Ulus JORDEN, Jr., Appellant,
v.
NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU, Departments of the Army and the Air
Force; Emmett H. Walker, Jr., Chief, National Guard Bureau;
Richard M. Scott, Major General (PA), The Adjutant General,
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; John D. Campbell,
individually and as Colonel, Pennsylvania Air National Guard
Base Detachment Commander; and Henry C. Frisby,
individually and as Major, Pennsylvania Air National Guard
Chief, Administration, Appellees.
No. 85-1664.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued June 3, 1986.
Decided Aug. 27, 1986.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied Oct. 23, 1986.
Frank Finch, III (Argued), McDaniel, Dade, Wheeler & Walwyn, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellant.
Edward S.G. Dennis, Jr., U.S. Atty., Walter S. Batty, Jr., Asst. U.S. Atty., Chief of Appeals, Margaret L. Hutchinson, Asst. U.S. Atty., Philadelphia, Pa., Thomas M. Crowley (Argued), Office of the Attorney General, Harrisburg, Pa., Marilyn D. Barton, Major, USAF (Argued), Office of the Judge Advocate General, U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C., for appellees.
Before GIBBONS, BECKER, and STAPLETON, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Circuit Judge.
This case requires us to determine the susceptibility of National Guard officers to suits by guardsmen for damages and injunctive relief. Plaintiff, Ulus Jorden, discharged from both his military and civilian positions in the Pennsylvania Air National Guard ("PaANG"), sought damages against his superiors and reinstatement to both positions. Relying on Chappell v. Wallace,
Although we find that the district court acted correctly in dismissing Jorden's claims for damages, we conclude that it erred in dismissing his claims for injunctive relief, i.e., reinstatement, accordingly, we shall affirm in part and reverse in part and remand this case for further proceedings.
Part I of this opinion sets forth the necessary background--the structure of the National Guard and the facts and procedural history of this case. Part II begins with a brief history of the case law concerning the immunity of military officers from damages claims, and then applies that body of law to the instant case. Similarly, Part III begins with a brief history of the case law concerning the reviewability of claims for injunctive relief against the military, and then considers its applicability to Jorden's claims for reinstatement.1I. Background
A. Structure of the National Guard
As this court noted recently in Johnson v. Orr,
The Guard's status is further complicated by its having a mixture of military and civilian elements. In addition to its military complement, the Guard hires full-time civilian technicians. The technician program provides various services critical to the Guard's mission: maintenance of equipment and facilities, support of aircraft operations, and clerical functions. The technician program too involves federal and state elements. Although the 1968 National Guard Technicians Act, 32 U.S.C. Sec. 709 (1982), made civilian technicians federal employees, the technician program is administered at the state level.2 The adjutant general, a state officer, is in charge of personnel matters. Finally, and significant in this case, in order to be eligible for a technician position, one must be a Guard military member. 32 U.S.C. Sec. 709(b). A Guard technician is automatically dismissed from his civilian technician position if he loses his military membership, 32 U.S.C. Sec. 709(e)(6), and can otherwise be dismissed "for cause." 32 U.S.C. Sec. 709(e)(3).
B. Facts And Procedural History
In 1956 plaintiff-appellant Jorden became the first black member to enlist in PaANG. Two years later he became a full-time civilian technician in PaANG as well. For the next twenty-five years he served in both capacities without incident. Beginning in 1981, however, Jorden became either a "whistleblower" or a "troublemaker," depending on whom one believes. He launched a series of protests alleging various abuses by his superiors, including impermissible expenditure of Guard funds and discriminatory treatment of him personally.
Jorden alleges that his complaints were legitimate, that they were not followed up adequately, and that instead they led to a campaign of harassment against him. In October, 1984, he was called alone (without his unit), in an Order of the Governor, to active duty for twenty-three days of "special training." The order specified that, during the twenty-three day period, Jorden was to report to the Malcolm Grow Medical Center for psychiatric evaluation.
Jorden refused to comply, believing that the governor was not empowered to call out a single guardsman for such a special session. Following Jorden's non-compliance, PaANG Adjutant General Richard M. Scott dismissed him from his military position in PaANG. Thereupon, Jorden's technician employment was automatically terminated, because, as we have noted, only military members of the Guard are eligible for technician employment. At the time of his discharge, Jorden was a master sergeant in the PaANG military unit and an assistant office manager in the technician program.
