The plaintiff Philip Burns was a tenured fifth grade teacher in the Plainfield school system until December 17,. 1975, when his employment contract was terminated by a vote of the Plainfield Board of Education (the Board). Prior to the action of the Board, he was given specifications of the charges on which the termination was to be considered and a full public hearing before a quorum of the Board. He was represented at that hearing by himself and by his brother as counsel. Instead of taking an appeal to the Court of Common Pleas for review of the Board’s decision, as provided for by Conn. Gen. Stat. § 10 — 151(f), he brought this action for a declaratory judgment, preliminary and permanent injunction, compensatory and punitive damages, and other equitable relief.
Plaintiff Burns alleges that the Board’s termination of his contract was impermissibly based on his exercise of his first amendment rights, and also that the Board’s decision violated both procedural and substantive rights of due process guaranteed him by the fourteenth amendment. Upon those allegations he invokes the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and its jurisdictional counterpart, 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3), as the basis for jurisdiction in this court. The individual defendants, allegedly acting under color of state law, are sued in their official, as well as individual, capacities.
See Dunham v. Crosby,
This case now comes before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment. A motion for a preliminary injunction, previously filed by the plaintiff, was denied after a hearing in January of 1976. A hearing on the motions for summary judgment was held on November 13, 1978. It is to those motions I now turn.
The First Amendment Issue
Although there were three separate charges lodged against the plaintiff in the termination hearing before the Board, the principal one was based on conduct in class which directly affected the students. The classroom conduct of the plaintiff which provoked the institution of charges against him first came to the attention of Albert Mizak, the Superintendent of Schools, through letters from parents of fifth graders in Burns’ class who wanted Burns fired. This sudden flurry of correspondence to the school authorities from those parents was their response to what Mr. Burns had done as a teacher of their children.
A. The Pen-Pal Incident
In September of 1975, the plaintiff assigned to his then fifth grade class at the Memorial School a penmanship lesson. As part of that lesson, the students could either practice cursive penmanship by writing the alphabet or write a letter to the plaintiff’s then fiancee. As a result of that assignment, each student who wrote to the plaintiff’s then fiancee received from her a letter in return. These return letters were directly sent to the. plaintiff who, in the classroom, distributed them to his students. Each letter was addressed to a specific student and was enclosed in a sealed envelope.
Among other things, the aforesaid letters, written by the plaintiff’s then fiancee and distributed to various students in the plaintiff’s fifth grade class contained the following, or similar statements:
“I am a communist, in the Progressive Labor Party, just like Phil [Burns] is.[ 1 ] We are both working hard for the day when you kids and the rest of us working people kick out all the rich rotten bosses and then we can all run everything ourselves. That is what communism really means. Then we can all cooperate and have a good and happy life. My son Chris is learning to be a Communist too!”
Pl.’s Exh. C, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction (letter dated October 6, 1975 addressed “Dear Sherry,” which was part of the record of the contract termination hearing of Philip Burns as well as part of the record of the Hearing on Plaintiff’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction). See also other letters marked as Pl.’s Exh. K — 1, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
It is not surprising that parents of some of the fifth graders who got those letters promptly reacted by calling for the discharge of the plaintiff as a teacher in communications to the Superintendent.
On October 17, 1975, the Superintendent (Mizak) called Burns into his office. When Burns answered “No” to Mizak’s inquiry if he knew why he was there, Mizak said, *273 “Well, I think you do. It’s because of the [pen-pal] letters.” Tr. at 8, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction, Jan. 26, 1976. He offered to let Mr. Burns resign and gave him a few days to think it over, and also told Burns that he was going to recommend to the school board that his contract to teach be terminated. By letter of October 28, 1975, Mizak wrote to Burns:
“In response to your request for a statement of the reasons for the proposed termination of your contract of employment, this is to notify you that the reasons are the following:
(1) insubordination. More specifically, you have violated a directive issued to all personnel by the Superintendent of Schools, and dated June 12,1975, which is entitled ‘Interruption of School Programs or Duties’ in that, on at least on[e] occasion, you visited the classroom of a fellow teacher to discuss your personal affairs, thereby, interfering with that teacher in the performance of his duties.
