Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982), plaintiff-appellant Jorge Correa-Martinez (Cor-rea) sued three jurists in federal district court. Asking that the judges be judged, Correa-Martinez alleged that he had been forced to resign from the judicial branch of Puerto Rico’s government in violation of his due process and first amendment rights. The district court dismissed the action for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(6). We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In reviewing a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal, we take the well-pleaded facts as they appear in the complaint, indulging every reasonable inference in plaintiff’s favor.
See Dartmouth Review v. Dartmouth College,
The administrative arm of the Puerto Rico judicial system is formally known as the Office of Court Administration of the General Court of Justice (OCA). 1 There are two personnel classifications within the *52 judicial branch, Uniform Service and Central Service. “Officers and employees of the Uniform Service may be suspended or dismissed only for just cause prior to the formulation of charges, and they shall have the right to defend themselves and be heard in the manner provided by law.” P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 4, Appx. XIII, Reg. 16 (1978) (district court’s translation). In contrast, “[ojfficers and employees of the Central Service, except judges, may be suspended or dismissed by the Nominating Authority in its discretion.” Id.
Correa toiled in OCA’s vineyards from 1981 through 1988. When originally hired, he received an engagement letter telling him that he was being named to a “trust” position in the Central Service. 2 The letter also warned that continued employment was dependent upon his “efficiency, attitude, availability and compliance with the regulations in effect.” Although he started at a lower rank, Correa served for several years as Executive Director I, Guaya-ma Judicial Region. He describes his functions as “essentially administrative in character.” His performance evaluations were uniformly favorable and led to a number of merit-related pay increases.
Near the end of 1988, the halcyon days drew to a close. Judge Juan-Alvarez became the interim administrator of the Gua-yama Judicial Region and asked plaintiff to resign. Plaintiff complied. His resignation was officially accepted by Judge Arril-laga-Belendez. The complaint alleges that defendants did not afford Correa a hearing and gave no reason for forcing him to quit.
Plaintiff now attacks on two fronts. Contending that he possessed a “clear and substantial property interest” in continued employment at OCA, he maintains that his constructive discharge, unaccompanied by any hearing or explanation, violated procedural due process. Asserting simultaneously that the defendants cashiered him because of his close association with a former administrative judge, he maintains that his ouster ran afoul of the first amendment.
The district court found both offensives lacking in firepower and dismissed the complaint. The court ruled that Correa, as a trust employee in the Central Service, had no property interest in his position and could thus be fired in the employer’s discretion without notice or hearing. The court also rejected the first amendment claim, stating that “[mjere personal and political differences between the defendants and a third party ... cannot support the allegations of political discrimination against plaintiff.” This appeal ensued.
II. PRINCIPLES AFFECTING APPELLATE REVIEW
In the Rule 12(b)(6) milieu, an appellate court operates under the same constraints that bind the district court, that is, we may affirm a dismissal for failure to state a claim only if it clearly appears, according to the facts alleged, that the plaintiff cannot recover on any viable theory.
Conley v. Gibson,
In the menagerie of the Civil Rules, the tiger patrolling the courthouse gates is rather tame, but “not entirely ... toothless.”
Dartmouth Review,
It is only when such conclusions are logically compelled, or at least supported, by the stated facts, that is, when the suggested inference rises to what experience indicates is an acceptable level of probability, that ‘conclusions’ become ‘facts’ for pleading purposes.
Id.
There is another principle at work as well. We have frequently recognized that, in cases where civil rights violations are alleged, particular care is required to balance the liberality of the Civil Rules with the need to prevent abusive and unfair vexation of defendants.
See, e.g., id.; Dewey,
With these precepts squarely in mind, we proceed to evaluate Correa’s allegations.
III. THE DUE PROCESS CLAIM
As a prerequisite to his due process claim, plaintiff must demonstrate the existence of a constitutionally cognizable property or liberty interest.
See Paul v. Davis,
Constitutionally protected property interests originate in extra-constitutional sources; they are “created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law....”
