United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
REVISED JUNE 13, 2005
May 27, 2005
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Charles R. Fulbruge III
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Clerk
No. 04-40844
CHARLENE SALGE,
Plaintiff - Appellee
versus
EDNA INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT
Defendant - Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
Before WIENER, BARKSDALE, AND DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Defendant-Appellant Edna Independent School District (“EISD”)
appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of
former employee Charlene Salge on her First Amendment retaliation
claim. We affirm.
I. FACTS & PROCEEDINGS
After she was fired from her longtime job of secretary at the
local high school, Plaintiff-Appellee Charlene Salge brought
actions against her former employer, EISD, for violations of (1)
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”)1 and (2) the
1
29 U.S.C. § 626 et seq.
First Amendment, the latter via 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Salge claimed
that EISD Superintendent Bob Wells fired her either because of her
age or because of her responses to questions posed by a local
journalist about the resignation of Kenneth Airheart, the principal
of the high school and Salge’s direct supervisor. The district
court dismissed Salge’s ADEA claim but granted her motion for
summary judgment on her First Amendment claim, which ruling EISD
appeals.
In February 2002, Wells met with Airheart to discuss the
latter’s annual evaluation. Wells criticized Airheart’s
performance, including Wells’s perception that Airheart did not
adequately supervise his employees as Wells had expressed to
Airheart on prior occasions that Salge’s performance was deficient
and had asked Airheart to fire her. Wells informed Airheart that
he intended to recommend to the EISD School Board that Airheart’s
current employment contract not be extended. After hearing this
evaluation, Airheart held a meeting with approximately forty
employees of the high school, one of whom was Salge. He announced
to the group that he had received the second worst performance
evaluation of his life, that his contract had not been extended,
and that he intended to resign because he did not wish to stay
where he was not wanted.
Two days later, the local newspaper, the Jackson County
Herald-Tribune, reported that Airheart was retiring. Some time
during the weeks that followed, Cynthia Roberson, a reporter for
2
the newspaper, called the high school for information about another
employee’s resignation; Salge answered the phone when Roberson
rang. Roberson stated in her deposition that she had called the
high school because of the unusually large number of high-level
school officials that were leaving at the same time, and that
Airheart’s retirement had quickly become the main subject of this
conversation. Exactly what Salge said to Roberson is disputed.
In March, the newspaper published a second article about
Airheart’s departure, stating that his contract had not been
“renewed.” Salge denied telling Roberson that Airheart’s contract
was not being renewed, insisting instead that she had told Roberson
that the contract was not being extended. Roberson corroborated
Salge’s version in her deposition and stated that she had used the
wrong word in the article. Roberson admitted when questioned by
opposing counsel, however, that she could not really recall whether
Salge had said “renewed” or “extended.”
Most EISD employees have two-year contracts, which are renewed
every year. An EISD contract that is not renewed after reaching
its end is effectively a termination of employment. A two-year
contract that the school board declines to renew at the end of its
first year, is referred to as a “non-extension.” A non-extension
of a contract does not necessarily result in termination of
employment; rather it serves as a warning to the employee that, at
the end of the second year, his contract might not be renewed. As
a result, his employment will then terminate at the end of its
3
second year. Airheart’s contract had not been extended, thus he
had received a “warning”; but the second newspaper article
erroneously stated that his contract had not been renewed,
incorrectly implying that he had been fired contemporaneously.
When Airheart, other EISD employees, and EISD parents read the
article, they became alarmed and expressed concern to Wells that
personnel information had been released to the media. Airheart’s
concern was with the fact that the information was erroneous,
whereas others expressed concern that confidential personnel
information had been released.
Wells contacted Roberson, who told him that she had obtained
her information regarding Airheart’s contract status from Salge.
The newspaper ran a correction approximately one week later,
clarifying that Airheart’s contract had not been extended and that
he could have elected to stay in his current position, but that he
chose to resign. Wells never discussed any of the articles with
Salge.
Approximately two months later, Wells discharged Salge for
releasing confidential information to the media in violation of
school district policies that prohibit employees from discussing
confidential personnel matters and from contacting the media about
school district news. Wells testified in his deposition that Salge
was terminated for violating both of these policies.
Salge filed suit alleging that she was fired either because of
her age in violation of the ADEA, or because of her responses to
4
Roberson’s questions, in violation of her First Amendment right of
free speech. She filed a motion for partial summary judgment on
her First Amendment claim, to which EISD responded and filed a
cross-motion for summary judgment on the same issue, subsequently
filing a motion for summary judgment on Salge’s ADEA claim. The
district court granted EISD’s motion for summary judgment on
Salge’s age discrimination claim but held in Salge’s favor on the
First Amendment claim, awarding her backpay, frontpay, damages for
mental anguish, attorney fees, and costs. That ruling is the
subject of this appeal.2
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review grants or denials of motions for summary judgment de
novo.3 Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of
material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
2
Salge also asserts on appeal that EISD’s media policy,
prohibiting its employees from directly contacting the press,
violates the First Amendment. This issue was not properly
presented to the district court, however, as Salge did not allege
it in her complaint and did not provide the district court with a
copy of the policy. To be preserved for appeal, an issue must
have been raised in the trial court to the extent necessary to
allow that court to rule on it. Vogel v. Veneman, 276 F.3d 729,
733 (5th Cir. 2002)(citing In re Fairchild Aircraft Corp., 6 F.3d
1119, 1128 (5th Cir. 1993)). We therefore decline to address
this contention.
3
MacLachlan v. ExxonMobil Corp., 350 F.3d 472, 478 (5th
Cir. 2003).
