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Sixth Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity for State University Officials Who Allegedly Violated Professor's First Amendment Rights
Officials allegedly retaliated against a professor who expressed politically controversial statements about the best treatments for gender dysphoria among youth.
In Josephson v. Ganzel, a unanimous panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed a district court's denial of sovereign immunity and qualified immunity to public university officials who allegedly took adverse employment actions against a professor who expressed skepticism about certain treatments for youth diagnosed with gender dysphoria.
Judge Mathis wrote for the panel, joined by Senior Judge Gilman and Judge Griffith. His opinion begins:
The First Amendment protects popular and unpopular speech alike. Allan Josephson worked as a professor of psychiatry at a public university's medical school. After developing an interest in the medical treatment of childhood gender dysphoria, he began publicly discussing his views on that topic. In October 2017, he expressed his thoughts on treating childhood gender dysphoria during a panel discussion sponsored by a conservative think tank. His commentary was unpopular with his coworkers and supervisors. Josephson believes that his superiors retaliated against him for the views he expressed during the panel discussion, ultimately culminating in the nonrenewal of his contract with the university after more than fifteen years of employment. So he sued the individuals that he says violated the First Amendment by retaliating against him.
The defendants argue that they are entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity and qualified immunity. The district court disagreed, and so do we. For the reasons explained below, we affirm.
Dr. Josephson was a psychiatrist and a member of the faculty at the University of Louisville School of Medicine in the Department of Pediatrics. He participated in a panel sponsored by the Heritage Foundation on gender dysphoria in children. During this panel, he expressed his opinion that "gender dysphoria is a socio-cultural, psychological phenomenon that cannot be fully addressed with drugs and surgery. Thus, doctors and others should explore what causes this confusion and help the child learn how to meet this developmental challenge."
After word of his participation spread within the medical school, he was demoted and, later, his contract with the school was not renewed. Dr. Josephson then sued alleging a violation of his First Amendment rights.
The panel explains that the defendants' alleged contact clearly violated Dr. Josephson's First Amendment rights. Among other things, his remarks were on a matter of public concern in his personal capacity and did not disrupt or interfere with his ability to perform his duties.
On the matter of qualified immunity, Judge Mathis wrote:
Defendants argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity for two main reasons. First, they argue it was not clearly established that each Defendant's conduct, in isolation, was an adverse action sufficient to show retaliation against a professor because of his protected speech. Second, they argue it was not clearly established that the First Amendment protected statements like those Josephson made in October 2017.
Resolving Defendants' first argument is not complicated. Defendants argue that Josephson's rights were not clearly established because no court had specifically addressed whether isolated actions against a professor because of his speech were adverse actions. In other words, Defendants believe they can act as they choose until there is a case on all fours. We disagree. As we have explained, "we do not require an earlier decision that is 'directly on point.'" McElhaney v. Williams, 81 F.4th 550, 556–57 (6th Cir. 2023) (quoting Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7, 12 (2015)). At the same time, "'existing precedent' must place the contours of the right 'beyond debate.'" Id. (quoting Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 12).
During the relevant period, it was beyond debate that "the First Amendment bar[red] retaliation for protected speech." Crawford-El v. Britton, 523 U.S. 574, 592 (1998). By the fall of 2017, both the Supreme Court and this court had held that, absent a disruption of government operations, a public university may not retaliate against a professor for speaking on issues of social or political concern. Pickering, 391 U.S. at 574; Hardy v. Jefferson Cmty. Coll., 260 F.3d 671, 682 (6th Cir. 2001). And we had established that a retaliatory "adverse action" is one that "would deter a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in that conduct." Thaddeus-X, 175 F.3d at 394. We had further established that campaigns of harassment, when considered as a whole, may amount to adverse actions. See Fritz, 592 F.3d at 724; Thaddeus-X, 175 F.3d at 398; Bloch, 156 F.3d at 678. It was also established that legitimate threats "to the nature and existence of one's ongoing employment is of a similar character to the other recognized forms of adverse action—termination, refusal to hire, etc.—even if perpetrated by a third party who is not the employer." Fritz, 592 F.3d at 728. We have, moreover, "repeatedly held that '[a]n act taken in retaliation for the exercise of a constitutionally protected right is actionable under § 1983 even if the act, when taken for a different reason, would have been proper.'" Wenk v. O'Reilly, 783 F.3d 585, 595 (6th Cir. 2015) (alteration in original) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Bloch, 156 F.3d at 681–82). Thus, a reasonable university official during the relevant period would have understood that he could not lawfully terminate or threaten the economic livelihood of a professor because of his protected speech.
