Coggin v. Longview Indep Sch , 337 F.3d 459 ( 2003 )


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  •                                                        United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    Revised July 23, 2003
    July 2, 2003
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    For the Fifth Circuit             Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    No. 00-40731
    RANDALL COGGIN,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    VERSUS
    LONGVIEW INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT; ET AL,
    Defendants,
    LONGVIEW INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    For the Eastern District of Texas
    Before KING, Chief Judge, and JOLLY, HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, JONES,
    SMITH, WIENER, BARKSDALE, EMILIO M. GARZA, DeMOSS, BENAVIDES,
    STEWART, DENNIS, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.*
    JAMES L. DENNIS, Circuit Judge:
    Randall Coggin brought this action under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    *
    Judge Prado, who joined our court subsequent to en banc oral
    argument, did not participate in this decision.
    1
    against his former employer, a Texas independent school district,
    because its board of trustees terminated his employment contract
    without any kind of a hearing.    After a bench trial, the district
    court rendered judgment in favor of Coggin.     A divided panel of our
    court affirmed.1   A majority of the judges in active service voted
    to rehear the case en banc.2     We now affirm the judgment of the
    district court.
    I. Statutory Procedure for Termination of
    School Board Employees’ Term Contracts
    Under the Texas Education Code, a school board has the power
    to terminate a term contract and discharge a teacher at any time
    “for good cause as determined by the board.”3    Prior to terminating
    a term contract, however, the board must give the teacher notice of
    its proposed action.4    If the teacher desires a pre-termination
    hearing under state law, he must file a written request with the
    state commissioner of education (“Commissioner”) within 15 days of
    receiving notice of his proposed termination.5     Within 10 business
    1
    Coggin v. Longview Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    289 F.3d 326
     (5th Cir.
    2002).
    2
    Coggin v. Longview Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    309 F.3d 307
     (5th Cir.
    2002).
    3
    
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 21.211
    (a)(1) (Vernon 1996). Under Texas
    law, each independent school district is considered a municipal
    governmental entity, 
    id.
     § 11.151, and is governed by a board of
    trustees (i.e., a school board), id. § 11.051(a).
    4
    Id. §§ 21.251(a)(1), 21.253.
    5
    Id. § 21.253. The Commissioner is appointed by the governor
    with the advice and consent of the state senate, id. § 7.051, and
    2
    days of receiving a timely request for a hearing, the Commissioner
    must assign a hearing examiner to conduct a hearing in that
    particular case.6       Not later than 45 days after the Commissioner
    receives a request for a hearing, the hearing examiner shall
    complete the hearing and recommend findings of fact, conclusions of
    law, and, if appropriate, the granting of relief.7                  The school
    board, not the Commissioner, is taxed with the costs of the hearing
    examiner, the shorthand reporter, and the production of a hearing
    transcript.8
    After receiving the examiner’s recommendation and the record
    of the hearing, the school board or its designated subcommittee
    must consider them and allow each party to present an oral argument
    to the board or subcommittee.9     Within 10 days of that meeting, the
    board must announce a decision that includes findings of fact and
    conclusions of law and that may include a grant of relief.10               The
    board    may   adopt,   reject,   or       change   the   hearing   examiner’s
    conclusions of law or proposal for granting relief, and it may
    reject or change the hearing examiner’s finding of facts not
    heads the Texas Education Agency, id. §§ 7.002, 7.055.
    6
    Id. § 21.254(c).
    7
    Id. § 21.257.
    8
    Id. § 21.255(e).
    9
    Id. § 21.258.
    10
    Id. § 21.259.
    3
    supported by substantial evidence in the record.11
    Section 7.057(d) of the Texas Education Code provides that
    “[a] person aggrieved by an action of the agency or decision of the
    Commissioner may appeal to a district court in Travis County.”12
    This appeal must be made by serving the Commissioner as in a civil
    suit, and the court shall determine all issues of law and fact at
    trial.13
    II. Factual and Procedural Background
    Randall Coggin worked for the Longview Independent School
    District (“LISD”) for more than 30 years.                  From 1983 until his
    discharge on September 13, 1999, Coggin supervised the LISD Career
    and Technology Education department. At the time of his discharge,
    Coggin was employed under a two-year term contract spanning the
    1998-1999 and 1999-2000 academic years. Before receiving notice of
    his proposed termination, his performance appraisals were generally
    complimentary.     On August 12, 1999, however, Coggin received a
    letter from the LISD’s new superintendent notifying him that the
    school board proposed to terminate his employment contract for
    engaging in     various    alleged   improprieties,         including   sexually
    harassing    female     subordinates,       using   LISD    resources   for   his
    personal     benefit,    impeding    the     LISD’s   investigation      of   his
    11
    Id.
    12
    Id. § 7.057(d)
    13
    Id.
    4
    behavior, and falsifying asbestos records.    On August 24, Coggin
    deposited copies of his written request for a hearing with the U.S.
    Postal Service for delivery via certified mail, properly stamped
    and addressed to the Commissioner and the school board.   The school
    board received its copy of Coggin’s request on August 26, but the
    Commissioner did not receive the request until August 30.   Because
    the Commissioner mistakenly thought that Coggin’s request must have
    been received, rather than filed, by August 27, 1999, he refused to
    appoint a hearing examiner. On September 2, 1999, the Commissioner
    mailed copies of a letter addressed to both Coggin and the LISD’s
    counsel stating that (1) the Commissioner had received Coggin’s
    written request for the appointment of a hearing examiner; (2) the
    request was dated and postmarked before the August 27 deadline for
    filing; (3) the Commissioner received the request on the third day
    following the deadline; but (4) the Commissioner would not appoint
    a hearing examiner because Coggin’s request was received after the
    deadline.    After Coggin received the Commissioner’s September 2
    letter, Coggin’s attorney and the Commissioner engaged in a “flurry
    of correspondence” regarding the timeliness of Coggin’s request for
    a hearing, but the Commissioner declined to reconsider his refusal
    to appoint a hearing examiner.14
    On September 13, 1999, the LISD school board, without giving
    further notice to Coggin or any kind of a hearing, adopted a
    14
    District Court’s Memorandum Opinion at 10.
    5
    resolution discharging Coggin as an employee of the LISD.   The LISD
    concedes that it was aware of the Commissioner’s refusal to appoint
    a hearing examiner prior to the board’s action.      Thus, as the
    district court found, “[w]hen it terminated Coggin’s contract, the
    LISD board had actual knowledge that Coggin had requested a hearing
    on the termination of his contract, the date on which he had
    requested it, and that no hearing of any kind had been held.”15
    On November 12, 1999, Coggin brought suit against the LISD,
    the Texas Education Agency (“TEA”), and the Commissioner under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     for depriving him of his property without due process
    of law.    After the district court expressed its opinion that the
    TEA and the Commissioner had a valid Eleventh Amendment defense,
    Coggin dismissed his § 1983 claim against them, and the case
    proceeded solely against the LISD.    Following a bench trial, the
    district court concluded that (1) Coggin timely filed his request
    for a hearing as required by state law; (2) the board had notice
    that Coggin had not received a hearing despite his timely request;
    (3) the board deprived Coggin of his property without due process
    when it terminated his employment contract without any kind of a
    hearing; (4) the LISD failed to prove that Coggin had engaged in
    the alleged misconduct and therefore had no cause to terminate his
    employment contract; and (5) Coggin was entitled to $215,894 in
    damages and attorney’s fees.   The LISD appealed.
    15
    Id. at 10-11.
    6
    III. The LISD’s Action Was the Sole Cause of
    The Violation of Coggin’s Right to Due Process
    On appeal the LISD does not dispute that its termination of
    Coggin’s employment in the middle of his two-year term employment
    contract deprived him of a constitutionally protected property
    interest in continued employment, or that Coggin was entitled to
    constitutional     due   process   in       conjunction   with   the   proposed
    termination of that employment.16            Nor does it challenge or point
    to any error in the district court’s determination that Coggin
    timely filed his request for a hearing.17             LISD argues, instead,
    that any deprivation of Coggin’s right to due process of law was
    caused by the Commissioner’s refusal to appoint a hearing examiner,
    not by the school board’s termination of his employment contract
    without a hearing: “The gravamen of this dispute is a question of
    causation.”18      Thus, the LISD contends that the Commissioner’s
    action, to the exclusion of its own, should be considered the sole
    16
    Defendant’s Supp. En Banc Brief at 15.
    17
    Indeed, the LISD insists that the matter of the timeliness of
    Coggin’s request for the appointment of a hearing examiner is
    irrelevant to its appeal:
    Regardless of whether Coggin failed timely to file a request
    for hearing under those procedures or the Commissioner erred
    as a matter of state law in interpreting the TEA filing
    requirements, any such dispute (1) was not a dispute involving
    the School District, (2) was not caused by LISD, and (3) was
    waived when Coggin failed to pursue appropriate relief in
    court against TEA and the Commissioner.
    Id. at 22.
    18
    Id. at 9.
    7
    cause of the deprivation of due process and, therefore, that it is
    not responsible for the violation.
    The LISD’s irrevocable discharge of Coggin without a hearing
    just 4 business days after Coggin’s receipt of the Commissioner’s
    notice of refusal was the sole cause of the violation of Coggin’s
    right   to   due   process    of   law.19   The   LISD   argues   that   the
    Commissioner’s erroneous refusal to appoint a hearing examiner was
    the cause of the violation because Coggin waived his rights by not
    appealing the Commissioner’s decision through the filing of a civil
    suit in state district court as provided for by § 7.057(d) of the
    Texas Education Code.        We disagree.
    Section 7.057(d) does not prescribe a time limit within which
    a person aggrieved by an action of the Commissioner must file an
    appeal in the district court.        The Texas Administrative Procedures
    Act, however, provides that an aggrieved person is allowed 30 days
    to appeal from the decision of an administrative agency.20           Thus,
    19
    The Commissioner mailed his erroneous decision to Coggin and
    LISD on Thursday, September 2, 1999. Because of the intervening
    Labor Day on September 6, 1999 and the two days required for
    delivery of other mail in this case, Coggin could not have received
    the Commissioner’s September 2 letter until Tuesday, September 7,
    1999. Therefore, the LISD discharged Coggin only 4 business days
    after he had received the Commissioner’s September 2 letter.
    20
    Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 2001.176 (Vernon 2000) (“A person
    initiates judicial review in a contested case by filing a petition
    not later than the 30th day after the date on which the decision
    that is the subject of complaint is final and appealable.”). A
    “contested case” means “a proceeding . . . in which the legal
    rights, duties, or privileges of a party are to be determined by a
    state agency after an opportunity for adjudicative hearing.” Id.
    § 2001.003(1). The Texas courts have construed this definition to
    8
    Coggin was afforded 30 days by the Texas procedure to file his
    appeal in district court contesting the Commissioner’s refusal to
    assign a hearing examiner.21   But the LISD’s discharge of Coggin
    just 4 business days after his receipt of the Commissioner’s notice
    of refusal prematurely cut off Coggin’s right to appeal under §
    7.057(d) and unreasonably foreclosed the possibility of a pre-
    termination due process hearing in his case.
    Consequently, we conclude that Coggin did not waive his
    rights, and that the LISD’s action of peremptorily discharging
    Coggin without a hearing just 4 business days after his receipt of
    the Commissioner’s notice of refusal was the sole cause of the
    violation of his right to due process of law.   The Commissioner’s
    erroneous decision was not a cause of the violation because, if the
    LISD had not peremptorily discharged Coggin, that error could have
    include situations in which a state agency adjudicates a party’s
    legal rights in an exercise of quasi-judicial authority, as opposed
    to making such an adjudication in an exercise of rule making
    authority. See WBD Oil & Gas Co. v. Railroad Comm’n of Tex., 
    35 S.W.3d 34
    , 44 (Tex. App. 2001); Ramirez v. Texas State Bd. of Med.
    Exam’rs., 
    927 S.W.2d 770
    , 772 (Tex. App. 1996); Best & Co. v. Texas
    State Bd. of Plumbing Exam’rs., 
    927 S.W.2d 306
    , 309 & n.1 (Tex.
    App. 1996); Big D Bamboo, Inc. v. Texas, 
    567 S.W.2d 915
    , 918 (Tex.
    App. 1978).
    21
    Even if the Administrative Procedures Act did not apply,
    “Texas law is firmly established that, when the statute fails to
    prescribe such a time limit, an appeal must be taken within a
    reasonable time.” Westheimer I.S.D. v. Brockette, 
    567 S.W.2d 780
    ,
    789-90 (Tex. 1978) (applying § 11.13(c), the predecessor to
    § 7.057(d), and citing Railroad Comm’n v. Aluminum Co. of Am., 
    380 S.W.2d 599
     (Tex. 1964); Board of Water Eng’rs v. Colorado Mun.
    Water Dist., 
    254 S.W.2d 369
     (Tex. 1953); Midas Oil Co. v. Stanolind
    Oil & Gas Co., 
    179 S.W.2d 243
     (Tex. 1944); and Harkness v.
    Hutcherson, 
    38 S.W. 1120
     (Tex. 1897)).
    9
    been corrected on appeal by the state district court’s order that
    the Commissioner assign a hearing examiner in accordance with the
    Texas Education Code procedure.
    IV. The LISD Was the Responsible State Actor
    This court’s standard analysis for determining who is the
    state actor responsible for a constitutional violation in an action
    arising under § 1983 reaches the same result.                 In Bush v. Viterna,
    we identified three key questions that guide our analysis of causes
    of action arising under § 1983:
    [T]he first question must be whether a federally secured
    right has been affected. . . . The second question that
    must be asked is whether the alleged deprivation of a
    federal   right   has   been   accomplished   by   state
    action. . . . After one has found a deprivation of a
    federally secured right and has determined that it
    resulted from state action, one must ask a third
    question: Who is the state actor responsible for this
    violation?22
    In        this   case,   because   Coggin    was   deprived    of   his   protected
    employment right without the due process hearing to which he was
    entitled and which he did not waive, and because that deprivation
    involved two state actors, the only question presented is who is
    the state actor responsible for the violation—the LISD or the
    Commissioner.23          This inquiry depends on an analysis of state law.24
    22
    Bush v. Viterna, 
    795 F.2d 1203
    , 1209 (5th Cir. 1986).
    23
    See McMillian v. Monroe County, Alabama, 
    520 U.S. 781
    , 784-85
    (1997) (“A court’s task is to ‘identify those officials or
    governmental bodies who speak with final policymaking authority for
    the local government actor concerning the action alleged to have
    caused the particular constitutional or statutory violation at
    issue.’” (quoting Jett v. Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    491 U.S. 701
    ,
    10
    That is, in order to identify the responsible state actor, we must
    determine how state law distributes government functions.25   But we
    do not apply state law; rather, we “simply [use] state law to
    identify the persons responsible for an identified civil rights
    violation.”26
    Texas law assigns to the school board, as the governing body
    of the school district, exclusive policy making authority with
    regard to employment decisions.    The state law is clear that the
    school board, alone, may terminate a term contract and discharge an
    employee upon a finding of good cause.27   Only the school board can
    determine whether such cause exists and whether an employee should
    737 (1989))).
    24
    
