San Filippo v. Bongiovanni

Opinions of the United 1994 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 7-21-1994 Filippo v. Bongiovanni, et al. Precedential or Non-Precedential: Docket 93-5658 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1994 Recommended Citation "Filippo v. Bongiovanni, et al." (1994). 1994 Decisions. Paper 89. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1994/89 This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1994 Decisions by an authorized administrator of Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository. For more information, please contact Benjamin.Carlson@law.villanova.edu. UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _______________ No. 93-5658 _______________ JOSEPH SAN FILIPPO, JR. Appellant v. MICHAEL BONGIOVANNI, ANTHONY S. CICATIELLO, ADREIENNE S. ANDERSON, DONALD M. DICKERSON, FLOYD H. BRAGG, NORMAN REITMAN, individually and as members of the Board of Governors of Rutgers University, RUTGERS UNIVERSITY Appellees RUTGERS COUNCIL OF AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS Amicus Curiae _______________ On Appeal From the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civil No. 88-2575) _______________ Argued: May 13, 1994 Before: BECKER AND LEWIS, Circuit Judges and POLLAK, District Judge0. (Filed July 21, 1994) LEON FRIEDMAN (Argued) 148 East 78th Street New York, NY 10021 Attorney for Appellant 0 Honorable Louis H. Pollak, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation. 1 JOHN J. PEIRANO, JR. (Argued) LINDA B. CELAURO Carpenter, Bennett & Morrissey 100 Mulberry Street Three Gateway Center Newark, NJ 07102 Attorney for Appellee 2 DENISE REINHARDT Reinhardt & Schachter 744 Broad Street Suite 2500 Newark, NJ 07102 Attorney for Amicus Curiae _______________ OPINION OF THE COURT _______________ POLLAK, District Judge. This case, brought under 42 U.S.C. §1983, arises out of the dismissal by University -- New Jersey's principal state institution of higher education -- of pl Dr. Joseph San Filippo, who was, until May 13, 1988, a tenured professor of chemist The defendants named in this case are Rutgers University and six members of the Rut Board of Governors (hereinafter collectively described as "Rutgers"). The district granted Rutgers' motion for summary judgment and dismissed Professor San Filippo's On appeal, San Filippo, with support from the Rutgers Council of American Association of University Professors Chapters ("Rutgers AAUP") as amicus, challenge district court's grant of summary judgment in Rutgers' favor: (1) on San Filippo's that he was dismissed in retaliation for the exercise of his first amendment rights (2) on San Filippo's claim that Rutgers violated his right to procedural due proces because the panel that recommended his dismissal had, according to San Filippo, a financial incentive to recommend dismissal. Part I of this opinion outlines the factual background and procedural his this case. Part II analyzes the legal issues posed by San Filippo's first amendmen claim. Part III addresses San Filippo's due process claim. 3 I. Factual background and procedural history Because San Filippo appeals from the district court's grant of Rutgers' m for summary judgment, the following factual recital accepts as true all evidence pr by non-movant San Filippo, with all reasonable inferences drawn in his favor. On November 25, 1985, Dean Tilden Edelstein told San Filippo and his Rutg AAUP counsellor, Wells Keddie,0 of allegations that San Filippo had harassed, explo and attempted to exploit visiting scholars from the People's Republic of China. On January 6, 1986, Dean Edelstein sent San Filippo a letter stating the complaints ag him. As required by one of the University's dismissal regulations, advice about wh dismissal proceedings should be commenced was sought from two groups of San Filippo faculty peers and three academic officers of the University. On February 14, 1986, tenured faculty members of the chemistry department passed a resolution concluding the charges against San Filippo, if proven, represented grounds for dismissal. Aft Appointments and Promotion Committee, the University Provost, and the Chief Academi Officer concurred in the sentiment expressed in that resolution, Rutgers University President Edward Bloustein wrote a letter to San Filippo, dated October 1, 1986, in he described the formal charges against San Filippo. President Bloustein further indicated that, if San Filippo did not make a timely request for a hearing, Preside Bloustein would recommend to the University's Board of Governors that San Filippo b dismissed based on the charges outlined in the letter. San Filippo exercised his right to a hearing before a panel of five facul peers (the "Senate Panel") which, after a forty-six day hearing, concluded that San Filippo had committed almost all of the offenses charged. In a forty-four page rep issued on December 21, 1987, the Senate Panel recommended that San Filippo be strip 0 The Rutgers AAUP is the recognized agent for collective bargaining under state law Rutgers University faculty members, including Professor San Filippo. The Rutgers A an affiliate of the national organization, also serves as a professional organizati the Rutgers University faculty. 4 his tenure and dismissed from the University. The Board of Governors unanimously concluded in its sixty-page opinion that the Senate Panel's findings were supported evidence. On May 13, 1988, the Board of Governors voted to dismiss San Filippo on basis of nine charges of misconduct. One member of the seven-member Board --Walter Wechsler -- voted against dismissal because he believed that the sanction was too s Wechsler has not been named as a defendant. San Filippo filed the instant action on June 13, 1988. He alleges, among things, that disciplinary proceedings were initiated against him and that he was di in retaliation for the numerous (1) grievances and lawsuits he had instituted, and complaints he had voiced, against Rutgers University and various University officia between 1977 and 1986 -- activities that he contends are protected by the first ame A. San Filippo's alleged protected activities In 1977, San Filippo wrote a letter to the then chemistry department chai Professor Sidney Toby, complaining about dangerous conditions in the chemistry laboratories, conditions that had been described by the New Jersey Department of He "generally unsatisfactory." In 1979, in response to a newspaper reporter's questio concerning a student's collapse due to noxious fumes during a chemistry experiment, Filippo stated -- as reported by the newspaper on January 30, 1979 --that undergrad students were being subjected to a "health hazard and an absolute danger" and that "minimum safety requirements are not being met." San Filippo was berated by the th department chairman, Professor Joseph Potenza, and by an administrator for making t comments. San Filippo's comments led to the creation of an American Association of University Professors - University Safety Committee. In 1977 and 1978, San Filippo testified before a grand jury regarding an investigation into the manufacture of illegal drugs in the chemistry laboratories. 5 Potenza criticized San Filippo for his "disloyalty" and for "washing the department dirty linen in public." In 1983-84, San Filippo became embroiled in a dispute over what he descri an effort by members of the chemistry department's instruments committee to obtain funding for a mass spectrometer by misrepresenting the department's need for such a instrument. San Filippo threatened to tell the federal funding agency the truth ab department's needs. The committee members wrote a memorandum to Potenza, as depart chairman, protesting San Filippo's threats to undermine their efforts to obtain a m spectrometer. Potenza told San Filippo that he intended to place the memorandum in Filippo's personnel file. San Filippo contacted the United States Attorney's offic regarding this action against him, and an Assistant United States Attorney told San Filippo that such an action would be characterized as an effort to obstruct justice San Filippo told Potenza what the government lawyer had said, Potenza had the lette reprimand removed from San Filippo's personnel file. Between 1979 and 1986, San Filippo complained about certain financial irregularities in the chemistry department, particularly efforts to divert funds fr Filippo's federal grants. In October 1985, San Filippo objected to a proposal by t department chairman, Professor Robert Boikess, to impose a "shop user's fee," which Filippo characterized as illegal double billing of chemistry department members. In 1981, the chemistry department declined to recommend San Filippo for promotion to full professorship. San Filippo filed a grievance in 1982, contending he had been denied promotion through manipulation of his promotion packet. While t grievance was pending, the chemistry department recommended that San Filippo be pro to full professor, effective July 1984. Although the grievance committee ultimatel agreed with San Filippo that he should have been promoted, the University took the position that the issue was moot. In September 1985, San Filippo filed a lawsuit i 6 court in which he contended that he was entitled to have his promotion effective Ju 1982. That suit is still pending. In 1984, San Filippo grieved the fact that he had been denied a merit sal increase. The University rejected San Filippo's grievance, and he filed for non-bi arbitration. The first hearings in the arbitration occurred in October 1985. On Sep 10, 1986, Boikess testified for the University. Regarding this event, the arbitrato commented in his decision dated December 26, 1986: Little things are often very revealing. A transcript does not conve full flavor of what transpires in the hearing room. Boikess was called o last day of the hearing. He brought his own lawyer with him (Mr. Peirano San Filippo cordially greeted him before he took the stand. Boikess not acknowledge the greeting and refused to acknowledge grievant's presen the room. During his testimony, Boikess kept referring to grievant's "self- nomination" [for the merit salary award]. His tone of voice was so caust it sparked an inquiry from me. (The inference to be drawn by the tone of employed was that a "self-nomination" was somehow less worthy). I specifically asked Boikess why he emphasized "self-nomination." B danced around the issue and did not really answer my question. It became obvious that he would not answer, so I gave up. Further, the tenor and t his testimony revealed his near-total contempt for San Filippo. I note in passing that most of the persons being considered were sel nominated. The [merit salary award procedure] specifically provides for One would have to be a block of wood to fail to notice Dr. Boikess' complete distaste for Joe San Filippo. (A.1155 n.21). The arbitrator sustained San Filippo's complaint. He further noted opinion: San Filippo testified, without contradiction, that he was criticized by administration officials for talking to the school newspaper about unsafe conditions in the laboratories. [San Filippo] was chairman of the Safety Committee at the time. A student took ill. [San Filippo] was accused of "disloyal." Putting aside the serious first amendment issues the episode (Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563), it seems to me that the to the health of the students outweighs any possible harm to the reputati 7 those in authority that disclosure of lab conditions might have created. Further, there is a difference to [sic] loyalty to the institution and th purposes it is supposed to serve and fealty to the individuals who may, a given moment, occupy positions of higher authority in the organization. is more important in the scheme of things: bruised feelings because the is tough and demanding or personal safety? . . . While not directly at issue, there was some unsettling evidence that [Dr. Filippo's] promotion packet had been surreptitiously removed and unfavora material secretly inserted. [Dr. San Filippo] had to bring successful gr action to rectify the situation. It would appear that someone was willing to extra-ordinary lengths to deny [Dr. San Filippo] professional advantag That kind of conduct is similar to what happened to [Dr. San Filippo] in [merit salary award] review. [Dr. San Filippo's] nomination was clearly judged under separate "San Fil rules" that were applicable to no one else. . . . . I know a pipe job when I see one. (A.1161 n.29). In November 1985, Dr. San Filippo brought a libel action in state court a three administrators who accused San Filippo of deliberately falsifying time report relating to one of his technical assistants. Finally, San Filippo brought a lawsuit in state court against the Univers March 1986 complaining about, among other things, the University's decision to proh without a hearing of any kind -- graduate student assistance in San Filippo's resea program, because