Boisseau v. Town of Walls

138 F. Supp. 3d 792, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 137524
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedOctober 8, 2015
DocketCivil Action No. 3:14cv149
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 138 F. Supp. 3d 792 (Boisseau v. Town of Walls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boisseau v. Town of Walls, 138 F. Supp. 3d 792, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 137524 (N.D. Miss. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER

MICHAEL P. MILLS, District Judge.

This cause comes before the court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ,P. 56. Plaintiff has responded in opposition to the motion, and the court, having considered the memoran-da.' and= submissions of the parties,. concludes that it should be granted as to plaintiffs sole federal claim.and that the court should decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs remaining state law claims.

FACTS

This is a wrongful termination case, based upon both federal and state law, in which the parties’ versions of why the plaintiff was not rehired differ greatly. The parties do agree that plaintiff was hired as the Walls police chief in January 2010 and that, in July 2013, the town’s board of aldermen voted not to re-appoint him to that position. That aside, the parties’ versions of the facts of this case differ significantly. Defendants characterize plaintiff as a dishonest and erratic man who lied about his certification to obtain and retain his position, committed various misconduct during his tenure, and engaged in a sustained campaign of harassment against town employees after he lost his job. Defendants devote several pages of their brief to the evidence which, they claim, supports this characterization of plaintiff. In the opening paragraph of their summary judgment brief, for example, defendants write that:

. Plaintiff Gary Boisseau is an imposter. To obtain the position as police chief with Defendant the Town of Walls, Mississippi, he lied, on his employment application about being certified to work as a full-time law enforcement officer. Then, during his tenure as police chief, he submitted false documentation to both the Mississippi Office of Standards and Training and the Mississippi Highway Patrol.; The deception continued throughout this litigation, as Boisseau repeatedly perjured himself at his deposition and sent harassing correspondence under fake names to town employees.

[Defendants’ brief at 1].

Plaintiff disputes defendants’ unflattering characterizations of him to varying de[795]*795grees. Plaintiff admits that he failed to pass the full-time certification tests at the law enforcement academy he attended, but he maintained at' his deposition, without supporting proof either then or since, that he obtained certification through “street” training. In his deposition, plaintiff initially denied that he had sent certain harassing e-mails using fake names, but, in his response to the summary judgment motion, he now admits that- he sent a “number of bizarre emails to city officials” using fake names. In his brief, plaintiff seeks to turn some of these acts of harassment against defendants, citing the testimony of his psychiatrist regarding “how depression resulting from losing one’s job could result in a loss of judgment, causing a person to do things that he would not ordinarily do.” In this vein, plaintiff similarly cites the testimony of his wife that he is not “the same man he was before Patti and Ray Denison did what they, did to him. My husband is broken and I will never get him back. He is completely changed.” [Plaintiffs brief at 6].

Defendants contend that the board’s decision not to re-appoint plaintiff in July 2013 came about as a result of issues involving e-mails, but of a different sort. Specifically, defendants assert that when plaintiff, apparently a rather computer-saavy individual, .was asked to delete emails of the outgoing mayor, he improperly read one of them relating to him:

Boisseau is a self-proclaimed “tech wiz” and alleges that, prior to Mayor Denison taking office, Mayor Austin asked him to delete all e-mails from the mayoral computer so that Mayor Denison could begin with a fresh slate. As he was deleting the e-mails, Boisseau claims to have noticed one that had been sent from City Clerk Kathy Gordon, on June 27, 2013, that included his name in the subject line and a complaint about him in the body of the message. Boisseau opened the e-mail, read it; printed it off, and took it to Mayor Denison on her first day as the new mayor because he wanted “to nip [the issue] in . the bud.” It is undisputed that Mayor Austin did not give Boisseau permission to read the content of any of her e-mails when she asked him to delete all of them.

[Defendants’ brief at 4].

In their brief, defendants emphasize that the board voted not to re-appoint plaintiff very shortly after this incident and that his reading of the- e-mail was discussed at the meeting where the decision was made:

The first meeting of the newly elected mayor and board of aldermen was held on July 2, 2013. During the meeting, the mayor and board went into executive session to discuss reappointments but ended up tabling them until a subsequent meeting. On July 9, -2013, the mayor and board reconvened and again went into executive session to discuss re-appointments. Following discussion about Boisseau accessing the content of a mayoral e-mail without authorization, the board voted four-to-zero not to reappoint Boisseau as police chief.

[Defendants’ brief at 4]. For his part, plaintiff does not deny that he read the email.in question, but he argues that, in light of his overall record .as police chief, the- incident did not warrant termination. Specifically, plaintiff writes that:

[T]here is evidence from two (2) subordinates that Boisseau was an outstanding performer. Defendants fired Bois-seau even though he was the only qualified operator of the NCIC, thus precluding the- Defendant Town from being able to check criminal histories after he was gone. The. former mayor, who was the alleged victim of the invasion of privacy by the reading of her email (Lynda Austin), testified that she did not have any problem with his [796]*796coming into her office and helping with the computer issues, and, furthermore, that she would not have recommended the termination of Boisseau if she had been the mayor. That Boisseau did not think there was anything wrong with his reading the email, when May- or Austin had asked him to clear out her email account, is obvious from the fact that it was Boisseau himself who went to Defendant/Mayor Patti Deni-son to complain about the email.

[Plaintiff’s brief at 13],

Plaintiff contends that the real reason for his firing was that he rebuffed pressure from Ray and Patti Denison, who served as alderman and mayor respectively, to make a DUI arrest against their Mend Charles Pryor “go away.” Plaintiff notes that “Pryor has been hired to do construction work many times by Defendant Ray Denison and has known Defendant Patti Denison as long as he has known Defendant Ray Denison,” and he asserts that this relationship led the Deni-sons to intervene on his behalf. In his brief, plaintiff describes the pressure he allegedly received from the Denisons as follows:

According to Boisseau, both Defendants Ray and Patti Denison asked him to “do something with the [D.U.I.] charge” that Strickland had made against Pryor. Boisseau responded that he could not dismiss the charge because Pryor is a danger to the public. In fact, Boisseau said he did not have the authority, as police chief, to dismiss the charge, although he did have the authority to go to the prosecutor and ask for a lesser charge. Boisseau was not willing to do that. Pryor was ultimately convicted on the1 D.U.I. charge.

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Related

Brown v. Leflore County
150 F. Supp. 3d 753 (N.D. Mississippi, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 F. Supp. 3d 792, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 137524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boisseau-v-town-of-walls-msnd-2015.