Case Information
*2 Before BEAM and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges, and DOTY [1] ,
District Judge
___________
DOTY, District Judge
John Young, a police officer with the City of St. Charles, Missouri, was terminated from his position for submitting altered documents. He brought a civil rights action against the city and certain defendants who had upheld his dismissal alleging that he had been denied procedural and substantive due process. The district court [2] granted the defendants' motion to dismiss, concluding that Young received all the process he was due and that the process was not truly “irrational” so as to support a substantive due process claim. On appeal, Young argues that the district court applied the wrong standard in dismissing this action and erred in concluding that he did not state a claim for violation of due process. For the reasons stated, we affirm.
I.
John Young brought an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of St. Charles, Missouri, the city's former chief of police, the former city administrator, and five members of the city's personnel board as a result of his termination as a police officer with the city's police department. Young had been employed for approximately 17 years as a police officer before being terminated.
Young alleges that the police department allowed its officers to work secondary jobs so long as they completed the department's request form for designated outside employment. On or about September 8, 1989, the City of St. Charles Police Department distributed to its officers a memorandum instructing them to update their requests for outside employment. In response to this memorandum Young claims that he filled out a number of forms for a variety of outside employers, some for whom he was already working and some for whom he anticipated working. Young further claims that, on or about June 12, 1996, he and two other officers were investigated for working outside employment without having submitted request forms.
Young alleges that, while the investigation of the two other officers was quickly closed, Chief King ordered an intensive disciplinary investigation of him on the ground that he failed to have a form on file for outside employment. Young further contends that soon thereafter, at a pre-disciplinary meeting, he was ordered to produce any copies of the employment request forms in his possession. On or about July 29, 1996, Young attended a second pre-disciplinary meeting where he produced his copies of 25 forms including the ones relevant to his dismissal. After reviewing these documents, the department's second in command, Captain Jack Banas, accused Young of submitting forgeries. Young denies that these were forgeries and alleges that Banas kept his “originals” and handed him copies of the documents. On or about August 1, 1996, the police department dismissed Young from employment upon a finding that some or all of the forms that he submitted were altered. A report of a handwriting expert was cited in part as the basis for the department’s decision to dismiss Young.
Following his termination, Young appealed to defendant Michael Miller, the city
administrator, who upheld the dismissal. Young then appealed to the city personnel
board which consisted of defendants Fred Wahl, Harold Webbink, William Hurst,
Gilbert Lauer, Michelle Sheehan, and Dale Hawkins. Young alleges that the board
denied his request to take certain depositions and that the police department failed to
follow basic “chain of custody” safeguards in the storing of his original forms and in
the conveying of the forms to and from the handwriting expert. Young also alleges that
the handwriting expert was not qualified under the standards set forth in
Daubert v.
Merrell Dow
,
Young alleges that his procedural and substantive due process rights were violated by these actions. On March 11, 1999, plaintiff filed a petition for judicial review under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 536.100 in the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri. The petition sought judicial review of the personnel board's decision. On May 14, 1999, Young filed this present action in district court on substantially the same grounds as the state court petition. Young voluntarily dismissed the state court action without prejudice on August 23, 1999.
Upon defendants' motion to dismiss and for summary judgment, the district court dismissed all of Young's claims against all defendants. The district court specifically found that plaintiff's claims under the Missouri constitution must be dismissed since no private cause of action exists under the state constitution. [3] The district court also held that Young’s procedural due process allegation failed to state a claim because plaintiff’s complaint specifically indicates that he had notice in the form of two pre-deprivation hearings, had pursued and participated in two administrative appeals subsequent to his termination and had thereafter pursued a *5 separate appeal in the state court of Missouri which he later voluntarily dismissed without prejudice. Based upon plaintiff’s complaint, the district court determined that Young received all of the due process to which he was entitled. After analyzing the substantive due process claim, the district court similarly dismissed it for failing to state a claim since any alleged evidentiary and procedural errors as pleaded involved no more than possible violations of state law and city personnel policies and did not rise to the level of "truly irrational" governmental action necessary to support a substantive due process action.
Our review upon appeal leads us to the same result as that reached by the district court. The facts as pleaded reflect that Young had adequate notice and opportunity to be heard on both a pre-termination and post-termination basis, therefore his complaint fails to state a claim for a denial of procedural due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. Although Young's allegations that the evidentiary rulings and procedures employed by the defendants, if true as pleaded in his complaint, may appear arbitrary, capricious or even contrary to Missouri law and city personnel rules, they are insufficient to establish conduct that is "truly irrational" or “shocking to the conscience” necessary to state a claim for a denial of substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. Furthermore, as the district court concluded, the individual defendants here are entitled to either absolute quasi-judicial immunity or qualified immunity from Young's claims for damages.
II.
This court reviews a district court's order granting a motion to dismiss de novo.
Springdale Educ. Ass’n v. Springdale Sch. Dist.
,
Nevertheless, dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) serves to eliminate actions which
are fatally flawed in their legal premises and deigned to fail, thereby sparing litigants
the burden of unnecessary pretrial and trial activity.
Nietzke v. Williams
,
III.
Officer Young seeks relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for due process violations. The district court determined that the allegations as pleaded in the complaint indicated that Young had received all the process he was due and that none of his allegations led to the conclusion that his termination was “irrational.”
The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits state
governments from depriving "any person of life, liberty or property, without due
process of law ..." U.S. Const. amed. XIV, § 1. This clause has two components,
procedural due process, and substantive due process.
Id.
Analysis of either must begin
with an examination of the interest allegedly violated.
Dover Elevator Co. v. Arkansas
State Univ.
,
A. Procedural Due Process
A state employee is entitled to a hearing or some related form of due process
before being deprived of a constitutionally protected property interest.
See Cleveland
Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill
,
The facts as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint adequately supports the district
court's conclusion that Young received all the process that he was due since he was
given notice of the reason for his dismissal, an opportunity to respond to the charges,
and after his termination, he availed himself of departmental grievance procedures. He
received two post-termination appeals: first, to the city administrator and second, to the
city personnel board. Young also received a post-termination hearing with the
personnel board.
[4]
Clearly, Young had a meaningful opportunity to challenge his
discharge, and although he was unsuccessful, his procedural due process rights were
adequately protected by the process.
See Loudermill
,
B. Substantive Due Process
Young also alleges that his substantive due process rights were violated. To
state a substantive due process claim, Young must allege that a government action was
*8
“sufficiently outrageous” or "truly irrational, that is, something more than ... arbitrary,
capricious, or in violation of state law."
Anderson v. Douglas County,
The facts as alleged in the complaint do not support the conclusion that the decision to terminate him was "truly irrational” or “sufficiently outrageous” to sustain a due process claim. Furthermore, and in light of the alleged facts, there is no support for the conclusion that the decision to terminate Young “shocks the conscience.” Young’s complaint as pleaded fails to state a claim for denial of substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. Thus, we conclude that the district court did not err in granting defendants' motion to dismiss Young's alleged substantive due process claims.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the decision of the district court to grant defendants’ motion to dismiss all claims.
A true copy.
ATTEST:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
Notes
[1] The Honorable David S. Doty, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, sitting by designation.
[2] The Honorable E. Richard Webber, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
[3] This issue is not on appeal, and therefore will not be discussed.
[4] When the personnel board upheld his discharge, Young petitioned for and was given judicial review in Missouri state court pursuant to Mo. Rev. Stat. § 536.100. Young voluntarily and without prejudice dismissed his petition for judicial review in state court.
