Walker v. Walthm Housing ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-1238
    JOHN J. WALKER,

    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.

    WALTHAM HOUSING AUTHORITY and EDWARD McCARTHY,
    Defendants, Appellants.

    ____________________
    No. 94-1239

    JOHN J. WALKER,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.
    WALTHAM HOUSING AUTHORITY and EDWARD McCARTHY,

    Defendants, Appellees.
    ____________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Marianne B. Bowler, U.S. Magistrate Judge] _____________________
    ____________________

    Before
    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Young,* District Judge. ______________

    ___________________

    Paul E. Stanzler with whom Elizabeth J. Maillett and Burns & _________________ _______________________ _______
    Levinson were on briefs for defendants. ________
    Philip R. Olenick with whom Paul L. Nevins was on briefs for __________________ _______________
    plaintiff.

    ____________________
    January 17, 1995
    ____________________

    ______________________

    *Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.
















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. The appellant Waltham Housing _____________

    Authority ("WHA") is a public agency responsible for

    providing low income housing in Waltham, Massachusetts. In

    1987, appellee John J. Walker had served as the WHA's

    executive director for over eleven years and was currently

    serving in this position under a two-year written contract

    due to expire on December 31, 1988. The WHA Board of

    Commissioners consisted of five members, including Chairman

    Louis D'Angio and appellant Edward McCarthy.

    In the summer of 1987, the Board began a personnel

    search to replace the WHA's retiring assistant executive

    director. At a board meeting on August 12, Walker expressed

    his dissatisfaction with the three finalists whom the Board

    was considering. The Board nevertheless selected one of the

    remaining candidates, Walter McGuire, to fill the position.

    Believing that his contract gave him the final say on

    hiring, and angered by the Board's action in selecting

    McGuire over his objection, Walker presented Chairmen D'Angio

    with a hastily scribbled letter of resignation and then left

    the meeting. The letter read:

    Mr. Louis D'Angio Chairman Waltham Housing
    Authority, I hereby resign effective 6:50 p.m.
    Aug. 12, 1987 and will file for retirement Aug. 13,
    1987.

    /s/ John J. Walker






    -2- -2-













    D'Angio passed the letter around to the other Board members,

    and the Board voted unanimously to table Walker's resignation

    for further consideration.

    Following the meeting D'Angio, at the urging of Board

    members, went to Walker's office to talk him out of

    resigning. D'Angio returned the resignation letter to

    Walker, placing it on his desk and telling him that the Board

    wanted him to take it back. Walker said nothing but (he

    later testified) put the letter in his shirt pocket,

    believing that his resignation had been rejected. The next

    day Walker came into the office and did not file papers

    applying for retirement.

    The Board scheduled a special meeting for August 17 to

    address the matter of Walker's resignation, which was still

    tabled. Three days before the meeting Walker told D'Angio

    that he wanted three matters "handled" or "cleared up": a

    modification of the assistant executive director's job

    description; a $2,000 salary adjustment for Dorothy Boyle,

    who was an assistant WHA administrator and Walker's sister-

    in-law; and Board agreement to Walker's "strong input" into

    selections for assistant executive director and two other

    positions. D'Angio asked Walker not to attend the August 17

    Board meeting but to let D'Angio present his position.

    D'Angio did not tell the Board that he had given Walker

    his resignation letter back. Instead, at the August 17



    -3- -3-













    meeting D'Angio declared that Walker would rescind his

    resignation only if the Board agreed to meet three

    conditions. The three conditions, presented as nonnegotiable

    demands by D'Angio, were the same three matters that Walker

    had told D'Angio at their August 14 meeting that he wanted

    "cleared up." The Board had no objection to the first two

    conditions, but balked at the third request--Walker's "strong

    input" into the Board's selection of the top staff positions.

    Two members of the Board, McCarthy and Joseph Pavone,

    were concerned that Walker wanted the final say on hiring for

    those positions; they asked if Walker would come before the

    Board to discuss his position on this matter. D'Angio said

    that the three conditions were a "take it or leave it"

    proposition and that Walker would not appear to discuss them.