Jorden then brought a civil rights suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania alleging that his various superiors had engaged in a conspiracy to harass him and to discharge him on the basis of race and in retaliation for the exercise of his first amendment rights. Specifically, he asserted claims for damages under 42 U.S.C. Secs. 1983, 1985 and 1986 against General Scott, Colonel John D. Campbell and Major Henry C. Frisby, all of whom were both his military officers and his civilian supervisors; a pendent state common law claim of defamation against Scott, Campbell and Frisby; and claims for reinstatement against the aforementioned defendants, as well as against Emmett Walker, Chief of the National Guard Bureau ("NGB") and against the NGB itself.3
Defendants moved for dismissal of plaintiff's entire case, invoking both Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6). As we have noted, the district court granted the motion to dismiss,4 finding that Jorden's federal claims were barred by Chappell v. Wallace,
A. History of the Availability of Damages Suits Against Military Officers
Military officers have not always been afforded absolute immunity from damages suits. The leading nineteenth century case is Wilkes v. Dinsman,
The ability of servicemen and other aggrieved persons to recover damages in a military context was dealt a severe blow by the Supreme Court's decision in Feres v. United States,
The availability of damages relief against military officers was subsequently affected by two Supreme Court cases that did not involve military officers but whose holdings concerned damages actions against government officials in general. In Monroe v. Pape,
However, in 1982, this court held that soldiers who alleged that they were ordered to stand in a field while a nuclear device was exploded nearby could not bring a Bivens damages action against their federal military officers. Jaffe v. United States,
One year later, in Chappell v. Wallace,
As noted, the district court found that Chappell barred Jorden's damages suit. Determining whether this holding was correct requires analysis of two issues. First, we must decide whether the reasoning of Chappell, which dealt with a Bivens claim against federal military officers, also applies to Sec. 1983 actions against state military officers. Because we conclude that it does, we must then consider Jorden's contention that Chappell does not prohibit all or even most damages actions against military officers but compels a fact-specific inquiry into whether judicial review in a particular case will unduly interfere with the military mission.7
B. Does Chappell Apply To Sec. 1983 Actions?
Jorden's counsel made clear at oral argument that the claim against Walker, the only federal military officer in the case, was for injunctive relief only. Thus, this case involves no Bivens damages claims. Rather, Jorden's damages claims are brought against state military officers under the Reconstruction Civil Rights statutes. Because Chappell involved Bivens claims against federal military officers, and not Sec. 1983 claims against state military officers, it is not clear whether Chappell controls this case. This uncertainty is heightened by two footnotes near the end of the Chappell opinion.
Footnote 2 distinguished Wilkes v. Dinsman, supra, on the ground that "[Wilkes ] involved a well-recognized common law cause of action ... and did not ask the Court to imply a new kind of cause of action."
We believe that the issue is more problematic than these courts have suggested. Bivens claims and Sec. 1983 claims are not entirely parallel, for the former is a judicially-created remedy while the latter was created by Congress. As we noted in Johnson v. Orr,
Butz posed the obverse situation of the instant case. In Butz, the government tried to argue that notwithstanding the fact that the Court had granted state officials only qualified immunity under Sec. 1983, federal officials should receive greater immunity from Bivens claims. In the instant case, the Supreme Court having already held that federal military officials have immunity, the question is whether state officials should receive equal immunity. This distinction is not significant, however, given the unequivocal command of Butz that Bivens claims and Sec. 1983 suits are to be treated as identical for the purposes of immunity:
[I]n the absence of congressional direction to the contrary, there is no basis for according to federal officials a higher degree of immunity from liability when sued for a constitutional infringement as authorized by Bivens than is accorded state officials when sued for the identical violation under Sec. 1983. The constitutional injuries made actionable by Sec. 1983 are of no greater magnitude than those for which federal officials may be responsible. The pressures and uncertainties facing decisionmakers in state government are little if at all different from those affecting federal officials. We see no sense in holding a state governor liable but immunizing the head of a federal department; in holding the administrator of a federal hospital immune where the superintendent of a state hospital would be liable.... Moreover, the Government's analysis would place undue emphasis on the congressional origins of the cause of action in determining the level of immunity.... [W]e deem it untenable to draw a distinction for purposes of immunity law between suits brought against state officials under Sec. 1983 and suits brought directly under the Constitution against federal officials.
