Legal Research AI

Chakrabarti v. Cohen

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-07-28
Citations: 31 F.3d 1
Copy Citations
4 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 92-1987

                    KISHANLAL CHAKRABARTI,

                     Plaintiff, Appellee,

                              v.

      JOSEPH L. COHEN, M.D., and MICHAEL J. GILL, M.D.,

                   Defendants, Appellants.

                                        

No. 92-1988

                    KISHANLAL CHAKRABARTI,

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

                JOSEPH L. COHEN, M.D., ET AL.,

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET

   The  opinion of  this  Court issued  on  July 22,  1994,  is
amended as follows:

   On page 9, last line, replace "count II;" with "count III;".

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                         
No. 92-1987

                    KISHANLAL CHAKRABARTI,
                     Plaintiff, Appellee,

                              v.
      JOSEPH L. COHEN, M.D., and MICHAEL J. GILL, M.D.,

                   Defendants, Appellants.
                                         

No. 92-1988
                    KISHANLAL CHAKRABARTI,

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,
                              v.

                JOSEPH L. COHEN, M.D., ET AL.,
                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         
        APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
  [Hon. W. Arthur Garrity, Jr., Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                          

                                         
                            Before

                   Selya, Boudin and Stahl,
                       Circuit Judges.
                                     

                                         

Timothy  A. Mullen, Assistant Attorney General, Government Bureau,
                  
Trial Division, with whom Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General,  was on
                                       
briefs for defendants.
Robert LeRoux Hernandez for plaintiff.
                       

                                         

                        July 22, 1994
                                         

     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  Dr. Kishanlal Chakrabarti served
                          

as a staff psychiatrist at the Lemuel Shattuck Hospital ("the

hospital"),  a facility  of  the Massachusetts  Department of

Public  Health.   In  this suit  he  sought redress  for  his

discharge by the hospital,  and won a jury award  of $75,000.

Both sides appeal.  We affirm.

     The background facts are straightforward.  Born in India

and trained in England, Chakrabarti  joined the staff of  the

hospital  in  1979  and  worked initially  in  its  geriatric

psychiatry unit.  In  the early 1980s, another facility--this

one  managed by a different state agency--was merged into the

hospital.   Chakrabarti  disagreed  with the  merger and  its

implementation and made his criticisms known; and he objected

unsuccessfully to the naming  of Dr. Michael Gill as  head of

the combined psychiatric unit at the hospital.

     In October 1985 Gill asked Chakrabarti to resign, citing

their inability to work together and asserted deficiencies in

the  latter's  performance.     Chakrabarti's  new  immediate

supervisor,  Dr. Susan  Wehry, also  expressed  some concerns

about his performance.  Gill repeated his request in December

1985  and Chakrabarti  rejected the  request.   In June  1986

Wehry replaced  Chakrabarti in her unit  with another doctor,

and  the  hospital's chief  of  medicine,  Dr. Joseph  Cohen,

assigned  Chakrabarti to  a  newly created  job: guardianship

coordinatorandutilization
                        reviewphysicianfor
                                         psychiatricpatients.

                             -2-

     During  the  next  twelve  months  Chakrabarti  did  not

perform  his new duties to the satisfaction of Cohen, Gill or

Wehry.   Chakrabarti in turn took  the view that his  new job

was  effectively a  demotion,  cutting him  off from  medical

practice with patients  at the  hospital.  On  June 5,  1987,

Gill gave Chakrabarti a negative evaluation and told him that

if Chakrabarti still  declined to resign, Gill would urge the

Medical  Executive  Committee  not  to   renew  Chakrabarti's

clinical  privileges.1     On  June  8,   1987,  the  Medical

Executive   Committee  voted  unanimously  not  to  recommend

renewal. 

     Later in June 1987  Chakrabarti was formally notified of

the decision not to  renew; the reason given was  his failure

to  perform satisfactorily  his current  assignment.   He was

told that he could appeal pursuant to the hospital's medical-

staff bylaws.   Chakrabarti apparently could  not perform his

guardianship  role without  clinical  privileges but  he  was

continued on the hospital  payroll until June 1988.   At that

time  he  was  terminated on  the  ground  that  no post  was

available  for  him at  the  hospital  because  he could  not

perform clinical duties there.  

