On May 4, 1994, PlaintiffAppellant Magaly Roldán-Plumey (“Roldán”) brought this Section 1983 suit against Defendants-Appellees Hiram Cerezo-Suárez (“Cerezo”), Commissioner of Municipal Affairs for Puerto Rico, and Sandra Valentín (“Valentin”), Director of the Legal Division of the Office of the Commissioner of Municipal Affairs (“OCMA”), in their individual and official capacities. The suit alleged that appellees, in violation of Roldán’s First Amendment rights, dismissed her from her position of Hearing Examiner (also referred to as Examining Officer) because of her political beliefs. The district court granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment on the ground that party affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the effective performance of the position of Hearing Examiner and, consequently, that appellees were entitled to dismiss Roldán on those grounds. See Opinion and Order, March 5, 1996, at 10. Having ruled on the merits, the district court did not address, inter alia, whether appellees were entitled to qualified immunity.
In contrast to the lower court, we find that the inherent duties of Roldán’s position do not demonstrate policymaking attributes sufficient to subject Roldán to discharge based on her political beliefs and, accordingly, reverse the entry of summary judgment. Moreover, having found cause to set aside the judgment on the merits, we address ap-pellees’ argument that they are entitled to qualified immunity and find it wanting.
BACKGROUND
On March 1, 1992, Roldán accepted the position of Hearing Examiner with the Office of the Commissioner of Municipal Affairs. The OCMA is the main regulatory agency of Puerto Rico’s municipalities and is charged with uncovering, investigating, and reporting to municipal mayors any irregularities in the municipalities’ management. P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 21, § 4909 (1995). The office is further obligated to provide various forms of “technical and professional assistance to the municipalities rеlating to their organization, administration, functions and operation.” Id. § 4902. The Commissioner developed a confidential and trust employee plan under which employees in the OCMA were classified in accordance with the Puerto Rico Public Service Personnel Act, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1301 et seq. The plan, developed by Cerezo’s predecessor as Commissioner, Ismael Pagán-Colberg, designated the position of “examining officer” as a trust position. According to this document, the OCMA positions designated as trust or confidence positions were only “[tjhose positions whose holders intervene or collaborate substantially in the formulation of public policy, which directly advise or render direct services to the Commissioner of the Office of the Commissioner of Municipal Affairs.” Del Exh. IV to Motion to Summary Judgment.
The classification, or job description, for the position of “Examining Officer” sets forth the position’s duties as follows:
DUTIES OF POSITION
Professional and technical work that requires great knowledge of the principles and the practice of law and the ability to direct research procedures leading to an adjudicative determination.
1. Holds administrative hearings required by the Autonomous Municipalities Act and any other necessary one[s] to carry out the duties assigned to the Commissioner. Regulates the procedures during the [performance] of the same.
2. Takes oaths and declarations, issues summons for the appearance of witnesses and the filing of reports, documents and other evidence necessary to solve cases.
3. Evaluates evidence and comes to conclusions of facts and law.
4. Carries out legal studies for the solution of cases.
5. Issues reports with his conclusions and recommendations to the Commissioner.
6. Carries out other assigned related duties.
Def. Exh. V to Motion for Summary Judgment.
On November 4, 1992, Pedro Rosselló (“Rosselló”), a member of the New Progres *61 sive Party (“NPP”), was elected governor. In March 1993, Rosselló appointed Cerezo Commissioner of Municipal Affairs. In April 1993, Cerezo appointed Valentin to head the Legal Division of the OCMA. On May 6, 1994, Roldán received a dismissal letter effective that same date.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo,
viewing the facts, and drawing all reasonable inferences, in the light most favorable to the non-movant, here Roldán, and affirming summary judgment only “if no genuine issue of material fact exists.”
O’Connor v. Steeves,
DISCUSSION
I. Political Discharge Claim
We turn first to the grounds on which the district court granted summary judgment to Cerezo and Valentín. More than twenty years ago, a plurality of the Supreme Court held that governmental employers may not discharge an employee because of her political affiliation without showing a governmental interest sufficiently vital to outweigh the employee’s First Amendment right to association.
Elrod v. Burns,
The Court next attempted to define the contours of the prohibition on political discharge in
Branti v. Finkel,
More recently, in
Rutan v. Republican Party of Illinois,
the Court extended the reach of the
Elrod-Branti
doctrine to politically motivаted promotions, transfers, and recalls.
Rutan,
[a] government’s interest in securing effective employees can be met by discharging, demoting, or transferring staff members whose work is deficient. A government’s interest in securing employees who will loyally implement its policies can be adequately served by choosing or dismissing certain high-level employees on the basis of their political views.
