This appeal by the plaintiffs is a sequel to our decision reported at
The plaintiffs who are current residents of Bethesda Lutheran’s Watertown facility are classified by federal Medicaid regulations as residents of Illinois because that is where their parents lived when these plaintiffs were admitted to the facility. We noted in our previous opinion that, as Illinois residents, these plaintiffs would be entitled to Medicaid benefits from neither Wisconsin nor Illinois if the challenged regulations were valid. The plaintiffs who are prospective residents of the facility live either with their parents or, in one ease, in a group home, all outside Wisconsin. The Wisconsin laws challenged in the suit prevented them from relocating to the Watertown facility, as they (or more likely their guardians) wanted to do.
We reversed the judgment of the district court, holding that both the state laws and the federal regulations were unconstitutional, and remanded the case for the entry of appropriate relief. The plaintiffs asked for and obtained injunctive relief, and that phase of the suit is over. They also sought damages from Jefferson County. The district court turned them down on the ground that while a county does not have the shield of the Eleventh Amendment, it cannot be held liable under section 1983 for acts that it did under the command of state or federal law. That at least is the position of this circuit,
Quinones v. City of Evanston,
Our position admittedly is anomalous from the standpoint of conventional tort law, in which obedience to a superior’s orders is not a defense to liability.
Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 888 (1979). The logic of our position, as we explained in
Quinones,
is rooted in the principle (firmly established though often criticized, for example in Larry Kramer & Alan Sykes, “Municipal Liability Under § 1983: A Legal and Economic Analysis,” 1987
S.Ct. Rev.
249) that a municipality is not vicariously liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the torts of its employees.
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
In any event, the plaintiffs in this appeal do not question the circuit’s position but instead argue that Jefferson County, fearful of the financial burden that the plaintiffs might have imposed on it had they been admitted to Bethesda’s facility as residents of the county, acted of its own volition in denying them this status and not just under the compulsion of federal and state law. In support of this argument they cite statements by the director of the County’s welfare department, who is one of the defendants. But the state of mind of local officials who enforce or comply with state or federal regulations is immaterial to whether the local government is violating the Constitution if the local officials could not act otherwise without violating state or federal law. The spirit, the mindset, the joy or grief of local officials has no consequences for the plaintiffs if these officials have no discretion that they could exercise in the plaintiffs’ favor. “[Municipal liability
The plaintiffs’ briefs insinuate, although unclearly, that the challenged laws were not a complete obstacle to their obtaining Wisconsin residency — -that the County had discretion despite the laws to grant Wisconsin residency to at least some of the seven individual plaintiffs. But we said the opposite in our opinion — we said they were barred by the challenged laws — and while the plaintiffs are free (within the flexible limits of the law of the case doctrine) to ask us to reexamine our previous opinion in whole or in part, they have not done that. They ignore what we said, and argue the issue as if nothing germane had been said in that opinion. This is not acceptable practice, as we just had occasion to note in
Wilder v. Apfel,
AFFIRMED.