of the accusations against San Filippo. B. The charges and proceedings against San Filippo As explained above, on October 1, 1986, President Bloustein brought forma written charges against San Filippo. After a hearing before the Senate Panel, which recommended dismissal, the Board of Governors, which reviewed the findings of the Senate Panel for suffici the evidence, concurred in the Senate Panel's findings sustaining the following cha 8 Charge 1: Your treatment of scholars visiting from the People's Republic China and a Chinese Teaching Assistant violated the standards of professi ethics required by all faculty members. More specifically, your treatmen respect to these individuals, as set forth more fully in the attached doc is as follows: a. You took advantage of your professorial position and exploited Mr. He Gao and Mr. Changhe Xiao, both visiting scholars from the People's Republ China, by directing them or leading them to believe that they had no choi to perform domestic work for you, such as garden work and indoor and outd cleaning work during the period May through July 1985.0 c. You exploited Messrs. Gao and Xiao by representing that they would be provided health benefits coverage and that you would deduct $700.00 from salary to be paid each of them in order to cover the costs of such benefi Despite deducting such sums, you did not provide coverage to either Mr. G Mr. Xiao. d. During the period of time that the above-named visiting Chinese schol were at Rutgers, you threatened and harassed those individuals by repeate stating that you would send them back to China and by directing abusive l toward them. e. On or about March 31, 1986, you interrupted without sufficient cause laboratory class being conducted by Teaching Assistant, Zong Ping Chen. continued that incident by treating her in an unprofessional, threatening abusive manner, within the hearing of other individuals, including her st Charge 2: On or about July 8, 1985, you directed Mr. Changhe Xiao, who h injured himself while doing maintenance work at your house, to identify h as Mr. Peng Zhou in Middlesex Hospital in order to have Mr. Xiao covered Peng Zhou's medical insurance. Charge 3: You encouraged and permitted individuals working under your di and supervision to submit false time reports and to make inappropriate ch against certain University accounts. Specifically:0 b. Ms. Marilyn Brownawell, who works directly under your supervision, su time reports for the week ending August 17, 1984. She reported and was p 40 hours of work for that period, charged against the Chemistry Departmen mass spectrometer account, even though you knew that she did not perform work related to the mass spectrometer or indeed any compensable work for of any kind during that period.0 0 The Senate Panel found that charge 1(b) was unproven, and the Board concurred in t determination. 0 The Senate Panel did not sustain charge 3(a), and the Board concurred in this determination. 0 Charge 3(c) was not sustained by the Panel, and the Board concurred in this determination. 9 Charge 4: You violated professional and academic standards and exploited foreign visitors to the University by bringing to the University as post- doctoral fellows Chinese scholars you knew did not have appropriate crede and by charging stipends of such individuals, who did not possess doctora degrees, to your NSF grant as post-doctoral fellows. Subsequently you sup these individuals for admission to the graduate program in Chemistry, a f which clearly established that they did not have the credentials to be po doctoral fellows.0 Charge 5: During Fall 1985, you submitted an application for admission t graduate program, including letters of reference, on behalf of Mr. Peng Z one of the individuals referred to in #4 above. One of the letters of ref submitted by you purportedly was written and signed by Liu Guozhi. In fa that letter was not prepared by Liu Guozhi, and you had knowledge of the and did not make it known when you submitted the letter. Charge 6: On December 16, 1985, Professor Robert Boikess, Chair of your department, specifically instructed you not to permit Mr. Peng Zhou, Mr. Yuan Guo, or any other graduate student except those already associated w your research group, to work in your laboratory, pending investigation of allegations of exploitation and harassment lodged against you by visiting Chinese scholars. Despite these specific instructions, you subsequently permitted Cong-Yuan Guo, Zhen-min He, and Peng Zhou to perform work in yo laboratory. In the Board's opinion, the Board specifically found that the conduct described in sustained charges 1(a), 1(d) and 1(e) was a serious enough breach of the role of fa member that, even if those were the only sustained charges, there would be sufficie cause for dismissal. Accordingly, on May 13, 1988, the Board directed that San Fil dismissed from the University. Board member Wechsler agreed with his colleagues' findings but felt that dismissal was too severe a sanction: "Because this punishment is clearly out of pro to his alleged wrongdoing, and quite possibly tainted by a long history of animus, respectfully dissent." (A.322). C. The procedural history of this case 0 The Senate Panel sustained this charge in regard to Mr. Peng Zhou, but not in rega Mr. Cong-Yuan Guo. The Board concurred in both determinations. 10 On June 13, 1988, San Filippo filed this suit against the University and Board members who voted in favor of his dismissal. San Filippo sued under §1983 an law, alleging that the dismissal violated his speech, petition, equal protection, a process rights under the United States and New Jersey Constitutions, and violated h common law contract rights. Following the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment on a number of the district court granted San Filippo's motion for partial summary judgment on his that the regulations pursuant to which he was dismissed were void for vagueness. S Filippo v. Bongiovanni, 743 F. Supp. 327 (D.N.J. 1990). The void-for-vagueness iss certified for interlocutory appeal to this court; we reversed and remanded the case further proceedings. San Filippo v. Bongiovanni, 961 F.2d 1125, 1139-40 (3d Cir. 1 After the Supreme Court denied San Filippo's petition for certiorari, San Filippo v Bongiovanni, 113 S. Ct. 305 (1992), the district court referred the remaining summa judgment motions to a magistrate judge. In his Report and Recommendation, the magistrate judge recommended that s judgment be granted in defendants' favor on San Filippo's procedural due process cl on his state law claims, but that summary judgment be denied on San Filippo's first amendment/equal protection claim.0 Regarding the first amendment claim, the magist judge first explained that this circuit uses a three-part test to assess a public employee's claim of retaliation for having engaged in a protected activity. First, plaintiff must show that he engaged in a protected activity. Second, plaintiff mus that the protected activity was a substantial factor motivating the dismissal decis Finally, defendant may defeat plaintiff's claim by demonstrating that the same acti 0 The parties agree that the analysis is the same under the first amendment and equa protection claims. From this point, we refer to these claims as the first amendmen claim. 11 would have taken place even in the absence of the protected conduct.0 See Holder v of Allentown, 987 F.2d 188, 194 (3d. Cir. 1993); Czurlanis v. Albanese, 721 F.2d 98 (3d Cir. 1983) (citing Mt. Healthy City School Dist. v. Doyle, 429 U.S. 274, 283-87 (1977)). With respect to the first prong of this test, the magistrate judge conclu that, unlike speech generally -- which is protected under the first amendment only addresses a matter of public concern -- San Filippo's lawsuits and grievances were activities protected under the petition clause of the first amendment regardless of whether they addressed matters of public concern. The magistrate judge then noted fact-finder could reasonably infer that San Filippo's protected conduct was a subst factor motivating the decision to dismiss him from the University. Finally, the magistrate judge recommended that San Filippo be given the chance to conduct additi discovery in order to rebut Rutgers' claim that San Filippo would have been dismiss in the absence of his protected activities. Because the magistrate judge believed t defendants had not yet made relevant discovery material available to San Filippo, t magistrate judge recommended that summary judgment be denied under Rule 56(f) of th Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.0 0 The burden of persuasion shifts to Rutgers with respect to the third prong of this In this respect, the retaliatory discharge test differs from the Title VII rule established in Texas Dep't of Community Affairs v. Burdine, 450 U.S. 248 (1981), an reaffirmed in St. Mary's Honor Center v. Hicks, 113 S. Ct. 2742 (1993), where the b of persuasion remains on the plaintiff even after he or she has proved a prima faci and the employer need only articulate -- not prove -- a non-discriminatory reason f actions. 0 Rule 56(f) states in relevant part: Should it appear from the affidavit of a party opposing the motion that t party cannot for reasons stated present by affidavit facts essential to j the party's opposition, the court may refuse the application for judgment order a continuance to permit . . . discovery to be had or may make such order as is just. 12 San Filippo did not object to the magistrate judge's recommendation that be granted summary judgment on the state law claims. Accordingly, in an opinion da September 28, 1993, the district court accepted those recommendations and granted R summary judgment on those claims. San Filippo objected to the magistrate judge's recommendation that Rutgers be granted summary judgment on his due process claim, a argued that he was entitled to summary judgment on that claim or at least to furthe discovery. Rutgers objected to the magistrate judge's recommendation that summary judgment on San Filippo's first amendment claim be denied. The district court adopted the magistrate judge's recommendation that sum judgment be granted on San Filippo's due process claim, but rejected the magistrate judge's recommendation that summary judgment be denied on San Filippo's first amend claim. With respect to the first amendment claim, the district court first disagre the magistrate judge's conclusion that San Filippo's lawsuits and grievances were activities protected under the first amendment petition clause regardless of whethe addressed a matter of public concern. Instead, the district court held that lawsui grievances, like speech generally, are protected activities under the first amendme if they address matters of public concern. The district court concluded that some of San Filippo's speech addressed of public concern and was therefore protected under the first amendment. The distr court also concluded that a fact-finder could reasonably infer that San Filippo's protected conduct was a substantial factor motivating his dismissal. However, the district court held that there was no basis in the record from which a fact-finder reasonably conclude that San Filippo was dismissed because of his protected conduct rather than because of the misconduct described in the charges brought against him. Moreover, the district court rejected the magistrate judge's recommendation that a on the summary judgment motion be delayed until after San Filippo had had an opport to conduct additional discovery, and instead held that San Filippo had received all 13 discovery to which he was entitled. Accordingly, the district court held that Rutg entitled to summary judgment on San Filippo's first amendment claim as well as on h process and state law claims, and dismissed San Filippo's complaint in its entirety On appeal, San Filippo argues that the district court's order granting Ru summary judgment on his first amendment claim should be vacated because the distric erred, (a) in granting Rutgers' motion for summary judgment without affording him a opportunity to take additional discovery, and (b) on the merits. San Filippo also contends that the district court's order granting Rutgers summary judgment on his d process claim should be vacated because there remains a material issue of fact rega the question whether the Senate Panel had a pecuniary interest in the outcome of th proceedings against San Filippo, and because he was entitled to additional discover II. San Filippo's first amendment claim San Filippo first contends that the district court erred in denying his r made pursuant to Rule 56(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,0 that the dist court delay its ruling on Rutgers' summary judgment motion until after he had time conduct further discovery. San Filippo made various discovery requests on Septembe 1989; Rutgers asked to have until November 7 to respond. On November 24, San Filip wrote a 20-page letter to Rutgers pointing out inadequacies in Rutgers' response. November 29, Rutgers moved for summary judgment and the requested information was n supplied. San Filippo submitted a Rule 56(f) affidavit in support of its oppositio Rutgers' motion for summary judgment. The magistrate judge recommended that the ru the summary judgment motion be deferred until after San Filippo had an opportunity additional discovery. 