TALBOT SMITH, Senior District Judge.
The controversy before us concerns yet another aspect of the relationships between educational institutions and their teachers.
Here the problem centers around the school’s failure to reappoint probationary teachers and the rights of the disappointed teachers with respect thereto.
The plaintiffs before us are two teachers. The defendants are administrative officers of the University of Missouri and the members of its Board of Curators (hereinafter, collectively, the University). The Complaint states that plaintiff Cusumano was employed in September of 1964, under a term appointment for one year as an instructor of engineering mechanics at the University of Missouri-Rolla, Rolla, Missouri. At or about this time he received a copy of the Academic Tenure Regulations of the University (Regulations) to which reference will hereinafter be made. He subsequently received one-year contracts on September 1st of each year through and including the school year 1970 — 1971. On March 31, 1971 he was notified that he would be appointed to a terminal one-year term for the school year 1971 — 1972 but would not be rehired thereafter.
Plaintiff Harmon was employed in September of 1968 as an associate professor of mathematics at Rolla, also receiving at such time the University’s Academic Tenure Regulations. He was rehired from year to year on term appointments through and including the school year 1970 — 1971. In December of 1970 he was notified that his appointment for the school year 1971 — 1972 was a terminal appointment and that he would not be hired thereafter.
In view of the fact that both teachers were on “term appointments” as opposed to continuous or tenure appointments, neither was given reasons for his non-reappointment, the University relying upon its Regulation specifically so stating:
[I]t shall not be necessary for his [the term appointee’s] dean or department chairman to provide him with any statement of causes or reasons for not recommending reappointment.
Subsequent to the commencement of a prior related action plaintiffs were given
a hearing,
but they assert that it was fruitless since the hearing produced no reasons for nonreappointment. Apparently plaintiffs sought to utilize this hearing as a forum to establish their academic credentials, since they complain to us that at the hearing they “could not defend against charges concerning their professional competency because they were never informed of those charges.” (Competency is not the issue presented to us, however, though it is pled as a part of the inducement.)
What is presented is the claim that plaintiffs’ constitutional rights to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated by the University’s refusal to give them reasons for their nonreappointment with an adequate hearing thereon. They seek damages, back pay, declaratory relief and an order requiring the University to reinstate them with “tenure or continuous employment.”
Ordinarily, under the teachings of Perry v. Sindermann, 408 U.S. 593, 92 S.Ct. 2694, 33 L.Ed.2d 570 (1972) and Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 92 S.Ct. 2701, 33 L.Ed.2d 548 (1972), a probationary teacher has an insufficient “property interest” in the continuation of his employment past the expiration of his contract to invoke due process protections concerning the decision not to reappoint him. In this case, however, plaintiffs assert in substance that under their contracts and in the circumstances before us they have acquired a
“de facto
tenure”
entitling them to such protection. The court below found otherwise and dismissed the action. We agree.
The issue presented concerns the proper interpretation of the University’s Regulations which, it is conceded by both parties, are incorporated by reference in the contracts of the plaintiffs. The University of Missouri, in the year 1950, promulgated extensive and specific Academic Tenure Regulations establishing a tenure system for all academic employees of
the University. Two types of appointments are specified, terfn appointments and continuous appointments.
Only holders of the latter type of appointment have permanent or continuous tenure. Term appointees have no rights thereto although their appointments cannot lawfully be terminated during the term, save “for cause.”
Considering the plaintiffs in turn, Mr. Cusumano was, under his contract, an instructor. The regulations concerning the termination of his service are found in Regulations, Section 4A:
Instructor.
Initial appointment at the rank of Instructor shall be a term appointment for one academic year. The maximum probationary period on term appointments shall not exceed seven years. During the appointee’s initial one year term, and during each succeeding term through his seventh year of service, his dean or other appropriate administrative officer shall make one of the following recommendations * * *:
[(l)-{5) list retention alternatives.]
