The Superintendent of the United State Military Academy at West Point (the “Academy”), the Commandant of the Academy, and the Secretary of the Army appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) from an order,
Cadet Hagopian was separatеd from the Academy for deficiency in conduct after receiving 107 demerits as of May 21, 1972, 5 demerits in excess of the 102-demerit allowance prescribed as a maximum for the period December 21, 1971 to June 7, 1972. 1 Separation de *204 prives Hagopian of the opportunity to complete his college education at the Academy and thereby to become a commissioned officer in the United States Army. It also subjects him to transfer to active duty “in an appropriate enlisted grade” for not less than two nor more than four years. 10 U.S.C. § 4348(b) (1972 Supp.); Regulations for the United States Military Academy 16.01e (March 15, 1971) (hereinafter “Academy Reg.”).
In this action Hagopian challenges, for alleged fаilure to comport with minimum due process requirements, the procedures by which demerits for Class III delinquencies 2 are initially awarded and the procedures followed by the Academy’s Academic Board in determining whether a cadet whose accumulated demerit awards exceed his allowance for a demerit period should be recommended for separation. We hold that the existing measures presently available to a cadet for contesting an individual award of demerits are sufficient to meet minimum standards of due process, but that when an accumulation of awarded demerits renders the cadet subject to separation, he must be granted a fair hearing before being separated, including the right to personally appear and to present witnesses and other evidence in his behalf. As Cadet Hagopian was denied these rights at the meeting of the Academic Board which recommended his separation, we affirm the judgment below.
I.
At the outset we emphasize that we are not here being called upon to modify the Academy’s rigorous and exacting standards of discipline, behavior and personal decorum for cadets, standards which have traditionally been recognized as vital elements of a training program designed to develop the mind, body and character of prospective career officers. The ultimate objective of that training is tо insure that when our country faces the all-important task of defending itself, Academy graduates will provide military leadership under stress, imbued with courage, a strong sense of duty, and a willingness to subordinate personal self-interest to the overriding needs of their country. Such important matters, which are part of the Army’s conduct of military affairs and the standards adopted by it to prepare men for military operations, should not be interfered with by the judiciary. See Orloff v. Willoughby,
Since the elements of due process are flexible, requiring consideration in each case of a variety of circumstances, it *205 is essential to have a full understanding of the present operation of the disciplinary system at the Academy as it relates to the separation of a cadet for deficiency in conduct of the type which formed the basis of the Academy’s decision in Hagopian’s case. Preliminarily it should be noted that the Academy’s disciplinary system as a whole is charаcterized as “correctional and educational in nature rather than being legalistic and punitive.” 3 Its purpose is to teach the cadets “to be prepared to accept full responsibility for all that they do or fail to do and to place loyalty to the service above self-interest or loyalty to friends or associates.” 4 Toward these ends the awards of demerits to cadets at the Academy serve a dual function. In the daily educational context demerits are awarded so that cadets will be deterred from committing infractions of the Academy’s standards and, hence, will develop the kind of discipline the Academy hopes to inсulcate in future Army officers. In the far less frequent context, however, the accumulation of demerits to the point of conduct deficiency serves as a measure used to determine whether a cadet should be expelled from the Academy.
The award of demerits for a Class III delinquency begins with a report by an officer, civilian instructor, or another cadet, 5 6 forwarded to the allegedly delinquent cadet’s Tactical Officer.® The Tactical Officer may initiate the delinquency report himself and did so here as to 7 offenses (out of a total of 16) for which Hagopian received 46 demerits. The Tactical Officer notifies the cadet of any repоrt, and he may request an Explanation of Report or the cadet may on his own submit one to contest the delinquency. 7 The Tactical Officer reviews reports (including his own) and explanations and takes final action on all Class III offenses. 8 The individual report form with a notation of the demerits awarded is returned to the cadet and, in addition, a Weekly Cadet Delinquency Report is posted each week to notify the cadet of his offenses for the past week for which demerits were awarded, as well as to notify him of cumulative totals for the month and for the demerit period. 9
If a cadet wishes to appeal any demerit award listed, he must submit a request for reсonsideration to the Tactical Officer by 8:00 A.M. of the day following the posting of the weekly report, and the award of demerits will be considered by the next higher authority, the Regimental Commander. 10 It is also possible for the cadet to seek further review from the Superintendent of the Academy if he feels he has been wronged, 11 or to initiate a complaint, through his chain of command, to the Inspector General. 12 In the normal course, before a cadet exceeds his demerit allowance, these latter avenues of appeal are likely to be used only in rare instances.
