DocketNumber: 02-6248
Citation Numbers: 371 F.3d 879
Filed Date: 6/16/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 1/12/2023
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 2 Anderson v. LaVergne, et al. Nos. 02-6094/6248 ELECTRONIC CITATION: 2004 FED App. 0180P (6th Cir.) File Name: 04a0180p.06 Before: COLE and COOK, Circuit Judges; SPIEGEL, Senior District Judge.* UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS _________________ FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT COUNSEL _________________ ARGUED: James L. Harris, Nashville, Tennessee, for MICHAEL ANDERSON, X Appellant. David Randall Mantooth, LEITNER, WILLIAMS, DOOLEY & NAPOLITAN, Nashville, Plaintiff-Appellant/ - Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: James L. Harris, Cross-Appellee, - Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant. David Randall - Nos. 02-6094/6248 - Mantooth, LEITNER, WILLIAMS, DOOLEY & v. > NAPOLITAN, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellee. , - _________________ CITY OF LA VERGNE, - Defendant-Appellee/ - OPINION Cross-Appellant, - _________________ - - COOK, Circuit Judge. Michael Anderson and the City of HOWARD MORRIS, - LaVergne cross-appeal from the district court’s grant of Individually and in his official - summary judgment in favor of Anderson, and a jury’s award capacity as Chief of Police of - of damages, on Anderson’s claims brought under 42 U.S.C. the City of LaVergne, - § 1983 alleging the deprivation of his constitutionally Defendant. - protected right of intimate association. Because reasonable - jurors could conclude only that the City’s policy forbidding N Anderson from dating a higher-ranking colleague rationally Appeal from the United States District Court furthered a legitimate governmental interest, we conclude that for the Middle District of Tennessee at Nashville. the district court should have granted summary judgment for No. 00-00313—Aleta A. Trauger, District Judge. the City rather than Anderson. I Argued: April 28, 2004 In 1999, Anderson, a police officer for the City of Decided and Filed: June 16, 2004 LaVergne, began a romantic relationship with Lisa Lewis, an * The Honorab le S. Arthur Spiegel, Senior United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting by designation. 1 Nos. 02-6094/6248 Anderson v. LaVergne, et al. 3 4 Anderson v. LaVergne, et al. Nos. 02-6094/6248 administrative assistant for the police department. Three back pay and $5,500 in intangible damages. Both parties months later, Chief of Police Howard Morris ordered appeal—the City seeking a reversal of the district court’s Anderson and Lewis to “cease all contact with each other” denial of its motion for summary judgment, and Anderson outside of the workplace. Morris issued this order because he seeking a new trial on the amount of damages. believed that intra-office dating between employees of different ranks (Lewis outranked Anderson) might lead to II sexual harassment claims against the department. In granting summary judgment for Anderson, the district Despite Morris’s order, Anderson and Lewis continued court misapplied cases involving expressive speech claims to their relationship. When Lewis eventually told Anderson she Anderson’s intimate association claim. Moreover, the district wanted to end the relationship, a disturbance of some sort court erroneously concluded that the police department’s involving Anderson occurred at Lewis’s apartment. The policy lacked a rational relationship to a legitimate Davidson County police investigated but did not file any government interest. Thus, even though the district court charges. After the LaVergne Police Department’s Internal articulated the correct standard—rational basis—for Affairs Division completed its own investigation, Morris reviewing the police department’s policy, it erred in its terminated Anderson for failing to follow Morris’s order to application of that standard. We first explain why rational stop seeing Lewis outside of the office. Morris immediately basis review applies to Anderson’s intimate association claim, reconsidered, however, and offered Anderson the option of and then discuss why the police department’s prohibition resigning without the department placing any negative against intra-office dating satisfies the rational basis test. information about the incident at Lewis’s apartment in his employment record. Anderson accepted this offer, resigning A. Intimate Association on July 29, 1999. The Constitution protects two distinct types of association: In April 2000, Anderson filed this suit against the City of (1) freedom of expressive association, protected by the First LaVergne and Morris (individually and in his official Amendment, and (2) freedom of intimate association, a capacity), alleging that Morris’s order violated Anderson’s privacy interest derived from the Due Process Clause of the First and Fourteenth Amendment right of intimate Fourteenth Amendment but also related to the First association, and seeking damages under § 1983. Defendants Amendment. See Roberts v. United States Jaycees, 468 U.S. moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the 609, 617-18 (1984); Akers v. McGinnis,352 F.3d 1030
, 1035 motion with respect to the claims against Morris in his (6th Cir. 2003); Corrigan v. City of Newaygo,55 F.3d 1211
, individual capacity but sua sponte granted summary judgment 1214–15 (6th Cir. 1995). With respect to expressive in favor of Anderson on his claims against the City and association, the Supreme Court “has recognized a right to Morris in his official capacity (the court later dismissed this associate for the purpose of engaging in those activities claim against Morris as redundant with the claim against the protected by the First Amendment—speech, assembly, City). The district court ruled that the policy prohibiting petition for the redress of grievances, and the exercise of intra-office dating was not rationally related to a legitimate religion.”Roberts, 468 U.S. at 618
. Concerning intimate government interest because the interest the policy association, the Supreme Court “has concluded that choices advanced—avoiding sexual harassment claims—was not a to enter into and maintain certain intimate human “police interest.” A jury awarded Anderson $10,283.86 in relationships must be secured against undue intrusion by the Nos. 02-6094/6248 Anderson v. LaVergne, et al. 5 6 Anderson v. LaVergne, et al. Nos. 02-6094/6248 State because of the role of such relationships in safeguarding most favorable to Anderson, he and Lewis lived together at the individual freedom that is central to our constitutional some point, were romantically and sexually involved, and scheme.”Id. at 617–18.
