No. 96-011
IN THE SUPREMECOURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
1996
.~~
KATHARINE S. BOREEN, formerly
known as KATHARINE SELBY,
Plaintiff and Appellant,
GEORGECHRISTENSEN, a/k/a GEORGEP. CHRISTENSEN,
a/k/a "CHRIS" CHRISTENSEN, and F. GUY YOUNGBLOOD,
acting individually and in the capacities of
administrative officers of the DEPARTMENT OF
MILITARY AFFAIRS, STATE OF MONTANA,
Defendants and Respondents
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the First Judicial District,
In and for the County of Lewis & Clark,
The Honorable Jeffrey Sherlock, Judge presiding.
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Peter Michael Meloy (argued); Meloy & Morrison,
Helena, Montana
For Respondents:
Hon. Joseph P. Mazurek, Attorney General,
James M. Scheier (argued), Ass't Attorney General,
Helena, Montana
Submitted: September 10, 1996
Decided: December 30, 1996
Filed:
Justice W. William Leaphart delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff Katharine S. Boreen (Boreen) appeals the September
14, 1995 Order of the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and
Clark County, granting qualified immunity to Defendant F. Guy
Youngblood (Youngblood) and dismissing Boreen's 42 U.S.C. § 1983
claim as to Defendant Youngblood. We affirm.
We consider the following issue on appeal:
Did the District Court err in granting Defendant Youngblood
qualified immunity on the basis that Boreen's property interest in
her employment was not clearly established law at the time she was
constructively discharged by the Defendants?
Factual and Procedural Backsround
Boreen was employed by the Montana Department of Military
Affairs. Following her resignation from her employment in April
1990, Boreen filed a complaint against the Department of Military
Affairs, alleging constructive discharge under the Montana Wrongful
Discharge From Employment Act. That action was dismissed because
it was filed after the statute of limitations had passed. Boreen
then filed a complaint pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 5 1983 (§ 1983)
alleging that she was terminated from her employment with the
Department of Military Affairs, and that she was deprived of a
property interest in her employment without due process of law.
Youngblood, one of the named Defendants, filed an answer to the
complaint. Boreen then filed an amended complaint, alleging that
2
she was constructively discharged from her employment. Youngblood
filed an answer to the amended complaint, raising, inter alia, the
affirmative defense of qualified immunity. Youngblood also filed
a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment. Youngblood made two
primary arguments in his motion to dismiss: (1) government
employees who are not covered by a collective bargaining agreement
or a contract for a specific duration do not have a property
interest in their employment; and (2) he was entitled to qualified
immunity. Youngblood also argued that the amended complaint was
barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel.
Following a hearing, in a November 16, 1993 Order, the
District Court granted Youngblood's motion to dismiss on the ground
that Boreen had no property interest in her employment. The
District Court rejected the argument that Boreen's complaint was
barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel. The District Court
declined to rule on the question of whether Youngblood was entitled
to qualified immunity.
Boreen submitted an interlocutory appeal of the November 16,
1993 Order to this Court, which reversed the District Court's
decision. Boreen v. Christensen (1994), 267 Mont. 405, 884 P.2d
761 (Boreen I). This Court determined that Boreen, whose
employment was subject to "just cause" requirements for
termination, had a property interest in her employment and could
therefore maintain an action under § 1983. The issues of qualified
immunity, res judicata, and collateral estoppel were not before
this Court in that initial appeal.
The case was remanded to District Court where Youngblood
renewed his motion to dismiss or for summary judgment upon the
grounds of qualified immunity, i-es judicata, and collateral
estoppel. In a September 14, 1995 Order, the District Court held
that it had already rejected Youngblood's motion for dismissal on
the basis of res judicata or collateral estoppel and resolved the
case on the issue of qualified immunity. The Court granted
Youngblood qualified immunity on the basis that he did not violate
any of Boreen's clearly established rights of which a reasonable
person should have known.
Boreen obtained a Rule 54 (b), M.R.Civ.P., certification
authorizing an interlocutory appeal of the Court's September 14,
1995 Order since the Order effectively dismissed the case as
against both defendants.
Standard of Review
The question of whether a district court properly granted
qualified immunity involves a determination of whether the rights
in question were clearly established at the time of their alleged
violation, and is a question of law, reviewable, de nova. Cannon
v. City and County of Denver (10th Cir. 1993), 998 F.2d 867;
Williams v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (6th Cir. 1994), 24 F.3d 1526.
