MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Dr. C.B. Goswick, a physician employed by Texas A & M University, asserts by motion to dismiss the defense of “quasi-judicial” immunity from suit for alleged medical malpractice. For the reasons discussed below, the Court DENIES the doctor’s motion.
I. FACTS
In October of 1984, while James Gleason was attending Texas A & M, he was involved in a bicycle/car accident and suffered a compound fracture in his lower left leg. Gleason was initially treated at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan, Texas, by Dr. Lawrence Coleman and Dr. David Beesinger, who operated on and treated his leg. Gleason was later transferred to the A.P. Beutel Health Center on the Texas A & M campus. The Health Center provides care to students attending Texas A & M. Gleason’s treatment at the Health Center was undertaken by Dr. C.B. Goswick, a physician licensed to practice in Texas and the Director of Student Health Services at Texas A & M in College Station.
Gleason’s medical malpractice action, founded on diversity jurisdiction, alleges damages as a result of improper care rendered by Drs. Goswick, Coleman, and Beesinger, the Health Center, and Texas A & M. Gleason contends that Dr. Goswick failed to take proper preventative measures against infection, failed to properly diagnose the developing infection in his leg, failed to provide proper treatment for the infection once it had developed, and failed to timely refer Gleason to a specialist who could properly treat his condition.
Texas A & M and the Health Center were dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because state agencies are not citizens for purposes of diversity jurisdiction. Dr. Beesinger was dismissed by agreement of the parties. Dr. Goswick now moves to dismiss under the theory that he is immune from liability under the doctrine of “quasi-judicial” or “official” immunity. Dr. Goswick’s motion must be treated as a motion for summary judgment since he supports it by affidavit and deposition testimony properly reserved for a summary judgment motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56.
II. GOVERNING LAW
The issue of a treating physician’s quasi-judicial immunity in a medical malpractice action is one of first impression under Texas law. Since neither the Texas Supreme Court nor other Texas courts have ruled on the issue, this Court must formulate a rule of law independently.
Wood v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
A. Quasi-Judicial Immunity in Texas
“Quasi-judicial” or “official” immunity is a form of common law immunity afforded to public officers and employees for tortious acts done within the course and scope of their duties.
Richardson v. Thompson,
This distinction is far from settled by Texas courts, however. Generally, discretionary acts are those requiring personal deliberation, decision and judgment, while ministerial acts are those requiring obedience to orders or the performance of a duty in which the actor is left no choice of his own.
Baker v. Story,
For example, in Baker v. Story, the court observed that the distinction between discretionary and ministerial functions is “not only a fine-spun distinction; it is, for practical purposes, unworkable.” The court cogently noted that:
It seems almost impossible to draw any clear and definite line, since the distinction, if it exists, can be at most one of degree. ‘It would be difficult to conceive of any official act, no matter how directly ministerial, that did not admit of some discretion in the manner of its performance, even if it involved only the driving of a nail.’
Baker,
In analyzing the discretionary/ministerial test, the
Baker
court relied on
Comley v. Emanuel Lutheran Charity Board,
Acts of implementation ... have no quality of political or governmental judgment about them which would cause the judiciary to abstain from applying the rules of due care just as it does when such acts are performed in a non-governmental setting.
Id. In applying these principles to medical malpractice actions, the Oregon court concluded that the negligent acts of a medical doctor employed by the state did not involve matters of governmental discretion. The alleged malpractice of a state-employed doctor therefore fell outside the immunity granted to state employees in the performance of discretionary acts.
In
Baker
the court of civil appeals reversed an instructed verdict in favor of a physician employed by the University of Texas Medical School in San Antonio because the evidence did not establish as a matter of law the nature of his duties, and thus that they were “quasi-judicial” in nature.
In both
Baker
and
Salcedo
the courts discussed official immunity for state-employed treating physicians, but never decided the issue. In both cases the courts reversed and remanded on procedural grounds.
Baker,
While no Texas court has directly decided whether a state-employed physician has official immunity, Texas decisions dealing with official immunity of other state employees are instructive. The duties of jailers and sheriffs in receiving and caring for prisoners are held to be ministerial and thus not protected.
Browning v. Graves,
In
Christilles v. Southwest Texas State University,
The physician at the veterans’ hospital exercises professional discretion in deciding whether or not to operate, but he *161 combines professional discretion with governmental discretion when he decides that budgetary restrictions require non-use of an especially expensive treatment in absence of specified conditions.
Id. (quoting 3 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 25.08, at 403-4 (2d Ed.1978 & Supp.1982)). Applying this analysis, the Christilles court held that a university professor’s decision to use a real drinking glass in a theater production, instead of a safer substitute, was an exercise of “professional” or “occupational” discretion and was not an exercise of “governmental” discretion. Id. at 43.
B. Quasi-Judicial Immunity in Other Jurisdictions
Because of the lack of clear standards provided by the discretionary/ministerial test, courts in many jurisdictions have criticized it or abandoned it
sub silentio
in favor of what is in fact a functional analysis that looks to an official’s duties instead of his title.
