MCLEAN v. CITY OF QUINCY FLORIDA et al
Filing
87
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS' 64 MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT. Plaintiff's request (ECF No. 78 ) to strike Defendants' answer and defenses is DENIED. Defendants' motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 64 ) is GRAN TED. The clerk shall enter judgment in Defendants favor stating: "Judgment is entered in favor of all Defendants and against Plaintiff on all claims." The clerk shall close the case. The clerk shall tax costs against Plaintiff. Signed by SENIOR JUDGE WILLIAM STAFFORD on 1/28/2025. (rcb)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TALLAHASSEE DIVISION
JACK L. MCLEAN, JR.,
Plaintiff,
v.
4:23cv354–WS/MJF
THE CITY OF QUINCY, FLORIDA,
a Florida Municipality Corporation,
COMMISSIONER RONTE HARRIS,
individually and in his official capacity,
COMMISSIONER KEITH DOWDELL,
individually and in his official capacity,
COMMISSIONER ANESSA CANIDATE,
individually and in his official capacity,
Defendants.
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’
MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The plaintiff, Jack McLean (“McLean”), sues his former employer, the City
of Quincy, Florida (the “City”), and three (3) individuals who were City
Commissioners at all relevant times, namely Ronte Harris (“Harris”), Keith
Dowdell (“Dowdell”), and Anessa Canidate (“Canidate”) (collectively, the
“Commissioners”). McLean alleges that he was fired as City Manager in
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November 2021 by a majority vote of the five-member City Commission, the
majority votes being cast by Harris, Dowdell, and Canidate. In Count One of his
amended complaint, McLean sues the City for age and disability discrimination
pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), the Rehabilitation Act of
1973 (“RA”), and Chapter 760 of the Florida Civil Rights Act (“FCRA”). In Count
Two of his amended complaint, he sues all four Defendants for retaliation under
the First Amendment.
Before the court at this time is Defendants’ motion for summary judgment
(ECF No. 64). McLean has filed a corrected response (ECF No. 78) in opposition
to Defendants’ motion,1 and Defendants have replied (ECF No. 84) to that
response.
I.
1
In more than half of Defendants’ 27-page corrected response, in a section
entitled “Examination of Record Evidence,” McLean complains about Defendants’
alleged discovery violations. He maintains that Defendants “did not produce text
messages” relevant to the case and that he was “unprepared for his deposition”
because Defendants failed to fulfill their discovery obligations. McLean asks the
court “to strike Defendants’ answer and defenses” as a sanction. Defendants have
responded (ECF No. 83) in opposition to McLean’s request to strike and for
sanctions. The court has reviewed the matter and finds that McLean’s request to
strike and for sanctions is due to be denied. The time for complaining about
discovery violations is during the discovery period, not after the close of discovery
and after a motion for summary judgment has been filed. McLean may not now
raise the argument that Defendants failed to comply with their discovery
obligations.
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The parties have submitted deposition transcripts, declarations, and other
documents that provide evidence of the following:
McLean served as City Attorney from 2000 to 2006 and as City Manager
from 2008 to 2014. ECF No. 63–1, McLean Depo., pp. 14–15. In May 2018,
Commissioner Dowdell nominated McLean as interim City Manager;
Commissioner Harris seconded the motion. McLean served in an interim capacity
from May 2018 until May 2019, when he executed an at-will employment
agreement, providing that either party could terminate the agreement with thirty
(30) days notice. Id. at 22–24.
McLean had been friends with Dowdell and Harris for years before he began
his second stint as City Manager. That friendship was tested during McLean’s
second City-Manager stint. According to McLean, Dowdell’s actions toward him
as City Manager became hurtful; he seemed more “power craved” than before; and
he overstepped the bounds set forth in the City Charter for Commissioners, causing
friction between the two. Id. at 26–31. Dowdell has asserted that, as early as
January 2021, he started having concerns about McLean’s actions as City
Manager, in particular McLean’s spending and its effect on the City’s financial
status. Dowdell explained that “though we started as friends, my impression of
[McLean] changed. . . . We were always arguing about things he was doing in the
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community to make it look like the Commission[ers] did not know what they were
doing.” ECF No. 63–4, Dowdell Decl., pp. 1–4.
