OPINION
After an abbreviated pre-termination hearing, LeCarthy Mitchell was fired from his job as a school custodian for allegedly stealing school property. No post-termination hearing was provided by the school district. Mitchell filed suit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the school superintendent and the school district violated his constitutional right to procedural due process. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. For the reasons set forth below, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual history
Mitchell worked for the Fayette County Public School (FCPS) District in Lexington, Kentucky from October of 1993 through August of 2001. His last assignment was as head custodian at Henry Clay High School. Mitchell’s status as an employee with more than four years of continuous service with FCPS entitled him, under Kentucky law, to not be discharged except “for cause.” Ky.Rev.Stat. 161.011(5). “For cause” includes “incompetency, neglect of duty, insubordination, inefficiency, misconduct, immorality, or other reasonable grounds which are specifically contained in board policy.” Ky.Rev. Stat. 161.011(7). The statute also provides that “[ljocal school boards shall develop and provide to all classified employees written policies which shall include ... [discipline guidelines and procedures that satisfy, due process requirements.” Ky. Rev.Stat. 161.011(9)(c).
By letter dated August 15, 2001, FCPS superintendent Dr. Robin L. Fankhauser suspended Mitchell for fifteen days with pay. Fankhauser explained that her action was “based upon the fact that I have received allegations against you concerning theft of school property. The purpose of the suspension with pay is to allow me the opportunity to investigate the facts involved in these allegations.” A “hand-delivered” designation is found at the top left-hand corner of the letter, and a form titled “Attempt to Serve” was introduced into evidence, suggesting that FCPS Law Enforcement Officer JD Jones attempted to deliver the letter at 6:15 p.m. on August 15.. Whether Mitchell ever received the letter is not clear from the record.
Also introduced into evidence — over Mitchell’s objection — is a FCPS Law Enforcement “investigative report” dated August 15, 2001, purporting to record an interview between Officer Jones and Mitchell. Mitchell is alleged to have “admitted taking a sewing-machine cabinet from Henry Clay High School to his home in Frankfort, Kentucky. He stated that he later put the cabinet in the dumpter [sic]. The cabinet has not been recovered.”
On August 20, 2001, Mitchell was called in to meet with Fankhauser and various other FCPS officials. Mitchell was then informed of the allegations that had been made against him — by people who were not present at the meeting — to the effect that Mitchell had helped another custodian steal school property. At the meeting, Mitchell admitted only to having taken a *479 sewing-machine cabinet home with him, but then returning it to the school. -
Fankhauser notified Mitchell in a letter a few days after the meeting that she was terminating him based upon the fact that, in July of 2001, he had been “observed helping another custodian load several ladders, lumber, folding chairs, and séwing machines into his car.” In a letter responding to his termination, Mitchell denied the allegations against him “either because they are untrue or because, to the extent any of the charges have a basis in fact, they do, not warrant the extreme sanction of termination.... ” Mitchell also requested an opportunity “to challenge the charges in a due process hearing before a neutral finder of fact....” FCPS’s general counsel denied Mitchell’s request, explaining that the August 20, 2001 meeting served as Mitchell’s due process hearing: “Dr. Fankhauser listened to all parties at the meeting and subsequently made the decision to terminate Mr. Mitchell[ ]....”
B. Procedural history
Mitchell brought suit against Fankhau-ser and FCPS pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Fankhauser and the Board violated Mitchell’s right to the due process of law by refusing “to provide him with an evidentiary due process hearing upon the reasons” for his termination. After Fankhauser and FCPS answered, both sides moved for summary judgment.
Fankhauser and FCPS attached to their trial-court brief in support of summary judgment “seventeen pages detailing the factual allegations against” Mitchell. Mitchell moved to strike these documents on the basis that they were “offered only to influence the Court to make a decision on the underlying facts of the case and ‘are not of record before the Court.’ ” Denying Mitchell’s motion, the district court reasoned that the attachments were “relevant to what if any investigation took place and ... what pre- or post-termination hearings actually were necessary to satisfy the requirements of due process.” The district court denied Mitchell’s motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment to Fankhauser and FCPS on January 30, 2003. ' Mitchell filed a timely notice of appeal of the court’s grant of summary judgment to Fankhauser and FCPS. .
