REGINA SHEA-SULLIVAN v. TOWN OF SOUTHAMPTON, SELECT BOARD and EDWARD CAULEY
Civil Action No. 16-12023-MGM
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
July 17, 2018
MASTROIANNI, U.S.D.J.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
(Dkt. No. 22)
MASTROIANNI, U.S.D.J.
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff, Regina Shea-Sullivan, filed an eleven count complaint in state court against Defendants—Town of Southampton (“Town“), the Town Select Board (“Board“), and Edward Cauley (“Cauley“)—raising claims related to mistreatment she allegedly suffered while employed by the Town. The case was removed to this court by Defendants based on the existence of two claims brought under federal law. The court now considers Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgement (Dkt. No. 22).
II. JURISDICTION
Plaintiff‘s complaint includes two counts based on federal law: Count VII brought pursuant to
III. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
“Summary judgment is appropriate ‘if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.‘” Bellone v. Southwick-Tolland Regional School Dist., 748 F.3d 418, 422 (1st Cir. 2014) (quoting
IV. MATERIAL FACTS
Consistent with the summary judgment standard, the court summarizes the relevant facts presented by Plaintiff and supported by citations tо the record.
A. Events Prior to August 18, 2013
In 2006, Plaintiff, Regina Shea-Sullivan, began working for the Town as an administrative assistant. Four days per week Plaintiff worked for the Board and one day per week she worked for the Town Highway Department. The individual defendant, Edward Cauley, was the Highway Superintendent and Plaintiff‘s supervisor when she performed work for the Town Highway Department. He was a Town employеe for approximately thirty years. On four occasions between 2008 and 2010, Cauley subjected Plaintiff to unwanted sexual advances. At some point following the last incident, Plaintiff verbally reported Cauley‘s conduct to David Silvernail, the chief of police for the Town, and Jacquie Sears, then a member of the Board. Silvernail, in turn, told Michael Phelan, then chair of the Board, about the report. Sears also shared the allegations with Phelan and another member of the Board, Ann Roy. These conversations most likely occurred during 2011, but some may have happened as late as 2012 or 2013. Despite several town officials having knowledge of Plaintiff‘s allegations, no action was taken against Cauley and he continued to be Plaintiff‘s supervisor. Plaintiff has not alleged Cauley made any other unwanted sexual advances toward her. The evidence in the record indicates Cauley did not learn of Plaintiff‘s complaints regarding his conduct until, at the earliest, 2012 and possibly not until after Plaintiff filed a written complaint with the Board in September of 2013. After learning of Plaintiff‘s complaint, Cauley called Plaintiff a “liar” when speaking to others about her allegations of unwanted sexual advances towards her.
The position of Town Administrator (“TA“) became vacant in 2011. The Board appointed Plaintiff to the position of Interim TA for a period of twelve weeks. Subsequently the Select Board approved additional twelve-week periods, the last of which еnded in early 2014. As Interim TA,
In May of 2012, Cauley was elected to the Select Board, the five-member voting body that presides over Southampton. Shortly after being еlected to the Board, Cauley voted to renew Plaintiff‘s appointment as Interim TA for an additional twelve weeks. In September and December of 2012, the Board voted for additional twelve week renewals of Plaintiff‘s interim position. Cauley voted against both of these extensions. Cauley also voted against giving Plaintiff a raise or providing her an administrative assistаnt to assist with her workload, and led an unsuccessful attempt to change the job description for the permanent TA position to again require a college degree.
During the spring of 2013, a screening committee considered applicants for the permanent TA position. Cauley was one of five members of the screening committee. The other four members of the committee included Silvernail and Sears and two other members who had previously been friendly with Cauley. On April 16, 2013, the Screening Committee announced five finalists. Plaintiff was not among the finalists, but, after a complaint from Sears, Plaintiff was interviewed for the TA position on May 5, 2013. A different candidate was offered the position. That candidate had both a Juris Doctor and Master of Business Administration degree, in addition to an undergraduate degree. He also had almost ten years of experience as a town manager and town administrator in four different towns.
B. Events After August 18, 2013
At an August 29, 2013 meeting the Select Board announced the candidate chosen for the TA position had declined the position. During the same meeting, the Select Boаrd voted to add the requirement of a college degree back to the FA job description and to appoint a new screening commission. On September 24, 2013, Cauley again voted against a further twelve-week extension of Plaintiff‘s appointment as Interim TA. Despite Cauley‘s vote, the Select Board approved a further extension.
On September 30, 2013, Plаintiff filed a written complaint with the Board regarding Cauley‘s unwanted sexual advances between 2008 and 2010. The Town hired an independent investigator to investigate the complaint. Cauley ceased participating directly in the activities of the second screening committee, but he did not resign and continued to be included in group emails. He continued to be prеsent in the Town offices and was observed to have a hostile relationship with Plaintiff. He also enjoyed a close relationship with four other women who worked in Town Hall, each of whom had negative interactions with Plaintiff, in at least one case, going back to shortly after Plaintiff was hired.
