Taylor, Cynthia v. Carmouche, Hamilton

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 24, 2000
Docket99-3117
StatusPublished

This text of Taylor, Cynthia v. Carmouche, Hamilton (Taylor, Cynthia v. Carmouche, Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor, Cynthia v. Carmouche, Hamilton, (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-3117

Cynthia Taylor and Rebecca Smith,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

Hamilton Carmouche, Margaret Felton, and City of Gary, Indiana,

Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 2:96 cv 504--Andrew P. Rodovich, Magistrate Judge.

Argued February 22, 2000--Decided May 24, 2000

Before Coffey, Easterbrook, and Williams, Circuit Judges.

Easterbrook, Circuit Judge. After Hamilton Carmouche was promoted to Corporation Counsel of Gary, Indiana, he needed to appoint a City Attorney, the No. 2 position. He chose Margaret Felton, which caused an uproar among the secretaries in the office. It was not just that Felton is white, while Carmouche, most of the other attorneys and staff, and most residents of Gary are black. The problem was that people thought that Felton would be a taskmaster--as she turned out to be (for example, she had a time clock installed). The next year was filled with strife: staff members complained to Carmouche and went over his head when he backed Felton. Displeased with efforts to undermine his position and that of his chosen second in command, Carmouche disciplined several of the insurgents. By the end of that year our two plaintiffs-- Cynthia Taylor, a lawyer in the office, and Rebecca Smith, a secretary and paralegal--were gone. Soon Carmouche and Felton followed them to private life, as they had lost the confidence of Mayor Barnes. He, too, was replaced before much longer, having decided not to run for reelection in 1995. Taylor was hired in June 1993, fresh from law school, and last worked for the Law Department in October 1994, when she took maternity leave. When Taylor sought to return in December, Carmouche demanded a medical clearance in light of Taylor’s contention that she needed therapy three days a week to address her inability to climb stairs--a serious problem at the Law Department, located on the fourth floor of a building whose elevator does not go higher than the third floor. Taylor did not respond for a month, and the physician’s opinion she finally secured in January said that she could not climb stairs or work more than four hours a day. Carmouche told Taylor that she would be welcome to come back when she could work full time; instead she found other employment and sued for wrongful discharge, contending that Carmouche retaliated against her on account of her complaints about his (and Felton’s) stewardship of the Law Department. Claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Family Medical Leave Act, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 have dropped by the wayside. In this court Taylor’s sole contention, based on 42 U.S.C. sec.1983, is that Carmouche violated her rights under the first amendment by penalizing her for speech about matters of public concern.

Smith joined the Law Department in 1991 and was satisfied with her situation until February 1994, when Felton became City Attorney. Smith complained in general terms to both Carmouche and Mayor Barnes that Felton is a "racist," and Smith perceives that she suffered as a result. Felton issued Smith a written warning for taking too much time for lunch and complained in writing to Carmouche about Smith’s unwillingness to attend a professional seminar. Felton delivered a verbal warning for using profanity and failing to treat others with respect. In July Felton spoiled a surprise birthday party that Smith and other secretaries had planned for a co-worker, telling the object of the party to "call off the dogs." When Smith paged Carmouche to return to the office so that she could complain in writing about Felton’s reference to the secretaries as "dogs," Carmouche blew up and called Smith’s memo "a piece of shit" and handed her a written order (dated ten days earlier) suspending her for failing to provide certain documents to the City Council in a timely fashion. Smith appealed this suspension to the City’s personnel committee, where both she and Taylor testified that Smith was being singled out for alleging that Felton is a racist. Smith prevailed on this grievance but soon was suspended again, and her additional grievances were unsuccessful. (She does not contend in this litigation that any of the additional suspensions was unjustified. Nor does she complain about the multiple written warnings for tardiness and insubordination that were placed in her file before Felton’s appointment.) Smith quit in October 1994 and labels this a constructive discharge.

Carmouche was not pleased by Smith’s decision to go over his head, or by Taylor’s criticism of his management decisions, and let both of them know it. Taylor, who had been working in a detached office on the third floor (large enough for one attorney and one secretary) to accommodate her leg injury, was ordered back to the fourth floor for closer supervision. She appealed to Gary’s chief operating officer, who told her to stay put. Taylor then went home and was not present for a visit from Carmouche and Felton, who suspended her for abandoning her job. Taylor filed another grievance, sought medical leave for the period of the suspension, and also applied for maternity leave. When Felton initially granted a shorter period of leave than Taylor sought, she filed a grievance about that decision too, this time with the City’s personnel director. Taylor returned to work and filed a workers’ compensation claim, asserting that all time off had been attributable to an injury sustained on the job, and filed yet another grievance, this time asserting retaliation for testifying at Smith’s grievance hearing. For the first time, Taylor went outside the City’s personnel hierarchy; she turned to the United States Department of Labor, asserting in a letter that she was the victim not only of retaliation for speech but also of racial discrimination. Meanwhile Taylor commenced her maternity leave, which was to last until mid-December. Taylor reported back to work on December 19, and her answer to Carmouche’s question whether she was able to work full time led to his request for a physician’s evaluation--and what happened then we have already described.

Magistrate Judge Rodovich, presiding by consent under 28 U.S.C. sec.636(c), granted judgment as a matter of law to the City of Gary on the first amendment claims at the close of plaintiffs’ case. Municipalities are not vicariously liable in litigation under sec.1983. Monell v. New York Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978). That Carmouche was a department head does not affect application of the Monell principle. Auriemma v. Rice, 957 F.2d 397 (7th Cir. 1992). Unless the City had a policy of retaliating against protected speech--and neither Taylor nor Smith contends this--it cannot be liable. If Carmouche or Felton retaliated against protected speech, then they violated rather than implemented Gary’s personnel policy, so the sec.1983 claim against the City was rightly dismissed.

Evidence concerning plaintiffs’ remaining claims showed that Felton alienated the secretaries by insisting that they work harder, that the secretaries perceived her as condescending, and that Carmouche was touchy, insensitive, profane, and in many other respects a poor manager. None of these is a federal offense, however, and the magistrate judge concluded that Smith, at least, had nothing else to go on.

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