Filed: Oct. 25, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 18-1713-(L) Atterbury v. United States Marshals Service UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term 2019 Argued: September 17, 2019 Decided: October 25, 2019 Docket Nos. 18-1713-cv(L); 18-2378-cv(Con) ------------------------------------------ STEPHEN L. ATTERBURY, Plaintiff - Appellant, v. UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE, GARY INSLEY, CONTRACTING OFFICER, OFFICE OF SECURITY CONTRACTS, JUDICIAL DIVISION, UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE, IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, JOHN DOE, I
Summary: 18-1713-(L) Atterbury v. United States Marshals Service UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term 2019 Argued: September 17, 2019 Decided: October 25, 2019 Docket Nos. 18-1713-cv(L); 18-2378-cv(Con) ------------------------------------------ STEPHEN L. ATTERBURY, Plaintiff - Appellant, v. UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE, GARY INSLEY, CONTRACTING OFFICER, OFFICE OF SECURITY CONTRACTS, JUDICIAL DIVISION, UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE, IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, JOHN DOE, IN..
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18-1713-(L)
Atterbury v. United States Marshals Service
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term 2019
Argued: September 17, 2019 Decided: October 25, 2019
Docket Nos. 18‐1713‐cv(L); 18‐2378‐cv(Con)
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
STEPHEN L. ATTERBURY,
Plaintiff ‐ Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE, GARY
INSLEY, CONTRACTING OFFICER, OFFICE OF
SECURITY CONTRACTS, JUDICIAL DIVISION,
UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE, IN HIS
INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, JOHN DOE, IN HIS
INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY,
Defendants ‐ Appellees.
___________________________________________________
DANIEL F. HAUSCHILD,
Plaintiff ‐ Appellee,
v.
UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE,
Defendant ‐ Appellant,
PATRICIA HOFFMAN, CONTRACTING OFFICER,
OFFICE OF SECURITY CONTRACTS, JUDICIAL
SECURITY DIVISION, UNITED STATES SERVICE,
IN HER INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, JOHN DOE, IN
HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY,
Defendants.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
Before: NEWMAN, CABRANES, LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
Consolidated appeals from the May 8, 2018, judgment of the District Court
for the Western District of New York, granting summary judgment to the United
States Marshals Service (“USMS”) on the claim of Stephen L. Atterbury that he
was improperly discharged as a Court Security Officer (“CSO”) (No. 18‒1713), and
from the June 15, 2018, judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of
New York granting summary judgment to Daniel F. Hauschild on his claim that
he was improperly discharged as a CSO (No. 18‒2378).
In No. 18‒1713, we reverse and remand; in No. 18‒2378, we affirm and
remand.
Joshua J. Ellison (Kate M. Swearengen, on the
brief), Cohen, Weiss and Simon LLP, New
York, NY, for Stephen L. Atterbury,
Plaintiff‐Appellant in 18‐1713, and Daniel F.
Hauschild, Plaintiff‐Appellee in 18‐2378.
2
Christine S. Poscablo, Asst. U.S. Atty., New York,
NY (Geoffrey S. Berman, U.S. Atty. for the
Southern District of New York, Benjamin H.
Torrance, Asst. U.S. Atty., New York, NY,
James P. Kennedy, Jr., U.S. Atty. for the
Western District of New York, Michael S.
Cerrone, Monica J. Richards, Asst. U.S.
Attys., Buffalo, NY, on the brief), for United
States Marshals Service, Gary Insley and
John Doe, Defendants‐Appellees in 18‐1713,
and United States Marshals Service,
Defendant‐Appellant in 18‐2378.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge:
These appeals present, in an unusual context, the issues of whether a
discharged public employee working for a federal government contractor has a
property interest in continued employment and, if so, whether his discharge
comported with the requirements of procedural due process. The context is
unusual because, as to both appeals, the property interest is claimed to arise from
the contract between the employee’s union and his employer, but the discharge
was ordered by the government agency with which the employer has a contract.
