OPINION
Aрpellant Leo L. Barrow appeals from the affirmance of the administrative decision which suspended him from his University of Arizona professorship for six months and from the granting of summary judgment in favor of appellees Schaefer, Weaver, Jones, Rosenblatt and Evans on Barrow’s causes of action for intentional interference with contract and violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Appellant Peter Keller appeals from the order that he is jointly responsible for a portion of the attorney’s fee award entered in favor of the individual appellees. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Barrow is a tenured professor of Spanish and Portuguese. In April 1982, a university trial board was convened to hear charges brought under the university Code of Conduct that Barrow was guilty of disorderly conduct, that he unlawfully possessed a narcotic drug and that he had violated a state or federal criminal law. The charges arose out of complaints by several students that Barrow had served cookies containing marijuana to two of his classes, one held in November 1979 and the other in December 1980. The trial board found him guilty of all charges and recommended that hе be censured. Barrow appealed the decision to the University Review and Advisory Board, which recommended imposition of a penalty more severe than censure. Then-president Schaefer recommended to the Board of Regents that Barrow be dismissed from his position.
At the final step of the administrative review process, the Board of Regents dismissed the disorderly conduct charges, dismissed all charges arising out of the November 1979 incident, and affirmed the findings that Barrow was guilty of possessing a narcotic drug and that he had violated a state or federal criminal law, bоth of which arose out of the December 1980 incident. The board ordered Barrow suspended from his position for 180 days beginning June 24, 1982. The suspension period was completed in early 1983.
Barrow filed his complaint on July 30, 1982. Count one sought review of the administrative decision. Count two was for breach of contract against the Board of Regents based on Barrow's alleged contractual right to have the charges heard by the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure rather than under the Code of Conduct. Count three alleged that the individual appellees interfered with Barrоw’s contractual right to have a hearing before the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure, and count four alleged that the individual appellees violated his civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by depriving him of his tenured professorship rights without due process and by chilling the exercise of his First Amendment right to teach his classes as he saw fit.
Count two was dismissed by Barrow before an answer was filed. In August 1986, the individual appellees’ summary judgment motion on counts three and four was granted. The court later awarded those appellees attorney’s fees of $22,560.50 and found that Barrow’s trial attorney, Peter Keller, was jointly responsible for $5,933.50 of the award pursuant to Rule 11(a), Ariz. R.Civ.P., 16 A.R.S. In December 1986, the court affirmed the Board of Regents’ decision.
Barrow contends it was error to affirm his suspension, claiming the university had no jurisdiction to punish Barrow since the incident involved occurred off campus. He also contends that insufficient evidence was presented to support the administrative decision. With regard to the individual appellees, Barrow contends it was error to grant their summary judgment motion, arguing that the record showed he was denied due process and that appellees presеnted no facts to support the legal argument on their motion. Finally, both Barrow and Keller appeal from the award of attorney’s fees to the individual appellees, with Barrow contending that there is no legal authority to support the award against him and Keller contending that the *75 facts do not support the partial award of fees against him under Rule 11.
A. REVIEW OF ADMINISTRATIVE DECISION
1. Lack of Jurisdiction
The evidence which was presented at the university trial board hearing was that in early December 1980, Barrow scheduled a session of his upper-level Spanish composition and conversation class to be hеld at Signal Hill in Saguaro National Monument West outside Tucson. The session, which served as the final examination in the class, consisted of the videotaping of students, Barrow, and others performing parts in a play the students had written with Barrow’s assistance. Two class members testified that Barrow brought a bag of cookies to the session, and a portion of a cookie taken by one of the students from the bag was later analyzed and found to contain marijuana.
Barrow was charged under the Code of Conduct, which governs the conduct of all members of the university community. Its provisions list 36 individual оffenses which can constitute a violation of the code. The two of which Barrow was found guilty are number 28, which prohibits the “[ujnlawful possession, manufacture, sale, or use of any narcotic or dangerous drug, as defined by the statutes of the State of Arizona,” and number 32, “[t]he violation of any criminal state or federal law on or off the university campus.” Code of Conduct § IV(A).
The Code of Conduct was adopted by the Board of Regents pursuant to former A.R. S. § 13-1093 (repealed in 1978 and replaced by § 13-2911), which authorizes the board to adopt rules to maintain public order on its property by govеrning the conduct of faculty, staff, students and visitors. Barrow contends that the wording of the statute prohibits the board from disciplining him for conduct that occurred off campus, arguing that the authority granted by the statute is limited to property owned, operated or controlled by the board. A.R.S. § 13-2911(G)(3). He also contends that the code is not applicable to any off-campus activity since the statute was enacted “to [gjuarantee the students, faculty and other staff and the public that tax-supported education facilities would remain accessible and useful at all times for eduсational and other authorized public purposes....”
