Harrison v. Larimer County, Board of County Commissioners et al
Filing
50
Opinion and ORDER granting 41 Motion for Summary Judgment. The Court ADOPTS that portion of the Magistrate Judge's 2/8/2013 Recommendation (# 48 ) relating to Mr. Harrison's due process claim. The Defendants' Motion to Dismiss (# [ 17]) is GRANTED with regard to that claim and that claim is DISMISSED for failure to state a claim. The Defendants' Objections (# 49 ) to other portions of the Recommendation are OVERRULED AS MOOT. The Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment (# 41 ) is GRANTED in its entirety. By Chief Judge Marcia S. Krieger on 3/12/2013. (klyon, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Honorable Marcia S. Krieger
Civil Action No. 11-cv-03407-MSK-KMT
JAY HARRISON,
Plaintiff,
v.
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF LARIMER,
COLORADO;
LARIMER COUNTY, COLORADO SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT;
SHERIFF JUSTIN SMITH, individually and in his official capacity;
UNDERSHERIFF WILLIAM NELSON, individually and in his official capacity,
Defendants.
______________________________________________________________________________
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
______________________________________________________________________________
THIS MATTER comes before the Court pursuant to the Defendants’ Motion for
Summary Judgment (# 41), Mr. Harrison’s response (# 44), and the Defendants’ reply (# 47);
and the Defendants’ Objections (# 49) to the Magistrate Judge’s February 8, 2013
Recommendation (# 48) that the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (# 17) be granted in part and
denied in part.
FACTS
The Court provides a summary of the pertinent undisputed facts, and elaborates as
necessary in the analysis. Where there is a dispute, the facts are construed most favorably to the
non-movant.
1
Mr. Harrison was employed as a Deputy with the the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office. In
2010, Mr. Harrison decided to stand for election to the open position of Sheriff of Larimer
County, as did his co-worker, Mr. Smith. One of Mr. Harrison’s major campaign themes
addressed inefficiencies, improper priorities, and a purported lack of integrity at the Sheriff’s
Office. Mr. Harrison believed these accusations implicated Mr. Smith, who was a member of the
existing command structure.
On November 2, 2010, Mr. Smith won the election. Shortly thereafter and consistent
with Mr. Harrison’s campaign promise to resign from the Sheriff’s Department if not elected, he
told Mr. Smith that he intended to begin looking for other work.
A few days later, while still employed by the Sheriff’s Department, Mr. Harrison
contacted the Mayor of the Town of Wellington. Mr. Harrison proposed to “discuss law
enforcement in Wellington.” The Town of Wellington did not have its own police department,
but instead had a contract with the Larimer County Sheriff’s Department to provide law
enforcement services. Mr. Harrison intended to inquire of the Mayor whether the Town was
interested in starting its own police department, suggesting that a town-run police department
“can save the town money and provide better service.” It does not appear that the Mayor and
Mr. Harrison had any particular substantive discussions on the issue, insofar as the Mayor
suggested that the matter needed to be addressed to the Town Council.
Mr. Harrison and other Sheriff’s Department deputies interested in the issue of a
Wellington police department attended a late December 2010 meeting of the Wellington Town
Council. Mr. Harrison asked to address the Council on the issue, but his request was denied as
untimely. Instead, the Council put Mr. Harrison on the agenda for its next meeting, January 11,
2
2011. Circumstances prevented Mr. Harrison from attending the January 11 meeting so Deputy
Tim Strohl made the presentation. Mr. Harrison followed up with an e-mail to the Mayor,
referring to Mr. Strohl’s presentation and again suggesting that the town create a police force.
He proposed that the Town “start the department with hiring Larimer Sheriff’s Deputies to save
costs and time in training people.” Ultimately, the Town decided not to create a police force.
Mr. Smith obtained a recording of the January 11 Town Council meeting. Believing that
the statements made by Mr. Strohl about the Sheriff’s Department contract and service were
“disloyal” to the Sheriff’s Department, Mr. Smith initiated an investigation into Mr. Harrison and
Mr. Strohl’s role in the presentation. Sergeant Disner conducted the investigation on behalf of
the Sheriff’s Department and interviewed Mr. Harrison on February 2. The Defendants contend
that, during this interview, Mr. Harrison made representations to Mr. Disner that were
inconsistent with the contents of his e-mails to the Wellington Mayor - in particular that: (i) Mr.
Harrison never identified himself as a Larimer County Sheriff’s Deputy, but Mr. Harrison’s email to the Mayor states “I am currently a Deputy with the Sheriff’s Office”; (ii) Mr. Harrison
denied that he ever represented that he wanted to start a police department in Wellington; and
(iii) Mr. Harrison denied stating that he wanted to be a member of any police department formed
in Wellington. Mr. Harrison disputes that he made any false statements to Mr. Disner. He
contends that: (i) he denied having made a representation to the Mayor that he was a Larimer
County Sheriff’s Deputy, pointing out that his e-mail never identified the “Sheriff’s Office”
where he was a deputy; and (ii) with regard to Mr. Disner’s questions about other representations
he might have made to the Mayor, Mr. Harrison stated that he was unsure of precisely what his
e-mails said until he could have an opportunity to review them.
