The defendant school committee concluded in March, 1979, that a reduction in the number of physical education teachers to be employed during the next school year was advisable due to an actual decrease in the number of pupils in the Manchester schools. 1 The school committee, therefore, voted to dismiss the plaintiff, a tenured physical education teacher. The plaintiff had the least seniority of the physical education teachers employed dur *582 ing the 1978-1979 school year, and there was no untenured teacher whose position the plaintiff was qualified to fill.
The plaintiff argues that, as a matter of statutory and constitutional right, he was entitled to notice and a hearing prior to the termination of his employment. 2 The case was heard in the Superior Court on the school committee’s motion for summary judgment. There is no disputed fact. The plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing his complaint. We granted his application for direct appellate review and now affirm the judgment.
The plaintiff maintains that, under the provisions of G. L. c. 71, § 42, he was entitled to notice and a hearing prior to termination of his employment. Section 42 establishes procedures that a school committee must follow in dismissing a tenured teacher (“a teacher . . . employed at discretion”). That section provides, however, that “ [njeither this nor the preceding section [referring to § 41, concerning the granting of tenure] shall affect the right of a committee to dismiss a teacher whenever an actual decrease in the number of pupils in the schools of the town renders such action advisable.” G. L. c. 71, § 42, as amended through St. 1972, c. 464, § 2. We read that language as removing from the notice and hearing requirements of § 42 any dismissal decision based solely on an actual decrease in the number of pupils in the schools of a municipality. The broad language of § 42 that it shall not affect the right of the school committee to dismiss a teacher due to a decline in enrollment does more than define a decline in enrollment as good cause for dismissal of a tenured teacher; it makes the notice and hearing provisions of § 42 inapplicable to the plaintiff’s circumstances. See
Lane
v.
School Comm. of Paxton,
The plaintiff contends that his status as a tenured teacher gave him a legitimate claim of entitlement to continued employment and that, under the due process clause of the
*583
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, his employment could be terminated only after notice and a hearing. See
Perry
v.
Sindermann,
The plaintiff’s constitutional argument must fail because he had no statutory or demonstrated contractual right to expect continued employment in the face of declining enrollment. See
McCarthy
v.
Sheriff of Suffolk County,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The enrollment was 1,180 pupils in the 1977-1978 school year and 1,109 pupils in the 1978-1979 school year. The anticipated enrollment for the 1979-1980 school year was 1,030 pupils.
The plaintiff makes no claim based on an asserted violation of his rights under the applicable collective bargaining agreement.
The plaintiff raises no claim that the reason given for his dismissal was a fabrication, that the school committee’s action was arbitrary or unreasonable, or that the plaintiff’s statutory or other rights in relation to other teachers, tenured or untenured, were denied. We, therefore, need not consider whether we would follow
Howell
v.
Woodlin School Dist. R-104,
Colo., (1979) (
