Carter v. State of RI

USCA1 Opinion









UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

____________________

No. 95-1082

SHEREE A. CARTER,

Plaintiff, Appellee,

v.

STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, ET AL.,

Defendants, Appellants.

____________________


APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

____________________


Cyr, Boudin and Lynch,

Circuit Judges. ______________

____________________



James R. Lee, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Jeffrey B. _____________ __________
Pine, Attorney General, was on brief for appellants. ____
George Carvalho, with whom Patrick J. Quinlan and George E. ________________ ___________________ _________
Babcock were on brief for appellee. _______


____________________

October 18, 1995
____________________



















CYR, Circuit Judge. Appellee Sheree A. Carter, a state CYR, Circuit Judge. _____________

prison guard, filed suit against the State of Rhode Island, eight

of her supervisors or superior officers, and her union, alleging

race and gender discrimination. Four individual defendants,

among the eight individual defendants who initiated this inter-

locutory appeal, challenge a district court order disallowing

their "qualified immunity" defenses at summary judgment. We

dismiss their appeal, for lack of appellate jurisdiction.


I I

BACKGROUND1 BACKGROUND __________

The Rhode Island Department of Corrections hired Carter

as a prison guard in October 1990. Her superior officers and

supervisors embarked on a prolonged campaign of workplace harass-

ment in April 1991. The work environment was marked by (i)

several disciplinary measures against Carter based on infractions

for which defendants had never disciplined white male guards,

(ii) especially undesirable or dangerous work assignments made

without regard to her seniority and class ranking, and failure to

accord "serious consideration" to her application for promotion,

(iii) repeated racial slurs and sexual threats anonymously

directed against Carter in telephone calls at work and at her

home, and in graffiti posted at or near her work station, (iv)

failure to address her repeated complaints about ongoing harass-

____________________

1The material facts are related in the light most favorable
to Carter, the party resisting summary judgment. See Hegarty v. ___ _______
Somerset County, 53 F.3d 1367, 1368 n.1 (1st Cir. 1995). _______________

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ment, amounting to implicit condonation, and (v) defamatory

comments to the press relating to Carter's discrimination com-

plaints.

Carter commenced suit in federal district court in

August 1993, alleging, inter alia, that defendants violated 42 _____ ____

U.S.C. 1983 by infringing her constitutional right to be free

from race and gender discrimination under the Fifth and Four-

teenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.2 She
____________________

2Only the ruling denying summary judgment on the 1983
claims is before us on appeal. An amended complaint additionally
alleged civil rights claims under 42 U.S.C. 1981 (race-based
discrimination only) and 1985, pendent state-law claims under ____
the Rhode Island Whistleblower Protection Act, see R.I. Gen. Laws ___
28-14-18 (1994), and common law tort claims for defamation and
intentional infliction of emotional distress. Later, Carter was
allowed to amend the complaint again by including a Title VII
claim, see 42 U.S.C. 2000e-2(a)(1), to conform to the proffered ___
evidence. Defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims,
based on their qualified immunity defenses to the 1981, 1983
and 1985 claims.
The district court denied summary judgment to all eight
defendants on the Title VII claims, finding trialworthy issues of
material fact. See Carter v. State of Rhode Island, No. 93- ___ ______ _______________________
0447B, slip op. at 6-7, 18-20 (D.R.I. Nov. 9, 1994) (Report and
Recommendation). The court also dismissed the 1985 claims
against all eight defendants because Carter failed to adduce
sufficient evidence to generate a trialworthy issue as to the
existence of a "conspiracy." Id. at 15-17, n.47. Finally, ___
except for the defamation claim against "supervisory" defendant
Vose, the court denied all motions for summary judgment on the
state-law claims. Id. at 25-27. ___
Though not at issue in this interlocutory appeal, we note an
apparent inconsistency between the district court order and the
memorandum explaining its rationale; viz., there is no foundation
in the memorandum and order for the district court's decision to
dismiss the 1981 claims against the four "supervisory" defen-
dants. The court dismissed the 1981 claims against the "union" ___ _____
defendants because Carter had adduced insufficient evidence that __________
the union intentionally or purposefully discriminated against _____
Carter by selectively invoking a union policy not to investigate
a union member's complaints while the complainant is receiving
workers' compensation. Id. at 11-13. On the other hand, there ___
is no discussion of the 1981 claims against appellants, who _______ __________