Butz,
A holding that Chappell applies to bar or limit Sec. 1983 damages claim is troublesome in one respect. Immunity from Sec. 1983 damages claims generally requires a court's determination that: 1) there was a common law immunity at the time of the passage of Sec. 1983 in 1871; and 2) Congress did not seek to abolish that immunity in passing Sec. 1983. City of Newport v. Facts Concerts, Inc.,
In sum, to apply Chappell to Sec. 1983 actions is problematic because Chappell was based not on the existence of a common law immunity for military officers but on policy considerations that, while relevant to immunity of federal officers from Bivens suits, may be less relevant to immunity of state officers from Sec. 1983 suits.9 Even if this argument is correct, however, Butz prevents us from adopting it. The argument contradicts the unequivocal command of Butz that immunity for federal officers from Bivens claims is identical to that of state officers from Sec. 1983 suits.
Nor can we evade the command of Butz by stating that, as a matter of policy, immunity for federal military officers is more important than immunity for state military officers. Rather, we recognize that "[t]he Guard is an essential reserve component of the Armed Forces of the United States." Gilligan v. Morgan,
Thus, the conclusion that state military officers have at least a certain immunity from Sec. 1983 damage actions is compelled by the combination of Chappell and Butz: the former disallowing a Bivens claim against federal military officials and the latter holding that Bivens claims and Sec. 1983 suits must be treated the same for purposes of immunity.10 Our next task is to determine the scope of that immunity.
C. The Scope of Chappell's Prohibition on Damage Claims
We have just determined that, notwithstanding the fact that Chappell dealt with a Bivens claim against federal military officers whereas Jorden's damages claim is a Sec. 1983 claim against state military officers, Chappell applies to this case. It does not necessarily follow, however, that Jorden's claim is barred. Rather, we must consider Jorden's contention that Chappell bars damages action only after a court has determined that, in a particular case, hearing a damages claim would threaten military discipline.
The majority of courts to consider the question have rejected that contention, holding instead that Chappell establishes a per se prohibition of damages actions against military officers for violations of constitutional rights. Trerice v. Summons,
Jorden relies primarily on the reasoning of Stanley v. United States,
We believe that the Stanley court misread Chappell. It appears to have been influenced by the following statement in Chappell: "[N]or do we now hold, that military personnel are barred from all redress in civilian courts for constitutional wrongs suffered in the course of military service."
The clear implication of Chappell is that while some non-damage constitutional claims involving the military remain viable, damage claims do not. The Stanley court's approach would frequently require courts to make difficult and hair-splitting distinctions as to whether a particular claim was the sort that, if legally actionable, would threaten military discipline. This approach seems questionable as a matter of policy. In any event, we simply do not read Chappell as sanctioning this kind of case-by-case approach.
We thus believe that the Supreme Court was laying down a general rule barring damages actions by military personnel against superior officers for constitutional violations, rather than authorizing a fact-specific inquiry. The Eighth Circuit understands Chappell to leave room for an exception where the conduct complained of has "total antipathy to any conceivable military purpose." Brown v. United States,
III. Jorden's Claims For Reinstatement
Our conclusion in part II establishes that the district court was correct to dismiss Jorden's claim for damages. We now turn to his claim for injunctive relief, i.e., reinstatement.
A. History of Availability Of Injunctive Relief Against The Military
The Supreme Court has heard many cases involving claims for injunctive relief against the military without even suggesting that the claims were not reviewable in a civilian court. The most notable exception is Gilligan v. Morgan,
[I]t should be clear that we neither hold nor imply that the conduct of the National Guard is always beyond judicial review or that there may not be accountability in a judicial forum for violations of law or for specific unlawful conduct by military personnel, whether by way of damages or injunctive relief.
Id. at 11-12,
Several subsequent cases have confirmed that the Court has not established a per se rule that military matters are not subject to judicial review. Rotsker v. Goldberg,
Chappell made no direct reference to claims for injunctive relief against the military, but it did cite Brown, Parker and Frontiero as examples of suits against the military that remain viable.
This court, too, has entertained suits for injunctive relief against the military. In Jaffe v. United States,
B. Should Jorden's Claims for Reinstatement Have Been Dismissed?
Although the district court made no specific mention of Jorden's claims for injunctive relief, i.e., reinstatement, it apparently found those claims barred by Chappell. We disagree. Chappell itself suggests that it leaves open claims for injunctive relief against the military, and has been so interpreted by every court to consider the question. Moreover, we find that permitting injunctive relief while denying a damages remedy is supported by considerations of policy. Finally, the law of this circuit dictates that Jorden's claim for injunctive relief be permitted.
