Case Information
*2 CALLAHAN, Circuit Judge:
In this appeal we are asked to decide whether prison officials enjoy absolute immunity from liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for conduct prescribed by facially valid court orders. We conclude that they do.
BACKGROUND
In 1993, Plaintiff-Appellant Jesse Engebretson pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual assault. The state trial court sentenced him to four concurrent 20-year prison terms. The court also found that because Engebretson had been convicted of burglary (a felony) within five years of committing the sexual assaults, he was a persistent felony offender under *3 Montana law. See Mont. Code Ann. § 46-18-501. The court accordingly sentenced Engebretson to serve an additional 30 years in prison, to run consecutively to the assault sentences. However, the trial court suspended Engebretson’s entire 30- year sentence and imposed probation instead, even though Montana’s persistent felony offender law provides that “the imposition or execution of the first 5 years of a sentence imposed under” the law “may not be deferred or suspended.” Id. § 46-18-502(3).
Engebretson did not appeal, and he began serving his 20- year prison sentence in November 1993. He was discharged for good behavior about ten years later, in September 2003. Engebretson then began serving his probationary term under the supervision of a probation officer.
Three years later, while he was on probation, Engebretson filed a habeas petition with the Montana Supreme Court. He argued that the state trial court’s sentencing order was illegal because his entire 30-year persistent felony offender sentence was suspended, in violation of § 46-18-502(3). In other words, the law required Engebretson to serve at least five years of his 30-year sentence in prison. The Montana Supreme Court granted Engebretson’s petition, concluding that the “sentencing court lacked authority to suspend Engebretson’s entire sentence as a persistent felony offender.”
On remand, the state trial court (through a different judge) adjudged Engebretson guilty of the four counts of sexual assault for which he previously had been charged, sentenced him to four concurrent 20-year terms (with credit for time served), and prescribed “terms and condition[s] of probation of any remaining time.” However, the court proceeded to amend the judgment to state that Engebretson’s “sentence has been discharged,” and to delete all the terms and conditions of his probation. The court’s orders did not mention Engebretson’s status as a persistent felony offender, and they did not impose a five-year prison term under § 46-18-502(3). The State did not appeal.
Nearly two years later, Engebretson and his wife, Catherine Engebretson, filed a pro se action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in federal district court against Defendants-Appellees Mike Mahoney, the warden of the prison where Engebretson had served his sentence, and William Slaughter, the director *4 of the Montana Department of Corrections. In an amended complaint, which added the State of Montana as a defendant, the Engebretsons alleged that Mahoney and Slaughter “would only release me [Jesse Engebretson] to a probationary sentence, even though I had informed them that such was an illegal sentence.” In other words, the Engebretsons sought damages because Jesse Engebretson was released from prison earlier than he should have been. [1] The Engebretsons more specifically alleged that: (1) Mahoney and Slaughter “had a duty to ascertain that I [Jesse Engebretson] had a legal sentence prior to accepting me into their custody;” (2) Engebretson “was stopped from filing in the court by the lack of legal reference materials” during his imprisonment; and (3) Engebretson was “stopped from gaining the assistance” of another inmate in his legal filings during his imprisonment, after that inmate “was moved to another facility after the Department of Corrections found out that he was assisting inmates in their legal research.” The complaint also alleged that Mahoney, Slaughter, and Jesse Engebretson’s probation officer (who was not named as a defendant) unconstitutionally restrained Engebretson’s liberty during his “illegal” term of probation. The Engebretsons sought $10 million in damages.
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction and failure to state a claim. Upon a magistrate’s recommendation, the district court dismissed the claims against Mahoney and Slaughter because they
subjected Jesse Engebretson to restrictions on his liberty based on a facially valid court order. Even though the order was later invalidated by the Montana Supreme Court, Engebretson apparently thought he should not have been sentenced to probation, either, as the state trial court did not identify him as a persistent felony offender, and therefore did not impose a five-year prison term or probation, on remand from the Montana Supreme Court. E NGEBRETSON V . M AHONEY
they cannot be held liable for complying with the order while it was in place.
