Lead Opinion
Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the majority opinion, in which Chief Judge ERVIN, Judges HALL, MURNAGHAN, WILKINS, NIEMEYER, HAMILTON, WILLIAMS, MICHAEL, and MOTZ and Senior Judge PHILLIPS joined. Senior Judge PHILLIPS wrote a special concurring opinion, in which Chief Judge ERVIN and Judge MURNAGHAN joined. Judge WIDENER wrote a dissenting opinion. Judge WILKINSON wrote a dissenting opinion, in which Judge RUSSELL and Judge WIDENER joined.
OPINION
We heard this case en banc to decide whether a municipality, here the City of Charleston, is entitled to absolute immunity from liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the unconstitutional enactments and actions of its local legislature. The numerous circuits that have addressed the question have unanimously concluded, in recognition of Supreme Court precedent, that municipalities are not entitled to such an immunity. We now join our sister circuits and hold that a municipality is not immune from liability under section 1983 for the enactments and actions of the local legislative body.
I.
In Monell v. New York City Dep’t of Social Servs.,
In the course of adjudicating these various claims to immunity, the Supreme Court has left no doubt that municipalities and local governments are not entitled to immunity from suits brought under section 1983. Chief Justice Rehnquist, writing for a unanimous Court, could not have been any clearer when he observed recently that “unlike various government officials, municipalities do not enjoy immunity from suit — either absolute or qualified — under § 1983.” Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Intelligence and Coordination Unit, — U.S. —, —,
With regard to the inquiry into tradition, the Court unqualifiedly concluded that “there is no tradition of immunity for municipal corporations.” Id. at 638,
The first of these common law doctrines “sought to distinguish between a municipality’s ‘governmental’ and ‘proprietary’ functions,” with the municipality subject to liability for the latter, but immune from liability as to the former. Id. The Court found that by 1871, the immunity from suit for a municipality’s “governmental functions” had largely been “nullified” by the states. Id. at 645-46,
By including municipalities within the class of “persons” subject to liability for violations of the Federal Constitution and laws, Congress — the supreme sovereign on matters of federal law — abolished whatever vestige of the State’s sovereign immunity the municipality possessed.
Id. at 647-48,
The Court in Owen identified as a second common law protection available to municipalities in the nineteenth century a doctrine that “immunized a municipality for its ‘discretionary
Th[e] common-law doctrine [of legislative or discretionary immunity] merely prevented courts from substituting their own judgment on matters within the lawful discretion of the municipality. But a municipality has no “discretion” to violate the Federal Constitution; its dictates are absolute and imperative. And when a court*298 passes judgment on the municipality’s conduct in a § 1983 action, it does not seek to second-guess the “reasonableness” of the city’s decision nor to interfere with the local government’s resolution of competing poliсy considerations. Rather, it looks only to whether the municipality has conformed to the requirements of the Federal Constitution and statutes.
Id. The Court in Owen thus rejected any sovereign immunity or separation of powers justification for municipality immunity from suit under section 1983, and the Court was able to identify no other possible historical or doctrinal source of immunity from suit for constitutional violations.
If there were any doubt that the Court’s pronouncements in Leathermcm and Owen, coupled with the Court’s reasoning in Owen, preclude the municipal legislative immunity asserted in this case, it is obvious from the facts before the Court in Owen that the abrogation of municipality immunity effected by section 1983 extends as well to a municipality’s legislative activities. In Owen, the local Chief of Police claimed that the City of Independence, the City Manager, and members of the City Council in their official capacity, had deprived him of his protected liberty interest in his “good name, reputation, honor, or integrity” without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Id. at 633 n. 13,
Indeed, the Court routinely cites the enactment of legislation as the prototypical government conduct that can give rise to liability under Monell’s “policy or custom” requirement. In Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati,
Another factor indicating that policy has been formed is the process by which the decision at issue was reached. Formal procedures that involve, for example, voting by elected officials, prepared reports, extended deliberation, or official records indicate that the resulting decisions taken “may fairly be said to represent official policy.” Monell, supra, [436 U.S.] at 694 [98 S.Ct. at 2037 ]. Owen v. City of Independence,445 U.S. 622 [100 S.Ct. 1398 ,63 L.Ed.2d 673 ] (1980), provides an example. The City Council met in a regularly scheduled meeting. One member of the Council made a motion to release to the press certаin reports that cast an employee in a bad light. After deliberation, the Council passed the motion with no dissents and one abstention. Id. at 627-29 [100 S.Ct. at 1403-04 ], Although this official action did not establish a rule of general applicability, it is clear that policy was formed because of the process by which the decision was reached.
