OPINION
H.B., A.B., M.B., аnd S.B. (collectively, “the Children”) appeal from the entry of summary judgment in favor of the State of Indiana — Elkhart County Office Division of Family and Children (“State”). The Children raise one issue for our review, which we restate as: whether the State is entitled to common law judicial immunity. 1
We affirm.
The Children were removed from thеir mother’s (“Mother”) home in 1987 and placed in a foster home. On a weekend visit with Mother in July 1989, one of the children was allegedly molested by Mother’s boyfriend (“Boyfriend”). This incident was reported to the Division of Family & Children (DFC), but not to law enforcement authorities. Following the report of molestation, the court ordered the child, Mother and Boyfriend to undergo counseling. In November 1990, the DFC recommended that the Children be reunited with Mother, who was still living with Boyfriend аt the time of the recommendation. The Elkhart Juvenile Court took the recommendation of the DFC and ordered that the Children be reunified with Mother. Shоrtly after the reunification, and for more than two years thereafter, Boyfriend molested at least two of the Children.
The Children brought this action, allеging that the DFC was negligent in recommending that the Children be reunited with Mother. The Children also alleged that the DFC *302 was negligent for failing to report the 1989 molestation to law enforcement authorities. The State moved for summary judgment based on the doctrines of quasi-prosecutorial, judicial, and witness immunity, and the Indiana Tort Claims Act. The State also argued that there was no private cause of action available under Ind.Code § 31-6-11-5 (1988), the duty to report statute. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the State. The Children appeal.
The Children contend that the trial court erred by entering summary judgment in favor of the State based on the doctrine of common law immunity. Summary judgment is appropriate only when there is no genuine issue of matеrial fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 56(C). The burden is on the moving party to prove there are no genuine issuеs of material fact and he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Once the movant has sustained this burden, the opponent must respond by setting forth sрecific facts showing a genuine issue for trial; he may not simply rest on the allegations of his pleadings.
Stephenson v. Ledbetter,
It is well-settled that judges аre entitled to absolute judicial immunity from suits for money damages for all actions taken in the judge’s judicial capacity, unless those actions аre taken in the complete absence of any jurisdiction. The underlying purpose of the immunity is to preserve judicial independence in the decision-making process.
Newman v. Deiter,
In determining whether a person is entitled to judicial immunity, the United States Supreme Court has established a functional approach, where the court looks to the nature of the function performеd, not the identity of the actor who performed it.
Forrester v. White,
Similar to the probation officer in J.A.W., the case workers employed by the DFC were acting to assist the juvenile court judge in his decisions regarding the care and custody of the Children. The DFC and its employees were acting under the direction of Ind.Code § 31-6-11-11 (1988), which states that casе workers from the DFC “shall assist the juvenile court ... during all stages of the
*303 proceedings in accordance with the purposes of [the chaptеr regarding reporting and investigation of child abuse and neglect].” Specifically, after the Children were adjudicated Children in Need of Services (“CHINS”), the case workers were required to complete a case plan for the Children, Ind.Code § 31-6-4-6.6 (1988), and to prepare a predispositional report that included a recommendation for the care, treatment, and rehabilitation of the Children. Ind.Code § 31-6-4-15 (1988). The case workers, in addition to acting under the statutes, were acting in accordance with the juvenile court’s order to monitor the progress made by the Children, Mother and Boyfriend. 3 Further, the DFC’s recommendation to reunify the Children with Mother was made during a judicial proceeding. Thus, the case workers were aсting as an arm of the juvenile court judge by implementing the court’s order, and ultimately recommending that the Children be returned to Mother. We hold that, as in J.A.W., these were acts intimately associated with a judicial proceeding and entitled the DFC to absolute immunity from suit. 4 Too, because the initial molеstation took place after the Children were adjudicated CHINS and came under the supervision of the DFC, we hold that the failure of the DFC to rеport the 1989 molestation to law enforcement officials occurred in the course of the DFC’s court-ordered duties, and falls within the scope of the DFC’s judicial immunity. Thus, the trial court did not err by entering summary judgment for the State on its claim for judicial immunity.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Because we hold that the State is entitled to common law judicial immunity, we need not address the State’s claims for other forms of common law immunity, or the claim-for immunity under the Indiana Tort Claims Act.
.
Newman
was a state tort action. However, the
Newman
court relied on
J.A.W.,
a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 аction, and held that common law judicial immunity is available in state tort actions against judges. The
Newman
court recognized the distinction between § 1983 cаses and state tort actions, and held that, "[i]f the judge is acting within his jurisdiction ... absolute judicial immunity applies, regardless of the nature of the cause оf action.”
Newman,
. It was in the course of that monitoring, in 1989, that the DFC learned of the initial molestation of one of the Children by Boyfriend.
. We find that this case is distinguishable from
Lake County Juvenile Court v. Swanson,
