In this case, we affirm the award of damages to a deputy sheriff fired because of activities protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
I. FACTS
On October 1, 1977, the Etowah County Sheriff’s Department employed Terry Sykes as a “road deputy.” On August 30, 1980, Roy McDowell was appointed sheriff to fill a vacancy created by the death of the previous sheriff. In October, 1981, Sheriff McDowell called Sykes to his office and accused Sykes of publicly making derogatory remarks about him. In October, 1981, and in April, 1982, McDowell discussed with Sykes what McDowell saw as Sykes’s lack of political support for McDowell. McDowell told Sykes that he should get on McDowell’s side in the upcoming election. Sykes disclaimed any interest in political activity and told McDowell that he was not supporting anyone and would like to be left out of politics and simply to be a deputy sheriff. In the April, 1982, conversation, McDowell told Sykes that Sykes did not have any constitutional rights while he worked for McDowell. McDowell also told Sykes that “several of them” were going to be fired and Sykes “would be one of them” if he did not find new friends.
Sykes also had several conversations with Major Tinsley of the sheriff’s office concerning his lack of support for McDowell. Major Tinsley accused Sykes of being a friend to Jack Partee and Harold Lockridge, employees with apparent inten *1100 tions of running against McDowell. Major Tinsley also threatened to fire four or five persons, including Sykes. In June, 1982, Major Tinsley asked Sykes to sign a newspaper advertisement for McDowell’s campaign. Sykes refused. When Sykes refused again the next day, Tinsley commented, “We’ve got some permanent openings in the jail.”
In the middle of October, 1981, Sykes began receiving large amounts of jail duty. Sheriff’s Department deputies considered jail duty to be punitive, or at least distasteful duty. Sheriff McDowell ordered Kirby Johnston, who is in charge of assignments to the jail, to assign Sykes to jail duty as much as possible. Sheriff McDowell’s orders were “to keep him off the road, to keep him out of contact with people, that he might politic against [McDowell].” McDowell told Johnston that he suspected Sykes was for Jack Partee for sheriff.
On June 22, 1982, Johnston told Sykes to report to jail duty the next day on the first shift for an indefinite period of time. The general rule regarding jail duty was to rotate road deputies equally. Because he had performed large amounts of jail duty for the preceding several months, Sykes refused to report to the jail for duty.
On June 23, 1982, Sykes reported to work on the second shift. Major Tinsley ordered him to report to the jail for an indefinite period of time. Sykes replied that “until it was equally distributed among all the deputies in the department, instead of just a certain few,” that he was not going to work at the jail. Major Tinsley then fired Sykes.
Sykes appealed his firing to the Etowah County Personnel Board (ECPB). The ECPB held that Sykes’s dismissal was improper because Alabama law required the sheriff, rather than a subordinate officer, to fire a deputy. After receiving this decision from the ECPB, McDowell personally fired Sykes. Sykes appealed this firing to the ECPB. The ECPB again ruled in Sykes’s favor, holding that McDowell was without authority to reopen the matter once the firing had initially been ruled improper.
McDowell filed a petition for writ of certiorari to the circuit court. The circuit court reversed the ECPB decision, holding that the sheriff could correct the procedural defect that rendered the first firing improper. Because the Board had earlier found sufficient grounds for the firing, the circuit court disposed of the case without remanding to the ECPB.
On Sykes’s appeal contesting the jurisdiction of the circuit court, the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the circuit court’s exercise of jurisdiction. The Alabama Supreme Court denied Sykes’s petition for writ of certiorari.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
While the state appeals were pending, Sykes filed this action in the district court claiming a violation of his first amendment rights of freedom of speech and association. The court submitted the case to the jury with special interrogatories. 1 The jury returned a $99,054.93 verdict for Sykes as compensatory damages. This compensatory damage award included $60,-000 for emotional distress, awarded against *1101 McDowell in his official capacity. The jury also awarded $15,000 to Sykes in punitive damages against McDowell in his individual capacity. Thus, the jury’s total damages awarded to Sykes were $114,054.93. The district court also ordered Sykes reinstated and awarded him attorney’s fees.
III. CONTENTIONS
McDowell argues that this case should have been dismissed at the pleading stage on the basis of res judicata. If the suit properly survived the bar of res judicata, then McDowell argues that it should not have been submitted to the jury; submission to the jury of Interrogatory 1 indicates that the district court did not determine that Sykes had alleged a first amendment protected activity. McDowell argues that because Sykes disavowed interest in supporting anyone politically, he did not engage in protected activity. Additionally, McDowell contends that the damages award was excessive.
