In this case, the district court refused to issue a preliminary injunction suspending the Massachusetts State Police Department’s “no mustache” policy. The plaintiffs, veteran police officers partial to their existing mustaches, prosecute this appeal. Finding no legal error or abuse of discretion, we affirm the denial of interim relief.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1991, Massachusetts decided to merge four state police forces (the Division of State Police, the Metropolitan District Commission Police, the Capitol Police, and the Division of Law Enforcement of the Registry of Motor Vehicles) into a single entity (the Department of State Police). See An Act to Consolidate Certain Police Forces in the Commonwealth, 1991 Mass.Acts c. 412, at 985. When the enabling legislation was signed into law, defendant-appellee Charles Henderson was the ranking officer of the Division of State Police. Since the legislation stipulated that Colonel Henderson, by virtue of his rank, would serve as the “executive and administrative head” of the composite force, id. at 990, he possessed power to “make all necessary rules and regulations” for governance of, and discipline within, the new department. Id. at 991. In addition, the law directed him to establish a transition program to familiarize officers of the component units with the new department’s rules and practices and to inculcate a unified mission. See id. at 1032.
Pursuant to his newly conferred statutory authority, Colonel Henderson promul *12 gated General Order 01 (the Order). 1 The Order barred officers of the Department of State Police from wearing mustaches on and after July 1, 1992, except for undercover assignments or health reasons. 2 In this respect, the Order is substantially identical to a regulation that for seventy-one years dictated the appearance of members of the former Division of State Police, 1,213 strong as of 1991, who comprise more than half the total membership of the 2,093-officer consolidated force created by the 1991 legislation.
On May 21, 1992, six veteran officers of the former Metropolitan and Registry police who had worn mustaches throughout their law enforcement careers sued for declaratory and injunctive relief, naming Colonel Henderson, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Public Safety, and the Massachusetts State Police as respondents. The plaintiffs simultaneously sought a preliminary injunction to prevent the “no mustache” rule from taking effect as scheduled. They claimed, inter alia, that the Order, if implemented, would abridge their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by forcing them to sacrifice an integral aspect of their personal identities.
Following the submission of affidavits, the district court held a hearing on the prayer for interim injunctive relief. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court allowed the parties to file supplemental affidavits. After considering the cumulative record, the court refused to meddle with implementation of the Order, finding that the plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the merits of their constitutional challenge. This appeal ensued.
II. ANALYSIS
We rehearse the criteria applicable to interim injunctive relief and then assess the supportability of the ruling below.
A. Legal Standards.
Over time, we have developed a quadripartite test for determining whether litigants are entitled to preliminary injunctive redress.
See Narragansett Indian Tribe v. Guilbert,
When the district court applies the correct legal standard in evaluating a motion for a preliminary injunction, its decision to grant or deny relief is subject to abuse-of-
*13
discretion review and will, therefore, be afforded considerable respect.
See Independent Oil & Chem. Workers of Quincy, Inc. v. Procter & Gamble Mfg. Co.,
B. Discussion.
In this case, the lower court apprehended the correct legal standard and rested its ruling explicitly on the absence of probable success. Thus, we are left to ponder a single question: did the court misuse its discretion in concluding that the plaintiffs would likely lose their case because of their inability to demonstrate that the ban on mustaches was arbitrary? The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Kelley v. Johnson,
In
Kelley,
plaintiffs brought a constitutional challenge to a grooming regulation that was part of a network of rules emphasizing “the overall need for discipline, esprit de corps, and uniformity” within a police department.
Id.
at 246,
Kelley’s grip on the instant case is unrelenting. The Order at issue here is roughly comparable to that endorsed by the
Kelley
Court. It is, therefore, presumptively valid.
See id.
at 247,
The sole factual support for plaintiffs’ argument seems to be the happenstance that other organizations, including the United States Marine Corps and several state police forces, enjoy a strong sense of camaraderie while permitting officers to sport mustaches and other barbigerous adornments. Yet, rules are not irrational simply because they differ from the rules employed by other organizations with similar goals.
See id.
at 246,
The plaintiffs’ failure to adduce meaningful proof of arbitrariness stands in stark contrast to the defendants’ proffer. Colonel Henderson’s affidavit makes pellucidly clear that the justification behind the “no mustache” rule is very much the same type of rationale accepted by the
Kelley
Court and consistently honored in later cases.
See, e.g., Maciariello v. Sumner,
Although the district court was not bound to accept the Henderson affidavit at face value, it was certainly entitled to credit the Colonel’s assessment of the situation — particularly when, as in this instance, the Colonel’s stated views were not inherently implausible, internally inconsistent, or contradicted by other credible evidence. At the preliminary injunction stage, it is, after all, “the district court’s duty — and its prerogative — to assess the facts, draw whatever reasonable inferences it might favor, and decide the likely ramifications.”
Independent Oil & Chem. Workers,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further.
5
“Likelihood of success cannot be woven from the gossamer threads of speculation and surmise.”
Narragansett Indian Tribe,
The denial of the motion for preliminary injunction is affirmed. Costs to appellees.
Notes
.General Order 01 provides in pertinent part:
4.5.5 Hair may be tapered or blocked at the sides but will not touch the ears.
4.5.6 Wigs or hairpieces may be worn if they conform to standards for natural hair.
4.5.7 Faces will be clean shaven. NO mustaches, beards or goatees except:
• Undercover officers with approval of the Bureau Commander;
• Medical problems verified by a medical practitioner with documentation forwarded, through channels, to the State Surgeon for review and recommendations to the Office of the Colonel/Superintendent.
4.5.8 Sideburns will be neatly trimmed and rectangular in shape. They will not be longer than the midpoint of the tragus of the ear and will be:
• Trimmed horizontally, at a right angle;
• Of even width.
. Notwithstanding the Order’s effective date, Colonel Henderson provided that those who refused to put blade to face by July 1 would be sworn into the new department as special state police officers, enjoying "full police powers” until July 1, 1993.
. The remaining aspects of the four-part test involve (1) the potential for irreparable injury, (2) the relevant balance of hardships if the restrainer does or does not issue, and (3) the effect on the public interest of granting or withholding temporary injunctive relief.
See Narragansett Indian Tribe,
. Appellants also asseverate that the "no mustache” rule is arbitrary because it is the only grooming standard, of many promulgated, that has been specifically enforced. However, the record does not adequately support the asseveration. Even so, we fail to see why a constitutionally valid rule would be rendered invalid merely because other, similar rules are poorly enforced.
. Given the weakness of plaintiffs' case on the merits, an analysis of the other factors bearing on preliminary injunctive relief would be supererogatory.
See, e.g., Coalition for Basic Human Needs v. King,
