In 1974, defendants, past and present members of an Oklahoma school board, declined to renew the contract of plaintiff, a non-tenured teacher. Plaintiff brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking reinstatement with backpay, damages and attorney fees. In the case’s previous appearance before this court, we held that the plaintiff had shown no entitlement to the position and hence had no protected property interest.
McGhee v. Draper,
We instructed the district court to hold new proceedings in order to determine whether the discharge infringed upon plaintiff’s liberty interest and, if so, to “consider proper equitable relief for the denial of procedural due process.”
On appeal, plaintiff challenges the district court’s rejection of her various claimed remedies. With respect to the availability of backpay and compensatory damages, plaintiff particularly urges that
Owen v. City of Independence,
I. Preliminary Issues
Two threshold arguments of the defendants lend themselves to summary disposition. Because the School District itself was earlier dismissed from the case — and that dismissal was not appealed,
“[Ojfficial-capacity suits generally represent only another way of pleading an action against an entity of which an officer is an agent.”
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
Owen v. City of Independence,
II. Liberty Interest
In our prior opinion we concluded that the district court had improperly directed a verdict against plaintiff on her liberty interest claim. That conclusion, of course, is the law of this case. Plaintiff must now be given an opportunity to establish her claim.
In order to recover under § 1983 for infringement upon a liberty interest, plaintiff must first shоw that the complained of conduct stigmatized or otherwise damaged
*643
her reputation. However, stigmatization or reputational damage alone, no matter how egregious, is not sufficient to support a § 1983 cause of action.
Paul
v.
Davis,
Plaintiff alleges that the stigmatization in this case was caused or enhanced by her non-renewal. Typically, when one’s liberty interest is allegedly infringed upon by a discharge from employment, the terminatiоn or non-renewal will either explicitly state the stigmatizing factors or implicitly ratify some other stigmatizing allegations. Thus, the discharge will either cause or contribute to the alleged defamation. In either case, the defamed’s liberty “to engage in any of the common occupations of life” is diminished,
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Once it is determined that a hearing right was triggered because of an infringement upon plaintiff’s liberty, the constitutional sufficiency of a purportеd hearing is a legal issue to be determined by the courts. In our prior opinion in this case we found that, assuming a violation of plaintiff’s liberty interest, no constitutionally adequate hearing was afforded her. This is the law of the case and plaintiff need not present evidence on this final element of her claim.
The truth or falsity of any charges made or legitimized by the school board’s action is not relevant to determining the existence of a procedural due process violation; it is relevant only in fashioning the appropriate remedy. The jury’s determination whether plaintiff was deprived of a liberty interest because of the charges against her depends on the character of the charges, not on their truthfulness. The “truth or falsity ... [may] determine whether or not [the] decision to dischаrge [plaintiff] was prudent, but neither enhances nor diminishes [plaintiff’s] claim that [her] constitutionally protected interest in liberty has been impaired.”
Bishop v. Wood,
*644 III. Remedies
When all of the elements of a § 1983 liberty claim are shown, a constitutional violation (failure to provide a hearing) is established. An appropriate remedy must then be fashioned. At a minimum, nominal damages would be available, even if the charges prove to be truthful.
See Carey v. Piphus,
A. Compensatory Damages
In the previous appeal, we determined that, because of the defendants’ good faith, no damages remedy was available. Intervening authority has preempted that conclusion.
Owen v. City of Independence,
A damages remedy against the offending party is a vital component of any scheme for vindicating cherished constitutional guarantees, and the importance of assuring its efficacy is only accentuated when the wrongdoer is the institution that has been established to protect the very rights it has transgressed.
Id.
By permitting the recovery of damages resulting from procedural violations, we do not remove from plaintiff the task of proving causal connections. Damages are not to be presumed.
See Carey v. Piphus,
As explained previously, the truthfulness of the charges does not affect the right to procedurаl due process protections. However, truthfulness is clearly important in tracing the consequences at trial of a denial of procedural rights. “[W]here a depriva
*645
tion is justified but procedures are deficient, whatever distress a person feels may be attributable to the justified deprivation rather than to deficiencies in procedure.”
Carey v. Piphus,
B. Hearing
In the exercise of its equitable powers, the district court could order a post-termination hearing to provide plaintiff with an opportunity to attempt to “clear [her] name.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
C. Reinstatement
Ordinarily a governmental decision not to rehire an employee does not deprive that employee of “liberty.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Plaintiff argues, however, that reinstatement is necessary in this case to erase the stigma and to “make good the wrong done.”