We must decide four issues in this appeal. First, under 28 U.S.C. § 1738, did the adjudication in the Alabama state court system of the procedural issue of Sheriff McDowell’s authority to fire Sykes bar litigation in federal district court of the merits of the firing?
Second, was the district court’s submission to the jury of the question whether Sykes engaged in first amendment protected speech error?
Third, assuming the district court independently analyzed the legal status of Sykes’s speech, did the court err in concluding that Sykes engaged in first amendment protected speech?
Fourth, were the punitive damages awarded by the jury excessive?
IV. EES JUDICATA
McDowell contends, because Sykes litigated in the Alabama courts, Title 28 U.S.C. § 1738 precludes Sykes from bringing this suit. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1738, federal courts are required to give full faith and credit to judicial proceedings in the state courts. Section 1983, Title 42 U.S.C. claims are subject to the same rules of preclusion as any other claims.
Allen v. McCurry,
The preclusive effect that the district court must accord depends on what preclusive effect Alabama law would accord the state court proceedings, and on whether Sykes litigated the constitutional issues surrounding his dismissal within the meaning of Cosines. To determine these questions, we must decide what issues were litigated in the Alabama state courts. 2
After McDowell’s personal firing of Sykes, the ECPB held that the sheriff lacked authority to cure an invalid firing. McDowell filed a petition for writ of certiorari to the circuit court, which held that the ECPB erred in concluding that Alabama law prevented the sheriff from curing a procedural defect in an earlier firing. The circuit court deferred to the ECPB’s original determination that Sykes’s conduct justified his dismissal. Sykes made an oral motion to intervene in McDowell’s appeal to the circuit court. McDowell concedes that the appeals courts, which upheld the circuit court, only adjudicated the procedural question raised by Sykes: whether the writ of certiorari was an available remedy.
McDowell argues that under Alabama' law, Sykes is barred from further litigation about his firing. McDowell cites
Dominex,
*1102
Inc. v. Key,
Under Alabama law, a circuit court may review whether evidence supports the factual findings of a personnel review board and whether the board has made errors of law.
See Phelps v. Public Commission,
This argument ignores the limited role Sykes played as an intervenor in McDowell’s appeal to the circuit court. To adopt this argument, we would in effect hold that Sykes was required to appeal the merits portion of the ECPB’s holding and assert his constitutional claims when McDowell appealed the question of his authority to fire Sykes. We are not persuaded that Alabama cases demonstrate that Alabama state courts would be bound by this circuit court decision on the procedural issue in a suit brought by Sykes alleging a constitutional violation. The most recent of the Alabama cases on preclusion,
Dominex,
summarizes the four elements of
res judicata:
(1) prior judgment rendered by court of competent jurisdiction; (2) prior judgment rendered on the merits; (3) parties to both suits substantially identical; and (4) same cause of action present in both suits.
The principle enunciated in
Brooks
is that a litigant who failed to bring a compulsory counterclaim is barred from litigating the counterclaim in a later suit.
In addition, precedent on the preclusive effect of state court judgments does not place a burden to appeal favorable administrative holdings on a federal rights-holder. In
Kremer v. Chemical Construction Corp.,
The teaching of
Kremer
and
Gorin
is that federal courts must accord preclusive effect to issues litigated and decided on the merits, even though the review on the merits is sharply limited.
See Casines,
Finally, the policy of section 1738 — to give finality to state court proceedings — is not implicated by litigation of Sykes’s constitutional claim in federal court. The case that was litigated in Alabama state courts was McDowell’s authority as sheriff to reinstate a dismissal by acting through correct procedure. Sykes’s cause of action— merits of his discharge — was not appealed and was not litigated. The overriding purpose of
res judicata
is to avoid relitigation of the same cause of action under new legal theories and thereby to prevent inconsistent decisions.
Allen v. McCurry,
V. FIRST AMENDMENT
On the first amendment claim, McDowell contends that the district court erred by submitting to the jury the question of whether Sykes engaged in first amendment protected conduct. In response, Sykes points out that McDowell did not raise an objection to the submission of the question to the jury at any time. Sykes also contends that the district court’s denial of McDowell’s motions for directed verdict and for new trial constituted an implicit determination that the conduct was protected. Thus, Sykes argues that the submission of the issue to the jury did not prejudice McDowell’s rights.
Whether certain activity or speech is protected by the first amendment is a question of law for the district court.
