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David Hanten v. School Dist. of, 98-2884 (1999)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit Number: 98-2884 Visitors: 19
Filed: Jun. 21, 1999
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _ No. 98-2884 No. 98-2963 _ David Hanten, David Hunter, Kevin * Lincoln, Gregory Zimont, K.C. * Heating, Cooling and Sheet Metal, * Inc., * * Appellants/Cross-Appellees, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Eastern District of Missouri The School District of Riverview * Gardens, Edward Evers, Michelle * Gotthardt, David Holtgrefe, Richard * Hunt, Kathy Kitchen, Michael * Quinlan, Rudy Smith, Chris Wright, * * Appell
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                  United States Court of Appeals
                         FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
                                ___________

                                  No. 98-2884
                                  No. 98-2963
                                  ___________

David Hanten, David Hunter, Kevin      *
Lincoln, Gregory Zimont, K.C.          *
Heating, Cooling and Sheet Metal,      *
Inc.,                                  *
                                       *
      Appellants/Cross-Appellees,      *
                                       * Appeal from the United States
      v.                               * District Court for the
                                       * Eastern District of Missouri
The School District of Riverview       *
Gardens, Edward Evers, Michelle        *
Gotthardt, David Holtgrefe, Richard    *
Hunt, Kathy Kitchen, Michael           *
Quinlan, Rudy Smith, Chris Wright,     *
                                       *
      Appellees/Cross-Appellants.      *
                                  ___________

                            Submitted: April 20, 1999
                              Filed: June 21, 1999
                                 ___________

Before BEAM and HANSEN, Circuit Judges, and KOPF,1 District Judge.
                            ___________

KOPF, District Judge.


      1
      The Honorable Richard G. Kopf, United States District Judge for the District
of Nebraska, sitting by designation.
       Does a school district’s preference for union labor, expressed in construction bid
specifications, violate the constitutional right of non-union employees to freely
associate when the school district, in conformity with the preference, requires the
successful contractor to engage a union-only subcontractor? We decide that such a
preference and the conduct in conformity with that preference do not violate the right
of non-union employees to freely associate.

      K.C. Sheet Metal, a non-union heating and air conditioning shop, three of its
employees and a taxpayer appeal. The plaintiffs sued the defendant school district, its
superintendent and individual board members alleging that they unlawfully prohibited
the company and the employees from working on a school building project.

       Specifically, the plaintiffs appeal from the district court’s2 decision granting
defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts I through IV of the first amended complaint, and
granting summary judgment on Count V. See Hanten v. School District of Riverview
Gardens, 
13 F. Supp. 2d 971
(E.D. Mo. 1998). The defendants cross-appealed the
denial of an earlier motion for summary judgment based only on damages. They
concede that the cross-appeal will be moot if this court affirms the district court’s
dismissal and summary judgment decisions.

       We affirm the district court’s decision granting dismissal of the complaint
regarding Counts I through IV. We also affirm the district court’s decision granting
summary judgment on Count V. The cross-appeal is therefore moot.

                                    I. Background



      2
       The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, United States District Judge for the
Eastern District of Missouri.

                                          -2-
       We first examine the complaint and then review the facts. We proceed to those
tasks next.

                                  A. The Complaint

      K. C. Sheet Metal’s first amended complaint sought legal and equitable relief
under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Missouri’s “Open-Bidding” statute, Mo. Rev. Stat. § 177.086
(West 1999) and Missouri’s “Sunshine” law, Mo. Rev. Stat. § 610.010 et seq. (West
1999). The plaintiffs alleged the defendants violated their First and Fourteenth
Amendment rights and the state statutes when the defendants removed K.C. from the
general contractor’s bid and replaced it with a union subcontractor.

       They asserted these claims in five counts. In Count I, the K.C. employees, but
not the other plaintiffs, claimed a violation of their right to free association. In Count
II, K.C. Sheet Metal, but not the other plaintiffs, claimed that it had been deprived of
a property interest without due process of law. In Count III, K.C. Sheet Metal and its
employees alleged a conspiracy to deprive K.C. of a property interest and to violate the
employees’ right to free association. Regarding Count IV, the taxpayer alleged a
violation of the Missouri “Open-Bidding” statute. In Count V, all of the plaintiffs
alleged a violation of the Missouri “Sunshine” law.

      The specific allegations pertinent to our discussion are found in paragraphs 9
through 32 of the First Amended Complaint. In those paragraphs they allege the
following:

                  ALLEGATIONS COMMON TO ALL COUNTS
                      The Union Representation Election

             9.    On March 28, 1997, the National Labor Relations Board
      conducted an election at K.C. to determine whether its Employees,
      including the Plaintiff Employees, wanted to be represented by Local 36,

                                           -3-
Sheet Metal Workers International Association, AFL-CIO (“Sheet Metal
Workers Local 36").

