On 9 April 2002, plaintiff Trooper Reginald Newberne filed suit against the named institutional and individual defendants, alleging that he was wrongfully terminated from his employment as a law enforcement officer with the State Highway Patrol in violation of the North Carolina Whistleblower Act, N.C.G.S. § 126-84 to -88. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, which the trial court allowed in an order filed 29 January 2003. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed,
Newberne v. Crime Control,
A motion to dismiss under N.C. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) "is the usual and proper method of testing the legal sufficiency of the complaint."
Sutton v. Duke,
*204
(quoting
Sutton,
In applying this standard of review, we treat the allegations in plaintiff's complaint as true: From November 1989 until his termination on 10 April 2001, the North Carolina Department of Crime Control and Public Safety (the Department) employed plaintiff as a sworn law enforcement officer in the State Highway Patrol (SHP). On 14 May 2000 at approximately 12:30 a.m., plaintiff arrived at a crime scene shortly after the arrest of Owen Jackson Nichols on suspicion of driving while impaired. Plaintiff did not directly participate in or witness Nichols's apprehension or arrest, which was effectuated by SHP Troopers B.O. Johnson, P.A. Collins, and J.R. Edwards.
While speaking with another trooper at the scene, plaintiff was approached by Trooper P.A. Collins. Plaintiff noticed that Trooper Collins was rubbing his hand and asked whether he had been injured. Trooper Collins replied that he had jammed his hand after hitting Owen Nichols and that Trooper Edwards had "pulled it back in place." When plaintiff advised Trooper Collins to seek medical treatment, Trooper Collins responded that he "wouldn't know what to tell the sergeant" and added that he could tell the sergeant he broke his hand during a fall. After stating once again that Trooper Collins should seek medical attention, plaintiff departed the crime scene.
Later that day, Andy Nichols, the father of Owen Nichols, filed a complaint with the Internal Affairs Section of the SHP, alleging that Troopers Johnson, Collins, and Edwards had used excessive force in the apprehension and arrest of his son. Nearly a month later, on 13 June 2000, plaintiff's supervisor, First Sergeant A.C. Combs, asked plaintiff if he had been involved in the apprehension and arrest of Owen Nichols or if he had witnessed anyone using force on Owen Nichols. Plaintiff responded that he arrived on the scene only after Nichols had been placed under arrest and that he did not witness anyone using force on Nichols. Plaintiff also reported that Trooper Collins had apparently injured his hand during the incident. At the conclusion of this conversation, First Sergeant Combs instructed plaintiff to "write what he saw" in a statement and to submit that statement before the end of plaintiff's shift.
Plaintiff became apprehensive about preparing the statement, fearing that "breaking the code of silence" and disclosing facts concerning a potential abuse of authority by another officer might subject him to retaliation by First Sergeant Combs and others within the Department and the SHP. Plaintiff therefore complied with First Sergeant Combs's request by preparing a statement, incorporated by reference in plaintiff's complaint, limited to what he literally "saw" on the night in question. Plaintiff wrote in his statement that Trooper Collins had apparently injured his hand, but did not include Trooper Collins's oral comments concerning how he had incurred that injury.
Despite having strictly followed First Sergeant Combs's instructions to write what he "saw," plaintiff remained troubled about whether he should also have included Trooper Collins's admission that he had struck Owen Nichols, notwithstanding plaintiff's fear of retaliation and reprisal. Accordingly, plaintiff sought the counsel of another trooper with the SHP, Sergeant Montgomery, in whom plaintiff confided both his fear of retaliation and his desire to "do the right thing." Shortly after soliciting and receiving Sergeant Montgomery's advice, plaintiff approached First Sergeant Combs on 20 June *205 2000 and told him there were "things he didn't know" about the events of 14 May 2000. First Sergeant Combs directed plaintiff to prepare an amended statement including everything he knew about the incident, and plaintiff prepared and submitted his amended statement later that day. In the amended report, which is incorporated by reference in plaintiff's complaint, plaintiff disclosed the details of his conversation with Trooper Collins at the crime scene, including Trooper Collins's alleged statements, "I hit the subject and jammed my hand" and "It just happened, I should know better."
On 15 September 2000, defendant Captain C.E. Moody, SHP Director of Internal Affairs, filed a personnel complaint against plaintiff based on information provided to him by First Sergeant Combs. The personnel complaint alleged that plaintiff had engaged in a "Serious Personal Conduct Violation" of the SHP Policy Manual's Directive No. H.1 Section VI, the so-called "Truthfulness Directive." On 10 April 2001, plaintiff was terminated from his employment with the Department and the SHP, ostensibly based on his violation of the Truthfulness Directive. Although at least some of the troopers directly involved in Owen Nichols's detention and arrest were disciplined for misconduct following an investigation into the 14 May 2000 incident, plaintiff was the only trooper whose employment was terminated.
