Lead Opinion
Plaintiff Charles Murphy .was an inmate in the Vandalia Correctional .Center in Illinois. On July 25, 2011, correctional officers hit Murphy, fracturing part of his eye socket, and left him in a cell without medical attention. Murphy sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state-law theories. A jury awarded him damages on some of those claims, including some state-law claims, and the district court awarded attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Two of the defendants now appeal and challenge two aspects of the judgment. They argue that state-law sovereign immunity bars the state-law claims and that the Prison .Litigation Reform Act requires that 25 percent of the damage award be used to pay the attorney fee award.
We affirm on the sovereign immunity defense. The Illinois doctrine of sovereign immunity does not apply to state-law claims against a state official or employee who has violated statutory or constitutional law. See Leetaru v. Board of Trustees of University of Illinois,
I. Factual and Procedural Background
We recount the facts in the light reasonably most favorable to the verdict, which defendants do not challenge on the merits. On July 25, 2011, plaintiff Charles Murphy was a prisoner at the Vandalia Correctional Center. His assigned seat at mealtime that day had food and water on it. When he reported the mess, Correctional Officer Robert Smith first told him to clean it up himself and later told Murphy to leave the dining area. A different officer handcuffed Murphy, and Officer Smith escorted him to a segregation building. When they got there, a third officer asked Muiphy what unit he normally stayed.in, but Murphy ignored him. Officer Smith began moving his finger in and out of Murphy’s ear, while asking Murphy if he was deaf and repeating the phrase “you can’t hear, you can’t hear.” While this was happening, Lieutenant Gregory Fulk entered the building and saw what was happening. .
Now escorted by three officers, Murphy was taken further into the segregation unit. Murphy did not struggle with the officers as they walked, although he taunted Officer Smith, promising what would happen the next time he “ain’t got no handcuffs on.” Hearing that, Officer Smith hit Murphy in the eye and then applied a choke hold with his arm around Murphy’s throat. Murphy lost consciousness. When he came to, Lieutenant- Fulk and Officer Smith were pushing him into a cell. With his hands still cuffed behind his back, Murphy fell face-first into the cell and hit his head on its metal toilet. The officers took off his clothes and handcuffs and left without having checked his condition.
In July 2012, Murphy filed suit in the Southern District of Illinois. After two rounds of complaint amendments and a partial grant of summary judgment for defendants, the case was tried to a jury. The jury found for plaintiff Murphy on four claims against two defendants—Lieutenant Fulk and Officer Smith, the appellants here. The jury found Officer Smith liable on two claims of state-law battery and one federal claim of unconstitutional use of force under the Eighth Amendment. The jury also found Lieutenant Fulk liable on a federal Eighth Amendment claim of deliberate indifference to a serious medical need. All told, the jury awarded $241,001 in compensatory and punitive damages against Officer- Smith and $168,750 against Lieutenant Fulk. The district court reduced the combined award to a total-of $307,733.82. That reduction is not at issue in this appeal. The district court also awarded attorney fees and ordered that 10 percent of the damages awarded be put toward paying those fees. Officer Smith and Lieutenant Fulk have appealed.
II. Sovereign Immunity
The defendants argue first that state-law sovereign immunity bars Murphy’s state-law claims. The district court found, and Murphy contends on appeal, that defendants waived their state-law sovereign immunity defense. We find no waiver but find that state-law sovereign immunity does not shield these defendants from liability.
A. Sovereign Immunity in Illinois
Illinois is protected against civil suits in federal court by two relevant doctrines. First, the “Eleventh Amendment immunizes unconsenting states from suit in federal court.” Benning v. Board of Regents of Regency Universities,
B. Waiver
Before addressing the merits of the state-law sovereign immunity defense, we first address plaintiff Murphy’s argument that defendants waived the defense. “[S]overeign immunity is a waivable affirmative defense.” Park v. Indiana University School of Dentistry,
State-law sovereign immunity, however, is a defense the defendants raised at least five times: in their answer, in the final pre-trial conference, in the jury instruction conference, in the defendants’ post-trial motion, and on appeal. Those references were explicitly to state-law sovereign immunity. The answer, for example, claimed protection under “statutory sovereign immunity,” and in both the post-trial motion and the briefs before this court, the defendants relied on the Illinois State Lawsuit Immunity Act.
Plaintiff Murphy has not cited nor have we found any comparable case finding a waiver of a sovereign immunity defense. Cf. Board of Regents,
Plaintiff Murphy relies on the defendants’ apparent willingness to defend this ease on the merits. See Neinast v. Texas,
That blending would be confusing under federal immunity law, whether under the Eleventh Amendment or doctrines of absolute immunity. As we explain below, though, the blending of state-law immunity and the merits under Illinois law accurately reflects state law. When a plaintiff sues a state official or employee, the Illinois case law links state-law immunity to the merits. If a plaintiff adequately alleges and ultimately proves that an Illinois official violated a statute or the Constitution,' Illinois courts hold that the immunity statute does not apply to claims against the individual official. Because of that linkage of immunity to the merits, the defense of the case on the merits is quite consistent with defendants’ assertion of state-law sovereign immunity.
