SAAD, J.
This is the third time we have addressed this case on appeal. Our Court originally adjudicated this alleged Whistleblowers' Protection Act
The Michigan Supreme Court reversed, and disavowed what we thought was the principle articulated in Shallal on the dispositive nature of Whitman's private motivations.
Because our narrow 2011 ruling regarding Whitman's private motivation meant that we did not look at the larger—and, to our minds, more important—question of whether Whitman's conduct objectively promoted the public interest, we addressed and decided this issue on remand in 2014.
We further held, once again, but with fuller explanation, that Whitman's alleged whistleblowing activity was clearly not the reason the mayor refused to renew his four-year term as chief of police. Instead, the mayor's refusal to renew Whitman's four-year political appointment was a direct result of Whitman's misconduct during his previous term—misconduct that only came to the mayor's knowledge during his postelection review of his team of political appointees. It was this review, and the information it revealed, that motivated the mayor to refuse to reappoint Whitman to another four-year term as chief of police.
The day after we issued our second decision on appeal, the Michigan Supreme Court issued Wurtz v. Beecher Metro Dist.,
Therefore, we now hold that Whitman's claim must be dismissed for any one or combination of the following reasons: (1) Wurtz requires its dismissal, (2) objectively, Whitman's conduct did not advance the public interest, but instead, it ran contrary to the public interest, and (3) the mayor's refusal to reappoint Whitman, a political appointee, to another four-year term as police chief was because of Whitman's misconduct in office, not the whistleblowing activity that allegedly took place long before his four-year term as chief had ended.
A trial court's ruling on a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) is reviewed de novo on appeal. Garg v. Macomb Co. Community Mental Health Servs., 472 Mich. 263, 272, 696 N.W.2d 646 (2005). "When reviewing the denial of a motion for JNOV, the appellate court views the evidence and all legitimate inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party to determine if a party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Genna v. Jackson, 286 Mich.App. 413, 417, 781 N.W.2d 124 (2009).
MCL 15.362, the provision of the WPA under which plaintiff brought suit, states:
In Wurtz, the Michigan Supreme Court clarified that these protections do not apply to job applicants and prospective employees,
Accordingly, when it adjudicates a claim under the WPA, Wurtz emphasizes the plaintiff's employment status at the time the alleged WPA violation occurred.
The Michigan Supreme Court applied these principles to Wurtz, a contract employee who worked for a local water and sewage district under a fixed term.
In sum, Wurtz holds that when a plaintiff alleges that a defendant violated
The charter of the city of Burton provides that:
The chief of police is among the city's administrative officers. Burton Charter § 6.1(a). Most administrative officers, including the chief of police,
Accordingly, for the chief of police to continue his employment after a mayoral election, he must be reappointed or reaffirmed to the position by the mayor, within 30 days of the mayor's election. This reappointment mechanism effectively means that a chief of police serves a four-year term, albeit "at the pleasure of the Mayor."
Here, Whitman alleges that he engaged in protected activity under the WPA—his purported whistleblowing regarding the city's initial refusal to compensate him for unused sick leave—during the course of his four-year appointment as police chief. He says that the mayor retaliated against him for this whistleblowing, in violation of the WPA, when the mayor declined to reappoint him as police chief after the mayor's reelection in November 2007.
Under the express holding of Wurtz, Whitman may not bring a claim under the WPA.
Accordingly, Whitman, as a political appointee seeking reappointment, was not subject to the protections of the WPA at the time of the alleged WPA violation. Thus, his suit under the WPA has no merit. We therefore reverse the trial court's denial of defendants' request for JNOV.
Whitman is not entitled to protection under the WPA for an additional reason: his conduct, as an objective matter, did not advance the public interest.
In this case, Whitman's actions are unquestionably and objectively contrary to the public interest. That is, regardless of his personal motivation, Whitman's whistleblowing effort sought enforcement of a law that harmed, not advanced, the public interest.
The law in question, Burton Ordinance 68-25C, § 8(I) ("68-C"), is not a law that protects the public interest. Rather, it is an ordinance that reads much like a standard, garden-variety collective-bargaining provision for wages and benefits.
The waiver of the benefit contained in 68-C, which plaintiff characterizes as a violation of law, has its origins in a severe financial crisis that afflicted the city of Burton in the early 2000s.
Only one department head objected to this public-spirited waiver of the perk—Whitman, then the chief of police.
