United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 06-1860
ABRAHAM PHILIP,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
JOHN CRONIN,
Defendant, Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lynch, Chief Judge,
O'Connor,* Associate Justice,
and Torruella, Circuit Judge.
Daniel S. Sharp with whom Elaine Whitfield Sharp and Whitfield
Sharp & Sharp were on brief for appellant.
Mary O'Neil, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Martha
Coakley, Attorney General, was on brief for appellee.
August 7, 2008
*
The Hon. Sandra Day O'Connor, Associate Justice (Ret.) of
the Supreme Court of the United States, sitting by designation.
LYNCH, Chief Judge. The Office of the Chief Medical
Examiner of Massachusetts has had a troubled history. This lawsuit
is brought by a disgruntled former contract medical examiner, Dr.
Abraham Philip, against the administrator of that office, John
Cronin.
In November of 2000 the National Association of Medical
Examiners ("NAME") conducted an audit and filed a report critical
of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for Massachusetts
("OCME"). (OCME had requested the audit.) The report called
OCME's facilities "woefully inadequate" and detailed insufficient
staffing, unacceptable delays, and other difficulties in the
office.
In March of 2003, John Cronin was brought on as the Chief
Administrator of OCME and charged with improving the office,
including mending OCME's public reputation. During Cronin's
tenure, plaintiff Abraham Philip was employed as a medical examiner
under a ten-month contract starting on September 2, 2003. That
contract required Dr. Philip to "adhere to the highest ethical
standards and serve as a role model for all other OCME employees."
He had worked for the agency in the past.
Cronin terminated Dr. Philip's contract on March 3, 2004.
Dr. Philip sued Cronin in his personal capacity, claiming the
termination was in retaliation for two letters criticizing OCME
that Dr. Philip had sent to the governor and therefore violated his
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First Amendment rights. Cronin denied that accusation and pointed
to several troubling incidents during Dr. Philip's employment as
the cause for the contract termination.
The case went to trial. After the close of plaintiff's
evidence, and on defendant's motion, the trial judge entered a
directed verdict for Cronin. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a). The judge
did so "essentially for the reasons and rationale set forth" in
defendant's memorandum of law in support of his Rule 50(a) motion.
Cronin, in his memorandum to the district court, had primarily
argued (1) that no reasonable fact finder could conclude that Dr.
Philip's critical speech regarding OCME was the motivating factor
in the termination of his employment, (2) that Dr. Philip's
employment would have been terminated regardless of his speech on
a matter of public concern, and (3) that Cronin was entitled to
qualified immunity.1 Of these rationales, we find the last --
qualified immunity -- sufficient to sustain the trial court's Rule
50(a) judgment.
1
It appears that although defendant claimed qualified
immunity as an affirmative defense in his answer to plaintiff's
complaint, he made no other effort to get a ruling on his qualified
immunity before trial.
Cronin's remaining arguments before the district court
pertained to two state law claims brought by Dr. Philip. Dr.
Philip does not argue on appeal that there was any error in the
dismissal of those claims.
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I.
Dr. Philip was, depending on one's point of view, either
a constant complainer or a constant seeker of improvement in the
OCME. He freely used emails and memos to communicate his ideas to
Cronin. Cronin did meet with Dr. Philip at least twice in January
2004, for a couple of hours each time, to discuss these
suggestions. Many of Dr. Philip's concerns had been highlighted in
the NAME report from two years earlier. As to Dr. Philip's new
ideas, Cronin did follow up on some.
Starting in February 2004, there was a series of
incidents which had later consequences. The first incident
involved the contamination of a death certificate. On February 13,
2004, a funeral home brought a death certificate back to OCME
because it had not been properly signed; because the autopsy had
been conducted by Dr. Philip, Cronin sent an administrative
assistant, Leslie Ward, to obtain Dr. Philip's signature on the
certificate.
Dr. Philip, in the midst of another autopsy, did not want
to be interrupted and essentially told Leslie Ward to tell the
funeral home to wait an hour until he took a break. She relayed
that message to Cronin; at Cronin's request, Leslie Ward's
supervisor, Deirdre Ward, went down to see Dr. Philip, bearing the
unsigned certificate and a request that he sign it. This time Dr.
Philip did sign it, but in doing so got blood on the certificate.
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Dr. Philip testified that he placed the bloody certificate on a
table to deal with later, but that the technician took it away
while Dr. Philip was finishing his autopsy. (Deirdre Ward told
Cronin that Dr. Philip had handed the bloodied certificate directly
to her.) Deirdre Ward brought the certificate to Cronin and told
him it had been "dripping with blood" when she received it. Cronin
told Deirdre Ward to place it into a sleeve, recognizing the bloody
certificate to be a biohazard. Cronin then explained what happened
to Dr. Richard Evans, the Chief Medical Examiner. According to
Cronin, Dr. Evans was shocked and disgusted by Dr. Philip's
unprofessional behavior.