The accumulation of demerits as a result of several individual awards may аctivate the other aspects of the disciplinary system with which this case deals. If a cadet exceeds his demerit allowance for a month or for the entire demerit period, the Tactical Officer is directed to interview the cadet to determine that all awards are correct and just and to have the cadet sign a form to that effect. 13 On such occasions the Tactical Officer counsels the cadet with a view to assisting him to mend his *206 ways and to avoid further infractions. Where the deficiency in conduct is based upon the cadet having exceeded his allowance for a full demerit period, as here, his case is forwarded through the Regimentаl Commander and the Commandant of Cadets to the Academic Board, 14 which may recommend probation only if the cadet is one “whose potential warrants retention” and which otherwise must recommend separation. 15 Formal approval of a recommendation to separate a cadet is finally taken by the Secretary of the Army. 16
The Academic Board, which makes the fateful recommendation to separate or retain on probationary status a cadet deficient in conduct, is composed of the Superintendent, the Dean of the Academic Board, the Commandant of Cadets, and the heads of the several depаrtments, totalling 18 members. 17 This body has general responsiblity, inter alia, for decisions on admissions, qualifications for receipt of diplomas, curriculum, and probation and separation of cadets. 18 A cadet who is being considered for separation by the Board for deficiency in conduct 19 may submit any additional written material for the Board to consider in reaching its decision, 20 but may not appear before the Board personally or through counsel and may not present witnesses in his behalf.
II.
On June 8, 1972, the Academic Board recommended that Cadet Hagopian be separated from the Academy, and on June 27, 1972, the Secretary of the Army approved the separation. This lawsuit followed on June 30, 1972, seeking preliminary and permanent relief based on an alleged denial of procedural due process. Hagopian concedes that the demerit award and separation procedures prescribed by the Regulations were followed in his case and that he submitted only one request for reconsideration of an award (which was successful) prior to May 22 and 23, 1972, at which time he sought to dispute the factual basis for incidents which had occurred on January 18, April 27, and May 21, 1972. The latter requests for reconsideration were rejected. His deficiency in conduct was referred to the Academic Board with recommendations of his Tactical Officer аnd his Regimental Commander that he be separated. On May 25, 1972, Hagopian signed the form which indicated that all reports were just and correct and that he had submitted all required requests for reconsideration.
Hagopian was notified by letter dated May 31 that his deficiency in conduct had been referred to the Academic Board for possible separation and that he had the right to present written evidence not previously submitted. He availed himself of this opportunity by a letter dated June 2, 1972, in which he did not dispute his delinquencies but appealed for another chance because he now realized his mistakes in “bucking the system.” In his affidavit to the district court Hagopian аlleged that shortly after he was notified on June 7 that the Board would be meeting the following day to consider his case he phoned the Academy legal department seeking advice and was told by one of the attorneys that they “were discouraged from counselling cadets who were called to appear before conduct boards.” Since Hagopian was not to appear before the Academic Board, it is unclear whether the term “conduct boards” was meant to include the Academic Board meeting to consider separation, or referred only to boards convened to adjudicate demerit awards for Class I and II delinquencies. *207 21 In any event, no legal advice was given and Hagopian confined his written efforts to the letter appealing for another chance, presumably hoping that his promise to do better in the future might persuade the Board members to find him to be a cadet “whose potential warranted retention.” It is undisputed, however, that if any of the demerit awards which Hagopian challenged in his requests for reconsideration in May or the demerit award he challenged for the first time in the district court 22 had been set aside by the Academic Board at its meeting, he would not have exceeded his allowance for the demerit period and would, therefore, not have beеn subject to separation for deficiency in conduct.
III.
Upon this appeal the district court’s grant of preliminary relief could be affirmed solely for failure to show any abuse of discretion on the part of the district court, Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Safeway Properties, Inc.,
In approaching the question of what process is due before governmental action adversely affecting private interests may properly be taken, it must be recognized that due process is not a rigid formula or simple rule of thumb to be applied undeviatingly to any given set of facts. On the contrary, it is a flexible concept which depends upon the balancing of various factors, including the nature of the private right or interest that is threatened, the extent to which the proceeding is adversarial in character, the severity and consequences of any action that might be taken, the burden that would be imposed by requiring use of all or part of the full panoply of trial-type procedures, and the existence of other overriding interests, such as the necessity for prompt action in the conduct of crucial military operations. The full context must therefore be considered in each ease. It could hardly be contended, for instance, that disciplinary action on the field of battle must conform to procedures applicable to the demotion of a civilian employee on the home front.