Board of Regents v. Roth, 408
U.S. 564, 577,
Correa acknowledges that OCA’s engagement letter notified him that he had been named to a trust position in the Central Service. 3 He also concedes that Central Service employees are subject to dismissal at the employer’s discretion. See P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 4, Appx. XIII, Reg. 16. These verities notwithstanding, Correa argues that the written confirmation of his particular appointment “tempered” the ramifications normally attendant to the post. In this respect, he points out that the *54 engagement letter admonished that “your permanency in the [position] will depend upon your efficiency, attitude, disposition and ... compliance with regulations in effect” from time to time. Plaintiff suggests that OCA thereby limited its discretion, granting him job security so long as he fulfilled these few written conditions.
Appellant’s thesis boils down to the idea that the engagement letter
ex proprio vig-ore
comprised an independent source for a legitimate expectation of continued employment, and hence, for a property interest. We give Correa high marks for ingenuity but a failing grade in persuasion. The engagement letter clearly informed plaintiff that he was being hired to a trust position. He accepted the characterization then — and must accept it now. Trust employees may be freely dismissed in the discretion of the nominating authority (here, OCA); indeed, the very essence of trust positions is their lack of permanence.
See, e.g., Ruiz-Roche,
We have regularly held that, under Puer-to Rico law, government employees hired illegally to permanent or career positions are neither invested with property interests in continued employment nor entitled to the due process protections which inure to their legally hired counterparts.
See Rosario-Torres,
Unless we are prepared to abandon the rationale of this line of cases, it must follow that OCA’s personnel director could not effectively confer a property interest on plaintiff merely by making statements contrary to the Commonwealth’s extensive statutory/ regulatory framework anent government employment.
Cf. Goyco de Maldonado v. Rivera,
To be sure, an employer’s unilateral declarations, promises, or conduct regarding conditions of continued employment might in some circumstances create a “legitimate claim of entitlement to job tenure.”
Perry v. Sindermann,
The
Perry
rule depends, of course, on perforation, that is, on pockets of uncertainty. Where an employment scheme— whether statutory, contractual, or mixed— is silent on specific points, pocked with fissures, or infected by a serious strain of ambiguity, an employer’s conduct or declarations may quite appropriately be used to fill the gaps. In the case at bar, however, there were no gaps to fill. The written assurances given to plaintiff, to the extent they can be interpreted to mean what plaintiff says they mean (a matter as to which we take no view), stand in direct contravention of a comprehensive network of statutory and regulatory directives governing the terms of Central Service employment and trust positions generally. It would rock the foundations of that system to rely on the arguably contradictory terms of a personnel director’s welcoming missive to supervene the letter of law. Thus, the engagement letter could not and did not create a cognizable property interest in the Executive Director I position.
Cf. Ruiz-Roche,
There is yet another base to be touched. Both apart from, and in concert with, the engagement letter, Correa also argues his due process claim in terms of “fundamental fairness.” We are not unsympathetic to his plea. Plaintiff served the judicial branch well for seven years. He toiled under four administrative judges, none of whom ever questioned his trustworthiness or competence. In short, taking the complaint at face value, he did nothing wrong. Be that as it may, length of employment and good behavior, in and of themselves, customarily do not create a property interest in continued employment.
See Perry,
As in the cases where employees were assigned career positions in an irregular manner and had good reason to believe that their positions were secure, plaintiff’s subjective expectancies cannot override the unambiguous commands of the civil service laws. Without some legal source other than a superior officer’s unilateral and/or unauthorized actions contrary to Puerto Rico law, a government worker’s pretensions to a constitutionally cognizable property right in his employment must be turned aside.
See Rosario-Torres,
*56 Plaintiff tries unsuccessfully to bolster his due process claim by pointing to the Regulations of Administration of the Personnel System of the Judicial Branch, specifically P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 4, Appx. XIII, Reg. 2 (employees “shall receive just and equitable treatment, without discrimination of any type based on race, creed, color, sex, social condition or political affiliation”) (plaintiffs translation). Without an adequate allegation of discrimination based on plaintiffs political affiliation, see infra Part IV, the regulation is simply not in play. Nor can the other, arguably ambiguous, regulatory language to which Cor-rea alludes, e.g., P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 4, Appx. XIII, Reg. 3, be construed to contradict the fundamental merit principle embodied in Puerto Rico’s extensive public employment scheme.
To say more would be to paint the lily. Because the plaintiff has not alleged facts sufficient to support a reasonable expectation of, or recognizable property interest in, continued government employment, defendants were not constitutionally required to afford him any process before ending his OCA service. Insofar as the motion to dismiss addressed the due process claim, it was properly granted. 5
IV. THE FIRST AMENDMENT CLAIM
The foregoing explication does not entirely settle matters. Correa also contends that his first amendment rights were abridged. That statement of claim, if otherwise actionable, cannot be defeated by the lack of a property interest.
