The College of the Desert and two of its officials, the president and the dean of instruction, appeal the judgment for Coleen Roberts following a jury trial on her sex discrimination and due process claims in her section 1983 action. They also appeal the district court’s order reinstating the original judgment following their refusal to pay Roberts the reduced damages she had agreed to accept by way of remittitur. Roberts cross-appeals the judgment for the defendants following a bench trial of her Title VII claims. We affirm in part and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
The College of the Desert is a California community college. Dr. Stout was its President and Dr. Patterson was its Dean of Instruction during the time relevant to Roberts’ complaint. The College hired Roberts as an instructor and chairperson of the Home Economics Department on July 1, 1974. The College contends that Roberts created serious problems in her administrative capacity because of her failure to adhere to hiring, purchasing and accounting procedures. Officials discussed these problems with Roberts during the 1974-75 academic year and outlined the complaints in a written memo on March 18, 1975. Because. the problems continued in the 1975-76 academic year, the Board of Trustees placed Roberts on probationary status for the 1976-77 year and froze her compensation for performing as chairperson at the prior year’s level.
During the 1976-77 year, Roberts continued to create administrative difficulties, allegedly by not following hiring and purchasing procedures, by taking unauthorized vacations and by deviating from procedures for obtaining travel reimbursements. In February of 1977, the administration informed Roberts she would not be reappointed as chairperson. Roberts requested a hearing, which was scheduled in June of 1977. During the months prior to the hearing, Roberts further, provoked the ire of the administration, allegedly by falsifying her supervisor’s signature on a work *1414 requisition, using campus duplicating facilities for personal projects, and teaching at another community college without proper authorization. Roberts contends all the criticisms and standards used in evaluating her were the product of sex discrimination.
At the Board meeting in June, Roberts was given only eight minutes to make her presentation, which was brought to an end by a heated exchange with John McFadden, President of the Board, over the propriety of Roberts’ teaching at another college while employed by the College of the Desert. After the meeting, the Board decided to let stand the appointment of a new chairperson to the Home Economics Department.
Roberts remained at the College as a tenured instructor but four restrictions were imposed upon her during the 1977-78 academic year. She was restricted from (1) teaching overload classes, (2) participating in committee work, (3) attending conferences, and (4) holding herself out as an agent of the College. The restrictions were lifted by the end of the year except that Roberts was still not permitted to hold herself out as an agent of the College.
Roberts continued to have conflicts with the College over office assignments, use of personal leave time, and teaching schedules. Roberts contends all of her problems were the product of sex discrimination or were in retaliation for her protest of the loss of the position as chairperson.
Roberts filed suit on July 5, 1983, alleging sex discrimination claims under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and under the Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1871, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983 and 1985(3). Roberts' section 1983 claim was grounded on two theories: denial of equal protection on the basis of sex discrimination and the denial of due process due to the lack of a meaningful hearing. Before trial, Roberts dropped her section 1981 claim, and the court dismissed the section 1985 claim toward the end of the trial. After the trial, the jury found for Roberts on her section 1983 claim and awarded her compensatory damages of $515,000 and punitive damages from Stout of $125,000 and from Patterson of $15,000. The College and individual defendants moved for judgment NOV or for a new trial. The court agreed there was no basis for punitive damages and that the compensatory damages were excessive. The court ordered Roberts to accept a re-mittitur or to face a new trial. Roberts agreed to accept the remittitur and the court ordered the defendants to pay $315,-000 within 30 days or it would reinstate the judgment of May 29,1985 totaling $655,000 damages. All parties timely appealed and cross-appealed.
ANALYSIS
I. Statute of Limitations
Roberts filed suit on July 5, 1983, alleging discrimination during all the years of her employment by the College from 1974 until the time of filing. Most of the specific acts alleged occurred in 1977 or earlier years. Defendants Patterson and Stout argue on appeal that the three-year statute of limitations, applicable to section 1983 claims filed in California in 1983, bars recovery for damages arising from any conduct prior to July 5, 1980. This argument is without merit because the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense which was not specially pleaded in the district court and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c);
Harbeson v. Parke Davis, Inc.,
II. Eleventh Amendment Immunity
If the College is an arm of the state for purposes of the eleventh amendment, the district court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the section 1983 suit against the
*1415
College.
Edelman v. Jordan,
In analyzing the factors that determine whether a governmental entity is an arm of the state, we consider state law treatment of the entity.
Jackson v. Hayakawa,
III. Legal Questions
We review all legal questions de novo.
United States v. McConney,
A. Parallel Title VII and § 1983 Claims
The appellants argue that Title VII is the exclusive remedy for sex discrimination in employment, and therefore, that the district court erred by submitting to the jury Roberts’ section 1983 claim based on a denial of equal protection. The Supreme Court has stated generally that Title VII does not deprive aggrieved parties of other remedies.
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency,
The Ninth Circuit has not expressly decided this question but has implicitly recognized that Title VII and section 1983 are not mutually exclusive.
See, e.g., Lowe v. City of Monrovia,
We agree with the reasoning of those courts that have held that Title VII does not preempt an action under section 1983 for a violation of the fourteenth amendment.
