Carolyn Mascow v. Board of Education of Frankli ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 19-2563
    CAROLYN MASCOW and LOCAL 571                     OF    THE      ILLINOIS
    FEDERATION OF TEACHERS,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    BOARD OF EDUCATION OF FRANKLIN PARK SCHOOL DISTRICT
    NO. 84; DAVID KATZIN, ITS SUPERINTENDENT; and HEIDY
    LAFLEUR,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 17-cv-6441 — Sharon Johnson Coleman, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED FEBRUARY 20, 2020 — DECIDED MARCH 3, 2020
    ____________________
    Before BAUER, EASTERBROOK, and MANION, Circuit Judges.
    EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Carolyn Mascow, a teacher
    who had tenure under Illinois law, was laid off in 2017. Be-
    cause her latest rating was “unsatisfactory,” she was not on-
    ly first in line for layoff when the school lost one position but
    also lacked any recall rights if the school district began hir-
    2                                                 No. 19-2563
    ing again—as it did. She contends in this suit under 42
    U.S.C. §1983 that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment entitled her to a hearing before the layoff and
    that the “unsatisfactory” rating violated the First Amend-
    ment, applied to the states through the Fourteenth. The dis-
    trict court dismissed the due-process claim on the pleadings
    and in a second order granted summary judgment to de-
    fendants on the first-amendment claim. 
    2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120074
    (N.D. Ill. July 18, 2019).
    Local 571 of the Illinois Federation of Teachers joined
    Mascow as a plaintiff. Although the notice of appeal named
    both Mascow and Local 571, their joint brief does not make
    any argument on the Union’s behalf. We treat its claims as
    abandoned.
    Mascow became co-president of Local 571 in 2010, and
    her first-amendment claim rests on two times she acted as
    the Union’s representative. During the summer of 2014 she
    told the school’s principal that a planned assembly that
    would require all teachers to stay 30 minutes after the end of
    school would violate the collective bargaining agreement.
    The next summer she told the district’s superintendent that a
    proposed motivational speech would violate the collective
    bargaining agreement by requiring teachers to stay late. The
    school cancelled one event and revised the other in a way
    that Mascow agreed would satisfy the collective bargaining
    agreement. Mascow contends that her evaluations suffered
    as a result, leading to the “unsatisfactory” rating that made
    her first in line for layoff and nixed any recall rights.
    The district court held that a reasonable jury could not
    find that the 2014 and 2015 meetings caused a reduction in
    Mascow’s ratings. She became the Union’s co-president in
    No. 19-2563                                                   3
    2010, met with school officials often, and initially retained
    good ratings. A bad rating in 2017 could not reasonably be
    amributed to two specific meetings in the summers of 2014
    and 2015—especially not when Mascow’s co-president, who
    amended the 2015 meeting, retained an “excellent” rating.
    Mascow’s contention boils down to post hoc ergo propter
    hoc, which is the name of a logical error rather than a way to
    prove a violation of the Constitution. This makes it unneces-
    sary to consider the extent to which the First Amendment, as
    opposed to state law, protects the interests of union repre-
    sentatives engaged in collective bargaining with public
    schools. Cf. Minnesota State Board for Community Colleges v.
    Knight, 
    465 U.S. 271
    (1984); Perry Education Association v. Per-
    ry Local Educators’ Association, 
    460 U.S. 37
    (1983). Likewise we
    need not consider the potential application of GarceDi v. Ce-
    ballos, 
    547 U.S. 410
    (2006), to a union representative’s speech
    that concerns workplace management.
    The due-process claim stands differently, however. Mas-
    cow, who had worked as a teacher in Illinois for more than
    20 years, had tenure under state law and could be fired only
    for cause or as part of a reduction in force. 105 ILCS 5/34-84,
    34-85; Land v. Board of Education, 
    202 Ill. 2d 414
    (2002). This
    gave her a legitimate claim of entitlement, which is to say a
    property interest in her job, as a mamer of constitutional law.
    See, e.g., Board of Regents v. Roth, 
    408 U.S. 564
    (1972); Cleve-
    land Board of Education v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
    (1985).
    These decisions, and many others, hold that a person may
    not be deprived of property without notice and an oppor-
    tunity for a hearing. Process sometimes may be informal, see
    Goss v. Lopez, 
    419 U.S. 565
    (1975), but the holder of the prop-
    erty interest must have some opportunity to present her po-
    4                                                  No. 19-2563
    sition to the decisionmaker. Mascow contends that defend-
    ants did not offer her such an opportunity.
    The district court dismissed Mascow’s due-process theo-
    ry, observing that Illinois does not offer hearings to laid-off
    teachers, whether or not they have tenure. Because Mascow
    did not have a right to a hearing under state law, she did not
    have a property right either and lacks a constitutional claim,
    the district court concluded.
