Michael D. O'NEILL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF AUBURN; Guy Cosentino, Mayor of the City of Auburn;
James E. Malone, City Manager for the City of Auburn;
James Hutchinson, Ann Bunker, Councilors of the Auburn City
Council; Andrew V. LaLonde, as Corporation Counsel for the
City of Auburn and Other Unknown and Unnamed Participants In
The Complained of Acts, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 1108, Docket 93-7909.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Feb. 28, 1994.
Decided May 3, 1994.
Edward C. Hooks, Ithaca, NY (Laurie M. Johnston, Harris, Beach & Wilcox, Ithaca, NY, on the brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
Nicholas J. D'Ambrosio, Jr., Albany, NY (Michael J. Grygiel, Bond, Schoeneck & King, Albany, NY, on the brief), for defendants-appellees.
Before: KEARSE and LEVAL, Circuit Judges, and POLLACK, Senior District Judge.*
LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
This is an appeal from a grant of summary judgment dismissing an action brought under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 by a terminated public official of Auburn, New York, alleging that his termination deprived him of property and liberty without due process of law. We affirm.
In September 1992, plaintiff-appellant Michael D. O'Neill was dismissed by the City of Auburn, New York, after nearly 15 years as City Engineer-Superintendent of Public Works. In recent years, O'Neill's service in that position had been marked by criticism in the press for alleged conflicts of interest, sometimes stemming from his private business interests; this criticism had included demands for his resignation. O'Neill also had been the subject of a grand jury investigation in 1988-89 and a City Ethics Board inquiry in 1990-91. The Auburn City Ethics Board had issued a report after investigation that O'Neill had violated the City Ethics Code (by receipt of a gift "under circumstances in which it could reasonably be inferred that the gift was intended to influence him ... in the performance of his official duties...."), and a grand jury had issued a report that O'Neill "may have created an appearance of impropriety."
Following his termination, O'Neill brought suit under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, claiming that defendants, The City of Auburn, the City Manager, and other city officials, deprived him of property and liberty interests without due process of law as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. First, O'Neill claims that Section 75 of New York State Civil Service Law gives him a property interest in his job, entitling him to notice and a hearing before termination; he received no notice or hearing. Second, he claims the defendants made stigmatizing public statements at the time he was terminated; he contends these statements infringed his constitutionally-protected liberty interest in securing future employment and entitle him to a hearing to clear his reputation.
The district court granted defendants' motion for summary judgment as to both claims.
I. Deprivation of property without due process
A. Property interest created by Sec. 75
O'Neill claims deprivation of his property without due process because he was discharged from his position without notice and a hearing. When a governmental employee is found to have a "property interest" in continuation of his or her employment, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment forbids discharge unless the employee is afforded a pre-termination hearing. Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
O'Neill identifies New York State Civil Service Law Sec. 75(1)(c) as the source of his property interest in his job. This statute states in relevant part:
A person ... shall not be removed or otherwise subjected to any disciplinary penalty provided in this section except for incompetency or misconduct shown after a hearing upon stated charges pursuant to this section [if that person is] an employee holding a position in the non-competitive class other than a position designated in the rules of the state or municipal civil service commission as confidential or requiring the performance of functions influencing policy, who ... has completed at least five years of continuous service....
N.Y.Civ.Serv.Law Sec. 75(1)(c) (McKinney Supp.1993).
O'Neill claims that his position is a non-competitive civil service title that was never classified as "confidential" or "policy-making" by the Auburn Civil Service Commission. It is undisputed that he held his position for "at least five years of continuous service." He therefore contends that Sec. 75(1)(c) gives him a property interest in retaining his job unless termination is preceded by notice and hearing.1 He asserts that his termination was not preceded by notice of charges of incompetency or misconduct and a hearing thereon, and that his right to due process before deprivation of his property was therefore violated.
We have previously held that Sec. 75 gives covered employees a property interest in their employment, so that they may not be terminated without notice and hearing. Dwyer v. Regan,
B. Independent officer exception
While Sec. 75(1)(c) expressly protects all civil service employees other than those in confidential or policy-making positions, defendants contend, and we agree, that the judicially-created independent officer exception exempts other positions from the protection of this statute.
1. Definition of the exception
The independent officer exception to Sec. 75(1)(c) originated in judicial interpretations of Sec. 22 of the Civil Service Law (now Sec. 75(1)(b)), a longstanding parallel provision, which gives military veterans and volunteer firefighters who hold civil service positions the right to notice and a hearing before discharge. This section on its face excludes from its protection only those persons employed as "private secretary, cashier or deputy of any official or department." Sec. 75(1)(b). However, in cases such as Mylod v. Graves,
O'Neill grounds his assertion of a property interest in the more broadly applicable Sec. 75(1)(c). He claims that the independent officer exception does not apply to Sec. 75(1)(c) because this section sets forth an explicit exclusion that applies only to employees "designated ... as confidential or requiring the performance of functions influencing policy." Id. The record supports O'Neill's contention that his position never received a designation as "confidential" or "policy-making." However, his argument that there is no independent officer exception to Sec. 75(1)(c) has already been rejected by New York courts. We reject it as well.
