Filed: Aug. 15, 2018
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 16-3650 Amy Colvin v. Hubert Keen, et. al. 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 4 August Term, 2017 5 6 (Argued: November 8, 2017 Decided: August 15, 2018) 7 8 Docket No. 16-3650 9 10 11 _ 12 13 Amy Colvin, 14 15 Plaintiff-Appellant, 16 17 v. 18 19 Hubert Keen, President, in his official and individual capacity, Lucia 20 Cepriano, Vice-President, in her official and individual capacity, Marybeth 21 Incandela, Director, in her official and individual capacity, James Hall, i
Summary: 16-3650 Amy Colvin v. Hubert Keen, et. al. 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 4 August Term, 2017 5 6 (Argued: November 8, 2017 Decided: August 15, 2018) 7 8 Docket No. 16-3650 9 10 11 _ 12 13 Amy Colvin, 14 15 Plaintiff-Appellant, 16 17 v. 18 19 Hubert Keen, President, in his official and individual capacity, Lucia 20 Cepriano, Vice-President, in her official and individual capacity, Marybeth 21 Incandela, Director, in her official and individual capacity, James Hall, in..
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16-3650
Amy Colvin v. Hubert Keen, et. al.
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3
4 August Term, 2017
5
6 (Argued: November 8, 2017 Decided: August 15, 2018)
7
8 Docket No. 16-3650
9
10
11 _____________________________________
12
13 Amy Colvin,
14
15 Plaintiff-Appellant,
16
17 v.
18
19 Hubert Keen, President, in his official and individual capacity, Lucia
20 Cepriano, Vice-President, in her official and individual capacity, Marybeth
21 Incandela, Director, in her official and individual capacity, James Hall, in his
22 official and individual capacity,
23
24 Defendants-Appellees.
25 _____________________________________
26
27 Before:
28
29 PIERRE N. LEVAL, DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, and DENNY CHIN,
30 Circuit Judges.
31
32 The plaintiff, a former employee of the State University of New York at
33 Farmingdale, appeals from the grant of summary judgment by the United
34 States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Sandra J.
35 Feuerstein, J.) dismissing her claim that officers and employees of the
36 university retaliated against her for her speech in violation of the First
37 Amendment. We find that the district court’s reversal of its prior denial of
38 summary judgment did not offend the principle of law of the case. The
39 judgment is AFFIRMED by reason of the defendants’ qualified immunity.
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1
2 JAMES M. MALONEY, Law Office of
3 James M. Maloney, Port Washington,
4 N.Y., for Plaintiff-Appellant.
5
6 MARK H. SHAWHAN, (Anisha S.
7 Dasgupta, on the brief), for Barbara D.
8 Underwood, Attorney General State of
9 New York, New York, N.Y., for
10 Defendants-Appellees.
11
12 LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
13 Plaintiff Amy Colvin appeals from the grant of summary judgment by
14 the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Sandra
15 J. Feuerstein, J.), in favor of the defendants, Hubert Keen, Lucia Cepriano,
16 Marybeth Incandela, and James Hall (“Defendants”), in their individual and
17 official capacities as officers and employees of the Farmingdale State College
18 of State University of New York (“SUNY Farmingdale” or the “College”).
19 Colvin, who was employed by the College as an admissions counselor during
20 the relevant time, alleged that Defendants took adverse employment action
21 against her in violation of the First Amendment in retaliation for her giving
22 advice to a co-worker who was being arrested by campus police. The district
23 court initially denied Defendants’ motion for summary judgment and
24 instructed that the case proceed to trial. On receipt of additional briefing, the
2
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1 district court ruled that the First Amendment did not protect Colvin from
2 retaliation because her speech did not address a matter of public concern, and
3 dismissed the case. Colvin contends that, under the doctrine of law of the case
4 (“LOTC”), we should require the district court to adhere to its original ruling
5 and conduct a trial. We disagree. Without deciding whether the district
6 court’s ultimate conclusion as to the character of Plaintiff’s speech was
7 correct, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to Defendants on the
8 alternate ground of Defendants’ qualified immunity.
9 BACKGROUND
10 The evidence, if considered in the light most favorable to Plaintiff,
11 showed the following. On May 18, 2011, Plaintiff, who was employed by the
12 College as an admissions counselor, participated in a lunchtime yoga class in
13 a campus classroom. During the session, campus police officers entered the
14 class in order to arrest Sherry Buch, a College employee who had been
15 suspended but was participating in the class. The police were responding to a
16 report that Buch was trespassing on the campus. Colvin identified herself as
17 an attorney and said to the police, “Officers, I would like to get her . . . union
18 representation and an attorney.” App’x 215. Colvin accompanied the officers
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1 as they directed Buch to a vestibule outside the yoga classroom. She told
2 Buch, “[W]e’re going to work on getting you a lawyer and a union rep,”
id.,
3 and advised her “to wait to say anything until we got an attorney and a union
4 rep,”
Id. at 218. Colvin also told the officers that she “would like to
5 accompany [Buch] to the police station.”