See Branti v. Finkel,
[EJven 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.
Perry,
The crux of the first amendment initiative is the allegation that the defendants “were motivated by their discriminatory intent to terminate plaintiff from his employment because of his close association with [the former administrative judge] ... with whom defendants have personal and political differences.” The district court held that no cause of action was stated. We agree.
At a bare minimum, plaintiff’s burden at the pleading stage was to allege facts which, if proven, would demonstrate that his forced resignation was brought about by discrimination on the basis of some constitutionally safeguarded interest.
See Branti,
Here, plaintiff does not allege that his politics, his ideology, or his advocacy of political goals led to his downfall. The complaint is altogether silent as to whether Correa had any partisan affiliation or espoused any controversial political views. It does not say if, or how, Correa’s affiliations or views differed from those of the incumbent judges. Refined to bare essence, then, plaintiff does not claim that defendants discriminated against him on the basis of his political beliefs or advocacy of ideas — discrimination which would implicate an interest shielded by the Bill of Rights. Rather, he asserts only that defendants had “personal and political differences” with an unrelated individual, Judge Padilla (the jurist formerly in charge of the Guayama Judicial Region), and discriminated against him (plaintiff) because of his “close association” with Judge Padilla. We do not think that such discrimination, if it existed, impinged upon a constitutionally protected right.
Various relationships have been sheltered under the capacious constitutional tent of freedom of association.
See, e.g., NAACP v. Button,
Analyzed in this light, Correa’s complaint was vulnerable to a motion to dismiss. The complaint did not say that plaintiff possessed, or expressed, any significant political views; indeed, implicit in plaintiff’s arguments is the suggestion that he, himself, scrupulously avoided partisan political involvement. 7 The complaint contained no facts regarding the political contours, if any, of Correa’s relationship with Judge *58 Padilla. It contained no facts capable of supporting an inference that the relationship came within the constitutional orbit. It did not maintain that defendants knew anything about plaintiffs politics or that their motivation related in the slightest to plaintiff’s exercise of any first amendment or other constitutionally protected right.
This deficit, we suggest, leaves a chas-mal gap — one not bridged by plaintiffs bald assertion that defendants constructively discharged him due to his relationship with Judge Padilla. At most, the complaint might support an inference that politics was in the air between defendants and Judge Padilla. Nevertheless, a politically charged atmosphere of that sort, without more, provided no basis for a reasonable inference that defendants’ employment decisions about
plaintiff
were tainted by their disregard of
plaintiffs
first amendment rights.
Cf. Dartmouth Review,
Of course, plaintiff tells us that political association is the protected characteristic, but that approach, too, rings hollow. Merely juxtaposing a prptected characteristic — someone else’s politics — with the fact that plaintiff was treated unfairly is not enough to state a constitutional claim.
See Dartmouth Review,
We make one final observation. We do not suggest that if, as plaintiff would have it, defendants chose to jettison a competent, hardworking employee because of his loyalty, real or imagined, to a former superior, the court system would be well served or fairness achieved. But that is not the point. In the absence of a cognizable federal question, a federal court cannot intrude upon another sovereign’s civil service system and declare itself a court of last resort to hear personnel appeals addressed to the wisdom, or even the good faith, of staffing decisions reached by the government actors.
Cf. e.g., Freeman v. Package Machinery Co.,
We have said enough. While Rule 12(b)(6) requires deference to the well-pleaded allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, we are not obligated to give free rein to imagination.
See Gooley,
V. THE REQUEST TO AMEND
After defendants moved to dismiss in the district court, plaintiff had an opportunity to amend his complaint as of right. 8 Eschewing such a course, plaintiff instead opposed the motion and inserted in his opposition a request that he be allowed to file an amended complaint if the motion was granted. The district court never acted on the request. Correa now portrays this omission as an abuse of the court’s discretion.
Because leave to amend “shall be freely given when justice so requires,” Fed. R.Civ.P. 15(a), a district court’s denial of a chance to amend may constitute an abuse of discretion if no sufficient justification appears.
