OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Crystal C. Lewis, an American of African descent, brings this case charging the defendants with discrimination (based on her race) and retaliation (based on her and her father’s protected conduct) with respect to her employment. She names as defendants the Eufaula City Board of Education, its five board members, and its superintendent of education. Lewis charges that the defendants’ actions violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended and codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981a, 2000e to 2000e-17; the Civil Rights Act of 1866, as amended and codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1981; and the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution as enforced through 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Jurisdiction is proper under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 (federal question) and 1343 (civil rights) and 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(3) (Title VII).
This case is currently before the court on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be granted in part and denied in part.
I. SUMMARY-JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the movant[s] show[ ] that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant[s] [are] entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). The court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of that party. Matsushita Elec. Indus.
II. BACKGROUND
A.
Eufaula is a small city in eastern Alabama with a history of racial unrest relating to its public education system. For some time, the public schools operated under federal court monitoring due to the city schools’ history of racial segregation. Despite the ending of court monitoring, many Eufaula residents continue to have grievances with the school system’s treatment of the black community. A particular point of contention has been the numbers of black teachers and administrators employed by the board. While over half of the students in the school system are black, the portion of black teachers is roughly 15 %, which some city residents contend is far too low. Although members of the city school board profess that they have been making efforts at increasing the ranks of black teachers and administrators, these residents are skeptical. They point to a neighboring school system, where teachers are almost evenly divided between black and white, and they contend that discriminatory employment practices in the Eufaula City Schools must account for the difference in comparative racial percentages.
B.
Lewis grew up in- Eufaula and worked as a physical-education teacher at Eufaula Primary School for about three years. During her first two years, she served under Principal Jessie Warren, who is black. Lewis received, generally, good performance evaluations. Her career, however, took a turn for the worse in the third year when Suzann Tibbs, who is white, replaced Warren as principal.
Because Lewis could obtain tenure only if she were rehired for a fourth year, the Eufaula City Board of Education had to decide at the end of each of these three academic years whether to renew her contract for the following year. As a general practice, a school principal would forward an initial renewal recommendation to Eufaula City Superintendent Barry R. Sadler; unless he had particular cause for concern, Sadler would, without making inquiry, forward the recommendation to the full board; likewise, unless the board had cause to do otherwise, it would adopt the principal’s recommendation. In effect then, renewal decisions were made by principals. Once Tibbs became principal of Eufaula Primary School, she recommended that Lewis’s contract not be renewed and, thus, in effect, that her employment be terminated. The recommendation was adopted by the board, and Lewis’s employment contract was not renewed.
Lewis immediately suspected that something was afoul. Although Principal Tibbs purported to have recommended non-renewal on the basis of Lewis’s poor performance (arguing that Lewis was too passive to be an effective physical education teacher and too hesitant to engage in outdoors activities), Lewis believed that Tibbs was not evaluating her performance in good faith. Lewis hypothesized that Tibbs wanted her position to open up so that a personal friend of Tibbs’s, who is white, could be hired. Lewis felt that her theory was bolstered because Tibbs had attempted to act on Lewis’s employment at least once before she became principal; on one occasion, Tibbs approached then-Principal Warren to discuss the possible non-renewal of Lewis’s contract, but Warren rebuffed her, stating that, based on his observations of Lewis’s performance, he was “not comfortable” with denying renewal. Regardless of Lewis’s suspicion of Tibbs’s intent, Tibbs’s friend, ultimately, did not
Lewis began applying for other positions with the school system, but she had no success. One such position for which she applied was at her previous school, Eufaula Primary School, but she was not selected. Instead, Ciara Culverhouse, who is white, was chosen based on Tibbs’s recommendation. Although Culverhouse had not yet obtained the licensing required for the job, she was hired with the understanding that it would be obtained sometime soon. Some members of the black community were outraged that allegedly more qualified black applicants were passed over in favor of a white applicant who was without the necessary licensing. A crowd of approximately 100 people attended a school-board meeting to protest the decision. Among them was a woman who vigorously protested that her daughter Andrea Guilford, who is black and was purportedly highly qualified, was passed over. Upon this public outpouring of discontent, the board reversed itself and chose to hire Guilford instead of Culverhouse.
