Thrеe professors at Vincennes University, a public university in Indiana, brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the president, other officials, and the trustees of the university, charging retaliation for the exercise of the plaintiffs’ First Amendment right of free speech and seeking both injunctive relief and dam *818 ages. The president is sued in both his official and individual capacity, the trustees only in their official capacity. A suit against a state official in his or her official capacity is a suit against the state, and so is barred by the Elеventh Amendment unless (so far as pertains to this case) the state has waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit in federal court. The district court dismissed the official-capacity claims as barred by the Eleventh Amendment and then granted summary judgment on the individual-capacity claims on the ground that the alleged retaliation did not amount to an adverse employment action and so was not actionable.
Since section 1983 does not authorize suits against states (states not being “persons” within the statute’s meaning),
Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona,
It is true that the statute creating it includes a vеry broad “sue and be sued” clause: the trustees shall'be “capable of suing and being sued ... in all courts and places whatsoever.” Ind.Code § 23-13-18-l(b)(l). Read literally, this is consent to being sued in federal court. Yet similar language has been read not to crеate such consent.
Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon,
Left are thе individual-capacity claims against the university’s president and other officials, and also the possibility that the plaintiffs, if they succeed in proving retaliation, can obtain injunctive relief against the university, since official-capacity suits agаinst state officials that seek only injunctive relief are permitted by 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
Will v. Michigan Dept. of State Police, supra,
The plaintiffs want more than a simple injunction against retaliation. To see what more, we must turn to the facts they’re alleging. For 1995, the trustees authorized a “catch-up” salary raise for the faculty. This was to be a discretionary, merit-based raise rather than an across-the-board raise, but sufficient funds were appropriated to enable an average raise of $1,000. The plaintiffs, although their performance ratings ranged from average to еxcellent, received only $400 apiece. They claim that this was because they were “outspoken” on issues of faculty salaries, and the defendants concede that these so-called “merit” raises were actually used to rewаrd faculty who were combatting “dissension” and “divisiveness,” that for purposes of appeal it must be assumed that the plaintiffs were speaking out on matters of public concern and so were exercising the right that the free-speech clаuse of the First Amendment confers on them, and that no judicial determination has been made about whether their outspokenness was a factor in their receiving raises so far below the average. The defendants argue that despite these meager raises the plaintiffs’ salaries rose relative to the average salary in their division. But this means little in itself, since such a result could come about simply because higher-paid *820 faculty members quit, thus lowering the average.
Because the merit raise was an addition to base sаlary, the below-average raise received by the plaintiffs not only reduced the fringe benefits they would have received had they gotten a higher raise, but will reduce their future salaries; for by being added to the base salary the amount of the mеrit raise will be paid in all future years to those faculty who were granted it. The plaintiffs want an injunction commanding the university to raise their base salary to what it would have been had they not been discriminated against on account of their outspokenness.
An injunction that is a simple order to pay is not within
Ex parte Young’s
dispensation for injunctions to restrain unconstitutional conduct,
Edelman v. Jordan,
All that remains to be considered is the district court’s determination that because there was no adverse employment action, the plaintiffs’ claim of retaliation cannot be maintained. There are two steps in this analysis: retaliation is not actionable, in a suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 unless an adverse employment action is shown; the denial of a discretionary raise is not an adverse employment action. Both are in fact missteps. Not section 1983, but the federal statutes, such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, that forbid invidious discrimination in emplоyment, limit their protection to victims of “adverse employment action,” which is.judicial shorthand (the term does not appear in the statutes themselves) for the fact that these statutes require the plaintiff to prove that the employer’s аction of which he is complaining altered the terms or conditions of his employment.
Hunt v. City of Markham,
Even if an adverse employment action within the meaning of the antidiscrimination statutes were required in a section 1983 case (and, to repeat, it is not), it would not follow that the denial of a raise would not qualify as such an action merely because the raise was discretionary. This would be obvious if the basis fоr exercising such discretion to deny an individual a raise were race or sex. See, e.g.,
Riordan v. Kempiners,
The district court’s dismissal of the official-capacity claim is affirmed, but the dismissal of the other claims is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Paet, and Remanded.
