OPINION
In this § 1983 action, plaintiff, Arthur Roberts, a 14 year old Negro suitor, sues for monetary damages upon four causes of action set forth in his complaint.
1
The
The aforementioned allegations are also incorporated into a second cause of action charging common law assault and battery, into a third cause of action charging negligence of all defendants other than the official surety, and into a fourth cause of action charging false imprisonment. Although these claims standing alone would not be cognizable here for lack of diversity of citizenship between all plaintiffs and all defendants, they so closely relate to the § 1983 action that they are within the ancillary or pendent jurisdiction of this court. See Hurn
On March 31,1967, Circuit Judge Claude F. Clayton, then District Judge, granted summary judgment in favor of Pollard and Deaton on the ground of judicial immunity and they were dismissed from the suit. 5 Motion for summary judgment was overruled as to the defendant Evans. The court overruled Arterbury’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim on the first three causes of action but said motion was sustained as to the fourth. 6 Defendant Smith, the County Sheriff, and his official surety were also granted motion for summary judgment, which was not opposed by plaintiff. A motion to dismiss filed by the members of the Board of Supervisors was deferred until trial.
A three-day trial on the merits commenced February 18, 1969, and developed the following facts: On the afternoon of April 14, 1965, plaintiff was arrested on a charge of petty larceny and was taken to the Greenwood City Jail, where he remained overnight awaiting trial. The next morning he was taken before Charles Pollard, Judge of the Youth Court, who conducted a hearing in the presence of plaintiff and his father, Eddie Roberts, and determined that plaintiff, having been in Youth Court on a prior occasion and transferred for ordinary criminal prosecution, should be tried for misdemeanor in city court. In accordance with custom, city court officials were at once notified by telephone of the action taken by the Youth Court. 7 That afternoon at the city court trial, which was also attended by Eddie Roberts, plaintiff entered a plea of guilty before Gray Evans, Acting City Judge. 8 The court accepted plaintiff’s guilty plea and sentenced him to 90 days’ imprisonment. Pursuant to city-county agreement, plaintiff was shortly thereafter transferred from city jail to the Leflore County Farm for serving his sentence. At the time of this transfer, a detention warrant, advising nature of the conviction and sentence imposed but giving no other information, was delivered to the farm superintendent.
I.
JUDICIAL IMMUNITY OF GRAY EVANS
Plaintiff’s case for § 1983' liability against defendant Evans for his acts as pro tern. Municipal Court Judge
10
rests primarily upon the contention that Evans may not claim judicial immunity because the city court was, utterly without jurisdiction to impose sentence; and in this respect plaintiff relies upon state statutes vesting jurisdiction in the Youth Court.
11
It is a firmly established princi
The doctrine of judicial immunity is fully recognized in Mississippi. Bell v. McKinney,
Under the foregoing cases, Evans stands absolved from any civil liability to plaintiff, because he did not act with utter lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Plaintiff had been arrested for committing petty larceny, a violation of municipal law, and he was booked and jailed in city court on that charge. Admittedly, Evans had the legal authority to act as city judge; and plaintiff appeared in court and pleaded guilty to a criminal offense. Plaintiff’s attack upon existence of subject matter jurisdiction rests entirely upon the absence of a written judgment of transfer by the Youth Court signed, entered and on file at the time of the city court trial. Yet there can be no doubt that Youth Court Judge Pollard had exercised his continuing jurisdiction over plaintiff at a hearing actually conducted prior to the trial in city court, and a valid determination had then been made by the Youth Court consenting to plaintiff’s prosecution. The statutes relied upon by plaintiff were substantially complied with. The mere fact that formal judgment was not entered until April 19, four days after the city court trial, does not nullify the city court’s jurisdiction nor invalidate plaintiff’s conviction and
“In courts of law, the judgment is rendered when the court signifies its assent to the sentence of the law as a result of the proceedings in the case, Clark v. Duke,59 Miss. 575 , 579; or, as otherwise stated, a judgment at law is the pronouncement thereof at the conclusion of the trial, Simpson v. Boykin,118 Miss. 701 , 718,79 So. 852 . The entry of the judgment is a clerical or ministerial act, to be performed by the clerk, and is not the judicial act. Cresswell v. Cresswell,164 Miss. 871 , 879,140 So. 521 ,144 So. 41 . This is the rule in all common-law states, save as modified by statute; the rule being further that upon rendition, without entry, the judgment is valid and binding between the parties. See text and numerous cited cases, 34 C.J. pp. 44 et seq.”
