Plaintiff Willie Victor Ortiz Pinero (“Ortiz”) appeals from a district court judgment dismissing his political discrimination claims against the City of Gurabo, Puerto Rico, and its incumbent Mayor. We affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
In 1981, the City of Gurabo enacted an ordinance, pursuant to P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1851, designating eleven municipal offices as positions of “trust” or “confidentiality,” including the directorship of the Office of Federal Programs (“OFP”), the municipal agency charged with obtaining and administering federal funding for various public works projects. See Municipal Ordinance No. 3, Series 1981-82 (Sept. 14,1981).
In August 1991, then-Mayor Ramon Garcia Caraballo appointed Ortiz, a fellow member of the Popular Democratic Party (PDP), as OFP Director, and allegedly described the position to Ortiz as a non-“confidenee” position. Mayor Caraballo later extended Ortiz’ appointment through August 1993. In November 1992, however, after the PDP mayoral candidate was rejected by the electorate, outgoing Mayor Caraballo notified Ortiz that he should resign forthwith because the OFP directorship was a “confidential” position which the new administration was entitled to fill. Ortiz refused to resign. Thereafter, the incoming New Progressive Party (NPP) mayor, defendant-appellee Willie Victor Rivera-Arroyo (“Rivera”), dismissed Ortiz.
In due course, Ortiz initiated the present action for damages and reinstatement under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Gurabo and Mayor Rivera, claiming political discrimination and deprivation of his property interest in continued employment without the benefit of a pretermination hearing, in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the ground that the OFP directorship is a “trust” position for which compatible political affiliation constitutes a legitimate qualification.
See Branti v. Finkel,
II
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review
de novo, to
determine whether the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with any affidavits, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See O’Connor v. Steeves,
B. First Amendment Claim
1. Applicable Law
In a political discrimination case, the plaintiff first must show that party affilia
*12
tion was a substantial or motivating factor for the challenged action.
See Mount Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle,
Whether a government position is “political” does not depend upon such loose-fitting labels as “confidential” or “policymaking,” but on the
substance of the duties inherent in the position itself. Branti,
We employ a two-part inquiry to identify “political” positions under the Branti /Elrod analysis:
First, we inquire whether the overall functions of the employee’s department or agency involve “decision making on issues where there is room for political disagreement on goals or their implementation.” Second, we decide whether the particular responsibilities of the plaintiff’s position, within the department or agency, resemble those of “a policymaker, privy to confidential information, a communicator, or some other office holder whose function is such that party affiliation is an equally appropriate requirement” for continued tenure.. Among the indicia material to the second element are “ ‘relative pay, technical competence, power to control others, authority to speak in the name of policymakers, public perception, influence on programs, contact with elected officials, and responsiveness to partisan politics and political leaders.’ ”
O’Connor,
Although obviously fact-intensive, the ultimate determination whether a government position is “political” presents a question of law for the court, rather than an issue of fact for jury resolution.
See McGurrin Ehrhard v. Connolly,
2. The OFP and “Partisan Political Interests ”
The OFP is charged with marshaling and administering the million or so dollars obtained annually from federal agencies, and with doling it out for various public works projects within the municipality. Thus, the
*13
OFP unmistakably is a municipal “department or agency [whose overall functions] involve ‘decision making on issues where there is room for political disagreement on goals or their implementation.’ ”
O’Connor,
3. The Duties Inherent in the OFP Directorship
Under the second prong, we examine any evidence the defendants may have adduced that “the
particular responsibilities
of the plaintiffs position, within the [OFP], resemble those of ‘a policymaker, privy to confidential information, a communicator, or some other office holder whose function is such that party affiliation is an equally appropriate requirement’ for continued tenure.”
O’Connor,
a) Lack of Written Job Description
Ortiz first argues that summary judgment is precluded because the City of Gurabo has no official, written job description (a.k.a. Form OP-16) for its OFP Director, nor indeed for
any
of its municipal employees. He relies upon cases in which we have held that courts should determine the duties inherent in a particular position by examining the governmental entity’s written, signed job descriptions, rather than the duties actually performed by the plaintiff or prior occupants of the position in question.