Shortly after that public reversal, Lewis’s father Ronnie Crews attended public meetings of the school board to express his displeasure with the school system’s treatment of the black community in general and his daughter Lewis in particular. He made such appearances on two separate occasions. According to one board member, Crews’s presentations were of a substantial length; he was “quite aggressive”; and he “was acting like a courtroom lawyer cross-examining a witness.” Allen N. White Dep. (Doc. No. 29), Exh. K, 27:11-15. In the opinion of that board member, the presentations were inappropriate and left a lasting impression with him. Crew’s presentations to the board were also in fine with those of his wife Eamestine Crews. The Crewses were well known in the community for their outspoken views and involvement in issues having to do with race relations; they regularly criticized the treatment afforded to African-Americans by the local government.
Although Lewis was having no luck with her applications to Eufaula City Schools, a county school expressed interest in her. But, before it could formally consider her, it needed a form signed by Lewis’s prior employer, the Eufaula City Board of Education. Superintendent Sadler assured Lewis that he would expeditiously file the form, but he did not. As he understood the form, he was required to attest that Lewis’s work had been performed “satisfactorily.” Given that her contract was not renewed, he was unsure whether he could make that attestation. His submission of the form was delayed while he sought permission to state on the form that he confirms her employment but does not confirm that her ^york was satisfactory. By the time he obtained this permission and submitted the form, the county school had already denied Lewis’s application and hired another applicant.
Because Lewis was continuing to have no success with her job applications with Eufaula schools (and she had applied for over 25 different jobs there) and schools within a reasonable distance, her husband Michael Lewis approached Superintendent Sadler to ask whether anything could be done. Sadler responded that he would “never say never,” but, for the time being, “nobody is going to hire [Lewis] in , Eufaula.” Michael Lewis Aff. (Doc. No. 29), Exh. G, ¶ 7.
Lewis filed this lawsuit claiming that she was discriminated against because of her race and retaliated against because she had filed an EEOC charge and because of her father’s speeches to the board. She names as defendants the Eufaula City-Board of Education, its five board members (Allen N. White, Jim S. Calton, Jr., Louise Conner, Otis Hill, and James A. Lockwood), and Board Superintendent Sadler.
III. DISCUSSION
A.
Lewis’s first claim is that the defendants did not renew her physical-education teaching contract at Eufaula Primary School because she is African-American. Lewis’s complaint, which is not a model of clarity, does not specify the source of law for this claim-whether Title VII, § 1981, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, or all of these. The defendants assert defenses that apply to some, but not all, of those three legal sources. Nevertheless, it is unnecessary to know which basis Lewis is relying on, for, whatever the basis, her claim will be subject to the same standards of proof and will require the employment of the same analytical framework. Bryant v. Jones,
Lewis’s discrimination-in-employment claim, regardless of legal basis, is analyzed under the burden-shifting analysis set forth in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
If this burden of production is met, the burden is then on the employee to satisfy her ultimate burden of establishing that the employer’s proffered reason for the employment decision was a pretext for racial discrimination, a burden which she may satisfy “either directly, by persuading the court that a discriminatory reason more than likely motivated the employer, or indirectly, by persuading the court that the proffered reason for the employment decision is not worthy of belief.” Hall v. Alabama Ass’n of Sch. Bds.,
Often, the question whether the plaintiff has made out a prima-facie case is irrelevant when the district court considers an employer’s motion for summary judgment. Bailey-Potts v. Ala. Dep’t of Pub. Safety,
In this case, the defendants 'have come forward with evidence that Lewis’s employment was not renewed because of dissatisfaction with her performance. She was, the defendants state, too passive to be an effective physical-education teacher and too hesitant to bring the students outdoors for activities. Lewis has not come forward with sufficient evidence for a reasonable fact-finder to conclude that this justification is pretextual for racial discrimination. Viewed in the light most favorable to Lewis, her evidence shows that the Eufaula School System’s governance has a past history of racial discrimination; when Lewis reported to a black principal, he found her work satisfactory; when she later reported to a white principal, that principal unfairly ended her employment as part of a scheme to provide a job to a personal friend; and, after that plan went awry, the white principal hired an African-American to replace Lewis. Under that scenario, although Lewis’s employer may have acted unfairly in making the initial employment decision, that unfairness was based on nepotism and' not race. Lewis’s claim of racial discrimination cannot stand. See Alexander v. Fulton Cnty.,
If Lewis’s claim rests on a theory of mixed motives, that is, that Principal Tibbs’s decision to end Lewis’s employment was driven both by both nepotistic and racist purposes, Lewis must still show that her race was a “motivating factor for [her non-renewal], even though other factors also motivated the [decision].” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(m); see also Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa,
To be sure, replacement of an African-American with another African-American will not, conclusively, defeat an African-American’s claim of racially discriminatory firing or failure to renew employment contract. Cf. Howard v. Roadway Exp., Inc.,
To the extent that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment goes to Lewis’s claim of racially discriminatory non-renewal of her employment contract, the motion will be granted.
