George Waddell, Jr. v. James Forney , 108 F.3d 889 ( 1997 )


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  •                 United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    Nos. 96-1339 and 96-2009
    George E. Waddell, Jr.,         *
    *
    Appellee,    *
    * Appeals from the United States
    v.                         * District Court for the
    * Northern District of Iowa.
    James Forney; Henry Garcia,     *
    Individually and as Assistant   *
    Regional Deputy of the National *
    Credit Union Administration     *
    (NCUA); Mark Treichel,          *
    Individually and as Examiner    *
    for the National Credit Union   *
    Administration,                 *
    *
    Appellants,    *
    *
    DuTrac Community Credit Union, *
    *
    Intervenor Below.    *
    Submitted:   December 10, 1996
    Filed: March 13, 1997
    Before BOWMAN and HEANEY, Circuit Judges, and SMITH,1 District
    Judge.
    HEANEY, Circuit Judge.
    1
    The Honorable Ortrie D. Smith, District Judge for the Western
    District of Missouri, sitting by designation.
    After his employment termination as general manager of a
    state-chartered credit union, George E. Waddell, Jr. initiated this
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    action against federal and state defendants, alleging that they
    deprived him of protected property and liberty interests in his
    employment without procedural due process.2         The defendants appeal
    from the district court's denial of their motions for summary
    judgment based on qualified immunity, principally arguing that
    Waddell's    alleged   constitutional      rights    were     not   clearly
    established.    We affirm in part and reverse in part.
    I.
    As an initial matter, we address Waddell's claim, based on
    Johnson     v. Jones, 
    115 S. Ct. 2151
    , 2153 (1995), that this court
    lacks jurisdiction to consider an appeal from a denial of qualified
    immunity based on disputed issues of fact.            The district court
    denied    summary   judgment   to    the   defendants       based   on   its
    determination that genuine issues of fact regarding the defendants'
    conduct remain and that, construing the facts in favor of Waddell,
    a reasonable jury could find for him.       While we cannot review the
    district court's determination that material issues of fact remain
    for trial on the merits of Waddell's claims, see Allison v. Dept.
    of Corrections, 
    94 F.3d 494
    , 496 (8th Cir. 1996), we can consider
    the legal question whether, in view of the facts that the district
    court deemed sufficiently supported for summary judgment purposes,
    the individual defendants' conduct was objectively reasonable given
    their knowledge and the clearly established law.            
    Id. As Justice
    Scalia explains in Behrens v. Pelletier:
    2
    Waddell's action against the federal defendants falls under
    Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Fed. Bureau of Narcotics, 
    403 U.S. 388
    , 
    91 S. Ct. 1999
    , 
    29 L. Ed. 2d 619
    (1971) and his claim
    against state defendant Forney is brought under section 1983.
    Because the two claims involved the same analysis, we consider them
    together.
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    Johnson    reaffirmed    that     summary-judgment
    determinations are appealable when they resolve a
    dispute concerning an "abstract issu[e] of law"
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    relating to qualified immunity, . . . typically,
    the issue whether the federal right allegedly
    infringed was "clearly established." . . . Johnson
    permits petitioner to claim on appeal that all of
    the conduct which the District Court deemed
    sufficiently supported for purposes of summary
    judgment met the Harlow standard of "objective
    legal reasonableness."
    
    116 S. Ct. 834
    , 842 (1996) (citations omitted).                    Accordingly, we
    deny   Waddell's     motion    to    dismiss     and       consider   whether   the
    individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
    II.
    Government officials are entitled to qualified immunity when
    "their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or
    constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have
    known."    Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    547 U.S. 800
    , 818 (1982).                  Thus, we
    must consider what specific constitutional rights the defendants
    allegedly violated, whether the rights were clearly established in
    law at the time of the alleged violation, and whether a reasonable
    person in the official's position would have known that his conduct
    would violate such rights.          Waddell has alleged that the defendants
    unlawfully interfered with his employment relation, deprived him of
    a   protected     property    interest    in    his    employment     without   due
    process,    and    similarly    deprived       him    of    a   protected   liberty
    interest.    After a summary of Waddell's allegations, we address
    each constitutional claim in turn.
