These cases present a common question of appellate jurisdiction: whether a court’s refusal to grant summary judgment to a defendant who denies committing any wrong may be appealed immediately as a “collateral order” on the authority of
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
William Elliott filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 contending that the police beat him when they took him into custody. Elliott contends that the beating perforated his eardrum (leaving him with a partial loss of hearing) and broke several teeth. The defendants moved for summary judgment, submitting affidavits and medical records that, they contend, show that Elliott’s injuries (if any) predated the arrest, and that he suffered no new hurt at their hands.
*341
The district court concluded that there is a genuine dispute about what happened to Elliott when he was arrested, and it set the ease for trial. 1990 U.S.Dist. Lexis 711 (N.D.Ill.),
Barbara Propst, formerly the Assistant Director of the Computer-based Education and Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois, sued under § 1983 contending that her transfer to Assistant Dean in the College of Applied Life Sciences penalized her for speech that she believes protected by the first amendment. Propst reported to administrators of the University that Donald L. Bitzer, then Director of the Laboratory, had a conflict of interest because he was acquiring goods and services for the Laboratory through corporations in which he had an ownership interest. The University commissioned an audit, which interfered with normal activities of the Lab. The three officials responsible for Propst’s transfer — Chancellor Morton W. Weir and Vice-Chancellors Judith S. Lieb-man and Robert M. Berdahl — contend that they acted to promote efficient operation in the Lab, impossible with the Director and his two chief aides (Barbara Propst and her husband Franklin, then Associate Director of the Lab) at each other’s throats. Bitzer contends that he had nothing to do with the transfer — that he did not know of the Propsts’ complaints, did not know why the University was running a detailed audit, and never asked higher-ups to do anything about the Propsts. The district court denied the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, and all four have appealed.
I
The defense of qualified immunity articulated in
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
By sleight of hand you can turn any defense on the merits into a defense of qualified immunity. Consider this possibility for the police officers Elliott has sued: It was not “clearly established” in May 1986, when we arrested Elliott, that police officers could be liable for taking peaceable custody of a suspect; the district court proposes to hold a trial at which the only outcome favorable to plaintiff (given the uncontroverted evidence that Elliott suffered no injury) would be a holding that police are liable for making arrests that cause no injury; that would be a change of law, which we cannot be expected to forecast; therefore we are entitled to qualified immunity. The parenthetical expression carries the entire weight of this “argument”: if you allow the possibility that the suspect will show injury at trial, then the defendants may be held liable under the. law as it existed in 1986. So the claim to immediate appellate review collapses to the argument that the “right not to be tried” can be vindicated only if the court of appeals combs through the factual record. Yet that is miles away from the position of Harlow, Mitchell, and Anderson, which describe qualified immunity as a defense contingent on the state of the law.
To say that the question on appeal under
Mitchell
is the state of the law when the defendants acted is not to say that current law is irrelevant.
Siegert v. Gilley,
— U.S.-,
Facts too play a role in
Mitchell
appeals. It is impossible to know which “clearly established” rules of law to consult unless you know what is going on.
Auriemma v. Rice,
Yet the
reason
a court of appeals examines the facts is to determine whether it was “clearly established” at the time that such deeds were forbidden.
Anderson,
Bitzer does not contend that he acted in the shadow of legal uncertainty. He submits, rather, that he did not know about and had nothing to do with the events of which Propst complains. His appeal, No. 90-2146, is unrelated to qualified immunity and is dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
The four defendants in Elliott’s case make at least a stab at presenting a legal issue.