Based on the factual allegations summarized above, plaintiff asserted a claim for damages under the North Carolina Whistleblower Act, N.C.G.S. § 126-84 to -88. In stating his claim for relief, plaintiff expressly contended that defendants "discharged [p]laintiff because [p]laintiff reported to his superiors, both verbally and in writing, information in the Amended Statement that supports a contention that the Troopers violated State or federal law, rule or regulation and exercised gross abuse of authority in the apprehension and arrest of Owen Nichols." Plaintiff further asserted that defendants "discriminated against [p]laintiff for submitting the Amended Statement" in that plaintiff's dismissal was "grossly inequitable in comparison with the treatment and/or sanctions received by [the] other Troopers who were disciplined for the same and/or more severe misconduct but were not terminated." Plaintiff also contended that his termination "was pretextual in the perceived need to protect the Department and Division from a potential civil law suit by Owen Nichols for the use of excessive force."
I.
In 1989, the General Assembly amended Chapter 126 of the North Carolina General Statutes, the State Personnel Act (SPA), by enacting Senate Bill 125, entitled "An Act to Encourage Reporting of Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in State Government and Endangerment to the Public Health and Safety, and to Protect Informant State Employees from Retaliation," and popularly known as the "Whistleblower Act."
Caudill v. Dellinger,
[i]t is the policy of this State that State employees shall be encouraged to report verbally or in writing to their supervisor, department head, or other appropriate authority, evidence of activity by a State agency or State employee constituting:
(1) A violation of State or federal law, rule or regulation;
(2) Fraud;
(3) Misappropriation of State resources;
(4) Substantial and specific danger to the public health and safety; or
(5) Gross mismanagement, a gross waste of monies, or gross abuse of authority.
N.C.G.S. § 126-84(a) (2003). The Whistleblower Act further provides, in pertinent part, that
[n]o head of any State department, agency or institution or other State employee exercising supervisory authority shall discharge, threaten or otherwise discriminate against a State employee regarding the State employee's compensation, terms, conditions, location, or privileges of employment because the State employee, or a *206 person acting on behalf of the employee, reports or is about to report, verbally or in writing, any activity described in G.S. 126-84, unless the State employee knows or has reason to believe that the report is inaccurate.
N.C.G.S. § 126-85(a) (2003).
This Court has not previously had occasion to review claims brought under the Whistleblower Act. Based on our careful reading of the statute, however, we hold that the Act requires plaintiffs to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the following three essential elements: (1) that the plaintiff engaged in a protected activity, (2) that the defendant took adverse action against the plaintiff in his or her employment, and (3) that there is a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse action taken against the plaintiff. This parsing of the statute is consistent with numerous state and federal court decisions identifying the essential elements of comparable whistleblower provisions in various state and federal statutes.
See, e.g., Moon v. Transp. Drivers, Inc.,
We note that in the first North Carolina appellate decision to address the Whistleblower Act, the Court of Appeals articulated the third element differently, stating that a plaintiff must show that "`the protected conduct was a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse action.'"
Kennedy v. Guilford Technical Cmty. Coll.,
Although the Court of Appeals was correct to hold that courts should generally apply a burden-shifting approach when analyzing the causation element of a whistleblower claim, the analysis set forth in Kennedy conflates two distinct proof schemes which apply under different factual circumstances. Moreover, for the reasons detailed below, the Kennedy formulation of the causation element applies only when the plaintiff presents direct evidence of the defendant's retaliatory animus. We therefore decline to follow Kennedy's articulation of the elements of a whistleblower claim. We also take this opportunity to clarify the proof schemes that may apply to claims under the Whistleblower Act and to offer guidance to our trial courts in analyzing the causation element.
There are at least three distinct ways for a plaintiff to establish a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse employment action under the Whistleblower Act. First, a plaintiff may rely on the employer's "admi[ssion] that it took adverse action against [the plaintiff] [solely] because of the [plaintiff's] protected activity." Delikat,
Retaliation and Whistleblower Claims,
§ 14:6, at 838. Such "smoking gun" evidence is rare,
Thomas v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
Second, a plaintiff may seek to establish by circumstantial evidence that the adverse employment action was retaliatory and that the employer's proffered explanation for the action was pretextual.
See
Delikat,
Retaliation and Whistleblower Claims,
§§ 14:6, 14:6.2, at 838-55. Cases in this category are commonly referred to as "pretext" cases.
Under the
McDonnell Douglas/Burdine
proof scheme, once a plaintiff establishes a prima facie case of unlawful retaliation, the burden shifts to the defendant to articulate a lawful reason for the employment action at issue.