See, e.g., Mendez-Palou v. Rohena-Betancourt,
Although written, signed job descriptions may provide highly probative evidence as to the responsibilities inherent in a particular government position, and may even prove “dispositive,”
see id.
at 3, we have never suggested that their
absence
is disposi-tive,
cf. Mendez-Palou,
b) The Responsibilities Inherent in the Position
Ortiz contends that the district court incorrectly assessed the record evidence relating to the duties inherent in the OFP directorship. He claims that he administered the OFP in a politically-neutral fashion and took no meaningful part in mayoral “policymaking” or “political” decisions concerning federal funding allocations among the various constituencies within the municipality.
As previously noted, probative indicia that a position is “political” include ‘“relative pay, technical competence, power to control others, authority to speak in the name of policymakers, public perception, influence on programs, contact with elected officials, and responsiveness to partisan politics and political leaders.’”
O’Connor,.
More importantly, Ortiz was appointed to head the OFP, whose overall functions clearly involved “‘decision making on issués where there is room for political disagreement on goals or their implementation,’ ” under the first prong of the Jimenez Fuentes test. See supra Section II.B.2. 6 By his own account, Ortiz was in complete charge of the OFP staff, 7 as well as the *15 applications for, and the administering of, all federal grant and loan programs involving the City, amounting to approximately one-third of its municipal budget. See Ortiz Deposition, at 29-30. 8
Ortiz reported directly to the mayor, rather than through intermediaries, meeting with him on an average of six or seven times a year.
Cf. Mendez-Palou,
Ortiz admittedly received and reviewed copies of federal audits and oversight reports, including the Federal Transit Administration’s Triennial Review of the City’s federally funded transit program, which identified areas where the City was not in compliance.
See
Defendant’s Exh. 6;
see also
49 U.S.C. § 5S07(i)(2). This politically-sensitive report is precisely the type of document whose contents are not likely to be shared freely with any but the mayor’s trusted political confidants for fear it might become fodder for the political opposition.
Cf. Mendez-Palou,
Finally, Municipal Ordinance No. 3, enacted in 1981 pursuant to P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1351, designates only eleven municipal offices as positions of “trust” or “confidentiality,” including the Director of the Office of Federal Programs. 11 Consistent with the ordinance, former Mayor Caraballo notified Ortiz in writing on December 24, 1992, that he was among the eleven municipal officials who must resign to make way for the incoming NPP administration.
*16 Against this formidable array, Ortiz offers five arguments. First, he contends that Municipal Ordinance No. 3 is a nullity because the defendants have not shown that it was duly submitted to the Central Office of Personnel Administration for approval, as supposedly required by the Personnel Act. But see supra note 11. This claim is unavailing.
On its face, the ordinance reflects that it had been submitted to the Central Office of Personnel Administration (“Central Office”) for
review. See
Municipal Ordinance No. 3, § 3. Thus, the burden lay with Ortiz to show that the City did not comply with the statutory requirements,
12
and he proffered no evidence that the ordinance was not duly submitted to the Central Office.
See O’Con-nor,
Second, Ortiz correctly notes that state laws identifying government positions as “trust” or “confidential” are not disposi-tive of the federal-law question whether a particular position is “political.”
See Jimenez Fuentes,
Third, Ortiz attempts to estop defendants from asserting a Branti/Elrod defense by pointing to the putative assurance made to him by Mayor Caraballo in August 1991, that the OFP directorship was not a “trust” position, see supra p.2. Even this evidence is not hefty enough to ward off summary judgment, however. 13
For one thing, application of the equitable estoppel doctrine against governmental entities, including municipalities, is narrowly circumscribed.
See Heckler v. Community Health Servs. of Crawford County,
Immediately prior to his appointment to the OFP directorship, Ortiz, concededly a “political activist,” served for three years as City
assemblyman,
a position which would have brought all City ordinances within his constructive knowledge.
