Baez-Cruz v. Municipality of Comerio

140 F.3d 24, 1998 WL 135451
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 1998
Docket97-1850
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 140 F.3d 24 (Baez-Cruz v. Municipality of Comerio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baez-Cruz v. Municipality of Comerio, 140 F.3d 24, 1998 WL 135451 (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants Berta Baez-Cruz and twenty-three of her former co-workers brought this action in the district court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the municipality of Comerio, Puerto Rico, and four of its officials. Plaintiff-appellants alleged that their dismissal from municipal employment was based on their political affiliation in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments and the laws of Puerto Rico. Previously, Plaintiffs had sought reinstatement by the Puerto Rico administrative body that handles government employment disputes. That body denied relief to Plaintiffs in a decision that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court ultimately affirmed.

Following the Puerto Rico Supreme Court’s affirmance, the district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. It reasoned that Plaintiffs were collaterally estopped from arguing that their dismissal was politically based by a contrary finding in the Commonwealth proceedings. Plaintiffs have appealed. The question we face is whether, under Puerto Rico law, the administrative body’s findings preclude relitigation of Plaintiffs’ termination. We affirm.

FACTS

1. Tension Between Comerio Municipal Employees and the New Comerio Administration

In 1992, the citizens of Comerio elected Defendant Luis Rivera Rivera (“Rivera”), a member of the New Progressive Party (the “NPP”), as their Mayor. That election ended a half-century of rule in Comerio by the Popular Democratic Party (the “PDP”). Other members of the NPP administration included Defendant Domingo Marcano, Internal Auditor; Defendant Rufino Ayalo, Director of Public Works; and Defendant Damian Rivera, Director of Civil Defense. Plaintiffs, all members of the rival PDP, were career municipal employees.

The months following Rivera’s assumption of the mayoral post were marked by tension between the municipality and its employees. In their complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that they perceived the new administration to be *27 discriminating against PDP holdovers by subjecting them to sudden transfers, threats, and revocation of privileges. Plaintiffs and other employees protested this perceived mistreatment by declaring a one-day work stoppage. The Municipality admonished the protesters and withheld their pay for the strike day.

After Mayor Rivera refused to negotiate, Plaintiffs and those in agreement declared another strike, which directly led to their dismissal. The dismissed employees announced a four-day work stoppage, with a protest on the first day in front of City Hall. Mayor Rivera responded by activating, through Defendant Damian Rivera, the municipality’s civil defense to provide Comerio with essential services. Plaintiffs and their fellows saw the civil defense forces as strikebreakers. The City Hall protest led to physical and verbal confrontations between the civil defense force and the strikers.

Following the work stoppage, the municipality investigated the strike, which, the parties agree, violated Puerto Rico law forbidding municipal employees to strike. The' municipality’s auditor, Defendant Domingo Marcano, reviewed the municipality personnel department’s attendance records to determine who participated in the strike. The Municipality then informed forty-eight employees of their dismissal.

2. The Administrative Proceedings

The forty-eight terminated employees immediately requested a hearing before the Puerto Rico Personnel Administration Systems Appeal Board (known by its Spanish acronym, “JASAP”), the administrative body that handles government employment disputes. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1894(1). JASAP’s examining officer recommended that only those employees who could be identified as having participated in the strike be terminated. The investigation positively identified only the twenty-four Plaintiffs in this action. The municipality quickly reinstated the other twenty-four employees, but refused to reinstate the twenty-four Plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs contested the examiner’s recommendations before the JASAP. JASAP upheld the examiner, adopting her findings of fact and conclusions of law. As a “Conclusion of Law,” the examining officer’s report stated that,

The appellant party [the strikers-PIaintiffs] brought to our consideration that the dismissal was due to reasons of political ideology. It arises from evidence that all the employees who participated in the strike belonged to the [PDP]. (Findings of Fact No. 23) Nevertheless, once the administrative hearings were held not all the forty-eight (48) employees who participated in [the] strike were dismissed, but twenty-four (24) employees. There were twenty-four “Populares” [i.e., members of the PDP] who were reinstated after the administrative hearing with the discount of the day.

3. The § 1983 Action

On the same day that JASAP denied Plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration, Plaintiffs brought the instant action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. The complaint alleged that the terminations and prior disciplinary measures violated Plaintiffs’ rights conferred by the Federal Constitution to free expression and 'association, equal protection of the law, and procedural due process. Also included within the federal complaint were claims under the law of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Defendants filed their answer, and, based on the JASAP Report’s findings, they moved for summary judgment.

The district court stayed, the proceedings, including discovery, while Plaintiffs appealed from the JASAP decision to the Puerto Rico courts. Plaintiffs’ appeal was rebuffed at every turn. The Superior, Court, the Circuit Court, and, ultimately, by a 3-2 decision, the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico each affirmed JASAP’s decision.

Soon after the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico rendered its decision, the district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The district court held that JA-SAP’s determination “that [in the court’s words] the sole reason for plaintiffs’ dismiss *28 al was their participation in an illegal strike,” collaterally estopped Plaintiffs’ political discrimination claim. The district court also held that Plaintiffs failed to demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact in their procedural due process claim, and then dismissed without prejudice the remaining claims under Puerto Rico law.

Plaintiffs filed a Rule 59(e) motion to vacate and/or to amend the judgment, arguing that Puerto Rico’s rules of collateral estoppel did not preclude relitigation of a factual issue unless the parties in the second suit were identical to the first. The individual officials, defendants here, were not parties to the JA-SAP proceeding. Thus, Plaintiffs argued, the JASAP decision could not collaterally estop a claim involving these new parties. The district court rejected this contention, and this appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

1. Background

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Bluebook (online)
140 F.3d 24, 1998 WL 135451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baez-cruz-v-municipality-of-comerio-ca1-1998.