(6) that he be reappointed Instructor for a terminal one year term, expressly stated to be such; or
(7) that he not be reappointed, provided there has been timely notice as stipulated in Section 4E. A formal recommendation to this effect need not be made.
With respect to Associate Professor Harmon the pertinent termination regulations are found in Section 4C:
Associate Professor.
Initial appointment at the rank of Associate Professor normally shall be a term appointment. The maximum probationary period on term appointments shall not exceed four years. During the appointee’s initial term, and during each succeeding term through his fourth year of service, his dean or other appropriate administrative officer shall take one of the following recommendations * * Hs.
[(1) — (3) list retention alternatives.]
(4) that he be reappointed Associate Professor for a terminal one year term, expressly stated to be such; or
(5) that he not be reappointed, provided there has been timely notice as stipulated in Section 4E. A formal recommendation to this effect need not be made.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
TALBOT SMITH, Senior District Judge.
The controversy before us concerns yet another aspect of the relationships between educational institutions and their teachers.
Here the problem centers around the school’s failure to reappoint probationary teachers and the rights of the disappointed teachers with respect thereto.
The plaintiffs before us are two teachers. The defendants are administrative officers of the University of Missouri and the members of its Board of Curators (hereinafter, collectively, the University). The Complaint states that plaintiff Cusumano was employed in September of 1964, under a term appointment for one year as an instructor of engineering mechanics at the University of Missouri-Rolla, Rolla, Missouri. At or about this time he received a copy of the Academic Tenure Regulations of the University (Regulations) to which reference will hereinafter be made. He subsequently received one-year contracts on September 1st of each year through and including the school year 1970 — 1971. On March 31, 1971 he was notified that he would be appointed to a terminal one-year term for the school year 1971 — 1972 but would not be rehired thereafter.
Plaintiff Harmon was employed in September of 1968 as an associate professor of mathematics at Rolla, also receiving at such time the University’s Academic Tenure Regulations. He was rehired from year to year on term appointments through and including the school year 1970 — 1971. In December of 1970 he was notified that his appointment for the school year 1971 — 1972 was a terminal appointment and that he would not be hired thereafter.
In view of the fact that both teachers were on “term appointments” as opposed to continuous or tenure appointments, neither was given reasons for his non-reappointment, the University relying upon its Regulation specifically so stating:
[I]t shall not be necessary for his [the term appointee’s] dean or department chairman to provide him with any statement of causes or reasons for not recommending reappointment.
Subsequent to the commencement of a prior related action plaintiffs were given
a hearing,
but they assert that it was fruitless since the hearing produced no reasons for nonreappointment. Apparently plaintiffs sought to utilize this hearing as a forum to establish their academic credentials, since they complain to us that at the hearing they “could not defend against charges concerning their professional competency because they were never informed of those charges.” (Competency is not the issue presented to us, however, though it is pled as a part of the inducement.)
What is presented is the claim that plaintiffs’ constitutional rights to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated by the University’s refusal to give them reasons for their nonreappointment with an adequate hearing thereon. They seek damages, back pay, declaratory relief and an order requiring the University to reinstate them with “tenure or continuous employment.”
Ordinarily, under the teachings of Perry v. Sindermann, 408 U.S. 593, 92 S.Ct. 2694, 33 L.Ed.2d 570 (1972) and Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 92 S.Ct. 2701, 33 L.Ed.2d 548 (1972), a probationary teacher has an insufficient “property interest” in the continuation of his employment past the expiration of his contract to invoke due process protections concerning the decision not to reappoint him. In this case, however, plaintiffs assert in substance that under their contracts and in the circumstances before us they have acquired a
“de facto
tenure”
entitling them to such protection. The court below found otherwise and dismissed the action. We agree.
The issue presented concerns the proper interpretation of the University’s Regulations which, it is conceded by both parties, are incorporated by reference in the contracts of the plaintiffs. The University of Missouri, in the year 1950, promulgated extensive and specific Academic Tenure Regulations establishing a tenure system for all academic employees of
the University. Two types of appointments are specified, terfn appointments and continuous appointments.
