HEFFERNAN v. CITY OF PATERSON
Supreme Court Cases
578 US __ (2016) (2016)
Case Overview
Action
First Amendment claim affirmed.
Facts/Syllabus
"Petitioner Heffernan was a police officer working in the office of Paterson, New Jersey鈥檚 chief of police. Both the chief of police and Heffernan鈥檚 supervisor had been appointed by Paterson鈥檚 incumbent mayor, who was running for re-election against Lawrence Spagnola, a good friend of Heffernan鈥檚. Heffernan was not involved in Spagnola鈥檚 campaign in any capacity. As a favor to his bedridden mother, Heffernan agreed to pick up and deliver to her a Spagnola campaign yard sign. Other police officers observed Heffernan speaking to staff at a Spagnola distribution point while holding the yard sign. Word quickly spread throughout the force. The next day, Heffernan鈥檚 supervisors demoted him from detective to patrol officer as punishment for his 'overt involvement' in Spagnola鈥檚 campaign. Heffernan filed suit, claiming that the police chief and the other respondents had demoted him because, in their mistaken view, he had engaged in conduct that constituted protected speech. They had thereby 'depriv[ed]' him of a 'right . . . secured by the Constitution.' 42 U. S. C. 搂1983. The District Court, however, found that Heffernan had not been deprived of any constitutionally protected right because he had not engaged in any First Amendment conduct. Affirming, the Third Circuit concluded that Heffernan鈥檚 claim was actionable under 搂1983 only if his employer鈥檚 action was prompted by Heffernan鈥檚 actual, rather than his perceived, exercise of his free-speech rights."