David Crowley v. Anderson Cty., Tenn.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2019
Docket18-5862
StatusUnpublished

This text of David Crowley v. Anderson Cty., Tenn. (David Crowley v. Anderson Cty., Tenn.) 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
David Crowley v. Anderson Cty., Tenn., (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0436n.06

No. 18-5862

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED DAVID LYNN CROWLEY, ) Aug 20, 2019 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) v. ) ) ANDERSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE; N. JAY ) ON APPEAL FROM THE YEAGER, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN Defendants-Appellants, ) DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE ) WILLIAM ANDREW CORBITT, ) Defendant. ) OPINION )

Before: MOORE, COOK, and READLER, Circuit Judges.

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. David Crowley was the Building

Commissioner for Anderson County, Tennessee, and he performed five building inspections

without certain certifications that are required by state law. These inspections led to legal trouble:

Anderson County’s Law Director, N. Jay Yeager, authored a memo discussing Crowley’s apparent

violations of state law, and Yeager referred the matter to the District Attorney; the District Attorney

and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”) then initiated their own five-month

investigation; eventually, the District Attorney prosecuted Crowley. A jury acquitted Crowley.

Understandably unhappy with what he endured, Crowley sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging

various violations of his civil rights. The question presented here is whether Yeager is entitled to

qualified immunity. We REVERSE the district court because Yeager is entitled to qualified No. 18-5862, Crowley v. Anderson County, Tenn. et al.

immunity on the civil-rights-conspiracy claim, and this also absolves Anderson County of liability

on that claim. We also REMAND this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

In September 2012, David Crowley was appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the

County Commission to serve as the County’s Building Commissioner and Director of Public

Works. In this role, Crowley oversaw building inspectors and the building-permitting process,

and he signed off on any building-code violations. See R. 83-1 (Crowley Dep. at 14) (Page ID

#1244). When he was first appointed, Crowley was not a certified building inspector, but he

learned of that certification requirement at some point after entering his role as Building

Commissioner. Id. at 16–17, 38 (Page ID #1246–47, 1264); see also id. at 41–42 (Page ID #1267–

68) (the mayor wrote a letter to the state fire marshal indicating that Crowley failed one of the

certification exams on November 18, 2013). Crowley could not recall exactly when he received

his certification, but he testified that he probably received it in 2014. See id. at 18 (Page ID #1248).

In Tennessee, all municipal and county building officials must “receive certification from

the state fire marshal before enforcing applicable building and fire codes.” TENN. CODE ANN.

§ 68-120-113(a)(1). State law provides that building officials “shall have up to twelve (12) months

from the date of employment to receive certification.” Id. (emphasis added). State law further

provides that a “building official who knowingly fails to enforce this [statute], and such intentional

failure poses an immediate danger to the life, safety or welfare of another, commits a Class B

misdemeanor.” Id. at § 68-120-113(d)(2).

Crowley did not receive his certification within twelve months from the date he entered his

employment, and he performed building inspections after that time. The inspections occurred

between October 2013 and December 2013. R. 83-1 (Yeager Memo at 2) (Page ID #1576).

2 No. 18-5862, Crowley v. Anderson County, Tenn. et al.

Crowley admits that he performed these inspections. R. 83-1 (Crowley Dep. at 82–84 (Page ID

#1294–96). Crowley also testified that he stopped performing building inspections in January

2014, after receiving a notice from a state agency that he was not certified. Id. at 39–41 (Page ID

#1265–67).

In January 2014, N. Jay Yeager, the County’s Law Director, wrote a memo that outlined

the five inspections, and he presented the memo to the County Commission at a meeting that same

month. See R. 83-1 (Yeager Memo at 2) (Page ID #1576). Before writing the memo, Yeager

informed Crowley that Yeager would need to investigate this matter. R. 83-1 (Crowley Dep. at

56–57) (Page ID #1277–78). Yeager initially learned of the five inspections from several

individuals, some of whom were building inspectors. See R. 83-1 (Yeager Dep. at 67–70) (Page

ID #1490–93). Yeager also called the state fire marshal, described the situation to an individual

in that office, and that individual indicated the inspections violated the law; Yeager then asked to

be transferred to and spoke to the fire marshal’s legal counsel, who confirmed the view that the

inspections ran afoul of the statute. Id. at 158–59 (Page ID #1526–27). The Yeager memo stated

that “[e]ach of these inspections . . . can possibly be prosecuted as Class B misdemeanors.” R. 83-

1 (Yeager Memo at 2) (Page ID #1576). It continued:

these are allegations at this point and I will need to do a complete investigation of the matter to confirm the allegations. I need directions from County Commission to proceed with a full investigation of this matter . . . . Furthermore, I have no choice but to refer any possible criminal violations to the District Attorney General if the investigation reveals possible criminal acts. Id.

At his deposition, though, Yeager testified that his office does not “do the investigation of

criminal acts,” and that his department does not “have any jurisdiction to investigate criminal

allegations.” R. 83-1 (Yeager Dep. at 106) (Page ID #1505). Rather, Yeager turns over potentially

3 No. 18-5862, Crowley v. Anderson County, Tenn. et al.

criminal matters to the district attorney or local law enforcement. See id. In this case, after sending

his memo to the District Attorney, David Clark, Yeager testified that he did nothing else in the

case. See id. at 106–07, 151 (Page ID #1505–06, 1520). DA Clark testified that he and Yeager

had a very brief meeting in April, at which Yeager gave him the memo. R. 83-1 (Clark Dep. at

41) (Page ID #1437); see also id. at 43 (Page ID #1439) (DA Clark does not “recall speaking to

Mr. Yeager about the Crowley investigation after it was referred to the TBI.”). DA Clark then

requested TBI Agent William Corbitt to investigate, and Agent Corbitt initiated his own five-

month investigation. Agent Corbitt did request to interview Yeager at the end of his investigation,

in September 2014. At the interview, Agent Corbitt asked Yeager about his memo and how he

obtained the information in the memo. See R. 83-1 (Corbitt Dep. at 89–90) (Page ID #1336–37).

DA Clark, meanwhile, testified that Yeager played no role in how the investigation or prosecution

of Crowley was performed. See R. 83-1 (Clark Dep. at 89) (Page ID #1456).

At the end of the TBI investigation, Agent Corbitt issued a report. See R. 83-1 (TBI Rep.

at 1) (Page ID #1606). Although Agent Corbitt believed that Crowley’s inspections “affected the

welfare of another at the moment [Crowley] did that inspection outside of that grace period,” R.

83-1 (Corbitt Dep. at 84–95) (Page ID #1340–41), the report does not specifically indicate that

Crowley’s inspections posed an immediate danger to the safety or welfare of others, see R. 83-1

(TBI Rep. at 1–4) (Page ID #1606–09); TENN. CODE ANN. § 68-120-113(d)(2).

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