The Court of Appeals has upheld a judgment in favor of a church that sued a Westchester County community for religious discrimination after the Town of Greenburgh interfered with the plaintiffs' efforts to build a new church. This ruling has several broad holdings that expand the rights of religious plaintiffs to challenge governmental decisions that substantially burden land-use decisions.
The case is Fortress Bible Church v. Feiner, decided on September 24. This case reached the Second Circuit after a 26-day bench trial. In light of the standard of review on appeal, which defers to the trial court's factual findings, the Second Circuit's summary of the church's efforts to build a new facility on its property can be summed up like this: the Town screwed over the church in imposing burdensome conditions for SEQRA (or environmental impact) approval. One twist here is that the Town Supervisor, Paul Feiner, was concerned about the church's tax-exempt status and wanted the church to donate a fire truck in lieu of taxes. This is among the reasons why Judge Robinson said the Town acted in bad faith and violated the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), the Free Exercise and the Equal Protection Clause.
Here's how the Court of Appeals affirms the district court's ruling. First, it holds for the first time that the Town can violate RLUIPA by abusing the SEQRA process. RLUIPA deals with zoning laws that infringe on religious rights. While SEQRA is not really a zoning law, the Town used SEQRA review as a vehicle for determining the zoning issues related to the church's land use proposal. "The Town's actions during the review process and its denial of the Church's proposal constituted an application of its zoning laws sufficient to implicate RLUIPA." This is a far-reaching ruling.
Second, the Town imposed a substantial burden on plaintiffs' religious rights in violation of RLUIPA. The Town acted in bad faith in imposing unreasonable barriers that prevented the church from going forward with a necessary expansion. The Second Circuit credits the district court's analysis in finding that the Town acted arbitrarily and disingenuously and manipulated the SEQRA process to derail the church's project "after it refused to accede to its demand for a payment in lieu of taxes."
Third, the church has a free exercise claim under the First Amendment. After sidestepping whether cases like this require strict scrutiny or rational basis review, the Court says that the Town denied the church's application without any rational basis and that the Town's witnesses at trial were not credible.
Fourth, the church has a viable "class of one" claim under the Equal Protection Clause. While the church did not identify a single one-on-one comparator, it proved through multiple comparators that the conditions that the Town imposed in the project were not applied to other projects. Here is another broad rule applied by the Court: "Where, as here, the issues compared are discrete and not cumulative or affected by the character of the project as a whole, multiple comparators are sufficient so long as the issues being compared are so similar that differential treatment cannot be explained by anything other than discrimination." The Church wins this claim because it "provided overwhelming evidence that its application was singled out by the Town for disparate treatment."
Keeping track of the civil rights opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Brought to you by Bergstein & Ullrich.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Absolute immunity for prosecutors in Monserrate domestic violence case
As a matter of law, some people cannot be sued. No matter what they do, it seems. That's the rule in this case involving domestic violence committed by a former New York State Senator.
The case is Giraldo v. Kessler, decided on September 14. Giaraldo was Hiram Monserrate's girlfriend. The police interrogated her against her will when they had reason to believe that Monserrate hit her in the face with a drinking glass. Monserrate was in the State Senate when this happened. For those of you who live outside the State of New York, this is the kind of social degenerate who gets elected to state government in New York from time time. Anyway, Giraldo did not want to answer police questions about the assault, and she denied that Monserrate had done anything wrong and that the whole thing was an accident when he brought her "glass of water that broke, causing shards to fly and cut her forehead." No matter. The police held her against her will for five hours and "ordered" her to sign a statement implicating Monserrate in the assault, to no avail. Then the prosecutors got involved. They also held Giraldo against her will for two hours. Giraldo sues the prosecutors under the Fourth Amendment. (She also sues the police, but that claim is not on appeal).
Plaintiffs' lawyers are often asked by potential clients if they can sue the prosecutor who pursued criminal charges against them. Sometimes, these charges are dismissed or dropped or the jury acquits the defendant. Understandably, the defendant wants to remedy this possible injustice. The courts will not allow it, for obvious reasons. If prosecutors were on the hook each time someone is acquitted, they would be sued out of existence.
Can you sue the prosecutors in this case? After all, Giraldo was not charged with anything. She was hassled by the prosecutors. That's a distinction, true, but she cannot sue the prosecutors in any event. They have absolute immunity. The district court allowed this claim to go forward, but the Court of Appeals (Winter, Cabranes and Carney) reverses and dismisses the claim against these defendants. "Prosecutorial immunity from Section 1983 liability is broadly defined, covering virtually all acts, regardless of motivation, associated with the prosecutor's function as an advocate." Tough to get around this standard. "Investigative acts reasonably related to decisions whether or not to begin or to carry on a particular criminal prosecution, or to defend a prosecution, are shielded by absolute immunity when done by prosecutors." Giraldo cannot sue the prosecutors because, at the time they interrogated her, Monserrate was arrested and the prosecutors had to make quick legal decisions about how to proceed. The interview, unpleasant as it was, was in preparation of a court proceeding in which the prosecutor acts as an advocate." Giraldo was an important witness in this proceeding, and the prosecutors had the right to personally assess her credibility when she tried to exonerate Monserrate.
