The plaintiffs/appellants brought this § 1983 action based on alleged violations of their first amendment and other constitutional rights. They sued the defendant state officials in their official capacities for declaratory and injunctive relief and in their individual capacities for damages. The district judge, relying on the doctrine of sovereign immunity, dismissed this case entirely on his own motion, without the benefit of briefs or argument. He made three rulings. We reverse all three and hold that this case was erroneously dismissed.
I.
In February 1977 the American Civil Liberties Union of Mississippi, two individual Mississippi residents, and the Delta Ministry, a Mississippi-based organization, brought this unusual civil rights action. Its gravamen is that various Mississippi officials violated, and continue to violate, the plaintiffs’ first amendment and other constitutional rights by harassment and by surveillance of their lawful activities. The complaint details by way of example three specific instances of allegedly unlawful intrusion. 1 The plaintiffs contend that these incidents were not isolated events, but were part of a continuing pattern of conduct stretching back as far as 1964 and continuing to the date of the complaint.
Thc complaint asserts four causes of action, two for injunctive and declaratory relief, and two for compensatory and punitive damages. The claims for injunctive and declaratory relief are asserted on behalf of a class of all who “have been and are subjected to the defendants’ unlawful governmental intrusions”. The damage claims are asserted on behalf of the named plaintiffs alone. Originally named as defendants were Cliff Finch, Governor of Mississippi at the time the complaint was filed; A. F. Summer, then attorney general; Heber Ladner, then secretary of state; James Finch, then commissioner of public safety; and W. Webb Burke, who was from 1968 to 1974 the director of the now-defunct Mississippi Sovereignty Commission. Although the complaint does not explicitly so state, it is plain from the form of relief sought that all five defendants were sued in their individual capacities with respect to the damage claims and that the first four defendants, alone, were sued in their official capacities with respect to the claims for injunctive and declaratory relief. Neither the state nor any state agency was named as a defendant to any claim.
The plaintiffs contend that some but not all of the defendants’ political surveillance and harassment took place under the aegis of the Sovereignty Commission. 2 Shortly after this suit was filed, the Mississippi legislature passed a law formally abolishing the Commission, which had been unfunded and moribund since 1974. The statute also *1339 sealed the Commission’s files and records until the year 2027. Miss. Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to -65 (Supp.1977). 3 The statute did not, however, explicitly create an evidentiary privilege. According to the plaintiffs, the files and records of the Sovereignty Commission constitute primary evidence in this case. They therefore subpoenaed the files from their custodian, the state Director of Archives and History. 4 Relying on Miss. Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to -65, the Director declined to comply with the subpoena. In a brief order dated July 6, 1978, however, the district court granted the plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of the documents, subject to the Director’s right to assert other privileges for particular documents. Although the order did not explicitly refer to Miss. Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to —65, that statute was the sole justification advanced for noncompliance. In effect, the court held that the statute did not create any evidentiary privilege to which a federal court trying these federal claims was bound to yield.
Despite that order, the Director delayed production of the Sovereignty Commission’s files and records. The plaintiffs again moved to compel their production. When the government moved for in camera inspection of certain documents assertedly privileged, the magistrate in charge of discovery ordered the defendant to prepare “an analysis cataloging the specific claim or claims [of privilege] as to each document”. The plaintiffs objected to the “analysis” eventually submitted on the ground that it was insufficiently detailed to permit them to challenge effectively the claims of privileges. 5 The magistrate ruled against the plaintiffs, but stayed in camera inspection pending review of his ruling by the district court. Both the plaintiffs’ application for review of that ruling and the defendants’ response were limited to whether (1) the submission was sufficiently detailed, (2) the defendants had properly asserted such privileges, and (3) such privileges properly applied.
