On the morning of January 29, 1975 approximately 100 University of Puerto Rico students marched to the office of the University’s chancellor, Dr. Ismael Rodriguez Bou, to protest the University’s refusal to suspend classes so that students might be free to аttend certain departmental meetings. Unidentified students participating in the march banged on the doors and windows of the chancellor’s office and made loud remarks. The march dispersed at *23 noon. During the period bеfore and after the march the University campus was calm and tranquil. The brief period of banging on doors and shouting was the sole disruption.
Two days later, several students, plaintiffs in this lawsuit were suspended from the University by Dr. Rodriguez Bou beсause of their allegedly disruptive activities while in the march. None of the students received any form of hearing or were given any opportunity to defend themselves prior to the suspensions. Two of the students had not even participated in the march and their suspensions were lifted within a week. A hearing was held to investigate the basis for the suspensions of the other students on February 6. The hearing examiner concluded that the suspensions werе unwarranted and a short time later they were revoked. Most of the plaintiffs suffered suspension for the period of twelve days.
Plaintiffs brought this suit against the University, Dr. Rodriguez Bou, and two other University officials 1 under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that their constitutional right to due process had been impaired by the summary suspensions. The district court found that the suspensions were unconstitutional, ordered them expunged from plaintiffs’ academic records and ordered Dr. Rodriguez Bou and another University official jointly to pay each plaintiff one dollar damages. The court refused to award fees to the plaintiffs’ attorneys because the defendants had not acted in bad faith in defending themselves against the claims against them. Both plaintiffs and defendant, Dr. Rodriguez Bou, appeal various aspects of the district court’s judgment. We shall examine each one in turn.
Dr. Rodriguez Bou challenges the award of damages against him on the ground that he is protected by the qualified immunity doctrine detailed in
Wood
v.
Strickland,
Although the question is close, we believe it could properly be found that Dr. Rodriguez Bou should have known his action was unconstitutional. One week before he ordered the suspension of these students, the Supreme Court had ruled in
Goss v. Lopez,
In the present case the district court specifically found that none of the defendants participated in any disruptive behavior, that the University campus wаs calm and tranquil on the day of the march, and that Dr. Rodriguez Bou did not receive any information which would indicate that plaintiffs posed a threat to property, persons, or the orderly carrying out of academ
*24
iс and administrative affairs at the University. Given these facts and the relevant constitutional standards requiring hearings prior to suspensions, Dr. Rodriguez Bou should have known that summarily suspending plaintiffs would violate their constitutional rights. Thus his conduct fаils to meet the objective part of the
Wood
v.
Strickland
test which states that a person “is not immune from liability for damages under § 1983 if he knew or reasonably should have known that the action he took within his sphere of official responsibility would violate the constitutional rights of the student affected . . .
Id.,
We also see no merit in Dr. Rodriguez Bou’s claim that the Eleventh Amendment prohibits courts from holding him liable for damages since an award against him in his representative cаpacity is equivalent to ordering damages to be paid from the state treasury. The district court stated in its opinion that Dr. Rodriguez Bou was to be held liable in his “official and
personal
capacity” (emphasis added). Although the district cоurt might have been clearer in indicating that the nominal damages were the personal liability of Dr. Rodriguez Bou, we have no doubt that such was its intention.
See Thonen v. Jenkins,
Plaintiffs raise three issues on аppeal. First, they contend that the district court erroneously failed to award them attorneys’ fees. We agree. In denying attorneys’ fees to plaintiffs, the district court apparently applied the standards set out by the Supreme Court in
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co.
v.
Wilderness Society,
Defendants argue that the new Attorney’s Fee Act is not applicable to this case because the effective date of the Act was subsequent to the date of the lower court’s proceedings (although it preceded the lower court’s judgment). However, we have previously held that the Act applies to pending cases,
King v. Greenblatt,
Plaintiffs also argue that the award of one dollar per plaintiff as damages is inadequate and does not reрresent fair compensation for the actual injuries plaintiffs suffered. Moreover, they argue that even if actual injury is not established, damages should be awarded commensurate with “the nature of the wrong” inflicted on them.
See Piphus v. Carey,
We have suggested that “in a civil rights action a plaintiff who рroves only an intangible loss of civil rights or purely mental suffering
may
... be awarded substantial compensatory damages.” (Emphasis added.)
Magnett v. Pelletier,
We prefer to respect the judgment of the district court as to appropriate damages in cases of this kind unless there is convincing evidence that the award was either too high tо too low.
As for damages based on an intangible loss of civil rights, the impairment of rights which plaintiffs experienced was not trivial, but it must be kept in perspective. This was not a case of officials acting out of malicious bаd faith. It did not involve repeated deprivations or harassment. Plaintiffs did not suffer gross indignities or public humiliation of the kind associated with blatant racial, religious, sexual or political discrimination. Rather the evidence befоre the court suggests that this was nothing more than an isolated error in the administration of University discipline. The district court’s nominal damage award was not out of line with the compensatory awards of other courts faced with similаr situations,
see Thonen v. Jenkins,
Plaintiffs’ final argument is that the district court erred in dismissing the University of Puerto Rico from the suit because it was not a “person” for § 1983 purposes. There is some precedent for holding that the University is a person for § 1983 purposеs,
see Marin v. University of Puerto Rico,
*26 The order of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. The case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The claims against one of the other University officials were dismissed by the district court. The other official was found liable for nominal damages and has not appealed.
. The
Carey
case was reviewed and reversed by the Supreme Court in
Carey v.
Piphus,-U.S.-,
