FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
December 3, 2008
PUBLISH
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
IRA THOMAS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 07-6197
CITY OF BLANCHARD, BILL
EDWARDS, MONTE KETCHUM and
TOM SACCHIERI,
Defendants-Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA
(D.C. No. CIV-06-489-D)
Mark Hammons, Hammons & Associates (Tamara L. Gowens, with him on the
brief), Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for the Plaintiff-Appellant.
David W. Lee, Lee & Gooch, P.C. (Ambre C. Gooch, with him on the brief),
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for the Defendant-Appellees City of Blanchard, Bill
Edwards and Monte Ketchum.
David W. Kirk, Lytle, Soulé & Curlee, P.C. (Robert Ray Jones, Jr., with him on
the brief) for Defendant-Appellee Tom Sacchieri.
Before MURPHY, McKAY and McCONNELL, Circuit Judges.
McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff-Appellant Ira Thomas was fired from his job as building code
inspector for the City of Blanchard, Oklahoma, after he discovered in the City
Clerk’s office a signed and completed certificate of occupancy for a home
constructed by a local builder — who is also the mayor — although Mr. Thomas
had not yet made the final inspection of the home or approved issuance of the
certificate. Suspecting illegality, Mr. Thomas responded forcefully (and maybe
even inappropriately; that is a disputed issue) by storming into a meeting to
denounce the certificate, shouting at the City Clerk, threatening to report the
matter to the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (“OSBI”), and eventually
following through on the threat. Mr. Thomas sued the City and various individual
defendants, including the mayor, claiming his discharge was in retaliation for his
speech — primarily, his reporting the matter to the OSBI — and therefore in
violation of the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.
The principal issue on appeal is whether Mr. Thomas’s report to the OSBI
was made pursuant to his professional duties and therefore outside the scope of
First Amendment protections under Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006).
Because we conclude that his speech was not made pursuant to his professional
duties and was therefore constitutionally protected, we address the other issues
relevant to when a public employee’s discharge violates the First Amendment:
whether the speech involved a matter of public concern, whether the
government’s interest outweighed the employee’s free speech rights, whether the
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speech was a motivating factor in the discharge, and (pertinent only to the
mayor’s appeal) whether the mayor personally participated in the decision to
discharge Mr. Thomas. As to all these questions, our review is on appeal from a
grant of summary judgement to the defendants; accordingly, the question is
whether the evidence in the record, interpreted in the light most favorable to the
plaintiff, would permit a reasonable jury to find a constitutional violation. We
reverse summary judgment in favor of the defendants, except on the question of
the mayor’s personal responsibility.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Before the discharge challenged in this case, Mr. Thomas was the building
code inspector for the City of Blanchard, although he also had other duties. As
building code inspector, Mr. Thomas would conduct a final inspection of new
homes when construction was complete. If a home passed its final inspection, the
builder would receive a certificate of occupancy (“certificate”). Certificates are
signed both by the housing inspector and by the City Clerk, Camille Dowers. The
builder had to go to City Hall to pick up the certificate of occupancy. Mr.
Thomas, in his capacity as housing inspector, had no power to make policy, but
was merely expected to “carry out the policies of the city.”
According to the “typical practice,” builders would call ahead to request an
inspection and Mr. Thomas would conduct the inspection. When the inspection
was finished, Mr. Thomas would phone City Hall to report the results; he would
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also prepare a written report noting whether the house had passed inspection or
not. It was common practice for Mr. Thomas and Ms. Dowers, the City Clerk, to
“pre-sign” a number of blank certificates, so that when Mr. Thomas called with
the news of a successful final inspection she could fill in the identifying
information (owner, address) and make the certificate available immediately to
the builder.
On Friday, April 14, 2005, Mr. Thomas noticed that there was a completed,
signed certificate (including both his signature and Ms. Dowers’) in the City
Clerk’s office for a house on 1118 Houser Lane, seeming to indicate that the
house had been passed. The builder of this house was Tom Sacchieri, the Mayor
of the City of Blanchard. Mr. Thomas had not yet performed a final inspection on
the house, so the certificate, Mr. Thomas knew, had been filled in prematurely.
Mr. Thomas told both Mr. Edwards and Ms. Dowers that the house on Houser
Lane had not yet been “finalled out” and that the certificate was no good. Later
Friday afternoon, Mr. Thomas called Ms. Dowers and asked that she tear up the
certificate for the house on Houser Lane.
