Christina Peeper v. Callaway Cty. ( 1997 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    No. 96-3864
    Christina Peeper,              *
    *
    Appellant,       *
    *
    v.                    * Appeal      from   the   United
    States
    * District Court for the
    Callaway County Ambulance District,
    * Westerna   District    of
    Missouri.
    political subdivision of the* State of
    Missouri,                   *
    *
    Appellee.     *
    Submitted:    May 21, 1997
    Filed: August 19, 1997
    Before MURPHY, HEANEY, and MAGILL, Circuit Judges.
    HEANEY, Circuit Judge.
    Appellant, Christina Peeper, sought injunctive relief
    from a resolution of a county ambulance district board
    of directors limiting her participation as a member of
    that board because of her marriage to an employee of the
    ambulance district. The district court denied Peeper’s
    motion, holding that the resolution was narrowly drawn to
    meet significant state interests. We reverse.
    2
    I.
    In April 1996, Peeper became a member of          the
    Callaway County Ambulance District Board of Directors
    (“Board”) after winning an election for the seat
    representing her subdistrict.      Peeper’s husband had
    worked as an emergency medical technician and supervisor
    for the Callaway County Ambulance District (“District”)
    for two years at the time of Peeper’s election to the
    Board. The District is a corporate body and political
    subdivision of the State of Missouri governed by the six-
    member Board.    At the time of Peeper’s election, the
    District and its employees were engaged in discussions
    over three major issues affecting their employment
    relationship: threatened litigation regarding overtime
    wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act; organization of
    the employees of the District for purposes of collective
    bargaining; and the schedule and hours worked by District
    employees.
    Peeper attended her first meeting as a member of the
    Board on April 23, 1996. After conducting its routine
    business and election of officers, the Board adopted,
    over Peeper’s objection, a resolution limiting Peeper’s
    participation as a member of the Board. On May 28, 1996,
    the Board passed an amended resolution with the same
    goal. The resolution provided:
    [I]n order to comply with applicable law and
    effectively prevent Christin[a] Peeper from
    using confidential information concerning the
    District for financial gain, . . . the
    undersigned board members desire and do hereby
    allow Christin[a] Peeper to participate in any
    3
    District matter except she may not participate
    in discussions involving, or vote upon, any of
    the following:
    A.    Legal actions, causes of action or
    litigation   between  the   District  and   its
    employees and any confidential or privileged
    communication between the District or its
    representatives and its attorneys or legal work
    product;
    4
    B.      Hiring,    firing,     disciplining   or
    promoting of particular employees by the
    District when personal information about the
    employee, including information relating to the
    performance or merit of individual employees, is
    discussed or recorded;
    C.     Testing and examination materials,
    before the test or examination is given or, if
    it is to be given again, before so given again;
    D. Preparation, including any discussions
    or work product, on behalf of the District or
    its   representatives     for    negotiations   with
    employee groups;
    E.     Individually identifiable personnel
    records,    performance     ratings     or   records
    pertaining to employees or applicants for
    employment, including information relating to
    medical,     psychiatric,      psychological,     or
    alcoholism or drug dependency diagnosis or
    treatment; and,
    F.     Any other matter implicating the
    conflict-of-interest concerns of Chapter 105
    RSMo which the board may, by majority vote,
    decide to prevent Christin[a] Peeper from
    hearing, participating in, or voting upon.
    . . . [I]n order effort [sic] to comply with
    applicable     law    and    effectively     prevent
    Christin[a] Peeper from acting in matters that
    would result in a specific monetary benefit to
    her or her spouse, that Christin[a] Peeper is
    directed to recuse herself and if she does not
    recuse herself she is prohibited from hearing,
    participating in, or voting upon the following:
    A.        Budgetary    items     involving   the
    compensation, benefits, and pensions paid to
    employees;
    B.     The hiring, promotion, discipline,
    compensation,     benefits,     and    pensions   of
    employees of the District; and
    C.     Any other matter implicating the
    conflict-of-interest concerns of Chapter 105
    5
    RSMo which the board may, by majority vote,
    decide to prevent Christin[a] Peeper from
    hearing, participating in, or voting upon.