In Montana, the standard of review of a district court's
conclusions of law is whether the court's interpretation of the law
4
is correct. Carbon County v. Union Reserve Coal Co., Inc. (1995),
271 Mont. 459, 469, 898 P.2d 680, 686.
ISSUE
Was the District Court correct in holding that Boreen's
property interest in her employment was not clearly established law
at the time she was constructively discharged from her employment,
thereby rendering Youngblood immune from suit?
The District Court dismissed Boreen's 5 1983 claim against
Youngblood on the grounds that Youngblood is entitled to qualified
immunity. Because § 1983 is a federal remedy, qualified immunity
from a 5 1983 suit is a matter of federal law. Finch v. Wemlinger
(Minn. 1981), 310 N.W.Zd 66, 69-70; Cooperman v. University Surg.
Assoc., Inc. (Ohio 1987), 513 N.E.2d 288, 296 (superseded by state
statute in 1990).
The purpose of granting qualified immunity to public officers
is not to protect them from the consequences of their wrongful acts
but to facilitate the proper operation of government by protecting
public officers in the discharge of their duties where they act
honestly and in good faith. Rickard v. Paradis (1975), 167 Mont.
450, 539 P.2d 718. The good faith requirement has since been
modified as set forth below.
The theory of qualified immunity first arose as a defense for
police officers in Pierson v. Ray (1967), 386 U.S. 547, 87 S.Ct.
1213, 18 L.Ed.Zd 288. The United States Supreme Court in Scheuer
v. Rhodes (1974), 416 U.S. 232, 94 S.Ct. 1683, 40 L.Ed.2d 90,
expanded the defense to apply to a broader group of executive
branch officers. Rhodes arose out of the shootings at Kent State
5
University in 1970. The plaintiffs alleged that Rhodes, then
Governor of the State of Ohio, recklessly deployed the National
Guard to the Kent State campus. Rhodes, 416 U.S. at 232. The
Supreme Court found that a qualified immunity should be available
to officers of the executive branch of government because of the
wide range of discretion that officers of the executive branch are
called upon to exercise. Rhodes, 416 U.S. at 247. The Court found
that:
It is the existence of reasonable grounds for the belief
formed at the time and in light of all the circumstances,
coupled with good-faith belief, that affords a basis for
qualified immunity of executive officers for acts
performed in the course of official conduct.
Rhodes, 416 U.S. at 247-48. The Court explored the contours of the
doctrine of qualified immunity through subsequent decisions that
discussed an "objective" versus a "subjective" test of good faith.
See Wood v. Stricklund (19751, 420 U.S. 308, 95 S.Ct. 992, 43
L.Ed.2d 214. An official's subjective good faith belief as to
whether he or she violated the plaintiff's constitutional rights
was no longer relevant after Harlow v. Fitzgerald (1982), 457 U.S.
800, 102 S.Ct. 2727, 73 L.Ed.Zd 396. The standard for granting
qualified immunity was reformed in this matter:
We therefore hold that government officials performing
discretionary functions generally are shielded from
liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does
not violate clearly established statutory or
constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would
have known.
.
On summary judgment, the judge appropriately may
determine, not only the currently applicable law, but
whether that law was clearly established at the time an
6
action occurred. If the law at that time was not clearly
established, an official could not reasonably be expected
to anticipate subsequent legal developments, nor could he
fairly be said to "know" that the law forbade conduct not
previously identified as unlawful . the defense would
turn primarily on objective factors.
Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818-19.
Harlow and its progeny make clear that the qualified immunity
inquiry is an objective one. a, e.g., Davis v. Scherer (19841,
468 U.S. 183, 104 S.Ct. 3012, 82 L.Ed.2d 139. The qualified
immunity inquiry focuses on whether a defendant, faced with
circumstances similar to those of the defendant before the court
and in light of the legal authorities extant at the time the
defendant acted, reasonably should have known that his or her
conduct was unlawful. Qualified immunity "gives ample room for
mistaken judgments by protecting all but the plainly incompetent or
those who knowingly violate the law." Hunter v. Bryant (1991), 502
U.S. 224, 229, 112 S.Ct. 534, 537, 116 L.Ed.2d 589, 596 (quoting
Malley v. Briggs (1986), 475 U.S. 335, 343, 106 S.Ct. 1092, 1097,
89 L.Ed.2d 271, 280).
Harlow presents a two-pronged test to determine whether an
official will be granted qualified immunity. The court must first
consider whether a clearly established right has been violated and
second, the court must determine whether a reasonable person or
official would have known that his conduct violated that right.