Mr. Thomas returned to city hall on the Monday following the weekend,
wearing a recording device. He interrupted a meeting where the City Manager,
Bill Edwards, and Mr. Thomas’s supervisor, Monte Ketchum, were present, and
told Mr. Edwards that the certificate for Mr. Sacchieri’s house was false and that
he wanted his name off of it. Mr. Thomas began asking Mr. Edwards whether he
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“realize[d] it’s against the law to be handing out” false certificates, but Mr.
Edwards stopped him, saying he didn’t need to be “lecture[d]” by Mr. Thomas.
Mr. Thomas accused Mr. Edwards of giving the certificate to Mr. Sacchieri, to
which Mr. Edwards responded: “[T]hat’s a goddamn lie. . . . It is in my hands.”
The remaining key parts of the dialogue, although to some extent obscured
by inaudible words and passages, are as follows:
BILL EDWARDS: (inaudible)
IRA THOMAS: Okay. That’s fine. If that’s – if that’s what you want to
do. I’m going – I’m going to the OSBI [Oklahoma State Bureau of
Investigation].
BILL EDWARDS: Okay.
IRA THOMAS: I’m – I’m going to the OSBI, and I’m going to – I’m going
to – I’ll talk to them about it.
...
IRA THOMAS: I’m not making demands. I’m just saying that I’ll make –
this is against the law, against the law.
BILL EDWARDS: I understand.
IRA THOMAS: And my name is on that document by false pretenses.
BILL EDWARDS: I tell you what –
IRA THOMAS: If you tear that document up right now, just tear it up in
front of me, everything – everything will be good.
BILL EDWARDS: No, everything won’t be good. But I’m gonna tear it up
anyway.
Mr. Edwards then handed the document to Mr. Thomas, who ripped it up.
Mr. Thomas apparently left City Hall, but re-entered through another door. He
then entered Ms. Dowers’ office and demanded that she hand over to him all of
the blank pre-signed certificates. Ms. Dowers screamed. Later that day, at the
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urging of Mr. Ketchum, Mr. Thomas returned to city hall and apologized to Mr.
Edwards and Ms. Dowers for his “tone of voice.”
Mr. Thomas conducted the final inspection of the 1118 Houser Lane house
the same day. He concluded that there were several minor deficiencies that had to
be corrected before he would approve the house for a certificate of occupancy.
Mr. Sacchieri, who was present at the inspection, told Mr. Thomas that he had
“got to be kidding” that the house did not pass. But he made the repairs, and Mr.
Thomas approved the house the next day, April 18.
Earlier that day, Mr. Thomas had in fact contacted the OSBI, although Mr.
Ketchum, Mr. Edwards, and Mr. Sacchieri had no knowledge of this. The OSBI
told him that he needed to contact the sheriff’s department first, which he did. He
eventually contacted Lydia Williams of the OSBI, but did not actually meet with
her until after he was fired. Mr. Thomas was terminated on April 21. Mr.
Ketchum made the decision to fire Mr. Thomas, and notified Mr. Edwards before
he did so. According to the record evidence, Mr. Sacchieri learned that Mr.
Thomas had been fired approximately ten days later.
Mr. Thomas filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint against the city, Mr.
Edwards, Mr. Ketchum, and Mr. Sacchieri in Oklahoma District Court, alleging
that he had been fired from his job for the exercise of his First Amendment rights.
The complaint specifically alleged that in making his reports to the OSBI and the
sheriff’s office, Mr. Thomas was not “fulfilling any requirement of his job no[r]
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acting pursuant to a directive imposed by his job description, assigned duties or a
directive from a supervising official.”
The defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that the undisputed
evidence showed that Mr. Thomas’s speech had been uttered pursuant to his
“official duties” and was therefore not protected by the First Amendment. They
further argued that the undisputed evidence showed that Mr. Thomas’s speech
was not the cause of his termination, that the interests of the city qua employer
outweighed Mr. Thomas’s interest in his speech, and that Mr. Edwards and Mr.
Ketchum were entitled to qualified immunity. Mr. Sacchieri filed a separate
motion for summary judgment, arguing (in addition to the above) that he had not
“personally participated” in the firing of Mr. Thomas and was therefore not liable.
In his response, Mr. Thomas stated that he believed he would have been subject to
criminal liability if he had “failed to protest and report the generation of a
fraudulent certificate of occupancy.”
