William R. SHAUL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CHERRY VALLEY-SPRINGFIELD CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, Thomas E. Marzeski, Superintendent, Charles W. Strange, Secondary Principal, Charles F. Culbert, Elementary Principal, John Does 1-4, Custodians Defendants-Appellees.
Docket No. 02-9082.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued March 27, 2003.
Decided March 25, 2004.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Peter Henney, Clarksville, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Frank W. Miller, The Law Firm of Frank W. Miller, East Syracuse, NY, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before: B.D. PARKER, Jr., RAGGI, Circuit Judges, and GOLDBERG,* Judge.
GOLDBERG, Judge.
Plaintiff William R. Shaul filed suit against defendants, the Cherry Valley-Springfield School District ("the School District"), Superintendent Thomas E. Marzeski, Secondary Principal Charles W. Strange, Elementary Principal Charles F. Culbert, and four John Doe custodians, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, in the United States District Cоurt for the Northern District of New York (Hurd, J.). Defendants were responsible for sorting and removing items from plaintiff's classroom following his suspension from the school. At the time plaintiff was a teacher employed by the School District. Plaintiff alleges that defendants' actions constituted an illegal search and seizure of his property in violation of his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Plaintiff asserts that the School District is also liable because its actions were in furtherance of a municipal custom, policy, or practice. Defendants deny рlaintiff's allegations. In addition, Superintendent Marzeski, Secondary Principal Strange, and Elementary Principal Culbert argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity from suit.
By memorandum-decision and order dated August 20, 2002, the district court awarded summary judgment in favor of defendants and dismissed plaintiff's complaint, ruling that Shaul could not challenge defendants' search of the classroom because, at the relevant time, he had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the room or its contents. The district court further concluded that Shaul could not сomplain of an unlawful seizure because he forfeited any possessory interest he may have had in various items by failing to retrieve them on the opportunities afforded. See Shaul v. Cherry Valley-Springfield Central School Dist.,
Shaul now appeals this ruling, challenging the district court's conclusion about his expectation of privacy in his classroom generally and in the locked file cabinet in particular. He further argues that defendants' failure to afford him sufficient time to retrieve his property precluded a finding that he had surrendered his privаcy or possessory interests in his property.
We consider the following issues: (1) whether Shaul had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his assigned classroom and if so, whether defendants' challenged search of the classroom and removal of Shaul's personal property was constitutionally reasonable; and (2) whether defendants' failure to return all of Shaul's personal property was a separate unreasonable seizure.
For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the district court's decision.
BACKGROUND
Shaul has been a high school mathematics teacher employed by the School District since 1969. During his tenure, he has been subject to two separate disciplinary proceedings. In 1990, Shaul was found guilty of having an inappropriate relationship with a female student. In November 1998, Shaul was accused of sexually harassing another female student, a sophomore then assigned to his homeroom and math class. On or about January 13, 1999, Shaul was arrested for stalking the first female student, with whom he had later become romantically involved. In a letter dated January 14th, Superintendent Marzeski requested that Shaul provide any documents associated with the January 13th arrest. On January 15th, Shaul was suspended with pay and subsequently reassigned to an administrative position in the School District. On March 10, 2000, a hearing officer found Shaul guilty of the alleged misconduct in the November 1998 incident and suspended him without pay for the remainder of the 1999-2000 academic year. In the fall of 2000, Shaul resumed his teaching duties and continues to be employed as a teacher in the School District.
Plaintiff's cause of action arises from defendants' actions immediately following his suspension on January 15, 1999. In his suspension letter, Shaul was instructed to meet Superintendent Marzeski on January 19th to return school-owned property and remove his personal belongings from the assigned classroom that he had used since 1991. Upon the advice of a representative of the New York State United Teachers Union, Shaul chose not to attend this meeting. He did deliver the school property in his possession — including keys to the classroom — to a fellow teacher, who returned them to the School District.
On January 29th, Shaul returned to the school to collect his personal belongings. These items were scattered throughout the classroom in boxes, a desk, and three filing cabinets, one of which was locked. The room, as described by both Shaul and school administrators, was extremely cluttered and messy. He did not remove all of his belongings from the classroom in the hour-and-a-half he had before being asked to vacate the premises.
The following day, January 30th, Secondary Principal Strange and Elementary Principal Culbert began cleaning the classrоom to prepare it for a new teacher who was to replace Shaul and use the same working space. School administrators, including Superintendent Marzeski, and custodians returned twice, on or around February 4th and 18th, to finish preparing the room. In the process of sorting through items left in the room, they drilled out the lock of one of the filing cabinets so that it could be accessed. A photo album containing pictures of the student involved in the 1990 incident was found in the room. At Shaul's disciplinary hearing, the school district attempted to introduсe the photo album along with a car phone, personal correspondence, a notebook, and various photographs. The hearing officer refused to enter these items into evidence.