We say "misuses" advisedly because the WPA is designed to ferret out violations of law that injure the public, especially when applied to public-sector defendants.
Also, whistleblowing assumes that an employee risks retaliation for uncovering the public employer's misconduct. Here, there simply was no misconduct or illegality. The only conduct of the city employees that implicated 68-C was the department heads' decision to waive the benefit provided by the ordinance, and Whitman's refusal to honor that waiver. This is an employee's insistence, plain and simple, that he get his perk—not an uncovering of corruption or illegality. And this disagreement about the legal effects of the waiver was satisfied, in Whitman's favor, after the city sought legal counsel. Accordingly, Whitman's citation of the ordinance was not whistleblowing. It was simply a disagreement regarding the proper interpretation of the city of Burton's labor laws. That is, there was a disagreement about whether the administrative team could waive the perk provided by 68-C, and whether Whitman was bound by the group's waiver. It had nothing to do with whistleblowing whatsoever.
That is why this is not the usual case. Reporting a violation of law normally constitutes conduct in the public interest.
Because he was not a whistleblower under the WPA, no juror could have legally found in favor of Whitman on his WPA retaliation claim. The trial court's denial of defendants' request for JNOV is accordingly reversed.
We also held in our 2011 opinion, Whitman I, that Whitman's alleged whistleblowing activity from late 2003 to early 2004 was not the legal cause of the mayor's decision to not reappoint him as police chief in late 2007.
As noted, in 2003, the mayor's administrative team voted to voluntarily take a wage freeze and forgo the perk of accumulated sick days to save the taxpayers money, and to avoid layoffs and reduced services.
A third party who attended Whitman's June 2004 meeting with the mayor made handwritten notes of the discussion, which state: "Mayor = No Trust—68-C (vacation)—lack of communication[.]"
Whitman's claim has a serious temporal problem: he alleges that he was not reappointed in late 2007 for events that took place in late 2003 and early 2004. Our courts have taken pains to stress that the length of time between an alleged whistleblowing and an adverse employment action is not dispositive on the issue of retaliation—when those two events are close in time (i.e., days, weeks, or a few months apart).
Here, there is an enormous temporal gap between Whitman's alleged whistleblowing and the supposed retaliation, which belies any causal connection between the two. As noted, Whitman's demands to receive compensation under 68-C took place in 2003 and early 2004. The mayor declined to reappoint him as police chief in November 2007—almost four years after the supposed whistleblowing. Of course, the mayor, as the top executive officer of the city of Burton, could have terminated Whitman at any time.
It strains credulity to the breaking point to suggest, as Whitman does, that the mayor—who had the power to dismiss Whitman at any time, for any reason or no reason—was so upset with his alleged whistleblowing in late 2003 and early 2004 but allowed Whitman to continue as police chief for all of 2004, 2005, 2006, and into late 2007, and only then decided to "retaliate" against him. Indeed, when viewed in the context of the typically close working relationship between a mayor and his chief of police, and the fact that the chief of police, as a member of the mayor's executive team, serves at the pleasure of the mayor, Whitman's allegations take leave of reality and enter the theatre of the absurd.
The long period of time between Whitman's supposed whistleblowing and the mayor's decision not to reappoint him involves another aspect that is fatal to his claim: there are numerous breaks in the causal chain. Whitman's first complaints regarding the administrative team's waiver of 68-C in March 2003 clearly did not cause the mayor to retaliate. Indeed, the mayor reappointed Whitman as the chief of police in November of that same year. Whitman's further attempts to secure compensation in January 2004 were addressed by the mayor, who first sought the advice of city counsel, and later, outside labor counsel. The mayor complied with that legal advice by paying Whitman almost $7,000 in additional compensation. And Whitman's 2004 dispute with the mayor ended amicably—he remained chief for more than three years following that meeting, and by his own admission, he never heard mention of the 68-C dispute from the mayor and never was retaliated against during that time period. These intervening events—all positive developments for Whitman—raise serious doubts that his 68-C whistleblowing was a "determining factor" or "caus[e] in fact" of the mayor's decision to not reappoint him. Matras, 424 Mich. at 682, 385 N.W.2d 586.
In any event, Whitman has provided no evidence to refute the mayor's stated and compelling reasons for not reappointing him—Whitman engaged in serious misconduct and misused his office. After his reelection in November 2007, the mayor reevaluated his entire administrative team pursuant to the mandates of Burton Charter § 6.2(b).