      10. Sheet Metal Workers Local 36 is a member of the St. Louis
Building and Construction Trades Council of St. Louis, AFL-CIO.

       11. In the election, K.C.’s Employees (including the Plaintiff
Employees) voted to reject Sheet Metal Workers Local 36. In so voting,
the Employees exercised their right of free association guaranteed by the
First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.

                         The Bid Specification

      12. On or about May 30, 1997, the Board of Education of the
Riverview Gardens School District issued a bid specification
(“Specification”) soliciting sealed bids for construction of the Moline
Elementary School (“the School Project”).

       13. The Specification “encouraged” bidders to enter into a
collective bargaining agreement for the School Project “with the St. Louis
Building and Construction Trades Council, AFL-CIO” but did not require
contractors to enter into such collective bargaining agreements.

      14. The Specification stated that all subcontractors were covered
by the terms and conditions of the General Contract.

                            The Wachter Bid

      15. One of the companies who submitted a bid for the School
Project was Wachter, Inc. (“Wachter”).

      16. In compiling its bid, Wachter solicited proposals for the
Project from various subcontractors, including K.C.

      17. K.C.’s mechanical subcontracting bid was the lowest
responsible mechanical subcontractor bid submitted to Wachter for the
School Project. Accordingly, Wachter listed K.C. as the mechanical

                                   -4-
subcontractor in the bid Wachter submitted to the School Board (the
“Wachter Bid Documentation”).

      18. At the time Wachter submitted its Bid Documentation listing
K.C. as the mechanical subcontractor, the two companies had had
extensive prior dealings as general contractor and subcontractor on
construction projects, including publicly-funded projects.

       19. In accordance with the Specification, Wachter had listed on
its Bid Documentation all of the subcontractors whose bids it planned to
incorporate into its bid for the School Project and whom it planned to use
to perform subcontracting work on the School Project.

       20. Of the eighteen subcontractors listed in the Wachter Bid,
only K.C. and the electrical subcontractor (Crown Electrical Contracting,
Inc.) were not signatory to an AFL-CIO collective bargaining agreement.

                          The Contract Award

      21. The bids for the School Project were publicly opened and
read aloud on the morning of June 24, 1997. Wachter was the low
bidder, with a bid of $4,868,550.00.

      22. When Wachter learned that it was the low bidder, a Wachter
representative contacted K.C. to advise that they had won the job and that
K.C. should get ready for work.

      23. On the evening of June 24, 1997, the School Board was
scheduled to hold a meeting at which it was to vote on the award of the
contract for the School Project. The written agenda for the School Board
meeting did not properly specify any closed session for review or
consideration of the bids on the School Project.

      24. On information and belief, at some time after the issuance of
the Specification on or about May 30, 1997, and prior to the vote on the
bid award during the School Board meeting on June 24, 1997, the School
Board went into an improper closed session in violation of the Missouri

                                   -5-
Sunshine Law (§ 610.010 et seq., R.S. Mo.) for the purpose of secretly
changing the Specification to prohibit the use of any subcontractor on the
School Project whose employees were not represented by an AFL-CIO
union.

       25.   Upon information and belief, this improper closed session
was:

           a.          a single meeting attended by a quorum of the
School Board; or

             b.       a series of meetings attended by different members
of the School Board (sometimes including defendant Wright), with each
such meeting involving numbers less than a quorum but totaling a quorum
when taken together, all for the purpose of avoiding the requirements of
the Sunshine Law in order that the School Board could conduct secret
deliberations and make a secret decision to deviate from the
Specifications, with a public meeting thereafter held to ratify the
consequences of the policy decision that had been made in private.

       26. On information and belief, during the closed session or
sessions the School Board decided to secretly change the Specification
and eliminate all subcontractors whose employees were not represented
by an AFL-CIO union.

        27. Thereafter, the School Board voted to award the contract for
the School Project to Wachter at a cost of $5,321,674.00, which was
$453,124.00 above Wachter’s original “winning” bid. A material portion
of this $453,124.00 increase was due to the additional cost of substituting
mechanical and electrical subcontractors who are signatory to AFL-CIO
collective bargaining agreements.

       28. The School Board member who made the motion to approve
Wachter’s bid at the increased amount was Rudy Smith. At all times
relevant to this matter, Rudy Smith was a paid business agent for the
Pipefitters Association, Local Union 562 (“Pipefitters Local 562"), which
is a member of the St. Louis Building and Construction Trades Council,

                                   -6-
      AFL-CIO.

