VALINDA F. OLADEINDE, PATRICIA L. FIELDS,
Plaintiffs-Counterclaim Defendants-Appellees,
v.
CITY OF BIRMINGHAM, a municipal corporation, Richard
Arrington, individually and in his capacity as Mayor of the
City of Birmingham, Arthur Deutsch, individually and in his
capacity as Chief of Police of the City of Birmingham,
Julius Walker, individually and in his capacity as
Provisional Captain of Administrative Vice-Narcotics
Division, R.L. Webb, individually and in his capacity as
Provisional Captain of Internal Affairs Division,
Defendants-Counterclaim Plaintiffs-Appellants,
David Barber, Roger Brown, United States of America, State
of Alabama, Movants.
No. 91-7518.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
June 24, 1992.
Kenneth L. Thomas, Thomas, Means & Gillis, Birmingham, Ala., for Walker.
Joe R. Whatley, Jr., Samuel H. Heldman, Cooper, Mitch, Crawford, Kuykendall & Whatley; and Donald V. Watkins, Birmingham, Ala., for all other defendants.
William M. Dawson, Jr., and Gayle H. Gear, Dawson, Ramsey & Wiley, Birmingham, Ala., for appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama.
Before EDMONDSON and COX, Circuit Judges, and MERHIGE*, Senior District Judge.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:
Defendants, sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, appeal the district court's order denying their motion to dismiss based, among other things, on qualified immunity. We reverse in part and affirm in part.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs, Valinda F. Oladeinde and Patricia L. Fields, are Birmingham Police Department officers who filed a section 1983 action against the City of Birmingham, Birmingham Mayor Richard Arrington, Birmingham Police Chief Arthur Deutsch, Provisional Captain Julius Walker of the Vice-Narcotics Division of the Birmingham Police Department and Provisional Captain R.L. Webb of the Department's Internal Affairs Division. (Excluding the City, defendants were sued in their official and individual capacity.) Plaintiffs alleged that defendants violated plaintiffs' rights to free speech, due process, equal protection and freedom of association by retaliating against plaintiffs' "whistleblowing" about wrongdoing in the Police Department.1
Defendants moved unsuccessfully to dismiss the original complaint and then moved for dismissal again after some discovery and pretrial proceedings. The district court denied this second motion, but certified the denial order for interlocutory appeal. This court denied permission to appeal; we were unable to determine what question of law might control plaintiffs' claims because plaintiffs' complaint was a "shotgun" pleading containing rambling facts and multiple claims for relief all under one count and because we were unable to determine from the district court's order whether the district court ruled on a question of law. See Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, No. 91-2061 (11th Cir. filed May 8, 1991).
The case went back to the district court, which allowed plaintiffs to amend their complaint. Defendants again moved for dismissal after plaintiffs amended their complaint; the motion to dismiss was based on these grounds: (1) complaint's failure to conform to Fed.R.Civ.P. 8; (2) complaint's failure to state a claim for which relief might be granted; (3) the substance of the alleged wrongful activity was privileged from discovery; (4) qualified immunity; and (5) for the state-law claims, defendants' argument that the district court should exercise no pendent jurisdiction.
The district court denied defendants' motion with the following brief statement:
Defendants evidently got carried away by the Eleventh Circuit's comments by way of dicta and citation to Pelletier v. Zweifel,
In addition, defendants' motion to dismiss appears to be fired out of the same or a similar shotgun from which they accuse plaintiffs of firing. In any event none of the grounds or rounds fired are sufficient to justify a grant of the motion to dismiss.
Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, No. 91-AR-0196-S (N.D.Ala. filed June 2, 1991). Apart from stating that plaintiffs' complaint met federal civil procedure pleading requirements, the district court never explained why it rejected defendants' other grounds for dismissal. This appeal by the individual-capacity defendants followed.
DISCUSSION
Defendants argue that the district court erred by concluding that plaintiffs' complaint conformed to procedural rules, by concluding that plaintiffs' complaint stated a claim for which relief might be granted, and by rejecting defendants' qualified-immunity defense.2 Many factors complicate our review of defendants' three claims, but no factor plays as dominant a complicating role as the long and wordy nature of plaintiffs' amended complaint.
In all kinds of cases, pleadings should be "simple, concise, and direct." Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(1).3 We are perplexed and frustrated by the fact that, despite clear guidance from this court, "the complaint presented to us ... [continues to be] a typical 'shotgun' pleading." Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, No. 91-2061, slip op. at 2 (11th Cir. filed May 8, 1991). But in the light of the fact that this case is presented to us for the third time4 (although the case has yet to advance much beyond the initial-pleadings stage) and in the interest of judicial economy and efficiency, we will review defendants' claims instead of remanding this case for further repleading. We admit to serious doubt that the complaint complies with Rule 8, but we will not reverse the district court on this point. We reject defendants' first point on appeal.
