Brown v. Halpin

885 F.3d 111
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 2018
DocketDocket No. 16-3615; August Term, 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 885 F.3d 111 (Brown v. Halpin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Halpin, 885 F.3d 111 (2d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

*114In this interlocutory appeal, we are called upon to address claims of First Amendment retaliation and violations of Connecticut state law, and defenses of qualified immunity and state sovereign immunity. We conclude that we lack jurisdiction to consider the qualified immunity defense at this time-when we must accept plaintiff's allegations as true-because it depends on the resolution of factual disputes. Although we conclude that we have jurisdiction to address the merits of the state sovereign immunity defense, we find that the district court committed no error in finding that the defense is unavailable at this phase of the litigation.

Plaintiff-appellee Virginia Brown was hired by defendant-appellant the State of Connecticut in September 2012 as a "staff attorney II" in its Retirement Services Division (the "Division"). App. 378. The Division is part of the Office of the State Comptroller (the "Comptroller") and administers the state's retirement systems, which include the State Employees Retirement System ("SERS") and the Connecticut Municipal Employees Retirement System ("CMERS").

Brown was responsible for providing legal services to the Comptroller and Connecticut State Employees Retirement Commission (the "Commission"), and her official duties included:

a. Working with outside counsel ... [on] tax issues relating to SERS;
...
c. Designing, drafting and implementing corrective policies and procedures for the administration of the Retirement Systems for the Commission;
...
e. Providing legal advice to the Commission and the Comptroller with respect to all aspects of the administration of the Retirement Systems, including preparing legal memos, summaries and analyses;
f. Providing guidance to [the] Division's internal investigator with regards to the disability retirement benefits, including disability fraud investigations, twenty-four (24) months reviews/investigations and collection of overpayments[.]

Id. at 379. Brown reported directly to defendant-appellant Brenda Halpin, the Director of the Division.

In October 2012, approximately one month after her hiring, Brown began making complaints that SERS was being improperly administered. Under Connecticut law, a participant in the program is eligible to receive benefits beyond the first 24 months only if he or she is "totally disabled for any suitable and comparable job." Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 5-169(a) ; 5-192p(b). However, the Comptroller was allowing participants to remain in the program so long as the retiree was disabled *115from performing his or her "own occupation." App. 381.

Brown subsequently prepared written materials for the Commission explaining that an incorrect standard was being applied. Before she sent the materials, however, she first provided them to defendant Linda Yelmini and counsel for the public employees' union. Yelmini was a Commission trustee, served on the Commission's "Personnel and Legal Subcommittee," and was the Director of the Office of Labor Relations ("OLR") for the state. Id. at 374. In these capacities, "it was a common practice for ... Yelmini to share information and make decisions collectively with the leadership of the Comptroller and the Division regarding the administration of the Retirement Systems." Id. at 375. Yelmini also "routinely gave instructions regarding the administration of the Retirement Systems directly to Defendant Halpin and Division staff," and when "Yelmini issued instructions to the Division, those instructions were generally followed." Id. at 376.

Brown alleges that Deputy Comptroller P. Martha Carlson subsequently notified her, presumably at Yelmini's request, that the materials prepared by Brown would not be provided to the Commission unless Brown changed them to "support[ ] the incorrect 'own occupation' ... [s]tandard." Id. at 384. Carlson stated that she "did not care that the Commission was breaching its fiduciary duty by violating the terms of the retirement plan[ ] [and] state and federal tax laws, and that it was 'their problem' as long as the ... [s]tandard supported the [public employee] Union's interests." Id. at 383. Carlson further ordered Brown to include in the materials the "false statement that the SERS plan provisions state that after twenty-four (24) months, disability retirement continued if the retiree was disabled from performing his/her 'own occupation,' " id. at 385, and that Brown remove "accurate factual information regarding the financial cost to the State and to the retirement plan and its members" of using the incorrect standard. Id. at 385-86.

Brown refused, and brought her complaints to her supervisor, defendant Halpin, Comptroller Kevin Lembo, and the Assistant Comptroller, General Counsel, and Ethics Liaison at the Comptroller, Natalie Braswell. Each of these individuals admitted that the Comptroller was improperly administering SERS. Brown's concerns were not limited to SERS, and she raised similar complaints about the administration of CMERS during the same period.

Brown subsequently disclosed the issues she had identified to the State of Connecticut Office of the Auditors of Public Accounts (the "Auditors") in July 2013.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
885 F.3d 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-halpin-ca2-2018.