Rodriguez-Ramos v. Hernandez-Gregorat , 685 F.3d 34 ( 2012 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 09-2531
    GIL A. RODRÍGUEZ-RAMOS,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    RUBÉN A. HERNÁNDEZ-GREGORAT; SANTOS M. DELGADO-MARRERO;
    GLADYS FUENTES-CRUZ; JUDITH MORALES-MORALES,
    Defendants, Appellees,
    INSURANCE COMPANY A, B, C,
    Defendant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Gustavo A. Gelpí, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Lynch, Chief Judge,
    Lipez and Howard, Circuit Judges.
    Carlos A. Del Valle Cruz, with whom Eileen Landrón
    Guardiola, Eduardo Vera Ramirez and Landrón & Vera, L.L.P. were
    on brief, for appellant.
    Susana I. Peñagarícano-Brown, Assistant Solicitor General,
    Department of Justice, with whom Irene S. Soroeta-Kodesh,
    Solicitor General, Leticia Casalduc-Rabell, Deputy Solicitor
    General and Zaira Z. Girón-Anadón, Deputy Solicitor General were
    on brief, for appellee Rubén A. Hernández-Gregorat and for
    appellees Santos M. Delgado-Marrero, Gladys Fuentes-Cruz and
    Judith Morales-Morales in their individual capacities.
    Francisco J. Amundaray, with whom Eric R. Ronda and Mercado
    & Soto, PSC, were on brief, for appellees Santos M. Delgado-
    Marrero, Gladys Fuentes-Cruz and Judith Morales-Morales in their
    official capacities.
    July 12, 2012
    HOWARD,    Circuit   Judge.     Plaintiff-appellant    Gil   A.
    Rodríguez-Ramos, a former trust employee of the Metropolitan Bus
    Authority of Puerto Rico ("MBA"), sued various public officials
    under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , alleging that a decision not to install him
    in a career attorney position in the MBA was politically motivated
    and was effected without due process of law, in violation of his
    First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.      The district court granted
    the defendants' motion to dismiss all claims.          For the reasons
    discussed below, we affirm in part and reverse in part.        We affirm
    the dismissal of the due process claim as to all defendants, and as
    well, dismissal of the First Amendment claim as to all defendants,
    save for defendant Delgado.         As to the First Amendment claim
    against   Delgado,   we    vacate   the   dismissal   and   remand   with
    instructions to grant plaintiff leave to amend the complaint.
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    On review of this motion to dismiss, we recount the
    relevant facts based upon the well-pleaded allegations in the
    complaint.   See S.E.C. v. Tambone, 
    597 F.3d 436
    , 438 (1st Cir.
    2010) (en banc).     We supplement that account with reference to
    Puerto Rico statutes and facts susceptible to judicial notice, as
    necessary to place the allegations in context.              See Haley v.
    Boston, 
    657 F.3d 39
    , 44 (1st Cir. 2011).
    In asserting an entitlement to a position as an "Attorney
    I within the MBA," the complaint alleges that Rodríguez is a long-
    -2-
    standing and active member of the Popular Democratic Party ("PDP").
    He began his public employment with the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
    in 1991 and for the next decade he held career positions in various
    government   agencies.1   He   maintained   his   career   status   while
    attending law school, and he was admitted to practice law in early
    2000.
    That spring, after taking the pertinent competitive exam,
    Rodríguez was appointed to the career position of "Attorney I" in
    the Administration of Corrections ("AOC"), where he had previously
    worked in non-lawyer capacities.    Approximately nine months later,
    in January 2001, he was appointed to the trust position of Director
    of the Office of Legal Affairs of the AOC.           According to the
    plaintiff's translation, his appointment letter stated:
    This designation [to the Director of the Office
    of Legal Affairs] does not excuse you from
    complying    with    all    the    duties    and
    responsibilities of the position you presently
    occupy as Attorney I in the Office of Legal
    Affairs, position in the career service to which
    you were promoted last March 1, 2000.       Your
    1
    Under Puerto Rico's civil service laws, "career" employees
    are "[t]hose employees who have been admitted into the public
    service in faithful compliance with the [guidelines] established by
    the body of laws in effect and which appl[y] to the recruitment and
    selection processes of the career service at time of their
    appointment," including the merit principle. 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1465
    (1). Such employees are removable for "just cause" only.
