OPINION
In this accelerated interlocutory appeal, police officers Dan Turner and Henry Bonaparte challenge the trial court’s denial of their assertions of qualified and official immunity. Appellee Troy Perry sued appellants, his former supervisors, alleging that they took adverse employment actions against him and slandered him in retaliation for his official complaint accusing them of unlawful conduct. Appellants contend that (a) they acted in response to unprotected speech, (b) their employer’s grievance process provided Perry with adequate due process, and (c) their representations of Perry’s conduct were made in good faith. We reverse the trial court’s denial of summary judgment based on qualified immunity to one of Perry’s First Amendment claims, affirm the trial court’s ruling in all other respects, and remand for further proceedings.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Alief Independent School District (“AISD”) employed appellee Troy Perry as a “Peace Officer-Gang Enforcement Officer” in 2004. Sergeant Henry Bonaparte was Perry’s direct supervisor, and Captain Dan Turner was the captain of the AISD police department. As a police officer responsible for investigating gang-related activity, Perry interviewed students and obtained and evaluated documents containing gang-related information. According to Plaintiffs Seventh Amended Petition, Perry completed an application in July 2004 to submit AISD’s “gang database” to the Department of Public Safety (“DPS”); however, Turner did not sign the application, and the appellants did not allow Perry to release the information to DPS.
In April 2005, information Perry had learned through his work as a gang officer caused him concern that there would be an increased risk of gang-related violence at several AISD schools on May 5 and May 16, 2005. He communicated the information he had gathered to gang investigators of several police agencies and the office of
After the information was published on the CLEO website, Bonaparte emailed Perry that “the [AISD] superintendent’s office had been inundated with calls for information in reference to the warning you had posted on the CLEO web site.” On May 4, 2005, Bonaparte again emailed Perry, stating, “From this point on no information[ ] regarding activities in and around this district will be given out without prior written approval from [a] departmental supervisor. Your decision to export data is causing a number of problems; this directive includes both written and verbal communications.” In addition, Perry was demoted from his position as a gang officer to a position as a patrol officer and placed on a “growth plan” on July 15, 2005. According to Perry, both Turner and Bonaparte informed him that these disciplinary measures were, in part; a response to the CLEO posting. Perry filed a grievance concerning that action, and in an undated memorandum, Bonaparte summarized the discussion that occurred during Perry’s grievance hearing on September 13, 2005. According to Bonaparte, Perry contended that he was reassigned from his position as a gang officer to a position as a patrol officer as a “direct result of his disclosure of a gang[-]related issue via a national web site.” Bonaparte further stated that “Perry did not perform in a satisfactory fashion during his tenure as a gang officer and he will not be returned to the position.” He concluded that “Perry has had problems with following the chain of command and has disseminated information to other outlets without supervisory approval.”
While these events were unfolding, Perry allegedly learned that Bonaparte and Turner had entered Perry’s office while he was away and removed a traffic citation he had written concerning an AISD teacher. According to Perry, Bonaparte told him that the citation was removed because the teacher was “politically connected.” On July 20, 2005, Perry asked the advice of an acquaintance at the Harris Count District Attorney’s Police Integrity Unit, and he was told that he should collect evidence of the alleged misconduct. Perry then obtained still photographs from a suiweil-lance tape that reportedly shows Bonaparte and Turner entering Perry’s office and leaving with a piece of paper. On or about October 18, 2005, Perry lodged an official complaint with an assistant district attorney in which he alleged that Bonaparte and Turner had unlawfully tampered with a government record. According to Perry, an assistant district attorney told him that the cited teacher said Turner had assured her that he would “take care of’ the citation.