0 The text of this rule is quoted at note 8, supra. 14 The district court rejected the magistrate judge's conclusion that summar judgment should not be granted until San Filippo had an opportunity to discover add information. The court explained that San Filippo argued that "he must see the reco other faculty persons similarly situated (i.e., persons who have been known to comm were accused of committing, similar offenses, but against whom no sanctions, or not severe a sanction was imposed)." Opinion at 42 (internal quotation omitted). The rejected San Filippo's argument for two reasons. First, the court concluded that " members 'similarly situated' to plaintiff are those faculty members against whom fo charges have been filed as to conduct which could lead to dismissal under the Unive regulations." Opinion at 42-43. The court explained that San Filippo received all information on June 9, 1989, pursuant to Rutgers' compliance with section I.1 of a Stipulation dated May 19, 1989. Second, the court concluded: These [nine] charges together caused plaintiff's dismissal and it is only tenured faculty member who had "been known to commit" or was "accused of committing" offenses of the kind, number, and scope taken together with w plaintiff is truly "similarly situated." No one suggests that such a per exists. Opinion at 44-45 (emphasis in original). For these two reasons, the court conclude San Filippo had received all of the discovery to which he was entitled. See Opinio 46. San Filippo, with support from the Rutgers AAUP, argues that the district abused its discretion in denying San Filippo's request for a Rule 56(f) continuance Under Contractors Assoc. v. City of Philadelphia, 945 F.2d 1260 (3d Cir. 1991), whe Rule 56(f) motion should be granted "depends, in part, on 'what particular informat sought; how, if uncovered, it would preclude summary judgment; and why it has not b previously obtained.'" Id. at 1266 (quoting Lunderstadt v. Colafella, 885 F.2d 66, Cir. 1989)). A district court has discretion in acting on Rule 56(f) motions. See 15 1267. However, where relevant information sought is in the hands of the moving par district court should grant a Rule 56(f) motion almost as a matter of course unless information is otherwise available to the non-movant." Id. In Contractors Assoc., the district court granted Contractors Association Eastern Philadelphia and other trade associations summary judgment on their claim t Philadelphia's public contract minority set-aside law violated the equal protection of the fourteenth amendment. On appeal, United Minority Associates Enterprises arg that the district court --to which Minority Associates had submitted a Rule 56(f) affidavit along with their opposition to summary judgment -- erred by granting the judgment motion without giving Minority Associates an opportunity to pursue discove the existence of discrimination in the Philadelphia construction market that could various set-asides. We held that the district court abused its discretion by not g a continuance before ruling on the summary judgment motion. See Contractors Assoc. F.2d at 1268. In addressing the first part of the Contractors Assoc. test -- what infor is sought and how it would preclude summary judgment -- San Filippo and the Rutgers argue that the district court's definition of "similarly situated" was too narrow. agree. Among other things, San Filippo argues that, but for his protected activity would not have been charged at all. To limit his discovery to individuals who were fact brought up on similar charges is, therefore, not adequately responsive to San Filippo's needs. Nor should San Filippo be limited to discovery of individuals who committed nine charges of comparable seriousness yet were not disciplined. The Sup Court explained in McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co., 427 U.S. 273, 283 n.11 ( [P]recise equivalence in culpability between employees is not the questio we indicated in [McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 804 (197 allegation that other "employees involved in acts against [the employer] comparable seriousness . . . were nevertheless retained . . ." is adequat 16 plead an inferential case that the employer's reliance on his discharged employee's misconduct as grounds for terminating him was merely a pretext Santa Fe, 427 U.S. at 283 n.11 (emphasis and omissions in Santa Fe). In analogous fashion, this court, in Bennun v. Rutgers State University, F.2d 154 (3d Cir. 1991), rejected a contention that the district court had erred in comparing the defendant University's decision not to tenure the plaintiff professor the University's decision to tenure another professor who had higher ratings than t plaintiff in two categories -- teaching effectiveness and general usefulness. See 178. We reasoned that to preclude such a comparison "would change 'similarly situa 'identically situated.'" Id. Although "[t]he propriety of such a comparison is cas specific," there is a "broad sweep of relevancy." Id. Admittedly, the district cou and should impose limits on discovery that is calculated to lead to the unearthing marginally relevant evidence. Nonetheless, the limits imposed here were too severe The Board indicated in its opinion that it viewed charges 1(a), 1(d) and the most serious charges against San Filippo, meriting his dismissal even if the ot charges were not sustained. San Filippo accordingly should be permitted to discove whether the University knew of other employees who committed one or more offenses o comparable or greater seriousness yet did not discipline these employees, or impose sanctions far less severe than dismissal. Although the district court's suggestion San Filippo was disciplined because of a combination of misdeeds rather than for an single misdeed is plausible, this type of evaluation is one that should generally b to the fact-finder. Because the information San Filippo sought in discovery was of sort that might prevent the entry of summary judgment and was under the control of Rutgers, we conclude that it was an abuse of discretion to deny San Filippo's Rule 17 motion. Accordingly, we will vacate the district court's grant of summary judgment Filippo's first amendment claim and remand for further discovery.0 Even without further discovery, there is sufficient evidence in the recor which a fact-finder could conclude that, in the absence of his protected activities Filippo would not have been dismissed based on the conduct described in the charges against him. First, Dean Edelstein was interviewed by the local New Brunswick news The Home News, shortly after San Filippo was dismissed. The paper reported: "'If Filippo] had behaved better earlier in terms of his relations with his colleagues,' Tilden Edelstein, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, San Filippo might have treated differently. . . . 'But San Filippo persisted in being "Joe the Warrior,"' Edelstein said." (A.606). A fact-finder could reasonably infer that the "war" to w Dean Edelstein referred encompassed the protected complaints San Filippo had made o years. In addition, Walter Wechsler, the member of the Board of Governors who diss from the decision to dismiss San Filippo, stated that "the punishment is clearly ou proportion to his alleged wrongdoing, and quite possibly tainted by a long history animus." (A.322). San Filippo also has presented evidence that other faculty members had co infractions of comparable seriousness yet had not been punished. For example, Prof Richard Hartwick of the chemistry department testified before the Senate Panel that had two students pitch hay for him on his farm. Another professor, George Muha, te that, as a student, he had helped his faculty advisor move from one place to anothe Professor Muha also testified that he had some of his own students work with him in photography lab, and that foreign students he had invited to his house at Thanksgiv 0 With respect to the second part of the Contractors Assoc. test -- why the informat not previously obtained --Rutgers argues that the May 19, 1989 Stipulation preclude further discovery. This argument is unpersuasive. We agree with the district cour conclusion that the Stipulation did not necessarily foreclose additional discovery. 18 domestic chores including yard work for him. Based on this evidence, a fact-finder reasonably find that San Filippo would not have been dismissed in the absence of hi protected activities. Accordingly, even if the denial of the Rule 56(f) motion wer erroneous, we would vacate the grant of summary judgment. In light of our decision to vacate the district court's grant of summary judgment on San Filippo's first amendment claim, we need to address certain other i that are relevant to the course of proceedings on remand. A. Protected activity As explained above, one who alleges retaliatory discharge from government employment must establish that the conduct which triggered the discharge was protec under the first amendment. Where the alleged retaliation is based on expressive co constituting speech, a court must first determine whether or not the speech can be characterized as addressing a "matter of public concern," for a governmental employ makes public complaints about problems not of "public concern" has no first amendme immunity against employer discipline. Connick v. Myers, 461 U.S. 138, 147 (1983).0 San Filippo's expressive conduct was not limited to speech. It included the filing of lawsuits, and also of grievances under a collective bargaining agreement, agains 0 A public employer is not precluded altogether from dismissing an employer for spee addressing a matter of public concern. Rather, a public employer may dismiss an em for speech addressing a matter of public concern if the state's interest, as an emp in promoting the efficiency of its operations outweighs the employee's interest, as citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern. Connick, 461 U.S. at 142. balancing test comes into play only if the public employer concedes that it dismiss employee because of the employee's protected speech but contends that it was justif doing so. Rutgers denies that it dismissed San Filippo for his protected activitie accordingly, the balancing test has no application in the case at bar. The court decides, as a matter of law, whether the speech at issue addres matter of public concern and whether the state's interest in efficiency outweighed employee's interest in commenting on matters of public concern. See Holder v. City Allentown, 987 F.2d 188, 195 n.2 (3d Cir. 1993). 19 University and University officials -- activities that implicate the petition claus rather than the free speech clause, of the first amendment.0 The magistrate judge concluded that San Filippo's activities implicating petition clause were protected by the first amendment regardless of whether the "pe at issue addressed a matter of public concern. The district court disagreed, and h that, to qualify for first amendment protection, San Filippo's "petition" activitie meet the Connick "public concern" threshold. Although the district court concluded some of San Filippo's speech addressed matters of public concern,0 the court conclu that his lawsuits and grievances did not meet that threshold. On appeal, San Filippo and the Rutgers AAUP recognize that the right to petition, like freedom of speech, is not absolute. They argue that San Filippo's l and grievances were protected first amendment activities, regardless of content, un they were baseless. Rutgers contends that the district court correctly held that S Filippo's lawsuits and grievances were protected under the petition clause only if addressed matters of public concern.0 0 The first amendment states in relevant part: Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of t press, or of the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petiti Government for a redress of grievances. United States Constitution, Amend. 1. 0 The district court concluded that the following items of speech addressed matters public concern: (1) San Filippo's 1979 statement in a school newspaper criticizing Rutgers for inadequate ventilation in the chemistry labs; (2) San Filippo's testimo 1977 and 1978, before a grand jury, regarding an investigation into the manufacture illegal drugs in Rutgers' laboratories; (3) San Filippo's criticisms, in 1983-84, o faculty peers' attempt to secure funding for a mass spectrometer by deceiving feder funding agencies; and (4) San Filippo's disputes between 1979 and 1986 with senior of his department over their efforts to obtain "inappropriate percentages" of his f grants. 