STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
C7-00-1327
Phyllis Kay Cokley,
Respondent,
vs.
City of Otsego, a municipality,
Appellant.
Filed March 6, 2001
Reversed
Stoneburner, Judge
Wright County District Court
File No. C4983100
Robert D. Boedigheimer, Peter J. Horejsi, McCloud & Boedigheimer, P.A., Suite 201, 5001 West
80th Street, Bloomington, MN 55437 (for respondent)
Patricia Y. Beety, League of Minnesota Cities, 145 University Avenue West, St. Paul, MN 55103
(for appellant)
Considered and decided by Kalitowski, Presiding Judge, Halbrooks, Judge, and Stoneburner,
Judge.
S Y L L A B U S
1. As a matter of law, the concerns expressed by respondent to her municipal employer about (1)
classification of the building inspector as an independent contractor, (2) overtime claims by
non-exempt employees, and (3) OSHA requirements that had already been brought to the city's
attention, did not constitute good faith reports of a violation or a suspected violation of federal or
state law under Minn. Stat. § 181.932, subd. 1(a) (2000).
2. An employee cannot establish a causal connection between expression of concerns about the
employer's practices and elimination of her position merely by advancing a theory of causation and
then impeaching the employer's witnesses regarding the employer's reasons given for the
job-elimination: an employee must present evidence of causation to establish a prima facie case
under Minn. Stat. § 181.932 (2000) before the burden shifts to the employer to articulate a
legitimate decision for its action.
O P I N I O N
STONEBURNER, Judge
This is an action by a former employee of the City of Otsego for damages under the Minnesota
Whistleblower Act, Minn. Stat. § 181.932 (2000). After a jury verdict in favor of the employee, the
City appeals from denial of its motions for JNOV and a new trial, and the district court's
enhancement of the attorney-fee award. Because the employee did not engage in protected activity
and failed to establish a causal link between her action and elimination of her position, we reverse.
FACTS
The township of Otsego was incorporated into a city in 1990. When the township's clerk-treasurer
retired in 1995, appellant the City of Otsego (the City) restructured its administrative staff. After
several city council meetings and subcommittee meetings, in April 1995, the City employed
respondent Phyllis Kay Cokley under a four-year contract, as the City's first business/finance
director and director of economic development. [1]
Cokley's contract provided for three months advance notice of termination of her position and
defined one of Cokley's duties as to more fully define her job duties, because both positions were
newly created. A job description for business-finance director had been developed before Cokley
was hired. In October 1995, Cokley prepared and presented to the city council a revised job
description covering both positions. The city council never approved this version of Cokley's job
description, and the previous job description for the business/finance director remained unamended
to include any additional duties regarding the director of economic development position or more
fully describe the actual duties Cokley was expected to perform. Both job descriptions included
managing the City's payroll and pay equity issues, supervising OSHA mandate programs, and
keeping informed on state and federal legislation as Cokley's responsibility, but the evidence at trial
established that she did not supervise OSHA programs. The exact scope of her duties was disputed
at trial.
Cokley became aware that the city clerk and deputy clerk had a practice of scheduling a partial
workday, using some vacation time for the hours not worked and then accruing overtime pay for
attending evening city council meetings. Cokley, whose responsibilities included issuing checks
based on submitted time cards, but not making a determination of the accuracy of those time cards,
believed that this practice for accruing overtime did not conform to provisions of the Federal Labor
Standards Act (FLSA). In January 1996, in the context of serving on a subcommittee to rewrite the
City's personnel policy, Cokley submitted a memorandum to the city clerk who chaired the
subcommittee, suggesting changes to the policy about work hours and how overtime was earned
and paid. The memorandum states: [t]he City's personnel policy discusses employees to whom the
Federal Fair Labor Standards Act [FLSA] applies, and yet past procedures regarding overtime and
compensatory time have not been in conformance with the Act.