                    

     1Under  the by-laws clinical  privileges were reexamined
every two years by  the Medical Executive Committee  on which
Cohen  sat.   Its  recommendation could  be  appealed to  the
Public  Health Council  headed by  the State  Commissioner of
Public Health.

                             -3-

     In  1988  Chakrabarti  brought  the  present  action  in

district court, naming as  defendants Cohen, Gill and several

others who are no longer parties  to the case.  The complaint

set  forth five  counts: a section  1983 claim  under federal

law,   42  U.S.C.     1983  (count  I);  a  claim  under  the

Massachusetts Civil Rights Act, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 12,    11H,

11I  (count II); and state  common law claims for intentional

infliction  of emotional  distress (count  III), interference

with business relations (count IV), and defamation (count V).

Damages and reinstatement were both sought.

     The  first trial occurred  in November 1991.   The court

directed a verdict  for defendants on count  III.  Thereafter

the jury found in favor of Cohen and Gill on counts I, II and

V.   On count IV the  jury found in favor  of Chakrabarti and

awarded him  $1 in nominal  damages and  $30,000 in  punitive

damages.  In  answer to interrogatories,  the jury said  that

Cohen  and   Gill  had   not  sought  to   retaliate  against

Chakrabarti for constitutionally protected speech.

     In January 1992 the  district court resumed  proceedings

to consider equitable relief.  The following month, the court

allowed  Chakrabarti to  amend  his  complaint to  allege--as

count   VI--violations   of  substantive   due   process  and

procedural due process; these were  to be considered as bases

for  equitable relief on the existing record.  The court also

ordered a new jury trial on damages under count IV because it

                             -4-

concluded  that  punitive damages  were  not  permitted under

Massachusetts  law  on  count IV.    A  retrial  on count  IV

occurred  in March  1992,  and the  jury awarded  Chakrabarti

$75,000 in actual damages against Cohen and Gill.

     Thereafter the  district court  resolved the claims  for

equitable relief.   It first  found that the  substantive due

process claim failed on the merits.  Later the court rejected

the procedural due process  claim; the court said Chakrabarti

had been terminated prematurely because Cohen and Gill failed

to  follow required  procedures,  but the  state provided  an

adequate  appeal  process  that  Chakrabarti  had  failed  to

follow.    Finally,  as to  count  IV  the  court found  that

equitable relief  was barred  by the Pennhurst  doctrine, see
                                                             

Pennhurst State School  & Hospital v. Halderman,  465 U.S. 89
                                               

(1984).  It also  ruled that under state law  attorney's fees

were not available as to count IV.

     On June 26, 1993, judgment  in favor of Chakrabarti  and

against Cohen and Gill was entered on count IV in the  amount

of  $75,000 plus  $33,351.45 in  pre-judgment  interest, plus

costs.   Judgment was entered  in favor of  the defendants on

all other counts.   Represented by the state, Cohen  and Gill

appeal from the  judgment on count  IV.  Chakrabarti  appeals

from the  judgment on counts  III and VI  and the  refusal to

allow attorney's fees as damages under count IV.  

                             -5-

     We  start with the appeal  by Cohen and  Gill.  Although

limited  to count  IV,  this appeal  raises several  distinct

issues.  Defendants begin by asserting that on this record no

reasonable  jury could  have  found that  the defendants  had

unlawfully   interfered   with   an   advantageous   business

relationship, and a verdict should have been directed on this

count.  On appeal, we draw all reasonable inferences in favor

of the party who opposed  the directed verdict and  prevailed

at trial;  and credibility  issues are similarly  resolved in

favor of the jury verdict.  Santiago-Negron v. Castro-Davila,
                                                            

865 F.2d 431, 445 (1st Cir. 1989).

     Both sides agree that the elements of the count IV claim

under Massachusetts  law are  a business relationship  with a

third party, knowledge of  it by the defendants, interference

"through improper motives  or . .  . means," and harm.2   The

defendants say that  under state law they enjoyed the benefit

of  statutory privileges that  protect them  so long  as they

acted in good faith  and in the reasonable belief  that their

actions were proper.  See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 231,   85N; Mass.
                         

