Massey, Michael v. Johnson, Mable ( 2006 )


Menu:
  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 05-2975
    MICHAEL MASSEY and
    MICKEY MILLS,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    MABLE JOHNSON, Dean of
    Vincennes University Aircraft
    Technology Center, in her individual
    and official capacities, JAMES MESSMER,
    Vice President of Vincennes University,
    in his individual and official capacities, and
    GAZELLA SUMMITT, Human Relations
    Director of Vincennes University,
    in her individual and official capacities,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
    No. 04 C 679—Larry J. McKinney, Chief Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED APRIL 12, 2006—DECIDED AUGUST 10, 2006
    ____________
    Before POSNER, RIPPLE and MANION, Circuit Judges.
    RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. Michael Massey and Mickey Mills,
    while employed at the Vincennes University Aircraft
    2                                              No. 05-2975
    Technology Center, wrote letters to the Indiana legislature
    complaining about their superiors. In the aftermath of the
    letters, both Mr. Massey and Ms. Mills were discharged.
    They then brought this federal civil rights action, see 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , against three University administrators,
    alleging that they were harassed and terminated in re-
    taliation for exercising their First Amendment rights. The
    defendants moved for and were awarded summary judg-
    ment. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we
    affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I
    BACKGROUND
    A. Facts
    The Aircraft Technology Center (the “ATC”), a branch
    of Indiana’s Vincennes University, opened in the mid-1990s
    to offer degrees in aviation science, technology and mainte-
    nance. Built adjacent to the Indianapolis International
    Airport, the campus consists of hangar-style classrooms
    in which students receive hands-on training in airplane
    repair. The defendants in this action were, at all times
    relevant to this appeal, ATC and Vincennes University
    administrators. Mable Johnson served as Dean of the ATC,
    commencing her tenure in 2000. Working out of an office
    at the ATC campus, she was in charge of the ATC faculty
    and operations staff. The other two defendants, Gazella
    Summitt and James Messmer, are administrators at the
    Vincennes University main campus, located approximately
    100 miles from the ATC in Vincennes, Indiana. Ms. Summitt
    is the Human Relations Director of Vincennes University;
    Mr. Messmer is the University’s Vice President of Statewide
    Services.
    No. 05-2975                                                  3
    Until he was terminated, the plaintiff Michael Massey was
    employed by the ATC as a janitor. He was hired in 2000 by
    the custodian supervisor Mike Hare, with the approval of
    Dean Johnson. By most accounts, Mr. Massey was a depend-
    able janitor; he worked the night shift, rarely took sick leave
    and received positive performance evaluations from his
    superiors. The other plaintiff in this action, Mickey Mills,
    worked for the ATC as an evening shift librarian until her
    termination.
    The events of this controversy began in February 2002,
    when Mr. Massey authored a letter detailing a number
    of very personal and serious accusations against Dean
    Johnson. Among the letter’s allegations were charges that
    Dean Johnson had hired her boyfriend and her daughter for
    positions within the ATC, in violation of the University’s
    anti-nepotism policy. In addition, the letter alleged that
    Dean Johnson had mistreated a disabled employee and had
    obtained her graduate degree through academic fraud. The
    letter also noted that internal grievances to Ms. Summitt, the
    University’s human relations director, had gone ignored.
    Mr. Massey mailed this letter to the president of Vincennes
    University and to each member of the Indiana legislature.
    Upon learning of the letter, Mr. Messmer and Ms.
    Summitt investigated Mr. Massey’s complaints and con-
    cluded that they were unfounded; they reported these
    findings to the university president. Dean Johnson, under-
    standably upset by Mr. Massey’s accusations, instructed Mr.
    Massey’s supervisor to fire him, but the supervisor, Mike
    Hare, refused. Shortly thereafter, Steve LaRoche, a custodian
    supervisor at the main campus, became Mr. Massey’s
    official supervisor. Hare, who worked at the ATC full-time,
    evidently remained Mr. Massey’s direct supervisor, but he
    took frequent telephone instructions from LaRoche concern-
    4                                                  No. 05-2975
    ing day-to-day custodial operations at the ATC. Ultimately,
    two months after Mr. Massey sent his letter, he was fired.
    According to LaRoche, who made the decision, he dis-
    charged Mr. Massey for attempting to justify a period of sick
    leave by using what appeared to be falsified doctors’ notes.
    When LaRoche attempted to discuss these notes with Mr.
    Massey, LaRoche was unable to locate him, and he con-
    cluded that Mr. Massey was avoiding him.
    After his termination, Mr. Massey remained in contact