Id. at 216. The officers responded,
6 “Well, we’re going to arrest you now,” to which Colvin replied, “I believe that
7 would be a false arrest.”
Id. at 215. The officers did not arrest Colvin.
8 On June 14, 2011, Defendant Marybeth Incandela, the SUNY
9 Farmingdale Director of Human Resources, questioned Colvin about the
10 incident and on June 27, 2011, gave Colvin a counseling memorandum. The
11 memorandum recapitulated that Colvin had “identified [her]self as an
12 attorney and offered advice and guidance to the employee being arrested.”
13 App’x 228. It described Colvin’s actions as “escalating tension,” criticized her
14 for making “the assumption that the officers were acting improperly,” and
15 informed her that “interfering with police business is unprofessional.”
Id. It
16 advised Colvin that, “Going forward, it is expected that your personal
17 conduct will be professional, and you will not interfere with any police
18 business conducted on the Farmingdale State College campus.”
Id.
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1 On July 8, 2011, Defendant James Hall, Colvin’s supervisor,
2 recommended her for reappointment. On July 21, 2011, however, Defendant
3 Lucia Cepriano, a Vice-President, advised that Colvin not be reappointed.
4 Four days later, on July 25, 2011, Hall met with Colvin and counseled her
5 about union activities. On August 2, 2011, Defendant Hubert Keen, President
6 of the College, advised Colvin by letter that her contract would not be
7 renewed. Colvin continued to be employed at the College for approximately
8 two more years. At some point between February 27, 2013 and August 6,
9 2013, her employment was terminated.
10 Colvin asserts that her job performance was “stellar,” App’x 272,
11 pointing to achievement forms, letters from management employees, students
12 and parents, and informal evaluations in her personnel file, as well as
13 discretionary bonuses, raises, and positive feedback she received from her
14 supervisors.
15
16 Procedure
17 Colvin brought this action on June 25, 2013 asserting a claim of
18 retaliation for First Amendment protected speech under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
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1 among other claims. She alleges that her contract was terminated because she
2 “spoke up for someone’s [constitutional] rights.” Colvin sought inter alia
3 compensatory and punitive damages, reinstatement of her job, and an
4 injunction against future adverse employment actions.
5 The district court dismissed most of Colvin’s claims with prejudice for
6 either lack of subject matter jurisdiction or failure to state a claim. The court
7 ruled that, considering the passage of two years between the yoga class
8 incident and her ultimate termination, Colvin had not shown a causal
9 connection between the two. The court accordingly dismissed her First
10 Amendment retaliation claim to the extent it was based on her claim that her
11 2013 termination was in retaliation for her exercise of free speech at the 2011
12 yoga class. Colvin has not challenged that ruling in this appeal.
13 To the extent Colvin’s First Amendment claim was based on the
14 counseling and reproaches she received in 2011, the claim was not dismissed.
15 Defendants moved for summary judgment on June 5, 2015, arguing that
16 Colvin’s claim must fail under the doctrine of Pickering v. Board of Education,
17
391 U.S. 563 (1968), because her speech was not on a matter of public concern
18 and thus was not protected from retaliation by the First Amendment. The
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1 district court referred the motion to United States Magistrate Judge Arlene R.
2 Lindsay for report and recommendation. The Magistrate Judge recommended
3 that the motion be denied with respect to the First Amendment retaliation
4 claim, reasoning that Colvin’s speech at the Yoga Incident did address a
5 matter of public concern because she “was not speaking of a personal
6 grievance; rather, she [was] attempting to vindicate Ms. Buch’s constitutional
7 right to counsel and her right to union representation in the face of perceived
8 police misconduct.” App’x 132. The district court at first was persuaded by
9 the Magistrate Judge’s recommendation. By order dated January 19, 2016, it
10 denied summary judgment and instructed that the case proceed to trial.
11 Shortly before the trial was scheduled to begin, Defendants submitted a
12 trial brief (“Pretrial Memorandum of Law”), in which Defendants argued
13 once again that Plaintiff’s speech was not on a matter of public concern, but
14 was motivated to help Buch achieve a favorable disposition of her arrest. The
15 court invited Plaintiff to respond, indicating a readiness to reconsider
16 whether summary judgment should be granted. Plaintiff responded, along
17 with an argument on the merits, that it was “Law of the Case as per the
18 Court’s Opinion and Order dated November 30, 2015 . . . that Plaintiff’s
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1 speech was a matter of public concern,” and that the court was therefore
2 obligated to adhere to the earlier ruling. Pl. Opp., ECF 107 at *2 (Sept. 13,
3 2016) E.D.N.Y 2:13-cv-3595 (SJF). The district court was persuaded by
4 Defendants’ new briefing, which it characterized as a motion under Rule
5 54(b) for reconsideration. By order dated September 28, 2016, it granted
6 summary judgment on all remaining claims in favor of Defendants. Colvin
7 then brought this appeal.