Gen.  L. ch.  111,     203(c).    And,  say  the  defendants,

Chakrabarti's  central  argument  is  that he  was  fired  in

                    

     2United Truck  Leasing Corp. v. Geltman,  551 N.E.2d 20,
                                            
23 (Mass.  1990); see also  G.S. Enters. v.  Falmouth Marine,
                                                            
571  N.E.2d  1363, 1370  (Mass.  1991).   Traditionally,  the
remedy differs  in certain  aspects, depending on  whether an
existing  contract  or  merely  a  business  relationship  is
disarranged; but these differences  have not been stressed in
this case.

                             -6-

retaliation for his  criticism but this  claim is negated  by

the jury's interrogatory answers on this issue.3  

     We will  assume arguendo that  the interrogatory answers
                             

established  that Cohen  and Gill  did not  retaliate against

protected speech.  This may  mean a debatable assumption; one

might argue that inconsistency in civil verdicts on different

counts   is   permissible   or,    at   best,   grounds   for

contemporaneous  relief (e.g.,  further consideration  by the
                             

jury  before entry of the verdicts).  But even if retaliation

for protected  speech were disregarded as  a possible motive,

defendants  must still show  that nothing else  in the record

supported  a finding  of  bad faith  or unreasonable  belief.

Defendants' brief does not attempt the task.

     At trial Chakrabarti sought to  show that he had enjoyed

good  evaluations prior  to Gill's  arrival; that  Gill, with

Cohen's  acquiescence  and  Wehry's  support,  had set  about

building a  false record of  Chakrabarti's incompetence; that

improper threats  had been employed  by Gill; that  Cohen had

assigned Chakrabarti to  a dead-end job  with no guidance  or

help as a pretext for  forcing him out of the hospital;  that

defendants ignored procedures that governed removal; and that

others on the  staff had been outraged at what  they said was

                    

     3As noted, the jury found in response to interrogatories
under  Fed.  R.  Civ.  P. 49  that  Chakrabarti's  "protected
speech" was not  "a substantial or motivating factor"  in the
actions taken against him by Cohen and Gill.

                             -7-

unfair  treatment  of Chakrabarti.   In  short, Chakrabarti's

criticism of  the new merger and  of Gill was only  a part of

the story.

     Whether the  story has much basis may  be debatable, but

it is the job of  an appellate brief to muster and  array the

evidence  to show why no reasonable jury could find bad faith

or other misconduct.   Here the  defendants' brief on  appeal

makes no serious effort, in support of this ground of appeal,

to analyze the evidence taking it in the light most favorable

to Chakrabarti and resolving credibility issues in his favor.

It is not  our job  to comb a  seven-volume trial  transcript

afresh and without counsel's assistance, and we decline to do

so.   Cf.  U.S. Healthcare, Inc.  v. Healthsource,  Inc., 986
                                                        

F.2d 589, 599 (1st Cir. 1993).

     Although it weakens  Chakrabarti's case  to assume  away

the main  motive he argued to  the jury--supposed retaliation

against protected  speech--it does not  eliminate that  case.

Fabricating false claims  of incompetence could  easily serve

as  wrongdoing under count IV  even if one  assumed that Gill

acted  out of  personal dislike  and Cohen  and Weary  out of

loyalty to Gill.  The original punitive damage award suggests

that the jury may well have taken such a view  of the matter.

Quite possibly  the jury was  wrong.   But it is  the job  of

defendants' counsel to show  us why and counsel has  not made

the effort.

                             -8-

     Later in their brief defendants make a different kind of

argument against liability.  They say that as a matter of law

administrators  of   the  hospital  cannot   be  liable   for

interference  with an  advantageous relationship  between the

hospital  and one of its own employees.  This certainly could

be the law  and perhaps ought to be; but  the general rule is

that supervisor  status, or  co-employment, merely  creates a

privilege  for  good-faith  interference  through  reasonable

means.  See P. Keeton,  Prosser and Keeton on Torts 985  (5th
                                                   

ed. 1984) (citing cases).  

