MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter comes before the court upon defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is denied.
*454 Plaintiff, Philomena Blank (Blank) was hired by defendant Donald G. Swan (Swan) as an employee of defendant York Township (York) on March 15, 1970. 1 In 1973 Swan made her chief welfare caseworker and office manager. Swan, who remained her supervisor, gave Malci Agnic (Agnic) a job in their office in March 1976. On April 21, 1976, Swan sent Blank a letter which reads as follows:
Dear Mrs. Blank,
I am attaching a photostatic copy of a felony, which is known as intimidation. Effective Friday, April 22, 1977, I am suspending you as an employee of York Township.
Your case will be reviewed if you will secure competent professional help.
Upon a review of a medical report concerning your physical and emotional well being a final decision will be made concerning your employment.
Yours very truly,
York Township Don Swan Supervisor, York Township.
There is evidence that Swan publicized the charges that Blank was emotionally or mentally disturbed and that she had tried to blackmail him both before and after he sent Blank this letter.
Blank informally requested a hearing before the York Township Board of Trustees, but received none. She never requested a hearing before Swan. Since her suspension 2 became effective, Blank has received no further salary from York, no payments have been made on her behalf to the municipal retirement fund, and she has neither received nor been eligible for any benefits associated with employment with York.
After looking for a job for over a year, Blank obtained a clerical job with the Veterans Administration in Hines, Illinois. She held this position from September, 1978, until later in the year, when she moved to New York with her husband.
In Count I of her two-count Complaint, Blank alleges that defendants’ actions during the course of this episode violated her rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. In Count II she seeks recovery from Swan for libel and slander under Illinois law.
The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees that no State shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law”. Blank contends that defendants have unconstitutionally deprived her of a liberty interest by defaming her in connection with the change in her employment status. 3
In
Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
“[t]he concept of liberty recognizes two particular interests of a public employee:
*455 1) the protection of his good name, reputation, honor and integrity, and 2) his freedom to take advantage of other employment opportunities.” Lipp v. Board of Education of City of Chicago,470 F.2d 802 , 805 (7th Cir. 1972).
Paige v. Harris,
The scope of the protected liberty interests identified in
Roth
was subsequently narrowed by the Supreme Court in
Paul v. Davis,
Davis held that a liberty interest is not implicated when the only injury suffered as the result of government action is a stigma or damage to reputation.
While we have in a number of prior cases pointed out the frequently drastic effect of the “stigma” which may result from defamation by the government in a variety of contexts, this line of cases does not establish the proposition that reputation alone, apart from some more tangible interests such as employment, is either “liberty” or “property” by itself sufficient to invoke the procedural protection of the Due Process Clause. [424 U.S. at 701 ,96 S.Ct. at 1160 ]. (Emphasis added).
As this court observed in
Danno v. Peterson,
However, this court ruled in Danno that .not every State-ordered alteration in an employee’s employment status constitutes a sufficient “plus” to mandate the conclusion that that action, when accompanied by the State-inflicted stigmatization or defamation of the effected employee, implicates a liberty interest of the employee. More specifically, Danno holds that a school board’s defamation of the plaintiff in conjunction with its determination to relieve him of his duties as principal and reassign him to a regular teaching position did not implicate the plaintiff’s liberty interests.
Defendants here argue that Blank, who complains that she was summarily suspended on account of and defamed by defendants’ false charge that she was mentally ill and attempting to blackmail Swan, 5 suffered no deprivation of a liberty interest because suspension is not the type of “plus” that will satisfy the test of Davis. They seize upon the statement in that case that
it was not thought sufficient [in Roth ] to establish a claim under § 1983 and the Fourteenth Amendment that there simply be a defamation by a state official; the defamation had to occur in the course of the termination of employment,
*456 The holding of the Court of Appeals in Larry refutes this argument with regard to the second prong of the concept of liberty identified in Roth and the reasoning underlying that decision applies equally in the context of the other aspect of liberty discussed in Roth. The significant language in Davis is that quoted in Larry and reproduced above. The passage relied on by defendants was a reference to the facts of the Roth case. Roth was suing the Board of Regents because they failed to renew his teaching contract. In the portion of the Roth opinion that was being interpreted by the Davis Court when it made the statement upon which defendants rely, the Roth Court merely observed that Roth might have stated a cause of action for deprivation of liberty if he had alleged that the non-renewal of his contract was accompanied by the directing of a defamatory accusation against him.