Tucson Public Schools, District No. 1 of Pima County v. Green,
The evidence produced at the trial board hearing was that Barrow had scheduled a final examination which was to be held off campus. Such examinations are normally held on university property. Instead of conducting a written examination in a classroom located in a university building, Barrow chose to have his class film a play as the final exam. He testified that his grades were based on a student’s “total participation” in the class, and both students who testified stated that their course grade was based on the filming, since they had taken no tests during the course and had received no grades on written work completed during the semester. The two students as well as Barrow testified that so far as they knew, nearly everyone in the class was present at the off-campus site.
A.R.S. § 15-1626 enumerates the general administrative powers of the Board of Regents. Among its other powers, the Board “shall ... [rjemove any officer or employee when in its judgment the interests of education in this state so require.” § 15-1626(A)(4). That statute does not limit the Board’s powers to on-campus activities. The power to suspend a professor when it is required by the interests of education is clearly included within a statute which authorizes a professor’s removal under such circumstances. Thus, even though A.R.S. § 13-2911, under which the Code of Conduct was adopted, refers to on-campus property, the Board of Regents’ authority over a professor extends to off-campus, university-related activities. We therefore find no merit to Barrow’s contention that the Board had no jurisdiction to punish him for his off-campus conduct.
*76 2. Was the Evidence Substantial?
Barrow next complains that substantial evidence was not presented to the trial board to support the findings of guilt. His specific complaints are that (1) there was no showing that the amount of marijuana in the cookie constituted a usable amount as required by Arizona case law and (2) the chain of custody for possession of the cookie was broken.
With regard to the issue of a usable amount of marijuana, Barrow notes that the criminalist who analyzed the cookie and determined that it contained marijuana testified that he could nоt estimate how much marijuana was contained in the portion of cookie he had been given to test and therefore could not say whether it was a usable amount. Barrow also notes that in order for the state to obtain a criminal conviction for possession of a narcotic drug when the amount of the drug involved is so small that a chemical test is necessary for its presence to be detected, the state must show that “the quantity is sufficient if usable under the known practices of narcotic addicts.”
State v. Moreno,
The evidence from one of Barrow’s students was that when Barrow аrrived at the site of the filming, he carried a paper bag from his car and placed it on a picnic table, opened it and told the students to help themselves. Several people ate cookies from the bag, and the student testified that she later saw that the cookies looked as though they contained marijuana. The student asked Barrow if he had made the cookies, and he replied that he had made them that morning. She then had her boyfriend take a cookie from the bag and give it to her. She wrapped the cookie in tinfoil and later turned over one-third of it to a university official who had it analyzed. Thus, the criminalist tested, at most, one-third of a cookie selected at random from a bag containing a number of cookies.
“It has been held that only in those cases where the amount is incapable of being put to any effective use will the evidence be insufficient to support a conviction.”
State v. Martinez,
For that reason, I would not give anybody who did not do marijuana a cooky because this sort of thing would be — a cooky quite often will get them so high that they could have personal problems. This is a heavy way to begin and it is a bad way to, you know—
So, I wouldn’t do that to anybody under any circumstances.
Q. Because cookies as opposed to smoking isn’t self-regulating?
A. Yeah, it is not____
In view of the fact that Barrow, a self-proclaimed expert on the subject, testified that a single cookie could produce a substantial effect on a persоn and that the criminalist had available for testing only a third of a cookie selected at random from an entire bag of cookies, we find that substantial evidence was presented from which the trier of fact could determine by a preponderance of the evidence in the administrative proceeding that the marijuana in the cookie was a usable amount.
The evidence with regard to chain of custody of the portion of cookie tested was as follows. The student testified she had her boyfriend take a cookie out of the paper bag Barrow had brought to the site on Saturday. The student saw him take the cookie. She placed it in a piece of tinfoil and shortly thereafter, left the site and took the cookie home and gave it to her parents. The following Monday the student took one-third of the cookie to Dean Paul Rosenblatt. The remainder of the cookie was left at her home. About three days later, she contacted Dean Rosenblatt and learned the portion she gave him had *77 been lost. She then took him a second third of the cookie, and while she was in his office, he telephoned Exеcutive Vice President Weaver and told him he was bringing another cookie portion to his office. The student and Rosenblatt then left his office and walked out of the building together. Sergeant Reinhardt of the university police testified that he went to Weaver’s office on January 14, 1981, and was given the piece of cookie wrapped in tinfoil which he placed in an evidence envelope with an attached chain of evidence log.
Barrow complains because there was no showing of where the cookie was between the time the student gave it to Rosenblatt and January 14 when Weaver gave it to Reinhardt. He contends that lack of showing precluded the trial court from affirming the Board of Regents’ decision. We disagree.