Sacco v. High Country Indep. Press (19951, 271 Mont. 209, 216, 896
P.2d 411, 415.
The first prong of the Harlow qualified immunity test depends
on whether the constitutional right allegedly violated was clearly
7
established at the time of the official conduct giving rise to the
litigation. See Finkelstein v. Bergna (9th Cir. 1991), 924 F.2.d
1449; Burgess v. Pierce County (9th Cir. 1990), 918 F.Zd 104.
The plaintiff has the burden of proving that the right which
the defendants allegedly violated was clearly established at the
time of the alleged misconduct. Baker v. Racansky (9th Cir. 1989),
887 F.Zd 183, 186.
A defendant need not have actual knowledge of a decision which
the plaintiff claims clearly established the law. Neither should
the defendant be required to have actual knowledge of a decision
upon which he relies to show that the law was not clearly
established. a, e.9., Mitchell v. Forsyth (1985), 472 U.S. 511,
105 s.ct. 2806, 86 L.Ed.Zd 411; Anderson v. Creighton (1987), 483
U.S. 635, 107 S.Ct. 3034, 97 L.Ed.Zd 523.
In the present case, Boreen alleges that she had a clearly
established protected property interest in her employment with the
Department of Military Affairs when she was constructively
discharged from her job by Youngblood in April of 1990.
Youngblood is raising the qualified immunity defense on the
basis that Boreen's protected property interest in her employment
was not a clearly established right at the time she was
constructively discharged. Although this Court held that Boreen
did have a protected property interest in her employment in Boreen
I, we must ask whether this property interest was a clearly
established right in 1990 when Boreen was constructively
discharged.
8
The United States Supreme Court has not established the
requisite hierarchy of law from which to determine whether a right
is clearly established. See, e.g., Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818 n.32
(expressly leaving this question open). Whether a United States
Supreme Court decision is necessary, whether circuit courts may
look to lower federal court decisions, and whether state decisional
law plays a role are questions disputed among circuit courts. See
Richard B. Saphire, Qualified Immunity in Section 1983 Cases and
the Role of State Decisional Law, 35 Ariz. L. Rev. 621, 633 (1993).
Circuit courts are in agreement that the determination of whether
the right in question is clearly established begins with a relevant
United States Supreme Court decision if available. See
-I e&L,
Thomas v. Whalen (6th Cir. 1995), 51 F.3d 1285.
The United States Supreme Court's seminal case establishing an
employee's property interest in employment is Cleveland Board of
Education v. Loudermill (1985), 470 U.S. 532, 105 S.Ct. 1487, 84
L.Ed.2d 494. In Loudermill, the Court held that an Ohio statute
which protected a public employee's employment during "good
behavior and efficient service" and prohibited dismissal "except
for misfeasance or nonfeasance in office" created a property
interest in continued employment which could not be taken away
without appropriate procedural safeguards. The Court concluded in
Loudermill that the "just cause" provision in the Ohio statute
created such a property interest.
The Court in Loudermill did not hold that all employees whose
employment is subject to "just cause" or "for cause" protection
9
have a property interest in their employment. Rather, the Supreme
Court held that the language in the Ohio statute, which provided
that an employee could not be fired except for specific listed
reasons, gave the plaintiff a property interest in his job under
Ohio law. Loudermill, 470 U.S. at 538-39. The Ohio laws expressly
provided that employees were classified civil servants who were
entitled to hold positions of employment, and that they were
entitled to hold their positions during good behavior and efficient
service. The Ohio employees' pay could not be reduced, nor could
they be suspended, or removed from their positions, except for
specific statutory violations. Loudermill, 470 U.S. at 538.
The Supreme Court decision in Loudermill emphasized that
property interests "are not created by the Constitution, they are
created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or
understandings that stem from an independent source such as state
law." Loudermill, 470 U.S. at 538 (quoting Board of Regents v.
Roth (1972), 408 U.S. 564, 577). Thus the question of whether a
property interest exists must be examined by reference to state
law. Bishop v. Wood (1976), 426 U.S. 341, 344, 96 S.Ct. 2074,
2077, 48 L.Ed.2d 684, 690. The Loudermill decision, therefore, did
not answer the question of whether a public employee in Montana has
a property interest in his or her employment.