    Id. at 786
    ; Jett, 
    491 U.S. at 737
     (“[W]hether a particular
    official has ‘final policymaking authority’ is a question of state
    law” (internal quotation omitted)); Pembaur v. Cincinnati, 
    475 U.S. 469
    , 483 (1986) (“[W]hether an official had final policy making
    authority is a question of state law.”); Bush, 
    795 F.2d at 1209
    (stating that the identify of the responsible state actor “will
    usually be answered exclusively by reference to state law and
    practice”).
    25
    McMillian, 
    520 U.S. at 786
     (“[O]ur understanding of the actual
    function of a governmental official, in a particular area, will
    necessarily be dependent on the definition of the official’s
    functions under relevant state law.”); Regents of Univ. of Cal. v.
    Doe, 
    519 U.S. 425
    , 429 n.5 (1997) (“[The] federal question can be
    answered only after considering the provisions of state law that
    define the agency’s character.”).
    
    26 Bush, 795
     F.2d at 1209.
    27
    
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 21.211
    (a)(1) (“The board of trustees
    may terminate term contract and discharge a teacher at any time for
    . . . good cause as determined by the board . . . .”).
    11
    be discharged as a result.28          Under the explicit terms of the
    statute, then, the LISD was the final policy and decision maker
    with respect to Coggin’s discharge.
    By comparison, under Texas law the Commissioner is not vested
    with    any   final   policymaking   authority     concerning    either    the
    determination of cause to discharge or the actual discharge of
    school district employees.      The Commissioner’s role of appointing
    a hearing examiner upon the timely filing of a request by an
    employee is     ministerial   and    does   not   involve   or   require   any
    policymaking.     Consequently, there was no policy authored by the
    Commissioner that caused the particular constitutional violation at
    issue. In fact, there was no action taken by the Commissioner that
    deprived Coggin of his property without due process of law.                The
    Commissioner has no authority to discharge a school district
    employee or to require the school board to terminate an employment
    contract. Indeed, the statute even requires that the school board,
    not the Commissioner, bear the costs of the hearing examiner, the
    shorthand reporter, and the production of a hearing transcript. In
    short, the Commissioner could not have been responsible for causing
    the termination of Coggin’s employment contract for cause without
    a pre-termination hearing because he could not determine cause or
    discharge Coggin.
    Consequently, because the school board was the final arbiter
    28
    
