Vazquez v. Lopez-Rosario ( 1998 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
    ____________________


    No. 97-1584

    WALDO G. VAZQUEZ, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    CARLOS LOPEZ-ROSARIO, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Juan M. Perez-Gimenez, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Lynch, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and DiClerico, District Judge.* ______________
    ____________________

    Harry Anduze Monta o, with whom Raul S. Mariani ______________________ ________________
    Franco was on brief, for appellants. ______
    Rafael Cuevas-Kuinlam, with whom Antonio Cuevas- ______________________ ________________
    Delgado and Cuevas, Kuinlam & Bermudez were on brief, for _______ ___________________________
    appellee Carlos Lopez-Rosario.
    Jaime Mayol-Bianchi, with whom Jose R. Perez- ____________________ ________________
    Hernandez and Pierluisi & Mayol-Bianchi, P.S.C. were on _________ ____________________________________
    brief, for appellee Puerto Rico Marine Management, Inc.
    Radames A. Torruella, with whom Carmencita ________________________ __________
    Velazquez-Marquez, Jorge A. Antongiorgi, and McConnell Valdes _________________ ____________________ ________________
    were on brief, for appellee Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping
    Authority.

    ____________________

    *Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.













    ____________________

    January 22, 1998
    ____________________
















































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    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. This case is another in a LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________

    series of cases arising out of the elections in Puerto Rico

    in 1992, in which the New Progressive Party (NPP) won power

    from its rival, the Popular Democratic Party (PDP). During

    the current decade, plaintiffs in these cases usually have

    been members of the PDP who complain that the incoming NPP

    administration has deprived them of their government jobs in

    violation of their rights under the First Amendment.1 In

    this case, plaintiff Waldo G. Vazquez, an NPP supporter,

    claims his job at a government contractor was eliminated as

    part of an internal party feud. He sues his employer, its

    major client (a public corporation), and a member of the

    client's board under 42 U.S.C. 1983 (1994).

    The district court concluded that Vazquez's

    evidence, principally his own testimony, amounted to no more

    than "hearsay upon hearsay" and "rumors, hearsay, gossip, his

    personal feelings, his intuition and his conclusions," and

    granted summary judgment for defendants. Vazquez argues that

    the district court committed error in excluding evidence as

    hearsay when the statements were admissions by party-

    opponents. Thus, we explore in some detail the requirements

    of Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2) as to party-opponent admissions, a

    recurring issue in employment cases.

    ____________________

    1. See, e.g., Acosta-Orozco v. Rodriguez-de-Rivera, No. 97- _________ _____________ ___________________
    1489, 1997 WL 775350, at *8 n.1 (1st Cir. Dec. 22, 1997)
    (citing cases).

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    We agree with Vazquez that some of the

    conversations which the district court excluded on hearsay

    grounds are admissions of a party-opponent and should have

    been considered as part of his case. To win the battle is

    not necessarily to win the war. Because the evidence Vazquez

    presents is insufficient to create a genuine issue of

    material fact in any event, we affirm.

    I. I.

    We state the facts in the light most favorable to

    the party opposing summary judgment, Acosta-Orozco v. _____________

    Rodriguez-de-Rivera, No. 97-1489, 1997 WL 775350, at *1 (1st ___________________

    Cir. Dec. 22 1997), and describe the evidence in some detail.



    Waldo Vazquez was employed for many years by Puerto

    Rico Maritime Management, Inc. (PRMMI), a private corporation

    that provides management services to the Puerto Rico Marine

    Shipping Authority (PRMSA), a public corporation created by

    the Puerto Rico legislature. PRMSA's Governing Board has

    seven members appointed by the Governor of Puerto Rico,

    subject to confirmation by the Commonwealth's Senate. See 23 ___

    L.P.R.A. 3054 (1994). PRMSA acknowledges it is a

    government agency, and we have held it is a "political

    subdivision" of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico under the

    National Labor Relations Act. See Chaparro-Febus v. ___ ______________

    International Longshoremen Ass'n, Local 1575, 983 F.2d 325 _____________________________________________



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    (1st Cir. 1992). At the time of his dismissal from PRMMI in

    1993, Vazquez held the title Vice President of Operations,

    Caribbean Division.

    In 1992, a new contract between PRMSA and PRMMI was

    signed, giving authority to the PRMSA Board over "key

    personnel" within PRMMI. PRMSA was given the right to

    dismiss high-level PRMMI employees "for any material breach

    of its contract by such [PRMMI] key personnel and/or for just

    cause." Vazquez's position was among those designated "key

    personnel."