See Foman v. Davis,
We have examined the amendments suggested in plaintiff’s opposition to the motion to dismiss and in his appellate brief. We find nothing of decretory significance, that is, nothing which would repair the holes in Correa’s case. For example, plaintiff offered to submit the unexpurgated text of the engagement letter, but there is no indication that any statements other than the excerpts already contained in the complaint would be relevant. Plaintiff also offered several sworn statements substantiating what the complaint already alleged about plaintiff’s excellent work record, the nature of his duties, and OCA’s wonted personnel practices. These submissions would plainly have been superfluous; the well-pleaded allegations of the complaint, without buttressing, were taken as true for purposes of defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion. See supra Part II and cases cited. Moreover, as we have explained at some length, this case is not about the essential justness of defendants’ decision to oust plaintiff from his governmental post; it is about the presence or absence of a claim cognizable under the federal Constitution and 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Having culled plaintiff’s representations as to what he might in good faith be able to allege, we are satisfied that this is an instance where “the ‘new’ facts are of the same genre as the ‘old’ facts.... ”
Dartmouth Review,
VI. CONCLUSION
To recapitulate, plaintiff has failed to demonstrate anything more than a unilater *60 al expectation of continued employment at OCA. While he may or may not have been treated fairly, we find nothing in the record which might demonstrate that he had a property interest in his job or that constructive discharge was offensive to the Constitution. Plaintiffs first amendment claim, which pivots not on his politics but on the persona and politics of a third party, will not wash. And because Correa’s proffered amendments were designed to amplify substantively defective statements of claim rather than to repair the defects, there was no good reason to allow the filing of an amended complaint.
We need go no further. Correa’s suit was appropriately dismissed. The order and judgment below must therefore be
Affirmed.
Notes
. The defendants, appellees before us, are Hon. Rene Arrillaga-Belendez, a superior court judge and OCA’s administrative director; Hon. Luis A. Juan-Alvarez, a superior court judge and quondam administrator of the Guayama Judicial Region; and Hon. Victor M. Pons Nunez, the Chief Justice of Puerto Rico. The two superior court judges were sued in their official and personal capacities whereas Chief Justice Pons was sued only as the authority "ultimately responsible for administration” of the court system.
. In Puerto Rico, “trust” positions ("de confian-za”) are noncareer positions which do not have the civil service protection accorded "career” positions ("de permanencia").
See
P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 3, §§ 1349-51 (1978) (executive branch). "In contrast to a ‘career
1
employee, an employee of ‘trust’ may, under Puerto Rico law, be discharged at will and without cause.”
Rodriguez Rodriguez v. Munoz Munoz,
. According to the Rules of Administration of the Personnel System of the Judicial Branch, positions in the Central Service include “[pjosi-tions of assistants to the executives and/or directing officers ... which because of their functions require personal trust.” P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 4, Appx. XII, Rule 4(1 )(c) (plaintiff's translation).
Judge Torruella continues to believe that this line of authority is wrongly decided,
see Rosario-Torres,
. Correa’s case, we might add, is considerably less compelling than the cited cases in that, unlike the employees in, say,
Rosario-Torres,
. Although plaintiff's complaint mentions substantive due process as well as procedural due process, he does not press the former point on appeal. In view of "the settled appellate rule that issues adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort at developed argumentation, are deemed waived,”
United States v. Zannino,
. We use the term "nonpolicymakers,” perhaps inartfully, as a shorthand reference to those instances where, because the affected employees are neither "involved in policymaking, the communication of political ideas, or sensitive tasks connected with the policymaking function,”
Vazquez Rios v. Hernandez Colon,
. Appellant has not claimed that, although he was in fact nonpolitical, defendants forced him to resign because they (mistakenly) thought he was a member of the opposition party. We express no opinion, therefore, on whether a discharge which arises not out of an employee’s political activity, but out of the government employer’s belief, wrongly held, that the employee was in league with the opposition party, would be actionable under the rubric of the first amendment.
. A party may amend "once as a matter of course at any time before a responsive pleading is served.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a). Inasmuch as defendants’ dismissal
motion
did not constitute a responsive pleading,
see Dartmouth Review,
. We note in passing that plaintiff offhandedly inserted the conditional request to amend in his opposition below and did not renew it after the district court ruled. He may very well have waived the point.
See generally Dartmouth Review,
