WENDELL DOMINA, BLAISE RIGGS, LINDEN SNYDER, VAN HARPOLD, AND JERRY SOULE, APPELLEES,
V.
GEORGE VAN PELT, INDIVIDUALLY; KLAYTON JOHNSON, INDIVIDUALLY; DALE SHAUL, INDIVIDUALLY; AND CHARLES PERSON, INDIVIDUALLY, APPELLANTS.
Nos. 00-1217, 00-1242, 00-1243, 00-1244 and 00-1245
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: September 15, 2000
Filed: December 26, 2000
Aрpeals from the United States District Court for the District of Nebraska.[Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Before Hansen, Heaney, and Morris Sheppard Arnold, Circuit Judges.
Morris Sheppard Arnold, Circuit Judge.
We view the record in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. See Burnham v. Ianni,
Mr. Riggs and the secretary were placed on paid leave pending the completion of an investigation. The county attorney characterized the results of the investigation as "inconclusive," partly because Mr. Person and the secretary denied engaging in the sexual conduct. Mr. Riggs was eventually fired, and the оther road crew members were advised by letter that they would be subject to discipline, including discharge, if they discussed the incident at work or on county property. According to the letter, there were no restrictions on what the road crew members could say on their own time and away from county property, but they were "strongly encourage[d]" not to discuss the matter at all.
Following a hearing regarding Mr. Riggs's discharge, the county offered to reinstate him to his position on the road crew. He was told, however, that he would not be promoted to a supervisory position that he had been scheduled to assume. Mr. Riggs declined the county's offer. The commissioners stated that they denied Mr. Riggs the supervisory position because of the way in which he reрorted the relevant incident, including having told his co-workers what he had observed, and because he later said that he was uncomfortable approaching two of the commissioners.
The plaintiffs sued the defendants in their individual capacity under 42 U.S.C. 1983, alleging that Mr. Person and the commissioners violated the plaintiffs' constitutional rights. Mr. Riggs alleged that the defendants retaliated аgainst him for reporting the incident, and that their actions in suspending, discharging, and, after reinstatement, denying him a promotion, violated his first amendment right of freedom of expression. He also alleged that the defendants' actions discouraged him from further protected speech and violated his right to equal protection. The other four plaintiffs alleged that the letter forbidding them to discuss the incident violated their first amendment and equal protection rights.
The defendants moved for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. The district court denied the motions, and the defendants appeal.
I.
Initially, we reject the plaintiffs' contention that the defendants waived any right to qualified immunity that they might have had by failing to raise the defense prior to moving for summary judgment. We have previously observed that "[q]ualified immunity is usually raised by a motion for summary judgment after a limited amount of discovery has been conducted," Whisman v. Rinehart,
II.
The plaintiffs also contend that Mr. Person may not assert a qualified immunity defense because he was no longеr employed by the county when he allegedly violated the plaintiffs' constitutional rights. Public officials, of course, are entitled to qualified immunity from liability for damages under 42 U.S.C. 1983 if "their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known," Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Here, Mr. Person makes no effort to explain why the defense of qualified immunity that is available to public officials should be extended to him as a private citizen. We therefore decline to review the district court's order denying him the defense. Cf. Primary Care Investors, Seven, Inc. v. PHP Healthcare Corp.,
III.
The county commissioners, as public officials, may appeal the district court's orders denying them summary judgment based on qualified immunity insofar as their entitlement to that defense depends on whether certain facts show a violation of clearly established law. See Hunter v. Namanny,
To determine whether these defendants are entitled to qualified immunity, we ask, first, whethеr the plaintiffs alleged the deprivation of a federal constitutional right. See Conn v. Gabbert,
Since Mr. Riggs contends that his first amendment right of free expression was violated, we consider initially whether the speech he engaged in was on a matter of public concern. A public employee's speech that "cannot be fairly characterized as [pertaining to] a matter of public concern," Connick v. Myers,
"Whether an employee's speech addresses a matter of public concern must be determined by the content, form, and context оf a given statement, as revealed by the whole record," id. at 147-48. Generally, a public employee's speech as an employee "upon matters only of personal interest," rather than speech as "a citizen upon matters of public concern," id. at 147, is not protected by the first amendment.
With regard to content alone, we do not believe that the report of a sexual act during the noon lunch hour between a public employee and her former supervisor would necessarily be a matter of public concern. We must also examine Mr. Riggs's speech, however, in the context in which it arose. Before Mr. Riggs's report, he and the other road crew members had been upset for some time about favoritism to the secretary. The secretary had received a significant pay raise that the other employees did not receive, and although her paid hours had doubled, her work did not increase accordingly, and she spent work time on such activities as painting pictures and playing cards with Mr. Person.
