In this сase, plaintiff brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the Provost and the former Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Tennessee. Plaintiff asserts that his removal by defendants from his position as Head of the University’s Speech and Theatre Department violated his rights under the first and fourteenth amendments of the Constitution. The district court granted defendants summary judgment based on its findings that defendants were еntitled to qualified immunity and that plaintiff had adequate state postdeprivation remedies. We find that defendants’ actions did not violate any of plaintiff’s clearly established rights and therefore affirm the district court’s judgment on the grounds of qualified immunity. 1
Plaintiff Peter Garvie served as Head of the University of Tennessee’s Department of Speech and Theatre from September 1, 1983, until his appointment as Head was terminated on June 30, 1986. During and following that time, Garvie also has been employed as a tenured professor in the Department. Several pieces of correspondence among Garvie and University administrators provide the only written evidence of the terms of Garvie’s employment. The correspondence makes clear that Garviе’s appointment was offered with the understanding that the administration would recommend that Garvie be granted tenure as a professor, but that the administrative assignment as Department Head carried no tenure. Garvie claims, however, that he was led to believe that he would serve as Head for an initial term of five years, during which term he could be removed only for cause. Gаrvie rests his claim on “oral explanations” and on the following language in a letter from Robert Landen, a former Dean of the College of Liberal Arts:
all department heads in the University serve at the pleasure of the Chancellor and, officially, administrative appointments are renewed on an annual basis; however, in the College of Liberal Arts it is expected that department heads will serve for five years at which point a “Leadership Needs Assessment” will be conducted under the auspices of the Dean of the College; this assessment will give all concerned, including you, a chance to reflect on whether or not you should continue serving as head of the department for another term; ...
In March 1986, Garvie presented severаl concerns to Provost Wheeler regarding Dean Jackson's actions relating to the Department of Speech and Theatre. Specifically, Garvie complained that Jackson, without Garvie’s knowledge, had provided funds directly to a Forensics professor for use by the debate team and had improperly conducted administrative grievance reviews of departmental evaluations. At the same meeting, Garvie defended the Department’s timely but controversial nonretention vote regarding a theatre faculty member.
Shortly following his meeting with Wheeler, Garvie met with Dean Jackson. Apparently, both Garvie and Jackson expressed anger at the other’s actions: Jackson was angry about Garvie’s complaints to Wheeler, and Garvie was angry about what he regarded as Jackson’s interference in the Speech area of the Department.
During the latter part of March 1986, Dean Jackson and Provost Wheeler exchanged memoranda regarding the Department and Garvie. Jackson cited Department dissatisfaction with Garvie’s handling of evaluation procedures and Garvie’s threat “to cease administration of the department’s speech wing.” In response, Wheeler stated: “Professor Garvie will administer all aspects of the Department under guidelines and in a manner satisfactory *649 to you. Any failure to administer the Department according to the duly established procedures of the College and the University will result in his dismissal as Head.”
In early April 1986, Garvie filed with Jackson a Complaint and Request for Review regarding Jackson’s handling of the previous year’s evaluation grievances. Jackson responded to Garvie’s complaint in a letter in which he clarified his actions in regard to those grievances and informed Garvie that further appeal could be taken pursuant to the University’s Faculty Handbook. In conclusion, Jackson stated: “I wish sincеrely that our working relationship was better than is currently the case. While I may have some misgivings about you as an administrator, clearly no one would or could deny the excellence of your work with the theatre.” In late April and early May, Dean Jackson began discussing an appointment as Department Head with another professor, and in early May Jackson requestеd Garvie to resign his Headship, a request that Garvie denied. Jackson then informed Garvie that he would consult with the Department’s faculty regarding the renewal of Garvie’s appointment as Head. On June 9, 1986, Dean Jackson recommended to Provost Wheeler that Garvie’s appointment not be renewed. On June 30,1986, Wheeler informed Garvie that his appointment as Head would expire as of that date and would not be renewed. Garvie, however, would retain full-time faculty status as a Professor of Speech and Theatre.
Garvie filed a § 1983 action in district court alleging that his removal as Head was wrongful and maliciously made in violation of his first amendment rights and his fourteenth amendment property and liberty due process rights. Defendants answered and filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that they were entitled to qualified immunity. The court granted defendants’ motion.
