Plaintiffs R.C. Bunger and K.V. Pradhan sued their former employer, Cameron University, the University of Oklahoma Board of Regents, and various administrators associated with Cameron University under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for deprivation of their due process and free speech rights. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on both claims, and Bunger and Pradhan now appeal. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
I. Background
Bunger and Pradhan were untenured assistant professors in tenure-track faculty positions in the Cameron University School of Business. In December 1990, the two professors, along with two other faculty members, signed a “Complaint Relating to Election Procedures for Graduate Council Membership from the School of Business.” The complaint was a memorandum to Dean Jacquetta J. McClung of the School of Business and to the chairpersons of the two departments at the school, and criticized the dean’s announced election procedures for becoming a member of the Cameron University Graduate Council. The Graduate Council played a role in shaping admissions policies to graduate programs, graduate curriculum content, and qualifications for graduate degrees. The professors complained that the election procedures restricted Graduate Council membership to tenured faculty and that exclusion of unten-ured faculty from the Council violated the University’s Faculty Handbook. Prior to the professors’ complaint, Bunger had received six of nine votes cast as a write-in candidate for the Council. Accordingly, in addition to demanding that untenured faeul
In April 1991, defendant Terril McKellips, Vice-President for Academic Affairs, officially notified Bunger and Pradhan that they had not been recommended for reappointment and that their current appointments would be terminated at the end of the 1991-1992 academic year. Both professors filed grievances with the Faculty Grievance Committee, complaining that the university failed to follow Faculty Handbook guidelines in making its reappointment decision. In particular, the professors complained that the university violated rules regarding the selection of a reviewing personnel committee, notification procedures, the scheduling of meetings, the development of evaluation plans, and the provision of an opportunity for the faculty member under scrutiny to address the personnel committee. The committee recommended that both professors be reappointed because the university had failed to follow its procedural guidelines in evaluating their performance. However, the university declined to follow the committee’s recommendations and refused to reappoint Bunger and Pradhan for the 1992-1993 academic year.
In May 1992, the plaintiffs initiated this action against Cameron University, the Board of Regents, and various individual defendants. They allege that the defendants deprived them of procedural due process by failing to reappoint them to the faculty of Cameron University in violation of procedures contained in the university’s Faculty Handbook. In addition, the plaintiffs alleged that the defendants violated their First Amendment right to free speech by declining to reappoint them, in retaliation for their participation in the grievance regarding the composition of the university’s Graduate Council. In April 1995, the district court entered an order granting summary judgment to the defendants and dismissing all claims against the defendants.
II. The Due Process Claims
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standard employed by the district court.
Wolf v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
Under Oklahoma state law, public employees are employed at will unless they have specific contractual arrangements entitling them to continued employment, such as tenure agreements.
See Carnes v. Parker,
Bunger and Pradhan also contend that the procedural guidelines in the Faculty Handbook effectively created a property interest in reappointment, of which they could be divested only according to the terms of the specified procedures. This tautological argument fails because it attempts to construct a property interest out of procedural
The plaintiffs in this ease also assert that the defendants deprived them of a constitutionally-cognizable
liberty
interest by refusing to reappointment them. Bunger alleges that another university withdrew an offer of employment after it learned of his pending litigation with Cameron University. Bunger and Pradhan therefore argue that Cameron University’s decision to not reappoint them restricted their liberty to take advantage of other employment opportunities, in violation of the requirements of due process. Although the liberty guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment extends beyond freedom from bodily restraint,
Roth,
III. The Free Speech Claim
Bunger and Pradhan claim that their participation in the complaint regarding the exclusion of untenured faculty from the Cameron University Graduate Council precipitated the university’s decisions not to reappoint them. They assert that the university’s decisions were in retaliation for their expressed opposition to university policies and that the university thereby violated their First Amendment rights to free speech. A public employee may not invoke the protection of the First Amendment for evexy statement that he makes while on the state payroll. Instead, constitutional protection extends only to speech on matters of “public concern,”
Connick v. Myers,
The decisions of the Supreme Court provide several examples of subjects that are
Bunger and Pradhan’s grievance does not involve a matter of public concern. The question of whether an administrative council in a university is limited to tenured faculty or opened to untenured faculty is a matter of internal structure and governance. The organization of such internal governing bodies is not an issue of social importance or heightened public interest. Although many an academic donnybrook has been fought over such administrative rules, the issues at stake rarely transcend the internal workings of the university to affect the political or social life of the community.
The First Amendment does not require public universities to subject internal structural arrangements and administrative procedures to public scrutiny and debate. The definition of what constitutes a matter of public concern must be constrained by “the common-sense realization that government offices could not function if every employment decision became a constitutional matter.”
Id.
at 143,
In conclusion, we hold that the expression of Bunger and Pradhan does not regard a matter of public concern, and thus their non-reappointment is not subject to First Amendment scrutiny. In addition, they possessed no Fourteenth Amendment property or liberty interest in their reappointment and thus their due process claims must also be rejected. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
