White v. Busboom , 297 Neb. 717 ( 2017 )


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    11/17/2017 01:11 AM CST
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    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
    297 Nebraska R eports
    WHITE v. BUSBOOM
    Cite as 
    297 Neb. 717
    William White, appellee and cross-appellant,
    v. Scott Busboom, appellant
    and cross-appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed September 15, 2017.   No. S-16-377.
    1.	 Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will
    affirm a lower court’s grant of summary judgment if the pleadings and
    admitted evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any material
    facts or as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from those facts
    and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    2.	 ____: ____. In reviewing a summary judgment, an appellate court views
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom the
    judgment was granted and give that party the benefit of all reasonable
    inferences deducible from the evidence.
    3.	 Judgments: Appeal and Error. An appellate court independently
    reviews questions of law decided by a lower court.
    4.	 Constitutional Law. The determination of constitutional requirements
    presents a question of law.
    5.	 Motions to Dismiss: Immunity: Appeal and Error. An appellate court
    reviews de novo whether a party is entitled to dismissal of a claim based
    on federal or state immunity, drawing all reasonable inferences for the
    nonmoving party.
    6.	 Attorney Fees: Appeal and Error. The award or denial of authorized
    attorney fees and the amount of a fee award are rulings that an appellate
    court reviews for abuse of discretion.
    7.	 Due Process. Procedural due process claims require a two-step analysis:
    (1) whether the plaintiff has asserted a life, liberty, or property interest
    that is protected by the Due Process Clause and (2) whether the plaintiff
    was deprived of that interest without sufficient process.
    8.	 Public Officers and Employees: Employment Contracts. An employ-
    ment contract with a public employer can give rise to an objectively
    reasonable expectation of continued employment.
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    WHITE v. BUSBOOM
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    297 Neb. 717
    9.	 Civil Rights: States. The elements of, and defenses to, an action
    brought under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     (2012) are defined by federal law.
    10.	 ____: ____. State courts are bound by definitive U.S. Supreme Court
    decisions or a consensus of federal court holdings on the substantive
    requirements of a claim or defense asserted under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    (2012).
    11.	 Public Officers and Employees: Immunity: Liability. The doctrine of
    qualified immunity protects government officials from liability for civil
    damages insofar as their conduct, in the context of the specific facts at
    the time, does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional
    rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
    12.	 Public Officers and Employees: Immunity. Whether an official may
    prevail in his or her qualified immunity defense depends upon the objec-
    tive reasonableness of his or her conduct as measured by reference to
    clearly established law.
    13.	 ____: ____. Qualified immunity gives government officials breathing
    room to make reasonable but mistaken judgments about open legal ques-
    tions. When properly applied, it protects all but the plainly incompetent
    or those who knowingly violate the law.
    14.	 Judgments: Immunity. A qualified immunity inquiry has two com-
    ponents: (1) whether a plaintiff has alleged a deprivation of a federal
    statutory or constitutional right and (2) whether that right was clearly
    established at the time of the alleged violation. A court has discretion to
    determine which component to address first.
    15.	 Public Officers and Employees: Due Process. Due process require-
    ments for depriving public employees of a protected property interest
    in employment must be determined under the balancing factors set
    out in Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 
    96 S. Ct. 893
    , 
    47 L. Ed. 2d 18
     (1976).
    16.	 ____: ____. A plaintiff fails to state a viable procedural due process
    claim when adequate postdeprivation state procedures were available
    but the plaintiff failed to invoke them.
    17.	 Federal Acts: Attorney Fees. In order to be eligible for attorney fees
    under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1988
    (b) (2012), a plaintiff must be a prevailing party,
    which means that the plaintiff must have obtained a judgment on the
    merits, a consent decree, or some other judicially enforceable settlement,
    which materially alters the legal relationship of the parties in a way that
    benefits the plaintiff.
    Appeal from the District Court for Johnson County:
    Daniel E. Bryan, Jr., Judge. Reversed and remanded with
    instructions.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
    297 Nebraska R eports
    WHITE v. BUSBOOM
    Cite as 
    297 Neb. 717
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, James D. Smith, and
    Jessica M. Forch for appellant.
    Abby Osborn, of Shiffermiller Law Office, P.C., L.L.O.,
    for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Wright, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy,
    K elch, and Funke, JJ.
    Funke, J.
    I. NATURE OF CASE
    The appellant, Scott Busboom, is an officer at the Tecumseh
    State Correctional Institution. The appellee, William White, is a
    former officer at the facility. White brought a civil rights action
    against the Department of Correctional Services (Department)
    and Busboom. He alleged that he was denied due process
    when he was placed on unpaid investigatory suspension with-
    out any opportunity to be heard. The district court granted
    the Department summary judgment, concluding that it was
    immune from suit under the doctrine of sovereign immunity.
    But it determined that Busboom was not entitled to qualified
    immunity in his individual capacity and that White was entitled
    to a judgment of liability against Busboom. The court con-
    cluded that Busboom had signed the letter suspending White
    while acting under the color of state law and that any reason-
    able officer in his position would have understood that White
    was entitled to a hearing before being deprived of a protected
    property interest.
    We conclude that when White was suspended without pay,
    the law did not clearly establish that a public employer
    must first provide notice and an opportunity to respond to
    allegations of misconduct to an employee with a protected
    property interest in continued employment. As a result, we
    conclude that Busboom was entitled to qualified immunity.
    Additionally, we conclude that White has failed to show that
    he was deprived of due process because he did not receive a
    posttermination hearing. Accordingly, we reverse, and remand
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    WHITE v. BUSBOOM
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    with instructions for the court to enter summary judgment for
    Busboom and dismiss White’s complaint.
    II. BACKGROUND
    1. Underlying Events
    White began working for the Department at the Tecumseh
    facility in 2008. A collective bargaining agreement (CBA) gov-
    erned the terms of his employment.
    In April 2010, White was arrested and accused of unlawful
    intrusion. On April 26, White was charged with a Class III
    misdemeanor for unlawful intrusion because the alleged victim
    was over age 18.1 The day after his arrest, White posted bail
    and called Busboom about the arrest. Busboom was a major
    at the facility, and his duties included reviewing documenta-
    tion for disciplinary actions against the uniformed officers and
    making recommendations to the deputy warden.
    Christopher Connelly, a captain at the facility, was assigned
    as the investigating officer for White’s matter. On April 13,
    2010, Connelly sent an email about White to Fred Britten, the
    warden at the Tecumseh facility, and Brian Gage, the deputy
    warden. Connelly informed them that White was charged with
    a misdemeanor offense of “Invasion of Privacy” but that the
    matter was still under investigation and that the Nebraska State
    Patrol had seized his computer. Connelly recommended White
    be suspended pending the outcome of the investigation.
    Two hours later, Britten sent an email to the Department’s
    director and other persons, including Busboom. Britten stated
    that he had discussed the matter with the deputy director and
    that a decision had been made to suspend White without pay
    pending an investigation into the circumstances of his arrest.
    The same day, Busboom signed a letter placing White on
    unpaid investigatory suspension:
    The Department . . . is placing you on investiga-
    tory suspension without pay, pending an investigation by
    1
    See 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-311.08
     (Reissue 2008).
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    outside law enforcement. The Investigatory Suspension is
    in accordance with the current [CBA] section 10.3b.
    While you are on the Investigatory Suspension, you are
    expected to be available in order for the agency to contact
    you. . . .
    [Note: Article M.15.1, if applicable, permits the
    agency to place the employee on an unpaid suspension
    when employees are charged with a criminal offense
    that is directly related to the workplace and could rea-
    sonably be expected to result in a significant disrup-
    tion of the workplace. For more details, see AR 112.06,
    Section III.B.3.b.3.]
    Busboom later stated in an affidavit that he was told to
    inform White of his unpaid suspension, that he used a form let-
    ter, and that he did not make the decision to suspend White. In
    a deposition, Busboom also said that he signed the suspension
    letter only because he was the highest ranking official at the
    facility that day.
    Section 10.3.b of the CBA, which was the cited authority in
    White’s 2010 suspension letter, provides the following:
    Investigatory Suspension or Reassignment: When the
    Employer determines that an employee must be removed
    from a current work assignment pending the completion
    of an investigation by the Employer to determine if disci-
    plinary action is warranted, the Employer may:
    a. reassign the employee . . . at their current rate of pay
    until the investigation is completed.
    b. suspend the employee from work without pay for
    alleged violations involving a report or statement sup-
    porting the allegation of gross misconduct/negligence,
    or for actions which have brought the agency into
    non-­compliance with governing state or federal laws/­
    regulations, until the investigation is completed or until
    six work days have elapsed, whichever occurs first. In all
    other instances, except those outlined above and those
    described in 10.3.c, the suspension shall be with pay. The
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    investigation may continue after the suspended employee
    returns to a paid status. If the employee is found not to
    have committed the violations alleged, the employee will
    be granted pay, benefits, leave, and service credit for the
    period of suspension.
    c. in cases where the employee has been charged in
    court with a felony, which is directly related to the work-
    place or which has the potential for significant impact