8
9 DISCUSSION
10 I. Law of the Case
11 Colvin’s first contention is that, under the doctrine known as law of the
12 case (“LOTC”), because the district court initially entered an order denying
13 Defendants’ motion for summary judgment before changing its mind, we
14 should vacate the district court’s ultimate grant of summary judgment and
15 require it to adhere to its initial denial. 1 Colvin does not point to any
1
The phrase, law of the case, is used in several different circumstances. One circumstance is when a court
considers changing a ruling it had previously made in the same case. A second arises when an appellate court is
asked to overturn a lower court’s decision because the lower court departed from a ruling it had previously
made in the case. A third arises when a lower court considers whether to adhere to a ruling previously made by
a higher court in the same case. In each circumstance, LOTC functions differently and involves considerations
that do not necessarily bear on the others. In this case we consider the circumstance in which an appellate court
is asked to reverse the judgment of the trial court because the trial court changed a ruling previously made in the
case. What we say in this context does not necessarily bear on the application of the doctrine in the other very
different circumstances.
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1 prejudice she suffered by reason of the change of ruling. She acknowledges,
2 furthermore, that LOTC is not a rule that bars courts from reconsidering prior
3 rulings, but is rather “a discretionary rule of practice [that] generally does not
4 limit a court’s power to reconsider an issue.” Appellant Br. 17 (quoting In re
5 PCH Assocs.,
949 F.2d 585, 592 (2d Cir. 1991)). As characterized by Judges L.
6 Hand and Friendly, the doctrine “‘does not rigidly bind a court to its former
7 decisions, but is only addressed to its good sense.’” Zdanok v. Glidden Co., 327
8 F.2d 944, 952-53 (2d Cir. 1964) (Friendly, J.) (quoting Higgins v. California
9 Prune & Apricot Grower, Inc.,
3 F.2d 896, 898 (2d Cir. 1924) (L. Hand, J.)). See
10 also, Arizona v. California,
460 U.S. 605, 644 (1983) (Brennan, J., concurring in
11 part and dissenting in part) (“A court’s decision to reconsider a prior ruling
12 before the case becomes final . . . is ultimately a matter of good sense.”)
13 (internal quotation marks omitted); Messenger v. Anderson,
225 U.S. 436, 444
14 (1912) (Holmes, J.) (“In the absence of statute the phrase, ‘law of the case’ . . .
15 merely expresses the practice of courts generally to refuse to reopen what has
16 been decided, not a limit to their power.”). In short, Colvin asks us to vacate
17 the grant of summary judgment and order trial, notwithstanding that she
18 suffered no harm or prejudice from the change of ruling and regardless of
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1 whether the final ruling was right or wrong, solely because the district court
2 initially denied the motion before becoming convinced that the motion should
3 be granted. We reject that argument.
4 a. Appellate Review of a District Court’s Changed Rulings
5 In asking that we vacate the grant of judgment under LOTC solely
6 because the district court had earlier denied summary judgment, without
7 pointing to any prejudice she suffered or any other special circumstances that
8 might render the change of ruling problematic, Colvin misunderstands the
9 nature of the doctrine. LOTC does not assert, as a general proposition, that it
10 is bad for courts to correct their mistakes, much less that doing so will result
11 in reversal. If that were the meaning of LOTC, it would be a foolish rule. In all
12 forms of human endeavor, people make mistakes, and in most circumstances
13 the best course of action is to correct them. Judging is no different.
14 Nonetheless, in some circumstances, problems that might result from
15 changing a ruling outweigh the benefits of correcting an error, or at least of
16 doing so without taking steps to mitigate the resulting problems. LOTC does
17 not say to judges, “Once a ruling has been made, you should not change it.” It
18 says rather, “When deciding whether to change a ruling, you should consider
10
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Amy Colvin v. Hubert Keen, et. al.
1 whether making the change will cause problems that would make it
2 preferable to adhere to the earlier ruling (even though you now consider it
3 erroneous) or would at least make it advisable to take precautious measures
4 to mitigate the bad effects of those problems.”
5 The issue can arise in innumerable contexts. We consider a few
6 hypotheticals that illustrate the considerations that affect application of
7 LOTC. Suppose that at the start of a trial, the plaintiff’s counsel put a question
8 to the plaintiff, opening a line of inquiry, and the trial judge initially sustained
9 the defendant’s objection to the question on the grounds of the irrelevance of
10 that line of inquiry. Moments later, the court reconsidered and proposed to
11 allow the question to be answered. The defendant objected based on LOTC,
12 but the court allowed the plaintiff to answer. Following a verdict for the
13 plaintiff, the defendant argued on appeal that the judgment should be set
14 aside solely because, under LOTC, the court should not have changed its
15 initial ruling. Absent a showing that the ultimate ruling was error, or that the
16 change caused prejudice to the defendant or resulted in some other harm, we
17 see no reason why the trial judge should have adhered to the erroneous
18 previous ruling merely because of the undesirability of changing rulings. We
11
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1 see even less reason why the appellate court would require a new trial,
2 especially because, at the new trial, the judge would once again allow the
3 inquiry into the subject matter.
4 On the other hand, suppose that at the start of trial, just as in the
5 previous example, the court sustained the defendant’s objection to the
6 plaintiff’s counsel’s question on the grounds of the irrelevance of the inquiry.
