Affirmеd by published opinion. Chief Judge WILKINSON, wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILKINS and Judge LUTTIG, joined.
OPINION
This case requires us to decide whether the district court properly dismissed plaintiffs suit on sovereign immunity grounds. We affirm the dismissal, but for reasons different from the district court.
I.
Plaintiff Sheila Montgomery worked as an administrative aide to the Warden of Maryland’s Eastern Correctional Institute (ECI). In September 1999, Montgomery took extended leave under the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) to have a scheduled surgical procedure. During her absence, Montgomery was reassigned to a position as a secretary in the maintenance department. It is undisputed that this new assignment kept her at the same pay grade and increment level within the Maryland State Personnеl Management System. It is also undisputed that Montgomery suffered no loss of benefits. Montgomery, however, felt that this transfer amounted to a retaliatory demotion in response to her having taken FMLA leave. She filed suit against the State of Maryland, ECI Warden Robert Kupec, and ECI Assistant Warden George Kaloroumakis. Kupec and Kalo-roumakis were sued in both their individual and official capacities.
In response to Montgomery’s suit, Maryland filed a motion to dismiss. At first, the state argued both that sovereign immunity barred Montgomery’s suit and that Montgomery had failed to state a claim because she was returned to an equivalent position. Before Montgomery replied, however, Maryland withdrew the Eleventh Amendment defense on behalf of all defendants.
Notwithstanding Maryland’s withdrawal of the argument, the district court, sua sponte, dismissed Montgomery’s suit on sovereign immunity grounds. Noting its “duty not to enforce unconstitutional statutes,” the court held that the FMLA did not abrogate Maryland’s sovereign immunity. The district court also held that the state’s withdrawal of the sovereign immunity defense did not amount to giving consent to be sued in federal court. The
II.
A.
We first ask whether the district court erred in deciding the sovereign immunity question. In Wisconsin Department of Corrections v. Schacht,
The district court failed to recognize the discretion afforded it by Schacht. To the contrary, the court explained its sua sponte consideration of the Eleventh Amendment issue as being requirеd by its “duty not to enforce unconstitutional statutes.” The court would have been well advised, however, not to take up the Eleventh Amendment defense. When a state' clearly contemplates the defense of sovereign immunity and then affirmatively and unequivocally decides to withdraw that argument, a district court errs in considering the issue sua sponte. This is true regardless of how the court ultimately rules. The Eleventh Amendment reflects the principle that in a federal system with dual sovereigns, one sovereign must treat the other with a measure of respect. See South Carolina State Ports Authority v. Federal Maritime Commission,
B.
In the appeal before this court, the State of Maryland reversed course and decided to aggressively invoke the defense of sovereign immunity. When asked at oral argument, counsel for the state unequivocally stated that Maryland was invoking its sovereign immunity as a defense to Montgomery’s suit. This assertion was followed by a letter which confirmed, for the record, that “the State appellees assert that the Eleventh Amendment bars the plaintiffs claim filed under the Family Medical Leave Act.” Because Maryland has pursued in this litigation what might be de
It is axiomatic “that the Eleventh Amendment defense sufficiently partakes of the nature of a jurisdictional bar so that it need not be raised in the trial court.” Edelman v. Jordan,
Further, circuit precedent allows the Eleventh Amendment to be raised for the first time on appeal, regardless of whether the case was resolved on the pleadings, see Suarez Corp. Indus. v. McGraw,
Montgomery contends, however, that Maryland’s conduct before the district court amounted to a waiver of the sovereign immunity defense. It is undisputed that thе defense of sovereign immunity can be waived. See South Carolina Ports,
Under Maryland law, however, the Attorney General may not dispositively waive the defense of sovereign immunity on behalf of the state. In Linkenhoker v. Weinberger,
Linkenhoker explicitly relied on Maryland law because in Ford, the Supreme Court held that whether executive officers of a state have validly waived the defense of sovereign immunity is determined by looking at “their pоwer under state law to do so.” Ford,
Montgomery acknowledges our holding in Linkenhoker and the underlying Brohawn decision, but claims that these cases have been superceded by subsequent legislative and judicial pronouncements. However, as the United States recognizes in its amicus brief, we relied upon Linkenhoker just four years ago for the proposition that “the Attorney General of Maryland lacks the authority to waive Eleventh Amendment immunity on behalf of the state and its officials.” Booth v. Maryland,
A failure to address the assertion of immunity would be inappropriate on several fronts. First, there is the important interest of not having private individuals impose a levy on state treasuries without any consent by the state itself. Secondly, there is a risk of judicially enforcing a private right of action which may rest upon an invalid exercisе of Congressional authority. Third, Maryland now quite explicitly asserts the Eleventh Amendment defense. Just as it might constitute a disregard of a state’s sovereign prerogative to entertain the defense in the face of an unequivocal withdrawal of immunity, so too might we abridge state sovereignty by failing to respect a claim of immunity in the face of the state’s unequivocаl assertion of it.
