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SUSAN HOBLER; LINDA SOUTHWELL, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
GARY BRUEHER, in his individual capacity, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 00-35589
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
D.C. No. CV-99-00177-WFN
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Washington William Fremming Nielsen, Chief Judge,
Presiding. Argued and Submitted February 4, 2002--Seattle, Washington
Before: William C. Canby, Jr., Andrew J. Kleinfeld, and Kim McLane
Wardlaw, [FOOTNOTE *] Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
Steven C. Lacy, Lacy & Kane, P.S., East Wenatchee,
Washington, for the appellants.
Mary P. Gaston, Perkins Coie, LLP, Spokane, Washington,
for the appellee.
Filed April 8, 2003
KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:
This appeal tests whether an elected county prosecutor
must retain the at-will confidential secretaries hired by the
predecessor he defeated, who supported the predecessor politically.
Facts
The firings of Susan Hobler and Linda Southwell, at-will
secretaries in the Adams County prosecutor's office, occurred
after a countywide election that replaced then-prosecutor David
Sandhaus. Adams County is a lightly populated rural county in
southeastern Washington. The county seat is in Ritzville, a little
town southwest of Spokane, southeast of Wenatchie, and northeast
of Kennewick. The county's elected prosecutor works mainly in
the Ritzville office, but has a branch office in Othello, an
even smaller town to the southeast.
After Sandhaus was elected as the Adams County prosecutor,
he hired Ms. Hobler and Ms. Southwell as support staff. The county
prosecutor prosecutes criminal cases, collects child support,
and advises the County Commissioners on legal matters and policy.
In addition to the prosecutor and whatever assistants or deputies
he had in the Ritzville office, that office ordinarily has had
two support staff positions. The Othello office was devoted exclusively
to collecting child support, and for a lengthy period had no
resident attorney. Two non-attorney staff persons worked at the
Othello office as well.
Sandhaus, the outgoing prosecutor, was evidently controversial.
Prior to his electoral defeat, there had been a recall petition
filed against him. The record establishes that relations were
bad between his office and the county commissioners. Linda Southwell
testified that "there were two schools of power, basically,
that David Sandhaus was one and that the commissioners were the
other. And there was frequent head butting going on there. And,
as an employee in the office, you had to be walking rather gingerly."
The defendant in this case, Gary Brueher, defeated Sandhaus in
the general election by a very wide margin, 71.3% to 28.3%. Evidently
viewing this electoral victory as a mandate for change in the
prosecutor's office, Brueher came into office pledging a "new
team." Brueher fired Hobler and Southwell shortly after
taking office.
We take the facts about the plaintiffs' work responsibilities
from their own testimony at their depositions, since this is
review of a summary judgment granted in favor of the defendant.
At the time of their firings, the plaintiffs had risen
to be Sandhaus's right hand men, as it were, in their respective
offices. Both had always been at-will employees. Hobler worked
at the county seat office in Ritzville and Southwell worked at
the smaller office in Othello.
Sandhaus used Hobler to sit in on interviews when he
hired prosecutors and support staff, to advise him on whom to
hire, and to give him confidential notes of what was said at
the meetings she attended. He also used her as a witness to sit
in on sensitive conversations that might need one, such as discussions
with employees about personnel problems. She reported to Sandhaus
confidentially on "performance issues" relating to
the office's attorneys. For example, when Sandhaus was out of
the office and a deputy violated an office policy by filing a
complaint based on what a policeman told her, rather than waiting
for the written police report, Hobler reported the errant deputy
to Sandhaus (to the deputy's considerable annoyance).
As the administrator of the office, Hobler did payroll,
so she knew how much money everyone made. Also, she worked with
the county auditor on obtaining and reviewing expenditures for
the prosecutor's budget. She characterized herself as a "liaison
individual between the elected official [Sandhaus] and the balance
of the populace." She regularly spoke with the people at
the courthouse, the county commissioners, and the sheriff. Thus,
Hobler often acted on behalf of Sandhaus with respect to the
county's other important officials. In addition, Sandhaus would
frequently call Hobler into his office "to impart the day
to day on goings in the office," acting as his "eyes
and ears," as many confidential personal secretaries do.