In No. 18‒1713, Stephen L. Atterbury appeals from the May 8, 2018,
judgment of the District Court for the Western District of New York (Richard
Arcara, District Judge) granting summary judgment to the United States Marshals
3
Service (“USMS”) on his claim that he was improperly discharged from his
position as a Court Security Officer (“CSO”). In No. 18‒2378, USMS appeals from
the June 15, 2018, judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New
York (Cathy Seibel, District Judge) granting summary judgment to Daniel F.
Hauschild on his claim that he was improperly discharged as a CSO.
We conclude that both Atterbury and Hauschild had a property interest in
their continued employment as CSOs and that their discharges did not comply
with the requirements of procedural due process. We therefore reverse and
remand in No. 18‒1713 and affirm and remand in No. 18‒2378.
Background
The parties and their relationships. Stephen L. Atterbury was a CSO in the
Western District of New York from 2002 until his termination in April 2011,
serving at the federal courthouse in Rochester, New York. Daniel F. Hauschild was
a CSO in the Southern District of New York from 1989 until his termination in Oct.
2012, serving most recently as Lead CSO at the federal courthouse in
Poughkeepsie, New York. Atterbury and Hauschild (collectively, “CSOs”) were
employed by Akal Security, Inc. (“Akal”), a private company providing security
4
services. Akal was retained by the USMS to provide security services at federal
courthouses.
The relationship between the CSOs and Akal was governed by a 2010
collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between Akal and the United States
Court Security Officers, the union representing the CSOs. The relationship
between Akal and USMS was governed by a contract between them (“Akal‐USMS
Contract”). We consider the provisions of these documents below.
Atterbury’s alleged misconduct. Atterbury left work early on Feb. 24, 2011,
after telling his superior officer that he was going home because he felt ill. The
parties dispute whether Atterbury was actually ill. Atterbury contends that he left
because he felt unwell, and that he understood his superior officer’s response was
an indication of permission. That officer claimed that he thought Atterbury was
joking. Other witnesses gave divergent accounts of whether Atterbury appeared
to be sick, with some corroborating Atterbury’s account and others suggesting that
he did not seem ill and that he was angry due to a miscommunication about
whether he needed to remain at a certain post. A U.S. Marshal, who said he
witnessed Atterbury leaving, stated that Atterbury “did not appear or sound sick”
but “appeared and sounded agitated and annoyed.” J. App’s at 22. The Marshal
5
reported Atterbury, and USMS directed Akal to investigate whether Atterbury
had violated performance standards by abandoning his post. After interviewing
several witnesses, Akal reported to USMS that its findings were consistent with
Atterbury’s version of events.
USMS asked Akal to reconsider, finding that Akal’s investigation was
insufficiently thorough because its investigator conducted only a brief, informal
interview of the eyewitness marshal who had reported the incident. Akal stood by
its findings, noting that USMS had not given Akal any information that
contradicted its findings. Nevertheless, USMS informed Akal that it disagreed
with Akal’s findings, that Atterbury’s actions had undermined confidence in his
ability to perform his duties as a CSO, and that Atterbury should be permanently
removed from performing under the Akal‐USMS Contract. USMS did not identify
the findings of Akal with which it disagreed or the actions of Atterbury on which
USMS relied. Atterbury appealed his removal to Akal. Akal apparently forwarded
that appeal to USMS, which informed Akal that the appeal was denied. Akal then
terminated Atterbury’s employment.
Hauschild’s alleged misconduct. In July 2012, USMS requested Akal to
investigate eleven allegations concerning Hauschild that it had received in two
6
anonymous letters. One allegation was that Hauschild had sent his brother, who
is a convicted felon, to the home of a U.S. Bankruptcy Judge to fix a plumbing
problem, and, as Lead CSO, had assigned an on‐duty Court Security Officer to
accompany his brother, who could not be left unattended. Akal’s report to USMS
substantially confirmed this allegation and recommended that Hauschild, who
was at that point temporarily suspended, be disciplined with a “time served”
suspension and given a final warning. Akal’s investigation did not confirm any of
the other anonymous allegations against Hauschild.
