Ronald Kincade brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, claiming that the City of Blue Springs, Missouri, and several City officials (Appellants) violated his First Amendment rights by discharging him from his employment as the City Engineer/Director of Public Works. The district court
I.
On June 4, 1990, Ronald Kincade was hired as the Engineer/Director of Public Works for Blue Springs, Missouri (City). Kineade’s written job description for this position required him to: represent the City in contacts with other governmental jurisdictions, contractors, and the general public on engineering matters; serve as a member of the City’s Zoning and Planning Commission; and meet with and advise the City Adminis
On August 5, 1991, Kincade gave a verbal status report on the assignment to the Mayor (Gregory Grounds), the BOA (Russell Clark, Evelyn Erieson, Dixie Flynn, Larry Morgan, and Emil Spears), the City Administrator (Frederick Siems), and the City Attorney (Robert McDonald). The comments Kincade made during this verbal status report are the subject of this appeal. Kincade’s report was made in an executive session, which is closed to citizens, see Mo.Ann.Stat. § 610.021 (Vernon 1995), and the content of his report was not recorded. Kincade made this report in his capacity as City Engineer and pursuant to an assignment from the BOA.
Kincade contends that during the August 5 meeting, he offered opinions on certain issues with respect to the Waterfield Dam. Specifically, he claims that he stated that in June of 1987 the City paid $62,510 to several local developers, including Bill House, for work that had not yet been completed, and that the dam had not received certain certification as the agreement with the developers required. Kincade also contends that he stated that, due to several inadequacies of the dam which he proceeded to outline, homes and residents downstream from the dam would be in danger of being flooded if the structural integrity of the dam was compromised. Finally, Kincade claims that he also raised the question of legal action against House over issues relating to the dam.
The Appellants contend that Kincade did not make the above statements and, further, that he failed to provide direct answers to their questions about the dam. They assert that Kincade stated that the dam would have to be torn down and rebuilt in order to ensure that it was structurally safe, and they also claim that at no time did Kincade express an opinion concerning the structural integrity of the dam. The Appellants claim that Kincade’s report was wholly inadequate for the assignment he was given.
In an executive session of the BOA on October 21, 1991, a majority of the BOA voted to request that Kincade either resign his position or be terminated. At some point during the meeting, City Attorney McDonald explained that under the City ordinance and Missouri law, Kincade was an employee-at-will who served at the pleasure of the BOA and that Kincade’s employment could be terminated at any time for any reason, so long as the reason was not unlawful. The parties dispute whether the City Attorney gave this advice before or after the BOA decided to terminate Kincade.
On October 24, 1991, Kincade’s employment was terminated. Kincade then filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, arguing that he was unlawfully terminated for making comments protected by the First Amendment on
II.
A.
The Appellants contend that they are entitled to summary judgment for several reasons. First, they argue that Kincade’s August 5, 1991, speech is not constitutionally protected. Second, they contend that they are entitled to qualified immunity. Finally, they argue that Kineade has presented insufficient evidence that his August 5 speech was the cause of his termination.
We must first satisfy ourselves that we have jurisdiction to address these arguments. A district court’s denial of a defendant’s summary judgment motion on a claim of qualified immunity is an immediately appealable decision, even though the denial is not a final judgment. Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Under Swint, “pendent appellate jurisdiction might still be appropriate where the otherwise nonappealable decision is ‘inextricably intertwined’ with the appealable decision, or where review of the nonappealable decision is ‘necessary to ensure meaningful review1 of the appealable one.” Moore v. City of Wynnewood,
[A] pendent appellate claim can be regarded as inextricably intertwined with a properly reviewable claim on collateral appeal only if the pendent claim is coterminous with, or subsumed in, the claim before the court on interlocutory appeal — that is, when the appellate resolution of the collateral appeal necessarily resolves the pendent claim as well.