(2) You have evidenced incompetence in the performance of your assigned teaching duties by using your classroom and your access to students in your classroom as a vehicle for the dissemination of your political convictions.”
Pl.’s Exh. F, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
Thereafter, on November 19, 1975, Mizak again wrote to Burns about the letter-writing charge to which (2) above refers:
“The following is submitted in response to your request for a more specific statement of the charges which form the basis for the recommendation that your teaching contract with the Plainfield School System be terminated.
“You have also been charged, as stated in the October 28,1975 letter to you, with incompetence, ‘in that you have used you[r] classroom as a vehicle for the dissemination of your political convictions.’ More specifically, you are charged with having caused letters to be written by a personal friend to your fifth grade students. These letters were written in response to letters written by your students as part of an in-class assignment and delivered by your class to these students. The letters in question which can, at best, be described as politically dogmatic in nature, were distributed by you to your students even though you knew their political content. Their distribution by you is a violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the by-laws of the Plainfield Board of Education which prohibits sectarian or partisan instruction. In addition, your distribution of these letters which indicate extreme bias on the part of the writer evidences, at the least, a lack of judgment on your part and a misunderstanding of your role as a teacher.
“Please be advised that pursuant to your request and that of your attorney, a date will be set for a hearing on the above matters before the Plainfield Board of Education no sooner than fifteen (15) days from your receipt of this more specific statement.”
Pl.’s Exh. G, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
A third charge was added on December 1, 1975:
“The following constitutes an amendment to, and an addition to, the statements of charges dated November 19, 1975. You should be prepared to answer these charges, as well as previous charges, to which I will refer at the hearing to be held before the Plainfield Board of Education:
1. You are charged with insubordination based on the events of Wednesday, the 26th of November 1975, at Plain-field Memorial School when Mr. Bahner indicated that Ms. Kingsley was not to enter your room. Nevertheless, you allowed Ms. Kingsley to do so .
“In regard to the charges, reference should be made to the Board of Education By laws, Article 6, Section 606, and to an item in the daily bulletin from Mr. *274 Bahner distributed to the entire staff on November 24, 1975 and again on December 1, 1975.”
Pl.’s Exh. H, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction (letter from Mizak to Burns, dated Dec. 1, 1975).
Finally, on December 10, 1975, Mizak again wrote to Burns:
“With regard to the charge of incompetence which is stated in my letter to you dated October 28, 1975, it has come to my attention from statements that you have made in the media that there may be some confusion in your mind about the nature of that charge.
“The basic facts of that charge form the essence of my claim that you have acted improperly in your classroom. It is clear that your actions in the classroom also support a charge of insubordination. To the extent that your actions indicate incompetence, I do not wish you to be misled to the extent that you feel that the charge is based on insufficient knowledge of the subject areas you teach. The charge of incompetence concerns itself not with your knowledge of the subject areas, but with your apparent inability to restrict your actions in the classroom to the subject areas you are assigned to teach. To the extent your classroom activities indicate a willful refusal to avoid the promulgation of sectarian political views to your students it is my judgment that your actions constitute insubordination. In this regard please make reference to the by-laws of the Plainfield Board of Education, sec 305, sub paragraph d.
“Should you have any questions in regard to this letter, which should be viewed as a clarification of the original charge of incompetence and as an additional charge of insubordination based on your conduct in the classroom, please do not fail to contact me.”
Pl.’s Exh. J, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction. As the letter points out, the foundation for the principal charges against Burns is in the by-laws of the Plain-field Board of Education, specifically section 305(d):
“No sectarian or partisan instruction shall be allowed, and no book tract designed to advocate the tenets of any particular sect or party shall be permitted in any of the schools.”
Pl.’s Exh. K — 1, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction (also Administration Exh. 16, Termination Hearing of Philip Burns).
Through his counsel, the plaintiff admitted in open court at the hearing on this motion for summary judgment that he knew what the contents of the letters were before he handed them out to his students. Nor is it seriously argued that this “pen-pal” project should be regarded as an exercise in penmanship. (The letters of the children went to Burns’ fiancee. Her answering letters did not concern penmanship.)