Linda Southwell administered the Othello office when
Sandhaus wasn' t there. He only came there once every couple
of months, so Southwell ran the office for him independently
and without supervision much of the time. The office did nothing
but child support collection, no criminal prosecutions, so the
work could be done largely by administrative staff. For a substantial
period of time there was no resident attorney.
After Sandhaus lost his election, Linda Southwell was
concerned about her office's child support enforcement budget,
and Sandhaus told her that he couldn' t do much about it because
he was leaving office. So Southwell herself worked with Sandhaus's
deputy and developed "a plan to continue funding for this
support enforcement program, which was about to come to an end."
The plan laid out "what moneys we needed, how they were
to be used, how they were to be divided up." She also made
the plan for the "travel arrangements, motel arrangements,
reimbursement for flying, etc." for whenever prosecutors
came to the Othello office. Southwell had "overall responsibility
for the functioning of the office." She said that "[i]f
someone didn' t show up for work, I had to call [Sandhaus]. If
something unusual happened in the office that might become something
he would be responsible for, I would report to him." Sandhaus
used her to monitor the performance of the staff and the other
people in the office and be sure the work was performed. She
also managed the office's purchasing.
There may be a genuine issue of fact as to whether Brueher
actually fired Hobler and Southwell because they supported Sandhaus
against him in the county election. The way he put it was that,
regardless of their competence, he didn' t feel he could trust
them. In his deposition testimony Brueher stated he thought that
"if I would have kept Sue Hobler on, that the attorneys
would have left and the office would have been in complete disarray."
This fits together with what Ms. Hobler testified to, about reporting
to Sandhaus on attorney failures to follow policy, and how upset
an attorney became when Hobler reported on her. Brueher's testimony
shows the firings may have been motivated by a concern about
the interaction between the prosecutor's office and the courthouse.
He said, "Sue wasn' t a real popular person at the courthouse
. . . the whole courthouse was against her." As for Ms.
Southwell in the Othello office, Brueher stated that "I
needed somebody in Othello that could operate independently and
that I could trust. And because of her involvement in that e-mail
incident and other things I just didn' t think I could trust
her." Brueher testified that "I was elected by a landslide
and that the people wanted change and I wanted to change and
get the office going in the right direction."
But there was also evidence from which a jury could
conclude that Mr. Brueher fired Ms. Hobler and Ms. Southwell
simply because they supported Mr. Sandhaus politically in his
election campaign. Because there may be an issue of fact as to
the motivation for the dismissals, we take the facts most favorable
to the plaintiffs for purposes of summary judgment. Thus, we
presume for the purposes of this appeal that Hobler and Southwell
met their burden of establishing that Brueher fired both of them
for expressing their political support for his election rival.
After their termination, Hobler and Southwell brought
this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Adams County in Spokane
County Superior Court, claiming that their dismissals violated
their First Amendment rights. The county removed the case to
the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Washington pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441 and on the basis
of federal question jurisdiction. In federal court Hobler and
Southwell amended their complaint, dropping their claim against
the county, and substituting a claim against Gary Brueher individually.
Brueher moved for summary judgment. The district court granted
summary judgment, characterizing Hobler and Southwell as confidential
secretaries in very small offices, whom the prosecutor had to
be able to replace. The district court went on to say that Brueher
"probably would have been derelict had he not terminated
their employment" and that he could do so under Branti
v. Finkel .[FOOTNOTE 1] We have appellate jurisdiction over
this matter pursuant to the district court's final judgment on
Brueher's motion for summary judgment. [FOOTNOTE 2]
Analysis
In Elrod v. Burns ,[FOOTNOTE 3] a new Democratic
sheriff fired all the Republicans in the sheriff's office who
weren' t protected by civil service rules. The Supreme Court
held that wholesale patronage dismissals going beyond policymaking
and confidential positions encroached on employees' First Amendment
rights. [FOOTNOTE 4] The plurality opinion in Elrod was
clarified by a majority opinion in Branti .[FOOTNOTE 5]
In Branti , an incoming public defender sought to fire
all the Republican assistant public defenders because they were
members of the wrong party. The Supreme Court held that firing
all the Republicans was unconstitutional, because the First Amendment
protection against government retaliation for speech applied
as well to political beliefs and affiliation. [FOOTNOTE 6]
But the Court took note of an exception to this First
Amendment protection, where the "position is one in which
political affiliation is a legitimate matter to be considered."