As noted above, Chappell stated that it was not closing the door on claims against the military for constitutional violations, and cited as examples of viable actions three cases--Brown, Frontiero, and Parker--that involved injunctive relief. It is true that those cases, like Rotsker, involved facial constitutional challenges to regulations or statutes concerning the military. However, the Court in Brown expressly stated that judicial scrutiny was not limited to facial constitutional challenges; rather, legitimate constitutional claims could arise from the application of these statutes and regulations.
All of the courts to consider the question have held that Chappell leaves open claims by discharged military personnel for injunctive relief. Ogden v. United States,
The district court did not expressly deny plaintiffs' claims for injunctive relief nor specifically consider whether the Chappell decision was also a bar to such relief. We hold that Chappell does not preclude an equitable remedy and that the district court erred in not addressing the injunctive requests. Chappell contains the express qualification that military personnel are not barred from "all redress in civilian courts for constitutional wrongs suffered in the course of military service." The Court cited three of its decisions as supporting this proposition. These cases involved facial attacks on the constitutionality of statutes and regulations concerning the military ... The suits requested nonmonetary relief, as opposed to the monetary damages sought in Chappell ... The implication that the Court could forbid the unconstitutional prohibition of protected conduct is clear.
One of the concerns underlying Chappell is the need for military officers' uninhibited decisionmaking, and the threat to such decisionmaking if officers fear personal liability. The threat of personal liability for damages poses a unique deterrent to vigorous decisionmaking. See generally, P. Schuck, Suing Government (1983). On the other hand, the possibility that an officer may be compelled by a court to cease applying a particular regulation in an arbitrary manner, or to reinstate an improperly discharged soldier, poses much less of a threat to vigorous decisionmaking. Indeed, it is for this reason that government officials are often immune from damages but susceptible to injunctions. See, e.g., Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union,
Our analysis of Chappell, however, does not end the case. For while Chappell did not require the district court to dismiss Jorden's claim for reinstatement, it did not require the court to hear the claim. Absent a decree from the Supreme Court to the contrary, lower courts must apply their own jurisprudence to determine whether claims for injunctive relief against the military are appropriate. For example, after finding that Chappell did not bar plaintiff's claim, the First Circuit in Pengaricano dismissed the claim by virtue of First Circuit law on reviewability of claims involving the military. Thus, the question whether the district court erred in dismissing Jorden's claim for reinstatement turns on this court's approach to the availability of claims for injunctive relief against military officials.
As noted, the law in this circuit, established in Dillard v. Brown, heavily disfavors finding injunctive claims against the military non-reviewable.14 Dillard involved a woman Guard member who was discharged from the Guard because of a regulation that forbade the enlistment of single parents. She alleged that the Guard had applied the regulation in an unconstitutionally discriminatory manner.15 The district court had held that this military matter was not reviewable in the civilian courts. This court reversed, holding that suits against the military are non-cognizable in federal court only in the rare case where finding for plaintiff "require[s] a court to run the military."
Like the plaintiff in Dillard, Jorden alleges that he was discharged in violation of his constitutional rights. Also like plaintiff in Dillard, if Jorden establishes a constitutional violation, the remedy will be a court-ordered reinstatement, rather than the kind of ongoing judicial oversight held inappropriate in Gilligan. Under Dillard, Jorden's claims for reinstatement are reviewable.
As we have explained above, Chappell neither required nor forbade the district court from dismissing Jorden's claims for reinstatement. We believe the law of this circuit, supported by considerations of policy, dictates that these claims should not have been dismissed.17
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we hold that the district court was correct in dismissing Jorden's damages claims, but incorrect in dismissing his claims for reinstatement. Thus, on remand, if Jorden can demonstrate that the discharges violated his constitutional rights, he is entitled to reinstatement.
We shall affirm the judgment of the district court insofar as it dismisses plaintiff's damages claims and dismisses all claims against the NGB. We shall reverse the judgment of the district court insofar as it dismisses plaintiff's claims for injunctive relief against the individual defendants, and shall remand this case for further proceedings.