See Texaco, Inc. v. Short,
Fourth, without citing either authority or a policy rationale, Ortiz argues that the OFP directorship cannot be considered a “political” position since there is no requirement that the municipal assembly approve the mayor’s selection for the post. We think this far too thin a reed to warrant rejection of the traditional Branti ¡Elrod criteria. Many “political” appointments (e.g., to the executive staff of a governor or mayor) are not subject to legislative approval, a requirement which correlates more closely to the issue of political accountability in the legislative branch, than to the partisan political attributes of an executive position.
Finally, Ortiz insists that the OFP directorship duties actually performed by him under Mayor Caraballo were merely administrative and technical, that Caraballo alone decided how federal funds were to be spent, and that Ortiz merely informed the mayor regarding the administrative status of federal funding applications. These claims are insufficient to overcome the well-supported legal determination,
see supra
pp. 14-16, that the OFP directorship is a “political” position. At most, Ortiz’ contrary characterizations, fully credited, establish the services actually rendered by Ortiz while he served as the director, as distinguished from the responsibilities inherent in the position itself.
Cf. Mendez-Palou
C. Due Process Claim
Ortiz advances essentially the same arguments as support for the due process .claim: that he had a legitimate expectation of continued employment under commonwealth law, which gave rise to a “property right” entitling him to a pretermination hearing.
See Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
Since Ortiz’ employment contract included a clause permitting his unilateral, unconditional termination by the mayor at any time, commonwealth or local law would be the only possible basis for an actionable claim to continued employment. Accordingly, Municipal Ordinance No. 3 is dispositive of the due process claim, since it designates the OFP directorship as a “confidential” position, pursuant to P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1351. The Personnel Act in turn defines “confidential” appointees as, inter alios, “those who intervene or collaborate substantially in the formulation of public policy, who advise directly or render direct services to the head of the agency,” and are subject to “free selection and removal.” Id. § 1350. Thus, Ortiz had neither a property right nor a contract right to continued employment as OFP Director, and defendant-appellee Rivera was under no *18 constitutional obligation to afford him a pre-termination hearing.
Ill
CONCLUSION
The claims for damages are barred under the doctrine of qualified immunity, because Ortiz failed to demonstrate that it was “clearly established” that the OFP directorship was not a “political” position.
See Mendez-Palou,
The judgment is affirmed; costs to ap-pellees.
APPENDIX A
LAWS OF PUERTO RICO ANNOTATED
TITLE THREE. EXECUTIVE
CHAPTER 51. PUBLIC SERVICE PERSONNEL
SUBCHAPTER V. PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM; STRUCTURE
§ 1350. Confidential employees
Confidential employees are those who intervene or collaborate substantially in the formulation of the public policy, who advise directly or render direct services to the head of the agency, such as:
(1) Officers appointed by the Governor, their personal secretaries and drivers; as well as their executive and administrative assistants who answer directly to them.
(2) Heads of agencies, their personal secretaries and drivers; as well as their executive and administrative assistants who answer directly to them.
(3) Assistant heads of agencies and their personal secretaries and drivers.
(4) Regional directors of agencies.
(5) Personal secretaries and drivers of officials selected by popular election, as well as their assistants who answer directly to them.
(6) Members of boards or standing committees appointed by the Governor and their respective personal secretaries.
(7) Members and personnel of boards or commissions appointed by the Governor having a specific period of effectiveness.
(8) Personnel of the offices of the Puerto Rico Ex-Governors.
Confidential employees shall be of free selection and removal. Likewise confidential shall be those employees who though of free selection may be removed only for good cause by provision of law or those whose appointment is for a term pre-fixed by law.
Every regular employee in a career position who is appointed to a confidential position shall be entitled to be reinstated in a position equal or similar to the last one he held in the career service.
Notes
. The certification lists five responsibilities: (1) “[t]o direct, coordinate and supervise all the operations of the Federal Programs Office”; (2) ''[t]o see to the compliance and good functioning of said Office"; (3) “[t]o submit all the corresponding reports to the Municipal Services Administration Program, the State Agency delegated upon by the C.D.G.B. Program”; (4) "[t]o take part in seminars and training that are offered on the Federal Programs as well as to accompany the Mayor in all matters concerning the Program”; and (5) "[t]o perform other similar duties as assigned.”