    On McCarthy's motion, the Board then voted to accept Walker's

    resignation. D'Angio joined in the unanimous vote but then

    resigned as chairman, and McCarthy was elected to complete

    D'Angio's term. Afterwards, D'Angio discussed with Alfred

    Bergin, another Board member, the possibility of calling a

    special meeting to "straighten the whole matter out." The

    WHA's bylaws required the chairman to schedule a special

    meeting of the Board upon the request of two members.

    D'Angio believed that there were at least three Board

    members--Bergin, Pavone and himself--that could be counted on

    to vote for Walker's reinstatement at a special meeting.



    -4- -4-













    By letter dated September 3, D'Angio and Bergin

    requested that McCarthy schedule a special meeting for

    September 21 to discuss Walker's resignation. The proposed

    date was significant because it was just before Bergin's term

    on the Board was slated to expire on October 1. The letter

    recommended that Walker be invited to address the Board. On

    September 9, Walker himself sent a letter to the Board asking

    for an opportunity to speak to them about "a few

    misunderstandings" concerning his resignation.

    McCarthy told a subordinate to ask an attorney whether

    McCarthy had authority to defer the Board meeting, and the

    attorney said that McCarthy had authority to select the date

    himself although the meeting should be held at the earliest

    time convenient for all members. After getting this legal

    advice, McCarthy put off the requested meeting until October

    7, six days after Bergin's departure from the Board.

    Apparently, the attorney had no information about Bergin's

    expected departure between the two dates.

    McCarthy later testified that he had postponed the

    meeting because of conflicts with his own heavy work schedule

    in September, but also because he wanted Bergin's

    replacement, Henry Walsh, to consider the issue of Walker's

    resignation; Walsh, said McCarthy, would be living with the

    outcome of the controversy during his term on the Board.

    McCarthy spoke with Walsh about the issue of Walker's



    -5- -5-













    resignation before the special meeting, and Walsh told

    McCarthy that he wanted nothing to do with that "mess."

    Walker appeared before the Board on October 7, and

    raised the same three matters that D'Angio had set forth at

    the August 17 meeting. After hearing from Walker, who

    requested his job back, the Board voted on whether to waive

    its earlier acceptance of his resignation and to reinstate

    him as executive director. Two members--D'Angio and Pavone--

    voted for Walker's reinstatement, and one member voted

    against it. Henry Walsh, Bergin's replacement on the Board,

    abstained. Apparently breaking with Board tradition,

    McCarthy as chairman then cast a no vote to create a tie,

    which defeated the motion.

    Walker filed suit against the WHA and McCarthy on

    December 23, 1987, claiming that he had rescinded his

    resignation prior to the Board's August 17 meeting, thereby

    preventing the WHA from accepting it. As later amended, the

    complaint set forth six counts:

    Count I, brought under 42 U.S.C. 1983,
    alleged that the WHA and McCarthy violated Walker's
    due process rights by terminating him without a
    prior hearing;

    Counts II and III alleged that the WHA
    breached Walker's employment contract and its own
    personnel policies;

    Count IV alleged that McCarthy tortiously
    interfered with Walker's employment;





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    Count V alleged that McCarthy violated the
    Massachusetts Civil Rights Act, Mass. Gen. L. ch.
    12; and

    Count VI sought a declaratory judgment that,
    as a result of the preceding conduct, Walker's
    dismissal by the WHA was improper.

    Walker requested compensatory and punitive damages,

    reinstatement, back pay, attorney's fees and various other

    forms of equitable relief.

    On count I, Walker's section 1983 claim, the district

    court granted summary judgment for McCarthy and for the WHA

    "with respect to liability for monetary damages." The court

    found that McCarthy was immune from section 1983 liability

    because, given D'Angio's statements to the Board, McCarthy

    was entitled to vote to accept what he believed to be

    Walker's still outstanding resignation letter. As for the

    WHA, the court ruled that D'Angio's alleged

    misrepresentations to the Board on August 17 did not make the

    WHA liable for damages, since D'Angio lacked final

    policymaking authority to act for the WHA to alter Walker's

    employment status.

    Nevertheless, the district court ruled that Walker might _____

    still be able to obtain equitable relief under count I in the

    form of reinstatement as the WHA's executive director.

