Maurice SKOBLOW, Appellant,
v.
AMERI-MANAGE, INC., Rоbert A. Burton, John Pitrelli, Elsa Dominguez, Barbara McMurtrey, Jackie Dale and Paul Uhrig, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*810 Lipman & Weisberg and Robert Weisberg, Miami, for appellant.
Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., and Craig Willis, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellees.
Before HENDRY, HUBBART and NESBITT, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
The plaintiff appeals an order еntering partial summary judgment for the defendants. We affirm.
The plaintiff was employed as a dentist at South Florida State Hospital. The hospital is a mental institution which is owned, funded and rеgulated by the State of Florida. Pursuant to a contract with the state, Ameri-Manage, Inc., provides management services at the hospital. On February 13, 1981, the plaintiff was notified of his termination from employment at the hospital by a letter from Robert Burton, the chief executive officer of the hospital and an employee of Ameri-Manage. This letter indicated that the plaintiff was being discharged because of "inadequate performance in carrying out your duties and responsibilities."
Two weeks later, an article appeared in the Miami Herald concerning the plaintiff's discharge. Four officials of the hospital or state were reported in the article to have givеn negative statements about the plaintiff's work as a dentist at the hospital. These officials were Jackie Dale, the community and patient relations director at the hospital (referred to in the article as the hospital spokeswoman), Barbara McMurtrey, the human resources director (personnel officer) at the hospitаl, Dr. Paul Uhrig, the director of the state's Division of Institutional Dental Services, and Dr. Elsa Dominguez, the dental services coordinator at the hospital and the plaintiff's immediate supervisor.
The plaintiff filed a two-count complaint against the defendants. In the first count, the plaintiff brought an action for defamation against Dale, McMurtrey, Uhrig and Dominguez. Burton was also named in this count on the asserted basis of a civil conspiracy with the other named defendants to commit the defamation. In the second count, the plaintiff alleged a civil rights violation pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 regarding his termination at the hospital. Ameri-Manage and Burton were named as defendants in this count. The defendants filed a motion for partial summary judgment on the basis of absolute privilege and sovereign immunity. Partial summary judgment was entered in favor of the defendants and this appeal followed.
In McNayr v. Kelly,
The public interest requires that statements mаde by officials of all branches of government in connection with their official duties be absolutely privileged. Under our democratic system the stewardship of public offiсials is daily observed by the public. It is necessary that free and open explanations of their actions be made. Any public servant should expect that those having authоrity to discharge him will explain their reasons for such dismissal.
Hauser v. Urchisin,
In the present case, all the defendants alleged to have defamed the plaintiff either had official supervisory responsibility over the plaintiff or had responsibilities regarding personnel matters or community relations. Since the statements made concerning the plaintiff's discharge were related to and made within the scope of the defendants' official duties, we hold that these defendants are entitled to an аbsolute privilege and are, therefore, immune from liability for the alleged defamation. See Wardlow; Hauser; Mueller v. The Florida Bar,
We also affirm the summary judgment entered in favor of Ameri-Manage on the section 1983 action in the plaintiff's second cоunt. Absent an unequivocal expression of intent by either the United States Congress to overturn a state's eleventh amendment immunity, or a state legislature to waive the state's sovereign immunity, a state and its agencies are immune from civil rights actions brought against them pursuant to section 1983 in both federal and state courts. See Quern v. Jordan,
An examination of the legal relationship between Ameri-Manage and the state is dispositivе. Pursuant to a contract between the state and Ameri-Manage, Ameri-Manage was to provide direct management for South Florida State Hospital, a state-ownеd hospital, coordinate the development of a long-range plan for the hospital consistent with legislative mandate, and assist the Department (HRS) in planning for interim and long-range forensic services. HRS delegated to the administrator of the hospital (Burton, an employee of Ameri-Manage), among other things, the authority to (1) "appоint grievance committee members and render a final decision on employee grievances"; (2) "effect personnel actions as specified in HRSR 60-10, 10(a) ... [and] hold presuspension/termination conferences and establish procedures for same"; (3) "submit personnel actions to the State Personnel Director directly, as speсified in HRSR 60-94(a)(1)0(26)"; (4) "assign to established *812 classes new positions authorized by the legislature"; (5) "assign to established classes new positions authorized by the Administrative Commission"; (6) "assign to an establishеd class any position that is added in lieu of a position that is deleted"; (7) "reclassify positions to existing Career Service Classes"; (8) "respond to Collective Bargaining Step One Grievances"; (9) "effect all types of disciplinary actions as stated in HRSR 60-10 paragraph 5. This includes oral reprimand, written reprimand, change in assignment, reduction in pаy, demotion, suspension and dismissal." [emphasis added] It was the exercise of this last-stated delegated authority which gave rise to the plaintiff's claim under section 1983.
An examinatiоn of the relationship between Ameri-Manage and the State of Florida leads us to the conclusion that Ameri-Manage was operating as an agency of the state at the time of the plaintiff's discharge from his position at the hospital. See Tuveson v. Florida Governor's Council on Indian Affairs, Inc.,
The parties are in agreement that Burton can be held liable in his individual capacity for any civil rights violations that might have occurred. Accordingly, the summary judgment entered in favor of all of the defendants on plaintiff's defamation count is affirmed, the summary judgment entered in favor of Ameri-Manage on the count alleging a civil rights violation is affirmed, аnd the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
NOTES
Notes
[1] In this regard, see the discussion in Shinholster v. Graham,
We note that the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has recently approved the decision in Shinholster and rejected the reasoning in Meeker. See Gamble v. Florida Dep't of Health & Rehabilitative Services,
[2] See supra note 1.
