MEMORANDUM OPINION
This сase, which involves a procedural due process claim, requires the Court to determine whether a public employee can assert a property interest in his job based upon a
Toussaint
contract.
See Toussaint v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Michigan,
I. The Factual Setting
To a large extent, the facts supporting Plaintiff Herb Merrell’s procedural due process claim are not in dispute. On September 9, 1985, Defendant Bay County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (“Bay Metro”) hired Plаintiff Merrell.
See, e.g.,
Complaint & Answer, ¶ 8. During Merrell’s tenure as a Bay Metro employee, the parties agree that Bay Metro had the necessary state nexus to support a 42 U.S. C. § 1983 action.
1
See generally Adams v. Vandemark,
The parties also agree that Plaintiff Mer-rell, in his capacity as manager of Bay Metro’s transportation-operations department, was charged with the responsibility of supervising Bay Metro’s bus drivers. In December of 1985, after Plaintiff Merrell had served as a Bay Metro employee for four months, he proposed a plan to restructure “the washing, fueling, [and] parking of the buses” at Bay Metro. See, e.g., Plaintiff’s Briеf, Exhibit 4 (page 56 of Defendant Stoner’s deposition). When this plan was implemented on January 7, 1986, the results were less than impressive. Merrell attempted to fire drivers who refused to remain on their buses because they had to use the washroom facilities, the bus line blocked a gate to a Chevrolet plant causing traffic congestion, and the police eventually were callеd to the scene. See, e.g., Defendant Bay Metro’s Answer to Interrogatory 25; see also Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 4 (pages 56-62 of Defendant Stoner’s deposition). Responding to complaints from bus drivers and a member of the Bay Metro supervisory board, see Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 4 (page 60 of Stoner deposition), and based upon his own personal observation of the events that occurred on January 7, 1986, Bay Metro General Manager Michael Stoner conducted a meеting with some of the Bay Metro employees to ascertain precisely what transpired during the January 7 “safety lane incident.” Defendant Stoner then met with Plaintiff Merrell on January 13, 1986 for a protracted discussion of the “safety lane incident” and Plaintiff Merrell’s allegedly dictatorial style of management. At the conclusion of the face-to-face meeting between Plaintiff Merrell and Defendant Stoner on January 13, 1986, Defendant Stoner apparently decided to give Merrell a second chance. See, e.g., Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 13 (Stoner memo summarizing “safety lane incident” and subsequent meeting of January 13, 1986).
After the January 13, 1986 meeting, Plaintiff Merrell continued in his capacity as operations manager without event through January 28, 1986. On January 29, 1986, Plaintiff Merrell left his position to go on sick leavе. Merrell remained on sick leave until February 28, 1986; he called Bay Metro on February 28 to inform his employer that he intended to return to his job on March 3, 1986. Later that day, Defendant Stoner discharged Merrell as of March 3, 1986 and memorialized his decision in a letter to Plaintiff Merrell. See Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 16. Both Merrell and the defendants agree, therefore, that no meeting occurred after the January 13, 1986 tétе-a-téte at which Stoner offered Merrell the opportunity to atone for the “safety lane incident.”
Based on the undisputed lack of a meeting between January 13, 1986 and the discharge in early March of 1986, Plaintiff Merrell has requested summary judgment on liability concerning his procedural due process claim. In Merrell’s view, he received no pretermination hearing despite the сlear mandate of
Cleveland Bd. of Education v. Loudermill,
II. Toussaint as a Basis for a Property Right in Public Employment
Plaintiff Merrell’s property right in his Bay Metro job hinges on the contours of a
Toussaint
implied contract for employment under Michigan law.
See Toussaint,
A. Toussaint in the Public Sector
Plaintiff Merrell undoubtеdly had no property interest in his Bay Metro job if he had no
Toussaint
contract. As a public sector employee, Merrell cannot simply assume the application of a
Toussaint
contract even though Bay Metro offered him unequivocal assurances of job security. In 1984, the Michigan Court of Appeals observed that “[n]o case has yet established that
Toussaint
applies to public employees.”
Engquist v. Livingston County,
The most logical place to examine the scope of
Toussaint,
namely the text of the opinion itself, offers the most logical explanation of Toussaint's rеach. The genesis of the implied contract, as the Michigan Supreme Court explicitly recognized in
Toussaint,
is the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Perry v. Sindermann,
B. Unilateral Alteration of a Toussaint Contract
In attacking Plaintiff Merrell’s claim to a property interest in his job, the defendants argue vociferously that Bay Metro altered Merrell’s terms of employment as of January 13, 1986. This, of course, presumes that a
Toussaint
contract can be unilaterally modified by an employer. Plaintiff Merrell contends that no such right of unilateral modification exists. Again, the Court must consider an unsettled question of state law.
Toussaint
itself is unclear on the question of unilateral modification.