See Keller,
B.Due Process
The College and individual appellants argue that Roberts lacked any protectible property interest in continued employment as department chair after only three years in the position on annually renewable contracts. The district court rejected the College’s argument that Roberts had no right to due process and held that because the College agreed to give her a hearing the jury could determine that the unreasonable manner of conducting the hearing constituted a deprivation of due process.
Roberts argues that her protectible property interest in her continued employment as a department chair arises from “mutually explicit understandings.”
Perry v. Sindermann,
The appellants argue that Roberts had no property interest in continued employment because the law of California does not create such an expectation of continuation in an administrative position.
See Lagos v. Modesto City Schools Dist.,
Brady v. Gebbie,
C. Retaliation
The appellants argue on the authority of
Novotny,
D. Qualified Immunity
Immunity exists to shield government officials when their conduct does not violate
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clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
IV. Substantial Evidence
A. Liability Verdict
The standard of review for a jury verdict in a civil case is whether it is supported by substantial evidence, that is, such relevant evidence as reasonable minds might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.
Transgo, Inc. v. Ajac Transmission Parts Corp.,
The district court indicated that it found substantial evidence to support a finding of a section 1983 violation based on either the equal protection or due process claim, and therefore held that it had to sustain the verdict. We are satisfied that substantial evidence supports the jury’s verdict. Even if the evidence of intentional sex discrimination were less than substantial, we have the discretion to attribute the general verdict to the due process violation, of which there was substantial evidence.
Traver v. Meshriy,
B. Damages Reduction
This court does not disturb a damages award unless it is clearly unsupported by the evidence.
Chalmers v. City of Los Angeles,
The jury awarded Roberts the following compensatory damages:
$115,000 Lost income, expenses and special damages
200,000 Pain and suffering
200,000 Destruction of career
The jury also awarded punitive damages of $15,000 against Dr. Patterson and $125,-000 against Dr. Stout.
The district court reviewed the evidence and disallowed the $200,000 attributable to destruction of her career because there was no evidence that Roberts tried to obtain other employment or that her personnel record at the College was causally connected to any putative inability to find another job. Roberts asserts that her career is destroyed and she is unemployable, but she cites to no specific evidence presented at trial to prove that fact.
The district court disallowéd the punitive damages against Patterson and Stout because it found no evidence
of
the requisite intent or reckless and callous disregard.
Smith v. Wade,
V. Damages Judgment
The district court was within its discretion in granting the defendants’ motion for a new trial unless Roberts, accepted a remittitur.
Fenner v. Dependable Trucking Co.,
VI. Appellants’ New Trial Motion
In addition to the other asserted grounds for a new trial the appellants contend they were denied a fair trial because of (1) the trial court’s exclusion of evidence and (2) Roberts’ misconduct. The court’s eviden-tiary rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion and will not be reversed absent prejudice.
Kisor v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
VII. Title VII Cross Appeal
A. Do Jury Findings Bind the Trial Court?
The crucial question raised by Roberts’ cross appeal is whether the district court was bound by the jury verdict on the section 1983 claim to rule in Roberts’ favor on her Title VII claim. We do not decide whether a court must accept jury findings on a legal claim when it rules on an equitable claim because here there were no findings. This was a general verdict and it is impossible to say upon which theory, due process or equal protection, the jury imposed liability.
See Hussein v. Oshkosh Motor Truck Co.,
B. Substantial Evidence
In reviewing a court’s ultimate determination on a Title VII claim, this court applies the clearly erroneous standard because the determination is essentially a factual one.
Atonio v. Wards Cove Packing Co.,
The district court determined that Roberts had made out a prima facie case of sex discrimination, but that the College’s reasons for non-reassignment to the chairper-sonship were legitimate business reasons which Roberts did not show to be pretextual. This finding is not clearly erroneous.
VIII.Attorneys’ Fees
Roberts contends that the district court abused its discretion in denying her attorneys’ fees because she prevailed on her section 1983 claim and a prevailing party in a civil rights case is ordinarily entitled to fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The College argues that this court has no jurisdiction to review the attorneys’ fees order because Roberts failed to refer to that order in her notice of cross-appeal. The College is correct. Although we have observed that it “violates the spirit of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to avoid a decision on the merits on the basis of mere technicalities,”
McCarthy v. Mayo,
Roberts argues that there was no prejudice to the appellants because she indicated in her civil appeals docketing statement that part of the relief she sought was $222,901 in attorneys’ fees. However, she did not brief the issue in any depth and we believe the appellants would be prejudiced by our consideration of the merits of the trial court’s decision that any fees awarda-ble for success on the section 1983 claim were offset by fees awardable to the College for its success on the Title VII claim.
On the other hand, because Roberts “succeeded on a significant issue and achieved some of the benefit [she] sought in bringing the suit,”
Toussaint v. McCarthy,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part and the cause is REMANDED for entry of a reduced damages judgment and for further proceedings to determine the College’s status for purposes of eleventh amendment immunity.