In Nolan v. Tully,
The Nolan and Gallagher decisions do not necessarily bind us, because while those holdings are grounded in the authority of the state's highest court, the Court of Appeals has not ruled on the precise issue whether the independent officer exception to Sec. 75(1)(b) applies as well to Sec. 75(1)(c). Our task is to predict how the state's highest court would rule on this issue. In re Brooklyn Navy Yard Asbestos Litig. (Joint E. & S. Dist. Asbestos Litig.),
We adopt the Third Department's ruling in Nolan as a reliable indicator of how the Court of Appeals would rule on the applicability of the independent officer exception to Sec. 75(1)(c). See Brooklyn Navy Yard,
Accordingly, we find that Civil Service Law Sec. 75(1)(c) does not confer a property right in continued employment upon state civil servants who are "independent officers" as that term is defined by New York case law. Cf. Baden v. Koch,
2. Application to appellant
We find for the reasons that follow that appellant O'Neill is an "independent officer."
The New York State Court of Appeals in 1955 defined "independent officer" as follows: "[H]e is an independent officer whose position is created, and whose powers and duties are prescribed, by statute and who exercises a high degree of initiative and independent judgment." O'Day v. Yeager,
In our opinion, the district court correctly determined that the City Engineer-Superintendent of Public Works is an independent officer who, under applicable state law, is excluded from the protection of Civil Service Law Sec. 75(1)(c). O'Neill thus had no property interest in retaining this position, and defendants did not violate his right to due process of law by terminating him from the position without notice and a hearing. Defendants were properly granted summary judgment on O'Neill's first cause of action, and we affirm.
II. Deprivation of liberty without due process
Petitioner's second claim is that defendants stigmatized him by publicizing allegations impugning his professional competence and his ethics; he asserts entitlement under the Fourteenth Amendment to a name-clearing hearing.
Our courts have established that the "liberty" interest protected by the due process clause includes in certain circumstances the right to contest at a hearing public, stigmatizing governmental accusations that impose a substantial disability. Wisconsin v. Constantineau,
The complaint asserts that at the time O'Neill was discharged from his position, local newspapers wrote that anonymous sources in city government told them that O'Neill was "incompetent," could "no longer do the job," had "poor relationships" with state agencies, did work that was not "up to par," and was "slopp[y]." The complaint attributes these statements to the defendants and alleges that they were false. In an affidavit filed in answer to defendants' motion for judgment on the pleadings, O'Neill added reference to press reports of similar assertions that "ethical considerations" led to his dismissal. The district court apparently treated this affidavit as an amendment of the complaint, broadening O'Neill's allegations to include the statements about "ethical considerations." The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on these claims. It held, first, that statements about competence are not "stigmatizing" and do not give rise to a cause of action for a name-clearing hearing. As to the alleged statement that O'Neill's dismissal was related to ethical considerations, the defendants had made a showing on the motion for summary judgment that this was true--and O'Neill had failed to allege otherwise.
We affirm.
A. Allegations impugning competence
Not every derogatory statement made about an employee who loses his or her job imposes sufficient stigma to implicate the liberty interest and require a name-clearing hearing. Cf. Roth,
The district court granted summary judgment based on its understanding that allegations of incompetence are, as a matter of law, insufficiently stigmatizing to give rise to a cause of action. Although the district court may have read our precedents overbroadly, we nonetheless agree that, in this instance, the allegations going to O'Neill's competence did not implicate the liberty interest.
The last three statements reported by the newspapers about O'Neill--that he had "poor relationships" with state agencies, that his work was not "up to par," and was "slopp[y]"--fall clearly within the category of statements described in Russell that are not stigmatizing because they describe problems within the employee's power to correct.
As to the statements that O'Neill was fired for "incompetence" and that he could "no longer do the job," the question is somewhat closer. An accusation that a licensed professional is incompetent is "considerably graver" and carries more potential for future disqualification from employment than a statement that the individual performed a job poorly. An employee's unwillingness to perform professional duties properly in a particular position could result from innumerable factors that would not be replicated in a subsequent employment setting. A prospective subsequent employer, especially for a position requiring professional skills, is far more likely to hire one who has chosen to perform below par in a particular prior engagement than one who was incapable of doing the job.