3
On March 18, 2011, following the investigation, Defendant Nelson, as Undersheriff,
formally notified Mr. Harrison that his employment as a Deputy was being terminated. The
notice of termination accused Mr. Harrison of misconduct and disloyalty. Specifically, it
explained:
The investigation was centered around your actions with fellow
Deputy Tim Strohl in contacting the town of Wellington about
starting their own police department. . . In e-mails and town board
agendas, you were identified and was listed as a Larimer County
Deputy Sheriff who wanted to talk about law enforcement in
Wellington. You advise that you did not represent yourself as a
representative of the Sheriff’s Office, but by your emails and
actions contradict your statements. You further make statements in
your e-mails that the Sheriff’s Office “does a good job [but] it can
be done better.” You further state that “We would build a
professional law enforcement agency that has only the interest of
the town and its citizens in mind.”
I further believed that you are not being completely truthful about
your involvement and intent. Your statements say one thing but
your e-mails say the contrary.
The letter went on to recite prior discipline imposed on Mr. Harrison between 2006 and early
2011, as well as reciting Mr. Nelson’s review of Mr. Harrison’s “evaluation and performance
log” which revealed “several references to your lack of self-initiated activity and case
investigation/classification.” Mr. Nelson concluded by stating “You conduct is intolerable and
raises questions about your future truthfulness, integrity, and your ability to do the job. . . [Y]our
actions cannot be excused or justified.”
Mr. Harrison appealed his termination to a Hearing Board. On April 14, 2011, the
Hearing Board upheld Mr. Harrison’s termination, finding his conduct to have violated Sheriff’s
Office rules governing “standard of conduct” and loyalty, as well as an additional charge of
4
“untruthfulness” that, the Hearing Board acknowledged, was not listed in the termination letter
but was consistent with the allegations contained therein. On April 28, 2011, Mr. Smith, acting
as Sheriff, finalized the termination of Mr. Harrison’s employment.
Mr. Harrison then commenced this action. In the Second Amended Complaint (# 12)
(but limited in accordance with the Magistrate Judge’s Recommendation that certain claims be
dismissed, to which Mr. Harrison has filed no timely objections), Mr. Harrison asserts two
claims for relief: (i) a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, that his termination constituted
impermissible retaliation for exercise of his free speech rights guaranteed by the First
Amendment to the United States Constitution; (ii) a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, that his
termination constituted impermissible retaliation against him for his exercise of associational
rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.
The Defendants seek summary judgment (# 41) on Mr. Harrison’s claims. In addition,
they object (# 49) to a portion of the Magistrate Judge’s Recommendation (# 48) regarding the
designation of the proper entity to be named as Defendant in this action.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure facilitates the entry of a judgment only if
no trial is necessary. See White v. York Intern. Corp., 45 F.3d 357, 360 (10th Cir. 1995).
Summary adjudication is authorized when there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and
a party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Substantive law governs
what facts are material and what issues must be determined. It also specifies the elements that
must be proved for a given claim or defense, sets the standard of proof and identifies the party
5
with the burden of proof. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986); Kaiser
Francis Oil Co. v. Producer’s Gas Co., 870 F.2d 563, 565 (10th Cir. 1989). A factual dispute is
“genuine” and summary judgment is precluded if the evidence presented in support of and
opposition to the motion is so contradictory that, if presented at trial, a judgment could enter for
either party. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248. When considering a summary judgment motion, a
court views all evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, thereby favoring
the right to a trial. See Garrett v. Hewlett Packard Co., 305 F.3d 1210, 1213 (10th Cir. 2002).
If the movant has the burden of proof on a claim or defense, the movant must establish
every element of its claim or defense by sufficient, competent evidence. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(c)(1)(A). Once the moving party has met its burden, to avoid summary judgment the
responding party must present sufficient, competent, contradictory evidence to establish a
genuine factual dispute. See Bacchus Indus., Inc. v. Arvin Indus., Inc., 939 F.2d 887, 891 (10th
Cir. 1991); Perry v. Woodward, 199 F.3d 1126, 1131 (10th Cir. 1999). If there is a genuine
dispute as to a material fact, a trial is required. If there is no genuine dispute as to any material
fact, no trial is required. The court then applies the law to the undisputed facts and enters
judgment.
If the moving party does not have the burden of proof at trial, it must point to an absence
of sufficient evidence to establish the claim or defense that the non-movant is obligated to prove.
