After Republican James O’Grady was elected Sheriff of Cook County, he appointed the plaintiffs, who were also Republicans, to desirable jobs in a new department. But when Democrat Michael Sheahan defeated O’Grady in his re-election bid in 1990, the plaintiffs were demoted or terminated. The plaintiffs sued Sheriff Sheahan, claiming he denied them their First Amendment right to support the Republican Party. They also claimed a property interest in their jobs, and alleged that Sheriff Sheahan denied them this property interest without due process. The district court dismissed the First Amendment claim; we reverse that decision and remand. The district court granted summary judgment on the due process claim; we affirm that decision.
I. Facts
In 1986, the voters of Cook County, Illinois elected Republican James O’Grady as sheriff. No doubt he brought some distinctive ideas to his office, and surely surrounded himself with loyal people to carry out his policies. In 1989, O’Grady established the Cook County Sheriffs Electrical Monitoring Unit (EMU). The EMU managed the use of electronic tracking devices for prisoners released from the Cook County Jail due to overcrowding. The plaintiffs — Thomas Kolman, Rick Pere, Thomas Codilis, Warren Anaya, Andy Roeus, Donald Malicki, and Kirk Surridge — were sheriffs department employees and active Republicans who supported O’Grady. Codi-lis and Malicki were promoted into the EMU and given the title Chief Deputy. The rest of the plaintiffs were hired into the EMU as investigators. With these appointments they all gained salary increases, improved working conditions, and other benefits.
O’Grady ran for re-election against Democrat Michael Sheahan in 1990. The plaintiffs actively supported O’Grady in his re-election bid. Sheahan won the election, and soon after that he terminated the plaintiffs from the EMU. Rocus and Malicki were dismissed from the sheriff’s office altogether. The rest of the plaintiffs were reassigned to their previous positions in the sheriffs department; they lost any seniority they had accumulated before coming to and while at the EMU, and reverted to the lower salary of their previous positions. In 1990, Pere had taken and passed a qualifying test to become a police officer. Sheahan’s administration never interviewed him for that position and, of course, never promoted him.
The plaintiffs sued Sheahan for these adverse employment decisions. They amended their complaint several times. In their Fourth Amended Complaint, which is before
*431
us, they made three claims. In count I, they alleged that they were “fired, demoted, forced to suffer loss of seniority, and denied the opportunity to be considered for promotions” in violation of the First Amendment, because they were Republicans who supported O’Grady. In count II, Pere alleged that he was illegally denied promotion under Illinois law, specifically 55 ILCS 5/3-7009 (Smith-Hurd 1992). In count III, they claimed that they had a property right to their jobs at the EMU, and were denied this property right without due process. Sheah-an filed a motion to dismiss counts I and II, and a motion for summary judgment on count III. As to count I, the court determined that our decisions in
Upton v. Thompson,
II. Analysis
A. Standards of Review
This appeal involves both a dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. We review both the dismissal and the grant of summary judgment under a
de novo
standard.
Midwest Grinding Co., Inc. v. Spitz,
1. Political patronage.
While recognizing its political utility, courts have long struggled with the constitutional implications of political patronage: when does an elected official’s need for loyal assistants conflict with a public employee’s right to possess or express political beliefs? The Supreme Court has fashioned a precarious balance between a public official’s prerogative to engage in patronage hiring and firing, and a public employee’s freedoms of association and expression. In
Elrod v. Burns,
The controlling precedent, therefore, requires that we look to the powers inherent in the plaintiffs’ positions at the EMU, to see if they had meaningful input into government decisionmaking.
Tomczak,
At the outset it would be helpful to understand why, in order to accept these positions, most of the plaintiffs were “required to take an indefinite ‘leave of absence’ from [their] position[s] ... as a condition precedent” to being promoted into the EMU. In accepting this condition they apparently left the insulation of being a “merit” or “non-exempt” employee where they would be subject to firing only for good cause. (See 55 ILCS 5/3-700 et seq.) It would be important to know if they accepted these new positions knowing that they were politically sensitive and thus had to relinquish the statutory protection provided in their former positions.
We cannot even resort to common knowledge to know about the plaintiffs’ job responsibilities. The EMU is an obscure department in Cook County government, at least from the public’s perspective. Contrast this with a more visible position, like a mayor’s chief of staff. If the chief of staff objected to his dismissal occasioned by a change in administrations, there would probably be no need for a court to view evidence about his job responsibilities before determining that his position involved meaningful input into decisionmaking. The court could probably dismiss the suit based on the obvious: that a mayor’s chief of staff is indelibly connected to the decisionmaking process.