On October 27, 2005, Perry filed a complaint with the school district in which he alleged that appellants had retaliated against him for reporting their conduct to the district attorney’s office. In connection with this grievance, Perry also related that he arrested a female student at Elsik High School on September 21, 2005, and at Turner’s instruction, transported the stu
The charges against the Elsik High School student were entered into the Juvenile Offender Tracking system on September 29, 2005, 1 and Perry attempted unsuccessfully to apprehend the student on the same day. When he returned to the station, he was given a letter of reprimand, dated September 28, 2005, in which Turner stated that Perry violated AISD’s procedural requirement that all officers notify an AISD police supervisor of an alleged criminal offense before contacting the Harris County District Attorney’s office to institute charges. The letter continued, “You are notified by receipt of this memorandum that you are required to contact an AISD Police Supervisor prior to contacting any ADA for charges.” Perry concluded that the reprimand, “arbitrarily enforcing an unwritten practice,” was issued to retaliate against him for reporting Bonaparte and Turner to the Harris County District Attorney’s office for illegal conduct.
Perry filed further grievances on October 11, November 2, and November 11, 2005. After he filed the November 11th grievance, AISD’s Director of Human Relations, Rose Benitez, summoned Perry to her office. In a meeting between Benitez, Perry, and Bonaparte, AISD terminated Perry’s employment. On November 17, 2005, Benitez wrote to Perry and stated that, at her November 11th meeting with him, they discussed issues concerning Perry’s job performance, including his “[inappropriate interaction with students.” Ben-itez further stated that a copy of the letter would be placed in Perry’s personnel file. 2
On January 12, 2006, Perry sued Turner, Bonaparte, and AISD. He alleged that AISD terminated his employment in retaliation against him for reporting violations of law by Turner and Bonaparte. He asserted claims against Turner and Bonaparte in their individual capacities for slander and intentional infliction of emotional distress. In addition, he alleged that they took adverse employment actions against him in violation of his rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
Turner and Bonaparte moved for partial traditional summary judgment on the grounds that they are protected from suit by qualified immunity and official immunity, and Perry failed to exhaust administra
II.Issues Presented
In their first issue, Turner and Bonaparte contend the trial court erred in denying their summary-judgment motion asserting qualified immunity to Perry’s claims that they violated his constitutional rights to freedom of speech and due process. In their second issue, appellants contest the trial court’s failure to grant summary judgment based on appellants’ assertions of official immunity to Perry’s claims of slander. 3
III.Standard of Review
To succeed in a motion for traditional summary judgment under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(c), the movant must establish that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
W. Invs., Inc. v. Urena,
IV,Analysis
A. Qualified Immunity
Qualified immunity protects governmental officials performing discretionary functions frpm suit if their actions were objectively reasonable in the light of then clearly-established law.
Anderson v. Creighton,
In analyzing whether qualified immunity applies, we first determine if the facts, taken in the light most favorable to the party asserting injury, showed that the official’s conduct violated a constitutional right.
See Scott v. Harris,
1. Claims Arising from Alleged Violations of Perry’s First Amendment Rights
Since 1968, courts have followed the
Pickering
balancing test to determine if the speech of a public employee is protected by the First Amendment.
Pickering v. Bd. of Educ. of Twp. High Sch. Dist. 205, Will County, Ill.,
In
Connick,
the Court discussed several facts on which it relied in analyzing whether speech “touched upon a matter of public concern.”
Id.
at 149,
• whether the speech was merely an extension of an employment dispute; 5
• whether the speech was focused on “gathering] ammunition for another round of controversy” with the employee’s superiors; 6
• whether the speech occurred at work or on the speaker’s own time and outside of the working areas of the office; 7
• whether the speech impeded the ability of the speaker or other employees to perform their duties; 8
• whether the employee sought to inform the public that the employer “was not discharging its governmental responsibilities in the investigation and prosecution of criminal cases”; 9 and
• whether the employee “[sought] to bring to light actual or potentialwrongdoing or breach of public trust” on the part of superiors. 10
Although these factors are not a general standard against which statements must be judged, they illustrate the application of the “content-form-context” test required by
Pickering. See id.
at 147,
In 2006, the United States Supreme Court decided
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
in which it further refined the First Amendment balancing test applicable to governmental employees.
In sum, the inquiry regarding whether a governmental employee’s speech is constitutionally protected now involves three considerations. First, we must determine whether the employee’s speech was made pursuant to his or her official duties.