The case is Giraldo v. Kessler, decided on September 14. Giaraldo was Hiram Monserrate's girlfriend. The police interrogated her against her will when they had reason to believe that Monserrate hit her in the face with a drinking glass. Monserrate was in the State Senate when this happened. For those of you who live outside the State of New York, this is the kind of social degenerate who gets elected to state government in New York from time time. Anyway, Giraldo did not want to answer police questions about the assault, and she denied that Monserrate had done anything wrong and that the whole thing was an accident when he brought her "glass of water that broke, causing shards to fly and cut her forehead." No matter. The police held her against her will for five hours and "ordered" her to sign a statement implicating Monserrate in the assault, to no avail. Then the prosecutors got involved. They also held Giraldo against her will for two hours. Giraldo sues the prosecutors under the Fourth Amendment. (She also sues the police, but that claim is not on appeal).
Plaintiffs' lawyers are often asked by potential clients if they can sue the prosecutor who pursued criminal charges against them. Sometimes, these charges are dismissed or dropped or the jury acquits the defendant. Understandably, the defendant wants to remedy this possible injustice. The courts will not allow it, for obvious reasons. If prosecutors were on the hook each time someone is acquitted, they would be sued out of existence.
Can you sue the prosecutors in this case? After all, Giraldo was not charged with anything. She was hassled by the prosecutors. That's a distinction, true, but she cannot sue the prosecutors in any event. They have absolute immunity. The district court allowed this claim to go forward, but the Court of Appeals (Winter, Cabranes and Carney) reverses and dismisses the claim against these defendants. "Prosecutorial immunity from Section 1983 liability is broadly defined, covering virtually all acts, regardless of motivation, associated with the prosecutor's function as an advocate." Tough to get around this standard. "Investigative acts reasonably related to decisions whether or not to begin or to carry on a particular criminal prosecution, or to defend a prosecution, are shielded by absolute immunity when done by prosecutors." Giraldo cannot sue the prosecutors because, at the time they interrogated her, Monserrate was arrested and the prosecutors had to make quick legal decisions about how to proceed. The interview, unpleasant as it was, was in preparation of a court proceeding in which the prosecutor acts as an advocate." Giraldo was an important witness in this proceeding, and the prosecutors had the right to personally assess her credibility when she tried to exonerate Monserrate.
Monday, September 24, 2012
District court gets around Garcetti in Mount Vernon retaliation case
Few First Amendment retaliation plaintiffs have been able to withstand a Garcetti defense in the Second Circuit ever since the Supreme Court said that public employees do not engage in protected speech if their whistleblowing or other statements are made pursuant to their official job duties. But some district courts are allowing these cases to proceed. This case is one of them.
The case is Stokes v. City of Mount Vernon, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118386, a decision by Judge Briccetti on August 14. Stokes was the city's Inspector General. He prepared a report that slammed a city program called Payments in Lieu of Taxes, or PILOT, administered by the city's Industrial Development Agency and run by Maureen Walker. Stokes accused Walker of all sorts of misconduct and ethics violations. The City Council then passed a law abolishing the Inspector General's office. After a state court held that this legislative action violated state procedure, the City Counsel next voted to sharply reduce Stokes' salary, causing him to resign. Stokes sued the City, the mayor and members of the City Council, claiming they constructively discharged him in retaliation for his critical report on PILOT.
The Supreme Court held in Garcetti that public workers are not speaking as citizens when they speak pursuant to their official job duties. As Stokes prepared his report in his capacity as Inspector General, his claim against the City and the mayor is dismissed under Rule 12. They employed Stokes, and as brutal as it sounds, there is no First Amendment protection for his termination by the City and mayor as well as members of the Board of Estimate who also have some authority over Stokes (as they can fix his salary). That holding is not remarkable. What is remarkable is Judge Briccetti's finding that Stokes may pursue his First Amendment claim against members of the City Council because they do not have employment authority over Stokes. Members of the council belong the legislative branch; it is the executive branch, the mayor to be exact, which can appoint and remove the Inspector General. The councilmembers are not Stokes' employer. This is an issue of first impression in the Second Circuit. Adopting the reasoning from federal cases around the country, Judge Briccetti finds the "employer/employee distinction makes sense." The judge reasons:
The case is Stokes v. City of Mount Vernon, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118386, a decision by Judge Briccetti on August 14. Stokes was the city's Inspector General. He prepared a report that slammed a city program called Payments in Lieu of Taxes, or PILOT, administered by the city's Industrial Development Agency and run by Maureen Walker. Stokes accused Walker of all sorts of misconduct and ethics violations. The City Council then passed a law abolishing the Inspector General's office. After a state court held that this legislative action violated state procedure, the City Counsel next voted to sharply reduce Stokes' salary, causing him to resign. Stokes sued the City, the mayor and members of the City Council, claiming they constructively discharged him in retaliation for his critical report on PILOT.