The "just cause" provision analyzed in Loudermill was
contained in an Ohio statute whereas the "just cause" provision
Boreen claims protection under is found in a Montana administrative
rule. Rule 2.21.6509, ARM. In addition, Montana has an "at will"
10
employment statute, § 39-Z-503, MCA, which has been construed as
providing no property interest in employment absent a "specified
term" of employment. Reiter v. Yellowstone County (1981), 192
Mont. 194, 627 P.2d 845. Loudermill did not address, nor did it
resolve, the issue of whether a "just cause" regulation converts an
employment "at will" to employment for a specified term. It is
necessary then to examine Montana law as expressed by this Court
and the federal courts interpreting Montana law to determine if
Boreen had a property interest in her employment in 1990.
This Court described the issue of whether a public employee in
Montana had a property right in employment as one of "first
impression" in Boreen I. Boreen I, 884 P.2d at 763. The Court
confirmed that "a close reading of our prior cases clarifies that
we have not heretofore decided the issue presented in the instant
case . .'I Boreen I, 884 P.2.d at 769. While the nonexistence
of a decision specifically addressing the alleged right is a
"significant consideration" in determining whether the right is
clearly established, Fortner v. Thomas (11th Cir. 1993), 983 F.2d
1024, 1028, the plaintiff need not produce a case directly on point
to show that a right was clearly established. Ostlund v. Bobb (9th
Cir. 1987), 825 F.2d 1371, 1374. Nonetheless, the contours of the
right allegedly violated must be sufficiently clear that a
reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates
that right. Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640.
Montana has an "at will" employment statute providing that an
employment with "no specified term" may be terminated by either
11
party on notice to the other. Section 39-2-503, MCA. Under that
law, as construed by this Court prior to April 1990, such "at will"
employees not covered by any written contract or collective
bargaining agreement had no property interest in their employment.
Reiter, 627 P.2d at 849. In Reiter this Court considered the case
of a county custodian whose employment was terminated after
eighteen years of service. In rejecting Reiter's argument that he
had a property interest in his employment, this Court stated:
It is clear . . that property interests are created and
defined by state law. The Montana statute [§ 39-2-503,
MCA] creates no property interest in employment if there
is no specified term.
Reiter, 627 P.2d at 849. Reiter had argued that his longevity of
service, by implication, created a property interest. The Court
rejected that argument, and the Court's pronouncements provided a
firm basis for the conclusion that state employees with no
specified term of employment likewise had no property interest in
their employment:
Even though appellant may have had an implied contract
with the county by virtue of his longevity of service, it
would be a contradiction in terms to say that he had an
"implied specified" period of employment. A specified
term is one which the parties expressed, and there was no
expression here concerning the length of employment.
Section 39-2-503, MCA, operates to fill the gap left by
the parties by defining the relationship as an "at-will"
employment.
Reiter, 627 P.2d at 849. The Court did not answer the question of
whether an administrative regulation containing a "just cause"
termination provision creates a "specified period" of employment
and thus a property interest in that employment.
12
The underlying administrative regulation which this Court
considered in conjunction with Laudermill as giving rise to a
property interest in Boreen I, was first discussed in Nye v.
Department of Livestock (1982), 196 Mont. 222, 639 P.2d 498. The
Court initially determined that Nye had completed her probationary
period of state employment and hence "had permanent status" in her
public employment, and then held that there was no showing of "just
cause" for removing her from her position. EYS, 639 P.2d at 502.
In considering the question of whether Nye was entitled to
judicial review of the decision following her grievance, the Court
explained that the answer depended on whether her grievance was a
contested case under the Montana Administrative Procedure Act
(MAPA). &'e, 639 P.2d at 500-501.
The Court noted that whether a person was entitled to a
contested case hearing depended not only on statutory rights
providing for due process but also on whether a hearing is required
as a matter of constitutional law. WC, 639 P.2d at 501. Nye had
not cited any statutory or constitutional authority which indicated
that a person in Nye's position was "required by law" to be given
an opportunity for hearing prior to a determination of her rights
or privileges. NYe, 639 P.2d at 501. The Court indicated that its
own research had likewise not revealed any such authority.
Therefore, the Court concluded that Nye's grievance procedure did
not qualify as a contested case under MAPA and consequently, Nye
was not entitled to judicial review. EYe, 639 P.2d at 501.
Although the Court held that Nye had "permanent status" in her
13
employment, it did not find that such "permanent status" was a
"specified term” that would defeat the "at will" nature of Nye's
employment, giving her a constitutional right to a hearing.
The Court next considered whether Nye could bring a claim of
wrongful discharge. Agreeing with the district court that Nye's
employment was "at will" pursuant to § 39-z-503, MCA, this Court
nevertheless found that Nye was not precluded from bringing a
wrongful discharge claim:
The District Court's order of dismissal [of the wrongful
discharge claim] appears to rest upon the fact that Nye's
employment was I' at will." Section 39-2-503, MCA.
