A wholly unnecessary employment dispute has spawned two years of federal litigation and more than 100 pages of briefs in this court. It is not the stuff of which constitutional cases should be made.
The facts, greatly abridged and slanted in the plaintiffs favor because the district judge granted summary judgment for the defendants, are as fpllows, Paul Baerwald, a Milwaukee. firefighter, injured his back and shoulder while on the job and was placed on injury leave; during this period, which began in May of 1991, he received 80 percent of his salary, tax free, plus free medical care for his injuries. In February of the following year, the City’s Employment Benefits Division, which administers the injury-leave program, pronounced Baerwald fit to return to duty, but the Fire Department told him- that he couldn’t return to work without a release from injured status from his treating physician, a Dr. Rosier. Rosier refused to release Baerwald, so the department placed him on sick leave. This entitled him to receive his full salary, not just 80 percent. But unlike injury leave, sick leave is taxable, of limited duration, and doesn’t cover medical expenses. Ba'erwald wanted to be allowed to return to work, or failing that returned to injury-leave status. The Fire Department agreed with his lawyer that he would be examined by the department’s physician, Dr. McCabe, at the expense of the Employment Benefits Division, and would abide by McCabe’s findings.
The examination was conducted in September, and Baerwald’s lawyer asked McCabe for an opinion regarding her client’s fitness to return to work. McCabe refused to give her the report unless she paid him a $250 fee. She refused. McCabe sent the Division a “return to work” slip, but when the Fire Department’s deputy chief, Gengler, learned of this he persuaded McCabe to retract the release, and as a result Baerwald remained on sick leave; why he was not returned to injury leave is unclear. Neither Baerwald nor his lawyer was informed either of the release or of its retraction.
McCabe examined Baerwald again in November and on the basis of Baerwald’s complaints about pain advised Baerwald that he (McCabe) could not release him to return to work, given the strenuous nature of a firefighter’s duties. On December 27, 1992, Ba-erwald’s entitlement to paid sick leave i’an out, and he took an unpaid leave of absence until, after another examination by McCabe, conducted in August of the following year, he was pronounced fit to return to duty at last and did so. Until his reinstatement he had spent 250 days on unpaid leave, and he is suing for the salary he would have received had he been on duty during that time, as he argues he should have been, and for other relief unnecessary to discuss separately.
How such a
contretemps
could give rise to a violation of the Constitution of the United States might well puzzle someone uninitiated into the mysteries of modern constitutional law. Baerwald’s argument is that because by statute and contract he could not be discharged from his firefighter’s job without cause, his job was “property” within the meaning of the due process clause of the
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Fourteenth Amendment, of which the defendants (the City, Gengler, and other officials) could not deprive him without due process of law. So far, he is on solid ground. E.g.,
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Nevertheless it is consistent with this principle that if Gengler had schemed to suspend Baerwald for 250 days without pay — the disability being merely a pretext— this would count as the deprivation of constitutionally protected property, and so would be actionable under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment if, for want of notice or a hearing, the suspension was a denial of due process. Otherwise the rule that a tenured public employee has constitutional property in his job could easily be circumvented. But that is not what happened in this case. The Fire Department had a rule that, whatever the Employment Benefits Division might say, it would not reinstate an injured firefighter unless he had a release to return to work from the physician who was treating him for the injury. The rule is entirely reasonable, since the benefits division’s primary concern is fiscal and this may lead it to pronounce a city worker’s injury healed before it is, while the Fire Department has a legitimate and indeed compelling concern, because of the danger that an injured firefighter poses not only to himself but also to the public and the other members of the firefighting team,
Evans v. City of Evanston,
It was the rule that prevented Baerwald from being reinstated until August of 1993; and the rule established a condition of his employment.
See Christ Gatz.onis Electrical
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Contractor, Inc. v. New York City School Construction Authority,
Baerwald argues that Gengler “conspired” with McCabe to keep Baerwald on sick leave. If there was such a conspiracy, it may have violated the agreement that Gengler had made with Baerwald’s lawyer; it did not violate the Constitution, as there is no argument, and could be no argument, that
that
agreement conferred property on Baerwald. Otherwise every breach of a public contract would be litigable under the Constitution, and that is not the law.
Mid-American Waste Systems, Inc. v. City of Gary,
Nor is it argued that the agreement supplanted the rule requiring a release by the treating physician. Rather, the agreement waived the rule: if McCabe cleared Baerwald to return to work, the Fire Department would not insist on a release from the treating physician. It was still open to Baerwald, when in November he found out that McCabe would not clear him, to obtain a release from his treating physician before his sick-leave benefits expired the following month. We may assume that he could not have obtained a release from Dr. Rosier. All he had to do, however, was to get himself another treating physician. Candidates included the two physicians who had advised the benefits division that Baerwald was fit to return to work. Although the Fire Department will not accept the division’s say-so that a firefighter is fit to return to work, it accepts the say-so of any physician, provided only that he is the firefighter’s treating physician. As we said earlier, it might be that no physician, reputable or otherwise, would have certified Baerwald to return to work in December of 1992, given his continuing complaints of severe pain. But that would prove that he wasn’t fit to return to work. It would be a clear vindication of the department’s rule.
At argument, Baerwald’s present lawyer acknowledged that Baerwald could have hired another physician, who would have given him his release, and the Fire Department would then have reinstated him. He could not explain why Baerwald — advised by counsel — failed to do that, beyond the lame excuse that Baerwald and the lawyer thought that Baerwald was entitled to McCabe’s report without having to pay $250 for it. The report would not have helped him. It only released him contingent on a further examination, and after the further examination McCabe refused to release him for work. The “return to work” slip was separate, apparently an error, and in any event promptly retracted.
The case thus comes down to Baerwald’s failure to obtain a release from his treating physician before his paid sick-leave benefits ran out. Either he (or his attorney) unaccountably overlooked this option, or he really was still disabled then and didn’t recover until months later, when he returned to McCabe and this time was released. In either event, we cannot find any violation of Baerwald’s constitutional rights, and the judgment for the defendants is therefore
Affirmed.
