Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, plaintiffs Jesse York, Allen Long, Darrell Mitchell, David Hoover, Michael Long, and Johnny Long filed suit against defendant Otto Purkey, alleging that Purkey violated their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by firing them from their jobs in retaliation for their political support of his political opponent. Purkey filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ causes of action on the grounds that he was entitled to qualified immunity and that he relied upon the legal advice of counsel when he terminated the plaintiffs. The district court treated Purkey’s motion as a motion for summary judgment and denied summary judgment in regard to all plaintiffs’ claims except Hoover’s. Purkey appeals the denial of qualified immunity. We affirm.
I. Background
Prior to September 1998, the plaintiffs were employed in Tennessee by the Hamblen County Sheriffs Department (“Department”) under Sheriff Charles Long. York worked as a deputy sheriff. Allen Long, Sheriff Long’s brother, supervised inmate labor during litter pickup. Mitchell served as a fitter truck driver. Hoover worked as a detective. Michael Long, Sheriff Long’s son, worked as a drug force detective. And Johnny Long, Sheriff Long’s brother, worked as a jailer.
In 1998, defendant Purkey defeated incumbent Charles Long in an election for Hamblen County Sheriff. The plaintiffs had supported and worked for Sheriff Long’s reelection. After Purkey took office as Sheriff of Hamblen County in September 1998, he terminated each plaintiffs employment with the Department.
Before terminating the plaintiffs, Purkey sought out and received general legal advice concerning his ability to terminate employees from the Hamblen County Attorney, Rusty Cantwell. Purkey never told Cantwell which employees he wanted to terminate. As Cantwell recalls, he gave the following advice to Purkey: “I told him that Tennessee was an employment-at-will state, which basically meant, generally meant, that no one has a vested interest in a job, that they can be terminated without cause, that he would not need reason.... I told him a limitation on that was you can’t fire people in violation of their civil rights.” Cantwell said that they did not discuss what he meant by “civil rights” in any great detail, but that he may have mentioned “First Amendment rights” and “may have discussed ... retaliatory discharges.”
Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, plaintiffs filed suit in the Eastern District of Tennessee against Purkey individually and in his official capacity. They alleged that Purkey violated their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by dismissing them from their jobs as employees of the Department in retaliation for their political support of Purkey’s campaign opponent, former Sheriff Long. Purkey filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ causes of action on the grounds that he was entitled to qualified immunity and had relied upon the legal advice of Cantwell when he terminated the plaintiffs.
Because Purkey’s motion to dismiss relied upon evidence outside of the plead
II. Jurisdiction
A district court’s denial of a summary judgment motion based on qualified immunity is an immediately appealable final decision. See Mattox v. City of Forest Park,
III. Discussion
Purkey contends that he was entitled to summary judgment in regard to all plaintiffs’ claims because he was entitled to qualified immunity. We disagree.
A district court’s denial of summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity is reviewed de novo because that doctrine’s application is a question of law. See Testa,
The Supreme Court first addressed patronage dismissal of public employees in Elrod v. Burns,
In Branti v. Finkel,
It is not necessary for courts to have previously designated a particular job as “political” in order to hold officials personally liable for partisan employment actions related to that job. Id. at 429. Branti requires this court to invoke case-by-case analysis to determine whether political affiliation is an appropriate consideration when staffing a particular job. See id. at 427. Case-by-case analysis of state and local law is used to determine whether a position falls within the Branti exception. See id. at 427-29 (applying such analysis to the position of deputy sheriff in a Tennessee county). See also Sowards v. Loudon County,
In McCloud v. Testa,
The amount of information about a job that is available in the record is important. Where the record contains abundant information about a job, courts should resolve any ambiguity about the classification of that particular position in favor of the government defendants for the purposes of qualified immunity. Hall,
Purkey does not specify the grounds upon which he is entitled to qualified immunity. He never disputes that, in general, it is clearly established that the practice of patronage dismissals is unconstitutional. Furthermore, he never argues the Branti exception. He fails to analyze the jobs at issue and offers no citations to state or county law to assist this court’s evaluation of those jobs. Thus, we reject Purkey’s qualified immunity defense because the record does not contain enough information, factual or statutory, about the jobs in question for us to evaluate those jobs under Branti and Testa. Additionally, the little information that is available about the plaintiffs’ jobs argues against qualified immunity. Based on the scant record before it, the district court did not err by rejecting Purkey’s qualified immunity defense.
While we have previously never analyzed whether a defendant’s reliance on the advice of counsel supports qualified immunity, we have recognized that there are circumstances in which reliance on the advice of counsel may support a claim of qualified immunity. See Mineer v. Call,
In Harlow,
If the law was clearly established, the [qualified] immunity defense ordinarily should fail, since a reasonably competent public official should know the law governing his conduct. Nevertheless, if the official pleading the defense claims extraordinary circumstances and can prove that he neither knew nor should have known of the relevant legal. standard, the defense should be sustained. But again, the defense would turn primarily on objective factors.
Id. A defendant government official will often claim that reliance on legal advice constitutes an “extraordinary circumstance” under Harlow. See V-1,
The “extraordinary circumstances” exception applies only rarely. The Tenth Circuit has stated that:
The circumstance most often considered for treatment as “extraordinary” is rebanee upon the advice of counsel. Of course, such reliance is not inherently extraordinary, for few things in government are more common than the receipt of legal advice. Still, reliance on the advice of counsel in certain circumstances rises to the level of extraordinary circumstances.
Id. And the Fourth Circuit has written that “although reliance on counsel’s advice may indeed be a factor to be considered in deciding whether a defendant has demonstrated an ‘extraordinary circumstance,’ reliance on legal advice alone does not, in and of itself, constitute an ‘extraordinary circumstance’ sufficient to prove entitlement to the exception to the general Harlow rule.” Buonocore v. Harris,
When determining whether reliance upon the advice of counsel constitutes an “extraordinary circumstance,” other circuits look to the individual circumstances of each case and consider relevant factors. Obviously, “[a] public official who fails to follow legal advice... cannot rely on that advice to establish entitlement to qualified immunity.” Buonocore,
Purkey’s reliance upon Cantwell’s legal advice does not constitute an extraordinary circumstance that absolves him of liability. First, it appears that Purkey did not follow Cantwell’s legal advice. Cant-well told Purkey that he could not terminate employees in violation of their civil
AFFIRMED.