United States v. Meredith,
“The court clearly advised the defendant of his sentence at the time of the hearing and this was supplemented, as in all cases, whether civil or criminal, by formal judgments entered upon the court record in compliance with what the court had directed. There is no requirement in the law that the formal sentences be reduced to final form in the presence of the defendant. His rights were fully protected by the announcement of the court in his presence.”
It is to be noted that the statute does not require the order of the Youth Court to be in writing or to be cast as a judgment before the juvenile may be proceeded against criminally. Indeed, the informality of the Youth Court proceedings and the expeditious manner in which they operate support our interpretation that Judge Pollard, in this instance, effectively released Youth Court jurisdiction over plaintiff. Moreover, by proceeding with the case prior to being presented with a written order of transfer, defendant Evans might have acted prematurely and more properly should have awaited the receipt of the Youth Court judgment before disposing of the case on its merits, as no doubt the absence of such judgment in the record of conviction would have resulted, on appeal, in its reversal and vacation of sentence. Lee v. State,
II.
PERSONAL LIABILITY OF AN INDIVIDUAL MEMBER FOR THE ACT OR NEGLECT OF THE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
Although plaintiff acknowledges that an action cannot lie under § 1983 against Leflore County or its governing body, the Board of Supervisors, 14 it is earnestly contended that individual board members are personally liable for the negligence of Arterbury and Williams as their agents in the operation of the county farm, and for the Board’s utter failure to adopt any regulations whatsoever for the guarding of prisoners while employed on county road work. Neither of these contentions is supportable under applicable state or federal law.
By Mississippi law, it is “the imperative duty” of the Board of Supervisors to require convicts sentenced to imprisonment in the county jail to work out the sentence on the county convict farm or, as the Board may provide, on the public roads or other public works, Miss.Code Ann. §§ 7900-7901. It is well settled state law that in the establishment and regulation of jails and work houses, a municipal corporation acts in its governmental, and not private, capacity. Jones v. City of Amory,
Plaintiff presses his case against the individual members of the Board by pointing to the negligence of the Board in its failure to adopt, as required by § 7904 of Miss.Code Ann., “all proper regulations for guarding the prisoners,” when they well knew and approved the use of prisoners to work on public roads, ■ bridges and other public jobs. 16 The evidence shows that the Board neither adopted a formal order as such to permit the county prisoners to do public work away from the farm, nor established any regulations whatever for guarding convicts while at work. In these respects, there was a default on the part of the Board of Supervisors and a failure to comply with statutory requirement. The Board actually acquiesced over a period of many years in the use of county convicts on road and other public works, and left to the superintendent of the farm the entire matter of handling and guarding the prisoners while at work; and the members of the Board were aware that Arterbury, as county farm superintendent, would use inmates from time to time as armed trusties to guard other prisoners while away from the farm. It is asserted that because of this positive neglect by the Board in its performance of a statutory duty, individual responsibility attaches to each supervisor. On the other hand, each supervisor pleads an immunity on two grounds: first, that a suit against them is in actuality a suit against the county; and second, that they are not individually answerable in a suit to redress private wrong for the Board’s neglect. We hold the first defense, which is based upon Miss.Code Ann. § 4049.5 (1942 Recomp.), 17 is untenable. The fact that, under the quoted statute, Leflore County may, in its discretion, satisfy from the public coffers a personal judgment rendered against one or more supervisors is immaterial. If the county were bound by a statute to make payment for personal default, that might be another matter, but that is clearly not the case before us. What the county might elect to do toward paying the individual obligation of a supervisor, if it may legally do .so, is not of present concern; the significant thing in this context is that Leflore County is required to do nothing toward satisfying a judgment obtained against an individual supervisor.