    
    Id.
     § 1462e(4). "Trust" employees, in contrast, are "employees
    that substantially intervene or collaborate in the formulation of
    public policy, or those who directly advise or render direct
    services to the head of the agency."        Id. § 1465(2).     Such
    employees "can be selected and removed at will." Id.
    -3-
    probationary period shall not be interrupted
    while you prevail in this designation.
    On May 1, 2001, the AOC Secretary favorably evaluated Rodríguez and
    approved his completion of the one-year probationary period for the
    Attorney I position, effective April 1.2
    Two months later Rodríguez was appointed to the trust
    position of Deputy Administrator of Management and Administration
    in the AOC.   He was subsequently appointed to a number of other
    trust positions in various agencies, including Assistant Secretary
    of   Investigations   of        the    Department    of   Corrections     and
    Rehabilitation, Sub-Administrator of the AOC, Deputy Chief of
    Administration and later Chief of the Medical Emergency Corps, and
    Administrator of the General Services Administration (GSA).              With
    the exception of a brief two-week interlude in September 2005
    during which he was reassigned to a career position as Attorney I,
    Rodríguez held trust positions continuously from July 2001 until
    December 2008.
    This   period    of    the   plaintiff's   employment   in    trust
    positions coincided with PDP control of the governorship.                In
    November 2008, however, the candidate of the New Progressive Party
    ("NPP") was elected governor. With the resulting transfer of power
    impending, the outgoing administration moved Rodríguez on December
    2
    There is a discrepancy in the plaintiff's pleadings between
    the March 1, 2000 appointment date referenced in the appointment
    letter and the April 1, 2000 date elsewhere in the complaint. This
    discrepancy is not, however, material to our disposition.
    -4-
    15, 2008 from his trust position as Chief of the Medical Emergency
    Corps to a career attorney position within the GSA.3      Two days
    later, on December 17, 2008, Rodríguez was appointed to the trust
    position of Special Assistant to the President in the Metropolitan
    Bus Authority, an agency of roughly 1,000 employees in which he had
    never previously worked. This was the position that Rodríguez held
    when the NPP government was installed two weeks later.
    The political shift in the executive branch brought with
    it changes in trust position personnel throughout the government.
    The president of the NPP and new governor of Puerto Rico, Luis
    Fortuño-Burset, appointed Ruben Hernández-Gregorat as Secretary of
    Transportation and Public Works.   Hernández, in turn, named Santos
    M. Delgado-Marrero as President and General Manager of the MBA.
    Upon Delgado's appointment, and allegedly at Delgado's
    request, Rodríguez submitted a letter of resignation from his trust
    position as Special Assistant on January 7, 2009.   In his letter,
    citing a provision of the Puerto Rico civil service law that
    entitles a departing trust employee to reclaim a career position
    3
    This move was in apparent violation of the so-called
    "electoral moratorium period." The Public Service Human Resource
    Administration Act prohibits government authorities "from making
    any personnel transaction which includes the essential areas of the
    merit principle . . . [within] two (2) months before and two (2)
    months after the holding of the General Elections of Puerto Rico."
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1462h. The Act provides that "[f]ailure
    to comply with this measure shall entail the voiding of the
    transaction thus carried out."       Id.   At this stage of the
    litigation, the parties make no arguments about the impact, if
    any, of this illegal 2-day appointment on the plaintiff's claims.
    -5-
    equivalent to the last career position that the employee had held,
    Rodríguez also requested that he be reinstated to an Attorney I
    career    position.       See    P.R.    Laws      Ann.   tit.    3,   §     1465a.