The district judge never reached those issues. Instead, acting sua sponte, he reversed his order of June 6, 1978 granting the plaintiffs access to the Sovereignty Commission files and held that Miss. Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to -65 absolutely precluded discovery of the files. Second, drastical *1340 ly, the district judge dismissed all of the plaintiffs’ claims as barred by the eleventh amendment — a contention which had not been raised by any party at any point during the two-year course of the litigation. Overlooking the fact that the claims for damages ran against the defendants in their individual capacities, rather than against the state fisc, the court held that the damage claims were “in essence, . . . for the recovery of money from the state” and therefore were barred. Without explanation, the district judge dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims for injunctive and declaratory relief as well. Third, the court denied class certification, even though the plaintiffs had never moved for certification and an order staying certification proceedings pending further discovery was then in effect. As we understand the district judge’s reasoning on this point, it appears that he thought that since the injunction and declaratory judgment claims were barred by the eleventh amendment, class certification should be denied as “unnecessary”.
The plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal on May 1, 1979. In November 1979, the 'voters of Mississippi elected a new governor, attorney general, and secretary of state. After the new administration took office in January 1980, Governor William Winter appointed a new commissioner of public safety as well. By operation of Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(1) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d)(1), these members of the new administration were automatically substituted as parties to this action to the extent that this suit was against the members of the outgoing administration in their “official capacities”. Since the damage claims run against the individual members of the outgoing administration, they are still defendants as to those claims. Since the injunctive and declaratory relief requested by the defendants must run against the individuals currently in office, the members of the new administration are now the defendants as to those claims.
II.
As the defendants’ counsel conceded in the oral argument on appeal, the district court’s dismissal of this action on the basis of the eleventh amendment was erroneous. That amendment only forbids suits against “one of the United States”. A state official who acts in violation of the Constitution is “stripped of his official or representative character and is subjected in his person to the consequences of his individual conduct” —that is, a lawsuit against him personally.
Ex parte Young,
1908,
The district court dismissed the damage claims on the strength of
Edelman v. Jordan,
1974,
The district court offered no reason at all for dismissing the claims for injunctive and declaratory relief. If granted, that relief would operate prospectively; it would have nothing to do with damages or the award of retroactive benefits payable from the state treasury. Defendants concede that dismissal was not warranted at the time, but argue that the intervening change of administration brings those claims within the proscription of the eleventh amendment. They note that Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(1), the appellate analog of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d)(1), provides for automatic substitution of new public officers in litigation after a change of administration only for suits brought against the outgoing officers in their “official capacity”. 9 But, they argue, circumvention of the bar of the eleventh amendment depends on the principle that suit may be brought against a state officer only in his personal capacity, not his official capacity. Hence, the argument runs, since Appellate Rule 43(c)(1) automatically brings the members of the new administration before the court only in their official capacity, the principle of Ex parte Young cannot apply and the suit must fail.
We reject this interpretation of Appellate Rule 43(c)(1) and Civil Rule 25(d)(1). What constitutes “official” action and what constitutes suit against a public officer in his “official” capacity may vary with the context in which the question is asked. It is well settled, for instance, that a public
*1342
officer’s conduct can be sufficiently “official” to constitute state action within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment without at the same time being sufficiently “official” to trigger the bar of the eleventh amendment.
E. g., Home Telephone & Telegraph Co.
v.
City of Los Angeles,
1913,
The expression ‘.‘in his official capacity” is to be interpreted in its context as part of a simple procedural rule for substitution; care should be taken not to distort its meaning by mistaken analogies to the doctrine of sovereign immunity from suit or the Eleventh Amendment. The amended rule will apply to all actions brought by public officers for the government, and to any action brought in form against a named officer, but intrinsically against the government or the office or the incumbent thereof whoever he may be from time to time during the action .... In general it will apply whenever effective relief would call for corrective behavior by the one then having official status and power, rather than one who has lost that status and power through ceasing to hold office.
