Lead Opinion
Knowlton Merritt, a former counselor supervisor at Klamath Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Inc. (KADA), appeals the district
I.
Knowlton Merritt began working for KADA as a counselor in 1976. KADA is a private nonprofit corporation providing treatment and support to alcohol and drug abusers. KADA had contracts with both Klamath County and the Indian Health Services (“IHS”), a federal agency, to provide alcohol and drug abuse services.
In 1981 state and federal officials, including defendants John Mackey and Steve Vincent, began evaluating KADA’s management. The first evaluations found that KADA violated state regulations, and the final report, in February 1983, threatened the cut off of federal and state funding. Mackey wrote the final report after discussions with his supervisor and a federal contracting officer. The report conditioned further funding of KADA on the requirement that Merritt “must be relieved of his duties at the earliest possible date” and “must not be employed by KADA”.
KADA, fearing the loss of funds, fired Merritt on March 17, 1983. Merritt appealed through the existing KADA grievance procedure. KADA informed Vincent and Mackey that its personnel policies gave it the burden of proving the reasons for Merritt’s termination and requested such an explanation from them. No explanation was ever provided.
In September 1983 KADA requested Vincent and Mackey to reconsider their order to fire Merritt and to clarify whether KADA could rehire Merritt. Neither Vincent nor Mackey responded. KADA took no further action on Merritt’s grievance, and Merritt pursued his grievance no further. Instead, he filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Fifth Amendment, alleging liberty and property deprivations without due process.
Merritt timely appeals the district court’s posttrial decisions that Parratt v. Taylor,
II.
Whether Merritt had a protected property right in his employment is a mixed question of fact and law. Where a mixed question “involve[s] the exercise of judgment about the values underlying legal principles,” it is reviewable de novo. United States v. McConney,
To determine whether due process requirements apply to an asserted interest, the court must initially look to the nature of the interest at stake. Board of Regents v. Roth,
The dissent insists nevertheless that the interest which Merritt asserts is merely that of noninterference with a contractual
[R]espondent’s actions ... caused substantial injuries, and were they the subject of a suit between private persons, they could be attacked as an invasion of a legally protected right to be free from • arbitrary interference with private contractual relationships. Moreover, petitioner has the right to be free from unauthorized actions of government officials which substantially impair his property interests.
The inquiry does not end here, however. For the purpose of due process, Merritt must show that he had more than a “unilateral expectation” of continued employment; he must demonstrate a “legitimate claim of entitlement.” Roth,
That KADA and not the government officials themselves terminated Merritt’s employment does not change the nature of his protected property interest. Liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 attaches to any person who, under color of state law, “subjects or causes to be subjected” any person to a deprivation of protected rights. In Johnson v. Duffy,
The district court erroneously concluded that Merritt’s right to due process would be satisfied by a postdeprivation remedy, following the Supreme Court’s decision in Parratt. The Court in Parratt held that a postdeprivation remedy will satisfy due process when the deprivation is a result of a “random and unauthorized act,” because “the loss is not a result of some established State procedure and the State cannot predict precisely when the loss will occur.”
Vincent’s and Mackey’s conduct occurred as part of an institutionalized practice of evaluating the recipients of government funding. Mackey’s and Vincent’s respective supervisors were aware through ongoing discussions that Mackey and Vincent were planning to coerce KADA into firing Merritt, well before any such action was taken. It would therefore have been practicable for the state and federal authorities to have afforded Merritt some predeprivation process, as Mackey and Vincent’s conduct was not random, even though it was contrary to official policy. Postdeprivation remedies satisfy due process only when the conduct at issue was both unauthorized and random. See Parratt,
III.
Merritt also argues that the district court incorrectly found his property claim against Vincent and Mackey to be barred by qualified immunity. Qualified immunity protects government officials from liability for civil damages “insofar as their conduct
Vincent and Mackey are not entitled to qualified immunity protection because their conduct exceeded the scope of their authority and because they violated Merritt’s clearly established constitutional rights. Vincent and Mackey testified that they knew they had no authority to require KADA to fire Merritt. Because they knowingly acted outside the scope of their authority, they are not entitled to qualified immunity.
IV.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants on the plaintiff’s claims alleging deprivation of a liberty interest and tortious interference with employment. See Lojek v. Thomas,
Merritt also alleged that the United States, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b), should be civilly liable for one of its officials who violated a state criminal statute that prohibits the use of force, threats, or intimidation to prevent any person from performing employment or accepting new work. Or.Rev.Stat. § 659.240(1). The statute does not create a private cause of action, and the district court correctly de
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED FOR A NEW TRIAL. The plaintiff may recover costs on appeal.
Notes
. In Greene, an aeronautical engineer employed ■ by a private manufacturer that produced goods . for the armed services, brought suit against government officials when he was dismissed by his employer following the revocation by the government of his security clearance. Greene is therefore on all fours with the instant case inasmuch as it concerns the interest asserted by a private employee bringing suit against government officials whose conduct caused him to lose his private employment.
