Theyerl v. Manitowoc County et al
Filing
31
ORDER signed by Chief Judge William C Griesbach on 12-2-15 denying 10 Motion for Summary Judgment; granting 16 Motion for Summary Judgment. (cc: all counsel) (Griesbach, William)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
JIM THEYERL,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No. 15-C-440
MANITOWOC COUNTY and
BOB ZIEGELBAUER,
Defendants.
DECISION AND ORDER
Beginning in 2012, Plaintiff Jim Theyerl alleged that a county employee was viewing
pornography on a work computer. He made his allegations public in a fashion the Manitowoc
County Board found reckless and unsupported by evidence, and as a result the Board eventually
barred him from speaking at Board meetings. Theyerl brought a lawsuit, and this court found that
his First Amendment right to speak during Manitowoc County Board meetings had been infringed.
The county subsequently settled with Theyerl. In the resolution approving the settlement, the Board
stated that Theyerl had made defamatory statements about a county employee. In addition, County
Executive Bob Ziegelbauer echoed similar sentiments during a radio interview.
In response,
Theyerl brought a new federal action alleging that these statements were defamatory and were made
in retaliation for his earlier lawsuit against the county. Both sides have now moved for summary
judgment. For the reasons given below, the Defendants’ motion will be granted and the Plaintiff’s
denied.
I. Analysis
Summary judgment is properly granted only if there are no genuine issues of material fact
and the moving party establishes that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P.
56.
A. Retaliation
Both sides have moved for summary judgment as to liability for Theyerl’s First Amendment
retaliation claim. Theyerl alleges that the County Board resolution approving the settlement with
Theyerl, in which it stated that he had “made defamatory statements about a specific county
employee,” was itself defamatory and made in retaliation for Theyerl’s lawsuit against the County.
He further asserts that Ziegelbauer defamed him on the radio when he stated that Theyerl had
accused an “innocent employee” of wrongdoing; had told outrageous lies and spread malicious
gossip; and “had no information” to support his charges.
1. The Release
The Defendants first argue that a release, which Theyerl signed as a part of the settlement
of the first lawsuit, bars any claims for retaliation. The release contains broad language releasing
the County and its officials from claims “arising out of” and “related to” Theyerl’s “being barred
from speaking at Board meetings beginning in June 2012.” The Defendants argue that the current
retaliation claim is “related to” the speaking ban because it involves the same parties, and the facts
giving rise to the current claim would not have occurred but for the bar on Theyerl speaking in June
2012. At their core, both lawsuits reflect discord between the same citizen and his county board,
and so in that sense they are undeniably “related.”
Their relationship is only superficial, however. Although the “related to” and “arising out
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of” clauses are themselves potentially broad, the release connects those clauses to a very specific
event—Theyerl’s “being barred from speaking” at board meetings beginning in June 2012.
By
referencing specific, enumerated board meetings several years ago, the release limits its potential
scope to what is “related to” a 2012 speaking ban.
Here, by contrast, the present claims of
defamation and retaliation involve things the Defendants said several years later. A lawsuit about
what other people said is not plausibly related to a speaking ban placed on the Plaintiff.
Accordingly, I conclude that the release does not apply.
2. Retaliation
To succeed on a retaliation claim, a plaintiff must demonstrate (1) he engaged in protected
speech; (2) the defendant took action against him sufficiently adverse that it would likely deter or
chill the exercise of his First Amendment rights; and (3) a causal connection between the
defendant’s action and the protected speech. Bridges v. Gilbert, 557 F.3d 541, 546 (7th Cir. 2009).
The focus is on the second element—whether the Defendants’ actions were sufficiently
adverse that it would chill any of the Plaintiff’s First Amendment rights. I begin by noting that the
Defendants’ speech certainly would not chill the First Amendment right in question here, namely,
the right to petition the courts. County boards and executives have no ability to affect, even
remotely, any citizen’s right to file federal lawsuits.
The fact that the Defendants expressed
skepticism about the veracity of the Plaintiff’s pornography claims would not deter any reasonable
citizen from filing a lawsuit. The Defendants were simply voicing a disagreement rather than any
kind of threat that would impact a citizen’s ability to petition the courts.
Nor would the Defendants’ statements be expected to chill any kind of protected expression.
Government officials often find themselves in positions in which their power allows them to
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retaliate against members of the public whose views they don’t like. A typical case might allege
that an official revoked a permit, conducted an audit, or maliciously prosecuted a citizen; the
examples are legion. In this case, however, the alleged retaliation is not any kind of government
action or abuse of power, but merely statements that the Defendants made. If an official merely says
that a citizen’s claims are untrue, that is no deterrent to the exercise of any protected rights. In fact,
government officials have an obligation to speak out, particularly when the conduct of government
employees is at issue.