7 However, just before the close of trial, the court reconsidered, decided that
8 the line of inquiry was relevant, and proposed to now allow the plaintiff to
9 answer the question. The defendant objected based on LOTC and argued that
10 he was prejudiced because, in reliance on the court’s initial ruling that the line
11 of inquiry was irrelevant, the defendant had released its subpoenaed
12 witnesses, whom he would have called to rebut the plaintiff’s answer to the
13 question. In that circumstance, the trial judge would have strong reasons
14 either to adhere to the prior ruling, or to explore whether grant of a
15 continuance could cure the prejudice suffered by the defendant. If the trial
16 court simply changed its ruling in spite of the prejudice to the defendant, and
17 without taking curative measures, an appellate court might have good reason
18 to vacate a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor.
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1 Given that under LOTC the question whether to change a ruling is
2 addressed to the court’s discretion, the trial court’s discretion to make the
3 change is reviewed on an abuse of discretion standard. The most common
4 problem that would justify the appellate court in finding that the trial court
5 abused its direction in making a change of ruling would be that doing so
6 caused prejudice to the appellant.
7 In Prisco v. A & D Carting Corp., the district court initially ruled, on
8 cross-motions for summary judgment, that the plaintiff had satisfied the
9 elements of a prima facie claim because the defendants were “potentially
10 responsible parties” within the meaning of the statute sued under.
168 F.3d
11 593, 604 (2d Cir. 1999). Following a bench trial, and without notice to the
12 plaintiff, the court reversed its prior ruling and dismissed the claim on the
13 basis that the plaintiff “had failed to prove that any of the defendants were
14 potentially responsible parties within the meaning of [the statute].”
Id. While
15 we found on appeal that the district court’s final judgment was not “clear
16 error,”
id. at 606, and that the court had changed its ruling for the “obviously
17 valid reason” of correcting an error of law,
id. at 607, we nonetheless asserted
18 that revisiting the ruling without notice to the plaintiff had “raise[d] the
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1 specter of severe prejudice to [the plaintiff] if it deprived her of the
2 opportunity to prepare and present evidence on that issue at trial.”
Id. We
3 explained that LOTC is “informed principally by the concern that disregard
4 of an earlier ruling not be allowed to prejudice the party seeking the benefit of
5 the doctrine.”
Id. Hence, we contemplated that, if the change of ruling had
6 prejudiced the plaintiff, LOTC would have counseled the district court to
7 maintain its initial, incorrect, ruling despite the likelihood of reversal. 2
8 As the Wright & Miller treatise observes, “if a sound reason for
9 reconsideration could be found, law-of-the-case concerns should require only
10 that reliance on the first ruling be protected, not that reconsideration be
11 prohibited.” Wright & Miller, 18B Fed. Prac. & Proc. Juris. § 4478.1, n.10 (2d
12 ed. 2018) (commenting on Marfia v. T.C. Ziraat Bankasi,
100 F.3d 243 (2d Cir.
13 1996)). See also, United States v. Birney,
686 F.2d 102, 107 (2d Cir. 1982) (“The
14 only limitation placed upon a trial judge’s decision to disregard a previous
15 ruling . . . is that prejudice not ensue to the party seeking the benefit of the
16 doctrine. In this context prejudice . . . refers to a lack of sufficiency of notice
2
We concluded that, despite a lack of notice to the plaintiff, the change of ruling had not in fact caused
prejudice and, accordingly, we affirmed.
Prisco, 168 F.3d at 607.
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1 and an opportunity to prepare armed with the knowledge” that the prior
2 ruling does not control.) (internal citations omitted).
3 Consider another illustrative hypothetical example: a court initially
4 denied a motion to dismiss the complaint by reason of its failure to state a
5 claim upon which relief may be granted. Soon thereafter, the court recognized
6 that, contrary to its earlier assessment, the complaint was insufficient; the
7 court reconsidered the prior denial and dismissed the case. No good reason
8 appears why the appeals court should not judge the appeal exactly as if the
9 ultimate ruling had been entered in the first instance, without change, unless
10 the plaintiff suffered prejudice caused by the change. Assuming the appellate
11 court considering the ultimate ruling deemed it to have been correct, it would
12 make no sense to vacate the dismissal and compel the parties to continue
13 litigating a complaint that fails to state an actionable claim. Our court so ruled
14 in Quinn v. Aetna Life & Casualty Company,
616 F.2d 38 (2d Cir. 1980). 3 In
15 Quinn, the defendant’s motion to dismiss on the pleadings was initially
16 denied and then subsequently granted.
Id. at 40. We affirmed the dismissal,
3
The fact pattern in Quinn differed slightly from the illustrative hypothetical because the initial ruling
upholding the complaint was in state court. Following the ruling, the case was removed to federal court, which
granted the motion to dismiss. That difference is without significance to our discussion of LOTC. The change
caused no prejudice to the plaintiff, and our court reasoned that LOTC erected no bar to either the district
court’s changed ruling or our affirmance of it.
Quinn, 616 F.2d at 40-41.
15
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1 explaining that “[r]elitigation of Aetna’s motion for dismissal on the
2 pleadings was not barred by the law of the case doctrine, which is
3 discretionary . . . and in any event cannot bind an appellate court.”
