In this аppeal plaintiff alleges that the defendants violated his rights under the Constitutions of North Carolina and the United States by dismissing him from his job as a Durham City police officer without affording him the procedures set forth in Durham City personnel policies mеmoranda.
Plaintiff filed a complaint in Chatham County Superior Court on 6 April 1995 alleging violations of Article I sections 1, 12, 14, 18, and 19 of the North Carolina Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. By consent order,
We note at the outset that plaintiff has argued only his procedural due process claims in his brief. We will not address, therefore, the other arguments that plaintiff asserted below and that fall within his one, very broad assignment of error. N.C.R. App. P. 28(b)(5).
Summary judgment is properly granted where the movant shows that there is no genuinе issue as to any material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 56(c) (1990). In the present case, plaintiff contends that there is a dispute regarding the events leading up to his dismissal. In light of our resolution of this case, these disputed facts are not material. Our inquiry, therefore, is limited to whether the trial court correctly applied the law.
The Office of the Durham City Manager issued a personnel policy memorandum entitled “Employee Grievance Procedure” in 1986, which outlined a hearing procedure for employee grievances. Similarly, in 1989, the same office issued a personnel policy memorandum entitled “Discipline,” which provided, inter alia, that employees should receive counseling and coaching from their supervisors and that supervisors should confer with Human Resources prior to the initiation of a disciplinary action. Plaintiff contends defendants violated his procedural due process rights by failing to follow these procedures.
Determining whether plaintiff’s procedural due process rights under the North Carolina and United States Constitutions have been violated requires a two-step analysis: plaintiff must show first that he has a protected liberty interest and only then will courts consider his contention that the process he recéived was inadequate.
See Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v.
Loudermill,
An employee is presumed to be an employee-at-will absent a definite term of employment or a condition that the employee can be fired only “for cause.”
See Still v. Lance,
An employee whose employmеnt would otherwise be at-will may gain a recognizable interest in continued employment where such a right is granted by ordinance or implied contract.
See id.
Employee manuals or policy memoranda may form the basis of such a right if they are expressly included in the employee’s employment contract, or in the case of local governments, enacted as ordinances.
See id.; Trought v. Richardson,
Plaintiffs reliance on the personnel policies discussed above as creating a right to procedural due process is misplaced. Nothing
■ Plaintiff points to
Howell v. Town of Carolina Beach,
In the present case, the personnel memoranda upon which рlaintiff relies have not been adopted by the City of Durham as an ordinance. In fact, Durham enacted an ordinance in 1991 that provides:
Sec. 14-17. Effect of administrative procedures on legal entitlements.
No property rights with regard to benefits, termination or job status shall be inferred from policy memoranda, employee handbooks or other statements of administrative procedure unless such benefits or guarantees have been specifically and explicitly included in this ordinance.
Durham Code of Ordinances, No. 9209, § 8, 4-15-91. The personnel memoranda upon which plaintiff relies do not grant him a recognizable property interest under the Due Process Clauses of the United States or North Carolinа Constitutions.
Plaintiff next argues that defendant McNeil’s submission of the Report of Separation to the North Carolina Department of Justice violated plaintiffs procedural due process rights.
Law enforcement agencies arе required to complete a “Report of Separation” within ten days of an officer’s retirement, resignation, dismissal, or death and forward it to the Criminal Justice Standards Division. See 12 N.C.A.C. § 9C.0305 (1981). In addition to administrative information, such as the officer’s name аnd length of service, the form contains four sections: Reason for Separation, Reason, Employability, and Agency’s Additional Comments. Under “Reason for Separation,” defendant McNeil checked the box labeled “Dismissal.” Under “Employability,” defendant McNeil checked two boxes: “This agency would not consider this individual for reappointment,” and “This agency would not recommend employment elsewhere as a criminal justice officer.” Defendant McNeil made nо comments or allegations under the sections “Reason [for dismissal]” or “Agency’s Additional Comments.”
Plaintiff contends that defendant McNeil’s submission of this report to the Criminal Justice Standards Division without giving him an opportunity to refute the charges underlying his dismissal violated his right to procedural due process. We disagree.
In
Presnell v. Pell,
One of the liberty interests encompassed in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is the right “to engage in any of the common occupations of life,” unfettered by unreasonable restrictions imposed by actions of the state or its agencies. Meyer v. Nebraska,262 U.S. 390 , 399 (1923); Truax v. Raich,239 U.S. 33 (1915). The right of a citizen to live and work where he will is offended when a state agency unfairly imposes some stigma or disability that will itself foreclose the freedom to take аdvantage of employment opportunities. Board of Regents v. Roth, supra. Thus, where a state agency publicly and falsely accuses a discharged employee of dishonesty, immorality, or job related misconduct, considerations of due process demand that the employee be afforded a hearing in order to have an opportunity to refute the accusation and remove the stigma upon his reputation.
Presnell v. Pell,
There are two issues presented here: first, whether a repоrt that does not contain any allegations of misconduct or immorality but that does withhold a recommendation is sufficient to “accuse[] a discharged employee of dishonesty, immorality or job related misconduct” and thereby implicate, a liberty interest; and, second, whether the report was made “public,” for due process purposes, when it was submitted to the Criminal Justice Standards Commission.
There is no question that prospective employers in law enforcement are not likely to be affirmatively impressed when they learn that defendant McNeil “would not recommend [plaintiff] for employment elsewhere as a law enforcement officer.” In fact, plaintiff alleges, and we must take as true, he was denied a position with the Orange County Sheriff’s Department as a result of defendant McNeil’s statements in the Report of Separation. Nonetheless, we hold that merely withholding a recommendation does not invoke due process protection. In
Robertson v. Rogers,
the school board chose not to renew plaintiff’s contract as assistant superintendent.
the superintendent [had] told prospective employers that Robertson was terminаted for “incompetence and outside activities,” this does not amount to the type of communication which gives rise to a protected liberty interest. See Sigmon v. Poe,564 F.2d 1093 , 1096 (4th Cir. 1977); Gray v. Union County Intermediate Education District,520 F.2d 803 , 806 (9th Cir. 1975). Allegations of incompetence do not imply the existence of sеrious character defects such as dishonesty or immorality, contemplated by Roth, supra, and are not the sort of accusations that require a hearing.
Robertson, at 1092. In the present case, the report does not include any charges related to plaintiff’s character. In fact, the report contains no charges of any kind.
Having found the statements included in the Report of Separation insufficient to implicate plaintiff’s liberty interest in seeking future employment, we need not reach the issue of whether the report was made public. Wе hold that plaintiff’s due process rights,
Affirmed.