See Burdine,
Third, when "the employer claims to have had a good reason for taking the adverse action but the employee has direct evidence of a retaliatory motive," a plaintiff may seek to prove that, even if a legitimate basis for discipline existed, unlawful retaliation was nonetheless a substantial causative factor for the adverse action taken. Delikat,
Retaliation and Whistleblower Claims,
§§ 14:6, 14:6.1, at 838-39. Cases in this category are commonly referred to as "`mixed motive'" cases.
Under the
Mt. Healthy/Price Waterhouse
analysis, once a plaintiff has carried his or her burden to show that protected conduct was a "`substantial'" or "`motivating'" factor for the adverse employment action, the defendant must prove "by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have reached the same decision as to [the employment action at issue] even in the absence of the protected conduct."
Mt. Healthy,
We agree with the United States Supreme Court that the essential differences between "pretext" and "mixed-motive" cases necessitate application of different proof schemes, and therefore follow
Price Waterhouse
in holding that claims under the North Carolina Whistleblower Act may be subject to either form of analysis, depending on the evidence presented in each individual case. As the
Price Waterhouse
plurality noted, "[t]he very premise of a mixed-motives case" is that the defendant possessed both legitimate
and
unlawful motives for the adverse employment action taken.
Therefore, claims brought under the Whistleblower Act should be adjudicated according to the following procedures. First, the plaintiff must endeavor to establish a prima facie case of retaliation under the statute.
Cf. Price Waterhouse,
Applying this analytical framework to the allegations in the instant complaint, we conclude that it is premature to determine whether the instant case should be analyzed according to the "pretext" model of
McDonnell Douglas
and
Burdine
or the "mixed-motive" analysis of
Mt. Healthy
and
Price Waterhouse.
As the trial court's choice between these two analytical models depends on the nature of both the plaintiff's and the defendants' evidence, a trial court may not make a final determination as to which of these two proof schemes applies until "all the evidence has been received."
II.
We next address defendants' argument that plaintiff's claim is subject to dismissal because it "does not contain facts sufficient to show that [plaintiff] was engaged in [a] `protected activity,'" the first element of a whistleblower claim. Emphasizing plaintiff's omission of the details of his conversation with Trooper Collins in his initial report, defendants assert that "[p]laintiff's lying and misleading inaccuracies were the reason he was disciplined." Defendants further contend that "[l]ying to a supervisor is not [w]histle-blowing and is certainly not a `protected activity'" under the Whistleblowing Act. Finally, defendants contend that "[p]laintiff's [c]omplaint d[oes] not contain facts sufficient to show that his dismissal was for any reason other than his own untruthfulness" in his initial report. We disagree.
As an initial matter, even assuming plaintiff's initial report contained "misleading inaccuracies,"
5
we do not agree with defendants' contention that any "admission of untruthfulness" on the part of the plaintiff
*211
necessarily constitutes "a complete bar to recovery" under the Whistleblower Act. The Whistleblower Act prohibits employment retaliation against a state employee who files a report alleging certain categories of misconduct or mismanagement by other state employees or agencies "unless the State employee knows or has reason to believe that the report is inaccurate." N.C.G.S. § 126-85(a). The plain meaning of this proviso is that the Act does not apply to employees who make allegations of mismanagement or wrongdoing which they know or should know to be false. In other words, the Act does not protect
false whistleblowing allegations,
unless the plaintiff had no reason to know of their falsehood.
Cf.
Westman & Modesitt,
Whistleblowing
Ch. 2 § II.E.2, at 52 (noting that "false [whistleblowing] allegations serve no public interest"); Lois A. Lofgren,
Whistleblower Protection: Should Legislatures and the Courts Provide a Shelter to Public and Private Sector Employees Who Disclose the Wrongdoing of Employers?,
More importantly, defendants' assertion that the "lying and misleading inaccuracies" in plaintiff's initial report were the true reason for plaintiff's dismissal is merely a
factual allegation
- one that is directly contradicted by the factual allegations in plaintiff's complaint. In ruling on a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), a trial court must "take all allegations of fact in the complaint as true."
Cage v. Colonial Bldg. Co.,
III.
Finally, we address defendants' argument that dismissal was proper because plaintiff failed to exhaust his administrative remedies in the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) before filing his complaint in the trial court. Defendants contend that plaintiff's petition for a contested case hearing, which was filed in the OAH prior to the initiation of the instant lawsuit, "was a[w]histleblower action." Defendants further assert that plaintiff failed to exhaust his administrative remedies before filing the instant complaint. Based on these contentions, defendants argue that plaintiff's claim is barred by the doctrine of administrative exhaustion. We disagree.