    In 1993, PRMSA had accumulated losses in excess of

    $300 million. Vazquez does not dispute this. On February

    24, 1993, the PRMSA Board voted, in light of these high

    losses, to authorize a reduction-in-force (RIF) of twenty-six

    employees at PRMMI; eventually at least forty-one employees'

    jobs were eliminated. Vazquez's position was among those

    selected for elimination, either directly by the Board or

    pursuant to its RIF directive. The record is not clear

    whether Vazquez's position was among those originally

    selected for elimination by the Board. However, as some

    evidence supports the conclusion that the Board directly

    authorized Vazquez's dismissal, we will assume that it did.

    In late March 1993, Steve Schulein, a high-level

    PRMMI official, informed Vazquez over breakfast at the

    Ambassador Plaza Hotel in Puerto Rico that his position was



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    going to be eliminated at the beginning of April. According

    to Vazquez's testimony, Schulein told Vazquez that he did not

    understand why Vazquez was to be dismissed, and that the

    elimination of his position had not been part of the original

    reorganization plan submitted to the PRMSA Board. Schulein

    said that he understood that the decision came from a member

    of the PRMSA Board. This conversation took place in the

    period when the other PRMMI employees were also being let go.

    The next day, Vazquez called Manuel Luis del Valle,

    Chairman of the Governing Board of PRMSA, in order to

    ascertain why his position had been selected for elimination

    in the Board's new plans for PRMMI's reorganization. Vazquez

    told Del Valle that his dismissal "was an injustice and a

    persecution." Vazquez argued that similar employees had not

    been eliminated, and that he had rejected the company's early

    retirement program two years before because he needed the

    salary and felt he still had much to offer the company. Del

    Valle promised he would help Vazquez fight his proposed

    dismissal, because, according to Vazquez, Del Valle "also

    understood that it was an injustice."

    On April 2, 1993, Vazquez received a letter

    informing him that "due to [PRMMI's] current financial

    condition you will be laid off . . . ."

    Vazquez continued his inquiries and protests about

    his dismissal. At some later time, Del Valle told Vazquez of



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    a conversation Del Valle had with Carlos Lopez-Rosario, a

    member of the PRMSA Board. According to Vazquez, Del Valle

    told him that Lopez had told Del Valle that "the problem" was

    that Vazquez had "political differences" with Lopez. The

    record is unclear when the conversation between Lopez and Del

    Valle supposedly took place or whether it had anything to do

    with Vazquez's dismissal. Del Valle's comments also

    confirmed what Vazquez calls "hallway gossip" that Lopez

    disliked Vazquez.

    Vazquez suspected that these "political

    differences" stemmed from the NPP's gubernatorial primary in

    1992. Vazquez had supported the losing candidate, Carlos

    Romero-Barcelo ("Romero"), now the Commonwealth's Resident

    Commissioner in Washington, while Lopez had supported the

    winner, Pedro Rosello, now the Governor of Puerto Rico.

    Vazquez speculated that this disagreement must have

    motivated his dismissal. He remembered a conversation with

    Lopez a few years earlier at an NPP activity in the home of a

    prominent supporter. Vazquez had expressed his preference

    for Romero as a gubernatorial candidate and Lopez had

    disagreed, arguing for Rosello. Vazquez also speculated that

    Lopez might be retaliating against him for the work of

    Vazquez's wife in organizing a women's group to support

    Romero in a political campaign almost two decades earlier.





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    According to Vazquez, Miguel Rossy, PRMMI's

    President, confirmed in a conversation at a local restaurant

    that Vazquez's position was not included in the original

    reorganization plan and that the decision came from an

    unnamed PRMSA Board member, "[s]omebody who doesn't . . .

    like you, who is opposed to Carlos [Romero's] people."

    Vazquez took this unnamed person to be Lopez.

    On several occasions, Vazquez also asked both

    Commissioner Romero and Governor Rosello personally to

    intervene and reverse the decision, citing his long record of

    service with PRMMI. The Governor told Vazquez that he would

    have to handle the issue with the PRMSA Board himself.

    According to Vazquez, at some point Ricardo Gonzalez, a PRMSA

    Board member, told Vazquez that he had tried to get the

    decision reversed, but that "the pressure was too strong."

    Gonzalez did not explain what he meant by "pressure," or who

    was applying pressure.

