OPINION
Appellant Barbara K., individually and as next friend of T.K., C.K., P.K., and N.K., filed this negligence suit against the independent executrix of the estate of Michael Dennis Cox and Baylor College of Medicine 1 based on their alleged failure to report suspected child abuse of her children that they allegedly discovered while performing psychological examinations ordered by a Harris County district court. The trial court granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment based on derived judicial immunity. Although the claims Barbara raises are slightly different from those raised in Delcowrt, we affirm because the case is controlled by the absolute immunity doctrine we discussed in Delcourt. 2 This doctrine includes both judicial immunity and derived judicial immunity. 3
Barbara filed for divorce from her husband, Larry. The case was assigned to the 257th District Court. Initially Larry was allowed unsupervised visits with his children; however, at some point Barbara petitioned the court to suspend Larry’s unsupervised contact with the children because she was concerned about possible sexual misconduct by Larry. In response to Barbara’s concerns, the judge ordered Dr. Michael Cox of the Baylor College of Medicine to perform psychological evaluations and examinations of Barbara and Larry and their children. The court’s order stated that Cox and Baylor were to act as an extension of the court in performing these evaluations and examinations:
It is ORDERED that Dr. Michael Cox, Baylor Pilot Program, Baylor College of Medicine, [sic] Department of Psychiatry, 1 Baylor Plaza, Houston, [sic] Texas 77030 ... is appointed as an extension of the Court as the evaluating psychologist for evaluation and examination of Larry ... Barbara ... and the children the subject of this suit....
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It is ORDERED that all written reports prepared by Dr. Michael Cox setting out his findings, including results from all tests made, if any, diagnosis, conclusions and observations shall be submitted directly to the Court.
In an affidavit the judge of the 257th District Court filed in connection with this lawsuit, the judge testified as follows: (1) Baylor College of Medicine created the Baylor Pilot Program in cooperation with the Court to provide “lower-cost mental health evaluations”; (2) the Court and the Baylor Pilot Program intended to have Ph.D psychology interns at Baylor College of Medicine perform evaluations with Dr. Cox’s oversight, with Dr. Cox and these interns functioning as an arm of the Court and under the Court’s order; (3) the Court appointed Dr. Cox and the Baylor Pilot Program to assist it in investigating, evaluating, and assessing the mental and emotional condition, including allegations of sexual abuse, of this family; and (4) Dr. Cox and the employees, agents, or servants of Baylor College of Medicine involved in the evaluation of the family did so to assist the Court in the integral judicial process of investigating, evaluating, and assessing the family members’ mental and emotional condition.
Dr. Cox assigned intern Suman Rao to help him evaluate Barbara, Larry, and the children. In the summer of 1998, Rao interviewed all members of the family. During these interviews, two of the children told Rao about events which led her to believe that Larry was behaving inappropriately with the children. Rao prepared a report to the judge recommending that Larry have no visits with T.K. and only supervised visitation with the other three children. However, Rao left Baylor suddenly, and the draft report was never sent to the court.
About eight months later, in March of 1999, Barbara notified Dr. Cox that at least two of her children had made outcries that Larry had sexually assaulted them. After interviewing the children, Dr. Cox made his first report to Children’s Protective Services (“CPS”) and told the court about the situation, recommending that Larry be ordered not to see the children until the matter was investigated. The court followed the recommendation, ordering Larry not to see the children. CPS investigated the reports and concluded that there was reason to believe that the sexual abuse had occurred.
Because of the long delay between the time Rao first became aware of Larry’s inappropriate behavior and the time that Barbara informed the experts that Larry
The Cox Estate and Baylor moved for summary judgment, alleging that they were entitled to absolute immunity from suit because the conduct in issue occurred while they were functioning as an arm of the court. The trial court granted this motion and entered a final judgment.
II.Issues Presented for Review
On appeal, Barbara asserts the following issues for review:
(1) Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment based on judicial immunity?
(2) Is the failure to report suspected child abuse a judicial act?
(3) Is the statutory duty to report suspected child abuse mandatory or discretionary?
