A unique aspect of Section 1983 litigation is that it is almost impossible to sue a municipality for a civil rights violation. A long time ago, the Supreme Court said that towns, villages and cities cannot be sued under this statute unless the plaintiff can show the civil rights violation was caused by a municipal policy or practice. Policy and practice can be proven in a variety of ways, but that is a difficult task, so most plaintiffs simply sue the individuals who violated their rights. But the question always remains, who is a policymaker?
The case is Agosto v. New York City Dept. of Education, issued on December 4. Plaintiff is a schoolteacher who claims that management violated his rights under the First Amendment because it retaliated against him after spoke out on matters of public concern. As it happens, the Second Circuit (Menashi, Lohier and Cabranes) says that plaintiff actually did not engage in First Amendment speech because his grievance were either personal to him or did not otherwise involve matters that would concern the community.
Many Section 1983 plaintiffs who sue school districts will argue that the principal who retaliated against them was a municipal "policymaker" because the principal had final authority over the plaintiff's employment. That argument applies the general rule that a final policymaker is the only one who can make policy for the district. The seminal Supreme Court for that principle is Monell v. Dept. of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978). As the Second Circuit puts it,
Agosto has apparently settled on the theory that Ureña’s disciplinary letters and negative evaluations were unreviewable by higher-level officials within the Department of Education, making Ureña the de facto final municipal policymaker on those specific matters involving Agosto. Even assuming that Ureña’s actions were unreviewable, Agosto’s claim still fails because the Supreme Court has rejected the “concept of ‘de facto final policymaking authority.’”That argument will not work, the Court says, because it it another way of imposing respondeat superior liability onto the district for the principal's actions, and Monell prohibits that theory of liability. Instead, plaintiff says that "even if Ureña were not the final municipal policymaker for teacher discipline and evaluations, he was the final policymaker at least for his own “discriminatory and harassing behavior towards Mr. Agosto.” In support of this proposition, plaintiff cites a few dozen district court rulings that "for the proposition that 'a public school principal acts as a final policymaker to the extent that the ultimate harm that befell the plaintiff was under the principal’s control.'" The Court of Appeals says these cases were all wrongly decided.
by erroneously equating a principal’s final decisions with a municipality’s final policies, those cases make the same mistake as Agosto. We do not believe that approach is consistent with Monell and accordingly decline to adopt it. Such an approach would risk imposing Monell liability for almost every action a principal takes.
The real policymaker, then is the Department of Education, not the principal. The Second Circuit had previously held as such in an unpublished summary order, Hurdle v. Board of Education of City of New York, 113 Fed. Appx. 423 (2d Cir. 2004). Agosto's case now confirms this is the law of the Circuit. To that end, this case is an important one for civil rights plaintiffs and their lawyers who seek to prove municipal liability under Section 1983.
You may ask, who cares about Monell liability when you can sue the individual decisionmakers? Because if the decisionmakers are entitled to qualified immunity, the municipal liability is the only way to win the case, since municipalities cannot invoke qualified immunity. Also, if you think the government employer for some reason will not cover the individual defendant's damages, then you want to sue the municipality.
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