5
matter of law.4 “[T]he nonmoving party must come forward with
specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.”5
We consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the
nonmovant.6
De novo is also our standard for reviewing district court
rulings that concern First Amendment issues, in which instances we
examine the whole record.7 Whether the speech at issue is on a
matter of public concern is a question of law that must be
determined by the court.8 And, our review of the district court’s
Pickering balancing analysis is, in the absence of any disputed,
material facts, also de novo.9
B. First Amendment Retaliation
To prevail on a First Amendment employment retaliation claim,
an employee must establish four elements: (1) he suffered an
adverse employment action; (2) his speech involved a matter of
public concern; (3) his interest in commenting on matters of public
concern outweighs the employer’s interest in promoting efficiency;
and (4) his speech motivated the employer’s adverse employment
4
Id.
5
Webb v. Cardiothoracic Surgery Assocs., 139 F.3d 532, 536
(5th Cir. 1998).
6
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, 477 U.S. 242, 250 (1986).
7
Denton v. Morgan, 136 F.3d 1038, 1042-43 (5th Cir. 1998).
8
Tompkins v. Vickers, 26 F.3d 603, 606 (5th Cir. 1994).
9
See Kinney v. Weaver, 367 F.3d 337, 363 (5th Cir. 2004).
6
action.10 None disputes that Salge has satisfied the first element,
as she was fired, or the fourth element, as her speech motivated
Wells to fire her: Wells readily acknowledges that he fired Salge
because of her statement to the press. Thus, the elements that
remain to be examined are (1) whether Salge’s speech involved a
matter of public concern, and (2) if so, whether her First
Amendment interest in her speech outweighs EISD’s interest in
promoting efficiency.11
1. Speech on a Matter of Public Concern
a. Content: What Salge Actually Said
The parties dispute the content of Salge’s speech,
specifically, whether Salge stated to Roberson that Airheart’s
contract was not renewed or that it was not extended. They also
argue about which version we should consider in our determination
whether Salge’s speech is on a matter of public concern. The
district court concluded that this argument was a red herring, as
both versions of the statement address a matter of public concern.
It is true that the Supreme Court’s Churchill v.
10
Harris v. Victoria Indep. Sch. Dist., 168 F.3d 216, 220
(5th Cir. 1999).
11
EISD does not dispute that Wells is a final decision-
maker and therefore EISD may be held liable under § 1983 for his
decision to terminate Salge. See Johnson v. Louisiana, 369 F.3d
826, 831 (5th Cir. 2004)(“[O]nly final decision-makers may be
held liable for First Amendment retaliation employment
discrimination under § 1983.”).
7
Waters12 decision held that, when a plaintiff-employee’s First
Amendment retaliation claim rests on a disputed version of his
speech, a court applying the Supreme Court’s Connick v. Myers13 test
to determine whether the speech was on a matter of public concern
must examine the speech as the defendant-employer reasonably
believed it to be.14 EISD argues that Wells reasonably believed
that Salge had violated the school’s confidentiality and media
policies and had provided false information to the newspaper; this
reasonable belief justified Wells’s decision to terminate Salge,
EISD argues, because (1) if Salge used the term “renewed,” then her
speech was false and therefore unprotected and (2) whether true or
false, she had violated school district policies against divulging
confidential personnel information and speaking to the media. We
evaluate these arguments, however, as part of our
Pickering balancing test to determine whether EISD’s interest in
efficiency outweighs any interest Salge has in making her speech.
Whether the speech in question violates an employer’s policy has no
relevance to whether the subject matter of the speech is on a
matter of public concern. Whether an employee’s speech is true or
false also plays no role in the determination whether the speech
12
511 U.S. 661 (1994)(plurality opinion).
13
461 U.S. 138 (1983).
14
Johnson, 369 F.3d at 832 (internal citation omitted).
8
concerned a matter of public interest.15
In Churchill, unlike the instant case, the difference between
the two versions of the employee’s speech was determinative, as one
version implicated protected speech and the other did not. The
Churchill employer understood the employee’s comments to be
personal criticism of her supervisor, which was not First Amendment
protected speech.16 The employee insisted that she criticized the
employer’s cross-training policy, which would have been protected
speech.17
In contrast, the parties in this case dispute whether Salge
said that Airheart’s contract had not been extended or had not been
renewed. Salge’s speech indisputably concerned the high school
principal’s resignation, so whether she used the word “renewed” or
“extended,” is immaterial: Her point was that Airheart resigned
grudgingly, as a result of the non-extension of his contract and
his own feeling that he was unwanted and unappreciated. We are
satisfied that, under either version, Salge’s speech concerned the
high school principal’s employment status and his reasons for
resigning before the end of the term of his employment. This is
the speech we evaluate in our determination whether Salge spoke on
a matter of public concern, and this evaluation does not implicate
15
Denton v. Morgan, 136 F.3d 1038, 1043 (5th Cir. 1998).
16
511 U.S. at 665-66.
17
Id.
9
Churchill.
b. Public Concern
“Whether an employee's speech addresses a matter of public
concern must be determined by the content, form, and context of a
given statement, as revealed by the whole record.”18 When a public
employee speaks in his capacity as an employee and addresses
personal matters such as personnel and employment disputes, rather
than in his capacity as a citizen on a matter of public interest,
his speech falls outside the protection of the First Amendment.19
When the speech in question merely touches on an element of
personal concern in the broader context of a matter of public
concern, however, a court is not precluded from concluding that an
employee’s speech as a whole addresses a matter of public concern.20
In Kennedy v. Tangipahoa Parish Library Board of Control, we
reviewed many of our First Amendment retaliation opinions.21 In
Kennedy, we gleaned principles from these previous decisions that
are useful in determining whether in a “mixed speech” case, i.e., a
case in which an employee’s speech contains elements of both
personal and public concern, the subject speech nevertheless
18
Connick, 461 U.S. at 147-48 (emphasis added).