    Framing this issue for trial, the district judge wrote:

    [A]t least in the factual context of this case, if
    Walker can convince the jury that he had
    unconditionally rescinded his resignation prior to
    the August 17 Board meeting and that D'Angio


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    misrepresented that fact to the Board, then
    plaintiff may be entitled to reinstatement as
    Executive Director.

    Thereafter, the district court granted summary judgment

    in favor of McCarthy and the WHA, on counts II (breach of

    contract), III (breach of personnel policies) and V (state

    civil rights claim). On count VI (the declaratory judgment

    claim) the court dismissed "[t]hose portions . . . having to

    do with the counts that have been disposed of on summary

    judgment . . . ." The court denied summary judgment for

    McCarthy on count IV (Walker's tortious interference with

    employment claim) ruling that McCarthy enjoyed no immunity

    from intentional torts under Massachusetts law and that

    Walker had raised a triable issue of fact as to McCarthy's

    motivations in scheduling the October 7 special meeting and

    voting at that meeting to create a tie.

    This left for trial count I, limited to equitable relief

    against WHA, count IV (the tortious interference claim

    against McCarthy) and possible declaratory judgment. After

    conferring with the parties, the district judge entered a

    pretrial order. The parties agreed that the case would be

    tried, with a jury, before a magistrate judge. They also

    agreed that "the only issues to be tried," as framed by the

    order, were:

    (a) Whether Louis D'Angio misrepresented to the
    Board of the Waltham Housing Authority
    plaintiff's alleged revocation of his
    resignation and, if so,


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    (b) Whether Edward McCarthy tortiously interfered
    with plaintiff's employment as the Authority's
    executive director?

    (c) The amount of damages. Plaintiff claims for
    back pay at least to December 31, 1988,
    medical insurance, life insurance, pension
    benefits, and the use of an automobile. The
    parties agreed to stipulate the amounts of the
    separate elements of damages.

    The parties also agreed to bifurcate the trial with issue (a)

    to be tried first ("phase I"), to be followed by the trial of

    issues (b) and (c) ("phase II"), if necessary, to the same

    jury immediately after the verdict on issue (a).

    Thereafter, the defendants moved to strike Walker's jury

    trial demand on phase I, arguing that count I was now limited

    to an equitable remedy triable to the court. The magistrate

    judge denied the motion, noting that phase I of the trial

    encompassed a factual determination--whether Walker had

    withdrawn his resignation--that was common to both Walker's

    equitable claim under count I and his legal claim under count

    IV. The court said this issue should therefore be tried to

    the jury, but the court would ultimately decide whether

    equitable relief was warranted.

    Trial on phase I then proceeded. The trial evidence has

    already been summarized above in the light most favorable to

    the verdict. Hendricks & Assoc., Inc. v. Daewoo Corp., 923 _________________________ _____________

    F.2d 209, 214 (1st Cir. 1991). On November 19, 1992, the

    jury answered affirmatively each of the three questions

    submitted to it on issue (a):


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    1. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff John Walker has proven that
    he rescinded or revoked his written resignation
    prior to the August 17, 1987, board meeting?

    2. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff John Walker has proven that
    the rescission or revocation of his resignation was
    unconditional?

    3. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff has proven that Mr. D'Angio
    misrepresented to the board on August 17, 1987, the
    fact that plaintiff had unconditionally rescinded
    or revoked his resignation?

    The next day trial proceeded to phase II, to address

    issues (b) and (c) outlined in the pretrial order. On

    November 30, the jury found that McCarthy had tortiously

    interfered with Walker's employment at the WHA and awarded

    him $79,018.78 in damages. The jury also answered

    affirmatively the following five questions in phase II:

    1. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff had an employment
    relationship with the Waltham Housing Authority?

    2. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff has proven that defendant
    McCarthy knew about this relationship?

    3. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff has proven that defendant
    McCarthy's interference, in addition to being
    intentional, was malicious?

    4. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that plaintiff has proven that his loss of
    employment relationship directly resulted from
    defendant McCarthy's conduct?

    5. Do you find from a preponderance of the
    evidence that defendant McCarthy was motivated by
    actual malice, amounting to malevolence, spite or
    ill will?


