Plaintiff Paul G. Simard, a language teacher, was denied tenure by the decision of defendant Board of Education of Groton, Connecticut not to renew his one-year contract. Alleging that his constitutional rights were violated by this action, plaintiff and three teacher associations brought this action against the Board, seven of its members and four other individual defendants in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and its jurisdictional counterpart, 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3). 1 Plaintiff Simard sought preliminary, as well as permanent, injunctive relief. He rejected the court’s suggestion that, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a)(2), the hearing on the application for a preliminary injunction be consolidated with the trial of the action on the merits, and a hearing as to preliminary relief only was held in June 1971, at which five witnesses testified. Thereafter, Chief Judge M. Joseph Blumenfeld, in a thorough opinion, denied the application and also denied defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint. A full trial was held some seven months later, at which ten witnesses testified, after which Judge Blumenfeld dismissed the complaint. 2 We agree with the judge’s conclusion that on the facts of this case, plaintiff is not entitled to relief. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
Simard taught French and Latin at the Fitch Senior High School in Groton from September 1968 until August 1971. From the beginning of his employment, Simard had been an active member of the Groton Education Association (GEA), which negotiated teachers’ contracts with the Board of Education. He served as Vice-President and President of the GEA and, in 1970-71, as Chairman of the Professional Rights and Responsibilities Committee, the negotiating arm of the GEA. Teacher contract negotiations, at least from 1965 to 1971, had been less than amicable, resulting in two work stoppages in 1967 and 1969. Negotiations for the 1971-72 contract, in which Simard served as chief negotiator for the GEA, were characterized by particular bitterness and recrimination.
The relevant portions of the Connecticut statute governing employment of teachers are set forth in the margin. 3 *991 The parties agree that had Simard’s contract been renewed for the 1971-72 academic term, he would have achieved tenure by the operation of law; and it is conceded that the rights of a school teacher in Connecticut are greater after he has achieved tenure status. 4 In early February 1971, however, he was notified by defendant Chapman, the Groton Superintendent of Schools, that his contract would not be renewed for the coming year — a decision that effectively denied him tenure. Simard’s skill as a classroom teacher is not disputed on the record before us. Instead, the Superintendent predicated nonrenewal of the contract on two of the six grounds set forth in the Connecticut statute: “insubordination against reasonable rules of the board of education,” § 10-151(b)(2), and “other due and sufficient cause,” § 10-151 (b) (6). To this statement of reasons was appended a list of 21 specific instances of conduct which allegedly formed the basis for the Superintendent’s decision. 5
Upon appellant’s request and as authorized by statute § 10-151 (a), the Board conducted a public hearing on the Superintendent’s decision not to renew plaintiff’s contract. The hearing, at which six witnesses testified, extended over four days in early March 1971. Simard was represented by counsel and was afforded the opportunity to call witnesses and to cross-examine; Simard was also given a transcript of the proceedings without cost. After the hearing, the Board unanimously concluded, in a seven-page opinion, that there were “adequate grounds for the Superintendent of Schools to deny Mr. Simard a teaching contract for the following year . ” The Board took pains to observe that it had in no way been influenced by Simard’s affiliation with the GEA or by his prominent role in contract negotiations. The Board stated:
The various infractions of the rules and regulations taken as a whole indicated to the Board that the likelihood of Mr. Simard conforming to such reasonable rules and regulations in the future was minimal. The incidents cited by the Superintendent of Schools and the administrators of the school system in the statement of reasons appear to be symptoms of an attitude on the part of Mr. Simard that is deemed by the Board of Education not to be conducive to a fair and effective administration of the school system. The fact that Sim-ard was often late to his class assignments ; that he failed to supervise his assigned classes in accordance with the established rules and express direction of the Principal; that he failed to cooperate in the preparation of necessary outlines for the high school evaluation; that his presence in the administration offices and stockroom at Fitch Senior High School were unauthorized and unex *992 plained; and the fact that he directly challenged the authority of the supervising Principal of the high school and read one of the written reprimands issued by his Principal to his students, all reflect conduct and an attitude not consistent with the professional responsibility of a member of the staff of the high school.
Plaintiff claims that the Board deprived him of both procedural and substantive due process as guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment and that it unconstitutionally penalized him for his exercise of rights protected by the first amendment.