19
Kennedy v. Tangipahoa Parish Library Bd. of Control, 224
F.3d 359, 366 (5th Cir. 2000)(citing Connick, 461 U.S. at 147).
20
Id. at 365.
21
Id.
10
addresses public concern.22 Salge’s speech undoubtedly included an
element of personal concern, as she was speaking about the
employment status of her direct supervisor, which in turn affected
the conditions of Salge’s employment.23 Still, in such cases, we
found that asking only whether an employee spoke in his capacity as
a concerned citizen or an employee yields uncertain results, as the
presence of some personal interest does not necessarily preclude a
holding that the speech at issue is on a matter of public concern as
well. Thus, in mixed speech cases we proceed to analyze the form,
content, and context of the employee’s speech.24
The first principle identified in Kennedy is that a matter of
public concern does not involve “solely personal matters or strictly
a discussion of management policies that is only interesting to the
public by virtue of the manager’s status as an arm of the
government.”25 That opinion goes on to clarify that “[i]f releasing
the speech to the public would inform the populace of more than the
22
Id. at 366, 372.
23
See Teague v. City of Flower Mound, 179 F.3d 377, 381
(5th Cir. 1999) (“[S]peech concerning the conditions of one’s
employment is a private matter.”); Moore v. City of Kilgore, 877
F.2d 364, 371-72 (5th Cir. 1989)(stating that employee’s speech
concerning local fire department’s staffing shortage, while a
matter of public concern because it involved the department’s
ability to effectively fight fires, also included an element of
personal concern as the employee was criticizing his employer’s
policy).
24
Kennedy, 244 F.3d at 366-67.
25
Id. (citing Wilson v. Univ. of Tex. Health Ctr., 973 F.2d
1263 (5th Cir. 1992)).
11
fact of an employee’s employment grievance, the content of the
speech may be public in nature.”26
The second Kennedy principle (one that is relevant to the
“context” factor), teaches that speech on a matter of public concern
need not be made before a public audience, although “it may relate
to the public concern if it is made against the backdrop of public
debate.”27 By way of example, we cited Harris, in which we had held
that there was an ongoing public debate concerning the subject
matter of the plaintiff’s speech, namely, problems with the local
high school’s academic performance. In Harris, faculty members and
parents phoned school board members to discuss the school’s
problems, citizens stopped one board member in a grocery store and
at church to discuss the situation, and the local newspaper ran a
story about the high school’s low performance rating.28 The audience
before whom the employee speaks29 and whether the employee speaks in
26
Id.
27
Kennedy, 224 F.3d at 372. See also Harris v. Victoria
Indep. Sch. Dist., 168 F.3d 216, 222 (5th Cir. 1999).
28
Kennedy, 224 F.3d at 372; Harris, 168 F.3d at 222.
29
Bradshaw v. Pittsburg Indep. Sch. Dist., 207 F.3d 814,
817 (5th Cir. 2000)(per curiam)(stating that the fact that an
employee chose to file internal grievances rather than publicize
her complaints weighed in favor of finding that the employee’s
speech was private rather than public); Victor v. McElveen, 150
F.3d 451, 456 (5th Cir. 1998)(noting that the plaintiff’s
awareness of a journalist’s presence while engaging in the
disputed speech supported a finding that he spoke on a matter of
public concern); Kirkland v. Northside Indep. Sch. Dist., 890
F.2d 794, 800 (5th Cir. 1989)(noting the fact that the plaintiff
never spoke publicly, to colleagues, supervisors, or the public,
12
response to an invitation30 may also be relevant to an analysis of
the context in which an employee’s speech is offered.
Finally, we declared in Kennedy that speech is not on a matter
of public concern if it is made solely in “furtherance of a personal
employer-employee dispute.”31 Typically, an employee speaks in
about the matter at issue in support of a holding that the
plaintiff spoke on a matter of private concern); Terrell v. Univ.
of Tex. System Police, 792 F.2d 1360, 1362 (5th Cir. 1986)
(holding that, as the plaintiff never made an effort to
communicate speech in his diary to the public, he did not speak
on a matter of public concern). But see Givhan v. W. Line
Consol. Sch. Dist., 439 U.S. 410, 413 (1979)(holding a teacher’s
private communication with principal concerning alleged racially
discriminatory policies to be protected by the First Amendment).
30
See Harris, 168 F.3d at 222.
31
224 F.3d at 372. See also Connick v. Myers, 461 U.S.
138, 148 (1983)(holding that questions posed by plaintiff’s
survey to other employees “reflect[ed] one employee’s
dissatisfaction with a transfer and an attempt to turn that
displeasure into a cause célèbre” and were therefore not matters
of public concern); Bradshaw, 207 F.3d at 817 (holding that a
high school principal’s private memos to the Board concerning her
unfavorable performance evaluations were not a matter of public
concern); Harris, 168 F.3d at 222 (pointing out, when evaluating
the extent of employee’s personal interest in their speech, that
“[t]here is no evidence that the [p]laintiffs’ speech merely
concerned an employment related squabble with their
supervisor.”); Victor, 150 F.3d at 456 (“Victor spoke as a
citizen on a matter of public concern, not as an employee upon
matters only of personal interest. At the time of his remarks,
Victor was well pleased with his position as a courtroom bailiff;
there was no evidence that he was a disgruntled employee or had
any personal reason to protest what he perceived to be the
potential racially discriminatory effects of the sheriff’s
approach to the new program.”); Kirkland, 890 F.2d at 799 (“If
the nature of the speech is purely private, such as a dispute
over one employee’s job performance. . .”); Terrell, 792 F.2d at
1363(“Terrell was not terminated for speaking ‘as a citizen upon
matters of public concern. . .’ or for ‘speak[ing] out as a
citizen on a matter of general concern, not tied to a personal
employment dispute. . .”)(citing Connick, 461 U.S. at 148
13
furtherance of his personal employer-employee dispute when he
discusses personnel matters directly impacting his job or criticizes
other employees or supervisors’ job performance.32
i. Context
The context factor weighs in Salge’s favor, because of (1) her
position as the high school secretary, (2) her responsibility for
maintaining good communications between the school and the
community, (3) her thirty-three years of experience in the school
system, and (4) Airheart’s prominent position in the community. We
concur with the district court’s determination that, for these
reasons, Salge’s speech was of interest to community members and of
greater importance because of her familiarity with the issues faced
by the school district.33
Salge’s comments were also made against a background of
existing community debate.34 The record before us confirms beyond
cavil that, at all times pertinent to this case, administration of
the Edna high school was an item of considerable interest in that
n.8)(emphasis in original).
