Defendants-Appellants the mayor, town administrator, town clerk, and one of the town council members of Jackson, Wyoming, appeal the district court’s denial of qualified immunity in an employment termination case brought by Plaintiff-Appel-lee, the former town attorney.
Background
Plaintiff worked as Jackson, Wyoming’s town lawyer on a contract basis from 1995 to 2005. The most recent version of Plaintiffs contract with the town, the 1999 version, provided for automatic renewal of Plaintiffs two-year term of employment under the contract unless either party gave written notice of a desire to terminate the agreement at least 180 days prior to its termination date. Each two-year term began on July 1, every other year. To prevent automatic renewal, the town council needed to notify Plaintiff of its intent to terminate the agreement by January of each renewal year. Plaintiff did not receive notice of termination in January 2005 for the July 2005-June 2007 term of contract, and the contract was automatically extended for that additional period.
In March 2005, just before Plaintiffs newest two-year term began but after the time period for notice of termination had passed, Plaintiff had a heated argument with the town administrator. This conversation was triggered when the town clerk sent an employee to Plaintiff with a work-related request. Plaintiff was upset at the request because he felt it was out of the scope of his duties, and he said as much to the employee. The employee complained to the town clerk, apparently about the manner in which Plaintiff spoke to her.
The town clerk then approached Plaintiff directly to discuss the situation and told Plaintiff “you need to act in accordance with the [Town] values in your dealings with [the employee].” (R. at 340.) Plaintiff responded, “You work for a person [the town administrator] who has no [more] respect for those values or ethics than the man in the moon and until he wants to get in shape with these values, I’m not talking to you, get out of here.” (R. at 341.) By this comment, Plaintiff was referring to the town administrator’s *1243 support of the mayor, who had recently encouraged two large town land purchases that Plaintiff believed to be inappropriate. After the conversation between Plaintiff and the town clerk, the clerk complained immediately to the town administrator, who then proceeded directly to Plaintiffs office to discuss the matter.
Plaintiff explains he discussed several topics with the town administrator during their inflammatory conversation, including the administrator’s own compliance with town values, the advisability of the town’s recent land purchases, and the town governing body’s adherence to open meeting laws. When discussing the administrator’s adherence to town values, Plaintiff called the town administrator a “liar” and suggested that the administrator was indeed a “whore” for the mayor and town council, as the administrator had once described himself in jest. (R. at 364, 538.) Toward the end of the conversation, Plaintiff requested that the town administrator not share with the town council the concerns Plaintiff had voiced during the conversation.
At some point during the conversation, the administrator’s cell phone rang. He fiddled with it, stopped the ringing, and put it in his pocket. The town clerk was the person trying to reach the town administrator, and she tried twice to call him. On the second try, she realized that she was connected to his phone but that he was speaking to Plaintiff, not to her. She began to listen to the conversation, placing it on speaker phone in her office. At some point during the conversation, a town council member entered the town clerk’s office and also eavesdropped on the conversation. After some unspecified period of time, the town clerk and town council member stopped listening to the argument and hung up the phone. The eavesdropping town council member then informed the mayor about the conversation, and the eavesdropping town clerk told a town financial officer, who subsequently relayed to Plaintiff that Plaintiffs argument with the town administrator had been overheard.
In May or June of 2005, the mayor and town administrator contacted a lawyer about how to terminate Plaintiff. On July 28, 2005, shortly after Plaintiffs newest two-year term had begun, the mayor called Plaintiff into his office and told Plaintiff that he was requesting the town council to fire Plaintiff at its August 1 meeting unless Plaintiff resigned. The mayor allegedly explained that if Plaintiff resigned, the mayor would ask the town council to honor Plaintiffs employment contract to pay him six months’ severance benefits under the termination clause. Plaintiff wrote a resignation letter that day, which he made effective August 1, and gave it to the may- or the same day. Plaintiff then received and accepted six months’ of severance pay and health benefits.
After the six months had passed, Plaintiff sued the town and Defendants, in their official capacities and as individuals, on various state and federal claims. Defendants filed a summary judgment motion against Plaintiff, but the district court denied their motion on all claims, including their claim for qualified immunity. Defendants then filed this interlocutory appeal on the issue of qualified immunity.
Discussion
“Orders denying qualified immunity before trial are appealable to the extent they resolve abstract issues of law.”
