Mary W. Vance, a black citizen of Chester County, South Carolina, brought this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking reinstatement as a public school teacher and damages against the Chester County Board of School Trustees. The complaint alleged that the Board’s failure to reemploy her for the 1971-72 school year violated constitutional guarantees of due process and equal protection. Specifically, she contended that the notice and hearing accorded her were unconstitutionally inadequate, and that she had been dismissed because of her race. In response to the defendant’s motion, the district court granted summary judgment. Mrs. Vance has appealed. We affirm.
Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure authorizes summary judgment only when “ . . . the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact. . . . ” But summary judgment should be entered “ . only where the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law, where it is quite clear what the truth is, [and where] no genuine issue remains for trial . . . [for] the purpose of the rule is not to cut litigants off from their right of trial if they really have issues to try.” Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
From the papers and depositions, the following facts emerge. Mrs. Vance was employed in the public schools of Chester County, South Carolina for approximately 26 years. Her contract contained no provision for formal tenure, and instead was required to be renewed annually upon appropriate recommendation by the Superintendent of Chester County Schools to the Chester County Board of School Trustees.
During the school year 1968-69, the final year of a segregated school system in Chester County, Mrs. Vance was employed as a teacher at Landsford-Lewis-ville Elementary School, an all black institution. Her principal, who was black, completed a fitness report dated February 12, 1969 which noted that Mrs. Vance required improvement in eight of nine subcategories relating to “Instructional Competence.” She was also graded as requiring improvement in four of six subcategories relating to “Professional Attitudes and Growth.”
In 1969-70, the first year of a unitary school system in Chester County, Mrs. Vance was reemployed at Gayle Elementary School. But, because she had only a “C” teaching certificate, she worked as a “teacher’s aide” to the first grade. Her principal reported in March 1970 that she required improvement in five subcategories of instructional competence and that her performance was unsatisfactory in a sixth. In “Professional Attitudes and Growth,” she was also marked as requiring improvement.
During the 1970-71 school year, Mrs. Vance obtained a “B” certificate, and she was again reemployed, this time as a second grade teacher at Dora Jones Elementary School. During the school year, her work was observed on several occasions and her superiors discussed with her ways in which she could improve her performance. Following one such period of observation on January 22, 1971, her supervisors discussed with her in considerable detail her various teaching deficiencies, including an overall lack of classroom planning and a failure to make provision in some way for *823 children’s individual strengths and weaknesses. It was emphasized to Mrs. Vance, as she had been previously instructed, that she had to establish written lesson plans and maintain index cards on each child. It was further suggested that she visit other classrooms to observe techniques utilized by other teachers.
Following the evaluation and discussion of January 22, 1971, Mrs. Vance was notified orally, by the Elementary Supervisor, on March 4, 1971, that she was not being recommended for reemployment. This was confirmed by letter from her principal, March 8, 1971. On March 12, 1971, she was notified that the Chester County Board of School Trustees had not reelected her as a teacher. Thereafter, on April 23, 1971, Mrs. Vance wrote the Chester County Board of School Trustees asking that they reconsider the matter. In a letter of May 5, 1971, the Board informed Mrs. Vance that a hearing had been set for May 10, 1971, and invited Mrs. Vance to be present. She telephoned on May 7th to indicate she would be present.
The hearing on May 10 was attended by Board members, Mrs. Vance, and school administrators. Neither Mrs. Vance nor the Board sought assistance from counsel. Mrs. Vance presented her case fully and was permitted to leave the hearing to obtain from her classroom at Dora Jones Elementary School materials which she felt would support her position. The matters which concerned the Board involved the same shortcomings which had been discussed with Mrs. Vance in the January 22, 1971 conference, the lack of lesson plans, the need for index cards on each child, and the need to view other teachers in their classrooms.
Mrs. Vance was subsequently notified by letter of May 17, 1971 that the Board had voted unanimously to uphold its previous decision not to offer her a contract to teach in Chester County for the ensuing year.
Thereafter, however, she was offered a non-teaching position as a study hall monitor for the 1971-72 school year. This opportunity came about late in the summer of 1971, when scheduling problems at the school created the need for an additional monitor. She accepted this position and served throughout the year at a reduced salary. At the close of the 1971-72 school year, the position of study hall monitor was eliminated, and Mrs. Vance was not reemployed. Subsequently, on May 30, 1972, she brought this suit.