[FOOTNOTE 7] For example, a state university football coach
couldn' t be fired for political affiliation, but the "various
assistants" whom a governor uses to "write speeches,
explain his views to the press, or communicate with the legislature"
could have their jobs conditioned on sharing the governor's political
beliefs and party commitments. [FOOTNOTE 8] This is often characterized
as the "policymaker" and "confidential employee"
exception. But the Court described the proper inquiry in Branti
as "not whether the label ' policymaker' or ' confidential'
fits a particular position; rather, the question is whether the
hiring authority can demonstrate that party affiliation is an
appropriate requirement for the effective performance of the
public office involved." [FOOTNOTE 9] The Branti rule
applies not merely to party affiliation, but more broadly to
political beliefs, expression, and support. [FOOTNOTE 10] Therefore,
although the partisan affiliations of Sandhaus, Brueher, Hobler
and Southwell have no bearing on this case, their political activities
fall within Branti 's (and its progeny' s) consideration.
We have repeatedly considered patronage dismissal for
policymakers and whether certain classes of employees were policymakers
for Branti purposes. For example, in Fazio v. City
and County of San Francisco ,[FOOTNOTE 11] we considered
a district attorney's decision to fire a high-ranking assistant
because the assistant ran against him. We affirmed summary judgment
against the fired assistant, holding that "an employer may
fire a public employee for purely political reasons if the employer
can demonstrate that political considerations are ' appropriate
requirement[s] for the effective performance of the job.' "
[FOOTNOTE 12] Our holding recognized that some positions must
be subject to patronage dismissal for the sake of effective governance
and implementation of policy. In so doing, we cited a decision
of the Seventh Circuit with approval, saying that "[a] public
agency would be unmanageable if its head had to . . . retain
his political enemies . . . in positions of confidence or positions
in which they would be . . . exercising discretion in the implementation
of policy." [FOOTNOTE 13] Thus, we held that Assistant District
Attorney Fazio was a "policymaker" for purposes of
the Branti exception. [FOOTNOTE 14]
Similarly, we held in Biggs v. Best, Best & Krieger
[FOOTNOTE 15] that "an employee's status as a policymaking
or confidential employee would be dispositive of any First Amendment
retaliation claim." [FOOTNOTE 16] Biggs held
that the "policymaker" exception was broader than "one
who makes policy," and held further that if an employee
falls within the Branti exception, that is the end of
the analysis. [FOOTNOTE 17] Thus, where the Branti exception
applies the employee can be fired "for purely political
reasons" without any Pickering balancing. [FOOTNOTE
18]
We carefully considered the mode and standard of review
for political dismissal cases in Walker v. City of Lake wood.
[FOOTNOTE 19] In Walker we reiterated that "' an
employee's status as a policymaking or confidential employee
[is] dispositive of any First Amendment retaliation claim.' "
[FOOTNOTE 20] Likewise, Walker stated that we only consider
whether Pickering protects the employee's speech, activities,
affiliations or beliefs in cases where the employee is not in
a policymaking or confidential position. [FOOTNOTE 21] We held
in Walker that the question whether the employee held
a policymaking or confidential position is "a mixed question
of fact and law." [FOOTNOTE 22] This is because "[d]etermining
the particular duties of a position is a factual question, while
determining whether those duties ultimately make that position
a policymaking or confidential question is a question of law."