             29. On June 25, 1997, K.C. and Crown Electrical Contracting,
      Inc., were informed that they would not be performing subcontract work
      on the School Project because only subcontractors whose Employees are
      represented by and associated with an AFL-CIO union would be retained
      to perform work on this Project.

             30. The mechanical subcontractor that replaced K.C. is signatory
      to collective bargaining agreements with both Sheet Metal Workers Local
      36 and Pipefitters Local 562.

             31. On information and belief, the other sixteen subcontractors
      who were listed on Wachter’s Bid Documentation have been retained by
      Wachter to perform the subcontracting work on the School Project as
      specified in Wachter’s original Bid.

             32. Defendants forced the removal of K.C. and the Employees
      from the School Project because K.C.’s Employees are not represented
      by or associated with an AFL-CIO union.

                                    B. The Facts

       In 1996 the voters in the Riverview Gardens School District passed a bond issue
to fund the expansion of four grade schools and to build a new facility, Moline
Elementary. There is no doubt that organized labor had been influential in the passage
of the bond issue.

      As overcrowding was a big problem in the district, completion of the new
construction on time was critical. The school board and its superintendent wanted a
peaceful construction project to maintain the ambitious one-year construction schedule.
The board members agreed that the presence of non-union contractors would result in
picketing and other work stoppage problems. It was the opinion of at least four board


                                         -7-
members that they should award the construction contracts to companies that had
reached labor agreements for the project with the St. Louis Building and Construction
Trades Council and AFL-CIO unions.

      They achieved this consensus through casual discussion at social gatherings.
These discussions took place at private residences, school sporting events or school
plays. No quorum was present at any gathering. No formal vote was taken or
recorded.

       As a result of her conversations with some of the board members, the school
superintendent directed legal counsel to draft language for the bid specifications that
preferred union contractors. The specifications also preferred workers who had
completed a Department of Labor-approved apprenticeship program.                    The
specifications also required all bidders to include in their bid package a list of their
subcontractors. They included this provision so the school district could exercise
control over which subcontractors worked on the Moline project.

       Five contractors submitted bids to build the Moline project. The sealed bids
were opened at 10:00 a.m. on June 24, 1997, at the school district’s administration
building. The district’s architect read the dollar amounts aloud. Wachter was the
lowest bidder. Wachter’s bid was lower than its nearest competitor by $175,700.
Wachter listed its subcontractors, as required by the district. Two of the subcontractors
did not have contracts with the St. Louis Building and Construction Trades Council.
K.C. Heating and Air was one of the non-union subcontractors.

        The district’s architect reviewed Wachter’s bid and noticed K.C. was one of the
subcontractors on Wachter’s list. The architect knew K.C. had been picketed on other
jobs because of its non-union status. The architect also wrongly believed workers in
a non-union company could not complete an apprenticeship program, yet Wachter had
certified that all the workers covered by its bid had completed apprenticeship training.

                                          -8-
       Curious, the district’s architect called Wachter’s president to confirm the non-
union status of K.C. and to ask about the apprenticeship certifications. Wachter’s
president, Kamp, said he had bids from other subcontractors who were union
subcontractors and he was willing to substitute those contractors for K.C. Kamp also
indicated he believed the apprenticeship certification requirement in the bid documents
applied only to Wachter employees. In any event, and because of the inquiry by the
architect, Kamp submitted a revised bid by “fax.” Kamp also sent a letter with his
revised bid that expressed his preference for using subcontractors that had union
agreements. Even with this substitution, the Wachter bid was still the lowest bid
although the Wachter bid increased by $112,374 with the use of union subcontractors.

       Later in the day on June 24, 1997, but before the school board meeting that
night, the architect, the school superintendent and the assistant superintendent met to
review the bids on the Moline project. The architect reported on his telephone call with
Kamp earlier in the day. He explained that Wachter’s bid originally included two non-
union subcontractors, but that Wachter had later revised its bid to reflect an all-union
job and had advised that it would be Wachter’s preference to do the job with all-union
subcontractors. The architect explained Wachter’s bid was still the lowest, even after
substituting the two union subcontractors. At the conclusion of the meeting, the staff
prepared a one-page sheet listing the five bidders and their gross bid amounts. The bid
amount for Wachter reflected the increased price resulting from the substitution of
subcontractors.

       During the board meeting of June 24, and after receiving the one-page bid-sheet,
it was moved that the Wachter bid be accepted. The board members accepted the bid
unanimously without discussion. The bid sheet, which did not list the names of
subcontractors, reflected that Wachter’s bid was the low one. None of the board
members were aware that K.C. Sheet Metal had submitted a proposal to Wachter or
that Wachter preferred union labor.


