Thе principal questions presented in this appeal are: (1) whether a public employee engages in speech protected from retaliation by the First Amendment by relaying a subordinate’s concerns to her supervisor and by filing a lawsuit; and (2) whether a plaintiff can hаve third-party standing to assert claims on behalf of an individual who has suffered no injury.
Defendants-appellants Deborah Haslun, Carlos Millan, Joseph Bloomer, Ramesh Mehta, and Jonathan Barr (collectively, “defendants”) appeal from an April 3, 2008 order of the United States Distriсt Court for the Southern District of New York (Charles L. Brieant, Jr.,
Judge)
denying their motion for summary judgment raising the defense of qualified immunity. The underlying action was brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by plaintiff-appellee Florence Huth (“plaintiff’ or “Huth”), an employee of the New York State Thruway Authority (“Thruway Authority”). Plaintiff claims that defendants, who are also employees of the Thruway Authority, violated her rights under the First Amendment to the Constitution by initiating disciplinary proceedings against her, which resulted in her demotion. She also asserts that, in doing so, defendants violated the First Amendment rights of her coworker. We hold that the conduct that resulted in plaintiffs demotion does not qualify as speech protected from retaliation by the First Amendment under the framework set forth by the Supreme Court in
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
BACKGROUND
On April 26, 2005, Huth met with Dorothy Archer (“Archer”), one of Huth’s sub *72 ordinates within the Thruway Authority. Archer told Huth that certain of her coworkers and supervisors were selling bootleg DVDs on Thruway Authority premises. Huth alleges that Archer also told her that a supervisor was giving “special duties” to an African-American coworker, which Huth understood to be a complaint by Archer about reverse discrimination. Huth conveyed these concerns to her supervisor, defendant Bloomеr, during daily meetings with him. Bloomer responded that he was already aware of Archer’s concerns.
At some point on April 26, 2005, Huth drove in a Thruway Authority vehicle to a Thruway Authority facility in Newburgh, New York. Archer accompanied Huth on this trip. Huth stopped at several toll plazas along the way. During those stops Archer left the car and solicited and obtained Thruway Authority employees’ signatures on petitions to nominate Archer for a union office. Huth maintains that Archer did not tell her that she was soliciting signatures during the stops.
Huth alleges that on April 29, 2005, Bloomer advisеd Huth and Archer that they were both under investigation for their activities on April 26, 2005, as Thruway Authority policy prohibits management personnel, such as Huth, from being involved in union elections and prohibits the use of Thruway Authority vehicles in connection with union elections. After a hearing officer initially cleared Huth of any wrongdoing, defendant Barr, the Thruway Authority’s Director of Administrative Services, informed Huth by letter on April 11, 2007 that she had been found “guilty of misconduct and/or incompetence for violating Administrative Services Bulletin 2004-16” on Union Elections and that, as a result, Huth was being demotеd to her last permanently-held, lower-level position.
Huth v. Haslun,
On January 9, 2007, after disciplinary proceedings had begun, but before the Thruway Authority had decided to demote her, Huth commenced the present action. Specifically, Huth sued defendants for compensatory and punitive damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging, inter alia, that they (1) had violated her rights under the First Amendment by disciplining her in retaliation for reporting Archer’s concerns about other Thruway Authority employees; and (2) had violated, “on a third-party standing basis,” J.A. 232, her rights under the First Amendment by disciplining her in retaliation for Archer’s expression of her concerns and for Archer’s union-related activities. 1 After Huth was demoted, she filed an amended complaint, which expanded her first claim by alleging not only that she was retaliated against for reporting Archer’s concerns, but also for filing the instant aсtion.
On January 11, 2008, defendants moved for summary judgment on the basis that they were entitled to qualified immunity because, based on undisputed facts, they did not violate Huth’s rights under the First Amendment. Defendants further argued that Huth lacked standing to bring
*73
third-party claims on behalf of Archer. In an Order dated April 3, 2008, the District Court denied defendants’ motion.
Huth,
DISCUSSION
At the outset we note that “[b]e-cause the denial of a motion for summary judgment is not a final judgment, it is generally not immediately appealable.”
Walczyk v. Rio,
We review
de novo
a distriсt court’s denial of summary judgment based on a defense of qualified immunity,
see Papineau v. Parmley,
To overcome the defense оf qualified immunity, a plaintiff must show both (1) the violation of a constitutional right and (2) that that constitutional right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.
See Pearson v. Callahan
, — U.S. -,
I. Huth’s Speech Was Not Protected from Retaliation by the First Amendment
We begin with Huth’s first claim — that defendants violated her rights under the First Amendment by disciplining her in retaliation for (1) reporting Archer’s concerns about other Thruway Authority employees and (2) initiating the present action. Whether speech by a public employee is protected from retaliation under the First Amendment begins with this question: “whether the employee spoke as a citizen on a matter of public concern.”
Garcetti,
Garcetti’s second requirement is that, to be protected from retaliation by the First Amendment, a public employee’s speech must be “on a matter of public concern.”
Here the record shows that Huth passed along Archer’s concerns about the actions of certain Thruway Authority employees to the head of Huth’s division and that she did so at daily meetings when they discussed the employees in their division.
See
J.A. 330. We have no difficulty concluding that such speech was made not as a “citizen” but, rather, pursuant to Huth’s official duties as a Thruway Authority employee and supervisоr.
See Garcetti,
The record also makes plain that Huth’s present lawsuit, asserting claims for monetary and punitive damages, does not qualify as speech “on a matter of public concern.”
See id.
at 418,
II. Huth Lacks Third-Party Standing to Assert a Claim on Behalf of Archer
Turning to Huth’s final claim — that defendants retaliated against her for
Archer’s
exercise of her First Amendment rights- — -we note that we have previously held that “[a] plaintiff may assert the constitutional claims of a third party if the plaintiff can demonstrate: (1) injury to the plaintiff, (2) a close relationship between the plaintiff and the third рarty that would cause plaintiff to be an effective advocate for the third party’s rights, and (3) some hindrance to the third party’s ability to protect his or her own interests.”
Camacho v. Brandon,
We therefore conclude that Huth cannot show that she suffered a violation of a constitutional right, and we rеverse the District Court’s denial of summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity.
CONCLUSION
To summarize, we hold:
(1) that plaintiff did not engage in speech protected from retaliation by the First Amendment by relaying the concerns of a subordinate to her supervisor or by filing this lawsuit; and
(2) that plaintiff does not have standing to assert claims on behalf of a third party who has suffered no injury.
For the foregoing reasons, the April 3, 2008 order of the District Court is REVERSED. Judgment shall enter for the defendants-appellants.
Notes
. Huth also alleged that defendants had violated her rights under the Equal Protection Clause by selectively "prosecuting” hеr, but not others, for violating the Thruway Authority's policy regarding union elections. We note that she has withdrawn her equal protection claim in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Engquist v. Oregon Department of Agriculture,
