I.
Bеttye Warnock, formerly auditor for Pecos County, brought this § 1983 suit to recover damages and obtain prospective relief from Pecos County and its two state district judges, Alex Gonzalez and Brock Jones. She alleges that these judges violated her First Amendment rights when they chose not to appoint her to a second two-year term as county auditor after she brought to light “violations of laws and administrative regulations of the State of Texas and of the policies and ordinances of Pecos County, Texas.” She sued the judges in both their official and individual capacities.
In an unsuccessful suit filed in Texas state court in May of 1993, she alleged that the county violated the Texas Whistleblower Act, Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 6252-16a (West • 1993) (currently codified as amеnded at Tex. Local Gov’t Code § 554.001 et seq. (West 1994 & Supp.1997)). Although this statute allows a state prosecutor to recover civil penalties from individual officials, it does not permit private suits against officials acting in their individual capacities. Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 6252-16a § 5(a); Tex. Local Gov’t Code § 554.008. The county won a
Based on the whistleblowing suit, the district court below held that Warnoek was precluded from recovering against the county. The district court dismissed the county with prejudice, and Warnoek did not appeal.
Warnoek did, however, appeal the district court’s further conclusion that the Eleventh Amendment and qualified immunity principles barred her claims against the two judges. We vaсated the judges’ dismissals. Warnock v. Pecos County,
On remand, the district court once again dismissed the judges in their official capacities, and Warnoek has not appealed those dismissals. With respect to the claims against the judges individually, Warnoek followed the Rule 7(a) procedure that we outlined in Schultea. The judges filed a response in which they argued that they were entitled to qualified immunity. Although the county noted that it had already been dismissed, it filed a similar pleading urging the court to dismiss the judges on the grounds of qualified immunity.
Instead of deciding the immunity issue, the district court granted summary judgment on the theory that Wamock’s state suit against the county precludes the present suit against the judges individually.
II.
We cannot sanction this application of the doctrine of res judicata. First, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c), res judicata is an affirmative defense that courts generally should not raise sua sponte. Carbonell v. Louisiana Dept. of Health & Human Resources,
Second, even if the court properly raised the issue of res judicata, there was no identity of parties. Warnoek did not sue Judges Gonzalez and Jones in her state action. Nor was there privity between the county and the judges in their individual capacities. See Conner v. Reinhard,
III.
Judges Gonzalez and Jones invite us to affirm the dismissal by reaching the issue of qualified immunity. Because the immunity question would almost certainly arise before the district court, and because we have access to all the relevant pleadings, we will decide it. We concludе, however, that War-nock has defeated the judges’ immunity from discovery and thus that the judges’ motion to dismiss should be denied. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Warnock’s Rule 7(a) reply lists dozens of violations of law or fiscal improprieties committed by county officials or compromising county funds. For each violation, Warnock indicates the year in which the incident occurred; in many eases, she indicates the month of the year. She also provides the names and offices of the state and county officials to whom she reported the violations. We have no trouble concluding that Warnock’s Rule 7(a) reply is sufficiently detailed to satisfy the heightened pleading requirements' that we reinforced in Schultea v. Wood,
A samplе of Warnoek’s allegations shows that her claim is sufficiently particularized. She asserts that she reported to Judge Gonzalez’s chambers in June of 1991 that his wife had improperly used county phone services. The next month, she told Judge Jones that the district attorney was holding forfeiture funds unlawfully. In January of 1992, she brought to both judges’ attention alleged violations of Texas bidding statutes. She told the county treasurer on several occasions about matters such as the unauthorized release of pledged securities, incorrect amounts paid to the state, illegal early releases of paychecks, and violations of laws governing rapid deposits. She notified county officials of violations of state statutes on travel reimbursements. Shе told the commissioners court that its use of tax money for a prison water tank was improper. The list goes on. This detailed Rule 7(a) reply “alleg[es] with particularity all material facts on which [Warnock] contends [she] will establish [her] right to recovery, which ... include[s] detailed facts supporting the contention that the plea of immunity cannot be sustained.” Elliott v. Perez,
The judges contend that most of War-nock’s detailed allegations are irrelevant because only about a dozen involve reports to the judges themselves. Given the context, however, we will not require Warnock to plead the details of how Judges Gonzalez and Jones learned about each report to various state and county officials. The judges may not have known about every last report, but we can suppose that their duty to decide whether to re-appoint Warnock to the auditor’s office led them to inquire into her communications with entities such as the county treasurer’s office, the county attorney’s office, and the commissioners court. See Siegert v. Gilley,
B.
