A disappointed faculty member, Harriet Spiegel, sued the trustees of Tufts College in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts following rejection of her tenure application. The district court dismissed most — but not all — of her statements of claim without requiring defendants to answer, and thereafter authorized a partial judgment in Tufts’ favor under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). 1 Because we *41 conclude that the judgment was prematurely entered, we dismiss the appeal.
I.BACKGROUND
This case’s voyage to our shores can be charted from three distinct coigns of vantage. We begin with the relevant facts, then trace the theories upon which suit was grounded, and end Part I with a roadmap of the litigation’s travel.
A.
The Facts.
Inasmuch as this proceeding follows upon the heels of a dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. Rule 12(b)(6), we accept the well-pleaded factual averments of the complaint, eschewing, however, reliance on bald assertions or patently untenable conclusions.
Chongris v. Board of Appeals,
Spiegel was hired by Tufts in the late 1970s for an advertised tenure-track faculty position. Her first posting was as an assistant professor of English for a onе-year term (September 1, 1979 through August 31,1980). This appointment was then renewed for a three-year term expiring August 31, 1983. Among her other duties, she had special responsibility throughout for a remedial reading program.
At Tufts, tenure-track faculty customarily make formal application for tenure (and concomitantly, promotion to the rank of associate professor) during the sixth year of full-time service. Before then, candidates often undergo а mid-tenure review (MTR). The MTR is designed to evaluate the faculty member’s overall performance and to inform her of progress (or lack of progress) toward the attainment of tenure. Spiegel underwent an MTR during the 1982-83 academic year. She alleges that the results were favorable. In any event, she was offered and accepted a further three-year appointment, running through August 31, 1986. She was still devoting approximately half of her time to remedial reading.
Around late 1985, plaintiff submitted her formal tenure application. The departmental vote was inconclusive. The ten tenured members of the English department split five and five on the question of whether Spiegel deserved permanent status. The college’s Committee on Tenure and Promotion (Committee), following a subcommittee recommendation, eventually voted to deny tenure. Spiegel then petitioned the аdministration, which refused to intervene. On June 30,1986, the Dean notified Spiegel that tenure had been refused. Her contract would be extended for one additional year but not renewed beyond August 31, 1987.
B. The Statements of Claim. Plaintiff’s complaint was framed in four counts. The gravamen of each follows:
1. Count I (breach of contract) — Tufts failed to evaluate plaintiff for tenure purposes as advertised by the college in its faculty handbook and kindred documentation.
2. Count II (brеach of contract) — Tufts failed to evaluate plaintiff for tenure purposes as she had been promised, especially with respect to the dual nature of her work “in two distinct areas, the remedial writing program and traditional scholarship.” Complaint at 11 50.
3. Count III (misrepresentation) — Tufts falsely represented both (a) the weight to be given to different components of Spie-gel’s work, and (b) the acceptability of certain of her endeavors vis-a-vis tenure consideration. These misrepresentations were *42 said to have occurred when she was hired, during her MTR, and at other times. 2
4. Count IV (civil rights violations)— Tufts denied plaintiff tenure in retribution for her exercise of protected rights, “including but not limited to her rights to free speech.” Complaint at 1174. The protected activity, plaintiff alleged, comprised having “spoken out against the practices of [the English] department chairperson,” id. at 1169, and having opposed the tenure application of one Jonathan Wilson “on the grounds that Wilson did not meet the English Department’s affirmative action needs.” Id. at ¶ 70. Plaintiff claimed the retaliatory action trammelled rights secured to her by the Constitution and laws of the United States and of Massachusetts, including Mass.Gen.L. c. 12, § 11I and, presumably, the First Amendment.
C. Travel of the Case. Once the complaint was served, Tufts moved to dismiss it for failure to state any legаlly cognizable claim. The district court granted the motion as to the first three counts, Spiegel v. Trustees of Tufts College, C.A. No. 86-3330-S, slip op. at 5-12 (D.Mass. July 30, 1987) (unpublished), but overruled it as to Count IV. Id. at 12-17. The court also repulsed the effort to amend the pleadings, which was the functional equivalent of dismissing proposed Count V. See supra note 2. Plaintiff thereupon moved under Rule 54(b) for entry of judgment on the matters decided adversely to her. The district court, in a cryptic footnote order, allowed the motion. As fоr the reasons which underlay the grant of Rule 54(b) certification, we can only speculate. The district judge wrote but a single sentence, which we quote in haec verba:
Allowed, 8/31/87, there being no just cause for delay.
