Moses MEEKS, Jose Lopez, Emitt Barge, George Butler, Carl
Hutchinson, George Washington, Gloria Kaplanos,
Administratrix of the Estate of Bill
Gianopoulos, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Douglas M. GRIMES, individually and as Judge of the Gary
City Court of Gary, Indiana; Office of the Gary City Court
of Gary, Indiana; Common Council of the City of Gary and
its Individual Members, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 85-1176.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Oct. 24, 1985.
Decided Dec. 19, 1985.
James J. Frank, Gary, Ind., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Alton L. Gill, Jr., Dept. of Law, City of Gary, Gary, Ind., for defendants-appellees.
Before WOOD and FLAUM, Circuit Judges, and FAIRCHILD, Senior Circuit Judge.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs-appellants are former bailiffs of the Gary City Court of Gary, Indiana who claim that they were terminated for their political activities in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments as interpreted in Elrod v. Burns,
I.
Plaintiffs were employed as bailiffs of the Gary City Court by Judge Fredrick T. Work and served under him until the end of the judge's second four-year term in 1979. The Gary City Court consists of one elected judge who presides over both the criminal and civil divisions of the court. The court employs a number of referees who take responsibility for hearing unspecified types of cases. Under Indiana law the bailiffs of this type of local court are appointed by the judge under whom they serve. The law further provides that bailiffs are "at will" employees who serve at the pleasure of the employing judge. In essence, the bailiffs' position is a classic example of a patronage appointment given to an elected official.
As the 1979 election drew near Judge Work decided not to seek a third term, throwing the Democratic party, of which he was a member, into a factional battle. The nature of Gary politics at the time was such that the person prevailing in the Democratic primary was assured victory in the general election. In the 1979 primary, the defendant, Douglas Grimes, who ran and lost to Judge Work in 1975, ran against Lloyd B. Fisher, who had the active support of Judge Work and the plaintiffs-bailiffs. Following a hard-fought primary that generated "considerable ill will" between elements of the Democratic party, the defendant prevailed and took the oath of office on January 7, 1980. On the same date all the plaintiffs were discharged from their positions with the court. The bailiffs proceeded to file this Sec. 1983 action against Judge Grimes, individually, and the Gary City Court praying for damages and injunctive relief for alleged violations of the plaintiffs' First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Trial was held before Judge Kanne, who after hearing all the testimony ruled in favor of the defendants. The court found that the plaintiffs were discharged solely because of their political activities in opposition to Judge Grimes but that the defendants' action was privileged under Elrod v. Burns,
II.
At the outset, we find no reason to disturb the district court's finding that the dismissal of the plaintiffs was politically motivated. This determination was based on the credibility of the testimony heard at trial coupled with the strong circumstantial inference arising from the close temporal proximity of the defendant's assumption of office and the dismissals. In these circumstances an appellate court's review is very limited; we will not disturb the trial court's factual findings absent a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). See also O'Toole v. New York Life Insurance Co.,
A.
As was recognized by the Court in Elrod, patronage is a reality of American politics which almost invariably comes into conflict with the protections provided the government employee under the First Amendment.
In finding that the sheriff of Cook County could not discharge certain bailiffs and process servers, a plurality of the Supreme Court in Elrod held that "a non-policy-making, nonconfidential government employee can [not] be discharged or threatened with discharge from a job that he is satisfactorily performing upon the sole ground of his political beliefs."