“Whether the Constitution requires that a particular right obtain in a specific proceeding depends upon a complexity of factors. The nature of the alleged right involved, the nature *208 of the proceeding, and the possible burden on that proceeding, are all considerations which must be taken into account.” Hannah v. Larche,868 U.S. 420 , 442,80 S.Ct. 1502 , 1515,4 L.Ed.2d 1307 (1960).
With respect to decisions made by Army authorities, “[o]rderly government requires us to tread lightly on the military domain, with scrupulous regard for the power and authority of the military establishment to govern its own affairs within the broad confines of constitutional due process”, Friedberg v. Resor,
At first blush separation of a cadet from the Acаdemy appears similar to the involuntary activation of a ready reservist for failure to perform satisfactorily in the reserve, for which no hearing is required. See O’Mara v. Zebrowski,
Because of the factors controlling' what process is due usually vary from case to case, prior decisions on the subject cannot ordinarily furnish more than, general guidelines which might give the/ reader a “feel” for what is fundamental-' ly fair in a particular instance. In this case, however, we have the unusual benefit and guidance of a decision of this Court in Wasson v. Trowbridge,
“While the government must always have a legitimate concern with the subject matter before it may validly affect private interests, in particularly vital and sensitive areas of government concern such as national security and military affairs, the private interest must yield to a greater degree to the governmental. . . . Few decisions prоperly rest so exclusively within the discretion of the appropriate government officials than the selection, training, discipline and dismissal of the future officers of the military and Merchant Marine. Instilling and maintaining discipline and morale in these young men who will be required to bear weighty responsibility in the face of adversity — at times extreme- — is a matter of substantial national importance scarcely within the competence of the judiciary. And it cannot be doubted that because of these factors historically *210 the military has been permitted greater freedom to fashion its disciplinary procedures than the civilian authorities.
“We conclude, therefore, that due process only requires for the dismissal of a Cadet from the Merchant Marine Academy that he be given a fair hearing at which he is apprised of the charges against him and permitted a defense. . . . For the guidance of the parties, . . . the rudiments of a fair hearing in broad outline are plain. The Cadet must be apprised of the specific charges against him. He must be given an adequate opportunity to present his defense both from the point of view of time and the use of witnesses and other evidence. We do not suggest, however, that the Cadet must be given this opportunity both when demerits are awarded and when dismissal is considered. The hearing may be procedurally informal and need not be adversarial.
“. . . The requirement of counsel as an ingredient of fairness is a function of all of the other aspects of the hearing. Where the proceeding is non-criminal in nature, where the hearing is investigative and not adversarial and the government does not proceed through counsel, where the individual concerned is mature and educated, where his knowledge of the events . . . should enable him to develop the facts adequately through available sources, and where the other-aspects of the hearing taken as a whole are fair, due process does not require representation by counsel.”382 F.2d at 812 (emphasis supplied).
We find these standards to be of persuasive and controlling guidance in the remarkably similar context with which we are here confronted. Applying them here, we have little difficulty in sustaining the validity of the Academy’s procedures for awarding demerits for individual Class III delinquencies. However, we find inadequate the present procedures which are followed in separating from the Academy cadets who have exceeded their demerit allowance for a prescribed period.
We view the award of demerits for each Class III delinquency not as the conduct of a military operation exempt from interference but as part of the daily operation of the Academy’s disciplinary system in which the Tactical Officer is responsible for instilling disciplined conduct in the cadets he supervises in a manner similar to the responsibilities of public school teachers to educate their students. Of course the student voluntarily at a military academy must be prepared to subordinate his private interests to the proper functioning of the educational institution he attends to a greater degree than the student at a civilian public school. However, although the Tactical Officer must decide whether demerits are to be awarded, he is not an adversary of the cadet but an educator who shares an identity of in-' terest with the cadet, whom he counsels from time to time as a future leader. See e. g., Menechino v. Oswald,
It would be an undue burden to impose on the routine administration of the Academy’s disciplinary system the requirements of a hearing, with the attendance of the cadet and witnesses, before an adjudication of demerits for such infractions as a dirty uniform or an unintentional failure to comply with instructions were permitted. Short of
*211
expulsion, the procedures available to a cadet (explanation of a reported delinquency, request for reconsideration, and appeal to superior authorities) are ample to satisfy the demands of due process, even with respect to demerits awarded by the Tactical Officer for delinquencies reported by the Tactical Officer himself. This is so because the sanctions imposed are slight, the nature of the proceeding is corrective and educational, and the burden on the proceedings which a hearing would impose is excessive, see Hannah v. Larche,
supra,
The demands of due process, however, are greater when the accumulation of demerits subjects the cadet to the severe sanction of expulsion rather than a form of milder discipline, see Farrell v. Joel, supra,
While we adhere to the admonition in Wasson that the “hearing may be procedurally informal and need not be adversarial,” we conclude that at a hearing at which Academy officials will determine whether or not a cadet will be expelled the cadet must be allowed to appear and present evidence, including witnesses, on his behalf. The importance of informality in the prodeeding militates against a requirement that the cadet be accorded the right to representation by counsel before the Academic Board. Unlike the welfare recipient who lacks the training *212 and educatiоn needed to understand his rights and express himself, the cadet should be capable of doing so. However, we reject any intimation that Cadet Ha-gopian was not entitled to seek advice or retain counsel to assist him in preparing his defense at the hearing.