GIBBONS, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I join the opinion of the court to the extent that it reverses the district court's dismissal of Jorden's claims for injunctive relief. However, I disagree with the majority's disposition of the damage claims, and I dissent on this point.
The issue presented by Jorden's appeal of the district court's dismissal of his damage claims is whether a state national guard official is immune from a section 1983 suit brought by another member of the national guard unit. The Supreme Court frequently has addressed claims bearing on immunities available to section 1983 defendants and in doing so has delineated a relatively straightforward analysis for assessing such claims. Resort to that controlling analysis in this case makes quite clear that the defendants here are not immune from damage liability under section 1983.
In assessing immunity claims by 1983 defendants, the Court first has looked to see if any relevant immunity existed prior to the enactment of section 1983. If such immunity did exist, the Court has then looked at the legislative history that accompanied enactment of section 1983 to see if it reveals any congressional intent to abolish that immunity. Should no such intent manifest itself, the Court finally has weighed policy considerations relevant to the asserted immunity. Only when all three conditions have been satisfied--the existence of preexisting immunity, the absence of congressional intent to abolish that immunity, and the absence of policies disfavoring immunity--has the Court held the defendant to be immune. See City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc.,
In this case, in which state national guard officers contend that they are absolutely immune from a damage suit brought by a subordinate, one cannot progress past the first step of the analysis. Not only were military officers not immune from such damage actions prior to enactment of section 1983, the Supreme Court, in a case decided shortly before the passage of section 1983, held expressly that they were liable in such actions. See Wilkes v. Dinsman,
To his credit, Judge Becker acknowledges the Supreme Court's methodology for evaluating immunity claims asserted by state officials defending section 1983 suits, at 106, and notes that prior to the enactment of section 1983 military officials were not immune from damage suits, at 105. However, other than to note that his holding is "troublesome in one respect," at 103, he offers no explanation of how the holding squares with the acknowledged methodology or with the noted immunity law.
What Judge Becker does offer in defense of his holding is Butz v. Economou,
First, Judge Becker mischaracterizes the holding of Butz. In that case the plaintiffs brought a Bivens action against officials of the executive branch of the federal government. The district court and the court of appeals had rejected the defendants' assertions that they were absolutely immune, and the defendants had appealed. In assessing the defendants' claim to absolute immunity, the Court canvassed one hundred and fifty years of Supreme Court case law that had held federal executive branch officials to be liable in damage suits in various circumstances, see id.
Judge Becker reads Butz to stand for the "unequivocal command ... that Bivens' claims and Sec. 1983 suits are to be treated as identical for the purpose of immunity." At 106. To the extent that statement suggests--as Judge Becker's analysis indicates--that Butz holds that any state defendant sued for damages under section 1983 is absolutely immune if that defendant's federal counterpart would be absolutely immune to a Bivens claim, he is distorting Butz. Furthermore, implicit in such a suggestion is the assertion that Butz modifies the cases in which the Court has delineated pellucidly the analysis--discussed above--appropriate for determining when state officials are immune from section 1983 damage actions. Nothing in Butz, or in Fact Concerts, which was decided after Butz, supports such a novel assertion.
Even if one were to assume for the purposes of argument that Butz establishes the proposition for which Judge Becker cites it, the reasoning underlying his resolution of the immunity issue is still flawed. Judge Becker argues that in light of Butz the state national guard defendants are immune from this section 1983 suit because, he asserts, the Supreme Court held in Chappell that federal military officials are immune to Bivens suits. Yet this argument is unavailing, for Chappell does not hold what Judge Becker suggests it does.
In Chappell enlisted naval men filed a Bivens suit against their superior officers, seeking damages for alleged constitutional violations. The district court dismissed the plaintiffs' complaint on the grounds that the underlying military actions could not be reviewed by a civilian court, that the defendants were immune, and that the plaintiffs had failed to exhaust administrative remedies.
In a unanimous decision the Court reversed the Ninth Circuit. However, contrary to the necessary implication of Judge Becker's argument, that reversal was not predicated on the conclusion that the defendants were immune from suit. Indeed, it is quite clear that the Court did not address the issue of the defendants' immunity. Rather, the decision dealt only with the propriety of extending the judicially-created Bivens remedy to the plaintiffs, as the Court focused exclusively on whether the "special factors counselling hesitation" were present. See id. at 298-304,
Finally, the issue remains whether the state national guard officials whose liability we consider here are the same as the federal naval officers whose liability the Court considered in Chappell. Resolution of this issue is critical because, even if Judge Becker's interpretation of Butz and Chappell were correct, that interpretation would allow one to conclude that the defendants here are immune from suit only if one concluded that they are state equivalents of the federal officials who were the defendants in Chappell.