    with Mickey Mills, the other plaintiff in this action.
    Prompted by her discussions with Mr. Massey, Ms. Mills
    authored a letter of her own supporting Mr. Massey’s
    previous accusations against Dean Johnson and reporting
    that, in the aftermath of the Massey letter, university
    officials conducted a sham investigation to cover up the
    wrongdoing. She mailed this and similar letters to Indiana
    legislators and to the Federal Aviation Administration; her
    last letter was sent on September 22, 2003. Ms. Mills also
    showed one of her letters to her supervisor, who in turn
    showed it to Dean Johnson. Once Dean Johnson learned
    of the letter, Ms. Mills allegedly was ostracized by her
    fellow employees and began to receive an unprecedented
    stream of reprimands, assignment changes and negative
    evaluations. In August 2003, her full-time evening shift
    position was cut to part-time when the ATC’s library
    changed its closing time from midnight to 9 p.m. Finally,
    in November 2003, and approximately two months after the
    date of her last letter, Ms. Mills was terminated. As its
    reason for discharging her, the ATC cited reduced enroll-
    ment and elimination of the school’s evening program.
    Notably, Dean Johnson, the accused wrongdoer in the
    plaintiffs’ letters, also had her position eliminated as a result
    of these factors.
    No. 05-2975                                                   5
    B. District Court Proceedings
    On April 16, 2004, Mr. Massey and Ms. Mills joined in
    filing a one-count complaint under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , alleging
    that they were harassed and terminated in retaliation for
    exercising their First Amendment right to free speech. After
    almost one year of discovery, Dean Johnson, Mr. Messmer
    and Ms. Summitt moved for summary judgment. In decid-
    ing the defendants’ motion, the district court first addressed
    the allegations related to Mr. Massey’s termination. At the
    outset, the court noted that the decision to fire Mr. Massey
    was made directly by Steve LaRoche, a supervisor operating
    within a chain of command that did not include Dean
    Johnson. Therefore, in the court’s view, even if there were
    direct evidence of retaliatory animus on the part of Dean
    Johnson, this evidence could not be attributed to LaRoche,
    the true decision maker involved in Mr. Massey’s termina-
    tion. As for circumstantial proof, the court concluded that
    Mr. Massey had not presented anything other than his sub-
    jective belief that LaRoche’s reason for firing him—the fake
    doctor’s notes—was pretext. According to the court, the
    undisputed evidence showed that the notes were indeed
    suspicious and that Mr. Massey never had made himself
    available to provide LaRoche with an explanation. This,
    in the court’s view, was a valid reason for firing Mr. Massey,
    and one that had not been rebutted as false.
    Similarly, the court determined that Ms. Mills’ evidence
    did not suggest directly that the individuals involved in her
    termination were motivated by retaliation. Most notably, the
    court discounted evidence of a meeting in which the
    defendant, Mr. Messmer, became visibly angry at Ms. Mills
    for writing her letters. According to the court, proof that Mr.
    Messmer was angered by Ms. Mills’ protected speech was
    insufficient to prove retaliation; “ ’rather, the plaintiff must
    6                                                   No. 05-2975
    demonstrate that the challenged action would not have
    occurred but for his constitutionally protected conduct.’ ”
    R.66 at 13 (quoting Love v. City of Chicago Bd. Educ., 
    241 F.3d 564
    , 569 (7th Cir. 2001)). Alternatively, the court held that,
    even if retaliation was a partially motivating factor, the
    defendants had offered a legitimate and persuasive justifica-
    tion for firing Ms. Mills—reduced enrollment and budget
    cuts—that Ms. Mills had not rebutted as pretext.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    We review the district court’s summary judgment rul-
    ing de novo, resolving facts, and inferences reasonably
    drawn from those facts, in the light most favorable to the
    non-moving party. Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical
    Servs., Inc., 
    504 U.S. 451
    , 456 (1992). Summary judgment is
    appropriate when the record shows “that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(c); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322 (1986).
    When the non-moving party fails to establish “the existence
    of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which
    that party will bear the burden of proof at trial,” Rule 56(c)
    mandates entry of summary judgment against that party
    because “a complete failure of proof concerning an essential
    element of the nonmoving party’s case necessarily renders
    all other facts immaterial.” Celotex, 
    477 U.S. at 322-23
    .
    Government retaliation tends to chill an individual’s
    exercise of his First Amendment rights, and this principle
    applies with equal force in the context of public-sector
    employment. See Vargas-Harrison v. Racine Unified Sch. Dist.,
    