Whitman made no specific effort before this Court to deny these allegations against him other than to state, self-servingly and without support, that they were "merely a pretext," and to assert "that his personnel file demonstrate[d] that his performance as a police chief was good, that he had received numerous awards, and that there were never any disciplinary actions against him." Whitman II, 493 Mich. at 309-310, 831 N.W.2d 223. Whitman's only proffered "evidence" of a causal connection between his supposed whistleblowing and the mayor's decision to not reappoint him was the statement the mayor made in December 2007—after the mayor had already made his decision, but before its public announcement—in which the mayor supposedly told senior police officers that he lacked trust in Whitman. The mayor cited as one example Whitman's refusal to keep his word, and along with the entire administrative team, to waive his unused sick-day compensation under 68-C.
Whitman's assertion must be weighed against the other factors in this case: (1) the mayor's view of Whitman's 68-C demands as a trust issue, not a retaliation issue, and certainly not whistleblowing, (2) the almost four-year interval between Whitman's alleged whistleblowing and the purported retaliation, (3) the causal breaks in Whitman's claim, and (4) the allegations of Whitman's extensive misconduct. When Whitman's assertion is weighed against these factors, the evidence is overwhelming that his so-called whistleblowing had no connection to the mayor's decision to not reappoint him as the police chief. There is simply no way that a reasonable fact-finder, even when "view[ing] the evidence and all legitimate inferences . . . in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party," Genna, 286 Mich.App. at 417, 781 N.W.2d 124, could find that retaliation was "one of the reasons which made a difference in determining whether or not to [discharge] the plaintiff." Matras, 424 Mich. at 682, 385 N.W.2d 586 (emphasis added; alteration in original).
The dissent's analysis betrays a basic misunderstanding of the nature and function of executive appointments in governmental administration. Again, the mayor of the city of Burton is required by the city charter to "reaffirm or appoint . . . administrative officers" to the city administration "within thirty (30) days from his election." Burton Charter § 6.2(b). The city council
Here, as we have explained in our opinion, Wurtz mandates that Whitman's suit be dismissed. The mayor was reelected in November 2007. Upon the mayor's reelection, Whitman's term as police chief, which began in 2003, effectively ended. The city charter required the mayor to reaffirm or appoint a police chief and to submit his suggestion to the city council for approval. Thus, at that stage, Whitman was merely a candidate for the position of police chief. Accordingly, Whitman cannot now use the WPA to sue the city for the mayor's ultimate decision to not reappoint him as police chief, because the WPA does not protect job applicants or prospective employees. In other words, Whitman may not bring a WPA claim against the city of Burton for the mayor's decision to not reappoint him to an office that, as a matter of law, he no longer held at the time.
The dissent attempts to escape this obvious outcome with irrelevant appeals to emotion ("[Whitman] was a full-time, 32 ½-year employee with the city of Burton"), misstatements of fact ("Smiley removed [Whitman] on November 27, 2007"), and basic misinterpretations of key terms ("[Whitman] enjoyed an `indefinite' term of employment [as chief of police]").
The last of these is particularly egregious. The true, noncolloquial, definition of "indefinite" is "not definite"—i.e., "having no exact limits." Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (2014). This is exactly the way in which the word is used in the city of Burton's city charter:
Instead of using the correct dictionary definition of "indefinite" and adhering to the broader context of the sentence in which the word is used in the city of Burton's charter, the dissent interprets "indefinite" to mean "forever"—i.e., that Whitman had an expectation of continued employment for an unlimited period of time.
This interpretation is the exact opposite of what the word "indefinite" actually means in the context of the city charter. Again, an "indefinite" term of employment is one that is "not definite"—i.e., one that can end at any time—today, tomorrow, or any time before the conclusion of the four-year term. Accordingly, the city charter's use of "indefinite" means that while a police chief may be employed for a full four-year term, he serves at the pleasure of the mayor and may be terminated at any time
Finally, the dissent attempts to confuse matters by insinuating that we do not recognize that at-will employees are protected under the WPA. Of course we recognize the obvious proposition that an at-will employee, like any other employee, is protected under the WPA—for retaliatory actions taken against him when he is employed. Here, defendants never took retaliatory action against Whitman while he was employed as chief of police. Rather, the mayor chose to not reappoint Whitman after the mayor's reelection in November 2007, at which time Whitman became a candidate for the (then open) position of police chief.