However, the tort of wrongful discharge may apply to an
at will employment situation.
EYC, 639 P.Zd at 501-502.
The Court recognized that the administrative "just cause"
rule, applicable to Nye, "may be the source of a public policy [the
violation of] which would support a claim of wrongful discharge."
@Ye, 639 P.2d at 502. Reciting the due process protections
contained in the policy, the Court concluded that the Department of
Livestock failed to apply these regulations to Nye and, thereby,
violated public policy. UYe, 639 P.Zd at 502. The Court then
remanded the case~on this issue.
Citing m, a later decision of this Court stated that a
wrongful discharge claim based on a public policy violation is one
of several "exceptions11 to the right of "at will" employers to
discharge employees. Prout v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (1989), 236
Mont. 152. 157, 772 P.2d 288, 291. As noted by Justice Morrison in
14
a subsequent concurring opinion, such a court-created exception
does not abrogate the statutory employment "at will" rule:
The breach of the obligation owed by the employer may
give rise to a tort action on the part of the employee,
but does not convert "at will" employment to employment
for a specific term.
Dare v. Montana Petroleum Mktg. Co. (1984), 212 Mont. 274, 286, 687
P.2d 1015, 1022 (Morrison, J., specially concurring).
When u is read in conjunction with Reiter and subsequent
Montana decisions analyzing the "at will" statute, it is apparent
that a Montana employee subject to a "just cause" provision did not
have a clearly established property interest in her employment
subject to the protections of the Due Process Clause. Reiter held
that an implied employment contract did not create a "specified
term" of employment nor did 'Ipermanent status" in the u case
create a "specified term" that would render the "at will" statute
inapplicable to an employee. Although the Court in w held that
violation of the administrative "just cause" provision may be the
basis for a claim of wrongful discharge it did not hold that "just
cause" may be the basis for a protected property interest.
Subsequent case law emphasized that a wrongful discharge claim did
not convert an "at will" employment to a "specified term.”
Although we said that Reiter and a subsequent Montana federal
district court decision suggested our decision in Boreen I, this
"suggestion" cannot fairly be said to have clearly established the
law. "Government officials are not charged with predicting
the future course of constitutional law." Ostlund, 825 F.2d at
1374.
15
While the pre-1990 case law did not hold specifically that an
administrative "just cause" provision did not create a property
interest in employment, neither was it clear that the "just cause"
provision affirmatively established a property interest.
Certainly, the "contours" of an employee's right to a property
interest in employment were not sufficiently clear such that a
reasonable official would understand that he was violating that
right. See Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640. We therefore hold that at
the time Boreen was constructively discharged in 1990, it was not
clearly established that she had a protected property interest in
her employment.
Although Boreen alleges that it was improper for the District
Court to consider post-1990 decisions in its determination of
whether her property interest in employment was clearly established
in 1990, these decisions are relevant indicators of the state of
the law before Boreen I. Generally courts do not look to post-
incident decisions in determining whether the prior law had been
clearly established, but such cases may serve as persuasive
authority. Baker, 887 F.2d at 187.
The District Court noted that in 1991, this Court ruled that
a governmental (school district) employee did not have a property
interest in his employment. Medicine Horse v. Big Horn Cty. Sch.
Dist. (1991), 251 Mont. 65, 823 P.2.d 230. In 1994, the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals, in Hollister v. Forsythe (9th Cir. 1994),
22 F.3d 950, construed Montana law and specifically the Reiter and
Medicine Horse decisions, and ruled that a county employee subject
16
to "just cause" requirements for termination did not have a
property interest in employment. This Court acknowledged the
Hollister decision in Boreen I, stating "we simply do not agree"
with the decision. Boreen I, 884 P.2d at 769. Our disagreement
with the result in Hollister illustrates the lack of clarity on the
issue of whether a Montana employee subject to a "just cause"
provision had a protected property interest in her job before
Boreen I.
A determination of whether the law was clearly established
requires an analysis of the state of the law as of the date of the
incident in question as opposed to a review of legal developments
after the incident. Nonetheless, the District Court did not err in
noting that numerous judicial decisions after 1990 illustrate the
fact that the question of whether an "at will" employee had a
property right in employment was not "clearly established" before
our 1994 decision in Boreen I. Moreover, the Court's conclusion is
not inconsistent with our analysis of the pre-1990 authority.
