On March 15, 1996, plaintiff-appellant Shannon Rogan suffered serious personal injuries when a motor vehicle she was driving collided with a trolley car operated under the auspices of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). We canvassed the pertinent facts on an earlier occasion,
see Rogan v. Menino,
In due course, an MBTA police officer cited the plaintiff for failure to yield. Believing the citation to be unfounded, the plaintiff sought judicial review. A state district judge found her responsible for failing to yield. The plaintiff eschewed a further appeal, instead paying a $50 fine.
That was not the end of the matter. Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the plaintiff sued a multitude of defendants — the two responding officers (McDonough and Col-burn), the City of Boston, three municipal officials, the MBTA, and several MBTA employees — in the federal district court. She claimed, inter alia, that McDonough, Colburn, and the municipal officials had impaired her access to the courts when they ceded control of the investigation to the MBTA (which, she averred, had a financial interest in the outcome of the investigation and shaped its findings accordingly).
The plaintiff eventually settled her state-court tort suit against the MBTA and, as part of the settlement, dismissed the MBTA defendants from this action. The district court disposed of the plaintiffs claims against the remaining defendants in stages. First, the court, acting on a motion brought pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), dismissed all individual-capacity claims against the mayor (Menino), the police commissioner (Evans), and a third municipal official (DiMarzio).
Rogan v. Menino,
The plaintiff appealed both the Rule 12(b)(6) order and the sua sponte summary judgment. This court upheld the dismissal of the individual-capacity claims, but vacated the grant of summary judgment on procedural grounds.
Rogan II,
We review the district court’s entry of summary judgment de novo, construing the record and all reasonable inferences therefrom in favor of the nonmoving party (here, the plaintiff).
N. Am. Specialty Ins. Co. v. Lapalme,
Summary judgment practice has its own rhythm. Where, as here, the initiators are the defendants, they must begin the movement by averring the absence of any evidence sufficient to support some necessary element of the plaintiffs case. Maldonado-Denis v. Castillo-Rodriguez, 23 F.3d *27 576, 581 (1st Cir.1994). To avoid summary judgment, the plaintiff then must sound a contrapuntal note, pointing to evidence in the record sufficient to establish the existence of a “genuine” issue of “material” fact anent the disputed element(s). Id. A genuine issue exists if the record evidence is such that a reasonable factfinder could resolve it either way. Id. A fact is material if its existence vel non “affects the outcome of the suit” so that it “needs to be resolved before the related legal issues can be decided.” Id. (citation and internal punctuation omitted).
Summary judgment motions are decided on the record as it stands, not on the pleadings or on the nonmovant’s vision of what facts might some day be unearthed by the litigation equivalent of an archeological dig. Consequently, a plaintiff who aspires to ward off a properly documented motion for summary judgment must produce enough proof to enable her case to get to a jury.
Perez v. Volvo Car Corp.,
Against this backdrop, we turn to the plaintiffs claims. The statute under which she sues, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, provides in pertinent part that “every person who, under color of a statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage ..., subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States ... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured.” In other words, section 1983 “supplies a private right of action against a person who, under color of state law, deprives another of rights secured by the Constitution or by federal law.”
Evans v. Avery,
To maintain such a cause of action, the plaintiff — who has the burden of proof — first must show official conduct, that is, an act or omission undertaken under color of state law.
Roche v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
To satisfy the “constitutional injury” requirement, the plaintiff must make a showing of a deprivation of a federally-secured right.
Baker v. McCollan,
The most obvious avenue would be to show an unconstitutional implementation of the transfer policy.
See City of Canton v. Harris,
The plaintiff pursues the second avenue with more vigor: she endeavors to make the requisite showing of constitutional injury based on a denial of meaningful access to the courts. Theoretically, she is on solid ground. There is a constitutional right of access to the courts.
See Wolff v. McDonnell,
The plaintiffs thesis is not easily extracted from the harsh rhetoric and tangled ratiocination that permeates her brief. As best we can tell, her argument seems to be that the defendants are liable because they shifted responsibility for the accident investigation to the MBTA police who, she theorizes, had a conflict of interest which led them to conduct a biased investigation and cover up the real cause of the accident (the trolley driver’s negligence). This conflict of interest, the plaintiff says, arises out of the mutual employment of the MBTA police and the trolley car operator, presumably on the basis that, if the trolley driver were held responsible for the accident, the MBTA would be exposed to financial risk (i.e., money damages). In this way, the municipal defendants allegedly deprived the plaintiff of an impartial investigation, and, thus, of meaningful access to the judicial process (including an opportunity to obtain more generous recompense in her tort action).
This thesis has several flaws. The perceived link between the investigation and the plaintiffs tort suit seems tenuous at best, especially since under Massachusetts law, the plaintiffs conviction on the failure-to-yield charge would not have been admissible in evidence in a trial of that suit.
See LePage v. Bumila,
To bridge these chasmal gaps, the plaintiff baldly asserts that the MBTA’s financial interest in the outcome of the investigation somehow creates a presumption of partiality. She is wrong. Accusations of bias are not self-elucidating. Thus, a plaintiff who alleges a pattern and practice of partiality must, when faced with a motion for summary judgment, offer some significantly probative evidence to support that charge. Indeed, in sitúa-
*29
tions in which a presumption exists, the presumption is that government officials are
impartial
in the administration of responsibilities arising within the scope of their employment.
2
See Withrow v. Larkin,
The plaintiff’s cause is not aided by her denunciatory charge that the citation issued by the MBTA for failure to yield was “intended to provide leverage to diminish her claim for damages.” Appellant’s Br. at 15. That is rank conjecture. As the plaintiff provides us with no evidence to support the accusation, it can play no role in the summary judgment calculus.
3
See Maldonado-Denis,
The short of it is that the plaintiff has mustered no proof that the MBTA’s investigation was anything less than pristine on this (or any other comparable) occasion. By the same token, she has adduced no evidence to show that the municipal defendants knew, or had reason to know, of any irregularity in the MBTA’s discharge of its investigatory functions. These deficits are fatal.
See, e.g., Corrada Betances v. Sear-Land Serv., Inc.,
We need go no further.
4
Here, as in
Maldonado-Denis,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The MBTA has its own police and shares jurisdiction over certain matters with the Boston police department. See Act of July 19, 1968, ch. 664, 1968 Mass. Acts 547 (creating a separate police force to function with the MBTA's territorial authority and investing its officers with powers equivalent to those of municipal police officers).
.In support of her contention that partiality may be presumed without proof, the plaintiff cites
Ward v. Vill. of Monroeville,
. At any rate, the undisputed evidence that a state court judge, unaffiliated with the MBTA, found the plaintiff guilty of failure to yield tends to contradict the notion that the MBTA officers issued the citation for an improper purpose.
. The absence of a constitutional injury suffices to doom the plaintiff's claim, rendering it unnecessary for us to consider the other formidable obstacles (e.g., qualified immunity) that block her path.