Id. at 40-
4 41. By the same token, if the district court initially wrote an opinion granting
5 the motion to dismiss, but soon thereafter decided that was an erroneous
6 ruling and directed that the case proceed, after ample discovery, to trial,
7 resulting in the plaintiff’s verdict, it appears that the question on appeal
8 would be whether the ultimate ruling was correct, regardless of whether it
9 was a changed ruling.
10 We recognize that, in a significantly different circumstance, our court
11 has expressed views on the application of the LOTC doctrine which seem, on
12 superficial examination, to be in substantial tension with the views expressed
13 above. In Official Committee of the Unsecured Creditors of Color Tile, Inc. v.
14 Coopers & Lybrand, LLP, we observed in dictum that “those decisions
15 [decisions under Rule 54(b)] may not usually be changed unless there is ‘an
16 intervening change of controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the
17 need to correct a clear error or prevent a manifest injustice.’”
322 F.3d 147, 167
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1 (2d Cir. 2003) (emphasis added) (quoting Virgin Atl. Airways, Ltd. v. Nat’l
2 Mediation Bd.,
956 F.2d 1245, 1255 (2d Cir. 1992)).
3 The district court in that case had entered a partial judgment
4 dismissing Color Tile Committee’s claims against Coopers & Lybrand.
Id. at
5 152. Two years later, Color Tile Committee moved under Rule 54(b) for
6 reconsideration of the prior dismissal of those claims.
Id. at 166-67. The
7 district court denied the motion, without reference to LOTC, on the ground
8 that the motion was “really an untimely motion to amend the pleading . . . .”
9
Id. at 156. After the entry of final judgment, Color Tile Committee appealed
10 from the district court’s denial of its motion under Rule 54(b). We rejected the
11 claim, noting that a district court’s denial of such a motion is reviewed for
12 abuse of discretion, and adding the language quoted above about the limited
13 circumstances in which “those decisions” usually may be revised.
Id. at 167.
14 In fact, the observation quoted from Official Committee is not in tension
15 with our discussion because it dealt with a substantially different circumstance.
16 Apart from the fact that these remarks in Official Committee were dictum and
17 were qualified by the word “usually,” unlike our case, they related to the
18 revision of a partial judgment. The court’s observation was not about all
17
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1 decisions, but about “those decisions,” which were identified just above as
2 decisions under Rule 54(b).
Id. at 167.
3 A decision under Rule 54(b) is one that adjudicates claims and
4 determines the rights and liabilities of parties. Such a decision is of a different
5 character from other kinds of rulings a court may make. It would serve as an
6 immediately appealable final judgment if no other claims remained to be
7 adjudicated. Even when other claims remain, such a partial adjudication may
8 be entered as an immediately appealable final judgment if the district court
9 “determines that there is no just reason for delay.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b).
10 In the interests of finality in litigation, the governing rules severely
11 restrict circumstances in which courts may revise final judgments. See Fed. R.
12 Civ. P. 60(b). To be sure, the revision of partial judgments is not so restricted
13 by the Federal Rules, as Rule 54(b) expressly provides that they “may be
14 revised at any time before the entry of a judgment adjudicating all the claims
15 and all the parties’ rights and liabilities.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Nonetheless,
16 the interests of finality can apply in a different way to decisions that
17 adjudicate claims than to other sorts of decisions a court may make. It is
18 inconceivable that the court’s statement in Official Committee about “those
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1 decisions” was intended to mean that a trial court’s “decision” to allow two
2 months to conclude discovery, or to sustain an objection to a question, “may
3 not usually be changed unless there is an intervening change of controlling
4 law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a clear error or
5 prevent a manifest injustice.” Official
Comm., 322 F.3d at 167. The court was
6 referring to a decision that adjudicated a claim.
7 The initial decision in our case, which the district court later reversed,
8 did not adjudicate a claim or determine the rights and liabilities of the parties.
9 To the contrary, it expressly declined to do so. It was not a decision of the sort
10 covered by Rule 54(b) and thus was not the sort of decision covered by the
11 statement in Official Committee.
12 In any event, even if it were contraindicated under LOTC for a trial
13 court to replace an incorrect ruling with a correct one, the mere fact of the
14 change of ruling would still not justify an appellate court in vacating the
15 judgment. If LOTC were pushed so far as to call upon the reviewing court to
16 vacate a changed, but correct, judgment, solely by reason of the change,
17 LOTC would then mean that the initial incorrect ruling would bind not only
18 the court that made it, but also the court of appellate review, whose function
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1 is to correct errors, rather than perpetuate them. Christianson v. Colt Indus.
2 Operating Corp.,
486 U.S. 800, 817 (1988) (“Just as a district court's adherence to
3 law of the case cannot insulate an issue from appellate review, a court of
4 appeals' adherence to the law of the case cannot insulate an issue from this
5 Court's review.”). We have previously rejected such a proposition. See Quinn,
6 616 F.2d at 40-41.