The district court also dismissed the Engebretsons’ claims against the State of Montana on Eleventh Amendment grounds, and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a state-law loss-of-consortium claim that Catherine Engebretson appeared to assert in the amended complaint. The Engebretsons appeal only the district court’s conclusion that Mahoney and Slaughter are entitled to absolute immunity.
STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review
de novo
the district court’s dismissal for
failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6).
Botello v. Gammick
,
DISCUSSION
Although the parties and the district court do not discuss it, the first question we must address is whether the Engebretsons have standing to bring this action. Jesse Engebretson did not suffer any actual injury from the defendants’ enforcement of the state court’s unlawful sentencing order; indeed, that order saved him five years’ mandatory prison time. See Memphis Cmty. Sch. Dist. v. Stachura , 477 U.S. 299, 307 (1986) (explaining that the “basic purpose of § 1983 damages is to compensate persons for injuries that are caused by the deprivation of constitutional rights” (quotation marks omitted)).
However, Jesse Engebretson alleges that the term of
probation
prescribed by the state court’s sentencing order,
and enforced by the defendants, was unlawful because, after
the Montana Supreme Court vacated and remanded the state
trial court’s initial sentencing order, a different trial judge did
not identify him as a persistent felony offender and
accordingly relieved him of any further prison or probation
time. In other words, in Engebretson’s view, he never should
have served
any
probation time. Engebretson also alleges
that the defendants had a duty to investigate whether the
initial sentencing order was lawful before enforcing it. While
we think these allegations lack merit, because we are
reviewing this case at the dismissal stage, and because the
Engebretsons proceeded
pro se
below, the allegations are
sufficient for purposes of standing to assert a § 1983 claim.
See Bernhardt v. Cnty. of Los Angeles
,
The next question is whether prison officials who, like
Mahoney and Slaughter, simply enforce facially valid court
orders are absolutely immune from any liability under § 1983.
We have not yet had occasion to address this question.
See
Sadoski v. Mosley
, 435 F.3d 1076, 1080 (9th Cir. 2006)
(Gould, J., concurring). However, several of our cases point
in the direction of absolute immunity. In
Hoffman v. Halden
,
268 F.2d 280, 301 (9th Cir. 1959),
overruled on other
grounds by Cohen v. Norris
,
We think the failure of a jailor or keeper to release a prisoner held on a warrant or commitment cannot be the basis for a civil rights action regardless of allegations of *7 malice, motive or intent. His act is required by law. Even if the statute were later held void or the conviction later set aside, so long as he acted under authority of the writ or warrant, he was performing a duty which the law at that time required him to perform.
Id.
at 300. In
Coverdell v. Department of Social & Health
Services
,
The Supreme Court also has not decided whether prison
officials are entitled to absolute immunity from § 1983
liability for enforcing facially valid court orders. However,
the Court has long expressed the general idea that public
officials who ministerially enforce facially valid court orders
are entitled to absolute immunity.
See, e.g.
,
Matthews v.
Densmore
, 109 U.S. 216, 218–19 (1883);
Erskine v.
Hohnbach
, 81 U.S. 613, 616–17 (1872). More directly
relevant here, the Court has extended absolute immunity in
§ 1983 cases where doing so would “free the
judicial process
from the harassment and intimidation associated with
litigation.”
Burns v. Reed
,
In recent years, the Supreme Court has emphasized this
functional approach for determining when public officials
may claim absolute immunity under § 1983. An official must
For example, the Court has extended absolute immunity to prosecutors
and judges for their roles in judicial proceedings.
See Imbler v. Pachtman
,
424 U.S. 409, 427–28 (1976);
Pierson v. Ray
, 386 U.S. 547, 554–55
(1967). In contrast, the Court has declined to extend absolute immunity
to judges and prison, school, and executive officials acting in their non-
judicial capacities.
See, e.g.
,
Forrester v. White
,
be “performing a duty functionally comparable to one for
which officials were rendered immune at common law,” and
“it is only the specific function performed, and not the role or
title of the official, that is the touchstone of absolute
immunity.”