    Contemporaneously with submitting this letter, Rodríguez requested
    a meeting with Delgado to discuss the matter.               Not having received
    a reply, three weeks later Rodríguez submitted a second written
    reinstatement       request     to   Delgado.        This   request        also   went
    unanswered.
    Over the next few months, although remaining in his trust
    position, Rodríguez was gradually relieved of the duties and
    functions    that    he   had    performed    as     Special     Assistant.        The
    complaint alleges that Delgado ordered Rodríguez's internet access
    removed, excluded him from meetings, and severed his workload. The
    complaint lists numerous days between January and the end of June
    on which Rodríguez neither performed nor was assigned any job
    function    whatsoever.          Although       he   occasionally      was        given
    assignments to do legal work, in May when a union attorney referred
    to the plaintiff a sexual harassment dispute that had arisen in the
    MBA, Delgado issued orders preventing Rodríguez from handling the
    matter.     Instead, it is alleged, throughout this period Delgado
    engaged outside counsel to handle this and most other legal matters
    at a cost of approximately $30,000 per month.
    Rodríguez's request to be placed in a career position
    remained pending for most of the first half of 2009, although the
    -6-
    complaint    alleges that       in   April     Delgado    did   attempt    to   have
    Rodríguez transferred to another agency. In early March, Delgado's
    executive secretary had told Rodríguez "not to worry" because his
    request had been approved, but he remained in the Special Assistant
    position into June.          On June 15, Rodríguez inquired about his
    status with Gladys Fuentes-Cruz, the MBA's Vice President of
    Management    and    Human      Capital,       in   the   presence    of     Judith
    Morales-Morales, Special Aide to Delgado in personnel matters.
    Fuentes explained that she was not working on the matter, which was
    being handled directly by Delgado with no involvement of Human
    Resources personnel.
    On June 22, Rodríguez received a letter from Delgado
    appointing him to a career position as a Bus Terminal Administrator
    within the MBA, effective the first day of July.                          Rodríguez
    describes this appointment as a "demotion" to an "inferior working
    position to that which he is entitled to" with a salary of "$3,000/
    monthly below to that which he should have been entitled."                      Prior
    to the effective date of this assignment, neither the President of
    the MBA nor any member of the human resources staff met with
    Rodríguez to discuss the assignment. Additionally, when on June 25
    Rodríguez used the standard form to request a review of his
    personnel    file,   he   was    told,     allegedly      contrary   to    standard
    procedures, that he must write a letter making the request.                      The
    -7-
    complaint states that Rodríguez complied and made such a written
    request on June 30.
    The next day, July 1, when his new duties were set to
    begin, Rodríguez filed this action in federal court.    Invoking 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , he alleged that he was denied placement in an
    Attorney I position in the MBA as a result of his political
    affiliation and without due process of law, in violation of his
    First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.     The complaint named as
    defendants Hernández, Delgado, Morales and Fuentes, each in his or
    her individual and official capacities.
    The district court dismissed the federal claims pursuant
    to the defendants' motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(6), and this timely appeal followed.4
    II. ANALYSIS
    We review de novo an order of dismissal for failure to
    state a claim.   Tambone, 597 F.3d at 438.     In conducting this
    review, "we disregard statements in the complaint that merely offer
    4
    The plaintiff also asserted a violation of his Fourteenth
    Amendment equal protection rights and invoked supplemental
    jurisdiction over various claims arising under the laws and
    constitution of Puerto Rico.    The district court dismissed the
    equal protection claim as indistinguishable from his First
    Amendment political discrimination claim, see Pagán v. Calderón,
    
    448 F.3d 16
    , 36-37 (1st Cir. 2006), and declined to exercise
    supplemental jurisdiction over the Commonwealth claims.       The
    plaintiff does not challenge either disposition (although in his
    reply brief he belatedly urges that the supplemental claims be
    reinstated if the district court's dismissal is reversed), and we
    limit our review accordingly.
