Ann M. ZIMMERER, Ph.D., еtc., Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross Appellee,
v.
Thomas M. SPENCER, Individually, etc., and San Jacinto
Junior College District, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees-Cross Appellants.
No. 72-2709.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
Aug. 28, 1973.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Nov. 12, 1973.
Larry Watts, Houston, Tex., W. Michael Gottesman, Washington, D. C., for appellant.
Jeff Crane, Houston, Tex., Stanley Baskin, Pasadena, Tex., for appellees.
Before TUTTLE, GODBOLD and MORGAN, Circuit Judges.
GODBOLD, Circuit Judge:
This is a teacher discharge case. The District Court found that Dr. Zimmerer, a teacher at San Jacinto Junior College, in Texas, was entitled to procedural due process because, though non-tenured, she had "an expectаncy of reemployment under the policies and practices of the institution" (emphasis added). It found that the college Board of Regents had deprived her of procedural due process by refusing to rеnew her contract without sufficient notice of charges against her and without a sufficient hearing. Relief was granted in the form of the pay (and salary raise) that she would have received during the following year, plus attorney fees. Both sides have appealed. We are of the opinion that the District Judge correctly resolved the matter, and affirm.
The record adequately supports the finding that Dr. Zimmerer was not acсorded procedural due process, and we agree with that finding. The Board insists, however, that the Supreme Court decision in Perry v. Sinderman,
A teacher, like the respondent, who has held his position for a number of years, might be able to show from the circumstances of this service-and from other relevant facts-that he has a legitimate claim of entitlement to job tenure. Just as this Court has found there to be a "common law of a particular industry or of a particular plant" that may supplement a collective-bargaining agreement, United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Co.,
The Fourtеenth Amendment's procedural protection of property is a safeguard of the security of interests that a person has already acquired in specific benefits. These interests-property interests-mаy take many forms.
Certain attributes of "property" interests protected by procedural due process emerge from these decisions. 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 оf it. He must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it. . . . It is a purpose of the constitutional right to a hearing to provide an opportunity for a person to vindicate those claims.
Id. at 577,
Dr. Zimmerer's case clearly falls within the "common law of the institution." Indeed, that is substantially what the District Judge said by his statement that Dr. Zimmerer's had an expectancy of reemployment "under the policies and practices of the institution." If at that time the Supreme Court's decision had been available the findings of fact might have been more precisely targeted, but the statement quoted, appearing after a description of the objective facts of institutional policies and practices, is more of a precursor of the Supreme Court in Perry than inconsistent with it.
Like the college in Perry, Dr. Zimmerer's college had no explicit tenure system even fоr its senior members. She had taught in the college for six years and had been department chairman for five. She was the senior member of the Psychology Department. Although faculty contracts were issued for only one year at the time, the Faculty Handbook contained a section entitled "Tenure" which stated that "Tenure is expected to be stable."
The term "tenure" in the handbook must be given some content and meaning short of formalized tenure, which did not exist at the college. The Board attempts no explanation of what the term means, nor does it claim that the presence of the provision in the handbook is an accidеnt. Rather it says that Dr. Zimmerer's and the District Judge should not have placed so much reliance on what the handbook said. Also, under an established procedure, if the college decided that a teacher's contract was not to be annually renewed the teacher was placed on probation. This, the president explained, "is a way of telling them that unless the corrections were made that were thought to be necessary that at the end of the year the contract would not be renewed."
Thus the facts reexamined with the benefit of the Supreme Court's guidance support the existence of a protectible prоperty interest.
This leaves the question of whether the relief granted by the District Court was correct. We think that it was.
In Perry the Supreme Court stated: Proof of such a property interest would not, of course, entitle him to rеinstatement. But such proof would obligate college officials to grant a hearing at his request, where he could be informed of the grounds for his nonretention and challenge their sufficiency.
Dr. Zimmer insists she is entitled to reinstatement at this time and until the Board gives her a hearing complying with due process, and back pay from the time of refusal to renew her contract. The Board suggests that under Perry the District Court could grant neither reinstatement (which it did not do) nor back pay but could order only а remand to the Board with directions to conduct a hearing complying with due process. We think neither extreme is required in this case.
In deciding upon remedy, the District Court considered the scope of Dr. Zimmerer's originаl protectible interest. In effect it found that the "constructive tenure" she had was for one-year's employment and that this was what she lost. This finding was supported by the existence of the procedure, described аbove, of putting an unsatisfactory teacher on probation for one year and then not renewing her contract for the succeeding year. An argument can be made that during a year of probation she might have rehabilitated the situation. But in view of the finding that the Board's reasons for its actions were valid, and the finding that the controversy was intractable and recognized by the parties to be such, we cannot say that the court was wrong in considering as a practical consequence that the most that Dr. Zimmerer lost was one year's pay. Under other circumstances different relief may be appropriate.
We have considered the argument that independently of the foregoing Dr. Zimmerer is entitled to a hearing at this time for the purpose of "clearing her name," because the Board's action is a deprivation of her libеrty. Board of Regents v. Roth, supra; see also Moore v. Knowles,
Affirmed.
Notes
Including a referеnce to a tenured teacher. Perry makes clear that the protectible tenure interest of the teacher is not limited to an arrangement formally incorporated into a written contract
If the сourt, rather than itself deciding the merits of the dispute, had remanded to the Board for it to discharge that function, the Board, as the initial body to consider potential remedies, would have had the duty to fashion relief
