Elawyers Elawyers
Washington| Change

Nieves-Villanueva v. Soto-Rivera, 96-1285 (1997)

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit Number: 96-1285 Visitors: 24
Filed: Dec. 22, 1997
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: Puerto Rico law., Santiago: The interesting thing about that case is that, there were there were 22 transitory employees whose, appointments were to end, and there was another group of, employees in which in which case the decision was, different, and the matter of discrimination was approved.
USCA1 Opinion









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


No. 96-1285

CARLOS J. NIEVES-VILLANUEVA, et al.,

Plaintiffs, Appellants,

v.

JOSE R. SOTO-RIVERA, Individually and as
Mayor of the Municipality of Canovanas, et al.,

Defendants, Appellees.


____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

[Hon. Hector M. Laffitte, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Stahl, Circuit Judge, _____________

Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________
____________________


Carlos A. del Valle Cruz for appellants. ________________________

Miguel Pagan, with whom Pagan & Pagan was on brief, for _____________ ______________
appellees.

____________________

December 22, 1997
____________________



















LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs are fifty-one LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________

former "transitory" or non-permanent employees of the

municipality of Canovanas, Puerto Rico. A jury found against

their claims that the incoming New Progressive Party (NPP)

administration failed to renew their contracts of employment

in various municipal jobs because they were supporters of the

prior Popular Democratic Party (PDP) administration and so

violated their rights under the First Amendment.1

The important question raised by this case is

whether the district court committed error in admitting the

testimony of an expert witness. The witness testified as to

what the law required and that her examination of plaintiffs'

personnel records led to the conclusion that plaintiffs had

been improperly hired or renewed in the first place.

Defendants did not testify this was their reason at the time

of their decision not to renew plaintiffs' contracts.

Although such expert testimony should not have been

permitted, we consider any alleged error in light of the

____________________

1. This court has reviewed numerous claims of political
firings or demotions from Puerto Rico. In November of 1984,
the PDP won the gubernatorial election in Puerto Rico.
Before that, the governor's office was held by a member of
the NPP. A first wave of cases involved outright dismissals;
the second wave involved adverse actions less than outright
dismissals. That history is recited in Agosto-de-Feliciano ___________________
v. Aponte-Roque, 889 F.2d 1209 (1st Cir. 1989). In 1992, ____________
control of the governor's office and of some local
governments switched, and the NPP came back to power. Now,
this court is faced with another wave of litigation (we
hesitate to count which wave this is), brought this time by
PDP members.

-2- 2













evidence as a whole, and particularly in light of the judge's

instructions to the jury. In the circumstances of this case,

we consider the alleged errors harmless and affirm the jury

verdicts.

I. I

Plaintiffs sued, inter alios,2 Jose Soto-Rivera

("Soto") and the Municipality of Canovanas under 42 U.S.C.

1983, alleging that they had been dismissed due to their

political beliefs and in violation of their due process

rights. The complaint sought reinstatement, injunctive

relief, compensatory and punitive damages, and attorney's

fees.

On defendants' motion for summary judgment, the

district court dismissed plaintiffs' due process claims,

noting that, under First Circuit precedent and Puerto Rico

law, transitory employees generally do not have a property

interest in continued employment beyond their yearly terms of

appointment. See Caro v. Aponte-Roque, 878 F.2d 1, 4-5 (1st ___ ____ ____________

Cir. 1989); see also Mel ndez v. Municipio de Arroyo, 96 _________ ________ ____________________

J.T.S. Case No. 68, at p. 1077 (P.R. Sup. Ct. May 15, 1996)

(reaffirming that, as a matter of Puerto Rico law, transitory

employees generally have no "legitimate expectation" to a




____________________

2. The district court dismissed plaintiffs' claims against
the other municipal defendants prior to trial.

-3- 3













renewal of their contracts); Departamento de Recursos ___________________________

Naturales v. Correa, 118 D.P.R. 689, 697 (1987) (same).3 _________ ______

Before trial, defendants retained Blanca Santiago

as an expert in governmental personnel matters to examine the

plaintiffs' personnel records. Santiago's report concluded

that plaintiffs' initial appointments and, in some cases,

renewal appointments were contrary to Puerto Rico municipal

law, and that the previous administration had employed a

"subterfuge" to renew the plaintiffs' appointments and to

evade a prohibition on making personnel decisions within two

months of a general election. The report also opined that

plaintiffs did not have "a legitimate expectation of

retaining employment." Finally, the report concluded that,

under the law of Puerto Rico, "the Municipality of Canovanas

could not continue extending said transitory appointments."

Upon receiving Santiago's report, plaintiffs made a

motion in limine to exclude Santiago's testimony.

Plaintiffs' principal objection was that the expert witness's

opinion concerning the propriety of plaintiffs' appointments


____________________

3. Defendants also moved for summary judgment on the claims
for damages on qualified immunity grounds. The district
court denied defendants' motion, holding that before the
events in 1993, the First Circuit had clearly established
that First Amendment protection extended to political non-
renewals of employment. See Caro, 878 F.2d at 2-4; Figueroa ___ ____ ________
v. Aponte-Roque, 864 F.2d 947, 951 (1st Cir. 1989). The ____________
district court determined that there existed a genuine issue
of material fact concerning defendants' motives in declining
to renew plaintiffs' transitory appointments.

