The damages action authorized by 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is limited in several significant respects: (1) municipalities and other political subdivisions are not subject to suit, see
Monroe
v.
Pape,
Plaintiffs-appellants are the administrators of the estate of Stephen R. Kostka, who was shot and killed by a Westford, Massachusetts police officer, David Hogg, in the course of an arrest. To redress an alleged violation of Kostka’s constitutional rights, plaintiffs instituted this action against Hogg, several alleged accomplices, the town of Westford’s police chief Joseph Connell, and the town of Westford itself. In addition to alleging that the shooting of Kostka by Hogg deprived Kostka of his constitutional rights, the complaint stated that Connell and the town of Westford “failed in their duty to instruct, train, educate, and control the defendant Hogg in the exercise of his duties as a police officer.” Plaintiffs claimed a right to recover against all the defendants under § 1983, and, to the *40 extent § 1983 was unavailable, they asserted a right to recover directly under the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court dismissed the claims against Connell and the town of Westford, reasoning that neither the police chief nor the town could be held vicariously liable either under § 1983 or directly under the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court made these dismissals final judgments pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.P. 54(b), and this appeal followed.
We first consider the claim against Connell. Plaintiffs do not seriously contend that § 1983 authorizes damages liability where an individual had no personal role in the wrongdoing. Such an actor by definition lacks the bad faith required to expose him to damages liability under § 1983.
1
See Wood
v. Strickland, supra; Scheuer v. Rhodes,
Although the claim based upon Connell’s breach of his duty to instruct and control Hogg seemingly alleges personal involvement in the wrongdoing,
2
analysis reveals that it suffers from the identical defect. A police chief is under no general federal constitutional duty to take positive action to reduce the incidence of unconstitutional conduct by police officers on the beat,
see Rizzo v. Goode, supra
Plaintiffs’ claim against the town of Westford requires additional analysis, since the immunity of the town may differ from that of an official. If Hogg or some other municipal official did act in bad faith, the authorization of recovery against a deep pocket defendant like the municipality would not be inconsistent with the Supreme Court decisions concerning official immunity, although there would be other objections. If, on the other hand, the constitutional wrong were the result of a good faith action of a municipal employee, it is not self evident that the overall public interest requires that the municipality always be immune. While the imposition of damages liability on a political subdivision could conceivably result in chilling the performance of some official functions, the likelihood of substantial inhibition is not great since the officials will not be held personally liable. In light of the substantial countervailing interest in compensating the victims of unconstitutional conduct, it might well be that, if there were a right of action against governmental bodies, their immunity from damages might be significantly narrower than that of the individual officials. Without deciding anything about this question, we turn to the issue of liability in damages of the municipality.
Plaintiffs’ basic contention may be stated simply. They appear to concede that they have no right of action against the town of Westford under § 1983, but they rely upon
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Federal Narcotics Agents,
In Bivens, the Court created a private right of action for damages against federal officers who violate the Fourth Amendment. Although the opinion for the Court does contain language that is generally supportive of plaintiffs’ reading of it, the Court’s methodology belies any claim that Bivens should be understood as recognizing sweeping federal judicial power to create damages remedies to vindicate constitutional rights.
The Court began its analysis by carefully evaluating the adequacy of the only existing alternative remedy, a state law tort action against the federal officers in which the Fourth Amendment would operate only to deprive federal agents of the defense that they were acting pursuant to federal authority. Because the interests protected by state tort law may not include those protected by the Fourth Amendment, the Court refused to remit the plaintiffs to a state law tort action, holding that a showing of a Fourth Amendment violation should be “both necessary and sufficient to make out plaintiff’s cause of action.”
Id.
at 390-95,
When there is a request for the judicial creation of a supplemental damages remedy arising directly under a constitutional provision,
Bivens,
we think, teaches that a federal court should proceed with caution.
Compare Cort v. Ash,
First, as was not the case in Bivens, plaintiffs here have available to them a right of action which is measured by constitutional standards: § 1983. While a direct action against a political subdivision might often provide superior opportunities for compensation, the existence of a statutory remedy which is designed to implement the constitutional guarantee may itself render the Bivens analysis inappropriate.