Pembaur,
In the face of this overwhelming authority, the City of Charleston attempts to justify its claim of absolute legislative immunity by reference to the tradition and policy justifications supporting the legislative immunity for individual legislators. While there is indeed a long tradition of granting individual legislators at all levels of government a broad immunity from suits based upon their legitimate legislative activities,
The Court has made clear that neither the tradition nor the public policy considerations supporting a broad legislative immunity for legislators sued in their individual capacity has persuasive force when the liability of the municipality is at issue. The Court foreclosed reliance on the tradition of legislative immunity for individual legislators when it stated in unequivocal terms that “there is no tradition of immunity for municipal corporations.” Id. at 638,
As to the public policy behind granting individual officers an immunity, the Court explained in Owen that the “overriding considerations of public policy,” which, on occasion, have led the Court to conclude that an “official be given a measure of protection from personal liability,” are “less compelling, if not wholly inapplicable, when the liability of the municipal entity is at issue.” Id. at 653,
[a]t the heart of this justification for a qualified immunity for the individual official is the concern that the threat of personal monetary liability will introduce an unwarranted and unconscionable consideration into the decisionmaking process, thus paralyzing the governing official’s decisiveness and distorting his judgment on matters of public policy. The inhibiting effect is significantly reduced, if not eliminated, however, when the threat of personal liability is removed. First, as an empirical matter, it is questionable whether the hazard of municipal loss will deter a public officer from the conscientious exercise of his duties; city officials routinely make decisions that either require a large expenditure of municipal funds or involve а substantial risk of depleting the public fisc. More important, though, is the realization that consideration of the municipality’s liability for constitutional violations is quite properly the concern of its elected or appointed officials. Indeed, a decisionmaker would be derelict in his duties if, at some point, he did not consider whether his decision comports with constitutional mandates and did not weigh the risk that a violation might result in an award of damages from the public treasury.
Id. at 655-56,
Indeed, in the Court’s view, the very existence of an immunity for individual officials cuts strongly in favor of denying immunity to the municipality the official represents. In Owen, for instance, the Court concluded that, in light of the qualified immunity already afforded to officials sued individually, the only way to “properly allocate[ ]” the costs of constitutional violations among government officials, municipalities, and victims, is to deny an immunity defense to the municipality. Id. at 657,
If the [legislators serving on TRPA] have enacted unconstitutional legislation, there is no reason why relief against TRPA itself should not adequately vindicate petitioners’ interests.
Lake Country Estates,
In sum, though the issue before us today is an important one, it is ultimately easily resolved. The Supreme Court effectively answered the question fifteen years ago in Owen. A unanimous Court in Leatherman recently reaffirmed Owen, and every other circuit to have addressed the issue has read Owen as foreclosing the possibility of legislative immunity for municipalities. In accord with this controlling, and otherwise impressive, body of authority, we hold that a municipality is not entitled to an absolute immunity for the actions of its legislature in suits brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
II.
In the instant case, the appellants’ complaint alleged that, in enacting the annual budget for the City of Charleston in 1993, Charleston’s Common Council denied appellants a salary increase on the impermissible ground that the appellants had actively supported a candidate in the prior mayoral election other than the one favored by a majority of the members of the Common Council, in violation of the First Amendment. The plaintiffs thus directly challenged the Common Council’s execution of a core legislative function. J.A. at 72 (opinion of district court) (“Plaintiffs’ complaint squarely attacks a classic legislative function of the Council.”); see also Rateree v. Rockett,
The district court dismissed the complaint without addressing the merits of plaintiffs’ claim, holding that the City of Charleston, the real party in interest in this case, see Goldsmith v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore,
Plaintiffs’ allegation that the Council denied their raises solely because of their political support of Mayor Hall would necessarily require an examination of the Council’s motive for its vote. Such an inquiry “runs squarely afoul of the doctrine of legislative immunity.” Where a suit would require testimony from legisla*303 tors regarding their legislative activities, “the doctrine of legislative immunity has full force.”