-4- 4













was not relevant to liability. Defendants did not maintain

that Soto did not renew plaintiffs' appointments due to

irregularities in how they were appointed. The district

court denied plaintiffs' motion.

II. II

We state the facts as the jury could have found

them, in the context of the evidence as a whole, with

particular emphasis on the evidence allegedly admitted in

error.

Plaintiffs said they were affiliated with the PDP,

one of Puerto Rico's major political parties. In 1992, Soto

was elected Mayor of Canovanas as the candidate of the NPP,

the main rival of the PDP. Soto was the first NPP candidate

elected as Mayor of Canovanas in several decades.

Plaintiffs had been appointed by the prior PDP

mayor, Esteban Melendez-Rivera, to various municipal jobs as

transitory employees. Those jobs included manual labor in

the Public Works Department, janitorial work in municipal

offices, clerical work, and other lower level jobs with

minimal salaries. Under Puerto Rico's Autonomous

Municipalities Act, 21 L.P.R.A. 4554, transitory employees

may be appointed for a limited term, generally not to exceed

one year. Although plaintiffs, unlike other civil servants

in Puerto Rico, had no formal tenure in their jobs following

the expiration of their contracts, many had been reappointed



-5- 5













for several one-year terms as a matter of course. Other

plaintiffs were in their first annual term of employment.

On January 15, 1993, three days after taking office

as Mayor of Canovanas, Soto informed most of the plaintiffs

that their positions as transitory employees had expired and

that he would not renew their appointments. The remaining

plaintiffs' appointments were temporarily extended, but

eventually their appointments expired as well.

Plaintiffs testified that they campaigned for

Esteban Melendez-Rivera, the PDP candidate, in the 1992

mayoral election. Plaintiffs testified that they had engaged

in various PDP political activities on behalf of Melendez,

including attending political meetings or taking part in the

campaign rallies known as caravanas ("caravans") that are _________

typical of mayoral campaigning in Puerto Rico. Many of them

testified that Soto solicited their support, and, when they

said they would support the incumbent PDP mayor instead, Soto

threatened to leave them without employment after the

election. Many plaintiffs also testified that they observed,

after their non-renewals, NPP members performing the duties

of the jobs they had performed as transitory employees.

In support of their First Amendment claims,

plaintiffs put in evidence their personnel files, arguing

that there was nothing in them that would indicate poor

performance. Plaintiffs also presented an expert witness in



-6- 6













personnel administration to bolster their claims of political

discrimination.4

Defendants' position was that Soto had not

considered plaintiffs' political affiliation in his decision

to allow their contracts to expire. They presented three

witnesses: Mayor Soto, Vice-Mayor Miguel Jimenez-Carrion

("Jimenez"), and Blanca Santiago, their expert witness on

government personnel administration. Soto categorically

denied the plaintiffs' allegations that he had threatened

their jobs if they supported the incumbent. He noted that he

had retained or hired PDP members to municipal jobs. He

testified that he had allowed plaintiffs' contracts to expire

because their services were no longer needed. Jimenez gave

essentially the same version of events. Neither testified

that they had not renewed the contracts because plaintiffs'

appointments had been irregular.

Defendants' Expert __________________

Defendants' expert witness, Blanca Santiago,

testified that the plaintiffs' personnel records demonstrated

that, in many cases, their appointments were contrary to

Puerto Rico law. In particular, Santiago testified that many

employees had been on the payroll in excess of one year,


____________________

4. The plaintiffs did not order the transcript of that
portion of the trial that included their expert witness's
testimony. That omission complicates our analysis, as we
explain below.

-7- 7













sometimes without any documented reappointment, and opined

that this violated the Autonomous Municipalities Act, which

provides that the appointment of "[t]ransitory employees

shall not exceed one (1) year . . . ." 21 L.P.R.A.

4554(c). Santiago also testified that many of the plaintiffs

had been illegally appointed within two months of a general

election, in violation of a prophylactic prohibition on

government personnel decisions commonly known as the

"electoral ban." See 21 L.P.R.A. 4564; 3 L.P.R.A. 1337. ___

Santiago testified further that, in some cases, the personnel

records had been manipulated in order to make it appear that

plaintiffs' appointments were not within the electoral ban

period.

Defense counsel then questioned Santiago to elicit

testimony to the effect that courts have held that transitory

employees do not have a right to the renewal of their

contracts. Defense counsel accomplished this objective by

reading passages from court decisions holding that transitory

employees in Puerto Rico have no reasonable or legitimate

expectation of continued renewal of their contracts that

would entitle them to administrative due process protections

before allowing their contracts to expire, and then asking

Santiago to comment. This was done although the due process

claims had been dismissed.





-8- 8













Santiago testified that, under court decisions,

"[o]nce [a transitory employee's] appointment ends the

transitory employee . . . doesn't have any . . . other right,

regardless of the fact that his appointment has been extended

for a period of time that we may call 'excessively long.'"

Plaintiffs' counsel objected to this testimony on the ground

that it misstated the law. That objection was overruled.