0 The district court's conclusion that San Filippo engaged in some protected activit not make this dispute academic. San Filippo wants, (a) the fact-finder to be instr that dismissal in retaliation for any or all of his lawsuits and grievances constit first amendment violation, and (b) to argue to the fact-finder that the close proxi 20 In Bradley v. Pittsburgh Bd. of Educ., 913 F.2d 1064 (3d Cir. 1990), we expressly declined to reach the question whether a public employee is protected und petition clause against retaliation for having filed a petition addressing solely a of private concern. See id. at 1076. We now will address that question. Although the Supreme Court has not discussed the scope of the constitutio right to petition in the context of an allegedly retaliatory discharge of a public employee, the Court has had occasion to consider the scope of that right in other contexts. In Eastern R.R. Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U (1961), the Court addressed the question whether a publicity campaign by railroads intended to encourage legislation and law enforcement practices disadvantageous to trucking industry violated the Sherman Act. First, the Court took note of the esta principle that, if a restraint of trade is caused by otherwise valid governmental a there is no Sherman Act violation. See id. at 135-36. Then, the Court went on to that the Sherman Act does not prohibit two or more persons from working together in attempt to persuade the government to take a particular action that would restrain See id. at 136. The Court based its decision upon two grounds. First, the Court r that nothing in the legislative history of the Sherman Act indicated an intent to r political activity by narrowing the channels through which citizens communicate wit governing officials. See id. at 137. The Court then added: Secondly, and of at least equal significance, such a construction of the Act would raise important constitutional questions. The right of petitio one of the freedoms protected by the Bill of Rights, and we cannot, of co lightly impute to Congress an intent to invade these freedoms. time between his 1985 lawsuits and the decision to file formal charges against him supports an inference of retaliation. 21 Id. at 138. Moreover, the Court rejected the contention that there was a Sherman A violation because the railroads' purpose was to destroy the truckers as competitors There may be situations in which a publicity campaign, ostensibly directe toward influencing governmental action, is a mere sham to cover what is a nothing more than an attempt to interfere directly with the business relationships of a competitor and the application of the Sherman Act woul justified. But this is certainly not the case here. No one denied that railroads were making a genuine effort to influence legislation and law enforcement practices. Id. at 144. Accord, United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657, 670 (1965).0 In California Motor Transport Co. v. Trucking Unlimited, 404 U.S. 508 (19 the Court developed the "mere sham" exception to petition clause protection suggest the Noerr dictum. Competitors of highway carriers regularly brought administrative judicial proceedings to challenge the carriers' applications for operating rights. highway carriers filed a complaint alleging that their competitors conspired to mon trade by instituting actions before administrative agencies and courts to defeat th carriers' applications to acquire operating rights. See id. at 509. The complaint further alleged that the competitors instituted the proceedings to oppose the carri applications without regard to the merits of the cases, in an effort to prevent the carriers from having meaningful access to the agencies and courts. See id. at 511. Supreme Court held that the district court improperly dismissed the complaint for f to state a claim under the antitrust laws. The Court first reiterated the holding Noerr that "no cause of action [is] alleged insofar as it [is] predicated upon mere attempts to influence the Legislative Branch for the passage of laws or the Executi Branch for their enforcement." Id. at 510. The Court further stated: 0 In Pennington, coal operators and a labor union had approached the Secretary of La the Tennessee Valley Association regarding the minimum wage for contractors selling to the TVA. The Court reaffirmed the holding of Noerr that "[j]oint efforts to inf public officials do not violate the antitrust laws even though intended to eliminat competition." 381 U.S. at 670. 22 The same philosophy governs the approach of citizens or groups of them to administrative agencies (which are both creatures of the legislature, and of the executive) and to courts, the third branch of Government. The rig access to the courts is indeed but one aspect of the right of petition. We conclude that it would be destructive of rights of association an petition to hold that groups with common interests may not, without viola the antitrust laws, use the channels and procedures of state and federal agencies and courts to advocate their causes and points of view respectin resolution of their business and economic interests vis-a-vis their compe Id. at 510-11 (citations omitted). Nonetheless, the Court held that the conduct de in the carriers' complaint fell within the "sham" litigation exception described in and thus stated a claim under the antitrust laws. The unprotected status of "sham litigation" was again recognized in Bill Johnson's Restaurants Inc. v. NLRB, 461 U.S. 731 (1983), in which the Court announc "baseless litigation is not immunized by the First Amendment right to petition." I 743. In Bill Johnson's Restaurants, a waitress who was fired filed an unfair labor practice charge. She and other waitresses also picketed the restaurant, which in tu filed a complaint in state court seeking both damages and an injunction against the picketing. The waitress then filed a second charge with the Board, alleging that t restaurant had filed the state action in retaliation for her exercise of rights und National Labor Relations Act and seeking to have the restaurant's state action enjo The Board issued a cease-and-desist order to halt the allegedly retaliatory state c lawsuit, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed. The issue before the Supreme Court was whether, under section 8 of the NL Board may issue a cease-and-desist order to halt a state court suit solely upon a s that the suit was filed for a retaliatory purpose, or whether the suit must also la merit. The Court recognized that the Board's position -- that the suit need only b for a retaliatory purpose -- found support in the broad remedial provisions of the However, the Court concluded: 23 There are weighty countervailing considerations . . . that militate again allowing the Board to condemn the filing of a suit as an unfair labor pra and to enjoin its prosecution. In California Motor Transport, we recogni that the right of access to the courts is an aspect of the First Amendmen to petition the Government for redress of grievances. Accordingly, we co the antitrust laws as not prohibiting the filing of a lawsuit, regardless plaintiff's anticompetitive intent or purpose in doing so, unless the sui "mere sham" filed for harassment purposes. We should be sensitive to the First Amendment values in construing the NLRA in the present context. Id. at 741 (citations omitted). The Court held that suits lacking a reasonable bas not fall within the scope of first amendment protection. The Court explained: The first amendment interests involved in private litigation -- compensat violated rights and interests, the psychological benefits of vindication, airing of disputed facts -- are not advanced when the litigation is based intentional falsehoods or on knowingly frivolous claims. Furthermore, si sham litigation by definition does not involve a bona fide grievance, it not come within the first amendment right to petition. Id. at 743 (internal quotation omitted). Accordingly, the Court concluded that it enjoinable labor practice under §8 of the NLRA to file a baseless lawsuit with the of retaliating against an employee for the exercise of rights protected by the NLRA id.0 In both Smith v. Arkansas State Highway Employees, 441 U.S. 463 (1979) (p curiam) and Minnesota State Bd. for Community Colleges v. Knight, 465 U.S. 284 (198 Court held that the petition clause does not require the government to respond to e communication that the communicator may denominate a petition. In Smith, the Arkan State Highway Commission refused to consider grievances filed by a union on behalf employees, and would respond only to grievances filed by individual employees thems 0 Following Bill Johnson's Restaurants in Hoeber on behalf of the NLRB v. Local 30, F.2d 118 (3d Cir. 1991), this court held that the district court properly denied th NLRB's request that the court enjoin a pending lawsuit brought by a labor union for of contract. We explained that two factors must be present before an injunction ag civil lawsuit may issue: the plaintiff must have an improper motive for bringing th and the suit must have no reasonable basis. See Hoeber, 939 F.2d at 126. 24 In Knight, a state statute required public employers to respond to union representa but not to individual employees. In both cases, the Court held that there was no p clause violation. The Knight Court, which described the challenged conduct as the converse of conduct challenged in Smith, rejected the employees' claim that "they h right to force officers of the State acting in an official policy-making capacity t listen to them in a particular formal setting." Knight, 465 U.S. at 282. Most recently, in McDonald v. Smith, 472 U.S. 479 (1985), the Court addre the question whether the petition clause provides absolute immunity to a defendant with defaming the plaintiff in a letter about the plaintiff written to the Presiden the United States. Smith, an unsuccessful aspirant for appointment as United State Attorney, brought a libel suit against McDonald, alleging that McDonald had written letters to Ronald Reagan -- the first when Mr. Reagan was President-elect, the seco month after his inauguration --accusing Smith of, among other things, fraud, extort and civil rights violations. The Court held that the petition clause does not prov absolute immunity in that context; rather, a petitioner whose communications are defamatory may be answerable in libel if he is shown to have acted with malice, as in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964). In reaching this conclusio Court observed: The right to petition is cut from the same cloth as the other guarantees First] Amendment, and is an assurance of a particular freedom of expressi . . To accept petitioner's claim of absolute immunity would elevate the Petit Clause to special First Amendment status. The Petition Clause, however, inspired by the same ideals of liberty and democracy that gave us the fre to speak, publish, and assemble. These First Amendment rights are insepa and there is no sound basis for granting greater constitutional protectio statements made in a petition to the President than other First Amendment expressions. McDonald, 472 U.S. at 482, 485 (citations omitted). 