[FOOTNOTE 23]
Walker 's important holding means that the question
whether the Branti exception applies is properly determined
by summary judgment or occasionally a motion to dismiss rather
than by trial, at least where the duties of the position, insofar
as they are material, are not genuinely at issue. Insofar as
the material "duties of a position" are not at issue,
the question of "whether these duties ultimately make that
position a policymaking or confidential [position] cannot properly
be submitted to a jury because it is a question of law."
[FOOTNOTE 24] In the case at bar, there is no genuine issue
of fact as to the duties of Ms. Hobler and Ms. Southwell, insofar
as they are material, so the district court properly did not
submit the question of whether they fell within the Branti
exception to a jury. "As with all mixed questions, we
conduct a de novo review." [FOOTNOTE 25]
Our patronage dismissal cases have involved the "policymaker"
branch of the Branti exception rather than the "confidential
employee" branch, e.g. Fazio, Walker, and Diruzza.
This case, though, has been briefed entirely on the question
whether Ms. Hobler and Ms. Southwell were "confidential
employees."
As with "policymakers," the question cannot
properly be answered by determining whether their titles fit
into the pigeonhole, because neither "confidential employees"
nor "policymakers" is, under Branti , a pigeonhole
at all. The question for us on appeal is "whether the hiring
authority can demonstrate that [politics] is an appropriate requirement
for the effective performance of the public office involved."
[FOOTNOTE 26] Thus, the question is not whether Ms. Hobler
or Ms. Southwell held the title "confidential secretary"
or could properly be denominated as such, but whether the work
they did made their support for the outgoing prosecutor against
the incoming prosecutor "an appropriate requirement for
the effective performance of the public office involved."
This clears out some underbrush from both sides' arguments.
It isn' t determinative that neither held the job title of "confidential
secretary." Nor could a public employer legalize wholesale
patronage dismissals simply by titling all the support staff
as "confidential staff." Likewise, it isn' t determinative
that Southwell signed a "confidentiality agreement"
or that both had access to highly confidential information, such
as arose in paternity cases in Othello or regarding who was about
to be indicted in Ritzville. Many public employees have access
to and work with confidential information yet are shielded from
wholesale patronage dismissals under Branti. As Branti stated
regarding mere access to confidential information, "although
an assistant [public defender] is bound to obtain access to confidential
information arising out of various attorney-client relationships,
that information has no bearing whatsoever on partisan political
concerns." [FOOTNOTE 27]
What matters is not any of these sorts of bright-line
rules. What does matter is whether Ms. Hobler's and Ms. Southwell's
actual duties in the Ritzville and Othello offices and their
relationship to the elected official made them "confidential
employees" in the Branti sense that their political
conduct was "an appropriate requirement for the effective
performance of the public office involved."
Plainly, it was. Most offices have certain key personnel
who aren' t policymakers in the Branti sense but who are
critical to effective policy implementation, and whose loyalty
and confidentiality are necessary. It is hard to run any sort
of office without certain employees who work so closely with
the outgoing boss that any incoming boss must have the option
of picking his or her own people for that position. The outgoing
Adams County prosecutor, Sandhaus, did have just such key personnel
in each of the two offices, Ritzville and Othello, who functioned
as his conduit for the most sensitive information. Sandhaus depended
on Hobler and Southwell to tell him when other staff, including
lawyers, weren' t doing their jobs the way he wanted them done.
Sandhaus's replacement, Brueher, quite reasonably felt that he
couldn' t patch things up with the staff attorneys and take effective
control of the office himself if Hobler and Southwell were still
in between.
Moreover, Hobler and Southwell functioned as Sandhaus's
communications conduit to the public and other elected officials
like the governor's assistants in the Branti example.
Because the county commissioners and the people at the courthouse
were upset with the prosecutor's office, Brueher could not carry
out his program of making peace with them if Hobler and Southwell
remained. Brueher needed precisely the same type of relationship
with his key employees that Sandhaus had with Hobler and Southwell
in order to effectively implement his policies. Requiring Brueher
to keep on persons that his predecessor and political enemy worked
with so closely would simply have stymied him.