II. BATTLEGROUND: THE RULE 54(b) STANDARD
Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) permits the entry of judgment, and thus an appeal, on fewer than all the claims in a multi-claim action. Yet Rule 54(b) notwithstanding, there is a long-settled and prudential policy against the scattershot disposition of litigation.
Pahlavi v. Palandjian,
Judgments under Rule 54(b) must be reserved for the unusual case in which the costs and risks of multiplying the number of proceedings and of overcrowding the appellate doсket are outbalanced by pressing needs of the litigants for an early and separate judgment as to some claims or parties.
Morrison-Knudsen Co. v. Archer,
When considering the wisdom of Rule 54(b) certification in a given case, the trial court must first assess the finality of the disputed ruling.
Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. General Electric Co.,
Once the finality hurdle has been cleared, the district court must determine whether, in the idiom of the rule, “there is no just reason for delay” in entering judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). The court’s role becomes that of a “dispatcher,”
Sears, Roebuck,
When and if the district court acts affirmatively under Rule 54(b) and an immediate appeal ensuеs, we must survey the legal landscape whether or not the Rule 54(b) order has been challenged by any of the litigants. Because the issue implicates the scope of our appellate jurisdiction, we are duty bound to take it up
sua sponte. See United States General,
Our role requires, first, that we determine for ourselves whether the judgment has the requisite aspects of finality.
Morrison-Knudsen Co.,
III. FOREGROUND
We assume without deciding that the first three counts of plaintiff’s complaint state one or more “claims” separate and distinct from the fourth count, and that the dismissal therefore possessed the necessary finality to permit the district court to consider allowing an early appeal. 6 On that assumption, we turn to an assessment of the interrelationship of the dismissed claims and the claim yet pending below. Because the certification was bereft of any clue as to the district judge’s reasoning, we could merely vacate the order and remand for a fuller evaluation, a course which we reserve the right to adopt should similarly deficient Rule 54(b) certificates come to our attention in the future. Yet because we and the parties have invested considerable time in a full-dress hearing of this appeal, and because the nexus between the dismissed counts and the surviving count is particularly plain, we eschew that option presently and cut directly to the chase. Because no findings were madе below, however, we scrutinize the juxtaposition of the claims de novo.
In the first place, we remark the obvious: notwithstanding the order of dismissal, the action remains pending for trial in the district court as to
all
of the parties. This circumstance alone counsels hesitation in the use of Rule 54(b).
Brunswick Corp. v. Sheridan,
The overlap does not end with the parties’ identities. The relief sought in various of the counts is much the same. Count IV, which remains unresolved in the district court, prays for three major forms of redress. First and foremost, it asks that Tufts be ordered to grant Spiegel a tenured appointment. That prayer is replicated in Counts I and II. Second, Count IV prays for money damages. A similar prayer festoons Count III. And last, Count IV prays for costs and counsel fees, as does Count III. This is redundancy of a highly significant sort. Should Spiegel prevail on Count
*45
IV — and we intimate no view of the matter — she might well have her tenure, her monetary balm, and payment for her litigation expenses. The first three statements of claim would be largely (if not entirely) mooted and the need for appellate review would vanish. Appellate courts, understandably, have treated such a possibility as a major negative in the Rule 54(b) equation.
See, e.g., United States General,
More important still, our independent review of the pleadings reveals substantial further imbrication between the dismissed counts and the surviving count. The common denominator of all of the counts is Spiegel’s contention that she was wrongfully denied tenure. To be sure, she posits an assortment of possible reasons for the tenure denial. Cf. Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(2) (party “may set forth two or more statements of a claim or defense alternately or hypothetically ... regardless of consistency”). But those possibilities — Tufts did not evaluate her for tenure as warranted in the faculty handbook (Count I) or as promised when she was hired (Count II), Tufts misrepresented various of the criteria germane to tenure consideration both at hire and during the MTR (Count III), Tufts inequitably denied her tenure because she was too outspoken (Count IV) — all stem from the same overall series of events. The adjudicated and unadjudicаted claims alike ask the same brace of questions: did Spiegel receive a proper and fair tenure evaluation? And if not, why not?