32
Kirkland, 890 F.2d at 798 n.10.
33
See Kinney v. Weaver, 367 F.3d 337, 361 (5th Cir.
2004)(en banc)(holding that, as individuals placed in law
enforcement such as police academy instructors “are often in the
best position to know” about issues of public concern related to
law enforcement, these individuals should be able to speak out
freely).
34
Kennedy, 224 F.3d at 372 (“[Speech] may relate to a
matter of public concern if it is made against the backdrop of
public debate.”).
14
small community —— in fact, EISD admits as much in its brief. The
newspaper published several articles about Airheart’s resignation,
one before Salge spoke; the reporter initiated the contact with
Salge, not vice versa; citizens called the school regarding the
issue; and members of the community approached Wells in the grocery
store —— an overall situation closely analogous to that detailed by
the Harris court in support of its conclusion that the context
element weighed in favor of holding that the employee spoke on a
matter of public concern.35
Salge also introduced more than fifty articles from newspapers
in the Edna area addressing school district personnel matters,
including the hiring, removal, or departure of school principals and
officials. EISD argues that the focus of community debate shifted
from Airheart’s resignation to EISD’s termination of Airheart after
the appearance of the second article; however, we agree with the
district court that the topic of the debate was the cessation of
Airheart’s and other EISD employees’ statuses at EISD, and that
whether Airheart felt compelled to resign or did so voluntarily was
an issue that could be interwoven within the broader community
debate.
EISD next counters that public interest in Airheart’s departure
from EISD should not render Salge’s statement protected. For this
proposition, EISD cites Terrell v. University of Texas System
35
168 F.3d at 222-23.
15
Police.36 In Terrell, it is true that we focused on whether the
plaintiff spoke as a citizen or an employee, not on whether members
of the public had an interest in the matter discussed by the
employee. We did so because “almost anything that occurs within a
public agency could be of concern to the public.”37 We held in
Terrell that the plaintiff’s speech was not protected because,
although it concerned police corruption, a matter of inherent public
interest, the speech was made only in a private diary which the
plaintiff never intended to make public and therefore could not have
been intended to speak on a matter of public interest.38
Our Terrell holding, however, is more accurately characterized
as one in which we completely discounted the content of an
employee’s speech because the context element weighed so heavily
against a holding of protected speech. The interpretation of
Terrell advanced by EISD in urging that we disregard whether the
content of an employee’s speech actually interests the public, is
contradicted by other precedent. In Kennedy, for example, we
expressly stated that “[t]he very fact of newspaper coverage [of the
matter discussed by the employee] indicates that ‘the public was
receptive and eager to hear about’ [the matter].”39 We conclude that
36
792 F.2d 1360 (5th Cir. 1986).
37
Id. at 1362 (emphasis in original).
38
Id. at 1363.
39
Kennedy v. Tangipahoa Parish Library Bd. of Control, 224
F.3d 359, 373 (5th Cir. 2000) (citing Moore v. City of Kilgore,
16
the context element weighs solidly in Salge’s favor.
ii. Form
As for the form of her speech, Salge was responding to an
unsolicited inquiry from a member of the community who was also a
member of the press. The fact that an employee responds to an
invitation to speak rather than initiating the speech weighed
heavily in favor of finding speech on a matter of public concern in
Harris, in which teachers had been invited to join a school
committee investigating the high school’s performance and were
subsequently invited to report findings on ways in which the school
could be improved.40
EISD argues that, in Harris and other invited speech cases, the
employee responded to an invitation to speak issued by the employer
itself, and that these cases stand for the proposition that it is
not fair to ask an employee her opinion and then punish her when she
responds truthfully.41 We also emphasized in Harris that another
important reason for this consideration is that, when employees have
been asked to speak by a truth-finding body, to punish them for
877 F.2d 364, 371 (5th Cir. 1989)(noting that the fact that the
media approached the employee-speaker and printed his responses
to their questions demonstrated public interest and concern in
the employee’s statements and supported a holding that the
employee’s speech involved a matter of public concern)).
40
168 F.3d at 222.
41
Id.
17
responding inhibits the truth-seeking process.42 Even though
fairness and protecting the truth-seeking process are important
reasons to protect employees who respond to invitations to speak, an
invitation to speak that has issued from the public, particularly
from the press, demonstrates the public’s interest in the matter and
therefore weighs in favor of holding an employee’s speech protected.
EISD disputes this characterization of the form of Salge’s
speech. It argues that Salge’s affidavit and deposition contradict
each other and that Salge’s deposition testimony, which indicated
that she was responding only to a question posed by Roberson rather
than engaging in a conversation about the large numbers of officials
leaving the school district’s employ, supports a holding that Salge
was merely engaged in gossip about personnel matters with a friend
rather than responding to an invitation to speak from a reporter.