    -8-
    'legal conclusion[s] couched as . . . fact[]' or 'threadbare
    recitals of the elements of a cause of action.'"              Ocasio-Hernández
    v. Fortuño-Burset, 
    640 F.3d 1
    , 12 (1st Cir. 2011) (quoting Ashcroft
    v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 1937
    , 1949-50 (2009)).                  The
    remaining, non-conclusory allegations are entitled to a presumption
    of truth, and we draw all reasonable inferences therefrom in the
    pleader's favor.      See 
    id.
         "The make-or-break standard . . . is
    that   the   combined    allegations,     taken   as    true,   must   state   a
    plausible,     not   a   merely   conceivable,         case   for   relief."
    Sepúlveda-Villarini v. Dep't of Educ. of P.R., 
    628 F.3d 25
    , 29 (1st
    Cir. 2010).    To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must, in
    other words, "allow[] the court to draw the reasonable inference
    that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged."               Iqbal,
    
    129 S. Ct. at 1249
    .
    A.   Political Discrimination
    It is well established that "[g]overnment officials are
    forbidden by the First Amendment from taking adverse action against
    public employees on the basis of political affiliation, unless
    political loyalty is an appropriate requirement of the employment."
    Ocasio-Hernández, 640 F.3d at 13 (citing, inter alia, Rutan v.
    Republican Party of Ill., 
    497 U.S. 62
    , 75-76 (1990)).               The parties
    do not dispute that the plaintiff's position as Special Assistant
    to the President of the MBA was a policymaking trust position for
    which party affiliation was an "appropriate requirement for the
    -9-
    effective performance of the [] office."      Branti v. Finkel, 
    445 U.S. 507
    , 518 (1980).       Consequently, to the extent that the
    plaintiff attempts to challenge the diminution of his functions and
    eventual transfer from that position, his claim necessarily fails.
    See Valdizán v. Rivera-Hernandez, 
    445 F.3d 63
    , 66 (1st Cir. 2006);
    Ruiz-Casillas v. Camacho-Morales, 
    415 F.3d 127
    , 133 (1st Cir.
    2005).
    The main thrust of the political discrimination claim,
    however, is that the plaintiff suffered political discrimination
    when he was reinstated to a particular career position, when he
    wanted another.   Specifically, he challenges his assignment to the
    purportedly inferior position of Bus Terminal Administrator rather
    than to an Attorney I position in the MBA to which he claims
    entitlement under Puerto Rico law. With respect to this employment
    action,   the     First   Amendment's   prohibition   on   political
    discrimination potentially does apply.    Cf. Gaztambide-Barbosa v.
    Torres-Gaztambide, 
    902 F.2d 112
    , 115-16 (1st Cir. 1990) (finding
    First Amendment prohibition on political discrimination applicable
    to defendants' failure to reinstate trust employee entitled to
    career position under Puerto Rico civil service law).
    To state an actionable claim of political discrimination,
    the plaintiff's complaint must plausibly allege that he is not of
    the defendants' political affiliation and that the defendants were
    aware of his affiliation.       The complaint must also allege an
    -10-
    adverse employment action and that political affiliation was a
    substantial or motivating factor for the adverse action.                    See
    Lamboy-Ortiz v. Ortiz-Vélez, 
    630 F.3d 228
    , 239 (1st Cir. 2010).
    "Moreover, each defendant's role in the [adverse action] must be
    sufficiently alleged to make him or her a plausible defendant.
    After all, we must determine whether, as to each defendant, a
    plaintiff's pleadings are sufficient to state a claim on which
    relief can be granted."        Ocasio-Hernández, 640 F.3d at 16 (quoting
    Sanchez v. Pereira-Castillo, 
    590 F.3d 31
    , 48 (1st Cir. 2009))
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The   district    court   correctly     concluded      that   the
    plaintiff's allegations of participation are speculative and thus
    inadequate with respect to all of the defendants except Delgado.
