Ellen D. McCABE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
C.E. SHARRETT, Jr., Chief of Police, City of Plantation,
Florida, City of Plantation, a municipal
corporation of the State of Florida,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 92-4582.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Feb. 7, 1994.
Arthur M. Wolff, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, for plaintiff-appellant.
Michael R. Piper, Johnson, Anselmo, Murdoch, Burke & George, P.A., Ft. Lauderdale, FL, for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
Before ANDERSON and EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and DYER, Senior Circuit Judge.
ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:
Ellen McCabe brought this suit against the City of Plantation, Florida (the "City") and Plantation's police chief, C.E. Sharrett, Jr., under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. She claims that defendants have violated her constitutional right to freedom of association by transferring her from her job as secretary to the police chief to a less desirable job on account of her marriage to a Plantation police officer, Joel McCabe.1 The district court granted defendants' motion for final summary judgment and denied McCabe's motion for partial summary judgment, and McCabe now appeals. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In March 1982, plaintiff-appellant Ellen McCabe (then Ellen Belmont) assumed the position of secretary to the City of Plantation chief of police. The police chief at that time was Morris Meek. In July 1985, appellant married Joel McCabe, a Plantation police officer who is currently a sergeant assigned to the Field Operations Bureau. In July 1990, Police Chief Meek retired and appellee Sharrett was appointed as his replacement. Ellen McCabe remained as sеcretary to Police Chief Sharrett until August 7, 1990, when she was transferred to a Clerk Typist position in the Plantation Parks and Recreation Department. McCabe claims that her job transfer constitutes a demotion because her salary is frozen, she is ineligible for a raise for approximately four and one-half years, and her new position involves less responsibility and more menial tasks than her old job. While defendants-appellees deny that McCabe was demoted, they do concede on appeal that for purposes of constitutional analysis she has suffered adverse employment action. Appellees also do not deny McCabe's assertion that she was transferred because she is married to Joel McCabe. Appellee Sharrett asserts that he transferred McCabe because he feared that her marriage would undermine her loyalty to him and her ability to maintain the confidentiality of his office. See R1-23-4 (Affidavit of Plantation Police Chief C.E. Sharrett, Jr.).
On September 19, 1990, Ellen McCabe sued Chief Sharrett and the City of Plantation under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, claiming that they had violated her right to freedom of association by transferring her because of her marriage to Joel McCabe. McCabe moved for partial summary judgment and defendants moved fоr final summary judgment; both motions were referred to a magistrate judge. The magistrate judge recommended that the district court grant McCabe's motion for partial summary judgment and deny defendants' motion for final summary judgment. See R1-41 (Report of Magistrate Judge Linnea Johnson). The district court, while adopting part of the magistrate judge's report, disagreed with the magistrate judge's recommendation, and granted final summary judgment to Chief Sharrett and the City. See R1-60 (Opinion of District Judge Shelby Highsmith). McCabe now appeals.
II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
A movant is entitled to summary judgment only "if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). "The district court should resolve all reasonable doubts about the facts in favor of the non-movant, and draw all justifiable inferences in his [or her] favor." U.S. v. Four Parcels of Real Property,
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review grants of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standard the district court used. Browning v. Peyton,
IV. DISCUSSION
A. McCabe's Claim
McCabe asserts that, by transferring her to thе Parks and Recreation Clerk Typist position because of her marriage to Joel McCabe, appellees have infringed her constitutional right to freedom of association. In essence, she argues that appellees have placed an unconstitutional condition on her retaining her position as secretary to the police chief; her claim is that appellees would allow her to keep her job as secretary to Chief Sharrett only on the condition that she relinquish her freedom of association right to be married to Joel McCabe, and that this condition is unjustifiable.B. The District Court's Decision
The district court concluded that the right McCabe asserts, the right to be married, is a constitutionally protected freedom of association right. See R1-60-7 (District Court Opinion). The district court also determined that McCabe's transfer constituted an adverse employment action and that she would not have been transferred were she not married to Joel McCabe. Id. The district court concluded, however, that McCabe's transfer was justified and that it therefore did not infringe her right to be married. To determine whether McCabe's transfer was justified, the district court employed the balancing test articulated in Pickering v. Board of Education,
C. Parties' Arguments on Appeal
McCabe contends that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to appellees instead of to her. Of course, she does not contest the district court's conclusion that her right to be married is constitutionally protected nor its determination that appellees demoted her solely because of her marriage to Joel McCabe. However, she argues that the district court should not have applied the Pickering analysis to determine whether her transfer was permissible. She contends that once the district court found that the right to be married was constitutionally protected and that she would not have been transferred were she not married to Joel McCabe, she was entitled to prevail. See Appellant's Brief at 10-17. In other words, she appears to believe that the district court should not have considered whether some governmental interest justified her transfer. Furthermore, even if the district court properly applied the Pickering test, she argues, it should have concluded that the balance weighs in her favor because there were no reasonable grounds to believe that her marriage to Joel McCabe had ever interfered with or would interfere with the effective functioning of Chief Sharrett's office. Id. at 17-24.
