This is an appeal from an Opinion and Order denying appellant Neftalí Soto’s qualified immunity defense. Soto, acting in his capacity as Secretary of the Department of Agriculture of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, has been sued in his personal capacity under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for enforcing a sugar regulation that prevented appellees, Starlight Sugar, Inc. and Pan American Grain Company, Inc. (“Starlight/PanAm”), from importing sugar into Puerto Rico in bulk for packaging in consumer-sized units. We reverse the district court opinion and hold that Soto is entitled to qualified immunity.
BACKGROUND
Section VI of Market Regulation No. 13 prohibits the importation of sugar into Puerto Rico for consumer use unless the sugar has been packaged in consumer-sized bags (two and five-pound bag sizes) prior to its arrival in Puerto Rico. 1 In other words, sugar cannot be shipped to Puerto Rico in bulk for packaging in Puer-to Rico. It is undisputed that the effect of this regulation is to prevent sugar intended for consumer use from being brought into Puerto Rico.
An explanation of the history of the sugar industry in Puerto Rico is provided in the district court opinion granting Starlight/PanAm a preliminary injunction,
Starlight Sugar, Inc. v. Soto,
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The prohibition on repackaging imported sugar was first challenged in the Puerto Rico court system in 1984. While the Puerto Rico Supreme Court was considering the issue, a concurrent suit was filed in federal district court in 1987. The district court stayed the proceedings pending a decision by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court. On November 30, 1987, the Puerto Rico Supreme Court rendered such a decision, upholding Regulation No. 13 against due process and equal protection claims based on the Puerto Rico Constitution.
Puerto Rico Sugar Corp. v. García,
CE-85-481, RE-85-496, P.R. Offic. Trans. Sugar repacker Garcia returned to the federal district court seeking relief in that forum. The district court, after dismissing the claims brought under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the United States Constitution, held that a claim could be maintained under the Commerce Clause, because such a claim could not have been litigated in the Puerto Rico courts.
2
García v. Bauzá Salas,
In 1994, appellee Pan American Grain imported approximately 80,000 pounds of sugar into Puerto Rico for consumer repackaging by appellee Starlight Sugar. Pursuant to Regulation No. 13, the Department of Agriculture issued a detention order prohibiting appellees from selling the sugar to grocery stores in Puerto Rico. Starlight/PanAm sued, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as damages, and based their challenge of Regulation No. 13 on the Commerce and Equal Protection Clauses of the United States Constitution.
The district court granted StarlighffPa-nAm’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief, holding that there was a likelihood of success on the merits as to both the Commerce Clause and equal protection arguments.
Starlight Sugar I,
This Court affirmed the grant of the preliminary injunction, finding “no abuse of discretion and no error of law.”
Starlight Sugar II,
In the most recent development of this case, the district court ruled, in an Opinion and Order, in favor of Starlight/PanAm’s
*141
Motion for Summary Judgment.
Starlight Sugar, Inc. v. Soto,
Citing
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Appellant Soto brings this interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, challenging only the district court’s rejection of his qualified immunity defense.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
DISCUSSION
This Court has identified a three-step process for evaluating qualified immunity claims: (1) whether the claimant has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right; (2) whether the right was clearly established at the time of the alleged action or inaction; and (3) if both of these questions are answered in the affirmative, whether an objectively reasonable official would have believed that the action taken violated that clearly established constitutional right.
Nelson v. Kline,
The district court held that Market Regulation No. 13 violated clearly established Commerce Clause and Equal Protection Clause caselaw. We will examine both, turning first to the Commerce Clause claim.
A. Commerce Clause Analysis
In explaining “dormant” Commerce Clause jurisprudence, the district court quoted the following passage:
*142 This “negative” aspect of the Commerce Clause prohibits economic protectionism — that is, regulatory measures designed to benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-state competitors.... Thus, state statutes that clearly discriminate against interstate commerce are routinely struck down ... unless the discrimination is demonstrably justified by a valid factor unrelated to economic protectionism.
Starlight Sugar I,
The Commerce Clause “confer[s] a ‘right’ to engage in interstate trade free from restrictive state regulation.”
Dennis v. Higgins,
Citing First Circuit precedent, the district court stated that: “The constraints of the dormant Commerce Clause apply equally to Puerto Rico.”
Starlight Sugar I,
The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, we have noted, “has taken a different view.”
Id.
at 9. Commenting on the scope of the application of the Commerce Clause to Puerto Rico, that court said: “This interstate commerce relation [between Puerto Rico and the United States] has constitu
*143
tionally had, and still has, contours which are different from the relation which under the Constitution prevails among states of the Union.”
R.C.A. v. Government of the Capital,
In an effort to clarify how we interpret the Puerto Rico Supreme Court’s position, we offer the following commentary. First, the
R.C.A.
case offers the only substantive statement on application of the Commerce Clause to Puerto Rico by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court. It, at minimum, suggested that there could be situations in which the Commerce Clause would not apply to Puerto Rico, even though it would constrain a State in comparable circumstances. Second, the
R.C.A.
case was written in 1964, and the relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States has been refined and clarified since that time.
See, e.g., Examining Bd. of Eng’rs v. Flores de Otero,
When determining whether a constitutional right is clearly established
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for purposes of qualified immunity, state,
4
as well as federal, decisions can be considered.
See Cinelli v. Cutillo,
State judges like federal judges take an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States, and unlike the converse case of federal judges enforcing state law, where it is accepted that the ultimate authority on questions of state law resides with state rather than federal courts, the federal courts of appeals do not have the ultimate authority to decide issues of federal law.