. We assume, without deciding, that there is sufficient competent evidence that political affiliation motivated the dismissal.
.
See id.
(noting that the first prong of the
Jimenez Fuentes
test was readily met where the municipal department for which plaintiff worked was responsible for developing and implementing public works programs, since "[ejections often turn on the success or failure of the incumbent [administration] to provide these services”);
Jimenez Fuentes,
. Ortiz also contends that the first prong of the
Jimenez Fuentes
test should focus upon the City as the pertinent "department or agency,” not on the OFP. Ortiz does not contend that this shift in focus would alter the first-prong inquiry itself, since under either scenario the City or the OFP would have to undertake the politically sensitive mission of allocating federal funds among various constituencies within the municipality. He argues, instead, that the shift in focus could affect the inquiry under prong two,
see infra
Section II.B.3(b), since Ortiz could then be viewed as a subordinate City official rather than the
head
of the first-prong "department or agency” (i.e., the OFP). Be that as it may, the attempt to distance Ortiz from political decisionmaking not only distorts the function of the second-prong inquiry under
Jimenez Fuentes,
but runs counter to our precedent in
O'Connor,
where we focused the inquiry under prong one upon the municipal
department
of public works, rather than the
municipality. See O'Connor,
. The district court relied on the lack of a written job description as probative evidence that the OFP directorship
is
a “political" position.
Ortiz Pinero,
.
See, e.g., O'Connor,
.Ortiz points out that he supervised an OFP staff of only four persons (accountant, secretary, and two clerks). As we have noted, however, the
relative
staff size, not its absolute size, affords the more illuminating insight.
See, e.g., O’Connor,
. We reject the contention that the April 1993 certification of duties issued by the City personnel department,
see supra
note 1, is without any probative force because it is unsigned and was not prepared until after Ortiz left office. Of course, an OP-16 signed by the employee has added probative value since it constitutes the employee’s contemporaneous “admission” concerning the duties inherent in the position. But it does not follow that the unsigned certificate, by which the City prospectively commits itself to its description of the duties inherent in the OFP directorship, is without probative weight. Although we have noted that an unsigned OP-16 may leave a factual dispute as to its authenticity,
see Romero Feliciano,
.
See Jimenez Fuentes, 807
F.2d at 246 (noting that “political” position holders, like directors, "monitor the progress of the agency’s programs and thus gauge the success of the Administration’s ... policies”);
cf Mendez-Palou,
.
See McGurrin Ehrhard,
. Section 1351 of the Personnel Act provides, in pertinent part:
1. Each [commonwealth] agency shall present for approval of the [Central] Office [of Personnel Administration] a plan containing the confidential positions by which it desires to operate. In the case of municipalities, the Municipal Assembly shall follow the ordinance or resolution approving the plan submitted by the mayor and shall send it to the Office for the sole purpose of ascertaining that the provisions of section 1350 of this title have been complied with.
P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1351 (emphasis added).
. We recognize that the burden of proof normally shifts to the governmental entity to establish that the
substantive
requirements of its enactment comport with the First Amendment. But we have found no authority, nor can we discern any sound reason, for shifting the burden of proof where the challenging party alleges only
procedural
irregularities of nonconstitutional dimension in an ordinance-enactment process.
See, e.g., Friends of the City Market v. Old Town Redev. Corp.,
. We note, as a threshold matter, that its admissibility is far from clear. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e). Even assuming that former Mayor Caraballo could bind the City by his representations, see Fed.R.Evid. 801 (permitting "admissions” of party-opponent ), it is extremely problematic whether the successor mayor, defendant Rivera, can be bound, especially since the very nature of the § 1983 claim made by Ortiz appears to preclude any characterization of former Mayor Caraballo as a party "opponent." As this evidence is otherwise deficient, however, we need not determine its competence at this time.
