Plаintiff, contending he had been discharged from government employment, brought the present section 1983 action seeking damages and reinstatement. Essentially, he claims 1) that the discharge was done without prior notice or hеaring in violation of his right to procedural due process and 2) that he was discharged because of his affiliation with the political party defeated in Puerto Rico’s 1984 elections in violation of his first amendment rights. Defendаnts moved for summary judgment on the damages claim on the theory that they had not violated clearly established law and that hence they were entitled to qualified immunity. Defendants' motion was denied without opinion, and they have nоw appealed.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
1.
Procedural due process.
With respect to plaintiff’s procedural due process claim, defendants’ position is that it was not сlearly established law at the time of plaintiff’s job termination that an employee with a contractually fixed term of employment had a property interest in employment beyond the specified term and hencе had a constitutional right to notice or a hearing. In general, defendants are correct.
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Plaintiff alleges in his complaint and affidavit that, although he was classified as a transitory government employee, he always understood his position to be permanent in nature. He had been employed in a transitory capacity for nearly six years before his discharge without notice or hearing. What plaintiff does not allege, however, is a basis for his “understanding” that his position was, in effect, рermanent and thus not governed by Puerto Rico law providing that a transitory employee “may be removed from service at anytime during the term of his appointment.” 3 L.P.R.A. § 1336(9) (Supp.1985).
See Perry v. Sindermann,
Defendants view plaintiff’s failure to plead the basis of his claim to a permanent position as proof that there is no genuine issue of material fact that his employment was for аnything other than a fixed term. Thus, defendants argue, they are entitled to summary judgment. This argument, focusing on whether facts are disputed, is not a proper subject of our review as part of an interlocutory appeal on thе issue of qualified immunity.
Bonitz v. Fair,
The qualified immunity question in this case is whether it was clearly established in 1985 that a transitory employee with only a subjective expectation of permanent employment was entitled to the protections of due process. Under Perry v. Sindermann, such an employee has no procedural due process rights, and thus it was not clearly established in 1985 that plaintiff was entitled to the protеctions of due process. Therefore, on the basis of the allegations before us, defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
2.
First amendment claim.
Defendants’ first amendment argument is not that they are entitled to qualified immunity because political affiliation was an “appropriate” requirement for plaintiff’s particular position, thus justifying their failure to reappoint him.
See Branti v. Finkel,
We disagree. Despite defendants’ attempts to distinguish the termination of plaintiff’s job from the “discharges” covered by
Elrod
and
Branti,
we find ample evidence in Supreme Court cases that there
*128
is no practical difference between these two categories for first amendment purposes. In
Perry v. Sindermann,
For at least a quarter-century, this Court has made clear that even though a person has no “ ‘right’ ” to a valuable governmental benefit and even though the government may deny him the benefit for any number of reasons, there are some reasons upon which the government may not rely.
Id.
at 597,
We think these cases make it clear that
Elrod
and
Branti
apply generally to an employee’s right to
retain
his public employmеnt, and they do not distinguish between employees discharged from a permanent position and those who fail to receive a new appointment.
Accord McBee v. Jim Hogg County, Tex.,
A case relied upon by defendants,
Messer v. Curci,
In rejecting defendants’ claim of qualified immunity on thе first amendment issue, we again emphasize that defendants may well be entitled to summary judgment on other grounds. Even though plaintiff was on sick leave when defendants took office, defendants extended his appointment from Januаry 31, 1985, to March 31, 1985, and during that period conducted an evaluation of the need for the approximately 700 transitory positions in the Department of Labor and Human Resources. It was only after this evaluation that plaintiff’s рosition was terminated. Thus, it is possible that plaintiff will be unable to meet his burden of showing that the dismissal would not have occurred but for his political affiliation.
See Jimenez Fuentes v. Gaztambide,
Our holding on the first amendment issue, therefore, is a narrow one. We conclude оnly that defendants are not entitled to summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity because it was clearly established at the time of plaintiff’s termination that even a “transitory” employee like plaintiff who had been employеd for nearly six years enjoyed the protections described in Elrod and Branti.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed so far as it denied summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity on the first amendment claim. The judgment of the district сourt on the due process claim is reversed, and the ease is remanded with instructions to enter summary judgment on that issue for defendants on the basis of qualified immunity.
Notes
. We find no significance in the line defendants attempt to draw between a transitory employee appointed to a pre-existing or permanent position and an employee who was appointed to a position that was specifically created for a fixed рeriod. It may be that such a distinction would make a difference when the "fixed period” had not continuously been extended, and the employee had been appointed only once for a brief period of timе in a position whose duties naturally terminated at the end of that period.
. In
Garretto
v.
Cooperman,