The Supreme Court held in Garcetti that public workers are not speaking as citizens when they speak pursuant to their official job duties. As Stokes prepared his report in his capacity as Inspector General, his claim against the City and the mayor is dismissed under Rule 12. They employed Stokes, and as brutal as it sounds, there is no First Amendment protection for his termination by the City and mayor as well as members of the Board of Estimate who also have some authority over Stokes (as they can fix his salary). That holding is not remarkable. What is remarkable is Judge Briccetti's finding that Stokes may pursue his First Amendment claim against members of the City Council because they do not have employment authority over Stokes. Members of the council belong the legislative branch; it is the executive branch, the mayor to be exact, which can appoint and remove the Inspector General. The councilmembers are not Stokes' employer. This is an issue of first impression in the Second Circuit. Adopting the reasoning from federal cases around the country, Judge Briccetti finds the "employer/employee distinction makes sense." The judge reasons:
The rationale for the Garcetti rule is that restricting speech owing its existence to a public employee's professional responsibilities does not infringe any liberties the employee might have enjoyed as a private citizen. It simply reflects the exercise of employer control over what the employer itself has commissioned or created. The individual defendants [on the City Council] do not point out any hiring, firing, or employment authority they have over plaintiff. ... Therefore, the rationale underlying Garcetti is inapplicable and the Court cannot conclude that plaintiff's speech is not protected simply because the speech at issue may have occurred in the context of plaintiff's official job duties.Other issues in the case: the district court says that the complaint states a claim for constructive discharge even though Stokes quit seven months after the City Council reduced his salary. Waiting too long to resign may kill the constructive discharge claim. But since Stokes tried to resolve his dispute with the city during that time, he resigned within a reasonable period of time. The district court also allows Stokes to proceed on his procedural due process because he had a property interest in his unelected position and there was no adequate post-deprivation remedy available since an Article 78 proceeding is not the proper vehicle to challenge legislative action. The substantive due process claim may also proceed because Stokes adequately alleges that defendants' conduct was arbitrary and outrageous.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
The PLRA strikes again
In 1995, Congress made it harder for prisoners to file lawsuits. Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act, a prisoner that seeks in forma pauperis status cannot do so if he filed three frivolous lawsuits in the past. This case asks when is someone a "prisoner" under the PLRA.
The case is Gibson v. City of York, decided on August 14. Gibson sought in forma pauperis status because he could not afford to file his lawsuit, which alleged that officials at Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Facility violated his civil rights. If Gibson was a "prisoner" while at Kirby, he cannot file that lawsuit without paying the filing fee. Was he a prisoner? When we think of prisoners, we think of guys in the slammer, in lockup, in the big house, behind bars, in the joint, etc. What about a psychiatric facility where the plaintiff was sent after he allegedly committed a crime, to see if he could get treatment that would allow him to stand trial?
The Court of Appeals (Walker, Leval and Pooler) notes that "Under New York law, 'when a defendant is in the custody of the commissioner [of mental health] pursuant to a temporary order of observation . . . , the criminal action pending against the defendant in the court that issued such order is suspended until the superintendent of the institution in which the defendant is confined determines that he is no longer an incapacitated person.'” When people like Gibson are in places like Kirby, they are still in custody, even if they are not in the hoosegow. The Second Circuit concludes:
The case is Gibson v. City of York, decided on August 14. Gibson sought in forma pauperis status because he could not afford to file his lawsuit, which alleged that officials at Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Facility violated his civil rights. If Gibson was a "prisoner" while at Kirby, he cannot file that lawsuit without paying the filing fee. Was he a prisoner? When we think of prisoners, we think of guys in the slammer, in lockup, in the big house, behind bars, in the joint, etc. What about a psychiatric facility where the plaintiff was sent after he allegedly committed a crime, to see if he could get treatment that would allow him to stand trial?
The Court of Appeals (Walker, Leval and Pooler) notes that "Under New York law, 'when a defendant is in the custody of the commissioner [of mental health] pursuant to a temporary order of observation . . . , the criminal action pending against the defendant in the court that issued such order is suspended until the superintendent of the institution in which the defendant is confined determines that he is no longer an incapacitated person.'” When people like Gibson are in places like Kirby, they are still in custody, even if they are not in the hoosegow. The Second Circuit concludes:
Because New York law explicitly specifies that the criminal proceedings against a person, such as Gibson, who is being held in a mental health institution pursuant to a temporary order of observation, are merely suspended during his confinement and observation—and only terminate if the person is still being held at the time the temporary order expires or the criminal charges at issue are otherwise dropped—we have little trouble concluding that Gibson was still a “person . . . detained in [a] facility who is accused of . . . [a] violation[] of criminal law” at the time he filed his complaint, and thus was a “prisoner” under the PLRA.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Another First Amendment retaliation case goes down the chute
Public employees continue to lose their First Amendment retaliation cases in the Second Circuit. This time, it's a payroll clerk typist who was fired after she brought financial improprieties to her supervisors' attention.
The case is Ross v. Lichtenfeld, decided on September 10. Ross worked for the Katonah-Lewisboro School District in Westchester County. She processed payroll and verified payroll amounts. If plaintiff found any mistakes or improper payroll payments, she told the Superintendent about it. On one occasion, when Ross told him about some improper payments, the Superintendent said, "Oh, my God. This is worse than the Enron scandal. If taxpayers find out heads will spin." On other occasions, she told the Superintendent that people were improperly receiving overtime payments and that various disbursements were made without School Board approval. She also told the School Board about this stuff.
Ross sounds like a hero, right? Well, she was fired after an arbitrator found that she had a falsified employment application for the position. Still, she did expose some financial improprieties. But her First Amendment retaliation claim fails. The Second Circuit says that Ross did not speak as a citizen in speaking out but instead spoke pursuant to her official job duties. That dooms the case under Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006), and its progeny, which makes it harder to win these cases even if the plaintiff exposes a matter of public concern. Ross was just doing her job, but doing you job is not citizen speech; it's work speech.
The case is Ross v. Lichtenfeld, decided on September 10. Ross worked for the Katonah-Lewisboro School District in Westchester County. She processed payroll and verified payroll amounts. If plaintiff found any mistakes or improper payroll payments, she told the Superintendent about it. On one occasion, when Ross told him about some improper payments, the Superintendent said, "Oh, my God. This is worse than the Enron scandal. If taxpayers find out heads will spin." On other occasions, she told the Superintendent that people were improperly receiving overtime payments and that various disbursements were made without School Board approval. She also told the School Board about this stuff.
