DAUGHTREY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which GILMAN, J., joined. BATCHELDER, J. (pp. 222-24), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
OPINION
Before us are two appeals, both related to a § 1983 action in which the plaintiffs alleged that their First Amendment rights were violated when Onzie Sizemore, as the newly elected county judge-executive of Leslie County, Kentucky, intentionally did
In the first appeal, defendant Onzie Sizemore, in his individual capacity, contends that the district court erred in denying his motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. In the second, defendants Leslie County and Leslie County Fiscal Court, along with Size-more and two county magistrates in their official capacities, contend that if this court finds that Sizemore is entitled to qualified immunity, then the plaintiffs’ claims against them must also be dismissed. To support this contention, they argue that because the issues are inextricably intertwined, we should assert pendent appellate jurisdiction over their appeal, even though the appeal on its own would not be reviewable.
We conclude that the district court erred in denying Sizemore summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity with respect to four of the plaintiffs, who fail to state a First Amendment violation because they fall within the Branti v. Finkel exception for political patronage dismissals. Accordingly, the claims of these four plaintiffs against the county and other defendants must be dismissed, because they cannot state a claim against these defendants if there has been no violation of their constitutional rights. However, we cannot exercise jurisdiction at this time over the claims of the remaining 15 plaintiffs, because the district court determined that a genuine issue of material fact remains as to what motivated then-constructive discharge. Such a ruling prevents appellate review at this stage of the proceedings, under the Supreme Court’s opinion in Johnson v. Jones,
PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In the May 1993 Leslie County Republican primary, Sizemore defeated the incumbent county judge, C. Allen Muncy.
During the primary campaign, the plaintiffs openly and publicly supported Judge Muncy. According to then- testimony, they displayed their support by engaging
None of the plaintiffs were rehired to work under Sizemore’s administration. They filed a civil rights action against Size-more and each of the four magistrates in their individual capacities, and also against Leslie County, the Leslie County Fiscal Court, and Sizemore and each of the magistrates in their official capacities. In this action, the plaintiffs alleged that their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated by the defendants because they were terminated from their county employment for the exercise of their political beliefs and were not afforded procedural due process. They also argued that their termination violated state laws and alleged that it was an unwritten policy or custom in Leslie County to get rid of the supporters of one’s political opponents upon taking office.
After protracted discovery, Sizemore, in his individual capacity, and the remaining defendants filed motions for summary judgment, with Sizemore specifically invoking the doctrine of qualified immunity. On March 31, 1997, the district court granted in part and denied in part the summary judgment motions. The court (1) granted the defendants’ motions with regard to the plaintiffs’ due process and state law claims; (2) granted the magistrates, in their individual capacity, summary judgment with regard to the plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims; (3) denied summary judgment with regard to liability of the county by virtue of suit against officials in their official capacity with respect to plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims; (4) granted summary judgment with regard to the First Amendment claims of plaintiffs Christy Couch Sexton and Marlene Feltner; (5) denied summary judgment with regard to all remaining plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims; and (6) denied Sizemore qualified immunity. Sizemore and the other defendants timely filed separate notices of appeal.
The summary judgment record included evidence that it was the custom in Leslie County for the victor of an election to “enjoy the spoils” by terminating all of the employees of the previous administration and hiring back only those the official wanted. In addition, the parties have devoted a fair amount of their appellate briefs to discussing the financial condition of the county when Sizemore took office, which, for reasons discussed below, is not relevant to our analysis at this stage of the litigation.