If the respondent comes forward with sufficient competent evidence to establish a prima facie
claim or defense, a trial is required. If the respondent fails to produce sufficient competent
evidence to establish its claim or defense, then the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23 (1986).
6
B. First Amendment speech claim
When the government is acting in its capacity as employer, rather than its capacity as
sovereign, it enjoys a broader ability to regulate the speech and conduct of employees than it
would have in regulating speech or conduct by private citizens. See generally Waters v.
Churchill, 511 U.S. 661, 671-72 (1994) (“the government as employer indeed has far broader
powers than does the government as sovereign”). In attempting to strike a balance between the
government’s need (as an employer) to efficiently manage its workforce and the public worker’s
right (as a citizen) to invoke his or her First Amendment right to speak out on matters of public
importance, the Supreme Court in Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563, 568 (1968),
held that a public employee who speaks out on a matter of public concern enjoys the full
protection of the First Amendment against retaliation in the employment sphere. In Connick v.
Meyers, 461 U.S. 138, 146-47 (1983), the Supreme Court explored the converse situation,
concluding that where a public employee’s speech “cannot be fairly characterized as constituting
speech on a matter of public concern . . . government officials should enjoy wide latitude in
managing their offices,” such that “a federal court is not the appropriate forum in which to
review the wisdom of a personnel decision taken by a public agency allegedly in reaction to the
employee.
Thus, the required elements of a First Amendment retaliation claim by a public
employee, derived from Pickering, are as follows. The employee must show: (i) that he
engaged in speech (or other First Amendment activity) that addressed a matter of public concern;
(ii) that his interest in free expression outweighed the employer=s legitimate interest in restricting
the speech; and (iii) that the speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the challenged
7
governmental action. The burden then shifts to the employer to demonstrate (iv) that it would
have taken the same action even in the absence of the employee=s protected speech. Morris v.
City of Colorado Springs, 666 F.3d 654, 661 (10th Cir. 2012). The first two elements – whether
the speech addressed a “public concern” and the balancing of employer and employee interests –
generally present issues of law to be decided by the Court; the last two elements – the
employer’s motivation and whether it would have made the same decision absent the speech –
are generally matters of fact to be determined by the factfinder. Id.
Here, Mr. Harrison engaged in two distinct strands of allegedly protected speech: speech
during his campaign for Sheriff, and in his subsequent attempt to persuade the Town of
Wellington to create its own police force. The Court analyzes each type of speech separately.1
1. Campaign speeches
The Court begins by examining whether Mr. Harrison can demonstrate that the
Defendants retaliated against him based on his campaign speeches.
a. contents of the speech
The Defendants contend first that Mr. Harrison cannot sufficiently identify any specific
statements he made during the campaign that could even be examined to determine their level of
First Amendment protection. Rather, the Defendants contend that Mr. Harrison can only identify
his campaign statements in vague terms of their subject matter.
The Court finds that the record contains enough examples of specific campaign
statements by Mr. Harrison to permit analysis. Among other things, the record includes what
1
It is not clear whether Mr. Harrison contends that the two strands of speech somehow
combine to create an actionable claim where, as discussed below, neither strand of speech would
support a claim of its own accord. Ultimately, the Court finds that such a contention would be
unavailing for reasons the Court addresses infra.
8
appears to be an October 2010 article about Mr. Harrison’s campaign from a publication called
the “North Forty News.” That article refers to Mr. Harrison as stating:
• That he would like to see other top administrators in the Sheriff’s Office out on
the streets, in uniform and in marked cars, as “they’re paid very well . . . and they should be out
there serving the public.”
• That the department is “top-heavy” and needed “restructuring,” as “the number
of administrators in the Sheriff’s Office has more than doubled since . . . 1996, but only a few
deputy positions have been added.”
• That the current administration’s2 solution to balancing the department’s budget
was “telling deputies to write more traffic tickets,” which Mr. Harrison did not believe to be “in
the public’s best interest.”
• That the current administration was “a reactive office” that did not sufficiently
stress crime prevention.
In addition, Mr. Harrison’s brief contends that he “publicly question[ed] the integrity of
the command staff” in his campaign speeches. The record offers only the vaguest suggestion of
the actual contents of such assertions: for example, Mr. Harrison mentions in his own deposition
that “my message was that the Sheriff’s Office . . . didn’t have the integrity and honor that I felt
it should have,” but does not specify any particular examples of a lack of integrity that his
speeches might have addressed or otherwise elaborate on his assertions. The Court will assume,
for purposes of this analysis, that Mr. Harrison made only generalized statements challenging the
“integrity” of the Sheriff’s Office (or suggesting that he would bring “more integrity” to the
office), but did not purport to bring any particular instances of alleged dishonest or corrupt
behavior by the Sheriff’s Office to the public’s attention.
