Sheldon J. Watts, Appellant-Plaintiff v. The Board of Curators, University of Missouri, Appellees-Defendants

495 F.2d 384, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9264
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1974
Docket73-1824
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 495 F.2d 384 (Sheldon J. Watts, Appellant-Plaintiff v. The Board of Curators, University of Missouri, Appellees-Defendants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheldon J. Watts, Appellant-Plaintiff v. The Board of Curators, University of Missouri, Appellees-Defendants, 495 F.2d 384, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9264 (8th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

ROSS, Circuit Judge.

Sheldon J. Watts, a former nontenured assistant professor of the University of Missouri at Kansas City (U.M.K. C.), brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging a deprivation of his constitutional rights in the nonrenewal of his employment contract. The case was submitted to the district court without a jury and upon stipulated facts and depositions. The district court found that Watts’ constitutional rights of procedural due process were not violated and that *386 the nonrenewal of the employment contract' was not based on impermissible reasons under the constitution. Watts v. Board of Curators, University of Missouri, 863 F.Supp. 883 (W.D.Mo.1973); Watts appeals from that decision on the sole ground that the court erred in finding that he was not denied reemployment because of the exercise of a protected constitutional right. We affirm the decision of the district court.

Watts was initially employed as a probationary assistant professor for the academic year 1966-67 and was reemployed under separate one-year contracts thereafter until the last year of his employment during which he was employed pursuant to a terminal contract for the term September 1, 1970, through August 31, 1971. This type of employment at the University of Missouri is called a term appointment. Under the Academic Tenure Eegulations, established by the Board of Curators of the University of Missouri, “[h]olders of academic staff positions under term appointments have no rights of permanent or continuous tenure.” Those regulations provide for the creation of a University Faculty Committee on Tenure. They also charge the Dean with the duty to recommend each year of an assistant professor’s term either that he (1) be reappointed for a term; (2) be reappointed on a continuous appointment; (3) be promoted to an associate professor on a continuous appointment; (4) be reappointed as an assistant professor for a terminal one-year term; or (5) not be reappointed.

Pursuant to the recommendation of the Committee on Tenure and Promotion and in concurrence with the recommendation of the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and the Chancellor, Watts was reappointed in 1969 as an assistant professor for a terminal one-year term for 1970-71. Accordingly, on October 13, 1969, Watts was informed by the Dean that his appointment for the academic year 1970-71 would be a terminal one in the following correspondence:

I am further obliged to inform you that the Committee have concluded, after serious deliberation and consideration, that your appointment for the academic year 1970-71 should be a terminal appointment. This decision reflects the fact that although your research project has been supported for a considerable length of time, nothing has yet been presented to your peers in the nature of an article or paper. If your manuscript were accepted for publication before January 1971 the committee would reconsider your position in light of your publication record and other matters affecting tenure. I am confident that this decision was not one lightly or frivolously taken and rests upon consideration [sic] which the Committee believe are important to the future growth and development of the Department.

This notification by the Dean did not proffer a constitutionally impermissible basis for the nonreappointment. However, the only correspondence from the Committee on Tenure to the Dean prior to the notification of Watts, that is in the record, contained the following paragraph :

This decision is based on several factors. 1) His.research has not resulted in any publication or even reviews by a press even though it has been supported for three years by grants. 2) He has taken no interest in his profession at the state level. He has neither presented a paper at the Missouri Conference nor has he discussed his work with local English scholars. His attitude is that only English historians in England are worthy of consulting perplexed the committee. 3) He objects strongly to teaching world history, even on a once every two or three year basis. In fact, he tried to obtain a “united front” of instructors requested to think about this to refuse as a group. 4) He has displayed disloyalty to his colleagues by distributing a critical review to selected members of the department. 5) He has *387 taken the position that in confrontation with students that they are always right and on one occasion suggested that the University “might need burning down.” (This might have been in jest, but no one there thought so.) All of these factors lead the committee to conclude that he should not be offered tenure. If the book is published during 1970-71 and he seems drastically changed after his leave, the committee might reconsider. However, to protect the department and university the leave with a terminal contract seems the best approach.

Watts argues that there is nothing to suggest that the officials of the University and the Board of Curators do anything other than rubber stamp the recommendation of the Committee and that, since some of the above factors in the Committee’s nonreappointment recommendations are protected by the first amendment, his nonrenewal was constitutionally impermissible.

After the receipt of this memorandum from the Committee, Watts was notified by the Dean of his terminal appointment as hereinbefore set forth. Watts accepted this decision as “fair” and went to England under a partial grant from the University to finish his manuscript. On December 9, 1970, Watts wrote a letter to the Chairman of the Tenure Committee and attached thereto a copy of a contract with Coronado Press as proof that he was then in compliance with the condition set forth in the Dean’s letter to Watts of October 13, 1969. However, on December 9, 1970, Watts had actually .completed only three of nine chapters of the book.

After a conference between Watts and the Dean concerning the unfinished manuscript, the Dean wrote to the Chairman of the Tenure Committee on March 24, 1971, indicating that on the basis of the Dean’s reading of the completed portion of the. manuscript and an article which had been published, “it will be impossible to fault him with respect to his scholarship.” The letter contained a statement by the Dean that “there is not sufficient objective evidence to justify the termination of Professor Watts and I believe that your committee’s recommendation to advise it in the light of recent evidence would not be in the best interests of the Department.”

Thereafter the Committee met again and unanimously voted not to modify its recommendation. Another written report was sent by the Chairman of the Committee to the Dean on March 29, 1971, reaffirming the Committee’s recommendation not to offer Watts a new contract. 1 It specified as the reasons for its recommendation that Watts had failed to finish his manuscript by the appointed time; that he had failed to participate in conferences relating to his specialized academic interest, including the annual state meeting in Columbia, Missouri; that he was absent at the time of registration in January 1971; and that he rebelled against extra teaching assignments made by the head of the department.

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495 F.2d 384, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheldon-j-watts-appellant-plaintiff-v-the-board-of-curators-university-ca8-1974.