II. The Due Process Claims
At the threshold, successful assertion of any due process claims turns on whether Simard’s interests in renewal of his contract with tenure thereafter rise to the level of those encompassed by the fourteenth amendment’s protection of “liberty” and “property.” In Board of Regents v. Roth,
A. Procedural Due Process
As we have previously observed, however,
the inquiry does not end with this assumption; it only begins. Due process does not invariably require the procedural safeguards accorded in a criminal proceeding. Rather “[t]he very nature of due process negates any concept of inflexible procedures universally applicable to every imaginable situation.” Cafeteria and Restaurant Workers, Local 473, AFL-CIO v. McElroy,367 U.S. 886 , 895,81 S.Ct. 1743 , 1748,6 L.Ed.2d 1230 (1961). See Hannah v. Larche,363 U.S. 420 , 442,80 S.Ct. 1502 ,4 L.Ed.2d 1307 (1960) (“ ‘Due process’ is an elusive concept. Its exact boundaries are undefinable, and its content varies according to specific factual contexts.”)
Farrell v. Joel,
Appellant further claims that the Board prejudged the merits of his case three weeks before the hearing when, according to the minutes of its meeting, it “concurred” in the Superintendent’s initial nonrenewal decision. However, the district judge found that no actual Board vote was taken at that time, that the Superintendent was at all times the moving force in the matter of tenure denial, and that the clerk transcribing the minutes merely inferred, sua sponte, that all members agreed with the Superintendent’s recommendation — a decision that would initially be communicated to the Board in the normal course of school administration, well before any hearing on its merits. The very limited nature of the school board’s prior involvement here is entirely consistent with due process. See Kelly v. Wyman,
*994
The remaining procedural due process claims are- still less substantial. The statement of reasons sent to Simard was more than adequate to put him on notice as to the nature of the objections to his conduct. While the district judge found some of the “charges” to be “vague and some . . . erroneously or insufficiently dated,” he also found that these inadequacies had been corrected at the hearing and in no way prejudiced appellant’s ability to rebut adverse allegations. Appellant further argues that he was denied his right to learn, before the hearing, the names of adverse witnesses and the substance of their testimony. Assuming arguendo that appellant was entitled to such discovery, see Ferguson v. Thomas,
Appellant also claims that the Connecticut statute, see note 3, supra, and the requirements of constitutional due process mandate a hearing before the
entire
Board of Education; and that inasmuch as two of the nine members were absent, and one missed one of the five hearings, the nonrenewal procedure was constitutionally deficient. Appellant misreads the language of the statute. Moreover, the Constitution does not require that all members of an administrative board must take part in every decision, or that the failure of one participating member to attend one hearing vitiates the entire process. Cf. Gearhart & Otis, Inc. v. SEC, 121 U.S. App.D.C. 186,
B. Substantive Due Process
Appellant groups a number of disparate contentions under a generalized assertion that he was denied substantive due process. He asserts that the reasons proffered for contract nonrenewal may not be so totally unrelated to legitimate educational interests of the school district as to be capricious and irrational, e. g., Wieman v. Updegraff,
The reasons proffered by Superintendent Chapman for nonrenewal ranged from the comparatively serious to the trivial. The Board’s opinion, quoted above, emphasized the more serious infractions. These, taken together, are not so minimally related to the ef
*995
fective performance of a high school teacher as to be unconstitutionally capricious or arbitrary. Accord, Knarr v. Board of School Trustees,
III. First Amendment Claims
Appellant’s most substantial claim is that his first amendment rights were infringed because he was in fact denied tenure in retaliation for his protected activities on behalf of the GEA. This claim, if factually established, states a valid ground for federal court relief. E. g., Stolberg v. Members of the Board of Trustees,
Circumstantial evidence in this case does provide some support for a theory of retaliatory motivation. The Board’s decision to deny tenure came very shortly after the bitter contract negotiations between the Board and the GEA. Simard played a central role in those negotiations.
