In this appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Sand, J., we consider the boundaries of absolute prosecutorial immunity where a municipal attorney represents both her employer agency and the individual complainant before that agency. Because it appears that the dual representation created a conflict of interest in this ease, we also consider whether the target of the agency prosecution, Norman Rudow, who alleges injury to a claimed
BACKGROUND
In an opinion reported at
In 1981, Brenda Alvarez, a clerical worker for Litton Office Product Centers, complained to the HRC that Rudow, who was then Litton’s regional division president, had sexually harassed her on the. job. HRC staff attorney Lois Whitman was assigned to the case, and she assured Alvarez that the attorney-client privilege protected the confidentiality of their communications. Whitman prosecuted the complaint in a hearing before an administrative law judge. In a January 1983 decision, the HRC sustained the sexual harassment complaint and awarded Alvarez damages of $15,188.97. The New York Supreme Court confirmed the determination,
Rudow v. New York City Commission on Human Rights,
Throughout the administrative and judicial stages of the sexual harassment prosecution, Lois Whitman continued to represent both the HRC and Alvarez. It appears that, by failing to obtain prior HRC permission to participate in the case beyond the state Supreme Court stage, Whitman may have exceeded the specific jurisdictional authority delegated to her, although her supervisor later ratified her decision to remain in the case in the appellate stages.
While preparing his appeal to the Appellate Division, Rudow learned that Alvarez had lied to the AU about receiving medical care and had submitted a forged note, ostensibly signed by a physician, describing her nervous condition. Rudow moved to supplement the record on appeal with evidence of the false testimony. When confronted privately by Whitman, Alvarez admitted her fabrications. Whitman did not report this admission to the HRC or the court, but met ex parte with the AU who presided over the original hearing. He advised Whitman that knowledge of the perjury and forgery would not have altered his ultimate determination. Apparently satisfied that she had met her professional responsibility, Whitman continued to press Alvarez’s case and opposed Rudow’s motion before the Appellate Division to supplement the record. The Appellate Division granted Rudow’s motion but refused to overturn the Supreme Court’s ruling.
While continuing his court battle, Rudow also mounted a direct attack on the City, demanding a new HRC hearing and, when no relief appeared likely, filed this action. The New York Post published articles disclosing the tainted hearing, and shortly thereafter the City sought to vacate the HRC ruling in order to accept additional evidence. The City’s Corporation Counsel wrote to Alvarez, severing any attorney-client relationship that Alvarez “may have had in the past” with Whitman.
Acting without the support of the HRC or Whitman, Alvarez sued unsuccessfully to prevent reopening of her sexual harassment case. Before the HRC could actually vacate its order, however, Rudow and Alvarez reached an agreement under which they jointly requested that the HRC take no further action on Alvarez’s complaint and waived any rights they may have had to further agency proceedings on the mat
Rudow claims that Whitman’s failure to disclose Alvarez’s perjury and forgery distorted the sexual harassment prosecution in a way that deprived him of his constitutional right to liberty without due process of law. He claims a protected liberty interest in his legal status as a person innocent of the unlawful employment practice of sexual harassment. Alternatively, Rudow claims that a protected liberty interest arises from the combination of his reputation interest with his interests in his legal status as an innocent person, in his employment opportunities and in being free of attorney deceit. He claims that his liberty interest in being free of attorney deceit springs from the New York attorney misconduct statute, N.Y.Jud.Law § 487 (McKinney 1983). Rudow also asserts a violation of section 487 as an independent cause of action against Whitman and the City.
The district court ruled that neither Rudow’s section 1983 claim nor his pendent state claim of attorney misconduct could be maintained against Whitman because she was protected by the doctrine of absolute prosecutorial immunity. As to Rudow’s section 1983 claim against the City, Judge Sand decided that even if Whitman’s conduct was culpable and even if the conduct could be imputed to the City as Whitman’s employer, Rudow had nevertheless failed to allege that he had been deprived of a constitutionally protected interest in liberty or property. The district court dismissed the federal and state claims against Whitman and the federal claim against the City, but held the City answerable for violation of the attorney misconduct statute. Thereafter, Rudow withdrew this latter claim, subject to reinstatement in the event that the district court’s dismissal of the other claims is reversed on appeal.