Boreen also argues that Rule 2.21.6509, ARM, the
administrative rule which requires just cause and due process for
disciplinary action, clearly established the right upon which
Boreen bases her 5 1983 claim. In other words, Boreen contends
that the administrative rule is the source of her procedural due
process right, and that the rule created clearly established
constitutional rights as of 1990, thereby defeating Youngblood's
qualified immunity claim. Boreen's argument is incorrect.
17
A similar argument was made by a discharged employee in Price
v. Brittain (5th Cir. 1989), 874 F.Zd 252. Price alleged that he
was deprived of his property interest in employment without
procedural due process. He claimed that his employee handbook,
which required notice and an opportunity to respond prior to any
discharge, "made the contours of his procedural due process rights
clear to defendants." Price
-I 874 F.2d at 261. Citing the Supreme
Court's decision in Davis, the appeals court rejected the argument:
[Elmployee handbooks cannot alone clarify established
constitutional rights that are not themselves clear in
light of preexisting law.
Price, 874 F.2d at 262. The court found that the defendant was
entitled to qualified immunity.
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals' holding as to the employee
handbook underscores the problem with Boreen's argument on the
issue of whether the "just cause" provision by itself clearly
established a property right in employment as of 1990.
As of 1986, this Court had held in Bick v. State, Dept. of
Justice (1986), 224 Mont. 455, 457, 730 P.2d 418, 420, that "it is
axiomatic in Montana law that a statute cannot be changed by
administrative regulation." (Citation omitted.) Accordingly, the
"just cause" provision in Rule 2.21.6509, ARM, did not by itself,
as of 1990, clearly establish a property right in the face of the
"at will" employment statute, § 39-2-503, MCA.
Our decision in Boreen I was based not on the administrative
"just cause" provision alone, but on the administrative "just
18
cause" provision read in conjunction with the United States Supreme
Court decision in Loudermill and our decision in u.
As of April of 1990, § 39-2-503, MCA, provided that an
employment "having no specified term" may be terminated at the will
of either party. At that time, this Court had not held that an
administrative rule containing a "just cause" termination provision
constituted a "specified term" of employment which would render the
"at will" statute inapplicable to an employee, thereby creating a
property interest in his or her employment.
As the dissent points out, the "at will" employment doctrine
embodied in § 39-z-503, MCA, is "antithetical" to the "just cause"
requirement of Rule 2.21.6509, ARM. However, contrary to the
dissent's conclusion, the fact that the administrative rule is
incompatible with the statute, only goes to prove that the law was
confusing (i.e., not clearly established) until our decision in
Boreen I.
Because we hold that Boreen's property interest in her
employment was not clearly established in April of 1990, we need
not reach the second prong of the Harlow test for granting
qualified immunity. The second prong asks whether a reasonable
official under the defendant's circumstances would have known that
his conduct violated the law. Because the law was not clearly
established a reasonable official could not have known of it and
the second prong need not be addressed. See Lucero v. Hart (9th
Cir. 1990), 915 F.2d 1367, 1371 (citing Harlow for the proposition
that the unsettled nature of the law, on the issue of entitlement
19
to a job, necessarily means that the government officials could not
have violated a clearly established statutory or constitutional
right of which a reasonable person would have known).
we hold, therefore, that Boreen's property interest in her
employment was not clearly established when she was constructively
discharged in 1990 and, consequently, Youngblood is immune from
suit. The District Court's grant of Youngblood's motion to dismiss
on the basis of qualified immunity was therefore correct. Because
we affirm the District Court's dismissal on the basis of qualified
immunity we do not reach the issues of res judicata and collateral
estoppel. Affirmed.
We concur: /Y
Justices
20
21
Justice James C. Nelson dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. Except as herein set forth, I do not
disagree with the majority's explication of the general principles
of law pertaining to qualified immunity and to an employee's
property interest in her employment. I do, however, disagree with
its application of these principles to the facts here. In that
regard, I also believe that the courts--this Court included--have
unnecessarily and improperly confused what is, in essence, a simple
and straightforward legal concept that has been clearly established
in the law for more than a decade: An employee whose employment is
subject to termination only for "just cause" or "good cause"
because of a contract, statute, rule or policy has a property
interest in her employment and may not be deprived of that interest
without due process of law; such an employee is not an "at will"
employee.
First, as regards this case, the majority correctly
acknowledges that, in the application of the doctrine of qualified
immunity, whether the law at issue was "clearly established"
focuses (in the words of the opinion) on the "legal authorities
extant at the time the defendant acted." What, then, was the law
"extant" at the time Boreen was constructively terminated on April
13, 1990? Obviously, in answering this question we need look no
further than to federal law and Montana law as of that date.