                                          -9-
      Rudy Smith moved the acceptance of the low bid. Smith was a union organizer.
Smith previously tried to organize K.C. Sheet Metal for Pipefitter Union, Local 562.
Smith had been unsuccessful in his organizational efforts. In addition, three months
before the bidding, some, but not all, of the employees of K.C. had voted against being
represented by a union. To be specific, the employees rejected a bid for representation
by Sheet Metal Workers Local 36 (a member of the St. Louis Building and
Construction Trades Council), in an NLRB election.

       The evidence establishes that neither Smith nor any of the other defendants were
aware of the NLRB election when they accepted the bid. In fact, as indicated earlier,
the evidence establishes that when they accepted the Wachter bid no board member
knew that K.C. had submitted a proposal to Wachter. For the superintendent, the
evidence establishes that she knew nothing relevant about K.C. except that it was a
non-union shop; that is, she was unaware of the NLRB election and there is no
evidence that she knew of Smith’s previous effort to organize K.C.

                                    II. Discussion

        Now, on appeal, we review the district court's Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal de novo.
See, e.g., Gordon v. Hansen, 
168 F.3d 1109
, 1113 (8th Cir.1999). We will not affirm
a dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim unless the plaintiff can prove no
set of facts that would demonstrate an entitlement to relief. See 
id. When analyzing
a 12(b)(6) dismissal, we accept the complaint's factual allegations as true and construe
them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. See 
id. “At a
minimum, however, a
complaint must contain facts sufficient to state a claim as a matter of law and must not
be merely conclusory in its allegations.” Springdale Education Association v.
Springdale School District, 
133 F.3d 649
, 651 (8th Cir. 1998).

    We must also review the district court’s decision to grant the motion for
summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as did the district court. See,

                                          -10-
e.g., Russell v. Men’s Wearhouse, Inc., 
170 F.3d 1156
, 1157 (8th Cir. 1996). We view
the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and give that party the
benefit of all reasonable inferences. See 
id. However, summary
judgment is
appropriate if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled
to judgment as a matter of law. See id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).

                        A. Count I--Freedom of Association

      The fundamental assertion of the plaintiffs’ complaint is that the defendants
“forced the removal of K.C. and the Employees from the School Project because
K.C.’s Employees are not represented by or associated with an AFL-CIO union.” (Am.
Compl. ¶ 32.) We assume that this allegation is true.

       From this premise, the K.C. employees argue that the defendants violated their
right to freedom of association under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. They
suggest that such a preference is inherently and facially coercive. We disagree.

                                            1.

       There is no doubt that “the freedom of an individual to associate for the purpose
of advancing beliefs and ideas is protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments.”
Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, 
431 U.S. 209
, 233 (1977). Moreover, the right
of free association presupposes a freedom not to associate. Roberts v. United States
Jaycees, 
468 U.S. 609
, 623 (1984). However, not every governmental practice that
might conceivably impose upon a citizen’s freedom to associate is actionable. Indeed,
we agree with the district court that the school district was entitled to engage in conduct
that incidentally inhibited protected forms of association like non-union membership
so long as that conduct was rational and was related to a legitimate governmental
purpose. Lyng v. International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural
Implement Workers of America, UAW, 
485 U.S. 360
, 366 (1988) (upholding statute

                                           -11-
that prohibited striking workers from receiving food stamps).

       In Lyng the Court conducted a rational-basis review of a statute prohibiting
households from participating in the food stamp program or from receiving increased
allotments while any member of the household was out on strike. The court concluded
that no stricter standard was warranted because the statute did not “directly and
substantially interfere” with the striking-workers’ right to freely associate. 
Lyng, 485 U.S. at 365-66
. In the Court’s view, it seemed “‘exceedingly unlikely’ that this statute
will prevent individuals from continuing to associate together in unions to promote their
lawful objectives.” 
Id. at 366.
      Just as Lyng applied to a practice that might conceivably, but incidentally, harm
union members, we are persuaded that the Lyng analysis should apply where the
governmental practice might conceivably, but only incidentally, impact non-union
members. We think Lyng is applicable to a governmental preference for union labor
in the construction industry because such a preference does not “directly or
substantially interfere” with the rights of laborers to refrain from joining a union.

       We emphasize that the complaint fails to allege in nonconclusory terms that the
union preference is likely to “directly or substantially interfere” with the rights of K.C.
employees. For example, there is no claim that such a preference is likely to coerce
these employees to join a union. There is no claim that there was a shortage of work.
There is no claim that any of the employees lost wages or were likely to suffer wage
losses as a result of the preference. Moreover, there is no claim that a union preference
would likely cause the employees to quit working for K.C. There is not even an
assertion that the K.C. employees would do something as a result of the preference that
they would not have done had there been no preference. As a result, we find it
“exceedingly unlikely” that the preference would prevent K.C. employees from
exercising their right not to join a union.