    Id.
     § 21.259.
    12
    of        employment   disputes   under    Texas   law,   it    was   exclusively
    responsible for hearing Coggin’s arguments against discharge before
    resolving the questions of cause and discharge.29                Contrary to the
    LISD’s arguments, Texas law has not removed or separated from the
    school board the function of providing pretermination due process
    to        its   employees.30   Under   well-established        federal   law,   the
    constitutional minimums for due process require that the final
    decision maker must hear and consider the employee’s story before
    29
    The Texas Supreme Court recognized this seminal fact in
    Montgomery Independent School District v. Davis, when it wrote in
    the context of a contract renewal case, “the Board retains the
    authority to make the ultimate decision of whether to renew a
    teacher’s contract.” 
    34 S.W.3d 559
    , 565 (Tex. 2000). Likewise,
    § 21.211(a)(1) makes clear that the board retains the exclusive
    authority to determine whether to terminate a teacher’s contract
    for cause.
    30
    The LISD, echoing the dissent to the panel opinion, asserts
    that Texas law separates the responsibility for providing a due
    process hearing from the responsibility for making termination
    decisions. The text of the Texas statutory scheme does not support
    this assertion. It is true that under the statutory scheme the
    function of appointing a hearing examiner has been given to the
    Commissioner, 
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 21.254
    , and that the function
    of gathering evidence, making findings of facts, and recommending
    conclusions of law has been given to an appointed hearing examiner,
    
    id.
     § 21.257. But the school board retains the exclusive duty to
    “consider the recommendation and record of the hearing examiner”
    and “shall allow each party to present an oral argument” before
    rendering its decision on whether there is cause to terminate and
    whether to discharge an employee. Id. § 21.258. In reaching such
    a decision, the school board has authority to make its own
    conclusions of law, including the crucial determination of whether
    there is cause to discharge. See id. § 21.259(b) (The school board
    “may adopt, reject, or change the hearing examiner’s . . .
    conclusions of law.”). It “may reject or change a finding of fact
    made by the hearing examiner” that is not supported by “substantial
    evidence.” Id. § 21.259(c).
    13
    deciding whether to discharge the employee.31                   The purpose of this
    is self-evident.            It is to provide a “meaningful opportunity to
    invoke the discretion of the decisionmaker . . . before the
    termination takes effect.”32              The Texas law complies with the
    federal due process requirement by providing that the school board,
    as        the   exclusive     decision   maker      with     regard   to   employment
    termination decisions, “shall allow each party to present an oral
    argument to         the     board”   before   the    board    determines    cause   or
    discharges the employee.33            Thus, under the responsible state actor
    analysis we conclude that the LISD is the state actor responsible
    for the violation in this case.
    V. Answer to Amicus Argument
    Contrary to the argument of the LISD’s amicus, the Texas
    31
    See, e.g., Zinermon v. Burch, 
    494 U.S. 113
    , 135 (1990)
    (“Because petitioners had state authority to deprive persons of
    liberty, the Constitution imposed on them the State’s concomitant
    duty to see that no deprivation occur without adequate procedural
    protections.”).
    32
    Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
    , 543 & n.8
    (1985) (citing Goss v. Lopez, 
    419 U.S. 565
    , 583-84 (1975), and
    Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 
    411 U.S. 778
    , 784-86 (1973)).         Both the
    employer and the employee benefit from this opportunity, for it
    ensures that the decision maker reaches an accurate decision. 
    Id.
    It thus protects persons “not from the deprivation, but from the
    mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.”
    Carey v. Piphus, 
    435 U.S. 247
    , 259 (1978).
    33
    
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 21.258
    (b); see also Londoner v. Denver,
    
    210 U.S. 373
    , 386 (1908) (“[A] hearing in its very essence, demands
    that he who is entitled to it shall have the right to support his
    allegations by argument however brief, and, if need be, by proof,
    however informal.”), cited in Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v.
    Craft, 
    436 U.S. 1
    , 16 n.17 (1978).
    14
    Association of School Boards Legal Assistance Fund, this decision
    in no way subjects a school board to liability for acts other than
    its own. If the Commissioner does not abide the prescribed scheme,
    Texas gives an aggrieved school employee the right to appeal to a
    state    district   court,   thereby    providing    constitutional   due
    process.34   If the mandated procedure is followed, an employee will
    also have been afforded constitutional due process when a school
    board makes its final termination decision.          When a school board
    disregards the statutory scheme, here depriving the employee of his
    right to appeal, however, it may subject itself to liability, not
    for the act of another but for its own act.         To the point, had the
    school board given Coggin the statutorily allotted time to appeal
    the Commissioner’s decision, there would have been no denial of due
    process.35
    VI. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the
    district court.
    34
    See 
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 7.057
    (d).
    35
    Judge Jones mistakenly claims that the majority decides an
    issue that was not properly before the en banc court. Whether the
    LISD or the Commissioner caused the due process violation has been
    the ultimate, concrete issue throughout the long history of this
    case.   Accordingly, in answering the causation question, the
    opinion does nothing more than properly exercise the court’s duty
    “to enunciate the law on the record facts.” See Empire Life Ins.
    Co. of America v. Valdak Corp., 
    468 F.2d 330
    , 334 (5th Cir. 1972);
    see also Phillips v. Monroe County, Miss., 
    311 F.3d 369
    , 376 (5th
    Cir. 2002) (“We may affirm the district court’s decision on any
    grounds supported by the record.”).
    15
    AFFIRMED.
    16
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge, joined by JONES, SMITH, BARKSDALE,
    EMILIO M. GARZA, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges, dissenting:
    I could agree with the majority’s theory of liability and
    outcome if its assumptions about the operation of state law had any
    basis in law or fact.    Because those assumptions indisputably have
    no support, I cannot join the majority’s opinion.
    Throughout   this   litigation,   the   theory   supporting   LISD’s
    liability for a constitutional violation has been marked by an
    inventive and evasive character whenever cornered by law or fact.
    The theory now expressed in the majority opinion for the first
    time, with no briefing from any party, is that Coggin was denied
    constitutional due process thus: LISD’s termination of Coggin
    caused him to lose his statutory right to appeal the decision of
    the TEA Commissioner and thus caused a denial of procedural due
    process. If only that were true, I would join the majority.
    The majority’s opinion acknowledges that due process in this
    case is satisfied so long as Coggin had the right under state law
    to appeal the Commissioner’s decision.       “If the Commissioner does
    not abide the prescribed scheme, Texas gives an aggrieved school
    employee the right to appeal to a state district court, thereby
    providing constitutional due process.”         (Majority Op. at 15).
    “Section 7.057(d) of the Texas Education Code provides that ‘[a]
    person aggrieved by an action of the agency or decision of the
    Commissioner may appeal to a district court in Travis County.’ This
    appeal must be made by serving the Commissioner as in a civil suit,
    17
    and the court shall determine all issues of law and fact at trial.”
    (Majority Op. at 4)(footnote omitted)(emphasis added).
    However, the majority assumes that “[t]he LISD’s irrevocable
    discharge of Coggin without a hearing just 4 business days after
    Coggin’s receipt of the Commissioner’s notice of refusal was the
    sole cause of the violation of Coggin’s right to due process of
    law.” (Majority Op. at 8).   “[T]he LISD’s discharge of Coggin just
    4 business days after his receipt of the Commissioner’s notice of
    refusal prematurely cut off Coggin’s right to appeal under §
    7.057(d) . . . .”      (Majority Op. at 9).    “The Commissioner’s
    erroneous decision was not a cause of the violation because, if the
    LISD had not peremptorily discharged Coggin, that error could have
    been corrected on appeal . . . .” (Majority Op. at 9).    Thus, the
    majority concludes that “had the school board given Coggin the
    statutorily allotted time to appeal the Commissioner’s decision,
    there would have been no denial of due process.”   (Majority Op. at
    15).
    Yet the majority fails to explain how the termination of
    Coggin denied him the right to appeal his case to the Travis County
    district court.   It is of course plain that the termination did not
    cause Coggin physically or procedurally to lose his right to appeal
    the Commission decision. The statute was still there, the district
    court in Travis County was still there, some 26 days - by the
    majority’s calculation - remained in his appeal period, and Coggin
    still had free will.       The majority seems to assume, without
    18
    expressly saying so, that his termination made any appeal of the
    Commissioner’s decision moot. Of course, neither the majority, nor
    I, nor any other judge on this court, nor any party, knows whether
    this assumption contains the slightest degree of correctness in
    fact or law.   It is only an assumption tailored from whole cloth,
    for a specific fit.    No brief has been filed raising the point.        No
    argument is made by the majority that the statute supports such an
    assumption.    No argument is made by the majority that case law
    supports any such assumption.       The majority simply offers the
    theory as so many inspired words.
    On the other hand, a more reasonable assumption would posit
    that had Coggin exercised his right to appeal – a right that no one
    has denied existed – a complete remedy would have been available.
    It is easily assumed that LISD would have been a proper party to
    that appeal.    If on appeal the court had concluded that the
    Commissioner   erred   in   rejecting   Coggin’s   petition,   it   is    a
    plausible assumption that the state court would have exercised its
    equitable powers and further would have held Coggin’s termination
    a nullity under state law and ordered him reinstated pending the
    outcome of the TEA hearing, thus providing him a whole remedy (“the
    [Travis County district] court shall try all issues of law and fact
    . . . .” § 7.057 (emphasis added)).     Assuming, however, the Travis
    County district court determined it had jurisdiction only to
    address the error of the TEA Commissioner, another scenario is
    equally plausible, plainly demonstrating that whatever the status
    19
    of his appeal might have been, it was not moot.             If Coggin had
    exercised his right to appeal – a right, I repeat, no one denied
    existed    –   and    if   Coggin   had   chosen    to   appeal   only    the
    Commissioner’s decision, he could have taken that judgment to the
    appropriate state court and obtained injunctive relief reinstating
    him pending the outcome of the TEA hearing he was denied.                Both
    these     scenarios    are   assumptions    enjoying     more     reasonable
    speculative bases than the majority facilely adopts to support the
    conclusion necessary for the result it thinks is appropriate.
    In short, the assumption of the majority that his termination
    caused the denial of due process by rendering his right to appeal
    moot is speculation of an unrestrained sort, which indeed seems
    contrary to reason and logic.
    I could agree with the majority opinion if anywhere in the
    record it were evident that the plaintiff had met his burden of
    proof to support the majority’s new-found, unbriefed, unargued
    theory that his termination denied him an effective appeal of the
    Commissioner’s decision.       But there is nothing in the record – or
    the law – to support the majority’s theory – and the majority
    apparently does not argue that there is.           Such is the consequence
    of attempting to develop arguments never presented by anyone at any
    time in order to tailor an outcome for a favored party.
    I can appreciate the equities that drive the majority to try
    to fashion some relief in this case.          During the pretermination
    process as provided by the Texas statute, Mr. Coggin got entangled
    20
    in errors and alleged errors, which he did not appeal.    However,
    because both Coggin and the majority have failed to carry their
    respective burdens of proof and persuasion, to explain how his
    termination in fact eviscerated his right to appeal, the question
    of causation remains unanswered, I am unable to join in the
    opinion, and I respectfully dissent.36 Finally, given what I regard
    as the complete failure of the majority to confect some credible
    constitutional analysis for a violation of due process, I join the
    dissents of Judges Jones and Garza.
    36
    I do note that the majority opinion does not challenge or deny
    the correctness of a single assertion made in this dissent. The
    majority would thus seem to admit there is no record or legal
    support for its theory of liability, thereby calling into question
    not only footnote 35 of its opinion, but its entire opinion as
    well.
    21
    EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge, joined by JOLLY, SMITH, BARKSDALE,
    EMILIO M. GARZA, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges, dissenting:
    I fully concur in Judge Emilio Garza’s excellent dissent.
    I am compelled by precedent, however, to comment on the majority’s
    decision to base its opinion on a theory never raised by the
    parties in this case; namely, the theory that LISD fired Coggin too
    quickly and failed to give Coggin proper time to seek state court
    judicial review of the Commissioner’s decision not to allow a
    hearing.   See Judge Emilio Garza’s Dissent at 7.
    The   problem   has   been    colorfully,    if   hyperbolically,
    described by our brethren on the Seventh Circuit:            “Judges are not
    like pigs, hunting for truffles buried in briefs.”37           United States
    v. Dunkel, 
    927 F.2d 955
    , 956 (7th Cir. 1991).          Today, the majority,
    unable to find a truffle in the briefs, has simply created an issue
    never raised by the parties either before the district court38 or
    37
    “It is reasonable to assume that just as a district court is
    not required to ‘scour the record looking for factual disputes,’ it
    is not required to scour the party’s various submissions to piece
    together appropriate arguments. A court need not make the lawyer's
    case.” Little v. Cox's Supermarkets, 
    71 F.3d 637
    , 641 (7th Cir.
    1995) (quoting Waldridge v. Am. Hoechst Corp., 
    24 F.3d 918
    , 922
    (7th Cir. 1994)) (internal citations omitted).
    38
    The district court specifically noted that “[t]he parties have
    cited no law that allows for review of the Commissioner’s failure
    to assign a hearing examiner.” Memorandum Opinion, p.17, Case No.
    6:99-CV-658, (E.D. Tex. May 16, 2000). The district court further
    stated the parties did not raise or suggest the “relevance or
    applicability of 
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 7.057
    ," upon which the
    22
    the panel of this court which first heard the case,39 or in the
    supplemental briefs filed prior to   en banc rehearing.40   Like some
    of my former and current colleagues on this court, I find such
    behavior by an en banc court to demonstrate “a complete lack of
    appropriate judicial self-restraint.”   United States v. Lyons, 
    731 F.2d 243
    , 253 (5th Cir. 1984)(en banc)(Rubin and Williams, JJ.
    concurring in part and dissenting in part, joined by Politz, Tate,
    and Higginbotham, JJ.).
    “It is the general rule, of course, that a federal
    appellate court does not consider an issue not passed upon below.”41
    majority relies.   
    Id.
     at 17 n.14.      Thus, the court refused to
    consider it. 
    Id.
    39
    None of the parties’ original briefs even refers to 
    Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 7.057
    .
    40
    LISD’s en banc brief, in a footnote, refers to and quotes from
    Judge Emilio Garza’s panel dissent in which he suggests that Coggin
    could have filed suit in state district court in Travis County
    against the Commissioner under § 7.057(d).      But LISD makes no
    attempt to present a reasoned argument that this was relevant to,
    or determinative of, the present case.      Accordingly, any such
    argument was abandoned for being inadequately briefed. See Fed. R.
    App. P. 28(a)(5); L&A Contracting Co. v. S. Concrete Servs., Inc.,
    