B.
Lewis’s second claim is- that the defendants refused to rehire her for a new position because of her race. This 'claim is also governed by the McDonnell Douglas bürden-shifting framework. See, e.g., Walker v. Prudential Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co.,
To the extent that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment goes to Lewis’s claim of racially discriminatory refusal to rehire her, the motion will be granted.
C.
Lewis’s final claims ■ are for retaliation. She first claims that, in violation of Title VII, the defendants refused to rehire her for a- new position because she had filed an EEOC charge. Second, she claims that the defendants’ conduct'was also motivated by her father’s speech and, as such, violated the First Amendment. The court addresses both retaliation claims in turn.
i.
Under Title VII, employers are prohibited from “discriminating] against ... [an] applicant ] for employment ... because [she] has ... made a charge” with the EEOC. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). A claim asserting retaliation in violation of that provision is also governed by the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting • framework. See, e.g., Lipphardt v. Durango Steakhouse of Brandon, Inc.,
Here, Lewis has established not only a prima-facie case of retaliation in violation of Title VII, she has also presented sufficient evidence to raise a factual question of whether the defendants refused to rehire her because she had filed an EEOC charge. First, there is the obvious: At the time the defendants refused to rehire her, she had filed an EEOC charge. Second, the defendants’ actions must be placed against a backdrop in which Lewis’s father had complained to board members about the board’s treatment of Lewis, charging them with racial discrimination, and at least one board member had found his remarks inappropriate and offensive.
ii.
Lewis claims that defendants’ retaliation was motivated not only by her EEOC charge, but also, violation of the First Amendment, by her father’s speech.
The First Amendment, prohibits the government from retaliating against persons for their protected speech. See, e.g., Bryson v. City of Waycross,
Often in First Amendment retaliation cases, the government is claimed to have retaliated against the plaintiff for her own speech; but the First Amendment may also be violated where the speech that invoked the government’s retaliatory response was not made by the plaintiff herself, but rather by a person in a close relationship with the plaintiff, and the government retaliated against the plaintiff for her perceived association with the other person and that person’s speech. See, e.g., Adler v. Pataki,
That is because, “[t]he First Amendment protects not only a citizen’s right to speak freely but also his or her right” of association. Cain,
Lewis has also asserted a viable claim based solely on free speech. “The First Amendment reflects ‘a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.’ ” Snyder v. Phelps, — U.S.-,
Title VII provides a useful analogy. In Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White,
For Lewis to support a First Amendment retaliation claim, she must show (1) that the speech at issue (in this case, her father’s presentations to the board) can be fairly characterized as relating to a matter of public concern, (2) that her interests as a citizen outweigh the interests of the governmental entity (here, the school board) as an employer, and (3) that the protected conduct (her father’s speech or her association with him) played a substantial or motivating role in the government’s decision to take an adverse-employment action. Akins,
Here, as for the first element, that Lewis’s father’s speech related to a matter of public concern, the evidence is sufficient to find that it did. “For speech to be protected as speech on a matter of public concern, ‘it must relate to a matter of political, social, or other concern to the community.’” Id. at 1303 (quoting Watkins v. Bowden,
As to whether Lewis’s interests as a citizen outweigh the government’s interests as an employer, the evidence here too favors her. “[T]he state interest ... focuses on the effective functioning of the public employer’s enterprise.” Rankin v. McPherson,
Third, that Lewis’s father’s speech motivated the government’s retaliation also presents a disputed issue of fact. For essentially the same reasons that a reasonable fact-finder could infer that Lewis was not rehired because of her filing of an EEOC charge, the fact-finder could also infer that the defendants were motivated by her father’s speech. That is, at the time the defendants refused to rehire her, Lewis had applied for over 25 openings; her father had made two speeches to the board, upsetting at least one board member; and, after all of that, Superintendent Sadler, in a cryptic comment, told Lewis’s husband that not one of the school system’s principals would hire Lewis.
Moreover, as stated above, even if the above elements are proved, the defendants may still escape liability if they establish that they would have refused to rehire Lewis regardless of her father’s speech (for example, because they were legitimately dissuaded from doing so because of her demonstrated poor job performance). Whether that is the case is a factual dispute that must be resolved at
For that reason, to the extent that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment goes to Lewis’s First Amendment claim of retaliation, the motion will be denied,
iii.