Since in this case, the injunction and declaratory judgment claims must run against the incumbents, the action is “official” within the meaning of Appellate Rule 46(c)(1) and Civil Rule 25(d)(1); but the effect of those rules is automatically to bring the individual members of the new administration before the court in both their individual and official capacities within the meaning of Ex parte Young. 10
We therefore reverse the district court’s dismissal of the injunction and declaratory judgment claims. Because the court’s denial of class certification was based on its dismissal of the underlying claims, we vacate that aspect of its judgment as well.
III.
Next, we consider whether Miss. Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to -65 (Supp.1977) creates an evidentiary privilege compelling respect by a federal court trying a § 1983 action. The district judge was of the opinion that the statute did create an evidentiary privilege, and that federal courts are without power to override that privilege. Even though the statute does not explicitly create an evidentiary privilege, but merely provides in general terms for the confidentiality of the Sovereignty Commission’s files, we are willing to assume, for the sake of argument, that Mississippi courts would construe the statute as creating a privilege. Nevertheless, we hold that that privilege should not be applied in this case.
Evidentiary privileges in federal courts are governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 501. Except “with respect to an element of a claim or defense as to which State law supplies the rule of decision”, privileges “shall be governed by the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the courts of the United States in the light of reason and experience”. Since the only claims and defenses asserted here relate to federal § 1983 claims, the latter clause applies. Defendants therefore concede that under Rule 501, any privilege created by Miss.Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to -65 does not apply in federal court of its own force, and *1343 they do not challenge the constitutionality of that Rule. Instead, they ask us to find that privilege sufficiently compelling “in light of reason and experience” to be applied as a matter of federal common law.
When a litigant seeks to assert a privilege “not existent in the common law but enacted by the [state] legislature based on unique considerations of government policy”, this Court, like other courts, has tested it by balancing the policies behind the privilege against the policies favoring disclosure.
Fears v. Burris Manufacturing Co.,
5 Cir. 1971,
That the courts of a particular state would recognize a given privilege will not often of itself justify a federal court in applying that privilege. It is sometimes said that “a strong policy of comity between state and federal sovereignties impels federal courts to recognize state privileges where this can be accomplished at no substantial cost to federal substantive and procedural policy”.
United States
v.
King,
E.D.N.Y.1976,
In this case, however, the federal interest in an independent evaluation of the claimed privilege is particularly strong. The purpose of enacting § 1983 was to ensure an independent federal forum for adjudication
*1344
of alleged constitutional violations by state officials; and, as we noted in
Carr,
there is a “special danger” in permitting state governments to define the scope of their own privilege when the misconduct of their agents is alleged.
Privileges are strongly disfavored in federal practice.
See, e. g., United States v. Nixon,
1974,
(1) The communications must originate in a confidence that they will not be disclosed.
(2) This element of confidentiality must be essential to the full and satisfactory maintenance of the relation between the parties.
(3) The relation must be one which in the opinion of the community ought to be sedulously fostered.
(4) The injury that would inure to the relation by the disclosure of the communications must be greater than the benefit thereby gained for the correct disposal of litigation.
Only if these four conditions are present should a privilege be recognized.
Id.
at 1100,
quoting
8 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 2285, at 527 (McNaughton rev. 1961). As a general rule, we defer to the discretion of the trial judge in applying this test.
Fears v. Burris Manufacturing Co.,
5 Cir. 1971,
We therefore reverse the district court’s order to the extent that it holds that Miss. Code Ann. 39-5-61 to -65 (Supp.1977) renders the Sovereignty Commission files privileged from production in federal court.
IV.
The defendants who currently hold office contend that the change of administration in Mississippi since this appeal was filed moots the claims for injunctive and declaratory relief against them. Relying on
Spomer v. Littleton,
1974,
A change of 'administration can affect an action for prospective injunctive or declaratory relief in at least three analytically distinct ways.
19
First, the action may become moot in the Article III sense of failing to present a justiciable “case or controversy”. See,
e. g., Spomer v. Littleton,
1974,
If we could construe this complaint as alleging that the members of the new administration are actually continuing the unconstitutional practices of their predecessors, the action would not be moot in the sense of Article III. Even if the practices have presently ceased, the case will still not be moot unless the defendants can demonstrate that “there is no reasonable expectation that the wrong will be repeated”.