Judge Becker does not attempt to argue that for the purposes of his analysis state national guard officials are the same as federal military officers. Rather, he sidesteps the issue by asserting blithely that we cannot "evade the command of Butz by stating that, as a matter of policy, immunity for federal military officers is more important than immunity for state military officers." At 106. This position is contrary to Supreme Court precedent. In Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
Turning to the substance of the matter, the federal military and state national guards differ in obvious and significant ways. As the Court explained in Chappell, the principal rationale for barring intramilitary damage actions by federal personnel is the concern for "disruption of the peculiar and special relationship of the soldier to his superiors that might result if the soldier were allowed to hale his superiors into court."
Judge Becker's argument that the Supreme Court's holdings in Butz and Chappell compel the conclusion that the state national guard officers who are the defendants in the case before us are immune to a section 1983 damage suit is indefensible. Further, controlling Supreme Court precedent governing the recognition of immunities available to section 1983 defendants makes clear that these defendants are not absolutely immune from a section 1983 suit for damages. I therefore dissent from the majority opinion to the extent it holds otherwise.
Notes
It is useful at the outset to distinguish among several terms that arise in cases involving the military. First, courts usually invoke the term "immunity" to refer only to whether particular defendants are susceptible to or are free from damages actions, while using "reviewability" to refer more generally to the appropriateness of a civilian court hearing cases that involve military matters. See Wallace v. Chappell,
Thus, in Johnson v. Orr,
Because Jorden asserted no proper jurisdictional basis for a suit against the NGB, the NGB was properly dismissed as a defendant. The NGB is an agency of the United States and is thus protected from lawsuits unless there has been a waiver of sovereign immunity. The Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), 5 U.S.C. Sec. 702 et seq. (1982), constitutes such a waiver, but Jorden does not make an APA challenge to actions of the NGB, whose only official action, the withdrawal of recognition of Jorden in ANGUS, was ministerial. Jorden does not dispute that, once he was removed from PaANG, he automatically lost his status in ANGUS. Rather, he intimated to the district court that certain currently unknown employees of the NGB (in addition to Walker) were aware of the conspiracy against him and acquiesced in it in violation of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1986. However, while such individuals may be sued, the NGB is not a "person" within Sec. 1986. Nor is it necessary to include the NGB as a defendant to enable the implementation of a court order of injunctive relief. State defendants can reinstate Jorden to PaANG, and defendant Walker, Chief of the NGB, can reinstate Jorden to ANGUS
The district court's opinion did not distinguish 12(b)(1) and (6), and its order did not specify whether the dismissal was pursuant to (1) or (6)
In a conclusory footnote, the court held that Jorden's failure to exhaust administrative remedies was an additional basis for dismissal. We disagree. It is true that Jorden has recourse to the Air Force Board for the Corrections of Military Records ("AFBCMR") under 10 U.S.C. Sec. 1552. (Jorden has petitioned for relief under Sec. 1552 and the petition is pending.) Some courts have dismissed actions because plaintiffs had not availed themselves of this remedy, see, e.g., Sanders v. McCrady,
Neither the district court nor defendants contend that there are adequate state remedies, and, in any event, the exhaustion of state administrative remedies is not required in Sec. 1983 actions, Patsy v. Florida Board of Regents,
Prior to Monroe it was widely believed that Sec. 1983's "color of law" requirement was met only where the state had authorized the conduct in question. Monroe clarified that the "color of law" requirement extended to "any official conduct--whether valid under state law or not." P. Schuck, Suing Government 48
We shall focus our analysis on Chappell because we find that Jaffe v. United States,
It bears emphasis that in both Brown and Martelon, as in the instant case, the military officers were National Guard officers whose training and military exercises are generally integrated with the National defense
One commentator made this point in criticizing Harlow v. Fitzgerald, supra, for treating Sec. 1983 and Bivens claims as identical for immunity purposes:
The abrogation of the subjective element of immunity in Harlow, however, was premised solely upon the Court's assessment of public policy. While this may be appropriate for Bivens actions, which are largely a creation of the judiciary, the Court does not have the discretion to depart from the intent of the legislature and apply its own notions of policy to section 1983 actions.
