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Nevada Public Agency Insurance Pool PUBLIC OFFICIALS LIABILITY WORKSHOP

Nevada Public Agency Insurance Pool PUBLIC OFFICIALS LIABILITY WORKSHOP. Civil Rights Issues Aha! Oh No! Help Me!. Liability Concepts Overview. Why Liability is Imposed Types of Liability Affecting Public Officials Civil Rights Laws and Issues. Top Ten Reasons to Worry about Liability.

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Nevada Public Agency Insurance Pool PUBLIC OFFICIALS LIABILITY WORKSHOP

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  1. Nevada Public Agency Insurance PoolPUBLIC OFFICIALS LIABILITY WORKSHOP Civil Rights Issues Aha! Oh No! Help Me!

  2. Liability Concepts Overview • Why Liability is Imposed • Types of Liability Affecting Public Officials • Civil Rights Laws and Issues

  3. Top Ten Reasons to Worry about Liability • 1. The same board might get reelected • 2. I might keep this job • 3. My spouse wants to protect our assets • 4. Attorneys might go on welfare • 5. Judges will get lonely • 6. Court clerk staff could get bored • 7. There’s no money in the budget to pay claims • 8. There’s no insurance to cover the risk • 9. No one else worries about it, so I have to • 10. I might get sued

  4. Legal Rights • Security of Person • Security of Property • Security of Reputation • Services of Family • Right of Privacy • Freedom of Speech; Right to Vote • To be Free from Malicious Interference

  5. Legal Duties • Refrain from Acts or Omissions that will Injure, Damage or Impair the Rights of Another • Respect for Other’s Rights • Provide a Safe Place and Take Care in Business Operations

  6. Civil Remedies • If a right has been invaded, a remedy exists • If a duty has been violated, others may sue • Resolution is declaratory, injunctive or money damages

  7. Contract Actions • Contract Litigation • To enforce contract • To enjoin from action • To void contract in whole or in part • To rescind the contract • To collect liquidated damages for breach

  8. Liability Arising from Fraud, Error, Mistake, etc. • Equitable Actions include: • Injunctive relief (stopping one from taken certain actions) • Restitution (making whole) • Quasi-contract (creating a contract after the fact based upon intent) • Specific Performance (forcing the party to do what they agreed to do)

  9. Miscellaneous Actions and Remedies • Bankruptcy • Garnishment • Receivership • Trusteeship

  10. Actions Arising from Acts or Omissions • Unintentional Torts • Negligent Acts • Negligent Omissions

  11. Actions Arising from Acts or Omissions • Intentional Torts • Trespass • False Arrest • Assault • Battery • Libel • Slander • Invasion of Privacy • Others

  12. Torts: Absolute or Strict Liability • Private nuisances • Industrial accidents (workers compensation) • Automobile accidents • Defective products/completed operations • Civil rights issues

  13. Causes of Action 42 USC Section 1983 • The range of actionable items is limited only by the sensitivity of the collective conscience of the community in which the litigation is filed.

  14. Public Officials Errors or Omissions • Misfeasance: the improper performance of some lawful act • Malfeasance: doing of an act one ought not to do at all; “evil doing;” ill-conduct; positively unlawful’ wrongful act with no legal right to do it • Nonfeasance: omission of acts a person ought to do; non-performance of acts which one ought to do; omission of required duty; neglect of duty; failure to do an undertaking agreed to

  15. Key Section 1983 Cases • Monell vs.. Dept of Social Services (1978) • Ruled that local governments were a “person” for suit • Eliminated absolute (sovereign) immunity under state laws

  16. Key Section 1983 Cases • Owen vs. City of Independence (1980) • Ruled that local governments were strictly liable for violation of Federal civil rights • Eliminated good faith qualified immunity to both official and entity

  17. Key Section 1983 Cases • City of Canton, OH vs. Harris (1989) • Established that deliberate indifference to training public employees constitutes a civil rights violation if public entity is shown to be grossly negligent or reckless such that misconduct is likely to occur • Failure to train constitutes a policy of deliberate indifference to protecting civil rights

  18. Plaintiff’s View of Civil Rights Laws • Triumph of the rule of law • Humblest citizen gains impartial forum for redress against government • Legal system helps the powerless, oppressed and disgruntled • As legal system succeeds, the fabric of society is strengthened

  19. Sources of Liability for Deliberate Indifference • Poor or No Policies • Customs or Usage • Pattern and Practice • Failure to Train

  20. Who Can Be Sued? • Governmental Entity • Officials Acting In Their Official Capacity - Note that strict liability applies; no good faith defense • Officials and Employees Individual

  21. Choosing Alternative Courses of Action • In any situation where people must choose between alternative courses of action, the majority will choose the worst possible course.