Defendants' second argument does not fare much better. That is because the protected nature of Josephson's speech was also clearly established. "To be clearly established, a legal principle must have a sufficiently clear foundation in then-existing precedent." District of Columbia v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48, 63 (2018). The principle "must be settled law." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Settled law "means it is dictated by controlling authority or a robust consensus of cases of persuasive authority." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
In the First Amendment retaliation context, "we ask whether any reasonable official would have understood that [Josephson's] speech was protected, and thus that the official could not retaliate against him." McElhaney, 81 F.4th at 557. The answer: It is, and has been, clearly established that public employees have a right to speak "on a matter of public concern regarding issues outside of one's day-to-day job responsibilities, absent a showing that Pickering balancing favors the government's particular interest in promoting efficiency or public safety." Ashford, 89 F.4th at 975 (first citing Buddenberg v. Weisdack, 939 F.3d 732, 739–40 (6th Cir. 2019); then citing Westmoreland v. Sutherland, 662 F.3d 714, 718–19 (6th Cir. 2011)).
It can no doubt be difficult to determine if speech is public or private. See DeCrane, 12 F.4th at 599 ("[W]e have recognized that it can be 'challenging' to distinguish public from private speech." (citation omitted)). Even so, by 2012, "[w]e had held that employees speak as private citizens (not public employees) at least when they speak on their own initiative to those outside their chains of command and when their speech was not part of their official or de facto duties." Id. at 599–600 (citing Handy-Clay v. City of Memphis, 695 F.3d 531, 542–43 (6th Cir. 2012)). "Would this 'firmly established' rule have 'immediately' alerted a reasonable person No. 23-5293 Josephson v. Ganzel, et al. Page 22 that" Josephson spoke in his private capacity? See id. at 600 (quoting Wesby, 583 U.S. at 64). We think so.
Defendants also argue that Josephson's Heritage Foundation panel remarks were a part of his official duties. Even if that were the case, it was clearly established that such speech is protected. See Meriwether, 992 F.3d at 505; Hardy, 260 F.3d at 680; Bonnell v. Lorenzo, 241 F.3d 800, 823 (6th Cir. 2001) ("[A] professor's rights to academic freedom and freedom of expression are paramount in the academic setting.").
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Those crazy judges! Next, they will be saying that woke employer persecution and firing is against the law or somesuch nonsense!
“Sixth Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity for State University Officials Who Allegedly Violated Professor’s First Amendment Rights”
Had it been a private university, the professor wouldn’t have any “First Amendment rights” against it. Same goes for private “woke employers” in general. (Which is as it should be. The government shouldn't interfere with a private employer's hiring / firing / promotion decisions.)
"The panel explains that the defendants' alleged contact clearly violated Dr. Josephson's First Amendment rights."
I think "contact" should be "conduct," right?
"gender dysphoria is a socio-cultural, psychological phenomenon that cannot be fully addressed with drugs and surgery. Thus, doctors and others should explore what causes this confusion and help the child learn how to meet this developmental challenge."
The fucking monster!
Swede - What did he get wrong?
Qualified immunity should be strictly limited to heat of the moment decisions by lower level employees that are made in accordance with their constitutional and policy limitations.
Administrative officials have counsel and the ability to discuss among their peers before making decisions.
I'm not even sure QI is justified in that context (heat-of-the-moment life-or death decisions) but it damn-sure should never have been extended.
"What will replace QI?" I hear the police unions screaming? The same thing they had before this judge-invented "solution". Police and prosecutors held to the same standards as the rest of us and trust to juries to sort out when deference to emergency decisions is justified.
I think QI should be limited, but it does serve a purpose. Wifhout QI, whenever the Supreme Court reverses itself – say, when Lawrence v. Texas replaced Bowers v. Hardwick – then every police officer who ever arrested anyone on a sodomy charge could be sued for violating people’s constitutional rights.
I see the essence of QI as a non-retroactivity principle so that public officials aren’t caught in the crosshairs of changes in the law. I think that’s a valid principle. But it’s been extended, far, far beyond that principle.
And yet we peons are caught in those crosshairs daily. I don't buy it. If we have to be held to "ignorance of the law is no excuse" then certainly the people who have actually been trained and are charged with upholding that law should be unable to claim the ignorance defense.
Qualified immunity is a bigger obstacle to suing state colleges than suing police departments. State universities are shielded by the Eleventh Amendment from monetary damages. Police departments aren't. So when qualified immunity applies, you are out of luck when suing a state college, but not out of luck when suing a police department. Moreover, qualified immunity isn't even raised as a defense in most lawsuits against police, as Marc Levin has pointed out.
Help out a non-lawyer here - nothing in the OP mentioned the professor not being a citizen of Kentucky, so how would the 11th apply? Am also unclear why suing for monetary damages vs. as example reinstatement would make a difference.
Thanks.
Only a non-lawyer would read the 11th Amendment and assume that it means what it says. Although by its terms it applies only to suits by a citizen of one state against a different state, the Supremes in their wisdom long ago decided that it means nobody can sue any state unless Congress, exercising its powers under an amendment enacted after the 11th, overrides the immunity.