The district court held that Mr. Thomas’s speech — specifically, the report
to the OSBI and his threat to make a report — was not protected by the First
Amendment because it was made “pursuant to his official duties,” and that, even
if the speech was protected, his claim nevertheless failed “as a matter of law
because [Mr. Thomas] cannot establish the requisite element of causation to
support his retaliation claim.” The city, Mr. Edwards, and Mr. Ketchum were
granted summary judgment. Mr. Sacchieri was found not to have personally
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participated in the firing, and so was also awarded summary judgment. Mr.
Thomas appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, “applying
the same standard as the district court.” Brammer-Hoelter v. Twin Peaks Charter
Academy, 492 F.3d 1192, 1201 (10th Cir. 2007). A grant of summary judgment is
proper only if the record shows there is “no genuine issue as to any material fact”
and the moving party is “entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” F ED . R. C IV . P.
56(c). In First Amendment cases, we have “an obligation to make an independent
examination of the whole record in order to make sure that the judgment does not
constitute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free expression.” Bose Corp. v.
Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 466 U.S. 485, 499 (1984); see also
Brammer-Hoelter, 492 F.3d at 1201–02. The question of whether speech is
protected is a question of law, not of fact. Connick v. Myers, 461 U.S. 138, 148
n.7 (1983).
A. Whether Mr. Thomas’s Speech Was Constitutionally Protected
The United State Supreme Court’s decision in Garcetti v. Ceballos set the
boundaries of what constitutes “protected” employee speech. 547 U.S. 410
(2006). Garcetti recognized that the “First Amendment limits the ability of a
public employer to leverage the employment relationship to restrict, incidentally
or intentionally, the liberties employees enjoy in their capacities as private
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citizens.” Id. at 419. However, employee speech that is made “pursuant” to the
employee’s professional duties is not accorded First Amendment protection under
Garcetti. Id. at 420, 421. This is because, the Court explained, “[r]estricting
speech that owes its existence to a public employee’s professional responsibilities
does not infringe any liberties the employee might have enjoyed as a private
citizen. It simply reflects the exercise of employer control over what the
employer itself has commissioned or created.” Id at 421–22.
Garcetti involved the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office. A
prosecutor, named Ceballos, prepared an internal office memorandum
recommending dismissal of a case that was being pursued by the office. The
memo and another like it led to a heated meeting; afterwards, Ceballos was
reassigned from his position, transferred to another courthouse, and denied a
promotion. Id. Ceballos sued, claiming the employment actions violated his
constitutional rights. The Court found that Ceballos’s statements, made directly
to his supervisors and also in a memorandum, were made pursuant to his official
duties and therefore not protected under the First Amendment. Id. at 422, 424.
The Court explained that Ceballos was speaking in his role “as a prosecutor
fulfilling a responsibility to advise his supervisor about how best to proceed.” Id.
at 421. The speech was therefore “commissioned” by his employer. Id. 421–22.
Ceballos was not so much a private citizen exercising free speech rights as an
employee whose job consisted in part of speech, for which he could be evaluated,
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rewarded, or disciplined. Because the “First Amendment does not prohibit
managerial discipline based on an employee’s expressions made pursuant to
official responsibilities,” Ceballos’ claim of unconstitutional retaliation failed.
Id. at 424.
The question under Garcetti is not whether the speech was made during the
employee’s work hours, or whether it concerned the subject matter of his
employment. See id. at 421. Merely because an employee’s speech was made at
work and about work does not necessarily remove that employee’s speech from
the ambit of constitutional protection. See Brammer-Hoelter, 492 F.3d at 1204.
Rather, it is whether the speech was made pursuant to the employee’s job duties
or, in other words, whether the speech was “commissioned” by the employer.
Garcetti, 547 U.S. at 421–22. In addressing that question, the Supreme Court
deliberately refrained from defining a “comprehensive framework for defining the
scope of an employee’s duties.” Id. at 424. It instead emphasized that the inquiry
was “a practical one,” and that a court cannot simply read off an employee’s
duties from a job description because “formal job descriptions often bear little
resemblance to the duties an employee actually is expected to perform.” Id. at
424-25.
In this case, Mr. Thomas’s supervisor, Monte Ketchum, conceded that Mr.