    -10- -10-













    On April 5, 1993, the magistrate judge entered an order

    denying Walker reinstatement under count I on the ground that

    the equities weighed against reinstatement. The magistrate

    judge initially ordered back pay as equitable relief and

    declared that Walker's termination was improper but on

    reconsideration vacated both awards--the former on the ground

    that it was foreclosed by the district court's pretrial

    rulings, and the latter on the ground that the WHA had acted

    in good faith so that the termination could not be described

    as improper.

    Final judgment was entered on August 26, 1993, in favor

    of the WHA and McCarthy on all claims except count IV. On

    count IV judgment was entered for Walker against McCarthy in

    the amount of $79,018.78. The court denied Walker's request

    for attorney's fees under 42 U.S.C. 1988, finding that he

    was not a prevailing party under that section. Both sides

    have appealed to this court.

    1. We first address Walker's challenge to the district

    court's rulings that on count I McCarthy was entitled to

    qualified immunity under section 1983 and that under that

    section the WHA was not municipally liable for damages for

    either McCarthy's or D'Angio's conduct. We review these

    summary judgment determinations de novo, Maldonado-Denis v. ________ _______________

    Castillo-Rodriguez, 23 F.3d 576, 581 (1st Cir. 1994), but __________________

    find no error.



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    In dismissing the damage claims under count I, the

    district court held that on the undisputed facts Walker had

    submitted his resignation to the Board and thereafter had

    given the Board no reason to think that the resignation had

    been withdrawn. We agree that when McCarthy voted on August

    17 to accept the resignation, he had no reason to think that

    the Board was firing Walker or infringing upon any due

    process right that Walker might have to a prior hearing

    before being involuntarily dismissed. Feliciano-Angulo v. ________________

    Rivera-Cruz, 858 F.2d 40, 42-44 (1st Cir. 1988). ___________

    Accordingly, McCarthy had qualified immunity for his August

    17 actions. Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 815-19 ______ __________

    (1982).

    Perhaps a municipality might in rare cases be liable for

    a constitutional violation, even though the individual who

    acted for it was protected by qualified immunity. See Owen ___ ____

    v. City of Independence, 445 U.S. 622, 647 (1980). But-- _____________________

    ignoring the other requisites for municipal liability, see ___

    City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik, 485 U.S. 112 (1988)--in this _________________ __________

    case it is difficult to see how there could be a

    constitutional violation at all since a majority of the Board

    reasonably thought that they had a voluntary resignation

    before them. See Stone v. University of Maryland Medical ___ _____ _______________________________

    System, 855 F.2d 167, 172-75 (4th Cir. 1988). ______





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    Walker says that McCarthy later acted in bad faith when _____

    in October he blocked Walker's reinstatement. But nothing

    McCarthy did after August 17 casts any doubt on his belief in

    August that Walker's previously tendered resignation was

    outstanding at that time. (Indeed, there is no evidence that

    McCarthy acted in bad faith in October.) Walker's

    alternative suggestion on appeal that the WHA might be liable

    for D'Angio's misrepresentations is made in so cursory a

    fashion that we regard it as waived. Ryan v. Royal Ins. Co., ____ ______________

    916 F.2d 731, 734 (1st Cir. 1990).

    Walker next claims that the magistrate judge should have

    ordered his reinstatement after the jury found that D'Angio

    had misrepresented the status of Walker's resignation to the

    Board. The Board responds that section 1983 is a fault based

    statute and, since the Board was not at fault in accepting

    the apparently outstanding resignation, the court had no

    power to reinstate Walker. We need not resolve the legal

    question whether there could be equitable relief without

    fault, since the magistrate judge was unquestionably within

    her authority in holding that the equities did not warrant

    such relief.

    At the time that court-ordered reinstatement became an

    arguable option in late 1992, Walker's two-year contract had

    long since expired. Further, Walker himself caused much of

    the confusion, not merely by his impetuous resignation letter



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    but by failing forthrightly to withdraw his resignation

    thereafter, choosing instead to sponsor new demands as an

    apparent condition of continuing as executive director. The

    magistrate judge soundly exercised her discretion in finding

    that Walker had no equitable claim to post-contract

    reinstatement.