In a letter identical (except for names and dates) to the letter directing
Atterbury’s removal, USMS notified Akal that it disagreed with Akal’s findings
and recommendation, and that Hauschild’s actions had undermined confidence
in his ability to perform his duties as a CSO. USMS ordered that Hauschild be
permanently removed from performing under the Akal‐USMS Contract. USMS
did not provide a statement of its findings or reasons for removing Hauschild.
Hauschild challenged his removal and asked USMS for a hearing. Akal asked
USMS to reconsider the removal decision. USMS informed Akal that it had
received Hauschild’s appeal and had denied it. Akal then terminated Hauschild’s
employment.
7
Litigation procedure. Atterbury filed a suit in the Western District of New
York to challenge the termination of his employment, and Hauschild filed a similar
suit in the Southern District of New York. For purposes of the pending appeal, we
need to note only the following procedural aspects of each case. Atterbury’s
complaint included a claim under the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”),
specifically, that “USMS violated the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) or § 706(2)(B),
because its decision to remove Atterbury from the CSO program, thus ending his
employment, without sufficient due process was contrary to his constitutional
rights.” Atterbury Complaint ¶ 58. He claimed that he had a constitutionally
protected property interest in his continued employment by virtue of the “just
cause” provision of the CBA.
Id. ¶ 48. Judge Arcara dismissed the complaint,
ruling, among other things, that Atterbury’s APA claim was really “a disguised
contract action” for which jurisdiction under the Tucker Act, see 28 U.S.C.
§ 1491(a)(1) lies in the Court of Federal Claims, see 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a). See Atterbury
v. United States Marshall [sic] Service, No. 12‒CV‒00502‒A(F),
2014 WL 3392725, at
*9‒*13 (July 10, 2014) (“Atterbury I”). Judge Arcara did not reach the merits of
Atterbury’s APA claim based on an alleged property interest in continued
employment arising from the “just cause” provision of the CBA.
8
Atterbury appealed, and we reversed. See Atterbury v. United States Marshals
Service,
805 F.3d 398, 409 (2d Cir. 2015) (“Atterbury II”). First, we noted that in Stein
v. Board of the City of New York,
792 F.2d 13 (2d Cir. 1986), we had recognized that
“an employee of a government contractor may under certain circumstances have
a constitutionally protected property interest in continued employment.”
Atterbury, 805 F.3d at 407. The plaintiff in Stein had a contract with his employer
providing that he could not be discharged except for “good cause,”
Stein, 792 F.3d
at 17, and we there concluded that this clause “created a protected property
interest” for Stein. See
id. In Atterbury II, we stated, “Atterbury’s circumstances
parallel those of the plaintiff in Stein. His complaint can fairly be read to allege that
the CBA’s ‘just cause’ provision gave him a protected property interest in
continued
employment.” 805 F.3d at 407. Finally, we ruled that Atterbury’s APA
claim “has a basis independent of any contract with the United States” and
therefore “does not fall within the scope of the Tucker Act.”
Id. at 409. We
remanded for further proceedings. See
id.
On remand, Judge Arcara considered the merits of Atterbury’s APA claim.
See Atterbury v. United States Marshals Service, No. 12‐CV‐502‒A,
2018 WL 2100600,
at *2‒12 (W.D.N.Y. May 7, 2018) (“Atterbury III”). First, he recognized that the
9
ultimate question was whether Atterbury had a legitimate claim of entitlement to
continued employment as a CSO. See
id. at *7. He then stated that “[t]hat question
cannot be answered without referring to the USMS‐Akal contact, which the CBA
explicitly references.”
Id. at *8 n.4. Judge Arcara acknowledged that section 8.1 of
the CBA provided that no employee “‘shall be disciplined or terminated without
just cause.’”