Bell v. Hood,
“The purpose of the due process hearing to which [plaintiff] was entitled was not to afford an opportunity to recapture [her] previous employment but simply to ‘clear [her] name.’ ”
Dennis v. S & S Consolidated Rural High School District,
[T]he contemplated hearing does not embrace any determination analogous to the “second step” of [a] parole revocation hearing, which would in effect be a determination whether or not, conceding that the report were true, the employee was properly refused re-employment. [Absent а] property interest in continued employment, the adequacy or even the existence of reasons for failing to rehire [her] presents no federal constitutional question.
Codd v. Velger,
Plaintiff believes that we read the Codd damning language too broadly — that the “contemplated hearing” refers only to the proper pre-termination hearing to which she was entitled and that a post-termination hearing involves different considerations. She insists that, having received no pre-termination hearing, only reinstatement can make her whole. We cannot agree with plaintiff’s argument. Compensatory damages, together with appropriate equitable relief, will adequately recompense plaintiff for any harm caused by the procedural deficiencies. Plaintiff’s theory would potentially convert the propriety — as opposed *646 to the procedural adequacy — of all stigmatizing discharges into precisely what Codd says they are not: federal constitutional questions.
Although we reject plaintiff’s broad theory that reinstatement is necessary to remedy a termination involving an infringement of liberty, the district court’s blanket statement — that “reinstatement is an inappropriate remedy to apply in a stigma-type liberty case where no property or First Amеndment issues are involved,” Record, vol. 1, at 110 — is also too sweeping. If the plaintiff can prove that she would in fact have been retained had full procedural due process been provided, she may be reinstated. 6
This theory of recovery requires a purely factual determination of the consequences of the due process violation. Given the problems of proof, thе probability of success on such a theory may be remote, but we cannot say it is infinitesimal. In similar circumstances the Supreme Court has “assume[d] that the [trier of fact]
can
determine what the outcome would have been if [plaintiff] had received [a] hearing .... [T]his determination will include consideration of the likelihood that any mitigating circumstance to which [plaintiff] can point would have swayed the initial decision-makers.”
Carey v. Piphus,
D. Backpay
This court noted in
Bertot v. School District No. 1,
The en banc court in Bertot ovеrruled the panel determination and held that the good faith of school board members does not preclude an equitable award of backpay. As with reinstatement, backpay is therefore an appropriate remedy in this case if plaintiff is able to prove a direct causal link between her denial of procedural due process and her termination.
IV. Conclusion
We acсordingly remand this case again to the district court. Plaintiff must be given an opportunity to prove that she was entitled to a hearing in connection with her nonrenewal of employment. If entitlement to a hearing is shown, plaintiff should be awarded nominal damages and any other relief which, consistent with this opinion, she can show is warranted.
Notes
. In its order dismissing the School District, the trial court did not. feel that it was ending the lawsuit. The official capacity defendants remained in the action at least for the purposes of equitable relief. “[A]ny injunctive relief granted plaintiff in this case will be just as effective applied to the School Superintendent and members of the Board of Education, as it would if the school district were retained.” Record in No. 75-1901, vol. 1, at 49. The trial judge’s opinion that the District was cloaked with the State’s Eleventh Amendment immunity did not protect the official capacity defendants from suits for equitable relief.
See Ex parte Young,
. The requirement of Paul v. Davis that reputational harm be entangled with “some more tangible interests” is thus met when a terminated or non-renewed § 1983 plaintiff can show that the termination at least aggravated his stigmatization. We do not mean to imply that this is a heavy burden for a plaintiff. Any termination occurring in an atmosphere where the plaintiffs reputation is at issue should be considered sufficient to meet Paul’s entanglement requirement. It should be the state’s burden to show that termination in such a context is so removed from the plaintiff’s reputational concern that it in no way impacted upon it.
Similarly, we should not be interpreted as implying that discharge from employment is the exclusive context in which a “tangible interest” can be entangled with a plaintiffs liberty interest for § 1983 purposes. See, e. g., Monaghan, Of “Liberty” and “Property”, 62 Cornell L.Rev. 405, 432-33 (1977).
.
Codd v. Velger,
. Although the trial court held that Oklahoma school districts are cloaked with the State’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, it did so without the benefit of
MonelV
s statement that suing board members in their official capacity is generally no different than suing the board.
In any event, it is apparent that plaintiff would have appealed thе trial court’s dismissal of the District had she suspected that the action would deprive her of an award of damages. On remand, should compensatory damages be deemed appropriate, the district court should reconsider its dismissal of the District in light of
Monell, Bertot,
and
Dowell v. Independent School District No. 89,
. Even without a protected property interest, employees may not be discharged for certain constitutionally infirm reasons, including exercise of first amendment rights. See, e.
g., Perry
v.
Sindermann,
. The Supreme Court has treated the merits of similar cases in which reinstatement and back-pay were the only remedies sought. See, e.
g., Bishop v. Wood,