                                           -12-
       Therefore, if Lyng applies, as we think it does, the preference that bidders on the
school project be signatories to an agreement with an AFL-CIO union will withstand
scrutiny so long as that specification is rationally related to a legitimate governmental
purpose. We believe that when the government, acting like a private business, states
a preference for union labor in construction bid specifications, such a preference is
facially rational.

       The preference for union labor at a construction project is based upon the desire
to avoid expensive and time consuming workplace disruptions, and that purpose is
clearly legitimate as well as rational. On this point, precedent supports the school
district. See, e.g., Woelke & Romero Framing, Inc. v. NLRB, 
456 U.S. 645
, 662 n.14
(1982) (applying the National Labor Relations Act; upholding “subcontracting clauses”
in construction industry contracts that prohibited a contractor from subcontracting work
at a construction site except to a subcontractor that had an agreement with a union; the
Court stated that “reducing jobsite friction is a legitimate purpose” and “the clauses at
issue here serve this goal by ensuring that members of the respondent unions need not
work alongside nonunion employees”)3; Plumbers Union v. City of Omaha, 
946 F.2d 599
, 600 (8th Cir. 1991) (applying rational basis test to reject freedom-of-association
claim by members of union regarding Omaha ordinance mandating that four-member
city plumbing board consist of two union and two non-union plumbers) (quoting Lyng);
Hoke Co., Inc. v. Tennessee Valley Authority, 
854 F.2d 820
, 828 (6th Cir. 1988)
(rejecting freedom-of-association claim; holding that Tennessee Valley Authority’s
desire to maintain a constant supply of coal and not have deliveries interrupted because
of labor strife provided legitimate basis for award to union contractor rather than non-


      3
        Just like a private business, the defendant school district was performing a
proprietary function when it drafted and followed construction bid specifications. As
a result, it generally enjoyed the same rights and privileges as any other participant in
the labor market. See, e.g., Building and Construction Trades Council v. Associated
Builders and Contractors, 
507 U.S. 218
, 232-33 (1993).

                                          -13-
union contractor) (quoting Lyng); Image Carrier Corp. v. Beame, 
567 F.2d 1197
, 1203
(2nd Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 
440 U.S. 979
(1979) (holding that a rational basis exists
for a city policy favoring union printers over non-union printers).4 See also Vincent E.
Mcgeary and Michael G. Pellegrino, Project Agreements and Competitive Bidding:
Monitoring the Back Room Deal, 19 Seaton Hall Legis. Rev. 423, 444-45 (1995)
(while questioning the wisdom of union-only stipulations, the authors note that
“[a]pplying minimum rationality, the judiciary operates under the presupposition that
the state acts for the public benefit” and the “[c]ourts have accepted that the contracting
agency knows best whether a union only requirement is beneficial.”) (Footnotes
omitted.)

       In summary, based upon the allegations of this complaint, the governmental
preference for union labor in construction bid specifications is not inherently coercive.
Moreover, it is legitimate and rational because it seeks workplace harmony at a
construction site where cooperation can be especially critical to the prompt and
economical completion of public works. The union preference is, therefore, not
facially invalid as a violation of non-union members’ right to freely associate.
Accordingly, the district court properly dismissed Count I of the first amended
complaint pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).5


                                            2.


      4
       The bid accepted by the defendants, even with the change of the subcontractors,
was still the low bid. This fact tends to confirm that the defendants’ preference was
rational. See, e.g., 
Hoke, 854 F.2d at 829
(noting relevance of the fact that union
contractor was the low bidder).
      5
       We express no opinion on the advisability of such preferences. In fact, one
could argue that such preferences are based upon outdated assumptions. See Image
Carrier, 567 F.2d at 1203
. Nevertheless, that sort of policy question rests with elected
representatives and not the courts. 
Id. -14- The
complaint contains no factually specific allegation that the plaintiffs were
“targets” of a campaign to coerce them to join a union or to punish them for refusing
to join a union. Therefore, K.C. Sheet Metal’s reliance upon cases imposing the more
exacting analysis for retaliation is misplaced. Thus, at the pleading stage, the school
district’s union-labor preference is not subject to scrutiny beyond “rational basis”
review.

        Liberally construing the complaint in favor of the plaintiffs, no inference can
fairly be drawn that any of the plaintiffs were targeted by the defendants for their non-
union associations or views. As a matter of fact, the undisputed evidence establishes
that plaintiffs could not fairly make such an allegation.