At about the same time in January 1996, Cokley discussed her concerns regarding FLSA
requirements and the clerk's and deputy clerk's practices with councilmember Ronald Black, who
was also on the subcommittee. [2] According to Cokley, Black, an attorney, told her that her
interpretation of FLSA requirements was correct, but he advised her to leave it alone because the
City had bigger problems and the mayor has his head in the sand and somebody's going to get
hurt. There is no evidence that Cokley raised concerns about the FSLA after January 1996.
Duane Fiedler, a city maintenance employee, self-initiated an OSHA compliance review for the City
in 1994 and reported his results to the city council at that time. Fiedler knew Cokley before the City
hired her. Fiedler discussed his OSHA concerns with Cokley. Cokley did not independently verify
any of Fiedler's concerns because, she
testified, it was not her responsibility. She did, however, arrange a lunch with Fiedler, and
councilmember Black in May 1996, at which time Fiedler again expressed his concerns about
OSHA compliance. Cokley may have also discussed Fiedler's concerns with councilmember
Fournier.
In May 1996, Cokley attended a League of Minnesota Cities Insurance Trust Loss Control
Workshop. She submitted a memorandum to the city council summarizing material contained in the
sessions of the workshop that she attended. The memorandum notes that the workshop offered
tracks in administration, public works, small cities and parks and recreation, and states: I attended
sessions that I thought were most beneficial to the [C]ity in both the administrative and small cities
tracks. One session involved OSHA training requirements. The memorandum states that the City
must provide training and be able to document that training has occurred, outlines the 14 most
cited training standards for the public sector discussed, and concludes that [s]afety training
must be done and must be documented.
One of Cokley's undisputed duties was to review and recommend insurance carriers and act as
liaison between the City and its insurance carriers in order to limit exposure and meet statutory
requirements. In early 1996, prior to the annual insurance audit that usually occurred in February or
March, Cokley became concerned that the building inspector, who was classified as an independent
contractor rather than an employee, had not provided a certificate of insurance. Based on her
knowledge and experience, Cokley believed that the building inspector should have been classified
as an employee, because he worked out of city hall and was provided with a desk and telephone
and code books by the City. Cokley testified that she talked to councilmember Black about not
having an insurance certificate for the building inspector and about her concerns that the position
was misclassified. Cokley could not recall when this conversation occurred. Cokley testified that if
PERA had determined the position should be classified as an employee, the City could have been
penalized for not making contributions to the public employee retirement fund, but there is no
evidence that she shared this specific concern with Black or any other member of the council.
At trial, Cokley was asked by her attorney: Did you consider the classification of the building
inspector to be unlawful in terms of the independent contractor laws in Minnesota? to which she
responded: Yes. No evidence of any such law or regulation was provided. Cokley was asked:
Did you suggest to the City that they reclassify him? She responded: I suggested to the City in
that memorandum that they needed to address that issue. The memorandum to which Cokley
referred is the summary of the workshop described above. In her summary of a session titled A
Cure for the Common CODE that covered the current law in Minnesota regarding building
inspections, Cokley wrote: If the [C]ity has a contracted building inspector, the building inspector
must have insurance and indemnify the [C]ity. And, in a summary of the workshop highlights,
Cokley wrote, in bold:
Require independent contractors to carry insurance indemnifying the [C]ity. They
must be careful on advise [sic] and suggestion and not act as a consultant regarding
building code regulations.
There is nothing in the memorandum about classification of building inspectors as employees or
independent contractors.
In November 1996, a new mayor and two new city councilmembers were elected. Cokley wrote a
note to the new mayor on November 6th, congratulating him on his election:
I hope you will find time during this interim period to meet with me, to allow me to
understand the ideas you want to bring forth as mayor, and to allow me to discuss
various issues that I feel are of concern.
At the November 12, 1996 city council meeting, councilmember, mayor-elect Fournier read a
prepared statement about the need for reorganization and a city administrator. Fournier moved to
eliminate Cokley's position, contract out the financial duties performed by Cokley and use the
savings to fund the position of city administrator. The city council, without any discussion, voted
unanimously to proceed with Founier's proposal. On the recommendation of the city attorney, the
council immediately placed Cokley on administrative leave and scheduled a public hearing for
November 19, 1996 to give Cokley an opportunity to respond to the reorganization proposal. At
the November 19th meeting, Cokley, through counsel, focused not on whether Cokley's position
should be eliminated, but rather on the process leading up to the proposal and adoption of the
motion to eliminate the position. At this meeting the city council voted unanimously in favor of the
reorganization proposal. Cokley's position was eliminated and she was provided with a
three-month-severance package.