    on, or disruption of, the workplace, the Employer may
    suspend the employee from work with or without pay
    until the charges are resolved.
    ....
    When the Employer has placed an employee on inves-
    tigatory suspension, the Employer shall have thirty work
    days from the date of discovery of an infraction to ini-
    tiate disciplinary action by serving a written notice of
    allegations on the employee except when the Employer
    is awaiting the results of an outside investigation. If no
    action is taken, disciplinary action is barred for that par-
    ticular incident.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    Section 10.9 of the CBA provides that “[i]n no case will an
    employee be charged with a disciplinary violation when the
    employee behavior it is based upon occurred more than one
    year prior to the initiation of the disciplinary process and has
    been known by the direct supervisor for more than one year.”
    White’s 2010 suspension letter incorrectly referred to
    “Article M.15.1” of the CBA, which is irrelevant to this
    dispute. In its order, the court stated that the correct provi-
    sion is article M.14.1, which, in relevant part, provides the
    following:
    When a Department . . . employee has been charged with
    a criminal offense that is directly related to the work-
    place which could reasonably be expected to result in a
    significant disruption of the workplace, the . . . Director,
    in consultation with the [Department’s] Human Resources
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    Administrator, may suspend the employee without pay
    until there is a trial court disposition of the criminal
    charges. A final disposition of the pending charges is
    not necessary prior to discipline, but may be considered
    by an arbitrator or hearing officer if a grievance is filed.
    The employee reserves the right to file a grievance on the
    Agency Director’s decision to suspend.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    On December 15, 2010, White filed a grievance regard-
    ing his unpaid suspension, but an arbitrator determined that
    it was not timely filed. On December 22, an officer reported
    to Connelly, Gage, Britten, and Busboom that White had
    called the facility to report that he had been charged with a
    third degree misdemeanor and was scheduled to go to court
    in January 2011. After a human resources assistant received
    this email, he asked Gage whether to continue White’s sus-
    pension without pay or change it to suspension with pay.
    Gage responded that White’s status with the Department had
    not changed.
    Busboom testified that he never received any information
    that White had been charged with a felony offense. Busboom
    did not know of any actions that the Department took to inves-
    tigate the charge against White or whether the charge was
    related to the workplace. The Department’s only action was to
    have Connelly act as a liaison to the county attorney.
    On March 28, 2011, the county attorney dismissed the
    charge against White without prejudice. But the Department
    did not reinstate him to his position. On March 30, Gage, the
    deputy warden, signed a new letter informing White that he
    was being placed on an unpaid investigatory suspension. Gage
    advised White that the Department was placing him on an
    “investigatory suspension without pay, pending an investiga-
    tion for possible actions off the job which adversely affects
    the employee’s performance and/or the employing agency’s
    per­formance or function.” Like the 2010 suspension let-
    ter, the 2011 suspension letter cited § 10.3 of the CBA as
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    a­ uthority for the suspension but did not set out any allegations
    of misconduct.
    Busboom testified that White was placed on a new inves-
    tigatory suspension so that the Department could perform an
    internal investigation. White testified that Busboom was the
    assigned investigator. White filed a timely grievance to the
    second suspension.
    White was asked to come to the Tecumseh facility on May
    5, 2011, to speak to the assigned investigator regarding his
    suspension. White did not attend. On June 2, the Department
    sent White a letter informing him that it was considering dis-
    ciplinary action against him because he had failed to come in
    for questioning. The letter stated that he had violated three
    CBA provisions, which prohibited the following conduct: (1)
    violating or failing to comply with the CBA, state laws, execu-
    tive orders, regulations, policies, or procedures; (2) failing or
    refusing to comply with a lawful order or proper assignment;
    and (3) acts or conduct that adversely affect the employee’s or
    employer’s performance. The only factual allegation was that
    White had failed to comply with the directive to meet with the
    assigned investigator. The letter stated that the Department’s
    charges would be heard on June 14.
    On June 14, 2011, a predisciplinary hearing was held with-
    out White’s presence. White stated in an affidavit that he did
    not appear because he believed his efforts would be futile
    based on the Department’s previous actions against him. On
    July 21, Britten wrote White that his employment was ter-
    minated as of that date because he failed to comply with the
    directive to meet with the investigator at the facility.
    On August 26, 2011, an administrator with the state’s
    employee relations division set aside White’s second suspen-
    sion because the Department had violated § 10.3 of the CBA
    in ordering it. It determined that the first suspension ended on
    March 28, 2011, and ordered the Department to pay White his
    wages and benefits from March 28, 2011, to his discharge date.
    The Department did not appeal that decision.
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    2. Procedural History
    In his amended complaint, White named the State “through
    the NEBRASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, and
    SCOTT BUSBOOM, Individually and in his official capacity.”
    White alleged that he had a liberty interest in his good name
    and a property interest in his employment, which was taken
    from him without due process. He alleged that the Department
    and Busboom had violated his due process rights by termi-
    nating his employment and depriving him of an opportunity
    to work “based on the ruse of an investigation which never
    occurred.” He alleged that in violation of his due process
    rights, he was denied any opportunity to be heard for over 1
    year, causing him to suffer lost wages, past and future; emo-
    tional distress and humiliation; and damage to his personal and
    professional reputation. He sought damages, injunctive relief,
    and attorney fees.
    The Department and Busboom moved to dismiss White’s
    complaint for failing to state a cause of action. They alleged
    that Busboom was immune from suit under the doctrine of
    qualified immunity. The court sustained the motion to dismiss
    as to White’s claim of reputational damage but overruled it
    as to his claim of a property interest in his employment. The
    Department and Busboom then filed an answer in which they
    alleged affirmative defenses, including immunity from suit. All
    parties then moved for summary judgment.
    In its February 2015 order, the court dismissed the
    Department as a party under the doctrine of sovereign immu-
    nity. It also found that neither the Department nor Busboom
    had violated White’s due process rights in terminating his
    employment in June 2011, because he had notice and an oppor-
    tunity to be heard. But the court concluded that White had a
    protected property interest in his employment and that his first
    unpaid suspension from 2010 to 2011 violated both the CBA
    and state personnel rules. It determined that Busboom had
    signed the suspension order while acting under the color of
    state law and that any reasonable officer in his position would
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    have understood White was entitled to a hearing before being
    deprived of a protected property interest.
    Factually, the court made the following determinations:
    (1) Busboom was involved in the disciplinary process and
    had been told to place White on an investigatory suspen-
    sion; (2) the Department and Busboom learned on April 13,
    2010, that White had been charged with misdemeanor inva-
    sion of privacy; (3) White was not charged with a felony; (4)
    Busboom admitted that no disciplinary actions were consid-
    ered as a result of the April 2010 letter; (5) Busboom admitted
    that White was not suspended because of a criminal offense
    directly related to the workplace; and (6) Busboom admit-
    ted that after 6 days, § 10.3.b of the CBA required a paid
    suspension.
    The Department and Busboom then moved the court to
    reconsider. They argued that White’s claim against Busboom
    was barred because he failed to timely avail himself of the
    grievance procedures in article 4 of the CBA and that “[o]n this
    basis, Defendant Busboom is entitled to qualified immunity.”
    The court denied the motion.
    The court acknowledged that White had not filed a griev-
    ance until 8 months after his 2010 suspension took effect,
    which was determined to be untimely. It characterized the
    waiver cases relied upon by Busboom as decisions holding
    that a plaintiff had waived his due process right to a hearing
    by failing to request it. The court distinguished these cases
    because the employee had received some type of pretermina-
    tion hearing. It concluded that those cases fell within the rule
    that a posttermination proceeding can correct any deficiencies
    in a pretermination proceeding. The court concluded that there
    was no postsuspension hearing that could have cured the fail-
    ure to provide a presuspension hearing.
    After a hearing, the court ordered Busboom to pay White
    $20,000 in lost wages and $15,000 in compensatory dam-
    ages. White’s attorney then applied for $25,901.27 in attorney
    fees and costs. The court reduced that request by half and
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    ordered Busboom to pay $12,731.25 in attorney fees and
    $438.77 in costs.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Busboom assigns that the court erred in failing to conclude
    that White had waived his due process claim, granting White
    summary judgment on his claim against Busboom in his indi-
    vidual capacity, and concluding that Busboom was not entitled
    to qualified immunity.
    In White’s cross-appeal, he assigns that the court erred in
    reducing the award of attorney fees.
    VI. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] We will affirm a lower court’s grant of summary judg-
    ment if the pleadings and admitted evidence show that there is
    no genuine issue as to any material facts or as to the ultimate
    inferences that may be drawn from those facts and that the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.2 In
    reviewing a summary judgment, we view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the party against whom the judgment
    was granted and give that party the benefit of all reasonable
    inferences deducible from the evidence.3
    [3,4] We independently review questions of law decided by
    a lower court,4 and the determination of constitutional require-
    ments presents a question of law.5
    [5] We review de novo whether a party is entitled to dis-
    missal of a claim based on federal or state immunity, drawing
    all reasonable inferences for the nonmoving party.6
    2
    Barnes v. American Standard Ins. Co. of Wis., ante p. 331, ___ N.W.2d
    ___ (2017).
    3
    