10
While we have concluded that adequate evidence supported the Board’s action, that does not necessarily defeat a claim of retaliatory nonrenewal; a discharge motivated only in part by demonstrable retaliation for exercise of speech and associational rights is equally offensive to the Constitution. See Board of Regents v. Roth, supra,
Appellant’s subsidiary first amendment claim warrants little discussion. He primarily argues that a penalty imposed for insubordination impermissibly impinges on unrestrained self: expression. Appellant apparently concedes that the orderly operation of schools may require some limited interference with protected speech and assoeiational activity. E. g., Pickering v. Board of Education,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The association plaintiffs are the Groton ■Education Association, Inc., the Connecticut Education Association, and the National Education Association. For the sake of convenience, we will usually refer only to plaintiff and appellant. The individual defendants, in addition to the Board members, are Richard Chapman, Superintendent of Schools, Ronald K. Gandia, principal of Fitch Senior High School, and Louis Caouette and Robert Laing, vice-principals.
. Neither of Judge Blumenfeld’s opinions is reported.
. Conn.Gen.Stat. § 10-151 provides in part:
(a) . . . The contract of employment of a teacher . . . may be terminated at any time for any of the reasons enumerated in subdivisions (1) to (6), inclusive, of subsection (b) of this section, but otherwise it shall be renewed for a second, third or fourth year unless such teacher has been notified in writing prior to March first in one school year that such contract will not be renewed for the following year, provided, upon the teacher’s written re-’ quest, such notice shall be supplemented within five days after receipt of such request by a statement of the reason or reasons for such failure to renew. Such teacher may, upon written request filed with the board of education within ten days after the receipt of such notice, be entitled to a hearing before the board to be held within fifteen days of such request. The teacher shall have the right to appear with counsel of his choice at such hearing.
*991 (b) Beginning with and subsequent to the fourth year of continuous employment of a teacher by a board of education, the contract of employment of a teacher shall be renewed from year to year, except that it may be terminated at any time for one or more of the following reasons: (1) Inefficiency or incompetence; (2) insubordination against reasonable rules of the board of education; (3) moral misconduct; (4) disability, as shown by competent medical evidence; (5) elimination of the position to which the teacher was appointed ... (6) other due and sufficient cause. .
Subsection (b) goes on to provide: that prior to termination, a teacher shall receive written notice; that on request within five days of notice, he shall receive within five days a statement of reasons for termination; that within 20 days of receipt of notice of proposed termination, he may request a hearing, to be held within 15 days of the request; that the teacher or the Board may request a public hearing; that the teacher may appear at the hearing with counsel; that a written decision shall be rendered by the Board within 15 days of hearing; that a free transcript of the hearing will be provided.
. See Devlin v. Bennett,
. The statement of reasons was set forth in a letter, dated February 25, 1972, from the Superintendent in response to a request from plaintiff’s attorney.
. Given the Supreme Court’s definition of those interests rising to the level of “liberty,” we doubt that Simard is entitled to due process on this ground. See Russell v. Hodges,
. As will be seen below, the district judge found as a fact that the Board’s decision was not a retaliatory attempt to rid itself of plaintiff because of ill will growing out of the negotiations.
. On appeal, appellant for the first time argues that since the President of the Board, who chaired the hearing and voted on the issue of tenure, was himself the source of certain information which formed the basis for one of the 21 specified instances of objectionable conduct, he was insufficiently impartial. We do not agree. Simard denied that he had ever accused the high school principal, defendant Gandía, of stealing documents belonging to the GEA, and asserts that the only basis for believing that he did arose from remarks made in a telephone conversation with the President of the Board. However, the precise circumstances under which the President allegedly received or transmitted this information are vague. The transcript of the hearing before the Board of Education suggests that he may not have been the source at all (Transcript at 184) and that Principal Gandía himself may have construed certain of Simard’s comments to him as a veiled accusation. Even if the Board President were the source, however, his conduct thereafter seems altogether innocuous; in no sense did he predetermine the adequacy of the accusation as a ground for contract nonrenewal. Compare Gilligan, Will & Co. v. SEC,
. Citing Vitarelli v. Seaton,
. As Judge Blumenfeld found, “words hardly conducive to harmonious bargaining were uttered by Simard, even to the extent of charging certain board members with .lack of good faith and ignorance of the subject matter of the agreement being negotiated.”
. Judge Blumenfeld additionally considered the testimony of two witnesses heavily relied on by appellant to establish retaliatory motive, and discounted it.
. Brief for Appellants at 22.
. Principal Gandía encountered Simard in the school office at a time when the latter had a classroom assignment. He three times asked Simard to return to his class; Simard told him “to write him another letter” and indicated that he would not return until he had checked his mail box and had a cup of coffee.
