Cillo v. City of Greenwood Village

739 F.3d 451, 198 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2079, 2013 WL 6851126, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 25863
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 31, 2013
Docket12-1395
StatusPublished
Cited by232 cases

This text of 739 F.3d 451 (Cillo v. City of Greenwood Village) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Cillo v. City of Greenwood Village, 739 F.3d 451, 198 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2079, 2013 WL 6851126, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 25863 (10th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

MATHESON, Circuit Judge.

The City of Greenwood Village, Colorado, (“the City”) fired Police Sergeant Patrick Cilio after an incident involving officers under his command. Sgt. Cilio alleges the City’s real motive for firing him was opposition to the union chapter he led. Sgt. Cilio and his union sued the City and three individual defendants — Police Chief Donnie Perry, Lieutenant Joseph Harvey, and City Manager James Sanderson (collectively “Defendants”). The district court granted summary judgment for Defendants on all claims. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual History 1

1. The parties and their roles

The Greenwood Village Police Department (“GVPD”) comprises about 65 law enforcement officers. 2 At the time of the relevant events, Chief Perry, Lt. Harvey, and three other lieutenants were the top GVPD administrators — the “Command Staff.” Mr. Sanderson was the former GVPD police chief and current City Manager. As City Manager, he heard appeals of employee terminations and had final decision — making authority.

Sgt. Cilio, a GVPD officer for 28 years, became a sergeant in 1997. Colleagues considered him a capable leader whose employees “would follow him into a burn *453 ing building.” Appx., Vol. II at 411. Sgt. Cilio earned numerous honors from inside and outside the GVPD, including the Medal of Valor, the highest honor given to living officers, and 2008 Officer of the Year for the judicial district encompassing more than twenty law enforcement agencies. His consistently positive performance reviews showed ratings of commendable and outstanding. Sgt. Cilio was never formally disciplined until his 2009 termination.

Until March 2008, Sgt. Cilio held two special leadership assignments, Sergeant in Charge of the Traffic Unit and Commander of the Emergency Response Team (“ERT”). Through this work, Sgt. Cilio developed considerable expertise in traffic fatality and accident reconstruction. He often consulted with other police departments and testified in court as an expert witness. His supervisors and colleagues universally agreed that he was highly skilled and widely respected in this field, and some described him as “probably the best I know,” Appx., Vol. II at 411, and “one of the best in the country,” id. at 468.

2. The Union and associated controversy

a. Formation of the Union

Before 2007, nearly every GVPD officer belonged to the local lodge of the Fraternal Order of Police (the “FOP”), a national “police employee association that had some, but not all characteristics of a union.” Appx., Vol. VI at 1489 n. 11. The FOP allows- officers, civilian employees, and administrators to join. It does not advocate collective bargaining. Chief Perry and three of his four lieutenants belonged to the FOP. Mr. Sanderson was a former FOP member. The FOP routinely used the GVPD email system and internal mailboxes to announce FOP events, distribute meeting minutes, and collect dues. FOP representatives visited new employee orientation sessions to recruit new members.

In 2007, Sgt. Cilio and two other officers formed Local 305, a chapter of the International Union of Police Associations, referred to within the GVPD as “the Union.” See Appx., Vol. II at 257. Sgt. Cilio served as chapter president. Unlike the FOP, the Union advocated collective bargaining and did not allow members of the Command Staff to join. The Union launched an aggressive recruiting effort that sharply criticized the City and the Command Staff for perceived inadequate training, poor officer retention, failures in recruiting, poor morale, low pay, and unfairness and lack of transparency in decision making, particularly regarding promotions.

b. Controversy about the Union

When the Union formed, there was “constant conversation” among GVPD officers about whether they would join. Appx., Vol. IV at 735. Most officers spoke openly about their affiliations with the Union and/or the FOP, and it was “common knowledge” in the small department which officers joined the Union and which remained with the FOP. Id. at 730, 742, 748. When new Union members resigned from the FOP, their names were immediately deleted from the FOP email distribution list, allowing the remaining FOP members to easily deduce who had switched affiliation. No rules prevented officers from belonging to both groups.

“[T]he division between Union and FOP members was palpable.” Id. at 742. “[E]ach group associated mainly with other officers who were members of the same group.” Id. Some in the department referred to the Union as the “Donnie haters,” based on the Union’s criticism of Chief Perry and his Command Staff. Appx., Vol. Ill at 580. After joining the *454 Union, some officers felt the Command Staff became “noticeably less friendly” towards them, id. at 730, and they inferred that “the Union [was] a real sore spot for management,” id. at 720. Union members suspected that one particular Union member “often told command staff about” what was discussed during closed-door Union meetings. Id. at 748. 3

The Defendants deny harboring negative views of the Union. Even so, deposition testimony indicates that Mr. Sander-son, Chief Perry, and Lt. Harvey followed the Union’s activities with displeasure. The individual defendants discussed the Union on numerous occasions with each another, with other members of the Command Staff, and with rank and file officers. The tone of these conversations ranged from polite disagreement with the Union’s positions about collective bargaining to harsh criticism of the Union and of Sgt. Cilio. The Defendants especially disagreed with the Union’s goal of implementing collective bargaining.

Mr. Sanderson circulated an open letter disputing the Union’s criticisms.. During meetings with Command Staff, Mr. Sand-erson said that if collective bargaining came into effect, officers would “start from zero” and could lose their existing benefits. Appx., Vól. II at 317. Chief Perry told the Command Staff and individual rank-and-file officers that the Union was divisive and bad for the department. He claimed that Sgt. Cilio had formed the Union as a way to get himself promoted and was taking advantage of Union members. Chief Perry insisted the FOP was a better organization. And he rejected the Union’s goal of collective bargaining, saying that if the City ever agreed to bargain collectively, the employee association with the most members would control the bargaining process — which Chief Perry asserted would be the FOP, not the Union. 4

The new Union grew quickly. Within a year, about half the department had joined, including nearly every officer in Sgt; Cilló’s Traffic Unit.

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739 F.3d 451, 198 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2079, 2013 WL 6851126, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 25863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cillo-v-city-of-greenwood-village-ca10-2013.