Id. (quoting CBA § 8.1). He then noted that “[s]ection 4 of the CBA
provides that a CSO may be ‘discipline[d]’ only ‘subject to the grievance and
arbitration procedures, except for those issues involving USMS rights under the
contract between the USMS and the Company,”
id. at *9 (quoting CBA § 4)
(emphasis and second brackets in original), and that section H‐3(b) of the Akal‐
USMS contract provides:
The United States Marshal Service reserves the right at all times to
determine the suitability of any Contractor employee to serve as a
CSO. Decisions rendered under any dispute resolution process . . .
shall not be binding upon the United States Marshals Service.
Id. (quoting Akal‐USMS contract § H3(b) (ellipsis in original).
Judge Arcara concluded that the CBA and the Akal‐USMS contract, read
together, created a “hybrid employment contract, unlike the contract at issue in
Stein,”
id. at *11, that the Akal‐USMS contract “vests considerable discretion in the
USMS to decide what factors are relevant to a matter of CSO discipline,”
id. at *10,
10
and that Atterbury therefore “has no property interest in his continued
employment,”
id. at *11. Judge Arcara granted the motion of USMS for summary
judgment and denied Atterbury’s motion for summary judgment. See
id. at *12.
Atterbury’s timely appeal is No. 18‒1713.
In the Southern District case, Hauschild’s complaint included the same APA
claim that Atterbury had made in the Western District case. Hauschild Complaint
¶ 61. Like Judge Arcara, Judge Seibel initially ruled that Hauschild’s APA claim
was a contract claim for which jurisdiction was precluded by the Tucker Act. See
Hauschild v. United States Marshals Service, No. 13‐CV‐5211 (CS),
2015 WL 13203452,
at *7‒*8 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 28, 2015) (“Hauschild I”). We reversed that ruling in light
of Atterbury II. See Hauschild v. United States Marshals Service, 672 F. App’x 93 (2d
Cir. 2016) (“Hauschild II”).
On remand, Judge Seibel first ruled that she could consider not only the
CBA contract but also the Akal‐USMS contract, which was referred to in the CBA.
See Hauschild v. United States Marshals Service, No. 13‒CV‒5211 (CS),
2018 WL
3014095, at *4 (S.D.N.Y. June 15, 2018) (“Hauschild III”). However, she disagreed
with Judge Arcara in Atterbury I and ruled that the “just cause” provision of the
CBA created a property interest in Hauschild’s continued employment as a CSO,
11
unimpaired by any other language in the CBA or the Akal‐USMS contract. See
id.
at *7‒*10. She therefore denied the summary judgment motion of the USMS.
Turning next to the issue of whether Hauschild’s employment was
terminated without the procedural protections of due process, Judge Seibel noted
that Hauschild was given an opportunity to provide oral and written statements
in response to each allegation against him, inferring that he must have seen the
July 12, 2012, letter from USMS to Akal, which requested an investigation, because
the language in Hauschild’s statement was nearly identical to the language in the
July 12 letter. See
id. at *11. She also noted that Hauschild was given an opportunity
to submit a post‒termination response. See
id. However, she pointed out, “The
record does not indicate that [Hauschild] was provided with Akal’s investigation
report, the information upon which the report was based, or any other information
upon which USMS based its decision.”
Id.
Judge Seibel ruled that “neither Supreme Court precedent nor Second
Circuit precedent dictates that a full adversarial hearing is necessarily required
post‐termination to comport with due process.”
Id. at *12. Then, carefully
endeavoring to apply the due process analysis of Mathews v. Eldridge,
424 U.S. 319,
344‒45 (1976), she concluded that “the risk‐of‐error factor tilts in [Hauschild’s]
12
favor, because there are concerns about witness credibility and reliability, and thus
the potential value of a hearing in which [Hauschild] can respond to the evidence
against him and perhaps confront his accusers is substantially greater.”
Id. She
therefore ruled that the process accorded Hauschild was “constitutionally
deficient,”
id., granted his motion for summary judgment as to his claim under 5
U.S.C. § 706(2)(B), and remanded to the USMS for further proceedings, see
id. *13.
The timely appeal of USMS is No. 18‒23783.
We granted Atterbury’s motion to consolidate his appeal with USMS’s
appeal in Hauschild’s case.