We hold that Whitman's claim must be dismissed for any one or a combination of the following reasons: (1) Wurtz requires its dismissal, (2) objectively, Whitman's conduct did not advance the public interest, but instead ran contrary to the public interest, and (3) the mayor's refusal to reappoint Whitman, a political appointee, to another four-year term as police chief, was a result of Whitman's egregious misconduct, not the alleged whistleblowing activity that took place long before his four-year term as chief had ended.
Accordingly, because no reasonable fact-finder could legally find in favor of Whitman on his claim under the WPA, we reverse the trial court's denial of defendants' motion for JNOV and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
O'CONNELL, P.J., concurred with SAAD, J.
BECKERING, J. (dissenting).
As noted by the majority, this matter is before the Court for a third time. Once again, I must disagree with the majority opinion. In addition to my conclusion that Wurtz v. Beecher Metro Dist., 495 Mich. 242, 848 N.W.2d 121 (2014), does not impact the outcome of this case, I disagree with the majority's analysis regarding the requirements of the Whistleblowers' Protection Act (WPA), MCL 15.361 et seq., and the majority's attempt to engraft language that does not exist into the act. In its first opinion in this case, the majority held that "a critical inquiry" in determining the validity of a claim under the WPA "is whether the employee acted in good faith and with a desire to inform the public on matters of public concern. . . ." Whitman v. City of Burton, 293 Mich.App. 220, 230, 810 N.W.2d 71 (2011) (Whitman I) (quotation marks and citations omitted). As the Michigan Supreme Court noted at the time of its first remand in this matter, "[n]othing in the statutory language of the WPA addresses the employee's motivation for engaging in protected conduct, nor does any language in the act mandate that the employee's primary motivation be a desire to inform the public of matters of public concern." Whitman v. City of Burton, 493 Mich. 303, 306, 831 N.W.2d 223 (2013) (Whitman II).
The primary purpose of the Supreme Court's latest remand order in this case, Whitman v. City of Burton, 497 Mich. 896, 855 N.W.2d 746 (2014) (Whitman IV), was to enable this Court to determine whether Wurtz impacts the outcome. In Wurtz, 495 Mich. at 244, 848 N.W.2d 121, our Supreme Court evaluated whether the WPA applies to a fixed-term contract employee "whose term of employment has expired without being subject to a specific adverse employment action identified in the WPA and who seeks reengagement for a new term of employment. . . ." Noting that such an employee "occupies the same legal position as a prospective employee," and that "[t]he WPA, by its express language, only applies to current employees" and "offers no protection to prospective employees," the Court concluded that the WPA had no application. Id. The Supreme Court made clear, however, that its ruling did not affect the rights of at-will employees and others who enjoy an expectation of ongoing employment and an expectation that they will not be fired or otherwise discriminated against for reasons violative of the WPA. Id. at 256-257, 848 N.W.2d 121. It further clarified that its ruling did not address contracts with a "renewal clause imposing some obligation or duty on the employer to act." Id. at 258 n. 32, 848 N.W.2d 121.
I respectfully dissent from the ruling of my colleagues because I would find that Whitman's employment situation was considerably
In Wurtz, the plaintiff, Richard Wurtz, entered into a fixed-term employment contract with the Beecher Metropolitan District, which manages water and sewage for a portion of Genesee County. Wurtz, 495 Mich. at 244-245, 848 N.W.2d 121. Wurtz contracted to serve a 10-year term as the district administrator; he drafted the contract himself because he was serving as the district's attorney at the time he entered into the agreement. Id. at 245, 848 N.W.2d 121. Per the terms of the contract, Wurtz served from February 1, 2000, to February 1, 2010. Id. Notably, the contract did not contain an extension or renewal clause. Id. at 248, 848 N.W.2d 121. Wurtz's relationship with the board members soured and became "tumultuous" in the two years before his contract expired, which he claimed was due in part to his whistleblowing activities. Id. at 245-247, 848 N.W.2d 121. As his fixed term neared its expiration, Wurtz solicited the board to extend his contract, and he warned the board members that if they did not extend his contract beyond the 10-year period as he wished, he would consider their failure to do so retaliation under the WPA for actions he took against them during his tenure. Id. at 246-247, 848 N.W.2d 121. The board voted not to extend Wurtz's contract, and instead, allowed it to expire per the terms of the contract. Id. at 247, 848 N.W.2d 121. As the Supreme Court emphasized in its opinion, "[o]ne essential and undisputed fact bears emphasis: Wurtz suffered no adverse consequences in the context of his self-drafted 10-year contract." Id. He finished his term of employment with no change in his employment status. After the contract expired, Wurtz sued the district and three of its board members "alleging a violation of the WPA and wrongful termination in violation of public policy." Id. The trial court granted the district's motion for summary disposition, and this Court reversed in a split decision. Id. at 248, 848 N.W.2d 121.
