Mark R. McCAMMON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, Charles W.
Phillips, as Director of the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions and individually, and John E. Simmonds, as
Deputy Director of the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions and individually, Defendants-Appellees.
Robert L. MILLER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, Charles W.
Phillips, as Director of the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions and individually, and John E. Simmonds, as
Deputy Director of the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions and individually, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 91-3736, 91-3737.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued May 19, 1992.
Decided Sept. 1, 1992.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Oct. 7, 1992.
Peter D. Miller (argued), Indianapolis, Ind., for plaintiff-appellant.
Linley E. Pearson, Atty. Gen., Terry G. Duga, Deputy Atty. Gen. (argued), Federal Litigation, Indianapolis, Ind., for defendants-appellees.
Before FLAUM and RIPPLE, Circuit Judges, and ESCHBACH, Senior Circuit Judge.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge.
The sole issue presented in this consolidated appeal brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is whether appellants Mark McCammon and Robert Miller had a protectible property interest to which due process rights attached in their employment with the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions (Department), a state agency. The district court held that they did not, and we reverse.
Until their dismissals on August 17, 1990, McCammon and Miller were employed within the Department as compliance field examiners. McCammon had worked there since 1979, and Miller since 1984. In a telephone conversation on July 30, 1990, John Simmonds, deputy director of the Department, notified Miller that he was to attend an "accreditation meeting" the next day. He did not inform Miller that he would be questioned about his timekeeping records. Simmonds telephoned McCammon the following morning, and conveyed essentially the same information. Later that day Simmonds, along with Department Director Charles Phillips and another Department employee, Chuck Stumpf, held separate meetings with McCammon and Miller.
Unbeknownst to the appellants, the Department had conducted an investigation in early 1990 to determine whether certain examiners were falsifying the time sheets by which they accounted for time spent on their jobs. As part of the investigation, verification forms were sent to companies that had been examined by Department employees. The July 31 meetings addressed certain discrepancies between the appellants' timesheets and company verification forms. The appellants, neither of whom had brought their personal records to the meetings, were unable to account for the discrepancies or to provide specific explanations. At the conclusion of the meetings, Phillips issued letters to McCammon and Miller, suspending them without pay effective the following day. About a week later, at their regular meeting on August 9, the members of the Department authorized Phillips to take further action against all personnel charged in the investigation, including McCammon and Miller. Both men were notified the following day that their employment was terminated, effective August 17.
McCammon and Miller contend that they had a property interest in their positions as financial examiners, and that the Department's actions deprived them of the fourteenth amendment procedural due process protections to which they were entitled. In the alternative, they maintain that even absent such a statutorily defined interest, the conduct of the Department in holding nominal pre-deprivation hearings with the two men supports a finding of a mutually explicit understanding of a protected interest.
At the time McCammon and Miller were terminated from the Department, the statute governing their dismissals read as follows:Any of the supervisors, examiners, assistants, or employees assigned to or employed in any division of the department may be removed, at any time, by the members with the approval of the governor for inefficiency, incompetency, or neglect of or failure to perform their duties.
Ind.Code § 28-1-2-15 (1986) (repealed 1991) (emphasis added). In finding that this provision did not grant the appellants a property interest in their jobs, the district court first noted that "[t]he ordinary meaning of the phrase 'at any time' suggests that employees can be dismissed at the discretion of the members." Miller v. Indiana Dep't of Fin. Inst., No. IP 90-1832-C, slip op. at 11 (S.D.Ind. Nov. 15, 1991); McCammon v. Indiana Dep't of Fin. Inst., No. IP 91-127-C, slip op. at 14 (S.D.Ind. Oct. 24, 1991). The court further reasoned that since Indiana common law considers all employees to serve "at will," the statute would be "in derogation of common law if interpreted as providing a property interest in employment." Miller, slip op. at 11 (citing Northern Indiana Public Serv. Co. v. Citizens Action Coalition,
The district court concluded that the provision merely "protects employees of the Department from dismissal to the extent that it does not allow their dismissal without the approval of the members of the Department." Miller, slip op. at 11; McCammon, slip op. at 14. Since the members here had allocated that authority to Phillips, the court held, the Department had complied with the statute and the appellants failed to establish a property interest. We review de novo the district court's interpretation of state law, Salve Regina College v. Russell, --- U.S. ----, ----,
It is well established that a claim of an entitlement to property must be "more than an 'abstract need or desire' or a mere expectation on the part of the individual." Patkus v. Sangamon-Cass Consortium,
McCammon and Miller contend that the plain language of § 28-1-2-15 granted them an entitlement to continued employment. The statute explicitly listed three specific causes for dismissal ("inefficiency, incompetency, and neglect of or failure to perform their duties"), which, they argue, means that the Department could not remove them for other, nonlisted reasons. In support of their argument, the appellants quote the traditional maxim, "expressio unius est exclusio alterius"--i.e., "[w]hen certain items or words are specified or enumerated in a statute then, by implication, other items or words not so specified or enumerated are excluded." Health & Hosp. Corp. v. Marion County,
To buttress this contention, McCammon and Miller refer us to Smulski v. Conley,
The Department responds with scant briefs which only barely satisfy the strictures of Fed.R.App.P. 28. The meager nine- and ten-page briefs each include a Statement of Facts consisting entirely of a single-spaced verbatim block quote from the district court's opinions. Virtually a full page of each "Argument" section contains full block quotes of the relevant statutory provisions, thus leaving a total of five pages to enlighten this court on the issues, only four of which contain substantive arguments. From this sparce material, the Department offers two case analogies, which it claims support a finding of at-will employment here, and one substantive statutory argument.