Davis,
Subsequent cases have further clarified Garcetti’s effect on the
Pickering/Cotmick
test. For example, in
Nixon v. City of
On appeal, the court held that the statements at the accident scene wei’e made pursuant to the officer’s employment responsibilities, and thus, were not subject to First Amendment protection.
Id.
at 498. As the court explained, “the fact that [the police officer] performed his job incorrectly, in an unauthorized manner, or in contravention of the wishes of his superiors does not convert his statement ... into protected citizen speech.”
Id.
at 498-99. Although the court did not determine whether the officer acted pursuant to his professional duties in writing the magazine articles, it held that the articles were unprotected under the
Pickering
test in any event because they brought “ ‘the mission of the [police department] and the professionalism of its officers into serious disrepute,’ ” thereby undermining citizen confidence in the department and impairing the performance of its functions.
Id.
at 500-01 (quoting
City of San Diego v. Roe,
a. Causing Gang-Related Information to be Posted on CLEO
In their first issue, appellants contend that the trial court erred in denying their motion for qualified immunity to Perry’s claims arising from his release of gang-related information for posting to the CLEO website. According to Perry, this speech was protected by the First Amendment, and thus, appellants violated his constitutional rights by subjecting him to employment discipline for engaging in this speech. Appellants assert that this speech is not protected under Garcetti because it relates to Perry’s employment. We agree.
Although the parties have not identified the statement in the record and we do not know its exact content, Perry’s own characterizations of the statement and the context in which it was made place it firmly within the scope of his employment responsibilities. For example, in his petition, Pei’ry repeatedly states that he was “retaliated against for performing [his] job.” See,
e.g.,
PL’s Seventh Am. Pet., ¶ 17 (“Because [Perry] sought to properly perform his job, including making relevant and material communication with appropriate officials, [Perry] was the target of retaliation by [appellants].”). Activities undertaken in the course of performing one’s job, even if unauthorized, are conducted pursuant to official duties.
Nixon,
We further note that CLEO can be accessed only by law enforcement personnel
If you look at my job description for the gang officer, it specifically says that I am to deal with other agencies. So, did I have prior — I already had prior permission to — to deal with other agencies. It was part of my job. It was part of what I did.
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The event [i.e., the gang violence expected in May 2005] was something I had heard about. I was in the investigation stage. If you read the content of what I sent out, it simply was asking for information.
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Again, my job description and — and what I understand my — my job to be and what the policy says is that I — if I had evidence of a specific incident then I need to make that appropriate — to make that known. I was gathering that inform — all I had was — was minor information at this time when I sent that out, and I was looking for more confirmation. So, do I — did I feel it was necessary [to obtain permission before releasing the information]? No, I was doing what I was supposed to be doing in that I was trying to gather information to see how valid what I had heard from another source and what I had been hearing in the district was.
According to his own testimony, Perry was investigating gang activity and requesting confirmation of information he learned in his investigation. Although a job description alone is not dispositive of the scope of an employee’s duties, Perry’s understanding of his job responsibilities is supported by AISD policies included in the summary-judgment record. 14
Because private citizens do not have a right to post gang-related information to CLEO, there is “no relevant analogue to speech by citizens who are not government employees.”
Garcetti,
In his response to the motion for summary judgment, Perry stated that he released information for posting on the CLEO website “as a concerned citizen who is concerned not only about the public welfare, but also as a citizen concerned about the safety of other law enforcement personnel.”
15
This statement is insuffi-
b. Reporting Appellants’ Allegedly Unlawful Conduct to the Harris County District Attorney
In the remainder of their first issue, appellants contend the trial court erred in denying them qualified immunity from Perry’s claims arising from his report to the Harris County District Attorney that appellants unlawfully removed a citation from Perry’s citation book. Again, Garcet-ti dictates that we begin our analysis by determining if Perry engaged in the speech at issue pursuant to his employment responsibilities.
