Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON.
The appellant, Mary A. Harris, appeals the district court’s dismissal of her complaint alleging that Howard University (University) and various University officials engaged in unlawful acts in denying her tenure and promotion to the rank of associate professor of Spanish at the University. The district court dismissed her action, concluding that the applicable statute of limitations barred the bulk of her claims. The court determined the statute of limitations commenced on October 31, 1991, the date the University first informed her by letter that tenure and promotion had not been approved. Harris argues,
inter alia,
that the letter does not constitute a final “tenure decision” under
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
I.
Mary Harris is a black female of Guyanese descent. In August 1985 the University hired her as an assistant professor of Span
After completing a book on poetry which was accepted for publication, Harris reapplied for tenure and promotion in October 1990. This time the Department APT Committee and the department chairman recommended Harris for promotion and tenure. Her application was then forwarded to the APT Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences (College APT Committee) which recommended against promotion and tenure. Her application was next reviewed by the Acting Dean of the College, Clarence Lee, who “endorse[d] her promotion with tenure ... but with great reservation.” Joint Appendix (JA) 234. Joyce A. Ladner, the University’s Vice President of Academic Affairs, recommended against promotion and tenure. By letter dated October 31, 1991 Harris was informed by Dean Lee that:
[T]he President of the University, Dr. Franklyn G. Jenifer, has not approved the recommendation that you be promoted to the rank of Associate Professor with tenure.
On behalf of the College of Arts and Sciences, I wish to thank you for your service and wish you well in your future endeavors.
JA 151.
After receiving the letter, Harris sought the assistance of James Davis, Acting Chairman of the Department of Romance Languages. According to Harris’s amended complaint, Davis informed her that she had “the right to reconsideration.” JA 26. Davis instructed her to write a letter to Dean Lee and include two letters of recommendation from outside the University to commence the reconsideration process. Harris then consulted with Dean Lee. According to Harris, “[b]oth Dr. Davis and Dr. Lee affirmatively advised [her] that said reconsideration was the next step in the tenure application process.” Id. In addition, by letter dated January 9, 1992 Ladner “confirmed that plaintiffs application for tenure would be ‘re-evaluate[d]’ pursuant to ‘the guidelines established for petitions of reconsideration,’ and that [Ladner] would inform Dr. Lee, of President Jenifer’s ‘decision’ ” once Harris initiated the reconsideration process. Id.
Harris subsequently resubmitted her application with two letters of recommendation and a copy of her book on poetry, which had by then been published. By letter dated March 25,1992 she was notified by Dean Lee that:
[Y]our petition to have your application for promotion and tenure reconsidered has been reviewed thoroughly by the College and the Central Administration. All pertinent supporting documents and relevant factors in your case were carefully evaluated. It is however, my unpleasant task to inform you that no basis was found upon which to change the original recommendation, namely that promotion and tenure be denied to you.
JA 159.
On March 24,1995 Harris filed a complaint against the University and various Universi
II.
Our review of the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss is
de novo. See Wilson v. Pena,
The appellees argue that this appeal can be resolved through a routine application of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Ricks.
Plaintiff Ricks joined the education department faculty at Delaware State College in 1970. In February 1973 the appropriate faculty committee recommended against tenure but agreed to reconsider its decision the following year. In February 1974, on reconsideration, the committee “adhered to its earlier recommendation.”
Ricks filed suit on September 9, 1977, alleging that Delaware State College unlawfully denied him tenure based on his national origin (Liberian) in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and 42 U.S.C. § 1981.
Id.
at 254,
We believe Harris’s case is distinguishable from
Ricks.
Harris maintains that originally she was not apprised of her right to reconsideration under Section E of the University’s
Guidelines for Appointments, Promotions, and Tenure Committees
(Guidelines).
5
Consequently, Harris claims that she was not given a meaningful opportunity to seek reconsideration from the College APT Committee, as was her “right” pursuant to the
Guidelines,
before the negative recommendation was forwarded directly to University officials for further action. Moreover, Harris might reasonably have believed that the reconsideration her application ultimately received was given in accordance with the
Guidelines.