    Beginning in September 1985, Waddell was the general manager
    of First Family Credit Union in Dubuque, Iowa.                  The deposit funds
    at the credit union were insured by the National Credit Union
    Administration ("NCUA"), an independent, federal regulatory agency
    that has the authority and obligation to periodically examine,
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    investigate, and assist federally insured, state-chartered credit
    unions pursuant to the Federal Credit Union Act, 12 U.S.C. §§ 1751-
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    1795k.     The NCUA has the authority to terminate a credit union's
    insured status, 12 U.S.C. § 1786(b) & (c), and to remove an officer
    or director of a credit union after notifying the individual of the
    charge and setting a hearing, 12 U.S.C. § 1786(g).           According to
    the   NCUA   Examiner   Guide,   however,   an    examiner   should   never
    recommend the removal of credit union management or personnel
    except for criminal acts.    (Jt. App. at 131.)       The guide provides:
    Removal of credit union management and/or personnel
    may be one of the alternatives presented to the
    officials, but any removal action must clearly be
    the officials' decision. Removal of officials and
    management by NCUA can be done only in accordance
    with the Act and the Rules and Regulations.
    
    Id. At all
    times relevant to this action, defendant Henry Garcia
    was an Assistant Regional Deputy of the NCUA and Mark Treichel was
    an NCUA examiner in the region supervised by Garcia.
    First Family is also regulated and supervised by the Iowa
    Credit Union Division (ICUD), under the direction of defendant
    James Forney, the Superintendent of Credit Unions for the State of
    Iowa.     See Iowa Code § 533.55 (1993).         Forney similarly has the
    authority to remove any officer, director, employee, or committee
    member of a credit union if, after notifying the individual of the
    charge against him and giving him a reasonable opportunity to be
    heard, he determines that the individual has either violated a law
    or has engaged in an unsafe or unsound practice in conducting the
    business of a credit union.      Iowa Code § 533.6(5) (1993).
    In 1990, after several years of concern about First Family's
    financial stability, the ICUD and the NCUA conducted a joint
    examination of the credit union.     In August, Forney requested First
    Family to show cause why he should not initiate formal proceedings
    to revoke its charter.       First Family prepared a business plan
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    addressing the concerns raised by Forney and presented it at a
    meeting of the board, Forney and other ICUD members, and NCUA
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    officials including Treichel.         At that time, Forney did not decide
    whether he would seek revocation of the credit union's charter.
    Both Forney and the NCUA continued to monitor First Family's
    progress.    Treichel, on behalf of the NCUA, conducted an audit of
    the credit union.    He concluded that First Family was insolvent and
    that its problems were due in large part to Waddell's negligence.
    He submitted a written report to Garcia, recommending that as a
    condition of further assistance to First Family, its Board should
    terminate Waddell "for negligence" without paying him termination
    compensation as provided under his contract.            (Jt. App. at 129-30.)
    Garcia   adopted    the    report    as     NCUA's   official   position.     In
    September, Garcia gave Forney a copy of Treichel's report and told
    him that in the opinion of the NCUA, First Family was insolvent and
    its manager had disregarded prudent lending practices when making
    business loans.
    On Friday, September 28, Forney met with Waddell and requested
    his resignation.     Waddell refused, denying the allegations in the
    NCUA report and requesting a hearing to clear up the matter.
    Forney arranged for a meeting with the credit union board that
    evening.     At    the    meeting,    Forney    told   the   board   about   his
    discussions with the NCUA officials and their recommendations,
    including their demand that Waddell be removed immediately.                  He
    then   presented    the    board     with    three   alternatives,   which   he
    indicated came from the NCUA through Garcia.             The first option was
    that the NCUA could take over the credit union the following Monday
    and appoint its own manager to replace Waddell.                 Alternatively,
    First Family and Forney could select a manager to replace Waddell
    and take over the credit union in a short time period.                Finally,
    the Board could retain Waddell as manager, but Forney indicated
    that he would initiate administrative proceedings against the
    credit union and require the credit union to immediately post a
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    sign on its doors stating that in one year it would no longer have
    insurance.