    Finally, in May 1993, Vazquez met with Lopez

    personally in Lopez's office at PRMSA. Vazquez asked Lopez

    whether what Del Valle had told him about "political

    differences" was true. Lopez replied, according to Vazquez,

    "I made some remarks . . . those remarks to Manuel Luis [del

    Valle] over a Coca-Cola or a cup of coffee, but Manuel Luis

    shouldn't have told you." There is no indication when such

    remarks were made.



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    II. II.

    Vazquez filed suit against PRMSA, PRMMI and Lopez,

    alleging that his dimissal was retaliation for his support of

    Romero, in violation of his First Amendment2 rights of

    political association under Elrod v. Burns, 427 U.S. 347 _____ _____

    (1976) and Branti v. Finkel, 445 U.S. 507 (1980).3 Following ______ ______

    ____________________

    2. We note that, under plaintiff's theory, the state action
    doctrine poses no bar to his assertion of a First Amendment
    claim against PRMSA and Lopez, although he was employed at a
    private company. Cf. Yeo v. Town of Lexington, No. 96-1623, ___ ___ _________________
    1997 WL 748667, at *8 (1st Cir. Dec. 9, 1997) (en banc) ("If
    there is no state action, then the court may not impose
    constitutional obligations on (and thus restrict the freedom
    of) private actors."). For summary judgment purposes, we
    take it that Vazquez's dismissal came at the insistence of
    the Board of Governors of a state agency, an agency which had
    retained the power in its contract to demand the dismissal of
    "key personnel." Furthermore, although plaintiff was not a
    government employee, he was dismissed, at the government's
    insistence, from his job with a government contractor. The
    First Amendment forbids the government not only from
    interfering with the associational rights of its employees,
    but also from using its power over contractors to punish its
    political opponents. See Board of County Comm'rs v. Umbehr, ___ ________________________ ______
    116 S. Ct. 2342 (1996); O'Hare Truck Serv., Inc. v. City of ________________________ _______
    Northlake, 116 S. Ct. 2353 (1996). Moreover, because his _________
    claim fails against the state actors, it fails against the
    private or semi-private actors who did the state's bidding.

    3. Under Elrod and Branti, the government may not condition _____ ______
    employment on membership in the party in power, unless party
    affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the position.
    See Branti, 445 U.S. at 517-18. Vazquez's claim is that his ___ ______
    support of Romero prompted his dismissal by a member of a
    rival faction within the same party.
    It is unclear from the summary judgment record whether
    Vazquez's support of Romero should be analyzed under the
    categorical rule for political affiliation of Elrod and _____
    Branti or under the balancing test for political speech by ______
    government employees established in Pickering v. Board of _________ ________
    Educ., 391 U.S. 563 (1968). See, e.g., Rodriguez-Rodriguez _____ __________ ___________________
    v. Munoz-Munoz, 808 F.2d 138, 143-147 (1st Cir. 1986) ___________
    (contrasting a claim based on "affiliation with a particular

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    discovery, the district court granted motions for summary

    judgment for PRMMI and Lopez, and a few days later, granted

    summary judgment sua sponte for PRMSA, which had not joined

    the other defendants' motions. On appeal, Vazquez claims

    that the district court erred in excluding the conversations

    he relates in his deposition on hearsay grounds, because most

    of the statements, he says, were admissible under Fed. R.

    Evid. 801(d)(2) as admissions of a party-opponent. Vazquez

    claims that the conversations he describes were sufficient

    evidence to permit his case to survive summary judgment. He

    also claims that the district court abused its discretion in

    entering summary judgment sua sponte for PRMSA.

    III. III.

    Evidence that is inadmissible at trial, such as

    inadmissible hearsay, may not be considered on summary

    judgment. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e); FDIC v. Roldan-Fonseca, ___ ____ ______________

    795 F.2d 1102, 1110 (1st Cir. 1986). We review the district

    court's decision to exclude such evidence for abuse of

    discretion. See General Elec. Co. v. Joiner, No. 96-188, ___ __________________ ______

    1997 WL 764563, at *4 (U.S. Dec. 15, 1997); Nieves-Villanueva _________________

    v. Soto-Rivera, No. 96-1285, 1997 WL 775545, at *5 (1st Cir. ___________

    ____________________

    political group" and one based on active partisan activity,
    speech or running for office). The parties and the district
    court assumed the Elrod-Branti test applied. We determine _____ ______
    that summary judgment was appropriate even under the more
    demanding Elrod-Branti standard, and therefore do not reach _____ ______
    the issue of which line of First Amendment precedent should
    apply.

