I. Introduction
Plaintiff Patricia Chavez-Rodriguez filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action alleging, in part, that Defendants David Coss, Karen Heldmeyer, and John Hiatt (collectively “Defendants”) retaliated against her in violation of her First Amendment rights while she was employed by the City of Santa Fe, New Mexico. 1 Chavez-Rodriguez’s First Amendment claim was based on a variety of statements she made to city, state, and federal officials, as well as a conversation she had with Ben Lujan, Speaker of the New Mexico House of Representatives. After removing the case to federal district court, the Defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings as to Chavez-Rodriguez’s First Amendment claim, arguing none of the speech in question was constitutionally protected. The district court granted the motion in part and denied it in part, concluding that while most of Chavez-Rodriguez’s speech was not protected, her discussion with Lujan was. Defendants then sought summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds as to the remaining component of Chavez-Rodriguez’s First Amendment claim. The district court denied this motion.
In this interlocutory appeal, Defendants challenge the district court’s denial of qualified immunity. This court now REVERSES and REMANDS to the district court to enter judgment in favor of Defendants on this aspect of Chavez-Rodriguez’s First Amendment claim.
II. Background
Chavez-Rodriguez became the Director of the City of Santa Fe’s Division of Senior Services (“the Division”) in 2004. The Division provides support, including meals, transportation, and health care services, to elderly residents living in the City and County of Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Division’s budget is funded by a number of sources, including the City and County of Santa Fe, the State of New Mexico, and the federal government. In addition to administering senior services programs, *711 Chavez-Rodriguez’s job description required that she “ensuref ] compliance with relevant state, federal, and city laws and regulations” and “reportf ] to funding sources and to the city governing body regarding progress and concerns.”
In 2005, the City proposed changes to the Division’s budget, including cutting certain funding for food services and transferring federal funds from the Division’s budget. Chavez-Rodriguez opposed these changes because of their effect on the Division’s ability to provide services and because she believed the proposed reallocation of funds violated federal law. She publicly voiced her concerns to various city councilors. According to Chavez-Rodriguez, her actions angered two city councilors in particular: Defendants David Coss and Karen Heldmeyer. Nonetheless, she continued to voice her concerns to individual city councilors and at least one federal official.
On May 25, 2005, the Division hosted a Volunteer Appreciation Banquet to honor senior volunteers. Chavez-Rodriguez attended in her role as Director, served as “Mistress of Ceremonies,” and gave welcoming remarks. The banquet was held during work hours and her attendance was part of her job responsibilities. Nine state representatives were invited to attend as well, including Ben Lujan, one of Chavez-Rodriguez’s longtime family friends and Speaker of the New Mexico House of Representatives. Lujan also gave a greeting at the event.
Chavez-Rodriguez sat at the head table with Lujan. At one point, Lujan asked Chavez-Rodriguez how she was doing. In her deposition, she described the conversation as follows:
And while we’re having lunch during the banquet, the Speaker of the House asked me, out of concern, if — he said, Patricia, how are you doing? Fine. I’ve known the Speaker for many, many years. We are family friends. And he asked me, is everything okay? Is there anything that I can help with?
And I said, well, you know, Mr. Speaker, I’m really, really, really concerned because — I’m worried that the program is in jeopardy of being dismantled as it — you know, as it has existed for over 25 years. I’m really, really, really worried about the funding. I’m worried that I’m having to reduce staff hours. I’m worried that money has been cut from the food line item.
And he told me, if there’s anything, anything I can do, I would be more than happy to do so. He said, I am very, very concerned about these programs. He said, I was originally — I was one of the original founders, if you will, of senior programs. Seniors are true and dear to my heart. They are my constituents. And their well-being is of my utmost importance. That’s why I’m here today at this banquet. And if I need to, Patricia, I’ll talk to the Mayor. I will talk to Mike, who was the City Manager at the time, to see if there’s anything that I can do.
In an affidavit, Chavez-Rodriguez further explained she
told the Speaker of the New Mexico House[,] Ben Lujan, the City budget cuts would place the City of Santa Fe out of compliance with Federal law, and would jeopardize the health and welfare of senior citizens of northern New Mexico.