7 Accordingly, when an appeal is based on the argument that the district
8 court contravened LOTC by changing the prior ruling, and the appeals court
9 finds no substantive error in the district court’s ultimate, changed ruling, it is
10 difficult to see what could justify overturning the judgment, unless either the
11 change caused prejudice to a party that relied detrimentally on the earlier
12 ruling, or perhaps that the change was made in a manner so unseemly as to
13 cast doubt on the propriety of the proceeding. See
Zdanok, 327 F.2d at 953
14 (raising issue of “unseemliness” of changing rulings).
15 b. Application
16 As noted above, Defendants moved for summary judgment after the
17 close of discovery, on June 5, 2015. After receiving the Magistrate Judge’s
18 recommendation to deny the motion, the court entered an order on January
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1 19, 2016 accepting the recommendation, denying summary judgment, and
2 instructing that the case proceed to trial. On August 29, 2016, shortly before
3 trial was to begin, Defendants submitted a trial brief in which they argued
4 again that the court should rule in their favor essentially for the reasons they
5 had argued in their prior, unsuccessful, motion for summary judgment. The
6 court indicated openness to reconsidering and invited Colvin to respond.
7 Colvin submitted briefing in opposition, arguing in part on the merits while
8 also asserting that, under LOTC, the court should not depart from its prior
9 ruling. Colvin made no claim that she would suffer prejudice resulting from a
10 changed ruling and it appears that any such claim would have lacked merit
11 because there is no indication that Colvin relied detrimentally on the court’s
12 denial of summary judgment.
13 Based on the new briefing, the district court decided that summary
14 judgment should be granted on the merits, based on the conclusion that
15 Colvin’s efforts on behalf of Buch were not speech on a matter of public
16 concern. The court then faced the question whether Colvin’s LOTC argument,
17 unsupported by any claim or showing of prejudice, would justify the court’s
18 subjecting itself and the parties to the expense and burden of requiring a trial,
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1 notwithstanding that the trial could serve no useful purpose in view of the
2 fact that the court had concluded that Defendants were entitled to judgment
3 as a matter of law. The court treated the argument made in Defendants’ trial
4 brief as a motion to reverse a prior decision made under Rule 54(b) and
5 considered the proposition set forth in Official Committee of the Unsecured
6 Creditors of Color Tile, Inc. v. Coopers & Lybrand, LLP that, under LOTC, a
7 decision usually may not be revised “unless there is an intervening change of
8 controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a clear
9 error or prevent a manifest
injustice.” 322 F.3d at 167 (internal citation
10 omitted). The court concluded that it was reconsidering its prior ruling “in
11 order to correct [a] clear error,” and granted summary judgment in favor of
12 Defendants. Colvin v. Keen, 13-CV-3595 (SJF)(ARL),
2016 WL 5408117, at *2
13 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 28, 2016).
14 Colvin argues on appeal that, under the doctrine of LOTC, we should
15 vacate the district court’s grant of summary judgment and remand the case
16 for trial. Colvin has not cited a single instance, and we know of none, in
17 which our court has vacated a judgment under LOTC for the sole reason that
18 the lower court had changed a ruling, regardless of absence of prejudice
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1 caused by the change. She relies on a proposition, cited in Zdanok, that “where
2 litigants have once battled for the court’s decision, they should neither be
3 required, nor without good reason permitted, to battle for it again.”
327 F.2d
4 944, 953 (emphasis added). The circumstances in Zdanok, however, were very
5 different from these. To begin, Zdanok did not involve an application to a
6 higher court to overturn a judgment of the lower court on the ground that the
7 lower court had changed a ruling in violation of LOTC. In Zdanok, the court
8 of appeals contemplated whether it should reverse its own prior judgment
9 entered by another panel of the same court.
Id. at 949-50. Where, as here, a
10 higher court is asked to overturn a judgment entered by a lower court, based
11 on the lower court’s change of judgment, LOTC applies in a very different
12 way. As it is widely recognized that a court’s decision to change its own prior
13 ruling is discretionary, see, e.g., In re PCH
Assocs., 949 F.2d at 592 (2d Cir.
14 1991);
Quinn, 616 F.2d at 40, we cannot properly overturn the district court’s
15 judgment unless we find that its decision to change its ruling was an abuse of
16 discretion. In contrast, when a court, as in Zdanok, faces the question whether
17 to depart from its own prior ruling, the court has wide discretion to make
18 whichever decision it thinks preferable.
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1 Furthermore, there were circumstances in Zdanok that are not present
2 here and that argued strongly against changing the ruling in question.
3 Specifically, Zdanok addressed a long, protracted dispute over the
4 transferability of employees’ seniority rights upon the employer’s transfer of
5 operations at a manufacturing
plant. 327 F.2d at 947. In a prior appeal, this
6 Court had ruled on the meaning of the collective bargaining agreement that
7 governed the seniority rights of employees transferring from the old to the
8 new plant. Zdanok v. Glidden Co.,
288 F.2d 99 (2d Cir. 1961). The case had
9 subsequently gone to the Supreme Court, which ruled on other matters, and
10 then returned to the district court. Zdanok v. Glidden Co.,
216 F. Supp. 476, 477-
11 78 (S.D.N.Y. 1963). The district court had conducted a trial on the issue of
12 liability, based on the contract interpretation mandated by this Court’s earlier
13 opinion, granting judgment as to liability against the employer.