As to federal law, the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in
Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill (1985), 470 U.S. 532,
105 S.Ct. 1487, 84 L.Ed.2d 494, had been the law of the land for
22
five years prior to Boreen's discharge. We discussed Loudermill at
length in Boreen v. Christensen (19941, 267 Mont. 405, 884 P.2d
761, (Boreen I), and there is no need to repeat that analysis.
Important to our discussion here, however, and again as the
majority acknowledges, the Court concluded in Loudermill that the
"just cause" provision in the Ohio statute at issue there created
a property interest in Loudermill's public employment. The
majority cites no federal case decided in the years between
Loudermill and Boreen's termination that departed from that simple
and straightforward proposition.
Accordingly, we must next look to the State of Montana law as
of April 13, 1990. For some twelve years prior to Boreen's
discharge, her public employment was subject to and was protected
by State administrative regulations which (a) premised all
disciplinary action, including discharge, on there being "just
cause" and (b) required "due process" in the administration of such
discipline or discharge. Again, these administrative regulations
are discussed in and appended to our decision in Boreen I.
Thus, as of April 13, 1990, a public employer in Montana which
had adopted the administrative regulations aforementioned, knew or
should have known that the public employee could not be terminated
absent there being just cause, as defined in 2.21.6507(6), ARM, and
that the employee was entitled to due process prior to termination
all as set forth and defined in 2.21.6506, 6507 and 6509, ARM.
Moreover on that date, given Loudermill, that same public employer
knew or should have known that if state law conditions termination
23
of public employment on "just cause"--as was the case here--then
that law creates in the employee a property interest in her
employment.
In short, on April 13, 1990, the law was clearly established
that an employee whose employment is subject to termination only
for "just cause" under state law had a property interest in her
employment and could not be deprived of that interest without due
process of law. That simple and straightforward legal principle
derived directly from the unambiguous requirements of Montana law
and federal law "extant" on that date. On April 13, 1990,
Youngblood needed to look no further than the Administrative Rules
of Montana and Loudermill to arrive at that conclusion.
Notwithstanding, Respondents here go to great lengths arguing
that the above settled principle of law was not clearly established
in April 1990--and in fact was not clearly established until our
decision in Boreen I. The majority agrees. However, viewed from
an objective standard, as the majority concedes it must, such a
position is insupportable.
First, as early as 1985, the principle of law articulated
above could not have been more clear to Montana public officials.
Through Attorney General Mike Greely, Montana participated in
Loudermill as amicus curiae on behalf of the Cleveland Board of
Education. See, Loudermill, 470 U.S. at 534. The State took the
position that state employees should not have a property interest
in their employment simply because they are protected by an
administrative just cause requirement. Obviously, Loudermill can
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hardly be read as supportive of that position. Having advanced
that argument, however, and in light of the Court's decision in
Loudermill, the handwriting was clearly on the wall five years
before Boreen was constructively discharged. She was protected by
a just cause/due process provision in Montana law; she had a
property interest in her employment.
Second, while not dealing with the constitutional property
interest issue addressed in Loudermill, this Court recognized in
Nye v. Department of Livestock (1982), 196 Mont. 222, 639 P.2d 498,
that the same just cause/due process regulations which governed
Boreen's employment were a source of public policy that would
support a claim of wrongful discharge and that the State
(Department of Livestock) had violated public policy by failing to
apply these regulations. Again, three years before Loudermill,
public employers in Montana were on notice that just cause/due
process requirements in administrative regulations would implicate
an employee's right to notice and an opportunity to be heard and to
the retention of her job if those regulations were not followed.
Under these circumstances and given the actual state of the
law as of April 13, 1990, any claim that the principle of law
establishing Boreen's property interest in her employment was not
clearly established must necessarily find justification in some
other basis than a simple reading of the provisions of Montana's
public policy expressed in the Administrative Rules of Montana
cited above and in what the majority concedes is the "seminal [U.S.
Supreme Court] case" on this subject.