    -10- 10













    Dec. 22, 1997). Once we determine what evidence can properly

    be considered, we review the district court's decision to

    grant summary judgment de novo. Acosta-Orozco v. Rodriguez- _____________ __________

    de-Rivera, No. 97-1489, 1997 WL 775350, at *1 (1st Cir. Dec. _________

    22, 1997).

    A. Hearsay and Party-Opponent Admissions ________________________________________

    Fed. R. Evid. 801(c) defines hearsay generally as

    "a statement, other than one made by the declarant while

    testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to

    prove the truth of the matter asserted." All of the

    conversations which Vazquez relates fit this general

    definition, as they are offered to show that Lopez was behind

    Vazquez's dismissal, and that his motive was to retaliate for

    Vazquez's support of Romero. Indeed, most of the

    conversations are hearsay within hearsay.

    Vazquez argues, however, that these conversations

    are nonetheless admissible because the Federal Rules of

    Evidence define admissions by a party-opponent as "not

    hearsay." See Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2). Vazquez argues that ___

    the comments by high PRMSA and PRMMI officials, acting within

    the scope of their agency or employment, are admissible under

    this rule. In addition, Vazquez properly notes, there is no

    objection to "hearsay within hearsay" if each link in the

    chain is admissible under an exception to the hearsay rules

    or is not defined as hearsay. See Fed. R. Evid. 805. ___



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    Careful scrutiny of the comments on which Vazquez relies is

    necessary to evaluate this argument.

    For a statement to be an admission under Rule

    801(d)(2), the statement must be made by a party, or by a

    party's agent or servant within the scope of the agency or

    employment. See, e.g., Woodman v. Haemonetics Corp., 51 F.3d _________ _______ _________________

    1087, 1093-94 (1st Cir. 1995); Union Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. __________________________

    Chrysler Corp., 793 F.2d 1, 6-8 (1st Cir. 1986).4 Each link ______________

    in the chain must be admissible, either because it is an

    admission and thus not hearsay or under some other hearsay

    exception.

    The conversations that Vazquez himself describes as

    "hallway gossip" were properly excluded as hearsay. Although

    Vazquez identifies some of the individuals who related the


    ____________________

    4. Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2) provides that a statement is "not
    hearsay" if:
    The statement is offered against a party
    and is (A) the party's own statement in
    either an individual or a representative
    capacity or (B) a statement of which the
    party has manifested an adoption or
    belief in its truth, or (C) a statement
    by a person authorized by the party to
    make a statement concerning the subject,
    or (D) a statement by the party's agent
    or servant concerning a matter within the
    scope of the agency or employment, made
    during the existence of the relationship,
    or (E) a statement by a coconspirator of
    a party during the course and in
    furtherance of the conspiracy.
    The other exceptions are not relevant to the statements
    offered in this case, which can more easily fit the
    exceptions mentioned in the text.

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    rumor that Lopez disliked him, nothing in the record

    identifies the sources of this information. While there may

    be a controversy over whether admissions must be based on

    personal knowledge, see Brookover v. Mary Hitchcock Mem. ___ _________ _____________________

    Hosp., 893 F.2d 411, 414-16 (1st Cir. 1990) (canvassing the _____

    controversy), unattributed statements repeated by party-

    opponents cannot be admissible. As the original declarant is

    unknown, it is impossible to determine whether the original

    declarant also fits within the party-opponent definition, and

    thus the exclusion of such office gossip was proper. See, ____

    e.g., Carden v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 850 F.2d 996, 1001- ____ ______ ________________________

    02 (3rd Cir. 1988) (excluding such unattributed hearsay when

    repeated by party-opponent); Cedeck v. Hamiltonian Fed. Sav. ______ _____________________

    & Loan Ass'n, 551 F.2d 1136, 1138 (8th Cir. 1977) ("That part ____________

    of [the party-opponent's] statement which contains a

    reiteration of what someone told him is not admissible as an

    admission by [a] party-opponent since the author of the

    statement is unknown.")5

    ____________________

    5. We distinguish cases where the statements are not offered
    as proof that they were in fact made, but rather as general
    examples of unlawful company policy. See, e.g., Abrams v. _________ ______
    Lightolier, Inc., 50 F.3d 1204, 1215-16 (3rd Cir. 1995) _________________
    (finding admissible supervisor's statement, repeated to ADEA
    plaintiff, that company "frowned on" older workers); Hybert ______
    v. Hearst Corp., 900 F.2d 1050, 1053 (7th Cir. 1990) _____________
    (admitting supervisor's statements about "concerns" and
    "feelings" of home office as direct statements of the
    company's attitude or policy rather than second-hand
    repetitions, inadmissible because unattributed). Vazquez
    does not claim that PRMSA had a policy or custom of
    persecuting Romero followers, but merely that one Board