2
The article specifically implied that Mr. Smith was considered, at least by Mr. Harrison,
to be associated with the current Sheriff’s Office administration. The article quotes Mr. Harrison
as stating “Justin Smith has had an opportunity for several years to make effective changes [and]
nothing will change with Mr. Smith [as Sheriff].”
9
b. whether the speech addressed “public concern”
A matter is one of public concern where it relates to Aany matter of political, social, or
other concern to the community@; that notion is juxtaposed with an action that is Aonly of
personal interest@ to the employee. Connick, 461 U.S. at 146-47. This assessment must be made
Aby the content, form, and context@ of the activity in question. Id. at 147-48. Matters of public
concern are those that are Asubject[s] of legitimate news interest; that is a subject of general
interest and of value and concern to the public.@ City of San Diego v. Roe, 543 U.S. 77, 83-84
(2004).
The Court may consider the motive of the actor in an attempt to determine whether the
association was Acalculated to redress personal grievances or whether it had a broader public
purpose,@ such as Asufficiently inform[ing] the issue as to be helpful to the public in evaluating
the conduct of government.@ Gardetto v. Mason, 100 F.3d 803, 812 (10th Cir. 1996); see also
Craven v. Univ. of Colorado Hosp. Auth., 260 F.3d 1218, 1226-27 (10th Cir. 2001) (A[i]n
deciding whether a particular statement involves a matter of public concern, the fundamental
inquiry is whether the plaintiff speaks as an employee or as a citizen@), Morris v. City of
Colorado Springs, 666 F.3d 654, 662-63 (10th Cir. 2012) (manner in which employee “frames”
the statement is relevant in determining whether he speaks as citizen or employee). Thus,
Aspeech pertaining to internal personnel disputes and working conditions ordinarily will not
involve public concern,@ whereas Aspeech that seeks to expose improper operations of the
government or questions the integrity of governmental officials@ does. Id.
The Defendants do not particularly argue that Mr. Harrison’s campaign statements and
positions do not reflect matters of “public concern” – indeed, it is difficult to imagine how bona
10
fide campaign speeches could be other than of public concern. Brammer-Hoelter v. Twin Peaks
Charter Academy, 492 F.3d 1192, 1205 (10th Cir. 2007) (“political speech regarding a public
election is undoubtedly a matter of public concern”). Instead, the Defendants focus on matters
touching on “internal management decisions” or “budgetary allocations” contending that they do
not amount to matters of “public concern.”
The Defendants rely on Gardetto v. Mason, 100 F.3d 803, 813-14 (10th Cir. 1996), but it
is more supportive of Mr. Harrison’s position. In Gardetto, the speech at issue was a university
professor’s comments about a lack of objectivity in a proposed layoff plan. The Court found that
such comments were of public concern, insofar as “the speech of persons able to offer a wellinformed perspective on expenditures of public funds may be especially valuable to public
debate on such subjects.” Id. at 814. In similar vein, the efficiency or effectiveness of the
organization or operation of a Sheriff’s office, or the value it receives for its expenditures of
public funds, are certainly matters of public concern. Accordingly, the Court finds that Mr.
Harrison’s campaign speech involved matters of “public concern.”
c. employer’s interest in regulating the speech
The next element requires the Court to weigh the employer’s interest in restricting the
speech against the employee’s interest in speaking out. The question is whether the employer
“has an efficiency interest which would justify it in restricting the particular speech at issue.”
Brammer, 492 F.3d at 1207. The Court inquires whether the employee’s exercise of speech
rights “impairs discipline by superiors or harmony among co-workers, has a detrimental impact
on close working relationships for which personal loyalty and confidence are necessary, or
impedes the performance of the speaker’s duties or interferes with the regular operation of the
11
enterprise.”3 Hulen v. Yates, 322 F.3d 1229, 1238 (10th Cir. 2003). However, “the only public
employer interest that can outweigh a public employee's recognized speech rights is the interest
in avoiding direct disruption, by the speech itself, of the public employer's internal operations
and employment relationships.” Brammer, 492 F.3d at 1207 (emphasis in original). The
employer’s interest element cannot be satisfied by “purely speculative allegations that certain
statements caused or will cause disruption.” Dill, 155 F.3d at 1203. Rather, an employer’s
interest is triggered by “actual disruption of services which results” from the speech. Finn v.
New Mexico, 249 F.3d 1241, 1248-49 (10th Cir. 2001); but see Hulen v. Yates, 322 F.3d 1229,
1238-39 (10th Cir. 2003) (suggesting that, in some circumstance, “a governmental employer may
rely upon predictions of disruption if supported by evidence”).
The Defendants have not offered a specific argument on this point as it relates to Mr.