    17 F.3d 106
    , 113 (5th Cir. 1994); Dardar v. Lafourche Realty Co.,
    
    985 F.2d 824
    , 831 (5th Cir. 1993). Moreover, a citation in LISD’s
    brief, without more, could hardly furnish the basis for this court
    to grant relief to Coggin, who never even cited, much less argued,
    the provision.
    41
    “Although we can affirm a summary judgment on grounds not
    relied on by the district court, those grounds must at least have
    been proposed or asserted in that court by the movant.” Johnson v.
    Sawyer, 
    120 F.3d 1307
    , 1316 (5th Cir. 1997); see also Breaux v.
    Dilsaver, 
    254 F.3d 533
    , 538 (5th Cir. 2001) (“Although this court
    may decide a case on any ground that was presented to the trial
    court, we are not required to do so.”); Leverette v. Louisville
    Ladder Co., 
    183 F.3d 339
    , 342 (5th Cir. 1999) (“This Court will not
    23
    Singleton v. Wulff, 
    428 U.S. 106
    , 120 (1976); Conley v. Bd. of Trs.
    of Grenada County Hosp., 
    707 F.2d 175
    , 178 (5th Cir. 1983) (“As a
    general principle of appellate review, we refuse to consider issues
    not    raised   below.”).   We     deviate   from   this   rule   only    in
    extraordinary     circumstances.      Leverette,    
    183 F.3d at 342
    .
    “Extraordinary circumstances exist when the issue involved is a
    pure question of law and a miscarriage of justice would result from
    our failure to consider it.” N. Alamo Water Supply Corp., 90 F.3d
    at 916. As this court has explained, such circumstances exist when
    “the asserted error is so obvious that the failure to consider it
    would result in a miscarriage of justice.”          Conley, 
    707 F.2d at 178
    .    Given the closeness of this case, which is readily apparent
    from the split among the members of this court, one cannot say that
    the resolution of this newly raised argument is obvious.
    The majority’s decision to wander down the road they have
    chosen is particularly regrettable in light of the en banc court’s
    consider an issue that a party fails to raise in the district court
    absent extraordinary circumstances.”); Forbush v. J.C. Penney Co.,
    
    98 F.3d 817
    , 822 (5th Cir. 1996) (“Furthermore, the Court will not
    allow a party to raise an issue for the first time on appeal merely
    because a party believes that he might prevail if given the
    opportunity to try a case again on a different theory.”); N. Alamo
    Water Supply Corp. v. City of San Juan, Tex., 
    90 F.3d 910
    , 916 (5th
    Cir. 1996) (“We will not consider an issue that a party fails to
    raise in the district court, absent extraordinary circumstances.”);
    Mo. Pac. R.R. v. Harbison-Fischer Mfg. Co., 
    26 F.3d 531
    , 538 (5th
    Cir. 1994) ("[W]e can affirm the district court on the alternate
    grounds asserted below."); FDIC v. Laguarta, 
    939 F.2d 1231
    , 1240
    (5th Cir. 1991) (refusing to affirm summary judgment on grounds
    "neither raised below ... nor even raised sua sponte by the
    district court").
    24
    nearly-unanimous statements of just five years ago in United States
    v. Brace, 
    145 F.3d 247
     (5th Cir. 1998)(en banc).   In light of the
    majority’s dalliance, it is worthwhile to restate what this court
    said in Brace:
    It goes without saying that we are a court of review, not
    of original error. Restated, we review only those issues
    presented to us; we do not craft new issues or otherwise
    search for them in the record. E.g., United States v.
    Johnson, 
    718 F.2d 1317
    , 1325 n.23 (5th Cir. 1983) (en
    banc) (we will not review improper jury instruction if
    neither raised in trial court nor claimed on appeal to be
    error). It is for the parties, those who have a stake in
    the litigation, to decide which issues they want to
    pursue, at trial and on appeal. Diverse reasons underlie
    the choices the parties make. Likewise, other obvious
    factors come into play, such as judicial efficiency and
    economy, fairness to the courts and the parties, and the
    public interest in litigation coming to an end after the
    parties have had their fair day in court. Cf. United
    States v. Atkinson, 
    297 U.S. 157
    , 159, 
    56 S. Ct. 391
    , 392
    