She alleged that both the department chairman and the College Dean “affirmatively advised [her] that said reconsideration was the next step in the tenure application process.” JA 26. Indeed, defendant Ladner, the University Vice President, revealed in a January 9, 1992 letter to Ian Isidore Smart, a University faculty member who strongly supported Harris’s tenure application, that Harris planned to file a “petition for reconsideration” and had been “encouraged ... to follow the guidelines established for petitions of reconsideration.” JA 158. As the appellees conceded during oral argument, however, those procedures provide for reconsideration
before
the final decision. As a result, it may have been reasonable for Harris to believe that the University was reconsidering her application pursuant to the
Guidelines
and that the tenure decision thus was not yet final. Her belief could have been bolstered by the fact that the University has a specific “grievance” procedure, wholly distinct from the reconsideration process, which is available to an unsuccessful candidate only
after
the University’s final adverse action.
Howard University Manual: Faculty Handbook Section,
JA 116-17. The reconsideration Harris received was, according to the University’s own process, not part of its grievance procedure. As a result, the reconsideration might well not have been “a grievance, or some other method of collateral review of an employment decision”
We note that our holding is not intended to allow a plaintiff to avoid the holding in Ricks simply by labeling the final decision “preliminary” and procedures to review that decision an “integral part” of the decision process rather than collateral review of the final decision. Our disposition of this case does not disturb or undercut the holding in Ricks that the “existence of careful procedures to assure fairness in the tenure decision should not obscure the principle that limitations periods normally commence when the employer’s decision is made.” Id. Rather, our holding is restricted to Harris’s allegations regarding the reconsideration process afforded her, which process, although termed “reconsideration,” does not appear to be like the collateral review procedure at issue in Ricks. Rather, under the University’s procedures as set forth in its Guidelines and conceded at oral argument, the reconsideration provided Harris appears to occur only prior to the final tenure decision.
Because the defendants did not show below “beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of [her] claim which would entitle [her] to relief,”
Conley,
III.
As Harris does not appear to contest the dismissal of her fifth and fourteenth amendment claims, we need not tarry over them.
6
While “[t]here is no doubt that Howard [University]’s action has serious consequences for appellant ... it is not subject to all the constraints put on governmental action by the due process clause.”
Williams v. Howard Univ.,
* :|: *
For the foregoing reasons we reverse the district court’s dismissal of Harris’s non-constitutional claims, affirm its dismissal of her constitutional claims and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. Harris's probationary status meant that tenure was not guaranteed. The Howard University Faculty Handbook (Handbook) explains that "[tjenure shall not be granted by default, through the mere serving of the full limit of time (seven years) by a faculty member under probationary appointment.” Joint Appendix (JA) 130.
. The Handbook includes a section entitled, "Precise Policies And Procedure Of The Tenure Process,” which details the following levels of review for a tenure application: the departmental Appointments, Promotions, and Tenure (APT) Committee, the department chairman, the College of Arts and Sciences APT Committee, the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, the Vice-President for Academic Affairs, the President and the Board of Trustees. JA 130-32. See also Howard University's Guidelines for Appointments, Promotions, and Tenure Committee (Guidelines), JA 133-38 (The Handbook and the Guidelines are separate publications. The former was adopted by the Board of Trustees in June 1980, while the latter was published by the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs in 1986.). According to the Handbook, "[t]he decision of the Board shall be final.” JA at 132.
. The officials include Joyce A. Ladner, Interim President, Franklyn G. Jenifer, Past President, Moraima Donahue, a member of the "Tenure Committees” and "John Doe (unknown person^] ), individually and as officials, employees, agents, assistants and/or persons acting in concert or cooperation with the other named defendant[s] or under their supervision.” JA 1.
. On October 30, 1995 Harris filed a "Motion for Reconsideration, to Set Aside Order of Dismissal, and for Leave to Amend Complaint” alleging that she had discovered new facts supporting an amended complaint. The district court eventually denied her motion because, inter alia, the new evidence on which her motion relied was available to her "at least two months prior to the judgment." Harris v. Ladner, No. 95-1111, at 6 (D.D.C. May 23, 1996) (order denying plaintiffs motion for reconsideration). The Court also held that her new claims, like her original ones, were time-barred. Id.
. Section E reads:
E. Faculty’s Right to Petition for Reconsideration
When a decision not to recommend promotion or tenure for a faculty member is rendered by the departmental or school- or college-wide APT Committee, the faculty member has the right to petition the APT Committee for reconsideration of its decision if he or she can provide materials that were not available during the initial review. The APT Committee has the obligation to determine whether the new materials warrant reconsideration of its decision. The faculty member should be notified promptly of this decision. Petitions should be submitted through department chairmen for departmental Committees and through the deans for school- or college-wide Committees.
JA 137-38 (emphases added).
. See Appellee’s Br. at 7 n.2; Appellant's Br. at 1-3.