. The section 1983 claim against Vincent, a state official, arises under the Fourteenth Amendment and the claim against Mackey, a federal official, arises directly under the Fifth Amendment pursuant to Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents,
. The. conclusion of this court in Piatt that the requirement of predeprivation process applies to all deliberate or planned conduct, whether or not that conduct was authorized, reflects the understanding that for Parratt to govern, the conduct complained of must be both unauthorized and random. As the court explained, "[wjhile the [Supreme] Court in Hudson extended Parratt to relatively minor infractions involving random and unauthorized but intentional conduct by state officials, it has refused to endorse the constitutionality of remedial process where the deprivation is not random or where it would have been practicable for the state to provide process before the fact.”
. In procedural due process claims under section 1983 there is an inherent tension in determining whether an agent’s action is sufficiently "authorized" to bring the case under Logan rather than Parratt and yet sufficiently "unauthorized" to remove the cloak of qualified immunity. The tension, however, is more apparent than real. The distinction between Logan and Parratt focuses on whether injury is sufficiently predictable to make a predeprivation remedy practicable. Thus, when a state actor steps outside of his authority so as to deprive individuals of their rights in a way that is known or predictable, the state can practicably provide predeprivation protection from unauthorized conduct. As this court noted in Piatt, the "considerations underlying Parratt are simply inapplicable to deliberate, considered, planned, or prescribed conduct by state officials, whether or not such conduct is authorized."
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I join only part IV, which affirms a portion of the district court judgment. I dissent from part II. I conclude that the majority incorrectly defines the interest which Merritt alleges is protected by the due process clauses, and applies Parratt v. Taylor,
I
To state a claim for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 1983 or under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
A.
The majority claims that Merritt had a protected property interest in his specific private employment. Maj. op. at [1369-1370]. It relies for this conclusion on two passages from the Supreme Court’s opinion in Greene v. McElroy,
This leaves us with the first passage from Greene which states that “the right to hold specific private employment and to follow a chosen profession free from unreasonable governmental interference comes within the ‘liberty’ and ‘property’ concepts of the Fifth Amendment.” Id. at 492, 79
There are several reasons why I find the passage from Greene upon which the majority relies to determine that Merritt had a property interest in continued employment insufficient to support this proposition. First, the passage itself is dicta. It occurs in the midst of the discussion of contentions raised by the petitioner which the Court ultimately determined it need not address. See id. at 493,
Even if the passage upon which the majority relies were not dicta, I cannot believe that the Supreme Court intended this passage to represent the broad and novel statement regarding the existence of a property interest in every individual job that the majority now asserts it does. “Property interests,” the Supreme Court has reminded us, “are not created by the Constitution. Rather, they are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law.” Board of Regents v. Roth,
Whether state law gives Merritt a property interest is a more difficult issue, resolution of which must be guided by Paul v. Davis,
The majority omits this essential determination and ignores the explicit teachings of Paul. Instead, it cites Roth for the proposition that “an employee may establish the existence of a property interest in continued employment by demonstrating a reasonable expectation based upon state law, rules or regulations concerning discharge or express or implied promise.” Maj. op. at [1371]. There are two fundamental problems with this proposition, however. First, Roth nowhere asserts it. Roth merely states the proposition’s inverse — that someone who had no basis in state law for an expectation of continued employment could not possibly have a property right in his continued employment. Roth,
The district court held on the basis of Yartzoff v. Democrat-Herald Publishing Co.,
The court in Kay, in contrast, held explicitly that Oregon’s law relating to “just cause” policies forming part of an employment contract create a “property interest” in continued employment. Kay,
Thus, because Merritt has shown no basis in state law for the conclusion that Oregon grants its citizens a right to continued employment, I conclude that Merritt’s interest in retaining his position was merely one protected by state tort law and not a property right. I suggest that to hold Merritt’s interest is “property” within the meaning of the due process clause is not only to ignore the Supreme Court’s message in Paul, but to trivialize the Constitution.
B.
The majority cites our recent decision in Castaneda v. United States Department of Agriculture,
The record does not reveal any evidence that the governmental agents acted for the “purpose of punishing or restraining” Merritt. The only evidence in the record shows that the agents’ purpose was to assure that KADA complied with state and federal standards for outpatient alcohol treatment services. The open question, therefore, is not before us. It is interesting, however, that O’Bannon distinguished, in dicta, cases involving “the direct relationship between a public employer and its employees” — where protected property interests exist — from cases “concerning the right of an employee who loses his job as a result of government action directed against a third party.” O’Bannon,
I would hold, therefore, that the right of noninterference with contracts is not an interest protected by the due process clauses. See also Rutledge v. Arizona Board
II
Even if the governments’ acts did implicate the due process clauses in this case, Parratt establishes that due process may be satisfied by a post-deprivation remedy. I first analyze whether post-deprivation remedies could be adequate in this case, and then consider whether any such remedies are in fact available here.
A.
To determine whether post-deprivation remedies provide adequate process, we undertake two related inquiries. First, we consider the extent to which the government acknowledged, ratified, or promoted the act of deprivation. Parratt distinguishes action that is an “established state procedure” from action that is “unauthorized.”
1.