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    Likewise, the exclusion as hearsay of the statement

    of Miguel Rossy, PRMMI's president, that Vazquez's dismissal

    was at the behest of "someone [at PRMSA] who doesn't like

    you, who is opposed to Carlos [Romero's] people," was within

    the district court's discretion. Even assuming dubitante

    that Rossy's description of the statement is enough to

    identify the declarant as Lopez, or at least as a Board

    member and thus an agent of PRMSA, Rossy was the President of

    PRMMI, not PRMSA. This breaks the link in the hearsay chain.

    There is no evidence that Rossy was authorized to speak for

    PRMSA's Board, and thus his statement cannot be considered

    within the scope of his agency as an officer of PRMMI.

    See Skillsky v. Lucky Stores, Inc., 893 F.2d 1088, 1091-92 ___ ________ ___________________

    (9th Cir. 1990) (no abuse of discretion in exclusion of

    double-hearsay statement which was related to plaintiff by an

    agent of a different employer where there was "no evidence

    that [the person who related the alleged statement] had any

    authority to make [such] admissions"); cf. Woodman, 51 F.3d ___ _______

    at 1094 (examining record to determine whether manager was

    acting within scope of her employment); Miles v. M.N.C. _____ ______

    Corp., 750 F.2d 867, 874 (11th Cir. 1985) (same). _____


    ____________________

    member, Lopez, did so in his case. See Abrams, 50 F.3d at ___ ______
    1216 (contrasting a "specific declaration made [concerning] a
    particular employment decision . . . offered for its truth,"
    which was inadmissible if from an unknown declarant, with a
    supervisor's "opinion regarding company policy," which was
    admissible).

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    However, many of the other conversations on which

    Vazquez relies should not have been excluded as hearsay. Del

    Valle's conversation with Vazquez relating the "problem" of

    Lopez's "political differences" with Vazquez fits within the

    Rule 801(d)(2) exception. The statement concerning political

    differences was made by a party (Lopez) and related by Del

    Valle, who was Chairman of the PRMSA Board and thus the agent

    of PRMSA, a party. The district court abused its discretion

    by excluding this conversation as "hearsay," if that is

    indeed what it did.

    Similarly, the statement of Gonzalez, a PRMSA Board

    member, that "the pressure was too strong" to reverse the

    decision is not hearsay, as Gonzalez was clearly an agent of

    PRMSA. Thus, Gonzalez's statement can properly be used to

    prove the truth of the matter asserted, i.e., that he felt

    under "pressure" not to reverse the PRMSA decision. However,

    Gonzalez's statement cannot be used as "hearsay within

    hearsay" to prove that Lopez had urged the Board to stand by

    a decision to dismiss Vazquez. Gonzalez does not identify

    the person applying "pressure," and the statement of an

    unidentified declarant is hearsay.

    Finally, Vazquez's description of his confrontation

    with Lopez is plainly not hearsay. Lopez is a party, and his

    direct admission that he had made some informal comments to

    Del Valle that he did not want Vazquez to hear is not



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    hearsay. Again, Lopez's statement can be used to prove the

    truth of the matter asserted, i.e., that he made comments to

    Del Valle that he did not want repeated to Vazquez.

    The Lopez statement, however, is insufficient to

    establish an "adoptive admission" that Lopez acknowledged

    that he had been responsible for Vazquez's dismissal and that

    it was in retaliation for Vazquez's support of Romero, as

    Vazquez argues. See Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(B) (defining as ___

    "not hearsay" "a statement of which the party has manifested

    an adoption or belief in its truth"). The burden is on

    Vazquez to show that the circumstances surrounding the

    conversation with Lopez demonstrate that Lopez manifested a

    belief in the accusation of retaliation. See Ricciardi v. ___ _________

    Children's Hosp. Med. Ctr., 811 F.2d 18, 24 (1st Cir. 1987). __________________________

    "In all cases, the burden is on the proponent to convince the

    judge that in the circumstances of the case a failure to

    respond is so unnatural that it supports the inference that

    the party acquiesced in the statement." Id. (quoting J. ___

    Weinstein & M. Berger, Weinstein's Evidence ______________________

    801(d)(2)(B)[01], at 801-202 n.15 (1985) (internal quotation

    marks and alterations omitted)).