The Supreme Court granted leave to appeal and framed one of the legal issues in dispute as "whether the plaintiff suffered an adverse employment action under the Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA), MCL 15.361 et seq., when the defendants declined to renew or extend the plaintiff's employment contract, which did not contain a renewal clause beyond the expiration of its ten year term[.]" Wurtz v. Beecher Metro. Dist., 494 Mich. 862, 831 N.W.2d 235 (2013) (emphasis added). In its analysis, the Supreme Court concluded that "a contract employee seeking a new term of employment should be treated the same as a prospective employee for purposes of the WPA." Wurtz, 495 Mich. at 249, 848 N.W.2d 121. Thus, "[t]he question then becomes whether a spurned job applicant can bring a claim under the WPA." Id. The Court held that "the WPA,
The relevant provision of the WPA, MCL 15.362, states as follows:
Our Supreme Court noted that the WPA "only applies to individuals who currently have the status of an `employee,'" Wurtz, 495 Mich. at 252, 848 N.W.2d 121, and because Wurtz made "no claim that his employment contract was in any way breached or that he was subject to a specific adverse employment action enumerated by the WPA during his contract term," his claim was not covered by the WPA. Id. at 252 n. 16, 848 N.W.2d 121. The Court noted that "[w]hile the ADEA[
Our Supreme Court emphasized, however, the limited nature of its holding and made clear that the WPA "does protect" against prohibited employer actions both at-will employees, who "stand[] squarely within the WPA's protections," and employees working under fixed-term contracts with respect to an employee's service under such a contract. Id. at 256-257, 848 N.W.2d 121.
That brings us to the present case. Whitman testified at trial that he was first hired by the city of Burton as a civilian
Smiley testified that pursuant to the city charter, within 30 days of a mayor's election, the mayor must submit the names of "the clerk, the fire chief, the police chief, the assessor, [and] the treasurer . . . to the City Council" to be confirmed by the council. In this regard, the city charter provides that city administrative officers are "the Mayor, the Clerk, the Treasurer, the Attorney, the Assessor, the Chief of Police, the Fire Chief, and a Board of Review." Burton Charter § 6.1(a).
Section 6.1(c) provides that "[t]he terms of all administrative officers, except the Mayor, shall be indefinite." (Emphasis added.)
Section 6.2(b) provides that
I disagree with the majority's conclusion that this case fits so neatly into the rule established in Wurtz. I begin by noting the significant ways in which this case is different from Wurtz. The plaintiff in Wurtz was employed pursuant to a 10-year contract with no renewal clause. The contract contained no provisions for changing its end-date or for otherwise renewing the term of Wurtz's employment. Thus, nothing required the employer to make a choice about the plaintiff's employment; the employment simply expired. The end of the plaintiff's employment relationship was a fait accompli. Any hope the plaintiff had of employment after the expiration of the 10-year term was in striking up a new term of employment. In this sense, given the terms of the plaintiff's employment agreement, he was nothing more than a prospective employee. As the dissenting opinion (which was ultimately embraced by the Supreme Court) pointed out
I respectfully suggest that the instant case falls squarely within the exception set forth in the dissenting opinion of our Court in Wurtz, and as expressly carved out by our Supreme Court when it held that the ruling in Wurtz dealt only with a fixed term contract that "did not contain a renewal clause beyond the expiration of its ten-year term." Wurtz, 494 Mich. at 862, 831 N.W.2d 235 (emphasis added). See also Wurtz, 495 Mich. at 258 n. 32, 848 N.W.2d 121. Here, in contrast to Wurtz's fixed-term contract, the city of Burton's charter contained a clause providing that the chief of police's term of employment "shall be indefinite," § 6.1(c), as well as a clause pertaining to the renewal of that "indefinte [sic] term[]," § 6.2(b). Notably, § 6.2(b) of the city of Burton's charter provided that Whitman's employment was indefinite, "except that the Mayor shall reaffirm or appoint those administrative officers and other appointive officers provided in this charter within thirty (30) days from his election, and give Council notice of same."