Harrison’s campaign speech. They do not, for example, contend that Mr. Harrison’s campaign
speeches about the Sheriff’s Office being “top-heavy,” his comments about the office’s
priorities, or his contention that the office lacked integrity (or that he could bring more integrity
to it) had any particular disruptive effects on the staff. Even assuming it did, the Court has grave
doubts that the employer’s interests in preventing such disruption would overcome the strong
interest that Mr. Harrison (and the public) would have in ensuring that those matters were
adequately explored in the election of a new Sheriff.
Accordingly, the Court finds that Mr. Harrison’s campaign comments enjoyed full First
Amendment protection under the Pickering balancing.
3
The employer’s interest is “particularly acute in the context of law enforcement, where
there is a heightened interest in maintaining discipline and harmony among employees.” Dill v.
City of Edmond, 155 F.3d 1193, 1203 (10th Cir. 1998).
12
d. employer’s motivation
The Court then turns to the question of whether Mr. Harrison can show that his campaign
comments were a motivating factor in the Defendants’ decision to terminate his employment. As
noted above, this element involves a question of fact that is normally reserved for the factfinder,
but as with all factual questions, summary judgment may be appropriate if Mr. Harrison cannot
demonstrate a genuine issue of triable fact.
The 10th Circuit has noted that “protected conduct closely followed by adverse action
may justify an inference of retaliatory motive,” particularly where “the protected speech
implicated the individual defendant in wrongdoing.” Baca v. Sklar, 398 F.3d 1210, 1221 (10th
Cir. 2005). Taken in the light most favorable to Mr. Harrison, the record indicates that he made
various complaints about the organization and operations of the Sheriff’s Office through the
election season of 2010, culminating in the election in early November. Those criticisms
included statements inferring that Mr. Smith was complicit in establishing and maintaining the
unfavorable policies. However, Mr. Harrison testified that he ceased making such comments
after the election was over.
Mr. Smith initiated the investigation that led to Mr. Harrison’s termination on January 11,
2011. Thus, the temporal window with regard to Mr. Harrison’s campaign speech is 70 days, or
10 weeks. The 10th Circuit has been extremely reluctant to permit an inference of retaliatory
motivation to be drawn where the temporal distance between protected conduct and adverse
action approaches that length. See Anderson v. Coors Brewing Co., 181 F.3d 1171, 1179 (10th
Cir. 1999) (six week window is sufficient to permit inference, but three month window is too
long). Indeed, in Meiners v. University of Kansas., 359 F.3d 1222, 1231 (10th Cir. 2004), the
13
court suggested, without necessarily finding, that events occurring at least “two months and one
week [67 days], and a maximum of just under three months” apart are “probably too far apart . . .
to establish causation by temporal proximity alone.”4
Given the length of time between Mr. Harrison’s campaign speeches and the
commencement of the investigation that led to his termination, the Court is inclined to find that
the distance is too great to permit an inference from temporal proximity alone that the
Defendants acted with an improper motivation. Thus, the burden is on Mr. Harrison to come
forward with additional evidence that indicates that the Defendants harbored a retaliatory motive
against him.
The only additional argument Mr. Harrison offers in support of his contention that the
Defendants were motivated by his protected conduct is that there are certain discrepancies
between the investigation report prepared by Mr. Disner and the reasons articulated by Mr.
Nelson and Mr. Smith in their termination letters, or inconsistencies with the termination letters
themselves. The Court finds this argument to be insufficient.
Mr. Harrison argues, for example, that the Defendants accuse him of lying during Mr.
Disner’s investigation, but points out that Mr. Disner’s investigation report “makes no mention
of an untruthful statement by [Mr.] Harrison.” But Mr. Harrison concedes that Mr. Disner’s
report “mention[s] perceived contradictions” between Mr. Harrison’s interview statements and
4
Arguably, Mr. Harrison might gain some additional probative value from the fact that his
campaign comments implicated Mr. Smith alongside the existing Sheriff’s Office management.
Speech directly implicating an individual defendant in wrongdoing gains a bit of additional
potency when examining a causal connection. Baca v. Sklar, 398 F.3d 1210, 1221 (10th Cir.
2005). But the Court finds that, given Mr. Harrison’s single reference to Mr. Smith being a part
of the existing administration implicates Mr. Smith in Mr. Harrison’s criticisms in a largely
indirect way, reducing any probative effect of causation that could be found.
14
the contents of his e-mails to the Town of Wellington, suggesting that there is some material
difference between an “untruthful statement” and a “perceived contradiction.” It is evident from
Mr. Disner’s report that he believed Mr. Harrison was being untruthful (or at the very least,
misleading) about the extent of his involvement in the Wellington issue, and thus, there is no
apparent inconsistency between the facts recited in Mr. Disner’s report and Mr. Smith’s ultimate
conclusion that Mr. Harrison should be terminated for, among other things, untruthfulness.