Because Perry is a police officer and his speech consisted of reporting his suspicions of unlawful activity, appellants contend that Perry engaged in this speech pursuant to his employment. In support of this argument, appellants emphasize that they were accused of unlawfully removing a citation. They contend that Perry “only had the authority to write tickets because he was a police officer; his reporting of the removal of a ticket, therefore, is necessarily related to [his] employment as a police officer.”
This argument is without merit. The speech at issue consists of Perry’s report to the district attorneys’ office alleging that appellants unlawfully tampered with an existing government record; the identity of the person who created the record is irrelevant.
Appellants also contend that this speech is unprotected pursuant to
Garcetti
because Perry communicated his allegations to the district attorney’s office while at work and in the course of performing his duties. Perry, however, testified without contradiction that he communicated with the district attorney’s office via cell phone, and did not recall using the office telephone for that purpose. Because appellants’ argument relies on facts that are not established in the record, it cannot support reversal.
See Scott, 550
U.S. at 379-81,
Having concluded that Perry was not acting pursuant to his employment responsibilities when reporting his suspicions of misconduct to the district attorney’s office, we proceed to the
Pickering/Connick
test and determine whether the speech addressed a matter of public interest. Some issues are inherently subjects of public concern.
Connick,
Finally, we must balance (a) the interests of Perry and the general public in allowing Perry to participate in speech on this issue, and (b) AISD police department’s legitimate purpose in “promot[ing] efficiency and integrity in the discharge of official duties,”
16
and maintaining “ ‘proper discipline in the public service.’ ”
17
“This involves whether the speech: (1) was likely to generate controversy and disruption, (2) impeded the department’s general performance and operation, and (3) affected working relationships necessary to the department’s proper functioning.”
Brawn,er,
Appellants contend that they nevertheless are entitled to qualified immunity because they did not violate a clearly established right protecting Perry’s speech. To be considered clearly established, “the contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right.”
Anderson,
At the time of these events, however, it was well-established that a legitimate report of unlawful police conduct is protected by the First Amendment.
See, e.g., Davis v. Ector County, Tex.,
Such a policy cannot be applied lawfully to authorize adverse employment action against a public employee “who in good faith reports a violation of law by the employing governmental entity or another public employee to an appropriate law enforcement authority.”
See
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 554.002(a) (Vernon 2004).
19
To the contrary, section 554.002 is intended to (1) enhance openness in government by protecting public employees who inform proper authorities of legal violations, and (2) secure governmental compliance with the law on the part of those who direct and conduct governmental affairs.
Town of Flower Mound v. Teague,
Because Turner and Bonaparte failed to demonstrate them entitlement to official immunity for Perry’s claims arising from his report of appellants’ suspected misconduct, we overrule the remainder of appellants’ first issue as it pertains to this speech.
2. Claims Arising from Alleged Violations of Fourteenth Amendment Rights
Appellants next challenge the trial court’s failure to grant summary judgment against Perry on his claim that appellants took adverse employment action against him in violation of his Fourteenth Amendment l-ight to due process. We begin our analysis by determining whether Perry was deprived of a protected interest, and, if so, what process was his due.
See Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
A property interest protected by procedural due process arises where an individual has a legitimate claim of entitlement that is created, supported, or secured by rules or mutually explicit understandings.
Alford v. City of Dallas,
Section 614.022 of the Texas Government Code, entitled “Complaint to be in Writing and Signed by Complainant,” provides, “To be considered by the head of a state agency or by the head of a fire department or local law enforcement agency, the complaint must be: (1) in writing; and (2) signed by the person making the complaint.” Id. § 614.022. Section 614.023, entitled “Copy of Complaint to be Given to Officer or Employee,” further provides:
(a) A copy of a signed complaint against a law enforcement officer of this state ... or peace officer appointed or employed by a political subdivision of this state shall be given to the officer or employee within a reasonable time after the complaint is filed.
(b) Disciplinary action may not be taken against the officer or employee unless a copy of the signed complaint is given to the officer or employee.
(c) In addition to the requirement of Subsection (b), the officer or employee may not be indefinitely suspended or terminated from employment based on the subject matter of the complaint unless:
(1) the complaint is investigated; and
(2) there is evidence to prove the allegation of misconduct.