The same language we quoted from the Seventh Circuit
in Fazio relating to "policymakers" applies
in this context to "confidential employees." The Seventh
Circuit noted, as we agreed, that "[a] public agency would
be unmanageable if its head had to . . . retain his political
enemies . . . in positions of confidence or positions in which
they would be . . . exercising discretion in the implementation
of policy." [FOOTNOTE 28] Without a confidential secretary
the official can trust to carry out his views, funnel communications
in and out according to his priorities, and represent him in
a way that enhances rather than damages his reputation, an elected
official cannot effectively perform his office. Thus, in the
case at bar political loyalty is "an appropriate requirement
for the effective performance of the public office involved."
It is striking that in this case, Hobler so much represented
the prosecutor's office that the personnel at the courthouse
were upset specifically with her, not just with Sandhaus, and
likewise the attorney staff in the prosecutor's office. Similarly,
it is significant that Southwell, not Sandhaus, took the initiative
on working out the Othello office's budget with the county auditor,
with the great influence that budget planning always has on the
circumstances of those who work in a government office.
The general rule in our sister circuits, which we adopt,
is that a confidential secretary to a policymaker may, consistent
with the First Amendment, be replaced by the policymaker's successor
for political reasons. The circuits vary in such details of application
as whether it is a mixed question of law and fact [FOOTNOTE 29]
and whether applicability of the Branti exception completely
obviates the need to perform a Pickering analysis. [FOOTNOTE
30] But the general rule, that a confidential secretary, though
not a policymaker, may fall within the Branti exception
and may be dismissed for political reasons, appears to pertain
everywhere.
For instance, the First Circuit held in Vazquez-Rios
that the executive secretary and the cultural attache of
a governor were confidential employees, while janitorial staff
were not. [FOOTNOTE 31] They rightly recognized that "[i]t
would strain credulity to read the First Amendment or Elrod
to require an elected official to work in constant direct
contact with a person viewed as a political enemy." The
First Circuit test for determining who is a confidential employee
in this sense is "public employees who occupy positions
of such unusually intimate propinquity relative to government
leaders that, despite their noninvolvement with partisanship
and policymaking, political loyalty could be deemed an appropriate
requirement of the job." [FOOTNOTE 32] In the case at bar,
the duties of Hobler and Southwell and the required working relationship
with Brueher was of the necessary propinquity to make those positions
fall under the Branti exception for confidential employees.
Similarly, the Sixth Circuit has held that "a secretary
to a policymaker may be fired for political reasons," as
these positions "involve[ ] access to confidential and political
material, and political loyalty, whether partisan or personal,
is an essential attribute of the job." [FOOTNOTE 33] The
Tenth Circuit has also affirmed the proposition that "political
association and allegiance were appropriate requirements for
the performance of [the employee' s] job as administrative assistant
to the city manager." [FOOTNOTE 34] The Seventh Circuit,
in recognizing the principle that a secretary to an elected official
often falls under Branti 's exception, explained that
"[i]f Rosalynn Carter had been President Carter's secretary,
President Reagan would not have had to keep her on as his secretary."
[FOOTNOTE 35] Finally, although presented in a different procedural
posture, the Second Circuit has held that considering political
affiliation for a confidential secretary position is appropriate
"when there is a rational connection between shared ideology
and job performance." [FOOTNOTE 36]
It is significant that in Elrod , the dismissal
of all Republicans was in an office of 3,000 people, where there
could be no intimate relationship of trust between all the dismissed
employees and the person who dismissed them. And in Branti
, the dismissal of all Republican assistants was in a Rockland
County, New York public defender's office with nine assistants.
Because the assistant public defenders' responsibilities were
primarily or solely to defend individuals charged with crimes,
"it would undermine, rather than promote, the effective
performance of an assistant public defender's office to make
his tenure dependent on his allegiance to the dominant political
party." [FOOTNOTE 37] But trust and loyalty are factors
in the relationship between a policymaker and confidential secretary
necessary to promote the effective implementation of policy.
