Teresa Torres-Martinez (“Torres”) sued Miguel Pereira (Administrator of the Puerto Rico Department of Corrections, “Pereira”), Jaime López (Regional Director of the Puerto Rico Department of Corrections, “López”) and other Puerto Rico Department of Corrections (“PRDOC”) personnel in their personal and official capacities (collectively, the “Defendants”) for political discrimination and violations of her Fourteenth Amendment due process rights. She also asserted various state-law claims. The district court granted summary judgment to Defendants on all claims. Torres now appeals the entry of summary judgment on her political discrimination and Fourteenth Amendment claims against Defendants in their personal capacities. After careful consideration, we affirm.
I. Background
Torres is a member of the New Progressive Party. She began working for the Department of Corrections in January 1987 as a Penal Records Technician. In 1992, Torres was appointed Director of the Penal Records Division at the Ponce Correctional Complex at a salary of $1,145 per month. In 1994, Torres was promoted to Head of Personnel/Human Resources Coordinator, a “trust” position in the Puer-to Rico government, 1 at a salary of $2,065 per month. In 2000, the job classifications in PRDOC were reorganized, and Torres was reclassified as a “Human Resources Supervisor.” Torres appealed the reclassification, and her title was restored to “Human Resources Coordinator.” In November 2000, the Popular Democratic Party defeated the New Progressive Party in the gubernatorial elections in Puerto Rico and took control of the government. With the change in administration, Torres was dismissed from her trust position and was reinstated as a career employee in the Ponce division of PRDOC. 2 López was her new supervisor. Torres’s career position was reclassified as a “Human Resources Coordinator,” and she received a salary increase to $2,256 per month. According to Torres’s job description, the Human Resources Coordinator:
performs executive level management work of great responsibility and complexity including planning, coordinating, directing, and supervising a division of the Human Resources Office or a program or activities that are highly complex and specialized and require the application of broad understanding of the field of human resources. The employee may act as technical or administrative assistant to the Director of Human Resources in comparable areas or functions in the Corrections Administration or may be in charge of supervising personnel transactions for a region. He or she receives general instructions from a superior and may supervise other personnel. The employee has discretion to develop and execute the assigned tasks and uses his or her judgment and criteria to perform assigned work.
The job description also included twenty “work examples,” indicating that a Human Resources Coordinator “[interviews, recommends, and selects personnel to be hired in his or her division” and “[prepares various complex letters and reports related to the activities carried out in his or her division.” Torres claims that between 2000 and 2004, a number of her official duties were performed by López and some of her co-workers. In particular, Torres claims that she no longer “[made] requests] for personnel needs,” “wr[ote] relocation or transfer letters,” “wr[ote] requests [for] merit steps,” or “[gave] orientation to new employees.” Torres conceded that these functions are not exclusively assigned to her job, and that López could have performed some of these functions in his job. However, Torres claims that she was “left without duties,” and resorted to performing clerical work.
Torres filed suit against Defendants in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico on October 25, 2004. Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment on February 10, 2006, arguing that Torres had failed to make out a case of political discrimination or due process violations, and that in any case, they were entitled to qualified immunity. The district court granted summary judgment to Defendants on April 3, 2006. 3
II. Discussion
Torres appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment on her political discrimination and due process claims.
4
We review a grant of summary judgment “de novo, construing the record in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and resolving all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.”
Rochester Ford
Sales,
Inc. v. Ford Motor Co.,
A. Political Discrimination
Employment decisions with respect to civil servants in “career” positions may violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments if they are motivated by an employee’s “exercise of constitutionally protected First Amendment freedoms,” such as membership in or activism on behalf of a political party.
Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle,
Torres has not established a prima facie case of political discrimination because the evidence she submitted fails to show that she suffered an “adverse employment decision.” We begin by noting that throughout the period during which Torres alleges she was subject to political discrimination, Torres maintained her position, the same or a substantially similar title, and her salary. In fact, Torres received a salary increase that was awarded to all career employees. Thus, Torres’s claim is not based on her termination or any loss of benefits.
Torres claims instead that she was subject to a more “subtle” form of discrimination in that Defendants completely deprived her of any work duties.
See, e.g., Rodríguez-Pinto v. Tirado-Delgado,
Thus, making all possible inferences in favor of Torres, the most that she has shown is that her boss exercised his prerogative to perform three or four duties which he shared with her. This is not a case where Torres states that her duties have been “substantially narrowed.”
Agosto-de-Feliciano v. Aponte-Roque,
B. Due Process Violation
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that no state shall “deprive any person of ... property, without due process of law.” Torres does not claim to have been deprived of state employment, her title, or her salary; she claims only to have been deprived of duties pertaining to her position. Thus, “[t]he threshold question we must first address is whether [Torres] had a property interest” in her job duties.
Vélez-Rivera v. Agosto-Alicea,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. A “trust” position is a job filled by political appointment in which the holder of the job serves at the discretion of the elected government. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, §§ 1349-1350 (2000) (repealed 2004).
. Under Puerto Rico law at the time that Torres alleges discrimination occurred, a career employee who was chosen to fill a trust position had an absolute right to return to their career position at the end of their term at the same salary and with the same benefits they enjoyed before, and any benefits that may have been awarded to the civil service position subsequently. P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1350(a) (2000) (repealed 2004).
. We do not reach the immunity issues because the district court correctly awarded summary judgment to the defendants on the First Amendment claim, and the Due Process claim fails to state a claim at all.
. Torres also argues that if either of these claims is reinstated, her supplemental state-law claims should also be reinstated.
. In fact, Torres explicitly stated in her brief before this court that "Plaintiff agrees that the
