MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
STEARNS, District Judge.
On July 6, 2004, Martin J. Galvin, Jr., a former principal of Wilby High School (WHS) in Waterbury, Connecticut, brought this action against the Town of Yarmouth and two Yarmouth police officers, Chief Peter Carnes and Lt. Steven Xiarhos. Galvin alleges that he lost his WHS principalship after Lt. Xiarhos illegally faxed a police incident report to Waterbury school authorities. The Amended Complaint alleges the unlawful dissemination of Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI), G.L. c. 6, § 172; a violation of the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act (MCRA), G.L. c. 12, §§ 11 H and 111; a violation of the Federal Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1983; and common-law claims for invasion of privacy, tortious interference with contractual relations, and the negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
On September 9, 2004, defendants removed the case to the federal district court on diversity grounds.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1332. On March 30, 2006, defendants moved for summary judgment on all counts of the Amended Complaint. On March 31, 2006, Galvin responded with a cross-motion for summary judgment. On August 24, 2006, the court heard oral argument.
FACTS
I will begin with the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as it is dispositive of the ease. The undisputed facts, which when considering the defendants’ motion must be taken in the light most flattering to Galvin, are as follows. During July of 2001, Galvin was summering in Yarmouth, Massachusetts. Galvin had previously rented a summer home in Yarmouth owned by Louis and Patricia Niekinello. Galvin’s relationship with the Nickinellos had become strained as a result of their rejection of his offers to buy the house.
On July 4, 2001, a hostile encounter with the Nickinellos’ son, Louis Niekinello, Jr., an off-duty Yarmouth police officer, escalated into a shouting and swearing match. Nickinello’s children witnessed the confrontation.
Niekinello called the Yarmouth Police complaining that Galvin was vandalizing his property. According to the officers who responded, Galvin was severely intoxicated, although he was not abusive or belligerent.
Galvin was taken into protective custody.
He was placed in handcuffs, transported to the Yarmouth police station, and held overnight in a cell. Galvin was never formally arrested or charged with a crime.
Immediately after Galvin was released, Lt. Xiarhos prepared the following departmental “incident synopsis.”
CONFIDENTIAL INCIDENT SYNOPSIS
Martin J. Galvin, Jr. has been harassing the Niekinello family again. On Wednesday] 7/4/01 at 1930, Galvin went to Patrol Officer Nickinello’s home and made threats and vandalized some property. Galvin was heavily intoxicated and was verbally abusive to both of Patrol Officer Nickinello’s daughters.
YPD responded and placed Galvin in protective custody.
Galvin is an alcohol abuser with 2 previous OUI arrests by YPD.
Please keep watch of the Niekinello property and be alert for Mr. Galvin. See report 2001014939 7/4/01 for additional details.
Waterbury PD contacted. Galvin is Wil-by High School principal in Waterbury Description of Subject....
Galvin has
no
active MA or CT driver license
Galvin has active CT License to Carry
Later that day, Lt. Xiarhos faxed the synopsis and several associated police reports to the Waterbury Public Schools.
On Monday, July 9, 2001, Galvin returned to work at WHS. The next day, he received a letter from David Snead, the Superintendent of Schools. The letter read as follows.
On Friday, July 6, 2001, I was notified that the Yarmouth, MA Police Department had arrested you for threatening and for malicious destruction/vandalism.
The Yarmouth police have reported to us that on or about 7:30 p.m. on July 4, 2001, you went to the home of a former neighbor, and made threats to him in front of his children aged 8 and 9. These threats included the use of abusive and profane language. It is further reported you were heavily intoxicated and that you vandalized property including a fence and patio chair.
As a result of this conduct, police were called and you were arrested and placed into protective custody. Please be advised that these criminal charges, if true, [may] result in questions relative to your employment in the Waterbury Public Schools.
I would like to give you an opportunity to discuss this matter as soon as possible. Please contact me when you receive this letter to arrange a meeting. You are entitled to SAW [union] representation at this meeting if you so choose.
On July 12, 2001, Galvin, together with a union lawyer and the union president, met with Superintendent Snead. Galvin did not deny his involvement in the incident, but he insisted that the Yarmouth Police had illegally provided Snead and the school board with protected CORI information. The lawyers representing both sides agreed with Galvin and the meeting adjourned without any action being taken.