Thomas’s official duties did not include a “duty to contact the OSBI for perceived
criminal violations.” But that is not the end of the matter. The inquiry is a
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practical one, and the defendants argue that Mr. Thomas’s speech, including his
decision to take the matter to the OSBI, “was about the type of work and
responsibilities of his work at the City.” Mr. Thomas was in charge of housing
inspection; his signature was on certificates for houses he had approved for
occupancy. He was aware that the certificate for the house on Houser Lane was
fraudulent only because of his official duty as a housing inspector. Moreover, as
stressed by the defendants, the alleged fact that a false certificate had been
prepared would be relevant to Thomas’s performance of his job. He would be
expected to report such an occurrence at least to those higher up his chain of
command.
This Court’s precedents since Garcetti have taken a “broad” view of the
meaning of speech that is “pursuant” to an employee’s “official duties.” Raj
Chohan, Note, Tenth Circuit Interpretations of Garcetti: Limits on First
Amendment Protections for Whistle-Blowers, 85 D ENV . U. L. R EV . 573, 584
(2008). In Brammer-Hoelter, we stated that “speech may be made pursuant to an
employee’s official duties even if it deals with activities that the employee is not
expressly required to perform.” 492 F.3d 1192, 1203. Therefore the fact that it
was not expressly Mr. Thomas’s duty to report to the OSBI is not dispositive on
whether he was acting “pursuant” to his duties. Indeed, in Brammer-Hoelter, we
held that if speech “reasonably contributes to or facilitates the employee’s
performance of the official duty, the speech is made pursuant to the employee’s
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official duties.” Id. at 1203 (citing Williams v. Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist., 480 F.3d
689, 693 (5th Cir. 2007) (per curiam). See also Green v. Bd. of County Comm’rs,
472 F.3d 794, 801 (10th Cir. 2007) (Green’s activities not protected because they
“stemmed from and were the type of activities that she was paid to do”).
On the other hand, it would be going too far to hold that every time a
public employee discovers alleged wrongdoing related to his job and brings it to
the attention of law enforcement or other outside parties, the speech is
unprotected. Mr. Thomas was not hired to detect fraud in connection with the
issuance of certificates of occupancy; he was hired to inspect houses. Unlike
Ceballos’ recommendation not to pursue a case, which was part of his job and
therefore subject to his employer’s authority to evaluate and discipline, Garcetti,
547 U.S. at 421-22, Mr. Thomas’s act went well beyond his official
responsibilities. No one could say he was “commissioned” by the City to report
suspected wrongdoing to the OSBI.
The line between “official” and “unofficial” duties is drawn most helpfully
in Casey v. West Las Vegas Independent School District, 473 F.3d 1323 (10th Cir.
2007). Casey was the Chief Executive Officer of a Head Start program in
Oklahoma. When she discovered that the Las Vegas School Board had been
violating the Open Meetings Act, she warned the Board, and when the Board
ignored her warnings, she complained in writing to the New Mexico Attorney
General’s office. We held that Casey was not acting within her job duties when
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she went to the Attorney General’s office to report the Board’s alleged violation
of the Act. Id. at 1332. We distinguished this from another incident, in which
Casey reported certain complaints about the administration of the Head Start
program, also ignored by the Board, to federal Head Start officials. The Head
Start program, we said, was “committed to her care and . . . she had independent
responsibilities to the federal government” to report fraud. Id.
We believe that Mr. Thomas’s decision to report what he believed to be
illegal activity relating to the falsely completed building certificate to the OSBI is
akin to Casey’s decision to take her grievance to the New Mexico Attorney
General when “she . . . lost faith that the Board would listen to her advice” about
the Open Meetings Act. Id. Mr. Thomas was not satisfied that Mr. Edwards or
Mr. Ketchum would report the fraud to the authorities, so he “took his grievance
elsewhere” — that is, to the OSBI. It was when Casey went beyond her
supervisors and reported to someone outside her chain of command about a matter
which was not committed to her care that we found that her speech was protected
by the First Amendment. Id. So too, when Mr. Thomas went beyond
complaining to his supervisors and instead threatened to report to the OSBI, an
agency outside his chain of command, his speech ceased to be merely ‘pursuant to
his official duties’ and became the speech of a concerned citizen. 1
1
Being outside one’s “chain of command,” we note, is not the same as
being an outside authority or agency. In Casey, Ms. Casey’s speech to federal
(continued...)
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The fact that Mr. Thomas threatened to go outside his usual chain of
command and report on suspected criminal activity to the OSBI, and not merely
to his supervisors or to the state housing inspector, leads us to believe that he was
not acting pursuant to his official duties. Threatening to report fraudulent
certificates to law enforcement officials was not the “type” of activity Mr.