    (Jt. App. at 62-64). The Missouri conflict-of-interest
    law, to which the resolution refers provides, in part,
    that:
    No elected or appointed official or employee
    . . . of any political subdivision [of the
    state] shall:
    . . . .
    6
    (2) Use confidential information1 obtained in
    the course of or by reason of . . . [her]
    official capacity in any manner with intent to
    result in financial gain for [her]self [or her]
    spouse . . . ;
    (3)    Disclose   confidential    information
    obtained in the course of or by reason of [her]
    . . . official capacity in any manner with
    intent to result in financial gain for [her]self
    or any other person;
    (4) Favorably act on any matter that is so
    specifically designed so as to provide a special
    monetary benefit to such official or [her]
    spouse . . . .       In all such matters such
    officials must recuse themselves from acting . .
    . .
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 105.454 (1997) (footnote added). Board
    members expressed concern about their own potential
    criminal   liability2  in   the  event   Peeper   misused
    information she received as a member of the Board.
    Peeper protested the May resolution and filed a claim
    in federal court seeking injunctive relief based on her
    claim that the resolutions violated her rights under the
    First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
    Constitution and under the free speech clause of the
    Missouri Constitution.      The district court denied
    1
    Confidential information is defined as “all information . . . which is of such a nature
    that it is not, at that time, a matter of public record or public knowledge.” Mo. Rev.
    Stat. § 105.450(5) (1997).
    2
    The Missouri conflict-of-interest law imposes criminal sanctions on any person who
    violate its strictures. The first knowing violation of the conflict-of-interest law
    constitutes a class B misdemeanor under Missouri law. Mo. Rev. Stat. § 105.478(1)
    (1997). A party committing a second offense under the law is guilty of a class D
    felony. 
    Id. § 105.478(2).
                                                7
    Peeper’s request for relief. The court held that the May
    resolution is “content-neutral,” narrowly tailored to
    meet the significant government interests of preventing
    the appearance of government corruption and promoting the
    effective functioning of the District, and leaves open
    alternative channels of communication for Peeper. 
    Id. at 6.
      The court further held that the May resolution
    conforms to the provisions of the Missouri conflict-
    8
    of-interest law, specifically citing section 105.476
    which provides, in part, that “nothing in [s]ections
    105.450 to 105.498 shall prohibit any political
    subdivision   from   establishing   additional  or   more
    stringent requirements than those specified in [s]ections
    105.450 to 105.498.” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 105.476 (1997).
    The restrictions in the May resolution place limitations
    on Peeper that are not rationally related to the goals of
    Missouri conflict-of-interest law and that impinge on
    Peeper’s First Amendment associational rights and her
    Fourteenth Amendment equal protection rights. Therefore,
    we reverse.
    II.
    We review the district court’s conclusions of law de
    novo. United States v. Kistner, 
    68 F.3d 218
    , 220-21 (8th
    Cir. 1995). Our first task is to determine whether the
    challenged resolution deserves scrutiny that goes beyond
    that traditionally required for restrictions placed on
    candidates or officeholders. See Clements v. Fashing,
    
    457 U.S. 957
    , 963 (1981). Where a regulation implicates
    a fundamental right, such as the First Amendment’s free
    speech guarantee, we review the regulation under
    heightened scrutiny.   
    Id. If no
    fundamental right is
    implicated, traditional equal protection principles
    apply.   
    Id. Traditional equal
    protection principles
    dictate that state-imposed burdens that affect some
    citizens differently than others offend equal protection
    under the Fourteenth Amendment only if such a burden is
    “wholly irrelevant to the achievement of the [s]tate’s
    [constitutional] objectives.” McGowan v. Maryland, 
    366 U.S. 420
    , 425 (1961).
    9
    The district court examined the May resolution under
    the First Amendment strict scrutiny standard.3        We
    disagree that strict scrutiny applies to the limitations
    at issue.