In 1998, Cokley sued the City under the Minnesota Whistleblower Act, Minn. Stat. § 181.932
(2000). The City moved for summary judgment on the ground that Cokley had failed to establish,
as a matter of law, that she had engaged in protected activity under the Act. The district court
denied the motion, and the case was tried to a jury. The district court denied the City's motion for a
directed verdict at the close of Cokley's evidence and the jury returned a special verdict, finding
Cokley had made a good faith report of an actual or suspected violation of law and that the City
eliminated her position in retaliation for making this report. The jury awarded Cokley damages.
The City moved the court to grant JNOV, a new trial, and remittur. The district court denied the
City's motions for JNOV and a new trial, granted its motion for remittur in part, entered an order
for judgment on the jury's verdict, and awarded Cokley costs and attorney fees with an upward
enhancement on the traditional lodestar amount. The City appeals the district court's denial of its
motions for JNOV and a new trial, and the district court's enhancement of the attorney-fee award.
ISSUES
I. Did Cokley engage in protected activity under the Whistleblower Act?
II. Did Cokley provide evidence of causation sufficient to withstand a motion for a directed verdict
or JNOV?
III. Did the district court's failure to give a special jury instruction defining a good-faith report result
in substantial prejudice to the City?
IV. Did the district court err in granting an enhancement to the amount of attorney fees awarded to
Cokley?
ANALYSIS
The City argues that the district court erred in failing to grant its motion for JNOV, because Cokley
failed to make a prima facie case under the Minnesota Whistleblower Act, Minn. Stat. § 181.932,
subd. 1(a) (2000).
This court reviews the denial of a motion for JNOV de novo. Pouliot v. Fitzsimmons, 582
N.W.2d 221, 224 (Minn. 1998). The evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to
the prevailing party and an appellate court must not set the verdict aside if it can be sustained on any
reasonable theory of the evidence. Id. (citation omitted).
The Whistleblower Act prohibits retaliation against an employee who in good faith, reports a
violation or suspected violation of any federal or state law * * * to an employer or any
governmental body or law enforcement official. Minn. Stat. § 181.932, subd. 1(a). Minnesota
courts have adopted the McDonnell Douglas analysis: the employee has the initial burden to
establish a prima facie case, and the burden of production then shifts to the employer to articulate a
legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for its action, after which the employee may demonstrate that the
employer's articulated reasons are pretextual. See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S.
792, 802, 93 S. Ct. 1817, 1824 (1973); Phipps v. Clark Oil & Refining Corp., 408 N.W.2d
569, 572 (Minn. 1987). At all times the employee has the burden to prove by a preponderance of
evidence that the employer's action was for an impermissible reason. Phipps, 408 N.W.2d at 572.
To establish a prima facie case of retaliatory discharge, the employee must show: (1)
statutorily-protected conduct by the employee; (2) adverse employment action by the employer;
and (3) a causal connection between the two. Hubbard v. United Press Int'l, Inc., 330 N.W.2d
428, 444 (Minn. 1983). The City argues that Cokley failed to prove statutorily-protected conduct
and causation between her conduct and elimination of her job. We agree.
I.
Whether an employee made a report in good faith is a question of fact, but the court may
determine as a matter of law that certain conduct does not constitute a report for purposes of the
Whistleblower Act. Rothmeier v. Investment Advisers, Inc., 556 N.W.2d 590, 593 (Minn. App.
