Michael Dishnow was employed as a guidance counselor by a public high school in Rib Lake, a small town in northern Wisconsin. He brought this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the school district, the superintendent of the school district, and the principal of the high school, claiming that they had fired him in retaliation for his exercising his First Amendment right to free speech. The jury agreed and returned a verdict in his favor of almost $400,000, of which some 60 percent was for humiliation and injury to reputation and most of the rest for lost wages. The judge cut down the award for humiliation and injury to reputation by 90 percent. The defendants have appealed. Dishnow has abandoned his cross-appeal, in which he sought restoration of the damages that the district judge had cut.
Dishnow had presented evidence that he was fired because he had written certain articles, which the school board considered scandalous or disreputable, for a local newspaper, plus a letter to the editors of the newspaper which had been published and which the board also reprobated;, because he had tipped off the local media to a violation by the board of the state’s open-meetings law; and because he had publicly and indeed vocally opposed the removal from the school library of the novel Forever by Judy Blume. The defendants presented evidence that Dishnow had been fired not because of any of these things but because he had committed fourteen acts of insubordination or unprofessional conduct, including referring to the principal at a faculty meeting as the “god damned administration,” using the school’s copying machine in violation of a school rule forbidding its use between 8:05 a.m. and 8:40 a.m. on school days, forgetting an appointment to address a class, and telling the school’s librarian (in the presence of students) to “get fucked.” The jury considered the fourteen-count indictment against Dish-now pretextual. It had every reason to do so. The prohibited use of the copying machine was particularly transparent, as no one else had ever been called on the carpet, let alone fired, for this peculiarly venial sin. The altercation with the librarian was mutu *197 al, and both used the word “fuck”; Dishnow’s one-day suspension (the librarian received merely .a written reprimand) was surely all the punishment a sane administration would have meted out for the offense.
The defendants take a different tack, arguing that the articles and some of Dish-now’s other expressive activities as well were not even prima facie protected by the First Amendment because they did not touch on matters of “public concern.” This part of the defendants’ submission is permeated, indeed vitiated, by a misunderstanding of the application of the First Amendment to public employees. We tried to dispel this misunderstanding in
Eberhardt v. O’Malley,
True it is that speech which could not be prohibited by the state if uttered by a private person may be a lawful basis for discharge or other discipline when uttered by a public employee.
Connick v. Myers, supra,
The defendants, because they do not understand the structure of the right and thought that Dishnow had failed at the threshold, did not ask the judge to find that his public utterances, though they were neither mere chit-chat nor personal grievances, but instead were addressed to matters of public concern, were so inimical to the maintenance of a proper educational atmosphere as to be constitutionally permissible grounds for discipline or discharge. At trial the defendants did elicit a bit of testimony that Dishnow’s utterances had impeded the school’s educational mission. Evidently this testimony did not impress the jury much, but
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in any event the balancing of the interest in freedom of expression against the employer’s interests is to be done by the judge, not the jury.
Waters v. Churchill,
- U.S. -, -,
The defendants’ objections to the jury instructions are frivolous, and we move to the last issue, which is whether the award for humiliation and injury to reputation, now only $23,750, is nevertheless excessive. The defendants failed to cite their strongest precedent for cutting down this award,
Avitia v. Metropolitan Club of Chicago, Inc.,
The present case is sufficiently different to justify the higher but still modest award that the judge made after granting the remittitur. Even if Dishnow’s testimony that he was upset by being fired is discounted utterly, he unlike Avitia was defamed. Avitia too had been fired on the pretext of poor performance, but there was no publicity and he had no trouble finding a substitute job. Dish-now’s tormentors publicly accused him of fourteen acts of misconduct and these charges were disseminated throughout the community. It is true that they might not have been had he not requested a public hearing in an effort to rally public support. But it would be a considerable paradox, and more (as we shall see in a moment), to cut down an award of damages based on the First Amendment because the plaintiff had sought a public airing for his views on matters of public concern.
A job search lasting more than six months produced only one offer to Dishnow and that at a substantial reduction from his extremely modest salary at Rib Lake. He was handicapped in his search by not having a letter of recommendation from his previous employer and by having to explain to pro
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spective employers the circumstances in which he had been dismissed. The part of the jury’s verdict that awarded damages for loss of future earnings compensated Dishnow for his having to take a job at a lower salary but not for the permanent depression in his career prospects from having been fired as a troublemaker. General damages are routine in defamation cases because of the difficulty of quantifying harm to reputation. General damages of $24,000 would not be considered excess in such a case even if the concept of “self-defamation” or “compelled republication” — illustrated by cases in which an employee by explaining why he lost his previous job repeats his previous employer’s defamatory grounds — is rejected, as it is in most jurisdictions for reasons that we discussed in
Rice v. Nova Biomedical Corp.,
The valid insight at the heart of the concept of self-defamation, whether or not the concept itself is accepted, justifies Dish-now’s decision to request a public hearing on the charges against him. He was not gratuitously publicizing the charges in an effort to magnify his damages. He was, if anything, attempting to mitigate his damages or exhaust his administrative remedies, since the public hearing might have resulted in his reinstatement, obviating, in all likelihood, this lawsuit. Mitigation and exhaustion are to be encouraged rather than penalized. This point would be entitled to no weight if Dish-now were arguing that the publicizing of the grounds of his termination prevented him from obtaining equivalent employment, thus depriving him of his constitutional liberty of occupation. E.g.,
Lawson v. Sheriff of Tippecanoe County,
Defamation, as we have just noted, even when committed by a public body, is not a constitutional tort. The interest in reputation that the common law tort of defamation protects has been held not to be a species of liberty or property within the meaning of the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Paul v. Davis,
AFFIRMED.
