In August of 1975, appellant Sidney Bleeker was hired as the administrator of the Woodland Nursing Home (“Woodland”) in Methuen, Massachusetts, pursuant to an oral agreement with one of Woodland’s owners. The agreement provided that ap-
pellant “would continue as administrator for as long as he performed ... to the satisfaction of the owners.” Following a declaration by the Governor of Massachusetts in September of 1976' that there was a public health emergency at Woodland, the Commonwealth’s Department of Public Health (“DPH”) supplanted Woodland’s private owners and took responsibility for the care of its patients. 1 Appellant continued to serve as administrator. He was required to report to officials in DPH, and to clear major transactions with them much as he had done previously with Woodland’s private owners, but the terms and conditions of his employment were otherwise unchanged.
In April of 1978, DPH assigned one of its assistant commissioners to manage Woodland. After visiting Woodland, meeting with appellant and examining certain- documents relating to Woodland’s operations, the assistant commissioner determined that Woodland was being managed improperly and that appellant should be replaced. At a second meeting between the two, the assistant commissioner told this to appellant and offered him the opportunity to resign. Appellant refused and was subsequently discharged with five weeks’ salary in lieu of two weeks’ notice and three weeks’ accrued vacation. Appellant did not challenge the authority of DPH to fire him, and did not request a chance to improve his performance. He claims he was told he had no right to a hearing or to seek review of the discharge decision, and in fact sought neither.
Appellant subsequently brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that various state officials 2 deprived him of rights secured by the contract and due process clauses of the United States Constitu *403 tion. The district court granted motions for summary judgment dismissing Bleeker’s claims. Bleeker then appealed, but only on the due process clause question.
We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Bleeker’s due process claim for the simple reason that, under controlling decisions of the Supreme Court and of this court, Bleeker’s interest in employment at Woodland did not constitute “property” within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Bishop v. Wood,
Bleeker, to be sure, does not concede that his employment at Woodland was entirely “at will.” He claims that his oral contract of employment incorporated certain written “Personnel Policies” that in effect converted his job into something of a tenured, or tenure-like, position. According to Bleeker, the Personnel Policies provided him with a right to a “warning and an opportunity to correct” before being discharged for unsatisfactory performance. Yet even if the Personnel Policies applied to Bleeker and provided him with the right he claims, both matters on which there is considerable doubt, the Policies are insufficient to convert his employment interest into constitutionally protected “property.” The wide discretion that the oral contract of employment gave Woodland’s owners (and hence the government) to dismiss Bleeker was not “seriously circumscribed,”
see Beitzell v. Jeffrey,
This, of course, is not to say that the state could violate the terms of Bleeker’s employment contract with impunity. But where state officials violate the terms of an employment contract that does not create a constitutional “property” interest in the job itself, the proper remedy lies in a suit for breach of contract, not a § 1983 action. As we said in
Medina Jimenez v. Almodovar,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The state’s takeover of Woodland occurred pursuant to Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 17, § 2A, which provides that, upon the declaration of a public health emergency by the Governor, the Commissioner of Public Health may “take such action and incur such liabilities as he may deem necessary to assure the maintenance of public health and the prevention of disease.”
. Appellant sued the Governor of Massachusetts, the Commissioner of the Department of Public Welfare, the Commissioner of the Department of Public Health, and the Secretary of the Executive Office of Human Services.
. By “constitutionally protected,” we mean protected against discharge without appropriate procedural safeguards. Bleeker’s employment interest might well be protected against action “based upon some constitutionally impermissible ground, such as racial, religious or sexual discrimination, or retaliation for assertion of rights guaranteed by . . . the Constitution.”
Beitzell v. Jeffrey,
.
Cf. Bishop v. Wood,