Cronin investigated and took statements from four
employees involved in the incident, who confirmed the events
outlined. Dr. Philip's autopsy assistant was not questioned about
the incident. Cronin then consulted his superiors at the Executive
Office of Public Safety ("EOPS"), EOPS Undersecretary Robert Hass
and EOPS Chief of Staff Jane Tewksbury. They discussed the written
statements and the range of possible disciplinary actions. Dr.
Evans also provided his views.
In Cronin's view, the lack of signature on the original
certificate was not directly Dr. Philip's fault, but Dr. Philip's
response was inappropriate. Dr. Philip had larger administrative
and safety responsibilities, and the group decided some discipline
was appropriate. The decision was made to suspend Dr. Philip for
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one day to "get his attention and make him realize that he need[ed]
to be part of this recovery of this medical/legal system that [OCME
was] looking to build from a professional ground up." The
suspension was brief in light of the staffing shortage at OCME.
Cronin's superiors instructed Cronin to convey that disciplinary
decision to Dr. Philip.
That same day, February 25, Cronin met with Dr. Philip to
hear his version of events. This effort was unsuccessful. Dr.
Philip became agitated and left Cronin's office in anger, yelling
at him. As Dr. Philip left, Cronin handed him a disciplinary
action letter, dated February 25, 2004, that read:
Please let this correspondence serve to notify
you that as a result of your actions on Friday
February 13, 2004 at approximately 12:30pm,
you are suspended without pay for one day.
Your suspension is to be served on Thursday
March 4, 2004.
The events, as described by four witnesses,
reveal that you abruptly accepted a death
certificate for your signature while you were
performing an autopsy on a homicide victim.
You then, without comment, handed the document
back to Ms. Deirdre Ward with "blood dripping
from it". A copy of the soiled document is
attached.
Your actions exposed a co-worker to a
potentially hazardous situation without any
explanation. The document was also rendered
"destroyed" thereby causing embarrassment and
inconvenience to this office, the funeral home
that transported the document, the burial
agent that signed the original for burial of
the decedent back in January 2004, and the
Natick Town Hall Clerk's office.
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Please understand that your actions are very
disturbing and are determined to be completely
unacceptable.
Any future occurrence of unprofessional or
unacceptable behavior will result in immediate
termination of your contracted services
pursuant to the Terms and Conditions of the
contract you have endorsed with this office.
At trial, Dr. Philip acknowledged he knew he was on shaky
ground in terms of his continued employment once he got this
letter. Dr. Philip's view of the incident was that he should not
have been asked to sign a certificate while he was in the midst of
an autopsy, that he believed he was given no choice but to sign the
certificate immediately, that the funeral home could have waited an
hour for him to take a preplanned break, or that some other medical
examiner could have been found to sign in his place.
Cronin, on the other hand, testified that he had not
viewed Dr. Philip as a discipline problem before the bloody autopsy
report, although Dr. Philip had made a number of negative comments
to Cronin, derisively calling him a "control freak" and "Mr.
Administrator." Cronin explained that no one other than Dr. Philip
and Dr. Evans could have signed the certificate; that Cronin was
attempting to provide polite and quick service to the funeral home
to help repair OCME's negative bureaucratic reputation; that
Deirdre Ward was instructed to ask, not command, Dr. Philip to sign
the certificate; and that neither Deirdre Ward nor Leslie Ward, to
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the best of Cronin's knowledge, violated standard operating
procedures by entering the autopsy suite.
The next incident concerns emails about evidence from a
child homicide prosecution, including the "urinate/fart" email.
On February 25, Jackie Faherty, general counsel for OCME, informed
Dr. Philip that a court had issued an order requiring his notes
relating to the death and autopsy of a child homicide victim be
preserved. Dr. Philip was working on a report for the case, but
the charts were in Faherty's possession. On February 27, Dr.
Philip replied to Faherty that he was working on the draft of his
report and needed the entire case folder that was in her
possession.
On February 29, an Assistant District Attorney ("ADA")
handling the child homicide case emailed Dr. Philip informing him
that the court had ordered preservation of all of Dr. Philip's
records in the case and asking about the report. By email, dated
March 1, Dr. Philip replied to the ADA:
I finalized the report on [name redacted], a
few corrections have to be made, which my
secretary will do early this morning. My
problem is I cannot find the original charts
on this case, to check if everything else is
okay. The last I heard the file was with
Jackie Faherty, and she locked it in her
office and has been away on Thursday and
Friday.
