In February 1986 Neomi Hernandez went to work for the State’s Attorney of Cook County, Illinois. Hernandez is active in the Democratic Party and twice ran in its primary for the state house of representatives (most recently in March 1992). She has joined litigation to promote her faction’s fortunes. E.g.,
Hastert v. State Board of Elections,
At the time of her discharge, Hernandez was officially a “Stenographer 5,” but she was doing the work of a paralegal in the Consumer Fraud Division of the Public Interest Bureau. Her complaint alleged that she “has been primarily engaged in gathering information from the public, and other litigation support activities.” The district judge concluded that “[t]his job description does not vary much ... from that of an assistant state’s attorney except for court appearances.”
Liras v. Petka,
He also dismissed the
Shakman
claim against O’Malley and Chris Orozco (who actually made the decision to dismiss Hernandez) to the extent it sought relief from them in their personal capacities. Bernard Carey, the State’s Attorney who signed the decree, could bind his successors only in their official capacities, the judge concluded. Hernandez protests this conclusion, but we think it sensible. O’Malley and Orozco are bound by virtue of the offices they hold; Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(d), which makes an injunction effective against successors in office, does not create personal (as opposed to official) liability, and neither does
Shakman v. Democratic Organization of Cook County (Cardilli),
The district judge held a bench trial of the Shakman claim and decided that the State’s Attorney’s Office was not in contempt of court, because Orozco had not considered Hernandez’s polities when deciding which members of the staff to dismiss. Dan Col-lyer, an employee of the Office, saw a picture of Hernandez collecting tickets at a fund raiser for O’Malley’s opponent, called her with a thinly veiled threat, and told the photographer: “I got the bitch.” But Collyer did not play a role in the process leading to Hernandez’s discharge five months later. After the County Board reduced the Office’s budget by 5 percent, Orozco asked supervisors which positions on their staffs could be cut. Robert Lyons, supervisor of the Consumer Fraud unit, told Orozco that he had more staff than he needed: the Consumer Fraud group had one paralegal per lawyer, double the Office’s usual ratio. Lyons recommended that Orozco fire Hernandez, the judge concluded, because she was carrying the lightest load of the unit’s paralegal staff. Other employees who campaigned against O’Malley were retained. The district judge summed up: “Hernandez failed to prove ... that political considerations were a factor in her layoff.”
Although Hernandez does not contend that this conclusion is unsupported by the record (or was influenced by trial error), she nonetheless believes that she is entitled to a second trial — this time, on the § 1983 theory, with a lower burden of proof (the preponderance standard, rather than the elear-and-eonvmcing-evidence standard applicable to contempt proceedings), and before a jury rather than a judge. Although the district judge concluded that Hernandez had not established her claim even by a preponderance of the evidence, this finding was not essential to the judgment and therefore is not preclu-sive in the § 1983 action. See
Cohen v. Bucci,
Like the district court, we begin analysis of the § 1983 theory with the question whether the complaint states a claim on which relief may be granted. Hernandez contends that O’Malley reacted adversely to her political affiliation, a contention that, if true, is within the scope of the rules established by
Elrod v. Burns,
Public prosecutors in Illinois are elected; no one doubts that states can make political affiliation a qualification for that job. We held in
Livas
that the prosecutor’s assistants
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also may be selected on political grounds, for in a large office they are the effective policymakers for broad classes of matters. The district judge observed in this case that paralegals make recommendations to the lawyers, and they could filter the facts in a way that determines the lawyers’ decisions. True enough — but they aren’t
supposed,
to do this. Paralegals are supposed to turn up facts and leave the decisions to the lawyers; that (in theory at least) is why lawyers need licenses and paralegals don’t. A paralegal receives rather than gives directions. Many people, including the police, provide input that affects prosecutorial decisions. By deciding which crimes to investigate, and how thoroughly, the police exercise more influence than the paralegals; does it follow that all police officers may be selected on the basis of political affiliation? At some point the chain of influence is so attenuated that the state’s effort to demand political loyalty yields to the first amendment rights identified in
Elrod.
So we held in
Matlock v. Barnes,
O’Malley contends that it is unnecessary to compile a record because the inquiry under
Branti
is whether the powers of
the public office
include enough discretion that politics becomes a legitimate consideration. The proposition is accurate in the abstract.
Herman v. Chicago,
Although the complaint survives the motion under Rule 12(b)(6), O’Malley is entitled to immunity from liability in damages. Until the right in question has been “clearly established,” courts do not demand that public officials dig into their pockets.
Harlow ¶. Fitzgerald,
A regimen of case-by-case balancing makes it hard to dismiss complaints and simultaneously makes it hard to show that the right in question was “clearly established.” Hernandez can point to
Matlock,
but O’Malley can point to
Liras and Hudson v. Burke,
Hernandez has not asked for damages from the Office in the official-capacity aspect of the case (to which immunity does not apply), given the holdings of
Monell v. New York Department of Social Services,
The judgment on the Shakman contempt claim is affirmed. The judgment on the § 1983 claim is affirmed to the extent it holds that Hernandez cannot recover damages. The remainder of the judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. The district court should permit any necessary discovery and decide whether in light of the analysis in this opinion Hernandez could be dismissed on account of political affiliation. If the answer to this question is no, and further discovery has altered the nature of the record from the time of the contempt proceedings, the judge should hold another trial to determine whether political affiliation led to the discharge. Because money damages are unavailable, Hernandez would not be entitled to a jury trial of this issue; and, for the same reason, if the record has not materially changed, the district judge should consider whether a new trial is necessary in light of findings already made in the contempt proceedings.
