OPINION
Bliss 0. Bignall and Annette R. Bignall (“Bignalls”) brought an action under 42 *245 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that North Idaho College (“College”) had denied Mrs. Bignall procedural and substantive due process when it declined to renew Mrs. Bignall’s teaching contract for the 1973-74 academic year. The district court granted judgment for the defendants and the Bignalls appeal.
Mrs. Bignall taught at the College from 1961 to 1973, as a part-time instructor until 1969, and as a full-time instructor thereafter. In November 1972, allegedly responding to a decline in student enrollment, the Board of Trustees (“Board”) of the College ordered the College’s President, Barry G. Schuler (“Schuler”) to cut the faculty by two full-time teaching positions. Mrs. Bignall was one of the two selected for non-renewal, and Schuler notified her by letter on January 10, 1973, that the College would not rehire her for the coming year. The letter stated no reasons for her termination. The Bignalls subsequently wrote to Schuler requesting an explanation and were informed that the Board had mandated that two full-time faculty be cut. When they asked for a hearing before the Board, the Board’s attorney replied that the Board considered Mrs. Bignall a probationary employee, and as such she was not entitled to a hearing. The letter did say that if the Bignalls could provide them with evidence showing Mrs. Bignall was tenured, the Board would reconsider its position. The Bignalls took this letter as a rejection of their request and, in June 1973, filed suit in the district court.
The Bignalls alleged that Mrs. Bignall had been denied due process in retaliation for the activities of her husband, a lawyer, in behalf of .minority students at the College. These activities were protected under the First Amendment. They requested a preliminary injunction, which the district court denied. At the same time, the court ordered the Board to provide, a hearing prior to the start of the 1973-74 academic year. In late August and early September 1973, the Board held hearings, but the Bignalls withdrew when the Board refused to allow them or their counsel access to the confidential personnel files of the other teachers who were considered for non-retention.
The Bignalls returned to the district court, where a trial was had. The court found that Mrs. Bignall was de facto tenured, but that she had waived her right to further administrative due process by improperly terminating the August hearing and that, in any event, the College had declined to renew her contract for valid, nondiscriminatory reasons, not as a result of her husband’s activities.
On appeal, the Bignalls contend that they were denied procedural due process because (1) Mrs. Bignall did not receive proper notice and hearing prior to Schuler’s decision and (2) the Board of Trustees was a biased panel. They further say that the College violated its own tenure policy by not showing a “demonstrable financial exigency” when it terminated Mrs. Bignall. They do not challenge the district judge’s holding on the lack of a First Amendment violation.
Due process is a flexible, pragmatic concept.
(Goss v. Lopez
(1975)
“first, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.” (Mathews v. Eldridge,424 U.S. 319 , 335,96 S.Ct. 893 , 903,47 L.Ed.2d 18 [44 U.S.L.W. 4224 , 4229 (1976)].)
(See generally
Note, “Specifying the Procedures Required by Due Process: Towards Limits on Interest Balancing,” 88 Harv.L. Rev. 1510 (1975).) Moreover, the component parts of the process are not unrelated (Friendly, “Some Kind of Hearing,” 123 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1267 (1975)): the goal of the procedures is to reach a substantively cor
*246
rect result at a minimum of cost. More elaborate procedures at one stage may compensate for deficiencies at other stages. (Cf.
Mathews v. Eldridge, supra; Arnett v. Kennedy
(1974)
A
de facto
tenured faculty member has a right to notice, and “a hearing, at [her] request, where [she] could be informed of the grounds for [her] nonretention and challenge their sufficiency.”
(Perry v. Sindermann
(1972)
The Bignalls assert
Perry v. Sindermann
and its progeny mean that Mrs. Bignall had a right to notice and a hearing before Schuler had decided that she was one of the two faculty not to be rehired. Recently, the Courts of Appeals for the Third and Fourth Circuits have decided this precise issue adversely to the Bignalls.
(Chung v. Park
(3d Cir. 1975)
“a pre-termination hearing is not a hearing held prior to any decision to terminate, as Dr. Chung suggests, but rather a hearing held prior to a termination of benefits ... In the present case, any hearing held prior to the end of the academic year would be a pre-termination hearing.” (514 F.2d at 386 n.7.)
We agree with the Third and Fourth Circuits. The instructor has not been denied due process while still employed at the same job and while adequate procedures remain to challenge and forestall the non-retention. 1
The College afforded the Bignalls a hearing but they chose prematurely to withdraw from it and return to the district court. The plaintiff in a section 1983 suit usually does not need to exhaust either state judicial or administrative remedies.
(Ellis v. Dyson
(1975)
When the Bignalls unilaterally halted the hearing, they aborted the decision-making process.
3
The hearing could have resolved
*247
the controversy, and given the district court, whose review would not normally be
de novo,
a full record to evaluate. The College violated the Bignalls’ procedural rights only if it offered an inadequate hearing. If the suggested procedure would have been adequate, the Bignalls cannot state a claim under the Civil Rights Act for a denial of their procedural rights when they themselves elected to forego a complete hearing.
(Whitner v. Davis, supra; Hayes v. Cape Henlopen School District
(D.Del.1972)
The Bignalls assert, in effect, that the procedure was inadequate both because the notice they received insufficiently specified why Mrs. Bignall was to be terminated and because the Board was biased since it had ordered the cut and it was concerned with the financial operation of the College.
