NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 17a0402n.06
No. 16-4180
FILED
Jul 12, 2017
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JOSEPH ZICKES, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE
) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
CUYAHOGA COUNTY; CUYAHOGA COUNTY ) COURT FOR THE
EXECUTIVE; BRYAN SMITH; MICHAEL ) NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
CARROLL, ) OHIO
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
BEFORE: GUY, ROGERS, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.
ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Joseph Zickes claims that after becoming the union steward for
the deputies at the Cuyahoga County Sheriff’s Department he was subjected by his supervising
officers Bryan Smith and Michael Carroll to a campaign of retaliation and harassment that
ultimately forced him to retire early. Notwithstanding Zickes’ arguments on appeal, the district
court properly rejected his claims, in part because the activities allegedly protected by the First
Amendment, such as refusing to lobby employees to donate sick time, do not touch on matters of
public concern. Zickes’ other arguments on appeal either do not need to be reached or are also
without merit, and the district court accordingly properly denied relief.
In October 2011, Zickes, a longtime employee of the sheriff’s department, was
reassigned to the Juvenile Justice Center, then under the supervision of Lieutenant Smith. A
No. 16-4180, Zickes v. Cuyahoga County, et al.
month later Zickes was also elected steward for the deputies’ bargaining unit, and it was then
that Zickes claims Smith began pressuring him to lobby his fellow bargaining unit members to
transfer their sick time to a lieutenant outside of their unit. Zickes refused, and shortly thereafter
he claims that Smith, along with Sergeant Carroll and Lucy Rodriguez, waged a campaign of
retaliation and harassment against him that ultimately compelled him to retire early, at
considerable financial cost.
Following his retirement Zickes brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Cuyahoga
County and the County Executive, along with Smith, Carroll, and Rodriguez in their individual
and official capacities, alleging that they had retaliated against him for his union activities, in
violation of the First Amendment. His First Amendment claim included an assertion that he
suffered severe emotional distress, and the complaint’s jurisdiction section alluded to further,
though unspecified, violations of his “Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and/or Fourteenth
Amendment” rights under the Constitution.
The County and County Executive, along with Smith and Carroll, eventually filed a
motion for judgment on the pleadings, leading the district court to dismiss any claim for
intentional infliction of emotional distress as well as any claims under the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth,
Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments, none of which was developed or listed in a separate count.
Zickes eventually moved for summary judgment on his remaining claims,1 and the remaining
defendants, Smith and Carroll, responded with their own motions for summary judgment.
The district court denied Zickes summary judgment, and granted it to the defendants.
After excluding testimony from a number of Zickes’ witnesses for advancing legal conclusions,
see Zickes v. Cuyahoga Cty., et al., 207 F. Supp. 3d 769, 778-79 (N.D. Ohio 2016), the court
determined that Zickes’ First Amendment retaliation claim failed, for either of two reasons.
1
Zickes also agreed to dismiss the County, County Executive, and Rodriguez from the suit.
-2-
No. 16-4180, Zickes v. Cuyahoga County, et al.
First, because the court determined that none of the speech that Zickes cited—his stance on the
sick-time donation and his posting on the union bulletin board—touched on a matter of public
concern, that speech could not qualify for constitutional protection. Id. But even if that speech
were protected, the court concluded that Zickes’ claim would still fail, because he had not
alleged a materially adverse employment action. On the one hand, the court found that the
various disciplinary actions that Smith and Carroll meted out to Zickes were insufficiently severe
to count as materially adverse in themselves. Id. at 780. Zickes’ constructive-discharge theory
was similarly without merit, the court concluded, because none of the incidents Zickes cited
could reasonably have made him feel compelled to quit, and he had failed in any event to provide
evidence suggesting that Smith or Carroll had sought to create such intolerable work conditions.
Id. at 781
As a result of those rulings the district court further concluded that Zickes could not
establish a violation of any clearly established constitutional right. Zickes, 207 F. Supp. 3d at
781-82. That failure, the court held, entitled the defendants to summary judgment based on
qualified immunity. Id. Zickes now appeals.
It is clear, first, that Zickes cannot succeed on his central First Amendment claim,
because he has presented no argument that his speech was, in fact, constitutionally protected.
Below Zickes pointed to two incidents that allegedly involved constitutionally protected speech:
his refusal to lobby his colleagues to donate their sick time, and his posting and writing on the
union bulletin board. In his brief on appeal, however, Zickes presents no discussion of either
incident, let alone a developed argument as to why the district court was wrong in concluding
that his speech in each case did not touch on a matter of public concern and thus was not
protected by the First Amendment. Zickes has accordingly forfeited that challenge. See Adair v.
-3-
No. 16-4180, Zickes v. Cuyahoga County, et al.
Charter Cty. of Wayne, 452 F.3d 482, 491 (6th Cir. 2006). Because the public concern
requirement is not met, Zickes’ First Amendment challenge fails without more. See Rorrer v.
City of Snow, 743 F.3d 1025, 1048 (6th Cir. 2014). We consequently need not reach his further
argument that he suffered a materially adverse employment action on account of that speech
through constructive discharge.2
Zickes has likewise failed to indicate any reversible error in the district court’s related
evidentiary rulings. First, Zickes concedes that the affidavits he introduced below, at least as
they concerned the nature of his speech, were being offered at least in part for a purely legal
conclusion—namely, that his speech touched on a matter of public concern. That was the only
basis on which the district court ruled those affidavits inadmissible, and on appeal Zickes does
not challenge the exclusion of the legal conclusions found in those affidavits. Zickes does object
to the exclusion of the factual assertions contained in those affidavits, such as testimony that
Carroll attempted to block Zickes’ entry into the grievance hearing and a later labor management
meeting, and that Carroll told Zickes he was launching an investigation into Zickes’ leaving a
lunch bag. But the only arguments that those portions of the testimony could support have to do
with the purportedly adverse actions and constructive discharge that were said to be motivated by
actions allegedly protected by the First Amendment. But without activity protected by the First
Amendment, the scope of any retaliation is no longer relevant. Thus, even if portions of those
affidavits were erroneously excluded, their exclusion was harmless, and would not warrant
reversal. See Upshaw v. Ford Motor Co., 576 F.3d 576, 593 (6th Cir. 2009).
Zickes also contests the dismissal of various other constitutional claims, as well as a
claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress That challenge is equally unavailing,
2
Zickes has failed, in any event, to point to any evidence supporting that constructive-discharge theory beyond his
own conclusory allegations. Indeed, he does not even indicate what “blatant acts of retaliation” he has in mind, let
alone what evidence would argue that those acts were calculated to force his retirement.
-4-
No. 16-4180, Zickes v. Cuyahoga County, et al.
however, for those various claims not only fail to appear as separate counts in Zickes’ amended
complaint,3 they are nowhere in the complaint even alleged in so many words as a claim.
Allegations that spare are plainly inadequate, see Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544,
555 (2007), and their dismissal was therefore proper.
Finally, Zickes argues that the district court erroneously allowed the defendants to file
briefs below that were, in effect, impermissibly long. As Zickes admits, however, that argument
is new on appeal. “As a general rule, this Court does not address on appeal issues that were not
raised and ruled upon in the district court,” and will do so only in “exceptional circumstances.”
United States v. Poole, 407 F.3d 767, 773 (6th Cir. 2005). Zickes has pointed to no
circumstances—nor to a particular harm he suffered—that would justify departing from that
general rule here.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
3
The various constitutional claims other than the First Amendment claims appear only in the jurisdictional section
of his complaint, while the only reference to emotional distress occurs under his First Amendment count.
-5-