United States v. W. T. Grant Co.,
1953,
We cannot, however, read this complaint as explicitly or even implicitly pleading that the members of the new administration will continue the unlawful practices of the old. It is true that complaints should be construed with more than the usual liberality in this regard. Civil Rule 25(d)(1) was amended to its present form in 1961 to end the older practice which placed on the plaintiff the duty to move specifically for substitution of official defendants within a limited period of time, on pain of dismissal. Since a plaintiff would have to be exceptionally foresighted to put in his initial complaint specific allegations that any successor to the original official defendant will continue the challenged practice or that the practice is a policy of the office, courts should freely imply such an allegation where plaintiffs have “supplied factual allegations from which the continuation of the dispute is a reasonable inference”,
Ciudanos Unidos de San Juan v. Hidalgo County Grand Jury Commissioners,
5 Cir. 1980,
Though their present complaint is insufficient, the plaintiffs argue on appeal that their position is that the new administration will continue the practices of the old, or that there is at least a reasonable expectation that the alleged wrongs will be repeated. The flexible Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not require litigants to be thrown out of court when their pleadings are technically deficient. Rule 15(d) is particularly apt for cases where an intervening change in administration renders ambiguous a complaint seeking prospective relief against public officers. That Rule permits a party, “upon such terms as are just”, to “serve a supplemental pleading setting forth transactions or occurrences or events which have happened since the date of pleading sought to be supplemented”. The interests of justice require that the plaintiffs be permitted to file such a supplemental pleading. If they do not do so within a reasonable time, their claims for prospective relief must be dismissed as moot.
The judgment is reversed and this case is remanded for proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Notes
. They are: (1) In 1972 defendant Ladner allegedly advised the Federal Bureau of Investigation that plaintiff Lawrence had filed a petition with Ladner’s office containing the names of people who wished to see certain — presumably unpopular — candidates placed on the general election ballot. As a result, FBI agents allegedly approached associates of Lawrence, questioned them, and advised them to avoid him. (2) In March 1971 defendant Burke allegedly gathered unspecified “illegal intelligence data” about plaintiffs Brooks and Delta Ministry and disseminated it to the state Office of Human Resources and Community Services. Those data were then used to cause internal strife in an organization in which Brooks participated and to halt that organization’s federal funding. (3) In October or November 1971 defendant Burke allegedly gathered “illegal intelligence data” about plaintiff American Civil Liberties Union of Mississippi and disseminated it to the Dean of Student Affairs at the University of Southern Mississippi for the purpose of interfering with the ACLU’s attempt to organize a chapter at that school.
Neither the truth nor the legal sufficiency of these or the plaintiffs’ other allegations are in issue on this appeal.
. The Sovereignty Commission was established in 1956 with the stated mission of performing “all acts and things deemed necessary and proper to protect the sovereignty of the State of Mississippi, and her sister states, from encroachment thereon by the federal government....” 1956 Miss. Laws Ch. 365, § 5, codified in Miss. Code Ann. § 3-1-11 (1972).
. Section 1 of 1977 Miss. Laws Ch. 320 abolished the Commission. Sections 2, 4, and 5, codified in Miss. Code Ann. §§ 39-5-61 to -65 (Supp.1977), sealed the Commission’s records. Section 39-5-61 provides:
The files and equipment of the state sovereignty commission are hereby placed in the custody of the department of archives and history. Said files shall be immediately sealed, impounded and maintained as confidential files by the department of archives and history. Any equipment may be used by the department of archives and history in the furtherance of the activities of the said department. On July 1, 2027, such files shall become public records under the custody and control of the department of archives and history.
Section 39-5-63 provides:
Any person who shall willfully break any seal containing the impounded files of the state sovereignty commission, or willfully examine, divulge, disseminate, alter, remove or destroy said files prior to July 1, 2027, shall, upon conviction, be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) nor more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) or imprisoned for not more than three (3) years, or punished by both such fine and imprisonment.