J.A. at 73 (citation omitted). Beсause we hold today that the City of Charleston is not entitled to absolute immunity under section 1983 from suits involving the decisions and enactments of Charleston’s Common Council, the judgment of the district court is reversed. To the extent that our opinions in Baker v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore,
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Our dissenting colleagues do not challenge our reading of this controlling caselaw. They ground their dissent instead exclusively on what they perceive to be the unacceptable policy implica
. The City Council's involvement in the unconstitutional deprivation in Owen was extensive:
On the evening of April 17, 1972, thе City Council held its regularly scheduled meeting. After completion of the planned agenda, Councilman Roberts read a statement he had prepared on the investigation. Among other allegations, Roberts charged that petitioner had misappropriated Police Department property for his own use, that narcotics and money had "mysteriously disappeared" from his office, that traffic tickets had been manipulated, that high ranking police officials had made “inappropriate” requests affecting the police court, and that "things have occurred causing the unusual release of felons." At the close of his statement, Roberts moved that the investigative reports be released to the news media and turned over to the prosecutor for presentation to the grand jury, and that the City Manager "take all direct and appropriate action” against those persons "involved in illegal, wrongful, or gross inefficient activities brought out in the investigative reports." After some discussion, the City Council passed Roberts’ motion with no dissents and one abstention.
Owen,
. Actions virtually identical tо those of the City Council in Owen were held to be legislative in nature in Tenney v. Brandhove,
. In City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc.,
. The protections afforded federal legislators are found in the Constitution itself. See U.S. Const, art. I, § 6, cl. 1 ("The Senators and Representatives ... for any Speech or Debate in either House ... shall not be questioned in any other Place.”); Gravel v. United States,
Building on this tradition, the Supreme Court has also recognized an absolute immunity from section 1983 liability for state and regional legislators, who arе not otherwise protected by the Speech or Debate Clause and whose state immunity would not protect them from suits brought under section 1983. See id. at 376,
And, though the Supreme Court has expressly reserved the issue, see id. at 404 n. 26,
. As the Court observed in Tenney,
Legislators are immune from deterrents to the uninhibited discharge of their legislative duty, not for their private indulgence, but for the public good. One must not expect uncommon courage even in legislators. The privilege*301 would be of little value if they could be subjected to the cost and inconvenience and distractions of a trial upon a conclusion of the pleader, or to the hazard of a judgment against them based upon a jury’s speculation as to motives.
Tenney,
. Similarly, in granting absolute immunity to state legislators in Tenney, the Court was careful to "note[] that this is a case in which the defendants are members of a legislature. Legislative privilege in such a case deserves greater respect than where ... the legislature seeks the affirmative aid of the courts to assert a privilege.” Tenney,
. Because the Common Council’s decision to deny the salary increases was legislative, we decline the appellees’ invitation to deny the City’s claim of legislative immunity on the ground that the Council’s action was administrative in nature. See Roberson v. Mullins,
. Under Baker and Schlitz, Charleston’s council members may be privileged from testifying in federal district court as to their motives in enacting legislation. Because appellants do not challenge this testimonial privilege, except to the extent that such a privilege could be interpreted to afford municipalities immunity from liability under section 1983, we do not address herein the vitality of this privilege in the wake of Owen and today’s holding.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
I agree with and concur in Judge Wilkinson’s excellent dissenting opinion.
In my opinion, the decision of the majority in this case is contrary to the most fundamental notions of our form of representative government. The subordination of the legislative branch of government espoused by the majority in this case will prove to be as fatal
Where there are three orders, then, any plurality of functions or shifting from one order to another is nоt merely utterly harmful to the community, but one might fairly call it the extreme of wrongdoing. And you will agree that to do the greatest of wrongs to one’s own community is injustice.
Surely.
The Republic of Plato, Oxford University Press 1968-3 reprint, Chapter XII, p. 129.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The practical consequence of the majority’s decision is to subject local legislators to federal suit for routine votes on a municipal budget. By doing so, we have consigned to federal court the most basic and important acts of a democracy. This amounts, literally, to local government by lawsuit. Because such a result stretches 42 U.S.C. § 1983 beyond all reasonable bounds and does grave harm to our fundamental democratic notions of political participation and representation, I respectfully dissent.
I.
This controversy involves nothing more than a political dog fight over a municipal budget — the kind that arises in local governing bodies every day. If municipal budget disputes must now regularly be replayed in actions for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, then the federal courtroom will come to replace the county meeting hall and city council chambers as the cornerstone of American politics. With all respect to the majority, the Supreme Court has not sounded this sort of death-knell for democratic governance.
The majority’s rationale is that this outcome is appropriate because plaintiffs have sued a municipal legislative entity for damages rather than the individual legislators themselves. The majority apparently believes that because legislators remain personally immune from damages for a vote on a municipal budget, their immunity interests are sufficiently vindicated. It is a mistake, however, to equate the sum of the immunity interests in this ease with the prospects of personal monetary liability. Much more is at stake.