Some ten months later, on April 18, 2002, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC) announced that it was revoking WHS’s accreditation. (WHS had been accredited by the NEASC in 1991). The Waterbury press reported that WHS, uniquely among 641 accredited schools, had failed every accreditation review standard. Four days later, on April 22, 2002, Superintendent Snead removed Galvin as the principal of WHS, naming him instead the principal of the Adult Education High School Program.
While the transfer amounted to a reduction in responsibility and prestige, Galvin’s salary remained unchanged.
On April 29, 2002, Galvin asked Snead to give the reasons for his transfer. On May 20, 2002, Snead sent Galvin the following letter.
My decision to transfer you was made for the best interests of the school-system. In light of the recent report of the New England [Association of Schools and Colleges, it has become evident to me that a change in leadership was necessary at Wilby High School.
The NEASC reports (sic) describes the following concerning the leadership and organization of Wilby High School:
1. Lack of vision and leadership at the school.
2.
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MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
STEARNS, District Judge.
On July 6, 2004, Martin J. Galvin, Jr., a former principal of Wilby High School (WHS) in Waterbury, Connecticut, brought this action against the Town of Yarmouth and two Yarmouth police officers, Chief Peter Carnes and Lt. Steven Xiarhos. Galvin alleges that he lost his WHS principalship after Lt. Xiarhos illegally faxed a police incident report to Waterbury school authorities. The Amended Complaint alleges the unlawful dissemination of Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI), G.L. c. 6, § 172; a violation of the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act (MCRA), G.L. c. 12, §§ 11 H and 111; a violation of the Federal Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1983; and common-law claims for invasion of privacy, tortious interference with contractual relations, and the negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
On September 9, 2004, defendants removed the case to the federal district court on diversity grounds.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1332. On March 30, 2006, defendants moved for summary judgment on all counts of the Amended Complaint. On March 31, 2006, Galvin responded with a cross-motion for summary judgment. On August 24, 2006, the court heard oral argument.
FACTS
I will begin with the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as it is dispositive of the ease. The undisputed facts, which when considering the defendants’ motion must be taken in the light most flattering to Galvin, are as follows. During July of 2001, Galvin was summering in Yarmouth, Massachusetts. Galvin had previously rented a summer home in Yarmouth owned by Louis and Patricia Niekinello. Galvin’s relationship with the Nickinellos had become strained as a result of their rejection of his offers to buy the house.
On July 4, 2001, a hostile encounter with the Nickinellos’ son, Louis Niekinello, Jr., an off-duty Yarmouth police officer, escalated into a shouting and swearing match. Nickinello’s children witnessed the confrontation.
Niekinello called the Yarmouth Police complaining that Galvin was vandalizing his property. According to the officers who responded, Galvin was severely intoxicated, although he was not abusive or belligerent.
Galvin was taken into protective custody.
He was placed in handcuffs, transported to the Yarmouth police station, and held overnight in a cell. Galvin was never formally arrested or charged with a crime.
Immediately after Galvin was released, Lt. Xiarhos prepared the following departmental “incident synopsis.”
CONFIDENTIAL INCIDENT SYNOPSIS
Martin J. Galvin, Jr. has been harassing the Niekinello family again. On Wednesday] 7/4/01 at 1930, Galvin went to Patrol Officer Nickinello’s home and made threats and vandalized some property. Galvin was heavily intoxicated and was verbally abusive to both of Patrol Officer Nickinello’s daughters.
YPD responded and placed Galvin in protective custody.
Galvin is an alcohol abuser with 2 previous OUI arrests by YPD.
Please keep watch of the Niekinello property and be alert for Mr. Galvin. See report 2001014939 7/4/01 for additional details.
Waterbury PD contacted. Galvin is Wil-by High School principal in Waterbury Description of Subject....
Galvin has
no
active MA or CT driver license
Galvin has active CT License to Carry
Later that day, Lt. Xiarhos faxed the synopsis and several associated police reports to the Waterbury Public Schools.
On Monday, July 9, 2001, Galvin returned to work at WHS. The next day, he received a letter from David Snead, the Superintendent of Schools. The letter read as follows.
On Friday, July 6, 2001, I was notified that the Yarmouth, MA Police Department had arrested you for threatening and for malicious destruction/vandalism.