Thomas was paid to do. See Green, 472 F.3d at 801; cf. Hesse v. Jackson, 541
F.3d 1240, 1250 (10th Cir. 2008) (holding that a plaintiff’s conversations with an
administrator were “pursuant to his official duties” because they “occurr[ed] for
the purpose of addressing administrative issues and [were] directed to the
contractually appropriate party”). Mr. Thomas was paid to inspect houses, and
while informing Mr. Ketchum of a fraudulent certificate would reasonably have
been pursuant to those duties, going outside his normal supervisors and
inaugurating a criminal probe would seem not to be.
Following Casey, we must further consider whether Mr. Thomas had an
underlying legal obligation, arising from his official position, to report the
suspected wrongdoing. In Casey, the plaintiff would have been subject to civil
and criminal liability by “remaining silent” in the face of her knowledge that
1
(...continued)
authorities about the administration of the Head Start program was deemed to be a
speech made to “outside authorities.” Casey, 473 F.3d at 1132. But they
nonetheless were within Ms. Casey’s normal chain of command, and she was
responsible for reporting fraud to them. See Cheek v. City of Edwardsville, No.
07-3341, 2008 WL 4150029, at *2–*3 (10th Cir. Sept. 10, 2008).
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fraud in the administration of Head Start had occurred. Casey, 473 F.3d at 1330.
We viewed this as relevant to determining whether reporting that fraud was
pursuant to her official duties. Id. at 1330–31. According to his response to Mr.
Sacchieri’s motion for summary judgement, Mr. Thomas believed that if he did
not report the fraud, he would be criminally liable. The district court relied on
this ground in its grant of summary judgment for the defendants, stating that
“[Mr. Thomas] believed he was obligated to report what he perceived, based on
his knowledge and the conduct of his job, to be improper or unlawful activity.”
Oklahoma law provides that “[a]ny clerk, register or other officer having
the custody of any record” who permits that record to be “alter[ed] or falsifi[ed]”
is subject to criminal liability. 21 Okl. St. § 461. Although Mr. Thomas never
had custody of the allegedly fraudulent certificate, his silence upon having seen it
might be construed as “permission” for the certificate to be issued. Had he let the
certificate go through with his tacit approval, it is possible that he might have
been subject to criminal liability. See 21 Okl. St. § 462.
But Mr. Thomas’s liability can be distinguished from Ms. Casey’s. Casey
was liable under federal statute as the director of a federally funded program, and
she was the person “primarily responsible” for the program being free of fraud.
Casey, 473 F.3d at 1330. There was a close relationship between the authority
who issued the regulations, the content of those regulations, and the scope of
Casey’s professional responsibilities.
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Mr. Thomas was employed by the city, not by the state. And he was not
given “primary responsibility” for ensuring that suspected fraudulent certificates
were subject to criminal investigation or prosecution. More importantly, perhaps,
it cannot be the case that a criminal liability statute aimed at every public official
should somehow become part of every public official’s job description. That
would effectively make the obligation to report and seek the prosecution of fraud
part of every employee’s job. Mr. Thomas reported the certificate to Mr.
Edwards, telling him it was not official. For this, he probably fulfilled his
obligations under the state statute. To go beyond this, and to contact the law
enforcement officials on his own, was beyond his professional responsibilities as
a housing inspector. Moreover, having complained about the premature
certificate to Mr. Edwards and having procured its destruction, Mr. Thomas was
under no danger of legal liability for “permitting” the falsification of the
certificate. Unlike Casey, who had to report to federal authorities to stop an
ongoing fraud, which had not stopped when she complained to her immediate
supervisors, Mr. Thomas’s demand that the certificate be destroyed had already
been satisfied.
Exercising de novo review of the legal question whether Mr. Thomas’s
speech was constitutionally protected, we therefore conclude that it was.
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B. Whether Mr. Thomas’s Speech Was A Matter of Public Concern
Having concluded that Mr. Thomas’s speech was not made pursuant to his
official duties, we must still consider whether Mr. Thomas’s speech was on a
matter of public concern, whether it was the cause of his termination, and whether
the employer’s interest in regulating the speech was greater than Mr. Thomas’s
interest in making it. We believe that these matters can be dealt with summarily.