There are some other very bizarre events going
on in the office with weird accusations being
levelled against me. So when you arrange with
Jackie Faherty to hand over the file to me,
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please insist that a witness be present in the
room to prevent weird charges of having
urinated on the chart or farted while working
on the chart being levelled against me by the
head honcho who runs this agency.
(emphasis added).
Dr. Philip explained his statements in the email as
reflecting his reaction to what he felt was the earlier unfair
discipline imposed on him for the bloody death certificate.
The ADA was concerned about this email and contacted
Cronin, who, in turn, contacted Faherty. Faherty expressed concern
that the email might well be a discoverable document, which could
become public. If so, it would greatly embarrass the agency.
On March 2, Faherty left the main case file on Dr.
Philip's chair and so informed him by email. In response, Dr.
Philip sent her this email, dated March 2:
Note my fervent prayers to you in what I
thought was plain english was to hand over the
files in the presence of a witness, and
arrange to have a witness present while
completing the autopsy report and checking the
file. I was down in the autopsy rooms and
evaluating a brain when some one sneaked in
and left the files on my chair. In order to
avoid any contamination of the file, they have
been left out on the table in the corridor,
till a witness can be arranged.
This email also caused concerns.
That same day, Faherty took these emails and her concerns
to Cronin, and later that day they went to Dr. Philip's office to
deliver the child homicide file in person. Cronin testified that
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he "put the file on [Dr. Philip's] desk and said finish your work,
please," though he also described becoming upset at Dr. Philip's
antagonistic response. Dr. Philip testified that Cronin threw the
file on Philip's desk in a threatening manner, told him to finish
the work, and that "enough was enough."
Meanwhile, on March 1, Dr. Philip had sent a letter to
then-Governor Mitt Romney that criticized OCME on numerous grounds,
which were not limited to the issues NAME had identified earlier.
The letter opens "I write to alert you to serious deficiencies in
the [OCME]." It appears that this letter was sent after Dr. Philip
sent the urinate/fart email.
On March 2, 2004, after he sent the urinate/fart email,
Dr. Philip circulated a memo internally via email; he sent the same
memo to the governor on March 3 (but with a cover letter bearing
the date of March 1). This is the "Joshua memo." Dr. Philip's
cover letter to the governor explained he was writing "to alert
[the governor] to serious issue [sic] regarding organ procurement."
The Joshua memo arose out of Dr. Philip's concerns about what he
believed was an inappropriate organ harvesting procedure. He had
declined to harvest organs from a candidate donor using this
procedure on January 30, 2004; Dr. Evans eventually approved the
use of the procedure on that candidate, contrary to Dr. Philip's
express recommendation. The Joshua memo called for more open
discussion about the legal and ethical implications of this
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procedure "so that everybody is comfortable with the decisions
taken."
The decision to terminate Dr. Philip's contract was made
at a March 3 meeting comprised of EOPS Undersecretary Hass, Chief
of Staff Tewksbury, Dr. Evans, Cronin, and perhaps one or two
others. Cronin testified the group discussed "the latest round of
bizarre activity" by Dr. Philip and his deteriorating behavior at
the agency. Cronin testified that the discussion touched on the
Joshua memo and the two letters Dr. Philip had sent to the
governor, but these items were not the "thrust" of the conversation
and did not inform their primary discussion or final decision.
Rather, "the focus of the discussion" was Dr. Philip's behavioral
issues, especially "Dr. Philip's behavior within the office place
related to [the] email that he had sent to [the] assistant district
attorney." This behavior was considered in light of the bloody
death certificate incident. Chief of Staff Tewksbury took the
position that Dr. Philip had to go. That was the general consensus
and final decision of the group.
Cronin agreed with the contract termination decision; his
only reservation was that the office was already understaffed and
they could not afford to lose another examiner. Cronin believed he
had no discretion, after the group decision, not to terminate Dr.
Philip's contract. He spoke with OCME's human resources director
and asked her to prepare a termination letter. He told her the
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letter should focus on Dr. Philip's breach of his contractual
obligation to meet the highest standards of conduct.
The letter terminating Dr. Philip's contract is dated
March 3, 2004, and states:
On February 25, 2004, you were notified that
any occurrence of unprofessional or
unacceptable behavior would result in the
immediate termination of your contracted
services pursuant to the Terms and Conditions
of the contract you endorsed with the Office
of the Chief Medical Examiner. Due to
continued instances of misconduct, your
contract is hereby terminated for cause,
effective immediately.