Chavez-Rodriguez claims her conversation with Lujan, along with her general opposition to the budget cuts, angered Coss and Heldmeyer. Ultimately, the Director of the Corporation for National and *712 Community Service 2 determined the budget transfers were a violation of the Older Americans Act, and the City restored the funds.
In March 2006, Coss was elected Mayor of Santa Fe. Thereafter, Chavez-Rodriguez claims she was retaliated against for several months due to her opposition to the budget decisions, including her discussion with Lujan. On January 19, 2007, Assistant City Manager Jack Hiatt informed Chavez-Rodriguez she was being removed from her position as Director of Senior Services and would be reassigned to a low-level position with a local community center. However, Chavez-Rodriguez was later reinstated as Director of the Division.
Chavez-Rodriguez initially filed the instant action in New Mexico state court against the City of Santa Fe, Coss, Heldmeyer, and Hiatt. The complaint included four counts: (1) retaliation in violation of her First Amendment rights, (2) violation of her federal and state right to due process, (3) assault under state law, and (4) recovery of attorney’s fees and costs. Chavez-Rodriguez’s First Amendment claims related not only to her conversation with Lujan, but also her public opposition to the budget cuts and her direct contact with individual city councilors and federal officials on the subject.
Defendants removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico. Defendants then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, which the district court granted in part and denied in part, determining most of the incidents of speech at issue were not protected under the First Amendment because they were undertaken pursuant to Chavez-Rodriguez’s official duties. However, the district court denied the motion as to Chavez-Rodriguez’s claim of retaliation for her conversation with Lujan, determining those statements were made as a private citizen and are, therefore, entitled to First Amendment protection. 3
Defendants then filed a motion for summary judgment claiming entitlement to qualified immunity. In its order, the district court reiterated its prior ruling that Chavez-Rodriguez’s conversation with Lujan constituted protected speech. The court also determined it was clearly established that retaliating against a public employee for protected speech is unconstitutional. Consequently, the motion was denied.
Defendants filed this appeal seeking review of the district court’s denial of qualified immunity. Though the denial of a motion for summary judgment is not typically an appealable final order, this court has appellate jurisdiction when the district court denies qualified immunity.
Swanson v. Town of Mountain View, Colo.,
III. Discussion
This court reviews a district court’s denial of qualified immunity de novo, following the same standards used
*713
by the district court.
Casey v. West Las Vegas Ind. Sch. Dist.,
Here, the court opts to proceed with the constitutional inquiry first. In
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
In this circuit, the first three inquiries are resolved by the court, whereas the final two are generally determined by the trier of fact. Id.;
see Hesse v. Town of Jackson, Wyo.,
The primary issue here is whether Chavez-Rodriguez’s speech at the banquet was pursuant to her official duties. There are no bright line rules to make this determination. Instead, the court “take[s] a practical view of all the facts and circumstances surrounding the speech and the employment relationship.”
Brammer-Hoelter,
Having considered the content of Chavez-Rodriguez’s speech, the context in which it was made, and Chavez-Rodriguez’s job duties, the court concludes her statements to Lujan were made pursuant to her official duties. Chavez-Rodriguez’s speech occurred at an event sponsored by the Division of Senior Services. The banquet was held during work hours, and she attended in her capacity as Director of the Division. Likewise, Lujan attended in his capacity as Speaker of the New Mexico House of Representatives. Therefore, both participants to the conversation were present at the banquet by virtue of their governmental roles.
While this alone would be insufficient to establish Chavez-Rodriguez’s statements are not entitled to First Amendment protection, the content of the speech strongly suggests Chavez-Rodriguez was communicating with Lujan pursuant to her employment duties. Even though the banquet setting was informal, her statements put Lujan on notice that without his assistance the Division would lose funding that would limit its ability to provide services. It appears Lujan himself so understood Chavez-Rodriguez’s statements, as he immediately offered to speak with various city officials to address the Division’s funding situation. The content of the speech indicates the conversation was more akin to a work discussion between two public officials than small talk at a party. By voicing her budgeting concerns to Lujan, a powerful New.Mexico state official, Chavez-Rodriguez was engaging in speech that “contribute^] to or facilitate^]” her performance as Director.