Ross sounds like a hero, right? Well, she was fired after an arbitrator found that she had a falsified employment application for the position. Still, she did expose some financial improprieties. But her First Amendment retaliation claim fails. The Second Circuit says that Ross did not speak as a citizen in speaking out but instead spoke pursuant to her official job duties. That dooms the case under Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006), and its progeny, which makes it harder to win these cases even if the plaintiff exposes a matter of public concern. Ross was just doing her job, but doing you job is not citizen speech; it's work speech.
The Second Circuit (Walker, Leval and Pooler) suggests one way that Ross might have won the case: "Because Ross never attempted to communicate her complaints to the public, she cannot avail herself of the argument that her duties in no way included public revelation of misconduct of district officials that is generally available to the employee who takes the issue public." So, one way to avoid summary judgment is for the plaintiff to report these matters to the media or some other outlet. Citing Garcetti, the Court also suggests that other whistleblower statutes "or other similar employment codes" might have protected Ross from termination, but she did not assert them in this case. The Court is probably referring to Civil Service Law section 75-b, which says that "A public employer shall not dismiss or take other
disciplinary or other adverse
personnel action against a public employee
regarding the employee's employment because the
employee discloses to a governmental body
information ... which the employee reasonably
believes to be
true and reasonably
believes constitutes an improper
governmental action" that violates a law, rule or regulation."
Friday, September 14, 2012
Dog hoarder loses her case
There is such a thing as dog hoarding. The SPCA often shows up after neighbors complain about the smell of dog feces and other foul odors, and the hoarder is charged with violating the New York State Agricultural and Markets Law. Sometimes the hoarders file a civil rights suit over the confiscation of their animals. These are very hard cases to win.
The case is Fabrikant v. French, decided on August 16. After Fabrikant's criminal charges were dismissed, she sued the SPCA for constitutional violations, including false arrest and the seizure and outplacement of her dogs. The district court dismissed the case, and the Court of Appeals (Newman, Straub and Lynch) affirms.
These cases are hard to read if you love dogs. The Second Circuit lays out the suffering these many dogs experienced, and I will spare you the details. The case is notable for a few holdings, though. First, the Court of Appeals says for the first time that people working for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals may be sued under Section 1983 as state actors. This is because animal control is traditionally a governmental function. Municipalities have delegated that function to local SPCA's. That's what happened in Ulster County, where this case originated and incidentally where I live and have donated to and visited the SPCA with our beloved Standard Poodle who lives like a king and basically runs the household.
The other holding of note is the qualified immunity ruling. The Court of Appeals rejected plaintiff's constitutional claim on qualified immunity grounds even though defendants waived/forfeited that argument in failing to raise it in the district court. Qualified immunity gets government defendants off the hook if the court finds they acted reasonably under the circumstances or the case law was not clear at the time they alleged violated the plaintiff's rights. In fact, defendants did not assert qualified immunity until oral argument in the Second Circuit. No matter. The Court of Appeals can resolve this issue because it is a question of law without any need for additional factfinding. Having gotten around the waiver, the Court says that the SPCA defendants are immune from suit because in 2002, when the events gave rise to this case, there was no clearly-established "right not to have her dogs sterilized by the SPCA, at least without some form of process, prior to being sent to foster homes while she was awaiting trial in state court on animal abuse charges." Even today, SPCA workers would not reasonably understand "that spaying or neutering Fabrikant's dogs following their seizure from her home violates a clearly established due process right." Rather, state law allows SPCA's and humane societies broad powers to promote the welfare of at-risk animals.
Finally, the Court of Appeals rejects plaintiff's search and seizure claim because the SPCA had probable cause to seize the animals. There is no evidence that anyone conspired against Fabrikant, and the SPCA people testified in detail about the conditions they observed when they came upon Fabrikant's property. It's difficult to get around a probable cause finding in a Section 1983 suit, particularly in cases like this where eyewitnesses give firsthand accounts in support of the charges. Law enforcement is allowed to rely on those firsthand accounts in going after the alleged wrongdoer.
The case is Fabrikant v. French, decided on August 16. After Fabrikant's criminal charges were dismissed, she sued the SPCA for constitutional violations, including false arrest and the seizure and outplacement of her dogs. The district court dismissed the case, and the Court of Appeals (Newman, Straub and Lynch) affirms.
These cases are hard to read if you love dogs. The Second Circuit lays out the suffering these many dogs experienced, and I will spare you the details. The case is notable for a few holdings, though. First, the Court of Appeals says for the first time that people working for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals may be sued under Section 1983 as state actors. This is because animal control is traditionally a governmental function. Municipalities have delegated that function to local SPCA's. That's what happened in Ulster County, where this case originated and incidentally where I live and have donated to and visited the SPCA with our beloved Standard Poodle who lives like a king and basically runs the household.
The other holding of note is the qualified immunity ruling. The Court of Appeals rejected plaintiff's constitutional claim on qualified immunity grounds even though defendants waived/forfeited that argument in failing to raise it in the district court. Qualified immunity gets government defendants off the hook if the court finds they acted reasonably under the circumstances or the case law was not clear at the time they alleged violated the plaintiff's rights. In fact, defendants did not assert qualified immunity until oral argument in the Second Circuit. No matter. The Court of Appeals can resolve this issue because it is a question of law without any need for additional factfinding. Having gotten around the waiver, the Court says that the SPCA defendants are immune from suit because in 2002, when the events gave rise to this case, there was no clearly-established "right not to have her dogs sterilized by the SPCA, at least without some form of process, prior to being sent to foster homes while she was awaiting trial in state court on animal abuse charges." Even today, SPCA workers would not reasonably understand "that spaying or neutering Fabrikant's dogs following their seizure from her home violates a clearly established due process right." Rather, state law allows SPCA's and humane societies broad powers to promote the welfare of at-risk animals.
