Ray Biggs v. NC Dept of Public Safety

953 F.3d 236
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 2020
Docket18-2437
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 953 F.3d 236 (Ray Biggs v. NC Dept of Public Safety) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray Biggs v. NC Dept of Public Safety, 953 F.3d 236 (4th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 18-2437

RAY C. BIGGS,

Plaintiff − Appellant,

v.

NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY; ERIK A. HOOKS, in his official capacity as Secretary for the North Carolina Department of Public Safety,

Defendants – Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, at Raleigh. Terrence W. Boyle, Chief District Judge. (5:17-cv-00120-BO)

Argued: December 11, 2019 Decided: March 10, 2020

Before WILKINSON, KEENAN, and DIAZ, Circuit Judges.

Motion to dismiss appeal denied. Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson and Judge Keenan joined.

ARGUED: John Heydt Philbeck, Sr., BAILEY & DIXON, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellant. Sripriya Narasimhan, NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, Tamika L. Henderson, Special Deputy Attorney General, NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellees. DIAZ, Circuit Judge:

Ray C. Biggs brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit against his employer, the North

Carolina Department of Public Safety (the “Department”), and its Secretary, Erik A. Hooks

(collectively, “Defendants”), arising from a demotion he suffered in 2012. Biggs, a black

man, claims that Defendants racially discriminated against him by punishing him more

harshly than white employees who broke the same rule that he did. He seeks reinstatement

to his prior position, the removal of negative materials from his personnel file, and

reimbursement for his legal expenses. The district court granted Defendants summary

judgment on the basis that they retain sovereign immunity despite removing this case to

federal court. Biggs now appeals. Defendants have moved to dismiss this appeal as moot

because Biggs recently retired from the Department.

As an initial matter, we deny Defendants’ motion to dismiss because Biggs has

sworn that he would promptly return to work if reinstated to his prior position. We affirm

the grant of summary judgment to the Department because its removal of this case didn’t

constitute a waiver of sovereign immunity. But we vacate the award of summary judgment

for Hooks and remand for further proceedings because—contrary to what the district court

found—Biggs is seeking prospective (not retrospective) relief, meaning his claim against

Hooks falls under the sovereign-immunity exception articulated in Ex Parte Young, 209

U.S. 123 (1908).

2 I.

A.

Biggs has worked for the Department since 1991. In March 2012, he was promoted

to the position of correctional captain, making him the officer-in-charge during his shifts

at the Bertie Correctional Institute. He received very good performance reviews

throughout his career and had never been disciplined.

On August 19, 2012, while Biggs was on duty, several inmates attacked three

correctional officers. Biggs followed Department procedure by ordering a lockdown

(requiring all inmates to return to their cells) and sending the injured officers to receive

medical treatment.

Shortly thereafter, Shady Welch, a correctional officer, saw two inmates who had

been involved in the fight walking unrestrained around the facility. Welch escorted them—

without handcuffs, contrary to Department policy—to a holding cell in the intake area. The

two inmates then asked to speak to Biggs, so Welch retrieved him.

The two inmates, who were still unrestrained, told Biggs that staff had assaulted

them. While they spoke with Biggs, several prison guards approached the cell, yelling and

gesturing hostilely toward them. According to Biggs, he believed at this point that there

had been two assaults: one where other inmates attacked staff, and another where staff

attacked the two inmates to whom he was speaking.

Department policy required Biggs to promptly investigate inmates’ excessive-force

claims. To that end, Biggs sought to transport the two inmates to an office so that they

3 could write statements about their excessive-force claim. Department policy also mandates

that inmates must be handcuffed behind their back before being removed from a cell and

while being escorted through the facility. The inmates refused Biggs’s repeated requests

to submit to being cuffed from the back, stating that they feared staff would attack them

and wanted to be able to defend themselves. Biggs agreed to cuff them from the front

instead and walked them across a five-foot-wide hallway and into an office, where they

wrote statements. Later, one of these inmates was found to have a homemade razor blade

in his pocket after going through a metal detector.

The Department investigated the fight and the staff’s response to it. One of the

investigators opined that Biggs’s violation of the handcuffing policy sent the wrong

message to other staff and created a risk that the inmates would harm staff or themselves.

In her view, Biggs should have either refused to talk to the inmates until they consented to

being handcuffed in the back or used force (like mace) to restrain and escort them.

B.

After receiving the investigators’ report, two senior Department officials demoted

Biggs six pay grades to line correctional officer, the position he started at in 1991. The

officials reasoned that Biggs had put others in danger and, as the officer-in-charge, he had

a responsibility to be a proper role model for his staff. A six-pay-grade demotion usually

entails a thirty-percent pay cut, but the Department cut Biggs’s salary by only ten percent

due to his prior good record. Biggs filed an internal grievance, but the Department upheld

the demotion and promoted a white staffer to replace him. Biggs then learned that white

staffers had received lesser punishments for violating the handcuffing policy. For example,

4 Welch was not disciplined for escorting the same inmates without handcuffs, and two years

earlier another correctional captain was merely issued a warning for directing staffers to

open an inmate’s cell door before restraining him.

Next, Biggs filed a petition with the North Carolina Office of Administrative

Hearings (“OAH”), arguing that the Department lacked just cause to demote him. The

OAH held a hearing at which Biggs, Welch, the investigator, the two senior officials who

decided to demote him, and two other Department employees testified. Biggs didn’t allege

or present any evidence to the OAH that race was a factor in his demotion. The OAH

found that Biggs had willfully violated the Department’s handcuffing policies and affirmed

Biggs’s demotion, but the OAH said nothing about Biggs’s race or whether it played a role

in his demotion.

C.

Biggs then filed this lawsuit in state court. He sought only injunctive relief, asking

the court to compel Defendants to reinstate him to his prior position (with its accompanying

benefits), remove negative materials from his personnel file, and reimburse him for his

legal expenses. Defendants promptly removed the case to federal court and moved to

dismiss it, contending that they had sovereign immunity and that the OAH’s just-cause

determination estopped Biggs’s race-discrimination claim.

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