Appellants in these two cases contend that they have asserted claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3) which fulfill the requirements stated in
Griffin
v.
Breckenridge,
I
No. 75-1443 —Murphy v. Mount Carmel High School, et al.
The appellant, Daniel Murphy, was a tenured teacher of ten years at the appellee Mount Carmel High School, privately operated. On May 6, 1974, Murphy was dismissed by the defendants for failing to adhere to the school’s recently enacted dress code. After a hearing, Murphy’s dismissal was upheld.
The appellant alleges that defendant school administrators conspired to cause his dismissal from the school. Murphy claims that he openly advocated positions concerning racial and sex equality which defendants found objectionable. In addition, he alleges that his criticism of school policies regarding the hiring of minority faculty and the enforcement of a student dress code served as the real reasons for his dismissal. Murphy argues, that although he is a white male, the conspiracy by the school administrators deprived him of his First Amendment right to speak out on' behalf of black people and women and resulted in his dismissal. He seeks compensatory relief and reinstatement to his position under the authority of § 1985(3). The district court, however, dismissed the appellant’s complaint for failure to state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted.
*1191 No. 75-1631 —Gerald H. Senese v. Robert Simpson, et al.
The appellant, Gerald A. Senese, was an employee of the Woodlawn Hospital in Chicago. Defendants were attempting to organize the employees, and to promote a strike. Senese was not a union member. On June 14, .1972, he alleges that while he was attempting to enter the hospital, defendants, in an effort to single out a nonstriking employee, conspired to and did assault and injure Senese. Senese complains that this assault, causing him serious injury and preventing him from attending the place of his employment, deprived him of rights guaranteed by various provisions of the Constitution. The rights specifically referred to were the right to associate with non-union employees and to engage in his lawful trade.
The appellant argues that the conspiracy was motivated by an animus against nonunion hospital employees and that this sufficiently meets the Griffin requirement of “class-based, invidiously discriminatory animus.” He asserts that he was deprived of “federally protected rights” and therefore entitled to compensatory and punitive damages under § 1985(3) and two pendent state assault and battery claims. The district court, having determined that Senese did not allege “either class-based discrimination or state involvement,” dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
II
In
Griffin,
the Supreme Court performed a two-level analysis of the complaint in order to decide whether a cause of action under § 1985(3) had been stated. It decided that the statute provided a cause of action albeit the conspirators were private persons, and construed the “language requiring intent to deprive of
equal
protection, or
equal
privileges and immunities,” as requiring “some racial, or perhaps otherwise class-based, invidiously discriminatory animus behind the conspirators’ action. The conspiracy, in other words, must aim at a deprivation of the equal enjoyment of-rights secured by the law to all.”
“ . . . defendants did (1) ‘conspire . . . ’ (2) ‘for the purpose of depriving, either directly or indirectly, any person or class of persons of the equal protection of the laws, or of equal privileges and immunities under the laws.’ It must then assert that one or more of the conspirators (3) did, or caused to be done, ‘any act in furtherance of the object of [the] conspiracy,’ whereby another was (4a) ‘injured in his person or property’ or (4b) ‘deprived of having or exercising any right or privilege of a citizen of the United States.’ ”
Griffin, supra,
at 102,
The Court then considered, first, whether the facts alleged in the complaint before it fell within the terms of § 1985(3) as so construed. Secondly, recognizing that conduct within the terms of the statute might be beyond the power of Congress to regulate, the Court identified the source of congressional power to reach the conduct alleged.
The plaintiffs in Griffin were Negroes; the alleged purpose of the conspiracy was to prevent plaintiffs and other Negro-Americans from seeking equal protection of the laws and enjoying equal rights, privileges and immunities of citizens, including the right to travel, of association and of speech. The Court readily found that the allegations of the purpose of the conspiracy showed the necessary “racial class-based, invidiously discriminatory animus,” and that personal injury resulting from acts done in furtherance of the conspiracy was adequately alleged.