C. Illinois Sovereign Immunity for Individual Employees
The Illinois sovereign immunity statute protects the State against being “made a defendant or party in any court.” 745 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/1. Murphy argues that he has not sued the State of Illinois but only Illinois state' employees. Whether thé statute covers such state-law claims is a matter of state law. Oür role is to decide questions of state law as we predict the state supreme court would decide them. E.g., Rodas v. Seidlin,
Naming state employees as defendants would be too simple an evasion of the statute, which “cannot be evaded by making an action nominally one against the servants or agents of the State when the real- claim is against the State of Illinois itself and when the State of Illinois is the party vitally interested.” Sass v. Kramer,
A claim against a state official or employee is a claim against the state when
“there are (1) no allegations that an agent or employee of the State acted beyond the scope of his authority through wrongful acts; (2) the duty alleged to have been breached was not owed to the public generally independent of the fact of State employment; and (3) where the complained-of actions involve matters ordinarily within that employee’s normal and official functions of the State.”
Healy v. Vaupel,
This case is governed by an important exception to sovereign immunity in suits against state officials or employees. If the plaintiff alleges that state officials or
Fritz v. Johnston,
This court’s Illinois sovereign immunity cases have acknowledged this exception to sovereign immunity but most often have found that the exception did not apply. See, e.g., Turpin v. Koropchak,
Richman also preceded Leetaru, which just last year reaffirmed the exception in broad terms,- over a dissent that would have narrowed it to a scope closer to the federal Ex parte Young doctrine. Leetaru,
III. Attorney Fee
The Prison Litigation Reform Act sets limits on attorney fees awarded to prisoners who prevail in civil rights cases. 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(d), Whenever such a prisoner receives a monetary judgment, “a portion of the judgment (not to exceed 25 percent) shall be applied to satisfy the amount of attorney’s fees awarded against the defendant.” § 1997e(d)(2).
The district court interpreted that language to permit it to exercise its discretion in choosing the percentage of the damage award that should go toward the attorney fee, so long as the choice was no greater than 25 percent. The court allocated 10 percent of the damage award to satisfy the attorney fee award. That interpretation is consistent with decisions of other circuits, which allow such discretion. See Boesing v. Spiess,
We have read the statute differently. In Johnson v. Daley,
Accordingly, we REMAND the case to the district court to modify its judgment to require Murphy to pay from the judgment the sum of $76,933.46 toward satisfying the
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Like the parties, we rely on Eleventh Amendment case law to address waiver. This is our usual approach under the Erie doctrine because procedural issues are governed by federal law in federal courts, and waiver is generally treated as procedural. See Herremans v. Carrera Designs, Inc.,
. The Illinois exception for illegal acts by state officials resembles the federal rule under Ex parte Young,
. We emphasize that Murphy both alleged and proved the violations in this case. Most Illinois cases dealing with this exception to sovereign immunity focus on the plaintiffs allegations because the appeals have arisen from motions to dismiss on the pleadings. We believe Illinois also requires a plaintiff ultimately to prove the alleged violations. For example, Leetaru explained that "sovereign immunity affords no' protection when agents of the State have acted in violation of statutory or constitutional law or in excess of their authority,” and in reversing dismissal on the pleadings, the court allowed defendants on remand to show their conduct was not “in fact" unauthorized, illegal, or in violation of plaintiff's rights. See
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the court’s opinion. I write separately to address the scope of Illinois’ sovereign immunity defense for state employees sued in their individual capacities, which has been a difficult issue for the Illinois state courts. Because the plaintiff in this case prevailed on federal constitutional claims as well as state claims, only a small portion of the judgment is at stake in this appeal. Yet the case still presents an important issue of state law: to what extent Illinois’ State Lawsuit Immunity Act and the Court of Claims Act confínes intentional tort claims against state employees to the Illinois Court of Claims.
The State Lawsuit Immunity Act- prohibits the State of Illinois from- being named as a defendant in any court, with limited exceptions. 745 ILCS 5/1. One of those exceptions is the Court of Claims Act, which created that court as the “exclusive forum for resolving lawsuits against the state.” People ex rel. Manning v. Nickerson,
The dispositive question here is whether state-law portions of this suit (the battery claims) against the defendant prison guards are really “against the State” for the purposes of these statutes. The most natural reading of the statute seems to preclude any court other than the .Illinois Court of Claims from exercising jurisdiction over the plaintiffs intentional tort claim. Battery is a tort and the defendants here were acting in the scope of their state employment when they (according to the jury) battered the plaintiff. Had they not been doing so, the Illinois Attorney General’s office. would not have appeared on their behalf, as it did in the district court and in this court. 5 ILCS 350/2(a) & (e) (providing that the Illinois Attorney General will appear on behalf of a state employee sued for something “arising out of any act or omission occurring within the scope of the employee’s State employment” and indemnify. upon judgment against the employee in such cases). In every practical sense, this is a judgment that “could operate to control the 'actions of the State or subject it to liability.” Currie v. Lao,
However, the Illinois Supreme Court has construed “against the State” more narrowly in suits against state employees. See, e.g., Leetaru v. Bd. of Trs.,
. Several opinions of Illinois' intermediate appellate court read the Court of Claims Act more broadly; their reasoning would bring the plaintiff’s battery claims within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Claims. See, e.g., Grainger v. Harrah’s Casino,