    Liability under Section 1983 "cannot rest solely on a defendant's
    position of authority," Ocasio-Hernández, 640 F.3d at 16, yet that
    is all that the plaintiff offers as to the roles of defendants
    Hernández, Morales, and Fuentes in his reinstatement.                 The only
    non-conclusory factual allegations made with respect to Hernández
    are that he was appointed Secretary of Transportation and Public
    Works and that he in turn appointed Delgado to the position of
    President and General Manager of the MBA.              As to Morales, the
    complaint states only that she was a special aide to Delgado and
    was present when the plaintiff asked Fuentes about the status of
    his reassignment.        The plaintiff did argue in response to the
    motion   to    dismiss   that   Hernández   and     Morales   have    ultimate
    -11-
    statutory authority over personnel decisions, see Metropolitan Bus
    Authority Act, 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 23, §§ 601
     et seq., but given
    that the complaint contains no allegations that these individuals
    actually participated in or condoned the personnel decision at
    issue here, it fails to render them plausible defendants.            Compare
    Peñalbert-Rosa v. Fortuno-Burset, 
    631 F.3d 592
    , 595-96 (1st Cir.
    2011) (holding insufficient bald assertions that defendants, by
    virtue of their positions, "participated" in or "approve[d]" of
    adverse employment action), with Ocasio-Hernández, 640 F.3d at
    16-17   (reaching    opposite    result      where   complaint      detailed
    defendants' personal involvement).
    The alleged participation of defendant Fuentes is no less
    speculative.   The complaint indicates that Fuentes was the MBA's
    Vice President of Management and Human Capital, a position that
    might more plausibly involve her in personnel decisions relating to
    the reinstatement of removed trust employees.           But the complaint
    fails to include allegations to that effect, much less allegations
    suggesting   that   Fuentes   played   any   role    specifically    in   the
    plaintiff's reinstatement. See Ayala-Rodríguez v. Rullán, 
    511 F.3d 232
    , 235-36 (1st Cir. 2007).      In fact, the complaint alleges just
    the opposite: that Fuentes was kept out of employment decisions
    involving the plaintiff.      As such, there is no basis from which to
    infer that Fuentes engaged in or "set[] in motion a series of acts"
    that led to the alleged adverse employment action.           Sanchez, 590
    -12-
    F.3d at 50 (quoting Gutierrez-Rodriguez v. Cartagena, 
    882 F.3d 553
    ,
    561 (1st Cir. 1989)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    We turn, then, to whether the political discrimination
    claim survives the motion to dismiss with respect to defendant
    Delgado.      There can be no disputing that the complaint satisfies
    the   first    two   political   discrimination   claim   elements,   which
    incorporate an awareness by the defendant(s) that the plaintiff is
    of a different political persuasion.              The complaint contains
    straightforward allegations that the plaintiff and Delgado are of
    competing political parties, stating that Rodríguez is a member of
    the PDP and each of the defendants is a member of the NPP.        It also
    contains detailed descriptions of the plaintiff's history of trust
    positions held under PDP administrations and his active and visible
    role in party politics, from which it is plausible to infer that
    the defendants knew of his political affiliation.5         See Grajales v.
    P.R. Ports Auth., No. 11-1404, 
    2012 WL 2126116
     (1st Cir. 2012)
    (plausible to infer defendants' knowledge from facts that plaintiff
    was placed in a "prestigious trust position by PDP hierarch under
    a     PDP   administration");      see   also     Montfort-Rodríguez     v.
    5
    Rodríguez asserts that in addition to a long line of trust
    positions under PDP administrations, he has held numerous posts
    within the party, including: member of the Popular Youth; member of
    the Autonomous Youth Movement of the PDP at the University of
    Puerto Rico; PDP electoral representative in various electoral
    units; PDP precinct president; PDP presidential delegate; president
    of the PDP Public Servants; and member of the PDP Governing Board.