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sought injunctive relief, compensatory and punitive damages, and

attorney fees. Defendants moved for summary judgment, contending

that Carter had failed to state a claim upon which relief may be

granted, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), (c), and asserting "quali- ___

fied immunity" from suit.

The district court categorized the eleven individual

defendants in three groups:

"Union" Defendants: Rhode Island Brotherhood _________________
of Correctional Officers (Union); William
Bove (Union president); Kenneth Rivard (Union
grievance chairman);

"Supervisory" Defendants: George A. Vose, Jr. _______________________
(Director of Rhode Island Department of Cor-
rections); Captain Walter Whitman (Warden;
Carter's supervisor); Captain Thomas Par-
tridge (Deputy Warden; Carter's supervisor);
Barry Levin (the Department's Chief Supervi-
sor of Employee Relations); and

"Superior Officer" Defendants: Lieutenant ______________________________
Ronald Le Clerc; Captain Kenneth Ahearn;
Captain Peter Germani and Captain Ronald
____________________

moved for summary judgment on the 1981 and 1983 claims on
qualified immunity grounds only, and whose 1981 liability is in
no sense derivative of, nor dependent upon, the union defendants.

Nevertheless, dismissal of the 1981 claims against the
"superior officer" defendants does appear to flow from the
dismissal of the 1983 claims against those defendants based on
insufficient evidence of discriminatory intent. On the other
hand, assuming the district court correctly denied summary
judgment to the four "supervisory" defendants on the 1983
claims, we discern no basis for dismissing the 1981 claims
against these "supervi-sory" defendants. Although qualified
immunity may be available under 1981, defendants normally are
denied the pretrial benefits of an immunity defense where, as __
here, the court finds trialworthy issues pertaining to their ____
subjective state of mind, i.e., discriminatory intent. See ___
Alexis v. McDonald's Restaurants of Mass., Inc., F.3d , ______ _____________________________________ __ ____ __
(1st Cir. 1995) [No. 94-1554, slip op. at 13, n.7 (1st Cir. Oct.
10, 1995)]. Accordingly, the parties should explore this appar-
ent inconsistency on remand.

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Brodeur (Carter's superiors).3

The first district court ruling pertinent to the

present appeal dismissed the section 1983 claims against the

"superior officer" defendants because Carter's alleged right to

be free from undesirable or dangerous work assignments is not

protected under the Fourteenth Amendment, and the actions charged

against defendants could not support a reasonable inference of

discriminatory intent. Carter v. State of Rhode Island, No. 93- ______ _____________________

0447B, slip op. at 23-24 (D.R.I. Nov. 9, 1994) (Report and

Recommendation). And, as to defendant Le Clerc, who allegedly

issued a public reprimand of Carter, the district court found

that the allegation that white male prison guards were not

subjected to similar reprimands did not provide an adequate

foundation for an inference that Le Clerc was motivated by race

or gender discrimination. Accordingly, the court dismissed the

section 1983 claims against the four "superior officer" defen-

dants.4

Second, the court ruled that Carter had stated action-

____________________

3After the motions for summary judgment were referred
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 636(b)(1)(B), the district court adopted
the report and recommendation issued by a magistrate judge three
days prior to oral argument in this appeal. Accordingly, the
report and recommendation is cited throughout, as the district
court ruling.