Several factors make the case at bar a particularly
strong one for applying the "confidential employee"
branch of Branti . The offices were very small, so the
elected official, Brueher, would have a continual and close working
relationship with his support staff. The dismissals were retail,
of two specific individuals whose personal activities in the
office mattered a great deal to the incoming official, as opposed
to the wholesale terminations in Branti and Elrod of all
persons not of the right political party. Both Hobler and Southwell
continually interacted on behalf of the prosecutor with the courthouse
personnel who affected how successful he was and the elected
county commissioners who determined his budget and who looked
to him for legal advice. The confidential secretaries were the
public face of the individual who fired them, not, as in Branti
, the representatives of clients other than that official.
That Southwell worked in the Othello office and saw
the prosecutor personally only once every couple of months does
not militate against her "confidential employee" status.
If anything, it magnified it. Brueher would have had to rely
on her even more than if he' d been there, to tell him what was
going on, to run the office, to represent him to the public and
office holders in Othello, to put together budget information,
and to keep him informed on personnel matters. His knowledge
of what was going on was limited to what she perceived and told
him. Physical propinquity is not required to make political loyalty
"an appropriate requirement for the effective performance
of the public office involved."
We refuse to convert the Branti test -- whether
political affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the effective
performance of the public office involved -- into something else.
An alternative test would invite the pigeonholing that the Court
held was impermissible, and a multifactor test would necessarily
list so many factors as to be no more determinative of the outcome
than the Branti formulation. The test for whether someone
is a "confidential employee" in the Branti sense
is simply whether political loyalty, or the absence of political
adverseness, is "an appropriate requirement for the effective
performance of the public office involved." This case suggests
a few factors that bear on the question, but neither a multifactor
"test" nor an exhaustive and exclusive list of factors
is appropriate. Among the factors that suggest themselves in
this case are: (1) how closely does the person work with the
official? (2) does the person's job require personal loyalty
to the official? (3) is the office so small that the relationship
is necessarily close, or so large that it isn' t? (4) does the
official rely on the person for information about delicate matters
within the office or communications with the public or other
officials on behalf of the official? (5) would the official's
ability to manage relationships with office staff or persons
with whom the office deals be impaired if the persons are politically
loyal to an adversary or not loyal to him? (6) were the dismissals
of only one or a small number of employees who worked most closely
with the policymaker, or were they wholesale dismissals? (7)
do the individuals speak to other employees, the public and to
other policymakers on behalf of the official? In other cases,
other factors may enter the balance.
Plaintiffs also brought a claim under state law, for
the tort of wrongful discharge in violation of public policy.
They concede that in this case, the only public policy at issue
is the First Amendment, so we affirm the summary judgment on
the state tort claim on the same basis as on the section 1983
claim as no violation of Hobler's or Southwell's First Amendment
rights occurred.
Conclusion
Because plaintiffs were "confidential employees"
in the Branti sense, the First Amendment did not protect
them from dismissal because of their political loyalty to the
defendant's political adversary, so the summary judgment for
defendant is AFFIRMED.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: FOOTNOTE(S):::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FN*. The original panel, consisting of Judge Canby, Judge
Kleinfeld, and Judge Henry A. Politz, Senior United States Court
of Appeals Judge for the Fifth Circuit, sitting by designation,
heard oral argument on February 4, 2002. We were saddened to
learn that Judge Politz died on May 25, 2002, while the case
was under submission. Judge Wardlaw was drawn to replace him
and has read the briefs, reviewed the record, and listened to
the tape of oral argument.
FN1. 445 U.S. 507 (1980).
FN2. 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
FN3. 427 U.S. 347 (1976).
FN4. Id. at 357.
FN5. Branti , 445 U.S. at 518-20.
FN6. Id. at 519-20.
FN7. Id. at 518.
FN8. Id.
FN9. Id.
