This is an appeal of a preliminary injunction issued in a political discrimination suit brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The appeal primarily raises issues related to the review of findings of fact by the district court. We affirm.
Introduction
José Luis Romerо Feliciano (Romero) served as Director of the Office of Emergency, Security and Civil Defense (ESCD) in the Housing Department of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, until he was demoted in March 1985 by the then Seсretary of Housing, Jaime Torres Gaztambide. Romero claims that he was demoted solely because of his affiliation with the New Progressive Party (NPP), which was defeated in the 1984 elections by the Popular Demоcratic Party (PDP). Romero filed a § 1983 civil rights action against Torres Gaztambide, et al, alleging that the demotion violated his associational rights, and seeking damages and reinstatement.
After a hearing the district court granted Romero a preliminary injunction restoring him to his job. The court found that Romero was likely to prevail on his claim that the demotion was politically motivated. Furthermore, the court ruled that the dеfendants were not likely to prevail on their affirmative defenses that Romero would have been demoted regardless of his affiliation and that political affiliation was an appropriate requirement for the position of ESCD director. The court also found that Romero would be irreparably harmed by waiting for a final judgment, that the harm to Romero outweighed any harm to defendants, and that a preliminary injunction would not harm the public interest.
See Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts v. Bellotti,
Our review of the preliminary injunction is limited to determining whether its issuance was an abuse of discretion.
See Collazo Rivera v. Torres Gaztambide,
I. Political Motivation Behind the Demotion
At the preliminary injunction hearing Romero presented the following evidence that his demotion was politically motivated. First, Romero has been an active member of the NPP. Second, the Secrеtary is a member of the PDP. Third, at a meeting of the Housing Department transition team, a member of that team told Romero, in the Secretary’s presence, that they knew Romero vras a NPP activist. Fourth, Romеro was demoted only a few months after the PDP took control. Finally, the Secretary appointed an active member of his own party to serve as Acting Director of the Office of ESCD after Romеro’s demotion.
The district court found this evidence sufficient to create an inference that party affiliation was the motivating factor in the demotion. This finding was not clearly erroneous. The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has observed that, given the heated political climate in Puerto Rico and the historical importance of patronage to the incumbent party, the replacеment of a member of the party out of power with a member of the parly in power creates an inference of political discrimination.
See Colón v. CRUV,
84 J.T.S. 52 (1982). Furthermore, as both the district court and this court are well aware, the number of cases alleging politically motivated demotions and discharges during the time Romero was demoted has sharply increased.
See, e.g., Jiménez Fuentes,
The Secretary also attempted to show that he would have demoted Romero regardless of political affiliation.
See Mt. Healthy City School Dist. Bd. of Education v. Doyle,
II. Political Affiliation as Appropriate Requirement for the Position
The Secretary also defended his actions on the grounds that political affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the position of ESCD Director. We have recently articulated a two step analysis for this defense.
See Jiménez Fuentes,
The district court found that the ESCD Director has four primary responsibilities. (1) The Director supervises the office’s responsibility for the security of the Housing Department headquarters. That responsibility involves supervising two receptionists and two security guards and issuing identification cards. (2) The Director supervises the office’s responsibility for civil defense. That responsibility involvеs overseeing one employee who coordinates with the Civil Defense Agency, primarily by providing information on the availability of housing in Department-owned buildings in the event of an emergency. (3) The Direсtor supervises the office’s responsibility for squatter problems. That responsibility involves overseeing four squatter technicians who are occasionally called upon to evict squatters. It is not сlear what else these technicians do, since most squatter evictions are handled by the police. In any case, the office does not have responsibility for deciding whom to evict. (4) The Director supervises the office’s responsibility for the Housing Department’s industrial dispensary. That responsibility involves supervising two nurses and maintaining the supply of medication. The Director also supervises a deрuty director and two secretaries, bringing the total number of employees under his direction to 15.
The district court based these findings on the testimony of Romero and the deputy director who served under Romerо and who was then serving under the acting director. The Secretary submitted a document from the Commonwealth Central Personnel Administration Office, the “OP-16,” that purports to list the official duties of the ESCD Director. The duties listed in that document give the Director broader responsibility for internal security, civil defense, and squatter problems than Romero testified to. Although we have considered the OP-16 dispositive in other Puerto Rico political discrimination cases,
see, e.g., Méndez Palou v. Rohena Betancourt,
In considering the merits of this case, the district court must, of course, heed our admonition that thе trier of fact make its decision on the basis of the
inherent
duties of the position, not just those of a particular incumbent.
See Méndez Palou,
Given these findings on the duties of the ESCD Director, this is not a difficult case. The four components of the position —providing security for Housing Department heаdquarters, assisting the Civil Defense Agency with temporary housing, evicting squatters when told, and running a dispensary — fail both steps of the
Jiménez Fuentes
analysis. The position does not involve partisan political concerns. And the duties themselves do not involve “policymaking, access to confidential information, communications, or similar functions for which party loyalty is an appropriate requirement.”
Collazo Rivera,
III. Irreparable Harm
It has long been held that “[t]he loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury.”
Elrod v. Burns,
The decision of the district court is affirmed.
ORDER
Before CAMPBELL, Chief Judge, WISDOM, * Senior Circuit Judge, COFFIN, BOWNES, BREYER, TORRUELLA and SELYA, Circuit Judges.
The petition for rehearing or rehearing en banc is denied. We note that plaintiff’s challenge to the OP-16 in this case differed from objections to the classification form raised in prior cases,
see e.g., Rosario Nevarez
v.
Torres Gaztambide,