The Bignalls have given us no facts which show the prejudice of this Board; they assume that any board in a like position would be biased and that the hearing is constitutionally inadequate as a matter of law. The cases do not support this position. While the risk of error with a biased hearing panel is obvious, courts have balanced the need for an objective decision-maker against the costs of employing outside people, administrative efficiency and the body’s having some expertise in institutional structure. (S
imard v. Board of Education
(2d Cir. 1973)
However, we agree with the Bignalls that since Mrs. Bignall was
de facto
tenured, the College gave them inadequate notice. The purpose of notice is to allow a complainant to marshall a case against the firing body.
(Cf. In re Gault
(1967)
Following the Board’s hearing, the district court held a
de novo
evidentiary trial. Along with the evidence presented at trial, the court considered the transcripts of the hearing. It decided not only the Bignalls’ allegations of procedural irregularity, but also the merits of their position that Schuler had chosen Mrs. Bignall discriminatorily. The Bignalls received the complete panoply of procedural rights.
(Morrissey
v.
Brewer
(1972)
We conclude that the total procedure, including intervention by the district court, did provide the Bignalls with substantial due process. This does not mean that they “waived” their procedural due process cause of action by abandoning the hearing. Since the lack of notice as to the real reason Mrs. Bignall was terminated rendered the procedure to that point inadequate, the Bignalls would not have received due process by continuing the hearing. However, this is not a case where a court has to review, using a deferential standard, a fully-run administrative procedure. The process the Bignalls received included the trial, by which time there was ample notice of the alleged financial exigency. Seiter, the Chairman of the Board, and Schuler had referred to it at the hearing; the pre-trial order had specifically noted that compliance with the College’s tenure policy was an issue of fact for trial. The district judge found, correctly as we shall discuss infra, that the College properly terminated Mrs. Bignall’s employment. Therefore, even perfect notice before the August hearing would not have helped her ultimately to prevail. Moreover, in this case, unlike Zimmerer v. Spencer, supra, where the dismissed employee was entitled to a terminal period of employment, Mrs. Bignall’s implied contract had no terminal period, and the delay did not hurt Mrs. Bignall financially.
The Bignalls maintain that the College denied Mrs. Bignall substantive due process. because it violated its own tenure policy 5 in *249 releasing her and because it did not develop and apply uniform criteria for deciding which faculty were not to be retained. They further state that the issue of financial exigency, or low enrollment, was not litigated below because it was raised for the first time at trial.
Under
Perry v. Sindermann, supra, de facto
tenure grows out of “ ‘the promisor’s words and conduct in the light of the surrounding circumstances.’ ” (
Assuming for. present purposes only that the Bignalls stated a
prima facie
ease that the College fired her in violation of her
de facto
tenure rights, the College bore the burden of proving that there was a financial exigency and that Schuler adopted and used a uniform set of procedures for all the faculty.
(Chung v. Park, supra; American Ass’n of University Professors v. Bloomfield College
(1974)
We also have no difficulty agreeing with the district judge that the College used proper procedures to select Mrs. Bignall. 6 The Bignalls point to no specific indicia of discrimination with the possible ex *250 ception that the College retained less senior faculty. On the other hand, Schuler testified that he formulated guidelines to be applied to the entire 50-person faculty. He consulted with all the department heads and considered their evaluations as well as the needs of the school. He and various administrators, including the two heads of the two departments in which Mrs. Bignall taught, all testified that she was the least well qualified academically; that because she directed her instruction to the most gifted among her students, she alienated the less bright so that students regularly transferred out of her classes or tried to avoid her courses. While there was some, perhaps unavoidable, flexibility in the selection process, the district court was not clearly erroneous in concluding that the College did not act discriminatorily.
The conclusion follows that the Bignalls were provided with adequate due process protection and that the College non-retained Mrs. Bignall for valid, constitutionally permissible reasons.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This court has used a balancing test to decide if a pre-termination hearing is constitutionally necessary.
(Peacock v. Board of Regents
(9th Cir. 1975)
. The Circuits are split on the need to exhaust state administrative remedies (Moskowitz & Casagrande, “Teachers and the First Amendment: Academic Freedom and Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies Under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983,” 39 Albany L.Rev. 661, 694-704 (1975).)
. The district court’s order contemplated a return to it if “either of the parties determine themselves to be aggrieved by the failure of the other party to perform in the spirit of this order . .” Despite this language, where, as here, the College had offered an adequate hearing, the Bignalls have no additional rights. Their withdrawal was only appropriate if they were about to be harmed, i. e., if the hearing was inadequate.
. The existence of a record of the hearing complements and reduces the need for a completely disinterested arbiter.
. We need not decide the issue whether de facto tenure at an institution with an articulated tenure policy can be equated to de jure tenure, because Mrs. Bignall’s tenure arose pri- or to the College’s adoption of its policy. Each of the facts upon which the district judge based his finding of de facto tenure occurred prior to the Spring 1972 promulgation of the tenure policy. The tenure policy, as formalized in the Proposed Tenure Policy of March 12, 1972, states that tenure shall not apply to:
“the termination of a faculty appointment due to the scheduled cancellation or abolition of an existing program, curriculum or course for reasons of demonstrable financial exigency, low enrollment or obsolescence.”
The finding that Mrs. Bignall had de facto tenure does not automatically lead to the conclusion that she had rights identical to those granted tenure under the College’s tenure program. The granting of tenure is a complex, ramified process. A holding that one has an *249 expectancy of continuous employment, on the other hand, is a rather gross conclusion that may merely signify that the holder of the expectancy cannot summarily be dismissed.
. The Bignalls have not shown any positions that Mrs. Bignall could fill that others were given. The only instructor hired after she was fired was a vocational instructor.