FN10. See, e.g., Savage v. Gorski , 850 F.2d 64 (2d
Cir. 1988); Faughender v. City of North Olmstead , 927
F.2d 909 (6th Cir. 1991); Soderbeck v. Burnett Cty. ,
752 F.2d 285 (7th Cir. 1985); DiRuzza v. County of Tehama
, 206 F.3d 1304, 1310 (9th Cir. 2000); Fazio v. City and
County of San Francisco , 125 F.3d 1328 (9th Cir. 1997).
FN11. 125 F.3d 1328 (9th Cir. 1997).
FN12. Id. at 1332 (alteration in original) (quoting
Branti , 445 U.S. at 518).
FN13. Id. at 1333 (alteration in original) (citing
Wilber v. Mahan , 3 F.3d 214, 217 (7th Cir. 1993)).
FN14. Id. at 1334.
FN15. 189 F.3d 989 (9th Cir. 1999).
FN16. Id. at 994-95.
FN17. Id. at 995 (quoting Fazio , 125 F.3d at
1331 (holding that Pickering balancing is not reached
if the Branti exception applies)). But see Barker v.
City of Del City , 215 F.3d 1134, 1139 (10th Cir. 2000) (holding
that an employee's status as a policymaker under the Branti
exception does not obviate the Pickering analysis).
FN18. Pickering v. Board of Ed. of Tp. High School Dist.
205, Will County, Illinois , 391 U.S. 563 (1968). Under Pickering
, we generally balance "the interest of the [employee],
as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern and
the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency
of the public services it performs through its employees."
Id. at 568; Fazio , 125 F.3d at 1331.
FN19. 272 F.3d 1114, 1131-32 (9th Cir. 2001).
FN20. Id. at 1131 (quoting Biggs , 189 F.3d
at 994-95).
FN21. Id. at 1132.
FN22. Id. at 1131.
FN23. Id. at 1132.
FN24. Id.
FN25. Id. (citing United States v. City of Spokane
, 918 F.2d 84, 86 (9th Cir. 1990)).
FN26. Branti , 445 U.S. at 518.
FN27. Id. at 519; see also Vazquez Rios v. Hernandez
Colon , 819 F.2d 319, 324-26 (1st Cir. 1987) (holding that
access to confidential information didn' t transform janitorial
staff into confidential employees under Branti ).
FN28. Fazio , 125 F.3d at 1333 (alteration in original)
(citing Wilber, 3 F.3d at 217). See also Weisbuch v. County
of Los Angeles , 119 F.3d 778, 784 (9th Cir. 1997) ("A
district attorney whose priority is violent crimes may need an
intake supervisor who agrees, not one who believes and gives
speeches to the effect that the number one priority should be
narcotics cases. The alternative would be a policy carried out
inefficiently or not at all, and constant departmental strife
as the [employee] was perceived to be spying on or micromanaging
the renegade director's department to see whether it was carrying
out official policies." ).
FN29. Compare Walker , 272 F.3d at 1131, recognizing
an existing circuit split on the issue and applying the mixed
question of law and fact analysis, with Soderbeck , 752
F.2d at 288.
FN30. . Compare Fazio , 125 F.3d at 1331, with Barker
, 215 F.3d at 1139.
FN31. Vazquez-Rios , 819 F.2d at 323.
FN32. Id. at 324.
FN33. Faughender , 927 F.2d at 914 (citation omitted).
FN34. Barker , 215 F.3d at 1138. The Tenth Circuit,
in contrast to our circuit, holds that the Branti exception
does not obviate Pickering balancing . Id. at 1139.
See also supra at n.16.
FN35. Soderbeck , 752 F.2d at 288. The Seventh Circuit
differs only in that they do not follow Walker on the
mixed question of law and fact issue.
FN36. Savage , 850 F.2d at 66-70 (reversing the district
court's grant of a preliminary injunction in favor of employees
including several confidential secretaries).
FN37. Branti , 445 U.S. at 519-20.
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