The former question we consider as a matter of law. The district court did not
reach whether Mr. Thomas’s speech was a matter of public concern, because it
was found to be pursuant to his official duties. The City, Mr. Edwards, and Mr.
Ketchum do not argue that Mr. Thomas’s speech was not a matter of public
concern, except indirectly: they say it was pursuant to his employment, and
therefore could not be a matter of public concern.
Admitting that he raises this issue for the first time in this appeal, Mr.
Sacchieri contends that Mr. Thomas’s speech was not a matter of public concern
because there was no criminal conduct by Mr. Sacchieri, only “personal
grievances.” But regardless of whether there was criminal conduct, the idea that
the mayor — who was also a builder — might have pulled strings to secure
approval of a house that had not yet passed its final inspection seems
quintessentially a matter of public concern. Certainly if we found in Casey that a
report of the School Board’s violation of the Open Meetings Act was a matter of
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public concern, then speech about possible illegality or pressure by the mayor
would count as well.
C. Did The City’s Interest Outweigh Mr. Thomas’s?
Mr. Edwards, Mr. Ketchum, and the City urge us to affirm on the ground
that the city’s interest as employer in promoting the efficiency of the services it
performs outweighs the employee’s interest in his speech. 2 This is also a question
of law. See Brammer-Hoelter, 492 F.3d at 1203. In our balancing of these two
interests, we will give a greater weight to speech that has been deemed to be a
matter of public concern. Descheneie v. Bd. of Educ. of Cent. Consol. Sch. Dist.,
473 F.3d 1271, 1279 (10th Cir. 2007). Mr. Edwards et al. point generally to Mr.
Thomas’s disruptive behavior, and suggest that this was the reason for his firing
and justified it.
But if this is their argument, it confuses this prong of the
Garcetti/Pickering test with the next prong: whether the plaintiff’s speech was a
motivating factor in his dismissal. We deal with that argument below. For
purposes of the third prong, the question is not whether the plaintiff’s speech was
accompanied by disruptive behavior or made in a disruptive manner, but whether
the government’s legitimate interests provide a sufficient justification for
2
Mr. Thomas argues that this argument and the following argument are not
properly before the court. See Thomas At. Br. 12, 16. But Mr. Thomas lost his
appeal, and we can affirm on any ground adequately supported by the record, “so
long as the parties have had a fair opportunity to address that ground.” Shero v.
City of Grove, 510 F.3d 1196, 1201 n.2 (10th Cir. 2007).
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controlling the plaintiff’s message. As we explained in Cragg v. Osawatomie,
143 F.3d 1343, 1346 (10th Cir. 1998), the Pickering analysis “requires us to ask
whether [the employer] has an efficiency interest which would justify it in
restricting the particular speech at issue.” (emphasis added). The defendants
make no argument relevant to that inquiry.
D. Was Mr. Thomas’s Speech a Motivating Factor in his Dismissal?
In order to establish his claim of retaliation, Mr. Thomas must also show
that his speech was a “substantial” or “motivating” factor in the city’s decision to
terminate him. Brammer-Hoelter, 492 F.3d at 1203. This is a question of fact,
not of law. Id. In their brief moving for summary judgment, Mr. Edwards, Mr.
Ketchum and the City stated that part of the “disruptive” behavior that led to Mr.
Thomas’s termination was his “busting into two meetings that . . . Edwards was
conducting, and engaging in insubordinate and disruptive behavior there,
including threatening to go to the OSBI.” (emphasis added). This seems to
concede that Mr. Thomas’s threat to go to the OSBI was at least one “motivating”
factor in the city’s decision to terminate him three days later; at the least, it
creates a genuine issue of material fact on the question. We therefore conclude it
was inappropriate to issue summary judgment on this basis. A reasonable jury
might well conclude that Mr. Thomas was fired not because he went to the OSBI,
but because of his aggressive manner in raising the issue of the premature
certificate—breaking into meetings, making the City Clerk scream, generally
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acting manic—but we cannot say on this record that a reasonable jury would be
forced to that conclusion.
The district court stated that “[t]he evidence does not support any inference
that, given these facts, defendants thought that plaintiff was going to report
something to the OSBI or any other authority with regard to the final inspection
of 1118 Houser Lane.” (emphasis added). This disregards the defendants’ own
concession that Mr. Thomas’s threat to go to the OSBI was part of the “disruptive
conduct” that inspired his termination. For free speech purposes, it does not
matter whether an employee is fired for actually reporting alleged wrongdoing to
outside authorities or for threatening to do so.