The court now turns to the defendants’ four defenses that, if they had merit, would require the court to grant summary judgment in the defendants’ favor on the retaliation claims regardless of the sufficiency of Lewis’s evidence.
The defendants note that, “in order to obtain judicial consideration of [a Title VII] claim, a plaintiff must first file an administrative charge with the EEOC,” Pijnenburg v. W. Ga. Health Sys., Inc.,
The second asserted defense is the doctrine of qualified immunity, which “protects government officials ‘from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ” Pearson v. Callahan,
In addressing whether a legal right was clearly established in the law, the question before the court is whether “the state of the law ... gave [the defendants] fair warning that their alleged treatment of [the plaintiff] was unconstitutional.” Hope v. Pelzer,
As an initial matter, the qualified-immunity doctrine does not apply to Title VII actions against governmental employers like the Eufaula City Board of Education. See, e.g., Busby v. City of Orlando,
The general principle that the government cannot take adverse-employment action in retaliation for protected speech has long been a feature of law as declared by the Supreme Court and the Eleventh Circuit (which includes Eufaula in its three-state area). See, e.g., Rankin,
Additionally, the First Amendment right of intimate association has long been recognized in numerous decisions. See, e.g., Roberts,
Because the allegations (which the court must take as true on a motion for summary judgment) undergirding Lewis’s retaliation claim for violation of her rights to association and speech go to the core protections of the First Amendment, the violations, if true, are obvious. Cf. Hope,
In sum, government officials reasonably apprised of the law and acting in good faith would, if acting as Lewis has alleged, have had more than “fair warning that their [conduct] was unconstitutional.” Hope,
The third asserted defense is the so-called Monell doctrine. In Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Serv.,
Finally, the school-board members and the superintendent are correct that Lewis’s Title VII retaliation claim does not lie against them in their “individual capacities.” Busby,
At the end of the day, after having assessed all asserted defenses, there remains standing in this case only Lewis’s Title VII retaliation claim against the board and her First Amendment retaliation claim against all defendants.
* * *
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that defendants Eufaula City Board of Education, Allen N. White, Jim S. Calton, Jr., Louise Conner, Otis Hill, James A. Lockwood, and Barry R. Sadler’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 20) is granted in part and denied in part as follows:
(1) Summary judgment on plaintiff Crystal C. Lewis’s First Amendment retaliation claim brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against all defendants is denied. This claim will go trial.
(2) Summary judgment on plaintiff Lewis’s Title VII retaliation claim against defendant Eufaula City Board of Education is denied. This claim will go trial.
(3) Summary judgment on plaintiff Lewis’s Title VII retaliation claim against defendants White, Calton, Conner, Hill, Lockwood, and Sadler is' granted, with plaintiff Lewis taking nothing on this claim against these defendants.
(4) Summary judgment on plaintiff Lewis’s Title VII discrimination claims against defendants Eufaula City Board of Education, White, Calton, Conner, Hill, Lockwood, and Sadler is granted, with plaintiff Lewis taking nothing on these claims against these defendants.
Notes
. Lewis does not claim that the defendants’ alleged retaliation against her for her father’s speech violated Title VII. Rather she claims that, to the extent that the defendants’ retaliation was motivated by such speech, the defendants violated the First Amendment, not Title VII. The Title VII claim addresses only the filing of the EEOC charge. However, given the intertwined nature of the EEOC charge and Lewis's father's speech (both of which accused the defendants of racially discriminating against Lewis), the evidence that, at least, one board member professed displeasure with her father's speech is background supporting an inference that the board had a retaliatory motive with respect to Lewis’s charge of discrimination.
. The defendants argue that the statement is inadmissible hearsay and cannot be considered. Superintendent Sadler, however, is one of the defendants in this lawsuit and his prior statement was offered into evidence by Lewis, his opponent in this litigation. A statement is "not hearsay” if it is "offered against an opposing party and ... was made by the party.” Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(A). Therefore, the statement is not hearsay.
.Causation may also be established by temporal proximity between the protected conduct and the adverse-employment action, though, "without more, [the period between the charge and the adverse action] must be 'very close.’ ” Thomas v. Cooper Lighting, Inc.,
. Lewis does not argue that the defendants violated the First Amendment (rather than Title VII) by retaliating against her for her filing of the EEOC charge. As such, the court does not address whether she would have such a claim under the First Amendment. See Merriweather v. Alabama Dept. of Pub. Safety,
. The evidence is somewhat unclear on the precise time line, and it appears that at least some of Lewis's job applications were filed before either of her father’s speeches to the board. Nevertheless, it also appears that many of her applications, if not the majority, were filed after one or both speeches.