"Heightened public interest in a particular issue, while not dispositive, may also indicate that the issue is one of public concern," Belk v. City of Eldon,
In Belk, we held that the plaintiff spoke on a matter of public concern when she reported to a city alderman that there were rumors of an extramarital affair between a female city employee and her supervisor and that the female employee might have been receiving benefits to which she was not entitled. See id. at 876-77, 879. We held that the use of public funds was at issue, and that the mention of rumors regarding the affair was "part of [the plaintiff's] protected speech, because they provided a potential explanation for [the supervisor's] alleged misuse of public funds," id. at 879.
"We generally have held that speech about the use of public funds touches upon a matter of public concern," Kincade v. City of Blue Springs,
IV.
The commissioners would nonetheless be protected by qualified immunity if in early 1998 (the time of their alleged misconduct) it was not clearly established that the speech in which Mr. Riggs engaged was on a matter of public concern. See Harlow,
We have "taken a broad view of what constitutes 'clearly established law' for the purposes of a qualified immunity inquiry, requiring some but not precise factual correspondence with precedents and demanding that officials apply general, well-developed legal principles," Boswell v. County of Sherburne,
Three years before the county commissioners disciplined Mr. Riggs, we observed that our holdings generally indicate that speech about the use of public funds "touches upon a matter of public concern," Kincade,
V.
The commissioners argue that regardless of whether Mr. Riggs spoke on a matter of public concern, they are entitled to qualified immunity becausе his speech disrupted the workplace. If a public employee's speech is found to be on a matter of public concern, the court then must balance the employee's interests as a citizen "in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the [public employer] ... in promoting the efficiency of the public services it pеrforms," Pickering v. Board of Education,
The district court denied summary judgment based on factual disputes in the record as to whether employee morale was affected by the speech in question. Cf. Grantham v. Trickey,
Under the fact-intensive analysis of Pickering, the commissioners had to present evidence that Mr. Riggs's speech adversely affected the efficiency of the county's operations. See Grantham,
Here the commissioners argue generally that their actions were justified by the county's concerns about the operation of the office, possible defamation claims, and the integrity of the county's griеvance process and sexual misconduct reporting practices. They also cite a letter from the secretary's attorney stating that after Mr. Riggs's discharge, a hostile work environment existed when a member of the public entered the road department office, made a sexual remark apparently directed to the secretary, and her co-workers laughed.
According to the plaintiffs' affidavits, they noticed that the morale of the road crew employees (other than the secretary) improved after Mr. Riggs reported the incident. Once the report was made, they were relieved; they believed that the county commissioners would address the problem, and that the ongoing stress created by the relationshiр between Mr. Person and the secretary would be eliminated. The plaintiffs also attested that after the incident was reported, they continued to perform their work in the same way they had performed it in the past, although there were times that were "very stressful."
Because there are factual disputes regarding the impact of Mr. Riggs's speech, we are unable to determine whether his interest in his speech outweighed the county's interest in functioning effectively; for the same reason, we cannot decide whether it was clearly established that his speech was entitled to first amendment protection. We therefore conclude that the district court properly refused to grant summary judgment, based on qualified immunity, to the county commissioners on Mr. Riggs's first amendment claims.
VI.
Turning to the first amendment claims of the other four plaintiffs, we examine the "content, form, and context," Connick,
We do not believe that by limiting the time and place for these plaintiffs to discuss what they had heard from Mr. Riggs, but had not witnessed, that the commissioners violated clearly established first amеndment law. We therefore conclude that the commissioners are entitled to qualified immunity from liability to these plaintiffs on their first amendment claims.
VII.
Although the district court did not address the issue, the county commissioners also sought qualified immunity from liability on the equal protection claims, the parties briefed the issue, and we believe that the record on appeal is sufficient for us tо resolve that question. See Hunter,
The threshold inquiry in an equal protection case is whether the plaintiff is similarly situated to others who allegedly received preferential treatment. See Klinger v. Department of Corrections,
VIII.
For the rеasons given, we reverse that part of the district court's order denying qualified immunity to the county commissioners in their individual capacity as to the plaintiffs' equal protection claims and as to plaintiffs Wendell Domina, Linden Snyder, Van Harpold, and Jerry Soule's first amendment claims, and we remand the case for the entry of an order granting summary judgment to the county commissioners on thеse claims.
We affirm the part of the district court's order denying summary judgment to the commissioners in their individual capacity on the question of qualified immunity as to Mr. Riggs's first amendment claims and denying summary judgment to Mr. Person on the question of qualified immunity. Because we do not have jurisdiction to review a sufficiency of the evidence claim in an appeal from the denial of qualified immunity, see Jones v. Shields,
