Thе appellants, fifteen former employees of the Southwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center (Southwest), a community hospital organized and operated under state law, brought this action against the
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires notice and a hearing before termination from public employment only if such termination would infringe a liberty or property interest.
Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
The appellants in this case clаim that both the statutes governing public hospitals in Mississippi and their contracts of employment, as set out in Southwest’s employee handbook, grant them a property interest in their continued employment. The statute in forcе at the time these employees were terminated provided that public hospitals “shall have full power and authority to promulgate and adopt suitable staff and hospital rules and regulations, to employ such personnel as may be necessary to properly maintain and operate such hospital, and to establish employee salaries and other employment benefits as may be advisable to attract and retain proficient personnel.” Miss.Code Ann. § 41-13-35 (1981) (amended 1985). This court has already interpreted that statute and held that it provides neither that employees at public hospitals in Mississippi are terminable at will nor that such employeеs are terminable only for cause; rather the statute governing community hospitals is “indisputably neutral.”
Conley v. Board of Trustees of Grenada County Hosp.,
Two months after the appellants were terminated, however, extensive revisions of the statutes governing community hospitals in Mississippi became effective. Under the new statutes, public hospitals are given the power “to provide for contracts of employment or contracts for services and ownership of property on terms that will protect the public interest.” Miss.Code Ann. § 41-13-35(5)(n) (Supp.1988). Furthermore, under the new statutory scheme, the administrator of the community hospital is given the power “to employ and discharge employees, as needed for the efficient performance of the business of the cоmmunity hospital and prescribe their duties.” Miss.Code Ann. § 41-13-36 (Supp.1988). The appellants argue that the qualifying language added to the statutes restricts the power of community hospitals to terminate their employees and bestows a рroperty interest on such employees.
See, e.g., In re Bishop,
There may be merit in the appellants’ contention that the new law creates a proрerly interest by lying the hospital’s power to hire and fire employees to promotion of the public interest and to promotion of hospital efficiency.
Cf. Roth,
In
Conley
we held that community hospital employees did have a property interest in their continued employment based on the employee guidebook issued by that hospital, which limited discharges to specified causes.
See
The
Southwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center Employee Handbook
in effect at the time these employees were terminated notes at the outset that the handbook states the policies and procedures of the hospital as well as the employees’ benefits and responsibilities. The handbook states that its purpose is to inform the employee of her opportunities, benefits, rights and duties and that the purpose of the personnel policies at the hospital is to attract, contribute to, and retain employees. The handbook enumerates 32 specific types of violations of hospital rules which may result in discipline or discharge. The handbook sets out a formal disciplinary procedure, a formal employee grievance procedure, and formal termination procedures, including a mandatory exit interview for the purpose of making sure that “the reason for the employee’s termination is not based on some misunderstanding or condition which could be remedied by either the Medical Center or the worker.” The appellants note the similarity between the provisions of Southwest’s handbook and the employee guidebook in
Conley
and argue that the provisions and the structure of the handbook limits discharge of Southwest employees to
The handbook may be accused of duplicitousness in setting forth extensive rights, rules, and procedures, all of which are subject to change without notice and none of which protects the employee from arbitrary dismissal; but the handbоok cannot be read to limit the employer’s power to terminate hospital employees at will. The only other significant evidence in the summary judgment record that might support the appellants’ reading of the handbook was an internal memorandum about the dismissals which stated that each of the employees to be terminated was entitled to a hearing. That memorandum, however, was never communicated to the employees. Nоr does that memorandum by itself indicate that the employee could be terminated only for cause. No representations were ever made to any of the plaintiffs, other than in the handbook, that they were not terminаble at will. There is no evidence in the summary judgment record of Southwest’s past course of conduct, which might indicate its interpretation of the employee handbook. In their depositions, all of the plaintiffs were asked whеther they had relied on any conduct or statements by the hospital, other than the handbook, in forming their beliefs that they were entitled to be terminated only for cause, and all answered that they had relied solely on the handbоok. Therefore, we hold that the appellants did not have a property interest in their continued employment at the Southwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center, and there is not a genuine issue of material fact in the summary judgment record to the contrary.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