Only holders of the latter type of appointment have permanent or continuous tenure. Term appointees have no rights thereto although their appointments cannot lawfully be terminated during the term, save “for cause.”
Considering the plaintiffs in turn, Mr. Cusumano was, under his contract, an instructor. The regulations concerning the termination of his service are found in Regulations, Section 4A:
Instructor.
Initial appointment at the rank of Instructor shall be a term appointment for one academic year. The maximum probationary period on term appointments shall not exceed seven years. During the appointee’s initial one year term, and during each succeeding term through his seventh year of service, his dean or other appropriate administrative officer shall make one of the following recommendations * * *:
[(l)-{5) list retention alternatives.]
(6) that he be reappointed Instructor for a terminal one year term, expressly stated to be such; or
(7) that he not be reappointed, provided there has been timely notice as stipulated in Section 4E. A formal recommendation to this effect need not be made.
With respect to Associate Professor Harmon the pertinent termination regulations are found in Section 4C:
Associate Professor.
Initial appointment at the rank of Associate Professor normally shall be a term appointment. The maximum probationary period on term appointments shall not exceed four years. During the appointee’s initial term, and during each succeeding term through his fourth year of service, his dean or other appropriate administrative officer shall take one of the following recommendations * * Hs.
[(1) — (3) list retention alternatives.]
(4) that he be reappointed Associate Professor for a terminal one year term, expressly stated to be such; or
(5) that he not be reappointed, provided there has been timely notice as stipulated in Section 4E. A formal recommendation to this effect need not be made.
The notice provisions in event of non-reappointment are found in Section 4E of the Regulations and provide, substantially, that notice of not less than one year shall be given to those in the categories of these plaintiffs, but that appointment for a “terminal one year term * * * expressly stated to be such” (one of the University’s options “during each succeeding term”) “shall be sufficient notice that the appointee will not
be recommended for reappointment at the end of the terminal period.”
As noted, such notice need not include a .statement of reasons for the nonreap-pointment.
The above Regulations as to termination of employment bear directly upon plaintiffs’ basic argument, namely, that “during the period of their employment they acquired a protectable property interest in their jobs” under the teachings of
Roth
and
Sindermann, supra.
This property interest, we are told, arose from “the expectancy of reemployment that is fully explained in the
Roth
and
Sinderman
[sic] cases.” In view of the fact that the Regulations above quoted (Sections 4A(6), 4C(4) and 4E) clearly state that during any year of a term appointee’s probationary period
he may be subject to what amounts to a notification of discharge by appointment to a terminal one year term, and that such notifications actually were given to the plaintiffs on, respectively, December 22, 1970 (Harmon) and March 31, 1971 (Cu-sumano) specifying a terminal academic year ending over a year hence, we are unable to find any reasonable expectancy of reemployment under the teachings of
Roth
and
Sindermann.
The entire thrust of the tenure Regulations is to avoid the
de facto
tenure hypothesized in
Sindermann, supra,
408 U.S. at 602, 92 S.Ct. at 2700, amounting to “an unwritten ‘common law’ in a particular university that certain employees shall have the equivalent of tenure.” Peculiarly applicable to the
de facto
tenure doctrine is Section 3B of the Regulations which states that “Holders of academic staff positions under term appointments shall have no rights of permanent or continuous tenure.”
But plaintiffs would avoid the provisions of the Regulations above cited by reliance upon Section 2 of the 1940 Statement of Principles adopted by the University and attached as an appendix to the Regulations. This 1940 Statement of Principles, we note at this point, has as its stated purpose “to promote public understanding and support of academic freedom and tenure and agreement upon procedures to assure them in colleges and universities.” Its origins, and the “status” of the principles enunciated are described by Machlup
thus:
There was first the 1915 Declaration of Principles, formulated by a commit
tee of the AAUP.A This was superseded by the 1925 Conference Statement, approved by both the AAC B and the AAUP. Subsequently, after prolonged discussions over a period of six years begun in 1934, the two organizations agreed on the 1940 Statement of Principles, which is still “on the books” and has been endorsed by 24 [42 in 1967] professional and learned societies. The principles enunciated in the 1940 Statement have the status of “norms,” not merely guidelines — although, of course, they are not norms that could be enforced against those who do not observe them, but merely norms by which the profession can judge academic practices which have become the subject of complaints. [Footnotes added.]