ANALYSIS
I. Plaintiffs Vernon Muncy, Martin Muncy, Russell Hoard, and Betty Sue Baker and the Branti Exception
A. Jurisdiction
Under the doctrine of qualified immunity, as explained by the Supreme Court in Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In this case, plaintiffs Vernon Muncy, Martin Muncy, Russell Hoard, and Betty Sue Baker allege that their clearly established First Amendment rights were violated when they were constructively discharged on the basis of political affiliation. Sizemore contends that he should be granted qualified immunity with respect to these claims because “party affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the effective performance of the public offices involved” and, therefore, the plaintiffs have failed to assert a violation of their First Amendment rights. Branti v. Finkel,
As a threshold matter, the plaintiffs argue that we lack jurisdiction to review this question, because the district court’s denial of summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity was based on its conclusion that “there is still a question of whether the positions occupied by those individuals were imbued with the discretionary and/or confidential access to the Judge-Executive so as to warrant a reasonable belief that the exception was applicable.” A district court’s order denying summary judgment that is based on qualified immunity and turns on an issue of law is immediately appealable as a final judgment under the collateral order doctrine. See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
In the present case, the jurisdictional question is not relevant with respect to the first four plaintiffs, because there is no factual dispute, but rather a dispute about how to characterize the undisputed evidence in light of the relevant law. The issue identified by the district court in this case — “whether the positions occupied by those individuals were imbued with the discretionary and/or confidential access to the Judge-Executive so as to warrant a reasonable belief that the exception [to the rule that employee’s cannot be fired on the basis of political affiliation] was applicable” — is not a factual dispute, as the plaintiff argues. Plaintiff mixes the factual issue of what the job duties of the plaintiffs’ positions are with the purely legal question of whether to characterize those duties as political and therefore unprotected by the First Amendment. See Mumford v. Basinski,
B. Whether Plaintiffs Asserted a Constitutional Violation
Defendant Sizemore’s appeal raises two legal questions, only one of which we need to reach. In determining whether qualified immunity exists, we first ask “whether the plaintiff has asserted a violation of a constitutional right at all.” Blair v. Meade,
The Supreme Court trilogy of El-rod v. Burns,
As this court noted in Blair, the Branti exception was “fleshed out in Faughender v. City of North Olmsted,
In McCloud, the court attempted to organize the growing body of Supreme Court and Sixth Circuit case law into a categorical approach for determining whether a position falls within the Branti exception, specifying the following categories:
Category One: positions specifically named in relevant federal, state, county, or municipal law to which discretionary authority with respect to the enforcement of that law or the carrying out of some other policy of political concern is granted;
Category Two: positions to which a significant portion of the total discretionary authority available to category one position-holders has been delegated; or positions not named in law, possessing by virtue of the named jurisdiction’s pattern or practice the same quantum or type of discretionary authority commonly held by category one positions in other jurisdictions;
Category Three: confidential advisers who spent a considerable portion of their time on the job advising category one or*213 category two position-holders on how to exercise their statutory or delegated pol-icymaking authority, or other confidential employees who control the lines of communication to category one positions, category two positions, or confidential advisers;
Category Four: positions that are part of a group of positions filled by balancing out political party representation, or that are filled by balancing out selections made by different governmental agents or bodies.
McCloud,
As the next step, therefore, we must review the claims of each of the first four plaintiffs in light of the approaches discussed in Faughender, Rice, Blair, and McCloud.
1. County Road Department Foreman/Garbage Coordinator Position
Under the Faughender analysis, we first examine the “inherent duties” of the position in question. One way of determining what those duties are is to consider the testimony of a person who has held that position, although such testimony is not decisive. See Smith v. Sushka,
The second prong of the Faughender analysis requires the court to consider the duties that the new holder of that position will perform. Sizemore testified that he envisioned his newly appointed road foreman, Clarence Napier, as his “liaison out to the public on roads and road problems.” Sizemore also testified that the county road budget is roughly a third to a half of the entire county budget. Napier testified that on a typical day, he receives complaints from a number of citizens regarding the condition of roads, which he follows up by inspecting the road and reporting back to the judge. He handles what he considers “small” problems and goes to the judge with big ones. He oversees road projects and supervises the crew. According to magistrate William Lewis, who served as magistrate for four terms, there is a direct relationship between keeping roads maintained and getting reelected.