In her affidavit, Salge said that Roberson asked her why the school
district could not keep good people and that she replied with the
information about Airheart’s resignation. In her deposition, Salge
said that she did not discuss personnel matters in general but that
the conversation focused specifically on Airheart. These two
statements are not necessarily contradictory, however, as Salge’s
affidavit states that she responded to a question, not that she
herself discussed personnel matters. Importantly, Roberson’s
statements corroborate Salge: Roberson stated that she called the
42
Id.
18
high school because it was unusual for so many school officials to
leave the school district’s employ at about the same time.
Moreover, even if we were to view Salge’s affidavit and
deposition testimony as inconsistent, this would not change our
characterization of the form of her speech.43 It is undisputed that
Salge responded to a question posed by a reporter who had called the
school to inquire about why personnel were leaving. Also
uncontradicted is Salge’s response about Airheart’s leaving,
answering, in essence, that he did not want to stay where he was not
wanted but that she wished that Airheart would not retire because he
was good for the school and the community. Even if Salge’s
testimony as to precisely how Roberson posed her question is
disregarded, there is ample evidence —— including Roberson’s
testimony, the previous newspaper article, and Wells’s own testimony
that members of the community were talking about Airheart’s
resignation —— that Airheart’s leaving the school district was a
matter of public knowledge and public concern by the time Roberson
called the school and talked to Salge. Irrespective of whether
Salge actually participated in a discussion with Roberson about the
school districts’ employment woes, merely responded to a question,
or was talking only about Airheart’s departure from the high school,
43
We also note that, if we were to find any contradiction
between Salge’s affidavit and deposition testimony, it would not
create a disputed issue of material fact that would prevent a
grant of summary judgment, as the essential facts of what Salge
said and the fact that Roberson called her and posed the
question, are undisputed.
19
there is no question that she responded to a question from a
reporter and was talking about the school’s loss of its principal.
We conclude that the form of Salge’s speech also supports holding
that she spoke on a matter of public concern.
iii. Content
The content of Salge’s speech also weighs in favor of holding
that she spoke on a matter of public concern. The undisputed
summary judgment evidence shows that Salge and Roberson were
discussing Airheart’s retirement, and that Salge was not embroiled
in a dispute with EISD over her employment status or her own job
performance.44 Her speech did not relate to her own employment at
all, but to the impending departure of a high-profile individual
within the system who just happened to be her supervisor. Although
EISD urges that Salge had a personal interest in her speech because
Wells had wanted Airheart to fire her for some time, it produced no
evidence that, at the time that Salge spoke with Roberson, she had
any idea that Wells wanted her fired. The record evidence shows
that Salge received uniformly positive work evaluations and that
there were no written complaints with respect to her work before her
termination.
EISD argues that Salge answered the phone in her capacity as
secretary, as it was her duty to do, and therefore spoke in her
44
See Kennedy, 224 F.3d at 372 (stating that speech is not
on a matter of public concern if it is made in “furtherance of a
personal employer-employee dispute.”).
20
capacity of employee, not citizen. Although EISD does not express
this argument in terms of the content, context, or form of Salge’s
speech, it may be fairly characterized as a statement that, because
it was Salge’s job to answer the phone, anything she may have said
to a reporter, irrespective of the subject, could not have been on
a matter of public concern. Even if the fact that Salge was
performing her job duties when she answered the phone does insert a
personal concern into the mix, it does not necessarily render her
speech unprotected per se; rather it is but one factor that we
consider. We note, nonetheless, that if EISD’s argument were
accepted it would undermine First Amendment protection for employees
who speak at work while working: Any speech made by an employee
whose job it is to answer the phone would be rendered unprotected,
if the speech occurred during a telephone conversation.45 We also
conclude that, even though this presents a closer question than the
context or form of Salge’s speech, the content factor, too, weighs
in Salge’s favor.
Relevant to all three factors discussed above, EISD tries to
liken this case to Bradshaw v. Pittsburg Independent School
District, in which we held that a disgruntled high school
45
See Wilson v. Univ. of Tex. Health Ctr., 973 F.2d 1263,
1269 (5th Cir. 1992)(holding that the fact that the plaintiff had
a duty to report sexual harassment did not render her speech
about her own harassment unprotected, as “such a rule would
permit public employers to remove constitutional protection from
speech on certain subjects by including those subjects within
employees’ reporting duties.”).
21
principal’s intra-office memos complaining about non-extension of
her contract did not constitute speech on a matter of public
concern.46 Bradshaw is easily distinguishable. First, the principal
was complaining only about her own contractual status, not
discussing the employment of someone else, much less general public
employment matters. Second, there was no demonstrated public
interest in her employment, as there was with Airheart’s and other
school employees in this case. Finally, unlike Salge, the school
principal in Bradshaw never communicated her concerns to a public
audience, writing only in intra-office memos.
Although Salge’s speech does not reveal official corruption,
discrimination, or other such “hot button” policy issues that we
have held to be indisputably matters of public concern,47 the form
and context of her speech —— responding to a reporter against a
46
207 F.3d at 817.
47
See Johnson v. Louisiana, 369 F.3d 826, 830-31 (5th Cir.
2004)(“Reporting sexual harassment is speech of ‘great public
concern.’”)(quoting Wilson, 973 F.2d at 1269); Kennedy, 224 F.3d
at 373 n.14 (contrasting unprotected speech about working
conditions, such as length of time on the job and the number of
breaks employees receive, with protected speech about “policy
changes occasioned by the violent rape of a coworker”); Harris v.
Victoria Indep. Sch. Dist., 168 F.3d 216, 222-23 (5th Cir.