Ultimately, the Court finds that Mr. Harrison has not come forward with evidence that
would permit the factfinder to draw an inference between his campaign speeches and the
decision to terminate him. Instead the evidence strongly rebuts such an inference. Mr.
Harrison’s first act, upon losing the election, was to inform Mr. Smith that he would soon be
resigning from the Sheriff’s Department. Mr. Harrison articulates no reason why Mr. Smith,
even if he harbored animus against Mr. Harrison for comments made on the campaign trail,
would not simply allow that resignation to occur. Moreover, it is clear that the Wellington
matter constitutes an entirely independent intervening event that would dispel any inference that
the Defendants’ actions against Mr. Harrison sprang from his campaign speeches, rather than his
conduct in the Wellington matter. Any inference of causation that one might draw between Mr.
Harrison’s campaign speeches and his termination is effectively displaced by more direct
inference of causation represented by the Wellington issue.
One might argue that the Defendants silently nursed a post-election grudge against Mr.
Harrison, such that they availed themselves of an opportunity to investigate him for the
Wellington matter where they would have ignored such activity by another Sheriff’s Office
employee who had not campaigned against Mr. Smith, but even this argument is problematic for
15
both factual and theoretical issues. Factually, the record refutes any contention that Mr. Harrison
was treated more harshly than similarly-situated individuals who did not make such campaign
statements. The record shows that Mr. Disner also recommended that Deputy Strohl be found
guilty of the same conduct violations even though there is no indication that Deputy Strohl ever
campaigned against Mr. Smith or made comments similar to Mr. Harrison’s campaign
statements. In addition, the facts of the Wellington matter are totally independent of the election.
Accordingly, because the Court finds that Mr. Harrison cannot establish that his
campaign speeches were a motivating factor in the Defendants’ decision to terminate him, the
Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the portion of Mr. Harrison’s First Amendment
speech claim based on campaign statements.
2. Wellington incident
The analysis proceeds differently with regard to the Wellington matter.
a. contents of speech
The Court begins by examining the particular speech that Mr. Harrison engaged in. For
the most part, Mr. Harrison’s communications with the Town of Wellington are contained in emails he sent to the Mayor; it appears to be undisputed that he personally had no substantive oral
conversations with Town officials. Thus, the Court examines the e-mails.
The initial e-mail to the Mayor, dated November 12, 2010, states simply: “My name is
Jay Harrison. I am currently a Deputy with the Sheriff’s Office. Would you have time to meet
with me to discuss law enforcement in Wellington.” On November 23, 2010, Mr. Harrison again
wrote to the Mayor, stating:
I was wondering if you had a chance yet to look at your calendar to
see if you had a small amount of time to meet. I would like to
16
discuss what your thoughts might be on Wellington starting their
own Police Department. I have looked at some numbers which
include size of the town, call load, and effective service. I believe
we can start a Police Department which can save the town money
and provide better service. With officers living in town and being
a part of the community. There are several Deputies including
myself that live in town and would love to serve our home
community. We would build a professional law enforcement
agency that has only the interest of the town and its citizens in
mind.
The record does not address any particular comments Mr. Harrison might have made at
the December Town Council meeting. It appears that he requested leave to address the Town
Council, but was told that his subject was not on the agenda and he was too late for general
public comments, but was offered the opportunity to be placed on the agenda for the next
meeting. He wrote to the Mayor again shortly before the January 11, 2011 Town Council
meeting, in which he states that he will not be able to attend, but adds:
We have prepared some information for the board. Wellington has
been my home for over 9 years. I enjoy raising my kids and living
here as do so many of us. We are not wanting to say bad things
about the Sheriff’s Office. There are great Deputies that work in
Wellington. Although the Sheriff’s Office does a good job, it can
be done better.
Finally, on January 13, 2011, he wrote:
I hope the Strohls did well with the presentation. I am meeting
with Chief Wagner from Timnath tomorrow. She is providing me
with information on starting a police dept. I am also working with
the towns of Nunn and Pierce in reference to giving info on
starting a police agency. I would like to submit a proposal to
Wellington to start a police dept. I am looking to start the
department with hiring Larimer Sheriff’s Deputies to save costs
and time in training people. These Deputies live or would live in
Wellington because of the increased commitment to the town they
live in as well as reducing the response time to calls and call outs
from on call time. Again, I think we can reduce costs and improve
effective law enforcement in town. This is a change for the people
17
to have a great influence on the law enforcement they want for the
town.
The record reflects no further communications by Mr. Harrison with the Mayor or anyone else in
the Town of Wellington.
b. whether the speech addressed “public concern”
Mr. Harrison’s comments to the Mayor appear to be a mix of public and private concerns.