The administrative proceedings conducted pursuant to the Code of Conduct are not conducted under the formal rules of evidence. Instead, “[t]he trial board shall receive and consider oral and documentary evidence of the kind on which responsible persons are accustomed to rely in serious matters____” Code of Conduct § 111(B)(2)(e).
The student testified that the cookies were raisin-oatmeаl cookies, that the raisins in them were darker than usual and that the cookies contained greenish specks which gave the rest of the cookie a “yellowish-greenish” tint. Another student testified that the cookies looked hard, grainy and speckly, that they were thin and brittle and had dark speckles in them. The student who took the cookie home with her stated that when she took the second third to give to Rosenblatt, the cookie looked the same as before and showed no evidence of having been tampered with. Finally, at the hearing when she was shown the portion tested by thе criminalist, she identified it as the cookie she had given to Rosenblatt.
Foundation for the admission of evidence can be established either by testimony showing a chain of custody or by identification testimony.
State v. Emery,
Ariz.R.Evid. 901(a) provides that ‘[t]he requirement of * * * identification as a condition precedent to admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims.’ A party can satisfy this requirement in a variety of ways: a witness can testify that the item is what it is claimed to be, Ariz.R. Evid. 901(b)(1), or the evidence can be shown to have distinctive characteristics which, tаken in conjunction with circumstances, support a finding that it is what its proponent claims, Ariz.R.Evid. 901(b)(4).
Emery,
We also find that substantial evidence was presented to support the Board of Regents’ decision and to affirm the penalty of suspension which was imposed upon Barrow.
B. SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR INDIVIDUAL APPELLEES
1. Interference with Contract Cause of Action
At the time of Barrow’s suspension, Schaеfer was president of the university, Weaver was executive vice president, Jones was provost for graduate studies, Rosenblatt was dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Evans was head of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese. The complaint alleges that in February 1981, Weaver requested the head of the Romance Languages Department to begin proceedings to terminate Barrow. It further alleges that although the department head told Weaver that insufficient justification existed to dismiss Barrow, Weaver wrote to the *78 chairperson of the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure requesting that a hearing be held. A hearing date was set, but it was postponed after Barrow objected. Weaver again referred the matter to the committee, Barrow again objected, and the committee declined to hold a hearing because proper procedures had not been followed. No hearing before that committee was ever held. Instead, Evans initiated a complaint against Barrow under the Code of Conduct, and the proceedings thereunder resulted in the appeal before us.
Under the Code of Conduct proceedings, Jones was appointed by Schaefer to conduct a preliminary investigation of the complaint. He recommended that a university trial board be convened to hear some of the charges. After the trial and an administrative appeal, Schaefer recommended that Barrow be dismissed. The university official the student initially complained to was Rosenblatt. He was also the person to whom she gave the cookie. Rosenblatt then gave it to Weaver.
The complaint alleges that appellees intended to terminate Barrow’s appointment “because of personal animosities and/or pedagogical differences.” It alleges that Barrow has a contractual right to have accusations regarding his competency as a professor heard by the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure and that appellees interfered with that contractual right by choosing to proceed against him under the Code of Conduct.
The elements of a cause of action for intentional interference with contract are a contract between thе plaintiff and a third party; knowledge of the defendant that the contract exists; intentional interference by the defendant which causes the third party to breach the contract; a showing that the defendant acted improperly; and a showing that damage resulted to the plaintiff.
Wagenseller v. Scottsdale Memorial Hospital,
This case is like that of
Payne v. Pennzoil Corp.,
2. Due Process Cause of Action
Barrow’s final cause of action alleged that the individual appellees conspired to deprive him of his due process rights and his right to freedom of speech and association, all in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In his opening brief, Barrow contends that appellee Jones violated the procedures of the Code of Conduct, thereby depriving him of due process. He has not argued that *79 any other appellee deprived him of his rights.
The Code of Conduct provides that a university officer, appointed by the president, shall conduct an initial investigation of a complaint filed against a faculty member. The Code states that the person appointed “shall consult with the person making the complaint and the accused.” Code of Conduct § 11(A)(2)(b). After his investigation concludes, the person is then required to report his findings to the accused in an orаl conference and advise the accused of the disposition he intends to recommend to the president.