McLean’s relationship with Harris likewise became strained. Harris argued
with McLean at City Commission meetings, openly expressing concern about
McLean’s lack of personnel management, his failure to address employee
concerns, and his failure to demand that department management follow protocols
and policies. In an email to McLean on January 19, 2021, Harris wrote that he
“was extremely disappointed at the outcome of the legislative work that [McLean]
put into the 2019–20 city budget.” ECF No. 63–1, McLean Depo., pp. 36–40; ECF
No. 63–8, pp. 1–3. According to McLean, Harris–like Dowdell–overstepped his
bounds as a City Commissioner, leading to disagreements between the two. ECF
No. 63–1, McLean Depo., pp. 36–40; ECF No. 63–8, Harris Decl., pp. 1–3.
On March 19, 2021, after experiencing heart trouble in February, McLean
underwent heart bypass surgery, causing him to temporarily stop working. While
he was on leave, recovering from his surgery, McLean’s wife, Bernice, had many
positive phone conversations with Harris and Dowdell, updating them on
McLean’s condition. During one of those conversations, Harris suggested that
McLean take paid leave for six (6) months and then return as a consultant. ECF
No. 78–2, Bernice Depo., p. 15. McLean was opposed to such a plan. He returned
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to work part-time on April 20, and resumed his full-time duties in May 2021. ECF
No. 14, Am. Compl., ¶ 20. McLean’s relations with Dowdell and Harris did not
improve after his return to work.
In early July 2021, McLean, Dowdell, and Harris met for breakfast at a
Cracker Barrel restaurant. The purpose of the meeting was to “to smooth out some
personal issues” and to “repair[] the relationship” between McLean and Dowdell.
ECF No.1, McLean Depo., pp. 100, 108. Nothing was said at this meeting to
suggest that either Dowdell or Harris wanted to terminate McLean’s employment
because of his age and/or disability. Id. at 102. Before the men left the Cracker
Barrel, some City business regarding the budget was briefly discussed.
Specifically, Dowdell and Harris wanted the upcoming budget to include a 122%
increase in pay for all commissioners—an increase that was opposed by McLean.
Id. at 103. McLean did not then consider whether this discussion violated Florida’s
Sunshine Law. Id. at 105–109.
Soon after the Cracker Barrel meeting, McLean learned from a number of
individuals that Dowdell and Harris were pushing for McLean’s termination.2
2
Those individuals included Rolanda Jackson (school board member),
Sherrie Taylor (former city commissioner), Natalie Bradwell (school system
employee), and Coach Livingston (high school coach). Of these individuals, only
Rolanda Jackson has testified in this case, and her response to questions was
basically: “I don’t recall.”
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According to McLean’s wife, Bernice, Dowdell himself told her in a July 22 phone
call that McLean was “too old and too sick” to be City Manager and that he had
three votes—Dowdell, Harris, and Canidate—to fire McLean at the next city
commission meeting. ECF No. 78–2, Bernice Depo., pp. 18, 21. Dowdell denies
that he made the “too old and too sick” comment to Bernice. ECF No. 63–5, p. 26.
In a series of text messages in late August and early September 2021, Harris
voiced his frustrations about McLean’s performance as City Manager. On August
26, 2021, for example, Harris texted McLean and Rolanda Jackson, writing:
Not one goal presented in [a November 19, 2021] email
has been accomplished. NOT ONE. I have a right to be
pissed. . . . Nobody is defending [McLean’s] leadership
anymore but [Commissioner Sapp]. . . . The commission
has no means of moving the city forward. It’s whatever
[McLean] want[s] to do and whenever [McLean] feel[s]
like it.
ECF No. 63–8, Harris Decl., Attach. 3, p. 255. On August 29, 2021, Harris texted
McLean:
You should not be able to park a car in a housing
complex, get out with a high powered rifle and walk
around intimidating law abiding citizens without a trace.
But in Quincy you can because the damn manager won’t
hire a chief of police or even put up surveillance when
the mayor asks. You are terrible for Quincy. Please plan
your exit so we can move forward.
ECF No. 63–27, p. 7. On September 11, 2021, Harris texted:
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Clearly, Jack, our values are not aligned. I need a
manager that has better judgment in management. This is
NOT what Quincy deserves. We deserve better. Please
STOP holding us hostage.” Id. at 4.