Soon afterwards, defense counsel continued

questioning Santiago on the legal status of transitory

employees:

Q. I am going to review . . . the case of
Fermin Orta et al. versus Pedro A. _________________________________________
Padilla, Municipality of Trujillio Alto, _________________________________________
et al. . . . . I'm going to read to you ______
from the translation of that opinion
. . . .

At this point, plaintiffs again objected, noting that the

case concerned the due process rights of transitory

employees, and that the sole claim on trial was the First

Amendment claim. Again, the district court overruled

plaintiffs' objection. Defendants resumed questioning the

witness about the law articulated in that case.5 Plaintiffs

____________________

5. Defense Counsel: "[I]t says, the opinion: After a
careful examination of the service and appointment contracts
of these 23 appellees, we find that the only contract
terminated before the expiration date was that of Juana Cruz.
The other 22 employees were notified that the contracts would
be terminated at the expiration date of the same. In light
of the prevailing principles, we must conclude that the
termination of the contract of those 22 transitory employees
was valid at law because the municipality did not have to
provide them with the regulatory guarantees mentioned above.

-9- 9













objected again, noting, "She's testifying [to] what are

basically jury instructions." The district court initially

sustained plaintiffs' objection, but then permitted defense

counsel to continue questioning the witness in this manner.

Defense counsel proceeded to read excerpts from the Supreme

Court of Puerto Rico's decision in Correa, and from this ______

court's decision in Cheveras-Pacheco v. Rivera-Gonzalez, 809 ________________ _______________

F.2d 125, 129 (1st Cir. 1987) (holding that transitory

employees do not have a property interest in continued

employment). Plaintiffs' counsel again protested, and a

conference was held outside the presence of the jury.

Plaintiffs' counsel asked the judge to strike Santiago's

testimony or give a curative instruction, stating explicitly

that it is against the law for a municipal government to let

a transitory employee's contract expire if the primary reason

is the employee's political affiliation. The district court

refused, saying plaintiffs had opened the door with their own







____________________

The trial court erred in ruling that the termination was
unlawful."
Santiago: "The interesting thing about that case is that
there were -- there were 22 transitory employees whose
appointments were to end, and there was another group of
employees in which -- in which case the decision was
different, and the matter of discrimination was approved.
But in the case of the transitory ones their appointments had
ended."

-10- 10













expert witness and that they could cross-examine Santiago on

the illegality of firing employees for political reasons.6

On cross-examination, Santiago stated that the

legal opinions she provided on direct examination concerning

the status of transitory employees and the alleged

illegalities in plaintiffs' original appointments were based

solely on Commonwealth law, not federal law. When questioned

about the case law of this court which has held that a

decision not to renew a transitory employees' contract may

not be primarily based on political affiliation under the

First Amendment, the witness was evasive. Although she

agreed that transitory employees could not be discharged for

political reasons, she insisted that this did not apply when



____________________

6. The Court: "Counsel, the problem with you is that you
don't make a distinction between the -- the witness'
credibility and what is admissible. She -- Mr. Pagan
[defense counsel] read to her certain passages of cases
saying that -- concerning transitory employees. I'm certain
you're going to read her a part saying if you take a
transitory employee and discharge him for political reasons
it's illegal, and she has to agree with that. See? That's
the way you neutralize that. I'm not going to teach you how
to practice law." (At oral argument, plaintiff's counsel
argued that this last sentence was particularly prejudicial.
However, as this admonition did not occur in the presence of
the jury, we examine only the impact of the district court's
ruling itself.)
The judge continued, "[T]he Orta case was brought [in] ____
by your [expert] witness, and that opened the door for
[defense counsel] to bring [in] the Orta case. . . . Once you ____
open the door then you can't complain. . . . I will instruct
the jury on the law at the proper time, and they have to
follow the law as I tell them, not as what counsel tells them
the law is."

-11- 11













a contract expired because, she said, such an employee was

not discharged.

Closing Arguments _________________

In closing arguments, plaintiffs' counsel argued

that the witnesses' testimony, principally the plaintiffs',

established that the incoming NPP administration's motive for

refusing to renew plaintiffs' contracts was reprisal for

their support of the previous PDP mayor. Defense counsel

strongly contested the plaintiffs' credibility, and argued

that Soto never considered plaintiffs' political affiliation

in his decision not to renew plaintiffs' contracts.

Defense counsel also made reference to Santiago's

testimony, arguing that the employees were transitory and

that their appointments had been in violation of Puerto Rico

municipal law. Defense counsel also argued that the Mayor

would have been in violation of that law if he had renewed

their appointments. Defense counsel made reference to

Santiago's testimony that transitory employees do not have a

reasonable expectation of retaining their jobs after their

contracts expire, arguing that plaintiffs' expert had

distorted the law in suggesting otherwise. Defense counsel

asked rhetorically, "[A]fter the appointment expired . . .

what are their [sic] rights of those employees? And that ___

Your Honor is going to tell you, see, in the instructions."

Defense counsel noted that, unlike plaintiffs' expert



-12- 12













witness, "She never . . . tell [sic] us whether [the ___

plaintiffs] were dismissed or not for political

discriminatory reasons. That is for you to decide." Defense

counsel did not argue that the reasons for the non-renewals

were that plaintiffs' appointments were irregular.