    3
    Strict scrutiny under the First Amendment dictates that a state may not restrict
    speech on a content basis unless it can show the restriction is narrowly tailored to serve
    a compelling state interest. Denver Area Educ. Telecomm. Consortium, Inc. v. FCC,
    518 U.S. ___, ___ (1996).
    10
    An individual’s right to be a candidate for public office
    under the First and Fourteenth Amendments is nearly
    identical to one’s right to hold that office. Because of
    the analogous rights involved, we employ the same
    constitutional test for restrictions on an officeholder
    as we do for restrictions on candidacy.      In reviewing
    candidacy restrictions, the existence of barriers to a
    candidate’s access to the ballot “does not of itself
    compel close scrutiny.” Bullock v. Carter, 
    405 U.S. 134
    ,
    143 (1972). The Supreme Court has upheld restrictions on
    candidacy that are unrelated to First Amendment values
    and that “protect the integrity and reliability of the
    electoral process itself.” See Anderson v. Celebrezze,
    
    460 U.S. 780
    , 788 n.9 (1983) (citing 
    Clements, 457 U.S. at 973
    (upholding state provision prohibiting an
    incumbent Justice of the Peace from seeking election to
    the state legislature)). To determine whether to uphold
    restrictions on candidacy, we first “consider the
    character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the
    rights protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments”
    caused by the challenged restriction. 
    Anderson, 460 U.S. at 789
    . Following that evaluation, we must:
    identify and evaluate the precise interests put
    forward by the [s]tate as justifications for the
    burden imposed by the rule.          In passing
    judgment, the Court must not only determine the
    legitimacy and the strength of each of those
    interests; it also must consider the extent to
    which those interests make it necessary to
    burden the plaintiff’s rights.
    
    Id. 11 Following
    this process, we initially consider the
    injury caused by restrictions on the officeholder. As
    is the case with restrictions on candidacy, restrictions
    on an elected official’s ability to perform her duties
    implicate the interests of two distinct parties:     the
    individual’s First Amendment associational rights and
    Fourteenth Amendment equal protection rights; and the
    voters’ rights to be meaningfully
    12
    represented by their elected officials. Cf. 
    Bullock, 405 U.S. at 143
    (1972) (“[T]he rights of voters and the
    rights of candidates do not always lend themselves to
    neat   separation” when considering the effect of
    limitations on candidacy).     Restrictions on a public
    official’s   participation    necessarily   affect   that
    individual’s First Amendment associational rights and
    Fourteenth Amendment equal protection rights.4 Legitimate
    state interests may warrant restrictions that are de
    minimis limitations of the official’s participation. See
    
    Clements, 457 U.S. at 972-73
    .        Restrictions on an
    officeholder after election also infringe upon voters’
    rights to be represented even more severely than when a
    state similarly restricts candidacy.5
    4
    Limitations on an elected official’s participation in the proceedings of a public body
    such as the District also conceivably affect the official’s First Amendment free speech
    rights, which would require us to apply strict scrutiny as Peeper suggests. Here,
    however, the May resolution only limits Peeper’s participation as a member of the
    Board and does not limit her ability to vote for Board members, to speak before the
    Board during public comment periods, or to otherwise express her opinions about the
    District’s operation as any other citizen may under the First Amendment’s free speech
    guarantee.
    5
    Candidacy restrictions affect the voters’ First Amendment right to be represented
    by reducing the pool of candidates, although voters have the opportunity to recruit other
    candidates to represent their viewpoints. See Plante v. Gonzalez, 
    575 F.2d 1119
    , 1126
    (2d Cir. 1978) (requirements for candidacy are not unconstitutional unless they deny
    a cognizable group of citizens the right to meaningful representation through other
    candidates). Limitations on an officeholder, by contrast, provide voters no opportunity
    to be heard through an alternative representative. If the restrictions prevent the
    officeholder from meaningfully representing the voters who elected the official, such
    restrictions are subject to strict scrutiny. See 
    Bullock, 405 U.S. at 143
    . Because
    Peeper does not raise the issue of the voters’ rights, and because we hold the May
    resolution unconstitutional under the rational-basis test, we need not determine whether
    13
    Although the district court upheld the May resolution
    applying the more rigid strict-scrutiny standard, we hold
    the resolution unconstitutional under rational-basis
    strict scrutiny applies.
    14
    review.   The resolution’s provisions injure Peeper’s
    First Amendment associational rights and her Fourteenth
    Amendment equal protection rights.      The   resolution
    creates a standard specific to Peeper that treats her
    differently   than   other   Board   members,   strongly
    implicating her Fourteenth Amendment equal protection
    rights.     The restrictions also restrain Peeper’s
    interaction with other Board members, implicating her
    First Amendment associational rights.