1999)(holding criticism of school principal for not properly
implementing a plan to improve the high school to be speech on a
matter of public concern); Victor v. McElveen, 150 F.3d 451, 456
(5th Cir. 1998)(“The content of Victor’s speech was inherently of
public concern because it was a protest against racial
discrimination.”); Moore v. City of Kilgore, 877 F.2d 364, 370
(5th Cir. 1989)(holding that staffing shortages at the Fire
Department, which might threaten the ability of the Department to
perform its duties, to be matters of public concern).
22
backdrop of high interest and wide discussion on this topic within
the community —— mandate the conclusion that, as a matter of law,
Salge spoke on an issue of public concern. The summary judgment
evidence demonstrates that this topic was a very high-profile issue
in the community at the time, differentiating Salge’s speech from
unprotected gossip by an employee about disputed personnel matters.
Even if Salge’s speech contained an element of personal concern to
the extent it related to the departure of her boss or even personnel
disputes within the EISD, her central point —— that Airheart was not
leaving voluntarily —— goes to the heart of the public conversation
about why so many EISD personnel were leaving. We hold that Salge
has demonstrated that her speech was on a matter of public concern.
2. Pickering Balancing: Employee Free Speech versus
Employer’s Interest in Efficiency
In balancing the relative importance of Salge’s First Amendment
rights against EISD’s interest in the efficient furnishing of public
services, we must consider whether Salge’s “statement impairs
discipline by superiors or harmony among co-workers, has a
detrimental impact on close working relationships for which personal
loyalty and confidence are necessary, or impedes the performance of
the speaker’s duties or interferes with the regular operation of the
enterprise.”48 When we do so, however, we must remain mindful that
“[c]reating room for free speech in a hierarchical organization
48
Rankin v. McPherson, 483 U.S. 378, 388 (1987); Pickering
v. Bd. of Educ., 391 U.S. 563, 568 (1968).
23
necessarily involves inconveniencing the employer to some degree.”49
EISD continues to urge, again citing Waters v. Churchill,50 that
we should evaluate the inefficiencies caused by Salge’s speech in
the framework of what Wells reasonably believed that Salge said.
EISD contends that Wells reasonably believed that Salge’s speech had
breached school district policy against dissemination of
confidential personnel information, and that Wells discharged Salge
based on his concern that she had or would cause significant
disruption by revealing such information. EISD insists that
Churchill permits an employer to take action to prevent the
disruption that it reasonably believes will result from an
employee’s speech.
EISD’s interpretation of Churchill is correct as far as it
goes. The aspect of Churchill that EISD fails to address, however,
is the truism that, before an employer may justifiably discharge an
employee on a belief that the employee’s speech has caused or will
cause significant disruption to the workplace, the employer must
undertake a reasonable investigation of the facts to determine what
the employee actually said.51 This indispensable prerequisite does
not impose an onerous burden on the employer, yet Wells never
bothered to satisfy the requirement of conducting a reasonable
49
Moore, 877 F.2d at 375.
50
511 U.S. 661 (1994).
51
Id. at 678.
24
investigation into Salge’s speech before he terminated her
employment.52 In fact, Wells never asked Roberson what Salge said ——
he only asked Roberson “where she got the information.” And,
Roberson’s only reply was that she had spoken to Salge, not that
Salge had said that Airheart’s contract was “not extended.” Without
ever addressing the content of Salge’s conversation with Roberson,
much less specifically discussing the nuances of “extended” vis-à-
vis “renewed,” Wells —— by his own admission —— merely replied,
“Okay. That’s all I needed to know.” Moreover, both Salge and
Wells confirmed that they never discussed the speech for which Salge
was fired.
Generally, without at least asking an employee what she said,
an employer’s indispensable investigation into whether an employee’s
speech was protected will not be reasonable. In Churchill, the
investigation approved by the Supreme Court comprised the employer
(1) thrice interviewing the employee who originally complained about
Churchill’s speech, (2) questioning another employee who had
witnessed the conversation for corroboration, and (3) most
significantly, conversing with the employee whose speech was at
issue.53 Although the Court noted that the employer had not
52
See id. (“[An investigation] need not be [conducted with]
the care with which trials, with their rules of evidence and
procedure, are conducted. It should, however, be the care that a
reasonable manager would use before making an employment decision
—— discharge, suspension, reprimand, or whatever else —— of the
sort involved in the particular case.”).
53
511 U.S. 661, 666 (1994)(plurality opinion).
25
interviewed the plaintiff before telling her that she was fired, it
relied on the fact that, after her discharge, the plaintiff filed an
internal grievance and was afforded a meeting with the hospital
president to tell her side of the story.54 And, even then, before
making the plaintiff’s employment termination final, the hospital
conducted yet another interview with the employee who had originally
complained about the plaintiff’s speech and sought assurances of all
employees’ credibility from supervisors.55 The Court summarized the
evidence before the employer as follows:
By the end of the termination process, Hopper, who made
the final decision, had the word of two trusted
employees, the endorsement of those employees’
reliability by three hospital managers, and the benefit
of a face-to-face meeting with the employee he fired.
With that in hand, a reasonable manager could have
concluded that no further time needed to be taken.56
Wells’s investigation also fell far short of any investigation
that we have ever held to be reasonable. In Johnson v. Louisiana,
for example, we upheld as reasonable an employer’s investigation of
an employee’s speech after (1) it received statements from three
employees, (2) it obtained a supervisor’s report stating that the
supervisor believed that the plaintiff was lying, and (3) the
plaintiff “fail[ed] to present any evidence in his own support even
54
Id. at 680.
55
Id.
56
Id.