1996), review denied (Minn. Feb. 26, 1997). Cokley claims that she reported three issues: the
City's employees were claiming overtime not authorized under the Federal Labor Standards Act
(FLSA); the City was violating OSHA regulations; and the City's building inspector should have
been classified as an employee rather than an independent contractor. To qualify as a report under
the statute, a report must blow the whistle by notifying the employer of a violation of law that is a
clearly mandated public policy. See Obst v. Microtron, Inc., 614 N.W.2d 196, 200 (Minn. 2000)
(determining whether plaintiff reported a violation of law); Hedglin v. City of Willmar, 582
N.W.2d 897, 902 (Minn. 1998) (finding vague reports of reprehensible conduct, where no statute
or rule is violated by such conduct, are not reports); Donahue v. Schwegman, Lundberg,
Woessner & Kluth, P.A., 586 N.W.2d 811, 815 (Minn. App. 1998) (holding complaint of internal
payroll deduction practices did not implicate public policy). As a matter of law, the January 15,
1996 memorandum proposing changes to the personnel policy and the May 3, 1996 memorandum
summarizing the sessions Cokley attended at the League of Minnesota Cities Insurance Trust Loss
Control Workshop do not meet the requirements of a report under the Act and should not have
been submitted to the jury for a determination of good faith. The evidence of Cokley's
conversations with individual councilmembers about her concerns was also insufficient to meet the
reporting requirement of the Act.
FLSA concerns
In January 1996, while serving on a subcommittee charged with reviewing the City's personnel
manual, Cokley prepared a memo to the city clerk, who chaired the subcommittee, suggesting
changes to the personnel manual to bring practices into compliance with the manual or vice-versa.
Cokley had several conversations with councilmember Black about her interpretation of the
overtime requirements in the FLSA. Cokley testified that Black agreed with her interpretation but
told her to leave it alone because there were bigger problems, that the mayor had his head in
the sand, and that somebody's going to get hurt.
The two-page January 1996 memo, prepared in the context of Cokley's participation on a
subcommittee to address changes to the personnel policy manual, contains a single sentence in the
middle of a paragraph on the second page:
The City's personnel policy discusses employees to whom the Federal Fair Labor
Standards Act applies, and yet past procedures regarding overtime and
compensatory time have not been in conformance with the Act.
As a matter of law, this non-specific reference to past practices not in conformance with the FLSA
is insufficient to implicate a current violation of law or public policy. See Donahue, 586 N.W.2d at
813-14 (finding mere mention of a suspected violation amounted to a complaint of acknowledged
firm practice and not a report under the statute). The evidence of Cokley's conversations with
councilmember Black about FLSA and the practices of the city clerk and deputy city clerk
regarding overtime also took place in the context of Cokley's participation on the subcommittee
addressing revisions to the personnel policy manual. Cokley discussed with Black her opinion that
non-exempt employees were receiving benefits not mandated by the FLSA. Cokley testified that
she was aware that the FLSA provided a minimum standard and that cities could give greater
benefits than provided in the FLSA. There is no evidence that Cokley pursued this issue beyond the
discussions that occurred in early 1996 in the context of the subcommittee or that she addressed
with councilmember Black or any other councilmember a violation of law that implicated public
policy. See Hedglin, 582 N.W.2d at 902 (finding vague reports of conduct not in violation of a
statute or rule are not a report).
OSHA concerns
Cokley's involvement in Fiedler's OSHA concerns consisted of a lunch meeting with Fiedler and
Black, during which Fiedler discussed his concerns, and possibly a conversation with Fournier
about Fiedler's concerns. When Cokley became involved the OSHA issues were not new to the
city council, because Fiedler had presented these issues to the city council in January or February of
1994. See Rothmeier, 556 N.W.2d at 593 (finding mention of suspected violation already
acknowledged by employer not a report); see also Obst, 614 N.W.2d at 203 (finding employer
already knew of safety violations).