        None of the school board members knew who the subcontractors were at the
time the bids were adopted. Although Mr. Smith, a member of the board and a labor
organizer, had previously tried to unionize K.C., the evidence establishes that he did
not know that K.C. was a possible subcontractor. It would therefore be impossible to
infer that Smith or any other board member acted as a result of some animus for K.C.
or its employees.

      Moreover, the evidence establishes that the superintendent knew nothing of
relevance about K.C. except that it had submitted a bid and that it was a non-union
shop. The complaint and the evidence therefore fail to provide a reason to believe that
the superintendent set out to punish or coerce K.C. and its employees, as opposed to
merely following the school board’s preference for union labor.

       To summarize, there is no allegation that would permit a fair inference that any
defendant retaliated against K.C. or its employees because of the plaintiffs’ non-union
associations or views. Likewise, the undisputed evidence establishes that no such
allegation could be made.


                                          -15-
       The foregoing having been said, we can quickly distinguish the cases relied upon
by the plaintiffs. They rely upon Board of County Commissioners v. Umbehr, 
518 U.S. 668
(1996) (holding that the First Amendment protects independent contractors from
the termination or prevention of automatic renewal of an at-will contract in retaliation
for their exercise of the freedom of speech; stating that the Pickering balancing test,
adjusted to weigh the government’s interests as contractor rather than as employer,
determines the extent of the protection) and O’Hare Truck Service, Inc. v. City of
Northlake, 
518 U.S. 712
(1996) (holding that protections generally afforded to public
employees against being discharged for refusing to support a political party or its
candidates also extend to independent contractors). Neither Umbehr nor O’Hare
expressly limited or overruled Lyng.

       Both Umbehr and O’Hare are plainly First Amendment retaliation cases. In
Umbehr the plaintiff complained that he lost his trash hauling contract because the
contractor criticized the county and its governing 
body. 518 U.S. at 672
. In O’Hare
the plaintiff, a towing operator, alleged that he supported a political opponent of the
Mayor and refused to contribute to the Mayor’s political campaign, although he was
solicited by the Mayor’s committee to make a contribution. After the Mayor was
reelected, and in retaliation for his lack of support, the towing operator alleged that he
was removed from the City’s list of those operators receiving calls for towing 
service. 518 U.S. at 715-16
.

       As we have previously observed, the complaint in this case fails to allege that
any of the defendants retaliated against the plaintiffs. Moreover, the evidence
conclusively demonstrates that the plaintiffs could not prove such an allegation if it had
been made. In fact, the plaintiffs’ complaint, fairly read, alleges only that a preference
for union labor, if acted upon, is inherently and facially coercive for the purpose of
deciding whether the preference violates the free association component of the First
Amendment. Accordingly, Umbehr and O’Hare, dealing as they do with retaliation for
political speech, are not applicable here. Therefore, the district court did not err by

                                          -16-
refusing to apply those cases to the plaintiffs’ complaint.

                 B. Count II--Due Process and Property Interest

      K.C. Sheet Metal claims that its due process rights under the Fourteenth
Amendment were violated when the company was removed from the Wachter bid. The
company argues that it had a reasonable expectancy of winning the subcontract based
on a mutually explicit understanding with Wachter. The district court believed that
K.C. Sheet Metal’s complaint failed to state a claim, and so do we.

       To establish a procedural due process violation based upon the loss of a property
interest, a plaintiff, like K.C., must first demonstrate that it had a property interest at
stake. See, e.g., Marler v. Missouri State Board of Optometry, 
102 F.3d 1453
, 1456
(8th Cir. 1996). State law determines the sufficiency of the claim of entitlement to a
property interest. See, e.g., Bishop v. Wood, 
426 U.S. 341
, 344 (1976). Under
Missouri law an unsuccessful bidder on a construction project has no property right in
the contract. See, e.g., State ex rel. Mid-Missouri Limestone, Inc., v. County of
Callaway, 
962 S.W.2d 438
, 441 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998) (stating that unsuccessful bidders
for sale of rock and gravel “were not deprived of anything to which they were legally
entitled and therefore cannot state a cause of action.”); La Mar Construction Co. v.
Holt City, R-II School District, 
542 S.W.2d 568
, 570-71 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976)
(construction contract for school; same).