Arguably, he raises matters that touch on questions of public concern, including the possibility
that Wellington could obtain cost savings and reduction in call times by establishing a town
police department. These are clearly matters that any citizen of Wellington would be expected to
be interested in. However, Mr. Harrison does not discuss these issues in any particular detail,
other than to simply suggest that, in the abstract, cost savings and reduced call times could be
obtained.
At the same time, Mr. Harrison also raises issues that are quite clearly statements bearing
only on his own pecuniary interests, such as expressing his desire to “serve [his] home
community” – in other words, to get a job with the new town police department -- and the
implication in the January 13 e-mail that Mr. Harrison saw himself as consulting on (“I am
working with the towns of Nunn and Pierce [and Timnath] . . . on starting a police agency”) or
heading up (“I am looking to start the department with hiring Larimer Sheriff’s Deputies . . .”)
Wellington’s new police department. These are purely private concerns that do not receive any
particular protection.
The fact that a body of speech touches on elements of both private and public concern
does not cast the entire course of speech into one category or the other; rather, it merely affects
the weight to be given in the Pickering balancing to the employee’s interest in making the
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speech. Finn, 249 F.3d at 1248-49 (“although not excluded from protection by the first step of
the Pickering analysis, a body of speech with only a ‘tidbit’ of content touching on matters of
public concern often will not be entitled to protection under the second step”). Thus, Mr.
Harrison’s comments to the Mayor of Wellington enjoy some, but less than full, protection in the
Pickering balancing.
c. employer’s interest in regulating the speech
The Court then turns to the relative weight to be given to Mr. Harrison’s limited public
interest in advocating for Wellington to start a police department and the Defendants’ interest, as
employer, in preventing disruption that might result from Mr. Harrison’s speech.
The Defendants offer two major arguments as to why Mr. Harrison’s statements were
particularly disruptive. First, they point out that Mr. Harrison specifically proposed poaching
deputies from the Sheriff’s Department to staff a new Wellington police department. The
Defendants point out that such conduct would necessarily result in increased costs to the
Sheriff’s Department, both in terms of lost investments in time and training for the deputies who
left and in the need to recruit and train new deputies. Second, the Defendants point to concrete
evidence of disruption that occurred from Mr. Harrison’s speech, as Mr. Smith testified that the
Sheriff’s Office deputies who were currently working in Wellington felt slighted by Mr.
Harrison’s comments that the Sheriff’s Office was providing inferior quality services, resulting
in what Mr. Smith described as “a morale issue for them.”
Both of the interests articulated by the Defendants are genuine and significant. Few
employers would abide a current employee actively and overtly soliciting the employer’s
customers to defect and join a competing business (much less one that the employee himself was
19
proposing to form). And even fewer employers would tolerate that employee expressly
proposing to recruit the staff for his or her new venture from the employer’s current personnel.
The Court is comfortable in finding that no reasonable factfinder could conclude that the
Sheriff’s Office’s interest in ridding itself of a current employee actively fostering the departure
of both employees and customers of his employer (much less for his own direct pecuniary
benefit), clearly outweighs the minimal public interest Mr. Harrison had as a citizen of
Wellington proposing ways for the town to save money.
Of course, Mr. Harrison’s proposal was not accepted by Wellington, and thus, the
Sheriff’s Office suffered no actual loss of customers or staff. The Court notes that caselaw
contemplates that, in certain circumstances, employers can act to prevent disruption before it
occurs. Hulen, 322 F.3d at 1238-39. The particulars of the Wellington issue would certainly be
an appropriate invocation of that rule.
But even if the Court were limited to balancing actual disruption against Mr. Harrison’s
public concerns, the record reflects that the Sheriff’s Office suffered actual disruption as a result
of Mr. Harrison’s proposal to Wellington in at least two ways. First, as Mr. Smith testified, he
personally “heard the chatter around the office from the deputies” that were insulted by Mr.
Harrison’s suggestion that their services to Wellington were insufficient.5 This disruption of
personal working relationships and confidence among co-workers is the type of injury to
5
Mr. Harrison argues that Mr. Smith’s deposition testimony only recites hearsay that Mr.
Smith obtained from Deputy Noe about damage to staff morale. But Mr. Smith’s deposition
makes clear that his understanding of morale problems caused by Mr. Harrison’s proposal was
based both “from what I heard [from] Deputy Noe . . . as well as just the noise I heard, the
chatter around the office from the deputies.” In any event, the fact that Mr. Smith may have
received reports of morale problems through intermediary officers, rather than directly from the
complaining deputies themselves, matters little in the question of whether an employer had an
interest in quelling the morale problem.
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operations that can permit employers to act. Moreover, the record also reflects that the Sheriff’s
Office (justifiably) felt the need to conduct an investigation into the nature, extent, and contents
of Mr. Harrison’s contacts with Wellington in order to ascertain how Mr. Harrison’s statements
could affect the Sheriff’s Office. This diversion of resources to matters outside the normal scope
of the Sheriff’s Office’s regular operations is another form of disruption that weighs in favor of
permitting the Defendants to act.