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    The board considered the first two options unrealistic due to
    the time pressures and the lack of input the credit union would
    have.       The final option, according to Carl McCarthy, the board's
    chairman, was in "fact," "a threat saying--telling our depositors
    that their money is no longer insured . . . ."            (Dist. Ct. Op. at
    7 (quoting McCarthy Dep. at 36).)          McCarthy explained, "the effect
    of [the third option] would be that the day after you put that
    [sign] on your door, there wouldn't be a credit union because there
    would be no funds there."        (Id. (quoting McCarthy Dep. at 35).)         In
    light of the alternatives, the board suggested a fourth option:               a
    merger with another credit union.              Forney accepted the merger
    option but maintained that Waddell would still have to be fired.
    (Id. at 8.)       According to McCarthy, the board wanted to retain
    Waddell and did not believe that the charges against him were
    substantiated, but the directors' hands were essentially tied
    because the message from the NCUA was clear--they had no real
    choice but to terminate Waddell.
    Over the course of the next few days, the threats and demands
    of the NCUA were repeated to the board members and expanded to
    include      threats   that    the   individual   directors   could    be   held
    personally liable for damages if the demands were not met. (See
    Joint App. at 218 (McCarthy Dep. at 190-1).)             It is also alleged
    that Forney and Garcia began dictating the manner in which the
    board would carry out Waddell's termination.                  They instructed
    McCarthy       that    "they   wanted    [Waddell]   terminated       effective
    immediately under paragraph 13.2.5 of the contract,"3 and they
    3
    Article 13.2.5 of Waddell's employment contract with First
    Family provides:
    13.2 Termination--This Agreement shall terminate .
    . . upon written notice of one party to the other,
    provided that in case of termination by Credit
    Union, there is formal action at a duly called
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    specified what benefits should be paid out to Waddell under the
    contract.   McCarthy requested substantiation of the charges against
    Waddell and reminded Forney and Garcia that Waddell's contract
    entitled him to prior written notice and an opportunity to respond
    to the charge before any termination decision was officially made.
    The board never received any documentation and Forney and Garcia
    continued to insist that Waddell be terminated immediately.
    On October 8, 1990, the board made a motion "pursuant to the
    demand of the NCUA per telephone calls" to terminate Waddell "for
    failure to follow credit union policies and failure to properly
    document a number of commercial loan files."     (Joint App. at 110
    (Minutes from Board Meeting, Oct. 8, 1990).)        The board sent
    Waddell's attorney a letter, notifying him of the charges against
    him and informing him that he could make a presentation to the
    board at the next meeting.   Waddell claims that although he made a
    presentation to the board:
    meeting, by the Board of Directors by way of a
    resolution clearly adopted by two thirds of the total number of
    members of the Board to give such notice, and first to occur of any
    of the following events:
    . . . .
    13.2.5 The material breach of this Agreement, or
    the   negligent   or  willful   misperformance   by
    Executive of Executive's obligations under this
    agreement or the dishonest, fraudulent or criminal
    acts on the part of Executive, provided, however,
    Executive shall be given prior written notice of
    the charges against Executive, an opportunity to
    respond in person or in writing, at the option of
    Executive, to the charges before a final decision
    is made to terminate this Agreement.
    (Jt. App. at 106 (emphasis added).)
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    [I]t was not really a defense because it was
    already known that I was going to be terminated no
    matter what because that's the only way the merger
    could go through. And that's the only way they
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    could get any guarantees for the merger, per
    stipulations from the department, NCUA or whatever.
    (Id. at 180 (Waddell's Dep. at 247-8).)      McCarthy also believed
    that the outcome of the hearing was "mandated by NCUA through Mr.
    Forney and phone conversations with Mr. Garcia."        (Id. at 217
    (McCarthy's Dep. at 189).)    Thus Waddell alleges that the First
    Family Board terminated him involuntarily, pursuant to the threats,
    demands, instructions, and terms dictated by the defendants.
    III.