The absence of municipal immunity for a legislator’s votes on a municipal budget erodes the viability of the entire local political process. The abrogation of municipal immunity for such votes will subtly transform the nature of political accountability. Pecuniary penalties, albeit against the municipality, will come to substitute for traditional reckonings at the polls. Local legislators will have to explain their votes on legislative appropriations to a court as well as to the electorate. That is not how democracy was meant to function.
This case will prove all too typical. The complaint presents a budget dispute involving municipal salary outlays between the council supporters and opponents of Charleston Mayor Kent Strange Hall. Budget fights of this kind invariably produce winners and losers. Under the majority’s ruling, the losers of such struggles now have an engraved invitation to proceed to federal court. It will be simple to portray any budgetary cut as plaintiffs have here — as an act of “political retaliation” in violation of the First Amendment. Indeed, a complaint may be expected to characterize any legislative success of an opposing faction in its most pejorative politi
The damage done to the pоlitical process will be acute. Lawsuits by disgruntled individuals may replace the voice of the electorate as the agent of municipal change and the instrument of municipal policy. This sad development is made worse because it occurs in the context of some 85,000 city and county governments, which were established to provide the purest and most direct form of political participation available to American citizens. “In the township, as well as everywhere else, the people are the source of power; but nowhere do they exercise their power more immediately.” 1 Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America 64 (P. Bradley ed. 1945).
Lawsuits such as this one also substantially weaken the ability of individual legislators to carry out the will of the voters. Instead of enjoying the freedom to cast votes according to their consciences and the wishes of their constituents, legislators must now look over their shoulders at the possible legal consequences of a vote cast or an argument advanced. Statements made on items in a local budget will now turn up as evidence of unconstitutional “political” motive in federal court. Legislators will have to consider how legislative action will be viewed by the most litigious members of their community. Such consequences are clearly contrary both to the purpose of § 1983 and the ideals of good government. As the Supreme Court has noted, “any restriction on a legislator’s freedom undermines the ‘public good’ by interfering with the rights of the people to representation in the democratic process.” Spallone v. United States,
These concerns have been repeatedly acknowledged as the basis of individual legislative immunity. See, e.g., Lake Country Estates, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
The complaint in this case seeks damages for past and future lost wages and benefits, embarrassment, humiliation, and reputational injury. It concludes — as is typical — with a demand for trial by jury. And in the absence of any municipal immunity, budget-making by jury trial may become the rule, not the exception. It is easy to see how the multiple motivations of legislators on a budget vote will present a genuine issue of material fact. Juries will thus come to serve as proxies for the larger electorate, and be drawn into the partisan passions of local political life. This concern over the politicization of the courts has been a critical ingredient of legislative immunity from the outset. Tenney,
Another important immunity interest overlooked by the majority is a legislator’s need for freedom from the burdens of litigation. The Supreme Court has repeatedly stressed that immunity under § 1983 is “an immunity from suit rather than a mere defense to liability.” Mitchell v. Forsyth,
All three of Harlow’s immunity concerns are implicated in this lawsuit. The Harlow burdens are no less significant because the action is brought against the municipal entity; as the only “real” persons involved, legislators still must carry the weight of the impositions and distractions of every case brought. In the case of municipal government, moreover, the consequences of an abrogation of all immunity are especially severe. Local elected officials may not enjoy the recognition of those who hold state or federal office. Many, however, are public-spirited citizens, and especially in smaller communities, they often serve part-time and for nominal pay. In this case, for example, the Council of the City of Charleston meets only twice a month. See City of Charleston, W.Va. Charter and General Ordinances § 21 (Michie 1975). The twenty-six members of the council are paid $2.50 for each meeting they attend, and their yearly salary mаy not exceed one hundred dollars. Id. at § 86. Subjecting part-time officials to the periodic vicissitudes of litigation will, in Harlow's words, both inhibit “discretionary action” and deter “able people from public service.” Harlow,
The majority’s belief that individual immunity is sufficient thus does not capture the true scope of the relevant immunity interests. Legislative immunity was created to protect a range of interests, not simply to provide a shield against personal damage awards. See Tenney,
II.