26
when explicitly invited to do so.”57
These investigations obviously differ dramatically from the de
minimis one conducted by Wells in this case, i.e., doing absolutely
nothing but to ask Roberson where she got her information. Wells
essentially conducted no investigation, despite the fact that he
knew about the previous newspaper article, the community’s interest
in Airheart’s resignation, and the 40-person meeting at which
Airheart had announced his resignation, all before Salge spoke with
Roberson. And, Wells must be deemed to have been on notice that
Salge’s First Amendment rights could be affected.58
EISD relies primarily on the role of Wells’s “reasonable”
belief that Salge had disclosed confidential information in his
decision to terminate her to show that Salge’s speech caused or had
the potential to cause serious disruption to the school district’s
functioning. Had Wells conducted a reasonable investigation of what
Salge actually said, he would have known immediately that she did
not divulge confidential information: Airheart had effectively
waived any confidentiality rights by revealing the information in
57
Johnson v. Louisiana, 369 F.3d 826, 832 (5th Cir.
2004)(emphasis in original). See also Gonzales v. Dallas County,
249 F.3d 406, 412 (5th Cir. 2001)(holding an investigation in
which the employer interviewed numerous witnesses to incident
involving employee, including employee himself, to be
reasonable).
58
See Churchill, 511 U.S. at 677 (“If an employment action
is based on what an employee supposedly said, and a reasonable
supervisor would recognize that there is a substantial likelihood
that what was actually said was protected, the manager must tread
with a certain amount of care.”).
27
the 40-person meeting that he convened and conducted —— he also
stated in his deposition that he did not consider this information
confidential.
EISD argues additionally on appeal that Wells also “believed”
that Salge had formerly made inappropriate remarks about
confidential matters at school, and that this belief supported his
deduction that she had divulged confidential information to the
newspaper. Even assuming arguendo that this were true, we would
still hold that Wells’s failure at least to ask Salge what she said
to the reporter bars a conclusion that his investigation of her
speech was a reasonable one.
EISD also points out that, when Airheart called Wells to
complain about the release of inaccurate information to the press,
Airheart did not volunteer the fact that he had revealed his
contractual status to a great many EISD employees at a meeting, and
that this also justifies Wells’s belief that Airheart’s contractual
status was confidential. We emphasize, however, that
Churchill requires that employers make a reasonable investigation of
an employee’s speech before taking adverse employment action.
Relying on other employees and third parties to come forward sua
sponte with exculpatory information does not qualify as an
investigation at all, much less a reasonable one.59 We therefore do
not weigh in EISD’s favor the putative disruption that Salge’s
59
511 U.S. at 677.
28
speech might conceivably have caused had she actually divulged
confidential information, as —— absent a real investigation —— it
was not reasonable for Wells to believe that she had divulged
anything confidential.60
It might have been reasonable for Wells to believe, even after
asking Salge about her conversation with Roberson and gathering any
other appropriate information, that Salge gave inaccurate
information to the newspaper.61 Again, without asking Salge what she
said to the reporter or asking the reporter if Salge actually spoke
the word “renewed,” Wells was not entitled to make and rely on his
“quantum leap of logic” that the inaccurate statement in the paper
came from Salge rather than being the result of a misunderstanding
or mis-printing by the paper.
EISD also argues that Wells did not think it necessary to
inquire further after Roberson told him that the information came
from Salge, as he assumed that the inaccuracy was Salge’s statement;
it also points out that neither Roberson nor Salge ever told Wells
that the inaccuracy in the paper was not a result of Salge’s speech.
60
See id. at 680 (holding that the court should consider
the potential disruption resulting from the speech that the
employer reasonably believed had been made).
61
It is possible that, if Wells had asked Salge about her
speech, been told that she used the word “extended,” and then
asked Roberson for confirmation, Roberson might have contradicted
Salge’s statement, and Wells could have reasonably believed that
Salge mis-spoke. See Churchill, 511 U.S. at 678 (“Of course,
there will often be situations in which reasonable employers
would disagree about who is to be believed. . .”).
29
This contention gets EISD nowhere. First, the one and only
inaccuracy in the newspaper article was its use of a single word,
“renewed,” as opposed to “extended.” Had the paper printed a
lengthy report about Airheart, full of distortions, lies, mistakes,
and innuendo; and had Roberson told Wells that all of such
information came from Salge, Wells might have been justified in his
belief that Salge had furnished inaccurate information to the
newspaper. In this case, when but one word separates false from
accurate information, we conclude that it is not reasonable to
assume, as Wells did, that the inaccuracy resulted from an
employee’s speech without at least asking the employee or the
journalist exactly what the employee said. We further note, as
indicated above, that it is not the responsibility of employees and
third parties to volunteer all relevant information to employers as
part of an employer’s “reasonable” investigation under Churchill.62
We therefore proceed to balance the value of Salge’s non-
confidential, accurate speech, against EISD’s interest in efficiency
for purposes of our Pickering analysis.
EISD offers four examples of how Salge’s speech purportedly
disrupted its operations: (1) Her speech affected the working
relationship between Wells and Airheart; (2) it upset EISD board
members and members of the community; (3) it caused Wells to spend
valuable time correcting the erroneous statement in public; and (4)
62
511 U.S. at 677-78.
30
it cast the school district in a negative public light.63 EISD also
contends that the value of Salge’s speech was very low, as it
amounted to little more than gossip in the workplace about a
personnel matter, and should accordingly count for little in
opposition to the inefficiency experienced by EISD.
First, although the working relationship between Wells and
Airheart was undoubtedly strained, this strain was certainly the
result, in principal part, of Well’s unfavorable evaluation of
Airheart’s work and his non-extension of the principal’s contract.