     Defendants  cite  only  a   single  case  to  show  that

Massachusetts  follows a  different course.   Saint  Louis v.
                                                          

Baystate Medical Ctr.,  568 N.E.2d 1181  (Mass. 1991).   That
                     

case confirms that,  as one might expect,  an employer cannot
                                                      

be sued by its own employee for interfering with the contract

between them.  Id. at 1188.  But the case does not say that a
                  

supervisor is similarly exempt from suit; it merely says that

the  supervisor enjoys a privilege to express his views.  Id.
                                                             

Nothing  in  the  discussion,  or  in  the  underlying  facts

described  in the  opinion, suggests  that this  privilege is

absolute  or shields  an improper  motive or  improper means.

Accord, Wright  v. Shriners  Hospital, 589 N.E.2d  1241, 1246
                                     

(Mass. 1992).

     Turning to  damages, defendants make  several arguments.

They  first  point to  the  directed  verdict for  defendants

                             -9-

entered  by the district judge  on count III;  they note that

Chakrabarti did  not claim  pecuniary damages (he  appears to

have  earned  more  in  private practice  after  leaving  the

hospital); and  they say that the  emotional distress claimed

as damages under count IV represent the same damages that the

judge declined to permit  under count III.  The  short answer

to  the supposed  inconsistency  is that  the district  judge

dismissed  count  III  because  he  thought  that  outrageous

conduct had not been  shown.  Thus the dismissal  had nothing

to do with a lack of emotional distress.

     Defendants  also  say that  one  who  sues for  wrongful

interference  with  an   advantageous  relationship  may  not

collect compensatory  damages for  emotional trauma  but only

for pecuniary  loss.  This  argument has some  surface appeal

since  the  wrongful   interference  tort   is  directed   to

protecting economic relationships, see Keeton, supra, at 978,
                                                    

and Massachusetts  has a  separately defined tort  to protect

against emotional distress.  But defendants did not make this

argument to the district court, and we cannot say that it was

"plain  error" for the  district court to  allow such damages

where the relationship in question was an economic one.4

                    

     4Compare American Velodur Metal, Inc. v. Schinabeck, 481
                                                        
N.E.2d  209,  216  (Mass.  1985)   (compensation  for  mental
distress and  anxiety allowed),  cert. denied, 475  U.S. 1018
                                             
(1986),  with Ratner v. Noble,  35 Mass. App.  Ct. 137 (1993)
                             
(no   such  compensation   allowed  where   the  relationship
interfered with was a non-pecuniary one).  See Keeton, supra,
                                                            
at 1003,  n.68, listing  Massachusetts as  one of the  states

                             -10-

     Defendants' last claim on damages is that the first jury

verdict  showed that no actual damages were suffered and that

the district court should simply  have set aside the punitive

damages  award without  granting  a new  trial.   In  one  of

several versions  of this  argument, defendants contend  that

the  jury's finding of no actual damages was untainted by the

misinstruction allowing punitive  damages.  Chakrabarti,  say

the  defendants,   should  not  benefit  from   an  error  in

instructions that he himself invited.

     Based  on  his  remarks,  the  district  judge evidently

believed that  the jury had, under  the mistaken instruction,

accepted the evidence of  emotional distress but  compensated

for it in the punitive damages award.  The judge thought that

fairness required a fresh start on damages, and he noted that

neither  side had  properly  advised him  on the  no-punitive

damages rule.   A new trial on damages was arguably the right

course  and was certainly not  an abuse of  the trial court's

broad discretion to order  new trials.   See Fed. R. Civ.  P.
                                            

59(a); Dopp v. HTP Corp., 947 F.2d 506, 518 (1st Cir. 1991).
                        

     We turn  now to  the cross-appeal by  Chakrabarti.   His

first argument is that the  district court erred in directing

a verdict against him  on his count III claim  of intentional

infliction   of  emotional   distress.     Massachusetts  law

                    

that  allows recovery  "for  mental suffering"  for  tortious
interference.