It is the existence of the choice, mandated by the renewal clause, that takes this case outside the ambit of Wurtz and brings Whitman within the protections of the WPA. Under the city of Burton's charter, Whitman's term of employment was expressly and repeatedly defined as "indefinite," and it was only to be reevaluated at the time a mayor won reelection. Like any at-will employee, Whitman could certainly be fired at any time, as he served at the pleasure of the mayor—this simply means that the mayor was delegated the authority to choose several of the city's employees who served as his or her administrative officers. In general, Whitman was, for all intents and purposes, an at-will employee, and such employees are protected by the WPA. Wurtz, 495 Mich. at 256-257, 848 N.W.2d 121. Notably, upon a mayor's reelection, § 6.2(b) imposed an obligation or duty on the mayor to act and to make a decision about his administrative officers' continued employment. Section
Although police chiefs often serve at the pleasure of their mayor, it is also true that police officers often attain such a position after years of service in law enforcement, and it becomes the capstone of their careers. Many serve for one or more decades in the position and retire from it at the end of their careers. To be sure, Whitman was not entitled to serve as long as he wished in the role of chief of police. He could be fired at any time and for any reason that did not violate the law. But given the language of the city of Burton's charter, I would hold that Whitman was serving within the bookends of his employment and that the WPA protected him from being fired or not reaffirmed by Smiley based on any discriminatory reasons. To interpret the applicability of the WPA as the majority suggests, in addition to being incorrect in my opinion, would potentially compromise the role of the chief of police, as the police chief could jeopardize his or her employment if he or she did not follow the mandates of the mayor, which might cause the police chief to ignore a violation of a law or regulation or rule so as to not risk being fired. That cannot be what the enactors of the WPA intended.
Because Whitman held an indefinite term of employment that carried with it the express option of being continued by reaffirmation, I find that any decision to terminate that employment, if motivated by protected activity, was a violation of the WPA. "The underlying purpose of the WPA is protection of the public. The statute meets this objective by protecting the whistleblowing employee and by removing barriers that may interdict employee efforts to report violations or suspected violations of the law." Pace v. Edel-Harrelson, 309 Mich.App. 256, 264, 870 N.W.2d 745 (2015) (quotation marks and citations omitted; emphasis added). In light of the purpose of the WPA, I decline to adopt the majority's narrow reading of the act, which would allow an employer to discriminate against an employee whose term of employment is expressly subject to a renewal clause, yet face no consequences under the WPA for taking a discriminatory action.
In light of the Supreme Court's opinion in Whitman II, 493 Mich. 303, 831 N.W.2d 223, and its decision to "VACATE the judgment of the Court of Appeals" following the first remand, and to remand the case for a second time to consider the impact of Wurtz, Whitman IV, 497 Mich. 896, 855 N.W.2d 746, the slate has been wiped clean of this Court's earlier binding opinions. The majority duly fulfills its obligation to reconsider this case in light of Wurtz. But in addition, the majority readopts nearly verbatim its earlier analysis after the first remand in this case, Whitman III, 305 Mich.App. at 22-33, 850 N.W.2d 621. As noted in the introductory paragraph of this dissenting opinion, I take issue with the majority's attempt to engraft a requirement into MCL 15.362 that does not exist. MCL 15.362 provides that
Nothing in the plain language of the statute requires a court or a jury to decide as a matter of fact whether the law or regulation or rule objectively advances the public interest. No qualitative analysis is required to decide which law or regulation or rule is worthy of being covered by the WPA. The plain language of MCL 15.362 does not remotely suggest that some laws are included and others are not. As the Supreme Court pointed out in Whitman II, 493 Mich. at 311-312, 831 N.W.2d 223:
The plain and unambiguous language of the WPA, as is, "meets its objective of protecting the public," id. at 318, 831 N.W.2d 223, and "further judicial construction" is neither required nor permitted, id. at 312, 831 N.W.2d 223. The Supreme Court also admonished that "there is no `primary motivation' or `desire to inform the public' requirement contained within the WPA," and such a requirement cannot be judicially imposed—"[t]o do so would violate the fundamental rule of statutory
Despite the Supreme Court's explicit and repeated admonitions not to consider a plaintiff's motives when determining whether a plaintiff has engaged in protected activity under the WPA—because such motive is irrelevant to the issue—the majority opinion attempts to place an invisibility cloak over its effort to do just that. Imposing on MCL 15.362 a new, judicially created requirement to evaluate whether, in fact, the law or regulation or rule at issue in the WPA action actually serves the public interest, brings motive—or purpose—back into the equation. For example, the majority describes Whitman's attempt to enforce Ordinance 68-C as a "(mis)use" of the WPA. They opine that Whitman's conduct "objectively disserved the public interest," that he "objectively served his interest, but harmed the public's," and that "[t]his is an employee's insistence, plain and simple, that he get his perk. . . ." As attributed to Shakespeare, "a rose, by any other name," does not alter what it is. The majority attempts to add the sweet fragrance of a new name to its judicially created imposition: assessing the objectives of the plaintiff and determining whether his or her actions actually advance the public interest. Nothing in the plain language of MCL 15.362 supports this additional requirement.