Harris’s frustration with McLean’s performance as City Manager was evident.
Id. at 6.
In late summer and early fall of 2021, Dowdell and Canidate were similarly
frustrated with McLean’s performance as City Manager. Dowdell was concerned,
in particular, with the way McLean spent monies beyond the $10,000 threshold
provided in the City Charter. ECF No. 63–4, Dowdell Decl., p. 2, ¶ 5. That concern
led Dowdell to place McLean’s contract on the agenda for the mid-September 2021
Commissioners’ meeting. Id. Dowdell later removed the item from the agenda,
having been told by the City Attorney that the item may not have been properly
noticed. Id. at ¶ 7. Canidate was concerned about McLean’s persistent lack of
response to the Commissioners’ inquiries and directives, his failure to provide
necessary documents when requested or otherwise in a timely manner, and his
general mismanagement of City operations that led to inefficiencies and financial
concerns. ECF No. 63–2, Canidate Decl., ¶¶ 4–6.
At their September 28 Commission meeting, the Commissioners approved a
122% pay raise for commissioners by a three to two vote, with Commissioners
Dowdell, Harris, and Candidate casting the deciding votes. ECF No. 63–14, p. 45.
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Although he opposed the size of the raise, McLean did not speak for or against the
raise at the meeting. ECF No. 63–1, McLean Depo., p. 138. McLean had earlier
advised Harris, who was then the mayor of Quincy, that the raise could be a
political problem for the Commissioners. Id. at 136–38. A number of individuals
from the community attended the September 28th meeting and did voice
opposition to the raise. ECF No. 63–14, p. 44.
Unbeknownst to the Commissioners, McLean had his lawyer call the state
attorney’s office on September 14, to report that Dowdell and Harris had
had possibly “violated the Sunshine Law requirements by conducting two secret
meetings prior to the vote on September 28, 2021, to discuss the pay raises in
question.” ECF No. 63–20, Grand Jury Presentment, p. 4. The Cracker Barrel
meeting was one of those alleged secret meetings. McLean himself met with the
state attorney on October 4; and, on November 9, McLean and Dowdell, among
others, appeared before the grand jury. Id. at 2. The allegations made by McLean
were “investigated by FDLE and were either determined to be unfounded or devoid
of evidence to corroborate the allegations.” Id. at 6. As announced in its
Presentment issued on March 22, 2022, the grand jury found “insufficient evidence
to proceed on any criminal allegations regarding meetings occurring in violation of
the Sunshine laws.” Id. at 8. The grand jury went on to report that “the raises, in
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question, while unjustified and wrong, were done legally,” id. at 9, adding that
“[t]he action of these Commissioners in adopting the pay increase demonstrates a
self-interest which is in direct conflict with their duty to serve this community as
our representatives.” Id. at 10-11. The grand jury recommended a charter
amendment to “prevent a recurrence of this problem going forward.” Id. at 9.
On November 9, at a regular commission meeting, an issue regarding raises
for probationary employees was addressed. ECF No. 63–14, p. 62. Harris learned
that, after the Commission approved raises for all non-exempt employees, McLean
had sent an email stating that probationary employees would not receive the raise
until the completion of probation. Id. After Harris—then Mayor—expressed
frustration with McLean’s failure to follow decisions voted on by the Commission,
Dowdell moved for the Commission to follow through on the previously approved
raises but to freeze all future pay raises and all hiring unless approved by the
Commission. Id. at 63. Although the City Attorney advised that the City Charter
was clear that the City Manager “shall employ or appoint all city employees,”
Dowdell’s motion passed, with Harris, Dowdell, and Canidate all voting in favor.
Id. at 64. At the end of the meeting, Mayor Harris again voiced his frustration with
McLean, stating that McLean was not telling the truth and had not responded to
several emails. Id. at 70. McLean asked that the December meeting include an open
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discussion about his future. Id. The Commission set December 14 as the date to
review McLean’s contract. ECF No. 63–25.