However, the court’s rejection of the extreme position urged by defendants does not resolve the question of whether an indefinite suspension without pay is the type of “plus” that will suffice to allow a finding that a liberty interest exists. It is to that question that the court will now direct its attention. 6
Defendants have cited no cases holding that this type of change is employment status in an insufficient “plus”, and this court has found none. To the contrary, the court’s researches have revealed that every court to decide this issue since
Davis
has found that suspension without pay does satisfy the “plus” requirement of the “stigma plus” test.
See Victor v. Brickley,
Defendants argue that even if Blank has adduced sufficient facts to satisfy the “stigma plus” test in all other respects, no liberty interest was affected by her suspension because the allegedly defamatory statements were not made “in conjunction with” the suspension. Upon examination, however, this position reveals itself to be more accurately described in the following way:
*457
Bishop v. Wood,
Defendants have adduced no decisions endorsing their reading of
Bishop. Gentile v. Wallen,
Next, defendants maintain that if Blank had a liberty interest in the premises, she should not be able to claim that she was deprived of it without due process because she failed to seek review of her suspension as provided for in the letter. Assuming, arguendo, that Swan would have given Blank a hearing if she had requested one, 9 the fact that she did not do so would not estop her from complaining about defendants’ failure to provide her with a hearing prior to her suspension.
While defendants contend that Blank had no due process right to a pre-suspension hearing,
cf. Muscare
v.
Quinn,
Finally, defendants argue that if Blank was deprived of liberty without due process of law in connection with her suspension, she is not entitled to relief by way of damages, which is what she seeks to recover in this lawsuit, but to an opportunity to clear her name. They rely on
Dennis v. S & S Consolidated Rural High School District,
Dennis
does not hold that
no
damages may be recovered by a successful plaintiff in a deprivation of liberty due process suit. Nor did
Codd v. Velger,
However, the court need not resolve at this time the question of what type of
*458
damages will be available to Blank should she prevail here. In the event that Blank does establish that she was deprived of liberty without due process of law, she will be entitled to a hearing before an entity other than this court at which she may attempt to “clear [her] name.”
Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
Accordingly, defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment will be denied as to Count I.
Turning to Count II, the court concludes that it has the power to, and will, exercise pendant jurisdiction over Blank’s state law claim against Swan for defamation.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Swan requests the entry of summary judgment in his favor on this Count on two grounds. First, he claims that he is absolutely immune from liability arising out of any defamatory statements made by him. Second, he argues that if he is not absolutely privileged in the premises, he is entitled to summary judgment because the remarks were covered by a conditional privilege.
Swan’s Motion .must be denied as to Count II. While Swan’s position would seem to entitle him to invoke the immunity defense established by
Blair v. Walker,
Accordingly, defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is denied.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Swan has been the Supervisor of York Township since April, 1969. He is also the ex officio Supervisor of General Assistance for York.
In the latter capacity, Swan had authority to hire Blank, supervise her performance, and suspend or terminate her employment.
. The parties dispute the effect of Swan’s letter. Blank contends that she was fired. Swan says that she was suspended and that she has never been fired or discharged from her employment with York. It is not necessary for the court to determine, at this time, which of these interpretations of the events described in the text is correct. For the purposes of this Opinion, the court will consider Blank’s change in employment status to be a suspension.
. The parties have not discussed the relevance to this case of
Pickering v. Board of Education,
. While Colaizzi was a “protection of good name” — liberty case and Larry was a “stigma foreclosing other job opportunities” — liberty case, in each case the court considered the question before it to be governed by Davis.
. Blank maintains that she was fired because she objected to the allegedly improper grant of, inter alia, general assistance benefits and government employment to Agnic, who Blank claimed to have been romantically involved with Swan.
. Defendants do not deny the presence of State action. Nor do they contest the fact that the accusations allegedly made against Blank were such as “might seriously damage [her] standing and associations in [her] community”.
See, e. g., Larry v. Lawler,
. Defendants claim that
Bagby
and
Doe
are distinguishable because the courts therein only found a liberty interest to exist because the stigma was inflinted in conjunction with the deprivation of a property right. This court does not agree with this restrictive reading of these cases. However, even if this interpretation of
Bagby
and
Doe
was correct the “distinction” would be an irrelevant one. In
Colaizzi v. Walker,
. Thus, cases involving suspension with pay, e.
g., Harris v. Harvey,
. The court notes that the letter of April 21, 1977, does not use the word hearing, and that Swan nowhere states that he otherwise communicated to Blank the availability of a hearing at which she might attempt to refute the charges against her and clear her name.
. A contrary conclusion has been reached by the Eighth Circuit.
See Wellner v. Minnesota State Junior College Board,
