Police in the Village of Lombard were not amused when John Graehling pulled away from a gas station with the nozzle still attached to his car, yanking the pump out of the ground. It did not help matters that Graehling was a fellow member of the police force and that the car was his police car. The Village paid for the damage and suspended Graehling for three days. Emulating Lt. Frank Drebin of Police Squad, Graehling repeated the stunt, demolishing another gas pump. He was unable to write a report about the second incident; his hands were shaking violently and he was suffering blackouts. Graehling’s fellow officers called for an ambulance, and he was admitted to a hospital.
Graehling had been suspended for 30 days following an earlier incident in which he struck a prisoner. A psychiatrist concluded after the second gas station debacle that Graehling suffers from bipolar manic depression, alcoholism, and post-traumatic stress syndrome. Steven Williams, the Village’s deputy chief of police, concluded that Graehl-ing was no longer fit for duty. On January 10, 1991, Williams summoned Graehling to his office and offered him two choices: resign immediately, but with an effective date far enough ahead for his pension to vest, or be sent home on leave. Graehling was out of sick leave and vacation days, so the second option would have cut off his income. He took the first option, after changing the effective date of the resignation to September 4, 1993, to ensure that he would complete 20 years of service. On January 14, 1991, the Board of Fire and Police Commissioners accepted Graehling’s resignation. Williams then assigned Graehling to back-office duties.
Nine days before his scheduled departure, Graehling asked the Village to let him stay on the police force. The Village refused “on the basis that his resignation was effective and, thus, irrevocable as of the date of its acceptance at the January 14, 1991 meeting of the Fire and Police Commissioners.” This language, like all of the facts we have recited, appears in Graehling’s complaint seeking relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12213. The district court dismissed the suit under Fed.R. 12(b)(6). 1994 U.S.Dist. Lexis 17752. Like the district court, we conclude that the ADA does not apply to resignations tendered before its effective date, and the vivid details in the complaint show that Graehling is not entitled to relief. He has pleaded himself out of court.
Let us start with the ADA. Although the President signed the ADA on July 26, 1990, its rules applicable to employment were deferred until July 26, 1992. 42 U.S.C. § 12111 note — Effective Date. Sacking a police officer whose alcoholism interfered with his job or endangered the safety of others did not violate the Rehabilitation Act, which governed the Village’s conduct in January 1991. See 29 U.S.C. § 706(7)(B), limiting the scope of 29 U.S.C. §§ 793, 794. Graehling submits that once the ADA took effect, however, the Village could not enforce his resignation. As he sees things, the police force committed two acts of handicap discrimination: extracting the resignation and implementing it. The first was not illegal, but the second, coming after the ADA, was, the argument concludes. The difficulty with the argument is that numerous cases hold that a separation at a time established by an earlier decision is
not
a fresh act of discrimination. Only the original decision to let the employee go is subject to analysis under the anti-discrimination laws.
Chardon v. Fernandez,
These cases all deal with the statute of limitations rather than with the effect of a newly-operative law, but the principle for which they stand is equally apt today. “The premise of these cases is that the employer took one dispositive act. Like punching someone in the nose, this act may lead to injury in the future, but when there is only one wrongful act the claim accrues with the first injury.”
Palmer v. Board of Education,
Now one could imagine an employer treating a resignation or discharge as tentative—no more than the status of a recommendation—so that the vital decision is whether to let the initial act hold sway. Consider the Cabinet of the United States. Many Presidents require their cabinet officers to submit undated letters of resignation, which the President may accept when political circumstances dictate while permitting the cabinet member to save face. (“I wasn’t fired; I quit to return to my career in private life.”) The real decision is to put a date in the letter and announce the “resignation” to the public. Similarly, we suppose, the Village of Lombard could collect resignations from its police officers, dated the 20th anniversaries of their service, accept them all, but relent when they wanted an officer to stick around. Graehling’s complaint alleges that the Village told him that the resignation was irrevocable. A suit should not be dismissed if it is possible to hypothesize facts, consistent with the complaint, that would make out a claim.
Hishon v. King & Spalding,
Graehling’s other federal argument is that the Village got rid of him without due process of law. He had a property interest in his job, so the Village could not have sacked him without notice and an opportunity for a hearing. An employee may decide whether to avail himself of that opportunity; one who resigns has decided not to use it and cannot complain. But if Williams had put a gun to Graehling’s temple and told him to sign the letter of resignation, the Village could not avoid its obligation to provide a hearing; a coerced resignation, like a eon- *298 structive discharge (a “resignation” after the employer has made things intolerable), is an independent wrong and does not justify withholding the opportunity for a hearing.
Although Graehling did not file suit until more than two years after the resignation (and thus, on his view, the deprivation of an opportunity for a hearing),
Lawshe v. Simpson,
True enough, Graehling believes that the “go home” part of the offer should have been “go home with full pay,” on the ground that his condition was job-related, rather than “go home without pay,” the consequence of his depleted leave accounts. Staking out a debatable position on a personnel matter does not expose one to a charge of “coercion,” however. If his condition entitled him to sick pay or other medical benefits, then this was a question on which Graehling could have demanded a hearing; the need to assert one’s procedural rights does not make a choice coercive.
Alvarado v. Picur,
By his own account, Graehling did not resign in a stupor and retract the resignation when he came to his senses. He resigned in January 1991 under an offer almost irresistibly attractive. For 32 months he reaped the benefits of that deal, receiving full pay for a make-work job and qualifying for a pension. Only when he had harvested the benefits did he seek to avoid the detriments. August 1993 was far too late to sing a new song — not at least, without tendering back to the Village the consideration he received. We held in
Fleming v. U.S. Postal Service,
The allegations of the complaint show that Graehling cannot prevail on his federal claims. Graehling makes several arguments based on state law. The district court dismissed them without prejudice to their renewal in state court. This is the normal approach under the supplemental jurisdiction when the federal claims are resolved quickly, and Graehling remains free to take his state-law claims to state court for resolution.
AFFIRMED