Clanton v. Cooper,
[b]ecause of the underlying purposes of qualified immunity, we review summary judgment orders deciding qualified immunity questions differently from other summary judgment decisions. After a defendant asserts a qualified immunity defense, the burden shifts to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff must first establish that the defendant’s actions violated a constitutional or statutory right.
Holland,
The threshold question, then, in a qualified immunity appeal from summary judgment is: “Taken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, [without determining whether there is a genuine fact issue,] do the facts alleged show the [official’s] conduct violated a constitutional right?”
Saucier v. Katz,
In this case, we conclude that the matter is determined at the first stage of the inquiry. As an initial matter, we reject Defendants’ argument that a constitutional violation occurred only if Defendants violated federal law. A § 1983 action must be based on the violation of a federal right not a federal law. The Supreme Court has explained:
[t]he problem is not whether state law has been violated but whether an inhabitant of a State has been deprived of a federal right by one who acts under color of any law. He who acts under color of law may be a federal officer or a state officer. He may act under color of federal law or of state law. The statute does not come into play merely because the federal law or the state law under which the officer purports to act is violated. It is applicable when and only when someone is deprived of a federal right by that action. The fact that it is also a violation of state law does not make it any the less a federal offense punishable as such.
Screws v. United States,
1. Continued Public Employment
We first review Plaintiffs claim that Defendants violated his constitutionally protected property interest in continued public employment. “It is well-established constructive discharge from employment is actionable under § 1988 if an employee possesses a protectable property or liberty interest in his employment.”
Lighton v. Univ. of Utah,
Under Wyoming law, “[pjroperty interests in continued public employment are created and defined by independent sources such as state statutory law, regulations or the terms of employment.”
Lucero v. Matthews,
In this case, a state statute, a town ordinance and resolution, and an employment contract all purportedly define Plaintiffs terms of employment. We now consider whether any of these documents provided Plaintiff with a constitutionally protected property interest in continued public employment
Wyoming Statute § 15-3-20I(a) and the 1995 Town Ordinance
The Wyoming statute directly applicable to the appointment and removal of a town attorney states: “Unless otherwise provided by ordinance, the ... attorney ... shall be appointed by the mayor with the consent of the governing body and may be removed by the mayor.” Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 15-3-204(a) (2007).
2
Thus, this statute expressly explains a town attorney may be removed by the mayor unless an ordinance provides otherwise.
3
“ ‘Ordinance’ means
*1246
a legislative enactment of general effect validly adopted by the governing body of any city or town.” Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 15-1-101 (2007). The Wyoming Supreme Court has examined the difference between an ordinance and a resolution, stating that “a resolution deals with matters of a special or temporary character; an ordinance prescribes some permanent rule of conduct or government, to continue in force until the ordinance is repealed.”
Mathewson v. City of Cheyenne,
In this case, the state statute requires exceptions to the mayor’s removal power to be provided by ordinance. 4 Jackson adopted Ordinance 499 in 1995, establishing the office of town attorney and providing that the terms and conditions of employment, duties, and responsibilities of the town attorney were to be established by resolution. See Jackson, Wyo., Ordinance 499 (1995), available at http:// www. townofjackson.com/ (follow “Jackson Government” menu hyperlink; then follow “Ordinances & Resolutions” hyperlink; then follow “Search Municipal Ordinances” hyperlink; then enter “Ordinance 499” into search box; then follow “Ordinance 499” hyperlink). Because the town passed an ordinance designating the process by which Jackson’s town attorney could be appointed and removed, we conclude the process so designated supercedes the default removal provisions provided by the current state statute, even though the designated process itself involved a resolution. Thus, we consider the town’s 1995 resolution, established by ordinance, to be one of the binding documents under which we must analyze Plaintiffs claims.