Moore,
However, we conclude that the Appellants’ argument that Kincade has presented insufficient evidence to establish that his August 5,1991, speech caused his termination is not “inextricably intertwined” with the qualified immunity claims. This causation argument presents significantly different issues. Moreover, in another recent case a unanimous Supreme Court held that “a defendant, entitled to invoke a qualified-immunity defense, may not appeal a district court’s summary judgment order insofar as that order determines whether or not the pretrial record sets forth a ‘genuine’ issue of fact for trial.” Johnson v. Jones, — U.S. —, —,
Finally, although the Appellants dispute what Kincade stated at the August 5, 1991, BOA executive meeting, they argue that even assuming the substance of Kincade’s speech is as he claims, such speech is not constitutionally protected and/or they are entitled to qualified immunity. Therefore, for the purpose of this appeal, we will apply the pertinent legal standards to the speech that Kin-cade claims that he made on August 5, 1991.
B.
The Appellants argue that Kincade’s August 5 speech is not constitutionally protected. A public employer “may not discharge an employee on a basis that infringes [upon] that employee’s constitutionally protected interest in freedom of speech.” Rankin v. McPherson,
1. Does the speech touch upon a matter of public concern?
The Appellants contend that Kincade’s speech does not touch upon a matter of public concern because Kincade made this speech as an employee, within the role and scope of the employer-employee relationship, and not as a concerned citizen. They note that Kincade spoke on August 5,1991, pursuant to a work assignment given to him by the BOA and that he spoke in his capacity as City Engineer. They also observe that Kincade never communicated his purported concerns about the dam and the agreements
An employee’s speech touches upon a matter of public concern when it is a “matter of political, social, or other concern to the community” at large. Connick,
The focus is on the role that the employee has assumed in advancing the particular expressions: that of a concerned public citizen, informing the public that the state institution is not properly discharging its duties, or engaged in some way in misfeasance, malfeasance or nonfeasance; or merely as an employee, concerned only with internal policies or practices which are of relevance only to the employees of that institution.
Cox v. Dardanelle Pub. Sch. Dist.,
We conclude that Kincade’s August 5, 1991, speech touched upon matters of public concern. He stated that the City had paid local developers a substantial amount of money for work on the dam that had not been done. We generally have held that speech about the use of public funds touches upon a matter of public concern. Hamer v. Brown,
More significantly, under the factual assumptions we have made, Kincade stated that homes and residents downstream from the dam could become imperiled if the dam’s structural integrity was compromised. These statements concerned potential danger to the community’s citizens, which surely is a matter of concern to the public and not of some personal interest solely to the speaker. Thus, we believe that Kincade’s speech concerned matters which can be “fairly considered as relating to matter[s] of ... concern to the community.” Connick,
The Appellants argue that under Baus-worth, when a public employee’s speech is made in his capacity as a public employee, such speech cannot touch upon a matter of public concern.
The Appellants seize upon this language and argue that when a public employee speaks in his role as an employee, that speech cannot touch upon a matter of public concern. However, our recent opinion in Mumford v. Godfried,
For similar reasons, we find the assumed facts of this case distinguishable from other cases that the Appellants rely upon for the proposition that a public employee’s speech is not protected when the individual is speaking in his or her role as a public employee. See Thomson v. Scheid,
We also reject the Appellants’ contention that the speech did not touch upon a matter of public concern because it occurred in a closed executive session of the BOA and was not conveyed to the public. A public employee’s First Amendment protection is not lost when the speech is made in private to the employer rather than to the public. Givhan v. Western Line Consol. Sch. Dist.,
The district court correctly concluded that Kincade’s August 5, 1991, speech touched upon a matter of public concern.
2. The Pickering Balancing Test
Because Kincade’s comments on August 5, 1991, touched upon a matter of public concern, we must balance Kincade’s free speech rights against the interests of the City. Pickering,
The magistrate judge concluded that the Appellants failed to present any evidence that Kincade’s August 5 speech caused disruption in the workplace or inefficiency and delay in the government’s services. The magistrate judge concluded, therefore, that it was impossible to balance Kincade’s interest in making the speech with the City’s interest in regulating the speech because the City produced no evidence to support its assertions. The district court adopted this conclusion.