Id.
§ 614.023.
20
We previously construed these statutes and concluded that the complaint must be in writing and signed by the person who claims to be the victim of misconduct.
Guthery v. Taylor,
According to appellants, the grievance process provided Perry with any due process to which he was entitled. We cannot agree that this substitute procedure protected Perry’s due process rights. By enacting sections 614.021-023, of the Government Code, the State provided covered employees with procedural safeguards to reduce the risk that adverse employment actions would be based on unsubstantiated complaints. Moreover, the State determined that the value of these protections outweighs the fiscal and administrative burdens incurred by complying with statutory requirements. In contrast, the summary-judgment evidence demonstrates that the procedures appellants followed impaired Perry’s ability to investigate or defend against the complaints made against him.
Rather than requiring complaints of alleged misconduct to be signed by the victim, appellants accepted and acted upon complaints that did not identify the true complainant. Instead, these complaints expressed the conclusions of other peace officers based on general allegations of unidentified people. For example, Officer Wayne Cox wrote,
In speaking with fellow officers, who wish to remain anonymous, I feel that Officer Troy Perry is threatening to undermine your authority as chief and erode the good order and discipline of the department. I respectfully request that he not be allow[ed] to interact with students at the Elsik campus as he tends to incite or inflame already volatile situations by his demeanor.... I opine that Officer Perry should never have any contact with the public as he is the antithesis of a professional police officer.
Cox’s partner, Officer William Britton, similarly wrote,
It has been brought to my attention by my fellow officers that Officer Perry has been speaking ill of the department. I have been with Officer Perry on several occassions [sic] at Elsik and I feel that his actions with the students at Elsik are not that of a professional police officer. I have observed him shout, yell and degrade students with whom he was interacting.
Officer Karen Meier emailed Bonaparte that the “morale in the department and overall tension level among officers is very strained” and “most of this could be avoided if Officer Perry could keep whatever problems he has with the department and supervisors to himself and not drag everyone into it.”
Deposition testimony demonstrated further problems with the procedure followed by appellants. Benitez testified that one of her job responsibilities requires her to investigate whether accusations are verifiable and truthful. Nevertheless, there was no investigation concerning Perry’s release of information for posting on the CLEO website, and she does not know that any AISD employee, other than law
In sum, appellants’ failure to follow statutory procedure magnified the risk that adverse employment action would be taken based on unsubstantiated complaints. Cf. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 614.022, 614.023 23 (requiring complaints against police officers to be written, signed, investigated, and supported by evidence if they are used as the basis for adverse employment action). On this record, we cannot conclude that the trial court erred in denying appellants’ motion for summary judgment regarding Perry’s Fourteenth Amendment claims.
B. Official Immunity
In them second issue, appellants argue that they are entitled to official immunity from Perry’s claims of slander,
24
and thus, the trial court erred in failing to grant summary judgment on this basis. Official immunity under common law is based on the need for public servants “to act in the public interest with confidence and without the hesitation that could arise from having their judgment continually questioned by extended litigation.”
Ballantyne v. Champion Builders, Inc.,
On appeal, the parties have focused their arguments on the element of good faith. To determine whether a public official has acted in good faith, we look to the objective standard adopted in
Chambers,
Appellants, however, failed to produce evidence that a reasonable officer in the same or similar circumstances could have believed that statements such as those made by Turner and Bonaparte were justified. In them affidavits in support of summary judgment, both Turner and Bonaparte stated:
It is within my job duties to report to ... administration, and specifically the Human Resources Department, what I believe, using my discretion, to be relevant in determining a subordinate’s employment or disciplinary future.
This was the case when reporting to the administration regarding Troy Perry and his job performance. I made the determination, using my discretion and judgment, as to what would be relevant to the administration in making a decision as to Troy Perry’s employment with Alief or any disciplinary measure taken. I performed these discretionary duties believing that my reporting to the administration as to Troy Perry was in the best interest of the District and believing what I reported to be trae.