Taken to its logical extension, the Plaintiff’s position would require that
government officials simply remain silent whenever allegations are made against government
employees, lest their denials of the allegations somehow be interpreted as retaliation.
In fact, the Plaintiff’s claim is premised on an unfortunate irony. The Plaintiff relies on the
First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of speech, yet in this lawsuit he uses that very same
Amendment as a bludgeon to punish public officials for their own speech. Not surprisingly, courts
have looked askance at similar claims. The Fourth Circuit summarized the problem aptly:
The nature of the alleged retaliatory acts has particular significance where the public
official's acts are in the form of speech. Not only is there an interest in having public
officials fulfill their duties, a public official's own First Amendment speech rights
are implicated. Thus, where a public official's alleged retaliation is in the nature of
speech, in the absence of a threat, coercion, or intimidation intimating that
punishment, sanction, or adverse regulatory action will imminently follow, such
speech does not adversely affect a citizen's First Amendment rights, even if
defamatory.
Suarez Corp. Indus. v. McGraw, 202 F.3d 676, 687 (4th Cir. 2000).
Here, the only retaliation Plaintiff alleges is that Ziegelbauer and the county board said that
Plaintiff’s claims about pornography were meritless, and, by logical extension, that they were
defamatory of a county employee. Even if the Defendants were “wrong” (which is debatable), they
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are entitled to give voice to their disagreements with a citizen without “retaliating” against him. To
find actual retaliation, there has to be something much more than words. Hammerhead Enters., Inc.
v. Brezenoff, 707 F.2d 33, 38–39 (2d Cir.1983) (holding that a public official's comments must
“reasonably be interpreted as intimating that some form of punishment or adverse regulatory action
will follow the failure to accede to the official's request.”)
There might be a narrow exception if a public official’s speech consisted of the disclosure
of damaging personal information about a private citizen. For example, in Bloch v. Ribar, 156 F.3d
673, 681 (6th Cir.1998), the court found retaliation after a sheriff published explicit details of a rape
in retaliation for the rape victim's criticism of the sheriff. Clearly, such an action, which was not
the expression of an opinion but a vindictive disclosure of evidence, could be sufficiently adverse
to chill speech. But here, all we have are allegations that the board and the county executive
continued to believe that the Plaintiff was wrong in his ongoing allegations about a single county
employee watching pornography. Their public disagreement with Plaintiff’s views was well-known
and wholly unsurprising, and their statements to that effect were not enough to chill any protected
activity.
This is particularly true in this case, where the Plaintiff’s allegations are shrouded in
uncertainty and seem to be based on little more than gossip. In response to the allegation about
pornography on a work computer, the county investigated the allegation of pornography and found
no wrongdoing. The Plaintiff takes issue with that investigation, but its conclusion is much firmer
evidence than the facts underlying the Plaintiff’s own allegation. For example, the Plaintiff falsely
claimed, during a board meeting, that he had “thirteen witnesses” who had seen the employee
viewing pornography, but it later became clear that few, if any, such witnesses existed. Remarkably,
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Theyerl admitted that he had not personally witnessed the pornography in question, and in fact he
had not even spoken to the lone witness he ultimately identified. Instead, the witness in question
allegedly saw pornography on a county employee’s computer, reported it to her husband, and her
husband then reported it to others, including Theyerl. (Case No. 13-C-590, ECF No. 31 at ¶¶ 2128.) The Plaintiff then decided to make that third-hand rumor into his cause célèbre. Given the
flimsy nature of the allegation, the fact that the Plaintiff himself dramatically exaggerated the
evidence supporting the claim, and the seriousness of the charge against the county employee, it is
wholly unsurprising that the Defendants continue to publicly dispute the veracity of the Plaintiff’s
allegation. To hold that the First Amendment would bar them from speaking out on such a hotly
contested issue would turn the First Amendment on its head.
3. Defamation
The normal practice for a federal court is to relinquish jurisdiction of an action once the
federal claims have been decided. Wright v. Associated Insurance Cos., Inc., 29 F.3d 1244, 1251
(7th Cir. 1994). Although the parties do not discuss pendant jurisdiction, they both appear to want
this court to decide the state law claims as well. Here, given the court’s familiarity with the subject
matter and the prior history of litigation in federal court, I conclude that it would waste judicial
resources and inconvenience a state court if I remanded the action. I will therefore decide the state
law claims on their merits. Id.
As noted earlier, the Plaintiff has complained about a number of statements the Defendants
made. He alleges that the statements made on the radio by Ziegelbauer were defamatory. These
included statements suggesting that the Plaintiff’s lawsuit was a “cowardly scam;” Plaintiff had
accused an “innocent employee” of wrongdoing; Plaintiff had made “outrageous lies” and spread
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malicious gossip; and Plaintiff had “no information” to support his allegations.