E. Are Mr. Edwards and Mr. Ketchum Entitled to Qualified
Immunity?
Finally, Mr. Edwards and Mr. Ketchum argue that they are entitled to
qualified immunity. We have already concluded that Mr. Thomas’s speech was
constitutionally protected and that it is a matter for a jury whether this speech was
the cause of his termination. The remaining question under the qualified
immunity analysis is whether Mr. Edwards and Mr. Ketchum violated “clearly
established law” by terminating Mr. Thomas. Our statement in Casey, which
involved similar circumstances, is sufficient to rebut this contention:
Finding that Ms. Casey’s right to be free from retaliatory
employment action based on her protected First Amendment
activities was potentially violated, we must still ask whether the right
Ms. Casey asserts was clearly established in law such that it put
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defendants on notice of the impropriety of their alleged retaliation.
This we have little difficulty in doing. It has long been established
law in this circuit that when a public employee speaks as a citizen on
matters of public concern to outside entities despite the absence of
any job-related reason to do so, the employer may not take retaliatory
action.
Casey, 473 F.3d at 1333-34. Accordingly, we do not affirm judgment for Mr.
Edwards and Mr. Ketchum on the basis of qualified immunity.
F. Did The Mayor Personally Participate in Mr. Thomas’s
Dismissal?
Mr. Sacchieri won summary judgment in district court on the ground that
he had not “personally participated” in the firing of Mr. Thomas. Our review of
the court’s decision on Mr. Sacchieri is de novo. Seamons v. Snow, 206 F.3d
1021, 1026 (10th Cir. 2000). For Mr. Sacchieri to be personally liable for Mr.
Thomas’s termination, we must find a “causal connection” between Mr.
Sacchieri’s actions and a violation of Mr. Thomas’s constitutional rights. See
Wulf v. Wichita, 883 F.2d 842, 864 (10th Cir. 1989). Finding none, we affirm the
district court’s summary judgment as to Mr. Sacchieri.
Mr. Thomas admits that his case is “circumstantial,” but he correctly
maintains this is no barrier to proving causation. He cites:
The history of Mayor Sacchieri violating the building rules,
Sacchieri’s request for a certification on the house in question prior
to final inspection, Edwards[’] treatment of the Mayor as his boss,
Edwards’ statement to Thomas in connection with the critical
incident that “we all have bosses”, Sacchieri’s conduct in attending
the inspection and trying to get his house passed when it was not
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compliant and the firing of Mr. Thomas on the day scheduled for
closing of the house . . . .
Aplt. Br. 35-36
But none of these facts, even viewing them in the light most favorable to
Mr. Thomas, ties Mr. Sacchieri to Mr. Thomas’s termination. They show grounds
for frustration on Mr. Sacchieri’s part, and perhaps even pressure on Mr. Edwards
to get the certificate. Nothing, however, links the decision to fire Mr. Thomas to
Mr. Sacchieri – no statement is offered as evidence of Mr. Sacchieri’s role, not
even an indirect one. Even if we assume that Mr. Edward and Mr. Ketchum fired
Mr. Thomas in order to curry favor with the Mayor, this is not sufficient to hold
the latter responsible. See, e.g., Tonkovich v. Kansas Bd. of Regents, 159 F.3d
504, 533 (10th Cir. 1998) (plaintiff must allege specific facts “showing an
agreement and concerted action” amongst defendants). Unless an official
participates personally in a constitutional violation, as by instructions or improper
training, he cannot be held responsible for the acts of his subordinates even if
those acts were committed for his benefit. The record on summary judgment
contains nothing to show that Mr. Sacchieri was a participant in the decision-
making process that led up to Mr. Thomas’s termination. As the district court
concluded, Mr. Thomas “offered no evidence that Sacchieri requested plaintiff’s
termination or that he was involved in any way in the decision to terminate
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plaintiff. In fact, the evidence shows that he was not aware that plaintiff had been
terminated until several days after the fact.”
CONCLUSION
Mr. Thomas’s speech was constitutionally protected, and the question of
whether he was fired for that speech is a matter of disputed fact. Therefore we
REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to Mr. Edwards, Mr.
Ketchum, and the City and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion. Because Mr. Sacchieri did not personally participate in the alleged
violation of Mr. Thomas’s constitutional rights, his motion for summary judgment
was properly granted and we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment as to Mr.
Sacchieri.
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