    2. We come now to the difficult part of the appeal,

    which is McCarthy's challenge to the verdict against him on

    count IV. McCarthy's best argument is that the evidence

    simply was not sufficient to permit a reasonable jury to find

    that McCarthy tortiously interfered with Walker's employment.

    The claim was rejected by the magistrate judge, who stressed

    that the jury is entitled to great latitude in factfinding.

    We agree with the principle but cannot, in this instance,

    agree that a rational jury could find that McCarthy engaged

    in tortious interference.

    McCarthy's first argument is that the Board lawfully

    accepted Walker's resignation on August 17 and thereafter,

    when McCarthy took his challenged actions before and at the

    special meeting on October 7, no employment contract existed

    with which he could interfere. We have a different reason

    for thinking that McCarthy could not be liable for tortiously

    interfering with an existing contract. Whatever the status ________

    of Walker's resignation, McCarthy reasonably believed that ____________________





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    the resignation was outstanding on August 17 and that it had

    been accepted, thus terminating the contract.

    Under Massachusetts law, one cannot tortiously interfere

    with a contract that one reasonably believes is not in

    existence. See Yiakas v. Savoy, 526 N.E.2d 1305, 1309 (Mass. ___ ______ _____

    App. Ct.), review denied, 529 N.E.2d 1346 (Mass. 1988) (actor ______ ______

    must have knowledge of contract and must know that he is

    interfering with its performance). Accordingly, it does not

    matter whether the Board's acceptance of the resignation was

    based on a misunderstanding or even whether (in some Platonic

    sense) the employment contract endured thereafter. McCarthy

    cannot be liable for tortious interference with contract

    rights that he had every reason to believe Walker had himself

    abandoned.

    The question whether the resignation was rejected by the

    return of the letter might be of some importance if Walker

    were appealing on his original contract claim, but he has

    chosen not to do so. Even then it would be hard to resist

    the conclusion that if the resignation was rejected by the

    return of the letter, it was effectively renewed by allowing

    D'Angio to assert nonnegotiable conditions for Walker's

    return. It is even easier to conclude that McCarthy had no

    reason to believe that the resignation had been withdrawn,

    and that is sufficient to protect his vote to accept it.





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    Walker, however, has a second string to his bow. In his

    complaint, count IV focused on McCarthy's actions "in

    preventing the Board . . . from rescinding" the prior

    asserted termination of Walker. Under Massachusetts law,

    this kind of interference with prospective employment

    relations is, like interference with existing employment,

    tortious if done out of actual malice or through improper

    means.1 The magistrate judge so instructed the jury. There

    is no showing that McCarthy's means were unlawful or

    intrinsically unethical, so the question to be answered is

    whether a reasonable jury could find that McCarthy acted with

    actual malice.

    The case for malice is extraordinarily thin. McCarthy

    testified that he postponed the special meeting because it

    was a busy period in his own regular job and because he

    thought that it was right for Walsh as a new Board member to

    consider a matter that would affect his own period in office.

    Neither explanation was directly impeached; and whether the

    latter reason is deemed good or bad, it is certainly a view

    that could be entertained without malice. There is also no


    ____________________

    1When an employer or supervisor is acting within the
    scope of his employment responsibilities, the hiring and
    firing decisions are privileged unless he acted with
    malevolence. Gram v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 429 N.E.2d 21, ____ _______________________
    24 (Mass. 1981). When a third-party contract is involved,
    liability is tested differently. Compare King v. Driscoll, _______ ____ ________
    638 N.E.2d 488, 494-95 (Mass. 1994) with Draghetti v. ____ _________
    Chmielewski, 626 N.E.2d 862, 870 n.14 (Mass. 1994). ___________

    -16- -16-













    evidence that McCarthy's discussions with the new Board

    member were improper or dishonest.

    Nor do we think weight can be placed on McCarthy's

    failure to tell the lawyer about the prospective change in

    membership. McCarthy was assertedly concerned that he might

    be under a legal obligation to call the meeting on the night

    designated in the request for the special meeting and asked

    someone else to check with the lawyer. There is no evidence

    that McCarthy thought that the change in Board membership was

    pertinent to this legal question and deliberately had this

    information withheld from the lawyer.