The Court then identified two sources of congressional power to impose liability for the conduct alleged. The first source was the Thirteenth Amendment: “We can only conclude that Congress was wholly within its power under § 2 of the Thirteenth Amendment in creating a statutory cause of action for Negro citizens who have been
*1192
the victims of conspiratorial, racially discriminatory private action aimed at depriving them of the basic rights that the law secures to all free men.”
HI
Murphy’s compliant is extremely detailed, if not prolix, and the theory of the asserted § 1985(3) cause of action is difficult to discern. It seems fair to say that the purpose of the conspiracy alleged was to deprive Murphy of his freedom of speech at the school, concerning school policies. Curtailment of speech, apparently, was the claimed deprivation "of the equal protection of the laws, or of the equal privileges and immunities under the laws.” As will be developed hereinafter, a § 1985(3) federal cause of action for injury arising out of a purely private conspiracy to interfere with freedom of expression, without state involvement, is not constitutionally supportable.
It is true that Murphy is alleged to have spoken, among other things, against discriminatory practices of the school toward black students and teachers and women teachers. The complaint, in our view, falls short of charging that the conspiracy was aimed at discriminatory treatment of black persons or women. It never identifies the legal rights of which the conspirators wished to deprive members of those classes. Even if the complaint did charge a conspiracy to deprive members of those classes of equal protection of the laws or of equal privileges and immunities under the laws, consistent with
Griffin,
the question would remain whether a plaintiff who is an advocate for but not a member of the class can recover under § 1985(3) and whether the likelihood of fomenting discrimination by curtailing Murphy’s speech at one school is not just too remote from the purposes of § 1985(3). At least in
Dombrowski v. Dowling,
Senese alleges that the object of the conspiracy was to deprive him of his First Amendment right to associate with his fellow non-union employees. He claims that the assault upon him was an act in furtherance of this conspiracy. 1 As a result of this act, he suffered bodily injury, and impairment of his right to freely associate with non-union workers and the right to attend and perform his job. 2
*1193 Appellants argue that curtailment of their interests secured by the First Amendment is a deprivation of equal protection of the law, and, therefore, satisfies the requirements of a § 1985(3) complaint as determined in Griffin. Such a denial is actionable under § 1985(3) if the Fourteenth Amendment may be interpreted as a source of congressional power for the protection of these First Amendment interests.
This question was not decided by
Griffin.
Decisions of this court, however, have indicated possible solutions. In
Dombrowski v. Dowling,
However, we noted in
Cohen
that the court was not “faced with the question whether the
Dombrowski
rationale would apply to a right protected by the First Amendment which in terms is only a protection against State action, but which is often accorded special deference.”
The guaranties of the First Amendment run only against the federal government, not private interference. By incorporation into the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment these guaranties also run against the state.
Gitlow v. New York,
Appellants assert, however, that section 5 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides Congress with the power to enact legislation to implement the guaranties of this Amendment. Section 1985(3), they argue, was written to provide a cause of action against private conspirators invading an interest protected from state impairment by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Neither the legislative history of the Amendment nor any holding of the Supreme Court supports this proposition. Nothing in the debates upon the adoption of the Amendment conclusively answers the question whether Congress has the power to grant statutory protection against private interference with personal interests protected from state interference by the Fourteenth Amendment. See
Cox,
“The Supreme Court Forward,” 80 Harv.L.Rev. 91
*1194
(1966). In addition, the Supreme Court in finding the criminal counterpart of § 1985(3), § 5519 of the Revised Statutes, unconstitutional specifically held that such a law, . . directed exclusively against the action of private persons, without reference to the laws of the State or their administration by her officers, . . is not warranted by any clause in the Fourteenth Amendment. . .. .” United
States
v. Harris,
The
Griffin
Court did not reach the question of the constitutional basis of § 1985(3) under the Fourteenth Amendment. It found sufficient authority under the Thirteenth Amendment and the rights of National citizenship for the applications of the statute operative in that case.
