The Department of Mental Retardation (department) employed the plaintiff as supervisor of individual service planning and coordination at the Monson Developmental Center (Monson) under a provisional appointment. The defendant Fletcher, superintendent of Monson, demoted Smith to day care services specialist as a result of an investigative report that the plaintiff had lied to William Gauthier, the president of Parents and Friends of Monson Developmental Center, Inc., a support group for Monson and its residents, and to the Commissioner of Mental Retardation. The lie was said to be a claim by the plaintiff that confidential information had been “leaked” from the plaintiff’s personnel file. Fletcher’s reason for demoting the plaintiff, namely, her dishonesty, was recorded in the plaintiff’s personnel file.
After considerable sparring between the plaintiff, assisted to a large extent by counsel, and the administration at Mon-son, the plaintiff brought this action. The plaintiff’s complaint, as once amended, contained prayers for preliminary and permanent injunctive relief and damages. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the complaint as once amended. The plaintiff then filed a motion for leave to file a second amended complaint. That motion was never expressly allowed or denied. However, soon after the motion for leave to file a second amended complaint was filed, a judge of the Superior Court conducted a hearing that resulted in the ruling giving rise to this appeal, and the judge’s memorandum of decision makes clear that he treated the second amended complaint as having been filed by leave of court and as being operative. So do we.
The second amended complaint consists of ten printed single-spaced pages of detailed factual and legal assertions, one page containing prayers for relief, and forty-five pages of attachments. The essential facts are those we have recited above together with the further fact that, although the plaintiff appeared before an investigator and offered her version of events in answer to questions put to her, she was denied the right, a right which she asserted, to a formal trial-type hearing as a precondition to demotion. A more extensive state
*547
ment of facts may be found at
The judge denied the plaintiffs request for preliminary injunctive relief and granted summary judgment to the defendants dismissing the complaint. The plaintiff appealed, and the Appeals Court reversed and ordered the entry of a judgment “declaring that the plaintiff shall be afforded a hearing before a hearing officer who is not in the chain of command at Monson and before whom the plaintiff may examine witnesses material to whether she made any deliberately false charges.”
We note that the defendants filed no affidavits and submitted no discovery materials to support their motion for summary judgment. Nevertheless, when a complaint sets out a detailed statement of the facts on which the plaintiff relies, as the plaintiffs second amended complaint does, and those facts do not support any claim entitling the plaintiff to relief, see
Spence
v.
Boston Edison Co.,
The Superior Court judge concluded, and the Appeals Court agreed, that 104 Code Mass. Regs. § 24.00 does not apply to the plaintiff’s controversy with the defendants. We need not repeat here the provisions of the regulation which are quoted and discussed at some length in the Appeals Court’s opinion at
The plaintiff contended before the judge and the Appeals Court, and contends here as well, that she had property and liberty interests protected by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which entitled her to procedural due process in the form of a trial-type hearing before her demotion could be effective. The judge agreed with the plaintiff’s contention that she had a property interest in her position as supervisor of individual service planning and coordination, and that therefore she was entitled to predemotion notice “and an opportunity to present reasons, either in person or in writing, why the proposed action should not be taken.” However, the judge concluded, presumably on the basis of the facts alleged in the second amended complaint, that the plaintiff had been given the notice and hearing to which she was entitled. The judge did not discuss the plaintiff’s asserted liberty interest, perhaps because, as we shall conclude, the thrust of the second amended complaint was not to secure a name-clearing hearing for the purpose of protecting the plaintiff’s general employability but instead was only to obtain such a hearing as a means of preventing her demotion to a less desirable position at Monson.
The Appeals Court decided, correctly we think, that the plaintiff did not have a constitutionally protected property in
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terest in her provisional position at Monson.
Id.
at 634. “The Fourteenth Amendment’s procedural protection of property is a safeguard of the security of interests that a person has already acquired in specific benefits .... To have a property interest in a benefit, a person clearly must have more than an abstract need or desire for it. He must have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it. . . . Property interests, of course, are not created by the Constitution. Rather, they are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law — rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.”
Regents of State Colleges
v.
Roth,
The plaintiff’s only argument in support of her claim that she had a constitutionally protected property interest in her employment is that she was “a Manager (M-l), entitled as a provisional state employee with nine months’ seniority to a pre-deprivation informal hearing. G. L. c. 31, § 41 [1988 ed.]. From this it follows that she had a Fourteenth Amendment property interest in the job . . . .” The argument has no merit. A State statute that “merely condition [s] an employee’s removal on compliance with certain specified procedures,” does not establish a constitutionally protected property interest in the position.
Bishop
v.
Wood,
In
Regents of State Colleges
v.
Roth, supra
at 573, the Supreme Court observed that, although that case was not
*550
such a case, “[t]here might be cases in which a State refused to reemploy a person under such circumstances that interests in liberty would be implicated. . . . The State, in declining to rehire the respondent, did not make any charge against him that might seriously damage his standing and associations in his community. It did not base the nonrenewal of his contract on a charge, for example, that he had been guilty of dishonesty, or immorality. Had it done so, this would be a different case. For ‘[w]here a person’s good name, reputation, honor, or integrity is at stake because of what the government is doing to him, notice and an opportunity to be heard are essential.’ ... In such a case, due process would accord an opportunity to refute the charge before University officials.” In a footnote, the Court stated: “The purpose of such notice and hearing is to provide the person an opportunity to clear his name. Once a person has cleared his name at a hearing, his employer, of course, may remain free to deny him future employment for other reasons.”
Id.
at 573 n.12. In another footnote,
id.
at 570 n.7, the Court stated,
“Before
a person is deprived of a protected interest, he must be afforded opportunity for some kind of a hearing . . .” (emphasis added). “[T]he hearing required where a nontenured employee has been stigmatized in the course of a decision to terminate his employment is solely ‘to provide the person an opportunity to clear his name.’ . . . Only if the employer creates and disseminates a false and defamatory impression about the employee in connection with his termination is such a hearing required.
Roth, supra
[at 573 n.12];
Bishop, supra.” Codd
v.
Velger,
In Paul v. Davis, supra at 710, the Supreme Court stated that it is not sufficient to establish a claim under either the Fourteenth Amendment or 42 U.S.C. § 1983 “that there simply be defamation by a state official; the defamation had to occur in the course of the termination of employment. Certainly there is no suggestion in Roth to indicate that a hearing would be required each time the State in its capacity as employer might be considered responsible for a statement *551 defaming an employee who continues to be an employee.” (Emphasis added.)
The Supreme Court cases leave unanswered questions about whether a nontenured State employee’s liberty interest is implicated by demotion, as distinguished from termination or refusal to rehire, and whether a State employee is entitled to a name-clearing hearing before any publication of defamatory statements in his personnel file or only afterward. This court said in
Stetson
v.
Selectmen of Carlisle,
These questions and others, including the question as to the precise form of name-clearing hearing to which an employee might be entitled, we think, despite the Appeals Court’s holding, should be left to another day because a reading of the plaintiff’s second amended complaint makes abundantly clear that this action was not brought to obtain a postdemotion name-clearing hearing to protect the plaintiffs ability to obtain new employment, but was brought solely to challenge the plaintiffs demotion and ultimately to obtain reinstatement. Because the plaintiff is not entitled to a hearing under 104 Code Mass. Regs. § 24.00, and the plaintiff does not have a constitutionally protected property interest in her position, and for the further reason, which we discuss below, that the defendants’ conduct did not infringe her constitutionally protected right of free speech, the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief for which this action was brought.
In
Connick
v.
Myers,
We conclude that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment was properly allowed.
Judgment affirmed.
