A shift in political winds has wafted this case here. Mayor Jane Byrne appointed Arthur Herman in February 1981 as the Director of Field Operations at Chicago’s Department of Housing. Byrne lost her bid for re-election in April 1983. Harold Washington, the new mayor, posted Brеnda Gaines to be Commissioner of Housing. Gaines reorganized the Department at the end of June 1984, abolishing Herman’s job (among other changes). Herman, formerly on the staff of Alderman Bernard L. Stone, an opponent of Mayor Washington, contends in this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 thаt Gaines juggled the organization of the Department to get rid of Washington’s adversaries, and in particular to punish him for refusing to approve redevelopment projects Mayor Washington favored. The district court did not reach the merits. Although Hermаn filed the complaint in February 1986, within the two-year period for commencing § 1983 suits in Illinois, see
Anton v. Lehpamer,
Laches comеs into play when an inexcusable delay produces prejudice to the defendant. See generally
Zelazny v. Lyng,
True enough, in employment cases damages add up unless the plaintiff finds a better job in the interim. Belated reinstatement also can complicate bureaucratic life. Cf.
Sampson v. Murray,
To find “prejudice” in the mounting of back-pay exposure is to say that cases involving employment discrimination must be filed before the two years available in Illinois to litigants whose § 1983 cases present other kinds of claims. The district court’s reasoning implies that any § 1983 employment case filed 19 months after discharge, or even sooner, will be dismissed unless the plaintiff has an explanation the court finds satisfactory. Statutes of limitations imрose no such requirement of explanation. They operate mechanically for the most part.
It may well be that in a perfect world employment cases would have shorter statutes of limitations than cases growing out of, say, the deliberаte withholding of medical care in prisons, because delay in an employment case aggravates the injury while delay in a medical case may help the court assess the extent of the injury. Congress has put shorter fuses on employment casеs when addressing the subject explicitly, and so did we when establishing an outer bound for filing petitions to enforce the
Shakman
consent decree, which governs most public employment in Chicago.
Smith v. City of Chicago,
Courts must оbtain the statute of limitations in § 1983 cases from state law, see 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and for years disputes about which state law to use vexed the federal courts.
Wilson v. Garcia,
The рractice of seeking state-law analogies for particular § 1983 claims bred confusion and inconsistency in the lower courts and generated time-consuming litigation. Some courts found analogies in common-law tort, others in contract law, and still others in statutory law.... Consequently, plaintiffs and defendants often had no idea whether a federal civil rights claim was barred until a court ruled on their case. Predictability, a primary goal of statutes of limitations, was thereby frustrated.
*403
Wilson
and
Owens
inform us that § 1983 cases growing out of discharge from employment should be treated no differently from cases growing out of police brutality (Owens) or airport noise
(Bieneman).
Laches treats employment cases differently from other § 1983 cases. Plaintiffs would have less than two years, as a rule, in еmployment cases. If the doctrine applies, then despite
Wilson
and
Owens
“plaintiffs and defendants [will have] no idea whether a federal civil rights claim [is] barred until a court rule[s] on their case”.
Wilson, Owens,
and the practical goals that led to those decisions require us to treat this § 1983 employment case just like any other § 1983 case. As a matter of law, mounting damages do not give the former employee a shorter time to file suit than state law provides for personal injury actions. This is not to say that laches is inapрlicable; when a federal court absorbs state law, it absorbs the related parts of state law that may shorten or extend the time, see
Wilson,
Chicago presented to the district court other grounds for summary judgment. Although that court did not reach them, grounds preserved in the district court may be urged here, without a cross-appeal, to sustain the judgment.
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Ludwig,
The job description for Director of Field Operations recited that the Director would reсommend the establishment of policies for housing rehabilitation in Chicago and coordinate efforts to carry out those policies. The Director could issue binding instructions to the staff. Rehabilitation projects required his approval. (Herman’s сomplaint says that his failure to sign off on politically inspired proposals led to his discharge.) The job description also called for the Director to maintain “liaison and coordination with aldermen and City Council staff, the Mayor’s Office, and elected officials”, and to “[a]ttend[ ] and speak[ ] at public hearings and regular meetings of the City Council ... and other organizations to represent the Department.” There can be no doubt that under
Elrod, Branti,
and this circuit’s cases, such a position is one for whiсh “party affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the effective performance of the public office involved”,
Branti,
Herman does not seriously contest this. He contends, instead, that these were not really his duties, and that a look at the *404 actual оperation of the Department casts him in a less exalted role. It is far from clear that this aids him. See Bicanic, at 393-95. Herman did not establish the factual foundation for a close look at his job’s duties, however. The City moved for summary judgment, filing a statement of material facts that it believed were uncontested and tendering the job description plus other materials (including parts of Herman’s deposition) to show that Herman was a politician holding a politically sensitive job. Under Local Rule 12(f), “[a]ll material facts set forth in the statement ... served by the moving party will be deemed to be admitted unless controverted by the statement required to be served by the opposing party.”
Chicago filed its motion and supporting materials on January 26, 1988. A briefing schedule gave Herman until Fеbruary 16 to respond. The district court extended that time on motion, first to March 4 and then to March 31. The second time the court stated that no further extensions would be forthcoming. Nonetheless, the court extended the time yet again, to April 22. John L. Gubbins, representing Herman, filed on April 22 yet another request for an extension, seeking two more weeks. Her patience exhausted, the district judge denied this motion and treated as admitted the material statements of fact in the City’s papers. Gubbins insists on appeal thаt Local Rule 12(f) is “inconsistent with the federal rules” because, “[cjontrary to well settled law, the district court did not comb the record” to check the City’s assertions. Per contra, the law is “well settled” that a court has no such obligation.
Once a party filеs a motion for summary judgment showing within its four corners entitlement to prevail, judgment must be entered “against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden at trial.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The record before the district court was a record the City made. The City’s assertions of facts were properly deemed admitted under Local Rule 12(f). Far from being inconsistent with first principles of justice, as attorney Gubbins would have it, Rule 12(f) contributes to the orderly conduct of litigation. It gives counsel an incentive to respond to motions, and Gubbins had ample time to respond to this one. Cf.
Powell v. Starwalt,
AFFIRMED.