    Id.
    4
    Doe v. McCoy, ante p. 321, ___ N.W.2d ___ (2017).
    5
    State v. Harris, 
    296 Neb. 317
    , 
    893 N.W.2d 440
     (2017).
    6
    Holloway v. State, 
    293 Neb. 12
    , 
    875 N.W.2d 435
     (2016).
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    [6] The award or denial of authorized attorney fees and the
    amount of a fee award are rulings that we review for abuse
    of discretion.7
    V. ANALYSIS
    [7,8] The Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment pro-
    vides that “[n]o State shall . . . deprive any person of life, lib-
    erty, or property, without due process of law . . . .”8 Procedural
    due process claims require a two-step analysis: (1) whether
    the plaintiff has asserted a life, liberty, or property interest
    that is protected by the Due Process Clause and (2) whether
    the plaintiff was deprived of that interest without sufficient
    process.9 An employment contract with a public employer can
    give rise to an objectively reasonable expectation of contin-
    ued employment.10
    In the instant case, Busboom does not dispute that White
    had a protected property interest in his continued employment.
    Nonetheless, Busboom contends that under our holding in
    Scott v. County of Richardson,11 White waived his procedural
    due process claim by failing to timely file a grievance after the
    2010 suspension. Additionally, Busboom contends that under
    the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals’ precedent, White’s
    failure to file a grievance under the CBA operates as a proce-
    dural bar to White’s due process claim.
    White responds that because the CBA’s procedures did not
    comply with minimal due process requirements for an unpaid
    7
    See, ACI Worldwide Corp. v. Baldwin Hackett & Meeks, 
    296 Neb. 818
    ,
    