Id. Unless a рosition is one that requires policy implementation, or is confidential in nature (a claim that appellees here do not make and to which we need not allude hereafter), a government employer must rely on traditional discharge criteria.
Based on this ease law, this circuit has developed a two-part test for discerning when discharge based on political affiliation is permissible. First, we inquire into wheth
*62
er the discharging agency’s functions entail “ ‘decision making on issues where there is room for political disagreement on goals or their implemеntation.’ ”
O’Connor,
A. Agency functions
In her opposition to appellees’ motion for summary judgment, Roldan conceded that OCMA is an agency whose functions require “ ‘decision making on issues where there is room for political disagreement on goals or their implementation.’” Id. For the purposes of this appeal, therefore, we consider the first prong satisfied.
B. Whether the position involves poli-cymaking
Under the second prong, the question is whether thе responsibilities of the position of Hearing Examiner resemble “a policymaker, a privy to confidential information, a communicator, or some other office holder whose function is such that party affiliation is an equally appropriate requirement.”
Jiménez Fuentes,
The Hearing Examiner job description details five specific responsibilities and designates a further responsibility to “carr[y]-out other assigned related duties.” The five well-defined responsibilities make clear that the position of Hearing Examiner leaves little room for free-ranging actions independent of their limited scope. The narrow duties require application of technical and professional skills in evaluating facts and researching law. They аre not broad and open-ended, and do not leave room for discretionary policymaking or policy implementation. Nor are they “hazily defined.”
See Alfaro de Quevedo v. de Jesús Schuck,
In addition, thе limited nature of the position differs substantially from most of those
*63
positions for which we have previously found political affiliation to be an appropriate requirement. For instance, in
Agosto-de-Feliciano v. Aponte-Roque,
In
O’Connor v. Steeves,
we found that the position of superintendent, which gave the officeholder responsibility for the administration of all departments of city government and required policymaking, acting as a city representative, and supervising personnel, all duties absent here, was one for which political affiliation was an appropriate consideration.
O’Connor,
In the seminal political discrimination case,
Jiménez Fuentes v. Torres Gaztambide,
The position at issue here is readily distinguishable from those at issue in
Jimenez Fuentes
and
O’Connor,
and is more akin to the position of Internal Auditor, which we addressed in
Cordero v. De Jesús-Méndez,
As in
Cordero,
the position at issue here is that of a mere “technocrat.”
Id.; see also De Choudens v. Government Dev. Bank of Puerto Rico,
Moreover, a review of the indicia we have typically considered material to this determination further suggests that a Hearing Examiner is not a policymaker. With regard to relative pay, the salary for Hearing Examiner is the fifth highest of the 13 levels on the OCMA pay scale, not including the Commissioner. The documents submitted on summary judgment do not indicate the number of employees filling each level of the scale. Thus, while the position is ranked fifth, a significant number of actual employees may be paid more than the Hearing Examiner. Mоreover, the trust classification is fifth-tier, among eleven trust positions in the OCMA. Although the position is of a quasi-adjudicative nature, it does not require that an officeholder possess a law degree. The position carries no supervisory responsibilities. The duties neither require any public appearances nor grant authority to speak on the Commissioner’s behalf. Contact with elected officials appears to take place only in the context of a hearing, and in no other context does a Hearing Examiner act as a public spokеsperson for or representative of her agency.
Appellees attempt to maneuver around the job description’s inherent duties by pointing to item number 6 1 on the job description, claiming that the possibility of being assigned related tasks transforms the position into one with broad powers. The summary judgment record indicates that appellees presented two exhibits, in addition to the job description, to support this contention. The first of these, Exhibit VI, appears to be a listing of correspondence received by the Office of Legal Affairs containing inquiries regarding various municipal concerns. These inquiries were assigned to Roldán for resolution. The last date on which any of the tasks on this list were assigned to Roldán is September 24, 1992. The other exhibit, Exhibit VII, suggests that, as of July 28, 1992, Roldán was assigned by Cerezo’s predecessor to monitor the status of amendments to the Autonomous Municipalities Act. We note that appellees did not argue to the district court, as they do on appeal, that the duties set forth in Exhibits VI and VII were assigned as “other [ ] related duties” pursuant to item six of the job description, and thus fall within the scope of the court’s analysis of “inherent duties.” Nevertheless, because the district court took into consideration the documents in Exhibits VI and VII, we address appellees’ contention here.
In reviewing the nature of the tasks assigned to Roldán by Cerezo’s predecessor, it is apparent that they were not related to the inherent duties of Hearing Examiner. Instead, these exhibits are of the very type we have consistently held are not to be considered in the process of determining whether a position entails policymaking. We look only to the inherent duties of the position under review and do not consider the actual tasks performed by a present or past officeholder.
