West Lafayette, Indiana, hired Stella Batagiannis in 1999 as Superintendent of the school district. In 2002 the board of education (as we call the governing body) gave Batagiannis a new contract running until June 30, 2007. In May 2003, with more than four years to go on that deal, the board suspended Batagiannis (with pay) after losing confidence in her leadership. She responded with a suit in state court, maintaining that the suspension was a de facto discharge; the state court declined to enjoin the board’s proceedings or undo the suspension. After a hearing in April 2004 the board converted de facto to de jure and fired Batagiannis. This federal suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 maintains that these steps violated Batagiannis’s rights under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment; she also contends that the board unlawfully retaliated against her for filing the state-court suit.
The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants (the school board and its trustees) after concluding that the April 2004 hearing provided Bata-giannis with all requisite process. Logically the initial question on appeal should be whether
any
process was due. Batagian-nis had a term contract, which creates a property interest. See
Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
The due process clause secures private interests against public deprivation. Governmental powers are not themselves private property. They do not exist independently of the government and are not secured against governmental interference. They are aspects of government, integral to it rather than claims against it. An attribute of a state’s sovereignty can’t sensibly be secured in private hands against governmental deprivation. Cf.
Stone v. Mississippi,
Defendants do not rely on this line of decisions, however, perhaps because they want to cut off Batagiannis’s salary as well as her tenure of office. Nor do they contend that litigation in state court provides the process due for any error (whether substantive or procedural) they may have made. See
Chicago United Industries, Ltd. v. Chicago,
Batagiannis maintains that the hearing she received in 2004 is deficient because the school board’s members made up their minds in 2002 or 2003 to get rid of her; all had prejudged the issue, and the hearing was a sham, by her lights. In this respect, however, Batagiannis received exactly what she had agreed to accept: a hearing
by the school board.
That’s what ¶ 5.b of her contract specified; by signing, she waived any entitlement to a wholly neutral decision-maker. Although
Arnett v. Kennedy,
It is understandable that the board wanted to retain the authority to make the decision. Members are elected to set policy. They chose to delegate most decisions to a superintendent but are entitled (and doubtless expected by their constituents) to monitor the schools’ administration and replace anyone not meeting their standards, see Ind.Code § 20-26-5-4(8)(A)— whether or not the differences of opinion amount to “cause” for the superintendent’s discharge. Accepting Batagiannis’s position in this appeal would cripple the democratic process. Suppose the incumbents on the board supported the superintendent they had installed and their opponents stood for election on a platform of hiring a new superintendent to carry out different policies. According to Batagiannis’s argument, however, as soon as the challengers were elected they would be disabled from replacing the superintendent, for they would have prejudged the issue.
Indeed, outgoing members of the board could vitiate the election by giving their appointee a term of office long enough to outlast the new members. Batagiannis herself had a five-year contract, exceeding the four-year term to which board members are elected. (This board has experienced rapid turnover; only two of the seven trustees serving in 2004, when Ba-tagiannis was fired, remain in office. See http://www.wl.kl2.in.us/co/board/board.htm (listing the board’s current members).) A long contract, plus a rule against participation in the decision by anyone who already had an opinion, would block the populace from using elections to change the way their schools are run. The due process clause does not prevent the creation of new policy; and when policy is carried out through appointees, the re *742 quirement of an opportunity for a hearing must be implemented in a way that allows the politically responsible office-holders to achieve their aims.
In saying this, we are well aware that administrative decision-makers, like judges, must be unbiased (though the definition of bias may differ, and judges are subject to extra rules that curtail the appearance of impropriety). See, e.g.,
United States v. Morgan,
Aside from her claim of bias, Batagiannis’s objections to the hearing do not occasion much analysis. She contends, for example, that the reasons the board gave for ending her employment “impugned her integrity.” There is no constitutional right to be free of defamation, see
Paul v. Davis,
As for her contention that the board retaliated against her because she filed a suit in state court: why is that actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983? That statute provides relief for state actors’ violations of the Constitution and laws of the United States, but a suit in state court and resting on state law is neither. Although speech in the course of litigation may be protected by the first amendment, see
BE & K Construction Co. v. NLRB,
Speech, in or out of court, may be informative — and, for policymaking officials, the basis of adverse action. Consider, for example, what would happen if the Secretary of State in a Republican administration were to write an op-ed piece endorsing the foreign-policy platform of the Democratic candidate in an upcoming election. The op-ed piece would be speech, but elected officials may insist that their policymaking officials support their programs, and the cabinet officer could be fired. See
Rutan v. Republican Party of Illinois,
What’s more, this particular claim of retaliation is incoherent on its own terms. Recall the foundation of the state suit: Batagiannis insisted that the suspension was a defacto discharge and demonstrated that the board already had decided to get rid of her. The formal decision in 2004 cannot be “retaliation” for the state suit when it just confirms something that, according to the litigation, preceded the suit’s commencement.
Affirmed