Don't ask me to explain why.
This post refers to Judge Griffith. It should be Griffin, not Griffith. Judge Richard Griffin was on the panel.
I recognize that this is the motion to dismiss stage where the university has to come up with an argument that the professor’s claims should fail even if his allegations were true. Often defense lawyers have to argue something if they want to be paid, even if there isn’t an especially good argument to be made.
But I’d be very surprised if the university administration doesn’t switch, in subsequent rounds of litigation, to arguing that the non-renewal had nothing to do with the professor’s talk.
In my experience, most professor termination lawsuits are generally misconstrued by the media (and framed by the pleadings).
Universities are usually loathe to terminate them; so whatever the "incident" was that is the final straw, it's usually not the actual reason. It's usually been a pattern of conduct for years.
(Note- this is based on my observations from 14 years ago, when I had a lot more experience with a large state university.)
loki13 2 hours ago
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" so whatever the “incident” was that is the final straw, it’s usually not the actual reason. It’s usually been a pattern of conduct for years."
Your explanation of termination in the university setting is also consistent with termination in private industry. Ask most any terminated employee and they will comment on events that happened during the final week while omitting the history over the last several months or even year.
If the university HR department did its job and properly documented the prior behavior leading to this "final straw", then they should win easily. In which case, why did they waste lawyer dollars on a QI-based defense? On the other hand, if they failed to do their job and the prior misconduct is inadequately documented then the university, like every other employer out there, should lose.
Sorry, I'm not seeing much reason to be sympathetic here.
Um ... don't remember if you're an attorney or not?
Two things- first, this isn't about sympathy. I don't know the facts. I was making an observation based on my personal knowledge and observations having seen this.
Second, WHAT? First rule of defense attorneys- if you can get rid of something before you get into "facts" that's a massive win. Facts? Those cost money.
It would be malpractice for a defense attorney with a colorable QI defense to NOT employ it first.
Litigation isn't about winning. It's about how must it will cost you to get to a result.
To explain further-
Money is in the engine of litigation. There are three main pressure points of litigation.
Motion to dismiss or other procedural bar. If you can knock something out before you have to get into discovery or facts, that's massive.
Summary judgment. If you can win on summary judgment, that's great. Hard, but great.
Trial. If a claim get to trial, it's already cost a ton of money. That's why the vast mast mast majority of cases settle prior to this.
Defense attorneys prefer good facts to bad facts, of course, but as we all know, as soon as we are talking facts, we are talking money.
Vast amounts of money
A capacity case I was involved in with elderly person with dementia had $289k in fees (Texas has a provision that allows all legal fees to be paid out of the estate as long the suit has even just marginally has any merit)
Another capacity case has around $250k in fees.
A bankruptcy case I am currently working has 600k+ fees
fwiw, I involved in the cases as the accountant, not as attorney.
Yep.
Capacity to sign a contract? You're talking big bucks.
As soon as I see a case, the first thing I think about is whether it's something that can be dealt with, or if there is some factual issue that a judge/jury will need to end up deciding.
Because if there is a factual issue (no matter how good the facts), you know that's gonna be a money pit.
As a general matter, the FA exists to protect the speech that is unpopular. Because popular speech doesn't need protection.
I might disagree with what this professor said, but the state should not punish him for it.
(Admittedly, things are slightly different in the "state-as-employer" context, but not different enough).
loki : I might disagree with what this professor said.
Here’s what he said :
“gender dysphoria is a socio-cultural, psychological phenomenon that cannot be fully addressed with drugs and surgery. Thus, doctors and others should explore what causes this confusion and help the child learn how to meet this developmental challenge.”
What do you think he got wrong ?
Who thinks drugs and surgery “fully” address gender dysphoria ? Who thinks doctors and others should not explore what causes this confusion and should not help the child learn to meet this developmental challenge ? Who thinks it is not a socio-cultural, psychological phenomenon ?
For myself it’s hard to imagine a more anodyne uncontroversial take on the subject.
Lee - "For myself it’s hard to imagine a more anodyne uncontroversial take on the subject."
fwiw - that for the most part is the mainstream opinion - at least mainstream outside the activists and the echo chamber bubble.
It really should not be controversial. Medical treatment should be treating the cause, not the symptoms.
Lee - sorry copied the wrong statement
"Who thinks drugs and surgery “fully” address gender dysphoria ? Who thinks doctors and others should not explore what causes this confusion and should not help the child learn to meet this developmental challenge ? Who thinks it is not a socio-cultural, psychological phenomenon ?"
That is the statement that I meant to copy -
This is why I specifically said, "MIGHT."
I don't want to get into whatever people are arguing about here. I just wanted to state that I believe that the FA protects speech, whether or not I agree with it.