Unlike McCabe, appellees believe that the district court properly ruled in their favor. They do not take issue with the district court's conclusion that McCabe's right to be married is a constitutionally protected freedom of association right. See, e.g., Appellees' Brief at 8. Nor do they contest either the district court's determination that McCabe suffered adverse employment action or the district court's finding that McCabe would not have been transferred were she not married to Joel McCabe. See id. at 15. Appellees do agree with McCabe that the district court should not have applied the Pickering analysis to McCabe's claim. They argue that instead of the Pickering test, the district court should have employed the analysis set forth in Elrod v. Burns,
D. Legal Standards Governing Whether Adverse Employment Action Infringes Public Employee's Freedom of Association Right To Be Married
To determine whether the district court properly granted summary judgment to appellees and denied summary judgment to McCabe, we must first consider the legal standards applicable to McCabe's claim, for they determine both which facts are material, see Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
McCabe's claim is that appellees have impermissibly burdened her freedom of association right to be married to Joel McCabe by conditioning her secretary job on her not exercising that right. Obviously the government burdens a constitutional right when it imposes a direct penalty such as a criminal fine on its exercise. However, the government may impose a similar burden if it conditions the receipt of a government benefit on the relinquishment of the constitutional right. Imposing such a condition is viewed as burdening the right because it deters exercising the right to the same extent as a direct penalty, see Speiser v. Randall,
In order for a public employee to establish that an employer conditioned his or her job in a way that burdened impermissibly a constitutional right, the employee must first demonstrate that the asserted right is protected by the Constitution and that he or she suffered "adverse employment action" for exercising the right. See, e.g., Goffer v. Marbury,
1. Demonstrating Constitutional Protection for Asserted Right
For a рublic employee to establish that an adverse employment action has infringed a constitutional right, the employee must first demonstrate that the asserted right is protected by the Constitution. In this case, the right that McCabe alleges has been impermissibly burdened is her right to association with her husband, Joel McCabe.
According to Supreme Court precedent, the United States Constitution accords special protection to two different forms of association, "intimate association" and "expressive association." See Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
Appellees do not contest the district court's conclusion that McCabe's asserted right, the right to be married, is a freedom of association right entitled to special constitutional protection. See, e.g., Appellees' Brief at 8. To argue otherwise would be unreasonаble, since Roberts explicitly states that the right to be married falls within the scope of the constitutional right of intimate association. See Roberts at 619,
Of course, a single association may possess both intimate and expressive features and therefore fall within the scope of not only the right of intimate association but also the right to expressive association. See Roberts at 618,
2. Demonstrating Adverse Employment Action
For a public employee to establish that an employment action has infringed a constitutional right the employee also must demonstrate that he or she has suffеred some sort of adverse employment action for exercising the right. "Adverse employment action" is broadly defined and as a matter of law includes not only discharges, but also demotions, refusals to hire, refusals to promote, and reprimands. See Goffer,
McCabe has produced evidence that the job to which she has been transferred, a Clerk Typist II position, is two pay grades lower than her secretary position. See R1-51-30, 71 (Deposition of Ellen McCabe). She has also produced evidence that, although her salary has not decreased, her eligibility for salary increases is less in her new position than in her former job, see id. at 31, 33-34, 60, and that her new position involves less responsibility and more menial tasks than her old job, see R1-9-6 (Affidavit of Ellen McCabe). Appellees have produced no evidence to contradict these facts. Moreover, at oral argument appellees did not contest the district court's determination that McCabe's transfer constituted an "adverse employment action." The evidence also demonstrates, and appellees do not contest, that McCabe was demoted solely because she exercised her right to be married to Joel McCabe. See R1-23-4 (Affidavit of Plantation Police Chief C.E. Sharrett, Jr.) (concession by Chief Sharrett that he transferred McCabe solely because of her marriage); Appellees' Brief at 15.