Griffin,
supra,
We find further support for this analysis of the scope of section 5 in a ease decided many years after
Harris
but before
Griffin.
Despite the views in the concurring and dissenting opinions of Justices Clark and Brennan, the Court in
United States v. Guest,
We are aware that our holding squarely conflicts with the position taken by the Eighth Circuit.
5
In
Action v. Gannon,
The suggested extension of the scope of actions brought under § 1985(3) to include private conspiracies to curtail expression because of a class-based invidiously discriminatory animus or which produce a private impairment of expression as a result of an otherwise actionable conspiracy, is, of course, not required by
Griffin.
The Supreme Court noted that the facts alleged in
Griffin
brought the cause of action “close to the constitutionally authorized core of the statute.”
The judgments appealed from are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Senese argues that the conspiracy against him was motivated by animus against the nonunion employees of the hospital, and that this sufficiently meets the Griffin requirement of “class-based, invidiously discriminatory animus.” The class is small and its constituency dependent on circumstances subject to ready change. Its character is quite different from classes based on race, ethnic origin, sex, religion, and political loyalty. Although we do not reach the question, we doubt whether it fulfills the Griffin requirement. We do note, however, that for purposes of § 1985(3) religious groups have constituted a class,
Marlowe v. Fisher Body,
. The right to engage in a lawful trade has been held to be a privilege and immunity of state citizenship, and consequently not subject to the protection of the Fourteenth Amendment and its implementing legislation. Slaughter House Cases, 83 U.S. (16 Walk) 36, 74-75,
. Amendment XIV. Section 5. Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.
. While we need not discuss the extent of state involvement required within the context of § 1985(3), the Supreme Court "‘has found state action of a nature sufficient to create rights . . . even though the participation of the State was peripheral, or its action was only one of several co-operative forces lending to the constitutional violation.”
United States
v.
Guest,
. The Third Circuit, in a less exhaustive opinion, has also held that § 1985(3) provides a cause of action for privately imposed restriction on speech.
Richardson v. Miller,
. H. E. Flack, The Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, 277 (1908) and R. J. Harris, Quest for Equality, 53 (1960).
. This opinion has been circulated among all judges of this court in regular active service. No judge favored a rehearing in banc on the position above taken, in conflict with the Third and Eighth Circuits.
Circuit Judge Swygert, however, filed the following statement:
“SWYGERT, Circuit Judge. Although I voted against a rehearing en banc, 1 must register my dissent from some of the lan *1195 guage in the opinion of Chief Judge Fairchild. The court could have arrived at the identical result without making a generalized pronouncement about the power of Congress under section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Under the decisions of this court in Dombrowski v. Dowling,459 F.2d 190 (7th Cir. 1972), and Cohen v. Illinois Institute of Technology,524 F.2d 818 (7th Cir. 1975), a section 1985(3) action may be brought against purely private parties. If, however, a plaintiff invokes constitutional rights under section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, the protected rights must be related to a state activity; otherwise, a section 1985(3) action would become a ‘general federal tort law.’ Griffin v. Breckenridge,403 U.S. 88 , 102 [91 S.Ct. 1790 ,29 L.Ed.2d 338 ] (1971). Dombrowski, supra, at 194-95. In the instant case, plaintiffs are asserting a First Amendment claim without an allegation that their rights of speech and association were in any way intertwined with state activities. Therefore, they did not state a cause of action under section 1985(3).
Judge Fairchild states categorically that ‘we do not find in section 5 the constitutional authority which would permit Congress to enact a right of action against private parties, without any state involvement, for infringement of interests which are protected from state impairment by the Fourteenth Amendment.’ (Footnote omitted.) This language, in my opinion, lends itself to the interpretation that a section 1985(3) action cannot be maintained unless the state through its agent was in some manner involved in the commission of the alleged offending conduct.”
. Appellant, Senese, argues that the state is involved in the deprivation of his rights by prohibiting suits against unincorporated associations, in its own name, for money damages.
Von Solbrig Memorial Hospital v. Licato,