Discussion
Confronting carefully written opinions of two experienced District Judges
reaching opposite conclusions on the same issue arising under the same contracts,
we agree with Judge Seibel. Both judges agreed that the issue on the APA claim of
both Atterbury and Hauschild is whether they have a constitutionally protected
property interest in their continued employment as CSOs.1 They also agreed that
1 In some circumstances, an employee, terminated from one position, might not be able to
assert denial of a constitutionally protected property interest if the employer reassigns the
employee to another position with no adverse consequences. However, as we noted in Atterbury
II, “[T]he defendants have not argued, nor is there any basis in the record for us to infer, that Akal
had any non‐CSO positions open to which Atterbury could have been
reassigned.” 805 F.3d at
407 n.4.
13
this issue arose only on the APA claim under section 706(2)(B), which requires a
reviewing court to “hold unlawful and set aside agency action . . . found to be . . .
contrary to constitutional right,” and not on a free‐standing constitutional claim of
the sort recognized in Bivens v. Six Unknown Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
403 U.S. 388 (1971). Cf. Ziglar v. Abbasi,
137 S. Ct. 1843, 1857 (2017) (“[E]xpanding
the Bivens remedy is now a disfavored judicial activity.”) (quotation marks
omitted). Both judges dismissed the employees’ Bivens claims. We affirmed the
dismissal of Atterbury’s Bivens claim in Atterbury II,
see 805 F.3d at 405, and we
noted in Hauschild II that Hauschild had not sought review of the dismissal of his
Bivens claim. See 672 F. App’x at 94 n.1.
We agree with Judge Seibel that the “just cause” sentence of section 8.1 of
the CBA unequivocally creates a property interest in continued employment: “No
employee, after completion of his or her probationary period, shall be disciplined
or terminated without just cause.” CBA contract, § 8.1. As she noted, we had ruled
in Stein that a “good cause” provision in an employee’s contract with his private
employer created a property interest, “notwithstanding a provision in the contract
between the employer and the Board of Education requiring the employer to
remove an employee whom the Board deemed to fall below acceptable standards.”
14
Hauschild III,
2018 WL 3014095, at *9 (citing
Stein, 792 F.2d at 14, 17). See Abramson
v. Pataki,
278 F.3d 93, 99 (2d Cir. 2002) (“[A] protectable property interest may arise
in a situation where an employee may be removed only for cause.”).
USMS contends that the “just cause” sentence of section 8.1 of the CBA is
modified by the following sentence in that section:
“It is agreed by the parties that in instances when the employee is
removed from working under the [Akal‐USMS Contract] by the
USMS, or when the employee’s authority to work as a Court Security
Officer under the [Akal‐USMS Contract] is otherwise denied or
terminated by the USMS, or the Employee no longer satisfies the
USMS’s qualifications for his or her position, the Employee may be
terminated without recourse to the procedures under this Agreement
. . . .”
CBA § 8.1 USMS says that the effect of this sentence is to strip employees “removed
from service by an action of the USMS . . . [of] the only avenue the CBA provides
to challenge disciplinary or termination decisions,” Br. for USMS at 36. However,
this argument ignores the avenues outside of the CBA processes by which
employees can challenge a removal not supported by cause, such as a breach‐of‐
contract action against Akal under Section 301(a) of the Labor Management
Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185(a), as Judge Seibel pointed out. See Hauschild III,
2018
WL 3014095, at *8. Furthermore, the “without recourse” sentence is sensibly read
15
to do no more than exempt terminations ordered by USMS from the CBA’s dispute
resolution processes.2
Also bearing on a literal reading of the CBA’s “just cause” provision is the
fact that in other CBAs between Akal and a union representing CSOs, the “just
cause” provision explicitly exempted terminations ordered by the USMS. See
Strolberg v. United States Marshals Service, 350 F. App’x 113, 114 (9th Cir. 2009);
International Union, Security, Police, and Fire Professionals of America (SPFPA) v.