                             -11-

recognizes  such a  tort to  redress "extreme  and outrageous

conduct."   Agis v. Howard  Johnson Co., 355  N.E.2d 315, 318
                                       

(Mass. 1976).  The district  court thought that no reasonable

jury  could find  that the defendants'  conduct rose  to that

level.  We share that view and therefore by-pass the question

whether count III could have afforded Chakrabarti any further

damages not covered by the count IV award.

     Chakrabarti's brief  portrays the  case as one  in which

"an exemplary  public  servant" and  "inspiring  leader"  was

hounded out of his  job through insults, lies  and calculated

humiliations.   In fact, the record shows not another Dreyfus

affair but a  fairly common employment dispute  etched not in

black and white  but in  gray.  Chakrabarti,  whose own  past

evaluations were  reasonably good but not  flawless, resisted

the new regime; the working relationship deteriorated; he was

shifted to a less attractive job and further disputes ensued;

ultimately,  he was  terminated,  despite the  protests of  a

number of those with whom he had worked.

     In obtaining this termination,  the defendants may  have

misstated  facts  concerning  Chakrabarti's   competence  and

conduct, although his brief  offers more generalizations than

record  citations on  this  point.   The administrators,  who

after  all had gone to medical school rather than law school,

may also have made some procedural missteps, as  the district

                             -12-

court found.5  Perhaps  it was  not an  impermissible stretch

for  a jury to  find their conduct  unprivileged (although as

noted  the evidence  on  this issue  has  not been  seriously

sifted by defendants).   But there is no indication  that any

of  their conduct, or all  of it taken  together, was extreme

and outrageous.

     Life is  crowded with events that  cause emotional upset

and  turmoil.  As one  would expect, the  cases indicate that

Massachusetts law keeps a  reasonably tight rein on the  tort

remedy for intentional infliction of emotional distress.  The

courts' language,  although  general, includes  phrases  like

"beyond all possible bounds of decency," "utterly intolerable

in a civilized community," and "atrocious."  See, e.g., Foley
                                                             

v. Polaroid Corp., 508  N.E.2d 72, 82 (Mass. 1987);  Short v.
                                                          

Town  of  Burlington, 414  N.E.2d  1035,  1036 (Mass.  1980).
                    

Lawyers,  who use  the term  "outrage" liberally,  may become

tone-deaf to the nuances; but  an atrocity is something  more

than  a faulty  evaluation,  a procedural  error in  applying

opaque  credentials   rules,  or  even  a   dead-end  job  as

competency coordinator.

                    

     5The principal misstep  described by the district  court
was the termination of Chakrabarti's medical privileges based
on the action  of the  Medical Executive Committee.   As  the
district  judge  read the  by-laws,  that  body merely  makes
recommendations to  the Public Health Council,  which in this
case apparently did not act.

                             -13-

     This discussion also answers Chakrabarti's next claim of

error.  The district court ruled, on count VI, that there was

no  violation of  substantive due  process, a  label normally

reserved for conduct that  is truly shocking.  See  Rochin v.
                                                          

California,  342 U.S. 165, 172 (1952) (use of stomach pump to
          

retrieve  evidence).  One need not  be blind to Chakrabarti's

undoubted  distress  to appreciate  that  defendants' conduct

fell far short of the  "egregiously unacceptable, outrageous,

or conscience-shocking."   Amsden v. Moran, 904 F.2d 748, 754
                                          

(1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1041 (1991).
                             

     As his  third claim  of error, Chakrabarti  asserts that

the  district court erred in  failing to find  a violation of

procedural  due  process.    The  district  court  said  that

Chakrabarti's privileges had been terminated prematurely (see

note  5,  above),  but  that  no  improper  state action  was

implicated.  The court reasoned that the fault lay not in the

by-laws but in defendants' mistaken treatment of  committee's

action as final. Citing Lowe v. Scott, 959 F.2d 323 (1st Cir.
                                     

1992), the court called this a random and unauthorized action

by individuals and not a basis for relief against the state.