    80 L. Ed. 555
     (1936); United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 731, 
    113 S. Ct. 1770
    , 1776, 
    123 L. Ed. 2d 508
    (1993); United States v. Calverley, 
    37 F.3d 160
    , 162 (5th
    Cir. 1994) (en banc), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1196
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 1266
    , 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 145
     (1995). In short, it is not
    for us to decide which issues should be presented, or to
    otherwise try the case for the parties.
    Our role is indeed limited. Concerning our not acting as
    legislators, Justice Cardozo admonished that a judge "is
    not a knight-errant, roaming at will in pursuit of his
    own ideal of beauty or of goodness". Cardozo, The Nature
    of the Judicial Process 141 (1921). Needless to say, the
    same is true regarding our not addressing issues not
    presented to us.
    Brace, 
    145 F.3d at 255-56
    .      The same principle was endorsed
    unanimously by the en banc court earlier.   See Thomas v. Capital
    Sec. Servs., Inc., 
    836 F.2d 866
    , 884 n.25 (5th Cir. 1988) (en banc)
    (“As an appellate court, we decline to entertain issues not raised
    in, or decided by district courts.”).    The majority have failed
    25
    even to cite, much less distinguish or otherwise explain their
    departure from en banc precedents.           They advance no authority to
    support their novel approach to the judicial craft.
    Further,   as   Justice   Blackmun       wrote   on   behalf   of   a
    unanimous   Supreme    Court,   the   rule    that    appellate    courts   not
    consider issues that the parties failed to present to the lower
    court:
    is ‘essential in order that parties may have the
    opportunity to offer all the evidence they believe
    relevant to the issues... [and] in order that litigants
    may not be surprised on appeal by final decision there of
    issues upon which they have had no opportunity to
    introduce evidence.’ We have no idea what evidence, if
    any, petitioner would, or could, offer in defense of this
    statute, but this is only because petitioner has had no
    opportunity to proffer such evidence. Moreover, even
    assuming that there is no such evidence, petitioner
    should have the opportunity to present whatever legal
    arguments he may have in defense of the statute.
    Singleton, 
    428 U.S. at 120
     (quoting Hormel v. Helvering, 
    312 U.S. 552
    , 556 (1941)) (emphasis added).
    The dangers of deciding issues raised by the court sua
    sponte are well-illustrated by the proceedings before the Eleventh
    Circuit in Stewart v. Dugger, 
    847 F.2d 1486
     (11th Cir. 1988)
    (Stewart I), vacated by 
    877 F.2d 851
     (11th Cir. 1989) (Stewart II).
    In Stewart I, a habeas petitioner brought a claim for relief based
    on allegedly inappropriate comments made during voir dire by the
    trial court in violation of Caldwell v. Mississippi, 
    472 U.S. 320
    (1985).   Stewart I, 
    847 F.2d at 1489
    .         The court denied relief on
    26
    these grounds.     The court, however, did not stop there.       The panel,
    in its subsequent opinion, characterized what happened next:
    While reviewing the Caldwell claim raised by Stewart and
    addressed above, this court noticed other occasions where
    defense counsel, the prosecutor and the trial judge
    touched on functions of the jury which might have been
    asserted as implicating Caldwell in a manner different
    from that which had been suggested by Stewart. The court
    sua sponte requested supplemental briefing and then
    addressed the merits of some, but not all, of these
    other, potential Caldwell issues. See Stewart v. Dugger,
    
    847 F.2d 1486
    , 1489-1493. (11th Cir. 1988).
    Stewart II, 
    877 F.2d at 854
    .
    The court in Stewart II accordingly reconsidered its
    decision in Stewart I to address certain Caldwell issues sua sponte
    and upon reconsideration, struck that part of the discussion in
    Stewart I.     
    Id. at 852
     (“The court, sua sponte, reconsiders this
    case insofar as our previous opinion addressed an issue which had
    been raised by the court sua sponte and unadvisedly.                For the
    reasons stated, one section of our previous opinion . . . is
    stricken and a statement of the reasons for its being stricken is
    inserted.”).      The court stated that it “unadvisedly” reached the
    issue   because    the   Caldwell   issues   raised   by   the   court   were
    procedurally barred.      Stewart II, 
    877 F.2d at 854-55
    .         The court
    went on to note that the respondent, in its supplemental brief
    filed at the instruction of the court, pointed out that the
    petitioner’s claim was procedurally barred.           
    Id.
     at 855 n.2.    The
    court then admitted that “[h]aving raised these issues by our own
    27
    motion perhaps led us to their resolution and caused us to overlook
    the procedural bar.”     
    Id.
    Our sister circuit (as well as the majority in this case)
    would have been well served to follow the lead of the D.C. Circuit:
    Of course not all legal arguments bearing upon the issue
    in question will always be identified by counsel, and we
    are not precluded from supplementing the contentions of
    counsel through our own deliberation and research. But
    where counsel has made no attempt to address the issue,
    we will not remedy the defect, especially where, as here,
    “important questions of far-reaching significance” are
    involved.
    Carducci v. Regan, 
    714 F.2d 171
    , 177 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (Scalia, J.)
    (quoting Alabama Power Co. v. Gorsuch, 
    672 F.2d 1
    , 7 (D.C. Cir.
    1982)).   The case before us is of far-reaching significance for
    Texas’s scheme for teacher discipline and terminations that was
    carefully crafted to enhance teachers’ rights while ensuring a fast
    decisional track.    The majority opinion casts constitutional doubt
    on the scheme despite Coggin’s concession that the statutorily
    mandated process is constitutional.
    The    American   system    of   judicial   decisionmaking     is
    grounded on the adversary process.          Vintson v. Anton, 
    786 F.2d 1023
    , 1025 (11th Cir. 1986) (noting that the adversary system is
    what “characterizes the judicial process under the Anglo-American
    common law”).      “The premise of our adversarial system is that
    appellate courts do not sit as self-directed boards of legal
    inquiry   and    research,   but   essentially   as    arbiters   of   legal
    28
    questions presented and argued by the parties before them.”42
    Carducci, 
    714 F.2d at 177
    .    For this court to base its decision on
    grounds not raised by the parties is a “serious misadventure in the
    judicial process” and constitutes nothing less than the destruction
    of the cornerstone of the adversarial process.    Lyons, 
    731 F.2d at 250
     (Rubin and Williams, JJ. concurring in part and dissenting in
    part).    Judge Posner has made the same point:
    This is a case in which the lawyer for a party tells the
    appellate court that he does not base his claim on
    grounds X and Y . . ., but the court’s independent
    research and reflection persuade the court that the
    lawyer is wrong. If reversal on such grounds is proper,
    we no longer have an adversary system of justice in the
    federal courts.
    Hartmann v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 
    9 F.3d 1207
    , 1215 (7th Cir.
    1993).
    Under the majority’s opinion, LISD will lose its appeal
    based on an argument of which it had neither notice nor opportunity
    to respond.    Receiving notice and being given the right to respond
    constitute the core of procedural due process.     Therein lies the
    42
    As Judge Phillips of the Fourth Circuit noted,
    [t]he most critical characteristic of the adversarial (as
    opposed to inquisitorial) system of litigation is the degree
    to which it gives over to parties acting through counsel a
    substantial degree of control over the litigation process.
    This control extends both to the formulation of the legal and
    factual issues to be laid before the court and to the
    presentation of factual proof and legal contentions on these
    issues to the decision maker.
    Hirschkop v. Snead, 
    594 F.2d 356
    , 377 (4th Cir. 1979) (en banc)
    (Phillips, J., concurring).
    29
    ultimate irony.   The majority’s opinion denies due process to LISD
    while   simultaneously   holding   the   school   district   liable   for
    depriving Coggin of due process.
    I respectfully dissent.
    30
    EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge, joined by JOLLY, JONES, SMITH,
    BARKSDALE, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges, dissenting:
    This is, in essence, a causation case.                           Specifically, we must
    address whether the LISD violated Coggin’s procedural due process
    rights by terminating him without a hearing after the Commissioner
    determined that, under state law, Coggin had untimely filed his
    request for a hearing.                 Because I would find that the LISD did not
    violate Coggin’s procedural due process rights, I respectfully
    dissent.
    I
    Section 1983 creates a cause of action against any person who, under color of law, “subjects,
    or causes to be subjected,” a person “to the deprivation of [a constitutional right].”43 In order to
    prevail on a § 1983 claim, this court has repeatedly held that it is not sufficient for a plaintiff to merely
    establish a violation of one of his constitutional rights. A plaintiff must also show a causal connection
    between the deprivation of that right and the actions of the defendant against whom relief is sought.
    43
    Specifically, the text of § 1983 reads:
    Every person who, under the color of any statute,
    ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage of any
    State or Territory, subjects, or causes to be
    subjected, any citizen of the United States or
    other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the
    deprivation   of   any   rights,   privileges,   or
    immunities secured by the Constitution and laws,
    shall be liable to the party injured in an action
    at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding
    for redress.
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .
    31
    See, e.g., Neubauer v. City of McAllen, 
    766 F.2d 1567
    , 1571 n.11 (5th Cir. 1985) (reversing
    judgment against some of the defendants in a § 1983 action because plaintiff failed to show that they
    personally caused the deprivation of a constitutional right); Irby v. Sullivan, 
    737 F.2d 1418
    , 1425 (5th
    Cir. 1964) (“To be liable under section 1983, a [defendant] must be either personally involved in the
    acts causing the deprivation of a person’s constitutional rights, or there must be a causal connection
    between an act of the [defendant] and the constitutional violations sought to be addressed.”). This
    causation requirement applies with equal force in cases where a § 1983 action is premised on a
    violation of procedural due process. Reimer v. Smith, 
    663 F.2d 1316
    , 1322 n.4 (5th Cir. 1981) (“It
    is axiomatic that a plaintiff cannot succeed in a § 1983 action if he fails to demonstrate a causal
    connection between the state official’s alleged wrongful action and his deprivation of life, liberty, or
    property.”).
    The panel opinion conceded (as the majority opinion now concedes) that Coggin needed to
    establish causation to prevail, but contended that he had met that burden because the LISD made the
    final decision to terminate him knowing he had not received a hearing. Thus, the panel opinion
    concluded, the LISD deprived Coggin of his property without due process of law. Coggin v.
    Longview Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    289 F.3d 326
    , 336-38 (5th Cir. 2002). The problem with the panel
    opinion’s analysis, however, is that it focused on the wrong causation issue. It based its causation
    analysis on who deprived Coggin of his protected property interest, when the real issue is who
    deprived Coggin of his procedural due process right.
    Careful consideration of the right to procedural due process reveals the heart of a due process
    violation. Procedural due process do es not protect one from the deprivation of life, liberty or
    property, but rather “from the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.” Carey
    32
    v. Piphus, 
    435 U.S. 247
    , 259 (1978) (emphasis added). In other words, the key to a procedural due
    process claim is whether the plaintiff was afforded the quantity of process to which he was
    constitutionally entitled prior to the deprivation of a protected interest. In Zinermon v. Burch, the
    Supreme Court described the right to procedural due process as follows:
    The Due Process Clause also encompasses a third type of protection, a guarantee of
    fair procedure. . . . In procedural due process claims, the deprivation by state action
    of a constitutionally protected interest in ‘life, liberty, or property’ is not in itself
    unconstitutional; what is unconstitutional is the deprivation of such an interest without
    due process of law. . . . The constitutional violation actionable under § 1983 is not
    complete when the deprivation occurs; it is not complete unless and until the State
    fails to provide due process. Therefore, to determine whether a constitutional
    violation has occurred, it is necessary to ask what process the State provided, and
    whether it was constitutionally adequate.
    