Section 39-5-65 provides:
The department of archives and history shall conspicuously display the penalties prescribed by section 39-5-63 in one or more places on each container or cabinet in which the files of the state sovereignty commission are impounded.
. The Mississippi Attorney General represented both the defendants and the non-party Director of Archives and History. At no point was any distinction drawn between their interests. We shall therefore refer to them collectively as “the defendants”.
. The “analysis” took the form of an eighty-two page, two-column list. The first column contained unexplained hyphenated numbers, presumably corresponding to particular documents. The second column contained mere one-word descriptions of the privilege asserted. The “analysis” did not identify, much less describe, the documents involved; the “analysis” did not explain the rationale for asserting a privilege with respect to each such document; and the “analysis” did not explain why, even if certain portions should be deleted to protect privileged material, the remainder of the document could not be released.
.
See L.
Jaffe, Judicial Control of Administrative Action 204-13, 235-39 (1965). Eleventh amendment cases antedating
Ex parte Young
that apply this principle in various forms are legion.
See C.
Jacobs, The Eleventh Amendment and Sovereign Immunity 99-105, 110-49 (1972). The true contribution of
Ex parte Young
to our constitutional jurisprudence was to confirm and generalize a development first enunciated in
Reagan v. Farmers Loan and Trust Co.,
1894,
. See Jerome Frank, Law and the Modem Mind 312-22 (1935), discussing the validity of legitimate legal fictions, particularly as treated by Vaihinger (“The Philosophy of As If”), Torur *1341 toulon (“Philosophy in the Development of Law”), Jeremy Bentham, C. K. Ogden, and Morris Cohen. And see Fuller, Legal Fictions (pts. 1-3), 25 Ill.L.Rev. 363, 513, 865 (1930-31).
.
E. g.,
where relief would be tantamount to specific enforcement of a contract against a state,
In re Ayers,
1887,
. Civil Rule 25(d)(1) provides:
When a public officer is a party to an action in his official capacity and during its pendency dies, resigns, or otherwise ceases to hold office, the action does not abate and his successor is automatically substituted as a party. Proceedings following the substitution shall be in the name of the substituted party, but any misnomer not affecting the substantial rights of the parties shall be disregarded. An order of substitution may be entered at any time, but the omission to enter such an order shall not affect the substitution.
Appellate Rule 43(c)(1) is only inconsequently different in wording.
. See 7A C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1960, at 678-79 (1972).
Cf. Ex parte La Prade,
1933,
.
See, e. g., Socialist Workers Party v. Grubisic,
7 Cir. 1980,
. See H.R.Rep.No. 93-1597, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 7-8, reprinted in [1974] U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 7098, 7100-01.
.
But cf. Robinson v. Magovern,
W.D.Pa.1979,
.
See also Lora v. Board of Education,
E.D.N.Y.1977,
. Defendants suggest that since the assumed state-law privilege has its origin in a statute, rather than in Mississippi common law, it should be entitled to more respect by federal courts. Under
Erie R. R. Co. v. Tompkins,
1938,
.
Brown v. Thompson,
5 Cir. 1970,
. We have no occasion to rule on the propriety of any such protective order here, however.
Cf. In re Halkin,
D.C.Cir. 1979,
. The defendants also suggest that the dissolution of the Sovereignty Commission in 1977 moots the case. The plaintiffs do not contend that the Sovereignty Commission was the sole or even primary vehicle for the unconstitutional intrusions they allege, however; its demise therefore is irrelevant to the question of mootness.
.
See, e. g., Ciudanos Unidos de San Juan v. Hidalgo County Grand Jury Commissioners,
5 Cir. 1980,
.
Mayor of Philadelphia v. Educational Equality League,
1979,
.
See, e. g., SEC v. Medical Comm. for Human Rights,
1972,
. See note 1 supra.