Accordingly, the Court finds that, taking the facts in the light most favorable to Mr.
Harrison, the Pickering balancing resolves, as a matter of law, in favor of the Defendants with
regard to Mr. Harrison’s statements to the Town of Wellington. The Defendants’ decision to
terminate Mr. Harrison as a result of those comments does not implicate Mr. Harrison’s First
Amendment speech rights, and thus, the Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Mr.
Harrison’s speech-based § 1983 claim in its entirety.
C. First amendment association claim
Mr. Harrison’s also invokes the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of association,
contending that the Defendants retaliated against him for associating with others when
advocating for the Wellington proposal.
As the Court understands it, this claim arises from the fact that Mr. Harrison discussed
his proposal with others, such as Deputy Strohl, before presenting it to the Town of Wellington,
and that Deputy Strohl ultimately gave the presentation to the Town Council when Mr. Harrison
could not attend.
In consideration a claim for retaliation based on an employee’s exercise of associational
rights under the First Amendment, the Court first determines the nature of the clamed association
21
– whether it is “intrinsic” or “instrumental” association. Merrifield v. Board of County
Commissioners, 654 F.3d 1073, 1080 (10th Cir. 2011). Where, as here, the association is
undertaken for the purpose of engaging in other First Amendment conduct (such as speech
petitioning the Wellington Town Council to make a certain decision), the association is
“instrumental” in nature. Claims of “instrumental” association are analyzed according to the
First Amendment conduct the associational conduct promotes. Id. at 1083.
Because the Court has already concluded that Mr. Harrison’s speech-based conduct with
regard to the Wellington issue failed to survive the Pickering balancing, it is difficult to see how
a claim that he was retaliated against for associating with Mr. Strohl and others to engage in that
conduct would somehow survive. Mr. Strohl’s presentation to the Wellington Town Council
avoids some of the pitfalls of Mr. Harrison’s communications with the Mayor, in that Mr.
Strohl’s comments do not emphasize poaching employees from the Sheriff’s Office to staff a
town police force, nor emphasized Mr. Strohl or Mr. Harrison’s intention to be considered for
employment with a new police force. Arguably, then, Mr. Strohl’s speech makes a stronger case
for being considered to be on a matter of public concern than Mr. Harrison’s speech does.
But the distinction is largely insignificant, as the Court has already found that Mr. Harrison’s
own speech-based conduct fails the Pickering balancing. Associating with others who were
more moderated and temperate in their speech does little to afford protection when one’s own
speech-based conduct lacked protection under Pickering.6
6
In any event, the Court finds that Mr. Harrison would have difficulty establishing the
remaining elements of a claim based on his association with Mr. Strohl and others, for most of
the reasons discussed above with regard to his speech-based claims. An employee who seeks to
undermine his employer is no less disruptive – and indeed, is more disruptive – because he
conspired with other co-workers to assist in the effort.
22
Accordingly, the Court finds the Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Mr.
Harrison’s associational § 1983 claim as well.
D. Remaining matters
The foregoing reasoning suffices to grant summary judgment to the Defendants on both
of Mr. Harrison’s § 1983 claims premised on the First Amendment. Mr. Harrison also asserted a
§ 1983 claim sounding in deprivation of due process, but the Magistrate Judge recommended
that the due process claim be dismissed. Mr. Harrison did not file timely objections to the
recommendation, and the Court, having nevertheless reviewed the recommendation under the
otherwise applicable de novo standard of review, agrees with the Magistrate Judge’s reasoning
and conclusions. Thus, Mr. Harrison’s due process claim is dismissed for failure to state a claim.
The Defendants filed timely objections to a portion of the recommendation regarding
who should be the appropriate entity Defendant in this case – the Board of County
Commissioners or the Sheriff’s Office itself. Because the Court grants summary judgment to all
Defendants on all of Mr. Harrison’s claims, it is unnecessary to reach the question of which
entity is a proper Defendant going forward. Accordingly, the Defendants’ objections to the
Magistrate Judge’s recommendation are overruled as moot.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court ADOPTS that portion of the Magistrate Judge’s
February 8, 2013 Recommendation (# 48) relating to Mr. Harrison’s due process claim. The
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (# 17) is GRANTED with regard to that claim and that claim is
DISMISSED for failure to state a claim. The Defendants’ Objections (# 49) to other portions of
the Recommendation are OVERRULED AS MOOT. The Defendants’ Motion for Summary
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Judgment (# 41) is GRANTED in its entirety. The Clerk of the Court shall enter judgment in
favor of the Defendants and against Mr. Harrison in this matter, and shall thereafter close the
case.
Dated this 12th day of March, 2013.
BY THE COURT:
Marcia S. Krieger
Chief United States District Judge
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