DISCUSSION
The first question, and the one that disposes of all claims against defendant Lois Whitman, is whether the doctrine of absolute immunity protects her from federal and state liability despite allegations that she acted outside of her authority to prosecute Alvarez’s administrative complaint against Rudow. Even accepting, as we must, in the posture of this appeal, Rudow’s factual claims, we conclude that Whitman’s conduct was at least colorably prosecutorial in nature and not clearly beyond her jurisdiction, and was, therefore, protected under the federal and state doctrines of absolute immunity.
In
Imbler v. Pachtman,
The public interest in maintaining its prosecutors’ freedom to exercise independent judgment without fear of personal civil liability is no less compelling in an agency hearing than in a court hearing.
Compare Imbler,
Although the Supreme Court upheld absolute immunity for a prosecutor acting “within the scope of his duties,”
Imbler,
Both of the
Barr
criteria must be evident in the prosecutor’s conduct before absolute immunity attaches: the conduct must be colorably prosecutorial in nature and it must not be undertaken in the clear absence of jurisdiction. Rudow has attacked both criteria, and we consider them in turn. We first note that if Whitman’s conduct was the
kind
of conduct authorized of prosecutors, then the
degree
of her misconduct is of no concern to us. Her immunity would be absolute.
See Barrett v. United States,
Whitman’s conduct during all phases of the Alvarez proceeding was quintessentially prosecutorial in nature, despite any conflict that arose. Her dual representation of the HRC and Alvarez occurred in a single integrated action, and all of the conduct complained of centered around that action.
Cf. Harper v. Merckle,
Dual representation characterizes the normal practice of the HRC.
See, e.g., Silverman v. City of New York,
The subsequent divergence of the interests of the HRC and Alvarez does not render Whitman’s response nonprosecutorial. Without commenting on Whitman’s efforts to resolve the conflict, we find her dilemma paradigmatic of the decisions faced by public prosecutors. The delicate balance that must be struck between the interests of the public and those of complainants in administrative or criminal proceedings is part of the reason for the absolute immunity doctrine. Fearless prosecution and the exercise of sound judgment
Having concluded that Whitman’s conduct was prosecutorial in nature, we need not tarry over Rudow’s claim that Whitman was jurisdictionally disqualified from appearing in the New York appellate courts. Whitman’s exercise of discretion in the conduct of the Alvarez matter may have carried her beyond the bureaucratic boundaries of her position as staff attorney and later as Acting General Counsel with the HRC. Nevertheless, her conduct remained within the general jurisdiction of the HRC and its staff. “[A] prosecutor must decide whether he is authorized before initiating proceedings before a court, and he may hesitate to do so ... if he fears liability____ [W]e must interpret his authority broadly.”
Lerwill v. Joslin,
The same principles that render Whitman absolutely immune from personal liability under federal law also protect her under New York law. In New York, absolute immunity extends not only to the prosecutorial function,
Schanbarger v. Kellogg,
Turning to Rudow’s substantive claim against the City under section 1983, we first note that, in order to avoid summary judgment and dismissal, Rudow must establish that Whitman acted under color of state law and that Rudow possessed a constitutionally protected right that was trammeled by the alleged conduct.
See Parratt v. Taylor,
Liberty interests protected by the Fourteenth Amendment may arise from the Due Process Clause itself or from state law.
Meachum v. Fano,
Rudow has competently alleged damage to his reputation, but has not offered a supplementary injury sufficient to meet the “reputation-plus” standard of
Paul v. Davis,
Finally, Rudow returns to the New York attorney misconduct statute, N.Y. Jud.Law § 487, claiming that the statute creates a right to be free of attorney deceit analogous to the business goodwill right in
Marrero.
He is correct that section 487 creates a constitutionally protected property right,
see Barrett,
Rudow has failed to articulate a constitutionally protected liberty interest, and his section 1983 claim against the City was properly dismissed. We need not discuss the adequacy of the remedy available to Rudow via the reopened HRC proceedings, a remedy that Rudow waived. Rudow claimed for the first time in his reply brief that he was entitled to at least nominal damages for the alleged denial of due process, independent of any underlying constitutional deprivation, under
Carey v. Piphus,
