Lead Opinion
NORRIS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which STAMP, D.J., joined. MARTIN, J. (p. 405), delivered a separate concurring opinion.
OPINION
Paul Parsley, the former sheriff of Bul-litt County, Kentucky, fired deputy sheriff David Greenwell immediately after he learned through a newspaper article that his deputy intended to run against him in the next election. Greenwell responded by fifing suit against Parsley and his chief deputy Mack (Jim) McAufiffe. The only federal cause of action included in the complaint was an allegation that defendants violated Greenwell’s First and Fourteenth Amendment right to run for political office. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants on this claim and on various state-law claims that are not at issue on appeal. Plaintiff then filed a motion to amend pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e), which the district court denied. The only issue on appeal concerns whether Sheriff Parsley violated Greenwell’s First
I.
Greenwell served as a deputy in Sheriff Parsley’s office from 1999 until 2005. On September 7, 2005, an article appeared in the Louisville Courier-Journal announcing Greenwell’s candidacy for the sheriffs office:
Republican Dave Greenwell, a Bullitt County sheriffs deputy, has filed with the Kentucky Registry for Election Finance to run....
Greenwell has been a deputy for six years and spent eight years in the 1990s as a Bullitt County deputy jailer.
He said he’d like to become sheriff and create a public relations position.
A deputy in such a position, he said, would follow up with people who file police reports to make sure the department handled their complaint to their satisfaction. Doing so would hold deputies accountable and improve the department’s image....
While reading this announcement, Parsley highlighted the parts of the article that indicated that Greenwell was running, as well as the statements Greenwell made regarding changes he would make to the sheriffs department. Parsley summoned Greenwell to his office, and told him, “See in the paper here where you’re trying to take my job.” Parsley then asked him to step outside. After consulting with his attorney, Parsley emerged and handed the following termination letter to Greenwell:
Dear Mr. Greenwell:
This will confirm that as of September 7, 2005 you informed the public and me personally that you are running against me for Sheriff in the 2006 election. Therefore, I am terminating your employment with me and my office for obvious reasons.
Greenwell maintains, that Parsley fired him not only due to his candidacy, but because Parsley was upset that Greenwell had spoken out on a matter of public concern, namely, the operation of the sheriffs department. For his part, Parsley testified, “He wanted to take my job away from me.... He put it in the paper he was running for sheriff — was gonna take my job.”
In the end, neither man was elected sheriff. Parsley lost the Democratic primary to Donnie Tinnell, who then defeated Greenwell in the general election.
II.
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo. Lockett v. Suardini
In the Carver decision, upon which the district court relied in granting summary judgment to defendants, a county court clerk terminated her deputy clerk the day after the deputy announced her intention to run in the next election. The
Stated narrowly, the issue before us is whether Carver, a deputy county clerk who was an at-will employee in a two-person office — the other person being the county clerk herself — had a First Amendment right to run against the incumbent clerk in the next election and still retain her job.
Carver,
Since the Carver decision, panels of this court have both questioned the wisdom of Carver and sought to read it narrowly. See Murphy v. Cockrell,
I am not persuaded by [plaintiffs] argument that Carver can be distinguished because she was discharged not only for the fact of her candidacy but also for the manner in which she campaigned. As the district court aptly observed, this turns “on the question of whether attacking your opponent’s political experience is akin to an expression of political beliefs.” As I see it, saying “I am a better or more experienced candidate than my boss” is nothing more than the assertion of a rival candidacy. I believe that the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn in this case is that [plaintiff] was discharged for her rival candidacy and not on account of her political beliefs or affiliations.
Murphy,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur separately to point out once again the weak precedential support for this Court’s decision in Carver v. Dennis,
I.
As I have noted in previous decisions, see Murphy v. Cockrell,
Still, like a stray cat that hangs around the door and infests the house with fleas, this decision continues to plague this Court’s jurisprudence.
Notes
. See Finkelstein v. Bergna,
. But the cat came back the very next day / The cat came back; we thought he was a goner / But the cat came back — it just wouldn’t stay away. The Cat Came Back, Harry S. Miller (1893).
