Larry Garcia worked his way up from warehouse clerk to Director of Technical Services at the Kankakee County Housing Authority. During 1998 the Authority was in turmoil; its Executive Director and all members of its governing Board quit or were dismissed. The new Board asked Garcia to serve as Interim Executive Director, and he assumed that position on December 4, 1998. Soon Garcia began to make changes in the Authority’s operations, and he challenged the authority of Charles Ruch, the Board’s new Chairman. Within a week of his appointment, Garcia started writing memos to the Board complaining about Chairman Ruch’s conduct and asking other members to rein in their leader. For forgetting who was in charge, Garcia paid a penalty: he lasted exactly 18 days as Interim Executive Director, and he lost his job as Director of Technical Services as well when a majority of the Board deemed him insubordinate and showed him the door.
In this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Garcia contends that his discharge violated not only the Constitution’s first amendment but also the due process clause of the fourteenth. The former theory is that the Board penalized him for sending the memos and for attending public meetings at which Chairman Ruch had sought to be the Authority’s sole representative. The latter theory is that he had a property interest in his job, which the Board could not affect without notice and an opportunity for a hearing. Garcia actually received an elaborate post-discharge hearing but contends that the outcome was a foregone conclusion. The district court was not persuaded by either theory and granted summary judgment to the defendants.
As the district court saw matters, Garcia and Ruch were engaged in a struggle for control of the Housing Authority. Which of the two would emerge on top was, in the judge’s view, a personnel dispute outside the scope of the first amendment. Compare
Connick v. Myers,
No editorial writer could be fined or imprisoned for taking a stand on the management of the Kankakee Housing Authority, or the extension of its services to Pembroke; nor could a reporter be barred from a meeting open to the public. But Garcia was not fined or imprisoned. He was told that his services are no longer required, but all economic opportunities in the private sector remain open. That is a substantial difference in consequence for the employee — a difference important to public employers as well, for no bureaucracy can function if each employee is a free agent, entitled to undermine the policy set by politically responsible officials. See
Waters v. Churchill,
The Executive Director of a public agency fits that description — more securely than, say, the deputy director of a bureaucracy, a position that we have held may be limited to those who hold views sympathetic with elected officials. See, e.g.,
Tomczak v. Chicago,
This leaves Garcia’s contention that he had a property interest in his job, an interest that under the due process clause he could keep until the Authority provided notice and an opportunity for a hearing. It is hard to see where this gets Garcia, because he
had
a hearing before his discharge became final. True, he was removed from office about a month before the hearing, but he was paid for that period and thus has no complaint about the delay. See
Gilbert v. Homar,
For what it may be worth, we add that Garcia lacked any “property” interest in his position, and the due process clause therefore did not require a hearing. No statute, regulation, or individually negotiated contract gave him tenure or the right to stay unless the Authority demonstrated cause for his removal. See
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Illinois treats employment handbooks as having the potential to form contracts between employers and workers. See
Duldulao v. Saint Mary of Nazareth Hospital,
This Manual creates no rights, contractual or otherwise, between the Authority, any prospective or current employee, or any other person. Statements of policy contained in this Manual are not made for the purpose of inducing any person to become or remain an employee of the Authority, and should not be considered “promises” or granting “property” rights. Nothing contained in this Manual impairs the right of an employee or the Authority, to terminate the employment relationship at will....
*536 The following policies and procedures state current policy and are not themselves to be considered or interpreted as terms of an implied or express contract. The Authority reserves the right to amend, modify and/or revoke any of its policies, practices, procedures and standards summarized in this handbook.
Disclaimers of this kind are enough in Illinois to show that the handbook does not create legal rights.
Davis v. Times MirRor Magazines, Inc.,
According to Garcia, the Housing Authority took back the disclaimer (or at least created an internal contradiction) several pages later, when the handbook said that employees could expect to keep their jobs as long as they performed well, and that an employee could have a hearing before a discharge became final. Garcia’s predecessor as Executive Director filed an affidavit stating that the Housing Authority never fired anyone without a good reason. That may be true as a factual proposition but the affidavit and the assurances do not contradict the handbook’s statement that all employment is at will. To say that employment is “at will” does not mean that the employer randomly or maliciously discharges good workers; that would serve no one’s interests. Employment is “at will” when the term of the arrangement is open-ended, and there are no legal remedies for bringing the arrangement to a close. See Richard A. Epstein, In Defense of the Contract at Will, 51 U. Chi. L.Rev. 947 (1984). Employer and employee have an equal right to end the relation at any time, for any lawful reason. Both employer and employee will want to continue a satisfactory arrangement; thus an employer rarely fires anyone without thinking that it has a good reason. All it means to say that the arrangement is “at will” is that courts do not inquire into the sufficiency of that belief. Judges and juries are not guaranteed to do better than supervisors at determining whether an employee had worked out in the position; and as the legal process is expensive (including the expense of error), both employer and employee may gain from saving those costs. Perhaps the Housing Authority made a mistake in not returning Garcia to his former post as Director of Technical Services, but under the handbook the penalty for any mistake will be paid in the market (because the Authority will have a harder time recruiting a quality replacement, or will need to pay more to make up for the greater uncertainty) rather than in the courts.
Affirmed.
