ON SUGGESTION FOR REHEARING EN BANC
(Opinion August 27, 1986,
Seeking rehearing, appellee Jett complains of our decision herein that
responde-at superior
is not a legally valid basis for imposition of liability on the school district under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and asserts that this holding conflicts with our opinion in
Garner v. Giarrusso,
Gamer
was decided during the reign of
Monroe v. Pape,
Gamer did not address whether municipal liability under section 1981 could be imposed on the basis of respondeat superi- or, and the opinion does not indicate that any contention in that respect was ever made. In Gamer, a black police officer, following a bench trial, received a single lump-sum award of $5,000 damages under section 1981 for mental anguish and humiliation suffered as a result of undergoing a racially discriminatory transfer and reevaluation procedure while serving in the New Orleans police department. In affirming *1246 this award, we rejected the city’s contention that Monroe, and the cases which followed it, wholly exempted municipalities from section 1981 coverage. Gamer at 1339. In so holding, however, we explained that:
“Our holding does not pose the problem of imposing vicarious liability upon a municipality because of the acts of its servants. See Hamilton v. Chaffin,506 F.2d 904 (5th Cir.1975). Garner’s employment contract was with the city, and the city itself was responsible for assuring an absence of employment discrimination. To the extent that it failed to live up to this responsibility, it is liable in damages.” Garner at 1341 (emphasis added).
Our explanation was consistent with the facts which were before us. Earlier in our opinion, we had affirmed the district court’s findings that the transfer and reevaluation were discriminatory. Involved in the transfer were both Garner’s superior officer and the city police superintendent, and the latter decided that Garner would have to undergo the reevaluation and “took full responsibility for” that decision. The district court found that the superintendent’s reevaluation “decision was discriminatory.” Id. at 1334. The inclusion of the superintendent in the scheme implicated the city directly, and resulted in liability on a basis other than respondeat superior. The instant case, however, is in a different posture. Here, we have a specific finding that Jett’s principal, Todd, was racially motivated in his recommendation of Jett’s reassignment. But as to Superintendent Wright, who ordered Jett’s reassignment and had the sole and unreviewable authority to reassign, there is no finding of racial motivation (or that Wright knew or believed that, or was consciously indifferent to whether, Todd’s recommendation was racially motivated). In the case at bar, wholly unlike Gamer, the respondeat superior question is raised by the parties and presented by the procedural and factual context of the case. Gamer realized that respondeat superior liability might “pose” a “problem” for municipalities, but did not have to resolve that issue or examine its ramifications.
We also observe that the only other municipal liability argument advanced by the city in
Garner,
apart from reliance on
Monroe,
was a plea for absolute or qualified immunity for municipalities, which we rejected.
Garner
at 1340-41. However, in light of the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Owen v. City of Independence,
Jett argues that the reasons which led Monell to reject respondeat superior liability for municipalities under section 1983 are absent under section 1981. We are not persuaded. In the first place, some of the same reasons are clearly applicable. Although Monell partially relied in this respect on the rejection of the Sherman amendment, the essential burden of Monell is that the Sherman amendment had little if anything to do with section one of the 1871 Act. Among other things, Monell points out that “the nature of the obligation created by that amendment was vastly different from that created by § 1,” id. at 2022, that the amendment would have made municipalities liable for acts of a few private citizens, that it did not purport to amend section one, and that many supporters of *1247 section one opposed the amendment. Id. 2023-32. Monell also relied on the conclusion that “creation of a federal law of respondeat superior would have raised all the constitutional problems associated with” the Sherman amendment. Id. at 2037. But whatever constitutional problems the imposition of respondeat superi- or liability on municipalities would have posed respecting the 1871 Act, it is plain that such problems would have likewise been perceived respecting the 1866 Act, as the latter had only the Thirteenth Amendment to rely on, while the 1871 Act additionally had the Fourteenth Amendment.
Monell
further references “the absence of any language in § 1983 which can easily be construed to create
respondeat superi- or
liability.”
Id.
at 2037 n. 57. This is, of course, likewise true as to section 1981. Indeed, section 1981 contains no language creating
any
liability; it is merely a declaration of rights, and does not even purport to define prohibited conduct, much less to either create a cause of action or impose or assign liability or responsibility to anyone. Again,
Monell
relies on the “shall subject, or cause to be subjected” language of section 1983.
