The defendant appeals a jury verdict finding that the plaintiff was denied due process when he was fired from his position as a public employee without a hearing. Two issues are raised on appeal: (1) whether our opinion in
Vail v. Bd. of Ed. of Paris Union Sck. Dist. No. 95,
I.
The plaintiff, Anthony Malcak, was hired in 1972 as Superintendent 1 of Parks and Recreation for the Westchester Park District, an Illinois municipal corporation (“District”). According to the Operating Policy Statement Manual of the Westchester Park District (“Manual”), “[t]he position of Superintendent of Parks and Recreation is an appointed one____ The appointment is for an indefinite period and by mutual agreement with either party serving proper notice of 60 days upon termination of employment.” In May, 1981, after determining the annual budget for the District, the Board of Commissioners (“Board”), contrary to their past practice, decided not to grant Malcak a raise in salary as they had in the past. The Board informed Malcak that they would review his salary in six months. On June 30, 1981 Malcak was terminated and given a sixty-day separation payment.
The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment as to both counts, which was subsequently denied. In discussing the plaintiffs claim of entitlement to a hearing, the district court held that,
“Vail v. Board of Education of Paris Union School District No. 95,
At the trial, during the plaintiff’s presentation of evidence, the four Commissioners testified that they had terminated Malcak because they were dissatisfied with his work, primarily in the maintenance of the parks. After deciding to dismiss Malcak at the June 24,1981 meeting, the Commissioners directed the President of the Board, Thomas Stanger, to confer with the Board’s attorney, Edward Matuga, concerning the proper method of terminating Malcak. Matuga advised Stanger that the Board was required only to follow the Manual’s directive that Malcak be given 60 days notice of a termination of employment. Matuga further advised Stanger that the Board could satisfy the 60-day notice requirement by paying Malcak for an additional 60 days. The Board followed this advice, terminating Malcak as of the end of June, 1981. Malcak was given 60 days’ pay in lieu of 60 days’ notice. The Commissioners further testified that the attorney, secretary and treasurer of the Park District were appointed to their positions on an annual basis; there was no similar provision for the annual appointment of the Supervisor. Rather, the Supervisor’s position was governed by the Manual provision of “appointment ... for an indefinite period and by mutual agreement with either party serving proper notice of 60 days upon termination of employment.”
The plaintiff testified that, after his first year of employment, his salary was automatically included in the annual budget of the Park District. The only discussion of his status at the budget hearings concerned the amount of his salary increase. Malcak, however, acknowledged that only the attorney, secretary and treasurer of the Park District were hired for one-year periods. Malcak also agreed that there were no entries in the minutes of the Board meetings stating that he was hired for a one-year term of office. Malcak further asserted that several commissioners individually had given him verbal assurances about his performance and continuing employment by the Park District. Malcak testified that, because of these assurances, “my understanding was that as long as I continued doing a good job, there would be no fear of losing it.” Malcak’s attention was directed to the following provision of the Manual specifying the powers of the Board:
“While discharging their responsibilities through official actions of the Board as a whole, Board members may be considered to be state officers with the Park District jurisdiction over the execution of the state’s Park and Recreation laws. In the discharge of their duties, Park Board members act as a committee of the whole and not as individuals. An individual Board member has no legal or moral right to speak for the Park/Recreation Board, unless specifically authorized to do so by action of the Board.”
After he was confronted with this rule of the Park District, the plaintiff conceded that he was aware of the Manual provision and agreed that the individual Board members did not have the authority to give him job assurances unless they had been specif
The defendants moved for a directed verdict at the end of the plaintiffs case. The district court granted the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict as to the first count, the political firing count, noting that the plaintiff had failed to produce any evidence to substantiate his claim. The district court expressed some puzzlement with our opinion in Vail, specifically questioning whether the existence of a property right was a legal or factual issue. After considering the motion overnight, the district court held that the ambiguous language of the Manual provision governing Malcak’s position coupled with the verbal assurances presented “an issue of fact ... as to whether he had a property interest under state law which he is entitled to have protected by the Due Process Clause. That seems to be the teaching of Vail.”
