Dan Turner and Henry Bonaparte v. Troy Perry

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 2009
Docket14-07-01060-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dan Turner and Henry Bonaparte v. Troy Perry (Dan Turner and Henry Bonaparte v. Troy Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dan Turner and Henry Bonaparte v. Troy Perry, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part and Reversed and Remanded in Part and Opinion filed January 27, 2009

Affirmed in Part and Reversed and Remanded in Part and Opinion filed January 27, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-07-01060-CV

DAN TURNER AND HENRY BONAPARTE, Appellants

V.

TROY PERRY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 215th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-02596

O P I N I O N


In this accelerated interlocutory appeal, police officers Dan Turner and Henry Bonaparte challenge the trial court=s denial of their assertions of qualified and official immunity.  Appellee Troy Perry sued appellants, his former supervisors, alleging that they took adverse employment actions against him and slandered him in retaliation for his official complaint accusing them of unlawful conduct.  Appellants contend that (a) they acted in response to unprotected speech, (b) their employer=s grievance process provided Perry with adequate due process, and (c) their representations of Perry=s conduct were made in good faith.  We reverse the trial court=s denial of summary judgment based on qualified immunity to one of Perry=s First Amendment claims, affirm the trial court=s ruling in all other respects, and remand for further proceedings.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Alief Independent School District (AAISD@) employed appellee Troy Perry as a APeace Officer-Gang Enforcement Officer@ in 2004.  Sergeant Henry Bonaparte was Perry=s direct supervisor, and Captain Dan Turner was the captain of the AISD police department.  As a police officer responsible for investigating gang-related activity, Perry interviewed students and obtained and evaluated documents containing gang-related information.  According to Plaintiff=s Seventh Amended Petition, Perry completed an application in July 2004 to submit AISD=s Agang database@ to the Department of Public Safety (ADPS@); however, Turner did not sign the application, and the appellants did not allow Perry to release the information to DPS.

In April 2005, information Perry had learned through his work as a gang officer caused him concern that there would be an increased risk of gang-related violence at several AISD schools on May 5 and May 16, 2005.  He communicated the information he had gathered to gang investigators of several police agencies and the office of the Texas Attorney General.  On April 21 and 22, 2005, he emailed the information to Turner, Bonaparte, and other law enforcement agencies and personnel.  According to Perry, DPS employee Vicki Norris contacted him and asked if he would allow her to post this information to a website on his behalf.  The website, referred to in the record as ACLEO,@ is a password-protected site accessible to criminal-justice personnel.  To obtain access, an officer must complete a written application, which must also be signed by the officer=s supervisor.  Perry had completed an application, but because appellants refused to sign it, he could not access CLEO directly.  Perry therefore authorized Norris to post the information for him. 


After the information was published on the CLEO website, Bonaparte emailed Perry that Athe [AISD] superintendent=s office had been inundated with calls for information in reference to the warning you had posted on the CLEO web site.@  On May 4, 2005, Bonaparte again emailed Perry, stating, AFrom this point on no information[] regarding activities in and around this district will be given out without prior written approval from [a] departmental supervisor.  Your decision to export data is causing a number of problems; this directive includes both written and verbal communications.@  In addition, Perry was demoted from his position as a gang officer to a position as a patrol officer and placed on a Agrowth plan@ on July 15, 2005.  According to Perry, both Turner and Bonaparte informed him that these disciplinary measures were, in part, a response to the CLEO posting.  Perry filed a grievance concerning that action, and in an undated memorandum, Bonaparte summarized the discussion that occurred during Perry=s grievance hearing on September 13, 2005.  According to Bonaparte, Perry contended that he was reassigned from his position as a gang officer to a position as a patrol officer as a Adirect result of his disclosure of a gang[-]related issue via a national web site.@  Bonaparte further stated that APerry did not perform in a satisfactory fashion during his tenure as a gang officer and he will not be returned to the position.@  He  concluded that APerry has had problems with following the chain of command and has disseminated information to other outlets without supervisory approval.@


While these events were unfolding, Perry allegedly learned that Bonaparte and Turner had entered Perry=s office while he was away and removed a traffic citation he had written concerning an AISD teacher.  According to Perry, Bonaparte told him that the citation was removed because the teacher was Apolitically connected.@  On July 20, 2005, Perry asked the advice of an acquaintance at the Harris Count District Attorney=s Police Integrity Unit, and he was told that he should collect evidence of the alleged misconduct.  Perry then obtained still photographs from a surveillance tape that reportedly shows Bonaparte and Turner entering Perry=

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