See Toussaint,
The rule of
Bullock,
rather than the broad holding of
Ledl,
has become the governing standard in the Michigan Court of Apрeals. In
Farrell v. Auto Club of Michigan,
III. Procedural Due Process in the Employment Context
The Supreme Court’s 1985 decision in
Loudermill
enumerated three distinct procedural due process rights applicable in the employment context: (1) oral or written notice of the pеnding charges against the employee; (2) an explanation of the employer’s evidence; and (3) an opportunity for the employee “to present his side of the story.”
Loudermill,
In Plaintiff Merrell’s case, he did have a meeting with Defendant Stoner in January of 1986 immediately after the safety lane incident. The decision reached by Stoner as a result of the January meeting, however, was that Merrell should be given а second chance.
See, e.g.,
Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 13 (Stoner memo summarizing “safety lane incident” and subsequent meeting of January 13, 1986). Merrell remained a Bay Metro employee for nearly two more months until he was summarily fired in March of 1986. Defendant Bay Metro provided Merrell with
none
of the
Loudermill
rights; Defendant Stoner simply wrote a discharge letter on February 28, 1986 and sent it by certified mail to Plaintiff Merrell.
See
Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 16 (letter of discharge). This is precisely what the Supreme Court proscribed in
Loudermill.
The propriety of the basis for discharge is immaterial in the procedural due process context. Rather, Plaintiff Merrell was entitled to nothing more and nothing less than a hearing prior to dismissal. Moreover, the January 13 meeting did not obviate the need for a pretermination hearing in March. By the defendants’ own admission, Defendant Stоner explicitly informed Plaintiff Merrell that he was being given a second chance.
See
Plaintiff’s Brief, Exhibit 13. This decision is borne out by Bay Metro’s retention of Merrell until March of 1986. Although Bay Metro was perfectly free to discharge Merrell in March of 1986 (or at any other time) if it had proper cause for dismissal,
see Toussaint,
IV. Qualified Immunity
While summary judgment on liability is appropriate against Bay Metro, Defendant Stoner has asserted a claim of qualified immunity not available to Bay Metro.
See generally Poe v. Haydon,
V. Conclusion
Based on the Court’s determination that Plaintiff Merrell’s Toussaint contract created a property interest in his job, Merrell was entitled to Loudermill process prior to discharge. Bay Metro’s failure to provide such process makes summary judgment on liability against Bay Metro appropriate. Beсause Defendant Stoner can assert a right to qualified immunity, however, summary judgment in favor of Stoner on the procedural due process claim will be granted. The Court shall enter such an order.
Notes
. Neither side questions Defendant Bay Metro’s status as a
Monell
entity subject to liability for personnel-related actions of Defendant Stoner.
See generally Monell
v.
Department of Social Serv.,
. Chief Justice Burger suggested that federal courts should abstain rather than tackle such unresolved state law issues.
See Perry v. Sindermann,
. This is not to say that Bay Metro lacked just cause to firе Plaintiff Merrell in January of 1986. Had Bay Metro discharged the plaintiff in January based on the safety lane incident, the Court would have to focus on whether the safety lane incident provided "just cause” for discharge within the meaning of Toussaint.
The scope of the power to modify a
Toussaint
contract is strictly a question of law, whereas the existence of a sufficient prior warning of modification power in any given case is a fact questiоn for the jury.
See Bullock,
. This conclusion is buttressed by the United States Supreme Court's comment in
Bishop v. Wood,
. Query whether this victory is somewhat hollow if Defendant Bay Metro prevails on Plaintiff Merrell’s breach of Toussaint contract claim by convincing the jury that it had just cause to dismiss Merrell. A panel of the Eighth Circuit debated the extent of available damages for a procedural due process violation in Hogue v. Clinton, 791 F.2d 1318 (8th Cir.1986). The Hogue majority made the following comments:
Proof of a violation of his right to procedural due process will entitle [the plaintiff] to at least nominal damages and attorney fees under the "Lawyer’s Relief Act.” Actual damages such as back pay, however, will be awarded only if [plaintiff] can prove actual injury. Unless [plaintiff] can establish that he suffered actuаl injury due to the failure to hold a pretermination name clearing hearing, we think an award of anything but nominal damages would be a windfall, not compensation.
Id. at 1323 (citations omitted). In dissent, Chief Judge Lay disputed the majority’s conclusion concerning the limits on damages absent actual injury. See id. at 1326-29 (Lay, C.J., dissenting in part). In Chief Judge Lay’s view, “an employee who proves a property deprivatiоn based on having been terminated without a Loudermill pretermination hearing [should] be awarded back pay from the time of discharge until a proper hearing is held.’’ Id. at 1329 (Lay, C.J., dissenting in part). This position clearly was considered and rejected by the Hogue majority. Id. at 1325. The Hogue majority apparently did not find the distinction between liberty and property interests to be material to the issue of available damages.