Finally, the Court of Appeals rejects plaintiff's search and seizure claim because the SPCA had probable cause to seize the animals. There is no evidence that anyone conspired against Fabrikant, and the SPCA people testified in detail about the conditions they observed when they came upon Fabrikant's property. It's difficult to get around a probable cause finding in a Section 1983 suit, particularly in cases like this where eyewitnesses give firsthand accounts in support of the charges. Law enforcement is allowed to rely on those firsthand accounts in going after the alleged wrongdoer.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Mixed result in student racial harassment case
In this racial harassment case filed by the parents of a young boy who was ridiculed at school because of his race, the Court of Appeals allows some claims to proceed to trial but grants qualified immunity to some school officials who were not on notice that certain physical harassment violated the Constitution.
The case is DiStiso v. Cook, decided on August 21. This is the first time in years that the Second Circuit has provided extensive guidance on school harassment cases. What complicates matters is that the parents brought this case under the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution (which prohibits racial discrimination in general) and not Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which addresses discrimination in public schools. Unlike statutory claims like Title VI, qualified immunity is available to public defendants in Section 1983 claims brought under the Constitution, which means the defendants can wiggle out of the case if the law governing the case was not clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.
The boy was harassed both verbally and physically. He was unable to testify who exactly committed the harassment. Still, since the parents complained about it, the jury could find that the teacher and principal knew about the racial name-calling in kindergarten (other kids called him "nigger" and "blackie" and said his skin was dirty after he washed up). The jury may also find that defendants' response to these complaints was "clearly unreasonable" (the legal standard in these cases) because they did nothing about it, i.e., they did not do anything to stop or deter the harassment or undertake a full investigation. Legally, this part of the case is not that remarkable, except for the holding that the parents' testimony about what their son told them about the harassment is admissible at trial. The Second Circuit (Raggi, Pooler and McLaughlin) says:
The result in this case would be different if the same kids who verbally harassed the boy were the ones who physically harassed him. But the child is unable to identify the harassers, and there is no other evidence connecting the bad kids with both forms of harassment. "In such circumstances, a jury might well find that if a teacher actually knows that particular students have harassed a classmate for invidious reasons on several occasions, the teacher actually knows that the same prohibited motive animates the same students’ further misbehavior toward the same classmate. ... Absent some such evidence to connect the racial name-calling to the later commonplace physical misbehavior, there is no basis in established law for inferring that a teacher who receives complaints as to the racial motivation for former conduct has actual knowledge that the latter conduct is similarly motivated."
.
The case is DiStiso v. Cook, decided on August 21. This is the first time in years that the Second Circuit has provided extensive guidance on school harassment cases. What complicates matters is that the parents brought this case under the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution (which prohibits racial discrimination in general) and not Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which addresses discrimination in public schools. Unlike statutory claims like Title VI, qualified immunity is available to public defendants in Section 1983 claims brought under the Constitution, which means the defendants can wiggle out of the case if the law governing the case was not clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.
The boy was harassed both verbally and physically. He was unable to testify who exactly committed the harassment. Still, since the parents complained about it, the jury could find that the teacher and principal knew about the racial name-calling in kindergarten (other kids called him "nigger" and "blackie" and said his skin was dirty after he washed up). The jury may also find that defendants' response to these complaints was "clearly unreasonable" (the legal standard in these cases) because they did nothing about it, i.e., they did not do anything to stop or deter the harassment or undertake a full investigation. Legally, this part of the case is not that remarkable, except for the holding that the parents' testimony about what their son told them about the harassment is admissible at trial. The Second Circuit (Raggi, Pooler and McLaughlin) says:
Although Nicholas himself had no present recollection of the frequency of these racially derogatory remarks or even of who said them, when they were said, or the circumstances in which they were said, his parents testified that their son complained of racial name-calling, specifically, use of the word “nigger,” approximately eight, and possibly as many as 15, times over the course of his kindergarten year. Mr. and Mrs. DiStiso may not be competent witnesses to the underlying truth of their child’s complaints, i.e., to the fact that other children called Nicholas racial epithets. But if a jury were to credit Nicholas’s testimony that he experienced such name-calling and reported it to his parents, his parents’ testimony as to the number of times their son made such reports, which we must assume would also be credited, might constitute circumstantial evidence as to the frequency of the harassment. This is enough to raise triable issues of fact as to (1) whether Nicholas experienced racial name-calling during his kindergarten year at Wakelee and, if so, (2) whether that name-calling was sufficiently severe or pervasive as to have effectively deprived the child of educational opportunities provided by the school.The Court says, however, that defendants are entitled to qualified immunity on claims that they were deliberately indifferent to acts of physical harassment. The law is not clearly established in this area, so there was no way for defendants to know that otherwise race-neutral physical harassment was racially-motivated, even if the verbal harassment to which they were aware was explicitly racial. Over Judge Pooler's dissent, Judge Raggi writes, "Where, as in this case, the subsequent misbehavior is of a type routinely engaged in by school children of the age at issue without regard to motivation, there must be some objective evidence linking initial racially hostile acts to such subsequent misbehavior to support a finding that a school official has actual knowledge that the latter behavior, like the former, is racially motivated." There was "no objective evidence linking the physical conduct to the alleged name-calling. Nor is there evidence that the misbehavior went beyond the commonplace for children of Nicholas's age. In these circumstances, no clearly established law would have alerted defendants that they could be deemed to have actually known that the physical misbehavior was racially motivated so as to expose their responses to the physical misbehavior to possible constitutional scrutiny."