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
ThermaScan, Inc. v. Thermoscan, Inc.
B. Due process
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution “provides that certain ■substantive rights — life, liberty, and property — cannot be deprived except pursuant to constitutionally adequate procedures.”
Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
In the context of employment rights, the Supreme Court has explained that “the root requirement of the Due Process clause” is “that an individual be given the opportunity for a hearing
before
he is deprived of any significant property interest.”
Loudermill,
Pre-termination hearings “need not be elaborate.”
Id.
at 545,
This court addressed the interplay between pre- and post-termination procedures in
Carter v. Western Reserve Psychiatric Habilitation Center,
Where, as here, a court has approved an abbreviated pre-termination hearing, due process requires that a discharged employee’s post-termination hearing be substantially more “meaningful.” At a *481 minimum, this requires that the discharged employee be permitted to attend the hearing, to have the assistance of counsel, to call witnesses and produce evidence on his own behalf, and to know and have an opportunity to challenge the evidence against him.
Id.
Mitchell’s case is similar to that of the discharged employee in Carter. The August 20, 2001 meeting-that Mitchell had with Fankhauser and the other FCPS officials provided Mitchell with oral notice of the charges against him and an opportunity to present his side of the story, analogous to the “abbreviated pre-termination hearing” provided to the employee in Carter. But Mitchell was not afforded a post-termination hearing; in fact, FCPS has no post-termination process. Fankhauser and FCPS explain in their brief that the FCPS policy “was intended to take care of all the requirements of due process pre-termination.” (Emphasis added.)
Despite this intent, we are convinced that the hearing actually, provided to Mitchell was not in itself sufficient to satisfy the requirements of due process as set forth in Carter. Mitchell, like the employee discharged in Carter, was afforded only an abbreviated pre-termination hearing. He is therefore entitled to a more meaningful post-termination hearing. This is not to say that two hearings are always required to satisfy due process. If the pre-termination hearing is more “meaningful,” as described in Carter, then no post-termination hearing would be necessary. But, as in Carter itself, that is not what took place in the case before us.
We now turn to the district court’s references to
Parratt v. Taylor,
In
Parratt,
a Nebraska prisoner sued prison officials under § 1983, alleging that the prison officials deprived him of the due process of law by negligently losing his mail-order hobby- materials. The Court held that the prisoner had failed to allege a due process violation, reasoning that the loss of property “did not occur as a result of some established state procedure” and that the prisoner could seek redress pursuant to state tort law.
Id.
at 543,
In the subsequent case of
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
This court first applied
Parrott
in
Vicory v. Walton,
This significant distinction, as stated by the Supreme Court in Parrott, Logan, Hudson, and Zinennon, and echoed by this court in Vicory, has unfortunately not been consistently applied in our circuit’s caselaw. The two parallel but contradictory lines of authority are discussed below.
This court decided the case of
Carter v. Western Reserve Psychiatric Habilitation,
767 F.2d
270
(6th Cir.1985), almost two years after
Vicory.
As previously mentioned,
Carter
followed the Supreme Court’s decision in
Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
Watts v. Burkhart,
Despite the Supreme Court’s and this court’s pronouncements that
Parratt
applies only to random, unauthorized deprivations of property, this court has occasionally applied
Parrott’s
requirement’ of pleading the inadequacy of state-court remedies more broadly.
See Jefferson v. Jefferson County Public Sch. Sys.,
On the other hand, other decisions of this court, in addition to
Carter
and
Watts,
have recognized the distinction between random, unauthorized acts and established state procedures.
See Moore v. Bd. of Educ. of Johnson City Schs.,
We are therefore faced with deciding between multiple precedents on both sides — those that apply
Parratt
only to random, unauthorized deprivations of property and those that apply
Parratt
*484
more broadly. Our analysis convinces us that the correct line of authority in the Sixth Circuit is that of
Watts, Macene, Carter,
and
Moore.
In the present case, Mitchell was not deprived of his property interest in his job pursuant to a random or unauthorized act. Mitchell, therefore, “was required neither to plead nor prove the inadequacy of post-termination state-law remedies in order to prevail.”
Moore,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
