From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Bell v. City of Demopolis, Alabama

United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
Jun 20, 1996
86 F.3d 191 (11th Cir. 1996)

Summary

finding Alabama's certiorari remedy sufficient because it empowered circuit courts to "review employment termination proceedings to determinate whether they are supported by substantial evidence and to see that the proceedings comport with procedural due process."

Summary of this case from Holden v. City of Sheffield

Opinion

No. 94-7205.

Decided June 20, 1996.

John A. Bivens, M. Virginia Buck, Tuscaloosa, AL, for Appellant.

Terry A. Sides, Randall Morgan, Hill, Hill, Carter, Franco, Cole Black, Montgomery, AL, for Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama.

(No. CV-92-1051-CB-S),

Charles R. Butler, Jr., Chief Judge.

Before TJOFLAT, Chief Judge, and RONEY and CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judges.

Honorable Levin H. Campbell, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the First Circuit, sitting by designation.


In this section 1983 employment discrimination action, plaintiff, a former police officer, alleged he received constitutionally inadequate procedural due process both before and after his termination. The district court refused to set aside a grant of summary judgment for the defendants, holding that plaintiff had suffered no due process violation. We affirm.

Plaintiff John Bell was a police officer with the Demopolis, Alabama, police department. While employed by the department, Bell was disciplined and reprimanded on a number of occasions. In early June 1992, he was placed on indefinite suspension, and on July 1, 1992, he received written notice of his termination.

Bell's termination was reviewed and affirmed, first by a body comprised of the police chief, the mayor, and select members of the city council called the "police committee," and then by the city council.

Bell then brought this section 1983 action alleging violations of federal substantive and procedural due process of law and state law claims, seeking compensatory and punitive damages, as well as reinstatement.

The district court granted defendants' motion for summary judgment after Bell failed to timely respond. Bell then filed a Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) motion asking the court to set aside the defendants' summary judgment based on excusable neglect. After the defendants filed an opposition brief, the court directed the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing the merits of Bell's due process claims in light of this Court's recent en banc decision in McKinney v. Pate, 20 F.3d 1550 (11th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 115 S.Ct. 898, 103 L.Ed.2d 783 (1995).

The district court denied Bell's motion for relief from judgment, holding that even if it were inclined to set aside the judgment based on excusable neglect, there was no need to do so because Bell could raise no genuine issue of material fact in opposition to the summary judgment motion. It held that (1) pursuant to McKinney, Bell's substantive due process claim fails as a matter of law; (2) because Alabama has available a satisfactory means by which Bell can seek redress for any procedural due process deprivation, he does not have a cognizable procedural due process claim, and (3) there was no state law wrongful discharge claim.

Bell argues that McKinney is not dispositive of his procedural due process claim. In McKinney, the plaintiff based his due process claim on the alleged bias of the decision maker at his pretermination hearing. The en banc court held that the alleged wrongful discharge of an employee by a state actor does not give rise to a substantive due process claim but instead implicates only procedural due process. The Court determined that the State of Florida's remedy for a biased decision maker, review by Florida courts, satisfied due process.

Bell attempts to distinguish McKinney in three ways. First, Bell asserts here that Alabama courts do not offer the same "thorough, almost de novo, review" of Florida's circuit courts. Alabama courts, however, like Florida courts, review employment termination proceedings both to determine whether they are supported by substantial evidence and to see that the proceedings comport with procedural due process. See, e.g., Ex Parte Tuskegee, 447 So.2d 713 (Ala. 1984); Guinn v. Eufaula, 437 So.2d 516 (Ala. 1983).

Second, Bell describes his attack as one on the termination process itself, whereas the plaintiff in McKinney challenged procedures as they applied to him. For the first time in his supplemental brief in support of his motion to set aside the judgment, Bell stated his challenge was "to the state's system itself, and its failure to ever provide him with a proper evidentiary hearing with counsel, witnesses, and cross-examination." Bell's characterization cannot belie the fact that the meat of his complaint — bias on the part of the police committee and the city council and inadequate time to speak in his post-termination hearing — amounts to an "as applied" attack. The evidence before the district court indicates that Bell was in no way restricted from being represented by counsel or examining and cross-examining witnesses. At no time did Bell present any evidence to the contrary. In fact, Bell stipulated in the pretrial order that he had no complaints about how his hearings were handled.