The Appellants maintain that Kincade’s August 5 speech created disruption in the workplace and caused inefficiency in government services because the report was un
The Appellants’ argument is largely based on bare allegations that the speech caused the City problems; the Appellants have not produced more than minimal specific evidence to support these assertions. Moreover, the minimal evidence the Appellants have offered at best constitutes their version of Kincade’s August 5 comments — specifically that Kineade’s answers to their questions were vague, evasive, and unsupported. As noted above, given the posture of this case, we must assume that the substance of Kin-eade’s August 5, 1991, speech is as he claims, without considering the Appellants’ version.
The Appellants have failed to provide even a scintilla of evidence that Kincade’s August 5 statements caused disharmony in the workplace, impaired his ability to perform his duties, or impaired his working relationships with other employees. Therefore, the district court properly declined to conduct the Pickering balancing test.
C.
The Appellants next argue that, even if Kincade’s August 5, 1991, speech was constitutionally-protected, they are entitled to qualified immunity. “Public officials are entitled to qualified immunity when their ‘conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ” Buzek v. County of Saunders,
The Appellants contend that they are entitled to qualified immunity because, given the fact-intensive nature of the Pickering balancing test, the law governing free speech questions for public employees can never be “clearly established.” They also claim that Kincade’s right to make this speech could not be “clearly established” because the state of the law was uncertain regarding whether a public employee can be speaking on an issue of public concern when the employee is speaking in his role as an employee.
“[W]hen Pickering’s fact-intensive balancing test is at issue, the asserted First Amendment right ‘can rarely be considered “clearly established” for purposes of the Harlow qualified immunity standard.’ ” Buzek v. County of Saunders,
As noted above, the Appellants have merely asserted that Kincade’s speech adversely affected the efficiency of the City’s operations and substantially disrupted the work environment without presenting any specific evidence to support this assertion. They therefore have not put the Pickering balancing test at issue, and accordingly, we reject their claim that they are entitled to
We likewise disagree with the Appellants’ argument that they are entitled to qualified immunity because the state of the law was unclear with respect to whether a public employee can be speaking on matters of public concern when the speech is made in his capacity as a public employee. At the time of Kincade’s termination, the cases made clear that speech touches upon a matter of public concern when it deals with issues of interest to the community. Connick,
The Appellants also argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity because they relied on the advice of counsel in deciding to terminate Kincade. Reliance on the advice of counsel is a factor to be weighed in assessing whether a public official is entitled to qualified immunity. See Tubbesing v. Arnold,
III.
For the reasons enumerated above, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Fernando J. Gaitan, Jr., United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, adopting the Report and Recommendation of the Honorable Sarah W. Hays, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Kincade claims that he stated the following at the August 5, 1991, meeting:
(1) that the north end of the dam did not have required embankment materials;
(2) that because the north end of the dam did not have the required embankment, the emergency spillway required by the design plans was not present, thereby incurring the likelihood of erosion and reduced structural integrity of the dam;
(3) that additionally, the emergency spillway was not constructed of concrete as required by the design plans, thereby contributing to the potential of erosion of the dam;
(4) that the design for the dam had called for a 50 foot width at the top;
(5) that the City had contracted for an additional 10 feet to be added to the width of the dam, for a total 60 foot width, for the purpose of providing a crossing for the Adams Dairy Parkway;
(6) that the dam was actually 42 to 49 feet wide as of August 1991;
(7) that the City had paid $62,510 to House and Weatherstone in June of 1987, even though the work had not been completed;
(8) that the dam had never been certified in compliance with the Development Agreement or the 1987 Geotech report; and
(9) that because of the inadequacies of the dam, homes and residents in those homes downstream from the dam and within several hundred yards of the dam were at risk of flood damage and personal injury if the dam’s structural integrity was compromised by erosion from the above inadequacies.
(Appellee’s Supp.Addend. at B-6.)
. The district court's grant of summary judgment to the Appellants with respect to the other two instances of speech is not challenged in this appeal.