Plaintiff Vernon Muncy’s reliance on Judge Muncy’s testimony that the road foreman played no role in the design or enforcement of policy and did not serve as an advisor ignores the fact that what is relevant under Faughender is how the new office holder envisions the position. Moreover, plaintiff does not challenge defendant Sizemore’s “vision” of the road foreman position, which lends further support to the conclusion that the position as defendant envisions it is inherently political. See Blair,
In light of the inherent nature of this position, which involves responsibility for carrying out the county judge-executive’s road maintenance policy and controlling the lines of communication between the public and the judge executive, as well as
In Blair, the court noted that although many of the duties of the position at issue were ministerial, the nature of the position involved elements of confidentiality and trust, and the position was “only one level removed from an executive position.” Id. The position of road foreman is also one level removed from the executive and by its nature requires the holder of the position to report important information to the executive and to represent the executive in the community so far as county roads are concerned. See Selch v. Letts,
There is significant evidence in political life that the failure to properly provide public services, such as snow removal from highways, will adversely impact on the chief executive of a state or a local government charged with providing such services. In the case before us, the successful implementation of policy in the area of highway maintenance would likely have a substantial effect on the public’s perception of the Democratic administration....
Id. at 1046-47 (citation omitted). In a case specifically involving the position of a county road foreman, another court found that political loyalty to the county judge was necessary for the effective performance of the job at least in part because “[i]n many ways, the foreman is the eyes and ears of the Judge so far as the condition of county roads is concerned.” Wagner v. Hawkins,
In any event, the road foreman position falls squarely into the first of the four McCloud categories. Kentucky state law specifically provides for a county road supervisor who “has the general charge of all county roads and bridges within his county” and must see that “county roads and bridges are improved and maintained as provided by law.” KRS § 179.070(1),(2). Road maintenance is a “policy of political concern,” and the record shows that the road foreman has some discretionary authority with respect to carrying out this policy.
2. Assistant Road Foreman/Supervisor Position
As assistant road foreman, plaintiff Martin Muncy testified that he worked under foreman Vernon Muncy, carrying out the tasks ordered by the foreman. He was responsible for making sure that work
Although the assistant road foreman is twice removed from the executive, and his job is largely ministerial, defendant Size-more is correct that this position is inherently political for essentially the same reasons the road foreman’s position is. Given the central importance of road maintenance in a rural county and the fact that the assistant road foreman may be called upon to serve as the executive’s liaison with the public as far as road conditions are concerned, the position can only be seen as inherently political. As in Blair, where the court found that both the finance officer and assistant finance officer fell within the Branti exception because the assistant performed many of the same tasks as the finance officer, in this case the assistant road foreman falls within the Branti exception because the nature of his job is to serve as the road foreman when the road foreman is unavailable. See Blair,
The same analysis leads to the conclusion that the assistant road foreman position falls within McCloud category two. When the road foreman, who is in a category one position, is absent, the assistant is delegated the authority available to the category one position-holder. See McCloud,
3. Garage Supervisor/Purchasing Agent Position
Plaintiff Russell Hoard served as both garage supervisor and purchasing agent. According to him, the garage supervisor in Leslie County comes under the authority of the road department. He takes complaints over the phone regarding road maintenance and conditions and discusses these complaints with the county judge. The county judge tells the supervisor which roads need to be fixed, how he wants it done, what parts need to be bought, and what equipment needs to be fixed. The garage supervisor is responsible for supervising the employees at the road department garage, which consists of telling them what to do and relaying messages from the county judge and the road foreman. The garage supervisor also measures fuel to see if more gas or diesel is needed and keeps the garage clean. The “purchasing agent” component of this position consists of shopping around for and ordering the parts that the garage mechanic indicates are needed.
Plaintiff Hoard argues that the garage supervisor has no discretion either in the design or enforcement of policy, nor does he have the authority to answer the complaints he receives by determining whether or not a road was to be fixed, and if so when it is to be repaired. As garage supervisor, Hoard says, he simply answered the phone, received complaints, and took notes. According to Hoard, this position is “nothing more that a supervisor with a glorified title ... performing tasks over which he ... has no discretion, or no discretion of political significance.”