Miller
,
Consistent with this functional approach, the courts of
appeals that have addressed whether prison officials are
absolutely immune from § 1983 liability for enforcing
facially valid court orders have uniformly concluded that they
are. Absolute immunity applies even where a prisoner claims
that the order at issue is invalid or the order is later
overturned.
See, e.g.
,
Figg v. Russell
,
We now join our sister circuits and hold that prison
officials charged with executing facially valid court orders
enjoy absolute immunity from § 1983 liability for conduct
prescribed by those orders. Our reasons are straightforward.
First, such immunity is grounded in the common law.
See
Patterson
, 999 F.2d at 1240;
Valdez
, 878 F.2d at 1287;
Francis
,
judicial process.”
Miller
, 335 F.3d at 895–96.
[4]
It is no
accident that most courts refer to absolute immunity for
prison officials enforcing court orders as “quasi-judicial
immunity.” Third, absolute immunity is necessary to free
prison officials from the fear of litigation and “insure that
such officials can perform their function without the need to
secure permanent legal counsel.”
Valdez
,
The Engebretsons nonetheless argue against absolute
immunity on two grounds. First, they contend that we are
bound by two prior Ninth Circuit cases which held that the
defendant prison officials were entitled to qualified
immunity.
See Alston v. Read
,
immunity” for circumstances in which a defendant is “acting in a role that
is functionally comparable to that of a judge, rather than under the
authority of a court order.”
Hamilton
,
Second, the Engebretsons argue that qualified immunity
is sufficient to protect prison officials enforcing court orders.
It is true that there is a presumption in favor of qualified
immunity, and that a defendant public official bears the
burden of showing a need for absolute immunity.
Antoine
,
(quoting
Coverdell
,
Our sister circuits have been careful to extend absolute
immunity only to the
fact
of a prisoner’s incarceration
pursuant to a facially valid court order—
i.e.
, the prison
official in question must act within his or her authority and
strictly comply with the order.
See, e.g.
,
Patterson
, 999 F.2d
at 1241 (“We note the limits of our holding. We simply
conclude that a warden is absolutely immune from damages
flowing from the fact of a prisoner’s incarceration, when that
incarceration occurs pursuant to a facially valid order of
confinement.” (emphasis omitted));
Valdez
,
E NGEBRETSON V . M AHONEY act as prescribed by the order in question.”); Hamilton , 322 F.3d at 778, 783–86 (holding that questions of fact about the manner in which prison officials executed court orders may defeat absolute immunity).
This case fits within these limitations. There can be no
question that the state court had the authority to issue
Engebretson’s sentencing order, that the defendants had the
authority to enforce the order, or that the order was facially
valid.
See
Mont. Code Ann. § 3-5-302(1)(a) (providing for
original jurisdiction in the state trial courts over felony cases);
id.
§ 46-19-101(1) (providing for authorization to imprison or
confine a defendant);
Sadoski
, 435 F.3d at 1079 (only a
“judge who acts in the clear absence of all jurisdiction is not
entitled to absolute immunity” (internal quotation marks
omitted));
Francis
,
The complaint also alleges that Mahoney and Slaughter impermissibly restricted Jesse Engebretson’s access to adequate legal reference materials and an inmate who might have helped him prepare his habeas petition. But those allegations concern how the defendants allegedly ran the prison system, not whether they could enforce, or how decide whether allegations regarding a lack of authority to issue or enforce a facially valid court order, or a prison official’s engaging in conduct not prescribed in such an order, might defeat that official’s absolute immunity.
CONCLUSION
Prison officials who simply enforce facially valid court orders “are performing functions necessary to the judicial process.” Miller , 335 F.3d at 895–96. They must not be required to second-guess the courts if that process is to work fairly and efficiently. For this and the other reasons discussed above, we hold that prison officials, like the defendants in this case, who are charged with executing facially valid court orders enjoy absolute immunity from § 1983 liability for conduct prescribed by those orders.
AFFIRMED. they enforced, the state trial court’s sentencing order. As such, the allegations do not undermine Mahoney and Slaughter’s absolute immunity from liability for simply and strictly enforcing that order. Because the Engebretsons do not appeal the district court’s failure to separately address these allegations, we do not address them further.