     On  appeal, Chakrabarti's  brief points  to a  different

possible defect in the by-laws and insists that under section

1983 he is entitled to an injunction reinstating his clinical

privileges  (and presumably  to  attorney's fees  as provided

where  relief is obtained under  that section).  The supposed

                             -14-

defect, created by  obscure wording  in the  by-laws, is  the

possibility  that hospital administrators  could frustrate an

appeal from an  adverse committee action by  having the chief

of   the  applicant's   service  unilaterally   withdraw  the

disapproved  application.6    This,  Chakrabarti   argues  at

length, is a wholly foreseeable threat to due process.

     There  is no evidence that any such pocket veto was used

to  frustrate  an  appeal  here.    Rather,  Chakrabarti  was

specifically and  promptly advised of his right to appeal the

adverse  recommendation of  the Medical  Executive Committee.

He took no action to  pursue that right.  It is  unclear that

the  by-law  creates such  a  pocket  veto--the language  may

envision a withdrawal, with the applicant's consent, to avoid

further embarrassment--but in any  event the potential defect

caused no harm in this case.

     The  last issue  in  the case  concerns attorney's  fees

under count IV.  At the second jury trial, Chakrabarti sought

to offer evidence of  attorney's fees as part of  his damages

claimed for tortious interference by defendants.  Recognizing

that attorney's fees are  not normally compensable damages in

                    

     6Section 6.5-5(c) of the bylaws reads:

          Adverse   Recommendation:      When   the
                                  
          recommendation of  the MEC is  adverse to
          the  applicant, the  superintendent shall
          immediately request the chief of services
          to resubmit a revised  application within
          10  days  or  to  withdraw  the  original
          application.

                             -15-

common law actions, Chakrabarti's  counsel cited to the court

an   exception  recognized   in  Massachusetts   in  tortious

interference cases where the victim is forced "to sue . . . .

a third party  in order to  protect his rights."   M.F. Roach
                                                             

Co.  v. Town  of  Provincetown, 247  N.E.2d  377, 378  (Mass.
                              

1969).

     The district  court rejected the evidence,  saying that,

by  contrast  to  Roach,  the present  case  did  not involve
                       

attorney's fees  incurred in suing  a third party  to restore

contractual  rights; rather  the  fees were  incurred in  the

present suit  to  recover  against  the  alleged  tortfeasors

themselves.     Roach  is   a  very  brief   opinion,  little
                     

illuminated by later cases.  But its language and what can be

discerned of its rationale give no hint that Roach applies to
                                                  

legal fees incurred in suing the tortfeasor.

     Rather  imaginatively,  Chakrabarti's  brief  on  appeal

tries to analogize this  case to a suit against  the hospital

in proper persona for reinstatement:  the brief asserts that,
                 

so  far  as equitable  relief is  concerned, the  request for

reinstatement is  made against the doctors  in their official
                                                             

capacity,  just as  if  the hospital  had  been joined  as  a

defendant.  This analogy is not without some force,  although

it may not have been clearly presented to the district court.

     In   any  case,   reinstatement   was  not   granted  to
                                               

Chakrabarti in this case or, so far as we know, in any other.

                             -16-

In Roach the attorney's fees allowed were incurred to achieve
        

redress against the third party.  Here, no such reinstatement

has been  achieved and, in  view of Chakrabarti's  failure to

appeal the  action of  the Medical Executive  Committee, such

relief was always  unlikely.   We have no  warrant to  extend

Roach to  such a situation  where redress  against the  third
     

party  is not achieved or  even likely, unless  and until the

Massachusetts courts  choose  so to  extend it.   See,  e.g.,
                                                            

Pearson v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 979 F.2d 254, 259
                                          

(1st Cir. 1992).

     This case reveals the  limitations of the trial process,

which imposes  yes or no  answers on liability  questions, in

coping  with muddled disputes of  this kind.   Frankly, it is

not manifestly clear to us  that Chakrabarti deserved to lose

his clinical privileges, nor that Cohen and Gill acted in bad

faith or through  patently improper means.   But the  parties

chose  to litigate  the case  rather than  to settle,  as the

district judge wisely encouraged  them to do, and we  find no

legal error  affecting substantial rights in the proceedings,

nor any basis to overturn the jury's decision.  

     Affirmed.  
             

                             -17-