Instructions ____________

The judge instructed the jury that its duty was "to

follow the law as I shall state it to you" and that it should

not "base [its] verdict upon any view of the law other than

that given in the instructions of the Court." The court did

not otherwise specifically instruct the jury to disregard the

expert witnesses' opinions concerning the applicable law, but

rather said expert testimony should be treated just as

testimony from any other witness.

Significantly, however, the judge instructed the

jury that any irregularities in the appointments of the

plaintiffs could not be used as a pretext for violating their

First Amendment rights:

Now, conduct purportedly engaged in
consonance with the Puerto Rico
personnel's law and regulation [sic] does ___
not control a claim alleging a violation
of the employees' First Amendment right
of political affiliation.
A new administration cannot use the
doctrine of compliance with state law or
nullity under state law as a cover for
discharges, transfers and discrimination
based solely on political affiliation.
Similarly, a new administration
cannot use the fact that plaintiffs were
hired during the electoral prohibition


13 -13-













period or "veda" as a pretext for ____
political discrimination. In the final
analysis, the question of motivation is a
question of fact.

The court also instructed:

If you find that plaintiffs'
political affiliation was the motivating
factor for the non-renewal of their
appointments, then you may find for the
plaintiffs.

The court also gave this instruction:

However, if you find that
plaintiffs' appointments were not renewed
because they had been appointed by the
former administration in violation of the
personnel and electoral laws and not
because of plaintiffs' political
affiliation, then you may find for the
defendants.

The judge further instructed that, although transitory

employees do not have tenure in their jobs, their contracts

may not be allowed to expire for political reasons.7
Finally, in response to a request from plaintiffs' counsel


____________________

7. The Court: "Transitory -- the plaintiffs in this action
were transitory employees of the Municipality of Canovanas.
Puerto Rico law permits the employment of transitory
employees appointed for a fixed term. The duration of this
designation shall correspond to the period for which the
position was created.
"The law provides that once a transitory
appointment expires, defendant may terminate the transitory
employee . . . for any reason except if that reason is based
on political affiliation. Defendant . . . asserts that the
reason for not renewing plaintiffs' appointments or contracts
was that plaintiffs' contracts had expired and that they were
not renewed for valid reasons wholly independent of
plaintiffs' political affiliation.
"Plaintiffs claims [sic] that their position as ___
transitory employees were not renewed because of their
political affiliation. So that is the issue."

-14- 14













for a curative instruction, the judge instructed that the

jury was to consider only evidence that they believed was

known to the decisionmakers at the time plaintiffs' contracts

were not renewed.8

Verdict _______

The verdict form asked, as to each of the

plaintiffs, "Do you find by a preponderance of the evidence

that the motivating factor for not renewing the appointment

of [plaintiff] was [his or her] political affiliation?" The

jury answered no in each case.

III. III

We review the district court's decision to admit or

exclude evidence for abuse of discretion. See General ___ _______

Electric Co. v. Joiner, 1997 WL 764563, at *3 (U.S. Dec. 15, ____________ ______

1997); Knowlton v. Deseret Med. Inc., 930 F.2d 116, 124 (1st ________ __________________

Cir. 1991).

Legal Principles ________________

Because the parties exhibit some confusion over

long-established legal principles in this area, we repeat

them. In Elrod v. Burns, 427 U.S. 347 (1976), a divided _____ _____

____________________

8. The Court: "In determining whether the defendants
discriminated or not, you are not to consider any testimony
or evidence that you believe was not present at the time of
[sic] the decision not to renew plaintiffs' transitory ___
appointment was taken, for if the irregularity or misconduct
was not discovered until after the employee's contract was
not renewed, the employer could not have been motivated by
knowledge of it, and he cannot now claim that the employee's
contract was not renewed for that reason."

-15- 15













Supreme Court granted some First Amendment protection to

employees terminated because of their political affiliation

where political affiliation was not a reasonably appropriate

requirement for the job. See id. at 359 (plurality opinion). ___ ___

As Justice Stewart, concurring, said, a "nonpolicymaking,

nonconfidential government employee [cannot] be discharged or

threatened with discharge from a job that he is

satisfactorily performing upon the sole ground of his

political beliefs." Id. at 375 (Stewart, J., concurring in ___

judgment). In Branti v. Finkel, 445 U.S. 507 (1980), the ______ ______

Supreme Court reaffirmed Elrod, and explained that the First _____

Amendment prohibits termination of public employees because

of their political affiliation unless "the hiring authority

can demonstrate that party affiliation is an appropriate

requirement for the effective performance of the public

office involved." Branti, 445 U.S. at 518.9 ______

This court has held that the Elrod-Branti doctrine _____ ______

applies to a local government's decision whether to renew the

contract of a transitory employee. See Cheveras-Pacheco v. ___ ________________

Rivera-Gonzalez, 809 F.2d 125 (1st Cir. 1987). A _______________

municipality may not allow transitory employees' contracts to

expire if the primary motive is to punish them for their

political affiliation. See id. at 127-29. This is true ___ ___

____________________

9. Defendants have never suggested that political party
affiliation was an appropriate requirement for any of the
jobs that were held by the plaintiffs.