4Although eight "superior officer" and "supervisory" defen-
dants are named in the notice of appeal, the order granting ________
partial summary judgment for the "superior officer" defendants is
not immediately appealable, as it has not been certified pursuant
to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). See Hegarty, 53 F.3d at 1372; see ___ _______ ___
generally Kersey v. Dennison Mfg. Co., 3 F.3d 482, 486 (1st Cir. _________ ______ _________________
1993).

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able section 1983 claims against the four "supervisory" defen-

dants, by alleging that she caused copies of her complaints to be

sent to each thereby establishing that they knew about her ____

allegations of ongoing race and gender harassment and disparate

treatment thus demonstrating a trialworthy dispute as to their

intent in failing to redress her allegations. Id. at 23. ______ ___

Finally, the district court ruled that the four "supervisory"

defendants were not entitled to qualified immunity from suit

because the right to be free from race and gender discrimination

by government officials had been "clearly established" long

before 1990. Id. at 24-25. Thus, only the four "supervisory" ___

defendants [hereinafter: "appellants"] presently challenge the

district court summary judgment ruling rejecting their "qualified

immunity" defenses. See supra notes 2 & 4. ___ _____


II II

DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________

A government official is not entitled to qualified

immunity from suit "if the right asserted by the plaintiff was

`clearly established' at the time of its alleged violation . . .

[and] a reasonable official situated in the same circumstances ___ __ ___ ____ _____________

should have understood that the challenged conduct violated that ___ __________ _______

established right." Burns v. Loranger, 907 F.2d 233, 235-36 (1st _____ ________

Cir. 1990) (citing Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511 (1988)) ________ _______

(emphasis added). The district court determined that "[t]he

constitutional right to be free from [] invidious discrimination

is so well established and so essential to the preservation of

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our constitutional order that all public officials must be

charged with knowledge of it." Carter, No. 93-0447B, slip op. at ______

25 (D.R.I. Nov. 9, 1994).

Appellants contend in their opening brief that the

district court should have proceeded to consider whether, as a

matter of law, the particular conduct of each individual defen-

dant was objectively reasonable. They rely heavily on an analogy

to Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc., 114 S. Ct. 367 (1993), a Title ______ ___________________

VII case. Appellants argue that Harris prescribes minimum ______

evidentiary standards for establishing the "objectively abusive"

conduct needed to support a reasonable inference that a particu-

lar defendant harbored an invidious discriminatory intent. As

they see it, the facially innocuous or objectively reasonable

conduct in which appellants, as well as the "superior officer"

defendants, are alleged to have engaged (e.g., defendants "glanc-

[ed]" at Carter during roll call; refused to let her drive an

automobile without a license) falls far short of the "objectively

abusive conduct" required under Harris (viz., repeated use of ______

explicit gender-based insults, sexual innuendo, threats, and

coercion against a subordinate). This is demonstrated, appel-

lants say, by the district court ruling that the evidence is

insufficient to support a reasonable inference that the four

"superior officer" defendants harbored a discriminatory intent.

See Carter, No. 93-0447B, slip op. at 23-24 (D.R.I. Nov. 9, ___ ______

1994); see also supra note 4. Appellants therefore insist that ___ ____ _____

they were entitled to qualified immunity because, viewing the


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disputed evidence most favorably to Carter, reasonable officials

situated in their circumstances should not have understood that ___

their conduct violated Carter's established right to be free from

race or gender discrimination. See Burns, 907 F.2d at 235-36. ___ _____

While this interlocutory appeal was pending, the United

States Supreme Court decided Johnson v. Jones, 115 S. Ct. 2151 _______ _____

(1995). Displacing our longstanding precedents allowing inter-

locutory appeals from virtually all rulings denying qualified

immunity defenses at summary judgment, see, e.g., Unwin v. ___ ____ _____

Campbell, 863 F.2d 124, 128 (1st Cir. 1988), the Supreme Court ________

held that

a defendant, entitled to invoke a qualified
immunity defense, may not appeal a district
court's summary judgment order insofar as
that order determines whether or not the
pretrial record sets forth a 'genuine' issue
of fact for trial.