    The district court did not cite any case for the proposition
    that the absence of a right to a hearing under state law
    knocks out a due-process claim under federal law, but the
    view is not novel. Justice Rehnquist espoused it in ArneD v.
    Kennedy, 
    416 U.S. 134
    , 153–54 (1974), concluding that a liti-
    gant must take the bimer with the sweet—that a substantive
    claim of entitlement (the sweet) is limited by a statutory de-
    nial of hearings (the bimer), adding up to no property inter-
    est. The problem for defendants is that Justice Rehnquist was
    joined by only two others (Chief Justice Burger and Justice
    Stewart), while the remaining six Justices rejected the con-
    clusion. 
    See 416 U.S. at 166
    –67 (Powell, J., concurring, joined
    by Blackmun, 
    J.); 416 U.S. at 177
    –78 (White, J., concurring in
    
    part); 416 U.S. at 209
    –11 (Marshall, J., dissenting, joined by
    Douglas & Brennan, JJ.). Post-ArneD decisions such as
    Loudermill routinely treat substance as a mamer of state law
    and hold that, if state law creates a legitimate claim of enti-
    tlement, then federal law alone determines whether a hear-
    ing is required. By reviving Justice Rehnquist’s bimer-with-
    the-sweet approach, the district court made a legal error. The
    Justices are free to overrule ArneD, Loudermill, and similar
    decisions, but we are bound by them.
    No. 19-2563                                                     5
    What could Mascow contest at a hearing? Not Illinois’s
    rule that tenured teachers with low ratings are laid off ahead
    of untenured teachers with bemer ratings. The Due Process
    Clause does not entitle people to hearings at which they will
    contest the wisdom of substantive legislative choices. Atkins
    v. Parker, 
    472 U.S. 115
    (1985). Nor would Mascow be entitled
    to a hearing to address whether she should have been given
    time to improve before the layoff. Again that is a mamer of
    state substantive law. Hearings deal with adjudicative facts,
    not legislative ones. Bi-Metallic Investment Co. v. State Board of
    Equalization, 
    239 U.S. 441
    (1915).
    Mascow might in principle contest defendants’ conten-
    tion that she was laid off as part of a reduction in force, but
    she appears to concede that her school lost one position for
    her specialty, and as the lowest-rated teacher in that special-
    ty she was automatically the one to go. This leaves the possi-
    bility of contesting the “unsatisfactory” rating. If Mascow’s
    rating had been “proficient” or higher, someone else would
    have been laid off—and, although a “needs improvement”
    rating would not have prevented her layoff, it would have
    provided recall rights that teachers rated “unsatisfactory” do
    not have.
    The problem with this potential subject is that Mascow
    was rated “unsatisfactory” in February 2017, one month be-
    fore being told that she would be laid off (and four months
    ahead of the layoff’s effective date). If she had an opportuni-
    ty for a hearing when she received the “unsatisfactory” rat-
    ing, she would not be entitled to a second hearing when laid
    off. And it would not mamer whether she used or bypassed
    an opportunity in February 2017; a state need not offer more
    than one opportunity for a hearing about a subject.
    6                                                  No. 19-2563
    Neither Illinois nor Mascow’s school district offers a for-
    mal process for contesting a rating. The litigants agree, how-
    ever, that teachers have informal opportunities to seek re-
    view. In 2015, when Mascow was rated “proficient” and dis-
    agreed with her evaluation on some categories, she com-
    plained to Heidy LaFleur, the school’s principal, who invited
    her to submit additional information. After considering
    Mascow’s submissions, LaFleur raised her rating in one of
    the categories. At oral argument counsel for defendants con-
    tended that an opportunity for face-to-face discussions and
    wrimen submissions supplies all the process due for an ad-
    verse evaluation. Mascow’s lawyer responded that in 2017
    she asked David Karin, the school district’s superintendent,
    to raise her “unsatisfactory” rating, and that he refused even
    to entertain the possibility. Mascow submits that this shows
    the absence of an opportunity for review; defendants say
    that it shows, instead, that someone who bypasses the chain
    of command cannot expect success.
    Neither the district judge nor the parties’ briefs in this
    court address just how teachers can obtain review of their
    ratings and whether those opportunities satisfy the constitu-
    tional need for “some kind of hearing.” 
    Goss, 419 U.S. at 579
    (emphasis in original). Neither the district judge nor the liti-
    gants has amempted to apply the approach prescribed by
    Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    (1976), for determining
    what kind of process is due in a given situation. It would be
    inappropriate for an appellate court to try to resolve these
    subjects without briefs focused on the vital issues. They
    should be considered first by the district court.
    The judgment is vacated to the extent that it addresses
    Mascow’s claim under the Due Process Clause and other-
    No. 19-2563                                            7
    wise is affirmed. The case is remanded for proceedings con-
    sistent with this opinion.