In this case an unfortunate series of circumstances and the mechanical application of an ill-considered county policy, since abandoned, led to an embarrassing strip search of a woman. Plaintiff Diane Sala had been accused by an individual of *209 harassment, a minor violation in New York’s hierarchy of offenses against the public weal, punishable by no more than fifteen days in jail. The summons, however, was mailed to the wrong address, and a warrant was issued for Sala’s arrest because of her failure to respond to the misde-livered summons. When Sala was informed that a warrant had been issued, she voluntarily appeared at the Suffolk County Police Department. She was handcuffed and then searched by defendant Loraine Weeks, a correction officer. A “strip search,” which included visual inspection of the genital and anal areas, but no contact, was conducted. This procedure was followed with all persons delivered to the custody of the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department at the Suffolk County District Court Detention Facility.
Plaintiff sued in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York for violation of her civil rights, 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The court, George C. Pratt, Judge, directed a verdict for the individual defendants, Weeks and County Sheriff Philip E. Corso, and for the County, because of the absence of any proof of a lack of good faith, but granted injunctive relief to pre-arraignment detainees charged with petty offenses, attorney’s fees of $15,000 and expenses of trial in the amount of $500 to plaintiff.
No appeal was taken from the grant of injunctive relief, the practice attacked having been abandoned by the County. 1 The award of attorney’s fees and expenses of trial was appealed, but the appeal was abandoned, and this court dismissed it on February 23, 1979. We have before us only plaintiff Sala’s appeal from the dismissal of her action for damages. We find no error in the result reached and therefore affirm the judgment.
The District Court properly directed a verdict for the individual defendants. The Supreme Court has enunciated a limited “good faith” official immunity to actions for damages brought under § 1983. See, e.
g., Procunier v. Navarette,
The subjective element of the good faith test is also satisfied. Sala did not allege that the individual defendants acted with malice, nor was there any proof that they intended “to deprive the plaintiff of a constitutional right or to cause [her] ‘other injury.’ ”
Id.
at 566,
We therefore affirm the dismissal of the damage claims against Corso and Weeks.
Sala’s claim against the County presents a more difficult question. Although § 1983 “creates a species of tort
*210
liability that on its face admits of no immunities,”
Imbler
v.
Pachtman,
Both
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
The possibility of municipal liability under § 1983 after
Monell
implicates a number of the same competing concerns which the courts have had to weigh in the cases involving personal liability under § 1983. Our path in balancing these considerations is directed by the Supreme Court’s declaration that its decision in
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
In
Scheuer, supra,
(1) the injustice, particularly in the absence of bad faith, of subjecting to liability an officer who is required, by the legal obligations of his position, to exercise discretion; (2) the danger that the threat of such liability would deter his willingness to execute his office with the decisiveness and the judgment required by the public good.
The first of these concerns is in large part peculiar to the context of individual official immunity. The sense of injustice felt at the prospect of holding an individual official liable in damages when he acted reasonably and in good faith is greatly diminished when the liability is to be affixed to a municipality, even if its responsible officials acted reasonably in the light of the then-existing law. Although “we are not insensitive to the financial plight of local governmental bodies” and wish to avoid “needlessly expanding] recovery at the expense of already overburdened taxpayers,”
Turpin v. Mailet, supra,
But the second rationale discussed in
Scheuer
retains more relevance in the context of municipal liability. The fear that the possibility of liability will unduly inhibit “the vigorous exercise of official authority,”
Butz v. Economou, supra,
The protection of constitutional rights requires that municipalities, in the formulation of governmental “policies” and “customs,” exercise their authority carefully and with the utmost concern for the effect which their decisions will have upon individuals. The role of municipal legal counsel in advising those responsible for decision making as to the legality of proposed actions is of course crucial.
4
But there are situations in which even the most able counsel will not be able to foretell the constitutional invalidity of a municipal policy. The Supreme Court has recognized in other context that, where a decision “establish[es] a new principle of law,” it may be appropriate to give such a decision only prospective application. See
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
Where prior law does not suggest that a municipal policy is constitutionally infirm, it cannot be said in any meaningful sense that the municipality has been “at fault” in adopting that policy, and we do not believe that § 1983, enacted by a Congress accustomed to nearly absolute municipal immunity,
5
should be read to implement a doctrine of liability without fault.
6
After all, “it is not a tort for government to govern.”
Dalehite v. United States,
Our decision is a narrow one. The facts of this case present a situation wherein although the practice was insensitive, demeaning and stupid, there was no evidence of bad faith on the part of anyone charged with formulating or implementing the municipal policy, and the case law as of the time of the incident involved here did not suggest that the practice of strip searching which apparently had long been followed by many governmental bodies, was unconstitutional. The practice has now been abandoned by the County. In such a situation, the public interest in careful, but forceful, governmental decision making requires that a municipality be afforded immunity from liability for damages under § 1983.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Our resolution of the non-constitutional immunity issue makes it unnecessary for us to determine or to remand for reconsideration the question whether the County’s strip search policy was unconstitutional in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Bell v. Wolfish,
—U.S.—,
. See note 1, supra.
. Several other courts have ruled on this question, with most of the recent cases holding that a good faith immunity applies to municipalities as well as to government officials.
E. g., Owen v. City of Independence, Missouri,
. Section 501(1) of the County Law of the State of New York provides, in relevant part:
The county attorney shall be the legal ad-visor to the board of supervisors and every officer whose compensation is paid from county funds in all matters involving an official act of a civil nature.
. At common law, municipalities were for a time accorded the same absolute immunity from tort liability which states possessed. By 1871, when the predecessor of § 1983 was enacted, some states, such as New York, had recognized a distinction between “governmental” and “proprietary” acts, imposing liability only for the latter.
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
.
Cf. Monell v. Department of Social Services,