On November 10, the City Attorney wrote a letter to the Commission
opining that the vote to freeze hiring and pay raises may have violated the City
Charter. ECF 63–21, ¶ 3. On November 11, after receiving the City Attorney’s
letter, Harris moved the discussion of McLean’s contract up from the December
Commission meeting to the November 16 special meeting agenda. ECF No. 63–25,
p. 2. In Harris’s words:
At this point, I was frustrated that [the Commission] could not keep
McLean from doing and spending as he pleased, so I requested that
his contract review be moved from a meeting in December, to a
special meeting [on November 16]. I did not think the City could
handle another month of McLean as manager, and had decided that I
would move to terminate him at this point. I was fed up.
ECF No. 63–8, Harris Decl., ¶ 9.
On November 15, McLean—in his capacity as City Manager—filed a
declaratory judgment action against the City in state court, seeking a declaration
that the Commission was prohibited from implementing a hiring freeze. ECF No.
63–26. A stipulated order dismissing the case was entered on December 2, 2021,
based on the parties’ Resolution of the dispute. ECF No. 63–28.
At the Commission’s Special Meeting on November 16, Harris moved to
terminate McLean’s employment as City Manager after thirty (30) days written
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notice. ECF No. 63–14, p. 77. Harris reminded the Commissioners that, per
McLean’s employment contract, his contract could be terminated by either party on
thirty (30) days written notice. Id. Harris’s motion carried, with Harris, Dowdell,
and Canidate providing the deciding votes. Id. at 82. With notice, McLean’s last
day as City Manager was December 16, 2021. The City later hired Dr. Beverly
Nash to replace McLean. ECF No. 63–1, McLean Depo., p. 163–64. Dr. Nash is
approximately one year younger than McLean. Id.
Before the 30-day notice period expired, McLean and the City’s Director of
Human Resources and Risk Management, Ann Sherman, signed off on a check
request to pay McLean $80,225.60, which included compensation for unused sick
and annual leave. ECF No. 63–8, pp.13–14. Sherman calculated the amount
of—and completed the paperwork for—McLean’s final payout. ECF No. 63–13,
p.6–7; ECF 78–6, Sherman Decl., ¶ 6. Surprised by the large amount of the payout,
Harris requested and reviewed public records regarding McLean’s pay and leave,
concluding that McLean “may have violated policies and defrauded the City out of
more than $57,000.” ECF No. 63–8, Harris Decl., ¶ 10. Harris organized his
findings in a binder (a public record itself), which included public records
regarding City policies and McLean’s pay and leave records. McLean provided his
binder to a lawyer who was hired by the Commission to investigate McLean’s
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payout. Id. at ¶ 11. In his letter to the lawyer, which accompanied the binder,
Harris suggested “these documents support the belief that McLean may have
committed . . . fraud.” Id. at 7. Harris also provided his binder to the local press
upon a public records request. Id. at ¶ 13.
The Florida Commission on Ethics (“FCE”) received a complaint alleging
that McLean violated Florida law by “taking actions in order to increase his final
financial payout from the City of Quincy.” ECF No. 63–13, pp. 2, 9. After
investigating the matter, FCE found probable cause to believe that McLean
violated Florida law. Id. at 11. The FCE case remains pending.
After his termination, McLean assisted with a petition to recall Dowdell,
Harris, and Canidate based on their vote to increase commissioners’ pay by 122%.
ECF No. 63–1, McLean Depo., p. 144. The raise triggered “a lot of newspaper
articles and television coverage and became a big issue in the community.” Id. A
counter-campaign ensued, and flyers were distributed, one claiming that McLean
“stole an $80,000 check before he left” and was “caught stealing from the City,”
ECF No. 63–29, p. 2, and another asserting that McLean “is currently being
investigated by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for possible theft of
over $57,000 in leave payout.” Id. at 1. The record in this case contains no
evidence that Dowdell, Harris, or Canidate created these flyers, provided
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information to the persons who did create the flyers, participated in the distribution
of the flyers, or asked others to circulate the flyers. William Walker, a second or
third cousin of Dowdell, did not create the flyers but did provide some of the
information that appeared on at least one of the flyers. He was also involved in the
distribution of flyers. ECF No. 63–16, Walker Depo., p. 10–18. According to
Walker, his information came from public records and/or from different people in
the Gadsden County Citizen Review Board. Id. at 18–19. Walker has denied that
Harris, Dowdell or Canidate asked him to pass out the flyers. Id. at 36–37.
II.
In Count One of his amended complaint, McLean sues only the City,
asserting two distinct claims under three different statutes, namely, an age
discrimination claim under the FCRA and a disability discrimination claim under
the ADA, RA, and FCRA.