Id. at 483. The
14 judgment as to liability was then appealed to this Court, where the employer
15 asked us to reevaluate the interpretation of the contract established in the
16 prior panel’s precedential ruling. The employer argued that a different
17 interpretation was warranted by reason of an intervening Supreme Court
18 opinion to the effect that collective bargaining agreements are interpreted
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1 under federal rather than state law.
Zdanok, 327 F.2d at 950. We found those
2 arguments unpersuasive in view of the similarity between the state and
3 federal laws in question.
Id. at 950-51. We nonetheless recognized a possibility
4 that our earlier ruling might have been mistaken.
Id. at 952. In spite of that
5 possibility, we declined the employer’s invitation to re-examine the
6 correctness of the prior ruling in view of the long history of the litigation,
7 which had been conducted in reliance on the rule dictated by the prior ruling.
8
Id. at 952-53. We had never concluded that the prior ruling was wrong, only
9 that this was a possibility. Furthermore, overturning that prior ruling after so
10 much litigation had been conducted in reliance on the rule it established
11 would have caused substantial prejudice to the party adversely affected.
12 The proposition quoted from Zdanok, on which Colvin relies, was not
13 expressed as a categorical rule, but only as a “consideration” to be evaluated
14 in the court’s exercise of discretion committed to the court’s “good sense.”
Id.
15 at 953. In any event, the quoted proposition from Zdanok, even if treated as a
16 rule, would not make it reversible error for the district court to have changed
17 its ruling in these circumstances. At most, the Zdanok proposition could be
18 read to say that a court should not allow litigants to advocate for a change of
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1 ruling “without good reason.”
Id. In this case, the court had good reason. It
2 was persuaded that Defendants were entitled to summary judgment; it would
3 have been inexcusably wasteful and burdensome to all persons involved to
4 require a trial of a foregone conclusion.
5 The only quibble we have with the district court’s decision to change its
6 ruling was with its belief that the change depended on Rule 54(b), implicating
7 the dicta from Official Committee. Rule 54(b), as noted above, relates to
8 revising a partial judgment, which is a “decision, however designated, that
9 adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than
10 all the parties . . . .” Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). The decision on which Defendants
11 sought a reversal was a denial of summary judgment. It did not adjudicate any
12 claim or any rights or liabilities of any parties, but rather declined to
13 adjudicate Colvin’s claim. Rule 54(b) and the restrictive language of Official
14 Committee, which related to the question whether to reverse a previous grant
15 of judgment, have no application here.
16 We see no reason why there was any impropriety in the district court’s
17 exercise of its discretion to revisit its earlier denial of summary judgment,
18 much less any reason to vacate its judgment for the sole reason that it had
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1 reversed its earlier ruling. If the ultimate, changed ruling was correct, and
2 Plaintiff suffered no prejudice from the change, it was altogether appropriate
3 for the court to change its ruling, rather than compel the parties to engage in
4 an unnecessary trial whose result was foreordained. At least in the absence of
5 any prejudice to the parties, it was sufficient for the court to conclude,
6 notwithstanding the prior ruling, that Defendants were entitled to summary
7 judgment. The district court acted well within its discretion to reconsider and
8 reverse its prior ruling, by which it avoided burdening itself and the parties
9 with an unnecessary trial.
10
11 II. Speech on a Matter of Public Concern and Qualified Immunity
12 Colvin also contends that, on the merits, her speech was protected by
13 the First Amendment. The First Amendment protects a public employee from
14 retaliation by her government employer for speech made “as a citizen on a
15 matter of public concern,” Garcetti v. Ceballos,
547 U.S. 410, 418 (2006), so long
16 as “the interests of the [speaker], as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of
17 public concern” are not outweighed by “the interest of the State, as an
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1 employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs
2 through its employees,” Pickering v. Bd. Of Educ.,
391 U.S. 563, 568 (1968).
3 We need not decide whether Colvin’s speech qualified as addressing a
4 matter of public concern because Defendants were protected from both
5 liability and the obligation to defend the case because of qualified immunity. 4
6 Under the doctrine of qualified immunity, “government officials performing
7 discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages
8 insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or
9 constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
10 Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). A right is “clearly established” if
11 “it would be clear to a reasonable [person in the position of the defendant]
12 that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.” Saucier v. Katz,
13
533 U.S. 194, 202 (2001). “This inquiry turns on the objective legal
14 reasonableness of the action, assessed in light of the legal rules that were
15 clearly established at the time it was taken.” Pearson v. Callahan,
555 U.S. 223,
16 244 (2009) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Defendants were entitled
4
Defendants, in addition to moving for summary judgment on the merits, had
also moved for judgment on the basis of their entitlement to qualified
immunity.
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1 to summary judgment unless there was clearly established law to the effect
2 that Colvin’s speech was on a matter of public concern.