The Yarmouth police have reported to us that on or about 7:30 p.m. on July 4, 2001, you went to the home of a former neighbor, and made threats to him in front of his children aged 8 and 9. These threats included the use of abusive and profane language. It is further reported you were heavily intoxicated and that you vandalized property including a fence and patio chair.
As a result of this conduct, police were called and you were arrested and placed into protective custody. Please be advised that these criminal charges, if true, [may] result in questions relative to your employment in the Waterbury Public Schools.
I would like to give you an opportunity to discuss this matter as soon as possible. Please contact me when you receive this letter to arrange a meeting. You are entitled to SAW [union] representation at this meeting if you so choose.
On July 12, 2001, Galvin, together with a union lawyer and the union president, met with Superintendent Snead. Galvin did not deny his involvement in the incident, but he insisted that the Yarmouth Police had illegally provided Snead and the school board with protected CORI information. The lawyers representing both sides agreed with Galvin and the meeting adjourned without any action being taken.
Some ten months later, on April 18, 2002, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC) announced that it was revoking WHS’s accreditation. (WHS had been accredited by the NEASC in 1991). The Waterbury press reported that WHS, uniquely among 641 accredited schools, had failed every accreditation review standard. Four days later, on April 22, 2002, Superintendent Snead removed Galvin as the principal of WHS, naming him instead the principal of the Adult Education High School Program.
While the transfer amounted to a reduction in responsibility and prestige, Galvin’s salary remained unchanged.
On April 29, 2002, Galvin asked Snead to give the reasons for his transfer. On May 20, 2002, Snead sent Galvin the following letter.
My decision to transfer you was made for the best interests of the school-system. In light of the recent report of the New England [Association of Schools and Colleges, it has become evident to me that a change in leadership was necessary at Wilby High School.
The NEASC reports (sic) describes the following concerning the leadership and organization of Wilby High School:
1. Lack of vision and leadership at the school.
2. Teachers’ perception that they are left out of the decision-making process.
3. Lack of regularly scheduled faculty meetings.
4. The length of time that it takes to resolve student scheduling conflict.
5. Lack of teacher collaboration across departments.
6. Lack of acknowledgment of teacher’s accomplishments.
I recognize that many other deficiencies were cited in the NEASC report that may not be directly related to the school’s leadership.
Nonetheless, I share some of these same concerns about Wilby High School’s leadership and I feel your skills are better suited to the Adult Education Program, which has been without a permanent principal for over a year.
Snead later testified that while he knew that Galvin had been taken into protective custody, he did not take any disciplinary action as a result (other than warning Gal-vin in the July 10, 2001 letter about the possible negative consequences of a criminal conviction). Snead maintained that Galvin was transferred solely because WHS had lost its accreditation under Gal-vin’s leadership.
DISCUSSION
Galvin’s Complaint is grounded on an alleged violation of the Massachusetts CORI statute (the transmittal of the July 4, 2001 incident report to Waterbury school officials). This alleged malfeasance underpins Galvin’s state-law claims of invasion of privacy, tortious interference with contractual relations, and the negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress. It is also provides proximal under-girding for Galvin’s federal and state civil rights claims.
In both his § 1983 and MCRA claims, Galvin alleges that he was deprived of a personal interest in property in derogation of his Fourteenth Amendment right to procedural due process.
See Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
408 U.S. 564, 569, 92 S.Ct. 2701, 33 L.Ed.2d 548 (1972). Although the property interest at stake in a procedural due process action may be (and almost always is) defined by state law, whether that interest “rises to the level of a ‘legitimate claim of entitlement’ protected by the Due Process Clause” is determined by federal constitutional law.
Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v. Craft,
436 U.S. 1, 9, 98 S.Ct. 1554, 56 L.Ed.2d 30 (1978). Of course, not every breach of a contractual right gives rise to a federal constitutional claim; the contractual right at issue must be one deemed significant both by the holder of the right and by the law that protects it.
Brown v. Brienen,
722 F.2d 360, 364 (7th Cir.1983).
The property right identified in the Amended Complaint is Galvin’s reputa-tional interest in his tenure as the principal of WHS.
Galvin alleges that his invol
untary transfer to the Adult Education Program, which he attributes to the CORI disclosure, damaged his reputation and his prospects for future employment opportunities.