The factual underpinnings of the adjudicated and unadjudicated counts are also inextricably intertwined. Count IV incorporates within itself each and all of the factual averments of the first three counts. See Complaint at 1167. The protected speech for which plaintiff claims unjustly to have been penalized (by denial of tenure) is alleged to have occurred “[ojver the course of her service at Tufts_” Id. at 11 69. Indeed, Count IV details specific incidents said to have taken place over a span ranging from 1982 to the time of the tenure denial (some four years later). Throughout the complaint, it is insinuated that the principal villains of the piece are the five faculty members within the English department who opposed plaintiffs tenure. The dismissed counts portray their criticisms of Spiegel’s credentials as lacking substance or as ignoring proper criteria. The surviving count denounces these selfsame criticisms as pretextual. All of the claim statements appear to implicate much the same evidence — and the legal issues can scarcely be viewed in isolation from each other. After all, whether or not an academician employed thе proper criteria in evaluating a tenure application, or voted against it without any justifiable basis, may tell much about whether the evaluator’s criticism was pretextual.
From what we have stated to this point, we believe it to be evident that the dismissed claims and the pending claim stem from essentially the same factual averments. A similarity of either legal or factual issues (or both) militates strongly against invocation of Rule 54(b).
See Solomon,
We spy no substantial countervailing considerations on the surface of this record. Where, as here, the dismissed and surviving claims are interlocking, only “unusual and compelling circumstances ... [can] dictate[] entry of an early, separate judgment” on the dismissed part of the case.
Morrison-Knudsen,
In sum, the interleaving of adjudicated and unadjudicated counts in this case is such that permitting a judgment to enter was plainly premature. There has been no demonstration whatever, in Justice Kennedy’s phrase, that “the costs and risks of multiplying the ... proceedings and of overcrowding the appellate docket are outbalanced” by any combination of properly cognizable faсtors.
Morrison-Knudsen,
IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. We believe that Rule 54(b) was not meant to animate essentially fragmentary proceedings or to be employed in the absence of sufficiently compelling circumstances. The present case, as we see it, does not pass muster. The “dispatcher,” see supra at 43, should have flagged down the plaintiff’s attempt to appeal out of season. 7
Because the Rule 54(b) certification was improvidently grantеd, we have no jurisdiction to consider the merits of the order dismissing Counts I, II, and III or the order denying leave to add proposed Count V. The appeal will be dismissed and the cause remanded with instructions to the district court to vacate its August 31, 1987 order.
Appeal dismissed. Cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. No costs.
Notes
. Inasmuch as Rule 54(b) lies at the core of the dispositive legal issue, we set forth a portion of the text:
When more than one claim for relief is presented in an action, whether as a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim, or when multiple parties are involved, the court may direct the entry of a final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties only upon an express *41 determination that there is no just reason for delay and upon an express direction for the entry of judgment. In the absеnce of such determination and direction, any order or other form of decision, however designated, which adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties shall not terminate the action as to any of the claims or parties,....
Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b).
. While the action was still pending, Spiegel moved to add a (fifth) count, sounding in negligent misrepresentation. Tufts objected. The district court denied this motion when deciding the Rule 12(b)(6) motion. The court described the amendment as futile because proposed Count V "would not survive a motion to dismiss."
Spiegel v. Trustees of Tufts College,
C.A. No. 86-3330-S, slip op. at 18 (D.Mass. July 30, 1987) (unpublished) [available on WESTLAW,
. Although the integers which comprise this calculus will vary from case to case, we note that a general compendium, helpful as a guide, has been set forth in
Allis-Chalmers Corp. v. Philadelphia Electric Co.,
. In
Pahlavi,
we abjured imposition of a "rigid requirement on the district court to prepare a written statemеnt in every case to justify its Rule 54(b) actions."
. We do not imply that the responsibility for such findings should be borne by the district court, unaided. A party who seeks the special dispensation which Rule 54(b) envisions has an obligation, at the very least, to point out the requirement and to ask that the court, should it grant the request, make a brief but particularized statement of its reasons. In this case, plaintiff failed to take this rudimentary precaution.
. The question, we think, is far from clear. The denial of tenure lay аt the heart of all of the counts. In a sense, plaintiff merely set out alternate grounds for relief, each of which arose out of the same aggregate of operative facts. We agree with the Fifth Circuit that true multiplicity of claims — an essential ingredient for a final order within the purview of Rule 54(b)— does not exist where a plaintiff "merely presents alternative theories ... by which the same set of facts might give rise to a single liability."
Schexnaydre v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
. There are cases involving a "controlling question of law” where intermediate appellate review would “materially advance the ultimаte termination of the litigation_” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). Under that statute, the strictures of Rule 54(b) do not apply. Yet section 1292(b) has a regimen of its own.
See, e.g., Bank of New York,