Four years later in Branti v. Finkel,
Policymaking type positions, as broadly defined by this court, see Nekolny,
Thus our attention turns to the second type of office for which politics is a constitutionally permissible job criterion; these positions can be generally described as "confidential." This is a catchall phrase that encompases those government employees who, while not decision makers, are in close contact with policymakers and the highly confidential communications or records affecting decisions. See Soderbeck,
On the record before us it is impossible to conclude that these bailiffs were confidential employees. Nor is it possible to state categorically that bailiffs are confidential employees as a matter of law.2 Service of process and courtroom security do not inherently translate into access to the decisionmaking process or confidential information. Defendants stress that any access to court records when coupled with political animosity creates a serious threat of politically motivated breaches of the confidentiality of the judicial process. This argument, while relevant, proves too much. These bailiffs are duty-bound to protect the sanctity of the court, and, while political affiliation may be an acceptable proxy for loyalty, trust, and maybe even efficiency, it would cast the net of the Elrod exception too wide to allow political support to be used to extrapolate a tendency to breach a sworn duty, behave unprofessionally, or commit criminal acts. Under the circumstances of this case there is no basis for finding, as the trial court did, that the plaintiffs were so intimately related to the confidential functions of the Gary City Court that politics were a legitimate qualification for employment. Cf. Soderbeck,
This does not end our analysis because, as was alluded to in our opinion in Soderbeck and stated explicitly by the Fifth Circuit in Stegmaier v. Trammell,
Underlying Elrod and Branti is a generally accurate assumption about the bureaucratic nature of government. These two cases and their progeny reveal a conception of government employment in which various decisionmakers preside over a large infrastructure composed of more or less ministerial employees who carry out policy mandates. An elected official must have the loyalty of his policymaking assistants in order to operate the government efficiently, as well as to attempt to carry out the policies upon which he or she was elected. The remaining employees within a bureaucratic structure rarely if ever come into contact with the policymakers. Their ties to the bureaucracy are based not on loyalty to the political figure but on more formal structural relationships. The ability to create large organizations is based on the use of organizational, as opposed to personal, loyalty and this is achieved through hierarchial, as opposed to interpersonal, authority. See K. Boulding, The Organizational Revolution: A Study on the Ethics of Economic Organization 8-40 (1953). See also W. Whyte, Jr., The Organization Man (1956). From this model the Elrod-Branti distinction between those employees for whom politics can be a job criterion and those for whom it cannot is relatively clear: political loyalty is particularly relevant only with respect to those offices "where the employee creates or implements policy and has broad responsibilities with ill-defined objectives," Tomczak,
The troublesome cases, like Soderbeck, see supra note 5, and Stegmaier, see supra note 4, are those to which the bureaucratic model and thus Elrod and Branti do not comfortably apply. This situation arises in the context of the intimate working environment; it is here that a non-confidential non-policymaking employee can work in such a close relationship with the elected official that animosity arising from political opposition can create an untenable job situation. The paradigm example of this type of environment is the chambers of a judge. Thus, while the court system as a whole may be described as bureaucratic, compare Vining, Justice, Bureaucracy, and Legal Method, 80 Mich.L.Rev. 248 (1981), with Edwards, A Judge's View on Justice, Bureaucracy, and Legal Method, 80 Mich.L.Rev. 259 (1981), the individual chambers constitute cells within an organization where relationships must be based on loyalty and rapport because of the constant face to face contact resulting from the more intimate surroundings.6 Political animosity, while not a noble basis for discharging an employee, can in practice create a hostile work environment where face to face contact and cooperation are essential. It would strain credulity to read the First Amendment or Elrod to require an elected official to work in constant direct contact with a person viewed as a political enemy. This would seem to be contrary to the respect this court has given the governmental interest in efficient public administration under the Branti formulation, Soderbeck,
We must stress the limited nature of the scope of this opinion. First, it applies to a select number of government employees: only those employees who work in direct and constant contact with a political official-employer would be exempted from the First Amendment's protection against patronage dismissals. For example, with respect to an individual judge's chambers it may refer only to the judge's secretary, the law clerks, and, possibly, a court reporter or bailiff assigned exclusively to the judge. Employees who work outside the everyday immediate work environment would be protected unless they were otherwise exempted under the Elrod-Branti formulation. Second, this opinion merely provides a basis for a problem this court has faced before and resolved in favor of allowing discharge. See Soderbeck,
B.
Turning to the particular facts of this case, we are unable to affirm the district court. As was discussed above, see supra pages 420-421, the district court's holding that the plaintiffs were confidential employees because of the potential for leaks of confidential information and for behavior impugning the character of the court cannot be sustained. We will not engage in the process of inferring a breach of duty from political opposition where the record does not even clearly support a finding that these bailiffs had routine access to sensitive documents. At least five of the plaintiffs worked almost exclusively outside the court where their primary responsibility was service of process. Process servers are not exempted employees who can be fired for political reasons. Elrod,
As well as not being traditional "policymaking" or "confidential" employees, it appears that none of the plaintiffs were an integral part of the daily routine in Judge Grimes's chambers. During oral argument each party was pressed to explain the duties of the bailiffs but provided no definitive answer. From the argument and the record one is left with the impression that even the courtroom bailiffs were not affiliated with Judge Grimes's chambers and that all the plaintiffs were ministerial employees of the larger organization that is the Gary City Court. Nevertheless, we cannot rely on impressions or educated guesses and this case must be remanded to the district court so a record about the nature of the bailiffs' duties can be created.
On remand the district court should focus on the inherent powers of the office of the bailiff for the Gary City Court rather than what these plaintiffs actually did or what the defendant plans for them to do. See supra note 1. At the same time it should be noted that there seem to be differentiations in the nature of positions classified generally as bailiffs. The court should consider each type of bailiff separately unless it finds that the assignment to a specific duty was non-permanent and that transfers between field work and the courtroom freely occurred. Finally, it is important to emphasize the narrow issue upon which this case is being remanded; we are ordering a trial solely limited to the issue of the closeness of the relationship between the judge and the bailiffs. There is no reason to disturb the district court's findings with regard to the defendants' motives. Thus if the district court on remand finds after examining the closeness, intimacy, or confidentiality of the relationship with the judge involved in the position held by each plaintiff, that the political animosity present in this case did not invariably lead to a untenable work situation, then a judgment for the plaintiffs should be entered.