Burgess v. Lowery,
In
Trailer Marine,
as noted, we held that the dormant Commerce Clause applies to Puerto Rico; the Puerto Rico Supreme Court took a different view in the
R.C.A.
case. The United States Supreme Court has anticipated this potential for disagreement: “Each system proceeds independently of the other with ultimate review in this Court of the federal questions raised in either system. Understandably this dual court system [i]s bound to lead to conflicts and frictions.”
Atlantic Coast Line R.R. Co. v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Eng’rs,
In the past, we have held that a right can be treated as clearly established in this circuit if we have unequivocally identified that right in prior decisions, regardless of Supreme Court silence on the subject or a lack of unanimity among the circuits.
Newman v. Massachusetts,
The Seventh Circuit has stated that an official should not be shielded by the defense of qualified immunity simply because there is “one contrary decision at either the federal court of appeals or the state supreme court level.”
Burgess,
We conclude that the applicability of the dormant Commerce Clause to Puer- *145 to Rico is disputed, and, thus, appellees’ attendant constitutional right is not clearly established. 5 Our holding is consistent with and respects the role of state systems in identifying and defining federal constitutional rights on a parallel basis with the federal courts with ultimate supervisory authority to harmonize any potential conflicts residing in the United States Supreme Court. 6 Soto is, therefore, protected by the qualified immunity defense as far as the Commerce Clause challenge is concerned.
B. Equal Protection Analysis
The district court provided limited explanation for its conclusion that Soto’s enforcement of Market Regulation No. 18 violated the Equal Protection Clause, citing only
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Ward,
Under Commerce Clause analysis, the State’s interest, if legitimate, is weighed against the burden the state law would impose on interstate commerce. In the equal protection context, however, if the State’s purpose is found to be legitimate, the state law stands as. long as the burden it imposes is found to be rationally related to that purpose, a relationship that is not difficult to establish.
If neither a fundamental right nor a suspect classification is involved in an Equal Protection Clause challenge, courts will uphold legislation that provides for differential treatment upon a mere showing of a rational relationship between the disparate treatment and a legitimate government objective.
Fireside Nissan, Inc. v. Fanning,
The district court addressed one government justification of Market Regulation No. 13, namely, protection of the local
*146
sugar industry, and cited
MetLife
for the proposition that this is not a legitimate government objective.
Starlight Sugar I,
Even if Soto’s stated justification for enforcing Market Regulation No. 13 is insufficient to uphold the rationality of the legislation, this Court is obligated to seek out other conceivable reasons for validating Regulation No. 13. Here, the Introduction to Market Regulation No. 13 provides a health and safety justification: “to guarantee that imported sugar that may be marketed in Puerto Rico meets certain minimum quality requirements.” That this was not the reason provided by Soto for his enforcement is irrelevant to an equal protection inquiry.
See Beach Communications,
Although this issue was never addressed by the parties, the district court discussed, and dismissed, the health and safety argument.
Starlight Sugar I,
We do not doubt the district court’s observations in this regard. For the most part, however, they are only relevant to Commerce Clause, not Equal Protection Clause, analysis. For one, equal protection does not demand that a State employ less burdensome alternatives if those are available. A court’s belief that the legislature’s alleged goals could be accomplished through more reasonable means is irrelevant to rational-basis review.
Beach Communications,
CONCLUSION
We hold that Starlight/PanAm’s Equal Protection Clause challenge to Secretary Soto’s enforcement of Market Regulation No. 13 fails at the first step of the analysis, demonstrating the actual deprivation of a constitutional right, and that Soto is accordingly protected by the defense of qualified immunity. Based on this and our earlier conclusion that the applicability of the dormant Commeice Clause to Puerto Rico is not “clearly established,” appellant Soto cannot be held personally liable for his actions. The district court’s decision *147 with respect to Soto’s qualified immunity defense is reversed.
Notes
. Puerto Rico Department of Agriculture Market Regulation No. 13, Sec. VI — Containers reads, in relevant part:
A. Refined sugar to be imported in Puerto Rico shall come in consumer size packages inside the corresponding shipping containers. For the purposes of this Regulation a consumer size package is that one whose net content does not exceed five (5) pounds. B. Imported refined sugar for industrial use shall not be repacked in consumer-size packages.
. The Puerto Rico Supreme Court's holdings on the applicability of the Commerce Clause to Puerto Rico will be discussed later in this Opinion.
. Belated citation at oral argument to the quality control purpose articulated in the Introduction to Market Regulation No. 13 is unavailing to Soto as to the Commerce Clause challenge, because it was never presented in the lower court, nor was it fully briefed on appeal. See,
e.g., King v. Town of Hanover,
. Decisions of the Puerto Rico Supreme Court in these circumstances should be considered to have the same force as if they originated in a state supreme court.
See Cruz
v.
Melecio,
. This does not mean that a Commerce Clause right, such as the one identified in this case, will not be considered clearly established for purposes of qualified immunity analysis indefinitely in the face of continued silence on the question by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court.
. Prior to 1961, the First Circuit was empowered to review decisions of the Puerto Rico Supreme Court that resolved federal questions. 28 U.S.C. § 1293 (1959); 28 U.S.C. § 1294(6)(1959). In 1961, §§ 1293 & 1294(6) were repealed, and since then, “[f]inal judgments or decrees rendered by the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico may be reviewed by the Supreme Court by writ of certiorari.” 28 U.S.C. § 1258.