       Liberally construing the complaint, K.C., at most, had an expectancy, based upon
a deal with Wachter, that since Wachter was the successful bidder, K.C. would be one
of Wachter’s subcontractors. However, from the point of view of the school district,
this expectation was entirely one-sided; that is, K.C.’s expectancy was based upon
Wachter’s actions rather than actions of the school district. Simply put, a unilateral
expectation like the one here is not enough to create a property interest. Associated
Builders and Contractors, Inc. v. City of Seward, 
966 F.2d 492
, 499 (9th Cir. 1992),

                                           -17-
cert. denied, 
507 U.S. 984
(1993) (city limited bidding on its construction project to
contractors and subcontractors who had agreements with a union; the court stated that
“as wishful bidders the Contractors have no constitutionally protected property interest
in the city’s power line renovation project”). See also Independent Enterprises, Inc.
v. Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority, 
103 F.3d 1165
, 1178-79 (3rd Cir. 1997) (low
bidder for municipal construction contract did not have property interest); Kim
Construction Co., Inc. v. Board of Trustees of Village of Mundelein, 
14 F.3d 1243
,
1245-50 (7th Cir. 1994) (same). Because K.C.’s unilateral expectation that it would
be a subcontractor did not amount to a property interest in the job, the district court
properly dismissed Count II of the first amended complaint pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
12(b)(6).

               C. Count III--Conspiracy Based On Counts I and II

      In Count III of their first amended complaint, the plaintiffs allege the defendants
conspired to violate the employees’ right of free association and to deprive K.C. of a
property interest without due process of law. Count III merely restates the allegations
in Counts I and II as a separate conspiracy claim. But because a claim of civil
conspiracy “does not set forth an independent cause of action but rather is sustainable
only after an underlying tort claim has been established,” and because the claims
underlying Count III have both been properly dismissed, Count III of the first amended
complaint failed to state a claim for relief as a matter of law. K & S Partnership v.
Continental Bank, N.A., 
952 F.2d 971
, 980 (8th Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 
505 U.S. 1205
(1992). Accordingly, Count III was properly dismissed pursuant to Fed. R. Civ.
P. 12(b)(6).

                D. Count IV--Missouri’s ”Open-Bidding” Statute

        In Count IV of the first amended complaint, David Hanten, as an individual, sued
in his capacity as a taxpayer and resident of the school district, alleging the defendants

                                          -18-
violated Missouri’s “Open-Bidding” statute, Mo. Rev. Stat. § 177.086 (West 1999),
when they removed K.C. as a subcontractor from the Wachter bid. We agree with the
district court’s decision to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim.

       The plaintiffs’ complaint makes no factually specific allegation that the school
district failed to award the bid to “the lowest responsible bidder.” The undisputed facts
confirm that the plaintiffs could not fairly make such an allegation because Wachter got
the bid. Wachter was the low bidder even with the substitution of subcontractors.

      Section 177.086 provides, in pertinent part:

      No bids shall be entertained by the school district which are not made in
      accordance with the specifications furnished by them and all contracts
      shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder complying with the terms of
      the letting, provided that the said school district shall have the right to
      reject any and all bids.

The Missouri courts interpret this statute to provide school districts with broad
discretion in awarding contracts. See, State ex rel. Page v. Reorganized School District
R-VI of Christian County, 
765 S.W.2d 317
, 320-22 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989); Metcalf &
Eddy Services, Inc. v. City of St. Charles, 
701 S.W.2d 497
, 499-500 (Mo. Ct. App.
1985); La 
Mar, 542 S.W.2d at 570-71
.

       In this case the school district’s preference for union labor was rationally based
on its desire for a peaceful job site, uninterrupted by labor disputes and work
stoppages. After following that preference, it selected the low bidder. When, as here,
the statute grants a school district broad discretion to reject any and all bids, a school
district could not be found to have violated the statute by awarding a contract to the
low bidder even though that bid could have been even lower if the school would have
waived a preference in the bid specifications. Accordingly, the district court properly
dismissed Count IV of the first amended complaint.

                                          -19-
                     E. Count V--Missouri’s “Sunshine” Law

     Count V of the first amended complaint alleged that the defendants violated
Missouri’s Sunshine law, Mo. Rev. Stat. § 610.010 et seq. (West 1999), by conducting
either a closed meeting on June 24, 1997, or a series of one-on-one closed meetings
prior to June 24, 1997, to ensure non-union subcontractors would be prohibited from
working on the Moline project. The district court granted summary judgment on this
claim, and the court was correct in doing so.

      A portion of the school board meeting on June 24, 1997, was closed, but the only
subject discussed during the executive session was a student disciplinary matter. There
is no evidence to contradict the defendants’ evidence which establishes the
subcontractor issue was not discussed during the closed portion of the meeting.

       Several of the school board members and the superintendent admit they
informally discussed the workforce issue during social occasions at private residences,
athletic events or school plays prior to the publication of the project manual that set
forth the bid specifications. At no time was there a quorum present for these
“discussions.” At no time was a formal vote taken or recorded. There is no evidence
that these “meetings” were planned for the purpose of discussing the workforce issue.