-16- 16













regardless of whether the employees have been renewed on a

regular basis prior to their dismissal or, as is true of some

of plaintiffs here, have served only one term. See Figueroa ___ ________

v. Aponte-Roque, 864 F.2d 947, 951 (1st Cir. 1989). Thus, ____________

the fact that a transitory employee does not have a

reasonable expectation of renewal in his or her employment

that would require due process protections does not defeat a

First Amendment claim.

In Rutan v. Republican Party of Ill., 497 U.S. 62 _____ _________________________

(1990), the Supreme Court held that the Elrod-Branti _____ ______

prohibition against political affiliation discrimination

applied not only to discharges, but also to significant

personnel decisions such as whether to hire or promote a

public employee. See Rutan, 487 U.S. at 79. Hence, even if ___ _____

the decision not to renew a transitory appointment10 is

considered a hiring decision rather than a discharge, Rutan _____

reinforces our rule announced in Cheveras-Pacheco. ________________




____________________

10. As a practical matter, given the Commonwealth's merit-
based system for hiring and discharging civil service
employees, the risk is greater that transitory employees, who
may be more easily hired and fired, may suffer from the use
of unlawful patronage practices. See 21 L.P.R.A. 4554. It ___
has been said that "invidious political [party]
discrimination is mainly directed against humble public
employees or [those] with scarce resources." Casiano v. _______
Departamento de Educacion, 97 J.T.S. Case No. 33, at p. 718 _________________________
(P.R. Sup. Ct. March 19, 1997) (Fuster-Berlingeri, J.,
dissenting from denial of certiorari).


-17- 17













And the Elrod-Branti-Rutan principle has been _____ ______ _____

reinforced recently by the Supreme Court. In Board of County _______________

Comm'rs v. Umbehr, 116 S. Ct. 2342 (1996) and O'Hare Truck _______ ______ ____________

Serv., Inc. v. City of Northlake, 116 S. Ct. 2353 (1996), the ___________ _________________

Supreme Court held that the First Amendment provides

protection to independent contractors similar to those

afforded government employees. See Umbehr, 116 S. Ct. at ___ ______

2345-46 (termination of a contract in reprisal for

contractor's criticism of county government); O'Hare, 116 S. ______

Ct. at 2355-56 (removal of an independent contractor from a

list of towing services employed by the city in retaliation

for supporting opposing political party).

Expert Testimony on the Law ___________________________

Aspects of Santiago's testimony are very troubling.

Certain parts of her testimony -- for example, concerning

actual personnel practices, the various categories of public

employees and the like -- are unobjectionable. But Santiago

also testified as to the holdings of various opinions of the

Supreme Court of Puerto Rico and by reference, of this court

(over objection), and to the legal conclusion that these

appointments were in violation of law (without objection).

To exacerbate matters, her testimony may be charitably

described as misleading at best as to the rights of

transitory employees as a matter of federal law.





-18- 18













It is black-letter law that "[i]t is not for

witnesses to instruct the jury as to applicable principles of

law, but for the judge." United States v. Newman, 49 F.3d 1, _____________ ______

7 (1st Cir. 1995) (quoting Marx & Co. v. Diners' Club, Inc., __________ __________________

550 F.2d 505, 512 (2d Cir. 1977)). At least seven circuit

courts have held that the Federal Rules of Evidence prohibit

such testimony, and we now join them as to the general rule.

See Burkhart v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth., 112 ___ ________ ______________________________________

F.3d 1207, 1212-14 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (reversible error to

allow an expert in police practices to opine on whether

police officers' efforts in communicating with a deaf

plaintiff were enough to satisfy federal disability

statutes); Snap-Drape, Inc. v. Commissioner, 98 F.3d 194, ________________ ____________

197-98 (5th Cir. 1996) (trial court properly excluded

taxpayer's expert reports as containing nothing more than

legal arguments concerning the tax treatment of certain

dividends); Berry v. City of Detroit, 25 F.3d 1342, 1353-54 _____ ________________

(6th Cir. 1994) (finding inadmissible the comments of an

expert in police practices on the meaning of the legal term

"deliberate indifference" in a civil rights case); Aguilar v. _______

International Longshoreman's Union, Local #10, 966 F.2d 443, ______________________________________________

447 (9th Cir. 1992) (testimony of purported expert that

workers reasonably and foreseeably relied on defendants'

promises addressed "matters of law for the court's

determination" that were "inappropriate subjects for expert



-19- 19













testimony"); Specht v. Jensen, 853 F.2d 805 (10th Cir. 1988) ______ ______

(en banc) (reversible error to allow an expert witness who

was an attorney to give his opinions on what was required to

make consent to a search effective); Adalman v. Baker, Watts _______ ____________

& Co., 807 F.2d 359, 366 (4th Cir. 1986) (finding ______

inadmissible proffered expert opinion concerning whether,

under securities laws, disclosure of a particular fact was

required in the course of negotiating a transaction); Marx & ______

Co. v. Diners' Club, Inc., 550 F.2d 505 (2d Cir. 1977) ___ ____________________

(securities lawyer, called as an expert, could not testify to

the legal obligations created under a contract). To state

the general rule is not to decide the far more complicated

and measured question of when there is a transgression of the

rule. We outline some of the considerations and conclude

that the rule has been transgressed here. We leave to future

cases the defining of the contours of application of this

rule.