3 There is no clearly established law to that effect. The speech of a public
4 employee is addressed to a matter of public concern where it can be “fairly
5 considered as relating to any matter of political, social, or other concern to the
6 community.” Connick v. Myers,
461 U.S. 138, 146 (1983). To qualify, the speech
7 must have “a broader public purpose” and not be merely “calculated to
8 redress personal grievances.” Ruotolo v. City of New York,
514 F.3d 184, 189 (2d
9 Cir. 2008) (internal quotations omitted). In determining whether speech
10 addresses a matter of public concern, we examine the “content, form, and
11 context of a given statement.” Reuland v. Hynes,
460 F.3d 409, 416 (2d Cir.
12 2006) (quoting
Connick, 461 U.S. at 147-48).
13 The precedents do not show a “clearly established” law favoring Colvin
14 on this question. This court has found, on the one hand, that speech debating
15 issues of discrimination, speech seeking relief from “pervasive or systemic
16 misconduct” by public officials, and speech that is “part of an overall effort to
17 correct allegedly unlawful practices or bring them to public attention” all go
18 to matters of public concern. Golodner v. Berliner,
770 F.3d 196, 203 (2d Cir.
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1 2014). By contrast, we have found speech that “concerns essentially personal
2 grievances” does not qualify as speech on a matter of public concern, Ruotolo,
3 514 F.3d at 190. We have also reasoned that speech is not on a matter of public
4 concern where it has “no practical significance to the general public,” Nagle v.
5 Marron,
663 F.3d 100, 107 (2d Cir. 2011). Examples include speech alleging
6 that a public school employee forged a signature on a teaching observation,
7
id., survey questions about coworkers’ office morale, see
Connick, 461 U.S. at
8 148, speech concerning the speaker’s own work assignments or salary, see
9 Ezekwo v. New York City Health & Hosps. Corp.,
940 F.2d 775, 781 (2d Cir. 1991),
10 and speech accusing a supervisor of favoritism, see Singer v. Ferro,
711 F.3d
11 334, 340 (2d Cir. 2013).
12 It is true that, under certain circumstances, we have found speech to be
13 on a matter of public concern where it sought to “vindicate . . . constitutional
14 rights . . . in the face of alleged police misconduct.”
Golodner, 770 F.3d at 204.
15 In Golodner, we reasoned that “it is axiomatic that misconduct within a police
16 department implicates a matter of public concern.”
Id. In that case, however,
17 the speech at issue related to alleged policies and patterns of police
18 misconduct that “raise[d] serious constitutional concerns.” See
id. at 205.
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1 Colvin’s speech, by contrast, was not addressed to misconduct at all. Colvin
2 merely identified herself as an attorney, told her co-worker and the police
3 officers that she wanted to get her co-worker an attorney and union
4 representative, and advised her friend not to say anything until such
5 representatives arrived. Colvin said nothing to indicate that Ms. Buch’s arrest
6 was constitutionally improper. 5 Since her speech was not addressed to police
7 misconduct at all, much less to the sort of pattern of misconduct alleged in
8 Golodner, Golodner does not clearly establish that Colvin’s speech was on a
9 matter of public concern.
10 Nor does Konits v. Valley Stream Cent. High Sch. Dist. clearly establish
11 that Colvin’s speech was on a matter of public concern. In that case, we held
12 that a teacher’s efforts to assist a custodial worker in redressing claims of
13 gender discrimination constituted speech on a matter of public concern where
14 the teacher (1) helped her file internal complaints; (2) referred her to an
15 attorney who represented her in subsequent proceedings; and (3) agreed to be
16 listed as a potential witness in those proceedings.
394 F.3d 121, 123-26 (2d Cir.
17 2005). We emphasized that the teacher was speaking out “against
5
We recognize that Colvin stated, in response to the police threatening to arrest her as well, “I believe that
would be a false arrest.” App’x 215. However, Colvin has never alleged that she faced retaliation for that
speech. In fact, she does not address that speech at all on her appeal to this Court.
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1 discrimination suffered by others.”
Id. at 125. Colvin, by contrast, was
2 advising a co-worker of her constitutional rights, not speaking out against
3 any perceived discrimination or official misconduct. Konits, like Golodner,
4 does not clearly establish that Colvin’s speech was on a matter of public
5 concern.
6 Colvin urges us to find that communicating “advice that is consistent
7 with Miranda [v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436 (1966)] by a bystander to a person being
8 arrested, made in the presence of the arresting police, per se addresses a
9 matter of public concern.” Plaintiff-Appellant Br. at 28. Our precedents do not
10 clearly establish such a rule. Although we have found that speech addressed
11 to police misconduct and discrimination against others may, under some
12 circumstances, constitute speech on a matter of public concern, there is no
13 clearly established law that merely advising another of a constitutional right
14 necessarily constitutes speech on a matter of public concern. Because it was
15 not “clearly established” that Colvin’s speech addressed a matter of public
16 concern, see
Pearson, 555 U.S. at 231, Defendants are entitled to qualified
17 immunity.
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1
2 CONCLUSION
3 We find that Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity, and
4 accordingly AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment on that
5 basis.
33