On a related question about pleadings (whether the complaint states a claim), we want to use this opportunity to repeat that, "in an effort to eliminate nonmeritorious claims on the pleadings and to protect public officials from protracted litigation involving specious claims, we, and other courts, have tightened the application of Rule 8 to § 1983 cases." Arnold v. Board of Educ. of Escambia County,
Rule 12(b)(6) and Qualified Immunity
At this early stage in the proceedings, the Rule 12(b)(6) defense and the qualified-immunity defense become intertwined. Under Rule 12(b)(6), defendants can defeat plaintiffs' cause of action if the complaint fails "to state a claim upon which relief can be granted." Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).5 Under the qualified-immunity defense, defendants are immune from liability and even from trial if plaintiffs' complaint fails to state a violation of "clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
When reviewing motions to dismiss, we follow the same standards as the trial courts. All well-pleaded facts in plaintiffs' complaint and all reasonable inferences drawn from those facts are taken as true. See, e.g., Stephens v. Department of Health and Human Servs.,
Separate Claims
We can immediately dispose of two claims contained in plaintiffs' complaint: equal protection and freedom of association. Our review of the complaint and relevant case law shows that no set of facts alleged support either of these two claims. This conclusion is made even easier by plaintiffs' counsel's admission during oral argument that she was "persuaded" by defendants' arguments and by applicable case law that the alleged equal-protection and freedom-of-association claims were legally unsupportable and that, if given the chance, she would "not include" these claims in another amended complaint. Plaintiffs, then, have concededly failed to state equal-protection and freedom-of-association claims for which relief might be granted.
Plaintiffs have also failed to state a due-process claim for which relief might be granted. Plaintiffs' complaint alleges that plaintiff Oladeinde's reputation was soiled, that plaintiffs Oladeinde and Fields were transferred for no good reason, and that plaintiff Oladeinde was denied a promotion. None of these allegations implicate the due-process protection of the Fourteenth Amendment.
We first examine whether plaintiffs alleged a violation of their procedural due-process rights. When reviewing a due-process claim, the threshold question is whether plaintiffs were deprived of a protected property or liberty interest. See, e.g., Faucher v. Rodziewicz,
We also conclude that the alleged defamatory remarks made about plaintiff Oladeinde fall outside the protection of constitutional due process. Plaintiff Oladeinde tries to rely on Owen v. City of Independence,
Plaintiff Oladeinde's promotion is also not a protected property or liberty interest. In Wu v. Thomas,
Aside from failing to state a claim for a violation of procedural due-process rights, plaintiffs have also failed to state a claim for a violation of substantive due-process rights. Substantive due process is a difficult concept to define. But "substantive due process is violated only when the government engages in actions which 'offend those canons of decency and fairness which express the notions of justice....' " Faucher,
Plaintiffs, however, have successfully stated a free-speech claim for which relief might be granted. Bearing in mind that all facts alleged in the complaint and all reasonable inferences drawn from those facts must be taken as true on a motion to dismiss, see, e.g., Stephens,
Although plaintiffs have successfully stated a free-speech claim, they have stated this claim only against three of the individual-capacity defendants: Deutsch, Walker and Webb. Nowhere do plaintiffs allege particular wrongful acts by Mayor Arrington and nowhere do plaintiffs allege a sufficient causal connection between the alleged free-speech violation and the Mayor's conduct. Absent these allegations, plaintiffs' complaint fails to state a section 1983 claim against the Mayor. See, e.g., Hansen v. Black,
Plaintiffs came closest to alleging the Mayor's involvement when plaintiffs made the following statements in their complaint: "As a result of plaintiffs' [whistleblowing], defendants Webb, Walker, Deutsch and Arrington took certain actions in an effort to punish, harass, and intimidate such 'whistleblowers....' " Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint at 7, para. 20; and "Defendants illegally conspired to violate plaintiffs' rights...." Id. at 18, para. 43. In the light of the heightened specificity requirements for Rule 8 in section 1983 cases, we look for definiteness in the averment of wrongful acts. These vague allegations, which are supported by no specific factual allegations against the Mayor, constitute no basis for a section 1983 cause of action. The district court, therefore, should have dismissed the claims against the Mayor.
Defendants in their Individual Capacity
We now address the question whether the remaining individual-capacity defendants are entitled to qualified immunity against plaintiffs' free-speech claim. We conclude that, based on the record before us, Deutsch, Walker and Webb are unentitled to qualified immunity at this stage in the proceedings.
Defendants correctly argue that, in free-speech cases, "[b]ecause no bright-line standard puts the reasonable public employer on notice of a constitutional violation, the employer is entitled to immunity except in the extraordinary case where [the balancing test from Pickering v. Board of Educ.,
CONCLUSION
Because plaintiffs' complaint fails to state a claim for which relief might be granted on the assertions that defendants violated plaintiffs' rights to due process, freedom of association and equal protection and because plaintiffs' complaint fails to state a claim against Mayor Arrington, we REVERSE the district court's denial of defendants' motion to dismiss these claims. But we AFFIRM the district court's decision in all other respects.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Honorable Robert R. Merhige, Jr., Senior U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation
Plaintiffs also raised state-based tort claims
We deem abandoned those motion-to-dismiss arguments that defendants advanced in the district court but failed to raise on appeal. See, e.g., Rogero v. Noone,
Rule 8 requires, among other things, that a pleading contain a "short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief." Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2). Although "[e]ach averment of a pleading shall be simple, concise, and direct[,] ... [n]o technical forms of pleading ... are required." Id. 8(e)(1)
See Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, Nos. 91-2061 & 91-2063 (11th Cir. filed May 8, 1991) (denying permission to appeal and denying mandamus petition); Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, No. 91-7530 (11th Cir. filed July 29, 1991) (denying mandamus petition and granting stay pending appeal)
In asserting their Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, we note that defendants have attacked the validity of each constitutional claim allegedly asserted in plaintiffs' complaint. See, e.g., Defendants' Motion to Dismiss at 15-23