The Board found that the foregoing charges had been proved. Indeed, there is no dispute over any of the essential facts. The Board then concluded:
“It is the conclusion of the Board of Education of the Town of Plainfield that Mr. Philip Burns has been insubordinate and has evidenced incompetence in that he has violated the rules of the Board of Education pertinent to partisan instruction and the directives of the Superintendent of Schools with regard to interruption of school programs or duties. It is also the specific finding of the Board of Education that Mr. Burns defied its agents and his superiors, the Superintendent of Schools and the Principal of Plainfield Memorial School based upon the facts as listed above, notably the incidents of November 26,1975, and that this defiance constitutes insubordination on his part.”
Pl.’s Exh. M, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
The plaintiff does not seriously complain of any denial of procedural due process at any stage of the proceedings, nor is there *275 any basis for such a claim. 2 Nor does he deny complete responsibility for the distribution of the letters to his students. He does not contend that the contents of the letter were not sectarian or partisan. 3
The issue is squarely presented: does the interest of the Board of Education in prohibiting sectarian or partisan instruction at the fifth grade level of its school system outweigh the plaintiff’s interest in first amendment protection. “Where there is tension between the two, accommodation must be sought in the balancing process which not infrequently characterizes the task of constitutional interpretation.”
Goldwasser v. Brown,
“The problem in any case is to arrive at a balance between the interests of the teacher, as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.”
The first amendment’s prohibition of any law “abridging the freedom of speech” is first among the freedoms safeguarded to the people. But this principle, like all of those in the law, is not absolute, and cannot always be perfectly sustained. 4 The plaintiff argues that academic freedom is inherent in the first amendment, and he defends his conduct as falling within the concept of academic freedom. On this ground, plaintiff moves for summary judgment on his behalf. The justification for this is that
“To preserve the ‘marketplace of ideas’ so essential to our system of democracy, we must be willing to assume the risk of argument and lawful disagreement.”
James v. Board of Education,
The rights of free speech, “while fundamental in our democratic society, still do not mean that everyone with opinions or beliefs to express may address a group at any public place and at any time. . . . ”
Cox v. Louisiana,
Despite the guarantee of a free trade in ideas, it has been authoritatively stated that “a State may permissibly determine that, at least in some precisely delineated areas, a child — like someone in a captive audience — is not possessed of that full capacity for individual choice which is the presupposition of First Amendment guarantees.”
Ginsberg v. New York,
It is equally absurd to contend that a fifth grade schoolroom is a public forum traditionally devoted to speech and assembly.
Cf. Greer v. Spock,
In striking the
Pickering
balance, the statements in the pen-pal letters distributed to the plaintiff’s students have significance simply because of the character of their subject matter. The action of the Board was not taken on the basis that it had the power to regulate the content of materials distributed to the students because of its political, social, or philosophical message. The position taken by the Board, and expressed in its decision, is that Burns had introduced a controversial subject wholly unrelated to the subject matter being studied. “Mr. Philip Burns has been insubordinate and has evidenced incompetence in that he has violated the rules of the Board of Education pertinent to partisan instruction. . . .” Pl.’s Exh. M, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction (Conclusions of Board following Contract Termination Hearing). Burns was supposed to be teaching cursive penmanship by having the students practice writing the alphabet or writing letters. “It must be remembered that the primary function of the schools is the education of the community’s children.”
Connecticut State Federation of Teachers v. Board of Education Members,
Not only did the plaintiff not teach his students the subject he had been hired to teach in this pen-pal incident, he used the time which was provided for that purpose to do what was forbidden by submitting them to “sectarian or partisan instruction” contrary to the prohibition of the by-laws.
Cf. Janusaitis v. Middlebury Volunteer Fire Department,
The extent to which the plaintiff’s rights were jeopardized does not outweigh the rights of the school board to require that he stick to his teaching responsibilities. The operation of public schools has been described as “perhaps the most important function of state and local governments.”
Brown v. Board of Education,
B. Additional Grounds for Contract Termination
In addition to the conclusion that Burns had violated section 305(d) of the by-laws, the Board concluded that Burns was guilty of the two other charges which were considered at the hearing. The Board found that Burns was guilty of having interrupted a fellow teacher to discuss matters personal to him during her performance of her school duties, contrary to a specific memo to all teachers prohibiting such conduct. There was ample proof that such an incident had occurred prior to the “pen-pal letters” incidents.
