INTRODUCTION
Appellant San Bernardino Physicians’ Services Medical Group (Physicians’ Group) contends that the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors constructively breached Physicians’ Group’s four-year contract to provide professional services at the San Bernardino Medical Center (Medical Center). Physicians’ Group brought a civil rights suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the County deprived the Group of its property interest in the contract without due process of law. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment or a directed verdict on the ground that our opinion in
Loehr v. Ventura County Community College District,
Although we read Loehr more narrowly than did the district court, we agree that appellant had no protected property interest. We therefore affirm the summary judgment.
FACTS
In January 1980, appellant Physicians’ Group, a California professional corporation, contracted with the Board of Supervisors to provide professional emergency room and burn care treatment services to the county-operated Medical Center. The written four-year contract provided for automatic one-year extensions if neither party gave 180 days notice of termination before *1406 the contract expired. The contract could be terminated within its term only “for cause.” The terminating party was required to give 120 days’ notice of the breach that prompted the decision to terminate; if the other party cured the breach, notice of termination would be cancelled. Physicians’ Group’s sole shareholder, Dr. Dressier, insisted on these protective measures because he was relocating from Boston and was concerned about his ability to attract qualified physicians to supply contract services.
Physicians’ Group and the County entered into a second contract in June 1980, this time for Physicians’ Group to provide general surgical services at the Medical Center. The second contract had a fixed term of one year. The contract was automatically renewable for additional one-year periods under the same terms and conditions as the emergency room and burn care services contract.
In May 1981, during both contracts’ fixed terms, the County notified Physicians’ Group that it was terminating the contracts effective that following fall. Physicians’ Group challenged the termination in state court, arguing that the County's reliance on the 180 day notice provision ignored the contracts’ further requirement of termination during the fixed term only for cause. The Board rescinded the termination notices before trial.
Meanwhile, various County employees and the Board allegedly harassed Physicians’ Group employees, threatened to terminate the contract prematurely, delayed payments due Physicians’ Group, conducted unwarranted and overly intrusive audits of the Group’s records, and refused to provide adequate office space.- Physicians’ Group responded in December 1981 by suing the County, the Board, and certain Medical Center administrators in federal court. The complaint asserted claims under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985, 1 alleging that the defendants' concerted actions violated Physicians’ Group’s civil rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments by depriving them of property without due process. The complaint requested injunc-tive relief, compensatory and punitive damages, and attorneys’ fees.
In June 1982, during discovery in the federal case, Physicians’ Group allowed the surgical services contract to expire by its own terms. The Group also terminated the emergency room and burn care services contract in October 1982, approximately 18 months before its fixed expiration date. The Group contends that both actions grew directly out of the continued harassment by defendants.
The defendants moved alternatively for summary judgment or a directed verdict on June 25, 1985. For purposes of its ruling, the district court assumed that the defendants committed material breaches of contract; that the breaches were part of a deliberate pattern intended to frustrate the Group’s performance; and that the breaches effectively frustrated Physicians’ Group’s performance and justified the Group’s premature termination of the contract. The court determined as a matter of law that, absent state or local laws to supplement an employee’s contractual rights, a government contract by itself cannot create a constitutionally protected property interest. The district court distinguished appellant’s interests from constitutionally protected interests in public-employment cases; it found that the protected interests in public-employment cases derived from state or local laws, not from contracts. Memorandum of Decision at 5. The district court therefore granted summary judgment,
2
reasoning that the plaintiff could not “establish a ‘legitimate claim of entitlement’ to continuation of the service contract.”
Id.
at 7. The court’s sole authority for its result was this court’s decision in
Loehr,
ISSUE
Appellant contends, and we agree, that the district court interpreted
Loehr
too
*1407
broadly in applying it to this case. The critical issue, however, is whether appellant Physicians’ Group’s rights to performance on the contracts, as a supplier of services to the government, were sufficient property interests to merit constitutional protection. If so, we then must consider whether appellant was denied “due process.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Loehr,
DISCUSSION
42 U.S.C. § 1983 creates a federal cause of action for deprivation, under color of state law, of rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution or laws.
Stonecipher v. Bray,
I. Property Interests Protected by the Due Process Clause
A. Loehr
The district court understood Loehr to hold that contractual rights alone cannot create property interests protected by the Due Process Clause. Memorandum of Decision at 6. In so ruling, the court read Loehr too broadly and arrived at a conclusion contrary to federal and state decisions holding that contracts may create protected property interests.
In
Loehr,
this court considered the section 1983 claim of a school district superintendent. Loehr contended that the school district deprived him of a property interest without due process of law when it terminated his four-year contract in mid-term. He asserted three related sources for his protected property interest: his employment contract with the school district, state law, and official district policy.
Loehr,
We began in Loehr by interpreting the employment contract. Id. We determined that Loehr “contracted for no more than California law automatically provides.” Id. at 1316; see also id. at 1314. Reviewing the relevant state statutes, we concluded that California had, by statute, restricted the property interests of school district administrators to the right to hold their original classroom teaching positions. Id. at 1314-16. Accordingly, Loehr had no property interest in continued employment as school superintendent and was not, therefore, entitled to due process before the district terminated his contract. We expressly refrained from deciding whether the applicable statute would have permitted Loehr independently to contract for a constitutionally protected property interest in his position as superintendent. Id. at 1316.
