Kathleen Leavey v. Detroit, City of

467 F. App'x 420
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 2012
Docket10-2064
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 467 F. App'x 420 (Kathleen Leavey v. Detroit, City of) 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
Kathleen Leavey v. Detroit, City of, 467 F. App'x 420 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

CLAY Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Kathleen Leavey, a public official previously employed by the City of Detroit, appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendant City of Detroit (“the City”), and Defendant Judge Marylin E. Atkins (“Judge Atkins”). Plaintiff brought claims of First Amendment retaliation under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and reverse discrimination under the Michigan Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act, M.C.L.A. § 37.2201 et seq. and the Fourteenth Amendment, against the City following her resignation from her position as Interim Corporation Counsel for the City. Plaintiff also filed a First Amendment retaliation claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Judge Atkins in her individual capacity.

For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff, who is white, was appointed to the position of Interim Corporation Counsel by Mayor Kenneth Cockrel, who is African American, as an at-will mayoral appointee in September 2008.

On January 14, 2009, Plaintiff participated in a conference call with Dennis Mazurek (“Mazurek”), Chief Assistant Corporation Counsel for the City, and Constance Allen (“Allen”), judicial assistant to Defendant Atkins, Chief Judge of the 36th Dis *422 trict Court for the City of Detroit. Mazurek and Allen are both white and Atkins is African American. The purpose of the conference call was to discuss the City’s failure to pay the judgment in the amount of $424,000 against the 36th District Court in the case of Sciotti v. 36th District Court, 2007 WL 1491809 (Mich.App.2007). According to Plaintiff, there was a dispute over which City budget would fund the judgment. During the conference call, the conversation shifted from discussing the need to pay the judgment to complaints about the operation of the 36th District Court. According to the amended complaint, Mazurek stated that the 36th District Court was a “part-time” court whose judges started late in the morning and were never available in the afternoon. Plaintiff then added the following statement:

you know, Connie, you know, people don’t have a lot of respect for your court, or they don’t — you know, your court is like a ghetto court. You treat people terrible over there. You know, they wait in lines all day long.

(R.49-5: Leavey Dep. 68.) The conference call ended shortly after Plaintiffs remark about the court.

After the conference call, Allen contacted Judge Atkins and informed her of Plaintiffs and Mazurek’s comments about the 36th District Court. Judge Atkins requested that Allen send an email stating her recollection of the conference call. Judge Atkins then forwarded the email from Allen to the City’s Deputy Mayor, Saul Green, who is also African American. Judge Atkins also called Deputy Mayor Green and informed him of the conversation that occurred between Plaintiff, Mazurek and Allen, and reported that Plaintiff had referred to the court as “ghetto.” Judge Atkins also indicated that she was going to send a letter to Mayor Cockrel and to members of the Detroit City Council stating that she was offended by the remark, and that she believed it was a racist statement. Deputy Mayor Green indicated that he would look into the matter.

On January 15, 2009, Deputy Mayor Green called Plaintiff to discuss the conference call from the prior day. Initially Plaintiff denied using the phrase “ghetto court” but acknowledged that the discussion between her and the two other court officials was pretty heated. She also explained that the discussion was more about the operation of the 36th District Court and how in her opinion the court is disorganized and regularly mistreats people. After the conversation, Deputy Mayor Green forwarded the email that he received from Judge Atkins to Plaintiff, but Plaintiff was unable to open the email. Plaintiff sent a separate email to Deputy Mayor Green admitting that she did in fact make the “ghetto” remark. In her email she acknowledged the following:

I imagine that this will upset many people. I did use the term I have to admit. This could be damaging to the mayor and the city. There may be only one solution to all who will want a pound of flesh and that is for me to resign and proceed to retirement. This is an embarrassment to the city and the mayor. Nothing I can say or do will assuage those who will be incensed and outraged by the comment.

(R.59-11: Leavey email to Green.)

Plaintiff arrived at her office later that morning and read the email forwarded by Deputy Mayor Green that was sent by Judge Atkins. Plaintiff then sent a second email to Deputy Mayor Green indicating that Judge Atkins’ email misrepresented the facts, that the recollection of the conversation was inaccurate, and that she was rescinding her offer to resign. Plaintiff *423 later sent a third email to Deputy Mayor Green in the early afternoon to explain in further detail the context of the “ghetto” remark. Plaintiff also stated that she was not going to resign and would defend her comments.

Plaintiff met with Deputy Mayor Green in person in the afternoon of January 15, 2009. There is no indication that Deputy Mayor Green read the emails from Plaintiff prior to their meeting. During the meeting, Plaintiff discussed the conference call from the prior day and she admitted to using the term “ghetto” in describing the 36th District Court. Plaintiff argued that her use of the term was not racist but was used to describe the court as dysfunctional. At the end of the meeting, Deputy Mayor Green told Plaintiff that she could not stay in her position as Interim Corporation Counsel and that he needed to discuss the situation with the Mayor.

Plaintiff submitted her resignation letter to Mayor Cockrel, effective January 15, 2009. Mayor Cockrel and Deputy Mayor Green met later that afternoon to discuss Plaintiffs statements and Deputy Mayor Green’s conversations with Plaintiff and Judge Atkins. Ultimately, Deputy Mayor Green recommended to Mayor Cockrel that Plaintiff leave her position. Mayor Cockrel agreed with the recommendation. Mayor Cockrel stated in his deposition in this case that his decision to accept Plaintiffs resignation was based on the fact that there was a:

comment and [ ] a discussion that in my view could have negatively impacted and influenced future dealings between the Law Department and the City of Detroit in general, not only with the 36th District Court but which would also have affected the credibility of the Law Department and the head of the Law Department in dealings with the City Council, that was my concern.

(R.59-4: Mayor Cockrel Dep. 17.)

On January 20, 2009, Plaintiff sent an email to Mayor Cockrel rescinding her resignation. A week after Plaintiff sent the January 15, 2009 email, Mayor Cockrel sent Plaintiff a letter backdated to January 15, 2009, accepting her resignation. After Plaintiffs resignation, she returned to her former civil service position with the City as the Senior Assistant Corporation Counsel; she voluntarily retired from that position in July 2009.

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467 F. App'x 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kathleen-leavey-v-detroit-city-of-ca6-2012.