Sizemore concedes that the position is hard to “pigeon hole” into a McCloud category, but he argues that the position is inherently political because it controls the lines of communication between the public and the county judge and between the county judge and the garage employees. Judge Muncy’s testimony in this instance supports Sizemore’s position. He testified
Even if responding to citizens’ complaints over the phone and supervising employees in the garage were not alone sufficient for the conclusion that this job is inherently political, the fact that the position involves a broad range of responsibilities leads to the conclusion that it is political. See Rice,
4. Senior Citizens Director
Under the Faughender analysis, this position is clearly political in nature and not protected by the First Amendment. As envisioned by Sizemore, the director has discretion in the appropriation of money under the senior citizens program budget. Further, the director prepares and submits budgetary information to both the county and state agencies which help to fund the program, and Size-more consults with and seeks advice from the director concerning the operation of the centers. Sizemore testified that the senior citizens director supervises the daily operation of the two senior citizens homes, including scheduling, ordering supplies and handling complaints, and also supervises every employee of those facilities. Any policy Sizemore wishes to implement regarding the operation of these centers must be discussed with and channeled through the director, and the director communicates with the public concerning the policies or activities of the senior citizens program. Finally, Sizemore testified that he was in almost daily contact with the director concerning the operations of the senior citizens program, discussing confidential matters such as personnel decisions and prioritizing programs.
This senior citizens director has discretionary authority with regard to the implementation of policy and appropriation of funds within the program’s budget, serves as the judge’s representative to the public on the issue of senior citizens, and advises the judge on policy issues. Under either Faughender1 s “inherently political” analysis, or McCloud’s categorical approach (this position would fall under either of the first two categories), political affiliation is an appropriate consideration for this position.
Based on the above analysis, the defendant should have been granted summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity with respect to all four plaintiffs involved in this part of the appeal: Vernon Muncy, Martin Muncy, Russell Hoard, and Betty Sue Baker. Moreover, because the court has concluded that the jobs of the plaintiffs are inherently political as a matter of law, it is unnecessary for the court to proceed to the second legal question— whether it was clearly established, when defendant Sizemore made his personnel decisions, that political affiliation was not
II. The Court’s Jurisdiction With Respect to the Remaining 15 Plaintiffs
With respect to the remaining 15 plaintiffs, defendant Sizemore contends, citing Pray v. City of Sandusky,
In making this argument, Sizemore would have us extend the reach of Pray, a Fourth Amendment case in which the constitutional claim does not require proof of defendant’s motive, to a case such as the present one, where the constitutional claim itself is based on defendant’s unconstitutional motive. In a Fourth Amendment search and seizure case, the qualified immunity question is whether the officer’s behavior was “reasonable,” ie., amounted to probable cause or reasonable suspicion, given the officer’s understanding of the factual circumstances, even if his understanding was mistaken. See Pray,
In Pray, although we said that the defendant was immune if his decision was reasonable even if mistaken, we refused to grant the defendant summary judgment because “there [were] factual disputes involving an issue on which the question of immunity turns, ‘such that it cannot be determined before trial whether the defendant did acts that violate[d] clearly established rights.’ ” Pray,
Defendant Sizemore concedes that the law was clearly established that these 15 plaintiffs were protected under the Branti analysis but attempts to extend Pray’s “reasonableness” analysis to the factual circumstances surrounding defendant’s motivation. We conclude that, under prior circuit precedent, the result would amount to an improper extension of Pray and, moreover, that it was implicitly rejected by the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in Crawford-El v. Britton,
Here, the district court held that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether political affiliation motivated the defendant. As we have previously suggested, Johnson v. Jones deprives us of jurisdiction to determine that factual question. See Blair,
It appears to us that defendant’s argument is an attempt to transform the factual issue of motivation into the legal question of objective reasonableness. Such an approach would immunize all defendants in cases involving motive-based constitutional torts, so long as they could point to objective evidence showing 'that a reasonable official could have acted on legitimate grounds. This is exactly the approach suggested by Justice Scalia’s dissent and rejected by Justice Stevens’s plurality opinion in Crawford-El, 523 U.S. at-,
In his dissent in Crawford-El, Justice Rehnquist lamented what he considered the Court’s failure to explicitly address one of the questions presented by the defendant, which is the very same question presented in this appeal: “In a First Amendment retaliation case against a government official, is the official entitled to qualified immunity if she asserts a legitimate justification for her allegedly retaliatory act and that justification would have been a reasonable basis for the act, even if evidence — no matter how strong' — shows the official’s actual reason for the act was unconstitutional?” Id. at---,
Given the Crawford-El court’s rejection of the dissents’ alternative constructions, its policy against immunizing officials based solely on their assertion of a valid reason for their actions, and its reliance on the traditional analysis of a summary judgment motion, the application of the Court’s holding to the present case, as it was presented to the district court, is clear. As long as plaintiffs produced evidence that could support a finding that Sizemore discharged them on the basis of their political affiliation, the district court was obligated under Crawford-El to deny Size-more’s motion for summary judgment. Indeed, this is precisely the basis upon which the district court denied Sizemore’s motion, holding that “[w]hether the plaintiffs’ constitutionally protected activities prompted the defendants’ actions presents an issue of fact.”