The result in this case would be different if the same kids who verbally harassed the boy were the ones who physically harassed him. But the child is unable to identify the harassers, and there is no other evidence connecting the bad kids with both forms of harassment. "In such circumstances, a jury might well find that if a teacher actually knows that particular students have harassed a classmate for invidious reasons on several occasions, the teacher actually knows that the same prohibited motive animates the same students’ further misbehavior toward the same classmate. ... Absent some such evidence to connect the racial name-calling to the later commonplace physical misbehavior, there is no basis in established law for inferring that a teacher who receives complaints as to the racial motivation for former conduct has actual knowledge that the latter conduct is similarly motivated."
.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Anti-parole policy does not violate Constitution
The State of New York allegedly had an unofficial policy against granting parole to violent offenders. They sued the state, claiming this policy violates the Constitution. The Court of Appeals does not think so.
The case is Graziano v. Pataki, decided on August 3. According to plaintiffs, who wanted to make this a class action, the state sharply reduced parole after George Pataki became governor, from 28 percent in 1993-94 to 3 percent in 2000-01. You can see how the state can get away with this. No politician was ever taken to the woodshed for denying parole to violent felons, including murderers.
In a series of summary orders over the last few years, the Second Circuit has held that the alleged anti-parole policy does not violate the Constitution. It re-affirms those rulings in this case, this time in a precedential opinion. Plaintiffs argue that the blanket parole denials violate due process because "they have a limited liberty interest in 'not being denied parole for arbitrary or impermissible reasons." But the Court of Appeals concludes that the parole scheme does not create a legitimate expectancy of release from jail, which means there is no property interest, which means there is no due process claim. Not only do the plaintiffs fail to allege that the parole officials are taking improper factors in account in denying parole, but all the parole deciders are really doing is heavily emphasizing the violent nature of the inmates' crimes, a legitimate factor under state law.
While the parole law requires the parole board to consider a variety of factors in granting or denying parole, they are allowed to overvalue the violent crime at the expense of other statutory considerations. The Second Circuit (Katzmann and Wesley) concludes, "a policy of according substantial weight to the severity of the crime is neither arbitrary nor capricious; indeed the Board is required to consider this factor as part of its determination, and it is entitled to give whatever weight it deems appropriate to each of the statutory factors." District Judge Underwood dissents.
The case is Graziano v. Pataki, decided on August 3. According to plaintiffs, who wanted to make this a class action, the state sharply reduced parole after George Pataki became governor, from 28 percent in 1993-94 to 3 percent in 2000-01. You can see how the state can get away with this. No politician was ever taken to the woodshed for denying parole to violent felons, including murderers.
In a series of summary orders over the last few years, the Second Circuit has held that the alleged anti-parole policy does not violate the Constitution. It re-affirms those rulings in this case, this time in a precedential opinion. Plaintiffs argue that the blanket parole denials violate due process because "they have a limited liberty interest in 'not being denied parole for arbitrary or impermissible reasons." But the Court of Appeals concludes that the parole scheme does not create a legitimate expectancy of release from jail, which means there is no property interest, which means there is no due process claim. Not only do the plaintiffs fail to allege that the parole officials are taking improper factors in account in denying parole, but all the parole deciders are really doing is heavily emphasizing the violent nature of the inmates' crimes, a legitimate factor under state law.
While the parole law requires the parole board to consider a variety of factors in granting or denying parole, they are allowed to overvalue the violent crime at the expense of other statutory considerations. The Second Circuit (Katzmann and Wesley) concludes, "a policy of according substantial weight to the severity of the crime is neither arbitrary nor capricious; indeed the Board is required to consider this factor as part of its determination, and it is entitled to give whatever weight it deems appropriate to each of the statutory factors." District Judge Underwood dissents.
Friday, September 7, 2012
What happens when the decisionmaker dies prior to the Title VII trial?
What happens when the decisionmaker in a Title VII case dies? Without his testimony, can the employer prove its nondiscriminatory reason? The Second Circuit has never addressed this issue, until now.
The case is Bucalo v. Shelter Island Union Free School District, decided on August 10. Plaintiff sued the school district for age discrimination and retaliation after she was twice denied the position of school librarian. The first time she was denied this position in 1999, plaintiff filed an EEOC charge but did not bring a lawsuit. After she was again denied the position four years later, plaintiff sued for retaliation. After the lawsuit was filed, the decisionmaker, Lanier, died. Prior to his death, as he was too ill to provide deposition testimony, Lanier signed an affidavit that explained why plaintiff was denied the position in 2003: he thought plaintiff had an unstable work history and he denied that her age or prior EEOC charge had anything to do with the job denial. At trial, the court said the affidavit were inadmissible hearsay. Plaintiff lost at trial, and argues on appeal that she is entitled to judgment as a matter of law because, without Lanier's testimony, the school district cannot prove its age-neutral reason for denying her position.
