McBride v. Village of Michiana

100 F.3d 457
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1996
Docket95-1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 F.3d 457 (McBride v. Village of Michiana) 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
McBride v. Village of Michiana, 100 F.3d 457 (6th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

100 F.3d 457

Noreen MCBRIDE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
VILLAGE OF MICHIANA, Defendant,
Elizabeth O'Donnell, individually and as Clerk of the Village of Michiana and as former Assistant Clerk of the Village of Michiana and as former President of the Village of Michiana and as former member and as former President Pro-Tem of the Village Council of the Village of Michiana; Kathleen Roberts, individually and as former President of the Village of Michiana and as a member and former President ProTem of the Village Council of the Village of Michiana; Kenneth Books, individually and as a Police Officer of the Village of Michiana; Marianne Gosswiller, individually and as former Chairperson of the Zoning, Planning and Environmental Commission of the Village of Michiana; Mary Ann Johnson, individually and as former member of the Village Council of the Village of Michiana and as former member of the Zoning, Planning and Environmental Commission of the Village of Michiana; Gertrude Peterson, individually and as former Clerk of the Village of Michiana; Richard Gosswiller, individually and as former President of the Village of Michiana and as former member of the Village Council of the Village of Michiana; Harvey Kemp, individually and as a former member of the Zoning, Planning and Environmental Commission of the Village of Michiana and as former acting Temporary Building Inspector of the Village of Michiana, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 95-1881

United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit

Argued May 20, 1996
Decided November 14, 1996

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan Tat Parish, Steven L.Wolfram (argued and briefed), Watervliet, MI, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Mary Massaron Ross (argued and briefed), Plunkett & Cooney, Detroit, MI, for Defendants-Appellants.

Before: DAUGHTREY and MOORE, Circuit Judges; FORESTER,* District Judge.

DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

Present and former officials of the Village of Michiana appeal from the district court's denial of their requests for qualified immunity in an action premised upon 42 U.S.C. Section(s) 1983. In the underlying proceeding, Noreen McBride, a reporter for various newspapers and other media outlets, claimed that the defendants infringed upon her clearly established constitutional right to be free from retaliation for exercising her First Amendment freedoms. We agree with the district court that the right of a reporter to be free from reprisals for relating news items about elected leaders was clearly established by the time the challenged acts occurred. Nevertheless, we also conclude that some of the alleged retaliatory acts may themselves be protected by the First Amendment and, therefore, cannot cause compensable, constitutional injuries. We thus AFFIRM the denial of qualified immunity to the defendants and REMAND this matter to the district court for further consideration of the claims raised by McBride.

I.

At all times relevant to this dispute, McBride worked in the Southern Michigan-Northern Indiana area for several news organizations, including the New Buffalo Times, the South Bend Tribune, and radio station WEFM. As part of her duties, she filed stories concerning the political happenings in the Village of Michiana in Berrien County, Michigan. Some of those stories discussed the mishandling of public funds, violations of the Michigan Open Meetings Act, and efforts by village officials to encourage non-residents to vote in village elections.

In her Section(s) 1983 complaint, McBride alleged that the government defendants then undertook a series of actions between the fall of 1989 and 1992 in retaliation for her less-than-glowing accounts of representative democracy in Southern Michigan. Specifically, she charged that certain defendants (Kenneth Books, a Michiana police officer, Marianne Gosswiller, a member of the Michiana Village Council, and Kathleen Roberts, the president pro tem of the Michiana Village Council) repeatedly contacted her employers and urged them not to allow McBride to report on Michiana political news. McBride also alleged that Gosswiller and Roberts, together with Mary Ann Johnson, another member of the village council, threatened to boycott the New Buffalo Times if that publication did not remove McBride from her political beat, and actually purchased an advertisement in a competing paper urging readers to cancel their subscriptions to the New Buffalo Times. Furthermore, Roberts contacted a potential employer of McBride and strongly suggested that the company not hire McBride.

On another occasion, with council members present, Officer Books called the New Buffalo Times and requested that McBride not be assigned to cover council proceedings, saying that he could not ensure her safety if she appeared before that body. When McBride did, in fact, appear to report on the governmental activities, Books and Gertrude Peterson, the former clerk of the council, ordered her to leave the press table set up in the council chambers, while Carol Nagy, another council member, informed the general public that the meeting would not begin as long as McBride remained at the table. Books then threatened McBride with physical removal if she did not comply with the directive. Before the next council meeting, moreover, the entire press table was removed from the premises.

McBride alleged as well other instances of possible retaliation by members of the Michiana government. For instance, she claimed that Roberts, Marianne Gosswiller, Richard Gosswiller, the former village president, and Elizabeth O'Donnell, a local governmental office-holder, verbally abused her during council meetings, that O'Donnell instructed village employees not to speak with McBride, and that Marianne Gosswiller, Peterson, and O'Donnell violated the Freedom of Information Act of Michigan by, among other things, improperly refusing to produce documents for McBride or charging her inflated prices for document requests. She also insisted that Richard Gosswiller intentionally destroyed government documents in order to deny her access to them.

Finally, McBride complained of certain actions taken by Harvey Kemp who served both as the Michiana Building Inspector and as a member of the Zoning, Planning, and Environmental Commission. She alleged that at one meeting of the commission, Kemp required all members of the media to stand and identify themselves before the commission members and the general public. Furthermore, she claimed that two months later, Kemp hurled a chair at McBride and other members of the press at a public meeting.

As a result of these acts by village officials, McBride filed suit against the defendants pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Section(s) 1983, alleging interference with her rights of free speech and free press, and retaliation for the attempted exercise of those freedoms. The district court granted the defendants' motion to dismiss the action, however, after finding that McBride failed to set forth a claim recognized under the United States Constitution. Specifically, the court determined that McBride had not been defamed, had never been denied access to the public meetings, and had no constitutional right to sit at a press table or to interview public employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 F.3d 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-village-of-michiana-ca6-1996.