Defendant Luba Routsong appeals the trial court’s denial of her motion for summary judgment on the state constitutional and tort claims against her. Because we find defendant entitled to summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity, we reverse.
. This litigation stems from the investigation, incarceration, and unsuccessful attempts to criminally prosecute and revoke the conditional pardon of plaintiff, Robert Murray, for the alleged sexual molestation of two minors. Plaintiff, along with his wife and child, initiated the litigation against thirteen individuals, claiming violations of plaintiff’s federal and state constitutional rights, as well as the commission of the torts of malicious arrest, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Defendant is a former caseworker for the Vermont Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS). The background necessary for disposition of her appeal is sketched below.
On March 13,1985, a mother telephoned the Vermont Probation and Parole Office in Newport to complain that plaintiff, a neighbor, had sexually molested her two daughters, ages seven and ten. The Probation and Parole Office notified Corporal Leo Willey of the Vermont State Police, who then contacted defendant at the SRS office in Newport. Defendant and Corporal Willey interviewed the mother, father, and the two daughters at the family’s home, and took taped statements from the daughters at the state police barracks later that day. In those state *624 ments both daughters indicated that they had been sexually molested by plaintiff. Defendant then prepared the daughters for testifying before the Parole Board, and was present at those proceedings on March 29, 1985. The Parole Board, two and a half months later, reported to the Governor that it could not find, by substantial evidence, support for the charge that plaintiff had committed a criminal offense. A notice of dismissal of the criminal charges that had been brought against plaintiff was filed on June 25, 1987.
In his complaint, plaintiff alleges that defendant had undertaken a “one-sided investigation of the fact situation,” had purposefully withheld information from psychologists who interviewed the daughters, and had, along with Corporal Willey,
manipulated [the] interviews with the . . . children on March 13,1985, conducted them in a highly leading manner, taped only those portions of the interviews that were damaging to Mr. Murray and stopped the tape for portions of the interviews that tended to show that Mr. Murray had not molested the girls, and in transcribing the tapes altered words and meanings to the detriment of Mr. Murray.
Further, plaintiff contends that because of defendant’s prior contacts with the alleged victims’ family and the resulting knowledge that the family contained, and associated with, known child molesters, defendant knew, or should have known, that the allegations against plaintiff were false and should have conducted a more in-depth investigation of the allegations.
Defendant moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that plaintiff had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, and, in any event, that defendant was protected from liability by the doctrine of qualified immunity. Defendant subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment with an accompanying affidavit by defendant, which denied some of the allegations in plaintiff’s complaint.
The trial court heard oral argument on defendant’s two motions. The court denied defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. The court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment as to the federal constitutional claims against her on the grounds that plaintiff had failed to establish that defendant had performed an act that operated to deprive plaintiff of his *625 federal constitutional rights. The court denied defendant’s motion as to the state constitutional and tort claims, stating that there were material facts in dispute, and that there had not been an adequate time for discovery.
Defendant’s motion for reconsideration of this ruling was denied. Defendant then filed with the court a notice of appeal as of right, or in the alternative, a motion for permission to appeal. 2 Such permission was denied, leaving this appeal based on appealability as of right.
I.
As a threshold matter, we must determine whether the denial of defendant’s motion for summary judgment premised on qualified immunity falls within the collateral order exception adopted by this Court in
State v. Lafayette,
In
Lafayette
we adopted the collateral order exception to the finality rule announced in
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan
*626
Corp.,
The linchpin of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Mitchell
was the perception that qualified immunity “is an
immunity from suit
rather than a mere defense to liability.”
Id.
at 526 (emphasis in original). Qualified immunity in this state is in accord with this perception. It is an attempt to balance redress for the wronged with the fact that public officials must be allowed the freedom necessary to perform their obligations. As was made evident in
Levinsky v. Diamond,
“[B]are allegations of malice should not suffice to subject government officials either to the costs of trial or to the burdens of broad-reaching discovery. . . .
Reliance on the objective reasonableness of an official’s conduct . . . [should] permit the resolution of many insubstantial claims on summary judgment.”
Levinsky,
Viewing qualified immunity as an immunity from suit., the issue of whether the denial of qualified immunity meets the requirements of the collateral order exception is more readily resolved. It is clear that the denial of qualified immunity is “effectively unreviewable ¡on appeal from a final judgment,” because immunity from suit is necessarily lost in reaching final judgment.
Mitchell,
As the Supreme Court stated in Mitchell,
it follows from the recognition that qualified immunity is in part an entitlement not to be forced to litigate the consequences of official conduct that a claim of immunity is conceptually distinct from the merits of the plaintiff’s claim that his rights have been violated.
Id.
at 527-28. Qualified immunity attaches to public officials who are (1) acting during the course Of their employment and acting, or reasonably believing they are acting, within the scope of their authority; (2) acting in good faith; and (3) performing discretionary, as opposed to ministerial, acts.
Levinsky,
Accordingly, we find that defendant’s appeal from the partial denial of her summary judgment motion premised on qualified immunity is properly before us.
II.
Summary judgment is appropriate only where the moving party establishes that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Gore v. Green Mountain Lakes, Inc.,
A.
In ascertaining whether a genuine issue of fact exists, the nonmoving party is to be given the benefit of all reasonable doubts and inferences.
