The plaintiff brought this civil rights suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against a sheriff in Indiana, and others, alleging that she had been deprived of liberty and property, without duе process of law, because the sheriff fired her from her job as a police radio dispatcher. Her husband had just been arrested for alleged participation in an interstate automobile theft ring, and in firing her the sheriff made statements thаt were printed in the local newspapers to the effect that she had been fired because her job gave her access to the computer that contained automobile registration information, and she might have tamperеd with the computer. The district judge dismissed her complaint on the basis of an affidavit, accompanying the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, which stated that a few days after having been fired she was offered and declined alternative employmеnt by the county,
Mrs. Lawson was an employee at will, and thus lacked a “property” interest (within the meaning of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment) of which the sheriff could have deprived her when he fired her.
Board of Regents v. Roth,
But the courts have found a deprivation of liberty when the employee was fired for a publicly announced reason that impugned his moral character. See, e.g.,
Codd v. Velger,
But this also implies, and the cases make clear, that there is no deprivation of liberty if the employee is not fired. See Paul v.
Davis, supra,
Neither in the affidavit that hаd been submitted with the motion for summary judgment nor anywhere else in the record before him did the district judge have any information about the nature of the alternative employment offered Mrs. Lawson. He therefore should not have dismissed the complaint. If the job she was offered was degradingly inferior to the job as police radio dispatcher from which she was fired, the offer did not negate the deprivation of liberty.
Mrs. Lawson also points out that a deposition that was before the district court on summary judgment contains her unequivocal denial that she was offered any alternative employment by the county. But whеn the defendants moved for summary judgment and attached the affidavit stating that she had been offered such employment, her сounsel did not direct the judge to the portion of the deposition that contains her denial. The judge was not obliged to comb the record for evidence contradicting the defendants’ affidavit, when the plaintiff’s counsel failed to bring to the court’s attention that there was any such evidence. But neither was counsel’s failing so egregious that he should be forbidden on remand to contest the defendants’ assertion that the county offered Mrs. Lawson another job. The defendants’ affidavit indicates that the offer was made to her through her lawyer, and it is possible that the lawyer received the offer but for one rеason or another did not convey it to her. It would still be a bona fide offer; the defendants cannot be charged with the fаilings of the plaintiff’s agent. A possible reconciliation of the affidavit and of Mrs. Lawson’s deposition, therefore, is that her lawyer failed to convey the offer to her. If so, still, as we have said, this would not negate the offer, and the issue would be whether the offer was of sufficiently comparable employment to negate the deprivation of liberty. Needless tо say, we express no view on this issue, or on whether, if Mrs. Lawson was deprived of liberty, it was done without due process of law.
Reversed and Remanded.