Because immunity interests of great importance are at issue in this case, Congress must be specific if it wishes to abrogate them. It is well-established that when Congress seeks to alter the federal-state equilibrium in a fundamental way, its intention to do so must be “unmistakably clear in the language of the statute.” Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon,
Language in other cases addressing the subject of municipal liability under § 1983, such as Monell v. New York City Dep’t. of Social Services,
The question of municipal liability presented in this case represents a problem of an entirely different magnitude than that considered in Monell and its progeny. In Mo-nell, for example, the Supreme Court examined municipal liability for an unconstitutional employment policy of mandatory, unpaid pregnancy leave for female city workers. Id. at 660-61,
Likewise, in Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Intelligence and Coordination Unit, — U.S. —,
Just like Monell and Leatherman, however, Owen never contemplated the extension of § 1983 liability to legislative votes on local budgets. In Owen, the Court did reject the idea that § 1983 preserved a distinction between “discretionary” and “ministerial” functions as a basis for immunity. Owen,
The fact that it did not is significant. Decisions about the allocation of public resources are the quintessential task undertaken by an elected representative body, whether it is the City of Charleston Common Council or the Congress of the United States. See Rateree v. Rockett, 852 F.2d 946, 950 (7th Cir.1988) (noting budget-making is the “classic legislative function”). Democracy decides nothing if it cannot set priorities for spending limited public funds. Section 1983 actions that challenge votes on budgetary items are simply different from suits contesting the constitutionality of an executive policy or alleging misconduct on the part of municipal employees. Allowing federal courts to recalculate basic decisions on spending and taxation severely disrupts the balance of federal
Section 1983 is not sufficiently specific to do the job the majority would have it do. When Congress passed this law in 1871, it had no idea it would metastasize to this extent. The members of the 42d Congress never dreamed they were subjecting local legislative bodies to monetary liability and litigation over individual items in a budget, and so of course failed to include language that would override the presumption against upsetting the federal-state balance. To the contrary, as Owen recognized, § 1983 preserved “tradition[s] of immunity ... so firmly rooted in the common law and ... supported by such strong policy reаsons that ‘Congress would have specifically so provided had it wished to abolish [such] doetrine[s].’ ” Owen,
III.
An additional difficulty with the majority’s position is the gap that it creates in the overall structure of defenses to § 1983 actions. In striking a balance between vindication of individual rights and limitation of the social costs of litigation, the Supreme Court has always been careful to provide governmental defendants under § 1983 with at least some defense to liability. See Anderson v. Creighton,
Thus, a network of defenses covers nearly the entire spectrum of § 1983 claims. The single circumstance where there is no immunity of any sort is the one we are faced with here — a suit for damages against the local legislature itself. Because the legislature is a public body, not an individual, it possesses no absolute or qualified immunity defense of its own. See Leatherman, — U.S. at-,
A testimonial privilege for individual legislators, to which the majority alludes, see majority opinion, note 8, is no answer to this problem. For one thing, the source and scope of such a privilege has not been explained. For another, the practical value of such a privilege is virtually nil. In fact, it makes the dilemma of municipal liability for legislative acts even worsе. The losing legislative faction in a budget dispute will readily waive the privilege and testily in court. At that point, the value of any testimonial privilege to the prevailing side becomes as tenuous as the value of, say, the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination after the prosecution has presented its ease-in-ehief. Any legislator invoking the privilege will be the object of suspicion in the courtroom, and the municipality will be left in the untenable position of trying to stave off liability in the face of one-sided evidence.
The end result is that strict liability for this narrow class of § 1983 defendants, which serves to “convert[] municipal governance into a hazardous slalom through constitutional obstacles that often are unknown and unknowable.” Owen,
The simple solution to this problem is to extend the well-established immunity of individual legislators to cover the legislative body whenever a cause of action “would perforce require testimony of the legislators involved regarding their motives” in a legislative vote. Hollyday v. Rainey,
IV.
The district court’s opinion in this case was short and to the point. It stated that “plaintiffs’ ease squarely attacks a classic legislative function of the Council, its vote on the City budget.” The court also noted that resolution of the dispute “would necessarily require an examination of the Council’s motive for its vote.” Finally, it quoted the Seventh Circuit’s holding that a budget vote is not rendered an “administrative” employment decision merely because it impacts city employees:
Almost all budget decisions have an effect on employment by either creating or eliminating positions or by raising or lowering salaries. This reality, however, does not transform a uniquely legislative function into an administrative one- Employment decisions аre not administrative when accomplished through traditional legislative functions. They are not “employment decisions” at all but instead, legislative, public policy choices that necessarily impact on the employment policies of the governing body. The political decision making inevitably involved in exercising budgetary restraint strikes at the heart of the legislative process and is protected legislative conduct.