Johnson, 115 S. Ct. at 2159. Recently, this court summarized the _______

Johnson message: _______

Thus, on the one hand, a district court's
pretrial rejection of a proffered qualified
immunity defense remains immediately appeal-
able as a collateral order to the extent that
it turns on a pure issue of law, notwith-
standing the absence of a final judgment. On
the other hand, a district court's pretrial
rejection of a qualified immunity defense is
not immediately appealable to the extent that
it turns on . . . an issue of fact . . . . In
such a situation, the movant must await the
entry of final judgment before appealing the
adverse ruling.

Stella v. Town of Tewksbury, __ F.3d ___, ___ (1st Cir. 1995) ______ _________________

[No. 95-1223, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 23942, at *7-8 (1st Cir. Aug.

23, 1995)].

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Johnson emphasized that routinely allocating fact- _______

intensive inquiries to appellate courts entails significant

delays and imprudent use of scarce judicial resources, since an

appellate court may have to wade through a huge, underdeveloped

pretrial record to resolve especially "nebulous" factual ques- _______

tions such as a defendant's "intent." Johnson, 115 S. Ct. at ______ _______

2158 (emphasis added).

Appellants' first reaction to Johnson is to mis- _______

characterize the summary judgment ruling in this case as a "law-

based" rather than a "fact-based" denial of summary judg-

ment. Johnson explicitly directs that "a district court's _______

pretrial rejection of a qualified immunity defense is not immedi-

ately appealable to the extent that it turns on . . . an issue of

fact . . . ." Stella, __ F.3d at ___ [No. 95-1223, 1995 U.S. ______

App. LEXIS 23942, at *7-8 (1st Cir. Aug. 23, 1995)] (citing

Johnson, 115 S. Ct. at 2159). Determining the presence or _______

absence of discriminatory "intent" based on evidentiary proffers

at summary judgment entails a quintessential factual assessment, _______

see Broderick v. Roache, 996 F.2d 1294 (1st Cir. 1993) (normally, ___ _________ ______

1983 defendants are not entitled to brevis disposition on

summary judgment where qualified immunity defense turns on

factual determination as to their subjective intent), which is

part and parcel of the "merits" dispute on the claims brought by

Carter in this case.

Second, appellants contend, citing Harris, 114 S. Ct. ______

367 (1993), that their conduct, as alleged, was not "objectively


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abusive" as a matter of law since it was not sufficiently __ _ ______ __ ___

egregious to support a reasonable inference that appellants were

motivated by race or gender discrimination:

[Such a standard] would permit any minority
[worker] to allege anything against a white ________
male [supervisor] and force that white male
to a jury trial. For example, a minority
could
allege a violation of the equal protection
clause because a white supervisor said hello,
one time, to a white worker before saying it
to the minority worker. That lawsuit would
obviously allege the violation of a clearly
established right [to be free from] racial
discrimination), but it would not allege
facts that violated that right. _____

Supplemental Brief for Appellants at 4. Given the evidence

adduced by Carter at summary judgment, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e), ___

we reject this artificial characterization as well.

For summary judgment purposes, all evidence in genuine

dispute must be viewed in the light most favorable to Carter.

The district court found that Carter adduced evidence that (i)

each appellant had been given written notice of a pervasive,

continuing campaign of workplace harassment and disparate treat-

ment aimed at her, see supra pp. 2-3, (ii) each appellant had ___ _____

authority to redress her complaints, and (iii) all failed to do

so. In this factual setting, Harris does appellants no good, ______

even as an analog.5

For one thing, contrary to appellants' contention, see ___

supra pp. 6-7, the Harris Court not only did not purport to _____ ______
____________________

5We need not test the assumption implicit in appellants'
analogy; viz., that Harris, a sexual harassment case, defines the ______
boundaries of racial harassment claims as well.