As you are aware, your contract required you
to demonstrate high standards of conduct.
Explicit in your duties was a requirement that
you adhere to the highest ethical standards
and serve as a role model for all other OCME
employees. Your conduct on or about March 1st
and 2nd, 2004, which included unprofessional
and inappropriate communications with members
of the OCME and a district attorney's office
do not comport with this requirement and
constitute a breach of your contract.
Chronologically, Dr. Philip's contract was terminated
less than seventy-two hours after his March 1 letter to the
governor, his release of the Joshua memo on March 2, and his March
3 transmittal of the Joshua memo to the governor. Dr. Philip bases
his First Amendment claims on these documents. He argues the
letters were discussed during the March 3 termination meeting, as
Cronin admitted, and were things of consequence. Cronin testified
there were two reasons for the termination: the bloody death
certificate and the urinate/fart email. From this, Dr. Philip
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argues that the termination letter was inconsistent and that
qualified immunity cannot be granted in the face of inconsistent
reasons from the defendant.
II.
Our review of the grant of judgment for defendant at
trial is de novo. Acevedo-Feliciano v. Ruiz-Hernández, 447 F.3d
115, 121 (1st Cir. 2006). We take all facts and inferences in
plaintiff's favor. Id.
After the trial in this case, the Supreme Court shed
further light on First Amendment claims brought by public employees
in Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006). As we have
recognized, Garcetti somewhat modifies the prior test articulated
under Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563 (1968). Curran
v. Cousins, 509 F.3d 36, 44-45 (1st Cir. 2007).
If the court decides, as the trial court did here, that
the "employee spoke as a citizen on a matter of public concern,"
then under Garcetti, we consider whether there was "adequate
justification":
The question becomes whether the relevant
government entity had an adequate
justification for treating the employee
differently from any other member of the
general public. This consideration reflects
the importance of the relationship between the
speaker's expressions and employment. A
government entity has broader discretion to
restrict speech when it acts in its role as
employer, but the restrictions it imposes must
be directed at speech that has some potential
to affect the entity's operations.
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Id. at 45 (quoting Garcetti, 547 U.S. at 418).
To prove retaliation, plaintiff must also establish a
causal connection between the speech and the adverse employment
action, here that Dr. Philip's speech was the substantial or
motivating factor in his firing. Torres-Rosado v. Rotger-Sabat,
335 F.3d 1, 11 (1st Cir. 2003); see also Curran, 509 F.3d at 45.
In addition, where a plaintiff seeks the relief of
monetary damages against state officials, as here, plaintiff must
overcome the qualified immunity defense of those officials, a
defense which protects their reasonable judgments. Dirrane v.
Brookline Police Dep't, 315 F.3d 65, 69 (1st Cir. 2002). This case
raises both the Garcetti doctrine and the doctrine of qualified
immunity.
A. First Amendment Claim
It is undisputed that Dr. Philip's speech in the Joshua
memo was on a matter of public concern. To the extent that the
district court entered a directed verdict on the basis that no jury
could reasonably conclude that the Joshua memo was a substantial or
a motivating factor in the decision to terminate Dr. Philip's
contract, we disagree. We discuss the point for its value in
future cases.
A trial judge faced with a motion for a directed verdict
must take the evidence in the light most favorable to the
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plaintiff, including drawing all inferences in plaintiff's favor.
Acevedo-Feliciano, 447 F.3d at 121.
The test is not what the jury verdict is likely to be.
Here, taking all the evidence in plaintiff's favor, we think there
was sufficient evidence of a causal and a motivating relationship
between the First Amendment protected speech and the termination
for the retaliation claim to survive a Rule 50(a) motion.
There is a great deal of temporal proximity here between
the protected conduct and the employer's action. Cf. DeCaire v.
Mukasey, 530 F.3d 1, 19 (1st Cir. 2008) (evidence of temporal
proximity may be sufficient to make out a prima facie case of
retaliation for exercise of rights protected under Title VII).