    272 F.3d 964
    , 970 (7th Cir. 2001) (“[A] public employee
    No. 05-2975                                                        7
    does not shed his First Amendment rights at the steps of the
    government building.”). Public employers, as a general rule,
    may not respond to their employees’ protected activity with
    actions aimed to deter that activity. See Garcetti v. Ceballos,
    
    126 S. Ct. 1951
    , 1957 (2006); Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Umbehr,
    
    518 U.S. 668
    , 674-75 (1996); McGreal v. Ostrov, 
    368 F.3d 657
    ,
    683 (7th Cir. 2004). To make out a prima facie case of first
    amendment retaliation, a public employee must present
    evidence that: (1) his speech was constitutionally protected,
    (2) he has suffered a deprivation likely to deter free speech,
    and (3) his speech was at least a motivating factor in the
    employer’s action. See Spiegla v. Hull, 
    371 F.3d 928
    , 935, 940-
    41 (7th Cir. 2004) (citing Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. Educ.
    v. Doyle, 
    429 U.S. 274
     (1977)).
    With respect to the plaintiffs’ discharges, the first two
    elements of their retaliation claims are undisputed; the
    letters written by Mr. Massey and Ms. Mills consist of
    speech protected by the First Amendment1 and, because
    both plaintiffs were terminated, it is undisputed that each
    suffered a deprivation likely to deter the exercise of free
    expression. The controversy in this case surrounds the third
    element—whether, and to what degree, the plaintiffs’ letters
    motivated the defendants’ decisions to fire them.
    As articulated by our case law, this element amounts to a
    causation inquiry. See, e.g., Roger Whitmore’s Auto. Servs., Inc.
    v. Lake County, Illinois, 
    424 F.3d 659
    , 669-70 (7th Cir. 2005).
    1
    That is to say, the defendants have conceded that the speech
    touched on matters of public concern, and they do not argue that
    any University interest outweighs the plaintiffs’ interest in
    speaking. See Pickering v. Bd. of Educ. of Township High Sch. Dist.
    205, Will County, Ill., 
    391 U.S. 563
    , 568 (1968); Gustafson v. Jones,
    