  22. Acts of Policy Makers • Official Acts of Policy Makers are Acts of the Public Entity for Purposes of 42 USC Section 1983

  23. Policy makers: Govern conduct Decide goals in their area and means to achieve them Act in place of the board in their area of responsibility Have discretionary authority Have decision making powers Delegation: Board must expressly or impliedly grant authority Board retains ultimate power to control finances Board retains ultimate power to curtail authority Board acts through power of federal or state laws, local ordinances or its own official policies Policy Makers Defined

  24. Law Enforcement Policymakers • Policy set by Chief of Police may be policy of city without board action • Sheriff, as Constitutional officer, sets policy, but close ties to county through finances makes county liable for acts of Sheriff

  25. Teamwork • Teamwork is essential. It allows you to blame someone else.

  26. Personal Liability of Administrators • Knew or should have known of pattern of gross abuse • A pattern of gross abuse means • Disregard of well established law • Failure to supervise or training that is so deficient as to constitute gross negligence or deliberate indifference to civil rights • Participated in or failed to stop a pattern of gross abuse

  27. Suits Can Seek Relief • Monetary damages • Declaratory relief • Injunctive relief

  28. Sources of Liability • Federal laws • State laws • Local Ordinances • Regulations • Policy statements • Board decision

  29. Sources of Liability • Where Customs or usage are so • Permanent • Well settled • Widespread • Well known • That they should have an effect on policy

  30. Custom or Usage • Persistent and widespread practices by employees that may be attributed to a municipality when the duration and frequency of the practices warrant a finding of either actual or constructive knowledge by the governing body. • To avoid liability, get your MBWA degree: Management By Wandering Around

  31. Affirmative Duty • Police officers duty to enforce the law • Duty includes obligation to prevent other officers from committing illegal acts • Failure to prevent fellow officer from violating constitutional rights of citizens makes both officers jointly liable to the victim • THE SAME RULES APPLY TO ALL OTHER PUBLIC OFFICIALS

  32. ABSOLUTE IMMUNITYapplies to local officials acting in a legislative (not administrative) capacity defeats lawsuit at the outset QUALIFIED IMMUNITYapplies to lawyers acting for or giving advice to officials and to local officials acting in an administrative capacity Depends upon the circumstances and motivations of officials Individual Immunities

  33. 1st Amendment 26% Freedom of speech Freedom of assembly Freedom of the press 14th Amendment 45% Due process of law Types of Constitutional Claims

  34. Target Defendants • Chief Executives - 18% • Department Heads - 25% • Managers - 12% • Line Employees - 45%

  35. Liability Prevention • Put policies in writing • Make sure minutes reflect exactly what was said and done at meetings • Have legal counsel review all ordinances and administrative policies • Define public officials’ duties so they know their bounds • Be familiar with and follow state and local due process and negligence standards

  36. Fair Employment Practices • Be gender, age, race and disability neutral in entire hiring process • Develop and distribute employment policies and job descriptions • Conduct regular performance evaluations for all employees and document results • Insist all supervisory staff follow established procedures for performance management and discipline

  37. Use Common Sense • Earn your MBWA regularly because if you don’t know, the courts will tell you that you should have known

  38. OPEN MEETING LAW Nevada Open Meeting Law Manual NRS Chapter 241

  39. 1. Does Meeting Law Apply? • Quorum • Decision or Action • No Private Polling or Deliberation • Lunch Together?

  40. 2. Agenda and Notice • Clear Explanations • Action Items Clearly Marked • Copies to Subject Parties • Must Post on Web site if you have one

  41. 3. Closed Session • CAUTION !!! • Personnel or Labor Relations • No Attorney-Client Privilege Except to Discuss Pending or Threatened Litigation • Decisions Void

  42. 4. Minutes & Recordings • Capture the Essence of Discussion and Final Decisions Made • Must be Posted on Web Site if you have one

  43. 5. Negative Consequences • Fines • Sanctions • Removal

  44. Ethics in Government Rules to Live By as a Nevada Public Official

  45. To Whom does the Code of Ethical Standards Apply? • Public Officers Elected or Appointed to a position created by • Constitution • State Law • Ordinance • And which position involves exercise of public power, trust or duty • Includes public employees

  46. Who is NOT a Public Officer? • Judges • Justices • Court System • Commissioner of Deeds • Advisory Committees

  47. Voting by Public Officers or Employees • Shall NOT Vote, abstain or act on any matter in which he or she has accepted • gift or loan • pecuniary interest • commitment to others

  48. Judgment NOT affected if the benefit or detriment accruing to him/her is no greater than to any other member of the group, business, profession or occupation - MAY VOTE AFTER DISCLOSURE IF Judgment WOULD BE affected, the individual shall NOT vote or advocate passage or failure, but may participate in consideration of the matter IF FULL DISCLOSURE IS MADE Independent Judgment

  49. Ethics Simplified • Behave appropriately • Authority to act comes from official board action • Personal goals are subordinate to board’s goals • Act collectively, not individually

  50. The Leadership Test Am I Doing the Right Thing at the Right Time the Right Way and for the Right Reason?

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