The very fact that, prior to Salge’s speech, Airheart assembled and
told a meeting of forty employees that he had received the second-
worst evaluation of his life and would not stay where he was not
wanted, nullifies the contention that Salge’s speech produced the
strained relationship between Wells and Airheart.
Second, many members of the community had already expressed
concern regarding Airheart’s resignation before the newspaper
published Roberson’s article grounded in part on Salge’s responses
to that reporter’s questions. EISD produced no evidence that the
community’s concern created such turmoil after the publication of
the article that it impaired the school’s operations.64 Wells stated
63
Although EISD states that Salge violated its policy
against contacting the media, it did not provide the court with a
copy of this policy or cite this policy in support of its
interest in efficiency under Pickering.
64
See Moore v. City of Kilgore, 877 F.2d 364, 375 (5th Cir.
1989)(holding that, as the employee firefighter’s speech did not
hinder the ability of his employer, the Fire Department, to
31
that, after Airheart held the meeting at which he announced the non-
extension of his contract and his intention to resign, Wells
received a number of phone calls from high school staff members,
students were upset that Airheart was leaving, and members of the
community approached Wells to discuss the situation.
Wells could not recall whether individuals outside the school
system actually called him to discuss the matter before the
appearance of the article, or only afterwards. Wells did confirm
that members of the community approached him to discuss Airheart’s
resignation while he was in the grocery or otherwise out in the
community, although he may not have received phone calls until after
publication of the second article. Wells also testified in his
deposition, conclusionally, that, after the article was published,
these disruptions “escalated,” yet he did not describe what effect
these disruptions had on EISD’s operations or how the disruption
perform its primary task of fighting fires, as opposed to causing
a general burden on the efficient operation of the city as an
organization, the employer’s interest in efficiency was entitled
to little weight as opposed to the employee’s speech). See
also Pickering v. Bd. of Educ., 391 U.S. 563, 572
(1968)(emphasizing that plaintiff teacher’s speech did not
disrupt the operation of the schools); Kennedy v. Tangipahoa
Parish Library Bd. of Control, 224 F.3d 359, 378 (5th Cir.
2000)(“[The plaintiff’s] letter would not have impeded the
Library’s general performance and operation: it did not have any
bearing on the day-to-day business of circulating books within
the community.”) These cases illustrate that, when we evaluate
the impact of a plaintiff’s speech on a defendant employer’s
operations, we inquire whether the speech impacted the actual
operations of the employer in providing its day-to-day services,
such as the circulating of books at the library or the
continuation of classes at school, as opposed to creating a
bureaucratic hassle.
32
became more severe. Moreover, EISD produced no evidence from anyone
other than Wells that Salge’s speech caused any disruption at all.65
Any additional disruption arising out of Salge’s alleged divulgence
of confidential or inaccurate information cannot, as we explained
above, be attributed to Salge for purposes of our Pickering
balancing.
As for the waste of Wells’s time, EISD produced no evidence
that the amount of time that Wells devoted was any greater than it
would have been if caused by an employee’s protected, if somewhat
controversial, speech.66 Wells did not state, nor did EISD produce
any other evidence to show, that he spent an inordinate amount of
time putting out brush fires in the community after the appearance
of the inaccurate article. In fact, no summary judgment evidence
indicates how much time Wells spent dealing with the alleged
disruption in the school district, much less that he spent enough
time to disrupt operations of the district.
Finally, even though EISD has an interest in its reputation,
Salge’s speech concerning Airheart’s employment status could not be
said to have cast the district in a “negative public light.”
65
Moore, 877 F.2d at 375 (noting that the defendant
employer presented no evidence, other than the testimony of one
supervisor, that the plaintiff’s speech actually created any
disruption to the employer’s work).
66
See id. (“Creating room for free speech in a hierarchical
organization necessarily involves inconveniencing the employer to
some degree. Speech concerning public affairs usually creates
attendant inefficiencies in the running of the public entity.”).
33
Indeed, Salge said nothing about the district at all, and the
disputed newspaper article did not even identify its source of
information as an employee of the district. As EISD does not
elaborate further on this argument, we shall not engage in
conjecture as to how Salge’s comment might have negatively portrayed
the school district.
EISD has failed to demonstrate any disruption to its working
environment or the running of the schools that is not easily
outweighed by speech of even moderate First Amendment value. We do
not suggest that, if an employer were to undertake a reasonable
investigation of an employee’s speech and determine that the
employee inappropriately divulged confidential information, this
fact would not weigh heavily in favor of an employer’s interest in
efficiency in the Pickering balancing test. Rather, we emphasize
that such is not the case before us, and that we discount Wells’s
belief that Salge revealed confidential information because he
failed to conduct any kind of reasonable investigation into the
substance of her speech. If he had conducted a meaningful
investigation and then mistakenly determined that her speech did
include confidential information, his belief on this matter would
have weighed in favor of EISD; but, again, that is not what the
record reveals here.
The disruption alleged by EISD does not outweigh Salge’s
interest in speaking on a matter of confirmed public interest in her
community, especially when analyzed as to context, form, and
34
content. Although it is unfortunate that Salge either misspoke or
Roberson misquoted Salge in the paper, there is no evidence that
Salge’s speech caused such an uproar —— or, to be more precise,
elevated an existing uproar —— as to impair the functioning of the
school district even temporarily. We conclude that
Pickering’s balance beam tips solidly in favor of Salge.
III. CONCLUSION
Salge spoke on a matter of public concern and, given the dearth
of evidence produced by EISD to show that her speech either actually
or potentially interfered with or disrupted the functioning of the
school district, we conclude that she was fired in violation of her
First Amendment rights. We therefore affirm in all respects the
district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Salge on her
First Amendment retaliation claim.
AFFIRMED.
35