Pierce v. Riggs,
As concerns defendant’s alleged conduct, there is no genuine issue of material fact. The thrust of plaintiff’s complaint against defendant is that she did not conduct a sufficiently thorough investigation given her knowledge of other instances of sexual molestation of family members, and that the investigation she did do was conducted in a manipulative manner. There is no dispute that defendant, at the time the allegations arose against plaintiff, knew that a stepdaughter had been sexually molested by the father in the family and that the family had associated with alleged and convicted sexual molesters. Her investigation of the allegations did not go beyond interviewing the family, taking taped statements from the two alleged victims, and learning that plaintiff was a convicted murderer. As to the taking of the statements, some leading
*629
questions were asked by Corporal Willey. There was a break taken during one of the statements, during which plaintiff alleges that the witness’s memory was “corrected,” an inference which we will accept as true. Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that in the transcription of the statements, words and meanings were altered to his detriment. Defendant denied this in an affidavit, and plaintiff has not presented any evidence to support the allegation. Accordingly, this allegation does not create a genuine issue of fact. See
Gore,
Defendant prepared the daughters for their testimony before the Parole Board. There is no dispute as to her actions during those proceedings, as a record of them is before us. During those proceedings defendant asked one leading question, requested a break and that the mother be brought in when one of the daughters did not respond in accordance with her tape-recorded statement, and did not correct a misstatement by the same daughter. As to plaintiff’s allegation that defendant deliberately withheld information from a doctor who interviewed the daughters, defendant in her affidavit states that she had left SRS prior to the time of the interview, and plaintiff has pointed us to no specific facts that indicate otherwise. Plaintiff’s final allegations, concerning defendant’s deposition testimony in 1987, are without sufficient support in specific facts to create a genuine issue.
B.
Defendant is entitled to summary judgment if, as a matter of law, she is entitled to qualified immunity on the basis of these facts. We hold that she is. As stated earlier, defendant is entitled to qualified immunity if she was (1) acting during the course of her employment and acting, or reasonably believing she was acting, within the scope of her authority; (2) acting in good faith; and (3) performing discretionary, as opposed to ministerial, acts.
Levinsky,
*630
Good faith exists where an official’s acts did not violate clearly established rights
4
of which the official reasonably should have known.
Levinsky,
Plaintiff has failed to show that defendant should reasonably have known that her acts violated plaintiff’s rights. We have been pointed to no clearly established law, 5 6 nor have we found any, which should have made it known to defendant that her *631 acts violated plaintiff’s rights. 6 Defendant received a call from Corporal Willey, informing her of the mother’s report that her minor daughters had been sexually molested by plaintiff. In conformity with 33 Y.S.A. § 4915 (formerly 33 V.S.A. § 685) (SRS “shall cause an investigation to commence within seventy-two hours after receipt of a report”), defendant immediately undertook an investigation. In her investigation, defendant interviewed the family at their home, and assisted in taking taped statements from the alleged victims. This investigation was in compliance with the statute, which provides, in part, that
(b) The investigation, to the extent that it is reasonable, shall include:
(1) A visit to the child’s place of residence or place of custody and to the location of the alleged abuse or neglect;
. (2) An interview with, or observance of the child reportedly having been abused or neglected. . . .
§ 4915(b). The extent of defendant’s investigation was also fully consistent with the SRS Policy Manual, which provides, in part:
Sources of Information
Most information will come from the individual or family and other persons directly involved. Contacts shall include the person complaining, and the family concerned. Individual interviews with family members, including the children whenever appropriate or feasible, are desirable, as well as joint interviews with the family group.
*632 Collateral sources shall be used selectively, as indicated by the situation. . . .
SRS, Agency of Human Services, Social Services Policy Manual § 2019.3 (1982). Further, it is undisputed that both of the alleged victims in their statements indicated that they had been sexually molested by plaintiff.
The fact that defendant’s investigation was in compliance with statutory requirements, combined with an inability to find any clearly established law that imposed on defendant an obligation to investigate further, compels the conclusion that the extent of defendant’s investigation was in good faith. Defendant should not have reasonably known that she was obligated to investigate any further than she did. In addition, defendant should not have reasonably known that the manner of her investigation violated plaintiff’s rights. The law surrounding the taking of statements from suspected minor sexual abuse victims, and the amount of assistance which can be given them in preparation for trial, was not, and is not, so clearly established that defendant reasonably should have known that her acts violated plaintiff’s rights. See
Myers v. Morris,
We adopted
Harlow’s
objective test of good faith in an effort to strike the proper balance between allowing redress for the wronged and allowing “public officials the freedom necessary to perform their obligations without fear of retaliation.”
Levinsky,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Our procedural rule governing collateral final order appeals, V.R.A.P. 5.1, effective May 1,1989, was adopted after the filing of the notice in the instant appeal.
If an appeal fell within the collateral order exception simply because both parties labelled it as such, or one party failed to object to it as such, the exception would become the rule, effectively eviscerating our finality requirement. See
In re Pyramid Co.,
The good faith inquiry in a § 1983 suit asks whether an official’s acts violated clearly established “statutory or constitutional rights” of which the official reasonably should have known because § 1983 provides a remedy only for violations of federal constitutional and statutory law. See
Owen v. City of Independence,
Plaintiff has pointed us to only two cases:
In re Scott County Master Docket,
Plaintiff asserts that defendant’s good faith should not be determined by viewing defendant’s acts in isolation, but rather as “in concert” with the acts of the other defendants. Plaintiff’s assertion, whether premised on conspiratorial liability or joint tort liability, fails in this case. Unsupported allegations of conspiratorial purpose are as ineffective in piercing the objective standard of good faith as are unsupported allegations of subjective bad faith.
Myers v. Morris,