    Rodríguez also alleges that he was known publicly as a PDP advocate
    by virtue of his regular participation in television, radio, and
    other media programming.
    -13-
    Rey-Hernández, 
    504 F.3d 221
    , 225-26 (1st Cir. 2007) (finding that
    defendant's knowledge that plaintiffs were trust employees under
    prior party's     administration      was    circumstantial    evidence that
    defendant was aware of political affiliation).
    Taken as whole, the complaint also adequately alleges
    Delgado's involvement in the decision to assign the plaintiff as a
    Bus Terminal Administrator.          We have noted that Fuentes was not
    involved in the plaintiff's reinstatement to a career position
    because, according to the complaint, Delgado took the matter into
    his own hands.    The plaintiff alleges that he was told that Delgado
    was directly handling his reinstatement request, and his inquiries
    into the status of that request were repeatedly directed back to
    Delgado personally.     Accepting these well-pleaded facts as true,
    they give rise to the inference that Delgado was involved in, if
    not directly responsible for, the reinstatement decision.
    "The requirement of plausibility on a motion to dismiss
    under Rule 12(b)(6) 'simply calls for enough fact to raise a
    reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of the
    illegal [conduct].'"        Ocasio-Hernández, 640 F.3d at 17 (quoting
    Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 556 (2007)). Under Puerto
    Rico law, trust employees who were previously in the career service
    are eligible to be reinstated as career employees.             An "employee[]
    with regular status in the career service who move[s] to the
    confidential     service,    shall    have    the   absolute   right   to   be
    reinstated in a position equal or similar to the last job [he] held
    -14-
    within the career service," and "is entitled to all benefits in
    terms of classification and salary that have been extended to the
    career job they held during the term in which they served in the
    confidential service."      P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 1465a; see also
    Colón-Santiago v. Rosario, 
    438 F.3d 101
    , 108-109 (1st Cir. 2006).
    This "entitlement" is at the heart of Rodriguez' claim.
    Rodríguez asserts that the Bus Terminal Administrator
    position to which he was assigned is inferior to an Attorney I
    position within the MBA to which he claims entitlement and that his
    placement   therefore     effectively     constituted     a   demotion.   Cf.
    Gaztambide-Barbosa, 
    902 F.2d at 116
     (reasoning that refusal to
    reinstate      trust    employee    in     career   position        "amounted,
    functionally, to a dismissal from the agency").
    Defendant Delgado does not dispute that demotions fall
    within the scope of employment decisions subject to First Amendment
    scrutiny. See e.g., Acosta-Orozco v. Rodriguez-de-Rivera, 
    132 F.3d 97
    , 101 (1st Cir. 1997); Nereida-Gonzalez v. Tirado-Delgado, 
    990 F.2d 701
    , 705-706 (1st Cir. 1993). He maintains, however, that the
    complaint is devoid of factual allegations sufficient to show
    political motivation, as well as of allegations that the plaintiff
    was deprived of rank or salary as a career employee and thus fails
    to   support    the    inference   that    a   demotion       occurred.   See
    Acosta-Orozco, 
    132 F.3d at 101
     (defining demotions as "'involv[ing]
    reductions in pay and official rank.'" (quoting Agosto-de-Feliciano
    v. Aponte-Roque, 
    889 F.2d 1209
    , 1218 n.8 (1st Cir. 1989))).
    -15-
    This case is far from the common political retaliation
    claim since Rodriguez was not in fact terminated from employment as
    a career employee.   His claim is that state law gave him a right to
    a better career employee position and Delgado denied him that.     A
    causally motivating factor in that decision by Delgado, he asserts,
    was retaliation for his political beliefs and though he was not
    deprived of all employment, he asserts that his First Amendment
    rights extend this far.