Barrow complains because the first contact he had with Jones, whom Schaefer had appointed to investigate the complaint in this case, was a letter asking Barrow to make an appointment for an oral conference so that Jones could advise Barrow of the recommendation he intended to make to Schaefer. Barrow responded with a letter stating he would agree to the conference if the meeting were оpen to the public, if it were recorded or televised and if he received a copy of the charges made against him. Jones refused to open the meeting or to record it but agreed to provide Barrow with a copy of the charges. Barrow never contacted Jones to schedule the meeting. Jones wrote twice more seeking an appointment and finally sent his report to Schaefer. Ten days later, Barrow’s attorney wrote to Jones, complaining, among other things, of the fact that no initial consultation was ever offered to Barrow. The record shows all required Code of Conduct procedures were complied with during the hearing before the university trial board and during the subsequent administrative review.
As was noted by Division One of this court in
Tiffany v. Arizona Interscholastic Association, Inc.,
Barrow was accorded his full due process rights in all subsequent proceedings, including notice of the specific charges against him, a full hearing with testimony from witnesses, the right to present witnesses and evidence and to cross-examine the witnesses against him, representation at the hearing and a finding of a violation based upon a preponderance of the evidence. See
McClanahan v. Cochise College,
C. ATTORNEY’S FEE AWARD
1. Barrow’s Appeal
Barrow’s final complaint on appeal is with regard to the $22,560.50 award of attorney’s fees entered in favor of the individual appellees. They sought the award under A.R.S. § 12-341.01(A) and (C) and 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The trial court did not specify the statutory basis for the award.
With regard to the cause of action alleging violation of his due process rights, we find that an award of fees is appropriate under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which allows a reasonable attorney’s fee to the prevailing party in a § 1983 action. As Barrow has pointed out, an attorney’s fee award to a prevailing defendant is more restricted than one to a prevailing plaintiff, the former being limited to cases in which the defendant has been required to defend against “unreasonable, frivolous, meritless or vexatious” actions.
Christiansburg
*80
Garment Co. v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
With regard to the interference with contract cause of action which essentially alleged that the appellees were liable to Barrow for compensatory damages and $1 million punitive damages because they had proceeded against him under the Code of Conduct instead of the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure, we find that an award of attorney’s fees in favor of all individual appellees was appropriate under A.R.S. § 12-341.01(C). Barrow dismissed his cause of action for breach of contract against the university based on that same contention a little more than one month after he filed his complaint, yet he continued the interference with contract action against the individual appellees. Four years after the complaint was filed, when aрpellees filed their summary judgment motion, Barrow still had no facts to support the cause of action. At the time of the motion, the trial date was imminent. His response to the motion was an affidavit which referred to several paragraphs in the complaint and an argument that appellees’ own affidavits filed in support of their motion raised factual issues with regard to “a pattern of communication” among the appellees outside the Code of Conduct proceedings. The record contains evidence of' the three elements required for an awаrd of fees under A.R.8. § 12-341.01(C): the claim constituted harassment, was groundless and was not made in good faith. We find no error in the trial court’s award. See
Gilbert v. Board of Medical Examiners,
2. Keller’s Appeal
Finally, Barrow’s trial attorney complains because the trial court found him jointly responsible for $5,933.50 of the $22,-560.50 attorney’s fee award entered against Barrow. The court imposed the fee under Rule 11(a), Ariz.R.Civ.P., 16 A.R.S. That rule permits a court to impose sanctions against a party or his attorney for violating the certificаte that the pleading is well grounded in fact, warranted by existing law and not imposed for any improper purpose. The amount of fees for which Keller was made jointly responsible corresponded to the amount billed for services performed by appellees’ attorneys after Keller filed opposition to appellees’ motion for summary judgment.
Initially, we note that Keller has standing to raise the issue even though he was not a party to the action below.
Abril v. Harris,
when the party or counsel knew, or should have known by such investigation of fact and law as was reasonable and feasible under all the circumstances, that the claim or defense was insubstantial, groundless, frivolous, or otherwise unjustified. It is also violated by the filing of pleadings for an improper purpose such as those intended to harass, coerce, extort, or delay.
Appellees contended that Keller violated Rule 11 in two ways: first, by filing opposition to their summary judgment motion and second, by filing an affidavit in connection with that opposition which they contend was not based on personal knowl *81 edge. Although we agree that the opposition to the motion was meager, we find no merit to appellees’ contention that the mere filing of opposition was a violation of Rule 11. Since the affidavit specifically incorporated only those facts related to the administrative procedures available and those followed in the case and since Keller represented Barrow in thosе administrative proceedings, the affidavit is clearly based on Keller’s personal knowledge. Thus, it cannot serve as the basis of an award of fees pursuant to Rule 11. We therefore reverse the fee award entered against Keller.
The Board of Regents has not requested attorney’s fees on appeal, and we decline to award attorney’s fees on appeal to individual appellees. The judgment in favor of the Board of Regents and the summary judgment in favor of the individual appellees are affirmed. The award of attorney’s fees against Keller is reversed.