    Waddell claims that the defendants' conduct deprived him of
    his right to be free from unlawful government interference in his
    employment relation.    He separately alleges that their conduct
    deprived him of a protected property interest in his employment
    based on his contract, which provided that he could only be
    terminated for cause, after written notice and an opportunity to
    respond.   (Joint App. at 106-7.)   As we understand them, these two
    claims involve essentially the same right:   some form of procedural
    due process if Waddell can demonstrate that the government agents
    have "`exercised coercive power or [have] provided such significant
    encouragement' that [First Family's] decision to fire [him] must be
    deemed to be that of the government."     Chernin v. Lyng, 
    874 F.2d 501
    , 508 (8th Cir. 1989) (quoting Blum v. Yaretsky, 
    457 U.S. 991
    ,
    1004 (1982)).4   Thus, we address the two claims together.
    4
    In the Ninth Circuit, a claim of unconstitutional government
    interference is dependent on the employee's enforceable entitlement
    to continued employment. Merritt v. Mackey, 
    827 F.2d 1368
    , 1371
    (9th Cir. 1987). In Chernin v. Lyng, 
    874 F.2d 501
    (8th Cir. 1989),
    however, our court determined that "[e]mployees have an interest in
    their employment relations which the Fifth Amendment protects from
    arbitrary government interference, regardless of whether their
    employment relation may be dissolved at will." 
    Id. at 506.
    In any
    event, we need not address this conflict as it is undisputed that
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    Waddell had a legitimate expectation of continued employment based
    on his employment contract.
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    A.     Property Right
    As of 1989, the right to be free from government interference
    with an employment relation was clearly established by our court in
    Chernin v. Lyng, 
    874 F.2d 501
    (8th Cir. 1989).         See Holloway v.
    Conger, 
    896 F.2d 1131
    , 1136 (8th Cir. 1990) (acknowledging Chernin,
    but holding that it was not "clearly established"      for conduct that
    occurred in 1987).      Prior to Chernin, the Ninth Circuit explicitly
    recognized the same constitutional right.        Merritt v. Mackey, 
    827 F.2d 1368
    (9th Cir. 1987).         In both cases, a government agency
    required a private employer over whom it had regulatory authority
    to fire an employee against the employer's own judgment or will.
    In Chernin, the USDA refused to provide a meatpacking company with
    inspection services--without which meatpackers may not operate--
    until the company agreed to fire the plaintiff.         
    Id. at 502-3.
    The USDA believed that the plaintiff's involvement in the company
    rendered it unfit for operation because he was a convicted felon.
    
    Id. at 503.
        The allegations in Chernin were that the company
    wanted to retain the plaintiff as an employee, but was forced to
    fire him due to the severe economic pressure from the USDA.      
    Id. at 507.
      Our court concluded that Chernin's termination constituted a
    deprivation of a right for which the Fifth Amendment guarantees due
    process of law.      
    Id. at 509.
        Similarly, in Merritt, state and
    federal officials conditioned further funding of a drug and alcohol
    treatment center on its firing one of the counselors "at the
    earliest possible 
    date." 827 F.2d at 1370
    .   After determining that
    the plaintiff had more than a "unilateral expectation" of continued
    employment, the Ninth Circuit concluded:
    Merritt had a protected property interest in his
    continued employment . . . . Thus, the Due Process
    Clause entitled Merritt to a meaningful hearing at
    a meaningful time to challenge any deprivation of
    that interest by the state or federal government.
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    Id. at 1371.
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    In   both     cases,   the    defendants   argued    that      because   the
    terminations were the result of a purely private decision, the Due
    Process Clause does not come into play.               Both our court and the
    Ninth Circuit soundly rejected this argument.             
    Chernin, 874 F.2d at 508
    ; 
    Merritt, 827 F.2d at 1371
    .          As the Ninth Circuit stated:
    "The requisite causal connection [between the
    government conduct and the deprivation] can be
    established not only by some kind of direct
    personal participation in the deprivation but also
    by setting in motion a series of acts by others
    which the actor knows or reasonably should know
    would cause others to inflict the constitutional
    injury."
    
    Merritt, 827 F.2d at 1371
    (quoting Johnson v. Duffy, 
    588 F.2d 740
    (9th Cir. 1978)).