As the Court of Appeals has correctly noted, "[t]wo statutes provide avenues to redress violations of the Whistleblower statute."
Swain v. Elfland,
We agree with defendants that, as a general proposition, if a state employee chooses to forego the judicial forum and initiates a whistleblower claim in the OAH, the employee's only recourse to superior court is to petition for judicial review of the final agency decision of the State Personnel Commission (SPC) pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 150B-43 (2003). As the Court of Appeals reasoned, to allow a plaintiff to "maintain an administrative action and an action in superior court simultaneously . . . . would allow plaintiff two bites of the apple, could lead to the possibility that different forums would reach opposite decisions, [and could] engender needless litigation in violation of the principles of collateral estoppel."
Swain,
We disagree, however, with the factual predicate of defendants' argument - that plaintiff "raised a[w]histleblower claim at the OAH." The only evidence of record concerning plaintiff's administrative action is a copy of his petition for a contested case hearing, a standard form document. 6 In that petition, plaintiff indicated two distinct grounds for his request for an administrative hearing by checking the appropriate choices printed on the form. First, plaintiff indicated that he was "discharge[d] without just cause." Second, plaintiff indicated that he was terminated due to "discrimination and/or retaliation for opposition to alleged discrimination," and that "the type of discrimination" was "[r]ace." In his only textual elaboration of the basis for his petition, plaintiff simply stated, "I was dismissed as a Highway Patrolman without just cause based upon a complete misinterpretation of my actions and statements re: a case of excessive force."
Nowhere in his petition did plaintiff reference the Whistleblower Act or allege that his employment was terminated in retaliation for his reporting a potential abuse of authority by other officers in the SHP. Although plaintiff's allegation that he was dismissed *213 "without just cause based upon a complete misinterpretation of [his] actions and statements" is not inconsistent with the factual allegations in his subsequently filed whistleblower claim, the language in his petition in no way states a claim under the Whistleblower Act. Indeed, of the eleven specific statutory grounds for filing a contested case under the SPA, see N.C.G.S. § 126-34.1 (2003), plaintiff's petition states only two: (1) that he was terminated without "just cause" in violation of N.C.G.S. § 126-35, and (2) that he was terminated because of his race in violation of Chapter 168A. See N.C.G.S. § 126-34.1(a)(1), (2). Conspicuously absent from plaintiff's petition is any allegation that his dismissal constituted a "retaliatory personnel action that violates [the Whistleblower Act]," an entirely separate statutory ground for seeking an administrative hearing in the OAH. See N.C.G.S. § 126-34.1(a)(7). Accordingly, the doctrine of administrative exhaustion does not prevent plaintiff from filing a whistleblower claim in superior court. 7
In conclusion, plaintiff's allegations are sufficient to overcome defendants' Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. Moreover, plaintiff is not barred from bringing his claim by the doctrine of administrative exhaustion. The decision of the Court of Appeals is therefore reversed, and the case is remanded to that Court for consideration of plaintiff's remaining assignment of error.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
We note that the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit overruled
Goff
in
Carter v. South Central Bell,
In a case of first impression brought under N.C.G.S. § 126-36, which prohibits retaliation against state employees for their opposition to certain forms of discrimination, this Court "look[ed] to federal decisions for guidance in establishing evidentiary standards and principles of law to be applied in discrimination cases."
N.C. Dep't of Corr. v. Gibson,
Because there was no majority opinion in
Price Waterhouse,
Justice O'Connor's concurring opinion, which represented the narrowest ground for decision, constitutes the holding of that case.
See Price Waterhouse,
We acknowledge that, subsequent to the United States Supreme Court's decision in
Price Waterhouse,
"Congress codified a new evidentiary rule for mixed-motive cases arising under Title VII" of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that abrogates Justice O'Connor's direct evidence requirement and permits plaintiffs to avail themselves of the mixed-motive standard in Title VII actions without direct evidence of unlawful discrimination.
Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa,
Plaintiff concedes in his complaint that he did not disclose the details of his conversation with Trooper Collins in his initial statement, but nonetheless maintains that his initial statement was "truthful and complied with the instruction of [First Sergeant] Combs that [he] memorialize what [he] saw at the [i]ncident." Because it is not necessary to our disposition of this case, we do not address whether plaintiff's initial report is best characterized as "misleading" and "inaccurate" or "truthful" in light of First Sergeant Combs's alleged instructions.
Neither the record on appeal nor the allegations in plaintiff's complaint reveal anything about the procedural history of plaintiff's administrative action other than the fact that a petition for contested case hearing was filed.
In holding that the doctrine barred plaintiff's action, the Court of Appeals noted that "[p]laintiff admits in his complaint that he `did not exhaust his potential administrative remedies.'"
Newberne,
