The issue in this case is whether a judge’s act in firing a court reporter is protected by judicial immunity. The plaintiff, Harriet McMillan, was employed as a court reporter for the Lake County Superi- or Court from February, 1973, to July 1, 1981. When the defendant, Gerald Sveta-noff, was elected and took office as judge he dismissed the entire staff of his courtroom, including McMillan. One employee was rehired.
Indiana Code § 33-5-29.5-8 provides that court personnel serve at the pleasure of the senior judge of each division. In practice each judge employs the staff for his or her own courtroom subject to approval of the senior judge. Court reporters serve a particular judge, but are occasionally rotated through other chambers and also do work for private attorneys.
McMillan brought suit under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983, alleging violations of her civil rights. Specifically, she claimed she was discharged because of her race (black) and her political affiliation (Democrat). Judge Svetanoff filed a motion for summary judgment as to the damages claims, asserting absolute judicial immunity. The district court denied the motion without a statement of reasons. We affirm.
I
The sole question presented for review is whether the defendant should be shielded from personal liability for his termination of the plaintiff. It is well established that judges are immune from liability for their judicial acts, even when they act maliciously or corruptly.
Stump v. Sparkman,
The rationale for a doctrine that excludes judges from liability for even intentional and malicious conduct while on the bench is that judges should be free to make controversial decisions and act upon their convictions without fear of personal liability.
Stump,
Courts are hesitant and cautious in applying the judicial immunity doctrine to areas outside the traditional adversarial process, such as to quasi-judicial acts. See
Malley v. Briggs,
— U.S.-,
In
Stump v. Sparkman,
II
A.
Most court decisions interpreting judicial acts in the context of judges’ hiring and firing decisions have not extended judicial immunity protection. Those cases have uniformly held that such decisions are not “judicial” in nature and thus do not further the doctrine’s objective of protecting judicial decisionmaking freedom. The defendant argues that because the selection of court reporters is made exclusively by judges, it meets the first prong of the Stump test and because court reporters assist judges in carrying out their official duties the second prong is also met. We find these arguments unpersuasive after a review of other judicial immunity decisions.
The defendant cannot find real support for his contention that his act is protected in
Blackwell v. Cook,
A subsequent Northern District of Indiana case criticizes the part of the
Blackwell
decision on which defendant relies. In
Laskowski v. Mears,
This circuit has recently considered whether a judge should be immune from suit for firing a probation officer.
Forres-ter v. White,
Other district court decisions support no immunity when a judge discharges a court reporter. In
Shore v. Howard,
Similarly, in
Lewis v. Blackburn,
A juvenile court staff attorney applicant sued the county judge for failure to hire in
Marafino v. St. Louis County Circuit Court,
The defendant also points to
Rheuark v. Shaw,
B.
In situations outside the traditional judicial decisionmaking arena but not involving personnel decisions, courts, including the Supreme Court, have been hesitant in extending absolute immunity to judges. For example, in
Ex parte Virginia,
Finally, in
Doe v. County of Lake,
C.
The Supreme Court has expressed its reluctance to grant absolute immunity to quasi-judicial officers. Recently, in
Cleav-inger v. Saxner,
Similarly, in
Malley v. Briggs,
The consensus of these cases is that judicial immunity should not be extended lightly or only because the actor is a judge. Before a judge is granted immunity, courts should examine the acts complained of to determine whether they are “judicial.”
Lojuk v. Johnson,
Ill
The question before us is whether the act of firing a court reporter implicates the judicial decisionmaking process. In
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this case the answer is a resounding no. Hiring and firing of employees is typically an administrative task. It involves decisions of a personal rather than impartial nature, which is integral to judicial deci-sionmaking. The decision to fire the plaintiff did not involve judicial discretion; in other words, the judge did not utilize his education, training, and experience in the law to decide whether or not to retain plaintiff. The administrative act of firing the plaintiff will not assist the judge in interpreting the law or exercising judicial discretion in the resolution of disputes. Certainly the court reporter assists the judge in his or her official capacity, but so does everyone else employed within the judge’s chambers — the secretary, bailiff, law clerk, court reporter, probation officer, clerk of court, janitor — they all assist in the smooth operation of the judicial process. That, however, does not entitle a judge to absolute immunity in all employment-related decisions. Providing judicial immunity in employment actions alleging civil rights violations will not further the objective of the doctrine. The judge will not be more inhibited in rendering decisions because he may be called to task for firing a court reporter. Shielding judges from personal liability in their hiring and firing decisions cannot outweigh the need to protect the constitutional rights of public employees. Unlike situations more closely aligned with the judicial process, there is no other adequate means of review for a judge’s possible constitutional violations. A litigant who has not received appropriate due process may appeal the case to a higher court for review, whereas normally the only means an at-will employee has to question and correct the motives of a judge’s employment decisionmaking is a civil rights suit. The absence of adequate procedural protections was emphasized in
Malley,
Because allowing judges to hire and fire court reporters with impunity will not further the objectives of the judicial immunity doctrine — principled decisionmaking — we decline to extend it to a judge’s decision to terminate a court reporter. Therefore the district court’s denial of defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment is affirmed. 3
Notes
.
Blackwell’s
relationship and duty analysis seems especially suited to the line of patronage cases. In
Elrod v. Bums,
. We realize that the holding in Shore v. Howard conflicts with Forrester, but the Shore rationale is proper insofar as it recognizes that acts which effect the judge's independent decision-making are shielded by judicial immunity.
. We do not discuss qualified immunity because that doctrine was not raised. However, it is interesting to note that qualified immunity was rejected by the Eighth Circuit in
Goodwin
v.
Circuit Court of St. Louis County,