Id.
at 2036. But whatever significance the presence of such language in section 1983 may have necessarily derives from the fact that section 1983 purports to assign responsibility to certain parties. As noted, section 1981 does not. Section two of the 1866 Act is the only section thereof which purports to impose any responsibility for deprivation of section one rights.
2
And, it is particularly relevant in this connection that the “shall subject, or cause to be subjected” language of the 1871 Act was
borrowed
from section two of the 1866 Act.
Id.
at 2032-33;
Monroe,
Finally, account must be taken of the context in which
Monell
dealt, with the municipal liability
respondeat superior
issue. The initial and principal holding in
Monell
was that municipalities were covered by section 1983 and that a municipality was a “person” within the meaning of the statute’s provision that “any person” who under color of state or local law violated another’s federal constitutional rights “shall ... be liable to the party injured.” This holding was partially based on the act passed in February 1871, a few months before the 1871 Civil Rights Act, providing that “in all acts hereafter passed ... the word ‘person’ may extend and be applied to bodies politic and corporate ... unless the context shows such words were intended to be used in a more limited sense.”
Id.
at 2034-35. The Court also relied in this connection on the fact that “the debates [respecting section 1983] show that Members of Congress understood ‘persons’ to include municipal corporations,”
id.
at 2033, and that “the legislative history of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 compels the conclusion that Congress
did
intend municipalities ... to be included among those persons to whom § 1983 applies.”
Id.
at 2035 (emphasis in original). Thus, the
Monell
Court dealt with a statute which expressly and intentionally included municipalities among those subjected to liability thereunder, and contained no language expressly negating
respondeat superior.
In that context, some rather specific reasons were appropriate in order to negate municipal
responde-at superior
liability. But the section 1981 context is completely different in this respect. As noted, section one of the 1866 Act contains no language which can be construed as covering municipalities, and it
*1248
does not purport to create a cause of action or to assign or impose liability or responsibility on anyone. Moreover, we are aware of no specific legislative history of section one of the 1866 Act, comparable to that of the 1871 Act, indicating an intent to impose municipal liability.
3
See Judge Sneed's concurring opinion in
Sethy v. Alameda County Water District,
We conclude that there is no reason to assume that Congress intended to impose vicarious municipal liability by section one of the 1866 Act though not so intending by section one of the 1871 Act, especially in light of then perceived constitutional problems associated with imposition of that character of municipal liability, and that the considerations enunciated in
Owen
counsel against such vicarious municipal liability, as does also the appropriateness of parallel treatment in this respect of these two post-Civil War statutes, particularly as contrasted to Title VII. See our original opinion,
Accordingly, we reject Jett’s complaints respecting our prior opinion’s disposition of his section 1981 claim against the school district. 5
Treating the suggestion for rehearing en banc as a petition for panel rehearing, it is ordered that the petition for panel rehearing is DENIED. No member of the panel nor Judge in regular active service of this Court having requested that the Court be polled on rehearing en banc (Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure and Local Rule 35), *1249 the suggestion for rehearing en banc is DENIED.
The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
. Gamer also expressed concern that it would be "anomalous" to hold private parties liable under section 1981, while exempting municipalities. Id. at 1341. But, again, this was in the context of rejecting a Monroe approach, completely taking municipalities out of the coverage of the statute. A Monell approach, by contrast, adequately accommodates this concern, as is reflected by Gamer's recognition, discussed in the text, infra, that it was not holding municipalities to "vicarious liability.” Id.
. Section two has been described as the "enforcement section” of the 1866 Act.
McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co.,
We also observe that the last clause of section one of the 1871 Act expressly references the 1866 Act.
.Contrast
Owen, supra,
where the Court, in denying municipalities qualified immunity under section 1983, reviewed the status of municipal immunity at common law.
“[T]he municipality’s ‘governmental’ immunity is obviously abrogated by the sovereign’s enactment of a statute making it amenable to suit. Section 1983 was just such a statute. By including municipalities within the class of ‘persons’ subject to liability for violations of the Federal Constitution and laws, Congress— the supreme sovereign on matters of federal law — abolished whatever vestige of the State’s sovereign immunity the municipality possessed.” Id. at 1413-14.
This reasoning, of course, is wholly inapplicable to section 1981, because nothing in section 1981 includes municipalities within any class.
With respect to the common law of municipal immunity for "governmental” as opposed to “proprietary” functions, it may be noted that many states recognize that school districts exercise
only
governmental, and no proprietary, functions for this purpose.
See
. As noted in our prior opinion,
. We are aware that
Springer v. Seamen,