    The record, however, reveals that Vazquez, at most,

    accused Lopez of making statements to Del Valle, and Lopez

    responded by admitting that he had made "some remarks."

    Vazquez does not say that he accused Lopez directly of



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    retaliating against him, only that he accused him of making

    statements to Del Valle about their political differences.

    It would hardly be unnatural to fail to respond to an

    accusation that Vazquez does not claim to have made.

    B. Summary Judgment on the Motive for Vazquez's Dismissal _________________________________________________________

    In order to forestall summary judgment, Vazquez

    must have demonstrated that his support of Romero was at

    least a "motivating factor" in the Board's decision to

    dismiss him. See Rodriguez-Rodriguez v. Munoz-Munoz, 808 ___ ___________________ ___________

    F.2d 138, 143 (1st Cir. 1986). Vazquez must "point[] to

    [admissible] evidence in the record which, if credited, would

    permit a rational fact finder to conclude that [his

    dismissal] stemmed from a politically based discriminatory

    animus," LaRou v. Ridlon, 98 F.3d 659, 661 (1st Cir. 1996) _____ ______

    (quoting Rivera-Cotto v. Rivera, 38 F.3d 611, 614 (1st Cir. ____________ ______

    1994) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)),

    rather than for economic reasons. "Without more, [Vazquez's]

    unsupported and speculative assertions regarding political

    discrimination will not be enough to survive summary

    judgment." Id. ___

    The record reveals that Vazquez felt his dismissal

    was unfair and that many of his friends agreed with him. He

    had worked for many years at PRMMI, climbing the corporate

    ladder, had rejected early retirement two years before and

    was then dismissed. The conversations he relates contain



    -17- 17













    many statements of support from PRMSA and PRMMI employees who

    sympathized with him. However, "[m]erely juxtaposing a

    protected characteristic -- [Lopez's] politics -- with the

    fact plaintiff was treated unfairly is not enough to state a

    constitutional claim." Acosta-Orozco, 1997 WL 775350, at *5 _____________

    (quoting Correa-Martinez v. Arrillaga-Belendez, 903 F.2d 49, _______________ __________________

    58 (1st Cir. 1990) (internal quotation marks omitted)).

    Instead, Vazquez must point to evidence which shows

    that Lopez singled out Vazquez's position, which was not

    included in the original reorganization plan, for elimination

    and that he did so to retaliate for Vazquez's support of

    Romero. Vazquez can point to three conversations to support

    this theory. First, he can point to Del Valle's comments

    that "the problem" was Vazquez's "political differences" with

    Lopez. Second, he can point to Lopez's acknowledgement that

    he made "some comments" to Del Valle that he did not want

    Vazquez to hear. Finally, he can note Gonzalez's statement

    that Gonzalez felt "pressure" not to reverse Vazquez's

    dismissal.

    These comments are insufficient to establish that

    Lopez engineered Vazquez's dismissal in order to retaliate

    for Vazquez's support of Romero, and amount to no more than

    "unsupported and speculative assertions." LaRou, 98 F.3d at _____

    661. Even viewing these statements in the light most

    favorable to Vazquez, no reasonable jury could find that such



    -18- 18













    statements prove by a preponderance of the evidence that

    Vazquez's support of Romero was a "substantial" or

    "motivating" factor in the PRMSA Board's decision to include

    his position in the reorganization. That Vazquez had

    "political differences" with a single PRMSA Board member at

    some unidentified time does not establish that the Board or a

    majority of the Board acquiesced in a plan to eliminate his

    position in retaliation for those differences. Nor does it

    establish that "the problem" referred to the elimination of

    Vazquez's position. Similarly, Gonzalez's statement that he

    felt "pressure" not to reverse Vazquez's dismissal says

    nothing about the reason for the pressure. Facing a deficit

    in excess of $300 million, PRMSA Board members undoubtedly

    felt pressure to stand by the reorganization plan.

    Finally, we find no abuse of discretion in the

    action of the district court in entering summary judgment sua

    sponte for PRMSA, following the district court's grant of

    summary judgment to PRMMI and Lopez. Vazquez had

    "appropriate notice and a chance to present [his] evidence on

    the essential elements of [his] claim . . . ." Berkovitz v. _________

    Home Box Office, Inc., 89 F.3d 24, 29 (1st Cir. 1996). _______________________

    Vazquez does not identify how his opposition to summary

    judgment for PRMSA would have differed in any way from his

    opposition to summary judgment for PRMMI and Lopez.





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    The judgment of the district court is affirmed. ________

    Costs to appellees.

















































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