The Board also concluded that the plaintiff wilfully violated a directive of his immediate superior, the school principal, by insisting that his fiancee, the pen-pal of incident number one, and her minor son, be permitted to be present in his classroom during an instruction period. His insistence provoked a confrontation between Burns and the principal which was resolved only by calling upon the police to enforce the order against visitors during classroom activities.
Each of these conclusions was amply supported by evidence. It is immaterial what standard of judicial review is applied to test the validity of these conclusions — -whether that of “ ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law,’ rather than the possible stricter standard of . ‘unsupported by substantial evidence.’ ”
Cf. Automobile Club of New York, Inc. v. Cox,
Other Protected Conduct
However, this does not mean that the
defendants’
motion for summary judgment must be granted, for the contention is made by Burns that his contract would not have been terminated on the basis of his violations of the rule against interference with a teacher and the order against allowing Ms. Kingsley into his fifth grade class if the Board had not also given weight to the “pen-pal” incident as a motivating factor in its decision.
See generally Davis v. Village Park II Realty Co.,
Before these defendants can be called upon to make that kind of a
Mt. Healthy
“same decision anyway” determination, the burden is on Burns “to show [not only] that his conduct was constitutionally protected, [but also] that this conduct was a ‘substantial factor’ — or, to put it in other words, that it was a ‘motivating factor’ in the Board’s decision not to rehire him.”
Mt. Healthy, supra,
In this case it is not clear whether the Board considered any conduct of Burns other than what was set forth in the formal charges against him. In the charges before the Board, Burns was only required to defend against the specified charges, not every particular action of his life. There is nothing in the record to show that there was any evidence before the Board concerning prior conduct or statements of Burns in connection with his political activities. Apart from the notice of charges against Burns, it does not appear on the record that anything done or said by Mizak, other than the formal charges, 7 came to the attention of the Board members who heard and voted on the charges against Burns.
The hurdle which the plaintiff must clear before the defendants are put to the necessity of proving that they would have reached the same decision anyway consists of proof that other constitutionally protected conduct was “a ‘motivating factor’ in the Board’s decision” to relieve him.
At this stage of the proceedings, where defendants’ motion for summary judgment is being considered, the court is not called upon to determine whether plaintiff has proven that his outside activities were a “motivating” factor in the Board’s termination decision. For purposes of a summary judgment motion, the court does not try issues of fact but only determines whether there are issues to be tried.
E. g., United
*280
States v. Bosurgi,
The question to be decided here, therefore, is whether, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff, the plaintiff has established the existence of a genuine factual dispute as to whether the prior conduct of the plaintiff was a motivating factor in the decision of the Board members to fire him. Plaintiff elicited testimony in a deposition of the Superintendent of the Plainfield Public Schools, Albert Mizak, in which Mizak acknowledged that plaintiff’s outside political activities were considered a “problem” by Mizak and by people in the community at large. See Deposition of Albert Mizak at 25 — 26. Mizak indicated that, in his opinion, plaintiff’s outside political activities would be less likely to be accepted in the area of Plainfield than in other more liberal areas. See id. at 27, 32. Statements such as these indicate the possibility that plaintiff’s outside activities may have played a significant role in the attitude of members of the community, including the Board members, regarding whether the plaintiff should have been terminated as a teacher at the Plainfield Public Schools. Though Mizak himself was not a member of the Board of Education, and thus did not formally vote at the termination hearing, it is not impossible that like-minded members on the Board who had selected him as Superintendent of Schools might have been influenced in their termination decision by plaintiff’s outside political activities. Since defendants concede that plaintiff’s communist affiliation was “common knowledge,” Memorandum in Support of Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment at 13, for purposes of summary judgment it would not be totally farfetched to acknowledge that plaintiff might be able to establish at trial that members of the Board were influenced by this knowledge in deciding to terminate plaintiff from his position.