Connick v. Myers,
The test, since no objection was made, is plain error. Judicial notice of plain error is confined in this circuit to “error that has seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
Liner v. J.B. Talley and Co., Inc.,
The second aspect of McDowell’s argument is that the district court erred as a matter of law in reaching its implicit conclusion that Sykes engaged in protected speech activity. The gist of the argument is that Sykes consistently denied being politically involved; therefore, he was not engaged in any protected activity. McDowell contends, for instance, that the record contains no evidence that Sykes supported or associated with Jack Partee; therefore, no freedom of association claim has been shown. McDowell also argues that even if the record shows accusations by Sheriff McDowell against Sykes because Sykes was speaking politically in associating with Partee, Sykes’s denials of the accusations, which he repeated at trial, make him ineligible for the protection of the first amendment. McDowell also, argues that evidence showing a pattern of patronage politics is irrelevant to a first amendment case.
The record reveals that Sykes was firm in avowing his right not to speak in the county about political affairs. He asserted his “constitutional right” not to be coerced into “becoming on [McDowell’s] side.” He told Major Tinsley, in response to an accusation that his friends were running for sheriff, that he hoped he was friends with men he had worked with for eight hours a day. He refused to sign a newspaper ad supporting Sheriff McDowell. This he did in the face of explicit threats of retaliation. The expressive content of these refusals to speak as ordered, by disavowing friendships and signing ads supporting McDowell, is clear. In addition, the right not to send messages under state coercion is a first amendment protected right.
See, e.g., Wooley v. Maynard,
McDowell also argues that Sykes was discharged for insubordination — his refusal to report for jail duty. McDowell cites cases, such as
Berry,
holding that, even though refusal to obey an order takes the form of speech, it is not a protected activity. That rule is not on point here. Sykes’s claim is not that his refusal to report to jail duty constituted speech, but that McDowell fired him for other conduct, which the first amendment protects. When an employee engages in constitutionally protected conduct, “it is ... a question of fact whether [he] was constructively dis
*1105
charged because of it.”
Schneider,
We hold that Sykes engaged in protected first amendment activity and that submitting the protected speech issue to the jury did not prejudice McDowell’s rights.
VI. DAMAGES
Citing
Wilson v. Taylor,
A court’s refusal to grant a new trial on the grounds of inadequate or excessive damages is a matter within the sound discretion of the district court. It should be overturned only in exceptional circumstances.
Wilson,
McDowell’s comparison with
Wilson,
in which the emotional distress award was found excessive, is unpersuasive. “Comparison of verdicts rendered in different cases is not a satisfactory method for determining excessiveness
vel non
in a particular case and ... each case must be determined on its own facts.”
Wiley,
The record does not support McDowell’s assertion that the only evidence to support a claim for the damage award was that Sykes was “worried because he was not able to find a job.” Sykes testified to a number of adverse effects of the firing. Sykes’s finances were cut by half. He suffered embarrassment among his peer group of other law enforcement officers. In a small community “where each resident knows the neighbors,” the humiliation of a public firing is evident.
See Baskin v. Parker,
VII. CONCLUSION
We hold that the administrative proceedings in which Sykes was involved did not bar him from further litigation in federal court. We also hold that even though the question of whether speech is protected is a legal question for the district court, submitting the question to the jury did not constitute plain error, in this case. Finally, we hold that the damages awarded by the jury are not clearly excessive. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Question 1:
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Terry Sykes, while employed as an Etowah County deputy sheriff during Sheriff Roy McDowell’s campaign seeking election to his first full term as sheriff of Etowah County, engaged in protected first amendment conduct with respect to the sheriff’s race which was not favorable to Sheriff McDowell's election effort and which was known to Sheriff McDowell before Deputy Sheriff Sykes was discharged as an employee of the Etowah County Sheriff's Department?
Question 2:
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Terry Sykes’ protected first amendment conduct was a substantial or motivating factor in Sheriff McDowell’s decision to discharge him?
Question 3:
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Sheriff McDowell would have reached the same decision to discharge Deputy Sheriff Terry Sykes even in the absence of Sykes’ first amendment protected conduct?
Questions 4-10 omitted.
. The sources for this discussion are the case record, including the order of the circuit court; the parties’ explanations; and the appellate opinion in
Etowah County Personnel Board, et als. v. Roy McDowell,
as Sheriff of Etowah County Alabama,
. Because Sykes’s motion to intervene was orally made, the exact grounds supporting the motion are not reflected in the record.