In her complaint, Mrs. Vance contends that she has been discriminated against on the basis of her race. Yet, initially, we note that the record reflects no effort by the Chester County Board to exclude blacks from teaching positions. In the spring of 1971, Mrs. Vance was one of eight teachers who were not recommended for reemployment, four of whom were white and four black. Thus, unlike United States v. Chesterfield County School District,
When asked if the school board treated white teachers any differently than black teachers in employment practices, Mrs. Vance stated she did not know. She did claim that her assignment in 1971-72 as a high school study hall monitor was outside her range of experience and unfair to her, but this occurred after the non-renewal of her teaching contract. Indeed, this position had been offered primarily as a favor to her. When asked how she was treated unfairly because of her race, she stated: “I would say that my rights have been violated.” But when asked how these rights had been violated, she stated she did not know.
Mrs. Vance further claims that the notice and hearing accorded her failed to comport with the fourteenth *824 amendment requirements of procedural due process. 1 Specifically, she asserts that due process requires that she be given written notice of the charges resulting in her non-renewal, that she be represented at the hearing by an attorney, and that the hearing itself be conducted before any action is taken by the Board on the renewal or non-renewal of her contract.
In Grimes v. Nottoway County School,
The record shows that Mrs. Vance’s work had been less than satisfactory for a long period of time, and this had been discussed with her on several occasions in the context of improving her performance. These generalized discussions culminated on January 22, 1971 in a very specific discussion of her deficiencies. Mrs. Vance admits this occurred and further admits these specific deficiencies also formed the basis of the discussion when her case was heard on May 10, 1971 before the Board. Consequently, on these facts, the district court, properly we feel, held that the oral notice of the reason for not renewing her contract was adequate. 2
Similarly, we hold that in light of the fact that neither party at the hearing sought the assistance of counsel, and in view of the informality of the proceedings and the lack of any pre-established procedures, due process does not require the presence of counsel under these circumstances. “The school may adopt any method that is adequate to comply with [due process] mínimums.”
Grimes,
supra,
Lastly, the question arises whether an evidentiary hearing should
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have been accorded prior to the Board’s decision not to renew Mrs. Vance’s contract. The resolution of this issue depends on a balancing process in which the Board’s interest in expeditious removal of an unsatisfactory employee is weighed against the interest of the affected employee in continued public employment. Goldberg v. Kelly,
Here, the public interest is the maintenance of employee competence and efficiency. These factors are essential if government is to perform its responsibilities effectively and economically. Thus, government must have wide discretion and control over the management of its personnel and internal affairs. See Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy,
Generally, the public employee’s countervailing interest is the continuation of his employment pending an evidentiary hearing. Yet, in Mrs. Vance’s case, the period of employment at stake before the Board involved the subsequent 1971-72 school year, which was yet to come. No interruption of her 1970-71 contract was either accomplished, contemplated or suggested. Thus, Mrs. Vance has suffered not even a temporary interruption of income, without notice or hearing, from the County Board’s initial action on March 8, 1971 and the subsequent May 10, 1971 evidentiary hearing. Any possible deprivation is considerably less severe than that involved in Goldberg v. Kelly, for example, where termination of welfare benefits to the recipient would have occurred in the face of “brutal need.”
Subsequent to oral argument of this case, the Supreme Court decided Arnett v. Kennedy,
The essential fairness of the hearing is aptly described in the plaintiff’s deposition :
Q: “So it would be fair to say, then, Mrs. Vance, that they listened to your side of the story and they looked at the evidence that you had to present concerning the complaint that was being made against you?”
A: “Yes.”
Q: “The Board considered these matters and you had full opportunity to present your side of the story?”
A: “Yes.”
On balance, then, we conclude that a prior evidentiary hearing was not required, and that the action of the Board comported with due process.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The requirements of procedural due process apply only to deprivation of interests encompassed by the fourteenth amendment’s protection of liberty and property. When these protected interests are implicated, the right to notice and hearing is paramount. E. g., Boddie v. Connecticut,
Although she had been employed approximately 26 years, Mrs. Vance had no tenure rights, either contractual or statutory, to continued employment. Nevertheless, as the Supreme Court, in Perry v. Sindermann,
. As in Grimes, where oral notice was found adequate, at no time does it apj)ear that she requested a written specification of the charges against her.