The jury found that the plaintiff had a property interest in his job and was entitled to damages of $30,000. The district court awarded attorneys’ fees in the amount of $14,036.05. After inviting the plaintiff to file a motion for reinstatement, the court also ordered reinstatement. The District 2 moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial. In denying the motion, the district judge held that, “the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury on what the Court of Appeals has characterized in Vail as a fact issue of whether Mr. Malcak had a property interest in his job which was protectable — protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
II.
In
Bd. of Regents v. Roth,
“Property interests, of course, are not created by the Constitution. Rather they are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law — rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.”
Roth,
The Court held in
Perry
that a contract does not have to be written to receive constitutional protection.
Perry,
In
Vail,
a school board offered a coach a one-year contract and, in response to Vail’s inquiries about job security during the employment interview, promised to renew the contract for an additional year. Vail accepted the offer, moved from a town in which he had lived for thirteen years, left a job he had held for ten years, and took a pay cut. The School Board, however, voted not to renew Vail’s contract for the second year. Vail sued the Board, arguing that it had deprived him of property, the second year of his contract, without due process of law. There were two lines of defense: the evidence did not support a finding that the Board offered to renew the contract; and the contract was unenforceable under Illinois law. Specifically, the defendants argued three state law grounds for finding the implied contract unenforceable: (1) the provisions of the Illinois Teacher Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 122, § 24-11 (1979), pre-empted any property interest created by the implied contract; (2) any implied contract would be unenforceable because it arose from an
ultra vires
Board act; and (3) an oral promise to renew employment after the first year was unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds. Our court rejected both defense theories, first upholding the factual finding as not clearly erroneous under Fed.R.Civ.P. 52.
Vail,
III.
We turn now to the question of whether the court should have granted the motion for a directed verdict on Count II of the complaint — the procedural due process claim:
“As this court has emphasized on numerous occasions, a motion for a directed verdict should be granted only where the evidence, together with all inferences that reasonably could be drawn from it, considered most strongly against the moving party, does not create a jury question____ A directed verdict in favor of a defendant, then, is proper only if reasonable people, viewing the facts most favorable to the plaintiff and disregarding conflicting unfavorable testimony, could not conclude that the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case.”
Initially we address the plaintiffs interpretation of the provision of the Manual governing the terms of his employment as meaning that he was to be employed indefinitely until the time that he and the Board mutually decided upon his termination and simultaneously served each other with 60 days’ notice of that joint decision. The Manual states: “The appointment is for an indefinite period and by mutual agreement with either party serving proper notice of 60 days upon termination of employment.” When construing statutory language, the court must presume that the legislature did not intend an absurdity or an injustice.
Halberstadt v. Harris Trust & Savings Bank,
Malcak’s second argument is that the defendants’ course of conduct — specifically, the automatic inclusion of his salary in the annual budget — created a contract for continuing employment. “The length of time that an individual retains an asset affects the
weight
or
value
of the interest but
not
the
nature
of the interest.”
Vail,
Finally, Malcak argues that the commissioners’ verbal assurances created a contract for continued employment so long as the plaintiff’s work was adequate. A principal may be bound by his agent if the agent was actually authorized to bind the principal.
Roscoe Co. v. Lewis Univ., Col.
“Apparent authority in an agent is such authority as the principal knowingly permits the agent to assume or which he holds his agent out as possessing — it is such authority as a reasonably prudent man, exercising diligence and discretion, in view of the principal’s conduct, would naturally suppose the agent to possess.”
Schoenberger v. Chicago Transit Authority,
In summary, after examining the facts and the proffered bases for finding a contract for continuing employment, we conclude that the facts are not in dispute and that the plaintiff was not entitled to a finding of a contract for continuing employment as a matter of law. Since there was no legal basis for finding a contract for continuing employment, the district court erred when it failed to direct a verdict for the defendant on the plaintiff’s due process claim.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the due process claim is DISMISSED with prejudice.
Notes
. The job title was later changed to Director. For purposes of clarity, we will use the older title, Superintendent, because the Operating Manual of the Westchester Park District employs that term.
. Because the Park District was the only named defendant in the second count, the individual commissioners were no longer defendants and thus were dismissed.