The Department first relies upon Bishop v. Wood,
Latching on to this reasoning, the Department argues that because the Court construed the Bishop ordinance as merely conditioning a right to removal on procedural compliance, the instant ordinance should likewise be interpreted. The Department overlooks, however, that Bishop apparently was based largely the principle of deference to the district court's interpretation of state law (a principle which, we note, the Court has since abolished. See Salve Regina College, --- U.S. at ----,
Moreover, we also note that the district court in Smulski discounted the defendants' reliance on Bishop largely for the reasons noted above--the Supreme Court's reliance on state law, its deference to the district court's interpretation, and the Court's observation that the ordinance on its face could be read to confer a property right--concluding, "It is clear then that the mere fact that a Marion, North Carolina, ordinance was not found to create a property interest in a policeman's employment [in Bishop ] is not dispositive of a similar question concerning a Hammond, Indiana, ordinance." Id. at 774. The Department failed to inform us (although, we note with interest, neither did the appellants) of the fact that Smulski explicitly distanced itself from Bishop; indeed, despite Smulski's relevance here, and the appellants' reliance on the case in their briefs, the Department's briefs offered no reference or citation to Smulski whatsoever.
The Department also refers us to Phegley v. Indiana Department of Highways,
The Department finally argues that the Indiana legislature's subsequent amendment of the relevant provision to explicitly require cause for dismissal, see Ind Code § 28-11-2-5 ("An employee of the department may be discharged at any time by the director for just cause") (effective July 1, 1991), indicates that the version in effect at the time McCammon and Miller were fired merely established an at-will employment relation which created no protected property interest. According to the Department, this view is supported by the Indiana rule of statutory construction that the amendment of a statute, absent clear intent to the contrary, raises the presumption that the legislature intended to change the law. See K. v. G.,
Despite the general presumption cited by the Department, we believe that in this case the legislature amended the statute to clarify, rather than alter, existing law. See Van Orman,
The director shall appoint such deputies, assistants and other employees as may be found necessary to carry on the work of the department. Except as hereinafter otherwise provided, the several deputies, assistants and other employees shall be chosen for their fitness, either professional or practical as the nature of the position may require, irrespective of their political beliefs or affiliations. The technical or professional qualification of any applicant shall be determined by examination, professional rating or otherwise, as the director, in his discretion, may determine. In so far as may be practicable, the examiners shall be so appointed that not more than one-half ( 1/2) of the examiners shall be adherents of any one political party.
Ind.Code § 28-1-2-14 (1986) (repealed 1991) (emphasis added). In construing the statute in effect during the relevant time period in its entirety, we find that the policy decision to insulate bank examiners from politics at the front end (i.e., hiring) indicates that the legislative intent likewise would be to shield these employees from discretionary political decisions at the back end (i.e., firing), thereby supporting the appellants' contention that the dismissal provision at issue established a protected interest in continued employment. We agree with the appellants that the amended language is functionally equivalent to that in the previous version, and that the language of the statute as a whole, as well as the nature of the amendment, sufficiently rebuts the presumption. See K. v. G.,
Although at argument the Department proffered additional policy rationales (which, as an original matter, might have some appeal), it again offered no support to back up its claims. The Department maintained, for example, that examiners hold unique and specialized positions; because these positions are closer in line to the chief executive than the typical civil servant, it follows that the positions are more, not less, at-will than those held by the typical civil servant. Given the preceding discussion, however, it is equally as reasonable to speculate that the specialized nature of these positions requires added procedural protections. Indeed, a common sense interpretation would indicate that the legislature's intent regarding the hiring and firing provisions should be viewed in the conjunctive; a statute whose aim is to prevent political hiring likewise would embrace the goal of protecting Department employees from political firing.
We find that McCammon and Miller had a protectible property interest in their employment with the Department, and therefore were entitled to constitutionally adequate due process procedures prior to their removal. Given this, we need not address the appellants' argument that the Department's conduct in meeting with the appellants prior to their dismissals constituted recognition of an implied understanding of a protected property interest. We reverse the determination of the district court in regard to both McCammon and Miller, and remand for a determination of whether the Department afforded the appellants constitutionally adequate notice and pre-deprivation procedures prior to their dismissals.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