The 1995 Town Resolution
The town resolution provides: “The Town Attorney shall be hired and may be removed by the mayor, by and with the advice and consent of a majority of the Town Council.” Resolution 95-10,
available at
http:// www.townofjackson. com/ (follow “Jackson Government” menu hyperlink; then follow “Ordinances & Resolutions” hyperlink; then follow “Search Municipal Resolutions” hyperlink; then
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enter “95-10” into search box; then follow “Resolution 95-10” hyperlink). The
Carlson
court indicated that “limiting phrase[s],”
Carlson,
We note that the town resolution provides that the town attorney “shall be ... subject to all Town of Jackson personnel policies, regulations and procedures, except as hereinafter provided.” Resolution 95-10. However, we conclude the express resolution language giving the mayor the power to remove the town attorney trumps any conflicting general town policies. Thus, based on the resolution’s express language and Wyoming case law interpreting similar language, we conclude the town resolution provided the mayor with the power to remove Plaintiff at will. Therefore, we hold that the 1995 town resolution does not provide Plaintiff with a constitutionally protected interest in continued public employment.
The Contract
We next turn to the question of whether Plaintiff had a property interest in his continued public employment by contractual arrangement. Wyoming case law interpreting § 15-3-204(a) allows for changes to be made by contract.
See Carlson,
The contracts Plaintiff signed with the town in 1995, 1997, and 1999 purport to define Plaintiffs terms and conditions of employment. Plaintiffs 1999 contract, if valid, automatically renewed unless either party gave advance notice of termination. The 1999 contract states that it “establish[es] certain conditions of employment” and “provide[s] a just means for terminating [Plaintiffs] services at such time as ... when Employer may otherwise desire to terminate [Plaintiffs] employ.” (R. at 668.) The contract provides that “[n]oth-ing in this agreement shall prevent, limit or otherwise interfere with the right of the Town Council to terminate the services of the Employee at any time, subject only to the provisions set forth in Section 4, paragraph A(l) and A(2), of this agreement.” (R. at 669.) Section 4 then provides in pertinent part:
In the event [Plaintiff] is terminated by the Town Council before expiration of the aforementioned term of employment without cause, and during such time that [Plaintiff] is willing and able to perform his duties under this agreement, then in that event Employer agrees to pay [Plaintiff] his regular salary for six (6) months and his health insurance coverage for six (6) months with the same eighteen month provision as provided for in he [sic] Town of Jackson Personnel Policy Manual....
In the event [Plaintiff] is terminated for just cause, then Employer shall have no obligation to pay any severance sum designated in this agreement.
*1248 (R. at 670.) Thus, the express contract language does not support Plaintiffs contention that his contract provides him with a protected property interest in continued public employment because the contract makes it abundantly clear that Plaintiffs employer could terminate him without cause at any time. 6
Although Plaintiff argues that he was a nonprobationary employee and thus that he could be fired only for cause, we reject this contention based on the differences between Plaintiffs job and the jobs of employees held to be nonprobationary in
Lucero
and
Parker,
the two most relevant cases. In
Lucero,
a sheriff who was terminated had been designated by statute as a “sworn nonprobationary, full-time” deputy.
Lucero,
Likewise, in
Parker,
the court made clear at the outset that it was analyzing the alleged resignation of a tenured professor who could only be terminated for “just cause.”
Parker,
Wyoming employees who serve in managerial, policy-making positions serve at the pleasure of the mayor unless specified otherwise by statute, contract, or “rules and regulations pursuant to statute or ... having the force of contract.”
Carlson,
Neither the town ordinance/resolution nor Plaintiffs contract provide Plaintiff with a constitutionally protected property interest in continued public employment. Plaintiff has thus failed to meet the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis on his first federal claim. We therefore need not consider the second prong. Because Plaintiffs claim to a protected property interest in continued public employment fails, we do not address any of the related issues Plaintiff raises in connection with that alleged violation, such as his due process and equal protection claims.
*1249 II. Free Speech
The second federal rights violation Plaintiff alleges is a violation of his constitutionally protected right of free speech. Plaintiff bases this claim on the town clerk’s and town council member’s eavesdropping on his conversation with the town administrator and the mayor’s subsequent alleged firing of Plaintiff in retaliation for Plaintiffs statements made during that heated interchange.
Our first inquiry under these circumstances is whether the employee spoke “pursuant to [his] official duties.”
