Nicholas NEU, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
James P. CORCORAN, Individually and as Superintendent of
Insurance of the State of New York, and James W. Randolph,
Individually and as Deputy Superintendent of Insurance of
the State of New York, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 725, Docket 88-7914.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Jan. 25, 1989.
Decided March 3, 1989.
August L. Fietkau, Asst. Atty. Gen., (Robert Abrams, Atty. Gen., Lawrence S. Kahn, Deputy Sol. Gen., Frederic L. Lieberman, Asst. Atty. Gen., New York City, on the brief), for defendants-appellants.
Andrew J. Goodman, (Rosner & Goodman, New York City, on the brief), for plaintiff-appellee.
Before NEWMAN, PIERCE, and MAHONEY, Circuit Judges.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge:
The principal issue on this appeal is whether qualified immunity shields a state official who defames a private citizen and thereby damages his career opportunities but without depriving the citizen of any legal right or status created by state law. The issue arises on an appeal by James P. Corcoran and James W. Randolph from an order of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Robert W. Sweet, Judge) denying their motion to dismiss a due process claim brought by Nicholas Neu. Neu v. Corcoran,
Background
From February 1985 through March 11, 1987, plaintiff appellee Neu was president of American Motor Club, Inc. ("AMC"), a New York corporation engaged in selling prepaid automobile collision contracts to motorists in New York. The New York State Insurance Department filed charges against AMC in 1985, alleging that the company was engaged in the selling of insurance without a license. The Supreme Court of the State of New York upheld the charges in January 1987 and enjoined AMC from continuing its activities in the state. The Court also imposed monetary sanctions on Neu personally. In October 1987, New York's Appellate Division, First Department, affirmed the ruling that AMC was engaged in the unauthorized sale of insurance but reversed the fines against Neu. People v. American Motor Club, Inc.,
In March 1987, after the state Supreme Court's ruling, Neu began operating similar prepaid collision service companies in California. Neu's complaint in the pending litigation alleges that in June 1987 Corcoran, New York's superintendent of insurance, and Randolph, deputy superintendent, made defamatory remarks about Neu at a convention of insurance commissioners in Chicago. Neu alleges that the New York officials falsely told other commissioners, including California's, that Neu did not honor his contracts, did not repair vehicles, was responsible for driving AMC into bankruptcy, knowingly violated the law, was a swindler, operated a scam in New York, and associated with criminals. Neu further alleges that as a result of those statements, his reputation was ruined and he was forced out of the automobile repair business, which was his sole livelihood. In particular, he alleges that the California Department of Insurance threatened to bring disciplinary action against insurance companies and brokers that engaged in business transactions with Neu's companies and that he was forced to resign from his California companies.
Neu's suit against Corcoran and Randolph was brought in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 (1982). He alleged that the state officials, without due process, deprived him of a liberty interest by defaming him and casting a stigma on him that foreclosed a range of career opportunities and deprived him of the ability to engage in his occupation. He also brought a pendent state law claim for defamation.
Corcoran and Randolph moved, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), to dismiss Neu's claim for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted and on the basis of official immunity under federal and state law. The District Court issued an order denying the motion. Corcoran and Randolph appeal from the order to the extent that it denied their official immunity defense to the federal claim.
Discussion
1. Appellate Jurisdiction. Although the denial of a motion to dismiss is ordinarily not an appealable "final decision" within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291 (1982), the "collateral order" doctrine of Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Neu contends that Corcoran's and Randolph's qualified immunity defense turns on disputed questions of fact and that the case is therefore not ripe for review under the collateral order doctrine. Specifically, he contends that whether appellants' alleged statements actually resulted in foreclosing Neu from engaging in his chosen occupation is a factual question requiring further inquiry in the District Court. We disagree. We think that the validity of appellants' qualified immunity defense to Neu's claims can be decided as a matter of law, accepting Neu's factual allegations as true for purposes of the appeal. We therefore have jurisdiction to review the immunity ruling.
2. Qualified Immunity. Government officials performing discretionary functions are not absolutely immune from liability for civil damages, but they are protected by qualified, or good-faith, immunity. Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Neu alleges that appellants, acting under color of state law, deprived him of a liberty interest without due process by making defamatory statements that led to foreclosure of his ability to engage in his chosen occupation, the auto repair contract business. The District Court concluded that this adequately stated a claim for relief under section 1983. Neu v. Corcoran,
Whether or not the District Court is correct that Neu adequately alleged deprivation of a liberty interest to state a claim for relief under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, a matter we do not decide, we do not agree that Huntley, Baden, or any of our other decisions clearly established in 1987 that appellants' alleged actions constituted a deprivation of a protected liberty interest. Unlike the case at bar, Huntley and Baden both involved defamation of government employees who were allegedly defamed in the course of being dismissed or demoted. To explain why this distinction is significant, we must survey cases in the Supreme Court and in this Circuit explicating the constitutional standards concerning defamation by government officials.