    Accepting     Waddell's      allegations   as    true,   the   defendants'
    conduct falls squarely within Chernin and a reasonable person in
    defendants' positions should have known that his conduct would
    violate Waddell's right to due process.               The defendants required
    First Family to fire Waddell immediately or lose the insurance on
    its deposit funds.        The defendants' initial demands and subsequent
    threats of personal liability led the board to believe that it had
    no   choice   but    to   terminate    Waddell's      employment     as   manager.
    Although Waddell was given written notice of the charges against
    him and, in form, an opportunity to respond, the hearing was not a
    meaningful one.       As the deposition testimony of both Waddell and
    McCarthy reveal, the board was predisposed to find against him.
    The defendants were aware of Waddell's rights under his contract
    and should have known that he was entitled to due process before he
    was terminated.       Accordingly, the district court was correct in
    concluding that a genuine issue of fact regarding the defendants'
    conduct remains and that summary judgment on the basis of qualified
    immunity for this claim was not appropriate.
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    The defendants argue that Waddell's right to be free from
    governmental interference was not clearly established because none
    of the cases relied on by the district court involved a troubled
    financial institution.    Relying on United States v. Gaubert, 
    499 U.S. 315
    , 329-31 (1991), the federal defendants specifically argue
    that because they have the regulatory authority to either terminate
    a credit union's insured status with notice of termination to the
    public or terminate Waddell directly, they also have the discretion
    to pursue informal, more efficient, corrective action.         Although
    Gaubert recognizes such discretionary authority, it does not alter
    the clearly established right of an individual to be free from
    arbitrary government interference with an employment relation.       In
    Gaubert, the Court was concerned with whether the federal agents'
    conduct, including obtaining the resignation of a savings and
    loan's management and board of directors and involvement in its
    day-to-day   business,   fell   within   the   discretionary   authority
    exception to liability under the Federal Torts Claims Act.          The
    Court considered the general supervisory authority of the federal
    agency and not whether its specific actions in fact deprived the
    plaintiff of a due process right to continued employment.         Thus,
    defendants' reliance on Gaubert is misplaced.
    Defendants also point to Mann v. Carver, 
    644 F. Supp. 129
    (E.D. Mo. 1986), a case involving a nearly identical facts in which
    a district court stated, in dicta, that had plaintiff alleged a
    constitutional claim, he would not have succeeded.         
    Id. at 132.
    Again, the court was not addressing head-on the constitutional
    claim.   Further, Mann was pre-Chernin and cannot displace what our
    court later clearly outlined as a protected legal right.       Moreover,
    "[i]n determining whether a legal right is clearly established,
    this circuit applies a flexible standard, requiring some, but not
    precise factual correspondence with precedent, and demanding that
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    officials apply general, well-developed legal principles."   J.H.H.
    v. O'Hara, 
    878 F.2d 240
    , 243 (8th Cir. 1989).   In fact, our court
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    in   Holloway     recognized    the     authority     of   Chernin    despite    its
    different factual 
    context. 896 F.2d at 1136
    .
    The defendants additionally argue that because First Family
    was given options, and even was permitted to suggest its own
    alternative, its decision cannot be deemed attributable to the
    government.      See O'Bannon v. Town Court Nursing Ctr., 
    447 U.S. 773
    ,
    787-90 (1980) (finding no liability when the adverse consequence
    flows only indirectly from the federal government's determination
    to take action against a direct recipient of federal benefits).
    Moreover, they contend that because their actions were not directed
    at Waddell, but rather at returning the credit union to financial
    stability, they cannot be held responsible for Waddell's loss.
    Waddell's allegations, and the supporting deposition testimony,
    support a finding of more than simply suggesting alternatives.                   All
    of the alternatives, except for the third, which essentially would
    have closed down the credit union the next business day, included
    a demand for Waddell's immediate termination.                 Such a demand, if
    proven, would be in direct violation of the NCUA Examiner's Guide.
    First Family felt it had no options with respect to Waddell.
    Similarly, in both Chernin and Merritt, the government action was
    directed    at     the   employer,      not    the    plaintiff-employee        and,
    ostensibly, was in the best interests of the employer.                     What the
    cases stand for is that the government, in seeking to address a
    problem,    must    ensure     that    individuals'        basic    constitutional
    guarantees are met.