I received reports from various administrators within the District that Troy Perry’s behavior, with respect to his interactions with students, parents, and faculty, was inappropriate. I used my judgment and found these reports to be reliable and in the interest of Alief and its students and faculty, I reported my findings as well as my observations to ... Human Resources. This was done without malice....
It is not my understanding that my issuance of disciplinary measures, such as my issuance of a verbal or written directive; the assignment of a growth plan; or even recommendation of termination, for violation of District or department policy or procedures, in any way violates the Constitutional rights of any officers under my supervision.
In effect, each appellant states that he felt justified in making the statements and reports at issue regarding Perry’s conduct; however, in analyzing claims of official immunity, “consideration of
svbjective
evidence of the good faith element of official immunity is inappropriate.”
BaUantyne,
Because Turner and Bonaparte failed to produce evidence that a reasonably prudent officer, in the same or similar circumstances, could have believed that them representations of Perry’s conduct were justified, the trial court properly denied summary judgment on this ground. We therefore overrule appellants’ second issue.
V. Conclusion
We conclude that Perry did not engage in protected speech when he released information for publication to a law-enforcement website. Consequently, appellants are entitled to qualified immunity against Perry’s claims that they violated his First Amendment rights in connection with this communication. We therefore reverse the trial court’s order and render judgment
Notes
. Perry attributes the delay in entering the charges into the computer system to school closures in connection with Hurricane Rita.
. Perry filed another grievance on November 28, 2005, and an unsuccessful grievance hearing was held on January 19, 2006.
. On appeal, the patties do not address Perry’s claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress or appellants' contention that Perry failed to exhaust administrative remedies.
.The plurality opinion may be taken to state the holding of the Court. As J. Souter explained in a concurring opinion, a majority of the Court agreed that, in the absence of pretext, employers whose conduct survives the plurality’s reasonableness test cannot be held constitutionally liable.
Waters,
.
Id.
at 148,
.
Id.
at 148,
.
Id.
at 152-53,
.
Id.
at 151,
.
Id.
at 148,
. id.
. Although the events in this case predate
Garcetti,
we apply its threshold requirement when determining whether Perry engaged in protected speech.
See Harper v. Va. Dep't of Taxation,
.That the employee's speech concerns facts learned while working is not dispositive.
See Charles v. Grief,
. In
City of San Diego,
the Supreme Court held that the police department had a legitimate and substantial interest in preventing one of its officers from selling pornographic videos of himself on eBay where the officer identified himself as a law enforcement officer, appeared in uniform, and performed indecent acts.
Nixon,
. For example, a policy entided "Alief ISD Policy CKE (Legal)” states that a "peace officer may provide assistance to another law enforcement agency....”
. In Perry’s Seventh Amended Petition, however, he alleged that he "was reprimanded even though the AISD Gang Officer’s stated responsibilities included protecting AISD students and personnel, and the responsibility to work with other agencies to track, monitor and document criminal gang sets, affiliates and associates.”
.
Arnett v. Kennedy,
.
Connick,
. During his deposition, Turner testified that it was part of AISD police department’s "procedure” to obtain prior approval from a supervisor before disseminating "juvenile information and information that could cause alarm.” Turner denied that this was a "policy.”
. An appropriate law enforcement authority includes governmental entities that the employee in good faith believes are authorized to investigate or prosecute a violation of criminal law. Id. § 554.002(b)(2).
. Act of May 16, 1969, 61st Leg., R.S., ch. 407, § 1, 1969 Tex. Gen. Laws 1333, 1333-34 (formerly codified as Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 6252-20, eff. June 2, 1969), recodified by Act of May 4, 1993, 73rd Leg., R.S., ch. 268, § 1, 1993 Tex. Gen. Laws 583, 678-79, amended by Act of May 19, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 507, § 1, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 1394, 1394, eff. Sept. 1, 2005.
.
See County of Dallas v. Wiland,
.Cf Fudge v. Haggar,
. To the contrary, Benitez testified that she did not investigate the complaints.
. Perry’s slander claim is primarily based on appellants' representations that he engaged in "inappropriate interactions with students.”