    Finally, McCarthy's casting of the tie vote, allegedly

    against tradition for the WHA chairman, proves nothing about

    malice. There is no claim that McCarthy broke any law or

    rule. Based on Walker's behavior--the impromptu resignation,

    the failure to come to the August 17 meeting, the apparently

    non-negotiable demands--there was ample reason for McCarthy

    to think that it would be in the best interest of the WHA if

    someone else were to assume the role of executive director.

    At trial Walker offered evidence that he had complained

    to McCarthy that the latter's brother-in-law, also an

    employee of the WHA, had been performing insufficient work,

    and that McCarthy disagreed. Nothing in the fairly tame

    evidence about this episode suggested that McCarthy had

    become angry, threatened Walker, vowed revenge, or done



    -17- -17-













    anything else that would suggest that he harbored a

    continuing desire to harm Walker.

    What we have is a perfectly plausible story from

    McCarthy, uncontradicted in either substance or detail, that

    is consistent in every respect with permissible motives. The

    jury might have thought it unfair that Walker, an eleven-year

    veteran of WHA, forfeit his job because of one impulsive

    step; it may have thought that McCarthy was uncharitable and

    opportunistic. But it is impossible to understand how a

    rational jury could infer malice by a preponderance of the

    evidence when there is no evidence of malice at all.

    Of course, the jury may simply have disbelieved

    McCarthy's statement of his reasons; factfinders have a great

    deal of latitude in appraising witnesses, cf. D'Orsay Equip. ___ ______________

    Co. v. United States Rubber Co., 302 F.2d 777, 779-80 (1st ___ _________________________

    Cir. 1962), although one might think that there are some

    limits where the story is plausible, consistent and wholly

    uncontradicted. Cf. Frank Music Corp. v. Metro-Goldwyn- ___ ___________________ ______________

    Mayer, Inc., 772 F.2d 505, 514 n.8 (9th Cir. 1985). But even ___________

    if McCarthy were not credited in one particular or another,

    Walker's burden goes beyond merely setting McCarthy's

    testimony aside: the burden was upon Walker to show

    affirmatively that McCarthy acted out of malice.

    Most of the authorities say that one side cannot carry

    its affirmative burden of proof on a fact by pointing to the



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    possibility that the jury disbelieved the other side's denial

    of the fact. United States v. Zeigler, 994 F.2d 845, 848-50 _____________ _______

    (D.C. Cir. 1993); Jannigan v. Taylor, 344 F.2d 781, 784-85 ________ ______

    (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 382 U.S. 879 (1965); Dyer v. _____________ ____

    MacDougall, 201 F.2d 265, 268-69 (2d Cir. 1952) (Hand, J.). __________

    But others have disagreed, see United States v. Zafiro, 945 ___ ______________ ______

    F.2d 881, 888 (7th Cir. 1991), aff'd on other grounds, 113 S. ______________________

    Ct. 933 (1993), and the strength of such an inference could

    vary greatly depending on context, including other evidence

    and the logical force of the inference. Here, there is no

    "other evidence" of malice and malice is not the only logical

    alternative to believing in full McCarthy's account of his

    own motives in postponing the meeting.

    The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has stressed

    that in tortious interference cases involving employment and

    discharge, malice means "actual malice" and "[a]ny reasonable

    inference of malice must . . . be based on probabilities

    rather than possibilities." Gram, 429 N.E.2d at 24-25. The ____

    court continued: "An inference of the probability of malice,

    action motivated by spite, does not reasonably follow from a

    showing, in these circumstances, only of negligence or of

    sloppy and unfair business practices." Id. at 25. This is ___

    virtually an epitaph on Walker's claim.

    The remaining claims and arguments by both sides are

    mooted by our decision. The appellants' numerous other



    -19- -19-













    attacks on Walker's monetary judgment need not be considered.

    Likewise, Walker's claim that attorney's fees and costs

    should have been granted him under Rule 54(d) and 42 U.S.C.

    1988 fails since he has obtained no relief at all. The

    judgment in favor of WHA and McCarthy on all claims other

    than count IV is affirmed; the judgment in favor of Walker ________

    and against McCarthy on count IV is reversed. No costs in ________

    this court are awarded to either side.

    It is so ordered. ________________



































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