Doug Taylor v. City of Lawrenceburg
Opinion
The appellant, Doug Taylor, claims that the Board of Public Works and Safety of the City of Lawrenceburg ("the Board") terminated his employment with the City because of his disagreements with the Mayor and exposure of purported wrongdoing by City officials. Seeking redress, Taylor filed suit against the City, members of the Board, and several City officials, bringing a claim of First Amendment retaliation pursuant to
I. BACKGROUND
Doug Taylor is a former police officer of the City of Lawrenceburg, Indiana. He also held positions with the City's civil-city, parks, and electric departments. Taylor ran for a position on Lawrenceburg's City Council and, in April 2011, improperly appeared in police uniform at an event for his campaign. Taylor also inaccurately represented on his police time sheet that he was on duty during the campaign event. The Indiana State Police investigated this conduct, resulting in the filing in October 2011 of criminal charges against Taylor for Official Misconduct and Ghost Employment. Taylor won election to the City Council in November 2011.
The Board placed Taylor on administrative leave with pay shortly after the criminal charges were filed. It later moved him to a front-desk position within the police department in January 2012.
On March 13, 2013, Taylor signed a deferred prosecution agreement admitting to the criminal charges and agreeing to resign from the City Council. The next day, he distributed to local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies an eleven-page letter accusing the Board and various City officials, including Mayor Dennis Carr, of corruption and criminal wrongdoing.
A week later, the Board notified Taylor of its intent to terminate his employment as a police officer (as well as with "any other department of the City") and informed him of his right to a hearing pursuant to Indiana Code § 36-8-3-4(c). Taylor requested a hearing.
Prior to the hearing, the Board adopted a rule that its decision would be determined by a simple majority vote of the Board members who were present during the presentation of evidence and argument. Five members, including the Mayor, were present to hear the evidence and arguments at Taylor's hearing. After considering the evidence, the Board voted 2 to 1 to terminate Taylor's employment. The Mayor, who votes only in the event of a tie, did not vote, and one other member of the Board abstained. Taylor's employment was terminated, and he stopped receiving paychecks from the City.
The Board subsequently issued its findings of fact and law pursuant to § 36-8-3-4(i). In its findings, the Board credited a local prosecutor's testimony that he would not accept case-related information from a police officer, like Taylor, who had admitted to a crime of dishonesty. The Board also rejected Taylor's contention that the Board members were biased against him.
In addition, the Board rebuffed Taylor's suggestion that the termination proceedings were initiated in response to his March 14, 2013, letter accusing Board members and others of wrongdoing. The Board found "no causal connection" between the termination proceedings and the letter and explained that it had waited for the resolution of Taylor's criminal charges before issuing the notice of termination.
Pursuant to § 36-8-3-4(e), Taylor had the right to appeal the Board's decision to "the circuit or superior court of the county in which [the Board was] located," within thirty days, § 36-8-3-4(f), after which the Board's decision would become "final and conclusive," § 36-8-3-4(g). Taylor timely appealed the Board's decision to the Dearborn County Superior Court on October 25, 2013, but he voluntarily dismissed the appeal in August 2014, before it was adjudicated.
II. ANALYSIS
The district court entered summary judgment in favor of the defendants, concluding that Taylor's First Amendment retaliation claim was barred by
res judicata
or collateral estoppel and that the individual defendants were immune to Taylor's state law claims pursuant to § 36-13-3-5(b) because he had alleged that they had acted "under authority or color of state law." The district court also found that the state law claims failed on the merits. We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo
.
Brunson v. Murray
,
In
University of Tennessee v. Elliott
,
We have no trouble concluding that the Board acted in a judicial capacity here. In
Goodwin v. Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
,
For his part, Taylor points to evidence that, he contends, shows certain Board members engaged in improper ex parte communications with some witnesses, City employees, and fellow Board members. But Taylor had the opportunity to raise these issues when he appealed the Board's determination to the Indiana Superior Court and chose not to do so. Given Taylor's ability to fully litigate these issues before the Board, the Board's findings of fact and law, and the availability of judicial review, we are satisfied that the Board acted in a judicial capacity.
Turning to the application of issue preclusion under Indiana law, as we explained in
Mains v. Citibank, N.A.
,
Miller Brewing Co. v. Ind. Dep't of State Revenue
,
Taylor first argues that issue preclusion should not apply because the Board's decision was a nullity and, therefore, not final. Prior to Taylor's hearing, the Board had adopted a decisional rule requiring a majority vote of the Board members who were present to hear evidence and argument. Five Board members participated in the hearing, but only three actually voted, with two out of the three voting for termination. And so, Taylor contends, the Board "never made a decision to terminate his employment."
Of course, Taylor cannot mean to argue that the Board issued no decision at all. It made a determination and issued findings of fact and law. As a result, Taylor's employment was terminated, and he stopped receiving checks from the City. Instead, what Taylor is doing is challenging the validity of that decision.
But the appropriate forum for Taylor to press this issue was the Circuit or Superior Court in Dearborn County. § 36-8-3-4(e). Knowing this, Taylor filed an appeal, but withdrew it before it could be adjudicated. Under Indiana law, once an appeal is withdrawn, it is as though it was never filed.
See
State ex rel. Weaver v. Paxson
,
The next question is whether Taylor had a full and fair opportunity to litigate before the Board the same issues that underlie his claims in this suit. The crux of Taylor's federal and state free-speech retaliation claims, as well as his state law whistleblower claim, is his contention that the Board terminated him because of his March 2013 disagreements with Mayor Carr.
Taylor litigated these issues before the Board, and the Board found against him. In its findings, the Board stated that there was no causal connection between its decision and Taylor's letter, but rather that the proceedings were "causally related to the resolution or disposition of judicial proceedings.... Specifically, ... [Taylor] was subject to criminal charges prior to the execution of the deferred prosecution agreement, such that disciplinary proceedings could not commence until after the execution of the agreement. The Board finds that until [Taylor] admitted the elements of his criminal activity in the context of a judicial proceeding, any prior admission by [him] was entitled to less weight." Moreover, as to Taylor's clashes with Mayor Carr, the Board also rejected his argument that the Board members were improperly biased or prejudiced against him.
Taylor therefore had the opportunity to litigate before the Board the same material issues underlying his claims in this case. And, for the same reasons discussed above, we are convinced that Taylor had a full and fair opportunity to be heard on these issues.
Lastly, as to his defamation claim, Taylor argues again that this claim should be revived because the Board's determination was not approved by the required majority vote. His defamation claim arises out of the Board's proposed findings, which he contends improperly credited the testimony of a prosecutor about Taylor's inability to testify credibly in his role as a police officer after having admitted to a crime of dishonesty. But, again, Taylor failed to appeal the Board's determination and, therefore, is bound by its findings as to these issues under Indiana law. To the extent Taylor's defamation claim rests on issues that could not have been litigated until after the Board issued its decision, Taylor could argue that issue preclusion should not apply; but he does not make that argument and thus waives it.
See
Hojnacki v. Klein-Acosta
,
The district court's decision is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Doug TAYLOR, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF LAWRENCEBURG, Dearborn County, State of Indiana, an Indiana Municipal Corporation, Et Al., Defendants-Appellees.
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published