The Court of Appeals (Straub, Winter and Lynch) rejects plaintiff's argument and affirms the verdict. In St. Mary's Honor Center v. Hicks (2003), the Supreme Court said that if the plaintiff conclusively proves her prima facie case and the employer does not meet its burden of proving a legitimate reason for the adverse action, then the plaintiff wins as a matter of law. That rule does not help plaintiff here because the jury had a factual basis to find that plaintiff did not prove her prima facie case. Specifically, the jury could find that plaintiff was not denied the position under circumstances creating an inference of discrimination because it could find that Lanier did not know that plaintiff was significantly older than the woman who was offered the position; Lanier had never met plaintiff and the the resumes of plaintiff and the selectee suggested that both were in their early 30's. As for the retaliation claim, same result. The jury could have found there was no causal connection between the first EEOC charge and the 2003 position denial because of the lengthy time gap and that Lanier was not involved in the 1999 position denial.
Even if plaintiff did conclusively prove her prima facie case, the fact that Lanier was unable to testify at trial does not mean that plaintiff could win the case as a matter of law. There were other ways for defendant to prove that plaintiff was denied the position in 2003 for legitimate reasons. The Court of Appeals has held that "a defendant's failure to 'come forward with a non-discriminatory reason' does not compel a jury verdict for the plaintiff if the defendant 'furnishes a satisfactory explanation for its inability to tell the reason why plaintiff was disfavored.'" Defendant had a compelling reason in this case: Lanier died prior to trial and was too sick to provide deposition testimony. Meanwhile circumstantial evidence -- including plaintiff's questionable resume and the selectee's superior qualifications -- permitted the jury to find that the school district had a legitimate reason to deny plaintiff the job.
The case is Bucalo v. Shelter Island Union Free School District, decided on August 10. Plaintiff sued the school district for age discrimination and retaliation after she was twice denied the position of school librarian. The first time she was denied this position in 1999, plaintiff filed an EEOC charge but did not bring a lawsuit. After she was again denied the position four years later, plaintiff sued for retaliation. After the lawsuit was filed, the decisionmaker, Lanier, died. Prior to his death, as he was too ill to provide deposition testimony, Lanier signed an affidavit that explained why plaintiff was denied the position in 2003: he thought plaintiff had an unstable work history and he denied that her age or prior EEOC charge had anything to do with the job denial. At trial, the court said the affidavit were inadmissible hearsay. Plaintiff lost at trial, and argues on appeal that she is entitled to judgment as a matter of law because, without Lanier's testimony, the school district cannot prove its age-neutral reason for denying her position.
The Court of Appeals (Straub, Winter and Lynch) rejects plaintiff's argument and affirms the verdict. In St. Mary's Honor Center v. Hicks (2003), the Supreme Court said that if the plaintiff conclusively proves her prima facie case and the employer does not meet its burden of proving a legitimate reason for the adverse action, then the plaintiff wins as a matter of law. That rule does not help plaintiff here because the jury had a factual basis to find that plaintiff did not prove her prima facie case. Specifically, the jury could find that plaintiff was not denied the position under circumstances creating an inference of discrimination because it could find that Lanier did not know that plaintiff was significantly older than the woman who was offered the position; Lanier had never met plaintiff and the the resumes of plaintiff and the selectee suggested that both were in their early 30's. As for the retaliation claim, same result. The jury could have found there was no causal connection between the first EEOC charge and the 2003 position denial because of the lengthy time gap and that Lanier was not involved in the 1999 position denial.
Even if plaintiff did conclusively prove her prima facie case, the fact that Lanier was unable to testify at trial does not mean that plaintiff could win the case as a matter of law. There were other ways for defendant to prove that plaintiff was denied the position in 2003 for legitimate reasons. The Court of Appeals has held that "a defendant's failure to 'come forward with a non-discriminatory reason' does not compel a jury verdict for the plaintiff if the defendant 'furnishes a satisfactory explanation for its inability to tell the reason why plaintiff was disfavored.'" Defendant had a compelling reason in this case: Lanier died prior to trial and was too sick to provide deposition testimony. Meanwhile circumstantial evidence -- including plaintiff's questionable resume and the selectee's superior qualifications -- permitted the jury to find that the school district had a legitimate reason to deny plaintiff the job.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
No adverse employment actions in public employee retaliation case
The Court of Appeals has not been kind to First Amendment retaliation claims, often ruling that the plaintiff's speech was unprotected because it was work-related and not uttered as a citizen. In this case, the Second Circuit rules against the plaintiff for a different reason: no adverse action. This reasoning would apply to Title VII retaliation claims as well.
The case is Wrobel v. County of Erie, decided on August 1. Other aspects of the case are discussed here. Wrobel was targeted by new supervisors in the highway department, Naylon and Rider. Wrobel's wife and other colleagues tried to expose Naylon and Rider's mistreatment of county workers and other improper behavior, such as the misuse of public money. They sent letters to the State Attorney General about this, signing them as "Concerned Erie County Employees." Wrobel and others also met with the FBI about these allegations.
This may constitute speech on matters of public concern -- a necessary prerequisite for any First Amendment retaliation claim -- but Wrobel did not suffer an adverse employment action. Under Circuit precedent, an adverse action is any managerial response that would deter a reasonable public employee from speaking out again. Here, management interrogated him without the presence of a union representative in telling Wrobel to keep his wife out of County buildings. Wrobel was also questioned by the County sheriff about a workplace theft. These are de minimus slights, the Court of Appeals says. They may not have been pleasant, but they were not enough to prevent the average employee from speaking out again. There was no proof that the sheriff's questions were motivated by Wrobel's speech, and these were only a few polite questions anyway, after which Wrobel was left alone.
Plaintiff's best argument is that, when plaintiff grieved his transfer, management encouraged and tried to bribe employees to testify against him. But there is no real proof of this other than a email from Rider to Naylon asking him to attend the hearing "and bring other employees who did 'not want him back.'" This showed they disliked plaintiff, not that they were manipulating testimony.