This in no way implies that plaintiff has carried his burden of proof, as required by
Mt. Healthy,
of establishing that his protected activities were a “motivating” factor in the Board’s decision, but simply that plaintiff has succeeded in raising a genuine triable issue of fact as to the motivation of the board members at the time of the termination vote. The fact that those members of the Board who voted to terminate plaintiff’s employment have submitted affidavits that their decision was based solely on the evidence adduced at the hearing, and not on prejudice or bias toward the plaintiff or his political beliefs or associations, is not sufficient to support the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. As a general rule, summary judgment is to be used sparingly “where motive and intent play leading roles.”
Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
Under functionally similar circumstances, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals recently reversed a grant of summary, judgment for the employer stating,
“[The employee’s] termination was not an overt retaliation for engaging in protected activities, if it was a retaliation at all. . His only likely avenue of success lay in making credibility an issue, for resolution of the first amendment issue essentially required a determination of state of mind [of the employer]. When motivation is involved and credibility becomes of critical importance, or when essential facts are solely within the control of the moving party, summary judgment generally is inappropriate.”
Mazaleski v. Treusdell,
In the instant case I am persuaded to follow this rule — that summary judgment is generally not appropriate where the motive or state of mind of the moving party is in issue — under the rationale developed in sup
*281
port of the rule in prior cases in this circuit.
See, e. g., Friedman v. Meyers,
I am not unmindful that the principle applied by this decision may leave the courts open to time-consuming and often fruitless attempts to impeach the integrity of decision makers,
see Withrow v. Larkin,
For all of the foregoing reasons, both the plaintiff’s and the defendants’ motions for summary judgment are denied.
SO ORDERED.
ON THE MERITS
This is the final stage in the case of Philip Burns, a tenured fifth-grade teacher in the Plainfield, Connecticut school system whose employment contract was terminated by a vote of the defendant Plainfield Board of Education (the Board) in December of 1975. Shortly after the contract termination, plaintiff Burns brought an action in this court alleging that the Board’s action violated his rights under the first and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution.
A hearing on plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction was held on January 26 and 27, 1976. That motion was denied for lack of a showing of irreparable injury.
See
Ruling on Motion for Preliminary Injunction, filed March 3, 1976. Thereafter the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the basis of accompanying affidavits and on the basis of the evidence presented at the hearing on the preliminary injunction. In ruling on the cross motions, this court found that permissible reasons existed for the Board’s decision to dismiss plaintiff from employment as a teacher. Ruling on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment,
The only issue left unresolved by that opinion was the “Mt. Healthy issue”: whether conduct of Burns outside of the classroom, which was constitutionally protected, was a motivating factor in the Board’s decision to discharge him. See Ruling on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment. This issue was left unresolved because there existed a genuine issue of fact as to what factors motivated the Board’s decision. To resolve this issue, a trial on the merits of plaintiff’s complaint was held on June 26, 1979. 1
*282 Discussion
Under the rule of
Mt. Healthy City Board of Education v. Doyle,
The decision of the Board to discharge plaintiff, which plaintiff challenges in this action, was made' by a unanimous vote of six members of the Board. Plaintiff called as witnesses five of those six: Board members Dumaine, Yonta, Tetreault, Nicholson, and Krecidlo. Plaintiff elicited no testimony from any of these witnesses indicating that any of plaintiff’s out-of-classroom political activities — such as his membership in the Progressive Labor Party or his participation in leafletting activities — -were a motivating factor in their decision to terminate plaintiff’s employment contract.
Plaintiff argues, however, that the “minutes” of the December 1975 Board meeting, which followed the public hearing on the charges brought against the plaintiff, reveal that his protected first amendment conduct did play an important role in the Board’s decision. The minutes of that meeting state that plaintiff was found guilty by the Board members on four counts:
“1st count: Violation of administrative directive (insubordination) Vote was unanimous.
“2nd count: Classroom used to disseminate political views (incompetence) Vote was unanimous.
“3rd count: Ms. Kingsley’s visit to Memorial School (insubordination) Vote was unanimous.
“4th count: Passing out of leaflets to students and other [sic] (incompetence and insubordination). Vote was unanimous.”
Plaintiff’s Trial Exh. 1. Plaintiff argues that the “fourth count” listed in the minutes involved protected first amendment conduct, and that this was a substantial factor in the Board’s decision to discharge him.