The district court’s finding that there is a factual dispute as to Sizemore’s motivation, in turn, deprives this court of appellate jurisdiction, as explicitly instructed by the Supreme Court in Johnson. Although the Supreme Court clarified Johnson in Behrens v. Pelletier,
The Court held in Behrens, as it did in the Johnson opinion itself, that the legal issue contained in a district court’s denial of summary judgment is not insulated from review simply because the district
In sum, there is no “abstract issue of law” to be reviewed in this case. As we have explained, Sizemore’s attempt to transform a factual question about his motivation into a legal question about the reasonableness of the discharges is without merit. The question of motivation is factual in nature, and we have no jurisdiction to consider the sufficiency of plaintiffs evidence regarding Sizemore’s motivation in discharging them. We therefore conclude that we do not have jurisdiction over defendant Sizemore’s appeal of the denial of summary judgment as to the claims of these 15 plaintiffs.
The remaining defendants, Leslie County, Leslie County Fiscal Court, Leslie County Judge-Executive Onzie Sizemore in his official capacity, and the Leslie County magistrates in their official capacities, contend that although they cannot independently pursue an interlocutory appeal, we should assert pendent appellate jurisdiction over their appeal because the issues in their appeal and those raised by Sizemore in his individual capacity are inextricably intertwined.
The Supreme Court recognized pendent appellate jurisdiction in Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n,
The defendants’ appeal as to the Branti plaintiffs presents “the quintessential case for application of pendent jurisdiction,” calling for an “exercise [of] our discretion to do so in the interest of judicial economy.” Brennan,
However, having concluded that we do not have jurisdiction to consider Sizemore’s appeal of the district court’s denial of his motion for summary judgment as to the final 15 plaintiffs, because there are genuine issues of material fact as to his motivation for discharging them, we cannot assert pendent appellate jurisdiction over the appeal of the remaining defendants concerning the claims of these 15 plaintiffs.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set out above, we REVERSE the district court’s denial of summary judgment both as to Sizemore in his individual capacity on the basis of qualified immunity and also'as to the pendent defendants on the merits, with respect to the claims of Vernon Muncy, Martin Muncy, Russell Hoard, and Betty Sue Baker. With respect to the claims of the remaining 15 plaintiffs, we conclude that we are without jurisdiction over both the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Sizemore in his individual capacity and the pendent defendants’ appeal on the merits, and we therefore DISMISS the second appeal and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
I concur in all of the reasoning and most of the result of this opinion. I must respectfully dissent from the conclusion reached in Part II, however, because in my view, the reasoning of the majority opinion and the record in this case require reversal of the district court’s denial of summary judgment to defendant Sizemore on the claims of the 15 plaintiffs whose jobs do not fall within the Branti exception.
The majority opinion quite rightly says, “As long as plaintiffs produce evidence that could support a finding that Sizemore discharged them on the basis of their political affiliation, the district court was obligated under Crawford-El to deny Size-more’s motion for summary judgment.” This is, of course, precisely the point. If the plaintiffs had presented any such evidence, they would have been entitled to go to trial. But they did not. The plaintiffs claim that their discharges and failures to obtain rehire were politically motivated, but the verified complaint contains no facts to support plaintiffs’ allegations, and they have presented not one shred of evidence of political motivation in their opposition to the motion for summary judgment. The complaint merely lists the positions in which each of the plaintiffs had been employed, recounts the fact of the election, states that defendant Onzie Sizemore notified the plaintiffs that their employment was being terminated as of the end of Judge Muncy’s term, states that “Onzie Sizemore[ ] approved a list of new employees, which included replacement employees for the plaintiffs [sic] positions,” and states that “[t]he plaintiff [sic] were all discharged (or not rehired) in retaliation for their failure or refusal to support the defendant, Onzie Sizemore....”
