Tomalis v. Office of Attorney General of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

45 F. App'x 139
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 2002
DocketNo. 01-3347
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 F. App'x 139 (Tomalis v. Office of Attorney General of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomalis v. Office of Attorney General of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 45 F. App'x 139 (3d Cir. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

COWEN, Circuit Judge.

We are presented with the question of whether a Senior Deputy Attorney General’s rights to free speech and association were violated when he was terminated from his position as a tax litigator for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. We agree with the District Court that no constitutional violation occurred, and will affirm the grant of summary judgment dismissing the complaint.

I.

Plaintiff Matthew W. Tomalis, was employed by the Office of Attorney General (“OAG”) for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania as a Deputy Attorney General (“DAG”) from approximately August 1987 until February 1997. He was initially hired by Republican Attorney General Roy Zimmerman, but during his employment Tomalis was not affiliated with either the Democratic or Republican party. Tomalis was a political Independent. He was never told that political affiliation was a requirement for his position. Defendant Michael Fisher, the current Attorney General of Pennsylvania, came into office in 1996, following the criminal investigation and [141]*141resignation of Attorney General Ernie J. Preate, Jr.

After winning the election, Fisher, through his First DAG Gerald J. Pappert, sent a letter to all at-will employees in the OAG, including Tomalis, requesting that they submit their resignations within one week. Instead of submitting a letter of resignation, Tomalis wrote a letter in response that said, amongst other things, that the wholesale request for resignations was devastating to office morale.1 He copied that letter to the media, and portions of the letter were published in various newspapers.

After Fisher came into office, Tomalis was asked to prepare a list of all cases he was handling for the Commonwealth. In the course of preparing the list, Tomalis learned that the parties in some of the cases had contributed money to Fisher’s 1997 Inaugural Committee. Concerned that this presented a conflict of interest, Tomalis informed Chief DAG Carol Weit-zel of the situation. He further raised the issue at a staff meeting to Executive DAG Louis Rovelli. Not long after the staff meeting, on February 13, 1997, Tomalis’ employment with the OAG was terminated.

At the time of the termination, Tomalis was classified as a “DAG IV.” This is the highest classification possible in the OAG for a staff attorney.2 A DAG IV is also known as a “Senior DAG.” From the beginning of his employment with the OAG in the late 1980s, Tomalis received complex cases to work on. One such case was considered by him to be the biggest or amongst the biggest tax cases in recent years.

The official written job description for a DAG IV is quite comprehensive and delineates substantial potential roles for a DAG IV. The job description begins by stating that a DAG IV is a “highly responsible” position within the OAG. It further states that a DAG IV “renders legal services and advice on matters of significant scope, importance, and complexity, and is generally considered to have expertise in a particular field of law.” It adds that a DAG IV may serve as a “Senior Deputy Attorney General-in-Charge of a regional office of moderate size” and that a DAG IV’s work involves “conducting litigation of the utmost importance and complexity.” It closes by stating that a DAG IV “works independently except in extraordinary cases” and that work is “reviewed via conferences with the Section Chief.” The record reveals that DAGs have sat for the Attorney General on Pennsylvania’s Board of Finance and Revenue and they have [142]*142advised on how the Attorney General’s vote on that Board should be cast.

In connection with his promotion to DAG IV from DAG III, Tomalis authored a statement describing his actual responsibilities as a DAG III. He stated that as a DAG III, he was “handling ... all aspects of appeals of state tax matters,” that some of the cases involved millions of dollars, and that the “impact of the tax litigation [cases he handled] can range from almost none ... to an impact on thousands of other tax payers.” Tomalis further explained that most of his cases settled. The terms of the settlement, according to To-malis, were “generally within [his] discretion.” At oral argument, Tomails’ counsel affirmatively represented to this panel that Tomalis had settlement authority up to $25,000.

Tomalis was responsible for typical day-to-day litigation matters, such as writing briefs, negotiating settlements, conducting discovery, and appearing in court for oral argument. In his deposition, Tomalis explained that briefs to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had to be reviewed by superiors, but that briefs filed in the lower state appellate court (i.e., the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court), correspondence, and discovery-related documents were not submitted for such review before being filed. At times, threshold decisions to litigate or settle a case rested with Tomalis. At deposition, Tomalis further indicated that he could recall only a few instances in which he received specific direction on the handling of a tax case. The record further demonstrates that Tomalis was called on to review and offer commentary on proposed legislation and regulations, and to give legal advice on tax questions to other divisions of the OAG.

At any given time, Tomalis could have been handling several hundreds of cases for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The record reveals that Tomalis received significant praise for some of his professional efforts. For example, the record contains a letter dated February 26, 1996 from Michael J. Semes, who was apparently Chief Counsel at the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue. Attorney Semes lauded Tomalis for his litigation skills in handling eases for the Department of Revenue. The letter indicates that Tomalis “worked closely with the Department in developing a strategy to minimize the potential damage [of a particular court decision that had a] questionable rationale.” Semes further states in his letter that this particular appellate court decision has “significant fiscal and policy impact.”

The official job description did not perfectly match Tomalis’ actual responsibilities in the OAG during his tenure. To-malis never supervised other employees, performed investigative work, or assigned cases. He did not have any dealings with contracts or leases and did not conduct performance evaluation of others. Tomal-is only met Fisher once, at a meeting involving all DAGs that took place after Fisher’s transition into office.

II.

Plaintiff filed the instant “constitutional tort” action against the OAG and Fisher under the Civil Rights Act of 1871 (42 U.S.C. § 1983) alleging that his termination from the OAG constituted a violation of his First Amendment rights. Plaintiff claimed that he was improperly terminated because of his political affiliation and/or because he spoke out about matters of public concern. He also alleged violations of Pennsylvania state law. The OAG moved for dismissal, claiming immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. The District Court granted the OAG’s motion to dismiss. Fisher also moved for summary judgment, which the District [143]*143Court denied as premature but allowed leave to renew the motion after further discovery. More discovery took place, Fisher’s motion was renewed, and the District Court granted judgment in favor of Fisher on the federal claims.

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Bluebook (online)
45 F. App'x 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomalis-v-office-of-attorney-general-of-commonwealth-of-pennsylvania-ca3-2002.