What is critical and of greater significance, however, is that here there has been *43 something akin to an explicit Congressional determination that political subdivisions are not to be held liable in damages for violations of constitutional rights. Although no act of Congress expressly so states, the Court has in a series of decisions beginning in 1961 interpreted § 1983, which was originally enacted in the Civil Rights Act of 1871, as embodying an affirmative policy that federal courts should not hold municipalities liable in damages when municipal employees violate individuals’ constitutional rights. - -
The leading case, of course, is
Monroe
v.
Pape, supra,
where the Court, based on its interpretation of the legislative history of the 1871 Civil Rights Act, held that municipalities were not “persons” within the meaning of that statute.
City of Kenosha v. Bruno,
The more significant of these was
Moor v. County of Alameda,
Aldinger v. Howard,
While the inconsistency of the proposed inferred right of action with § 1983 eliminates any question of creating such a remedial right under our federal common law powers,
7
the question remains whether such a right of action is constitutionally compelled.
Compare Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Federal Narcotics Agents, supra,
To accept the contrary view, we would have to hold that the Fourteenth Amendment embraces a personal right in injured persons to be fully compensated for all violations of their constitutional rights and that, because of individual officials’ good faith defense and related problems in obtaining or collecting judgments against them, the wrongdoers’ employers must be made vicariously liable. We observe first that even if we accepted this view of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Eleventh Amendment would preclude the lower federal courts from implementing it in all cases: we cannot authorize recovery against employers that are states. More significantly, we can find no support for the proposition that the Fourteenth Amendment requires that the family of interests protected by the doctrines of municipal and sovereign immunity must be subordinated to the value of compensating the victims of unconstitutional conduct. Indeed, the cases in which the Court has announced the scope of the state official’s immunity from suit suggest precisely the contrary.
See Imbler v. Pachtman, supra,
*45
We emphasize the narrowness of our holding today. Were we faced with a case in which the municipality had ordered the constitutional violation, the application of the constitutional test could be different. Similarly, we express no opinion as to whether specific guarantees, e.
g.,
the taking clause, might require a direct damages action against a political subdivision.
See Foster v. City of Detroit,
Affirmed.
Notes
. There is some authority in other circuits for holding a superior officer such as Connell liable under § 1983 under a theory of respondeat superior where state law would hold him liable.
E. g., Tuley v. Heyd,
. We note plaintiffs assertion that Connell was under a state created duty to instruct and control Hogg, but failure to comply with such a state duty is not a violation of the federal constitution. Since plaintiffs have not sought to recover on the theory either that a state law claim against Connell is pendent to their federal claim against Hogg or that the incorporation of this state provision into the federal civil rights action is here proper,
cf. Hesselgesser v. Reilly,
. Indeed, this theory strikes us as a transparent attempt to hold Connell vicariously liable under the guise of his having breached a duty owed plaintiffs’ decedent. Plaintiffs seemingly have taken one of the modern justifications for the doctrine of respondeat superior — the master’s opportunity to select, train, and control his servants, an opportunity which makes the master the best loss-avoider — and converted it into a constitutional duty on the part of all police chiefs. If there is a practical difference between this theory and a vicarious liability theory, we fail to perceive it.
. A number of courts have considered inferring such damages remedies against entities which may not be sued under § 1983. Courts which have apparently created such rights of action include:
Hostrop v. Bd. of Junior College,
. The question of subject matter jurisdiction is, of course, distinct from that whether plaintiffs have stated a claim upon which relief may be granted.
See Bell v. Hood,
. We understand that the interpretation of § 1983 as precluding municipal liability is vulnerable to the extent it rests upon the legislative history of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 alone.
See
Comment, 57 Calif.L.Rev. 1142, 1164-70 (1969). Whether or not the legislative history is supportive of this interpretation, broader considerations of federalism support the Court’s approach. The authorization of tort actions against the fisc is a delicate matter, especially when an instrumentality of a state is concerned. The Eleventh Amendment, of course, reflects the judgment that, in the absence of an explicit Congressional statement to the contrary, federal courts should not have the general authority to impose damages liability against a state itself.
See Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer,
.
See
Monaghan,
The Supreme Court, ’974 Term
— Forward:
Constitutional Common Law,
89 Harv.L.Rev. 1 (1975);
Comtronics v. PRTC, supra
at 707;
compare Cort v. Ash, supra