Cf. Soderbeck v. Burnett County, Wisconsin,
This case is not so clear-cut. Because we have no idea what goes on at the EMU, we are left with a myriad of possibilities. It is possible, for instance, that the EMU jobs involved no participation in decisionmaking. Perhaps Sheriff O’Grady appointed partisans into light duty assignments at the EMU as a reward for loyalty. On the other hand, it is also possible that the jobs were policy-making positions essential to Sheriff O’Grady’s political agenda. For instance, the plaintiffs may have had some input into the decision to release criminals, or the treatment of released criminals, or the degree of monitoring of released criminals. The defendant has taken the position that because plaintiffs Co-dilis and Malicki attained the title Chief Deputy, they were necessarily decisionmakers under
Upton
and
Dimmig,
subject to patronage dismissal. But
Upton
and
Dimmig
do not create a
per se
rule that anyone who achieves the title of Chief Deputy necessarily inhabits a decisionmaking job.
Cf. Lohorn v. Michal,
Granted, it is unlikely that Sheriff O’Grady shuffled loyal partisans into meaningless jobs. It is very possible the jobs were political, decisionmaking positions. In our system, control of departments at all levels is important for those given the task of governing. And an elected official gains this control by strategically placing loyal people in these departments. “Elected officials must be able to rely on the political loyalty and compatibility of a policymaking civil servant in order to seize the reins of government and realize their electoral mandate.”
Grossart v. Dinaso,
But we cannot affirm the dismissal based on a probability, when the allegations of the complaint allow for other possibilities.
See Randle v. Bentsen,
On remand, the district court will likely encounter the patronage question again on summary judgment. The court will probably be given several undisputed facts about the function of the EMU, its overall role in the sheriffs department, and what the plaintiffs did on a daily basis. From these undisputed facts the court may come to a pretty clear understanding of the powers inherent in the plaintiffs’ jobs. Once all of the undisputed facts about the plaintiffs, the EMU, and the defendant are before it, the district court will confront an array of holdings in this circuit dealing with patronage.
1
Without knowing the facts at this point it is difficult to determine whether the circuit has a precedent comparable to the plaintiffs’ circumstances. Nor do we assume that the existing cases will necessarily resolve the question. There has been much satellite litigation around the issue of patronage. Justice Powell predicted this disarray in his dissent to
Branti,
where he stated that “[t]he standard articulated by the Court is framed in vague and sweeping language certain to create vast uncertainty.”
If this circuit does not have an analogous case, perhaps Sheriff Sheahan was qualifiedly immune for his actions. See summary of qualified immunity law for patronage dismissal eases in
Pounds v. Griepenstroh,
2. Property right.
In count III of their complaint, the plaintiffs claimed that they had a property right in continued employment at the EMU, and that Sheriff Sheahan denied this property right without due process by removing them from the EMU. To be successful on this claim, the plaintiffs first had to demonstrate that they had a property right in continued employment.
Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
A state statute may establish a property right to continued employment.
Cleveland Board of Education,
Except as is otherwise provided in this Division, no deputy sheriff in the County Police Department ... and no employee in the County Department of Corrections shall be removed, demoted or suspended except for cause, upon written charges filed with the [Merit] Board by the Sheriff and a hearing before the Board thereon upon not less than 10 days’ notice ...
At first blush, the statute does seem to confer some right to continued employment — or at least the right to be free from termination or demotion without cause — for deputy sheriffs. The question is whether the statute covers the plaintiffs: two chief deputies and five investigators at the EMU. To answer that question it is necessary to go beyond the isolated statement from paragraph 3-7012, and to view the entire statutory scheme of the Cook County Sheriffs Merit Board Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. Ch. 34, paras. 3-7001-3-7017, of which paragraph 3-7012 is only a part.
Paragraph 3-7002 creates the Sheriffs Merit Board, which, among other duties, is charged in paragraph 3-7006 to “establish a classification of ranks including those positions which shall be exempt from merit classification.” Therefore, in order to avail themselves of the protections afforded deputy sheriffs under paragraph 3-7012, the plaintiffs would have to show that the Merit Board classified them as such. But the Merit Board did not rank the EMU positions. The plaintiffs concede this in their brief to the court: “The EMU investigator and chief deputy positions are not among the classified ranks as defined by the Sheriffs Merit Board.” Not only that, Sheriff Sheahan submitted unrefuted evidence that the plaintiffs’ positions were specifically exempted from *435 merit classification. Therefore, the plaintiffs cannot take advantage of paragraph 3-7012 to claim a right of continued employment at the EMU. That statute simply does not cover their jobs.
Next, the plaintiffs claim that an unspoken pact in the sheriffs department created a “rule of mutually explicit understanding” conferring a property right in their jobs. They rely on
Gorman,
The district court was correct to grant summary judgment for Sheriff Sheahan on the procedural due process question. The plaintiffs have failed to introduce sufficient evidence that they have a constitutionally protected property interest in their jobs.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand on the dismissal of the patronage question, and affirm the summary judgment on the due process claim.
Affirmed in Part, REVERSED in Part, and Remanded.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Heideman v. Wirsing,