    896 N.W.2d 156
     (2017); Vlach v. Vlach, 
    286 Neb. 141
    , 
    835 N.W.2d 72
    (2013).
    8
    U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1.
    9
    See Zawaideh v. Nebraska Dept. of Health & Human Servs., 
    280 Neb. 997
    , 
    792 N.W.2d 484
     (2011), disapproved on other grounds, State v.
    Boche, 
    294 Neb. 912
    , 
    885 N.W.2d 523
     (2016).
    10
    See, Scott v. County of Richardson, 
    280 Neb. 694
    , 
    789 N.W.2d 44
     (2010);
    63C Am. Jur. 2d Public Officers and Employees § 136 (2009).
    11
    Scott, supra note 10.
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    suspension, his failure to grieve his suspension cannot operate
    as a waiver of his due process rights. He argues that under the
    U.S. Supreme Court’s precedent, postdeprivation procedures
    cannot cure the Department’s failure to provide required pre­
    deprivation procedures or a prompt postsuspension hearing.
    And he argues that Scott is factually distinguishable.
    In determining whether the availability of postdeprivation
    procedures satisfies due process requirements, courts have
    focused on two U.S. Supreme Court decisions regarding due
    process requirements for depriving a state employee of a pro-
    tected property interest in his or her employment. We first
    explain those decisions.
    In Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,12 the U.S.
    Supreme Court considered what pretermination process must
    be given to a tenured public employee who can be discharged
    only for cause. The Court concluded that Ohio’s statutes,
    which provided that civil servants could not be discharged
    except for specified conduct, created a property interest in
    continued employment. It rejected the argument that the statu-
    tory procedures for discharging an employee defined the prop-
    erty interest. It held that a state “‘may not constitutionally
    authorize the deprivation of such an interest, once conferred,
    without appropriate procedural safeguards.’”13 The Court held
    that due process required “‘some kind of a hearing’ prior to the
    discharge of an employee who has a constitutionally protected
    property interest in his employment”14 and set out the follow-
    ing requirements for that hearing:
    The essential requirements of due process . . . are
    notice and an opportunity to respond. The opportunity
    to present reasons, either in person or in writing, why
    proposed action should not be taken is a fundamental due
    12
    Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
    , 
    105 S. Ct. 1487
    , 
    84 L. Ed. 2d 494
     (1985).
    13
    
    Id.,
     
    470 U.S. at 541
     (citations omitted).
    14
    
    Id.,
     
    470 U.S. at 542
    .
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    process requirement. . . . The tenured public employee is
    entitled to oral or written notice of the charges against
    him, an explanation of the employer’s evidence, and an
    opportunity to present his side of the story.15
    The Court emphasized that even if the underlying facts are
    clear, an employee’s only meaningful opportunity to persuade
    an employer that a discharge is unnecessary or inappropriate is
    likely to be before the discharge.16
    Finally, the court explained that its holding rested in part on
    Ohio’s statutes that provided for a full posttermination hear-
    ing. It concluded that “all the process that is due is provided
    by a pretermination opportunity to respond, coupled with
    posttermination administrative procedures as provided by the
    Ohio statute.”17 Accordingly, the “pretermination hearing need
    not definitely resolve the propriety of the discharge. It should
    be an initial check against mistaken decisions—essentially,
    a determination of whether there are reasonable grounds to
    believe that the charges against the employee are true and
    support the proposed action.”18 As stated, the pretermina-
    tion process need only include oral or written notice of the
    charges, an explanation of the employer’s evidence, and an
    opportunity for the employee to tell his side of the story.19 The
    Court further stated that if the employer perceives a hazard in
    keeping an employee on the job, it can suspend the employee
    with pay.20
    Several years later, in Gilbert v. Homar,21 the Court held
    that due process did not require a predeprivation hearing
    15
    
    Id.,
     
    470 U.S. at 546
    .
    16
    See Loudermill, 
    supra note 12
    .
    17
    
    Id.,
     
    470 U.S. at 547-48
     (emphasis supplied).
    18
    
    Id.,
     
    470 U.S. at 545-46
    .
    19
    Loudermill, 
    supra note 12
    .
    20
    
    Id.
    21
    Gilbert v. Homar, 
    520 U.S. 924
    , 
    117 S. Ct. 1807
    , 
    138 L. Ed. 2d 120
    (1997).
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    before an employee charged with serious criminal offenses can
    be temporarily suspended without pay.
    Richard Homar was a university police officer who was
    arrested in a drug raid while at a friend’s house and charged
    with felony drug offenses. On the same day, the university
    suspended him without pay pending an investigation into the
    charges. The charges were dismissed a week later, but Homar
    remained on suspension. Almost 3 weeks after his arrest, two
    officials met with him so he could tell his side of the story, but
    they did not tell him that they had received a report that he
    made confessions on the day of his arrest. About a month after
    his arrest, the university informed him by letter that because he
    had confessed to associating with drug dealers and obtaining
    marijuana from one of them for his own use, it had demoted
    him to a groundskeeper position. The next day, Homar met
    with the university president. After allowing Homar to read the
    report and respond, the president sustained the demotion.
    The Third Circuit concluded that Homar’s unpaid suspen-
    sion without notice and a presuspension hearing violated his
    due process rights. It relied on the Supreme Court’s statement
    in Loudermill that the employer could suspend an employee
    with pay pending a pretermination hearing.
    The Supreme Court assumed without deciding that due
    process protections extended to a disciplinary action “short of
    termination” against a tenured public employee.22 But it stated
    that a paid suspension was not the only way to avoid a per-
    ceived hazard in leaving an employee on the job. The Court
    also recognized that on multiple occasions, it had “‘rejected
    the proposition that [due process] always requires the State to
    provide a hearing prior to the initial deprivation of property.’”23
    22
    See 
    id.,
     
    520 U.S. at 929
    .
    23
    
    Id.,
     
    520 U.S. at 930
    , citing Parratt v. Taylor, 
    451 U.S. 527
    , 
    101 S. Ct. 1908
    , 
    68 L. Ed. 2d 420
     (1981), overruled in part on other grounds,
    Daniels v. Williams, 
    474 U.S. 327
    , 
    106 S. Ct. 662
    , 
    88 L. Ed. 2d 662
    (1986).
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    In determining what process was constitutionally due
    Homar, the Court balanced the three distinct factors set out in
    Mathews v. Eldridge24: “First, the private interest that will be
    affected by the official action; second, the risk of an errone-
    ous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used,
    and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute pro-
    cedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest . .
    . .” In applying these balancing factors, the Court stated that
    although Homar had a significant interest in his paycheck, the
    length and finality of a deprivation must be considered and
    that Homar had faced only a temporary suspension without
    pay: “So long as the suspended employee receives a suffi-
    ciently prompt postsuspension hearing, the lost income is rela-
    tively insubstantial (compared with termination), and fringe
    benefits such as health and life insurance are often not affected
    at all . . . .”25
    The Court concluded that the university had a significant
    interest in Homar’s immediate suspension to maintain public
    confidence in its police force, because he had been charged
    with serious crimes and occupied a position of high pub-
    lic trust and visibility. In that circumstance, the state is not
    required to pay an employee whose services are no longer
    useful because he has been charged with a felony. Finally, the
    charges supported the university’s conclusion that reasonable
    grounds existed to suspend Homar without providing a presus-
    pension hearing.
    But the Supreme Court agreed that once the charges were
    dropped, the risk of an erroneous deprivation increased sub-
    stantially. Because the lower courts had not addressed whether
    the university violated Homar’s due process rights by failing
    to provide a sufficiently prompt postsuspension hearing, the
    Court remanded for consideration of that issue.
    24
    Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 335, 
    96 S. Ct. 893
    , 
    47 L. Ed. 2d 18
    (1976).
    25
    Gilbert, 
    supra note 21
    , 
    520 U.S. at 932
    .
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    In Scott,26 we held that deficiencies in due process during
    pretermination proceedings may be cured if the employee is
    provided adequate posttermination due process and that such
    measures can be provided by grievance procedures that have
    been agreed upon by the employer and the employee.
    The plaintiff, James Scott, was a deputy sheriff who was
    placed on paid suspension for misconduct during an internal
    investigation. A week later, the chief deputy gave Scott a
    detailed report of the reasons for the suspension. A few days
    after that, Scott submitted to a polygraph test. The next day,
    the chief deputy discharged Scott after he refused to resign. At
    some point, Scott filed a grievance with the sheriff and appealed
    the sheriff’s denial to the county board of commissioners. The
    board found just cause to terminate Scott’s employment.
    The district court overturned Scott’s termination because the
    defendants had violated his predeprivation due process rights.
    It relied on Martin v. Nebraska Dept. of Public Institutions,27 a
    Nebraska Court of Appeals decision holding that posttermina-
    tion proceedings cannot cure a violation of a plaintiff’s preter-
    mination due process rights.
    On appeal, we acknowledged that three federal courts of
    appeals had held that posttermination hearings will not nor-
    mally cure a violation of pretermination due process rights.28
    But we agreed with the Eighth Circuit’s decisions on this
    issue and held that “deficiencies in due process during pre-
    termination proceedings may be cured if the employee is pro-
    vided adequate posttermination due process.”29 We ­concluded
    that the grievance procedures under the labor agreement
    26
    Scott, supra note 10.
    27
    See Martin v. Nebraska Dept. of Public Institutions, 
    7 Neb. App. 585
    , 
    584 N.W.2d 485
     (1998), overruled, Scott, supra note 10.
    28
    See Cotnoir v. University of Maine Systems, 
    35 F.3d 6
     (1st Cir. 1994);
    Abraham v. Pekarski, 
    728 F.2d 167
     (3d Cir. 1984); and Schultz v. Baumgart,
    