A. American Association of University Professors.
B. Association of American Colleges.
The above-mentioned Section 2, relied upon by plaintiffs, states in part that “Notices should be given at least one year prior to the expiration of the probationary period, if the teacher is not to be continued in service after the expiration of that period.”
Plaintiffs would read “should” in the quoted sentence as “must” and conclude therefrom that since notices were not given (as they “must” have been) during “the penultimate year of their maximum probationary periods in the School year 1969— 1970” they had “a property right: the expectancy of reemployment that is fully explained in the
Both
and
Sinderman
[sic] cases.”
Our problem, of course, is to determine the effect to be given the language of the Statement of Principles, precatory on its face, when the
Statement
has been adopted as part of a teacher’s contract. The Statement of Principles, it is clear, was not intended by its promulgators to be a binding legal document. The procedures of the disputed Section 2 are stated to represent “acceptable,” not obligatory, “academic practice.” The “precise terms and conditions of every appointment,” it states, should be reduced to writing — words of admonition contemplating transition from the generalities of the
Principles
to the precision of a contract. The function of the
Principles,
it has been said, is to serve as “merely norms by which the profession can judge academic practices which have become the subject of complaints.”
The notification provision itself has as a principal and desirable purpose that of an economic shield: according a probationary teacher reasonable warning of impending cessation of employment with
its attendant professional and financial dislocations and adjustments.
We find no vulnerability of the University on this score. The plaintiffs, in each instance, received over a year’s warning prior to their separation from the payroll.
But another consideration, as well, forces itself upon us. In addition to the types of tenure now existing, characterized by one writer in the field
as “tenure by law,” “tenure by contract,” “tenure by moral commitment under a widely accepted academic code” and “tenure by courtesy, kindness, timidity or inertia; ” we are asked to sanction another: tenure by default. This is clear from the arguments advanced by plaintiffs in support of their position, namely, that such “continuous employment” arises from the University’s alleged failure to comply with the “mandatory” terms of the 1940 Statement of Principles. They argue that any teacher has “an absolute right to rely on the fact that if he were not notified to the contrary at least one year prior to the end of his maximum probationary period as set forth, he would be continued in service under a continuous employment contract.” This, in fact, is the basis for plaintiffs prayer for injunctive relief, that due to a lack of notice in the 1969— 70 school year they are “entitled to tenure or continuous employment.”
We find nothing in the 1940 Statement of Principles warranting a conclusion so drastic. It cannot serve the public welfare or promote the best interests of either the University or its professorial staff to have a body of teachers, whatever their number, the permanent tenures of whom rest upon administrative neglect or oversight as to notice of termination.
Section 2 of the Statement of Principles, we conclude, is not mandatory, it is not inconsistent with the University’s Regulations, and furnishes no support
for plaintiffs’ assertions of
de facto
tenure.
It seems appropriate to express a caveat: We do not, obviously, hesitate to enter the burgeoning school-teacher fray when constitutional issues are at stake. So much should be abundantly clear from the compendium cited in note 1,
supra.
But aside from such issues, the matters of the selection of teachers, their professional qualifications, and their retention are best (and, as a matter of law, properly) left to those entrusted by the state with the awesome responsibilities for the education of our young.
We find that the probationary teachers before us had acquired no tenure,
de facto
or otherwise, in the circumstances presented, and that they had no constitutional or contractual rights to a statement of reasons for nonreappointment or a hearing thereon. Frazier v. Curators of University of Missouri, 495 F.2d 1149 (8th Cir. 1974).
Affirmed.