    Finally,     Treichel     argues     that      he    should    not   be   held
    responsible for violating Waddell's constitutional rights because
    of his limited involvement in the "coercive" dealings with First
    Family.    We agree with the district court, however, that Treichel's
    involvement was more than minimal.             He recommended to Garcia that
    Waddell be terminated and denied the termination benefits provided
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    under his contract.   Although Treichel's recommendations only went
    directly to Garcia, he stated them as terms and conditions of
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    financial assistance to First Family and he should have known that
    they would be communicated to the board.                  Treichel, essentially,
    set the constitutional deprivation in motion.                      Again, Waddell's
    allegations remain to be proved at trial, but in light of the
    record     before    us,    we    affirm    the    district      court's    denial   of
    qualified immunity for each of the named defendants.
    B.    Liberty Interest
    Waddell also contends that the defendants' actions deprived
    him   of   a   constitutionally         protected     liberty      interest     in   his
    reputation and his ability to pursue his profession.                    Waddell bases
    his liberty claim on comments that there was a bond claim against
    him and that he was not bondable made by each of the defendants at
    meetings discussing First Family's merger.                Waddell claims that the
    statements     were       false   and   that       they   were    damaging     because
    bondability     is    a    requirement       for    employment     in   a     financial
    institution in the State of Iowa.                    The district court denied
    defendants' motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity
    finding     that     Waddell's     allegations       supported      a   due    process
    violation.
    To establish a constitutionally-protected liberty interest,
    Waddell must demonstrate that the defendants, in connection with
    discharging him, publicly made untrue charges against him that
    would stigmatize him so as to seriously damage his standing and
    associations in the community, or foreclose his freedom to take
    advantage of other employment opportunities.                  See Board of Regents
    v. Roth, 
    408 U.S. 564
    , 573 (1972); Shands v. City of Kennett, 
    993 F.2d 1337
    (8th Cir. 1993).              Accepting Waddell's allegations as
    true, he has failed to establish a protected liberty interest based
    on the statements regarding his "bondability."
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    As   an   initial   matter,    the   alleged   comments   were   not
    sufficiently stigmatizing to constitute a protected liberty
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    interest.      The requisite stigma has generally been found in cases
    in which the employee has been accused of dishonesty, immorality,
    criminality, racism, or the like.          
    Shands, 993 F.2d at 1347
    .       The
    statement that Waddell had a bond claim against him certainly
    implied negligence or mismanagement, but did not necessarily impugn
    his honesty or morality, as the district court concluded, nor does
    it suggest that he has engaged in criminal activity.               Although
    "bondability" is a requirement for employment in credit unions,
    Waddell has not set forth any facts to support a finding that he
    has had trouble obtaining subsequent employment because of the
    defamatory statements.        See Green v. St. Louis Housing Authority,
    
    911 F.2d 65
    , 70 (8th Cir. 1990).        According to his own version of
    the facts, Waddell was not hired by the newly-merged credit union,
    not because of any statements about his bondability but because of
    the demands made by Forney and Garcia.           Further, Waddell has not
    demonstrated that the statements were made public.         The statements
    were allegedly made during a private meeting about the merger of
    First Family with another credit union.
    Finally, Waddell has not established that the statements were
    "uttered incident to" or in connection with his discharge.                 See
    Siegert v. Gilley, 
    500 U.S. 226
    , 234 (1991); LaSociete Generale
    Immobilier v. Minneapolis Community Dev. Agency, 
    44 F.3d 629
    , 640
    (8th    Cir.   1994)   (the   alleged   injury   to   reputation    must   be
    accompanied by an alteration of Waddell's legal status).           Waddell's
    allegations are vague as to exactly when the statements were made:
    they were made sometime after the board members felt compelled to
    terminate Waddell due to the defendants' demands but before Waddell
    was officially terminated.        It is undisputed, however, that the
    statements were made in the context of merger discussions at which
    it was already a foregone conclusion that Waddell was to be
    terminated from his management position at First Family.            Because
    we do not believe Waddell has alleged a constitutionally-protected
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    liberty interest, we reverse the district court's denial of summary
    judgment on this claim.
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    III.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court's denial of summary
    judgment to the defendants for Waddell's property claim and reverse
    with respect to his alleged liberty interest.
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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