With respect to Hagopian’s demand for the right to inspect the recommendations of his Tactical Officer and Regimental Commander recommending separation, which were before the Academic Board when it made its decision, we agree with the Court’s conclusion in Wasson that “ [particularly on the question of [his] fitness to remain a Cadet, he is not entitled to see the confidential opinions of members of the faculty”,
The foregoing is intended merely to convey, for the guidance of the Academy, the rudiments of due process required for disciplinary proceedings. It will be for the Academy within this rough framework to determine the precise procedures to be employed. In the meantime the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The demerit allowance is determined for each cadet class according to a mathematical formula which depends on the number of days the class is on duty status during each of the two demerit periods per year. Regulations for the United States Corps of Cadets, 407, 408 (1971) (hereinafter “Cadet Reg.”). The Academy year is divided into two demerit periods. A cadet who exceeds his demerit allowance for ,a full demerit period is deficient in conduct and may he separated *204 from tlie Academy, Cadet Regs. 408C, 409C, or placed on probation, depending upon whether the Academic Board concludes that notwithstanding his demerits his “potential warrants retention.”
. Under the Academy’s disciplinary system, delinquencies are classified according to seriоusness. Class I delinquencies, for which more than 15 demerits may be awarded, and Class II delinquencies, for which 9 to 15 merits may be awarded, Cadet Reg. 403, require action by a board within the Department of Tactics. Disciplinary System-Standing Operating Procedure § 28 (hereinafter “Disciplinary SOP”). Though part of Hagopian’s demerit total resulted from the award of 25 demerits for a Class I delinquency during this period, he does not challenge the procedure which led to this award. Rather, he challenges the procedure followed in awarding him the remainder of his demerit total which arose from fifteen separate Class III delinquencies. Class III delinquencies are of a minor nature, e. g., possession of unauthorized articles or uniform violations, and 1 to 8 demerits may be awarded for each delinquency by the Company Tactical Officer without the need for board action, Cadet Reg. 403C.
. Cadet Reg. 401.
. Id.
. Cadet Reg. 404.
. Disciplinary SOP § 14b.
. Id. §§ 14d, 19; Cadet Reg. 405.
. Disciplinary SOP § 14e. He refers Class I and II offenses for appropriate board action.
. Id. §§ 14h, 16a.
. Id. § 20.
. Cadet Reg. 201e.
. Cadet Reg. 320.
. Disciplinary SOP § 21.
. Id.
. Dean’s Standing Operating Procedure, Item XXIV c. 3 (May 12, 1969).
. Academy Reg. 16.09.
. Academy Reg. 3.01.
. Id. 3.06.
. The Board considers deficiencies in conduct in the same manner as it treats deficiencies in studies. Academy Reg. 9.05.
. Disciplinary SOP § 21; Rules of the Academic Board 5.01b.
. See note 2 supra.
. Cadet Hagopian received 5 demerits each for being in need of a haircut on both the 25th and 26th of April. He raised the objection below that be did not have the opportunity to rectify the cause of the first delinquency before it resulted in a second demerit award, although lie had not raised this objection prior to his separation.
. Of course, where military “regulations prescribed specific steps to be taken to insure due process they must be substantially observed,” Friedberg v. Resor,
supra,
. See Winters v. United States,
. The classification of offenses at the Merchant Marine Academy is substantially similar to the one prescribed at West Point. See note 2 supra.
. Cadet Reg. 409.
. Upon, oral argument counsel for the Government advised that expulsion hearings number approximately 8 per year.