    290 F.3d 895
    , 909 (7th Cir. 2002).
    8                                                     No. 05-2975
    To establish a causal link between the protected expression
    and a subsequent action by the employer, the plaintiff must
    show that the protected conduct was a substantial or
    motivating factor in the employer’s decision. See Mt. Healthy
    City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ., 
    429 U.S. at 287
    . As we recently
    clarified, “[a] motivating factor does not amount to a but-for
    factor or to the only factor, but is rather a factor that moti-
    vated the defendant’s actions.” Spiegla, 
    371 F.3d at 942
    .
    Moreover, as in other contexts where motivation is at issue,
    the plaintiffs are not required to come forward with direct
    evidence or “the so-called smoking gun.” Lewis v. City of
    Boston, 
    321 F.3d 207
    , 219 (1st Cir. 2003). Circumstantial
    proof, such as the timing of events or the disparate treat-
    ment of similar individuals, may be sufficient to establish
    the defendant’s retaliatory motive. See Culver v. Gorman &
    Co., 
    416 F.3d 540
    , 545-46 (7th Cir. 2005).
    If the plaintiffs make this threshold showing, the bur-
    den then shifts to the defendants to produce evidence that
    they would have fired the plaintiffs even in absence of
    their letter-writing. See Spiegla, 
    371 F.3d at 943
    . In other
    words, the defendants may show that retaliation was not the
    but-for cause for the firing.2 Finally, assuming the defen
    2
    The district court appears incorrectly to have thought that but-
    for causation was an element of the plaintiffs’ affirmative burden
    of production. As support for this proposition, the court relied on
    Love v. City of Chicago Board of Education, 
    241 F.3d 564
    , 569 (7th
    Cir. 2001), in which we said, “[the] plaintiff must demonstrate
    that the challenged action would not have occurred but for his
    constitutionally protected conduct.” In Spiegla v. Hull, 
    371 F.3d 928
    , 941-42 (7th Cir. 2004), however, we expressly disavowed this
    language and held instead that the burden rests on the defendant
    to show lack of but-for causation once the plaintiff has shown
    (continued...)
    No. 05-2975                                                  9
    dants carry that burden, the plaintiffs then must persuade
    a fact-finder that the defendants’ proffered reasons were
    pretextual and that retaliatory animus was the real reason
    that the defendants fired them.
    As the Supreme Court recently clarified, a plaintiff’s
    prima facie case, supplemented by evidence of pretext, often
    is adequate to sustain a finding of liability for unlawful
    retaliation. See Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 
    530 U.S. 133
    , 148 (2000). In the summary judgment context, this
    means that, to rebut the defendants’ proffered explanations
    for their terminations, Mr. Massey and Ms. Mills must
    produce evidence upon which a rational finder of fact could
    infer that these explanations were lies. See Vukadinovich v.
    Bd. Sch. Trs. N. Newton Sch. Corp., 
    278 F.3d 693
    , 699 (7th Cir.
    2002).
    A.
    We shall begin, as the district court did, with Mr.
    Massey’s claim of unlawful retaliation. Mr. Massey relies on
    what he views as direct evidence of a causal link between
    his letter-writing and subsequent termination. Direct
    evidence, in cases where a defendant’s motivation is at
    issue, is rarely present because it “essentially requires
    an admission by the decision maker that his actions
    were based on the prohibited animus.” Rogers v. City of
    Chicago, 
    320 F.3d 748
    , 753 (7th Cir. 2003) (internal quota-
    tion marks omitted). Nevertheless, Mr. Massey asserts
    that Dean Johnson made such an admission after learning
    that she was the subject of Mr. Massey’s letter. Indeed,
    2
    (...continued)
    that retaliation was at least a motivating factor.
    10                                              No. 05-2975
    according to the deposition of Mr. Massey’s supervisor,
    Dean Johnson gave an instruction to fire Mr. Massey shortly
    after she learned of the letter. However, the supervisor,
    Mike Hare, refused to execute the instruction. The eventual
    decision to fire Mr. Massey was made instead by LaRoche,
    a superior of both Hare and Mr. Massey, who in turn
    reported to the Director of Physical Plant and to the Univer-
    sity Vice President. Importantly, Dean Johnson was outside
    of this chain of command and therefore had no authority to
    influence directly LaRoche’s decision. Nor, despite ample
    discovery, has Mr. Massey presented evidence that Dean
    Johnson influenced LaRoche’s decision indirectly; LaRoche’s
    deposition testimony was that the decision was his alone. To
    constitute direct evidence of improper animus, a statement
    must relate to the motivation of the decision maker re-
    sponsible for the contested decision, or to the motivation of
    those who provide input in the decision. See Ezell v. Potter,
    