Brammer-Hoelter,
Chavez-Rodriguez relies heavily on her relationship with Lujan. Specifically, she argues her discussion with Lujan was more like a conversation between two family friends than an employment activity. While the personal relationship between the employee and her audience is a factor this court considers, the court must also be cognizant of the full context in which the speech occurs. Indeed, if the existence of a personal relationship itself was dispositive, no effect would be given to the employer’s “heightened interests in controlling speech made by an employee in ... her professional capacity.”
Garcetti,
Chavez-Rodriguez also argues her conversation with Lujan must constitute private speech because Lujan is not within her chain of command and she had no duty to report directly to him. As Chavez-Rodriguez notes, the Tenth Circuit has determined that this factor is relevant in at least two cases. In
Casey v. West Las Vegas Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Casey served as a school district superintendent as well as CEO of the district’s Head Start program.
With respect to her speech regarding the Head Start program, this court noted she went outside the chain of command. Id. at 1329. Nonetheless, the court determined her speech was not protected because she had a duty as executive director of the school district’s Head Start program to report noncomplianee with federal regulations. Id. at 1330-31. This court also considered it relevant she went outside her chain of command when reporting violations of the Open Meetings Act. This factor too was not dispositive and simply informed the conclusion that Casey was not fulfilling any work-related duty when she contacted the Attorney General’s Office. Id. at 1332. Indeed, the court noted:
Of course, Ms. Casey also took her complaints about the Head Start program to outside authorities. But, very much unlike the administration of the Head Start program that the Board committed to her care and pursuant to which she had independent responsibilities to the federal government, we have no evidence in the summary judgment record before us suggesting that the Board or any other legal authority ever assigned Ms. Casey responsibility for the Board’s meeting practices.
Id. Thus, the court’s focus remained on the specific nature of the plaintiffs job responsibilities. That Casey reached different results on the Head Start and Open Meetings Act claims makes it clear that going beyond the chain of command is merely one factor suggesting, under certain circumstances, that an employee’s speech is not job-related. It does not, however, control the inquiry.
Chavez-Rodriguez also points to
Thomas v. City of Blanchard.
There, this court held that a city building inspector’s report to law enforcement regarding the mayor’s falsification of a building certificate constituted protected speech.
In any casé, “even if not explicitly required as part of her day-to-day job responsibilities,” an employee’s statements are made pursuant to official duties when they “stemmed from and were the type of activities that she was paid to do.”
Green,
Given all of the circumstances surrounding Chavez-Rodriguez’s conversation with Lujan, the court concludes the speech in question was undertaken pursuant to Chavez-Rodriguez’s official duties and not as a private citizen. As a result, this speech is not entitled to First Amendment protection and the Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, this court REVERSES the district court’s denial of the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment because the Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. The court REMANDS this case to the district court with instructions to enter judgment as a matter of law in the Defendants’ favor with respect to the First Amendment claim stemming from Chavez-Rodriguez’s conversation with Lujan at the Division’s banquet.
Notes
. The City of Santa Fe was also named as a defendant in the complaint. The district court dismissed all municipal liability claims against the City, and the City is not a party to this appeal.
. The Corporation for National and Community Service "is an independent federal agency that administers and dispenses federal grant funds to support local programs fostering volunteer and community service activities.”
United States v. Williams,
. In a separate order, the district court also dismissed Chavez-Rodriguez’s federal due process claims along with all municipal liability claims against the City of Santa Fe. Chavez-Rodriguez’s assault claim against Hiatt remains pending before the district court.
. It is also noteworthy that Chavez-Rodriguez’s predecessor, Rita Maes, stated in an affidavit that when she served as Director, it was policy to invite state legislators to the banquet specifically so the Director would have an opportunity to lobby for funding.