In her May 3, 1996 memo, titled League of Minnesota Cities Insurance Trust Loss Control
Workshop, Cokley summarized for the councilmembers the sessions of the workshop Cokley
attended, including sessions about OSHA requirements. The memo outlines OSHA requirements as
taught at the workshop but does not assert that the City was in violation. In fact, several of the
requirements addressed in the memo are not applicable to the City. The memo speaks for itself and
is clearly informational: I have handout information on all of the issues discussed * * *. Should you
be interested in copies of this information, please let me know. See Obst, 614 N.W.2d at 203
(emphasizing good-faith report depends on content of report and purpose in making report). The
record contains no evidence that Cokley discussed OSHA issues with anyone after the May 3,
1996 memo was distributed or that she pursued conversations with anyone about Fiedler's
concerns after that date.
Building Inspector classification
Cokley's concerns about the building inspector first centered on the lack of an insurance certificate,
an issue that, she testified, was part of her job description. Based on her reading and experience in
other cities, Cokley developed a conviction that the building inspector was mis-classified as an
independent contractor and that the position should have been classified as an employee. She
discussed this concern with councilmember Black in early 1996. Although Cokley testified that she
prepared a memorandum that discussed this concern and suggested in the memorandum that the
City needed to address this issue, the memorandum she refers to is the May 1996 summary of
workshop sessions she attended. On the fourth page of the memorandum, Cokley stated: If the
[C]ity has a contracted building inspector, the building inspector must have insurance and indemnify
the [C]ity. In bold under the highlights of the workshop section, Cokley wrote:
Require independent contractors to carry insurance indemnifying the [C]ity. They
must be careful on advise [sic] and suggestion and not act as a consultant regarding
building code regulations.
Cokley's memo does not alert the council to the concern that Cokley expressed at trial, that the
building inspector's classification was in violation of independent contractor laws in Minnesota,
PERA requirements, or any other laws or regulations. See Obst, 614 N.W.2d at 200 (stating
reported conduct must at least implicate a violation of law). There is no evidence that Cokley
pursued this concern beyond her reference to insurance in the May 1996 memo. Neither the
memorandum nor the concerns Cokley expressed to Black report a violation of any law or
regulation and do not, as a matter of law, qualify as protected activity under the Whistleblower Act.
II.
In addition to failing to prove that she engaged in protected conduct, Cokley has failed to produce
any evidence of causation between her alleged conduct and the elimination of her position. We are
mindful that retaliatory motive is difficult to prove by direct evidence and that an employee may
demonstrate a causal connection by circumstantial evidence that justifies an inference of retaliatory
motive. Dietrich v. Canadian Pac. Ltd., 536 N.W.2d 319, 327 (Minn. 1995). Speculation,
however, is not circumstantial evidence. A fact is proved by circumstantial evidence when its
existence can reasonably be inferred from other facts proved in the case. 4 Minnesota
Practice, CIVJIG 12.10 (1999). `Inferences must * * * be reasonably supported by the available
evidence; sheer speculation is not enough.' Illinois Farmers Ins. Co. v. Brekke Fireplace
Shoppe, Inc., 495 N.W.2d 216, 221 (Minn. App. 1993) (quoting Rochester Wood Specialties,
Inc. v. Rions, 286 Minn. 503, 509, 176 N.W.2d 548, 552 (1970)). In this case, Cokley has
presented a theory of causation based on conjecture, not premises of fact from which a causal
connection can be inferred.
As is clearly demonstrated from the nature of her concerns and the manner in which she addressed
them, Cokley did not intend to blow the whistle until after her job was eliminated, at which point she
seized on the theory to explain the abrupt, seemingly arbitrary elimination of her job. She pressed
this theory upon newly-elected councilmember Mark Berning, who had no knowledge of Cokley's
activities prior to the elimination of her job, other than as related by Cokley. When Berning called
Cokley the day after her job was eliminated, Cokley outlined her theory to Berning. Cokley made
contemporaneous notes of her own statements during this conversation, which were presented at
trial as independent evidence of retaliation for whistleblowing.
Close proximity between a complaint of discrimination and a termination decision has been held to
support an inference of reprisal. See Thompson v. Campbell, 845 F. Supp. 665, 675 (D. Minn.