    Whether or not he has such an entitlement under state law
    (on the law or the facts) is a matter which is unclear, as are the
    contours of such an entitlement, if any.      Even if he did have a
    state law claim on the attorney's job, this panel of judges is
    divided as to whether his complaint passes muster under Iqbal,
    including as to the allegations of causation and political animus.
    We are mindful that Iqbal was decided only weeks before this
    complaint was filed, and that there may be further facts which may
    enhance the pleadings and elucidate the theory advanced.     As this
    court commented in Peñalbert-Rosa v. Fortuno-Burset, 
    631 F.3d 592
    ,
    597 (1st Cir. 2011), another political discrimination case:     "But
    Twombley and Iqbal are relatively recent; developing a workable
    distinction between "fact" and speculation is still a work in
    progress."
    In Peñalbert, we affirmed the dismissal as to certain
    named defendants but vacated dismissal of the entire case to allow
    plaintiff leave to amend.   
    Id.
       It is within the power of a federal
    -16-
    appellate court to do so when doing so is in the interests of
    justice, as set forth in Peñalbert and Rivera-Gomez v. Castro, 
    843 F.2d 631
     (1st Cir. 1988), and the cases cited therein.           We think it
    appropriate under our precedent to vacate the dismissal as to
    defendant Delgado only and to remand with instructions to allow
    plaintiff leave to amend as to Delgado.
    B.   Procedural Due Process
    Rodríguez argues that in addition to suffering political
    discrimination, he was denied his substantive due process rights
    when he was deprived of his property interest in a career position
    equivalent to his former attorney position without the benefit of
    a "pre-demotion" hearing.      In response, Delgado6 asserts that the
    plaintiff never completed his probationary period and thus had no
    property interest in a career position; in any event, Delgado
    argues, he is entitled to qualified immunity because a reasonable
    official could have concluded that the plaintiff had no right to
    reinstatement.     We   need   not    address   the   viability    of   these
    arguments   in relation      to the   due   process   claim,    because    the
    plaintiff    has    failed     to     demonstrate     that     Puerto     Rico
    post-deprivation remedies are constitutionally inadequate.
    As mentioned, Rodríguez asserts that Delgado violated his
    due process rights by denying him a "pre-demotion" hearing prior to
    6
    As with the First Amendment claim, the complaint fails to
    allege sufficient personal involvement of any defendant except
    Delgado in the conduct alleged to constitute a due process
    violation.
    -17-
    placing him in a position other than the attorney position to which
    he claims entitlement. What Rodríguez terms a "demotion," however,
    is not a demotion in the classic sense: he was not removed from,
    but rather seeks an affirmative reassignment to, a position that he
    has not held before and in which his alleged property interest is
    contested.     Thus, while under Loudermill and its progeny, see,
    e.g., Cleveland Bd. Of Educ. v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
    , 538
    (1985); Jirau-Bernal v. Agrait, 
    37 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 1994), an
    employee's right to a prior hearing may extend to demotions from
    currently held positions, that is not this situation.     Indeed, we
    have previously held that post-deprivation procedures available
    under Puerto Rico law are sufficient to vindicate employee rights
    when a former trust employee claims that she suffered salary and
    benefit deprivations as a result of her reassignment to a career
    position.    See Maymí v. P.R. Ports Auth., 
    515 F.3d 20
    , 30 (1st Cir.
    2008) (citing, inter alia, Amsden v. Moran, 
    902 F.2d 748
    , 755 (1st
    Cir. 1990)); see also 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 3, §§ 1468
     et seq.     The
    plaintiff makes no effort to explain why those procedures are
    inadequate here.    Under these circumstances, resort to available
    Puerto Rico remedies provides all the process that is due.
    III. CONCLUSION
    We affirm the district court's order dismissing the
    federal claims with prejudice, as well as the dismissal of the
    supplemental claims without prejudice, as to all defendants save
    for Delgado.    As to Delgado, the dismissal is vacated only as to
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    the First Amendment claim.    The case is remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    The parties shall bear their own costs.
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