See O’Connor,
We recognize that, in past cases, we have granted a modicum of deference to the Puer-to Rico legislature’s designation of a particular position as “trust” or “confidential.”
See, e.g., Figueroa-Rodríguez v. López-Rivera,
(a) Puerto Rico’s own civil service system permits a fairly small number of positions (no more than 26 per agency) to be classified as confidential (ie., potentially subject to politically-based discharge), P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1351 (1978 & Supp.1987); (b) the personnel law bases the classification of a confidential position on criteria similar to those enumerated in Elrod and Branti, (whether the job involves “formulation of public policy,” P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1350, or “direct service to the head or subhead of the agency which require a high degree of personal trust,” P.R. Personnel Bylaws: Areas Essential to the Merit Principle, § 5.2 (1976)); and (c) the legislators and administrators are more familiar with the issues and subjects that potentially may affix a particular job at a partiсular time with a “political charge.”
Figueroa-Rodríguez,
Based on the summary judgment record, we hоld that the position of Hearing Examiner is not one for which party affiliation is an appropriate requirement.
II. Qualified Immunity
In their request for summary judgment below, appellees contended, as they do on appeal, that they are entitled to summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. The doctrine of qualified immunity protects defendants in their individual capacities from liability for money damages. “Qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary functions from civil liability for money damages when their conduct does not violate ‘clearly established’ statutory authority or cоnstitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Nereida-González v. Tirado-Delgado,
In earlier political discrimination cases, we found defendants entitled to qualified immunity because their allegedly unconstitutional actions took place prior to thе development of clearly established law in this area.
See, e.g., Nereida-González,
To be sure, the law may still be blurred around the edges. But this is not a borderline case. In determining entitlement to the qualified immunity defense in the political discrimination context, we look only to the inherent duties of a position and ask whether the defendant could reasonably believe the position in question was one that “ ‘potentially concerned matters of partisan political interest and involved at least a modicum of policymaking responsibility, access to confidential information, or official communication.’” Figu eroa-Rodríguez, 878 F.2d at 1480. We have already found that the inherent duties of the position were limited to discrete, technical responsibilities that did not involve policymaking or policy implementation. We do not believe that appellees could reasonably believe that the five specified duties of the position in any way provided Roldán with discretion to devise or implement policy. Assigning her with a duty related to those functions would not expand her discretion in the position.
As discussed above, the additional tasks assigned to Roldán, on which appellees rely, were not inherent to the position nor can they be bootstrapped into the position through the device of item number 6. That the defendants might have considered the additional duties assigned to Roldán as part of the duties inherent in the position of Hearing Examiner appears unreasonable based on the record at the summary judgment stage. We note that should defendants muster convincing evidence at trial to show that the function of a typical Hearing Examiner includes following the status of legislation and providing legal assistance directly to the municipalities and that the position has traditionally been perceived as encompassing these tasks, they may or may not be entitled to qualified immunity. They are not, however, entitled to summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds.
Appellees suggest that one of the cases on which the district court relied,
Alfaro de Quevedo v. de Jesús Schuck,
First, the positions at issue in those eases involved considerable discretiоn to make and implement policy. The position at issue in
Alfaro de Quevedo,
the Director of the Office of Criminal Justice, required,
inter alia,
the officeholder to advise “the Secretary of Justice on all pending legislation affecting crimes and law enforcement,”
id.
at 593, draw up proposed legislation, prepare an annual budget, supervise the staff of the Office of Criminal Justice, and prepare a Proposed Code of Criminal Justice for Puerto Rico.
Id.
The position “gave [the officeholder] a broad discretion to carry out hazily defined purposes and to render advice to the Secretary in an area that is far from noncontroversial.”
Id.
at 593. The position at issue in
Gonzá-lez-Gonzalez
was that of the Director of the Board of Appeals of Puerto Rico’s Department of Social Services.
See González-González,
Second, González-González was dismissed from his post in 1985 and Alfaro de Quevedo resigned in 1973. When the defendants in *67 those eases ousted the plaintiffs, the state of the law with respect to political firings was poorly defined. The state of the law at the time of the discharge in this case had developed markedly since the two opinions relied upon below. Because we must consider whether appеllees violated a clearly established constitutional right of which a reasonable person would have been aware, at the time the adverse employment action was taken, the outcome of these two eases is not controlling on the issue of qualified immunity-
We also recognize that in prior cases, we have granted qualified immunity partially because a defendant might mistakenly rely on the position’s status as “confidential” or “trust” under the Puerto Rico Public Service Personnel Act, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1301
et seq. See, e.g., Figueroa-Rodríguez,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Item number 6 states that the office holder “[c]arries out other assigned duties.”
