.
I. FACTS
Garraghty, a state employee, is the Warden of the Nottoway Correctional Center in Virginia. At the time of the incident in question, defendant Jordan was his immediate supervisor, holding the position of Regional Administrator. Defendant Murray was the Deputy Director of the Virginia Department of Corrections and defendant Sielaff was the Director of that Department. Beginning in the summer of 1984 and continuing through the time that he was suspended, Garraghty was an outspoken critic of the Department of Corrections and of the then Governor Robb's corrections policy. He was also involved in an attempt to organize state employees. Garraghty incurred some disfavor among his superiors for thеse actions.
Jordan, at a meeting on May 21, 1985, instructed wardens under his supervision to streamline communications with his office so that all communications from lower level employees would be handled through the wardens within the regional chain of command. On May 24, 1985, which was the Friday of the Memorial Day Weekend, a low level Nottoway personnel official called Jordan regarding a routine personnel matter in contravention of Jordan's prior instructions to wardens. Jordan called Garraghty at about 4:50 P.M. thаt afternoon to ask why he (Jordan) was still receiving low level callers from Nottoway and also to ask Garraghty to provide information regarding the status of the particular personnel matter. Garraghty, whose shift ended at 4:30, was still in his office and took the call. When Jordan asked Garraghty for the personnel information Garraghty told Jordan that he was off duty and that he would provide Jordan with the information in a few days. When Jordan requested that Garraghty get the information immediately Garraghty exclaimed that he was being "set up" and said several times to Jordan: "make your move." Jordan told Garraghty that he was being insubordinate and demanded that Garraghty drive to Richmond (1 1/2 hours away) that afternoon to discuss the problem. Garraghty replied that he had personal business to take care of and refused Jordan's demand. The exchange grew heated and Jordan hung up the phone. Afterwards, Jordan called Director Sielaff's office for advice concerning the incident. Sielaff summoned Maya Hasagawa, Director of Employee Relations for the Corrections Department, to his office to participate in the conference call. Jordan described the incident and asked what disciplinary measures he could take. Hasagawa told Jordan that he could suspend Garraghty for up to five days for insubordination, according to the state book on standards of conduct, but cautioned Jordan that he first meet with Garraghty and give Garraghty a chance to explain his conduct. Hasagawa also told Jordan thаt he should treat Garraghty as he would any warden. Sielaff and Murray concurred with Hasagawa's advice. Jordan then called Garraghty's office and, finding that Garraghty had left for the weekend, left word that Garraghty report to Jordan's office on the following Tuesday.
On Tuesday, Garraghty appeared in Jordan's office with a tape recorder. Attending the meeting were Jordan, Garraghty and Carl Bobrosky, Corrections Department Manager of Operations. Jordan told Garraghty that the meeting was not adversarial аnd, stating that he was disturbed by his Friday telephone conversation with Garraghty, asked Garraghty to explain his conduct during the telephone conversation. Garraghty and Jordan disagreed as to what exactly had been said during the Friday conversation, and the tone in which things were said, but Garraghty acknowledged that he had refused to provide Jordan with the requested personnel information and to report to Jordan on Friday as ordered. Garraghty offered as his explanation that he had to attend to personаl business. Jordan and Bobrosky both testified that Garraghty was belligerent during the meeting, but Garraghty denied this. At some point early in the meeting Jordan realized that Garraghty was recording the conversation, and he told Garraghty to turn off the recorder. Garraghty turned the recorder off, but he later turned it back on without informing Jordan. Finding Garraghty's explanation for his conduct on Friday insufficient to excuse him, Jordan told Garraghty that his conduct constituted insubordination and advised Garraghty that he was suspended for five work days without pay. Virginia's regulatiоns did not provide for an appeal of suspensions of less than ten days so Garraghty had no post-suspension administrative hearing. See Va.Code Ann. Sec. 2.1-114.5 and regulations promulgated thereunder. Garraghty brought this action under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as compensatory and punitive damages.
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Court's Exclusion of Evidence
Garraghty's complaint alleged that Jordan, with the approval of the other defendants, suspended him in retaliation for his criticism of department policies and for his union activities. To support his allegations Garraghty attempted to introduce evidence to show that he was treated dissimilarly from others accused of insubordination and to show that the defendants had sought grounds to remove him because of his speech and union activities. Before trial, the court ruled, after considering the defendants' motion in limine to exclude certain evidence, that three types of evidence were to be excluded as irrelevant:
1. Statements or actions by persons other than the named defendants and of which the defendants were unaware;
2. Disciplinary actions taken against other Department of Corrections employees which [were] not alleged to be in retaliation for public statements made by such employees; and
3. Actions engaged in by other Department of Corrections employees for which no disciplinary steps were taken, but which were not comparable to the act that allegedly formed the basis for plaintiff's suspension.
Later, during the trial, when Garraghty proffered to the court such evidence as well as evidence of the defendants' alleged mistreatment of other corrections department employees, the court excluded the evidence as inadmissible under Federal Rules of Evidence 402, 403 and 404. Also during the trial, Garraghty attempted to introduce evidence of statements and actions of the defendants occurring after the suspension in order to prove the defendants' improper motive for the suspension. The district court excluded this evidence as irrelevant to the issue of the May suspension. Garraghty asserts that the court erred in excluding the evidence. He states that the evidence was relevant and probative to prove the defendants' improper motive for the suspension. We find Garraghty's arguments without merit.
