This appeal, in a “political discharge” case, presents an unusual variation on a familiar theme.
See, e.g., Mitchell v. Forsyth,
The defendants asked the district court to grant them summary judgment as to damages on Estrada’s federal claims, on the ground that they enjoy “qualified immunity.” They argued that, even if the facts were as plaintiff alleged, at the time she was dismissed the law did not clearly forbid her dismissal. The district court denied their motion,
1. The key facts, as Estrada states them, are as follоws: From March 1980 to February 1985 she worked in a career civil service position in the Department of Housing in Puerto Rico. In February 1985, soon after the Popular Democratic Party won the gubernatorial election, Estrada, a member of that party, was made personnel director of the Development Bank; this job was a non-tenured confidential or trust position. Estrada says that during 1985 the defendants pressured her to recommend and to accept job applicants as a form of political patronage. She says that she opposed patronage hiring and that in 1986 the defendants dismissed her because of this opposition. Estrada also claims that, when dеfendants dismissed her, they did not give her back her old job in the Housing Department, nor did they find any other career position for her. All this, she says, violates federal law, and, she adds, the violations were sufficiently clear, in light of the law as of 1986, to entitle her to damages as well as to injunctive relief.
2. In a case such as this one, where a plaintiff asserts that a government official has subjected her to "the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by thе Constitution and laws,” 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the official enjoys a “qualified immunity” from liability for damages. He is immune unless, at the time he took action, the right at issue was clearly established.
Anderson v. Creighton,
- U.S. -,
For one thing, we have found no fеderal case holding that it violates the federal Constitution to use political criteria for
hiring
state employees, even in circumstances where it might violate the federal constitution to
dismiss
them for political reasons. The only case we have found directly on point, a 1986 decision, describes the issue as one of first impression and holds that using political factors in hiring does
not
violate the Constitution.
Avery v. Jennings,
Appellant argues that, nonetheless, the use of political criteria to hire Development Bank employees clearly violated
Commonwealth
law. She points to Puerto Rico’s Public Service Personnel Act, 3 L.P.R.A. §§ 1301-1431 (1978), which says that even “agencies or instrumentalities,” such as the Development Bank, to which the provisions of the Act do
not
apply, “shall adopt ... a personnel regulation embodying the merit principle.” § 1338. She adds that the Act defines the “merit principle” as the “concept that all public employees shall be
selected
... on the basis of capability, without discrimination on account of ... political ... ideas.” § 1411(7) (emphasis added). She also nоtes that the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has said that when an excluded agency’s own “regulations do not comply with the fundamental purpose of guaranteeing strict application of the merit principle, ... the provisions of the [Personnel] Act ... shall be applied.”
Torres Ponce v. Jimenez,
The problem with plaintiff’s argument is that, even if she is correct about the clarity of Puerto Rico’s law, she still has not shown that dеfendants clearly violated
federal
law when they dismissed her. It is by no means clear whether or to what extent the federal
Constitution
forbids state officials from dismissing employees who refuse to violate state law. It seems unlikely, for example, thаt the Constitution would protect such employees in an ordinary case where the state law in question has no particular connection with constitutionally protected interests, such as free speech. How much рrotection the Constitution offers when the state law in question
does
relate to constitutionally protected interests appears unsettled. The plaintiff has not called to our attention any relevant authority. And, the arguably rеlevant authority we have found suggests that the federal Constitution does not provide protection, but in a context where no clear violation of state law was involved.
See Berry v. Bailey,
Since, under plaintiffs version of the circumstances, we cannot say her dismissal was
clearly
unlawful under federal law, the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity as to plaintiff’s federal claim for damages.
See Anderson,
3. Estrada also seeks damages in respect to a second federal claim. She says that the defendants violated Puerto Rico law, in that, after rеmoving her from her position as personnel director, they did not find her another civil service job. She points to the Personnel Act provision which says,
Every regular employee in a career position who is appointed to a confidential position shall be entitled to be reinstated in a position equal or similar to the last one he held in the career service.
3 L.P.R.A. § 1350 (Supp.1987). Before she obtained her job in the Development Bank, shе held a career position in the Department of Housing. Since her Development Bank job was a confidential position, she concludes that the Personnel Act entitles her to reinstatement to her career рosition at the Housing department, or a similar position.
Again, since we are reviewing the district court’s decision denying defendants’ assertion of qualified immunity, we need not determine the legal validity of the plaintiff’s argument. We need оnly decide if defendants’ refusal to reinstate her violated federal rights that were “clearly established” in 1986.
Harlow,
Regardless, for the reasons discussed at p. 306, supra, it is not clear that defendants’ failure to reinstate Estrada, even were reinstatement required under Puerto Rico law, would violate federal law. Plaintiff’s lawsuit rests on a claim that her dismissal was due to “political” factors that the federal Constitution forbids the defendants to take into account. See Mitchell, supra; Branti, supra; Elrod, supra. For the reasons discussed at p. 306, supra, we have fоund it unclear whether the federal Constitution forbids the defendants from dismissing a Commonwealth employee because she refuses to use political criteria in hiring. It must, therefore, also be unclear whether the federal Constitutiоn forbids the defendants from refusing to reinstate Estrada for those same reasons.
Again, because the state of federal law was unclear when plaintiff was dismissed in 1986, defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
4. Though defendants' brief raises several other issues, none of them directly turns on the issue of qualified immunity, the only question they may raise on this interlocutory appeal.
Bonitz v. Fair,
The determination of the district court denying qualified immunity is
REVERSED.