In Wisconsin v. Constantineau,
The Court again considered the issue of what constitutes a constitutional deprivation the following year in Board of Regents v. Roth,
In discussing whether the plaintiff in Roth had been deprived of a liberty interest, the Court noted that liberty, as protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, included a number of rights, including the right " 'to engage in any of the common occupations of life.' " Id. at 572,
The Court revisited the issue of governmental defamation in Paul v. Davis,
The Court in Paul expressed the concern that the Fourteenth Amendment not be interpreted so broadly as to turn every state-law tort committed by a state official into a constitutional violation. Id. at 699,
The Court noted that Constantineau had said that due process rights were triggered " '[w]here a person's good name, reputation, honor, or integrity is at stake because of what the government is doing to him. ' " Id. at 708,
The plaintiff's interest in his reputation, Paul said, "is simply one of a number [of interests] which the State may protect against injury by virtue of its tort law, providing a forum for vindication of those interests by means of damages actions." Id. at 712,
Although Paul is the foundation for all subsequent cases dealing with governmental defamation, its meaning is not unambiguous. See, e.g., 2 R. Rotunda, J. Nowak & J. Young, Treatise on Constitutional Law Sec. 17.4, at 230 (1986) ("One of the most disputed aspects of liberty in recent years is the degree to which the due process clauses protect the interest of an individual in his reputation."). Paul has been widely interpreted as holding that "stigma plus" is required to establish a constitutional deprivation, see, e.g., Moore v. Otero,
On the one hand, Paul suggested that reputation, together with "some more tangible interests such as employment," could constitute a liberty interest.
On the other hand, Paul stressed that defamation alone did not constitute deprivation of a protected liberty interest, absent impairment of a right or status previously recognized by state law. The Court, commenting on Roth 's discussion of reputation as a liberty interest, emphasized the fact that Roth had been discussing defamation by a state official in the course of declining to rehire the plaintiff as a state employee--state employment being a right or status recognized by state law. Id. at 709,
Contrary to the District Court, we do not think our cases have clarified this ambiguity left by Paul nor have they clearly established that defamation occurring other than in the course of dismissal from a government job or termination of some other legal right of status will suffice to constitute a deprivation of a liberty interest.
In Gentile v. Wallen,
Huntley v. Community School Board, supra, involved a public school principal who alleged that he had been defamed in the course of his dismissal. We held that the plaintiff in Huntley was entitled to due process protections because his situation was the one contemplated hypothetically in Roth: " ' "the State, in declining to re-employ the respondent, imposed on him a stigma or other disability that foreclosed his freedom to take advantage of other employment opportunities." ' " Id. at 986 (quoting Paul v. Davis, supra,
Like Huntley, Brandt v. Board of Cooperative Educational Services,
Baden v. Koch, supra, also involved a due process claim by a government employee. In Baden, the plaintiff alleged that he had been defamed in the course of being demoted from a probationary position as New York City's chief medical examiner back to his position as deputy medical examiner. We ruled that the plaintiff "asserted at best a weak liberty interest." Id. at 831. We did not suggest that the plaintiff's liberty interests would have been implicated if he had been defamed outside the context of dismissal or demotion from his government job.
The only two cases of this Court that might arguably support Neu's position are Rudow v. City of New York,
Rudow involved alleged defamation of a private citizen--not a government employee--by a city official. The plaintiff lost his job as a result of the alleged defamation, but he did not allege that he was foreclosed from finding other jobs in his field. We held that the plaintiff "competently alleged damage to his reputation, but has not offered a supplementary injury sufficient to meet the 'reputation-plus' standard of Paul v. Davis." Id. at 330.
In making that ruling, however, we noted that the plaintiff had not suffered a loss of public employment, "nor has he been prevented from practicing his profession." Id. (emphasis added). As Neu contends, the italicized phrase arguably suggests that the plaintiff would have had a sufficient claim if he had alleged that the stigma foreclosed him from practicing his profession, even though the defamation was not connected to any loss of government employment or legal status. But we decline to read this dictum from Rudow that broadly. The italicized phrase is followed by a citation to Baden, which was a public employee case. We do not think the panel in Rudow meant to extend the doctrine elaborated in Baden.
In Quinn, the plaintiff was an official of a not-for-profit corporation created to carry out urban redevelopment in Syracuse. He alleged that the Mayor of Syracuse deprived him of a liberty interest without due process by defaming him and mounting a campaign to have him fired. We ruled that the plaintiff's allegations were sufficient to survive summary judgment, observing that "an individual's liberty can be implicated when a governmentally imposed stigma restricts his ability to seek and obtain employment." Quinn v. Syracuse Model Neighborhood Corp., supra,
This Court's recent opinion in Walentas v. Lipper,
In light of these decisions, we do not think that the law of this Circuit clearly establishes that the governmental defamation alleged by Neu rises to the level of a constitutional violation, rather than simply a state law tort.2 Neu alleges that the New York officials made false statements about him that caused other states to take action against him. But the alleged defamation of Neu did not occur in the course of dismissal from a government job, nor did it come in the course of termination by New York of any other legal right or status enjoyed by Neu.3 It would not be clear to a reasonable government official that the defamation Neu has alleged is a deprivation of a protected liberty interest that triggers due process requirements. We therefore conclude that Corcoran and Randolph are entitled to immunity with respect to Neu's federal claim. Since the federal claim encounters an insurmountable threshold obstacle, it would be inappropriate to exercise pendent jurisdiction over the state law claim.
We therefore reverse the order of the District Court and remand with directions to dismiss the complaint.
Notes
For a critique of the retrenchment in the scope of a protected liberty interest from Wisconsin v. Constantineau to Paul v. Davis, see L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law Sec. 10-11 (1988)
Nor do cases from other circuits support Neu's claim. See, e.g., Goulding v. Feinglass,
One case that may support Neu's position is Little v. City of North Miami,
Neu was not licensed to sell insurance in New York and New York did not revoke such a license. Rather, New York prosecuted him for selling insurance without having such a license. Neu had no legally protected status entitling him to pursue his occupation in disregard of state law