III.
Montgomery asserts claims against the State of Maryland, as well as against Warden Robert Rupee and Assistant Warden George Kaloroumakis in both them official and individual capacities. With one exception, the Eleventh Amendment bars all these claims.
A.
First, Montgomery’s claims against the state are barred by the Eleventh Amendment. The Eleventh Amendmеnt bars private suits against unconsenting states unless Congress can validly abrogate a state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. See Alden v. Maine,
Second, the Eleventh Amendment bars Montgomery’s claims against Kupec and Kaloroumakis for retroactive relief in their official capacities. “The Eleventh Amendment bars a suit against state officials when ‘the state is the real, substantial party in interest.’ ” Pennhurst State School & Hosp. v. Halderman,
Third, Montgomery’s claims against Kupec and Kaloroumakis in their individual capacities must be dismissed as well. Normally, of course, the Eleventh Amendment does not bar claims by privаte plaintiffs against individual officers in their individual capacities. See Hafer v. Melo,
Montgomery has not allegеd that she suffered actual monetary damages, either in lost wages or in the cost of providing care. Rather, her demand for monetary relief appears to be rooted solely in her claim for emotional damages. The FMLA text nowhere provides, however, for recovery of damages for emotional distress. See Settle v. S.W. Rodgers, Co.,
B.
The only remaining claim against the individual supervisors in their official capacities is Montgomery’s claim for reinstatement to her former position. This claim can proceed because Montgomery’s complaint alleges an ongoing violation of federаl law. See Ex parte Young,
Montgomery’s complaint focuses on precisely the sorts of de minimis, intangible, and unmeasurable aspects of a job that the regulations sрecifically exclude. For example, she contends that her duties formerly were “truly administrative,” but now are “the simplest, most menial of clerical functions: answering the phone, taking messages, typing simple correspondence, and the like.” Moreover, she claims that while she used to have “her own work area,” now she must work in a “room shared with anothеr employee.” Finally, she contends that she has diminished job security.
Montgomery concedes, however, that her pay grade and increment level remained the same. The record reflects that both before and after her leave, Montgomery was classified as an “Administrative Aide Stenographer” by the Maryland State Personnel Management System. She аlso received a four percent raise within two months of being transferred. And since Montgomery’s transfer did not require a change in classification, she has not lost any job security. Cf. Hampton v. Univ. of Md.,
Ms. Montgomery is no more, and no less, subject to adverse action by the*342 Maryland State Personnel Management System now, as assigned to the Maintenance Department at ECI, than she was when she was formerly assigned to the Warden’s office at ECI. Her employment rights within the [system] ... have not changed with her reassignment from the Warden’s office to the Maintenance Department.
Montgomery’s оther complaints, such as the alleged reduction in the complexity of her tasks and the sharing of work space, also fall within the excluded de minimis category. The difference between “truly administrative” tasks and “answering the phone, taking messages, typing simple correspondence, and the like” is not of sufficient magnitude, especially given the equivalent рay grade, increment level, and administrative classification, to constitute an FMLA violation. And the difference between having one’s own work space and having to share space with one other person is not of such import as to implicate the protections of the governing federal law. In sum, Montgomery’s claim for reinstatement was properly dismissed.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We do not, of course, address the propriety of sua sponte consideration of Eleventh Amendment defenses which the state has not raised. See, e.g., Higgins v. Mississippi,
. Montgomery is likewise not entitled to in-junctive relief because her complaint demonstrates that her change in status was not related to her assertion of her rights under the Family and Medical Leave Act. According to her own summary of her complaint, the Defendants transferred her "to retaliate against her for filing a grievance and otherwise complaining of her work conditions.” As it is evident that Montgomery would have been transferred even if she had not taken medical leave, she has no right to be returned to her preleave position. See 29 C.F.R. §§ 825.216(a), 825.312(d) (2000).