“For age and disability discrimination, the plaintiff must prove that his age
or disability was a ‘but-for’ cause of the adverse employment action—meaning it
had a ‘determinative influence on the outcome’ of the employer’s decision.” King
v. HCA, 825 F. App’x 733, 736 (11th Cir. 2020) (citing Gross v. FBL Fin. Servs.,
Inc., 557 U.S. 167, 176 (2009) (ADEA) and McNely v. Ocala Star-Banner Corp.,
99 F.3d 1068, 1077 (11th Cir. 1996) (ADA)). A plaintiff may establish claims of
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age and disability discrimination through either direct evidence or circumstantial
evidence.3 See, e.g., Sanchez v. Mgmt. Enter. Dev. & Servs., Inc., No.
2:19cv277–ECM, 2022 WL 988378, at *7 (M.D. Ala. Mar. 31, 2022).
Direct evidence of employment discrimination is evidence “sufficient to
prove discrimination without inference or presumption.” Fripp v. City of Atlanta,
No. 23–14141, 2024 WL 3983345, at *3 (11th Cir. Aug. 29, 2024) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Under Eleventh Circuit precedent, direct evidence
includes “only the most blatant remarks, whose intent could be nothing other than
to discriminate.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). A discriminatory statement
can be direct evidence if the statement (1) is made by a decisionmaker;
(2) specifically relates to the challenged employment decision; and (3) reveals
blatant discriminatory animus. Chambers v. Walt Disney World Co., 132 F. Supp.
2d 1356, 1364 (M.D. Fla. 2001).
If a plaintiff presents direct evidence of discrimination, the trial court must
decide, first, whether the proffered direct evidence is credible, and, second,
3
Although McLean has not asserted an age discrimination claim pursuant to
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), federal caselaw
interpreting the ADEA is instructive in cases brought under the FCRA. Rainey v.
United Parcel Serv., Inc., 816 F. App'x 397, 400 (11th Cir. 2020). FCRA disability
discrimination claims are also analyzed under the framework established by federal
disability caselaw.
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whether the evidence played a substantial role in the adverse employment decision
at issue. Haynes v. W.C.Caye & Co., 52 F.3d 928, 931 (11th Cir. 1995). “If the trial
court both credits the direct evidence and finds that the evidence played a
substantial role in the employment decision at issue, then the defendant can avoid
liability only by proving that it would have made the same decision even if it had
not allowed such discrimination to play a role.” Id.
Here, there is evidence that Dowdell told McLean’s wife in July 2021
that McLean was “too old and too sick” to be City Manager and that he (Dowdell)
had three votes to fire McLean at the next City Commission meeting. Dowdell
allegedly made this statement two months after McLean returned to work
following open-heart surgery and four months before Commissioners Dowdell,
Harris, and Canidate voted to terminate McLean. There is no evidence in this
record that either Harris or Canidate made similar statements.
Assuming, without deciding, that Dowdell in fact made the “too old and too
sick” comment, the court finds that the record establishes that McLean’s age and/or
alleged disability did not play a substantial or determinative role in the decision by
the three Commissioners to fire McLean. The record is rife with evidence that all
three Commissioners voted to fire McLean based primarily on his job performance.
The Eleventh Circuit, moreover, has made clear that “[t]here can be no municipal
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liability unless all three members of the [five-member] council who voted [to take
action against the plaintiff] shared the illegal motive.” Mason v. Village of El
Portal, 240 F.3d 1337, 1340 (11th Cir. 2001). That Dowdell allegedly told Bernice
in July that he had three votes to fire McLean does not in any way suggest that he
had three votes to fire McLean based on his age and/or disability. Because there is
no evidence that Harris and Canidate shared Dowdell’s alleged “too old and too
sick” motive, McLean cannot prevail on his discrimination claims against the
City.4
III.
In Count Two of his amended complaint, McLean asserts a First
Amendment retaliation claim against the City as well as Commissioners Dowdell,
Harris and Canidate. McLean contends that he was fired as City Manager after he
reported the Commissioners’ alleged violations of Florida’s Sunshine Law to the
State Attorney and after he provided compulsory testimony before the Grand Jury
regarding those violations. McLean also contends that the Commissioners, through
4
The court would reach the same result if McLean’s discrimination claims
were analyzed under the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework for cases
based on circumstantial evidence. The City has articulated non-discriminatory
reasons for the Commissioners’ decision to fire McLean and has provided ample
evidence to support those reasons; and McLean has fallen far short of establishing
that those reasons are pretextual.
