We are presented here with the narrow question of whether a state probation officer, who mistakenly causes the arrest and incarceration of a person on probation, may claim absolute or only qualified immunity in a § 1983 damage suit. The district court below directed a verdict for defendant-ap-pellees at the close of plaintiff-appellant’s case, on the ground that the probation officer was cloaked with absolute immunity for her actions. Since we find that the probation officer in the immediate case was only entitled to qualified immunity, we vacate the district court’s order and remand.
Appellant, Michael Galvan, was sentenced to three years probation on October 24, 1979, on a theft conviction. On April 9, 1981, a person named Michael Galvan was arrested in Austin, Texas, for driving while intoxicated and unlawfully carrying a weapon. Peggy Grose, a Travis County probation officer, noticed Galvan’s name on the jail roster. Assuming that the person in jail was appellant, she prepared a motion to revoke his probation. An arrest warrant was issued and Galvan was arrested on June 24, 1981. He remained incarcerated for twenty days. The motion to revoke probation was withdrawn on July 13, 1981, when it was ascertained that the person *215 arrested on April 9, 1981, and appellant were different persons.
Appellant then filed this § 1983 suit against a number of individuals including Grose, Giles Garmon, Director of the Travis County Adult Probation Department, and the Travis County Adult Probation Department. Appellant contended that his constitutional rights were violated by the actions of the probation department in erroneously causing his arrest and incarceration. The case went to trial. At the close of plaintiff’s case, the district court granted a directed verdict to all defendants on the ground that they were protected by absolute immunity. Appellant appeals, claiming that appellees are protected only by qualified immunity.
The Supreme Court has recently noted that absolute immunity protects “officials whose special functions or constitutional status requires complete protection from suit,” such as legislators, judges, prosecutors and executive officers engaged in adjudicative functions.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The district court based its decision on
Spaulding v. Nielsen,
We have no occasion to decide today, and do not decide, whether immunity will shield probation officers from civil liability for official activities apart from the presentence report process.
In light of the Supreme Court decision in
Harlow,
as well as the cautionary notes struck in other cases rendered by this Court,
1
we find no absolute immunity in the immediate situation. Qualified immunity, as redefined by the Supreme Court in
Harlow,
permits state officers to be subjected to suits only if the officials’ conduct clearly violated an established statutory or constitutional right of which a reasonable person would have known.
2
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Williams v. Rhoden,
. We do not pass upon either the question of whether appellant has a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 or the question of whether appellant has alleged or proved that appellees clearly violated an established constitutional right of which they reasonably should have known. The district court did not reach the qualified immunity issue, and we remand for the court’s consideration of this question.
. In so concluding, we do not pass upon whether appellee Travis County Adult Probation Department is a proper defendant or whether, if it is, if it is to be considered analogous to a municipality. Nor do we pass upon what defenses are available to it if it is to be considered analogous to a municipality. See
Owen v. City of Independence,
