LEWIS D. HOLLOWAY, APPELLEE,
v.
SAM REEVES, SALLY JONES, DOYLENE FUQUA, CYNTHIA COUGHLIN, AND RANDY LAWSON, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN THEIR OFFICIAL CAPACITIES AS MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF BENTONVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 6 OF BENTON COUNTY, ARKANSAS, APPELLANTS.
No. 01-1929
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: November 12, 2001
Filed January 24, 2002
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.[Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Before Mcmillian and Morris Sheppard Arnold, Circuit Judges, and Smith,1 District Judge
Morris Sheppard Arnold, Circuit Judge
The defendants appeal following the district court's denial of their motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. We reverse.
I.
The defendants are members of the Bentonville school board who voted to fire Lewis D. Holloway from his position as school superintendent. More than two years remained on Mr. Holloway's employment contract at the time of his dismissal, and the board voted to "buy out" the remainder of the contract. In his complaint, Mr. Holloway claimed that the board deprived him of his right to due process, because he was fired without notice or hearing, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The defendant board members maintained that they were entitled to qualified immunity.
We review a rejection of a qualified immunity defense de novo. Burnham v. Ianni,
As the Supreme Court explained in Anderson v. Creighton,
II.
Mr. Holloway claimed in his complaint that the defendant board members knowingly violated rights guaranteed him in the school district's policy and in state law when they fired him without notice or hearing. But a suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 can remedy only a violation of federal rights, see Gooden,
Our cases clearly establish that public employees are entitled to procedural due process when they are fired from positions in which they have a legitimate expectation of continued employment, that is, when the employee's entitlement to the job is sufficiently certain so as to amount to a constitutionally protected property interest. See Winegar v. Des Moines Indep. Community Sch. Dist.,
But the school board did not simply fire Mr. Holloway and deprive him of the benefits of employment; instead, it voted to "buy out" the remainder of his contract. As of the time that Mr. Holloway was terminated, the board members expressed their intent to compensate him for the value of the remaining salary and benefits owed him according to the contract's terms, so they did not deprive him of anything of economic value when they voted to dismiss him.
While it is true that the school board later discontinued paying Mr. Holloway his salary and benefits because he obtained a superintendent's job in Georgia, the constitutionality of the board members' actions must be assessed as of the time that the actions were taken. Cf. Gooden,
The only remaining question is whether the board members deprived Mr. Holloway of a constitutionally protected interest in the intangible benefits of serving in the position of superintendent. Mr. Holloway cites Winegar,
The plaintiff in Winegar,
The plaintiff's liberty and property interests in "his job, his assignment, and his good name,"
We note that there are cases that explicitly hold that persons in positions like Mr. Holloway's do not have a property interest in the positions themselves, and we find their reasoning persuasive. For instance, in a case very similar to the present one, the Eleventh Circuit was asked to decide whether a reasonable school board member should have known that firing a superintendent without a hearing, but continuing to pay him the salary and benefits provided in his contract, violated the superintendent's "clearly established" due process rights. See Harris v. Board of Educ. of Atlanta,
We hold that there is no constitutionally protected property interest in a public policy-making position, aside from what are commonly called its economic benefits. Since Mr. Holloway's due process rights could not have been violated with regard to a non-existent property interest, the defendant board members are entitled to qualified immunity.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is reversed.
NOTE:
Notes
The Honorable Ortrie D. Smith, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, sitting by designation.