3. Determining Whether Adverse Employment Action Infringes Public Employee's Constitutional Right To Be Married
Since McCabe has established that her asserted right is a fundamental constitutional right and that she suffered adverse employment action solely because she exercised that right, the question for us to determine is whether the adverse employment action was taken in such a way as to infringe her asserted right. The Supreme Court has never specifically addressed the issue of what legal analysis governs the question of whether an adverse employment action infringes a public employee's fundamental right to be married. Thus, while there are several distinct analytical schemes that courts have applied in situations analogous to this one, it is not entirely clear which analysis should apply to this case. Specifically, we believe that there exist three potential analyses: the Pickering analysis, the Elrod- Branti analysis, and general strict scrutiny. As it turns out, we need not decide which of these analyses applies because we conclude that defendants are entitled to prevail regardless of which scheme we employ. However, to help explain why appellees are entitled to prevail under any of the possible analyses, we describe below each of the three schemes.
a. Pickering Analysis
In cases where a public employee has suffered adverse employment action in retaliation for exercising the right to free speech, the Supreme Court has evaluated the constitutionality of the action by applying a balancing test first enunciated in Pickering v. Board of Education,
b. Elrod-Branti Analysis
The Supreme Court has also devised a special analytical scheme for cases where a public employee has suffered adverse employment action solely because of affiliation with a certain political party. In Elrod v. Burns,
Generally speaking, when a government action or regulation burdens fundamental constitutional rights, the action or regulation is subjected to strict scrutiny and is therefore deemed to infringe those rights unless shown to be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest. See, e.g., Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce,
As the public employee expression and political patronage cases demonstrate, the Court has sometimes devised special analyses for cases involving burdens on public employees' constitutional rights. Nonetheless, in some situations courts have applied the generally applicable strict scrutiny test, rather than one of the special public employee analyses, to employee claims that public employer actions have infringed their fundamental constitutional rights. For example, in Clark v. Library of Congress,
As did the Clark court in analyzing a burden on the expressive association right, some courts have suggested that the generally applicable strict scrutiny test should be applied in determining justification for burdens on public employees' intimate association rights. See, e.g., Dike v. School Bd.,
Adverse Employment Action Infringes Public
Employee's Intimate Association Right To
Be Married
As mentioned above, the Supreme Court has never specifically explained what legal analysis governs the issue of whether an adverse employment action infringes a public employee's right to be married; thus, it is not entirely clear which analysis--general strict scrutiny, Pickering, or Elrod- Branti--governs this case. We might follow those courts that have applied general strict scrutiny analysis to cases involving public employees' political affiliation and intimate association rights. On the other hand, to the extent it seems appropriate to apply strict scrutiny to McCabe's intimate association claim, it might also seem fitting to look to Elrod and Branti, themselves strict scrutiny cases, for guidance in applying strict scrutiny to a case involving a public employee's exercise of association rights. Elrod and Branti 's concern that employees exercising their constitutional rights not hinder the "effective performance of the public office involved," see Branti,
Even if we rule out general strict scrutiny and assume that either the Pickering or the Elrod- Branti analysis applies, it is not clear which analysis is better suited to a situation involving intimate association. Appellees strongly urge that we apply the Elrod- Branti analysis to this case. They point out that Elrod and Branti explicitly address the right to freedom of association, whereas the Pickering analysis was developed in the free speech context. They concede that Elrod and Branti address the expressive association right rather than the intimate association right, but argue that Elrod and Branti stand for a general principle applicable regardless of the nature of the association right at stake: "that where a public employee occupies a position of confidence to a policymaker and concerns over divided loyalties exist, the policymaker may remove the employee from that position without violating the employee's [constitutional] rights." Appellees' Brief at 8-11.