Rateree,
I would affirm that judgment. Providing immunity here would not result in any absence of remedies for those opposed to the actions of local legislatures. See Harlow,
Legislatures themselves possess effective internal mechanisms for countering misbehavior in the give-and-take of public debate and deliberation. Also, legislative action in a multi-member body requires coalition-budding among individual legislators, which acts as a further check on arbitrary or extreme conduct. See Clayton P. Gillette, Plebiscites, Participation, and Collective Action in Local Government, 86 Mich.L.Rev. 930, 943-44 (1988). Many local legislatures have internal disciplinary powers as well. In this case, for example, members of the Common Council may be removed from the legislature for “official misconduct” by either a two-thirds vote of the council or by the circuit court of Kanawha County. City of Charleston Charter and General Ordinances § 19. Public scrutiny through the press also exposes and deters legislative action that crosses permissible lines.
Finally, state laws, both civil and criminal, provide additional means by which a wayward local legislature can be held аccountable. See Long v. City of Weirton,
V.
Many disputes must be resolved by litigation, but this is not one of them. In the end, litigation such as this robs local politics of any pretense to finality. The abrogation of immunity in the context of a municipal budget battle further signals the demise of the politiсal question doctrine, upon which courts have long depended to distance themselves from partisan affairs. The rule of law was not meant to be synonymous with the transfer of purely political business to our courts. There is no more political a business than legislative appropriations. Abraham Lincoln never spoke of government “of the judiciary, by the judiciary, and for the judiciary.” He knew from sad experience that judicial involvement carried its own special dangers of abuse, and he understood that true democracy reserved to the people the right to determine their own destiny.
. My good colleagues in the majority suggest that their approach is governed by precedent, while the dissenting opinion is somehow driven by policy. See majority opinion note 1. In this regard, the majority summons to its aid extended quotations, but those quotations simply do not address the situation at hand. See dissenting opinion §§ II and III, infra. Specifically, the precedent relied upon by the majority does not contain a single reference to the propriety of turning routine votes on a municipal budget into a § 1983 damages dispute. Indeed, the majоrity does not contend otherwise, but only states that "we must assume" that the Supreme Court has considered and disposed of this question. I think it legitimate that there be at least a pause before the most essential function of local government is swept away by "assumption.” The majority has decided a legal question of first impression, and has taken a significant practical leap. Surely it will seem so to innumerable elected office-holders, who suddenly discover that their votes on a budget are subject to judicial review, and that the legislative vestiges of local government are now justiciable as a matter of nothing more than ipse dixit.
. My brother Phillips contends that no such chilling effect is present because no Brandéis brief has proclaimed its existence. The failure of officials to act because of fear of § 1983 litigation, however, is not a matter that is apt to be openly expressed or assiduously documented. The elaborate structure of immunities for § 1983 suits is testament enough that some courts, including the Supreme Court, believe this type of litigation chills, even if the fact has thus far eluded my concurring brother.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I concur in the majority opinion, which I think admirably demonstrates why extant Supreme Court precedents compel the result reached.
I write specifically only to state my understanding that the laudatory comments in footnote 1 respecting the dissenting opinion are not intended to imply that were we free to do so, we would accept its policy arguments for granting municipalities absolute immunity to § 1983 claims for monetary relief for their unconstitutional legislative acts. It may be proper at our level to use a dissenting opinion as a vehicle for suggesting re-examination of extant Supreme Court authority on policy grounds, but I would not want to be thought persuaded by those made in the dissent here. With all respect to the elegance and fervor with which its political theories are advanced, I think it greatly overstates the threats to democratic government at the local level that it suggests flow from exposing municipalities to such suits. And, I believe it important to point out that there is not a shred of evidence in the record before us, either in the form of anecdotal or expert opinion testimony or by wаy of “Bran-déis brief,” to support the assertion that any such practical threats actually exist and are being experienced in the real world. In the absence of such evidence, I think the more appropriate policy assumption — were any appropriate in the ease presented to us — is that there is no such inhibiting effect on local government as the dissent posits. We are not referred to any other lower federal or state court decision which has expressed similar concerns, though municipal exposure to such claims has been a generally recognized legal reality now for years. The “chilling effect” on official conduct that is posited is one that could only be experienced by individual legislators, and they have the protections both of absolute legislative immunity to suit and of testimonial privilege if they prefer not even to participate in litigation against the municipality itself. And, the experience of history which presumably informed the common law’s refusal to accord such immunity (as documented in the Supreme Court decisions refusing to accord it as to § 1983 claims) must surely have confirmed that no such inhibiting effect was being generally experienced.