It is undisputed that all of these plaintiffs, as well as all other county employees, received termination notices advising them that it was defendant Sizemore’s understanding that their employment terminated at the conclusion of Judge Muncy’s term.
Defendant Sizemore, however, presented significant uncontroverted evidence that: at the end of Judge Muncy’s term, the county had some 50 to 60 employees, all of whom Sizemore terminated; Size-more hired approximately 39 employees at the beginning of his term; of those 39, only three were new employees,
Where the plaintiffs have presented actual evidence supporting their factual assertions, and where that evidence creates a genuine issue of fact material to the issues, we must, for purposes of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, take the plaintiffs’ version of the facts to be true. But not even Johnson v. Jones,
The issue before us, as the majority opinion points out, is neither whether the county was in fact in dire financial straits (although there is considerable evidence that it was and little evidence that it was not), nor whether a reasonable official in defendant Sizemore’s position could have believed that he could refuse to rehire those 15 ex-employees without violating their First Amendment rights. The issue here is whether the plaintiffs presented any evidence that Sizemore refused to rehire them because they had supported Judge Muncy. Citing Behrens, the majority opinion says that when the district court denies qualified immunity at the summary judgment stage with a conclusory statement that genuine issues of material fact remain,
[t]he purpose of [appellate] review of the factual record is to determine whether the district court’s holding that a given set of facts violates clearly established law is correct, not to determine whether the district court properly concluded that an issue of fact is “genuine,” as the latter determination is not reviewable. The distinction between the two, of course, is the difference between a legal question and a factual question. In any event, the problem discussed in Behrens and Johnson — of district courts’ [sic] summarily denying summary judgment motions and failing to provide a sufficient explanation of the facts to which it applied the law — is not present in the case at bar. The district court clearly stated the fact that it believed to be in dispute — Sizemore’s motivation, and the parties agree that if Judge Sizemore’s termination of the fifteen plaintiffs at issue was motivated by their political affiliation, those facts violate clearly established law.
(citation omitted). Hence, the majority concludes, we have no jurisdiction over this appeal.
But the district court’s simply stating the fact that it believed to be in issue cannot put that fact in issue; there must be some evidence to support the plaintiffs’ factual allegations. And a determination that the record contains no such evidence is not a determination that the issue of fact is or is not genuine; it is a determination that there is no issue of fact at all. If the review of the factual record demonstrates that there is no evidence to support the plaintiffs’ claim, then it is immaterial whether that set of facts, if it existed, would violate clearly established law. Here, the plaintiffs have presented no facts tending to demonstrate Sizemore’s motivation, which is the fact the district court believed was in dispute.
As the majority points out, Crawford-El requires that where the defendant moves for summary judgment in a First Amendment case such as this, it is the plaintiffs burden to “identify affirmative evidence from which a jury could find that the plaintiff has carried his or her burden of proving the pertinent motive.” In my view, the record here is devoid of any evidence at all relative to defendant Size-more’s motivations with regard these 15 plaintiffs. I would hold that because the verified complaint contains no facts and the plaintiffs have provided no evidence tending to demonstrate the violation of a constitutional right, the question before the court is a purely legal one subject to appellate review, and that the district court’s denial of summary judgment to
Notes
. The district court exercised jurisdiction based on 28 U.S.C. § 1331, 28 U.S.C. § 1343, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
. The amended complaint involved 22 plaintiffs: Vernon Muncy, road foreman; Martin Muncy, assistant road foreman; Russell A. Hoard, purchasing agent and garage supervisor; Betty Sue Baker, director of senior citizens program; Thomas Bentley, general laborer; Nancy Wooten, dispatcher; Joan Gay, secretary for senior citizens program; Marlene Feltner, director of emergency services; Carl Wooten, mechanic; Clyde Conway Vance, general laborer; Norman Couch, general laborer; Elias Collett, truck driver; Dean Adams, truck driver; Stevie Caldwell, shot foreman and truck driver; Leslie Huff, carpenter and general laborer; Lowell Thomas, Jr., mechanic; Christy Couch Sexton, secretary for judge executive; Ronnie Sizemore, welder and general laborer; Ronnie Huff, truck driver, carpenter and general laborer; Levi Muncy, truck driver; George Sizemore, heavy equipment operator; Steve Collins, welder. This appeal involves only 19 of the original 22 plaintiffs because the district court granted defendant Onzie Sizemore summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity with respect to two of the original plaintiffs, Christy Couch Sexton and Marlene Feltner, and the district court granted plaintiff Lowell Thomas’s motion to voluntarily dismiss his complaint.