25 As the arguments advanced in the briefs in the case at bar make clear, th Supreme Court cases we have just canvassed, while long on nuance, do not yield an e identified single common denominator. San Filippo and the Rutgers AAUP would have us regard San Filippo's petit activities protected under the first amendment unless those petitions were "mere sh "baseless litigation." They stress that none of the very narrow limitations the Su Court has placed on the right to petition involves an examination of the content of petition. They also argue that the petitions at issue in Noerr and Pennington did address matters of public concern, and therefore those cases implicitly rejected th proposition that petitioning is protected under the first amendment only if the pet addresses a matter of public concern. The Rutgers AAUP contends that "there is eve reason that the lines drawn around the right to petition in public employment be th as those drawn for selfish petitioners everywhere." That is, the Rutgers AAUP woul us define the contours of the right to petition without consideration of the contex which that right is exercised. In contrast, Rutgers argues -- we think persuasively --that "[t]he nature limitation upon the petition right depends upon context." Rutgers contends that th Supreme Court cases analyzing the extent of the petition right in the antitrust, la and libel contexts are not necessarily instructive in the case at bar, which concer ability of a government employer to dismiss an employee for filing lawsuits and gri against the employer. This argument that the scope of the petition right depends u context in which the right is exercised is particularly persuasive because the scop the free speech right -- a right that, like the petition right, is stated in unqual terms in the first amendment --depends on the context in which that right is exerci 0 San Filippo and the Rutgers AAUP rely upon cases from contexts other than public employment/retaliatory discharge in support of the argument that a lawsuit is prote regardless of content -- unless it is baseless. Most significantly, San Filippo co that our decision in Hoeber on behalf of the NLRB v. Local 30, 939 F.2d 118 (3d Cir 26 That the scope of the right to petition depends upon context does not, ho mandate the further conclusion that the "public concern" threshold of Connick shoul the right to petition in the context of a government employer's ability to discipli public employee. The general question posed by the case at bar is whether -- notwithstanding the dicta from McDonald quoted above -- there are contexts in which petition clause protects values additional to those protected by the speech clause. McDonald is a case in which the petition clause protects no value that is protected by the speech clause. The petition at issue in McDonald was a letter to t President. Smith and Knight instruct that not every communication which the writer denominates a "petition" imposes on the government agency or official addressed an obligation to respond. See Knight, 465 U.S. at 285; Smith, 441 U.S. at 465. Accor it is difficult to distinguish in any meaningful way between words contained in a l to the President and words contained in, for example, an advertisement appearing in New York Times. This difficulty presumably was the underpinning of the McDonald Court's holding tha McDonald's words about a public figure should not be immunized simply because they appeared in a letter characterized as a "petition." Moreover, the reasons for hold forecloses Rutgers' position. As explained in note 16, supra, in Hoeber we held, following Bill Johnson's Restaurants, Inc. v. NLRB, 461 U.S. 731 (1983), that a cou not enjoin a pending lawsuit as an unfair labor practice unless the plaintiff had a improper motive for bringing the suit and the suit had no reasonable basis. See Ho 939 F.2d at 126. San Filippo argues that, because the breach of contract lawsuit a in Hoeber appeared to address only matters of private concern, the case supports hi argument that his lawsuits and grievances addressing only matters of private concer protected under the petition clause. We disagree. Because this case does not aris the public employment/retaliatory discharge context, it is not on point. Many other cases cited by San Filippo and the AAUP are similarly inapposi because they arise in other contexts. See, e.g., Milhouse v. Carlson, 652 F.2d 371 (3d Cir. 1981) (disciplinary proceedings allegedly brought against a prisoner in retaliation for having filed a civil rights lawsuit); Goff v. Burton, 7 F.3d 734, 7 Cir. 1993) (same); Smith v. Maschner, 899 F.2d 940 (10th Cir. 1990) (same); Wright Newsome, 795 F.2d 964 (11th Cir. 1986) (same); Duvall v. Sharp, 905 F.2d 1188 (8th 1990) (arrest allegedly made in retaliation for filing a civil rights lawsuit). 27 that the first amendment does not immunize maliciously defamatory falsehoods contai a newspaper advertisement equally justify holding that the first amendment does not immunize maliciously defamatory falsehoods contained in a letter to the President. is no value in a petition that seeks to influence the President by means of false statements. As in the context of speech, the additional requirement that malice be before liability may be imposed avoids overdeterrence. The same difficulty in drawing a meaningful distinction between the speec in the petition at issue in Schalk v. Gallemore, 906 F.2d 491 (10th Cir. 1990) (per curiam) and other employee speech underlies the holding of that case. Schalk, a ho employee, had hand-delivered to the hospital board members a four-page letter descr her concerns about various management practices at the hospital. Schalk was formal reprimanded for complaining about matters unrelated to her area of responsibility. reprimand indicated that Schalk would be discharged if she made further complaints nature. After Schalk told a board member that she wanted to meet with the board to discuss concerns akin to those described in her letter, she was terminated. Schalk filed a lawsuit alleging that she was fired for writing a letter to, and later spea with, board members about management practices, in violation of her first amendment and petition rights. The Tenth Circuit first held that Schalk's letter and her comments to the member addressed a matter of public concern. Id. at 496. In a brief analysis of S petition clause claim, the court stated: "In the instant case, Schalk's right to p is inseparable from her right to speak. As such, we see no reason to subject this to a different sort of analysis." Id. at 498 (citing McDonald). As in McDonald, b the "petition" at issue was simply a letter imposing on the government no obligatio respond, it was properly analyzable under the conventional Connick rubric applicabl speech. 28 The case at bar is unlike Schalk in the sense that what San Filippo characterizes as "petitions" are not letters to the government-employer, but lawsui grievances directed at the government-employer or its officials. Submissions of th purport to invoke formal mechanisms for the redress of grievances.0 Notwithstandin distinction, each circuit court to consider the issue has held that a public employ alleges that he or she was disciplined in retaliation for having filed a lawsuit ag his or her employer does not state a claim under §1983 unless the lawsuit addressed matter of public concern.0 Recognizing that the question is a difficult one, we fi ourselves unable to subscribe to the reasoning of our sister circuits. Of these circuits, the Seventh Circuit has addressed the issue in the mos detail. In Altman v. Hurst, 734 F.2d 1240 (7th Cir. 1984) (per curiam), decided be McDonald, the Seventh Circuit held that a police officer who alleged that he was reassigned, denied overtime opportunities and otherwise harassed in retaliation for a lawsuit against his employer addressing matters of private concern did not state under §1983. The court explained: Several Supreme Court cases indicate that the first amendment protects a person's right to seek judicial redress of grievances. See NAACP v. Butt U.S. 415, 429. A close reading of these cases clearly shows that the Cou 0 Lawsuits, grievances, workers compensation claims, etc. share this feature of invo formal mechanism for redress of grievances against the government. We occasionally the term "lawsuit" to encompass any device invoking a mechanism for redress of grie against the government. 0 See White Plains Towing Corp. v. Patterson, 991 F.2d 1049, 1059 (2d Cir. 1993); Da South Park Independent Sch. Dist., 768 F.2d 696, 703 (5th Cir. 1985), cert. denied, U.S. 1101 (1986); Rathjen v. Litchfield, 878 F.2d 836, 842 (5th Cir. 1989); Rice v. Ohio Dep't of Transportation, 887 F.2d 716, 720-21 (6th Cir. 1989), vacated other grounds, 497 U.S. 1001 (1990); Altman v. Hurst, 734 F.2d 1240, 1244 n.10 (7th 1984) (per curiam); Belk v. Town of Minocqua, 858 F.2d 1258, 1261-62 (7th Cir. 1988 Gearhart v. Thorne, 768 F.2d 1072, 1073 (9th Cir. 1985) (per curiam); Renfroe v. Kirkpatrick, 722 F.2d 714, 715 (11th Cir.) (per curiam), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 823 (1984). Cf. Boyle v. Burke, 925 F.2d 497, 505-06 (1st Cir. 1991) (dicta). But see Fuchilla v. Prockop, 682 F. Supp. 247, 262 (D.N.J. 1987), (reading California Motor Transport to support the holding that a public employee may not be retaliated again filing a lawsuit regardless of whether the lawsuit addressed a matter of public con 29 concerned about political expression and not the general right to bring s a federal court of law. See, e.g., Button, 371 U.S. at 429. ("In the con NAACP objectives, litigation is not a technique of resolving private differences; it is a means of achieving the lawful objectives of equality treatment by all government, federal, state and local, for the members of Negro community in this county. It is thus a form of political expression This formulation dovetails with the Connick rule that limits the first am protection given public employees to pronouncements on public issues. Th private office dispute cannot be constitutionalized merely by filing a le action. Id. at 1244 n.10 (some citations omitted).0 That is, the Seventh Circuit explicitl rejected the proposition that the petition clause protects access to the courts for reason other than that the courts may serve as fora for expression. In Belk v. Tow Minocqua, 858 F.2d 1258, 1261-62 (7th Cir. 1988), the Seventh Circuit relied on McD as further support for its holding that a public employee may be terminated in reta 0 The Seventh Circuit reiterated this sentiment in Yatvin v. Madison Metropolitan Sc Dist., 840 F.2d 412 (7th Cir. 1988): The contention that every act of retaliation against a person who files c of wrongdoing with a public agency denies freedom of speech or the right petition for redress of grievances rests on the following syllogism: lit is a method recognized by the Supreme Court, as in NAACP v. Button, 371 U 415, 429-31 (1963), for advancing ideas and seeking redress of grievances retaliation against one who institutes litigation (or its condition prece Title VII litigation, the lodging of charges with civil rights agencies) discourages litigation; therefore such retaliation invades a First Amendm right. The weakness is the first premise, which is stated too broadly. litigation seeks to advance political or other ideas; litigation by the N seeking to eliminate public school segregation is an example. And even w litigation has private rather than public objectives, communications desi acquaint individuals with their legal rights are within the scope of the Amendment. But not every legal gesture -- not every legal pleading -- is protected by the First Amendment. Remedies against baseless litigation d violate the First Amendment's right to petition; nor do laws aimed at det 'far out' suits by requiring the loser to pay the winner's legal fees. Id. at 419 (citations omitted). Because the court concluded that Yatvin's sex discrimination claim against her employer had purely private objectives, the court rejected Yatvin's claim that her employer's retaliation violated the petition claus at 419-20. This conclusion may, however, be regarded as dictum because the court a held that Yatvin's first amendment claim was foreclosed by her failure to raise the below with sufficient particularity. See id. at 420. 30 for filing a grievance unless the grievance addressed a matter of public concern. Belk court stated: Notwithstanding the central importance Connick attaches to the content of public employee's speech, Belk asks us to accord absolute first amendment protection, without regard to content, to any grievance a public employee or threatens to file. Not only is there no legal or historical precedent such a stratification of first amendment freedoms, as McDonald suggests, such special treatment of the right to petition would unjustly favor thos through foresight or mere fortuity present their speech as a grievance ra than in some other form. Id. at 1262 (emphasis in original). Again, affording special treatment to speech f a grievance is "unjust" only if no independent reason exists for affording special protection to a mechanism for redress of grievances against the government. There is an additional argument for testing a public employee's lawsuits his or her employer by the Connick public concern threshold not made in the Seventh Circuit cases: namely, that the governmental interests which led the Court to impos public concern threshold on employee speech would appear to justify imposing a simi threshold on employee lawsuits and grievances. Under Connick, employers are able t discipline their employees for speech unless the speech addresses a matter of publi concern. The rationale for this distinction is that it represents an effort to see balance between the interests of the [employee], as a citizen, in commenting upon m of public concern and the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees." Connick, 461 at 142. The Supreme Court recently elaborated on the basis for authorizing the gov as employer to exercise broader power in regulating the speech of its employees tha government as sovereign may exercise in regulating the speech of the general public [T]he extra power the government has in this area comes from the nat the government's mission as employer. Government agencies are charged by with doing particular tasks. Agencies hire employees to help do those ta effectively and efficiently as possible. When someone who is paid a sala 31 that she will contribute to an agency's effective operation begins to say things that detract from