Jason Bernard made a drawing of a high school and offered copies of this artwork for sale at local stores. He alleges that the United Township High School District (“District”) of East Moline, Illinois, harassed him because he did not share his profits with the school’s booster club, and that the District also intimidated retailers into pulling his drawing from their shops. He claims that these actions violated the Fourteenth Amendment by depriving him of liberty and property without due process of law. The trial judge held as a matter of law that the District’s actions did not violate Bernard’s due process rights and dismissed his complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
We review the dismissal of a complaint '
de novo,
assuming the truth of its allegations and making all possible inferences in plaintiffs favor.
Gomez v. Illinois State Board of Education,
Please be advised that prints of United Township High School North Campus are being sold in the community. You should be aware that United Township High School has not authorized or endorsed the sale of these prints.
Anyone selling the prints should not make any express or implied representation that the school or the U.T. booster club is a party, has authorized, or will receive any financial benefit from the sale.
After these letters were sent, many retailers refused to continue stocking Bernard’s prints and he lost substantial sales as a result. Bernard claims that he did not tell retailers that the school would benefit from the sales and he characterizes the District’s letter as an implicit threat to merchants who continued to sell his prints. The briefs disclose á footnote to this story that does not appear in the complaint: Bernard was a high school senior in the District when these events occurred.
Bernard chooses to plead the legal effect of this narrative in due process terms. He claims that the District interfered with his occupation as an artist and marketer of prints and thus deprived him of liberty and property -without due process of law. The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects one’s liberty to follow a trade or occupation, as well as the property interests one may acquire in a particular job, from certain kinds of state infringement.
Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
Like the present case,
Wroblewski
reviewed the dismissal of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6). Wroblewski ran a municipal marina until the city became unhappy with his performance and terminated his lease. When city officials solicited bids for a new marina operator, they promised to penalize bidders who subcontracted work back to Wroblewski, and thus effectively shut him out of employment at the marina. Like Bernard, Wroblewski claimed that the city interfered with his work opportunities with third parties. In affirming the dismissal of Wroblewski’s complaint, we held that the city had not infringed his Fourteenth Amendment liberty because he was free to pursue marina work elsewhere, and thus had not been excluded from his trade.
Citing
Cowan v. Corley,
Bernard also charges that the District deprived him of two property interests without due process. First, he claims that common-law copyright principles gave him exclusive ownership of his print and an attendant right to use and dispose of it as he chose. Second, he claims that he had oral contracts with retailers to sell his print. Bernard presses the contract argument in his discussion of liberty interests, but previous due process cases have analyzed contracts as a property right, and we see no reason to depart from this approach.
Weinstein v. University of Illinois,
Unfortunately for Bernard, these property infringements (like the liberty interests discussed above) cannot be remedied by a suit directly under the Constitution. For as explained in
Weinstein,
although “the due process clause applies to efforts by the state to eliminate entitlements established by private contracts * * * the ‘due process’ of which the Fourteenth Amendment speaks is a suit under state law.”
Bernard’s complaint also alleged that the District’s conduct violated his First Amendment right of free expression. The trial court’s analysis of this claim was arguably incorrect in certain respects, but since Bernard did not appeal this portion of Judge Mihm’s decision, he has waived the argument and we will not discuss the matter.
Wroblewski,
The foregoing discussion should not be read to approve of the conduct alleged in the complaint. If true, Bernard’s charges give us pause. This student artist and would-be entrepeneur offered to share his profits with the school, but the parties failed to agree on terms. It is hard to understand what would motivate an educator to undermine such a student’s success once the student decided to proceed on his own. Bernard remains free to pursue such questions in a state-law tort suit.
AFFIRMED.