In order to survive the judges’ motion to dismiss, Warnock’s specific allegations must portray an objectively unreasonable violation of clearly established First Amendment law. Siegert,
Because Warnock is a public employee, her allegations must survive a three-part test in order to state a violation of the First Amendment. First, the relevant speech must involve a matter of public concern. Second, her interest in commenting on the matter of public concern must outweigh her employer’s interest in promoting efficiency. And third, her protected speech must have motivated her public employer’s decision to fire her. Connick v. Myers,
“There is perhaps no subset of ‘matters of public concern’ more important than bringing official misconduct to light.” Davis v. Ector County,
The defendants argue that Warnock was speaking as an employee rather than as a citizen and thus that hеr public employer could terminate her without regard to whether her speech involved matters of public concern. In essence, they contend that they could fire Warnock because it was her job to serve the public by investigating governmental waste and abuse. Citing Connick, we have announced that “our task is to decide whether the speech at issue in a рarticular case was made primarily in the plaintiffs role as citizen or primarily in his role as employee.” Terrell v. University of Texas System Police,
In weighing the value of Warnock’s speech against the cоunty’s interest in efficiency, we generally focus on three factors: “(1) whether the speech was likely to generate controversy and disruption; (2) whether the speech impeded the general operation of the department; and (3) whether the speech affected the working relationships necessary to the proper functioning of ... County administratiоn.” Davis,
Warnock presents an unusual case because the Texas legislature has assigned auditors the task of disrupting the workplace when its smooth operation conflicts with legal requirements or compromises the public’s interest in fiscal responsibility. In other words, Texas gives county auditors responsibility for guarding the public purse and using the authority of the auditor’s office to ensure that local governments comply with the law. Under Texas Local Government Code § 112.006(b), for example, “[t]he сounty audi
In the bulk of First Amendment eases brought by public employees, the governmental employer has a legitimate interest in terminating employees whose criticisms intrude on the workplace harmony that tends to facilitate the efficient operation of government functions. In this case, however, the statutes of the State of Texas articulate an interest in stirring up controversy when county auditors discover misappropriations of county funds. Although Wamock’s position was not merely ministerial, she was not a “policymaker” hired to implement the agenda of the county or the judges. As the statutory scheme shows, Warnock was to use her discretion to scrutinize county expenditures, not to enable county officials to spend money as they saw fit. The job of county auditor, then, is not within “that narrow band of fragile relationships requiring for job security loyalty at the expense of unfettered speech.” Gonzalez v. Benavides,
At this stage, of course, we are not in a position to determine whether any misaрpropriations or other violations have taken place. But if Warnock’s allegations are true, and we say nothing about that, Judges Gonzalez and Jones may not rely on the county’s interest in an efficient workplace. When a public employer grants an employee the task of serving as ombudsman within a particular field, it may not fire that employee fоr accurate and thorough criticisms of the relevant governmental practices.
Finally, Warnock must show that her protected speech caused Judges Gonzalez and Jones to decide not to re-appoint her. As we have noted, the allegations, if believed, could support an inference that the judges knew about the bulk of Wamoek’s reports. We also conclude that evidence supporting these allegations could sustain Wamock’s burden of demonstrating that her effort to air the county’s fiscal problems was “a substantial or motivating factor” in the judges’ decision; Harrington v. Harris,
An inference is just that. We do not know what discovery may bring. We say only that Warnock’s pleadings state a First Amendment violatiоn.
2.
We must next ask whether the judges’ qualified immunity protects them from having to answer Wamock’s allegations. The judges are entitled to immunity from suit if “reasonable public officials could differ on the lawfulness of the ¡judges’] actions.” Cantu v. Rocha,
Wamoek’s term ended on March 5, 1993.
Clearly established law will not defeat qualified immunity if “an objectively reasonable view of the fаcts” might lead an official not to realize that he was breaking the law. Matherne v. Wilson,
IV.
The dismissals of Judges Gonzalez and Jones in their individual capacities based on res judicata are REVERSED. We instruct the district court to deny the judges’ motion to dismiss on grounds of quаlified immunity and REMAND the ease for further proceedings.
REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions.
Notes
. For our purposes, there is no difference between firing and declining to re-appoint. See Brand v. Finkel,
. At this stage in the proceedings, it is difficult to know when the judges made the decision that Wamock alleges violated the First Amendment. For the purposes of the motion to dismiss, we assume that March 5, 1993, is the relevant date. This assumption does not bar further factual or legal arguments about when the judges terminated Wamock.