.Because “Muncy” is also a name shared by several of the plaintiffs, we will refer to the former county judge-executive as Judge Muncy and to the Muncy plaintiffs by their first and last names.
. The Supreme Court noted that the Court of Appeals’ evidentiary requirement and consequently the high court’s opinion applied to "a wide array of different federal claims for which an official’s motive is a necessary ele-menl,” including "termination of employment based on political affiliation in violation of the First Amendment.” Crawford-El, 523 U.S. at -,
. Even if the court were to have jurisdiction over that issue, as the dissent argues, Judge Sizemore has explicitly stated that he is not asking the court to decide it. ("For purposes of this appeal, Judge Sizemore is not requesting the Court to review the ‘evidentiary’ sufficiency’ of whether a genuine issue of material fact exists.” Instead, "[i]t is Judge Size-more's contention on appeal that even though it was clearly established that Plaintiffs’ positions fell outside the Branti exception, a reasonable official in Judge Sizemore's position could disagree that his conduct in failing to renominate Plaintiffs violated clearly established law.”)
Furthermore, assuming again that this court had jurisdiction to review the district court's decision regarding the sufficiency of plaintiff's evidence regarding Sizemore’s motivation, the plaintiffs have produced sufficient evidence of political motivation to create a genuine issue of disputed fact. The plaintiffs offer the deposition testimony of Billy Sizemore, one of the defendants in this case, whose response to the question, "Why was it necessary for the County to terminate all the County workers as of December 31, 1993?” was, "You sort of put your own people in when you go in office, I guess.” In response to the following question, "Do you know of any legitimate reason why it would be necessary to terminate all of the employment within Leslie County at the end of a term or at the end of an Administration?” Sizemore said "No.” The plaintiffs also offer evidence that the county’s financial condition was not as dire as the defendants represent it to have been, along with evidence that Judge Size-more’s staff may have misled the financial analyst evaluating the county's financial condition by providing duplicative copies of bills the county owed, which the financial analyst double counted, and by presenting bills to the analyst as though they had to be paid, when some of them were not necessary to pay (such as a bill for dues for an organization that the county was not necessarily obligated to pay). The plaintiffs also note that after Judge Size-more took office, he incurred one million dollars in debt for the county for a blacktopping project, which one defendant, Billy Sizemore, said he could not understand the county assuming if it faced the severe financial problems Judge Sizemore alleged. The
Proving a nebulous fact such as motivation is difficult, and although the plaintiff's evidence is not overwhelming, it presents reasonable doubt about Judge Sizemore’s motivation. In any event, despite the dissent’s argument to the contrary, plaintiffs have produced more than a “shred” of evidence, and certainly have produced as much, if not more, evidence than that presented by Jones, the civil rights plaintiff in the Johnson case, that the three officers moving for summary judgment had knowingly stood by while another officer beat him.
. It is worth noting, however, that at least one of the signatories to the verified complaint, Lowell Thomas, Jr., admitted at his deposition that he in fact had not been terminated by Sizemore, but had voluntarily quit his county job shortly afLer the primary election. He was permitted by the district court to dismiss his complaint voluntarily.
. Those unsupported opinions include the opinions of defendant Billy Sizemore noted by the majority as evidence of defendant Onzie Sizemore's motives.
. There is Kentucky law supporting this understanding. See Christian v. Belcher,
. Defendant Sizemore testified that only three of these employees were new. There is no testimony in the record to the contrary. It is clear that two of the new employees were Clarence Napier and Clayton Baker, who were appointed to the positions of County Road Foreman and Assistant Road Foreman, positions we have held to be inherently political.
.For example, Dolly Kilburn, Hattie Asher and Jackie Roberts provided affidavits indicating that they had openly supported Judge Muncy, that they had done so in the presence of defendant Sizemore or under circumstances such that Sizemore would have been aware of their activities, and that they had been rehired by defendant Sizemore after he took office.