    400 F.3d 1041
    , 1051 (7th Cir. 2005). As far as this record
    indicates, Dean Johnson was neither.
    In the alternative, Mr. Massey submits that we ought to
    impute Dean Johnson’s retaliatory motive to the two other
    defendants in this action, who, unlike Dean Johnson, in fact
    possessed the authority to discharge Mr. Massey. He frames
    his argument as an evidentiary one, based on the exception
    to the hearsay definition for the admissions of a party-
    opponent, see Fed. R. Evid. 804(d)(2)(D). According to Mr.
    Massey, the statements of Dean Johnson are admissible
    against Mr. Messmer and Ms. Summitt as the admissions of
    an agent, speaking within the scope of her employment.
    This argument misses the mark. As an initial matter, we do
    not believe that Dean Johnson’s statements ought to be
    characterized as hearsay. Quite obviously, the truth of Dean
    Johnson’s statement—that Hare should fire Mr. Massey—is
    irrelevant; what matters is that Dean Johnson gave the
    No. 05-2975                                                 11
    instruction. Because the statement is not being offered for its
    truth, it is not hearsay and needs no exception to be admissi-
    ble.
    Yet, Dean Johnson’s admission still cannot be con-
    sidered direct evidence of retaliation. Looking beyond
    the evidentiary point, Mr. Massey’s true contention seems to
    be that Dean Johnson’s statement is evidence of a retaliatory
    attitude existing generally among university officials in the
    wake of his letter-writing. Put simply, he seems to be
    saying, “Dean Johnson wanted me fired, and therefore so
    did her superiors.” We cannot accept this argument either.
    Little in the record suggests that the other two defendants,
    Ms. Summitt and Mr. Messmer, were angered by Mr.
    Massey’s letter, especially to the point of wanting him
    discharged. Moreover, even if these other defendants did
    want Mr. Massey terminated, LaRoche presented unrefuted
    deposition testimony that he alone made the decision to fire
    Mr. Massey. See R.49, Ex.7 at 157-58. Mr. Massey has not
    satisfied even his initial burden of producing evidence that
    links his termination to his protected speech.
    Even assuming, arguendo, that Mr. Massey had satisfied
    this threshold burden, no rational juror could find that
    LaRoche’s reason for firing him was false. The record
    indicates that, before his termination, Mr. Massey accounted
    for several days of sick leave by submitting two “doctors’
    notes,” written on prescription pads, advising that Mr.
    Massey should stay home from work. LaRoche reviewed
    these notes and checked them against records at the care
    facilities from which they were ostensibly issued. These care
    facilities told LaRoche that the signature appearing on the
    notes did not belong to any of their treating physicians, that
    notes such as these are not written on prescription pads, and
    that, in any event, the particular notes submitted by Mr.
    12                                               No. 05-2975
    Massey were on outdated prescription forms that the
    facilities no longer used. On this information, LaRoche
    suspected that the notes had been falsified and attempted to
    discuss the matter with Mr. Massey. Mr. Massey, however,
    did not make himself available, sending only an email that
    stated: “The doctor’s slip was as good as gold.” R.49, Ex.8 at
    187. In his appeal to this court, Mr. Massey offers a variety
    of explanations to excuse the suspicious doctors’ notes.
    Critically, however, he makes no claim that LaRoche ever
    was made aware of these explanations. Mr. Massey’s post
    hoc explanations for his conduct therefore do nothing to
    undermine the sincerity of LaRoche’s reasons for firing him.
    Summary judgment with respect to Mr. Massey’s claim was
    appropriate.
    B.
    The direct evidence presented by Ms. Mills fares slightly
    better in linking her termination to an improper motive.
    At her deposition, she described a meeting with Mr.
    Messmer, the University vice president, in which he had
    become visibly angry at Ms. Mills for her accusatory letters.
    Mr. Messmer’s anger was understandable given that, unlike
    the Massey letter, Ms. Mills’ letter had targeted
    Mr. Messmer himself, along with Dean Johnson and the
    human relations director, Ms. Summitt. This evidence of Mr.
    Messmer’s understandable displeasure at being the subject
    of Ms. Mills’ protected speech at least raises the inference
    that retaliation may have been a motivating factor in her
    eventual termination. Ms. Mills then had shifted the burden
    to the defendants to offer undisputed evidence that she
    would have been fired even if she had not written the
    letters.
    No. 05-2975                                                   13
    As a means of satisfying this burden, the defendants
    offered a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for firing Ms.
    Mills: the University terminated her position, along with the
    positions of numerous other employees, because economic
    considerations demanded that the ATC’s staff
    be downsized. By way of background, the ATC opened
    originally as a part of an incentive package put together
    by the State of Indiana to attract United Airlines to the
    Indianapolis Airport; it was anticipated that United Airlines
    would hire ATC graduates as airplane mechanics. However,
    due to its financial difficulties, United Airlines never met
    these expectations. As a result, average student enrollment
    at the ATC declined by more than one half between Fall
    2001 and Fall 2003 when Ms. Mills was terminated. Over the
    same period and continuing until early 2005, the number of
    full-time employees at ATC was cut by a similar percentage.
    In addition, the ATC faced a budget deficit of over $500,000
    for the fiscal year in which Ms. Mills was discharged.
    Although the persuasiveness of an employer’s non-
    retaliatory explanation ordinarily is “for the finder of fact to
    assess,” summary judgment should be granted when,
    in light of the defendant’s unrebutted evidence, “the
    court can say without reservation that a reasonable finder of
    fact would be compelled to credit the employer’s case
    on this point.” Venters v. City of Delphi, 
    123 F.3d 956
    , 973 (7th
    Cir. 1997). Here, Ms. Mills simply has not come forward