The record does not indicate that interfering with a private employee’s relationship with his employer was an established policy, practice, or custom of either the state or federal government. If anything, the record shows that this interference was unauthorized. The state and federal regulations that guide government employees in this situation imply that such interference was improper. Merritt argues that the conduct of both individual defendants was unauthorized and that the two were defying “express and clear limitations” on their authority. Indeed, the majority itself declares Mackey’s and Vincent’s action to be “contrary to official policy.” Majority op. supra at 1372.
The majority observes that “Vincent’s and Mackey’s conduct occurred as part of an institutionalized practice of evaluating the recipients of government funding.” Majority op. supra at 1372. This fact, however, is of no relevance to determining whether the challenged conduct was an established state practice. It is not the evaluation but the interference that is the basis of the action. Almost all government actions occur “as part of an institutionalized practice.” In Parratt, for example, the challenged conduct was part of the institutionalized practice of delivering prisoners’ mail. Parratt,
The majority also observes that Mackey and Vincent had informed their immediate
The majority opinion contains one other sentence relating to the question of authorization. The majority quotes language from our decision in Piatt v. MacDougall,
2.
The second inquiry for determining if post-deprivation remedies provide adequate process — whether the conduct was predictable or random — is addressed by the majority in only cursory fashion. The majority states that because Vincent and Mackey had consulted with their supervisors “[i]t would therefore have been practicable for the state and federal authorities to have afforded Merritt some predeprivation process.” Majority op. supra at 1372. If the majority means by this that, because the two supervisors could have predicted the injury, the two governments also could have predicted it, then the majority plainly conflicts with Parratt. “Whether an individual employee himself is able to foresee a deprivation is simply of no consequence. The controlling inquiry is solely whether the state is in a position to provide for predeprivation process.” Hudson,
The majority is wrong, I suggest, in failing to appreciate that a single supervisor at the lowest level in the bureaucratic hierarchy does not constitute this “administrative machinery.” Nothing in the record indicates that Mackey, Vincent, or either of their immediate supervisors held positions permitting them to set policy or determine when hearings should or should not be provided. In fact, the “administrative machinery” for both the state and federal government had promulgated administrative procedures to guide the conduct of the agents responsible for overseeing contractors such as KADA. See, e.g., 41 U.S.C. §§ 401-420, 601-613; 41 C.F.R. §§ 1 et seq. (1983); Or.Rev.Stat. §§ 279.011-279.990 (1983); Or.Admin.R. §§ 127-40-010 to 127-40-090 (1983). No one contends that the job descriptions of the two supervisors included the authority to modify or extend those regulations.
If, instead, the majority has some other individuals in mind when it refers to the
The majority addresses the question of whether the government actors’ conduct was “random” solely by way of conclusion. We are told, twice, that “Mackey and Vincent’s conduct was not random” but we are never told why. Majority op. supra at 1372. The record does not indicate that Mackey and Vincent’s conduct was a continuing problem, or one that past experience had shown was likely to recur. In fact, the record indicates that this incident was unique: “[i]t never came up before.”
Furthermore, I find no evidence in the record that this unique occurrence was the sort of situation either government could have predicted in advance. They had no contractual or regulatory relationship with Merritt. How could the state or federal government predict that they might need a set of procedures to guide their employees when dealing with parties who had no dealings with the government? Merritt’s real complaint may be that his employer did not avail itself of the existing procedural protections. Merritt has no standing, however, to raise his employer’s rights. The majority simply fails to point to any evidence supporting its assertion that this incident was “not random.”
I conclude, therefore, that post-deprivation remedies, if available, provide due process in this case because the conduct of the governmental agents was neither an established state practice nor predictable even though unauthorized.
B.
The final issue, which the majority does not reach, is whether post-deprivation remedies are in fact available to Merritt. As regards Vincent, the state employee, a state tort action alleging intentional interference with a contractual relationship was available and was, in fact, pleaded. A post-deprivation remedy was thus clearly available.
Whether adequate remedies are available against Mackey, the federal employee, or against the United States is more problematic. Merritt could have brought the same state tort claim against Mackey that he brought against Vincent. Therefore, Merritt did have some post-deprivation remedy against Mackey. This remedy, however, is provided by a different sovereign, Oregon. Assuming a state tort remedy could satisfy federal due process, it seems unlikely that Merritt could bring a state law tort claim against the United States. The Federal Tort Claims Act excludes from its waiver of sovereign immunity actions for intentional interference with contract. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). The parties did not adequately address, either in the district court or on appeal, the issue of a federal post-deprivation remedy. I would therefore remand this issue for further proceedings, were it critical to our decision.
Ill
The governments did not deprive Merritt of an interest protected by the due process clauses. I would therefore affirm the judgment of the district court. Moreover, post-deprivation remedies would provide due process and were available, at least with respect to the state employee.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I write separately even though I concur in Judge Ferguson’s opinion. This case calls upon us once again to engage in the difficult line-drawing enterprise of deciding whether a given employment situation gives rise to a cognizable property right under the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. I agree with the district court and with Judge Ferguson that Oregon law gave Merritt a constitutionally significant property interest in his continued employment. In my view, this conclusion follows not only from Board of Regents v. Roth,
