Plaintiff, Gloria L. Spreen, filed a complaint against three persons employed by her former place of employment, Taylor County, Wisconsin. Spreen contends that the three Defendants misrepresented to her the consequences, in terms of loss of pension benefits, of being terminated involuntarily, thereby misleading her into resigning her employment. Spreen’s complaint alleges that Defendants forced her to resign, and therefore deprived her of her right to procedural due process, and that Defendants’ conduct was a retaliation for the exercise of her rights under the first amendment. The district court originally granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, but then denied certain portions of Defendants’ motion upon granting Spreen’s motion for reconsideration. The district court denied the portion of Defendants’ motion for summary judgment which asserted that Defendants Pink, Brey, and Dassow were immune from suit on Spreen’s due process claim.
Plaintiff had worked for Taylor County for nearly fifteen years. During the last three years of her employment she worked as an income maintenance coordinator for the Taylor County Department of Social Services. On or about February 12, 1987, Spreen received a notice of suspension from Defendant Pink, her supervisor, who was the Human Services Agency Director for Taylor County. 1 The notice stated that there had been serious accusations against her, and that her suspension was effective immediately.
On February 27, 1987, all three Defendants, as well as Charles Rude (the Taylor County Personnel Director), Ray Lange (a Taylor County Board member and Chairman of the Human Services Department and member of the Taylor County Personnel Committee), and Taylor County Sheriff Wright held a meeting. The group decided at that meeting that Spreen should be given an opportunity to resign from employment. Mr. Rude explained the termination process, and discussed how to present to Spreen that she could either resign or be involuntarily terminated.
The meeting which is the subject of Spreen’s suit occurred sometime shortly af
Defendants do not contradict Spreen’s version of the conversations at their meeting with Spreen. Rather, they describe Spreen’s deposition testimony: “Spreen recalled some discussion of benefit loss but was uncertain as to whether it concerned pension benefits or ‘other benefits.’ (R. 13, p. 93.)” Appellants’ brief, filed Feb. 5, 1991, at 7. In a footnote, they describe her later affidavit: “In her affidavit submitted in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, Spreen’s memory improved and she stated that specific loss of pension benefits in the event of termination was mentioned. (R. 36 ¶ 19.)” Id. n. 2. Defendants quoted Spreen’s testimony as:
Q What was the discussion about termination that you had with Mr. Pink and Mr. Brey?
A One of them said they thought it would be in my best interests if I resigned and — or else I would lose my retirement lots of that stuff.
Q You specifically remember a reference to retirement or could it have been other benefits they were talking about?
A I don’t remember.
Id. at 11 (quoting Spreen deposition p. 93).
The two issues which the district court addressed were: 1) whether a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether Defendants Pink and Brey misled Plaintiff into resigning her employment; and 2) whether Defendants violated no clearly established constitutional right of Plaintiff’s, and are therefore entitled to qualified immunity.
The district court must not grant any summary judgment motion unless all of the pleadings and supporting documents, if any, indicate that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 247,
We review
de novo
the district court’s denial of partial summary judgment and apply the same standard as that employed by the district court.
Roland v. Langlois,
A review of the record and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom reveals that Defendants have not come forth with evidence showing the
absence
of a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Defendants misled Plaintiff into resigning her employment. Plaintiff testi
The second issue is whether Defendants’ alleged conduct violated Plaintiff’s clearly established constitutional rights; if not, Defendants would be entitled to qualified immunity. Defendants phrase this issue as “whether in February of 1987, it was ‘clearly established’ that an official violates an employee’s procedural due process rights if that official improperly induces the employee to resign her employment in order to avoid extending the right to notice and hearing.” Appellants’ brief, filed Feb. 5, 1991, at 13.
The Supreme Court held, in
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
We have already noted that the specific right alleged to be violated must be characterized in a way that reflects the ‘objective legal reasonableness’ standard of
Harlow. Auriemma v. Rice,
Five years before Spreen resigned, we issued a decision adopting the following language: “ ‘[i]f the resignation was involuntarily given ... then plaintiff’s separation from government employment constituted a discharge, and he would be entitled to certain procedural rights_’”
Dusa-nek v. Hannon,
The 1983 case of
Scharf v. Department of the Air Force,
A plaintiff has the burden of establishing that at the time of the alleged deprivation, the law was clearly established as to the constitutional right of which he or she was allegedly deprived. Here, Plaintiff has met that burden. She has cited the Dusane/c case, decided in 1982, as well as the Scharf and Covington cases from the Federal Circuit, which together show that a reasonable person in the job capacities of the three Defendants would understand that misrepresentation to Plaintiff as to the consequences of termination deprived her of procedural due process. The fact that the Scharf and Covington cases are not from this circuit does not render them meaningless; just as this court cited to the District of Columbia Circuit in Dusanek, the rulings in other circuits are instructive on what the law is as to constitutionally protected rights. Further, the fact that the two cases concerned appeals from the Federal Merit Systems Protection Board does not render them irrelevant. The key which makes both cases applicable to this ease is that both involve government officials making alleged misrepresentations upon which a government employee reasonably relied in deciding to resign.
Defendants cannot justify their alleged conduct, as they attempt to do in their briefs, by countering that Plaintiff should have known that their statements were incorrect. Defendants have not shown that knowledge of who is responsible for administering pension benefits, and whether those benefits would be lost upon involuntary termination, is a matter of common knowledge. Plaintiff, as a county government employee, should not be charged with that knowledge. She was entitled to reasonably rely upon Defendants’ statements regarding the loss of pension benefits.
In summary, Plaintiff has demonstrated that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether Defendants made misrepresentations to her and thereby induced her to resign; and Plaintiff has established that at the time of her resignation, she had a clearly established constitutional right to procedural due process if her resignation was involuntary, as it would be if induced by misrepresentations on the part of Defendants. Therefore, the district court properly denied these portions of Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. Defendant Allen Brey was Taylor County District Attorney, and Defendant Norman Dassow was an investigator in the Taylor County Sheriffs Department at the time of Plaintiffs resignation. Plaintiff is suing Defendants Pink, Brey, and Dassow in their official and individual capacities.
. The only Seventh Circuit case which presents a factual scenario arguably similar to the case at hand is Alvarado v. Picur, 859 F.2d 4486r (7th Cir.1988). That case focuses on coercive conduct by government officials in asking an employee to resign or be terminated. This case, on the other hand, focuses on misrepresentations which allegedly deprived the plaintiff of ah informed choice.
