Steadman v. The Texas Rangers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 1999
Docket97-20862
StatusPublished

This text of Steadman v. The Texas Rangers (Steadman v. The Texas Rangers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steadman v. The Texas Rangers, (5th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

Revised July 26, 1999

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

No. 97-20862

CHERYL STEADMAN; ET AL., Plaintiffs, LISA SHEPPARD, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus

THE TEXAS RANGERS; ET AL., Defendants, MAURICE COOK, Captain, Chief of the Texas Rangers, Defendant-Appellant. __________________________________________________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas __________________________________________________________ July 6, 1999

Before POLITZ, EMILIO M. GARZA and STEWART, Circuit Judges.

CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:

This case presents us with an intriguing question at the intersection of semantics and

constitutional law. We must determine whether the First Amendment rights of a female applicant to

the Texas Rangers (“Rangers”) were violated by Maurice Cook, the Chief of the Rangers (“Cook”),

and, if so, whether Cook is entitled to qualified immunity. The twist to this case is that the applicant,

Lisa Sheppard (“Sheppard”), while seeking to shoehorn supposed feminist beliefs into the

constitutionally-protected rubric of political speech, concedes that she never verbally expressed these

beliefs to Cook. Cook would have us hold, therefore, that he violated no First Amendment rights and that, even if he did, his actions should be shielded by the doctrine of qualified immunity. The district

court found genuine issues of material fact to exist and allowed the case to proceed past summary

judgment. The court also found that Cook’s violation of Sheppard’s constitutional rights was not

entitled to the protection of qualified immunity. After the most searching review, however, we

disagree with the district court that Sheppard’s views constitute something more than tacit, private

beliefs. Ironically, even though Co ok considered those beliefs when he worked to ensure that

Sheppard would not be hired, we need not reach the question whether he is entitled to qualified

immunity because we hold that he did not violate any of Sheppard’s established rights. We therefore

reverse the judgment of the district court and render judgment for Cook.

BACKGROUND

I. Facts

The Texas Rangers were organized and legally recognized in 1835. During the first one

hundred years of their existence, they were eulogized as the white knights of the American

Southwest.1 In 1935, Texas created the Department of Public Safety (“TDPS”), which combined the

Texas Rangers with the Highway Patrol. The TDPS is in turn under the guidance of the Public Safety

Commission (“PSC”), who se three members are appointed by the Governor of Texas; the PSC’s

duties include the formulation of plans and policies for the TDPS and the supervision of the TDPS.

As of 1993, the Texas Rangers had never selected a woman for membership. Following

increased pressure from both inside the Texas government and without, the PSC decided to hire

1 At least one historian of the Rangers characterized them as “mounted soldier[s] . . . with no counterpart[s] in any age or country . . . Chivalrous, bold and impetuous in action, [they are] yet wary and calculating, always impatient of restraint, and sometimes unscrupulous and unmerciful.” WALTER PRESCOTT WEBB, THE TEXAS RANGER 1 (1935).

2 female Rangers for the first time, a move which generated no small amount of controversy among the

Rangers.

Sheppard joined the TDPS as a commissioned officer in 1983 and made known her desire to

become a Ranger someday. According to TDPS policy, an applicant to the Rangers must have served

eight years in the TDPS (or its equivalent). At the end of that probationary period, the applicant must

take a written exam. If the applicant’s score on the written exam is high enough, he or she will be

presented to an oral review board. Each member of the review committee scores the applicant on

a scale of 0-500, with the top overall scorers becoming Texas Rangers.2

By 1992, Sheppard had served her probationary period, and she took the written exam for

the Rangers; her score was high enough to allow her to proceed to the oral interview. 3 Sheppard

elected not to proceed through the interview process in 1992, however, after advice from several

Rangers that it was not yet time for a woman to join t he Rangers. Instead, Sheppard accepted a

promotion to the rank of Criminal Investigator, believing that a year’s experience in that position

would help her when she re-applied for the Rangers the following year. No woman was made a

Ranger in 1992.

In 1993, Sheppard again took the Rangers’ written exam. This time, her score was among

the highest of the individuals taking the exam, and she again qualified for review by the committee.

After this second test, a number of individuals, including Ranger Lieutenant Ray Cano (“Cano”) told

2 This policy also required the highest and lowest score to be dropped, and the remaining scores to be averaged. 3 Sheppard took the Criminal Intelligence Service written exam simultaneously and proceeded to that oral review board as well; she was selected by that committee to assume the position of Criminal Investigator.

3 Sheppard that she was not only the most qualified female applicant, but one of the most qualified of

all applicants for a Ranger position in 1993. In addition, the Ranger assigned to investigate

Sheppard’s background found her qualified to become a Ranger.

In June 1993, Sheppard appeared before the oral interview board.4 Cook, the Senior Ranger

Captain, chaired the six-member interview committee. The day before Sheppard’s interview, another

woman, Cheryl Steadman (“Steadman”) appeared before the board; following Steadman’s interview,

and in direct contravention of Rangers’ policy, Cook insisted on reviewing the scores that Steadman

had received from Cano and another committee member, Ranger Lieutenant Earl Pearson. He made

numerous remarks, both disparaging and laudatory, about the various candidates, and he eventually

told Cano and Pearson to change their scores because he wanted Steadman and another woman,

Marrie Garcia, to be selected as Rangers.5 Cano protested Cook’s action to the extent that he

suggested that Sheppard would make the best candidate of the women being discussed. Cook

responded to Cano by saying that “we’re not going to prom ote Lisa . . . [because] Lisa’s too

independent and she’s too opinionated.” As a result of Cook’s pressure, both Cano and Pearson,

knowing that they were violating procedure, changed the scores for Steadman so that she would be

selected instead of Sheppard.

At Sheppard’s interview the next day, some members of the committee, including Pearson,

treated her with veiled contempt. Nonetheless, Sheppard was surprised to learn later that she had

been an unsuccessful candidate for transfer to the Rangers; Steadman and Garcia were selected. She

4 The internal rules for reviewing candidates required committee members not to discuss the candidates after each had appeared before the board. In addition, no committee member was to review how any other committee member had scored the candidates. 5 Cook also informed the other officers that he only wanted to promote two women.

4 later discovered that Cano had given her the highest score of any member of the committee (465 out

of a possible 500 points); another member gave her the lowest score (250), while Cook gave her the

second-lowest score (275). Because Sheppard’s average interview score was lower than that of nine

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