We agree with appellees that there is some justification for applying the Elrod- Branti rather than the Pickering analysis in this case. Elrod and Branti focus on a public employee's right to harbor certain political beliefs and on how exercising that right affects the performance of governmental functions by affecting employee loyalty. See Terry v. Cook,
In this case, appellees do not argue that McCabe has engaged in overt expressive conduct that has disrupted the workplace; rather, their concern is that her marital status will inhibit the proper functioning of the chief's office by compromising her loyalty to the police chief. To the extent that the status of being married is more closely analogous to belief than to conduct, the Elrod- Branti analysis and its focus on belief may be better tailored to this case than the Pickering analysis. Indeed, the facts of this case are strikingly similar to those of several cases where courts have applied the Elrod- Branti analysis. For example, in Soderstrum v. Town of Grand Isle,
While applying the Elrod- Branti analysis may seem appropriate, there is also some justification for applying the Pickering balance in this case. First of all, the rationale of Pickering and its progeny--that the state as employer has a special interest in regulating its employees' behavior in order to avoid the disruption of public functions--would seem to apply when employees exercise intimate association rights as well as when they exercise speech rights. A confidential secretary's marriage to the boss's subordinate could potentially disrupt workplace functioning as much as an instance of expressive conduct could. Second, our research has disclosed no case extending the Elrod- Branti analysis outside the narrow context of political patronage.10 In contrast, courts have often extended the Pickering analysis outside the speech context from which it arose. Of course, we routinely apply the Pickering analysis in cases where public employees claim to have suffered adverse employment action in retaliation for exercising the right to free speech. See, e.g., Goffer v. Marbury,
E. Appropriateness of Granting Summary Judgment to Appellees
As mentioned above, appellees do not contest the district court's conclusion that McCabe's right to be married is a constitutionally protected freedom of association right. Nor do they contest on appeal either the district court's determination that McCabe has suffered adverse employment action or its finding that McCabe would not have been transferred were she not married to Joel McCabe. Therefore, the only issue we need address is whether the district court properly found that McCabe's transfer, although burdening her constitutionаl right to be married, was nonetheless justified.
Although there are good reasons to apply either the Pickering or the Elrod- Branti analysis to this case, we need not decide which of the three schemes described above applies, because appellees' transferring McCabe was justified under any of the legal standards discussed here.14 Therefore, regardless of which justification standard applies, the district court properly granted summary judgment to appellees and denied summary judgment to McCabe.
Assuming arguendo that the district court properly determined the Pickering analysis to apply, we agree with the district court that the Pickering balance tips in favor of appellees.15 As mentioned above, that balance requires determining whether the public employee's interest in exercising a constitutional right outweighs the employer's interest in efficiency and the effective functioning of the office. Pickering,
Second, there is no dispute that McCabe's duties required that she have access to some confidential materials. Chief Sharrett swore that fulfillment of many of his duties often requires making communications that are not to be discussed outside his office. See id. at 2-3. He also attested that, in order for him to perform his duties efficiently and effectively, his secretary must have access to much of the same confidential information to which he has access, and that his secretary prepares his correspondence, much of which is confidential and not to be discussed outside his office. Id. at 3. McCabe has produced no evidence to contradict these assertions. In fact, the only evidence she has produced for the purpose of rebutting appellees' contention that her position involves access to confidential information, a copy of the City of Plantation's official job description for the position of secretary, actually tends to demonstrate that her position does involve keeping confidences, for it states that a secretary's work "often involves some degree of confidentiality." R1-15, Exhibit (Plantation Job Description for Position of Secretary).
Other evidence McCabe has produced tends to confirm that her job duties required her to have access to confidential information. She testified at her deposition that she performed Chief Sharrett's typing and filing and that she answered both his public and his private phone lines. See R1-51-11-12 (Deposition of Ellen McCabe). Since Chief Sharrett supervised such confidential matters as employee discipline and discharges, it seems clear that in the course of performing her secretarial duties McCabe would come into contact with sensitive information. In fact, McCabe аdmitted that she handled some materials regarding sensitive Internal Affairs investigations into officer misconduct; at her deposition she testified that one of her duties was typing the opinions of Internal Affairs investigators regarding the discipline they recommended for particular officers. Id. at 27. Her contact with Internal Affairs opinions occurred while the investigations were still ongoing, for after receiving the opinions typed by McCabe, the chief had the ultimate duty to decide what form of disciplinary action would be taken. Id. at 28. McCabe also testified that in the course of answering the chief's telephone, she handled public complaints regarding officers, which were sometimes referred to Internal Affairs. Id. at 35-37.
