George Larkin ROBERSON, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Edgar MULLINS, individually and as a member of the Wise
County Board of Supervisors; Sam Church, individually and
as a member of the Wise County Board of Supervisors; Claude
Collins, individually and as a member of the Wise County
Board of Supervisors; Jack Kiser, individually and as a
member of the Wise County Board of Supervisors; Julius Fred
Tate, individually and as a member of the Wise County Board
of Supervisors; Donnie Dowell, individually and as a member
of the Wise County Board of Supervisors; Wise County Board
of Supervisors, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 93-1618.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Oct. 27, 1993.
Decided July 8, 1994.
ARGUED: James Parker Jones, Penn, Stuart, Eskridge & Jones, Bristol, VA; Susan Debra Oglebay, Legal Dept., United Mine Workers of America, Castlewood, VA, for appellants. William Henry Hurd, Richmond, VA, for appellee. ON BRIEF: John Mack Farmer, Wolfe & Farmer, Norton, VA, for appellee.
Before RUSSELL and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges, and CLARKE, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
Affirmed in part and dismissed in part by published opinion. Judge DONALD RUSSELL wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILLIAMS and Senior District Judge CLARKE joined.
OPINION
DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:
Defendants, the Board of Supervisors for Wise County, Virginia (the County Board) and some of its members, appeal the district court's denial of their motions to dismiss plaintiff George Roberson's section 1983 action against them on the grounds that it is barred by absolute legislative immunity and, even if not barred, cannot succeed on the merits. We find that the district court correctly denied defendants' absolute immunity motion and, further, that we are without jurisdiction to review its denial of defendants' motion to dismiss on the merits. We therefore affirm in part and dismiss in part.
I.
The eight-member County Board is the governing body of Wise County. At a meeting of the Board in July, 1992, it was moved and seconded that plaintiff George Roberson be removed from his position as the Public Works Superintendent for Wise County. The Board then went into executive session and voted, with six members in favor and two opposed, to remove Roberson from his position.
Roberson, a Republican, brought this section 1983 action against the Board and the six County Board members who voted to terminate him, all Democrats, alleging that their votes were motivated by his political party affiliation in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. See Elrod v. Burns,
All defendants, the Board members as well as the Board itself, moved to dismiss Roberson's claim as barred by absolute legislative immunity. They also filed a second dismissal motion asserting that even if they were not entitled to legislative immunity, they were permitted to terminate Roberson for his political party affiliation because party affiliation was an appropriate requirement for effective performance of the duties of his office. See Branti,
The district court rejected both arguments and denied defendants' motions to dismiss; they took this immediate appeal.
II.
We must first address whether the district court correctly determined that the six members of the County Board who voted in favor of Roberson's termination were not entitled to absolute legislative immunity from his section 1983 claim.1 We conclude that the district court was correct in this determination.
Members of local governmental bodies are entitled to absolute legislative immunity from claims against them arising out of their actions in a "legislative capacity." Front Royal & Warren County Indus. Park Corp. v. Town of Front Royal,
Not all actions undertaken by local governmental bodies that have legislative responsibilities are necessarily "legislative." E.g., Scott,
Every other court of appeals that has attempted to define when a local governmental body acts in a legislative capacity has set forth the same, or a very similar, standard. Brown,
Here, the County Board terminated Roberson as the Public Works Superintendent for Wise County. Terminating a county employee is plainly unrelated to the process of "adopt[ing] prospective, legislative-type rules." Front Royal,
III.
Still before us is the contention that the County Board itself is entitled to absolute legislative immunity from Roberson's claim. This contention will not long detain us. If a local governmental body itself, or, equivalently, the municipality for which it is the governing body, is ever entitled to absolute legislative immunity,5 it is only when the body engages in "legislative" actions. Baker,
Defendants also ask that we review the district court's denial of their second motion to dismiss, which sought dismissal on the ground that they were permitted to terminate Roberson for his political party affiliation because party affiliation was an appropriate requirement for performance of the duties of his office. See Branti,
When we properly have jurisdiction over an interlocutory ruling by the district court, pendent appellate jurisdiction permits us to consider another district court ruling in the same case that is not independently appealable if the issues involved in the two rulings "substantially overlap and review will advance the litigation or avoid further appeals." Akers v. Caperton,
The interlocutory ruling which we have jurisdiction to review, the district court's denial of defendants' absolute legislative immunity motion, required us to address whether termination of a county employee was a legislative action. Reviewing defendants' motion to dismiss on the merits, in contrast, would require us to consider whether the duties of Roberson's position were such that political party affiliation was an appropriate requirement for the position. The issues involved in these two rulings do not at all overlap; under Akers and O'Bar, therefore, we are without pendent appellate jurisdiction to review the district court's denial of defendants' motion to dismiss on the merits.
V.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court's ruling denying defendants' motion for absolute legislative immunity, and we dismiss defendants' appeal of the district court's ruling denying defendants' motion to dismiss on the merits because we are without jurisdiction to consider it.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND DISMISSED IN PART.
Notes
We have jurisdiction to review immediately the district court's rejection of the individual Board members' absolute immunity defense, as well as its rejection of the Board's absolute immunity defense, see Part III infra, under the collateral order doctrine articulated in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Local officials who are not members of local governmental bodies may also be entitled to legislative immunity in certain circumstances, see Hernandez v. City of Lafayette,
A member of a local governmental body does not necessarily act in a legislative capacity when his participation in the action of the body takes the form of a vote; the action of the body must itself be legislative to make the member's act of voting legislative. In Scott v. Greenville County,
Of the courts of appeals, only the Eleventh Circuit has ever suggested that the vote of a member of a local governmental body is necessarily a legislative act, regardless of the matter on which the vote was taken. Hudgins v. City of Ashburn,
Several decisions addressing absolute legislative immunity in the context of Congress and state legislatures suggest that a legislature may act in a legislative capacity not only when it engages in the process of adopting prospective, legislative-type rules but also when it undertakes certain other activities that lie within the traditional legislative province. In Schlitz v. Virginia,
We find that the termination of a government employee in the case at bar was not an action that lies within the traditional legislative province. This finding is consistent with the Supreme Court's decision in Forrester, where the Court rejected a claim by a judge of absolute immunity from a suit arising out of his demotion and discharge of a probation officer, stating: "[W]e think it clear that [the judge] was acting in an administrative capacity when he demoted and discharged [the officer]." Forrester,
We need not, and do not, decide here whether a local governmental body, or the municipality for which it is the governing body, is ever entitled to absolute legislative immunity. See Baker v. Mayor of Baltimore,
It should be noted that the Supreme Court has held, in two criminal cases, that courts of appeals do not have pendent appellate jurisdiction. United States v. MacDonald,