On February 19th, Shaul came to the school to retrieve personal items that had been found in his former classroom. He claims that a number of items belonging to him were never returned, including two laser pens, several books, personal letters, and various teaching materials, including tests, quizzes, and homework problems.
Shaul filed suit in federal district court against defendants, alleging violation of his Fourth Amendment rights with the illegal search and seizure of the items in the classroom. Shaul also sought punitive damages against the individual defendants. In addition, Shaul claimed that the School District showed deliberate indifference to his constitutional rights in its attempt to introduce as evidence in his disciplinary hearing the personal items found in the classroom. The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Hurd, J.) found that there was no genuine issue for trial on plaintiff's illegal search and seizure claims and dismissed plaintiff's complaint in its entirety. Plaintiff appeals.
DISCUSSION
This Court has jurisdiction to hear this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. This Court reviews the district court's grant of summary judgment for defendants de novo. Leventhal v. Knapek,
I. Plaintiff's Claim of Unreasonable Search and Seizure on January 30, 1999
The Fourth Amendment protects the "right of the рeople to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures...." U.S. CONST.amend. IV. Shaul alleges that on January 30, 1999, defendants unreasonably searched his former classroom and seized personal property.
A. Plaintiff's Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
To prove an illegal search claim, a party must demonstrate (1) that he had an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable and (2) that he had acted in a way with respect to the property in question that indicated a subjective expectation of privacy. United States v. Perea,
As the district court observed, many persons — "students, colleagues, custodians, administrators, parents, and substitute teachers" — had access to Shaul's classroom, Shaul,
Whatever reasonable expectation of privacy Shaul may have had in his classroom while he was a teacher in good standing, we nevertheless agree with the district court that he had no such expectation on January 30, 1999, by which date Shaul had (1) been suspended from teaching and barred from his classroom, (2) surrendered the key to the classroom's locked file cabinet at the same time that he declined to retrieve his personal property from the classroom, and (3) been afforded a second opportunity to spend an hour and a half removing personal items from the classroom.
Certainly, the discharge or suspension of an employee greatly reduces — if not eliminates — his reasonable expectation of privacy in his former workplace. This conclusion is particularly warranted on the facts of this case where on January 19, 1999, Shaul was asked to surrender any school keys in his possession at the same time that he was given the opportunity to remove any personal belongings from his classroom. Taken together, the demand and the invitation served as constructive notice that Shaul could have no reasonable expectation of privacy in anything that he did not remove from his former classroom after that date. Cf. Leventhal,
B. The Reasonableness of the January 30, 1999 Search and Seizure
Despite Shaul's failure to retrieve his belongings on January 19, 1999, defendants afforded him a second opportunity. Shaul now asserts that the hour and a half afforded him on January 29th was insufficient for this task, that his expectation of privacy continued until full retrieval was made, and, therefore, that defendants removal of his belongings from the classroom on January 30, 1999 was an unreasonable search and seizure. We disagree.
Preliminarily, we observe that Shaul's insufficient time claim, even when viewed in the light most favorable to him, is unconvincing. Notably, Shaul makes no claim that he attempted on January 29th to retrieve any personal effects from the locked file cabinet, wherein he presumably had the greatest expectation of privacy. Neither does he claim that he could not empty the contents of his desk — the room's next most private area — into a box or bag within the allotted time. To the extent there was a problem with timely removal, it stemmed largely from the fact that Shaul had made little attempt to maintain privacy of large quantities of his personal materials, intermingling sports memorabilia, yearbooks, and personal correspondence throughout the classroom with school property. Brief of Appellant at 6.
Even if we were to assume that Shaul had a reasonable expectation of privacy that continued after January 29, 1999, Shaul would not be entitled to reversal of the district court judgment because by January 30th, it was certainly reasonable for defendants themselves to remove Shaul's personal belongings from the classroom.
As the Supreme Court has recognized, government offices are not provided to employees for the maintenance of personal effects. They are provided "for the sole purpose of facilitating the work of an agency." O'Connor,
The reasonableness standard must be satisfied both at the inception of an employer's intrusion and throughout its scope. The first requirement is satisfied if "there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the search will turn up evidence that the employee is guilty of work-related misconduct or that the search is necessary for a noninvestigatory work-related purpose such as to retrieve a needed file." Id. at 726,
In this case, there is no question that defendants' January 30th search of Shaul's former classroom and the removal of his personal belongings therefrom were reasonably necessary for a non-investigatory work-related purpose — that is, to clean and organize the classroom so that a new teacher could have the materials, equipment, and space necessary to assume Shaul's responsibilities for the remainder of the school year.