L9] The second defense raised by the supervisor-defendants is that they are not made individually liable for a viola
While many courts draw a distinction, as would plaintiff, between personal responsibility of a board member for the nonperformance of a ministerial duty, and no liability for failure to perform discretionary duties, that distinction does not appear to obtain in Mississippi, in respect of private suits to redress an individual wrong. The correct rule expounding controlling state law appears in Wray v. McMahon,
“This court, by several decisions heretofore rendered, has firmly committed itself to the rule, which generally prevails, that a governmental board or council, in the discharge of the duties imposed by law upon the board or council as such, acts in an official, and not in an individual capacity; and any neglect or failure in the exercise of its powers or in the discharge of its duties is the default of the board and not of the individuals composing it, and they are not liable for such neglect or default unless expressly made so by statute. State ex rel. Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. v. Forbes,179 Miss. 1 ,174 So. 67 ; Reese v. Isola State Bank,140 Miss. 355 ,105 So. 636 ; Pidgeon Thomas Iron Co. v. Leflore County,135 Miss. 155 ,99 So. 677 , and the cases cited in those opinions.” 19
The significance between a ministerial and a discretionary act of a supervisor, as regards his personal liability, is controlled by the nature of the action brought against him. If it is a suit for the public benefit, liability will be personally imposed for dereliction in the performance of a ministerial act, as held
“The Court declined to express an opinion in the Forbes case as to whether such an exception should be recognized where a member of a board personally joins in and lends his efforts towards the accomplishment of the wrongful acts of the body or board itself as an entity, as held by the Florida Court. Moreover, such an exception is contrary to the policy announced in our other decisions on the question; and especially where the suit is brought on behalf of private individuals.” 20 (Emphasis added) People’s Bank, etc. v. Beashea Drainage Dist.,24 So.2d, at 794 .
Insofar as state law is concerned, the foregoing is dispositive of the non-liability of defendant-supervisors since this is a private action brought for personal injury and there is no statute which imposes personal liability upon supervisors for noneompliance with § 7904 or other statute relating to the operation and management of the county farm. Some cases have held that an immunity granted by state law will be respected in a § 1983 action.
21
It is unnecessary for us to align ourselves with that view since by the weight of federal authority, § 1983 immunity is granted to a state officer for his failure to perform a discretionary act as opposed to a mere ministerial duty.
22
Immunity for discretionary or quasi-judicial action, although first developed in suits against judges and later prosecutors, has been generally extended to legislative and administrative officials.
23
As applied to the case at bar, while § 7904 imposes upon the Board a duty to promulgate regulations for the guarding of prisoners, it makes no attempt to dictate what regulations might be “proper”; and the only reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom is that the legislature intended that the Board have unfettered discretion in drawing what regulations it deemed proper.
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We are clear that under any applicable federal law, county supervisors may not be held personally liable for failure to issue any regulations where, had they in fact issued certain regulations, they could not be held individually responsible for neglect of the Board in failing to provide regulations of such character as would reasonably protect the interest of the working convicts. Conceivably, regulations might have been established by the Board imposing the most exacting standards of proficiency in the use of firearms for one to be an armed guard, or which might have prescribed under what precise conditions a trusty could carry firearms, or again which might have altogether prohibited the use of convicts for armed guard duty. These matters go entirely to the exercise of judgment and discretion; had the Board acted negligently in the adoption of imperfect regulations, there would be no liability because of the discretionary nature of the act. The Board’s nonfeasance in the same area of discretion may lead to no different result. Liability under § 1983 is to be read “against the background of tort liability that makes a man responsible for the natural consequences of his actions.” Monroe v. Pape,
III.
LIABILITY OF SUPERINTENDENT ARTERBURY UNDER MISSISSIPPI LAW AND THE EIGHTH AMENDMENT
Under state law, John Arterbury, having custody of the county prisoners as farm superintendent, is under a plain legal duty to exercise ordinary and reasonable care under the circumstances of each particular ease for the preservation of the life and health of those subject to his charge. This duty is the same as that imposed upon a county sheriff with respect to prisoners in the county jail. In Farmer v. State,
“When a sheriff, by virtue of his office, has arrested' and imprisoned a human being, he is bound to exercise ordinary and reasonable care, under the circumstances of each particular case, for the preservation of his life and health. This duty of care is one owing by him to the person in custody by virtue of his office, and for a breach of such duty he and his sureties are responsible in damages on his official bond.”
Although Miss.Code Ann. § 7915 was not directly mentioned in the foregoing case, the terms of the statute require nothing less than a standard of proper care under the circumstances.