Theyerl also
complains that the county board’s resolution stated that he had made defamatory statements about
a county employee. In essence, Plaintiff believes, the Defendants’ assertions that he had made false
statements about an employee were themselves defamatory.
There are three elements in a cause of action for defamation: (1) a false statement; (2)
communicated by speech, conduct or in writing to a person other than the person defamed; and, (3)
the communication is unprivileged and tends to harm one's reputation so as to lower him or her in
the estimation of the community or to deter third persons from associating or dealing with him or
her. In re Storms v. Action Wisconsin Inc., 2008 WI 56, ¶ 38, 309 Wis. 2d 704, 722, 750 N.W.2d
739, 748 (Wis. 2008). In addition, defamation plaintiffs who are public figures must also prove by
clear and convincing evidence another element, actual malice.
Actual malice requires that the
allegedly defamatory statement be made with “knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard
of whether it was false or not.” Id. (citing New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 280
(1964)). Plaintiff has conceded that he was a “limited purpose” public figure with respect to the
allegations underlying this action because he was the initiator of the underlying lawsuit and had
commented about it in board meetings and on the radio.
The underlying premise of the Plaintiff’s case (an accusation of defamation is itself
defamation) is an unusual one, but it has gone unchallenged by the Defendants.1
Instead, the
Defendants seem to accept that premise but challenge it on a number of bases. The strongest
1
As suggested elsewhere herein, it is common, and even expected, that a defendant will
publicly assert that a plaintiff’s allegations are untrue. It is doubtful that the commonplace denial of
allegations, even when combined with assertions that a plaintiff was telling lies or spreading gossip,
could themselves constitute defamation.
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defense, which I find dispositive, is that the Plaintiff cannot demonstrate that the Defendants acted
with actual malice when they made any of their statements.
As recounted above, the underlying truth of Plaintiff’s allegations is anything but clear. He
did not witness the alleged pornography but merely heard about it third-hand. No one ever
confessed to it, and an investigation by the county’s information technology staff revealed no
pornography stored on the computer in question. Given the steps the county took to investigate the
claim, and the fact that the Plaintiff himself fabricated information about the number of witnesses,
it would be impossible to conclude that the Defendants knew or had reckless disregard for the truth
of their belief that Plaintiff had defamed a county employee. The fact is, even now nobody knows
whether Theyerl’s allegations were true. Reckless disregard of the truth requires showing that the
false statement was made “with a high degree of awareness of ... probable falsity,” Garrison v.
Louisiana, 379 U.S. 64, 74 (1964), but here there is only a moderate chance that the underlying
allegations are true in the manner Theyerl has alleged. Reckless disregard is a subjective standard,
and given Theyerl’s history of exaggerations on the subject, neither Ziegelbauer nor any board
member would have believed to a “high degree” that Theyerl was telling the truth.
Id.
No
reasonable jury could so find. (ECF No. 20 at ¶ 10.)
Theyerl relies on a deposition of David Voelker, which Theyerl states he circulated among
the county board members to support his claim. Voelker, a six-year employee of the county’s
highway department, testified that on a single occasion he witnessed a photo of a nude woman on
another employee’s computer. (ECF No. 13-5.) This occurred at the main highway office on
Highway 310 and lasted for two seconds. (Id. at 24:18.) Voelker cannot say whether the other
employee viewed the image intentionally or whether it was the result of a popup ad or spam email.
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Nor can he say exactly when this happened, except that it would have been before 2009, when he
left county employment. Nevertheless, based on this deposition, Theyerl argues that the county
board members would have known that Theyerl was telling the truth.
Theyerl’s reliance on the deposition requires an expansive, and revisionist, view of what he
actually alleged. If he had merely claimed that someone, somewhere, had viewed pornography at
work, then Voelker’s deposition might be relevant evidence that such a claim was true. But the
question is whether the Defendants believed Theyerl’s specific accusations about pornography, i.e.,
that an employee in the county’s airport office (not the main highway office) had been viewing
pornography in 2012—at least three years after Voelker left county employment.
Theyerl had
suggested that the pornography viewer’s conduct was criminal (“I want people prosecuted for doing
this”), intentional and ongoing, not that it had occurred three or more years earlier on an isolated
occasion. The Voelker deposition simply has nothing whatsoever to do with Theyerl’s allegation
that pornography was actively being watched in the airport office in 2012.
In sum, the Defendants’ claims that Theyerl had engaged in defamation and lies was not
defamatory because their speech was either actually true or was made without reckless disregard
for the truth.
II. Conclusion
For the reasons given above, the Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is DENIED. The
Defendant’s motion is GRANTED. The case will be dismissed with prejudice. The clerk will enter
judgment accordingly. SO ORDERED this 2nd day of December, 2015.
/s William C. Griesbach
William C. Griesbach, Chief Judge
United States District Court
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