Finally, there is no dispute that the police chief's office cannot function effectively unless the police chief's secretary is loyal to him and able to maintain the confidentiality of the office. Chief Sharrett swore that "[i]t is absolutely essential to the efficient and effective performance and functioning of the office of the Chief of Police that [his] Executive Secretary maintain the absolute confidence of the office and that [he] have complete faith, trust and confidence in [his] Executive Secretary." R1-23-2-4 (Affidavit of Plаntation Police Chief C.E. Sharrett, Jr.). McCabe produced no evidence that controverted this assertion. Moreover, that McCabe was privy to information regarding Internal Affairs investigations and regarding the discharge of officers makes clear that any inability on her part to keep matters confidential would seriously compromise the effective functioning of the chief's office. For example, clearly it could irreparably undermine a misconduct investigation if information regarding the investigation were leaked to the department's rank and file through McCabe and her husband. Thus, it is clear that loyalty and the ability to keep confidences are required for proper performance of McCabe's former job. Even without the substantial evidence that McCabe's former position requires loyalty and confidentiality, it is a matter of common experience that loyalty and the ability to keep confidences are essential qualities in a personal secretary to a policymaker such as a police chief. See Soderstrum,
The only remaining question is whether McCabe's exercise of her intimate association right to be married to Joel McCabe threatened her loyalty to Chief Sharrett and her ability to maintain the confidentiality of the office so much that appellees' interest in the effective functioning of the office outweighs McCabe's interest in exercising her intimate association right. No one disputes that Chief Sharrett was subjectively concerned that McCabe's marriage to Joel McCabe would affect her loyalty to him and undermine her ability to keep confidences. Chief Sharrett swore in his affidavit that
I was personally and professionally concerned and uncomfortable having the wife of an officer under my command functioning as my confidential Executive Secretary. The position of Executive Secretary requires strict trust and confidence, sometimes even possibly to the detriment or adverse interest of Mrs. McCabe's husband, Sgt. Joel McCabe. I felt that such а situation was potentially disruptive of the efficient and effective functioning and performance of the office of the Chief of Police. I did not want to wait until a disruption occurred before taking action.
R1-23-4 (Affidavit of Plantation Police Chief C.E. Sharrett, Jr.). McCabe agrees that Chief Sharrett transferred her because of his personal concern that her marriage might breach the confidentiality of his office. See R1-10 Exhibit A at 5 (Affidavit of Ellen McCabe).
While it is clear that an employer's purely subjective fear of disruption is insufficient to outweigh an employee's exercise of her rights, see Williams,
In fact, because of the particular nature of McCabe's job and Chief Sharrett's job, we believe that it was not only reasonable but necessary for Chief Sharrett to transfer McCabe in order to preserve the confidentiality of his office. Thus, appellees' interest weighs particularly heavily in the Pickering balance.17 Evidence produced by both appellees and McCabe demonstrates that if the chief's secretary did breach the confidentiality of the chief's office she would most likely seriously damage the functioning of that office. For example, as we suggested above, it might seriously undermine an Internal Affairs misconduct investigation if information regarding the investigation were leaked outside the police chief's office.18 A breach of confidentiality may not have occurred before, and the likelihood of such a breach occurring may not have been overwhelming. However, because any breach of confidentiality would likely cause such serious damage to office functioning, it was objectively necessary for Chief Sharrett to take whatever steps he could to ensure that no such breach ever occurred. As discussed above, common experience suggests that a confidential secretary's marriage to a subordinate of her police chief would compromise her loyalty to the chief and her ability to keep confidences. Because McCabe was married to one of Chief Sharrett's subordinates, Joel McCabe, Chief Sharrett had no alternative for ensuring the confidentiality of his office besides transferring McCabe. Because Chief Sharrett's transferring McCabe was necessary to serve his interest in maintaining the effective functioning of his office, we readily conclude that appellees' interests are heavy enough in this situation to outweigh McCabe's interest in her marital association even without any evidence of actual disruption. See Waters,
Even if aрpellees correctly assert that the Elrod- Branti analysis rather than the Pickering analysis should apply, the district court properly granted appellees summary judgment. The dispositive question under the Elrod- Branti analysis is whether the employer can demonstrate that forgoing associational rights "is an appropriate requirement for the effective performance of the public office involved," Branti,
Even if the proper legal standard for determining whether McCabe's transfer was justified is general strict scrutiny analysis, appellees are still entitled to prevail. Strict scrutiny analysis requires the government to demonstrate that its challenged action was necessary to serve a compelling state interest. The government's interest in the efficient and effective performance of government functions is compelling. Elrod,
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment to appellees and denial of summary judgment to McCabe.
AFFIRMED.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result.
Notes
To avoid confusion, we will refer to Ellen McCabe as "McCabe" and to Joel McCabe as "Joel McCabe."
