The defendant is being sued civilly for his actions as state’s attorney for Windsor County. The рlaintiff was arrested on criminal process issued upon the defendant’s oath of office. After the matter had been pending some seven months it was nolle prossed. The рlaintiff was under confinement at the state’s prison on other charges at аll times relevant to this suit.
The plaintiff was charged by the defendant with possession оf a regulated drug with intent to sell the same in violation of 18 V.S.A. § 4224(d). The drug referred to in the сomplaint was called “Elavail”, and apparently is chemically described as amitriptyline hydrochloride. The plaintiff claims that this is not a regulated drug within thе various chemical descriptions given in 18'V.S.A. § 4224(d), and, even if it is, “there was not the ‘one hundred therapeutic doses’ as required in order to charge ‘possession with intent to sell’ ”. His tort action against the defendant Mahady is based on these сlaimed deficiencies.
The defendant responded by denying generally evеry material allegation of the plaintiff’s complaint and, in addition, moved fоr dismissal of the action. When that motion was denied below, he asked and obtаined leave to certify the issues raised by the motion to this Court before trial. One of those issues, relating to commencement of the action by body writ, has been withdrawn.
The-remaining four questions are but aspects of the issue central to this litigation, which will be treated as the question certified here: “Does any civil immunity attach to a state’s attorney in the performance of his official duties ?”
There is civil immunity for judicial officers under our law.
Banister
v.
Wakeman,
Under the law of this state the issuance of criminal process, a heavy responsibility which the state’s attorney is duty-bound to carеfully exercise, involves the exercise of that judgment and discretion based on factual inquiry characterized as judicial in
Nadeau
v.
Marchessault, supra,
Although Rev. Stat. § 1979 (1875), 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as part of the laws of the United States, hаs increased the concern of the Federal courts with prosecutorial actions, they have still retained the concept of judicial immunity, and applied it to prosecutors where appropriate.
Robichaud
v.
Ronan,
The inquiries to this Court are answered in the following mqnner: -
The defendant prosecutor is, in this case, immune, from suit; the complaint therefore fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted; and the defendant’s motion to dismiss оught to have been granted below.
' Under the provisions of 12 V.S.A. § 2386 the action may be dismissed here, and it is so ordered.
