Nicole Figg appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment dismissing a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim and several state-law causes of action arising from her incarceration in the South Dakota Women’s Prison. The district court held that since Figg’s sentence of incarceration had not been invalidated, her section 1983 action was barred by the “favorable-termination” rule established in
Heck v. Humphrey,
I. BACKGROUND
In April 1997, Figg pled guilty to one count of forgery in Butte County, South Dakota. She received a suspended sentence from a South Dakota Circuit Court. In September 1998, Figg admitted she violated the terms of her suspended sentence. The circuit court revoked the suspended sentence, and sentenced Figg to five years’ incarceration in the South Dakota State Penitentiary, with three of the five years suspended. On October 26, 1998, Figg signed a parole agreement (October Agreement) with the South Dakota Board of Pardons and Paroles (Parole Board), which did not indicate that the suspended *596 portion of her sentence was subject to reinstatement should she violate parole. On November 9, 1998, Figg signed a second parole agreement (November Agreement) which did indicate the suspended portion could be reinstated if she violated parole.
In December 1998, Figg was released on parole. In March 1999, a parole services report alleged that Figg had violated her parole, referring to the October Agreement, but not to the November Agreement. In May 1999, Figg received notice of her parole hearing, which indicated that she was accused of a violation which could result in revocation of her parole, reinstatement of her suspended sentence, or both. At her parole hearing, Figg was not informed that she was facing reinstatement of the suspended portion of her sentence. The board member conducting the hearing issued recommended findings of fact and conclusions of law, in which he concluded that Figg had violated parole, and recommended that parole be revoked and the suspended part of her sentence be reinstated. In May 1999, the Parole Board revoked Figg’s parole and reinstated the suspended portion of the sentence.
In August 2001, Figg filed a petition in state court for habeas corpus relief. At the habeas hearing, Figg testified she was not informed that a parole violation could result in reinstatement of the suspended portion of her sentence. The habeas court had before it the October Agreement, but not the November Agreement, when it granted the writ in December 2001. Relying on
Smith v. Board of Pardons and Paroles,
In December 2002, the defendants intervened in the already terminated state habeas proceeding and, on the basis of the November Agreement, moved the court to vacate the writ and/or order a new trial. In December 2003, they moved in the district court for summary judgment in the section 1983 action on the basis of absolute and qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion without prejudice and stayed the action until the state habeas court finished revisiting its grant of the writ, noting that the state court might decide issues related to the federal action and thus collaterally estop the district court from revisiting them.
The state habeas court made its decision in June 2004. Because Figg’s parole supervision ended in August 2003, and South Dakota no longer had authority to reincarcerate Figg, the court declined to order a new habeas trial. But the court found that Figg’s lack of candor to the court in the first habeas proceeding regarding her knowledge of the November Agreement constituted grounds-based in fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduet-to vacate the writ. Vacatur of the writ was filed July 1, 2004.
*597
The habeas tribunal sent its decision to the district court. The district court held that in order to seek section 1983 relief for her “illegal” incarceration, Figg must first prove that the underlying sentence was “reversed, expunged, invalidated, or impugned by the grant of a writ of habeas corpus.”
Heck,
Figg appeals the district court’s dismissal of her section 1983 action and state-law claims, and asserts that the court erred in dismissing her actions when no motion was pending.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo,
Wilson v. Spain,
A. Procedure Used In Granting Summary Judgment
Figg first asserts that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to defendants because no motion was pending before the court at the time. In its order denying without prejudice defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the district court stated that defendants could reassert their motions for summary judgment without refiling the relevant documents, after the state habeas court had resolved defendants’ motion to vacate the writ. Figg asserts that she had no opportunity to argue that
Heck
did not apply to her claims because she had no notice that the district court would grant the defendants summary judgment, apparently sua sponte. Sua sponte orders of summary judgment will be upheld “only when the ‘party against whom judgment will be entered was given sufficient advance notice and an adequate opportunity to demonstrate why summary judgment should not be granted.’ ”
Shur-Value Stamps, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
B. Defendants’ Entitlement to Immunity
Though the district court granted summary judgment on the basis that Figg’s section 1983 claim was barred' by
Heck,
we find that the defendants are immune from suit notwithstanding the court’s
Heck
analysis. “ ‘An absolute immunity defeats a suit at the outset, so long as the official’s actions were within the scope of the immunity.’ ”
Patterson v. Von Riesen,
Defendants Robert Hofer and Mary Lou Jorgensen were members of the Parole Board. We have said that “parole board members are absolutely immune from suit when considering and deciding parole questions.” Id. at 1238-39. Figg’s section 1983 claim against the Parole Board members is that as a result of violating her due process rights by failing to inform her that parole violations would affect her suspended sentence, she was illegally incarcerated when the Parole Board reinstated her suspended sentence. Though the Parole Board found that.Figg had violated her parole, Figg’s claim is based on the board’s decision to reinstate her suspended sentence. In determining whether officials have acted within their official jurisdiction for purposes of absolute immunity, “the inquiry focuses on whether the subject matter of the decision was within the official’s power, and whether the official was acting in her official capacity at the time of decision.” Id. at 1239. Thus, though Figg’s claim is not based on the Parole Board’s decision regarding her parole per se, absolute immunity will still attach in this case if the board members have the power to make decisions regarding suspended sentences.