    with evidence that the defendants were lying when they
    cited economic constraints and downsizing as the reasons
    for her termination. In an attempt to show pretext, she
    invites our attention to a negative performance evaluation
    that was drafted by Dean Johnson for Ms. Mills shortly
    before she was terminated. An unfairly drafted performance
    evaluation, such as this, certainly could strengthen the
    inference of improper motive. However, in this case, the
    14                                                 No. 05-2975
    draft evaluation was handled appropriately by university
    officials. The record shows that Dean Johnson first submit-
    ted the draft evaluation to Ms. Summitt for her approval.
    Ms. Summitt then declined to issue the evaluation as written
    because, in her view, Dean Johnson’s criticisms were
    unfounded. This sequence, although cited by Ms. Mills as
    evidence of pretext, actually gives more legitimacy to the
    University’s stated reasons for terminating Ms. Mills.
    Instead of being out to get her for writing the letters, the
    actual decision makers, Ms. Summitt and Mr. Messmer,
    seemed unaffected by bias in their handling of Ms. Mills’
    performance evaluation.
    At bottom, the evidence of an unfairly drafted evalua-
    tion is simply a reflection of the overall theme that
    emerges from the factual material in this case—a theme of
    prolonged bad blood between Dean Johnson and the
    plaintiffs, originating in the plaintiffs’ workplace difficulties
    with Dean Johnson’s daughter. Mr. Massey’s original letter,
    accusing Dean Johnson of nepotism, charged that Dean
    Johnson had hired her daughter in a position at the ATC for
    which the two plaintiffs did not believe she was qualified.
    Enduring workplace tension ensued, and, as a consequence,
    Dean Johnson may have been out to get the plaintiffs for
    their letter-writing. However, that fact alone cannot sustain
    Ms. Mills’ retaliation charge. The fatal flaw of her case is
    that Dean Johnson did not have authority over her employ-
    ment and did not influence the individuals who did.
    Ultimately, although Ms. Mills’ retaliatory termination
    claim goes slightly further than Mr. Massey’s, she still has
    not presented evidence on which a rational juror could
    question the sincerity of the individuals who actually made
    the decision to terminate her.
    No. 05-2975                                                     15
    C.
    Finally, Ms. Mills contends that, before being termi-
    nated, she was harassed by the defendants in retaliation
    for her letter-writing campaign. In the first amendment
    context, harassment, just as much as a formal discharge,
    may be actionable if it is designed to deter a public em-
    ployee’s free speech. See Power v. Summers, 
    226 F.3d 815
    , 820
    (7th Cir. 2000). Additionally, to give rise to liability, the
    retaliatory harassment need not be extreme. Although
    isolated criticisms may not suffice, see Mosely v. Bd. Educ. of
    City of Chicago, 
    434 F.3d 527
    , 534 (7th Cir. 2006), we have
    emphasized that harassment of a public employee vio-
    lates the First Amendment “unless the harassment is so
    trivial that a person of ordinary firmness would not be
    deterred from . . . expressing those beliefs.” Pieczynski v.
    Duffy, 
    875 F.2d 1331
    , 1333 (7th Cir. 1989). For example, in
    Bart v. Telford, 
    677 F.2d 622
    , 625 (7th Cir. 1982), we held that
    a “campaign of petty harassments” that included repri-
    mands and ridicule could be enough to deter the exercise of
    free speech.3 See also DeGuiseppe v. Vill. of Bellwood, 
    68 F.3d 187
    , 192 (7th Cir. 1995) (noting that “a campaign of petty
    3
    In Bart v. Telford, 
    677 F.2d 622
     (7th Cir. 1982), a city employee
    took a temporary leave of absence to run for mayor. When she
    returned to the job, she was subjected to a series of petty harass-
    ments as a result of this political activity. In one representative
    instance, she was held “up to ridicule for bringing a birthday
    cake to the office on the occasion of the birthday of another
    employee although the practice was common and was especially
    favored.” 
    Id. at 625
    . Reversing the district court’s 12(b)(6)
    dismissal, we held that a campaign of harassment “though trivial
    in detail may have been substantial in gross,” and the question of
    whether in that case it was enough to deter the exercise of free
    speech remained an issue of fact for the jury to decide. 
    Id.
    16                                            No. 05-2975
    harassment” that includes “minor forms of retaliation” and
    “false accusations” may be actionable under the First
    Amendment).
    The district court acknowledged this relatively low
    threshold for actionable harassment but nevertheless
    determined that Ms. Mills’ accusations of harassment
    were so trivial that no rational jury could find that they
    would deter free expression. We believe that the district
    court accurately assessed the situation. Ms. Mills claims
    that, after her letter-writing began, she was told that
    she could no longer bring water into the computer area
    of the library. Ms. Mills does not link this accusation to
    any particular defendant and provides no record sup-
    port for the assertion that she was singled out by the no-
    beverage rule. Ms. Mills also alleges that her supervisor
    assigned her additional tasks, told her to increase her
    productivity and, on one occasion, reprimanded her for
    failing to order certain supplies. Yet, these instances of
    “harassment,” even if sufficient to deter free expression,
    were at the hands of Ms. Mills’ immediate supervisor,
    who was not criticized in her letters and had no reason to
    retaliate against her. On this record, we believe that no
    rational jury could find that this sequence of events
    amounted to a campaign of retaliation designed to deter Ms.
    Mills’ free speech.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district
    court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    No. 05-2975                                            17
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    _____________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—8-10-06
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 05-2975