The case is Wrobel v. County of Erie, decided on August 1. Other aspects of the case are discussed here. Wrobel was targeted by new supervisors in the highway department, Naylon and Rider. Wrobel's wife and other colleagues tried to expose Naylon and Rider's mistreatment of county workers and other improper behavior, such as the misuse of public money. They sent letters to the State Attorney General about this, signing them as "Concerned Erie County Employees." Wrobel and others also met with the FBI about these allegations.
This may constitute speech on matters of public concern -- a necessary prerequisite for any First Amendment retaliation claim -- but Wrobel did not suffer an adverse employment action. Under Circuit precedent, an adverse action is any managerial response that would deter a reasonable public employee from speaking out again. Here, management interrogated him without the presence of a union representative in telling Wrobel to keep his wife out of County buildings. Wrobel was also questioned by the County sheriff about a workplace theft. These are de minimus slights, the Court of Appeals says. They may not have been pleasant, but they were not enough to prevent the average employee from speaking out again. There was no proof that the sheriff's questions were motivated by Wrobel's speech, and these were only a few polite questions anyway, after which Wrobel was left alone.
Plaintiff's best argument is that, when plaintiff grieved his transfer, management encouraged and tried to bribe employees to testify against him. But there is no real proof of this other than a email from Rider to Naylon asking him to attend the hearing "and bring other employees who did 'not want him back.'" This showed they disliked plaintiff, not that they were manipulating testimony.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Back and front wages are taxable
No one likes taxes but the IRS. Everything is taxed, including wages under Title VII. That's the rule in a recent Second Circuit case in which the plaintiff objected that a chunk of his large judgment was lost to taxes.
The case is Noel v. New York State Office of Mental Health, decided on August 31. Noel won a Title VII discrimination case in which the jury awarded him $280,000 in back and front pay. When the state paid out the award, it Office of State Comptroller on its own took out the various deductions and sent Noel a check in the amount of $139,582.52. That's fifty percent in taxes! Noel objected that the state made these deductions, and the district court sided with Noel, concluding that the state had no legal authority to withhold these taxes. The court ordered the state to reimburse Noel for the money that it deducted. The court further entered a judgment in the amount of $164,987.59, which reimbursed Noel for the taxes (plus interest and attorneys fees) that the state deducted from his check. The Court of Appeals reverses.
Here's the deal. Title VII authorizes an award of back and front pay if the plaintiff is wrongfully terminated. Since these are the wages that plaintiff would have recovered but for the defendant's wrongful discharge, he has to pay withholding taxes. After all, had plaintiff not been terminated in violation of Title VII, he would have paid taxes on that income. Under the IRS code, income is taxable. And the district court's order that "reimburses" Noel is really a windfall. The Second Circuit (Parker, Katzmann and Wesley) writes,
The district court's ruling gave an "undeserved windfall" to Noel. This was an "inappropriate hit to the public fisc," the Court of Appeals says.
By the way, the decision says that the state paid out the full judgment to Noel after the district court ordered the state to reimburse to Noel the taxes that it withheld. Now that the state has won the appeal, Noel has to pay all that money back in taxes. I certainly hope Noel did not spend all the money while the case was on appeal.
The case is Noel v. New York State Office of Mental Health, decided on August 31. Noel won a Title VII discrimination case in which the jury awarded him $280,000 in back and front pay. When the state paid out the award, it Office of State Comptroller on its own took out the various deductions and sent Noel a check in the amount of $139,582.52. That's fifty percent in taxes! Noel objected that the state made these deductions, and the district court sided with Noel, concluding that the state had no legal authority to withhold these taxes. The court ordered the state to reimburse Noel for the money that it deducted. The court further entered a judgment in the amount of $164,987.59, which reimbursed Noel for the taxes (plus interest and attorneys fees) that the state deducted from his check. The Court of Appeals reverses.
Here's the deal. Title VII authorizes an award of back and front pay if the plaintiff is wrongfully terminated. Since these are the wages that plaintiff would have recovered but for the defendant's wrongful discharge, he has to pay withholding taxes. After all, had plaintiff not been terminated in violation of Title VII, he would have paid taxes on that income. Under the IRS code, income is taxable. And the district court's order that "reimburses" Noel is really a windfall. The Second Circuit (Parker, Katzmann and Wesley) writes,
[P]ayments pursuant to Title VII judgments for back and front pay are “wages” as defined under the Internal Revenue Code and, as such, employers are required to withhold income and Federal Insurance Contributions Act (“FICA”) taxes. Moreover, we conclude that – although district courts have discretion to oversee the procedure by which these deductions are taken – the district court should not have ordered the
double payment.
...
The obligation on employers to collect taxes by withholding a specified portion of the tax from wages paid is mandatary. Specifically, I.R.C. § 3102(a) provides that FICA taxes “shall be collected by the employer . . . as and when paid.” Likewise, the Code uses mandatory language with respect to the withholding of income taxes. Moreover, an employer who fails to withhold FICA and income taxes from the wages of his employees, or who fails to pay those withheld taxes over to the government, can be held personally liable for an amount that is equal to the amount that should have been withheld and paid over.
The district court's ruling gave an "undeserved windfall" to Noel. This was an "inappropriate hit to the public fisc," the Court of Appeals says.
By the way, the decision says that the state paid out the full judgment to Noel after the district court ordered the state to reimburse to Noel the taxes that it withheld. Now that the state has won the appeal, Noel has to pay all that money back in taxes. I certainly hope Noel did not spend all the money while the case was on appeal.