the agency's effective operation, the government employer must have some power to restrain her. The reason the government in the example given above, fire the [high-ranking] deputy [who criticize state governor's legislative program] is not that this dismissal would so be narrowly tailored to a compelling government interest. It is that the governor and the governor's staff have a job to do, and the governor just feels that a quieter subordinate would allow them to do this job more efficiently. The key to First Amendment analysis of government employment decisio then, is this: The government's interest in achieving its goals as effec and efficiently as possible is elevated from a relatively subordinate int when it acts as sovereign to a relatively significant one when it acts as employer. The government cannot restrict speech of the public at large ju the name of efficiency. But where the government is employing someone fo very purpose of effectively achieving its goals, such restrictions may we appropriate. Waters v. Churchill, 62 U.S.L.W. 4397, 4401 (May 31, 1994). We recognize that employee lawsuits and grievances against a public emplo can, on occasion, be divisive in much the same way that employee speech can be. Nonetheless, we believe that there is an independent reason -- a reason of constitu dimension -- to protect an employee lawsuit or grievance if it is of the sort that constitutes a "petition" within the meaning of the first amendment. The first amendment's petition clause imposes on the United States an obl to have at least some channel open for those who seek redress for perceived grievan Through its incorporation of the first amendment, the fourteenth amendment's guaran "liberty" imposes the same obligation on the states. Smith and Knight stand only fo proposition that neither the United States nor the several states are required to recognize as a "petition" whatever particular communication is so characterized by chooses to protest governmental acts or omissions. But when government -- federal state -- formally adopts a mechanism for redress of those grievances for which gove is allegedly accountable, it would seem to undermine the Constitution's vital purpo hold that one who in good faith files an arguably meritorious "petition" invoking t 32 mechanism may be disciplined for such invocation by the very government that in com with the petition clause has given the particular mechanism its constitutional impr We do not share the Seventh Circuit's apprehension that not applying the Connick "p concern" standard to retaliatory dismissal of a public employee who files a "petiti would constitute "special treatment of the right to petition [that] would unjustly those who through foresight or mere fortuity present their speech as a grievance ra than in some other form." Balk, 858 F.2d at 1262. As applied to communications th not petitions, the Connick rule means that a public employee who goes public -- e.g writing to The New York Times -- with an employment dispute that is not of "public concern" runs the risk of being disciplined by her public employer for undertaking public attention to a private dispute. But when one files a "petition" one is not appealing over government's head to the general citizenry: when one files a "petit one is addressing government and asking government to fix what, allegedly, governme broken or has failed in its duty to repair.0 0 Like the Seventh Circuit in Belk, our dissenting colleague draws comfort from the Court's observation in McDonald that the first amendment right to petition and the amendment "freedoms to speak, publish and assemble . . . are inseparable" and hence is no sound basis for granting greater constitutional protection to statements made petition to the President than other First Amendment expressions." 472 U.S. at 485 it is important to note that the Court's language in McDonald was addressed to a qu very different from the question presented in Belk and the case at bar. In McDonal question was whether one who was defamed in a letter was disabled from suing the le writer by virtue of the fact that the letter was written to the President and thus be characterized as a "petition" within the meaning of the first amendment. In hol that the letter-writer was amenable to suit at the hands of the person defamed, und same state law standards, compatible with New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 that would have applied had the letter been written to a newspaper, the Court was n called upon the consider the question presented in the case at bar -- namely, wheth addressee of a "petition" (in McDonald, the President) could sanction the letter-wr for pursuing a constitutionally charted pathway of communication with government. It is also worthy of note that the letter-writer in McDonald apparently did not the audience for his defamatory efforts to President Reagan. The letter-writer all also saw fit to send copies of one or both of the letters to Senator Jesse Helms, t members of the House of Representatives, and the then Director of the Federal Burea Investigation, William Webster, as well as then Presidential Adviser Edwin Meese. U.S. at 481. 33 One example of formal governmental adoption of a mechanism for redress of grievances is entry into a collective bargaining agreement that provides for a grie procedure. Another example of formal government adoption of such a mechanism is wai sovereign immunity from suit in the courts of that sovereign. If government could, employer, freely discharge an employee for the reason that the employee, in order t present a non-sham claim against the government-employer, invoked such a mechanism, petition clause of the first amendment would, for public employees seeking to vindi their employee interests, be a trap for the unwary -- and a dead letter. The petition clause of the first amendment was not intended to be a dead -- or a graceful but redundant appendage of the clauses guaranteeing freedom of spe press. To be sure, "the right to petition," as the Court noted in McDonald, "is cu the same cloth as the other guarantees of that Amendment. . . ." 472 U.S. at 482. the Court in McDonald also stressed that the right to petition "is an assurance of particular freedom of expression." Ibid. More to the point, the right to petition pedigree independent of --and substantially more ancient -- than the freedoms of sp and press. The Court pointed out in McDonald that "[T]he historical roots of the P Clause long antedate the Constitution. In 1689, the Bill of Rights exacted of Will Mary stated: '[I]t is the Right of the Subjects to petition the King.' 1 Wm. & Mar 0 Sess. 2, ch. 2." Ibid. But of particular moment for the issue before us is that 0 The remote antecedents of the right of petition trace back to Magna Carta, chapte which provides: . . . if we or our justiciar, or our bailiffs, or any of our servants shall have done wrong in any way toward any one, or shall have transgressed any of the articles of peace or security; and the wrong shall have been shown to four barons of the aforesaid twenty-five barons, let those four barons come to us or to our justiciar, if we are out of the kingdom, laying before us the transgression, and let them ask that we cause that transgression to be corrected without delay. 34 Parliament, in the Bill of Rights, not only declared the right of subjects "to peti the King," but went on to provide that "all committments [sic] and prosecutions for petitioning are illegal." 1 W. & M., 2d Sess., c. 2, § 5, 16 Dec. 1689. The right petition and its attendant, and indispensable, immunity from "committments and prosecutions"0 were, in the Court's felicitous phrase, "exacted of William and Mary McDonald, 472 U.S. at 482, in 1689. That was precisely one hundred years before the But of course the right lukewarmly acknowledged by King John was exercisable only b barons. 0 The critical importance of Parliament's declaration that it was "illegal" to penal subject "for such petitioning" was made plain by Blackstone in his celebrated Commentaries, the series of law books best known to American lawyers of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries: If there should happen any uncommon injury, or infringement of the rights before mentioned, which the ordinary course of law is too defective to reach, there still remains a fourth subordinate right, appertaining to every individual, namely, the right of petitioning the king, or either house of parliament, for the redress of grievances. In Russia we are told that the czar Peter established a law, that no subject might petition the throne till he had first petitioned two different ministers of state. In case he obtained justice from neither, he might then present a third petition to the prince; but upon pain of death, if found to be in the wrong: the consequence of which was, that no one dared to offer such third petition; and grievances seldom falling under the notice of the sovereign, he had little opportunity to redress them. The restrictions, for some there are, which are laid upon petitioning in England, are of a nature extremely different; and, while they promote the spirit of peace, they are no check upon that of liberty. Care only must be taken, lest, under the pretence of petitioning, the subject be guilty of any riot or tumult, as happened in the opening of the memorable parliament in 1640: and, to prevent this, it is provided by the statute 13 Car. II. st. I, C. 5, that no petition to the king, or either house of parliament, for any alteration in church or state, shall be signed by above twenty persons, unless the matter thereof be approved by three justices of the peace, or the major part of the grand jury in the country; and in London by the lord mayor, aldermen, and common council: nor shall any petition be presented by more than ten persons at a time. But, under these regulations, it is declared by the statute I W. and M. st. 2, c. 2, that the subject hath a right to petition; and that all commitments and prosecutions for such petitioning are illegal. 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries *143. 35 Congress charged with implementing America's new Constitution submitted to the stat ratification, proposed amendments to that Constitution permanently establishing in American law the right of petition and other fundamental rights. There is no persu reason for the right of petition to mean less today than it was intended to mean in England three centuries ago. On remand, the district court should consider which, if any, of San Filip grievances and lawsuits constituted a "petition," and whether any such "petition" w sham. The mere act of filing a non-sham petition is not a constitutionally permiss ground for discharge of a public employee. B. Substantial factor Our decision to vacate the grant of summary judgment on San Filippo's fir amendment claim also requires us to consider Rutgers' argument that, contrary to th district court's conclusion, it was entitled to summary judgment because San Filipp cannot show that his protected conduct "was a substantial factor in the alleged retaliatory action." Czurlanis v. Albanese, 721 F.2d 98, 103 (3d Cir. 1983). The district court explained that courts have drawn an inference of retal based on the nearness in time between the protected activity and a discharge. Alth the district court believed that no fact-finder could reasonably infer that San Fil protected activities in 1977-1979 and 1983-84 were a substantial factor motivating dismissal, the court concluded that San Filippo was brought up on charges and dismi 36 sufficiently soon after he made protected statements in or around 19860 to raise an inference of retaliation.0 At the outset, we disagree with the district court's view that San Filipp protected activities in 1977-79 and 1983-84 were too far removed in time to support inference of retaliation. Although a dismissal that occurs years after protected a might not ordinarily support an inference of retaliation, where, as here, a plainti engages in subsequent protected activity and the plaintiff is dismissed shortly aft final episode of such protected activity, a fact-finder may reasonably infer that i the aggregate of the protected activities that led to retaliatory dismissal. This inference would be particularly strong if the plaintiff can show that the decisionm lacked a pretext on which to dismiss the plaintiff until shortly before the time of dismissal. Rutgers argues that the temporal proximity between San Filippo's protecte activities and the disciplinary proceedings against him cannot, by itself, support inference that the protected activity was a substantial factor in the alleged retal action. We need not address this argument, however, because San Filippo has additi evidence to support his allegation that he was dismissed in retaliation for his pro activity. The evidence described above as support for San Filippo's position that would not have been dismissed absent his protected activities -- the statements of Edelstein and Board of Governors member Wechsler and the evidence that other facult members committed infractions of comparable seriousness yet went unpunished -- equa support his position that his protected conduct was a substantial factor motivating 0 The court presumably was referring to San Filippo's disputes with senior members o department over their efforts to obtain "inappropriate percentages" of his federal and particularly his complaint to the University in October, 1985 about the chemist department's attempts to divert funds improperly from his federal grants under the of a "shop-user's fee." See page 5, supra. San Filippo was orally informed of the charges against him in November, 1985. 