The Complaint does not identify the definitional origin of this interest — ■ there is no substantive reference in the Complaint to a contract or state or federal law of any kind defining such an interest
■ — but this much is certain: if there was no CORI violation, any due process claim that Galvin might possess runs against his employers, who are not named as defendants, and not against the Town of Yarmouth and its employees.
The CORI statute states in pertinent part that:
[c]riminal offender record information, and where present, evaluative information, shall be disseminated, whether directly or through any intermediary, only to (a) criminal justice agencies; (b) such other agencies and individuals required to have access to such information by statute ... and (c) any other agencies and individuals where it has been determined that the public interest in disseminating such information to these parties clearly outweighs the interest in security and privacy.
G.L. c. 6, § 172. As the Supreme Judicial Court explained in
Bellin v. Kelley,
435 Mass. 261, 264, 755 N.E.2d 1274 (2001), CORI information may be disseminated in only three statutorily authorized circumstances: (a) to criminal justice agencies for investigative use; (b) to agencies designated as authorized recipients by other statutes; and (c) when the Criminal History Systems Board determines that dissemination of CORI material is in the public interest. Defendants argue that under subsection (b) of § 172, the dissemination of CORI information is authorized because Massachusetts school officials are required by law to gather CORI information for almost all school employees.
The school committee and superintendent of any city, town or regional school district and the principal, by whatever title the position be known, of a public or accredited private school of any city, town or regional school district shall have access to and shall obtain all available criminal offender record information from the criminal history systems board of any current or prospective employee or volunteer of the school department, who may have direct and unmonitored contact with children.
G.L. c. 71, § 38R. Defendants contend that it makes no difference that the information
was given for use by a Connecticut rather than a Massachusetts school employer because under Connecticut law, the dissemination of criminal offender records to school employers is also statutorily authorized. Conn. Gen.Stat. § 10-221d(a)(2) states:
[o]n and after July 1, 1994, each local and regional board of education shall (1) require each applicant for a position in a public school to state whether such person has ever been convicted of a crime or whether criminal charges are pending against such person at the time of such person’s application, (2) require, subject to the provisions of subsection (d) of this section, each person hired by the board after July 1,1994, to submit to state and national criminal history records checks within thirty days from the date of employment and
may require,
subject to the provisions of subsection (d) of this section, any person hired prior to said date to submit to state and national criminal history records checks.... (Emphasis added).
Galvin, in a very convoluted argument, contends that the Connecticut statute, unlike its Massachusetts counterpart, does not make a criminal record check of school employees mandatory. Therefore, according to Galvin, the dissemination of CORI information to a Connecticut school is not authorized by subsection (b) of the CORI statute, because a Connecticut school board is not
required
to gather criminal offender information; it is simply permitted to do so.
The fatal flaw in Galvin’s argument is its failure to grasp the not overly subtle distinction between being required to gather information on the one hand and being authorized to receive it on the other.
Equally fatal for Galvin is his inability — even positing a CORI violation — to establish a causal link between the CORI disclosure and the loss of his principalship at WHS.
Galvin argues that his transfer in April of 2002 is directly attributable to the receipt by Superintendent Snead of the CORI information faxed by Lt. Xiarhos in July of 2001. Defendants, however, offer Snead’s uncontradicted testimony that he transferred Galvin — not in July of 2001 but in April of 2002 — because of WHS’s loss of accreditation under Galvin’s leadership and for no other reason. In his May 20, 2002 letter, written well before this lawsuit was filed, Superintendent Snead pointed to the six leadership deficits identified by the NEASC as justification for Galvin’s transfer. Galvin offers nothing to challenge Snead’s testimony other than a
post hoc ergo propter hoc
argument. Where temporal proximity between an employer’s
knowledge of protected activity and an adverse employment action is the only evidence offered to show causality, proximity must be “very close.”
Bishop v. Bell Atlantic Corp.,
299 F.3d 53, 60 (1st Cir.2002), quoting
Clark County Sch. Dist. v. Breeden,
532 U.S. 268, 273, 121 S.Ct. 1508, 149 L.Ed.2d 509 (2001) (per curiam). Action taken ten months after the fact, particularly on the heels of a portentous intervening event, “suggests, by itself, no causality at all.”
Id.
at 274, 121 S.Ct. 1508.
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, Galvin’s cross-motion for summary judgment is
DENIED.
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment is
ALLOWED.
The Clerk will enter judgment for the defendants on all counts of the Amended Complaint.
SO ORDERED.