    494 U.S. 113
    , 125-126 (1990) (internal citations and footnote omitted); see also Brewer v. Chauvin,
    
    938 F.2d 860
    , 864 (8th Cir. 1991) (“The complained-of constitutional violation is the denial of
    procedural due process, not the plaintiff’s discharge from public employment.”). Stated simply, a
    plaintiff’s due process rights are not violated because his property was taken from him; his rights are
    violated because he was denied a certain amount of process before his property was taken. Because
    the essence of a procedural due process claim is whether or not the plaintiff was afforded
    constitutionally adequate process, the majority opinion’s emphasis on who made the final decision
    to terminate Coggin is misplaced.
    33
    To determine whether the LISD caused the deprivation of Coggin’s procedural due process
    right in this case, we must ask whether the LISD caused Coggin not to have a due process hearing.
    Based on the record in this case, the answer to this question is no. Under § 21.253 and § 21.254 of
    the Texas Education Code, the sole authority to appoint a state certified hearing examiner was vested
    in the Commissioner of the TEA. In this case, the Commissioner denied Coggin a hearing because,
    based on his interpretation of § 21.253, Coggin’s request for a hearing was untimely. Even if one
    assumes that Coggin’s rights were violated by the Commissioner’s action, it was this mistake that
    caused Coggin to be denied a hearing and thus deprived him of his right to procedural due process.
    In contrast, the LISD did nothing to prevent Coggin from obtaining a pre-termination hearing. The
    LISD properly provided Coggin with notice of its intent to terminate his employment and of the
    measures he needed to take in order to preserve his right to a hearing. See TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN.
    § 21.251(a)(1). Once the Commissioner refused to appoint a hearing examiner, the LISD had no
    authority to order the Commissioner to change his mind or to appoint a certified hearing examiner
    on its own. See TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 21.257. Because the actions of the LISD did not in any
    way cause the denial of Coggin’s right to a hearing, the LISD cannot properly be said to have caused
    the deprivation of Coggin’s right to procedural due process.
    For the purposes of § 1983 liability, it is immaterial whether the LISD had other options
    available to afford Coggin due process after the Commissioner refused to appoint a hearing examiner.
    Although it is conceivable that the LISD could have held its own due process hearing44 or sent a
    44
    The majority opinion suggests that Texas law does not prohibit
    the LISD from holding its own hearing.      Maj. Op. at 14.      This
    conclusion is dubious. The Texas Supreme Court has held that a
    school district may not avoid the rules set forth in the Texas
    Education Code for terminating an employee. Montgomery Indep. Sch. Dist.
    34
    second notice of termination in an effort to extend the period of time in which Coggin could file a
    timely request for a hearing, any possible “inaction” by the LISD cannot fairly be termed a “cause”
    of the potential constitutional violation at issue here.
    An “inaction” view of causation misstates the LISD’s obligation to Coggin in this situation.
    Under the statutory setting of this case, Texas law deliberately separates the decision to terminate a
    public school teacher from the dut y to afford a due process hearing, presumably as a means of
    protecting teachers from biased school board reviews.45 The LISD had no authority to appoint a
    hearing examiner under this statutory scheme, nor did it have the authority to supplement Coggin’s
    statutorily-governed hearing with its own factfinding hearing. See Davis, 34 S.W.3d at 568. Under
    Texas law, the LISD’s role in providing Coggin procedural due process was complete when it
    v. Davis, 
    34 S.W.3d 559
    , 568 (Tex. 2000) (concluding that “the Board did not have authority within
    the statutory scheme of subchapter F” to make additional findings beyond those made by the
    appointed hearing examiner); see also TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 21.251 (“[Subchapter F] applies if
    a teacher requests a hearing after receiving notice of the proposed decision to: . . . (2) terminate the
    teacher’s probationary or term contract before the end of the contract period . . . .”). Although Davis
    did not consider the due process aspects of the statutory scheme, it certainly illustrates the mandatory
    nature of the regime. The Education Code does not clearly authorize a school district to hold any
    type of hearing once the Commissioner declines to appoint a hearing examiner, and Davis at least
    suggests strongly that the LISD is forbidden from stepping beyond the narrow dictates of the scheme.
    See also Reyes v. Roma Indep. Sch. Dist., No. 083-R2-199, at 4-6 (Tex. Com m’r Educ. Feb. 25,
    2000) (stating that the procedures set out in Chapter 21 are mandatory and exclusive, that a board
    of trustees does not have jurisdiction to deviate from those procedures, and that the parties cannot
    agree to change those procedures unless the statute authorizes them to do so).
    45
    The apparent purpose of this scheme is to ensure teachers a fair and independent review of
    the allegations against them when faced with termination prior to the expiration of their contracts.
    Under Texas law, Coggin could be terminated only for “good cause as determined by the board.”
    See TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 21.211(a)(1) (emphasis added). By providing for an independent pre-
    termination hearing, however, Texas law limits the circumstances in which a school board may find
    “good cause” for termination. Although the school board may reject the conclusions of law and
    proposed action recommended by the appointed hearing examiner in an employee’s case, the school
    board may not reject the hearing examiner’s findings of fact if they are supported by the substantial
    evidence in the record. See TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 21.259.
    35
    provided him with constitutionally adequate notice of the charges against him and informed him of
    the procedures he needed to follow to request a pre-termination hearing from the Commissioner of
    the TEA. Once the LISD fulfilled this obligation, under Texas law, the duty to ensure that Coggin
    was afforded the hearing to which he was constitutionally entitled shifted to the Commissioner.46 The
    majority opinion does not hold that this shift in obligations is unconstitutional. Indeed, it cannot,
    because no case holds that it is unconstitutional for Texas to “divide” due process in this way. Cf.
    Bush v. Viterna, 
    795 F.2d 1203
    , 1209 (5th Cir. 1986) (“The states have virtually complete freedom
    to decide who will be responsible for [the tasks of modern government], and therewith to determine
    who will be held liable for civil rights violations that occur in the course of carrying them out.”).
    Instead, the majority opinion chooses to ignore this issue, limiting its analysis to the tangential issue
    of whether the LISD is the “final arbiter of employment disputes.”47 Maj. Op. at 13.
    46
    Normally, the party who causes the deprivation of property is the party responsible for affording
    due process. Indeed, had this case arisen before the Texas legislature amended the Texas Education
    Code in 1995, there would be no question that the LISD could be held liable under § 1983 for
    terminating Coggin without a hearing. In 1995, however, the Texas legislature dramatically altered
    the state’s provisions for terminating teachers under contract, and thereby changed this result.
    47
    The “final decision maker” analysis in the original panel
    opinion concluded with the argument that the LISD was required to
    conduct a “due process hearing to comply with its federal
    constitutional obligations,” and that any obstacle created by Texas
    law would “have to yield to federal law under the Supremacy
    Clause.” Coggin, 289 F.3d at 336.
    In actuality, the Supremacy Clause is irrelevant. It might be tempting to reason that if state
    procedures prevented the LISD from remedying the “mistake of law” made by the Commissioner,
    then those procedures should yield to federal law. This argument, however, assumes that the LISD
    retained an obligation to ensure that Coggin receive all the process he was due prior to terminating
    his employment. As no ted above, Texas law vests that obligation in the Commissioner of the
    TEA—not the school district. Moreover, there is no legal support for the proposition that LISD had
    a federal obligation to compensate for the Commissioner’s alleged mistakes. Cf. Bush, 
    795 F.2d at 1209
    .
    36
    Thus, the only way that Coggin could succeed against the LISD in this case is if we invalidate
    Subchapter F’s hearing provisions. But Coggin does not challenge the constitutionality of Texas’s
    statutory scheme, either on its face or as applied in his case. On the contrary, he concedes that the
    procedures set forth in Subchapter F of the Texas Education Code are precisely the kind of
    “reasonable procedural requirements” for invoking due process rights previously sanctioned by the
    Supreme Court.48 See Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., 
    455 U.S. 422
    , 437 (1982). Because Coggin
    argues only that the LISD violated his procedural due process right by terminating him after the
    Commissioner wrongfully denied him a hearing, his claim fails for lack of causation.
    II
    The majority opinion has taken a different tack from that of the panel opinion. The majority
    opinion contends that the LISD was the “sole cause of the violation of Coggin’s right to due process
    of law” because it discharged Coggin four business days after Coggin received notice of the
    Commissioner’s refusal to appoint a hearing examiner. Maj. Op. at 8. The logic of this “timing”
    causation argument fails on its own terms, see Parts II.A and B infra, but the majority opinion’s
    approach is suspect for at least two other reasons.
    First, this new causation theory was never briefed or argued to either this court or the district
    court. In the panel opinion, the majority concluded that the LISD had violated Coggin’s due process
    rights by firing him when it knew he had requested a hearing but had not received one. Coggin, 289
    F.3d at 335-38. The majority opinion now contends, without any prompting by the parties, that the
    48
    Coggin does argue, however, that the Commissioner improperly
    adopted a receipt rule instead of the more “traditional” mailbox
    rule, which has led to mischief at both the trial and appellate
    levels.
    37
    LISD’s error was acting too quickly. This latter theory was not in any of the briefs submitted to the
    district court, nor was it included in the district court’s ruling. It is inappropriate for the majority
    opinion to decide this case on grounds that were not presented. United States v. Brace, 
    145 F.3d 247
    , 255-56 (5th Cir. 1998) (en banc) (“Restated, we review only those issues presented to us; we
    do not craft new issues or otherwise search for them in the record.” (emphasis added)).
    Second, the majority opinion states that the LISD’s discharge of Coggin “prematurely cut off
    Coggin’s right to appeal under § 7.057(d).” Maj. Op. at 9. Yet it cites no state law to support this
    argument. In fact, the majority opinion’s underlying premise that TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 7.057(d)
    somehow incorporates TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 2001.176 is pure speculation about Texas law.
    Even if Coggin had a reasonable period of time to file an appeal, as the majority opinion contends (see
    Maj. Op. at 9 n.21), its further conclusion that Coggin did not have any appeal rights after the LISD