0 The activities found by the district court to address matters of public concern ar described briefly at note 13, supra. 37 dismissal. On the basis of this evidence, we conclude that a fact-finder could rea find that San Filippo's protected conduct was a substantial factor motivating his dismissal. Rutgers next argues that San Filippo is inappropriately seeking to impute to the members of the Board of Governors the improper motives of responsible for bringing charges against him. Rutgers contends that, under Monell Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978) and St. Louis v. Praprotnik, 485 112, 123 (1988), the University can only be held liable if the Board members person determined to dismiss San Filippo on the basis of his first amendment activities or knowingly acquiesced in the decision to do so by approving both the decision and th allegedly improper basis for it. But this, according to San Filippo, is too narrow standard of liability: in San Filippo's view, the University should be held liable fact-finder concludes that (a) the charges against San Filippo were initiated in retaliation for the exercise of his first amendment rights and (b) the Board member "deliberately indifferent" to that fact. In Monell, the Supreme Court held that, although municipalities and other governing bodies can be sued under 42 U.S.C. §1983, liability cannot be imposed on entity on a theory of vicarious liability for the torts of the entity's employees. Rather, a local governing body can be held liable only for an official policy or cu See Monell, 436 U.S. at 694. A single decision by a final policy-maker, as defined state law, may constitute official policy. See Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati, 475 469, 480-81 (1986). Rutgers argues that the Board of Governors is the only final p maker in this case, and that the Board did not have a retaliatory motive when it vo dismiss San Filippo. San Filippo contends that he need only show that the Board members were "deliberately indifferent" to the fact that he had been brought up on charges in retaliation for the exercise of his first amendment rights. He relies on City of C 38 Ohio v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378 (1989), in which the Supreme Court held that Canton's to train police officers to give medical attention could be a basis for imposing §1 liability if "the failure to train amount[ed] to deliberate indifference to the rig persons with whom the police [came] into contact." Id. at 388. The Canton Court explained that the use of the deliberate indifference standard was most consistent the Court's "admonition in Monell that a municipality can be liable under §1983 onl its policies are the 'moving force [behind] the constitutional violation.'" Id. at (citations omitted). The Tenth Circuit extended Canton to a situation analogous to the case at Ware v. Unified School Dist. No. 492, 902 F.2d 815 (10th Cir. 1990). The plaintiff Ware served as clerk to a school board and secretary to the superintendent of the s district. She alleged that her superintendent had recommended to the board that sh dismissed in retaliation for her protected speech, and that the board had acted wit deliberate indifference to her first amendment rights in approving the termination. Ware court rejected the board's argument that Canton be limited to its facts, and h There is evidence in the record to support Ware's claim that the Boa acted with deliberate indifference to her First Amendment rights in appro her termination. . . . The record contains evidence that board members k about Ware's public stand on the bond issue and were informed of her beli her termination was in retaliation for that stand. . . . Notwithstanding above indications that the board knew [the superintendent's] recommendati in retaliation for Ware's position on the bond issue, the board made no independent investigation, asked [the superintendent] no questions about reasons for his decision. . . . The evidence is sufficient to create a j question on whether the board acted with deliberate indifference to Ware' Amendment rights in approving [the superintendent's] recommendation. Id. at 819-20. We agree with the Tenth Circuit that its application of the deliberate indifference standard of Canton is most consistent with the "'admonition in Monell municipality can be liable under §1983 only where its policies are the moving force 39 [behind] the constitutional violation.'" Ware, 902 F.2d at 819 (quoting Canton, 48 at 388-89) (citations omitted). Nor is this use of the deliberate indifference sta inconsistent with City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik, 485 U.S. 112, 124 (1988) (plural opinion). Praprotnik recognized that final decision-making power may be delegated, that a local governing body may be held liable based upon the exercise of this dele power. See id. at 124. But the Court added: Simply going along with discretionary decisions made by one's subordinate however, is not a delegation to them of the authority to make policy. It equally consistent with a presumption that the subordinates are faithfull attempting to comply with the policies that are supposed to guide them. would be a different matter if a particular decision by a subordinate was in the form of a policy statement and expressly approved by the supervisi policymaker. It would also be a different matter if a series of decision subordinate official manifested a "custom or usage" of which the supervis have been aware. . . . But the mere failure to investigate the basis of subordinate's discretionary decisions does not amount to a delegation of policymaking authority, especially where (as here) the wrongfulness of th subordinate's decision arises from a retaliatory motive or other unstated rationale. Id. at 130. In addition to holding that the "mere failure to investigate the basis subordinate's discretionary decisions" does not make the subordinate a final policy the Praprotnik Court also implicitly held that the local governing body is not liable f mere failure to investigate by the final policy-maker. Our use of a "deliberate indifference" standard does not make the Univers liable for the Board's mere failure to investigate -- that is, the University would liable if, oblivious to the motivation behind the decision to charge San Filippo an initiate dismissal proceedings, the Board had decided to dismiss San Filippo for wh legitimate reasons. Such a scenario would not amount to deliberate indifference of Board to San Filippo's first amendment rights. The scenario described by San Filip however, goes beyond that of an oblivious Board failing to investigate. 40 San Filippo presented to the district court evidence that the Board had r to suspect that San Filippo's prior protected activities had been a substantial mot factor in the decision to initiate dismissal proceedings. As the magistrate judge "the record is replete with evidence which indicates that the information regarding Filippo's protected activities was well known to the individual members of the Boar (A.2152 n.15). Moreover, Wechsler's dissenting opinion discloses awareness at the of the Board of San Filippo's contention before the Senate Panel that other faculty members had had students perform uncompensated work for them, yet were not discipli (A.325). Finally, the Board's opinion recognizes that San Filippo's attorney, Ira Goldberg, had argued that "the charges brought against Professor San Filippo were fabrications based on a personal 'vendetta' against him by members of his Departmen (A.304). As in Ware, this evidence suffices to create a question for the fact-find regarding whether the ultimate decision-maker acted with deliberate indifference to plaintiff's first amendment rights by approving the recommendation that the plainti dismissed.0 0 The Supreme Court's recent decision in Waters v. Churchill, 62 U.S.L.W. 4397 (May 1994) provides additional support for our use of the Canton "deliberate indifferenc standard in the case at bar. In Waters, the Court addressed the question whether t Connick test should be applied to what the government employer thought the employee or to what the fact-finder ultimately determines was said. The Court took an inter position, holding that a court should accept the employer's factual conclusions, bu if the employer was reasonable in arriving at those conclusions. Id. at 4401-02. elaborating on what would constitute reasonable conduct by an employer, the Court explained: If an employment action is based upon what an employee supposedly sa a reasonable supervisor would recognize that there is a substantial likel that what was actually said was protected, the manager must tread with a amount of care. This need not be the care with which trials, with their of evidence and procedure, are conducted. It should, however, be the car a reasonable manager would use before making an employment decision -- discharge, suspension, reprimand, or whatever else -- of the sort involve the particular case. Justice Scalia correctly points out that such care normally constitutionally required unless the employee has a protected pr interest in her job, but we believe that the possibility of inadvertently 41 III. San Filippo's procedural due process claim San Filippo also asks us to vacate the district court's grant of summary judgment on his procedural due process claim. San Filippo argues that his due proce rights were violated because the five members of the Senate Panel that conducted th hearings and recommended that he be dismissed were not impartial decision-makers an because the proceeding was tainted by the appearance of impropriety. Specifically, Filippo alleges in his Third Amended Complaint: [The] members of the panel were negotiating with the Rutgers Administrato chiefly responsible for supervising the prosecution of the case for addit compensation, thus giving them a financial incentive in the outcome of th proceedings, in that they reasonably would believe that they would get additional compensation only if their final decision was favorable to the Administrator. Furthermore, all the contacts for such additional compens were held in secret, thus leading to the appearance of impropriety on the of the Panel. Both the magistrate judge and the district court rejected San Filippo's argument th fact-finder could reasonably infer that the panel members believed they were more l to be compensated if they recommended that San Filippo be dismissed. In addition, t magistrate judge and district court rejected San Filippo's argument that the "secre negotiations about compensation created an appearance of impropriety. We agree wit conclusions reached by the magistrate judge and district court. The Senate Panel was composed of five faculty members, chosen by lot afte cause and peremptory challenges, whose responsibility was to hold hearings and dete punishing someone for exercising her First Amendment rights makes such ca necessary. Id. at 4402. By holding that the University may be held liable if a fact-finder fi that the Board of Governors was deliberately indifferent to the possibility that di proceedings were initiated against San Filippo in retaliation for the exercise of h first amendment rights, we similarly require his employer to "tread with a certain of care" to avoid "the possibility of inadvertently punishing someone for exercisin First Amendment rights." 