Even if the majority has correctly engrafted a new requirement into the language of MCL 15.362, I disagree that Whitman's actions were "unquestionably and objectively contrary to the public interest" and "harmed, not advanced, the public interest," as characterized by the majority. As I noted in my prior dissenting opinions, seeking to balance a budget through violating one of the city's own ordinances hardly seems to serve the public interest. Whitman I, 293 Mich.App. at 248, 810 N.W.2d 71 (BECKERING, J., dissenting). As the chief of police, Whitman was fulfilling his duty to uphold the law, which was certainly in the public interest. Id. The public interest is served when a violation of the law is reported. Whitman III, 305 Mich.App. at 46, 850 N.W.2d 621 (BECKERING, J., dissenting); see also Dolan v. Continental Airlines/Continental Express, 454 Mich. 373, 378 n. 9, 563 N.W.2d 23 (1997). And while the city may save expenses by ignoring the requirements of Ordinance 68-C, the public will literally not be served on the days the public servants subject to the ordinance are absent from work, taking their allotted sick, personal, and vacation time in light of the mayor's warning to "use it or lose it." Whitman III, 305 Mich.App. at 47 n. 4, 850 N.W.2d 621 (BECKERING, J., dissenting).
I could, like the majority, reiterate the arguments I set forth in my prior dissenting opinions. To do so, however, would be purely repetitive, as nothing has changed the analysis. Consequently, to spare the reader the redundancy, I adopt and remain with my previous findings and conclusions on all pertinent appellate issues in this case. See Whitman I, 293 Mich.App. 220, 810 N.W.2d 71; Whitman III, 305 Mich.App. 16, 850 N.W.2d 621.
Because I conclude that Wurtz does not affect the outcome of this case, I would affirm the trial court's order awarding judgment to Whitman in keeping with the jury's verdict. As set forth in my prior dissents, the trial court did not err in denying defendants' motion for JNOV. See Whitman I, 293 Mich.App. at 237-239, 810 N.W.2d 71 (BECKERING, J., dissenting); Whitman III, 305 Mich.App. at 41-47, 850 N.W.2d 621
Because we did not analyze the overarching issue in our 2011 opinion—that is, whether the WPA only protects conduct that objectively advances the public interest—the Supreme Court did not address that issue in its 2013 decision. Because the Supreme Court instructed us in its 2013 remand to consider "all remaining issues on which [we] did not formally rule," we discussed this aspect of the WPA in the opinion issued, and vacated, in 2014, and do so again here. Id. at 321, 831 N.W.2d 223.
In any event, our Court has noted the distinction between an employee's personal motives in reporting legal violations and reporting that actually advanced the public interest. See Phinney v. Perlmutter, 222 Mich.App. 513, 554, 564 N.W.2d 532 (1997) ("In addition, whether plaintiff sought personal gain in making her reports, rather than the public good, is legally irrelevant and need not be addressed except to note that the reporting of misconduct in an agency receiving public money is in the public interest.") (emphasis added). Phinney's holding on an unrelated matter was abrogated by Garg, 472 Mich. at 290, 696 N.W.2d 646. (Garg overruled Sumner v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 427 Mich. 505, 398 N.W.2d 368 (1986), on which Phinney relied for its analysis of the continuing violations doctrine.)