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Enter the "at will" employment doctrine. As of April 13,
1990, one case, Reiter v. Yellowstone Cty. (1981), 192 Mont. 194,
627 P.2d 845, had discussed Montana's at will employment statute,
s 39-2-503, in conjunction with an employee's claim of a property
interest in his employment. We held that, "[tlhe Montana statute
create[d] no property interest in employment if there [was1 no
specified term" and therefore, Reiter had no constitutionally
protected property interest in his employment. Reiter, 627 P.2d at
849-50. Importantly, as we pointed out in Boreen I:
Reiter did not raise, nor did we address, the effect on
the "at will" nature of the plaintiff's employment of the
parties conditioning termination on a demonstration of
"just cause" under an administrative regulation adopted
by the government. In fact, we specifically pointed out
that Reiter's employment "was not covered by any written
contract or collective bargaining agreement or
ordinance."
Boreen I, 884 P.2d at 765 (citing Reiter, 621 P.2d at 847).
Accordingly, whatever Reiter stands for, it can hardly be
argued that our decision in that case made unclear the unambiguous
requirements of Montana law as expressed in the above cited
administrative regulations and in the subsequent Loudermill
decision, when Reiter did not even address the Loudermill issue.
Correctly, we rejected out of hand any application of Reiter (and
its progeny) in Boreen I and we should, likewise, do so here.
Montana's I' at will" employment statute and the cases
interpreting that statute simply have no bearing where the employee
is protected by a just cause/due process legal requirement. In
fact, the whole concept of "at will" employment is antithetical to
the legal mandate that an employee may not be discharged except for
26
just cause or good cause. "At will" employment, as we have defined
it, is the ability of an employer to dismiss his employee "for a
good reason, bad reason or for no reason at all." Scott v. Eagle
Watch Investments, Inc. (1991), 251 Mont. 191, 195, 828 P.2d 1346,
1349. That definition simply cannot be reconciled with a legal
requirement that the employer can only discharge his employee for
just cause or good cause--i.e., as the corollary, that he may not
terminate his employee for a bad reason or no reason at all. The
concepts of "at will" employment and "just cause" termination are
purely and simply incompatible with each other, and our use here of
"at will" employment cases to justify our decision not only flies
in the face of our rejection of the applicability of those cases in
Boreen I, but also lends further confusion to what was, at least in
April of 1990, a clearly established principle of law. The issue
of "at will" employment was a red herring in Boreen I; it is in
this case as well. Boreen never was an "at will" employee; she was
entitled to retain her job until her employer established just
cause for her termination and provided her with due process before
discharging her. Boreen I, 884 P.2d at 766-67.
That brings me to my last point. The law in April 1990 was
clearly established. The majority’s reliance on post-1990 cases to
explain what law was extant at the time Boreen was constructively
discharged is plainly improper under the doctrine of qualified
immunity articulated in Harlow v. Fitzgerald (1982), 457 U.S. 800,
102 S.Ct. 2727, 73 L.Ed.2d 396. The fact that since 1990 courts
have engrafted onto the rule in Loudermill legal concepts--like "at
27
will" employment--that plainly have no bearing on the rule
articulated in that case speaks not to any confusion in the law in
1990, but rather to judicial attempts to avoid what Loudermill--and
Montana's administrative regulations--clearly require.
Much is made by the'Respondents and by the majority of our
statements in Boreen I that our decision was one of first
impression. True enough. Boreen I was just such a case; this
Court had not, prior to that case, directly addressed the
Loudermill issue. It does not, however, follow from a case being
one of first impression before a particular court, that the legal
principle on which the case is decided has not been already clearly
established in the black-letter law or in some other controlling
body of case law. In fact, as pointed out above, that was
precisely the situation in Boreen I. Montana's administrative
regulations and Loudermill dictated the rule in Boreen I.
Moreover, by the time we decided Boreen I in 1994, the courts had
had four years to complicate and confuse what was clear in 1990.
Notwithstanding, even with the additional four years of state and
federal case law, this Court had no apparent difficulty in
concluding, on the basis of Montana's administrative regulations
and Louder-mill, that Boreen had a property interest in her public
employment. If that simple principle of law was clear to this
Court in 1994, it was, likewise, certainly clearly established in
April 1990. We did not make any new law in 1994; we simply set
forth what clearly had been the law since 1985.
Our decision here cannot be justified on the basis of the
28
principles of law cited by the majority. The law was clearly
established on April 13, 1990: because Boreen's employment was
protected by state regulations prohibiting her from being
discharged absent her employer demonstrating just cause, she had a
property interest in her employment and could not be deprived of
that property interest without due process of law. Youngblood is
not entitled to qualified immunity from her § 1983 claims.
Katharine Boreen won the battle in Boreen I; unfortunately,
she has lost the war in Boreen II. I dissent.
Justice Terry N. Trieweiler and
foregoing dissent.
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