Joseph H. Bieluch, Jr. v. Bernard Sullivan, Commissioner of Public Safety, I/o

999 F.2d 666, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 19368
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 1993
Docket1368, Docket 92-9314
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 999 F.2d 666 (Joseph H. Bieluch, Jr. v. Bernard Sullivan, Commissioner of Public Safety, I/o) 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
Joseph H. Bieluch, Jr. v. Bernard Sullivan, Commissioner of Public Safety, I/o, 999 F.2d 666, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 19368 (2d Cir. 1993).

Opinions

GEORGE C. PRATT, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff Joseph H. Bieluch, Jr., appeals from a summary judgment granted by the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, Alan H. Nevas, Judge, holding that qualified immunity protected defendant Bernard Sullivan from liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for summarily transferring Bieluch from his position as resident trooper. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.

[668]*668FACTS AND BACKGROUND

Bielueh joined the Connecticut police force in 1967. In 1973, he became one of two “resident troopers” for the Town of New Hartford, Connecticut. Connecticut’s resident trooper program is designed to provide community-based policing for towns lacking an organized police force. A resident trooper is functionally equivalent to a chief of police and is a highly desired, prestigious position. As a resident trooper, Bielueh had flexible hours and diverse duties, received an additional stipend of $100 per month, and was under less supervision than regular “road troopers”. His duties included performing educational activities in the town; supervising the town constables; and assisting the town’s First Selectman in preparing a local public-safety budget, reviewing public-safety ordinances, and monitoring housing-code violations. Bielueh was a New Hartford resident trooper for seventeen years; his summary transfer in 1990 precipitated tins lawsuit.

In 1980 Bielueh and his family moved to New Hartford, because he wanted to live in the same town where he worked. As a private citizen, he became active in community affairs. He was elected to New Hartford’s Board of Finance, but after the State Ethics Commission issued an advisory opinion stating that his position on the board created a conflict of interest under state laws, he resigned from the board in March 1990. That same month he was elected president of the New Hartford Business and Property Owners’ Association, an organization dedicated to overturning a referendum that had approved the construction of a new school. Bielueh was publicly identified on some of the association’s written communications as the president and was quoted in local newspapers as a member of the association.

The association circulated petitions calling for the town’s Board of Selectmen to rescind their votes authorizing construction of a new school. The board refused to act on the petition, which prompted the association to file a lawsuit against the town and its selectmen. Bielueh was a named plaintiff in the suit, and First Selectman Reginald J. Smith, Jr., was a named defendant. The suit was settled after the town agreed to schedule a referendum to reconsider the issue. The second referendum rescinded the previous approval for the construction of a new school. Its mission accomplished, the association dissolved.

A new organization, the New Hartford Property Owners’ Association, formed in May 1990 and elected Bielueh as its president. The organization effectively campaigned against several town budgets proposed by New Hartford’s Board of Finance by supporting petitions to force referenda on proposed budgets. At times, the association distributed flyers or mailings to New Hartford residents. Bielueh also personally appeared at town budget meetings and expressed his views. When the fiscal year began on July 1, 1990, the town did not have a budget in place.

Bernard Sullivan was appointed to the position of Connecticut’s Commissioner of Public Safety in November 1989. The Commissioner of Public Safety supervises the resident troopers. Conn.Gen.Stat. § 29-5. On or about July 2, 1990, Sullivan received a letter signed by nine New Hartford residents that expressed concern over Bieluch’s political activities. Reginald Smith was one of the signatories, but he had signed the letter as a private citizen, without indicating his position as First Selectman.

The letter to Commissioner Sullivan criticized the tactics employed by both of the organizations of which Bielueh had been president. It said that Bielueh had “placed himself at the center of an extremely divisive, ongoing, political controversy”, which was “totally inappropriate for a resident state trooper”. As examples of his “unethical public conduct and conflict of interest”, the letter contained the following allegations:

—Prior to the May 15 referendum to rescind, Trooper Bielueh promised a “secret plan” for a cheaper solution to school space needs. This was widely reported in the press. Yet Trooper Bielueh betrayed the public trust placed in him as a Building Committe [sic] member by publicly refusing to reveal or discuss this plan with fellow committe [sic] members.
[669]*669—On May 10,1990 a neutral forum chaired by a professional moderator was held for pro- and anti-school groups to air their views. Trooper Bieluch’s P.A.C. was formally invited to participate as panel members. The enclosed letter expressed his refusal.
—During several school referenda Trooper Bieluch’s patrol ear has been conspicuously parked at polls, providing well-recognized anti-school publicity.
—Trooper Bieluch personally circulated the petition to repeat the school referendum. (How many citizens feel safe or comfortable refusing their Resident Trooper in this role?)
—After the school defeat, Trooper Bie-luch’s P.A.C. began their assault on our town budget using similar tactics of exaggeration and distortion.
—After one budget defeat May 30, 1990, Trooper Bieluch’s P.A.C. has now forced a 2nd budget referendum scheduled June 26, 1990. These actions have recklessly squandered public funds, denied citizens their right of line item veto at a Town Meeting and seriously threaten our town’s ability to function as of a new fiscal year July 1, 1990.
—Trooper Bieluch’s P.A.C. has publicly targeted our education - budget, seeking staff cuts, even though the Education budget has a net increase of only 6% over last year with an increase in enrollment of 5.8%.
—Trooper Bieluch has conducted the business, of the N.H. Property and Business Owners’ Association from his office in Town Hall and on company time.

Several documents were attached to the letter, including copies of petitions for the school construction referendum, newspaper articles,- and various materials distributed by the association.

Sullivan asked his subordinates to check into the matter, but they did not verify the truthfulness of any of the eight allegations of unethical conduct. They did confirm that the Reginald Smith who had signed the letter was the First Selectman, and they recommended transferring Bieluch from his- New Hartford resident trooper position. The First Selectman acts as the administrative chief of police. He is not superior to the resident trooper, but has a working relationship with him.

Less than two weeks after Sullivan received the letter, he decided to transfer Bie-luch. When Bieluch’s immediate commanding officer, Lieutenant Watrous, contacted Smith and told him that Bieluch might be transferred, Smith said that he would like to see Bieluch replaced because he felt that Bieluch’s political activities were affecting his work.

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999 F.2d 666, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 19368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-h-bieluch-jr-v-bernard-sullivan-commissioner-of-public-safety-ca2-1993.