South Dakota law provides that “[t]he [Parole Board] is charged with the responsibility for enforcing the conditions imposed by the sentencing judge, and the board retains jurisdiction to revoke the suspended portion of the sentence for violation of the terms of the suspension.” S.D. Codified Laws § 23A-27-19.
See Smith,
Defendant Duane Russell was the warden of the South Dakota Women’s
*599
Prison. Defendant Brenda Hyde was an employee of the prison. Like defendants Hofer and Jorgensen, they are entitled to absolute immunity. Figg’s suit against Russell and Hyde is based on the fact of her confinement and the resulting deprivation of rights attending that status.
3
In
Patterson,
the plaintiff brought a section 1983 action against the wardens of the prison in which he was incarcerated after he was issued a writ of habeas corpus. In affirming the dismissal of the claim, this court held that jailors and wardens are “absolutely immune from damages flowing from the
fact
of a prisoner’s incarceration, when that incarceration occurs pursuant to a facially valid order of confinement.”
The basis for Figg’s suit against defendant Brent Walker, a parole agent and administrative assistant to the Parole Board, is not clear. Her complaint alleges that Walker offered her the October Agreement for parole, which she accepted, but the agreement did not state that conditions applicable to her parole likewise applied to her suspended sentence. She contends only that “defendants” failed to notify her that her parole conditions applied to the suspended sentence. Thus, Figg’s claim appears to be that Walker participated in the alleged due process violation that led to her incarceration.
“Parole agents” in South Dakota are apparently akin to “parole officers” in other states, responsible for “direct supervision of parolees on a daily basis.” S.D. Codified Laws § 3-12-47. “[T]he extent of immunity accorded an official depends solely on the official’s function.”
Nelson v. Balazic,
In the instant case, Walker’s only function was to offer Figg the October Agreement, without giving her notice that the terms of parole applied to the suspended sentence. This is essentially the same claim Figg brings against the Parole Board members. Thus, we think Walker’s function in this case is so associated with *600 the function of the Parole Board that he, too, is cloaked in absolute immunity. See S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15-1.1. Walker apparently made no independent decisions in offering the October Agreement to Figg. When he offered the agreement to her, he acted as a representative of the Parole Board, conveying to Figg the board’s decision. His actions were so connected to the quasi-judicial role the Parole Board performed in granting parole in the first place, that they were but an extension of that function. So, at least in this limited sense, Walker is entitled to absolute immunity. See Anton, 78 F.3d at 396 (holding parole officers entitled to absolute immunity because their recommendations that parole be delayed “had a similar, close connection” to parole board commissioner’s decision to delay parole).
C. Dismissal of State-Law Claims
The district court also granted summary judgment to defendants on Figg’s state-law causes of action for false imprisonment, invasion of privacy, infliction of emotional distress, battery, assault, and negligence because they were “premised on the illegality of Plaintiffs incarceration.” Collateral estoppel does not bar the litigation of these claims because the issue central to each of them-whether Figg’s incarceration was unlawful-has not been determined by a valid and final judgment.
See Morse v. C.I.R.,
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Figg’s section 1983 claim on the grounds of absolute immunity. We reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Figg’s state-law claims, and remand for dismissal of those claims without prejudice.
Notes
. Defendants also based their motion on Eleventh Amendment and qualified immunity. We need not reach these arguments, however, as we dispose of- the case under absolute immunity.
. Even if the Parole Board had acted in violation of Figg’s constitutional rights, as Figg asserts, those actions would not fall outside the board’s power, such that absolute immunity would not apply. "An official does not act outside her jurisdiction simply because she makes an unconstitutional or unlawful decision.”
Patterson,
. Figg's complaint states that ’’[djuring the 416 days that Nicole Figg was illegally detained in prison, she was treated in all respects as a penitentiary inmate and subjected to the same restrictions, deprivations of freedom, sanctions, and punishments as those inmates who were rightfully being imprisoned in the South Dakota Women’s Prison.”