The doctrine of qualified immunity recognizes that government officials need to be able to carry out their duties without fear of harrassing litigation and that they can do so “only if they reasonably can anticipate when their conduct may give rise to liability for damages and only if unjustified lawsuits are quickly terminated.”
Davis v. Scherer,
The focus in determining whether an official is entitled to qualified immunity is on the objective legal reasonableness of the official’s actions in light of clearly established law.
Harlow,
[0]ur cases establish that the right the official is alleged to have violated must have been “clearly established” in a more particularized, and hence more relevant, sense: The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualifiеd immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful; but it is to say that in the light of preexisting law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson,
Garvie asserts that the matters he raised in meetings with Wheeler and Jackson touched on matters of public concern and, therefore, that his speech was protected by the first amendment. He further alleges that his removal as Department Head was in retaliation for his protеcted speech and thus was unlawful. In arguing against defendants’ claim of qualified immunity, Garvie asserts that a reasonably competent public official would have known in 1986 that an alleged retaliatory termination of a department head based on the exercise of first amendment rights was unlawful. We believe that under the reasoning of Anderson, however, Garvie’s argument presents too general a question. Instead, we consider whether reasonably competent officials could have disagreed on whether and to what extent Garvie’s speech was protected by the first amendment.
Pickering v. Board of Education,
By contrast,
Connick v. Myers,
Pickering
and
Connick
establish that a public employer may not dismiss an employee based the employee’s speech on matters that concern the public, rather than the personal interest of the speaker, unless the employer’s interest in efficient operation outweighs the employee’s interest in speaking freely. We find, however, that neither these cases nor any others to which Garvie has cited us clearly establish either (1) that a department head’s criticism of his superior’s actions regarding the allocation of funds within a department, review of faculty grievances, and departmental votes on faculty nonretеntion is a matter of public concern, or (2) even if such speech did touch on a matter of public concern, that the department head’s interest outweighs the administrator’s interest in maintaining authority and good working relationships.
Connick
made clear that not all criticisms directed at a public official “would plant the seed of a constitutional case.”
Garvie also claims that he had a property interest in his appointment as Department Head and that defendants’ termination of his appointment without a hearing violated due process. The relevant inquiry for this court, in light of defendants’ claim of qualified immunity, is whether Gаrvie’s asserted property interest was clearly established. In so inquiring, we examine Tennessee law to determine whether Garvie had a legitimate claim of entitlement to his position as Department Head.
Bishop v. Wood,
“The hallmark of property, ... is an individual entitlement grounded in state law,
which cannot be removed except ‘for cause.’” Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
Garvie also fails to provide evidence of any “orаl explanations” by University administrators that would give rise to his legitimate entitlement to a five year term as Head. Tennessee courts will not recognize the existence of an implied contract “in the face of a declaration to the contrary by the party to be charged.”
V.L Nicholson Co. v. Transcon Investment & Financial Ltd., Inc.,
*652
In reviewing Tennessee law and the evidence of record in this case, we conclude that this case more nearly resembles
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Garvie finally asserts that his removal as Department Head constituted a deprivation of a liberty interest under the fourteenth amendment. He claims that he was publicly defamed by the rumors that circulated in the Department regarding his removal and by Provost Wheeler’s statement to a student newspaper that nonrenewal of Garvie’s appointment was “in the best interests of the department.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
To be sure, plaintiffs lost their positions at the College, which may have made them less attractive to other employers, but in and of itself this does not amount to a deprivation of liberty. Plaintiffs have made no showing that a definite range of opportunities is no longer open to them, and accordingly their liberty has not been restricted within the meaning of Roth.
Lake Michigan College Federation of Teachers v. Lake Michigan Community College,
Unlike the plaintiff in
Roth,
however, Garvie claims defamation in addition to removal as Department Head. It is not clear, however, that defamation unaccompanied by termination оf employment or another change in Garvie’s legal status constitutes a deprivation of liberty under the fourteenth amendment; an individual has no constitutionally protected interest in reputation alone.
See Paul v. Davis,
In conclusion, we find that defendants Walker and Jackson reasonably could have concluded that their actions in terminating Garvie’s appointment as Department Head did not violate Garvie’s rights under the first and fourteenth amendments. Defendants therefore have carried their burden of pleading and proving the affirmative defense of qualified immunity.
See Alexander v. Alexander,
Notes
. Because we find that defendants are clearly entitled to qualified immunity, we need not consider the applicability to this case of
Hudson v. Palmer’s
rule [