B. Property Interests Arising From Contract
In fact, it has long been settled that a contract can create a constitutionally pro
*1408
tected property interest. In
Roth,
“[Property” interests subject to procedural due process protection are not limited by a few rigid, technical forms. Rather, “property” denotes a broad range of interests that are secured by “existing rules or understandings.” A person’s interest in a benefit is a “property” interest for due process purposes if there are such rules or mutually explicit understandings that support his claim of entitlement to the benefit and that he may invoke at a hearing.
Id.
at 601,
Having recognized, as we must, that deprivation of contractual rights may create a claim under section 1983, we are faced with an equally compelling necessity to recognize that not
every
interference with contractual expectations does so. It is neither workable nor within the intent of section 1983 to convert every breach of contract claim against a state into a federal claim.
3
“[W]e must bear in mind that the Fourteenth Amendment was not intended to shift the whole of the public law of the states into the federal courts.”
Brown v. Brienen,
Even though every contract may confer some legal rights under state law, that fact alone need not place all contracts within federal due process protection. “Although the underlying substantive interest is created by ‘an independent source such as
*1409
state law,’ federal constitutional law determines whether that interest rises to the level of a ‘legitimate claim of entitlement’ protected by the Due Process Clause.”
Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division v. Craft,
The prime protected category, which has supplied nearly all of the successful contract-based section 1983 actions, is that of employment contracts. The seminal cases of
Roth
and
Perry
dealt with employment, as did nearly all of the cases to which we have referred thus far. What renders an employment contract protectible by the Fourteenth Amendment is often not clearly articulated; we are willing to accept the view that crucial factors are “the security with which [the interest] is held under state law and its importance to the holder.”
Brown,
II. Physicians’ Group’s Contracts
Understanding the preferred position of employment contracts, Physicians’ Group attempts to analogize its contracts to ones of employment. The contracts were essentially for the provision of personal services; the physicians in the group made important personal decisions in the expectation of continued employment; and the security of a fixed term and termination only for “cause” were elements of the contract. But the analogy fails. Physicians’ Group did not itself become employed as an individual would; it was not capable of doing so. 5 True, the medical services it contracted to supply depended on the personal services of its employees, but virtually any contract to supply the state will ultimately entail personal services. The physician employees of Physicians’ Group may or may not have security of tenure, but that status depends entirely upon their contracts with their employer, Physicians’ Group, and not upon the contracts between Physicians’ Group and the state. Physicians’ Group is the plaintiff in this case, and it stands in the position of supplier, not employee.
By rejecting Physicians’ Group’s attempt to place itself within the protection afforded tenured employees, we do not suggest that employment contracts are the only kind that may be entitled to Fourteenth Amendment protection. Indeed, there may be great variety in the types of state-secured entitlements subject to constitutional protection.
See Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
We do not rule that a corporation can never avail itself of section 1983 to protect its purely contractual rights; we are unable to anticipate every type of contract to which a corporation or similar entity might be party. It is enough to hold that Physicians’ Group’s contract to supply medical services to the state does not confer any constitutionally protectible interest on Physicians’ Group. 7 Its contract to supply services to the state cannot sensibly be distinguished from construction contracts or even purely material supply contracts, for purposes of federal protection. It may well be that the requirements of federalism have more to do with the line we draw than the shadings of contract entitlement doctrine. See L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law 530-31 (1978). But of our conclusion, we are certain. This claim presents no federal case. Physicians’ Groups’ remedy, if any, lies in state law.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The claim under section 1985 has not been pursued on appeal.
. The district court granted the alternative motion for summary judgment or directed verdict. Because the case was not actually tried, we treat the court's order as a summary judgment.
. Some decisions have dismissed contract-based section 1983 claims simply on the ground that the action was essentially one for breach of contract and included no complaint that a separate injury was caused by the procedural inadequacy of the state’s treatment.
E.g., Casey v. Depetrillo,
Our decision not to affirm summarily on the ground that the case is at bottom one for breach of contract does not mean that we minimize the danger of federalizing state contract law. As our text indicates, that concern underlies our holding that Physicians’ Group’s contract confers no federally protected entitlement.
.
Cf. Bellotti,
. Physicians’ Group’s contract to supply the services of others is to be distinguished from an individual's contract to supply his or her own services.
See Farr v. Chesney,
. Appellees argue that even if Physicians' Group has a protectible interest under state and federal law, no harm is done until plaintiffs exhaust their state court remedies.
Cf. Williamson County Regional Planning v. Hamilton Bank, 473
U.S. 172, 194-95,
. Alternatively, it could be held that any entitlement conferred by Physicians’ Group’s contracts was adequately protected by a post-deprivation hearing, and that state contract remedies were sufficient for that purpose. That approach, however, still requires a determination that Physicians’ Groups’ supply contracts are fundamentally different from tenured employment contracts, which are protected by a due process requirement of predeprivation hearing.
See Brown,