    terminated him is simply not supported by existing authorities. See, e.g., Smithville Indep. Sch. Dist.
    v. Hoskins, Nos. 03-98-00561-CV, 03-98-00624-CV, 
    1999 WL 716665
     (Tex. App.—Austin Sept.
    16, 1999, no pet.) (not designated for publication) (considering a teacher’s § 7.057(d) appeal after
    he had been terminated by the school board and affirmatively deciding that the court had jurisdiction
    to consider the issues raised by the teacher, including various due process claims).
    A
    The majority opinion reasons as follows: First, Coggin had a protected property interest in
    continued employment and was entitled to constitutional due process before his employment was
    terminated. Second, Coggin attempted to invoke his right to due process by requesting a pre-
    termination hearing from the Commissioner. Third, the Commissioner erroneously deprived Coggin
    of his right to a pre-termination hearing by ruling that Coggin’s request was untimely. Fourth, the
    38
    Commissioner’s error could have been corrected by the Texas state courts, but the LISD cut off
    Coggin’s appeals rights by firing him too quickly.49 Thus, the LISD is the “true” reason that Coggin
    was not provided with the pre-termination hearing to which he was entitled.
    Of course, the third step of the majority opinion’s reasoning is the linchpin to its analysis.
    Although the nature of Coggin’s employment created due process rights, such rights can be waived.
    The Supreme Court has held that a state may both create reasonable procedural requirements
    regarding the right to a hearing and terminate a claim for failure to meet these statutory requirements
    without raising due process concerns. Logan, 
    455 U.S. at 437
    . In other words, Coggin was not
    entitled to a pre-termination hearing unless he complied with the reasonable procedural requirements
    of Chapter 21 of the Texas Education Code.50 And one of those requirements is that a “teacher must
    file a written request for a hearing . . . with the commissioner not later than the 15th day after the
    date the teacher receives written notice [of the proposed termination].” TEX. EDUC. CODE § 21.253
    (emphasis added).
    The Commissioner refused to appoint a hearing examiner because he determined that
    Coggin’s request was late, and thus Coggin had waived his right to such a hearing. If the
    Commissioner was correct—that the mailbox rule does not apply under state law—then Coggin was
    49
    The majority opinion’s recitation of the facts also suggests
    that the LISD terminated Coggin in the face of a “‘flurry of
    correspondence’” between Coggin’s attorney that the Commissioner
    regarding the timeliness of Coggin’s hearing request. Maj. Op. at
    5. In fact, the record clearly indicates that the flurry did not
    even begin until eleven days after Coggin’s termination. So, there
    is no reason to believe that the LISD knew or had reason to know
    that Coggin was challenging the Commissioner’s determination.
    50
    This fact is undisputed.                 Again, Coggin himself admits that the
    procedures set forth in Subchapter F of the Texas Education Code are precisely the kind of
    “reasonable procedural requirements” sanctioned by the Supreme Court in Logan.
    39
    not constitutionally entitled to a hearing or any other kind of process before the LISD terminated him.
    See Logan, 
    455 U.S. at 437
    . Accordingly, if Coggin waived his rights, then it is irrelevant whether
    the LISD fired him one day later, or one year later.
    When phrased this way, it is clear that the majority’s opinion rests on one fundamental
    premise: Section 21.253 of the Texas Education Code sets out a “mailbox rule” for hearing requests,
    and thus the Commissioner was wrong to apply a “receipt rule” to Coggin’s request. The validity of
    Coggin’s § 1983 suit depends on this premise. Coggin cannot establish that his due process rights
    were violated unless he can show that he did not waive those rights. Surprisingly, the majority
    opinion does not focus on the burden of proof in this case. But it is undisputable that Coggin bears
    the burden of showing that a constitutional violation occurred. See Crawford-El v. Britton, 
    523 U.S. 574
    , 588 (1998) (reiterating that the plaintiff bears the “initial burden of proving a constitutional
    violation”); Lewis v. Woods, 
    848 F.2d 649
    , 652 (5th Cir. 1988) (“It is axiomatic that a plaintiff who
    files suit under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     may recover only if he proves a constitutional violation . . . .”).
    The original panel opinion and the district court’s ruling at least implicitly recognized this, and
    included an explicit discussion on the rule of § 21.253. Coggin, 289 F.3d at 330-32. Although the
    detailed reasoning of those opinions is not included in the majority’s opinion,51 the waiver issue must
    still be considered because it is the necessary platform for the majority opinion’s current holding. A
    careful examination reveals that this platform is faulty.
    51
    The majority does, however, implicitly recognize the importance
    of this point. See Maj. Op. at 9 (“Consequently, we conclude that
    Coggin did not waive his rights . . . .”), 10 (“In this case, . .
    . Coggin was deprived of his protected employment right without the
    due process hearing to which he was entitled and which he did not
    waive . . . ”).
    40
    B
    The majority opinion, like that of the original panel (and the district court), fails to recognize
    that § 21.253 of the Texas Education Code is ambiguous. Instead, all are content to believe that
    § 21.253 clearly applies a “mailbox rule” to hearing requests. However, § 21.253 does not say, on
    its face, that a filing is deemed timely if it was postmarked within the fifteen-day period. Likewise,
    § 21.253 do es not explicitly state that hearing requests are governed by a receipt rule.
    Notwithstanding the majority opinion’s assumptions to the contrary, § 21.253 is anything but clear.52
    52
    This ambiguity can best be illustrated by examining the
    position taken by the district court. The district court first
    reasoned that “file” must not mean “receipt by the commissioner”
    because other provisions of the Texas Education Code explicitly use
    “receipt” language. Yet this argument is overly broad. Chapter 21
    of the Texas Education Code uses “receive” to refer to a party’s
    receipt of a document. Upon receipt, the party is given a certain
    amount of time to perform a designated action. In other words, the
    party is required to “file”, “request”,“notify”, et cetera within
    so many days after “receiving” some type of notice. See, e.g.,
    TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 21.207 (after “receiving notice of the proposed
    nonrenewal,” the teacher “shall notify the board of trustees . . .
    not later than the 15th day after the date the teacher receives the
    notice”) (emphasis added); TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 21.254(c) (“The
    commissioner shall assign a hearing examiner . . . not later than
    the 10th business day after the date on which the commissioner
    receives the request for a hearing.”) (emphasis added). Viewed
    this way, it is clear that the Code’s use of “receive” may be
    nothing more than a logical way to reference the start of a time
    period. This syntax does not, however, illuminate the meaning of
    “file” in § 21.253.
    The district court also pointed out that the TEA’s own
    administrative regulations incorporate a mailbox rule, see TEX.
    ADMIN. CODE ANN. § 157.1050(b), and took this as evidence of a
    general “view of the agency” that the mailbox rule governs
    hearings. But a general, catch-all provision in a different state
    code may not trump the detailed provisions set forth in chapter 21
    of the Education Code. Evidence from within the same statutory
    scheme is more indicative of what the Texas legislature intended.
    See, e.g., Horizon/CMS Healthcare Corp. v. Auld, 
    34 S.W.3d 887
    , 901
    (Tex. 2000) (holding that “the more specific statute controls over
    the more general”); Rudman v. R.R. Comm’n of Tex., 
    349 S.W.2d 717
    ,
    41
    In fact, Coggin himself knew of § 21.253’s ambiguity. He admits that he checked with the post office
    to see if his request, sent by certified mail, with return receipt requested, would arrive by the deadline.
    So Coggin, by his own admission, was not relying on a mailbox rule.53
    In the face of this obvious ambiguity, the Commissioner could have reasonably interpreted
    the statutory language to include either a mailbox rule or a receipt rule. The Commissioner chose the
    latter. And, had the Commissioner’s interpretation been challenged in a Texas court, it would have
    been given “serious consideration, so long as the construction [was] reasonable and [did] not
    contradict the plain language of the statute.” Dodd v. Meno, 
    870 S.W.2d 4
    , 7 (Tex. 1994) (quoting
    Tarrant Appraisal Dist. v. Moore, 
    845 S.W.2d 820
    , 823 (Tex. 1993)). The district court, however,
    (Tex. 1961) (“Courts must take statutes as they find them.”); Gov’t
    Pers. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Wear, 
    251 S.W.2d 525
    , 529 (Tex. 1952)
    (holding that duty of courts is to construe a statute from the
    language used therein if possible). And a careful examination of
    chapter 21 reveals that the legislature deliberately included a
    mailbox rule in other sections.        See TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. §§
    21.105(a), .160, .210. Section 21.253 includes no such language,
    and this fact weighs against a mailbox rule.
    Finally, the district court relied on Ward v. Charter Oak Fire
    Ins. Co., 
    579 S.W.2d 909
     (Tex. 1979).       While the similarities
    between Ward and this case are striking, its importance is probably
    exaggerated. Decided almost twenty-five years ago, Ward involved
    the worker’s compensation law, which the Texas Supreme Court held
    was “to be liberally construed to effectuate the remedies it
    grants.”    
    Id. at 910
    .     Liberal construction of the Worker’s
    Compensation Law was an established policy even before Ward, but no
    legal authority indicates that Texas liberally construes the
    statutory scheme at issue here.
    53
    If § 21.253 did clearly incorporate a mailbox rule, Coggin
    would have a much stronger constitutional claim. In that case, he
    could argue    that   it   would  be   arbitrary,   and   therefore
    unconstitutional, for the Commissioner to deny Coggin’s request for
    a hearing as untimely. Cf. Logan, 
    455 U.S. at 431-34
     (finding a
    due process claim when the plaintiff was denied a hearing after
    complying with every state law procedural requirement). This is
    not, however, the situation before us.
    42
    erred by not according the Commissioner this deference.              It failed to even consider the
    constitutionality of the receipt rule applied by the Commissioner.
    This failure was a serious analytical error. In its haste to determine whether a constitutional
    violation had occurred, the district court did not stop to consider whether the receipt rule had
    afforded Coggin due process. Without a constitutional violation, Coggin does not have a claim under
    § 1983. Thus, the pertinent query for the district court was whether the Commissioner’s reasonable
    application of a receipt rule provided Coggin with the necessary process. I agree with the majority
    opinion (and the district court) that a fifteen-day mailbox rule satisfies due process. Importantly,
    however, a fifteen-day receipt rule is equally constitutional.
    The constitutional minima of procedural due process are notice and a meaningful opportunity
    to respond. Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
    , 546 (1985); Matthews v. Eldridge,
    
