Walker v. Waltham Housing Authority

44 F.3d 1042, 1995 WL 11237
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 1995
Docket94-1238, 94-1239
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 44 F.3d 1042 (Walker v. Waltham Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Waltham Housing Authority, 44 F.3d 1042, 1995 WL 11237 (1st Cir. 1995).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.

The appellant Waltham Housing Authority (1CWHA”) is a public agency responsible for providing low income housing in Waltham, Massachusetts. In 1987, appellee John J. Walker had served as the WHA’s executive director for over eleven years and was currently serving in this position under a two-year written contract due to expire on December 31, 1988. The WHA Board of Commissioners consisted of five members, including Chairman Louis D’Angio and appellant Edward McCarthy.

In the summer of 1987, the Board began a personnel search to replace the WHA’s retiring assistant executive director. At a board meeting on August 12, Walker expressed his dissatisfaction with the three finalists whom the Board was considering. The Board nevertheless selected one of the remaining candidates, Walter McGuire, to fill the position.

Believing that his contract gave him the final say on hiring, and angered by the Board’s action in selecting McGuire over his objection, Walker presented Chairmen D’An-gio with a hastily scribbled letter of resignation and then left the meeting. The letter read:

Mr. Louis D’Angio Chairman Waltham Housing Authority, I hereby resign effective 6:50 p.m. Aug. 12,1987 and will file for retirement Aug. 13, 1987.
/s/ John J. Walker

D’Angio passed the letter around to the other Board members, and the Board voted unanimously to table Walker’s resignation for further consideration.

Following the meeting D’Angio, at the urging of Board members, went to Walker’s office to talk him out of resigning. D’Angio returned the resignation letter to Walker, placing it on his desk and telling him that the Board wanted him to take it back. Walker said nothing but (he later testified) put the letter in his shirt pocket, believing that his resignation had been rejected. The next day Walker came into the office and did not file papers applying for retirement.

The Board scheduled a special meeting for August 17 to address the matter of Walker’s resignation, which was still tabled. Three days before the meeting Walker told D’Angio that he wanted three matters “handled” or “cleared up”: a modification of the assistant executive director’s job description; a $2,000 salary adjustment for Dorothy Boyle, who was an assistant WHA administrator and Walker’s sister-in-law; and Board agreement to Walker’s “strong input” into selections for assistant executive director and two other positions. D’Angio asked Walker not to attend the August 17 Board meeting but to let D’Angio present his position.

D’Angio did not tell the Board that he had given Walker his resignation letter back. Instead, at the August 17 meeting D’Angio declared that Walker would rescind his resignation only if the Board agreed to meet three conditions. The three conditions, presented as nonnegotiable demands by D’Angio, were the same three matters that Walker had told D’Angio at their August 14 meeting that he wanted “cleared up.” The Board had no objection to the first two conditions, but balked at the third request — Walker’s “strong input” into the Board’s selection of the top staff positions.

Two members of the Board, McCarthy and Joseph Pavone, were concerned that Walker wanted the final say on hiring for those positions; they asked if Walker would come before the Board to discuss his position on this matter. D’Angio said that the three conditions were a “take it or leave it” proposition and that Walker would not appear to discuss them. On McCarthy’s motion, the Board then voted to accept Walker’s resignation. D’Angio joined in the unanimous vote *1045 but then resigned as chairman, and McCarthy was elected to complete D’Angio’s term.

Afterwards, D’Angio discussed with Alfred Bergin, another Board member, the possibility of calling a special meeting to “straighten the whole matter out.” The WHA’s bylaws required the chairman to schedule a special meeting of the Board upon the request of two members. D’Angio believed that there were at least three Board members — Bergin, Pavone and himself — that could be counted on to vote for Walker’s reinstatement at a special meeting.

By letter dated September 3, D’Angio and Bergin requested that McCarthy schedule a special meeting for September 21 to discuss Walker’s resignation. The proposed date was significant because it was just before Bergin’s term on the Board was slated to expire on October 1. The letter recommended that Walker be invited to address the Board. On September 9, Walker himself sent a letter to the Board asking for an opportunity to speak to them about “a few misunderstandings” concerning his resignation.

McCarthy told a subordinate to ask an attorney whether McCarthy had authority to defer the Board meeting, and the attorney said that McCarthy had authority to select the date himself although the meeting should be held at the earliest time convenient for all members. After getting this legal advice, McCarthy put off the requested meeting until October 7, six days after Bergin’s departure from the Board. Apparently, the attorney had no information about Bergin’s expected departure between the two dates.

McCarthy later testified that he had postponed the meeting because of conflicts with his own heavy work schedule in September, but also because he wanted Bergin’s replacement, Henry Walsh, to consider the issue of Walker’s resignation; Walsh, said McCarthy, would be living with the outcome of the controversy during his term on the Board. McCarthy spoke with Walsh about the issue of Walker’s resignation before the special meeting, and Walsh told McCarthy that he wanted nothing to do with that “mess.”

Walker appeared before the Board on October 7, and raised the same three matters that D’Angio had set forth at the August 17 meeting. After hearing from Walker, who requested his job back, the Board voted on whether to waive its earlier acceptance of his resignation and to reinstate him as executive director. Two members — D’Angio and Pa-vone — -voted for Walker’s reinstatement, and one member voted against it. Henry Walsh, Bergin’s replacement on the Board, abstained. Apparently breaking with Board tradition, McCarthy as chairman then east a no vote to create a tie, which defeated the motion.

Walker filed suit against the WHA and McCarthy on December 23, 1987, claiming that he had rescinded his resignation prior to the Board’s August 17 meeting, thereby preventing the WHA from accepting it. As later amended, the complaint set forth six counts:

«Count I, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleged that the WHA and McCarthy violated Walker’s due process rights by terminating him without a prior hearing;
© Counts II and III alleged that the WHA breached Walker’s employment contract and its own personnel policies;
© Count IV alleged that McCarthy tor-tiously interfered with Walker’s employment;
® Count V alleged that McCarthy violated the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act, Mass.Gen.L. eh. 12; and
® Count VI sought a declaratory judgment that, as a result of the preceding conduct, Walker’s dismissal by the WHA was improper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 F.3d 1042, 1995 WL 11237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-waltham-housing-authority-ca1-1995.