MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiff Paula Corbin Jones seeks civil damages from the President of the United States for actions that, with one exception, are alleged to have occurred prior to his assuming office. The matter is before the Court on motion of the President for permission to file a motion to dismiss on grounds of Presidential immunity and to defer the filing of any other motions or pleadings until such time as the issue of immunity is resolved. The plaintiff has responded in opposition to the motion. 1 For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that the President’s motion should be and hereby is granted.
*904 I.
This complaint, which was filed on May 6, 1994, arises out of an alleged incident that is said to have occurred on May 8, 1991, when President Clinton was Governor of the State of Arkansas. The plaintiff was a state employee at the time, and she claims that the President sexually harassed and assaulted her during a conference being held at a hotel in Little Rock, Arkansas.
The plaintiff asserts four claims in her complaint against the President. In Counts I and II, she alleges that President Clinton conspired to and did deprive her of her constitutional rights to equal protection and due process under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. She contends that the President discriminated against her because of her gender by sexually harassing and assaulting her, by imposing a hostile work environment on her, and by causing her to fear that she would lose her job. She further claims that she was subjected arbitrarily to the fear of losing her job or experiencing other adverse actions in relation to her job and work environment. In Count III, plaintiff asserts a claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress or outrage, and claims in Count IV that the President, through his press aides and attorney, defamed her by denying the allegations that underlie this lawsuit. 2
The President informs the Court that he will file a motion to dismiss the complaint without prejudice to its reinstatement after he leaves office, on grounds that sitting Presidents are constitutionally immune from having to litigate private suits for civil damages. He states that the immunity motion will raise serious issues which go to the constitutionality of compelling a sitting President to litigate private civil damages claims, as well as to this Court’s authority to proceed in this case in the first instance. The President argues the Court should allow him initially to assert the immunity issue alone, thereby permitting that question to be resolved prior to filing any other pleadings in the case.
II.
The President states that his immunity motion will be based substantially on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
Fitzgerald
involved official actions by a sitting President while the allegations here relate to conduct that purportedly occurred prior to President Clinton’s assumption of office. The President acknowledges this distinction and states that his motion will not assert absolute immunity such as was afforded in
Fitzgerald,
but will recognize the plaintiffs right to reinstate the lawsuit after he leaves office. In asserting such a claim of immunity, the President will seek entitlement to a fundamental protection from suit previously unrecognized in any court. This claim may or may not succeed. Nevertheless, because of the “singular importance of the President’s duties,”
Fitzgerald,
In allowing the President to first assert the issue of immunity, the Court is permitting a procedure that is entirely consistent with the principles underlying absolute immunity. The “essence of absolute immunity is its possessor’s entitlement not to have to answer for his [alleged] conduct in a civil damages action.”
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Moreover, the immunity that will be asserted in this case is of a unique character and does not require an analysis of the allegations of the complaint. The Court thus has no need for dispositive motions at this time. Were the President asserting a defense of qualified immunity, the Court might well agree with the plaintiff that the substantive allegations of her complaint must be addressed. In such cases, courts are required to determine whether the alleged actions violated “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The immunity that will be asserted by the President, however, is premised on his status as President and does not require the Court to review the legal sufficiency of the complaint. Indeed, the allegations of the complaint are irrelevant. This Court “need not consider the correctness of the plaintiffs version of the facts, nor even determine whether the plaintiffs allegations actually state a claim. All it need determine is a question of law.”
Forsyth,
Nevertheless, plaintiff argues that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require ev
*906
ery defendant, including the President of the United States, to either answer a complaint or file a single dispositive motion raising all available grounds for dismissal, including absolute immunity. Certainly, that is one way to handle a case, but it is not the only way it can be done. Plaintiff asserts, however, that the briefing schedule sought by the President is “nothing less than a categorical suspension of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” To the contrary, Rule 12 specifically allows for successive motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
Sharma v. Skaarup Ship Management Corp.,
To be sure, the plaintiffs interest in seeking prompt relief for the alleged violation of her rights is certainly legitimate and not to be minimized. The Court, however, finds that plaintiffs concern that the briefing schedule proposed by the President will entail undue delay is unfounded. Should the Court deny the President’s claim of immunity, such order would be immediately appealable.
Forsyth,
Furthermore, it must be recognized that the relief plaintiff seeks is of a purely personal nature, the delay of which will affect but a single individual who waited two days short of three years in which to file her lawsuit. The President’s claim to immunity from suits for civil damages, on the other hand, is equally legitimate and may affect “not only the President and his office but also the Nation that the Presidency was designed to serve.”
Fitzgerald,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will allow the President to file a motion to dismiss on the grounds of Presidential immunity on or before August 10, 1994, and to defer *907 and preserve the filing of any other motions or pleadings that may or must be filed under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure until such time as the issue of Presidential immunity has been resolved by this Court. 6
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. During a telephone conference held on June 16, 1994, separate defendant Danny Ferguson stated that he had no position with respect to the matter now before the Court.
. Plaintiff also asserts conspiracy and defamation claims against separate defendant Ferguson.
. It is true that for some officials, the question of absolute immunity will depend upon the particular function the official is performing. Such an inquiry involves application of a " 'functional approach,’ which looks to 'the nature of the function performed, not the identity of the actor who performed it.' ”
Buckley v. Fitzsimmons,
— U.S. -, -,
. Plaintiff also argues that the cases cited by the President require that every defendant either answer a complaint or file a single dispositive motion raising all available grounds for dismissal. However, the courts in those cases did not specifically require the concurrent filing of all motions but simply addressed the particular procedure in which the litigants before them happened to proceed. Those cases do not stand for the proposition that the briefing schedule proposed by the President is inappropriate or otherwise preclud-
. As was previously noted, the Supreme Court has expressed concern that suits for civil damages could distract a President from his public duties.
Fitzgerald,
. Nothing in this Order should be construed as indicating how the Court will rule on the President's soon-to-be-filed immunity motion. This Order only addresses the procedural issue, not the substantive questions relating to immunity.