In Bonner v. City of Prichard,
Before applying the balancing test, a court must make the threshold determinations (1) that the public employee has suffered adverse employment action and (2) that the public employee's speech can be "fairly characterized as constituting speech on a matter of public concern." Connick v. Myers,
The Court has described the state interest element of the test as focusing on "the effective functioning of the public employer's enterprise." Rankin,
In cases where the employer denies taking the adverse employment action solely because of the public employee's exercise of speech rights, courts perform the causation analysis first articulated in Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle,
In Rutan v. Republican Party of Illinois,
See Craig D. Singer, Comment, Conduct and Belief: Public Employees' First Amendment Rights to Free Expression and Political Affiliation, 59 U.Chi.L.Rev. 897, 897-904 (1992) (describing ad hoc Pickering balance and categorical Elrod-Branti analysis); James Kimmell, Jr., Note, Politics and the Non-Civil Service Public Employee: A Categorical Approach to First Amendment Protection, 85 Colum.L.Rev. 558, 559-63 (1985) (explaining difference between ad hoc and categorical approaches)
Of course, the plaintiff must make threshold showings (1) that the behavior at issue consists of constitutionally protected political affiliation or belief and (2) that he or she actually suffered adverse employment action before a court will consider the issue of justification. Furthermore, in cases where the employer denies taking the adverse employment action solely because the employee exercised the expressive association right of political affiliation, we also employ the Mt. Healthy causation analysis. In other words, we require the plaintiff to demonstrate that political affiliation was a substantial or motivating factor for the challenged action in order to recover, and we allow the employer to prevail even if the plaintiff meets the substantial factor burden and even if the challenged action would be otherwise impermissible if the employer can show that the action would have been taken even absent the employee's protected conduct. See, e.g., Tanner v. McCall,
Of course, before the burden shifts to the public employer to demonstrate that the challenged action is justified under strict scrutiny, the plaintiff must make threshold showings (1) that the activity at issue is protected as a fundamental constitutional right and (2) that he or she suffered adverse employment action for exercising the right. We need not address whether, in cases where the employer disputes taking the challenged action solely because of the protected conduct, the Mt. Healthy analysis should be applied before applying strict scrutiny, since as discussed appellees concede that they transferred McCabe solely because of her marriage to Joel McCabe
The new sheriff in Soderbeck did fire plaintiff Soderbeck because of her relationship with her husband, who was the new sheriff's political enemy. See Soderbeck,
We have sometimes implied that the Pickering analysis applies generally to the public employment context regardless of the type of right asserted. See, e.g., Terry,
This former Fifth Circuit case, although decided after the close of business on September 30, 1981, is a Unit B case and is binding precedent under Stein v. Reynolds Securities, Inc.,
We addressed the plaintiff's freedom of association claim in Wilson I and Wilson II without the benefit of the later-decided Roberts case. Sеe Roberts,
All three of these schemes provide the government employer some opportunity to demonstrate that governmental interests justified the challenged employment action. As mentioned above, McCabe appears to believe that no consideration should be given to governmental interests in determining the propriety of her transfer. In other words, she contends that once the district court found that her right to be married was constitutionally protected and that she was transferred solely because of her marriage, she was entitled to prevail. See Appellant's Brief at 10-17. We reject this suggestion. It is true that a Sixth Circuit case, Adkins v. Board of Education,
The Pickering balance is a question of law, so the district court correctly concluded that it could grant summary judgment based on the outcome of the balance. See Goffer,
Rankin also identified as relevant "the manner, time, and place of the employee's expression" and "the context in which the dispute arose." Rankin,
This is true even though appellees have produced no evidence that McCabe's marriage has actually disrupted the chief's office. Evidence produced by both parties demonstrates that McCabe actually breached no confidences during the brief period she served as Chief Sharrett's secretary. McCabе testified at her deposition that when Chief Sharrett notified her of her transfer, she asked him whether she had ever violated the confidentiality of his office, and he responded "No, you have not." R1-51-51 (Deposition of Ellen McCabe). In his affidavit Chief Sharrett essentially admitted that McCabe had not actually breached any confidences when he stated that he transferred her because "I did not want to wait until a disruption occurred before taking action." R1-23-4 (Affidavit of Plantation Police Chief C.E. Sharrett, Jr.)
Because a police department's mission, unlike that of other public agencies, requires dealing with threats to public safety, the maintenance of high morale, internal discipline, and confidentiality tends to be uniquely important to the effective functioning of a police department. See McMullen v. Carson,
Because maintaining high morale, discipline, and confidentiality is so important to proper police department functioning, and because these qualities may be compromised relatively easily by employees' exercising their rights, we have held that police departments' interest in regulating their employees' conduct tends to be particularly heavy. See Waters v. Chaffin,