In our legal system, purely legal questions and

instructions to the jury on the law to be applied to the

resolution of the dispute before them is exclusively the

domain of the judge. Accordingly, expert testimony on such

purely legal issues is rarely admissible. As the Second

Circuit has noted, "The danger is that the jury may think

that the 'expert' in the particular branch of the law knows





-20- 20













more than the judge -- surely an impermissible inference in

our system of law." Marx & Co., 550 F.2d at 512. __________

The one well-recognized exception is for questions

of foreign law, where the judge may be aided by the expert's

assistance. See Adalman, 807 F.2d at 366; Marx & Co., 550 ___ _______ ___________

F.2d at 510; 1 McCormick on Evidence 12, at 50 (John W. ______________________

Strong, ed., 4th ed. 1992); 7 Wigmore on Evidence 1953 ____________________

(Chadbourne rev. 1978). Even in the case of foreign law,

under modern practice the testimony is generally given to the

judge, outside of the presence of the jury, and is meant to

assist the judge in determining the appropriate instructions.

See Adalman, 807 F.2d at 366; 9 Wigmore on Evidence 2558 ___ _______ ___________________

(Chadbourne rev. 1978). Here, the testimony was plainly not

offered to assist the judge, who has presided over many such

political discharge cases, and was presented to the jury.

Because the jury does not decide such pure

questions of law, such testimony is not helpful to the jury

and so does not fall within the literal terms of Fed. R.

Evid. 702, which allows expert testimony "[i]f scientific,

technical or other specialized knowledge will assist the

trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a

fact in issue . . . ." As the D.C. Circuit noted, "Expert

testimony that consists of legal conclusions cannot properly

assist the trier of fact in either respect . . . ." Burkhart, ________

112 F.3d at 1212; see also Aguilar, 966 F.2d at 447 (expert ___ ____ _______



-21- 21













legal opinion does not assist the factfinder under Rule 702).

This is because the judge's expert knowledge of the law makes

any such assistance at best cumulative, and at worst

prejudicial. See Burkhart, 112 F.3d at 1213 ("Each courtroom ___ ________

comes equipped with a 'legal expert,' called a judge, and it

is his or her province alone to instruct the jury on the

relevant legal standards."); 7 Wigmore on Evidence 1952 ____________________

(Chadbourne rev. 1978) ("It is not the common knowledge of

the jury which renders the witness' opinion unnecessary, but

the special legal knowledge of the judge.")

Similarly, Fed. R. Evid. 704(a), which removes the

common-law bar on "otherwise admissible" testimony that

"embraces an ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of

fact," does not vitiate the rule against expert opinion on

questions of law. The common law did not allow an expert

witness to inform the jury of his or her factual conclusion

concerning the "ultimate issue" in the case, because this was

thought to invade the province of the jury. The abolition in

Rule 704(a) of this "ultimate issue" rule allows the expert

witness to offer his or her factual conclusion in order to

aid the jury, which properly can choose to accept or reject

it. However, questions of law are not "to be decided by the

trier of fact"; rather it is for the judge, not the lawyers

or the witnesses, to inform the jury of the law applicable in





-22- 22













the case and to decide any purely legal issue.11 Recently,

this court has cautioned that the abolition of the "bar on

'ultimate issue' opinions . . . is not a carte blanche for

experts." Dincov. Dylex,Ltd.,111 F.3d964,973 (1stCir.1997).12 _____ __________

While the testimony by Santiago described above

clearly transgressed the general rule, we acknowledge that it

is often difficult to draw the line between what are

questions of law, what are questions of fact, and what are

mixed questions. See, e.g., In re Air Disaster at Lockerbie, _________ ________________________________

Scotland on December 21, 1998, 37 F.3d 804, 826-27 (2d Cir. ______________________________

1994) (regarding expert's testimony that defendants engaged

in "fraud" and "deceit" admissible because the terms were

used in layman's sense, while finding expert's conclusion

____________________

11. For similar reasons, the question of whether a legal
rule has been clearly established, in the context of a
qualified immunity defense to a 1983 action, is a question
decided by the court, not the jury. See St. Hilaire v. City ___ ___________ ____
of Laconia, 71 F.3d 20, 24 (1st Cir. 1995). Thus, the Eighth __________
Circuit found reversible error in allowing a witness to
espouse views concerning the reasonableness of an officer's
conduct in light of prevailing "Fourth Amendment standards."
Peterson v. City of Plymouth, 60 F.3d 469, 475 (8th Cir. ________ _________________
1995). The jury's role was only to decide what facts were
known to the officer at the time of the arrest, not whether,
in light of those facts, the officer's conduct was reasonable
under the applicable legal standard and therefore protected
by qualified immunity. See id. ___ ___

12. Santiago was competent to testify that plaintiffs'
appointments were irregular in the sense that they did not
conform to normal personnel practice, but her legal
conclusion that the appointments were in violation of the law
was improper. Because there was no objection to such
conclusions, our review is for plain error, a burden
plaintiffs cannot sustain in light of our harmlessness
analysis.