See, e.g., Comley v. Emanuel Lutheran Charity Board,
In determining the propriety of shielding an official from suit under the circumstances, this Court has long favored a “functional inquiry —immunity attaches to particular official functions, not to particular offices. See, e.g., Forrester v. White, [484] U.S. [219], [-] [108 S.Ct. 538 , 542,98 L.Ed.2d 555 ] (1988); Harlow v. Fitzgerald,457 U.S. 800 , 811-812 [102 S.Ct. 2727 , 2734-35,73 L.Ed.2d 396 ] (1982); Doe McMillan,412 U.S. 306 , 319-320 [93 S.Ct. 2018 , 2028-29,36 L.Ed.2d 912 ] (1973); Barr v. Matteo,360 U.S. 564 , 572-573 [79 S.Ct. 1335 , 1340-41,3 L.Ed.2d 1434 ] (1959). The adoption of this functional approach reflects the Court’s concern, expressed in Doe, that federal officials be granted absolute immunity only insofar as the benefits of immunity outweigh the cost. Because the benefits of official immunity lie principally in avoiding corruption of governmental functions, the inquiry into whether absolute immunity is warranted in a particular context depends on the degree to which the official function would suffer under the threat of prospective litigation.
The same trend is evident in decisions from the federal circuit courts. In
Costley v. United States,
Jackson v. Kelly,
However, the
Jackson
court concluded that the determination whether a physician’s duties were ministerial did not end the analysis of whether he was entitled to official immunity. The court read
Doe v. McMillan,
In applying the balancing test, the
Jackson
court concluded that the burden to effective government did not outweigh the dangers to individual citizens of severe and permanent injuries by negligent military physicians. “Effective government would not suffer excessively if monetary compensation were permitted because the alleged wrongful conduct does not involve politically sensitive judgments or discretionary governmental acts.”
Id.
The court therefore held that the defendant air force physician was not entitled to immunity.
Id.
at 739-40.
See also Chavez v. Singer,
C. The Test for Quasi-Judicial Immunity of State-Employed Doctors in Texas
After considering the authorities discussed above and the policies underlying official immunity, this Court finds persuasive the two-step analysis advocated by the United States Supreme Court in Doe v. McMillan and followed by a number of the circuit courts. 2 This analysis requires application of both a functional test and a balancing test. The functional test applies a case-specific discretionary versus ministerial function analysis. The balancing test weighs the harm to the individual citizen against the threat to effective government.
Discretionary functions of physicians are limited to policy-making decisions such as whether a patient is eligible for treatment and whether facilities are available to treat a patient.
See Costley v. United States,
The Court concludes that prior Texas case law and the policies underlying quasi-judicial immunity require a finding under the. functional test that a state-employed *163 physician should not be shielded for his negligent acts in providing medical care where only ministerial duties were performed. Medical judgment, not governmental judgment, is involved when a physician has undertaken treatment of a patient. The physician then has a duty to provide treatment with the same care, skill and diligence that would be owing by a private physician under the same or similar circumstances.
The Court also concludes that in a medical malpractice case such as the present one, where acts of a medical nature and not policy decisions are involved, the balancing test weighs in favor of denying quasi-judicial immunity to state-employed physicians. The need to protect individual citizens from severe and permanent injuries outweighs the need to immunize the government-employed physician in such a case.
III. DR. GOSWICK’S CLAIM OF IMMUNITY
Dr. Goswick’s summary judgment proof defeats his claim of official immunity under both prongs of the two-part analysis adopted by the Court. Under the functional test, official immunity will be afforded to Dr. Goswick only if the facts show his conduct to be discretionary. Dr. Goswick’s affidavit in support of his motion for summary judgment states that he provided medical treatment to Gleason for about four months after Gleason was transferred to the A.P. Beutel Health Center for medical treatment. “I would see Mr. Gleason on rounds and provide whatever care I deemed appropriate in following the course of his treatment.” (Affidavit of Dr. C.B. Goswick, Jr. at p. 2). Nothing in Dr. Goswick’s affidavit indicates that he made any policy decisions with regard to Gleason’s treatment. The affidavit states that his only duties toward Gleason were to provide treatment “in conformance with the good standards of medical care.” Nor does Dr. Goswick’s deposition, or the Deposition of Dr. Walter Finnegan submitted in support of Dr. Goswick’s motion for summary judgment, evidence that Dr. Goswick was required to make policy decisions about the treatment to be provided to Gleason at the A.P. Beutel Health Center. {See Goswick Deposition at 6-7, 65; Finnegan Deposition at 201-03, 213.)
In medical malpractice cases like the present one, where a state-employed physician provides medical treatment not involving policy decisions, this Court has already concluded that the balancing test supports denial of quasi-judicial immunity. Accordingly, Dr. Goswick is not entitled to quasi-judicial immunity under the balancing test.
IV. CONCLUSION
Quasi-judicial immunity is only available to state-employed physicians performing discretionary acts within the course and scope of their duties. Since Dr. Goswick did not perform discretionary acts in treating James Gleason, and no policy requires immunity under a balancing test, he is not entitled to assert the affirmative defense of quasi-judicial immunity. Dr. Goswick’s motion for summary judgment is therefore DENIED.
Notes
. Although the Texas legislature has not spoken directly to this issue, the Texas Education Code §§ 59.01 et seq. (Vernon 1987), reflects legislative recognition of the liability of state-employed physicians for malpractice. This statute allows state universities to establish “Medical Professional Liability Funds” as separate self-insurance funds to pay judgments and settlements for staff physicians in medical malpractice actions.
.
Jackson v. Kelly,