1994) (holding that termination four months after plaintiff filed a complaint, together with other
circumstantial evidence in the record, raised an issue of material fact concerning the causal
connection between protected conduct and termination); Dietrich, 536 N.W.2d at 327 (stating that
a causal connection may be established by the proximity in time between a statutorily protected act
and an adverse employment action). At trial, Cokley's counsel characterized the congratulatory note
she wrote to the mayor-elect as making waves right up to the final days before she gets fired. In
her brief she states that the evidence confirmed that she wrote Fournier to discuss her concern
regarding the violation of laws only a few days before she proposed to eliminate her position.
Cokley asserts that the proximity of this note to the elimination of her job constitutes evidence of
causation. The note speaks for itself. The note does not mention or suggest any violations of law by
the City. No evidence links the remarks in this note to Cokley's concerns about FLSA, OSHA or
the building inspector's classification. As a matter of law, a letter that does not reference any
concerns about violations of law is not a whistleblower report protected under the statute, and its
proximity to the elimination of Cokley's job does not constitute relevant evidence of causation to
support a whistleblower claim. See Obst, 614 N.W.2d at 200 (holding reported conduct must at
least implicate a violation of law).
Cokley argued that evidence that the council held several meetings and subcommittee meetings
before deciding to hire her, contrasted with a lack of any discussion prior to approval of the motion
to pursue elimination of her position, demonstrates causation. Although this evidence may show that
the council acted precipitously, only speculation links the council's quick decision with the
information Cokley had provided many months earlier.
Cokley also argued that the city attorney's characterization of the decision to eliminate Cokley's
position as a political decision, rather than an economic decision, (made in a conversation with
newly-elected councilmember Berning) is evidence of retaliation by the city council. No evidence
supports this assertion. A political decision to eliminate a position is not prohibited by the
whistleblower statute, even if the decision has been characterized as an economic decision at the
time that it was made. A political decision is not a synonym for retaliation and is not evidence of
retaliation. Cokley cannot question the motivation of the city council until she has demonstrated
some evidence of causation.
Cokley argues that phone calls by Fournier and the city attorney to other councilmembers to line-up
support for the motion for reorganization and the city council's unwillingness to answer questions or
submit to cross-examination at the November 19, 1996 meeting about their support for this
proposition are further evidence of causation linking elimination of her position to her alleged
reports. Cokley suggests that because she impeached the City's witnesses about the phone calls and
because the council was not willing to submit, on November 19th, to cross-examination about their
motivation for reorganization, the jury is free to speculate that there was a causal connection
between information she had provided in the first six months of 1996 and the reorganization
approved after the November 1996 election. Again, Cokley relies on speculation, not evidence.
The district court erred by failing to direct a verdict for the City at the close of Cokley's evidence,
placing the jury in a position of determining whether the reasons for reorganization advanced by the
City were pretext without requiring Cokley to make a prima facie case under the Whistleblower
Act. Cokley's counsel adeptly used this error to his advantage, successfully persuading the jury to
substitute speculation for evidence. Once the verdict was in, the district court erred by failing to
grant judgment notwithstanding the verdict, because Cokley did not engage in protected activity and
failed to present evidence beyond speculation to show any causal link between the concerns she
had expressed several months earlier with the decision to eliminate her position. Viewing that
evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, judgment for Cokley cannot be sustained on any
reasonable theory.
Because the case should not have been submitted to the jury, we do not reach the issues of jury
instructions or the enhancement of attorney fees.
D E C I S I O N
The district court erred by failing to grant judgment notwithstanding the verdict where Cokley did
not engage in protected activity and failed to present evidence beyond speculation to show any
causal link between the concerns she expressed and the decision to eliminate her position.
Reversed.
Dated: February 28, 2001
Footnotes
[1] Cokley, who responded to the City's advertisement for a business-finance director, had
requested a salary higher than that expected by the City for that position. Because the City wanted
to hire Cokley, they added the title of director of economic development to the position to justify
the higher salary.
[2] Cokley testified that she had reported similar concerns to councilmember Larry Fournier, who
was also a member of the subcommittee. Fournier testified that he did not recall any conversations
or memos from Cokley regarding the FLSA.
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