This court will defer to a trial court's Rule 403 balancing unless it is an arbitrary or irrational exercise of discretion. United States v. Penello,
B. The Due Process Claim
Garraghty's second claim is that the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendants on his due process claim. He contends that the defendants violated his right to due process because Jordan, with the other defendants' approval, did not inform him before or at the beginning of the Tuesday meeting of the charges against him and did not give him a meaningful opportunity to respond to the charges of insubordination before a neutral decision maker. Garraghty contends that Jordan ordered him to appear before Jordan without explanation and misled him to believe that the meeting was nonadversarial so that Garraghty did not believe it necessary to offer more than a cursory explanation for his conduct on Friday. He claims that if he had known that Jordan was considering disciplining him, he would have explained in detail the reasons for his conduct and would have otherwise more vigorously defеnded himself. Additionally, Garraghty asserts that he was denied due process because Jordan, the victim of Garraghty's insubordination, the initiator of the disciplinary proceeding and the sole witness to the Friday telephone conversation, was also the person who acted as judge in the informal proceeding.
We agree with the district court that Garraghty received "all the hearing he was entitled to." In examining Garraghty's claim, we must determine (a) whether the discipline imposed deprived Garraghty of a proрerty interest protected by the fourteenth amendment and (b) if so, whether the manner in which the discipline was imposed satisfied constitutionally mandated protections. Board of Regents v. Roth,
It is well settled that due process requires that a public employee who has a property interest in his employment be given notice of the charges against him and a meaningful opportunity to rеspond to those charges prior to his discharge. Loudermill,
At a minimum, due process requires that an employee be given notice of the charges against him and " 'some kind of a hearing' " before being disciplined by suspension. Loudermill,
In Loudermill, a tenured public employee discharge case in which a post-termination hearing was available, the Court determined that prior to termination, "[t]he tenured public employee is entitlеd to oral or written notice of the charges against him, an explanation of the employer's evidence, and an opportunity to present his side of the story." Loudermill,
In an earlier case, Goss v. Lopez,
There need be no delay between the time "notice" is given and the time of the hearing. In the great majority of cases the disciplinarian may informally discuss the alleged misconduct with the student minutes after it has occurred. We hold only that, in being given an opportunity to explain his version of the facts at this discussion, the student first be told what he is accused of doing and what the basis of the accusation is.
Id.,
Garraghty's deprivation is less severe than that of the terminated employee in Loudermill, and more severe than that of the suspended student in Goss. Due process, therefore, requirеd pre-deprivation proceedings no more formal and extensive than those required in Loudermill, and no less extensive than the proceedings delineated in Goss. In determining the process due Garraghty, we are aided by a recent Sixth Circuit decision which involved similar circumstances.
In Boals v. Gray,
With these teachings in mind, we now review the case before us to determine whether constitutional due process principles were satisfied. In reviewing Garraghty's claim, we find it appropriate to apply the balancing test used in Loudermill. That test balances the competition between (a) the employee's interеst in his employment, (b) the government's interest in an expeditious and effective tool to discipline unsatisfactory employees, (c) the government's interest in the avoidance of undue administrative or fiscal burdens, and (d) the risk of an erroneous deprivation of the employee's interest. Id.,
Recognizing these competing interests, we first address the notice requirement. Garraghty contends that he was not informed of the charges against him so that he could meaningfully respond to the charges. We do not agree. Constitutional due process requires only that an employee be given notice appropriate under the circumstances. Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank and Trust Co.,
When asked about the incident, Garraghty acknowledged that he had refused to provide the personnel information when requested, that he had refused to report to Jordan's office on Friday as ordered, and that he had repeatedly told Jordan to "make his move." Although there was some disagreement as to who was abrasive during the telephone conversation, Garraghty admitted the acts of insubordination for which he was suspended. When given an opportunity to explain his behavior he merely stated that he had personal business to attend to Friday afternoon. Jordan, finding Garraghty's excuse insufficient, then suspended him. Thus, Garraghty was given an opportunity to be heard, to "present his side of the story," before Jordan suspended him. Goss,
Due process principles did not require that a neutral decision-maker, rather than Jordan, make the decision to suspend Garraghty. A pre-deprivation proceeding need not be a full evidentiary hearing with witnesses and a neutral decision maker so long as the employee is given an opportunity to answer the charges. See Loudermill,
The Sixth Circuit, in Boals, rejected the district court's finding that due process requires pre-deprivation hearings before neutral decision-makers in suspension cases when insubordination is admitted. Boals,
C. The Directed Verdicts on Garraghty's First Amendment
Claims
Garraghty also challenges the district court's directed verdicts for Murray and Sielaff, Jordan's supervisors, on the first amendment claims. Garraghty contеnds that the directed verdicts were improper because there was conflicting evidence concerning substantial issues such that reasonable people could have found that Murray and Sielaff violated his first amendment rights.
Although it is true that a court should not direct a verdict for a defendant if, viewing the evidence and drawing reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the court finds substantial evidence supporting liability, when the court finds no such evidence a directed verdiсt is proper. Richmond Television Corp. v. United States,
Accordingly, since we find that Garraghty's claims are all without merit, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Virginia Code was later amended to exempt state wardens from the state civil service provisions on employee discipline and grievance procedures. Va.Code Ann. Sec. 2.1-116 (as amended 1985)
