Ben Upton v. City of Royal Oak

492 F. App'x 492
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2012
Docket10-2304
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 492 F. App'x 492 (Ben Upton v. City of Royal Oak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ben Upton v. City of Royal Oak, 492 F. App'x 492 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Ben Upton appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendant City of Royal Oak, his former employer, and the individual Defendants, 1 City officials he alleges participated in terminating his employment as a firefighter/paramedic. Upton alleged that Defendants terminated him in retaliation for his speech and activities in support of a ballot proposal that called for a minimum ratio of firefighters to Royal Oak’s population (the manning initiative), deprived him of due process both pre- and post his termination, and participated in a civil conspiracy. We AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part.

I

Upton began employment as a firefighter for Defendant City of Royal Oak (the City) in February 1992, and became president of the firefighters’ union in 1996, an office he held at all pertinent times. In the face of the City’s considering substan *494 tially reducing firefighter personnel, Upton and the firefighters petitioned in the spring and summer of 2004 to place the manning initiative on the November 2004 ballot. The initiative caused discord between Upton and City officials.

Upton’s on-the-job injury — June 8, 2004

On June 8, 2004, during the period when Upton and the firefighters were petitioning for the manning initiative, Upton slipped and fell from a fire truck after fighting a fire. He was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with shoulder and neck injuries, including acute myofascial cervical strain. From June 8, 2004, Upton was in and out of work, on light duty, sick leave and injury leave.

In the interim, Defendant Tom Hoover was appointed City Manager in the summer of 2004.

The City sent Upton for an independent medical examination (IME) by Dr. Xeller. Dr. Xeller wrote the City’s insurer, Citizens Management, Inc., on January 4, 2005, that he had examined Upton six months after the June 8, 2004 work injury, and that Upton’s resulting cervical strain had resolved. Upton returned to work but the fire chief sent him home because he was on medication.

Beginning in February 2005, Upton used his sick days, and sick days donated by other employees, and then was off work on leave without pay.

Upton filed a worker’s compensation claim in April 2005. R. 37-24 at 2.

On April 16, 2005, one of Upton’s neurosurgeons, Dr. Ho, determined that Upton was able to return to work without restriction as of May 4, 2005. Upton did so and worked for several weeks. However, following a check-up on May 31, 2005, Dr. Ho restricted Upton from lifting more than 35 pounds: “permanent restriction of no lifting greater than 35 lbs dx 721.0 cervical spondylosis. [ 2 ]” Upton reported to work the following day but was told to go home.

On June 28, 2005, Defendant Assistant City Attorney C. Brian James sent a memorandum to Defendant City Manager Hoover stating that Upton should be and was offered a police dispatcher position because the City was on weak ground in the worker’s compensation case and that Upton had accepted the offer:

The City Manager [Defendant Hoover] and the Mayor [Defendant Jim Ellison] and the City Commission may be aware that firefighter Ben Upton has been off work due to medical reasons for the past several months. For the beginning of that time the City was paying worker’s compensation benefits and then those benefits were terminated by the City. Since the termination of the w/c benefits Upton has been using his sick bank and days proffered to him by other firefighters. For the past month he has been on leave without pay. Upton has long ago exceeded the 60[day] maximum for light duty in the fire department. There is an upcoming mediation hearing regarding the worker’s comp case for Thursday. After consultation with and between the City’s worker’s comp attorney, [Defendant] MJ Dipaolo [sic ], Human Resources Director and our own office, it has been concluded that the best case for the City would be to offer Upton a job within the ROPOA as a PSA (dispatcher). Upton accepted the position today. The City will drop its *495 contest (we are advised that the City is in a very precarious position in that litigation anyway) to the previously suspended worker’s comp benefits. This resolution provides several plusses [sic ] for the City. It may also provide a minus or two when one or both of the police and fire unions file a grievance(s).
The City will avoid most of the cost of continuing to contest the w/c matter at which we are advised is extremely unlikely for the City to prevail. We will have the comp lawyer continue to pursue discovery as to Upton’s “side job”. The City at least halves its exposure for paying Upton w/c or disability benefits. By employing Upton the City gets a dispatcher position filled without paying extra benefits to a new hire. The City reduces its w/c exposure from 80% of $70,000 +/- to providing the difference between the dispatcher’s salary ($34,-000-$38000) and the 80% of the firefighter salary. In round numbers that reduces the City’s liability by not less than 50% without taking into account the added benefit of not paying additional benefits to a brand new PSA. The City avoids creating a new “light duty” past practice at the fire department. The City creates a new “past practice” of slotting the injured elsewhere in the City, IF a position is vacant and appropriate. ... The w/c agency will mandate that Upton participate in voc rehab to try to return Upton to full health. The dispatcher job may provide added incentive to Upton to rehab himself to try to expedite his return to full time duties at the fire house. As always, I thank you and MJ Dipaolo [sic ] for your cooperation. Please call me if you have any questions ...

R. 37-6. That afternoon, Defendant City Manager Hoover forwarded Defendant Assistant City Attorney James’s memo to the City Commissioners stating:

The attached report from Brian James in the Attorney’s Office is forwarded to you for your information. We have been dealing with Mr. Upton’s Workers Comp case for the past several months. The solution that Mr. James describes has been thought out by [then-City Attorney] Mr. Semchena [ 3 ], Mr. James, Ms. Dipaolo [sic ], the Workers’ Comp Attorney and myself.
In approving the filling of vacant positions in the Police Department last week by the Commission, we included the filling of the vacant PSA position. By filling it in this fashion, we resolve several matters, as described by Mr. James.
I plan on moving forward with this resolution unless any of you have concerns. It is an administrative resolution that I strongly recommend. I must implement this by this Thursday, which is the end of the month.

R. 37-6 at 2.

However, Defendants withdrew the dispatcher position offer the following day, and offered Upton a part-time, non-union position as a code enforcement officer, which he declined because it was an at-will position and the City was implementing layoffs at the time.

Upton consulted with another neurosurgeon, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
492 F. App'x 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ben-upton-v-city-of-royal-oak-ca6-2012.