    738 F.2d 231
     (7th Cir. 1984).
    29
    Scott, supra note 10, 280 Neb. at 703-04, 789 N.W.2d at 52.
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    “process provides employees with due process required under
    Loudermill.”30
    We emphasized that the chief deputy had given Scott the
    factual allegations that supported the suspension and had given
    him an opportunity to respond to them. We did not dispute
    that the pretermination procedures violated Scott’s due process
    rights but concluded that “the violation . . . was cured by the
    extensive posttermination hearing.”31
    However, since our holding in Scott, the Eighth Circuit
    has moved away from its earlier position that posttermination
    grievance procedures can cure violations of pretermination due
    process requirements.
    The U.S. Supreme Court has consistently held that exhaus-
    tion of administrative remedies is not a prerequisite to filing
    an action under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     (2012),32 absent a federal
    statute requiring such exhaustion.33 However, in Keating v.
    Nebraska Public Power Dist.,34 a 2009 case involving a water
    dispute, the Eighth Circuit stated that it had recognized an
    exception to the general rule that exhaustion of state remedies
    prior to bringing a § 1983 claim is not required. The court
    stated that “‘[u]nder federal law, a litigant asserting a depriva-
    tion of procedural due process must exhaust state remedies
    before such an allegation states a claim under § 1983.’”35
    The court held, however, that it is not necessary for a litigant
    to have exhausted available postdeprivation remedies when
    the litigant contends that he was entitled to predeprivation
    30
    Id. at 705, 789 N.W.2d at 53.
    31
    See id. at 706, 789 N.W.2d at 53.
    32
    See, Felder v. Casey, 
    487 U.S. 131
    , 
    108 S. Ct. 2302
    , 
    101 L. Ed. 2d 123
    (1988); Patsy v. Florida Board of Regents, 
    457 U.S. 496
    , 
    102 S. Ct. 2557
    ,
    
    73 L. Ed. 2d 172
     (1982).
    33
    See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. § 1997e (Supp. III 2015).
    34
    Keating v. Nebraska Public Power Dist., 
    562 F.3d 923
     (8th Cir. 2009).
    35
    
    Id. at 929
     (emphasis in original), quoting Wax ’n Works v. City of St. Paul,
    
    213 F.3d 1016
     (8th Cir. 2000).
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    process. It cited a U.S. Supreme Court holding that “‘where
    the State feasibly can provide a predeprivation hearing before
    taking property, it generally must do so regardless of the ade-
    quacy of a postdeprivation tort remedy to compensate for the
    taking.’”36 The court further noted that it had previously held
    the “‘availability of post-deprivation remedies is not a defense
    to the denial of procedural due process where predeprivation
    process is practicable.’”37 Accordingly, the court ruled that the
    appellants’ failure to exhaust postdeprivation remedies did not
    affect their entitlement to predeprivation process and that the
    district court should not have considered this failure in dis-
    missing the claim.
    In 2012, the Eighth Circuit extended this reasoning in a case
    involving an Iowa teacher’s discharge:
    [W]e have held that a government employee who chooses
    not to pursue available post-termination remedies cannot
    later claim, via a § 1983 suit in federal court, that he was
    denied post-termination due process. . . . That said, we
    have also held that “it is not necessary for a litigant to
    have exhausted available postdeprivation remedies when
    the litigant contends that he was entitled to predepri-
    vation process.” . . . Thus, the effect of a government
    employee’s failure to pursue available post-termination
    remedies depends on whether the employee alleges the
    deprivation of pre-termination process or post-termination
    process.38
    The appellate court concluded that based on the plaintiff’s
    failure to pursue posttermination process, the federal district
    court had properly dismissed his claims of deficient posttermi-
    nation proceedings. However, the appellate court determined
    36
    Id., quoting Zinermon v. Burch, 
    494 U.S. 113
    , 
    110 S. Ct. 975
    , 
    108 L. Ed. 2d 100
     (1990).
    37
    
