Steven Calvit v. Mpls. Public Schools

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 18, 1997
Docket96-4181
StatusPublished

This text of Steven Calvit v. Mpls. Public Schools (Steven Calvit v. Mpls. Public Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Calvit v. Mpls. Public Schools, (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 96-4181 ___________

Steven Calvit, * * Plaintiff/Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the District of * Minnesota. Minneapolis Public Schools; * Four Winds School; Donna Grant, * * Defendants/Appellees. * ___________

Submitted: June 12, 1997 Filed: August 18, 1997 ___________

Before MURPHY, HEANEY, and NORRIS,1 Circuit Judges.

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Stephen Calvit sued the Minneapolis Public Schools, the Four Winds School, and Donna Grant (collectively MPS) for retaliating against him for criticizing the school's policy for reporting child abuse. He alleged that MPS 1) violated his free speech rights under the United States and Minnesota constitutions; 2) violated the Minnesota whistleblower statute; 3) defamed him; and 4) illegally retaliated against him

1 The Honorable William A. Norris, United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation. for reporting child abuse. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of MPS on the free speech and whistleblower claims and dismissed the other state claims without prejudice. Calvit appeals, and we reverse.

I.

Calvit was a social worker at the Four Winds school, which is a magnet school emphasizing Native American culture. Under state law he was required to report child abuse within 24 hours of discovery. See Minn. Stat. Ann. § 626.556. Four Winds had developed its own policy on reporting child abuse, however, which allowed a report only if all members of a child abuse team determined one was necessary. According to Calvit, the policy violated state law and was designed specifically to limit reports involving Native American children. Calvit claims he often discussed his concerns about the school policy with his supervisors while he worked at Four Winds and also with a fellow social worker, Harold Lee. MPS claims on the other hand that he did not report his concerns over the policy until after his employment at the school ended.

Under his contract, Calvit would continue to work for the school district beyond the end of the school year unless the district terminated him before June 1. In May 1993, the school district decided to terminate his employment and sent a letter on May 12 informing him of its decision.

On May 12, Calvit reported to child protective services that he suspected that R.B., a student at Four Winds, might have been a victim of sexual abuse. Later that month, child protective services expressed its concern that Calvit's report had not been timely. Calvit claimed he followed school procedure and that initially he did not have enough information to conclude the child had been abused but that he reported it when he did. On June 3, Kay Bonczek, an administrator in the school district's human resources department, wrote Donna Grant, the principal of Four Winds, instructing her to investigate the report about R.B. and informing her that "[w]e will hold on Steve

-2- Calvit's reappointment until the investigation has been completed and the situation is reviewed." A memorandum written in June indicated that Calvit called Bonczek on June 7 to sign a contract for the next school year but that he was told that the investigation had not been completed so his return to Four Winds would be delayed. Calvit's last day at Four Winds was June 14. On June 17, Grant informed Bonczek that she had investigated the matter, and determined that, among other things, when Calvit "interviewed [R.B.], he found no cause to believe abuse had occurred."

Four Winds had reviewed Calvit's general job performance on June 1 and rated him good or superior in every category. At the time Grant informed Bonczek about her investigation regarding the R.B. report, she described Calvit as "extremely conscientious" and said the school was "pleased with the work he had done. . . It is my request that he be reappointed as soon as possible." Later, on June 24, Grant wrote Bonczek that Calvit had done an excellent job and asked her to reassign him to Four Winds.

The first time Calvit made his views known to school district personnel outside of Four Winds was on June 24, 1993. On that day he met with the school district's supervisor of social workers, a special education administrator, and a human resources administrator and discussed Four Winds' child abuse policy. At this meeting Calvit stated that he had to get approval from Four Winds administrators before reporting child abuse and that Four Winds employees had tried to convince him not to report cases of suspected abuse. He claimed that he had been told to call a child's parents when the police came to take a child to a facility. He believed this was not proper. Calvit also indicated that there was a separate standard for reporting cases involving Native American children. The school district rehired Calvit on August 12, 1993 and assigned him to the Morris Park Elementary School. One month later Calvit received a notice of deficiency from the human resources department for his action in the case involving R.B. The

-3- notice stated that he had not reported a suspected case of child abuse in a timely manner and that his "conduct [was] unbecoming a teacher." The notice also stated that if he did not properly report child abuse his contract would be terminated. Despite the school district's criticism of Calvit's behavior, in 1994 the Minnesota Board of Social Work determined that Calvit was not at fault in his report regarding R.B. because there was no reason to believe abuse had occurred.

The school district's human resources department wrote to Calvit in November 1993 that "[t]he district has reassigned you to a full time social worker position at Morris Park to forestall any further complaint of Whistle Blowing." While at Morris Park he was assigned to be a transportation coordinator, in addition to his social work duties. The evidence is mixed on the quality of the assignment to Morris Park. The former principal of the school described its condition in 1993 as "stagnant, dysfunctional, and decaying [and] dirty, dark, devoid of any indications of student work or learning and very unhappy." On the other hand, Calvit's union representative urged him to take the job and Calvit said that he liked the first principal he worked with there, Harold Benson.

Calvit experienced problems at Morris Park. He testified that he informed the second principal, Nina Malm, about the disciplinary letter related to the R.B. case and his disagreement with its findings and conclusions. He also told a school administrator that he would report cases of child abuse if appropriate, even if he were told not to by the principal, and he testified that he told Malm that she was not following the standard child abuse reporting procedures. Calvit claims that other employees at Morris Park treated him rudely and the administrators did nothing to stop this. He also testified that Malm told him not to report certain child abuse cases. Calvit experienced health problems and left the school midway through the year.

Calvit sued MPS in state court for 1) violating his free speech rights under the first and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution and Article I, § 3 of

-4- the Minnesota Constitution; 2) retaliating against him in violation of the Minnesota whistleblower statute; 3) defamation; and 4) retaliation for reporting suspected child abuse. The case was then removed to federal court.

The district court granted summary judgment in favor of MPS on the free speech and whistleblower claims and dismissed the other state claims without prejudice.

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