John C. Donahue v. Windsor Locks Board of Fire Commissioners, John R. Colli, Jr., Russell C. Gabrielson, and John R. Colli, III

834 F.2d 54, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15598, 45 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 37,604
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 25, 1987
Docket90, Docket 87-7345
StatusPublished
Cited by733 cases

This text of 834 F.2d 54 (John C. Donahue v. Windsor Locks Board of Fire Commissioners, John R. Colli, Jr., Russell C. Gabrielson, and John R. Colli, III) 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
John C. Donahue v. Windsor Locks Board of Fire Commissioners, John R. Colli, Jr., Russell C. Gabrielson, and John R. Colli, III, 834 F.2d 54, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15598, 45 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 37,604 (2d Cir. 1987).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Circuit Judge:

The fundamental obligation of the federal courts is to adjudicate disputes. Not all controversies present triable issues, however, and the courts have a responsibility to vigilantly weed out those cases that do not merit further judicial attention. The procedural tool of summary judgment enables courts to terminate meritless claims, but this potent instrument must be used with the precision of a scalpel. The courts must take care not to abort a genuine factual dispute prematurely and thus deprive a litigant of his day in court.

In the instant controversy, the district court granted summary judgment too hastily on appellant’s first amendment claims. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

On each summary judgment application, it is necessary to carefully examine the facts. This appellant, John C. Donahue, has been a member of the Windsor Locks Volunteer Fire Department for more than seventeen years. Twice during his lengthy tenure, Donahue publicly challenged firehouse practices. He now charges that his views evoked prolonged harassment from the defendants.

Donahue’s first public complaint arose out of his wife's application to join the Fire Department in 1978. The Department, which had only male members then — and still included no women at the time this suit was filed — refused to admit Mrs. Donahue. Believing that his wife had been discriminated against based on gender, Donahue complained to the affirmative action officer *56 for the Town of Windsor Locks in 1981. When this failed to generate any action, he wrote to the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities. The Commission also failed to respond. Thereafter, Donahue took his protest to the press, publicly denouncing the Department’s decision to reject his wife’s application.

Donahue’s second complaint against a firehouse practice stemmed from a closed meeting of the Board of Fire Commissioners. Because Donahue considered the nonpublic gathering to be in violation of the state’s Freedom of Information Act, he filed a complaint with the Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission in June of 1983. The Commission upheld Donahue's complaint.

Donahue alleges that these two incidents have caused the defendants to act in concert to harass him. He points to a series of events in support of his charge, beginning with Chief John R. Colli, Jr.’s formal recommendation to the Board to dismiss him in June, 1983. Chief Colli admits that he harbored ill-feelings toward Donahue because of the adverse publicity generated against the Department. He also admits that his animosity colored his recommendation. In spite of his strong feelings, however, the Commission rejected Colli’s recommendation to dismiss Donahue in January of 1984.

According to Donahue, the dismissal recommendation was only the start of the vendetta. He avers that soon after the Board’s decision, Colli’s harassment degenerated into attempts to foment disputes between him and his co-workers, suspend him unnecessarily, and generally chill his exercise of free speech. Donahue perceived this as pressure for him to resign, but he refused to acquiesce. He refused to relinquish his position at the firehouse in the face of this retaliation for his allegedly legitimate exercise of protected speech.

In April, 1984, Donahue strongly verbalized his anger with a co-worker, Lieutenant Peter D. Coffey, at the firehouse. Donahue used profane language during that argument and, a few days later, Coffey filed a formal written complaint. Donahue concedes the accuracy of the complaint, but he asserts that it was prepared by Chief Colli to harass him. Coffey's deposition lends support to this; it reveals that his intent in complaining to Chief Colli was to obtain an internal resolution, but that Chief Colli used the opportunity to urge a formal complaint. The use of foul language was certainly commonplace in the fire station, but Donahue received a suspension of twenty days. He asserts that a firefighter had not been officially disciplined for using profanity since 1969.

Shortly thereafter, Coffey and his wife began receiving threatening letters and phone calls. Initially, Coffey attributed these actions to Donahue. A handwriting expert, in an affidavit, however, identified one of the threatening letters as written by Chief Colli. Another letter included a copy of Donahue’s personal journal containing his private thoughts and comments about family, friends, and co-workers. The journal was sent anonymously, but Donahue believes Chief Colli circulated it. Chief Colli did in fact possess Donahue’s journal in 1982, but he insists he threw it into a dumpster on the advice of the Town Attorney.

Coffey quickly turned over all of the materials he had received in the mail to Russell Gabrielson, the Chairman of the Board. Gabrielson contends that he too, like Chief Colli, sought to dispose of these papers. He states that he placed the materials in his stove and lit it. Apparently the journal did not burn, however, because he retrieved it undamaged from the stove three months later. Gabrielson’s copy of the journal was finally returned to Donahue in June 1986, almost a year after the complaint was filed.

Donahue also alleges that Gabrielson, like Colli, sought to force his resignation from the Department. To support this contention, he points to the Board’s Executive Session on July 11, 1984, in which Chairman Gabrielson insisted that Donahue’s complaints of gender-based discrimination and Freedom of Information Act violations were “the icing on the edge of the cake.”

*57 On October 9, 1984, Donahue was involved in another altercation at the firehouse, this time with Lieutenant John R. Colli, III, Chief Colli’s son. The subject of the dispute was the Department’s minute book. Colli III concedes that Donahue was reading the book initially, but charges that when he told Donahue he required the book to prepare for a meeting, Donahue became belligerent and used abusive and profane language. Colli III resigned the following day. In his resignation letter, Colli III stated that he feared “physical retaliation” from Donahue because, during the argument, Donahue had “lost all control of temper, swearing at me, shaking his fist at me, and warning me of retaliation.” His letter was posted at the firehouse. Donahue, on the other hand, claims that Colli III provoked the dispute and that at no time did he threaten “physical” retaliation. Instead, he stated only that he would report Colli III to the Freedom of Information Commission if the harassment continued.

In July, 1985, Donahue brought suit in the District Court for the District of Connecticut, alleging violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and conspiracy to deny his rights to free speech and privacy. 1 He sought an injunction and damages against the Windsor Locks Board of Fire Commissioners, Chief Colli, Gabrielson, and John Colli, III.

After discovery proceedings, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of all the defendants on all the claims. The judge concluded that although Donahue had stated a constitutionally cognizable injury, he raised no genuine issues of material fact.

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Bluebook (online)
834 F.2d 54, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15598, 45 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 37,604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-c-donahue-v-windsor-locks-board-of-fire-commissioners-john-r-ca2-1987.