Gumz v. Morrissette,
II
The Chancellor and Vice-Chancellors of the University of Illinois knew about the Propsts’ complaints. Unlike Bitzer, these three officials present a genuine immunity defense: that the law had not clearly established the impropriety of transferring a public employee whose speech created a disturbance undermining the productivity of other workers. Propst’s constitutional claim depends on
Pickering v. Board of Education,
Berdahl contends that he began receiving reports that important members of the staff thought that the work of the Laboratory was in jeopardy and were looking for other employment. Two groups of employees visited Berdahl to voice their concerns about deteriorating relations between Bitzer and the Propsts. Weir received letters reporting that the Lab was in “bad shape”. Weir, Berdahl, and Liebman submit that they decided that either Bitzer or the Propsts had to go if the Laboratory was to return to normal. When in the fall of 1987 the auditors submitted a report that the administrators interpreted as absolving Bitzer of any material conflicts, the administrators decided to move the Propsts. They transferred Barbara to an administrative position in the College of Life Sciences, and Franklin returned to the Physics Department, where he was a tenured professor. Neither transfer involved loss of pay or rank within the University. Such transfers, the administrators submit, are justified to deal with a demonstrated disruption in working conditions. E.g.,
Breuer v. Hart,
Barbara Propst does not deny that the three administrators received reports of growing dissention, of diversion of time from the Lab’s work, and of plans to leave unless something were done. She maintains, however, that conditions in the Lab were not nearly as bad as the administrators were led to believe (she submits that things were hunky-dory), that any disruption was caused by the audit rather than by conflict among the managers, and that the administrators’ true intent was to retaliate on account of her speech rather than to facilitate the educational mission of the Laboratory. She demands additional discovery to pursue these avenues.
When denying the administrators’ motion for summary judgment against Franklin Propst, the district court concluded that the cause and extent of breakdown in the Lab’s functioning are genuine issues of material fact. The court adopted that reasoning without further elaboration in Barbara Propst’s case. Yet the question is not
*344
what the conditions in the Laboratory
were;
it is what the administrators reasonably believed them to have been.
Anderson,
That conclusion takes us straight to Barbara Propst’s second argument, and a conundrum. She wants discovery and a trial to probe the defendants’ mental processes: did they really rely on the reports, as they say, or were they out to penalize her speech, as she suspects? Yet
Harlow
eliminated the subjective component from official immunity (formerly “good faith immunity”, a telling phrase) because searching for intent and other components of knowledge blocks the use of immunity as a shortcut to decision.
Auriemma
gives part of the answer. We rejected the invitation to impute to official actors the best motives they could have.
Auriemma
adopts the approach of
Wade v. Hegner,
What
Auriemma
and like cases leave unanswered is the question how it is then possible to comply with Harlow’s directive that “[ujntil this threshold immunity question is resolved, discovery should not be allowed.”
Judge Higginbotham, concurring in
Elliott,
Because
Gomez
holds that the complaint need not anticipate an immunity defense, it is misleading to speak of a “heightened
pleading
requirement”. Nothing we say here affects what the plaintiff must put in the complaint. Only Rule 56 remains for consideration. Rule 56 does not specify how much discovery should be allowed before the court acts; Rule 56(b) says that a defendant may move for summary judgment “at any time”, authorizing motions in advance of discovery. Whether the district judge should allow discovery before acting on the motion depends on the governing law.
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
In
Auriemma
the defendant gave plaintiff all the ammunition necessary to avoid summary judgment. After demoting
*346
many white police officers and promoting black officers over them, the chief of police denied having an affirmative action plan— which supported an inference that the chief had an improper intent and was not confused by the perplexing state of the law concerning affirmative action. The top administrators of the University of Illinois have not handed Propst her case on a platter. They contend that they acted solely to promote the efficient operation of an important part of their university. Barbara Propst offers no reason other than her own suspicions to doubt the administrators’ account of their reasons. Her husband’s parallel case has produced substantial discovery; she does not argue that any of the discovery in that case undercuts the administrators’ explanation. Barbara Propst has not produced “specific, nonconclusory factual allegations”,
Siegert,
Appeals No. 90-1168 and 90-2146 are dismissed for want of jurisdiction. On the administrators’ appeal, No. 90-2093, the judgment is reversed.