We have held that governmental allegations of professional incompetence made in connection with an employee's termination may, if they significantly restrict future employment opportunities, sufficiently impair the liberty interest that a name-clearing hearing should be afforded. In Huntley v. Community School Board,
This does not mean that every time a professional employee is dismissed amid public charges of incompetence, a name-clearing hearing is required. In Baden v. Koch,
Taken together, our cases suggest that governmental allegations of professional incompetence, made in connection with an employee's termination, will not support a cause of action for a name-clearing hearing unless the allegations go "to the very heart of [the employee's] professional competence," Huntley,
We cannot find that the statements impugning O'Neill's "competence" stigmatized him in this manner. O'Neill's position as City Engineer/Superintendent of Public Works was multi-faceted. It included not only duties he performed as a licensed professional civil engineer, but also numerous administrative and supervisory functions, as well as functions involving relations with other agencies of government. The statements published in the newspapers were vague and did not specify which aspects of his job he was "incompetent" to perform; they could have meant no more than that he lacked supervisory skills, had an abrasive managerial style, or caused unnecessary friction in dealing with other public agencies. Thus we cannot find that these statements impugned his professional reputation as a licensed engineer or impaired his ability to find future employment within his profession. Without passing here on whether or in what circumstances publicized statements of government officials to the effect, "O'Neill is an incompetent engineer," might have implicated his liberty interests, we can safely conclude that the vague statements of unspecified "incompetence" did not damage O'Neill's professional reputation in a manner that required a hearing. Accordingly, we find that the district court was correct in granting summary judgment as to these statements.
B. Allegations about "ethical concerns"
The district court also granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment on the other portion of O'Neill's liberty interest claim, in which O'Neill contended that his liberty interest was violated by statements by unnamed government officials that "ethical considerations" played a part in his termination. The court found that, while statements impugning ethics were stigmatizing under Board of Regents v. Roth,
As noted above, the complaint initially referred only to the statements alleging incompetence. Defendants then moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing on the theory that because statements about incompetence are not stigmatizing, O'Neill stated no liberty interest claim. O'Neill responded by an affidavit (which all apparently treated as an amendment of the complaint) in which he asserted that the defendants also made statements to the effect that "ethical considerations" contributed to his firing.
The defendants then moved for summary judgment, pointing out that O'Neill had failed to allege the falsity of the complained-of statement about ethical considerations and that furthermore, the statement, if made, was undeniably true, as (i) the Auburn City Ethics Board had issued a report after investigation that O'Neill had violated the City Ethics Code (by receipt of a gift "under circumstances in which it could reasonably be inferred that the gift was intended to influence him ... in the performance of his official duties...."), and (ii) a grand jury had issued a report that O'Neill "may have created an appearance of impropriety." O'Neill made no response.
The court ruled that this required grant of the defendants' motion for summary judgment. We agree with that ruling.
A plaintiff who demands a name-clearing hearing must contest the truth of the allegedly stigmatizing statements because, as the Supreme Court has explained, the purpose of a name clearing hearing is to give the allegedly stigmatized employee an opportunity to refute the government's stigmatizing charges. If the truth of the statements is not contested, there is nothing to have a hearing about. Codd v. Velger,
In addition to plaintiff's failure to plead (or otherwise allege) the falsity of the proposition that ethical considerations played a role in his dismissal, he also failed to submit any evidence showing the existence of a triable issue of fact in response to the defendants' showing, on their summary judgment motion, that this proposition was true. The court therefore asserted, "Nor does it appear that plaintiff could allege that these statements are false," (Op. at 35 n. 10), citing the defendants' evidence of the grand jury and Ethics Board reports. Although a plaintiff is not required in such an action to prove the falsity of the stigmatizing statements, that being the function of the eventual name-clearing hearing, Brandt v. Board of Coop. Educ. Servs.,
Conclusion
The district court's grant of summary judgment, dismissing O'Neill's claims that the City of Auburn deprived him of property and liberty interests in connection with his termination from employment as City Engineer/Superintendent of Public Works, is affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Milton Pollack, United States Senior District Judge for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation
O'Neill also claims that he had an "understanding" with the City of Auburn that independently created a property interest in the job. This argument, made apparently for the first time on appeal, is untimely, and in any event, appears to lack merit
While Wisconsin v. Constantineau,
While we found that Baden had alleged a "weak" liberty interest,
Although not briefed by the parties, this case raises the additional question whether the action is mooted by the availability to the plaintiff of a libel action in the courts of New York. If, by offering such an action, the State of New York has provided O'Neill with the very remedy he seeks--a "name clearing hearing" consonant with the requirements of due process--then there is no need for an action under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. In this respect, this case seems distinguishable from those precedents where the stigmatizing statements were made as part of the governmental agency's official act of terminating the employee. In such cases, the officials making the stigmatizing statements would be immune from suit. See, e.g., Barr v. Matteo,
Judges KEARSE and POLLACK express no views either in agreement or disagreement with the discussion in this footnote.