42 whether the charges brought against San Filippo were true and constituted grounds f dismissal. The panel had twelve meetings after it convened on December 5, 1986 and the evidentiary hearings began. Between March 24, 1987 and September 22, 1987, the devoted forty-six days to evidentiary hearings. After closing arguments, the panel another twelve meetings before it produced a forty-four page report on December 21, Throughout the hearings, San Filippo was represented by two attorneys, Ira and Pame Goldberg, and a union counsellor provided by the Rutgers AAUP, Dr. Wells Keddie. With the knowledge and consent of San Filippo's attorneys, Dr. Keddie, on 5, 1987, sent a memorandum to the panel chair, Dr. Szatrowski, copied to San Filipp his attorneys. The memorandum suggested various ways to deal with time and schedul problems: I don't have a single original or good idea as to how to resolve the time but there are some things which might mitigate the impact upon the commit members. One of them is the course you are already pursuing, the seeking some relief from normal duties while this demanding activity proceeds. I to me that if the proceedings cannot be concluded by the May 15 date, it be entirely appropriate to request the equivalent of Summer Session pay f of you or released time for those of you (yourself) on "summer vacation" upcoming trimester. But another possibility might well be worth consider released time after this is all over to enable committee members to make considerable lost time, energy, and opportunity. Dr. Keddie also suggested that panel members "be provided meals and accommodations. When it became clear that the hearings would not conclude before commence Szatrowski asked San Filippo's attorney, Ira Goldberg, if he had any objection to Szatrowski asking Dr. Susan Cole, Vice President for University Administration and Personnel, for summer compensation for the panel members. Szatrowski and Goldberg testified in their affidavits that Goldberg voiced no objection and wished Szatrows "good luck." When Szatrowski first requested additional compensation and/or released t the spring of 1987, Cole denied the request because she believed that the panel mem 43 were already under an obligation to participate without extra compensation. In late spring, Szatrowski renewed the request in light of the length of the hearings and t that certain panel members were ordinarily not required to be in attendance at Rutg over the summer. By letters dated July 29, 1987, Cole granted the members their re extra compensation and release time. San Filippo was not told of this decision. Shortly after the summer increases were granted, Szatrowski asked Cole fo further additional compensation when it became clear that the hearings would contin the fall. Cole testified that when Szatrowski approached her about the matter of fu payments, she "told him when the panel was finished with its business, that we coul discuss the matter again." Szatrowski similarly testified: When I asked if this [the refusal to grant more compensation] meant that regardless of the amount of additional time spent on this matter by the panelists while carrying out their normal duties, there would be no furth consideration for additional compensation in the future, Dr. Cole indicat there would be no consideration possible until after the completion of th hearings. Ultimately, after the panel issued its final report recommending that San Filippo b dismissed, Cole recommended that the panel members receive extra compensation. Based upon this factual scenario, San Filippo alleges that the panel memb would have been tempted to reach an outcome in Rutgers' favor because they would ha believed that they were more likely to get extra compensation if they did so. We ag with the magistrate judge and district court that there is insufficient evidence to support an inference that the faculty members believed that their receipt of compen was tied to the outcome of the proceedings. The cases cited by San Filippo are cas which the adjudicator had a direct financial interest in the outcome. See, e.g., T Ohio, 273 U.S. 510, 531 (1927) (mayor acting as judge shared in the fees and costs by him); Ward v. Village of Monroeville, 409 U.S. 57, 60 (1972) (mayor responsible village finances could not act as judge when fines and forfeitures provided substan 44 portion of village funds). The Supreme Court has held that the impermissible pecun interest must be realistic and more than "remote." Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc., 446 238, 250 (1980). We find no evidence in the record to support a conclusion that the members believed that they were more likely to be compensated if they recommended S Filippo's dismissal. San Filippo alternatively argues that the panel members' participation in hearings while negotiating for additional compensation created an appearance of impropriety. See Commonwealth Coatings Corp. v. Continental Casualty Co., 393 U.S. 150 (1968) (arbitration panel "not only must be unbiased but must also avoid the appearance of bias"). Under Commonwealth Coatings, to prevail on an "appearance of impropriety" due process claim, San Filippo must establish both that the events in question would cause one to reasonably question the panel's impartiality and that t information was concealed from San Filippo. San Filippo makes much of the fact tha was not told about the meetings between Szatrowski and Cole; however, in light of t that Keddie suggested that Szatrowski broach the subject of extra compensation, the meetings do not have the invidious character San Filippo suggests. Finally, San Filippo argues that he should have had the opportunity to de Szatrowski to determine what was said in the conversations between Szatrowski and C San Filippo contends that, although he noticed Szatrowski's deposition in August 19 discovery was stayed after November 1989 when the motions for summary judgment were As the district court noted, San Filippo has failed to explain why Szatrowski was n deposed before August 1989 -- particularly, why he was not deposed during the summe fall of 1989 when San Filippo deposed nine other current and former officials and employees of Rutgers. Moreover, San Filippo does not indicate how he expects the deposition testimony of Szatrowski to differ from the testimony found in Szatrowski affidavit, dated April 2, 1990. For these reasons, we conclude that the district co 45 not abuse its discretion by refusing to delay decision on the summary judgment moti until San Filippo had a chance to depose Szatrowski. IV. Conclusion For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part and vacate in part the order district court. We affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment in Rutger favor on San Filippo's due process claim. We vacate the district court's grant of judgment in Rutgers' favor on San Filippo's first amendment claim, and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. 46 Joseph San Filippo, Jr. v. Michael Bongiovanni; Anthony S. Cicatiello; Adrienne S. Anderson; Donald M. Dickerson; Floyd H. Bragg; Norman Reitman, individually and as of the Board of Governors of Rutgers University; RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY, No. 5658 BECKER, Circuit Judge, concurring and dissenting. While I agree with almost all of the majority opinion, I cannot join in conclusion to Part IIA, pages 42 to 47, holding that a public employee is protected the Petition Clause against retaliation for having filed a petition (in the nature lawsuit or grievance) addressing a matter of purely private concern. I would adopt position of the seven other circuits which hold that a public employee plaintiff wh "petitioned" is in no better position than one who has merely exercised free speech Majority Typescript at 37 n.19 (listing circuits). I need not offer extended justification for my position, for the majority already done so when describing these other circuits' views at pages 24 to 41 of it opinion. Although the majority then arrives at a conclusion in contradistinction to preceding analysis, the majority's rationale supporting its conclusion pales by com with the reasoning of the other circuits and with the inexorable logic of McDonald Smith. 472 U.S. 479 (1985). In a nutshell, I simply do not believe that the fact the government adopts a formal redress mechanism gives one who pursues it more prot than if the person had written a letter to the editor or made a speech. As the Sup Court explained in McDonald: The Petition Clause . . . was inspired by the same ideals of liberty and democracy that gave us the freedoms to speak, publish, and assemble. These First Amendment rights are inseparable, and there is no sound basis for granting greater constitutional protection to statements made in a petition to the President than other First Amendment expressions. 472 U.S. at 484-85. The same holds true when the petition is addressed to the cour to university officials. 47 In my view, the Supreme Court would be surprised to learn that, althoug result of "the nature of the government's mission as employer," a public employer ( Rutgers) can fire someone who "begins to say or do things that detract from the age effective operation" so long as the speech is on a matter of private concern, Water Churchill, 62 U.S.L.W. 4397, 4401 (May 31, 1994) (quoted in Majority Typescript at the government cannot fire the same individual if he or she speaks after invoking a mechanism for the redress of grievances (or speaks through that forum). Such an interpretation of the Petition Clause, rather than making that clause a "trap for t unwary" as the majority contends would be the consequence of my interpretation of t Clause, Majority Typescript at 44, is an invitation to the wary to formulate their on matters of private concern as a lawsuit or grievance in order to avoid being disciplined. This would undermine the government's special role as an employer. The majority argues that in contrast to speech on a matter of private con "when one files a `petition' one is not appealing over government's head to the gen citizenry: when one files a `petition' one is addressing government and asking gove to repair what government has broken, or, at least, has failed to repair." Majorit Typescript at 43. But the libelous letter to the President at issue in McDonald, 4 at 484-85, took the form of an address to government rather than the general citize and yet the Court held that the letter received no greater constitutional protectio result. And the fact that San Filippo's speech addressed government did not make it less disruptive of the workplace environment than if it had addressed the general p indeed, the speech may have been more disruptive because it still reached the publi (lawsuits, for example, are matters of public record) and, in addition, compelled t university to respond to the lawsuits and grievances. The majority argues that it would undermine the Constitution's purposes t government to punish someone for invoking a mechanism to which government has given constitutional imprimatur." Majority Typescript at 42. However, the constitutiona 48 imprimatur of the Petition Clause applies equally to the letter to the President at in McDonald as to the lawsuits and grievances at issue here. By waiving sovereign immunity to suit or adopting grievance procedures, the government may give special statutory/regulatory imprimatur to these mechanisms as opposed to other forms of pe such as letters, but it does not give them a special constitutional imprimatur. Mo the government has given its regulatory imprimatur to the letter at issue in McDona setting up an office in the White House that is designed to respond to corresponden Finally, for lawsuits at least, the state's waiver of sovereign immunity is not spe to suits by public employees and thus may not be at all meant as a recognition of a employee's right to file repeated lawsuits against his or her employer. Nor, by adopting such petition mechanisms, does the government somehow in the employee's interest in having free license to protest his or her employer's dec For example, San Filippo would have had the same interest in protesting the failure chemistry department to recommend him for a full professorship if the university ha adopted a grievance procedure. Connick declares that this interest is outweighed b university's interest in regulating its work environment. Finally, the majority's suggestion that a contrary interpretation would r the Petition Clause a "dead letter" is hyperbolic. Inter alia, the clause would st have use when there is a "petition," in lieu of more conventional speech. Moreover, if all petitions now constitute speech (given the broad interpretation the Supreme has given to speech), I do not see why it matters that the guarantees overlap. The certainly petitions that did not constitute speech when the First Amendment was rat meaning that the two clauses were not redundant when initially adopted. In additio First Amendment's guarantees of free speech and a free press also substantially ove See Laurence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law, § 12-22, at 971 & nn. 2-3 (2d e 1988). Cf. Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665, 684 (1972) ("It has generally been he the First Amendment does not guarantee the press a constitutional right of special 49 information not available to the public generally.") At least the Petition Clause the function of emphasizing that freedom to petition the government directly is an important part of freedom of speech and prevents courts from deleting the petition As the Supreme Court stated in McDonald, the right to petition "is an assurance of particular freedom of expression." 472 U.S. at 484-85. Thus, the majority's "dead letter" argument cannot carry the day. 50