    Having determined that the resolution injures
    Peeper’s First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, we
    evaluate the state’s purported interests and whether the
    restrictions rationally serve those interests.        The
    Board’s stated interests are threefold: to prevent the
    misappropriation of information for personal gain; to
    prevent the appearance of impropriety; and to promote the
    free flow of ideas among members of the Board.6 Each of
    these interests, if served, can at a minimum constitute
    a reasonable state interest. See, e.g., FEC v. National
    Conservative Political Action Comm., 
    470 U.S. 480
    , 500
    (1985) (government’s interest in avoiding corruption is
    compelling); Buckley v. Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    , 27 (1976)
    (prevention of the appearance of corruption is a concern
    almost equal to the prevention of actual corruption);
    New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 
    376 U.S. 270
    (1964)
    6
    Board members also expressed an interest in avoiding their own criminal liability
    for violations of the Missouri conflict-of-interest law that Peeper might commit. Yet,
    the statute requires a person to “knowingly” violate the conflict-of-interest law before
    that person is subject to criminal liability. Mo. Rev. Stat. § 105.478(1). The mere
    presence of Peeper in discussions that are not specific to her husband cannot constitute
    knowledge of, much less the “aiding or abetting”of a violation of the statute on the part
    of other Board members.
    15
    (uninhibited, wide-open debate should be a “profound
    national commitment” and a “fundamental principle of the
    American government”).     In this case, however, the
    portions of the resolution that restrict Peeper from
    participating in or even hearing discussions not directly
    related to her husband do not rationally relate to those
    interests.
    16
    The May resolution limits Peeper in a wide range of
    matters, most of which do not involve the concerns
    expressed by the Board or addressed by the conflict-of-
    interest law. For instance, the May resolution prevents
    Peeper from participating in discussions of or voting on
    “[l]egal actions, causes of action or litigation between
    the District and its employees” without a requirement
    that the topic be related to Peeper’s husband’s
    employment.    Likewise, the resolution prevents Peeper
    from participating in discussions of hiring or firing
    employees or addressing testing and examination materials
    without regard to whether Peeper’s husband is associated
    with the matters. The resolution goes well beyond the
    Missouri conflict-of-interest law’s general prohibition
    of the misuse of confidential information for financial
    gain and recusal requirement for measures “designed . .
    . to provide a special monetary benefit” to the official
    or her spouse.
    The Board’s concern about keeping its discussions
    free-flowing, particularly during the Board’s closed
    sessions, is based on its belief that Peeper’s presence
    would chill discussions between other Board members.
    This chilling, the Board contends, stems from the other
    Board members’ opinion that if Peeper is present she
    might pass on confidential information to her husband who
    would, in turn, pass it on to his co-workers.       It is
    incongruous, however, for a state to allow the election
    of people with such relationships to public office and
    then   consider   them   less-trustworthy   stewards   of
    confidential information merely because of          these
    relationships.    The Missouri conflict-of-interest law
    prohibits any public official from misusing confidential
    information or acting for self-benefit, and those with
    17
    spouses employed by the public bodies they serve perhaps
    face   greater  temptations   to   run  afoul  of   that
    prohibition. One does not, however, face any additional
    temptation where the matters are unrelated to the
    official’s spouse.    Yet the May resolution prohibits
    Peeper from participating in any matter dealing with any
    employee’s records, any testing material, or the hiring
    or firing of any employee.      The Board’s interest in
    preventing corruption or at least the appearance of
    corruption is not served by the vast portions of the May
    resolution that go beyond matters that could not lead or
    appear to lead to corrupt behavior by Peeper.
    18
    As such, those portions of the May resolution are not
    rationally related to the state interests cited by the
    Board.
    Because provisions of the May resolution infringe
    upon Peeper’s constitutional rights under the First and
    Fourteenth Amendments without being rationally related to
    a legitimate state interest, the May resolution cannot
    stand as written.
    III.
    We reverse the decision of the district court. In
    light of our holding that the May resolution cannot stand
    as written, no injunctive relief is necessary.
    A true copy.
    Attest.
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
    19