Third, Bell distinguished his challenge from the type of process challenged in McKinney. The plaintiff in McKinney attacked only the adequacy of the pre termination process he received, positing his challenge directly in federal court instead of seeking post-termination review in the state system. Bell, on the other hand, challenged primarily the post-termination process, having pursued state court remedies. The controlling factor in McKinney, however, was that the state had a mechanism in place which appears adequate to remedy any procedural due process violations. Though the plaintiff in McKinney did not pursue post-termination remedies, this Court determined that because there was an adequate state remedy available — state court review — no due process violation existed. Likewise in this case, the state offers an adequate remedy in the form of administrative as well as state court review.

Alternatively, Bell argues that McKinney was wrongly decided and should be overturned. This panel, however, is bound by prior panel decisions of the Eleventh Circuit, and, of course, the decisions of the en banc court, such as McKinney.

The district court correctly held that considering all the evidence in the light most favorable to Bell, he has failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact and is therefore not entitled to obtain relief from judgment in this case.

AFFIRMED.


Summaries of

Bell v. City of Demopolis, Alabama

United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
Jun 20, 1996
86 F.3d 191 (11th Cir. 1996)

finding Alabama's certiorari remedy sufficient because it empowered circuit courts to "review employment termination proceedings to determinate whether they are supported by substantial evidence and to see that the proceedings comport with procedural due process."

Summary of this case from Holden v. City of Sheffield

affirming district court's dismissal of procedural due process in employment discrimination context because "Alabama has available a satisfactory means by which [the plaintiff] can seek redress for any procedural due process deprivation"

Summary of this case from Flagship Lake County Development Number 5, LLC v. City of Mascotte

affirming district court's dismissal of procedural due process in employment discrimination context because "Alabama has available a satisfactory means by which [the plaintiff] can seek redress for any procedural due process deprivation"

Summary of this case from Wyttenbach v. Florida

affirming district court's dismissal of procedural due process in employment discrimination context because "Alabama has available a satisfactory means by which [the plaintiff] can seek redress for any procedural due process deprivation"

Summary of this case from Schwarz v. Tomlinson

recognizing that Alabama state courts are available to remedy inadequate public employee termination proceedings

Summary of this case from Galbreath v. Hale Cnty.

distinguishing between a challenge to state procedure itself and a challenge to state procedure as applied

Summary of this case from Kilpatrick v. Crenshaw Cnty. Comm'n

distinguishing between a challenge to the state procedure itself and a challenge to the state procedure as applied

Summary of this case from McCleskey v. City of Dothan, Alabama

stating that review in the Alabama state courts provided constitutionally sufficient postdeprivation due process for plaintiff claiming wrongful termination

Summary of this case from Hardy v. Wood

stating that "the state offers an adequate remedy in the form of administrative as well as state court review"

Summary of this case from Reams v. Irvin

distinguishing between a challenge to the state procedure itself and a challenge to the state procedure as applied

Summary of this case from Boggan v. McLendon

distinguishing between a challenge to the state procedure itself and a challenge to the state procedure as applied

Summary of this case from Hill v. Manning

In Bell, the Eleventh Circuit compared the remedies available to the plaintiff under Alabama law to the remedies which were available to the plaintiff in McKinney under Florida law.

Summary of this case from Carter v. Harris

In Bell, the Eleventh Circuit stated that "Alabama courts... review employment termination proceedings both to whether they are supported by substantial evidence and to see that the proceedings comport with procedural due process."

Summary of this case from Carter v. Harris

distinguishing between a challenge to state procedure itself and a challenge to state procedure as applied

Summary of this case from Carter v. Harris
Case details for

Bell v. City of Demopolis, Alabama

Case Details

Full title:John BELL, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF DEMOPOLIS, ALABAMA; Austin…

Court:United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit

Date published: Jun 20, 1996

Citations

86 F.3d 191 (11th Cir. 1996)

Citing Cases

Smith v. City of Mobile

" Id. at 1560. See also id. at 1559 ("Whether an individual complains that a state lacks constitutionally…

Carter v. Harris

In applying these cases, a distinction is drawn between cases in which a state process itself is challenged,…