Philip v. Cronin

537 F.3d 26, 28 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 28, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 16703, 2008 WL 3115352
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 2008
Docket06-1860
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 537 F.3d 26 (Philip v. Cronin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philip v. Cronin, 537 F.3d 26, 28 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 28, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 16703, 2008 WL 3115352 (1st Cir. 2008).

Opinion

LYNCH, Chief Judge.

The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Massachusetts has had a troubled history. This lawsuit is brought by a disgruntled former contract medical examiner, Dr. Abraham Philip, against the administrator of that office, John Cronin.

In November of 2000 the National Association of Medical Examiners (“NAME”) conducted an audit and filed a report critical of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for Massachusetts (“OCME”). (OCME had requested the audit.) The report called OCME’s facilities “woefully inadequate” and detailed insufficient staff *28 ing, unacceptable delays, and other difficulties in the office.

In March of 2003, John Cronin was brought on as the Chief Administrator of OCME and charged with improving the office, including mending OCME’s public reputation. During Cronin’s tenure, plaintiff Abraham Philip was employed as a medical examiner under a ten-month contract starting on September 2, 2003. That contract required Dr. Philip to “adhere to the highest ethical standards and serve as a role model for all other OCME employees.” He had worked for the agency in the past.

Cronin terminated Dr. Philip’s contract on March 3, 2004. Dr. Philip sued Cronin in his personal capacity, claiming the termination was in retaliation for two letters criticizing OCME that Dr. Philip had sent to the governor and therefore violated his First Amendment rights. Cronin denied that accusation and pointed to several troubling incidents during Dr. Philip’s employment as the cause for the contract termination.

The case went to trial. After the close of plaintiffs evidence, and on defendant’s motion, the trial judge entered a directed verdict for Cronin. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a). The judge did so “essentially for the reasons and rationale set forth” in defendant’s memorandum of law in support of his Rule 50(a) motion. Cronin, in his memorandum to the district court, had primarily argued (1) that no reasonable fact finder could conclude that Dr. Philip’s critical speech regarding OCME was the motivating factor in the termination of his employment, (2) that Dr. Philip’s employment would have been terminated regardless of his speech on a matter of public concern, and (3) that Cronin was entitled to qualified immunity. 1 Of these rationales, we find the last — qualified immunity — sufficient to sustain the trial court’s Rule 50(a) judgment.

I.

Dr. Philip was, depending on one’s point of view, either a constant complainer or a constant seeker of improvement in the OCME. He freely used emails and memos to communicate his ideas to Cronin. Cronin did meet with Dr. Philip at least twice in January 2004, for a couple of hours each time, to discuss these suggestions. Many of Dr. Philip’s concerns had been highlighted in the NAME report from two years earlier. As to Dr. Philip’s new ideas, Cronin did follow up on some.

Starting in February 2004, there was a series of incidents which had later consequences. The first incident involved the contamination of a death certificate. On February 13, 2004, a funeral home brought a death certificate back to OCME because it had not been properly signed; because the autopsy had been conducted by Dr. Philip, Cronin sent an administrative assistant, Leslie Ward, to obtain Dr. Philip’s signature on the certificate.

Dr. Philip, in the midst of another autopsy, did not want to be interrupted and essentially told Leslie Ward to tell the funeral home to wait an hour until he took a break. She relayed that message to Cronin; at Cronin’s request, Leslie Ward’s supervisor, Deirdre Ward, went down to see Dr. Philip, bearing the unsigned certificate and a request that he sign it. This *29 time Dr. Philip did sign it, but in doing so got blood on the certificate. Dr. Philip testified that he placed the bloody certificate on a table to deal with later, but that the technician took it away while Dr. Philip was finishing his autopsy. (Deirdre Ward told Cronin that Dr. Philip had handed the bloodied certificate directly to her.) Deirdre Ward brought the certificate to Cronin and told him it had been “dripping with blood” when she received it. Cronin told Deirdre Ward to place it into a sleeve, recognizing the bloody certificate to be a biohazard. Cronin then explained what happened to Dr. Richard Evans, the Chief Medical Examiner. According to Cronin, Dr. Evans was shocked and disgusted by Dr. Philip’s unprofessional behavior.

Cronin investigated and took statements from four employees involved in the incident, who confirmed the events outlined. Dr. Philip’s autopsy assistant was not questioned about the incident. Cronin then consulted his superiors at the Executive Office of Public Safety (“EOPS”), EOPS Undersecretary Robert Hass and EOPS Chief of Staff Jane Tewksbury. They discussed the written statements and the range of possible disciplinary actions. Dr. Evans also provided his views.

In Cronin’s view, the lack of signature on the original certificate was not directly Dr. Philip’s fault, but Dr. Philip’s response was inappropriate. Dr. Philip had larger administrative and safety responsibilities, and the group decided some discipline was appropriate. The decision was made to suspend Dr. Philip for one day to “get his attention and make him realize that he need[ed] to be part of this recovery of this medical/legal system that [OCME was] looking to build from a professional ground up.” The suspension was brief in light of the staffing shortage at OCME. Cronin’s superiors instructed Cronin to convey that disciplinary decision to Dr. Philip.

That same day, February 25, Cronin met with Dr. Philip to hear his version of events. This effort was unsuccessful. Dr. Philip became agitated and left Cronin’s office in anger, yelling at him. As Dr. Philip left, Cronin handed him a disciplinary action letter, dated February 25, 2004, that read:

Please let this correspondence serve to notify you that as a result of your actions on Friday February 13, 2004 at approximately 12:30pm, you are suspended without pay for one day. Your suspension is to be served on Thursday March 4, 2004.
The events, as described by four witnesses, reveal that you abruptly accepted a death certificate for your signature while you were performing an autopsy on a homicide victim. You then, without comment, handed the document back to Ms. Deirdre Ward with “blood dripping from it”. A copy of the soiled document is attached.
Your actions exposed a co-worker to a potentially hazardous situation without any explanation. The document was also rendered “destroyed” thereby causing embarrassment and inconvenience to this office, the funeral home that transported the document, the burial agent that signed the original for burial of the decedent back in January 2004, and the Natick Town Hall Clerk’s office.
Please understand that your actions are very disturbing and are determined to be completely unacceptable.

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Bluebook (online)
537 F.3d 26, 28 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 28, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 16703, 2008 WL 3115352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philip-v-cronin-ca1-2008.