-23- 23













that defendants violated FAA regulations inadmissible);

Specht, 853 F.2d 805, 809 (discussing the distinction). ______

Indeed, the definition of what is law and what is application

or practice may be difficult to ascertain. This may be

particularly so when the issues involve not only a statute

and formally promulgated regulations, but also guidelines,

handbooks, advisory rulings, interpretive bulletins, general

counsel's letter opinions, informational notices and similar

accoutrements of the modern bureaucratic state. Further,

there may be particular areas of law, such as legal

malpractice, where expert testimony on legal matters is

admissible where it would normally be excluded. We can also

hypothesize instances in rare, highly complex and technical

matters where a trial judge, utilizing limited and controlled

mechanisms, and as a matter of trial management, permits some

testimony seemingly at variance with the general rule.13 But

none of those instances are before us. The issues raised

here are routinely before the federal courts, are not

complex, and the use of such testimony was egregious.

Testimony Re After-Acquired Evidence ____________________________________




____________________

13. Such an instance may be patent litigation, in which
technical experts are generally allowed to comment on the
scope of a patent's coverage and give their conclusions on
the issue of infringement. See Snellman v. Rioch Co., 862 ___ ________ __________
F.2d 283, 287 (Fed. Cir. 1988); Stearns Co. v. United States, ___________ _____________
324 Fed. Cl. 264, 268-69 (1995).

-24- 24













There is a second reason the admission of

Santiago's testimony is very troubling. That has to do with

application of the after-acquired evidence doctrine.14 In

McKennon v. Nashville Banner Publ'g Co., 115 S. Ct. 879 ________ _____________________________

(1995), the Supreme Court considered whether an employee's

wrongdoing, discovered after the termination of employment,

which would have been sufficient to justify the decision, but

which was not known to the employer at the time of the

decision and so could not have motivated the decision,

foreclosed a claim of age discrimination. See id. at 882. ___ __

The Supreme Court held that such evidence was not relevant to ___

the employer's liability for age discrimination, but would be

relevant in determining what remedy was appropriate. See id. ___ ___

at 885. If the evidence would have led to the employee's

discharge at some later date, that would affect the measure

____________________

14. A question may be raised whether the evidence of
irregularities that Santiago described meets the definition
of after-acquired evidence under McKennon v. Nashville Banner ________ ________________
Publ'g Co., 116 S. Ct. 879 (1995). McKennon concerned ___________ ________
employee wrongdoing that would normally cause termination of
employment. We do not know if the irregularities alleged in
this case would in fact normally lead to termination or non-
renewal of employment. In addition, McKennon expressly ________
considered the equitable doctrine of unclean hands in
determining that "the employee's wrongdoing must be taken
into account, lest the employer's legitimate concerns be
ignored." Id. at 360. Here, as the evidence was presented, ___
it was apparently the former administration, not the
employees, who made the appointments allegedly against normal
procedures. If the employees were blameless, it may be
difficult to import wholesale the McKennon doctrine. Given ________
the desultory treatment of this aspect of the McKennon issue ________
by the parties and our disposition of the case, we think it
wiser to address the issue in some future case.

-25- 25













of damages and the appropriateness of reinstatement as

equitable relief. See id. at 885-86. In Umbehr, the Supreme ___ ___ ______

Court adopted the McKennon approach in First Amendment claims ________

brought by public employees or contractors. See Umbehr, 116 ___ ______

S. Ct. at 2352 ("[I]f [plaintiff] prevails, evidence that

[defendants] discovered facts after termination that would

have led to a later termination anyway . . . would be

relevant in assessing what remedy is appropriate.").

Thus, such after-acquired evidence is normally

admissible only as to remedy, and not on liability. Yet

here, it was seemingly offered, over objection, as pertinent

to liability. Those portions of Santiago's testimony

concerning the irregularities in plaintiffs' appointments

which did not consist of legal conclusions were arguably

relevant to damages, but normally, not to liability. On

appeal, plaintiffs only argue the issue of admissibility, and

the evidence was arguably admissible on damages.15

To prevail, plaintiffs must show abuse of

discretion in admission of the evidence. Any abuse of

discretion analysis is complicated by the actions of the

____________________

15. The trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury
that Santiago's testimony was not relevant in determining
liability. Although the judge properly instructed the jury
that it should not consider evidence that it did not believe
was before the decision maker at the time of the decision,
the risk of prejudice was such that the judge should have
stated explicitly that Santiago's testimony concerning
irregularities was not to be considered in any way on the
question of liability.

-26- 26













parties here. While much of Santiago's testimony would

normally be inadmissible, plaintiffs may have invited

defendants to respond in kind. It was apparently plaintiffs

who first introduced the topic of legal conclusions to be

drawn from review of plaintiffs' personnel files and of the

law about rights of public employees. Plaintiffs argued that

the files showed no disciplinary warnings or other actions by

the employers which provided cause for termination of their

employment, and their expert may have engaged in

inappropriate legal commentary. Defendants apparently did not

object, perhaps because they wanted to respond in kind.