The evidence does not support plaintiff’s argument. The Board’s formal “Findings of Fact and Conclusions” make no mention of plaintiff’s leafletting activities. See Plaintiff’s Trial Exh. 6. The Board’s formal findings and conclusions only make reference to the pen-pal incident, plaintiff’s interruption of another teacher’s classroom, and plaintiff’s disregard of a directive of the school principal, see id., — conduct which I have previously held to be a permissible basis for plaintiff’s discharge. See Ruling on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment. In light of the testimony presented at the trial on June 26, 1979, the most reasonable explanation for the absence of any mention of plaintiff’s leafletting activities in the “Findings of Fact and Conclusions” of the Board is that these activities played no significant role in the Board’s decision. All five of the Board members who were called as witnesses testified that, to the best of their recollection, they did not base their decision to discharge plaintiff on plaintiff’s leafletting activities. To the extent that the Board members could remember their reasons for voting to discharge plaintiff, they testified that the reasons were the pen-pal incident and plaintiff’s disregard for the authority of the school principal.
Plaintiff asks this court not only to disbelieve the testimony of all of these witnesses but to believe the opposite, that plaintiff’s outside political activities were a major factor in the Board members’ decision to discharge plaintiff. Nothing in the demeanor of these witnesses on the witness stand, and nothing elicited during plaintiff’s examination of these witnesses, leads this court to discredit any of the witnesses’ testimony. Thus I find that plaintiff has not proven by a preponderance of the evidence, as is his *283 burden, that a “substantial” or “motivating” factor in the Board’s decision to discharge him was his protected first amendment conduct. 2 Accordingly, judgment shall enter for the defendants on the complaint.
The foregoing shall constitute the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 52.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Even without identifying herself and Phil as communists, the rest of the letter was a simplified but explicit exposition of Marxist communism. It implied the abolition of private property, the abolition of classes, and with the end of “classes” the abolition of conflicts of interests and the establishment of the unity of society. This entirely conforms to the Marxist doctrine which assumes that all the important social conflicts are rooted in class divisions, and it is the sectarian view of a number of persons united in opinion and interest.
. The plaintiff had full and timely notice of the charges against him and the proposed action of the Board. He also had the opportunity to attend a public hearing, to be represented by counsel, and to be heard.
See Wood v. Goodman,
. At the hearing before the members of the Board of Education, Mr. Burns stated not only that he knew of the general contents of the letters, but that he would have distributed them to his students in class even if he had known of the exact language used in them. Tr. at 190, Contract Termination Hearing of Philip Bums, Dec. 16, 1975 (introduced as Pl.’s Exh. K, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction).
. “It is a
non sequitur
to say that First Amendment rights may not be regulated because they hold a preferred position in the hierarchy of the constitutional guarantees of the incidents of freedom.”
Poulos v. New Hampshire,
. From the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes in
Abrams v. United States,
. “[Sjchool boards must meet a burden of justification if they are to enforce a regulation which infringes on teachers’ First Amendment rights. But the mere invocation of the words ‘speech’ and ‘association’ in a complaint does not put the boards to this test. Rather, before CFT can put the defendant school boards to this burden of justification, CFT must show that its members’ First Amendment rights have in fact been infringed by the school boards’ policies. The question is whether or not there is a real abridgement of the rights of free speech.
Kovacs v. Cooper,
Connecticut State Federation of Teachers v. Board of Educ. Members, supra, 538 F.2d at 479.
. The Superintendent, Mizak, who prepared the charges against Bums was aware for years that Burns was a member of the Progressive Labor Party, and that he had been active in passing put posters and literature of the party. Despite that knowledge of Burns’ beliefs and activities, which consisted of his political pronouncements in circulars and pamphlets that he sent around the community, Mizak had previously recommended Bums for tenure. Mizak had often told Bums that what he did out of school was his business, and within his rights as an individual. Tr. at 119-20, Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
. In deference to the plaintiffs request, the hearing on his application for a preliminary injunction was not consolidated with the trial on the merits under Rule 65(a)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P.
. Furthermore, it is not at all certain that the leafletting referred to in the fourth count of the minutes was protected first amendment conduct since it is unclear whether the count refers to leafletting in or outside the classroom. However, I need not decide this issue given my ruling that this conduct was not a motivating factor in the Board’s decision to discharge plaintiff.