       An informal meeting “of less than a quorum does not constitute a meeting of a
public governmental body when there is no intent to avoid the purposes of the Sunshine
Law.” Colombo v. Buford, 
935 S.W.2d 690
, 699 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996) (affirming
directed verdict; gathering at personal residence attended by some of the school board
members was not a public meeting; series of one-on-one personal and telephone
discussions between school board members concerning renewal of superintendent’s
contract was not governed by the “Sunshine” law; three members of school board who
traveled to high school to talk with school principal and teachers did not constitute a
quorum subject to the “Sunshine” law). The plaintiffs have not presented any evidence

                                         -20-
from which a reasonable fact finder could conclude that any of the defendants
intentionally tried to avoid the law.

        The district court’s decision is strongly buttressed by the fact that the board
members could have met in private to discuss whether to put the union-only preference
in the bid specifications. In fact, Mo. Rev. Stat. § 610.021(11) (West 1999) states that:
“Except to the extent disclosure is otherwise required by law, a public governmental
body is authorized to close meetings, records and votes, to the extent they relate to the
following: . . . Specifications for competitive bidding, until either the specifications are
officially approved by the public governmental body or the specifications are published
for bid.” Thus, absent persuasive evidence to the contrary, there is no reason to think
that the defendants intended to evade the “Sunshine” statute by doing something
indirectly that the law permitted them to do directly.

      Because there was no dispute of material fact concerning the alleged violation
of Missouri’s “Sunshine” law, the defendants were entitled to summary judgment on
Count V of the amended complaint.

                                    F. Cross-Appeal

      The defendants have appealed the denial of their motion for partial summary
judgment as to damages. They concede, however, that this court need not reach this
appeal if the plaintiffs’ appeal is denied. That being the case, the cross-appeal will be
denied as moot.

                                    III. Conclusion

      The judgment of the district court, granting the defendants’ motion to dismiss the
complaint and the alternative motion for summary judgment, is affirmed. The
defendants’ cross-appeal is denied as moot.

                                           -21-
      BEAM, Circuit Judge, concurring.

       I concur in the court's opinion. On the record before the court, the opinion well
and accurately reflects the state of the law. Nonetheless, I am troubled by having to
reach this result and write separately to mention some specific concerns.

       The series of informal meetings used to adopt the pro-union bidding policy,
apparently orchestrated by the school superintendent and aided, at least in part, by
board member Rudy Smith, a paid union organizer, seems to have permitted the school
district to skate around barriers erected by the Missouri Sunshine (open meetings)
Laws. These procedures, although perhaps technically permissible, obviously led to
unfairness to K.C. Sheet Metal and its employees, caused significant increases in
construction costs, and prompt me to believe that the interests of all the citizens of the
district were not properly and adequately represented in this exercise.

       Mr. Smith, in response to K.C. employees' allegations concerning constitutional
free association rights, claims that he was totally unaware that K.C. employees had,
only weeks prior to the bid letting, voted against union affiliation with a local union
member of the St. Louis Building and Construction Council. This claim is surprising,
if not virtually unbelievable, given that Mr. Smith himself, acting for his own local
union, also a member of the same council, had, at an earlier time, unsuccessfully
attempted to organize these same K.C. employees. Indeed, considering all the facts
alleged and presented, Mr. Smith's affidavit could have been disregarded by the district
court as incredible.

       Finally, I express my greatest concern over the school superintendent's activities
in seeking to extract the nonunion subcontractors from the low bidder's proposal.
Notwithstanding their willingness to adopt policies designed to exclude nonunion
entities from this public building project, the school board members, to a person,
contend that they knew nothing of K.C.'s low bid at the time Mr. Smith moved the

                                          -22-
adoption of the modified bid proposal at the school board meeting. Assuming the
truthfulness of these assertions, it appears that the superintendent, without governing
board authorization, secretly altered and then presented changed bid documents to the
school board for its required consideration. These modifications occurred as a result
of substitutions made in papers forwarded as part of the sealed bid proposals,
presumably submitted under the protection of Missouri public bidding statutes. As
nearly as I can tell, the school board has expressed no particular concern about this
unusual turn of events. This causes me to agree with appellants' observation that the
school board and its administrators "wanted an all-union labor force at least in part
because they wanted to grant a political favor [at taxpayer expense] to unions that
[they] felt had supported the bond issue and not because it would benefit the Project
itself." Appellants' brief at 29 (citations to record omitted). If this is in any way
accurate, and, as indicated, I believe it may be, every school district taxpayer except,
perhaps Mr. Smith and those similarly situated, should be outraged.

      As stated, I concur in the court's opinion. However, I lament that it is necessary
for me to do so given the facts of this case.

      A true copy.

      Attest:

             CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.




                                         -23-

Source:  CourtListener

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