Defendant Cronin testified that at the March 3 meeting where the
decision to terminate Dr. Philip's employment was made, the March
1 letter from Dr. Philip to the governor and the Joshua memo were
discussed. Cronin and the other participants were certainly aware
of these letters at the March 3 meeting. Further, the termination
letter itself refers to Dr. Philip's "conduct on or about March 1
and 2," although it specifically notes his "unprofessional and
inappropriate communications with members of the OCME and a
district attorney's office" in connection with those dates. While
the evidence was strong that it was Dr. Philip's behavior with
respect to the bloody death certificate and the urinate/fart email
which caused his dismissal, we cannot say that no reasonable jury
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could have concluded there was no causal relationship with the
March 1 letter and the Joshua memo. Dr. Philip had made a number
of highly critical comments about the agency before March 1, but on
March 1, March 2, and March 3, he made critical comments to persons
outside of OCME, unlike his earlier behavior. A jury could have
concluded that it was this going outside the agency with his
criticisms that was at least a motivating factor in Dr. Philip's
firing.2 It was also possible for a jury to conclude that there
was an overreaction to Dr. Philip's exercise of poor judgment in
his urinate/fart email, despite the prior discipline, which is best
explained as retaliation for his protected speech.
B. Qualified Immunity
Regardless, we have no doubt that Cronin, the sole
defendant in this case, is entitled to qualified immunity. Such
immunity provides a shield "to all but the plainly incompetent or
those who knowingly violate the law." Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S.
335, 341 (1986). "We use a three-part test to determine whether an
official is entitled to qualified immunity": "whether the
plaintiff's allegations, if true, establish a constitutional
violation," "whether the right was clearly established at the time
of the alleged violation," and "whether a reasonable officer,
2
Dr. Philip also relies on a supposed inconsistency
between Cronin's testimony about why Dr. Philip was fired and the
reasons stated in the letter of termination. We see no
inconsistency.
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similarly situated, would understand that the challenged conduct
violated that established right." Suboh v. Dist. Attorney's
Office, 298 F.3d 81, 90 (1st Cir. 2002).
We will take it as clearly established here that a public
employee has limited First Amendment rights of speech on matters of
public concern under Garcetti, Pickering, and a host of other
cases, and that on plaintiff's version of the facts, a First
Amendment violation is stated. See Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194,
201 (2001) (violation of constitutional right is threshold question
in qualified immunity analysis).3
Nonetheless, even if a constitutional right is clearly
established, the defendant is entitled to qualified immunity so
long as a reasonable official in Cronin's position could believe,
albeit mistakenly, that his conduct did not violate the First
Amendment. Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 819 (1982);
Dirrane, 315 F.3d at 69. This is an objective test: Cronin is
entitled to immunity so long as he reasonably could have believed
on the facts before him that no violation existed. Dirrane, 315
F.3d at 69.
The evidence at trial was that the contract termination
decision was made not by Cronin alone, but in conjunction with
Cronin's superiors at the Executive Office of Public Safety.
3
We also bypass here defendant's Mt. Healthy defense,
raised in his memorandum before the district court. See = Mt.
Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle, 429 U.S. 274 (1977).
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Cronin could quite reasonably believe that this
collective decision did not violate Philip's First Amendment
rights. By the time plaintiff rested at trial, it was clear that
these decisionmakers had reasons unrelated to Dr. Philip's
protected speech to fire him, and he admitted that he had committed
the acts of concern. Before March 3, Dr. Philip had already
engaged in inappropriate behavior in exposing people to risk with
the bloody death certificate. He had been warned that further
inappropriate conduct could lead to immediate termination, yet
within days, he behaved inappropriately again. He did not accept
responsibility for his actions, but rejected it angrily when asked
to explain himself. Not only was the email to the ADA intemperate
and unprofessional, but it also posed a risk of further
embarrassing an office trying to regain its reputation for
professionalism and confidence. See Flomenbaum v. Commonwealth,
___ N.E.2d ___, 2008 WL 2655561, at *4-5 (Mass. July 9, 2008)
(upholding "for cause" removal of Chief Medical Examiner on
evidence of incidents which in the view of the EOPS Secretary "had
damaged the integrity and reputation of [OCME], and which could
have been avoided").
Further, Cronin could reasonably conclude that
terminating Dr. Philip's contract would curtail the potential for
further harm to the office. "Even if this reasoning were mistaken,
it would not have been egregiously so and, accordingly, qualified
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immunity is available." Wagner v. City of Holyoke, 404 F.3d 504,
509 (1st Cir. 2005); see also id. ("Wagner's broad range of
complaints (some consisting of unprotected and antagonistic
speech), coupled with his disregard of confidentiality protocols
and his disobedience in following the department's chain of
command, would have permitted a reasonable superior officer to
believe that he was entitled to discipline Wagner regardless of the
content of his speech, consistent with the protections of the first
amendment."); Dirrane, 315 F.3d at 71 (reasonable police officer
would not necessarily have known he was acting unconstitutionally
in transferring officer who made repeated and disruptive
allegations of wrongdoing against his fellow officers, submitted a
"morass" of complaints, and had shown poor judgment).
III.
On this basis, the judgment is affirmed.
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