The second screening committee selected three finalists. Two оf the finalists were women and all three had college degrees and either had or were close to having a graduate degree. Plaintiff was not selected as a finalist. One of the women was offered the permanent TA position. After she declined the position, the other woman, Heather Budrewicz was offered, and accepted, the positiоn.
Plaintiff filed a second complaint with the Board on January 30, 2014. In her second complaint she alleged defamation and harassment by a co-worker, Joyce Skypeck, one of the four women Plaintiff identified as close with Cauley and hostile to her. Less than a week later, on February 3, 2014, Plaintiff filed a third complaint with the Select Board, asserting several town еmployees and members of the Select Board had harassed her or subjected her to unfair treatment in
Budrewicz began work as the permanent TA on March 3, 2014. By this time, Cauley had retired from his position as Highway Superintendent, but continued to serve on the Board. Plaintiff returned to an administrative assistant position, now reporting to Budrewicz. Later that month, the Board instructed Budrewicz to change thе job description for the administrative assistant position and discussed whether the position was permanent or temporary. Budrewicz reassigned duties that Plaintiff had previously performed to another Town employee and informed Plaintiff that the hours for the administrative assistant position had been reduced by two hours per week. Though Plaintiff had been an administrative assistant in a permanent position before serving as the Interim TA, Budrewicz informed Plaintiff that her administrative assistant position was temporary and she would have to reapply for a permanent position. Instead of reapplying, Plaintiff resigned from her position at the end of March of 2014.
V. DISCUSSION
Plaintiff‘s eleven count complaint includes two claims brought pursuant to fеderal law, each is alleged only against Defendant, Edward Cauley, in his individual capacity.1 In Count VII, Plaintiff alleges Cauley violated her rights to free speech, equal protection, and due process and the violations are actionable pursuant to
Claims brought under
A. Count VII - § 1983
A claim under
Plaintiff has not identified the specific actions taken by Cauley, individually, either as a Town employee or member of the Board that deprived her of her rights, leaving it up to the court to piece together the factual basis for her
The conduct Plaintiff attributes to Cauley and labels retaliatory, such as calling Plaintiff a “liar” to other Town employees, did not cause a deprivation of Plaintiff‘s rights to free speech, equal protection, or due process. Instead, the harms alleged by Plaintiff resulted from actions taken by the Board as a whole, specifically its response to her complaints about Cauley‘s sexual harassment and its decisions regarding hiring and pay for Town employees, including Plaintiff. Indeed, as Cauley was
Defendants argue, without citing authority, that Cauley cannot be held individually liable for official actions taken by the Board. Plaintiff resрonds with a citation to a First Circuit case ruling liability can attach to a city where an employee with “final authority” takes an unconstitutional action. Small v. Inhabitants of City of Belfast, 796 F.2d 544 (1st Cir. 1986). However, Plaintiff has not asserted a
Though not directly on point, the Seventh and Eleventh Circuits have both held “there can be no municipal liability for the isolated acts of only one member of a multimember board.” Wragg v. Vill. of Thornton, 604 F.3d 464, 469 (7th Cir. 2010) (citing Mason v. Vill. Of El Portal, 240 F.3d 337, 1340 (11th Cir. 2001). In the absence of authority to the cоntrary, the court is persuaded that just as an elected board is not liable for the malice of a single member, a single member cannot be liable for the official actions taken by the board following a vote of all members. For these reasons, the court concludes Cauley is entitled to summary judgment in his favor as to Plaintiff‘s
B. Count X - § 1985
Claims brought under
Plaintiff asserts throughout her filings that a conspiracy existed to discriminate against her on the basis of her sex, however the only discriminatory conduct she has alleged that was tied to her sex were Cauley‘s unwanted sexual advances between 2008 and 2010, well outside the aсtionable period. On the other hand, Plaintiff describes the motivating animus of the later conspiracy as a desire to retaliate against her because she complained about Cauley‘s sexual harassment and also other types of misconduct by other Town employees. Animus based on an employee‘s conduct, as opposed to the employee‘s membership in a class defined by an immutable characteristic does not satisfy the
VI. CONCLUSION
For the Foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment as to Counts VII and X of Plaintiff‘s complaint is hereby GRANTED. Having disposed of the only federal claims in the case, the court DENIES without prejudice summary judgment on all other counts and remands those counts to state court for further proceedings.
It is So Ordered.
_/s/ Mark G. Mastroianni________
MARK G. MASTROIANNI
United States District Judge
