The defendant school district (“Western Line”) appeals from a judgment of the district court ordering the reinstatement of the intervenor Givhan as teacher and awarding her back pay and attorney’s fees. The district court did so upon its holding that but for Ms. Givhan’s exercise of her First Amendment rights she would have been rehired for the 1971-72 school year. The district court made this determination, pursuant to a remand for this purpose,
Ayers
v.
Western Line Consolidated School District,
The Issue(s) on Remand and on This Appeal
On the remand, after the exchange of memorandum by opposing counsel as to the scope of the remand, the district court entered an order that only two issues would be considered on the remand. One of them was a now-abandoned racial-discrimination type claim. The other (and the only one before us now) was: “Whether plaintiff Givhan would have been rehired but for her criticism of the school district.” R. Ill, p. 688. This was in accordance with the de
With some forcefulness, the able counsel for the district now contends that the issue of whether Givhan’s criticisms were indeed protected by the First Amendment, even if they were the motivating factor for the teacher’s discharge, was not foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s
Givhan
decision ordering remand.
2
Nevertheless, not having urged this issue below, the district should not be able to raise this issue for the first time on the appeal. “[I]n the absence of exceptional circumstances provoking a miscarriage of justice, questions that are not presented to or passed on by the trial court ... will not be considered on appeal.”
Jones v. Birdsong,
We therefore conclude that the only issue as to the non-renewal of Ms. Givhan’s teaching contract raised by this appeal is whether the district court erred in concluding that, but for her First Amendment protected expression, her contract to teach would have been renewed.
Would Ms. Givhan Have Been Rehired But For Her First-Amendment Protected Criticism
In the pre-remand hearings, the principal had testified that he had recommended non-renewal of Ms. Givhan’s teaching contract because of her hostile attitude and her making of unreasonable demands.
4
These critical suggestions are treated at more length in our opinion on original hearing,
Ayers, supra,
On the remand, some nine years later, the principal now testifies that his decision not to rehire was not only based upon the above-noted critical' expressions, but also upon Ms. Givhan’s demurrers about administering two tests (see note 4 supra) and upon her peripheral involvement in March 1970, during a time of racial turmoil, with a knife-shakedown incident. 5
The district court, examining the evidence and testimony introduced both at the hearing on remand and at the initial hearing of the case, concluded that Givhan would have been rehired except for her First Amendment protected outspokenness.
In addition to the factors relied upon in the pre-remand proceedings, the court placed some emphasis on inconsistencies in two evaluation sheets relating to Givhan by the school principal, both dated the same day. One of these sheets was signed by both Givhan and the principal (as per school policy, indicating that Givhan had seen and discussed the evaluation), and was strongly worded in favor of Givhan’s teaching abilities and her contributions to the school. The other sheet was signed only by the principal and was less favorable. No attempt was made by the Western Line district to introduce the alleged original signed version of this more negative evaluation, nor was there any explanation given for why two evaluations were made on Givhan and dated the same day. The trial court concluded that the more positive evaluation sheet — the one seen and actually signed by Givhan — was the “correct statement.” And we note that even the less positive evaluation characterizes Givhan as a “good teacher.”
The court also placed emphasis on certain correspondence between Leach and his supervisor wherein Leach stated of Givhan: “petty and unreasonable demands”, “overly critical”, “arrogant”, “pressure and demands”, “derogatory remarks”, “agitated”. The court noted that if reasons other than the content of First Amendment expression, such as the manner or place in which it was made, had strongly motivated the school district not to rehire Givhan, the court would have expected more enunciation of these reasons in the correspondence leading to the termination decision.
In making the determination that Givhan would have been rehired if not for her First Amendment speech, the district court not only emphasized the foregoing factors but also found to be insubstantial three incidents that upon the remand Western Line alleged to be reasons why, even aside from Givhan’s critical First Amendment-protected expressions, the district would not have rehired her. See notes 4 and 5 supra. We do not find the district court’s determinations in these regards to be clearly erroneous, based as they are largely upon a credibility evaluation of the principal’s present testimony as compared with his earlier expressions at the earlier hearing and in his correspondence.
The district court thus concluded that the sole reason why Ms. Givhan was not rehired was because of her critical expressions that were protected by the First Amendment. Based largely on credibility evaluations, in findings not clearly erroneous, district court found the other reasons, now belatedly assigned, for the discharge, to be afterthoughts or pretextual. Whether we regard the district court’s finding of causation to be factual and not subject on review to be set aside as not clearly erroneous,
Pull
Nor do we find any error in the award of back pay and attorney’s fees, for the reasons so fully articulated by the district court.
Conclusion
The decision of the district court ordering the reinstatement of Givhan in her teaching position, and ordering that she be paid attorney’s fees and back pay is therefore AFFIRMED. We remand to the district court for a determination of fees and back pay that have accumulated pending this appeal.
AFFIRMED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The Court held that, since the case was tried before the issuance of its decision in
Mt. Healthy City Board of Education v. Doyle,
. The district relies on the Court’s footnote statements that, “[e]ven absent consideration of petitioner’s private encounters with the principal, a decision to terminate based on the reasons detailed [involving an alleged hostile attitude and non-expression reasons] would hardly strike us as surprising”,
. Even were we to accept that the issue is now before us of whether First Amendment protection extended to Givhan’s privately uttered criticisms, we could conclude under the non-clearly-erroneous factual findings made by the district court (that the alleged reasons for discharge were after-thoughts or pretextual) that the trial court could have properly found that Givhan’s criticisms were private expressions properly made and entitled to First Amendment protection.
Indeed, the
Givhan
decision of the Supreme Court, see quoted statements in note 2
supra,
alerted the district court that, under
Pickering v. Board of Education,
. The principal also alleged that she had refused to give achievement tests. On our initial hearing, we affirmed the district court’s finding that this was not a reason seriously relied upon; although Givhan at first demurred on nonfrivolous grounds, she did in fact administer the tests. See our initial opinion,
Ayers, supra,
. The knife-shakedown incident had not been mentioned by the principal as a matter of his personal knowledge prior to the hearing on remand nine years later. Following the incident, Ms. Givhan had been rehired for the 1970-71 school year. We are unable to disturb the district court’s credibility evaluation of the principal’s testimony that this incident played no part in the decision to rehire, and was in the nature of an afterthought.