(4) If mandatory, are appellees entitled to judicial immunity as a matter of law such that they are exempt from their mandatory statutory and professional duties to report suspected child abuse?
(5) If discretionary, does a fact issue exist as to whether appellees acted reasonably and in good faith so as to defeat summary judgment?
(6) Does judicial immunity extend to criminal acts and omissions?
(7) Does the existence of statutory immunity (which does not apply to the failure to report suspected child abuse) preclude the application of judicial immunity?
III.Standard of Review
The trial court granted summary judgment based on the affirmative defense of derived judicial immunity. The summary judgment was proper only if the movants conclusively established each element of this defense.
See Science Spectrum, Inc. v. Martinez,
IV.Analysis
A. Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment based on derived judicial immunity?
1. Rao, Baylor, and Cox were entitled to derived judicial immunity.
Barbara’s first issue is that Rao, Baylor, and Cox were not entitled to derived judicial immunity. She recognizes the significance of the court appointing
Generally, once an individual is cloaked with derived judicial immunity because of a particular function being performed for a court, every action taken with regard to that function — whether good or bad, honest or dishonest, well-intentioned or not — is immune from suit.
Halsey,
We have already held that a psychiatrist appointed to evaluate members of a family was entitled to derived judicial immunity.
See Delcourt,
When a court appoints a mental health professional to examine the child and the parents in a custody proceeding, the professional is acting as a fact finder for the court. The court relies on the professional to provide information essential to the decision-making process. Without the protection of absolute immunity, such professionals would be, at the very least, reluctant to accept these appointments. This would in turn inhibit judges from performing their duties.
Id. at 783. In fact, Delcourt involved the very same judge and a similar order to the one we have in this case. See id. at 779, 781-83.
In
Delcourt,
to determine whether the court-appointed psychiatrist was entitled to immunity, we looked to affidavit testimony from the appointing judge and affidavit testimony from the psychiatrist. Here, we have the same type of testimony.
6
The trial judge testified by affidavit that “Dr. Cox, Dr. Rao, and the employees, agents, or servants of Baylor College of Medicine who aided them in their evaluation of [the family] did so for the purpose of assisting the Court in the integral judicial process of investigating, evaluating,
Thus, the Cox Estate’s and Baylor’s summary-judgment evidence conclusively proved that they were entitled to absolute immunity. We overrule issues one, two, and five.
2. Possible violation of statutes imposing criminal liability does not negate derived judicial immunity in a suit by a private citizen.
In spite of this evidence of immunity, Barbara claims that the doctrine of judicial immunity did not shield the Cox Estate and Baylor from suit because (1) Cox and Rao violated statutory duties— which impose criminal liability — by not reporting suspected child abuse, (2) the duty to report suspected child abuse is mandatory and not discretionary, and (3) the statutory immunity given in section 261.106 of the Texas Family Code overrides judicial immunity. As with her earlier assault on the doctrine of judicial immunity, these arguments misinterpret and misapply the doctrine.
Barbara’s first issue, whether judicial immunity continues to protect court-appointed psychiatrists when they have violated a statute imposing criminal liability for a failure to act, is flawed because she applies a general rule — no judicial immunity from criminal liability — to a specific situation to which it does not apply — a suit brought by a private citizen.
The broadest rule that controls our decision was announced in
Pruitt v. Turner
in a dissenting opinion approved by the Texas Supreme Court.
See Pruitt v. Turner,
It was a settled principle at the very foundation of well-ordered jurisprudence that every judge, whether of a higher or lower court, in the exercise of the jurisdiction, conferred on him by law, had the right to decide according to his own free and unembarrassed convictions, uninfluenced by any apprehension of private prosecution.
Pruitt,
For this case, the key point in this quote is that the judge is free from
private
prosecution. Therefore, in
Pruitt,
a litigant could not sue the judge for failing to empanel a jury in a case.
See Turner v. Pruitt,
Some cases using the functional approach have held that certain administrative functions of judges are not part of the judicial function and therefore are outside the scope of judicial immunity.
