This suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Illinois and Mississippi, an Illinois municipality, and various Illinois and Mississippi officials charges a plot to kidnap the plaintiff from an Illinois jail and bring him to Mississippi to face criminal prosecution. The district court gave judgment for the defendants. The appeal raises only two issues that merit discussion: whether a district court may dismiss a suit on the basis of the Eleventh Amendment even if the state has not invoked the amendment; and when an admission made in a prior case can be used in the current case. An alternative ground not presented to the district court for dismissing the states from the suit is that states are not “persons” within the meaning of section 1983 and so are not liable under that statute.
Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona,
A state may, it is plain, waive its Eleventh Amendment immunity from being sued in federal court either legislatively,
Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon,
In
Wisconsin Dept. of Corrections v. Schacht,
But that is an aside; the important point is that the Court in
Schacht
(which was not a diversity case, but a case in which the Eleventh Amendment was the
*954
vehicle for a defense of sovereign immunity, see
We conclude, as have the other reported
post-Schacht
decisions, that a federal court can raise an Eleventh Amendment defense on its own initiative,
Parella v. Retirement Bd. of Rhode Island Employees’ Retirement System, supra,
The other issue we discuss arises from a written statement that Higgins made in the criminal proceedings against him in Mississippi, admitting that he had waived extradition. The district court relied on the statement in granting summary judgment for the defendants, the statement being inconsistent with Higgins’s claim that he had not waived extradition but instead had been kidnapped. If the statement was a judicial admission, which means, in effect, a waiver,
Solon v. Gary Community School Corp.,
We needn’t consider which type of admission it was, judicial or evidentiary, because a judicial admission binds only in the litigation in which it is made.
Kohler v. Leslie Hindman,
Inc.,
How then was the district court able to rely upon Higgins’s waiver in the criminal proceedings to show that he hadn’t waived extradition, since the court was confronted with contradictory statements, creating an issue of credibility? The answer is that there are exceptions to the principle on which Higgins relies that credibility cannot be determined in a summary judgment proceeding. The applicable exception is that a party cannot by affidavit retract damaging admissions without a good explanation, e.g.,
Cleveland v. Policy Management Systems Corp.,
Affirmed.