As previously discussed, immunity to section 1983 liability is founded in Congress' presumed adoption of immunities that were established at common law. Therefore, the paramaters of the qualified immunity under section 1983 must be defined by reference to the common law.... The judicial abolition of the subjective element of the immunity for Bivens actions ... cannot and should not simply be extended to section 1983 actions. Only Congress may properly determine whether public policy mandates amending section 1983 ... for the immunity defense.
Gildin, The Standard of Culpability In Section 1983 and Bivens Actions: The Prima Facie Case, Qualified Immunity And The Constitution, 11 Hofstra L.Rev. 557, 587-88 (1983).
The question whether Sec. 1983 and Bivens actions should be treated identically for immunity purposes turns, in part, on how much significance ought be attached to the fact that Congress has provided explicit statutory remedies against state officers but not against federal officers. Compare majority opinion in Butz,
Judge Gibbons would apparently limit Butz to its facts, and not read it to require that federal officials and state officials be treated alike for immunity purposes. However, he overlooks the significance of the Court's extensive discussion, see supra p. 105, designed to show that logic dictates that federal officials and their counterpart state officials should be equally susceptible or insusceptible to suit. Given this lesson of Butz, Judge Gibbons' other point, that Chappell is not actually an immunity decision, is insignificant. Chappell limits the availability of Bivens damages actions against federal military officials, and we would therefore contradict the logic of Butz if we did not similarly limit the availability of Sec. 1983 damages actions against state military officials
On the basis of Nixon v. Fitzgerald Judge Gibbons argues in his dissent that, as a general matter, analogy between the immunities accorded state and federal officials is improper. The Nixon Court did in fact reject such an analogy, but it did so because of "[t]he President's unique status under the Constitution."
Jorden relied on the opinion of the Florida district court, because it was not affirmed until after the briefing and oral argument in this case had already occurred. However, the Eleventh Circuit adopted the district court's reasoning
Jorden sought damages under 42 U.S.C. Secs. 1985(3) and 1986 as well. Having determined that defendants are immune from a damages action under Sec. 1983, we cannot see any basis for holding them susceptible to suit under Secs. 1985 and 1986. See Mollnow v. Carlton,
In addition, we must dismiss Jorden's common law cause of action. Chappell hinted that the common law cause of action in Wilkes v. Dinsman may remain viable,
It is worth noting that we do not determine the availability of a damages action in a case like Johnson v. Orr, supra n. 2, where a Guard technician is dismissed from his civilian employment for circumstances arising wholly in the civilian context.
The Eighth Circuit assumed without deciding that the district court was correct in finding that Chappell did not bar the injunctive claim
It is clear that Dillard was not overruled by either Chappell or Jaffe II. We have already discussed at length the fact that Chappell does not bar claims for injunctive relief. Similarly, in Jaffe II we explicitly stated that "what we are called upon to decide is simply whether plaintiffs are entitled to money damages."
She also alleged that the regulation was facially unconstitutional, a claim this court appeared to regard as frivolous.
In Dillard we explicitly rejected the test set forth by the Fifth Circuit in Mindes v. Seaman,
Obviously, the claims for reinstatement against state defendants are properly brought under Sec. 1983. Jurisdiction over defendant Walker, Chief of the NGB, is maintainable either under Sec. 1983 or directly under the Constitution. See Knights of the Klu Klux Klan v. East Baton Rouge Parish,
The Court subsequently affirmed this holding in Dinsman v. Wilkes,
Judge Becker attempts to equate state national guards with the federal military by pointing out that national guards are federal reserve components and by noting that they might be involved in hostilities in case of a "surprise attack" on this country. At 106-107. By this reasoning, the military-discipline rationale of Chappell would bar conscriptable male civilians from suing military officials for damages, for they are as likely to be involved in hostilities as is any member of a state national guard
Furthermore, Judge Becker's effort to equate state national guards with the federal military ignores the important differences in the roles of those two organizations. State national guards serve to protect the states from domestic, civil disorder. By contrast the federal military--and the national guards, when federalized--serve to protect the country from external threats. Indeed, federal law prohibits the federal military from participating in domestic security operations. See Posse Comitatus Act, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1385 (1982).