Anderson was monogamous in the relationship. The relationship therefore involved an attachment to an individual The personal relationship at issue in this case does not with whom Anderson shared the “distinctly personal aspects involve constitutionally protected expressive activity, and of [his] life.”Roberts, 468 U.S. at 620
. Anderson does not assert that the City denied his right to expressive association. Instead, this case involves the City’s But the relationship’s status as an “intimate association” alleged intrusion into Anderson’s personal relationship with does not end our inquiry. We must next consider whether the Lewis in violation of his right of intimate association. City’s policy prohibiting intra-office dating constituted a “direct and substantial interference” with Anderson’s intimate The Supreme Court has explained that the right to intimate associations.Akers, 352 F.3d at 1040
. A “direct and association “receives protection as a fundamental element of substantial interference” with intimate associations is subject personal liberty.”Id. at 618.
The kinds of personal to strict scrutiny, while lesser interferences are subject to associations entitled to constitutional protection are rational basis review.Id. As explained
in Akers, this court characterized by “relative smallness, a high degree of has developed a general rule that we will find “direct and selectivity in decisions to begin and maintain the affiliation, substantial” burdens on intimate associations “only where a and seclusion from others in critical aspects of the large portion of those affected by the rule are absolutely or relationship.”Id. at 620.
In Board of Directors of Rotary largely prevented from [forming intimate associations], or International v. Rotary Club of Duarte, the Court emphasized where those affected by the rule are absolutely or largely that although the “precise boundaries” of the intimate prevented from [forming intimate associations] with a large association right were unclear, constitutional protection was portion of the otherwise eligible population of [people with not restricted to relationships among family members. 481 whom they could form intimate associations].”Id. Because U.S.
537, 545 (1987). Instead, the Constitution “protects Anderson continued to enjoy the ability to form intimate those relationships . . . that presuppose ‘deep attachments and associations with anyone other than fellow police department commitments to the necessarily few other individuals with employees of differing rank, the department’s policy is whom one shares not only a special community of thoughts, subject to rational basis review. experiences, and beliefs but also distinctly personal aspects of one’s life.’”Id. (quoting Roberts,
468 U.S. at 619–20). B. Rational Basis Review Therefore, in addition to marriage, courts have recognized both personal friendships and non-marital romantic Contrary to the district court’s conclusion, the City’s policy relationships as the types of “highly personal relationships” is rationally related to a legitimate government interest. The within the ambit of intimate associations contemplated by City barred dating relationships between police department Roberts. See, e.g., Akers,352 F.3d 1039
–40 (“Personal employees of different ranks to promote its interest in friendship is protected as an intimate association.”). avoiding sexual harassment suits. Such preventive policies are common among government employers. For example, Given these precedents, we find, at least for summary this court has upheld policies prohibiting marriage among judgment purposes, that Anderson’s relationship with Lewis municipal employees, Vaughn v. Lawrenceburg Power Sys., was an “intimate association.” Construing the facts in a light269 F.3d 703
, 712 (6th Cir. 2001), and requiring the transfer Nos. 02-6094/6248 Anderson v. LaVergne, et al. 7 of one spouse if two employees of the same school marry, Montgomery v. Carr,101 F.3d 1117
, 1130–31 (6th Cir. 1996). Moreover, the district court’s proposition that the City’s rational interest could only be one relating to the substance of police work (such as security or investigation) lacks legal support. The case law clearly recognizes that to be rational, the basis for an employment policy need not relate to the specific, substantive purpose of the organization but may concern general employment practices, because such practices are critical to the organization’s overall functioning. See, e.g., Wright v. MetroHealth Med. Ctr.,58 F.3d 1130
, 1137–38 (6th Cir. 1995) (upholding policy requiring transfer of one spouse as rationally related to legitimate government interests of avoiding potential conflicts in the workplace and preventing deterioration of workplace morale); Parks v. City of Warner Robins, Georgia,43 F.3d 609
, 615 (11th Cir. 1995) (upholding policy requiring resignation of one spouse as means of “avoiding conflicts of interests between work- related and family-related obligations; reducing favoritism or even the appearance of favoritism; preventing family conflicts from affecting the workplace; and, by limiting inter-office dating, decreasing the likelihood of sexual harassment in the workplace”). Thus, the district court erred in concluding that the police department’s policy was not reasonably related to a legitimate government interest. Because its policy satisfies the rational basis standard, the City did not violate Anderson’s constitutional rights. The City therefore was entitled to summary judgment on Anderson’s claims under § 1983. III For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Anderson, vacate the damages and attorney’s fee awards, and remand with instructions to enter judgment for the City on all claims.
brenda-a-parks-v-city-of-warner-robins-georgia-a-body-politic-acting , 43 F.3d 609 ( 1995 )
Martha Sabol Wright John C. Wright, Jr. v. Metrohealth ... , 58 F.3d 1130 ( 1995 )
Keith Vaughn Jennifer Vaughn v. Lawrenceburg Power System , 269 F.3d 703 ( 2001 )
Donald Corrigan v. City of Newaygo , 55 F.3d 1211 ( 1995 )
suzanne-montgomery-and-charles-g-montgomery-v-harold-l-carr-in-his , 101 F.3d 1117 ( 1996 )