FRANK D. WHITNEY, Chief District Judge.
THIS MATTER is before the Court on Defendant, City of Charlotte's Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law (Doc. No. 89) and supporting memorandum (Doc. No. 90). Plaintiff filed a memorandum in opposition (Doc. No. 91), and the matter is ripe for review. The Court finds that a hearing is not necessary to resolve the issues and, for the reasons that follow, DENIES Defendant's Motion.
In the interests of judicial economy, the Court declines to provide a thorough recitation of the testimony, evidence, and arguments presented at the six-day trial before a jury in this matter. In sum, the causes of action centered on Defendant's termination of Plaintiff, a fire investigator for the Charlotte Fire Department ("CFD"). Defendant contended that it terminated Plaintiff because she violated its social media policy by posting two racially inflammatory comments on Facebook ("Facebook Posts"). Plaintiff, on the other hand, claimed that Defendant actually fired her because she complained to her father-in-law and City Councilwoman Claire Fallon about health and safety issues in a new CFD building and about Defendant's mismanagement of money related to that building ("Building Complaints").
Relevant here, Plaintiff brought two causes of action against Defendant alleging that Defendant retaliated against her for exercising her First Amendment right to free speech ("First Amendment Retaliation"): one claim was based on her Facebook Posts, and the other claim was based on her Building Complaints.
With regard to Plaintiff's claim for First Amendment Retaliation based on the Building Complaints, the Court asked the jury five questions, including two special interrogatories to assist the Court in determining whether the Building Complaints constituted protected speech. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Plaintiff, finding that (a) Plaintiff's Building Complaints were a motivating factor in Defendant's decision to terminate her employment, (b) Defendant would not have terminated Plaintiff's employment in the absence of the Building Complaints, and (c) Plaintiff was entitled to $309,692 on that claim. (Doc. No. 86). The jury further found that (d) it was reasonable to believe that Plaintiff's Building Complaints caused, or could have caused, disharmony or disruption in the workplace, (e) but it was not reasonable to believe they impaired her ability to perform her duties. (Doc. No. 86).
Defendant renewed its motion for judgment as a matter of law, arguing that the Court should rule that the Building Complaints were not protected by the First Amendment, a question of law that the Court must answer before judgment can be entered in this case. The Court ordered the parties to brief the matter. Discussion of other background information and evidence is set forth more fully below as needed to explain the Court's decision.
A party that moved for judgment as a matter of law under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a) before the case is submitted to the jury may renew its motion after trial under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b). A Rule 50(b) motion is properly granted "if the nonmoving party failed to make a showing on an essential element of his case with respect to which he had the burden of proof."
The legal principles governing First Amendment claims by public employees are well-settled. "A state cannot condition public employment on a basis that infringes the employee's constitutionally protected interest in freedom of expression."
With these principles in mind, the Fourth Circuit recently reaffirmed that to state a claim for First Amendment retaliation, a plaintiff must satisfy the three-prong test set forth in
The first question of law is whether Plaintiff, a public employee, spoke as a private citizen upon a matter of public concern. The Fourth Circuit has instructed that:
In addition, a public employee speaks as a private citizen when she "make[s] public statements outside the course of performing [her] official duties," as opposed to "speak[ing] pursuant to employment responsibilities."
Here, Plaintiff's Building Complaints addressed matters of public concern. Plaintiff sent two separate e-mails containing her Building Complaints to City Councilwoman Claire Fallon, an elected public official. The e-mails included Plaintiff's allegations that CFD was mismanaging public funds related to a new CFD building and that the new building was not safe. (Doc. No. 91-3). For example, Plaintiff wrote that "Our $1.9 million for our building has fluctuated and at one time we only had a few hundred thousand to work with! No one could figure out where all that money went." (Doc. No. 91-3). In a more detailed list, Plaintiff expressed concern that the building was not ADA compliant, would not pass building or electrical inspections, and had "questionable" air quality. (Doc. No. 91-3). Considering Plaintiff and City Councilwoman Fallon testified that members of the public could visit the new building for tours and meetings (Doc. No. 90, Ex. B, p. 18, ll. 2-5; Doc. No. 90-4, p. 13, ll. 2-13), it is reasonable to infer that Plaintiff was concerned not just for her own conditions of employment, but for the safety of any person who could enter the space, including members of the public.
It is commonsensical that members of the community would be truly concerned with Plaintiff's allegations that the City of Charlotte was mismanaging taxpayer dollars and that a new fire department building was unsafe for both fire department employees and members of the public. Whether Plaintiff's allegations were actually true is irrelevant.
Moreover, Plaintiff spoke as a private citizen when making these Building Complaints. Plaintiff testified that her job as a fire investigator was to investigate the cause of fires and write reports of her findings. (Doc. No. 91-4, p. 8, ll. 14-21). She also assisted fire educators with their fire education program. (Doc. No. 91-4, p. 8, ll. 23-24). Her Building Complaints, which she sent to an elected public official with no employment authority over her, were outside the course of her official duties and employment responsibilities. Accordingly, because Plaintiff established as a matter of law that she was speaking as a private citizen on a matter of public concern, she satisfied the first prong of the
Under the
Defendant argues as a general matter that its interest in the promotion of camaraderie and efficiency as well as internal harmony and trust outweighs the public interest in Plaintiff's speech. Defendant contends that the jury determined that "the balancing test tipped in [Defendant's] favor" by finding it was reasonable to believe the Building Complaints caused, or could have caused, disharmony or disruption. (Doc. No. 90, p. 10). That argument is not only legally incorrect, in that the Court, not the jury, balances the competing interests, but it is also factually incorrect, as Defendant entirely ignores the jury's additional finding that the Building Complaints did not impair Plaintiff's ability to perform her duties, a factor that weighs in Plaintiff's favor.
In balancing the parties' interests here, the Court acknowledges that "fire companies have a strong interest in the promotion of camaraderie and efficiency."
On the other hand, the speech at issue here involved specific allegations of a government's mismanagement of public funds as well as issues of health and safety concerns in a building used by public employees and visited by members of the public. Even if Plaintiff's allegations were ultimately untrue, they involved matters of the utmost public concern. When a member of the public has knowledge that a public building is unsafe or that a government is wasting taxpayer money, "that person should not be discouraged from so reporting."
Once a plaintiff establishes that her speech is protected, she must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the protected speech was a substantial factor in the defendant's decision to discharge her. This is a question of fact, and an employer may rebut the showing by establishing that "it would have discharged the plaintiff `even in the absence of the protected [speech].'"
Defendant nevertheless contends that in dismissing Plaintiff's claim for First Amendment Retaliation based on the Facebook Posts, the Court effectively ruled that Defendant would have fired Plaintiff absent the Building Complaints and that, therefore, the jury's verdict is inconsistent with the Court's prior ruling. (Doc. No. 90, pp. 5-6). First, this issue is not properly before the Court at this time, as the Court only ordered briefing on the first two prongs of
For the reasons explained above, the Court concludes as a matter of law that Plaintiff's Building Complaints constituted protected speech under the First Amendment.
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that Defendant, City of Charlotte's Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law (Doc. No. 89) is DENIED.
The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to enter judgment in this case consistent with the jury's verdict.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Also, in addition to her free speech claims, Plaintiff alleged causes of action for gender discrimination and retaliation in violation of state and federal laws. After Plaintiff rested her case-in-chief, the Court granted Defendant's Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law on Plaintiff's Title VII retaliation claim.