Judges: Posner, Ripple, Manion

Filed Date: 8/10/2006

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (23)

Board of Comm'rs, Wabaunsee Cty. v. Umbehr ( 1996 )

Jennifer Venters v. City of Delphi and Larry Ives ( 1997 )

Brian Vukadinovich v. Board of School Trustees of North ... ( 2002 )

Rod Gustafson and Javier Cornejo v. Arthur Jones and Philip ... ( 2002 )

Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc. ( 2000 )

Garcetti v. Ceballos ( 2006 )

Lewis v. City Of Boston ( 2003 )

vashti-love-dr-claudine-moore-and-willie-edwards-v-city-of-chicago ( 2001 )

Officer James T. McGreal v. Eric Ostrov, Doctor, Village of ... ( 2004 )

Melody J. Culver v. Gorman & Company ( 2005 )

Lillian L. Mosely v. Board of Education of the City of ... ( 2006 )

Douglas Power v. Phillip M. Summers ( 2000 )

nancy-spiegla-v-major-eddie-hull-individually-as-an-employee-of-westville ( 2004 )

Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, Administratrix of the Estate of ... ( 1986 )

Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Services, Inc. ( 1992 )

Mary A. Bart v. William C. Telford ( 1982 )

Stephen Ezell v. John E. Potter, Postmaster General ( 2005 )

Patricia Rogers v. City of Chicago, an Illinois Municipal ... ( 2003 )

roger-whitmores-automotive-services-inc-and-roger-whitmore-v-lake ( 2005 )

Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle ( 1977 )

View All Authorities »