    424 U.S. 319
    , 333 (1976). Against this constitutional background, it is clear that a fifteen-day receipt
    rule is as reasonable a procedural requirement as a fifteen-day mailbox rule; both provide a
    meaningful opportunity for a hearing. In fact, other courts have found significantly shorter time
    periods constitutional. See Lindsey v. Normet, 
    405 U.S. 56
    , 64-65 (1972) (finding an eviction
    procedure with a two to six day early-trial provision constitutional); Panozzo v. Rhoads, 
    905 F.2d 135
    , 139 (7th Cir. 1990) (affirming a district court’s ruling that notice of a pre-termination hearing
    less than a day in advance is sufficient for due process purposes); see also Giberson v. Quinn, 
    445 A.2d 1007
    , 1009-10 (Me. 1982) (considering a ten-day time limit with a receipt rule for filing a
    request for a hearing following the suspension of a driver’s license).
    The simple fact is that the district court did not need to determ ine state law to evaluate
    Coggin’s § 1983 suit: the Commissioner’s application of a receipt rule did not violate Coggin’s due
    43
    process rights.54 Since the Commissioner applied a reasonable construction of a facially ambiguous
    statute, Coggin cannot seriously argue that his denial of a hearing was arbitrary. Cf. Neal v. Puckett,
    
    286 F.3d 230
    , 249 (5th Cir. 2002) (en banc) (Jolly, J., concurring) (defining “arbitrary” to mean
    “determined by individual discretion”), cert. denied, 
    123 S.Ct. 963
     (2003); Reid v. Rolling Fork Pub.
    Util. Dist., 
    979 F.2d 1084
    , 1088 (5th Cir. 1992) (holding that “arbitrary” means unreasonable action
    or discrimination (emphasis added)). Thus, the opportunity afforded Coggin co uld only fail to be
    meaningful if it fell short of the constitutional minima—but it is the United States Constitution that
    determines the process Coggin was due, not the filing rule of § 21.253 of the Texas Education Code.
    And, as explained above, the rule applied by the Commissioner more than suffices when measured
    by a federal constitutional yardstick.55
    The district court’s unnecessary foray into state law obscures the plain fact that Coggin failed
    to demonstrate a constitutional violation.56 For the reasons given above, Coggin cannot prove that
    54
    Even if the Texas courts someday decide that § 21.253
    incorporates a mailbox rule, the Commissioner’s failure to afford
    Coggin that extra increment of procedural protection would not
    automatically become unconstitutional.    At the time Coggin was
    denied a hearing, the Commissioner’s reasonable interpretation and
    application of § 21.253 was enough to accord Coggin due process.
    Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. at 546
    ; Lindsey, 
    405 U.S. at 64-65
    .
    55
    To be clear, because the receipt                           rule is constitutionally
    adequate, this court should not attempt                         to resolve the meaning of
    the term “file” in § 21.253. Likewise,                          the district court should
    have left this issue, a matter of state                         law, for Texas to decide.
    56
    And the majority opinion seems to build on this error.       It
    skims over this issue by insisting that the LISD “does not
    challenge or point to any error in the district court’s
    determination that Coggin timely filed his request for a hearing.”
    Maj. Op. at 7. This is simply not true. The LISD argued, before
    both the original panel and the en banc court, that Coggin was
    provided with the process he was due under the Fourteenth Amendment
    and, likewise, that the district court erred in its analysis of
    44
    the Commissioner’s reasonable application of a receipt rule to his hearing request wrongly denied him
    a hearing. Accordingly, Coggin cannot show that he was unfairly denied a hearing; he cannot show
    that he did not waive his right s; and, therefore, he cannot prove that the LISD violated his due
    process rights by firing him immediately.57
    The majority opinion attempts to shore up this faulty analysis by attaching various labels to
    the LISD, such as “responsible state actor,” “final policy and decision maker,” and “final arbiter of
    employment disputes.” Maj. Op. at 12, 13, 14. These terms are reminiscent of the analysis in the
    original panel opinion. Again, the panel majority concluded that the LISD violated Coggin’s due
    process rights because its “intentional discharge of Coggin in spite of its knowledge that he had not
    had any kind of hearing necessarily was the moving force behind Mr. Coggin’s deprivation and
    what process Coggin was due. See, e.g., Appellant’s Br. at 18, 24;
    Appellant’s Supplemental En Banc Br. at 15-16.       The LISD also
    argues that this error, in turn, led the district court to
    “improperly . . . reach and resolve other unnecessary questions.”
    Appellant’s Br. at 24.
    The LISD may not explicitly challenge the district court’s
    holding that § 21.253 incorporates a mailbox rule, but it clearly
    argued that the district court did not need to decide this issue
    because the rule of Logan applied. See id. at 18. Because we
    review the district court’s legal determinations de novo, the
    LISD’s arguments are more than sufficient to preserve the issue of
    whether it was legally necessary, under federal constitutional law,
    for the district court to interpret § 21.253.
    57
    Coggin’s ultimate failure to demonstrate a constitutional
    violation by the LISD distinguishes this case from Cleveland Board
    of Education v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
     (1985). In Loudermill,
    the terminated school district employees had made the necessary
    showing that their rights were violated when they were fired
    without a pre-termination hearing.    
    Id. at 548
    . Unlike Coggin,
    the Loudermill employees were given no opportunity to request a
    pre-termination hearing. 
    Id. at 536-37
    . Thus, the issue of whether
    the employees had waived their rights was inapplicable.
    45
    injury.” Coggin, 289 F.3d at 336. But this line of reasoning is also faulty for the reasons given
    above. See Part I supra.
    Assuming, arguendo, that Coggin could somehow prove that § 21.253 clearly incorporated
    a mailbox rule and thus he did not waive his right to a hearing, he still cannot succeed in this suit. No
    matter what process Coggin was owed, he has failed to establish that the LISD caused the deprivation
    of his rights. Without the necessary causal link between Coggin’s supposed due process violation
    and the actions and/or duties of the LISD, Coggin cannot maintain a valid § 1983 claim against this
    defendant.
    III
    Failure to use proper constitutional analysis has led to the majority’s conclusion that the LISD
    violated Coggin’s procedural due process rights. They choose to grant relief when, for a multitude
    of reasons, Coggin has not proven a viable § 1983 claim. Even if the circumstances of Coggin’s
    termination seem unjust, we should avoid acting as cognoscenti of what is right and wrong, less we
    effectively relegate the Constitution and state law to mere bien pensant.
    For the above reasons, I would vacat e the decision of the district court and render for the
    LISD.
    46
    47
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 00-40731

Citation Numbers: 337 F.3d 459

Filed Date: 7/23/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2020

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