    Id.,
     quoting Westborough Mall, Inc. v. City of Cape Girardeau, 
    794 F.2d 330
     (8th Cir. 1986).
    38
    Christiansen v. West Branch Community School Dist., 
    674 F.3d 927
    , 935-
    36 (8th Cir. 2012) (emphasis in original).
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    that his failure to exercise posttermination process had no
    effect on his claim that he was denied pretermination due
    process rights. As a result, the Eighth Circuit has implicitly
    acknowledged that where the Constitution demands predep­
    rivation due process,39 postdeprivation proceedings will not
    cure a state’s failure to provide the minimum predepriva-
    tion process.
    Importantly, the Eighth Circuit’s 2012 decision is consist­
    ent with other federal court decisions addressing this issue
    in cases involving the discharge of a public employee with a
    protected property interest in employment.40 Together, these
    decisions represent the consensus of lower federal appellate
    courts. Moreover, in Loudermill itself, the U.S. Supreme Court
    held that Ohio state employees were entitled to pretermination
    process despite the availability of extensive posttermination
    grievance procedures.41 Loudermill’s minimum pretermination
    procedures are required even when posttermination grievance
    procedures are available.
    [9,10] The elements of, and defenses to, a § 1983 action are
    defined by federal law.42 State courts are bound by definitive
    U.S. Supreme Court decisions or a consensus of federal court
    holdings on the substantive requirements of a § 1983 claim or
    defense.43 And the consensus of federal court holdings on this
    39
    See Zinermon, 
    supra note 36
    .
    40
    See, Jones v. City of Boston, 
    752 F.3d 38
     (1st Cir. 2014); Carmody
    v. Board of Trustees of Uni. of Illinois, 
    747 F.3d 470
     (7th Cir. 2014);
    Walls v. Central Contra Costa Transit Authority, 
    653 F.3d 963
     (9th Cir.
    2011); Montgomery v. City of Ardmore, 
    365 F.3d 926
     (10th Cir. 2004);
    Ciambriello v. County of Nassau, 
    292 F.3d 307
     (2d Cir. 2002).
    41
    See Loudermill, 
    supra note 12
    .
    42
    Howlett v. Rose, 
    496 U.S. 356
    , 
    110 S. Ct. 2430
    , 
    110 L. Ed. 2d 332
     (1990).
    43
    See, Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
    , 
    131 S. Ct. 2074
    , 
    179 L. Ed. 2d 1149
     (2011); Wilson v. Layne, 
    526 U.S. 603
    , 
    119 S. Ct. 1692
    , 
    143 L. Ed. 2d 818
     (1999); Howlett, 
    supra note 42
    ; Felder, 
    supra note 32
    ; Booker v.
    South Carolina Dept. of Corrections, 
    855 F.3d 533
     (4th Cir. 2017); De
    La Rosa v. White, 
    852 F.3d 740
     (8th Cir. 2017); Mammaro v. N.J. Div. of
    Child Prot. and Permanency, 
    814 F.3d 164
     (3d Cir. 2016).
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    issue is consistent with Loudermill. Upon the record before us,
    the Department did not provide White the minimum predepri-
    vation due process required for a discharge under Loudermill,
    so we next consider whether that process clearly applied to
    White’s claim that he was constructively discharged.
    1. Court Erred in Determining That White’s
    Predeprivation Due Process R ights
    Were Clearly Established
    (a) Qualified Immunity Principles
    [11,12] The doctrine of qualified immunity protects govern-
    ment officials from liability for civil damages insofar as their
    conduct, in the context of the specific facts at the time, does
    not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights
    of which a reasonable person would have known.44 Whether an
    official may prevail in his or her qualified immunity defense
    depends upon the objective reasonableness of his or her con-
    duct as measured by reference to clearly established law.45
    [13] The U.S. Supreme Court has stated that it does “not
    require a case directly on point, but existing precedent must
    have placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond
    debate.”46 “Qualified immunity gives government officials
    breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken judgments
    about open legal questions. When properly applied, it protects
    ‘all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly vio-
    late the law.’”47
    44
    See, Messerschmidt v. Millender, 
    565 U.S. 535
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 1235
    , 
    182 L. Ed. 2d 47
     (2012); Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 2151
    , 
    150 L. Ed. 2d 272
     (2001), overruled in part on other grounds, Pearson v.
    Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 808
    , 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 565
     (2009); Carney
    v. Miller, 
    287 Neb. 400
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 782
     (2014) (quoting Ashcroft, 
    supra note 43
    ).
    45
    Carney, supra note 44.
    46
    Ashcroft, 
    supra note 43
    , 
    563 U.S. at 741
    .
    47
    
    Id.,
     
    563 U.S. at 743
    . Accord, Messerschmidt, 
    supra note 44
    ; Potter
    v. Board of Regents, 
    287 Neb. 732
    , 
    844 N.W.2d 741
     (2014) (citing
    Messerschmidt, 
    supra note 44
    ).
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    [14] A qualified immunity inquiry has two components:
    (1) whether a plaintiff has alleged a deprivation of a federal
    statutory or constitutional right and (2) whether that right
    was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.48
    A court has discretion to determine which component to
    address first.49
    (b) Law Has Not Clearly Established
    Employee’s Due Process Rights
    for Constructive Discharge
    Although White was not actually discharged until after the
    second suspension, he argues that Busboom’s actions amounted
    to a constructive discharge. He contends that a procedural due
    process violation can rest on a constructive discharge. In sup-
    port of this contention, White relies on an unpublished federal
    district court’s judgment.50
    In Hammond v. Chester Upland School Dist.,51 the defendant
    school superintendent did not give the plaintiff school principal
    a reason for suspending her without pay until he was contacted
    by her attorney. The next month, the superintendent indicated
    that she would not be reinstated as principal and advertised
    her position as open. She refused the school board’s offer of
    a teaching position, and the defendants did not offer her a
    hearing on her continued unpaid suspension until more than 5
    months after its effective date and did not affirm the suspension
    until nearly 2 years later. The federal district court concluded
    that the suspension was a de facto termination and that she was
    entitled to pretermination due process under Loudermill, which
    had not occurred.
    The Seventh Circuit has also recognized that sham investi-
    gative procedures, which deprive a tenured public employee
    48
    Ashcroft, supra note 43.
    49
    See, id.; Pearson, 
    supra note 44
    .
    50
    See Hammond v. Chester Upland School Dist., No. Civ. A. 13-6209, 
    2014 WL 4473726
     (E.D. Pa. Sept. 9, 2014) (unpublished decision).
    51
    