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prescribe an evidentiary threshold for establishing "objectively

abusive conduct," it explicitly noted that merely because an

earlier decision "present[ed] some especially egregious examples

of harassment, [it did] not mark the [lower] boundary of what is

actionable." Harris, 114 S. Ct at 371. Moreover, the Court ______

noted that

whether an environment is "hostile" or "abu-
sive" can be determined only by looking at __
all the circumstances. These may include the ___ ___ _____________
frequency of the discriminatory conduct; its _________
severity; whether it is physically threaten- ________ __________ _________
ing or humiliating, or a mere offensive ut- ___ ___________
terance; and whether it unreasonably inter-
feres with an employee's work performance. .
. . [N]o single factor is required.

Id. (emphasis added). The factual allegations attested to by ___

Carter, relating to conduct and context, are presumed true at

this stage in the case, see supra pp. 2-3, and must be evaluated ___ _____

by the ultimate factfinder with a view to their adequacy as

support for a reasonable inference on the "nebulous" element of

discriminatory "intent." Thus, her factual allegations call for

precisely the type of fact-intensive inquiry that Johnson coun- _______

sels against, as an inappropriate judicial exercise on interlocu-

tory review.

Furthermore, the "conduct" we must deem established for

summary judgment purposes in this case cannot be confined to the

straitjacket designed for it by appellants (viz., "a white super-

visor said hello, one time, to a white worker before saying it to ___ ____

the minority worker"). Rather, their hypothetical substantially

understates the allegations actually attested to by Carter.


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Consequently, we need not address their artificial construct.

Carter expressly attests, for example, that repeated

racial and gender-based epithets were directed against her, and

that appellants condoned this harassment by their knowing inac-

tion. We can discern no permissible ground for treating the

district court ruling that there was a trialworthy issue of

fact as to whether appellants harbored a discriminatory intent

as an immediately appealable law-based decision within the ___

meaning of Johnson, 115 S. Ct. at 2159.6 _______

Johnson announces a jurisdictional rule signaling a _______

new day in the First Circuit, see Stella, __ F.3d at ___ [No. 95- ___ ______

1223, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 23942, at *9 (1st Cir. Aug. 23, 1995)]

and not one to be undone by recasting fact-based rulings

denying summary judgment on qualified immunity defenses into law-

based "collateral orders" immediately appealable under Cohen v. _____

Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541 (1949). See Elliott ____________________________ ___ _______

v. Thomas, 937 F.2d 338, 341 (7th Cir. 1991) ("By sleight of hand ______

[defendants] can turn any defense on the merits into a defense of

qualified immunity."), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 1121 (1992). The _____ ______

Johnson rule would be undermined its important aims frustrat- _______

ed, see, e.g., Johnson, 115 S. Ct. at 2158 (noting, inter alia, ___ ____ _______ _____ ____

"danger of denying justice by delay") were defendant offi-

____________________

6Likewise, the district court's ruling -- that there is a
trialworthy issue of fact as to the existence of an "affirmative
link" between appellants' acts or omissions and the alleged
deprivation of civil rights, see, e.g., Figueroa v. Aponte-Roque, ___ ____ ________ ____________
864 F.2d 947, 953 (1st Cir. 1989) is not an immediately
appealable law-based decision. Johnson, 115 S. Ct. at 2159. _______

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cials, spurred by the prospect of delay and the leverage it

occasions, permitted to contrive insubstantial "issues of law" as

grounds for interlocutory review.


III III

CONCLUSION CONCLUSION __________

As Johnson precludes interlocutory review of the _______

district court order denying summary judgment on appellants'

qualified immunity defenses, founded on the fact-based ruling

that there was a trialworthy issue of fact as to whether appel-

lants acted with discriminatory intent, their appeal is dismissed _________________________

for lack of appellate jurisdiction, with costs to appellee. __________________________________ ____ _____ __ ________

SO ORDERED. SO ORDERED. __ _______





























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