Wallace v. Desoto Cnty. Sch. Dist.

302 F. Supp. 3d 779
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedMarch 21, 2018
DocketCAUSE NO.: 3:16CV287–M–P
StatusPublished

This text of 302 F. Supp. 3d 779 (Wallace v. Desoto Cnty. Sch. Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Desoto Cnty. Sch. Dist., 302 F. Supp. 3d 779 (N.D. Miss. 2018).

Opinion

Michael P. Mills, U.S. DISTRICT COURT

*782This cause comes before the court on the motion of defendant Desoto County School District, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, for summary judgment. Plaintiff Matthew Wallace has responded in opposition to the motion, and the court, having considered the memoranda and submissions of the parties, concludes that the motion should be granted in part and denied in part.

This is, inter alia , a wrongful termination case arising out of Wallace's August 2016 firing as head football coach, athletic director and school teacher at Desoto Central High School. In removing plaintiff from his teaching responsibilities on August 15, the school district cited "immoral conduct" on his part, which evidently referred to the fact that a photograph depicting him in a state of nudity had appeared on the Ashley Madison dating website. Shortly before his termination, plaintiff had filed a complaint of sexual harassment with the school district against his ex-wife Tanya Keck, likewise a school district employee, alleging that she had conspired with her friend and co-worker Dan Turnage to post the nude photo of him on Wallace's Ashley Madison account in order to harass him and damage his career.

For its part, the school district concluded that the mere fact that the nude photo of plaintiff had appeared on a dating website associated with adultery justified his termination, regardless of how it came to be there. Shortly after his firing, plaintiff filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC, and he later filed the instant action in this court, alleging, inter alia , that he was fired based on sex discrimination and in retaliation for opposing sexual harassment by his ex-wife. The school district has now filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that it has no potential liability for any of plaintiff's claims and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

DISCUSSION

Before discussing the various federal and state claims asserted by plaintiff, this court will first make some observations regarding the facts of this case, since they are relevant to many of the claims discussed below. As noted previously, this is a case in which Wallace, then the head football coach at Desoto Central High School, was fired soon after it became publicly known that photos depicting him in a state of full frontal nudity had appeared on his Ashley Madison account. Ashley Madison is a dating website whose motto is "life is short, have an affair," and plaintiff concedes that he voluntarily signed up for that site during the last year of his marriage to Tanya Keck, in 2015. Plaintiff also concedes that he actually had an affair with Samantha Rivera, who, like plaintiff and Keck, was a Desoto County School District employee. It seems clear that this affair with Rivera was a prime factor in the failure of plaintiff's marriage, and it appears that Keck harbored considerable animus towards both plaintiff and Rivera as a result.

The fact that a high school football coach was terminated under the above circumstances would not, to say the least, ordinarily give rise to a valid federal lawsuit. Indeed, this court believes that a jury may well have considerable sympathy for the school district's position that it would rather *783not have a head football coach who was publicly associated with nude photographs on his Ashley Madison account (regardless of how they came to be there), and it may well look with skepticism upon plaintiff's claims that such factors as sex and retaliation were the real reasons for his firing.

At this stage of the proceedings, however, this court is required to view the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, as the non-moving party, and he is able to point to a number of potentially favorable facts in this case. Perhaps more importantly, plaintiff is able to point to a number of questionable decisions made by the school district in handling his termination, which serve to greatly assist him in establishing his federal claims. The first of the arguable errors made by the school district is that it granted plaintiff no public hearing, which he requested, in which he could have given his side of the story and sought to keep his job. While it is unclear whether such a hearing would have saved plaintiff's job, it seems highly likely that it would have at least mitigated the very considerable damage which he suffered to his reputation.

If plaintiff had been granted such a public hearing, then he almost certainly would have presented proof that he did not post the nude photo of himself on his Ashley Madison account, as at least some press accounts (discussed below) indicated was the case. In his summary judgment brief, plaintiff has presented very substantial, bordering on overwhelming, proof that the nude photograph of him was posted by either his ex-wife Keck, her friend (and fellow Desoto County school district employee) Don Turnage,1 or both of them working together. Indeed, Keck conceded in her deposition that she took the nude photo of Wallace during their marriage, and she likewise conceded that she knew the password to his Ashley Madison account. She nevertheless denied having posted the photo herself, and she expressed her opinion that Turnage had done so, after obtaining the password from her cell phone.

A jury may well look with suspicion upon Keck's claims of innocence in this regard, since, as noted in plaintiff's brief:

However, in discovery, Keck provided a text message that showed that Keck provided Turnage the name of Wallace's Ashley Madison account, and his password. When asked whether she had sent the text message to Turnage, Keck responded, "Not that I recall." In a later text message from Turnage to Keck it says "That sign in and password that u had. Are u not worried that they can trace that? I know I did it one time. Wouldn't look good huh."

[Plaintiff's brief at 7]. Keck was initially named as a defendant in this case, but she has since settled the claims against her, and Turnage and the school district are the sole remaining defendants.2 There is a great deal of other proof in the record, discussed in plaintiff's brief, that Turnage and/or Keck posted the photo in question, and it seems quite likely that plaintiff could have reduced the damage to his reputation if he had been given an opportunity to present that proof at a hearing.

To be sure, plaintiff admits that he did sign up for the Ashley Madison account himself, but he emphasizes that this fact became publicly known in August 2015, *784when the worldwide release of the site's database by "hackers" took place. Plaintiff notes that his career (and that of a co-worker similarly implicated) had weathered the storm of the release of the site's database, and a jury may well find that it was the posting of his nude photo on the website in August of 2016 which led to his termination. A jury might reasonably also find that plaintiff was the victim, rather than the instigator, of this posting, and that he did nothing more than allow his then-wife Keck to take a nude photograph of him while they were married.

It seems clear that this might have greatly mitigated the damage to plaintiff's reputation, and a jury might potentially find that it would have saved his job.

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Bluebook (online)
302 F. Supp. 3d 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-desoto-cnty-sch-dist-msnd-2018.