United States Marshal’s Service,
350 F. Supp. 2d 522, 534 (S.D.N.Y. 2004).
Finally, we reject the argument of the USMS that section H‐3(b) of the Akal‐
USMS contract somehow modifies the “just cause” provision of the CBA. Section
H‐3(b) provides, “The United States Marshals Service reserves the right at all times
to determine the suitability of any Contractor employee to serve as a CSO.”
Preliminarily, we do not agree with Judge Arcara that the Akal‐USMS contract can
modify the unambiguous “just cause” language of the CBA simply because there
is a reference (although not an incorporation by reference) to the contract in the
CBA. More importantly, our decision in Stein has already rejected a similar
argument. As we noted in Atterbury II, “the ‘just cause’ provision in [Stein’s]
2In Atterbury II, we noted the existence of the “without recourse” sentence, but expressed
no view on its significance because USMS had not relied on it on
appeal. 805 F.3d at 407 n.3.
16
employment contract created a protected property interest” and “the city had
transgressed on that claim of entitlement by disqualifying the plaintiff under the
‘good moral character’ provision” of the employer’s contract with the
city. 805 F.3d
at 407. Similarly here, the “suitability” provision of the Akal‐USMS contract would
transgress the employee’s protected property interest if it were permitted to
override the “just cause” provision of the CBA. Judge Seibel relied on this
understanding of Stein. See Hauschild III,
2018 WL 3014095, at *9.
We conclude that both Atterbury and Hauschild had a constitutionally
protected property interest in their continued employment as CSOs. See Wilson v.
MVM, Inc.,
475 F.3d 166, 178 (3d Cir. 2007) (concluding that, with respect to CSOs,
“a private employment contract with a ‘just cause’ termination clause can create a
constitutionally protected property interest”); cf.
Stein, 792 F.2d at 15‒17.
We also conclude that the procedures USMS used for the terminations of
employment of both Atterbury and Hauschild have thus far not comported with
the requirements of due process. Although Atterbury and Hauschild were
informed of the initial misconduct allegations that gave rise to Akal’s
investigations, USMS provided no explanation of the reasons for its decisions that
they be removed from the CSO program. Instead, it sent both Atterbury and
17
Hauschild the same form letter, which stated only that USMS “d[id] not concur
with Akal’s findings and proposed disciplinary strategy” and that each CSO’s
“actions have undermined the District’s confidence and trust in [his] ability to
effectively perform his duties.” Neither letter identified which of Akal’s findings
it rejected. See Supp. App’x at 15, 323. As to Atterbury, who was the subject of one
misconduct allegation, which Akal found unsubstantiated, USMS did not identify
the findings of Akal with which it disagreed or the actions of Atterbury on which
USMS relied. And, since the facts were in dispute, some form of hearing was
required. As to Hauschild, who was the subject of eleven misconduct allegations,
only one of which Akal regarded as substantial, USMS did not indicate whether it
based its decision on the substantiated allegation, on any of the unsubstantiated
allegations, or both. And, as Judge Seibel recognized, to the extent that facts were
in dispute, some form of hearing was required.
Remedy. There remains for consideration the appropriate remedy. In
Hauschild II, we said only that we “remand the matter for further proceedings
consistent with this order.” 672 F. App’x at 96. Because that decision ruled only on
the District Court’s jurisdiction, that decretal language was sufficient. However,
18
now that we have upheld Atterbury’s and Hauschild’s claims on the merits, we
need to make our remand slightly more precise.
Because the claims we have sustained arise under the APA, which permits
review of agency action, the district courts in both cases must remand to USMS for
further proceedings. That is the procedural route Judge Seibel ordered to be
followed, see Hauschild III,
2018 WL 3014095, at *13, and is the route sought to be
followed by Atterbury, see Br. for Atterbury at 48.
Conclusion
In Atterbury’s case, No. 18‒1713, we reverse and remand to the District
Court with direction to remand to USMS for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion; in Hauschild’s case, No. 18‒2378, we affirm and remand to the
District Court with direction to remand to USMS for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
19