Cliff Rives appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for partial summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity. We affirm. 1
BACKGROUND
Jacquelin Lindsey initiated this action against Rives under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and
Rives moved the district court for summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity, and the district court denied the motion. We review that denial
de novo. Act Up!/Portland v. Bagley,
DISCUSSION
I
The doctrine of qualified immunity protects government officials performing discretionary functions from civil liability when their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The parties engage in considerable skirmishing over the framing of this test. Rives seizes upon
Harlow’s
emphasis on the “objective reasonableness” of the official’s conduct.
See id.
at 819,
It is clear, therefore, that some account must be taken of Rives’s subjective intent in determining whether he is entitled to immunity. We conclude, then, that the proper threshold question is whether a reasonable official in Rives’s position in 1988 would know that subjecting Lindsey to adverse employment actions because of her gender would violate Lindsey’s clearly established federal statutory or constitutional rights. But we cannot stop there, for that formulation assumes the existence of the disputed motivation, and would send virtually every claim of unlawful discrimination to trial. If the presence of an element of intent too easily defeats a motion to dismiss or a motion for summary judgment, the purposes of qualified immunity that the Supreme Court sought to protect in
Harlow,
We have previously recognized the tension involved in applying
Harlow’s
objective anal
Here we are dealing with a motion for summary judgment rather than a motion to dismiss, so application of a heightened pleading standard is inappropriate. Nevertheless,
Branch
is instructive. Mere conclu-sory assertions of discriminatory intent, embodied in affidavits or deposition testimony, cannot be sufficient to avert summary judgment. The court must satisfy itself that there is sufficient “direct or circumstantial evidence” of intent,
id.,
to create a genuine issue of fact for the jury, before it can deny summary judgment on the ground of immunity.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
Ronald J. Bradshaw, who had worked with Rives on the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department stated that in 1978 Rives told him women did not belong in the workplace. Bradshaw also stated that Rives treated females with less respect than he treated males. Daniel R. Fitzpatrick, who was Director of the DBL in the early 1980’s described the DBL environment as one in which it was difficult for women to advance. He characterized the DBL in the years immediately following its transfer from the Sheriffs Office to the County, as a “good old boy network.” Aubrey Weil, who worked with both Rives and Lindsey in the DBL from 1980 to 1985, stated that Rives had a “misogynistie” dislike of Lindsey and treated her with more disdain than he treated the male agents in the DBL. Finally, Ed Simms, who worked with Rives and Lindsey after Rives’s promotion to Chief of Enforcement, stated that Rives “had a tremendous amount of difficulty dealing with women and was, in fact, overly hostile and belligerent towards them_ [Except for Mrs. Jorgen-sen,] my perception is that he didn’t get along with any of them.”
Although some of this information is dated, it is all relevant to the determination whether Rives’s conduct was prompted by a gender-discriminatory motive. When combined with Lindsey’s evidence concerning the actions taken by Rives, this evidence is sufficient to establish a genuine issue of material fact as to Rives’s motive. Accepting the evidence, a reasonable trier of fact could find that Rives’s actions against Lindsey were taken because she is a woman. The district court therefore properly denied Rives’s motion for summary judgment.
II
Rives argues that, even if it is assumed that he discriminated against Lindsey because of her gender, he is entitled to qualified immunity because any federal right of Lindsey to be free of gender discrimination was not .clearly established by 1988. He asserts that in 1988 it was clearly established only that refusing to hire a person on the basis of gender would violate federal law, and that it was not clearly established that denial of promotion, adverse alteration of job responsibilities and other hostile treatment would violate federal rights. We disagree.
The Equal Protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment confers a “federal constitutional right to be free from gender discrimination” at the hands of governmental actors.
Davis v. Passman,
Thus, Rives’s contention that Lindsey only possessed a federal right not to be refused employment on the basis of gender in 1988 clearly is unsupportable. 5 A reasonable official in Rives’s position in 1988 would have understood that unfavorably altering Lindsey’s job assignments, preparing unfavorable performance evaluations of her work and displaying a hostile attitude toward her causing others in the department to ostracize her, violated her clearly established federal constitutional rights — provided, of course, that Rives took these actions against Lindsey because of her gender.
CONCLUSION
Lindsey had a clearly established federal constitutional right to be free of gender discrimination at the hands of a state actor in 1988. Lindsey has produced sufficient direct or circumstantial evidence of discriminatory intent to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Rives was motivated by hostility to her gender. The district court accordingly did not err in denying summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 because a denial of a motion for summary judgment raising a defense of qualified immunity is an appealable final order within the meaning of that section.
Mitchell
v.
Forsyth,
. Lindsey also asserted state law claims against Rives and state and federal law claims against other defendants, none of which is implicated in this appeal.
. Rives does not dispute that he took measures adversely affecting Lindsey's employment status; he does, however, deny that his actions were the product of a gender-discriminatory motive.
. In accepting
either
direct
or
circumstantial evidence,
Branch
differentiated its position from that of the District of Columbia Circuit, which in a similar circumstance insisted upon “direct evidence" of improper motivation.
Martin,
. This case involving a constitutional equal protection challenge to governmental action is to be differentiated from challenges to private action brought under the "right of contract” provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 1981. Those provisions were held by the Supreme Court not to apply to post-hiring decisions, in
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