    Id.
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    of an adequate opportunity to respond to allegations of mis-
    conduct, coupled with an extensive suspension, can constitute
    a due process violation.52
    But other courts have acknowledged the difficulty of extend-
    ing the predeprivation requirements of Loudermill to a con-
    structive discharge:
    A constructive discharge differs in essential ways from
    a true discharge. When an employer decides to fire an
    employee, there is no ambiguity about the loss that the
    employee will suffer. If the employee has a property
    interest in the job, the government employer must pro-
    vide proper notice and a hearing before the firing is
    effected. . . . In the constructive-discharge context, how-
    ever, the employer may not even know that its actions
    have compelled the employee to quit. When that is the
    case, the employer can hardly be required to provide
    notice or a hearing before the resignation . . . .53
    The Fifth and the Ninth Circuits have similarly reasoned
    that in an actual discharge case, if an employer failed to pro-
    vide minimum predeprivation due process, it clearly ignored
    those due process requirements, whereas an employer may not
    be on notice that it should provide predeprivation due process
    procedures in a constructive discharge case.54
    Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit has held that a construc-
    tive discharge can support a viable § 1983 claim only if it
    amounted to a forced discharge to avoid providing pretermina-
    tion hearing procedures.55 The 10th Circuit requires a plaintiff
    employee to show that (1) the employer intentionally or know-
    ingly created intolerable working conditions, or was at least on
    notice of those conditions; (2) such conditions compelled the
    52
    See Levenstein v. Salafsky, 
    164 F.3d 345
     (7th Cir. 1998).
    53
    Lauck v. Campbell County, 
    627 F.3d 805
    , 812 (10th Cir. 2010).
    54
    See, Fowler v. Carrollton Public Library, 
    799 F.2d 976
     (5th Cir. 1986);
    Gravitt v. Brown, 74 F. Appx. 700 (9th Cir. 2003).
    55
    Fowler, 
    supra note 54
    .
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    plaintiff’s resignation; and (3) the employer failed to provide
    minimum pretermination procedures.56
    [15] Loudermill and Gilbert57 established that the due proc­
    ess requirements for depriving public employees of a pro-
    tected property interest in employment must be determined
    under the Mathews balancing factors.58 But we need not
    decide whether these facts show a constructive discharge or
    what due process requires in a constructive discharge case. It
    is enough here to conclude that White’s due process rights in
    the context of a constructive discharge claim were not clearly
    established at the time that the Department placed White on
    an unpaid suspension. This is particularly true in light of
    our decision in Scott,59 which implied that posttermination
    grievance procedures could provide all the due process that
    was required under Loudermill, even in cases involving an
    actual discharge.60
    (c) Law Has Not Clearly Established Employee’s
    Predeprivation Due Process Rights
    for Unpaid Suspension
    The holding in Loudermill was limited to setting out the
    minimum due process requirements before discharging an
    employee with a protected property interest in employment. As
    noted, in Gilbert, the Supreme Court did not decide whether
    procedural due process protections extend to adverse employ-
    ment actions short of a discharge.61 It held only that under the
    facts of the case, due process did not prohibit an unpaid sus-
    pension without predeprivation procedures.
    56
    Lauck, supra note 53.
    57
    See Loudermill, 
    supra note 12
    , and Gilbert, 
    supra note 21
    .
    58
    See Mathews, 
    supra note 24
    .
    59
    Scott, supra note 10.
    60
    See Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 
    102 S. Ct. 2727
    , 
    73 L. Ed. 2d 396
    (1982).
    61
    See Gilbert, 
    supra note 21
    .
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    In 2011, the Third Circuit applied the Mathews factors
    and held that absent extraordinary circumstances, due process
    requires notice and an informal hearing before suspending a
    state employee without pay if the employee has a protected
    property interest in employment, even if postsuspension griev-
    ance procedures are available. But the court also held that this
    right was not clearly established when the plaintiff was sus-
    pended.62 Two other federal appellate courts have also held that
    a state employer must provide at least some type of predepriva-
    tion process before imposing an unpaid suspension.63
    In contrast, the 10th Circuit held that a school board’s place-
    ment of an administrator on unpaid leave without any type of
    hearing did not violate his due process rights.64 Applying the
    Mathews factors, the court specifically held that the plaintiff
    was not constitutionally entitled to notice and opportunity to
    respond before he was suspended without pay. The court stated
    that his private interest in continuous income was attenuated
    by the relatively prompt postsuspension grievance procedure
    that was available to him, even though the administrator did
    not file a grievance. In effect, the court held that in unpaid
    suspension cases, an employee forfeits a predeprivation due
    process claim by failing to invoke postdeprivation procedures
    that were available. In a footnote, the Sixth Circuit stated that
    even if the administrator were entitled to a presuspension hear-
    ing, that right was not clearly established when the district
    suspended him.65
    Given this conflicting federal case law and a statement by
    two federal appellate courts that the right to predeprivation
    notice and a hearing was not clearly established in unpaid
    62
    See Schmidt v. Creedon, 
    639 F.3d 587
     (3d Cir. 2011).
    63
    See, O’Connor v. Pierson, 
    426 F.3d 187
     (2d Cir. 2005); Baerwald v. City
    of Milwaukee, 
    131 F.3d 681
     (7th Cir. 1997).
    64
    Kirkland v. St. Vrain Valley Sch. Dist. No. RE-1J, 
    464 F.3d 1182
     (10th Cir.
    2006).
    65
    See 
    id.
     at 1194 n.10.
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    suspension cases, we cannot say that Busboom should have
    known that White was entitled to notice and an informal hear-
    ing before he was suspended without pay. We conclude that
    the court erred in reasoning that any reasonable officer in
    Busboom’s position should have understood that notice and an
    opportunity to be heard were required before the Department
    could deprive White of a protected property interest. That
    level of generality was too high to determine whether the
    unlawfulness of the suspension was apparent.66 The question
    was whether, at the time of Busboom’s actions, the law clearly
    established that White was entitled to notice and a predepriva-
    tion hearing to respond to the Department’s allegations, despite
    the availability of prompt postdeprivation grievance procedures
    to challenge his unpaid suspension. We conclude that it did
    not. Accordingly, the court erred in failing to determine that
    Busboom was entitled to qualified immunity on White’s claim
    that he was denied predeprivation due process.
    2. White H as Failed to Show Postdeprivation
    Due Process Violation
    White also contends that his failure to file a grievance
    within the allowable time did not waive his postdeprivation
    due process. More specifically, he alleges that the grievance
    procedures did not comply with due process requirements
    because the CBA failed to specify the time for a postsuspen-
    sion hearing.
    In support of this contention, he relies on the U.S. Supreme
    Court case of Barry v. Barchi,67 in which the Court held that
    a horseracing board’s suspension of a trainer was unconsti-
    tutional for the same failure. In Barry, the board suspended
    the trainer for 15 days after one of his horses tested positive
    for drugs. Under the applicable statute, it was presumed, sub-
    ject to rebuttal, that the drug either was administered by the
    66
    See Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 
    107 S. Ct. 3034
    , 
    97 L. Ed. 2d 523
     (1987).
    67
    Barry v. Barchi, 
    443 U.S. 55
    , 
    99 S. Ct. 2642
    , 
    61 L. Ed. 2d 365
     (1979).
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    trainer or resulted from his negligence in failing to adequately
    protect against such occurrence. After the suspension, the
    trainer would be entitled to a hearing; however, the statute did
    not specify a time for such a hearing and granted the board up
    to 30 days after the hearing to issue a final order.
    The trainer did not seek a hearing under the statute, but
    instead filed suit and challenged the law. The federal district
    court found that even a short suspension could irreparably
    damage a trainer’s livelihood and that during that period, a
    trainer would lose clients to other trainers. It concluded that
    a full hearing after he had lost his clients was not a meaning-
    ful opportunity to be heard.68 It ruled that the statute violated
    the trainer’s due process rights because it allowed the sanction
    without a presuspension or a prompt postsuspension hearing.69
    The Supreme Court agreed that the board was entitled
    to impose an interim suspension, pending a prompt judicial
    or administrative hearing that would definitely determine the
    issues, whenever it has satisfactorily established probable cause
    to believe that a horse has been drugged and that a trainer has
    been at least negligent in connection with the drugging.
    Nonetheless, the Court noted that the statute, on its face
    and as applied, did not provide for a prompt hearing. So train-
    ers would often not have an opportunity to test the state’s
    evidence before they had suffered the full consequences of a
    suspension. The Court reasoned that this result did not satisfy
    the due proc­ess requirement of an opportunity to be heard on
    the ultimate determination “‘at a meaningful time and in a
    meaningful manner.’”70 Because the statute was deficient in
    that respect, the Court held that the trainer’s suspension was
    constitutionally infirm under the Due Process Clause.
    But Barry is distinguishable not only because the state pro-
    cedures gave the trainer no opportunity to contest the sanction
    68
    