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
While “employees retain the prospect of constitutional protection for their contributions to the civic discourse,”
Garcetti,
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff and without making any determination as to whether a genuine issue of fact exists, we conclude as a matter of law that Plaintiffs argument with the town administrator occurred in the course of his official employment responsibilities based on the undisputed facts concerning the context in which the conversation arose. According to both Plaintiff and the town administrator, the town administrator came to Plaintiffs office to discuss Plaintiffs interaction with another employee. The town administrator approached Plaintiff the same day the town clerk had complained to the town administrator about Plaintiffs disregard for town values in his dealings with other town employees. Although Plaintiff explains he and the *1250 town administrator heatedly discussed compliance with town values, the 810 West project, the Earns Meadow project, and public meeting laws before the town administrator left Plaintiffs office, we cannot and need not address whether the subject matter of the conversation creates a genuine issue of fact. However, we may conclude as a matter of law that Plaintiff spoke pursuant to his official duties given the lack of factual dispute regarding the context in which the conversation occurred.
Moreover, Plaintiffs contract explains that administrative issues “shall be subject to the administration of the Town Administrator.” (R. at 668-69). It is undisputed that the parties’ conversation arose in the context of Plaintiff and the town administrator needing to discuss the administrative issue of Plaintiffs treatment of town employees. According to Plaintiffs contractual terms and conditions of employment, that topic of discussion would appropriately be directed to the town administrator. We conclude Plaintiffs conversation with the town administrator occurred pursuant to his official duties because we cannot reasonably characterize Plaintiffs speech arising in the undisputed context of a conversation occurring for the purpose of addressing administrative issues and directed to the contractually appropriate party as speech occurring outside the scope of his employment responsibilities. Plaintiff therefore fails to pass the first step of the Garcet-ti/Pickering analysis.
We thus conclude Plaintiffs conversation with the town administrator did not enjoy First Amendment protection, and therefore none of Defendants’ alleged actions related to this conversation could have violated Plaintiffs right to free speech. We thus hold that Plaintiff has failed to satisfy the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis as to this claim, and we conclude each Defendant is entitled to qualified immunity as to this issue.
III. Searches and Seizures
We construe Plaintiffs third claim to be an assertion that the eavesdropping on his conversation with the town administrator constituted an illegal search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment. See U.S. Const, amend. IV. However, we conclude that Plaintiff had no reasonable expectation of privacy in his work-related, run-of-the-mill quarrel with the town administrator in Plaintiffs office. We therefore hold Plaintiff cannot satisfy the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis as to this claim and conclude each Defendant is entitled to qualified immunity as to this issue.
We REVERSE the order of the district court denying qualified immunity and REMAND this case with direction to enter judgment granting qualified immunity to all Defendants on all federal claims. We do not address any remaining state claims.
Notes
. Because we conclude no individual Defendant violated any of Plaintiff's federal rights, we refer to Defendants as a group for ease in reading, even though they appear before us as individuals.
. This statute applies to first class cities. Jackson became a first class city in 2004. See Town Council Proceedings, Jackson, Wyo. (2004), http:/ /www.townofjackson.com:8307/ agendas/2004/2004pkts/050304/Consent/ 041904wk.pdf; Town Council Agenda Documentation (2004), http://www.townofjackson. com:8307/agendas/2004/2004pkts/070604/ Ordinances/ charters.pdf.
. Although the statute does not specifically indicate that a mayor has the power to remove the town attorney without cause, the Wyoming Supreme court has interpreted the
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statute as granting mayors the absolute right to hire and fire town officers, such as town attorneys, who hold managerial, policy-making positions.
See Carlson v. Bratton,
. The phrase "unless otherwise provided by ordinance" was added to the statute in 1997. See 1997 Wyo. Sess. Laws 68. We do not address which documents describing Plaintiff's employment terms and conditions might have been binding prior to 2005. We conclude only that the 1995 town resolution is one of the binding documents we must analyze to address the 2005 claim.
. The contract gives the town council the power to terminate the town attorney, while the resolution gives the power of removal to the mayor. We need not address the differences between the two terminating entities because, in any event, both entities are entitled to qualified immunity for Plaintiff's discharge based on our conclusion that Plaintiff had no constitutionally protected property interest in his continued public employment under either the contract or the resolution.
. The only property interest Plaintiff arguably might have retained upon termination without cause was the six months’ salary and insurance coverage package provided by contract for such a case. We do not address whether Plaintiff was terminated with or without cause because that issue is not before us. In any event, because Plaintiff actually received six months’ salary and insurance coverage after leaving the town’s employ, we conclude he cannot maintain a claim that Defendants violated any protected property interest in that regard.