III.
Based on the foregoing this judgment is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
At trial there was substantial disagreement over the role of the bailiff in the Gary City Court. Judge Work testified that the bailiffs' duties consisted primarily of courtroom security and/or "field work" including process serving. Judge Grimes claimed in response that he had plans for an increased role for the bailiffs and that the nature of the plaintiffs' office under his administration should not be extrapolated from the practice under a former judge. There is no question that a new officeholder can revamp the organization he controls and convert a ministerial position into one closer to the core of the policymaking process. However, our focus is on the "inherent powers" of the office, not what any individual officeholder actually does
Elrod and Branti require examination of the powers inherent in a given office, as opposed to the functions performed by a particular occupant of that office. Ness v. Marshall,
Tomczak v. City of Chicago,
Furthermore, each of the plaintiffs was in a different situation; some were in the criminal division while others worked in the civil area and some were assigned to courtrooms while others did exclusively "field work." It appears that the general term bailiff as used here encompasses a number of different positions with differing responsibilities. For Judge Grimes to speak in general terms about changing the responsibilities of the bailiff is of little force where it is impossible to generalize about the nature of all the plaintiffs' jobs.
In finding that the bailiffs were confidential employees the district court focused in part on the sections of the Indiana Code that make bailiffs "at will" employees and the Cannons of Professional Ethics. Additionally, the court relied on its earlier opinion in Pruitt v. Kimbrough,
First, while we focus on the inherent powers of the office rather than the individual who occupies it, Tomczak,
Second, the provisions of the Indiana Code making the plaintiffs at will employees are irrelevant. A similar argument was made before the Supreme Court in Elrod and rejected.
That is the notion that because there is no right to a government benefit, such as public employment, the benefit may be denied for any reason. Perry, however, emphasized that "[f]or at least a quarter-century, this Court has made clear that even 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." 408 U.S. at 597, 92 S.Ct. [2694] at 2697 [
Elrod,
It should be noted that the vast majority of cases have dealt with "policymaking" employees. See, e.g., Tomczak v. City of Chicago,
The plaintiff in Stegmaier was a deputy circuit clerk of the court. The court found that the office of the clerk was not a policymaking office but that the circuit clerk was entitled to pick his own assistant because the position of deputy clerk was "confidential." This decision was based on the fact that, while the deputy clerk has no effect on policy or access to confidential material, the clerk had to run on a platform of honesty and integrity and, therefore, could hire a person who he felt was loyal and trustworthy
In Soderbeck this court faced a situation where a newly elected sheriff fired the previous sheriff's secretary who happened to also be the wife of the unsuccessful incumbent. The sheriff's office in Burnett County, Wisconsin was a very small operation and the court observed that, while Mrs. Soderbeck could be viewed as a confidential secretary, it was in part the nature of the office that would allow a jury to conclude that the plaintiff was unprotected
Mrs. Soderbeck, however, had been trained as a bookkeeper and her title was bookkeeper, not secretary or confidential secretary; and though she did do most of the typing in the sheriff's office, there was evidence that if the sheriff needed something typed he would hand his handwritten draft to whoever in the office was handy. Burnett County has a population of only 12,000 and a tiny sheriff's office whose six employees at the time of Mrs. Soderbeck's termination did not have sharply differentiated tasks; it was only after she was fired that a position of "confidential secretary" was created with a different job description from that of the bookkeeper's position that Mrs. Soderbeck has occupied. So while she did typing and handled legal papers, such as summonses and warrants, the other employees did these things too. She also did janitorial work, and performed domestic chores for the prisoners in the county jail (which is in the same building as the sheriff's office and home) as jail matron and laundress--not the usual functions of a confidential secretary. And she did not take dictation--no one in the office did. If she could be fired as a confidential employee, so could anyone else employed in the office, on the theory that if an office is small enough the tasks usually performed by the boss's personal secretary may be parcelled out among all the employees.
Soderbeck,
"Certainly elected officials should be permitted to dismiss their predecessor's personal secretaries and a few others who work closely with such officials in positions requiring a relationship of mutual trust." The Supreme Court, 1975 Term, 90 Harv.L.Rev. 186, 194 n. 41 (1976) (discussion of Elrod )
Defendants attempt to distinguish the type of process servers and bailiffs involved in Elrod on the grounds that the judge is the hiring authority rather than the sheriff. This argument cannot be accepted; an elected judge is not entitled to any special patronage power beyond that given to other political figures under the First Amendment. What may distinguish judges for patronage purposes is the unique relationship they have with the people who work with them in their chambers. However, differing structures of judicial systems and governments mean that each case is unique and an intimate working environment may or may not exist surrounding any political hiring authority