The trial judge evidently felt that this opened the

door to the defendants' expert. "Opening the door" is an

evidentiary concept which requires careful weighing of the

unfairness of allowing one party's objectionable evidence to

remain unanswered against the danger of compounding the

problem with further inadmissible and potentially prejudicial

testimony. See 1 McCormack on Evidence 57 (John W. Strong, ___ _____________________

ed., 4th ed. 1992). The judge may well have felt that

plaintiffs created the problem about which they now complain.

As plaintiffs did not provide this court with a transcript of

their own expert's testimony, we do not reach the question of

whether the judge abused his discretion in allowing

Santiago's problematic testimony under an "opening the door"

theory.



-27- 27













To overcome the jury verdict, plaintiffs must show

not only that there were errors under the abuse of discretion

standard, but also that the district court's errors were

harmful. "Only if we answer both questions in the positive

will [plaintiffs'] argument on appeal prevail." Ahern v. _____

Scholz, 85 F.3d 774, 786 (1st Cir. 1996). ______

Harmless Error ______________

In a civil case, the party asserting error bears

the burden of demonstrating that the error was harmful, i.e.,

that it affected that party's substantial rights. See Fed. ___

R. Civ. P. 61; Fed. R. Evid. 103; Federico v. Order of St. ________ _____________

Benedict in R.I., 64 F.3d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1995) (burden of _________________

showing harmful error in a civil case is on party asserting

error); Hygh v. Jacobs, 961 F.2d 359, 364-65 (2d Cir. 1992) ____ ______

(holding that objecting party had not met burden of showing

that admission of improper legal opinion testimony had

prejudicial effect). "In determining whether an error

affected a party's substantial right[s], the central question

is whether this court can say with fair assurance . . . that

the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error."

Ahern, 85 F.3d at 786 (citations, internal quotation marks _____

and original alterations omitted).

Factors considered in determining the likelihood

that the jury's verdict was substantially swayed by the

evidentiary error include both the centrality of the evidence



-28- 28













and the prejudicial effect of its inclusion or exclusion.

See id. "We weigh these factors in the context of the case ___ ___

as gleaned from the record as a whole." Id. (citation and ___

internal quotation marks omitted). Ultimately, if we are in

"grave doubt" concerning the likely effect of the error on

the verdict, we treat the error as if it had affected the

verdict. See id. ___ ___

Although normally testimony such as Santiago's as

to legal conclusions is clearly wrong and such testimony as

was proper is limited, at best, to damages, we cannot say

that the testimony affected the outcome of the trial, and

therefore, we consider it harmless.16

The district court's instructions here reinforce

the conclusion that Santiago's testimony was not central nor

did it actually prejudice the jury's decision. The judge

properly instructed that "once a transitory appointment

expires, defendant may terminate the transitory employee

. . . for any reason except if that reason is based on ______ __ ____ ______ __ _____ __

political affiliation." (emphasis added) The judge _________ ___________

instructed, not once but several times, that the central

issue for the jury to decide was whether the motive for

____________________

16. That plaintiffs apparently opened the door to such
testimony also bears on the harmless error analysis. The
jury may have had two "experts" each opining on the law and
may have disregarded both experts as not helpful on the key
question of motive. In this case, the question of motive was
a straightforward question of whom the jury believed, the
Mayor or the plaintiffs.

-29- 29













plaintiffs' non-renewals was their political affiliation.

Finally, the verdict form itself posed the question, "Do you

find by a preponderance of the evidence that the motivating

factor for not renewing the appointment of [plaintiff] was

[his or her] political affiliation?"

The judge did expressly caution the jury that the

municipal defendants could not use compliance with state law

as a pretext for political discrimination. The district

court instructed the jury that they were not to consider any

facts that were not known to the relevant decision makers at

the time plaintiffs' contracts were allowed to expire in

deciding whether Soto's administration let plaintiffs go

because of their political affiliation.17 As the district

court explained, "if the irregularity or misconduct was not

discovered until after the employee's contract was not

renewed, the employer could not have been motivated by

knowledge of it, and he cannot now claim that the employee's

contract was not renewed for that reason."

Thus, we do not find it likely, despite Santiago's

testimony, that the jury was confused about the rights of

____________________

17. In finding any error harmless, we need not decide
whether the admission of the evidence was erroneous in the
first instance. Plaintiffs themselves represented to the
court that Soto's knowledge of the illegalities was a viable
factual issue for the jury. Plaintiffs asked for and
received an instruction, which they said "would be curative"
of the McKennon problem, that the jury should disregard the ________
illegality evidence "if they believed that [the illegalities]
were discovered after the fact."

-30- 30













transitory employees under the First Amendment. As in Caro, ____

the issue in this case was "the factual matter of [the

municipality's] reason for dismissing the plaintiffs. Was

[its] motive political?" Caro, 878 F.2d at 2. The jury ____

answered that question. As we harbor no "grave doubt," the

judgment of the district court is affirmed. Costs to ________

appellees.







































-31- 31






Source:  CourtListener

Can't find what you're looking for?

Post a free question on our public forum.
Ask a Question
Search for lawyers by practice areas.
Find a Lawyer