The plaintiff has appealed from the denial of his motion for a preliminary injunction that would if granted have prevented the University of Illinois from funding a suit for defamation that has been brought against him by several professors employed by the university. That suit, a diversity suit pending in the same district court, was stayed on the eve of trial to await the outcome of the appeal in the present suit, which was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and charges that the university — a state agency,
Kroll v. Board of Trustees,
The plaintiff, Smart, is a black lawyer who applied for a position with the university as an assistant professor of agricultural law and was turned down in favor of a white, Purnell. Smart responded to this disappointment by launching a nationwide mail campaign against the university and the professors whom he considered responsible for his rejection. He prepared an affidavit charging racial discrimination and fraud and mailed more than 1,500 copies to public officials, lawyers and others involved in agricultural law, the news media, bar organizations, and other individuals and groups. Among the particulars of the charge is that Professor Grossman, co-chairman of the search committee that had recommended Purnell over him, had altered Purnell’s law school transcript by changing two F’s to passing grades, in order to make Purnell look better. These accusations precipitated the suit for defamation by Purnell, Grossman, and others. The university is defraying the plaintiffs’ legal *434 expenses. Originally a plaintiff itself, later it voluntarily dismissed its claim.
Smart argues that by funding the suit for defamation the university is penalizing him for having exercised his right of free speech in accusing the university of fraud and discrimination. He does not live in Illinois, and he claims to have no resources with which to defend himself against the suit. He claims that his health will be endangered if he has to defend himself, and this is one of the grounds on which he argues that he will be harmed irreparably unless he gets a preliminary injunction.
We do not think the district judge abused his discretion in denying the motion for a preliminary injunction. This is so even though the idea behind Mr. Smart’s suit, although somewhat far-fetched, cannot at this stage be declared wholly groundless. It is true that within the limits prescribed by the Supreme Court in the line of cases that began with
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
However that may be, Smart’s argument is not that he has been deprived of property; it is that by bringing a defamation suit that he claims is malicious and abusive the defendants have infringed his freedom of speech, one of the forms of liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Any form of official retaliation for exercising one’s freedom of speech is actionable as an infringement of that freedom. Many officials have enforcement powers, and legal harassment including but not limited to threats to prosecute and actual prosecutions has frequently been charged as an infringement of free speech. E.g.,
Dombrowski v. Pfister,
If, therefore, a public body such as the University of Illinois brings or finances a suit for defamation not to win but to punish the defendant for criticizing the agency or its employees, it is at least arguable that this conduct could be found to violate the defendant’s constitutional rights. And if it would violate the Constitution for the university to harass Smart directly with groundless suits, it must violate the Constitution for the university to harass him indirectly by instigating or financing groundless suits brought by others — others who in this case, if Smart can be believed, are merely the university’s tools.
But of this arguably unlawful motive the plaintiff has presented not a shred of evidence, so that the likelihood of his actually prevailing on his constitutional claim must be reckoned, at this stage of the litigation and on this record, slight. This alone probably disentitled him to a preliminary injunction.
Storck U.S.A., L.P. v. Farley Candy Co.,
Even if Smart had shown that the defamation suit will unless enjoined impose irreparable harm on him, he has presented no evidence that the university’s funding of the suit —which is what he wants to enjoin — will do so, for he has presented no evidence that the defamation suit will fold if the university stops funding it. Since Mr. Smart appears to have no assets, it is unlikely that the plaintiffs in that suit can retain lawyers to handle it on a contingent-fee basis, and they may be unwilling or even unable to finance it out of their own pockets. But this is speculation; Smart has presented, as we have said, no evidence. It is true that he is proceeding pro se; but he is a lawyer and his briefs are competent professional products, so that his failure to present persuasive evidence either of irreparable harm to himself or of improper motive on the part of the university cannot be ascribed to a lay person’s understandable ignorance of legal technicalities. We add that the irreparable harm to the university from the grant of a preliminary injunction in this ease would not be slight. Smart made and widely publicized damning charges against the university; if they are false, the university has a right to take actions to save its reputation and might be gravely harmed *436 if forbidden even temporarily by an injunction to do so.
Although Smart’s lawsuit cannot be adjudged frivolous, his appeal is frivolous because he has made no effort to show that he satisfied the requirements for obtaining a preliminary injunction in the district court. He presented no evidence of improper motive by the university, the linchpin of his constitutional claim; and he failed to establish irreparable harm, which hinges as we have said on whether the plaintiffs in the defamation suit would dismiss the suit were it not for the university’s financial backing. As a lawyer, Smart cannot be forgiven these oversights. We direct him to file with the court within fourteen days a statement as to why sanctions should not be imposed under Fed.RApp.P. 38. His own motion for sanctions is frivolous and is denied, and the district court’s denial of his motion for a preliminary injunction is
AFFIRMED.