Shaul does not dispute this fact. Instead, he asserts that this avowed non-investigatory purpose was a subterfuge for defendants' real investigatory goal: the procurement of evidence of misconduct that could be used against him at his disciplinary hearing. To support this argument, Shaul observes that defendants unsuccessfully attempted to offer into evidence at the disciplinary hearing one item found while searching his locked file cabinet, i.e., a photograph of the former student whom he allegedly stalked. But even if we assume that defendants' search was motivated, at least in part, by an investigatory purpose, the search would not have been unreasonable. By January 30, 1999, defendants certainly possessed individualized suspicion that Shaul had recently engaged in professional misconduct. Id. (discussing "individualized suspicion" standard without holding it essential to a reasonable investigatory workplace search). Their challenged search was prompted by Shaul's suspension for alleged sexual harassment of a sophomorе student in his homeroom class. Thus, it was entirely reasonable for defendants to think that evidence relating to Shaul's dealings with the student — which had included written correspondence — might be found in the classroom where much of their interaction had occurred.
In sum, we agree with the district court that defendants were entitled to summary judgment on Shaul's claim of unreasonable search and seizure of his property on January 30, 1999. Whatever reasonable expectations of privacy Shaul may have had in personal property maintained in his classroom while he was a teacher in good standing, that expectation ended when, after being suspended for professional misconduct and barred from his classroom, he surrendered all school keys, including a key to a locked file cabinet in his classroom, at the same time that he failed to avail himself of an opportunity to retrieve his personal belongings. To the extent Shaul complains that defendants did not give him enough time to remove all his belongings on a subsequent occasion, we hold that even if that were the case, by Januаry 30th defendants had reasonable investigatory and non-investigatory grounds for searching the classroom and removing plaintiff's personal property so that a new teacher could complete the school year.
II. Illegal Seizure Claim and Defendants' Failure to Return All of Plaintiff's Personal Effects
Shaul alleges that defendants' failure to return certain items removed from his classroom — two laser pointers, athletic memorabilia, books, personal letters, mementos, tests, quizzes, and homework problems — constitute an unreasonable seizure separate and distinct from that occurring on January 30, 1999. The district court rejected this claim, concluding that Shaul had no possessory interest in these items.
Given Shaul's assertion that he protested being forced to leave the classroom on January 29, 1999, without retrieving all his belongings, we cannot agree that, as a matter of law, he lost all possessory interest in any personal effects removed by defendants the following day. Certainly, defendants do not suggest that they were entitled to retain Shaul's personal possessions removed from the classroom on January 30th. Indeed, they submit that numerous boxes of such items were returned to him on February 19th. They do, however, challenge Shaul's claim to a possessory interest in teaching materials, asserting that such items were prepared for and, therefore, owned solely by the School District.
A. The Teaching Materials
Shaul argues that the tests, quizzes, and homework problems stored in the classroom — never returned to him and presumably discarded — were illegally seized by defendants in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. A seizure occurs when there is some meaningful interference with an individual's possessory interest in that property. United States v. Jacobsen,
The Copyright Aсt of 1976 provides that copyright ownership "vests initially in the author or authors of the work." 17 U.S.C. § 201(a) (1996). The author of a given work is "the person who translates an idea into a fixed, tangible expression entitled to copyright protection." Community For Creative Non-Violence v. Reid,
In the instant case, defendants argue that the work-for-hire exception applies since Shaul was employed by the School District and was required to prepare the teaching materials in his official duties as a teacher. Therefore, the School District should be considered the author and owner of the tests, quizzes, and homework problems prepared by Shaul.
Plaintiff concedes that he was an employee as defined under the work-for-hire exception, as found by the district court. In the absence of a written agreement stipulating otherwise, the key issue, therefore, is whether the materials in question were prepared "within the scope of employment." See Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, Inc. v. Otsar Sifrei Lubavitch, Inc.
Shaul erroneously relies on City of Newark v. Beasley,
The plaintiff also seeks to invoke an "academic" exception to the work-for-hire doctrine. See Weinstein v. University of Illinois,
Without denigrating in any way the time and effort devoted by Shaul in fulfilling his teaching duties, we hold that his ownership of the tests, quizzes, homework problems, and other teaching materials in his former classroom is precluded by the work-for-hire doctrine. Because the teaching materials at issue were owned by the School District, it was free to entrust its employee Shaul with some degree of possession or to withdraw that possession in its entirety as it deemed in its best interest. Its decision to reclaim all possession after Shaul's suspension and not to return teaching materials to him cannot support a claim of unreasonable seizure.
B. Missing Personal Belongings
Shaul does not dispute that on February 19, 1999, defendants returned to him boxes of personal items removed from his former classroom on January 30th. Rather, he complains that certain items were missing therefrom and that defendants' failure to return these items constitutes an unreasonable seizure of them.
Where, as in this case, an initial seizure of property was reasonable, defendants' failure to return the items does not, by itself, state a separate Fourth Amendment claim of unreasonable seizure. In United States v. Jakobetz,
CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, the district court's grant of summary judgment for defendants and dismissal of plaintiff's complaint is AFFIRMED.
Notes:
Notes
The Honorable Richard W. Goldberg, Judge, United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation