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publicly distributed flyers, spread false and defamatory information about McLean
when McLean was campaigning—post-termination—against the Commissioners’
approval of the 122% increase in Commissioners’ pay and urging the election of
the Commissioners’ opponents during the Commissioners’ re-election campaign.
McLean was a public employee both when he reported the Commissioners’
alleged Sunshine-Law violations to the State Attorney and when he testified before
the grand jury regarding those violations. It is well established that a state
employer, including a municipality, may not retaliate against a public employee for
speech protected by the First Amendment. Williamson v. Ala. Dep’t of Mental
Health & Mental Retardation, No. 21-13274, 2023 WL 5287873, at *1 (11th Cir.
Aug. 17, 2023). A First Amendment retaliation claim asserted by a public
employee is governed by a four-part analysis.
[W]e first consider whether the plaintiff's speech was made as a
citizen and whether it implicated a matter of public concern. Moss v.
City of Pembroke Pines, 782 F.3d 613, 617 (11th Cir. 2015). If so, we
then weigh the plaintiff's interests in free speech against the
government's interest in regulating speech to promote the efficiency of
the public services it performs through its employees. Id. at 618.
These two inquiries are questions of law decided by the court, and the
court's resolution determines whether the plaintiff's speech is
protected by the First Amendment. Id. Third, the plaintiff must show
that his speech was a substantial motivating factor in the alleged
adverse employment action. Id. Finally, if the plaintiff makes this
showing, the burden shifts to the government to prove that it would
have taken the adverse actions even absent the plaintiff's speech. Id.
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Williamson, 2023 WL 5287873, at *2.
Where, as here, a plaintiff asserts a First Amendment retaliation claim
arising from a municipal body’s majority vote to terminate a public employee,
municipal liability does not exist unless all members of the municipal body who
voted for termination shared a retaliatory animus. Matthews v. Columbia Cnty.,
294 F.3d 1294, 1297 (11th Cir. 2002). Furthermore, where, as here, a plaintiff sues
a majority of the individual members of a public body, each of whom lacks
decision-making authority to act on his/her own, those members may not be held
individually liable for an act of the entire body unless it is shown that each of those
members acted with a shared retaliatory animus. Carollo v. City of Doral, No.
1:14cv23980–UU, 2015 WL 13145804, at *7 (S.D. Fla. 2015), aff’d in part, rev’d
in part, remanded on other grounds, 833 F3d 1322 (11th Cir. 2016) (interlocutory
appeal limited to questions of qualified immunity).
Even if the court assumes that McLean’s pre-termination speech to the State
Attorney and to the Grand Jury was made as a citizen on a matter of public
concern, McLean has failed to establish that this speech was a substantial
motivating factor in his firing. He has admitted that he told no one that he spoke to
the State Attorney. ECF 63–1, McLean Depo., p. 114. The record is replete with
evidence that Dowdell’s, Harris’s, and Canidate’s frustrations with McLean’s
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performance as City Manager started and persisted for many months before
McLean spoke to the State Attorney and to the Grand Jury. McLean, moreover, did
not speak to the State Attorney or the Grand Jury until after he learned that the
Commissioners wanted to fire him. Absent from the record is evidence indicating
that all three of the Commissioners voted to fire McLean based on an unlawful
retaliatory motive. Because the evidence amply shows that McLean’s pretermination speech was not a substantial motivating factor in his firing, and
because the evidence just as amply shows that McLean would have been fired
absent his pre-termination speech, McLean cannot prevail on this aspect of his
First Amendment claim.
McLean also asserts a First Amendment retaliation claim based on
McLean’s post-termination involvement in the campaign to recall Canidate, Harris,
and Dowdell. McLean contends that this post-termination speech resulted in the
distribution of flyers stating—falsely and defamatorily–that McLean “was caught
stealing time from the City,” “stole an $80,000 check before leaving the City,” and
“is currently being investigated by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for
possible theft of over $57,000 in leave payout.”
To state a section 1983 claim based on First Amendment retaliation, a
plaintiff must show that (1) he engaged in constitutionally protected speech; (2) he
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suffered adverse conduct that would likely deter a person of ordinary firmness
from engaging in such speech; and (3) there is a causal relationship between the
adverse conduct and the protected speech. Jarrard v. Sheriff of Polk Cnty., 115
F.4th 1306, 1315–16 (11th Cir. 2024). The Eleventh Circuit has determined that a
public official’s defamatory statements may support a claim for retaliation under
the First Amendment. Echols v. Lawton, 913 F3d 1313, 1322 (11th Cir. 2019)
(concluding that “sometimes defamation inflicts sufficient harm on its victim to
count as retaliation” protected by the First Amendment (internal quotation marks
omitted)). Whether a public official’s statement is defamatory is determined by
state law.5
Here, McLean’s post-termination retaliation claim fails because, first and
foremost, the record is devoid of evidence that Defendants had anything to do with
the publication of the flyers. That void alone is sufficient to doom McLean’s posttermination retaliation claim.
Second, even assuming—for the sake of argument—that Defendants were in
some way responsible for publishing the flyers, McLean’s retaliation claim would
5
To prevail on a defamation claim under Florida law, McLean must prove:
“(1) publication by the defendant, (2) of a false statement, (3) with knowledge or
reckless disregard as to the falsity (i.e., “actual malice”), (4) which causes actual
So. 3d
, 2024 WL
damages, and (5) is defamatory.” Flynn v. Wilson,
5063563, at *3 (Dec. 11, 2024).
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nonetheless fail. The statement that McLean “is currently being investigated . . .
for possible theft of over $57,000 in leave payout” was not false and is not
defamatory. McLean was being investigated by the Florida Commission on Ethics,
which ultimately found probable cause to believe that McLean violated Florida
law. That case remains pending. The statements that McLean “stole an $80,000
check” and “was caught stealing time” from the City were made during a political
campaign at a time when there was widespread media coverage of McLean’s firing
and payout. The statements are more akin to nonactionable “rhetorical hyperbole”
than actual fact. See, e.g., Flynn v. Wilson, 2024 WL 5063563, at *4 (recognizing
that courts “have extended First Amendment protection [to expressions of
rhetorical hyperbole or opinion] in recognition of the reality that exaggeration and
non-literal commentary have become an integral part of social discourse” (internal
quotation marks omitted)). Given McLean’s pay and leave records, which were a
matter of public record and which led the FCE to find probable cause of a
violation, it was at least questionable whether the statements that appeared in the
flyers were blatantly false.
Third, as a former public figure who is complaining about Defendants’
alleged speech regarding McLean’s in-office activities, McLean must prove actual
malice on Defendants’ part. See, e.g., Zerangue v. TSP Newspapers, Inc.,814 F.2d
Page 22 of 23
1066, 1069 (5th Cir. 1987) (requiring former public officials to prove that “actual
malice” prompted speech concerning their in-office activities (citing Rosenblatt v.
Baer, 383 U.S. 75, 87 n.14 (1966))). “Actual malice exists when the speaker has
knowledge that the statement is false or when he speaks with reckless disregard for
whether it is false.” Echols, 913 F.3d at 1321–22.
Evidence of actual malice on the part of Defendants is missing here. Even if
the statements that appeared on the flyers derived from the binder of information
gathered by Harris, there is no evidence that Harris—both a Commissioner and
Mayor of Quincy—acted with malice when he questioned and investigated
McLean’s higher-than-normal payout, concluded that McLean may have
committed fraud, and sent his findings to a lawyer for investigation. In sum,
McLean’s post-termination retaliation claim fails.
IV.
For the reasons explained above, it is ORDERED:
1. Plaintiff’s request (ECF No. 78) to strike Defendants’ answer and
defenses is DENIED.
2. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 64) is GRANTED.
3. The clerk shall enter judgment in Defendants’ favor stating: “Judgment is
entered in favor of all Defendants and against Plaintiff on all claims.”
Page 23 of 23
4. The clerk shall close the case.
5. The clerk shall tax costs against Plaintiff.
DONE AND ORDERED this
28th
day of
January
, 2025.
s/ William Stafford
WILLIAM STAFFORD
SENIOR UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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