    Id.
    69
    
    Id.
    70
    
    Id.,
     
    443 U.S. at 66
    .
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    until after it was completed, but because the sanction irrepa-
    rably affected the trainer’s future livelihood by causing him to
    lose clients.
    In contrast, in FDIC v. Mallen,71 the Supreme Court upheld
    the administrative postdeprivation procedures for a bank presi-
    dent to contest his suspension where the agency was required
    to hold a hearing within 30 days of a claimant’s request and to
    issue a decision within 60 days of the hearing. The Court con-
    cluded that this 90-day period did not exceed permissible lim-
    its. It emphasized that leaving the suspension in place would
    not increase the plaintiff’s reputational injury, because he had
    been indicted of a felony crime of dishonesty, and that the pub-
    lic interest in a correct decision counseled against requiring a
    hasty one. The Court stated that the indictment demonstrated
    that the suspension was not arbitrary and raised a public con-
    cern that the bank was not being managed responsibly.
    In Zinermon v. Burch,72 the U.S. Supreme Court explained
    that when a plaintiff in a § 1983 action alleges a procedural
    due process violation, the existence of state remedies is a rel-
    evant consideration:
    In procedural due process claims, the deprivation by state
    action of a constitutionally protected interest in “life,
    liberty, or property” is not in itself unconstitutional; what
    is unconstitutional is the deprivation of such an interest
    without due process of law. . . . The constitutional viola-
    tion actionable under § 1983 is not complete when the
    deprivation occurs; it is not complete unless and until the
    State fails to provide due process. Therefore, to deter-
    mine whether a constitutional violation has occurred, it
    is necessary to ask what process the State provided, and
    whether it was constitutionally adequate. This inquiry
    would examine the procedural safeguards built into the
    statutory or administrative procedure of effecting the
    71
    FDIC v. Mallen, 
    486 U.S. 230
    , 
    108 S. Ct. 1780
    , 
    100 L. Ed. 2d 265
     (1988).
    72
    Zinermon, 
    supra note 36
    , 
    494 U.S. at 125-26
     (emphasis in original).
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    deprivation, and any remedies for erroneous deprivations
    provided by statute or tort law.
    [16] Consistent with Zinermon, lower federal appellate
    courts have concluded that a plaintiff fails to state a viable pro-
    cedural due process claim when adequate postdeprivation state
    procedures were available but the plaintiff failed to invoke
    them.73 We agree. These holdings are not an exception to the
    no exhaustion requirement.74 Instead, a plaintiff cannot show a
    procedural due process violation if the governmental actor pro-
    vided an adequate postdeprivation procedure and the plaintiff
    failed to invoke the remedy.75
    The CBA in this matter permits an employee to file a griev-
    ance for a violation of the labor contract within 15 days of the
    contested action, unless the employer exercises its discretion to
    extend the time limit. The decisionmaker who took the action
    must confer with the employee and respond to the grievance
    within 10 days. If dissatisfied with the response, an employee
    can appeal to the agency head, who must respond within 15
    days of the appeal. If instead, the agency head was the deci-
    sionmaker, he or she must respond to the grievance in 15 days.
    After that, an employee can appeal to the state’s employee rela-
    tions division, which must issue a decision within 20 days of
    a conference between the parties. An employee can appeal that
    decision to an arbitrator or hearing officer. And employees can
    additionally seek judicial review.76
    73
    See, e.g., Raymond v. Bd. of Regents of the University of MN, 
    847 F.3d 585
     (8th Cir. 2017); Christiansen, 
    supra note 38
    ; Kirkland, 
    supra note 64
    ; Alvin v. Suzuki, 
    227 F.3d 107
     (3d Cir. 2000); Chiles v. Morgan,
    No. 94-10980, 
    1995 WL 295931
     (5th Cir. Apr. 26, 1995) (unpublished
    disposition listed in table of “Decisions Without Published Opinions” at
    
    53 F.3d 1281
     (5th Cir. 1995)).
    74
    See Alvin, 
    supra note 73
    .
    75
    
    Id.
    76
    See Ahmann v. Nebraska Dept. of Corr. Servs., 
    278 Neb. 29
    , 
    767 N.W.2d 104
     (2009).
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    Here, the Department knew that White had been arrested
    for a misdemeanor offense of unlawful intrusion, not a fel-
    ony offense. But regardless of whether the decision to sus-
    pend White without pay was correct, we conclude that under
    Mallen, the postdeprivation procedures available to White
    were constitutionally adequate. His failure to invoke them
    does not render his unpaid suspension an unlawful depriva-
    tion of a protected property interest without due process. We
    conclude that he has failed to show a postdeprivation due
    proc­ess violation.
    3. White Is Not Entitled
    to Attorney Fees
    [17] In order to be eligible for attorney fees under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1988
    (b) (2012), a plaintiff must be a prevailing party, which
    means that the plaintiff must have obtained a judgment on
    the merits, a consent decree, or some other judicially enforce-
    able settlement, which materially alters the legal relationship
    of the parties in a way that benefits the plaintiff.77 We have
    determined that Busboom was entitled to qualified immunity
    on White’s claim that he was deprived of predeprivation due
    process and that White has failed to show a postdeprivation
    due process violation. Accordingly, White is not entitled to
    attorney fees, because he is not a prevailing party.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the court erred in determining that any
    reasonable officer in Busboom’s position should have under-
    stood that notice and an opportunity to be heard were required
    before the Department could deprive White of a protected
    property interest. Federal case law has not clearly established
    77
    See, Lefemine v. Wideman, 
    568 U.S. 1
    , 
    133 S. Ct. 9
    , 
    184 L. Ed. 2d 313
    (2012); Buckhannon Board & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Dept. of
    Health and Human Resources, 
    532 U.S. 598
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 1835
    , 
    149 L. Ed. 2d 855
     (2001); Hensley v. Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 
    103 S. Ct. 1933
    , 
    76 L. Ed. 2d 40
     (1983).
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    that in unpaid suspension cases, a public employer must pro-
    vide predeprivation notice and a hearing to an employee with a
    protected property interest in employment. Nor has federal case
    law clearly established that these due process rights are avail-
    able in constructive discharge cases.
    Moreover, when White was suspended, the controlling
    authority of both the Eighth Circuit and this court established
    that a state official’s failure to provide pretermination due
    proc­ess could be cured by posttermination grievance proce-
    dures. A prison official in Busboom’s position could have
    reasonably concluded that the same rule applied to the lesser
    disciplinary action of an unpaid suspension. Accordingly, the
    court erred in failing to sustain Busboom’s qualified immu-
    nity defense.
    Additionally, we conclude that White has failed to state a
    viable § 1983 claim that he was denied posttermination due
    process because he failed to invoke the grievance procedures
    that were available to him. Because White is not a prevail-
    ing party, he is not entitled to attorney fees. We therefore
    reverse the district court’s judgment and remand the cause with
    instructions for it to enter summary judgment for Busboom and
    dismiss White’s complaint.
    R eversed and remanded with instructions.