See, e.g., Forrester v. White,
Common law derived immunity might be unavailable if a statute provided Barbara with a statutory claim for damages against the Cox Estate and Baylor. We have not found — and Barbara has not cited us to— any authority holding that section 261.101of the Texas Family Code or any other statute provides Barbara with a statutory damage claim against the Cox Estate and Baylor on the facts of this case. In short, even if Cox and Baylor violated sections 33.008 and 261.101 of the Texas Family Code, Barbara has not shown that these statutes override the common law immunity to which Cox and Baylor have shown themselves to be entitled.
3. Possible violation of a mandatory duty does not negate derived judicial immunity.
We now turn to the second reason Barbara claims immunity does not shield the Cox Estate and Baylor — the duty to report suspected child abuse is mandatory, not discretionary. In support of this claim, Barbara cites numerous “official immunity” cases. Official immunity cases do not apply to judicial immunity; judicial immunity and official immunity are two completely different doctrines.
Judicial immunity lends immunity for acts taken in a case before a court. 7 Judicial immunity is an absolute immunity from private action for all acts— good or bad — in a case. It applies to judges and those appointed by judges to perform judicial, discretionary functions. For those appointed by a court to assist it, immunity attaches only if they are performing judicial, discretionary tasks.
Official immunity applies to government officials. Official immunity is not absolute; the actor must act in good faith, and the act must be discretionary. 8
The inquiry in official immunity cases is quite different. There the focus is not the actor’s general function, but the specific act in question. It delves into the specific act at issue and asks if it was discretionary. It looks at the alleged wrongful conduct and asks if the actor was well-intentioned and acted in good faith.
See City of Lancaster v. Chambers,
Although at some point in the inquiry both types of immunity ask if the act (for official immunity) or function (for judicial immunity) was discretionary, or involved discretion, the similarity stops there. Thus, official immunity cases do not apply to a judicial immunity case because they employ the wrong analysis. Therefore, we overrule issues three, four, and six, all based on an assumption that official immunity cases apply to derived judicial immunity.
B. Does the statutory immunity under section 261.106 of the Texas Family Code override the common-law derived judicial immunity?
In her seventh issue Barbara argues that the existence of statutory immunity under section 261.106 of the Texas Family Code shows that the Legislature intended to abolish common-law derived
In construing a statute, our objective is to determine and give effect to the Legislature’s intent.
See Nat’l Liab. & Fire Ins. Co. v. Allen,
Barbara cites no authorities directly on point. She does cite a Texas Supreme Court case in which the court held that the Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act intended to abolish the common-law discovery rule regarding the claims to which it applies.
See Morrison v. Chan,
Y. Conclusion
The Cox Estate and Baylor conclusively proved facts showing their entitlement to derived judicial immunity under Texas common law, and Barbara did not raise a genuine issue regarding any of the facts material to this defense. The focus of our derived-judicial-immunity analysis is on the nature of the function performed by Dr. Cox and Baylor, not on the alleged criminality of a specific act or omission allegedly committed while performing that function. The existence of a duty to report suspected child abuse under section 261.101(b) of the Texas Family Code and criminal sanctions for the knowing violation of this duty do not prevent Dr. Cox and Baylor from asserting derived judicial-
Notes
. They were not the only defendants, but they are the only defendants relevant to this appeal.
.
See Delcourt v. Silverman,
.
See Dallas County v. Halsey,
. Barbara alleged that this failure to act violated sections 33.008 and 261.101 of the Texas Family Code.
. Barbara separates her argument into two parts, first that their failure to report was not a judicial act and second that Cox and Baylor do not receive immunity simply because they are "court appointed." We answer both of these claims in our discussion below.
. We have no affidavit from Dr. Cox because he died between the time of the events in this case and the lawsuit.
. Typically it is described as immunity in cases over which the court has jurisdiction. But, if a case was filed in a court, even if the court ultimately decided it had no jurisdiction over a case, judicial immunity would protect the judge’s actions before the case was dismissed.
. Obviously, a judge qualifies as a governmental official, but judges need not resort to offi