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This accords with the general rule to the effect that a jailer must exercise reasonable and ordinary care and diligence to prevent unlawful injury to a prisoner placed in his custody, that he cannot be charged with negligence in failing to prevent what he could not reasonably anticipate, but he is responsible for the consequences of his own neglect. 41 Am.Jur., Prisons and Prisoners, §§12 and 13, pp. 893-94. City of Topeka v. Boutwell,
While prison administration and methods of handling prisoners are matters largely committed to the institution’s custodian and are not to be critically reviewed by courts in the absence of manifest breach .of duty of ordinary care, it remains that the custodian cannot act in a way that exposes others unnecessarily to danger. . We pretermit a consideration of whether in this modern age the use of inmates as armed guards comports with best prison standards, for it has not been shown that the trusty system is necessarily injurious to prisoners’ welfare. The more limited inquiry here is whether Arterbury exercised requisite degree of care when he decided to make Williams a trusty and furnished him with firearms for duty as an armed guard. In making that decision, Arterbury was bound to exercise care commensurate with the dangerous nature of the article being turned over to Williams; and to fail to exercise that degree of care would be Arterbury’s personal dereliction, for he might have reasonably foreseen the consequences of likely injury to another prisoner if the shotgun were in the hands of an untrained, incompetent guard, or one who was ignorant as to its safe and proper use. The rule in Mississippi with respect to handling of loaded firearms imposes the highest degree of care, as was enunciated in State, to Use of Johnston v. Cunningham,
The highest degree of care is exacted of a person handling firearms. They are extraordinarily dangerous, and in using them extraordinary care should be exercised to prevent injury to others. * * * A high degree of care is necessary in the use or manipulation ofloaded weapons in the presence or vicinity of other persons, and where injury results from a failure to exercise such care, the defendant is liable. * * * The bearer of loaded firearms is bound to exercise the utmost diligence in their handling, and he is liable for any injury caused by their discharge, unless it appears that he was entirely without fault. * * * ”
The language of the Mississippi Supreme Court is but a refrain of the law generally. “Some courts refer to the degree of care [in the handling of a firearm] required as a high degree of care; others say that the utmost or highest degree of of care must be used to the end that harm may not come to others. More often, the requisite degree of care is defined as such care as is commensurate with the dangerous nature of the firearm.” 56 Am.Jur., Weapons and Firearms, § 23, p. 1006.
Another applicable principle is that relating to consequences flowing from negligent allowance for a third person to use an instrumentality where the actor knows or should know that such third person is likely to use that instrumentality in a way to create a reasonable risk of harm to another person. Restatement of the Law of Torts, § 308, declares:
“It is negligent to permit a third person to use a thing or to engage in an activity which is under the control of the actor if the actor knows or should know that such person intends or is likely to use the thing or to conduct himself in the activity in such a manner as to create an unreasonable risk of harm to others. * * * The rule stated in this Section has its most frequent application where the third person is a member of a class which is notoriously likely to misuse the thing which the actor permits him to use. Thus, it is negligent to place loaded firearms or poisons within reach of young children or feeble-minded adults.” Accord, Lovett Motor Co. v. Walley,217 Miss. 384 ,64 So.2d 370 (1953).
If we were confronted solely with negligence, or even recklessness on the part of Williams, the trusty, without any evidence indicating Arterbury’s personal neglect, obviously Arterbury would not under those conditions be chargeable with Williams’ conduct because, here again, the doctrine of respondeat superi- or does not apply.
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The evidence, however, clearly points to failure on the part of Arterbury himself in using care measured either in terms of the highest degree or in terms of ordinary care under the circumstances, in turning over to Williams a loaded gun without making certain that Williams was competent to handle it. Cursory questioning of Williams as to' whether he understood how to handle a shotgun was wholly inadequate to satisfy a duty in dealing with a dangerous instrumentality. As we view the evidence, the instructions given by Arterbury were meager at best, and in no way did he ascertain Williams’ proficiency in handling the weapon either respecting marksmanship or safety measures. No heed was paid to well known and important safety measures in handling a gun. Williams was not told to recheek the safety mechanism at every manipulation of the gun, never to point the shotgun in any direction or at any object at which he was not ready to fire. Since the shooting in this case occurred under the most needless and avoidable circumstances, it is patent that Williams was thoroughly ignorant — indeed incompetent — in the handling of a firearm. It was Arterbury’s duty to exercise care that Williams knew how to use the gun
Finally, Arterbury, as a public official in charge of the county farm, has no state-recognized immunity from suits in tort and, as heretofore discussed, should Leflore County see fit in its discretion, under Miss. Code Ann. 4049.5, to pay a judgment against Arterbury, that would not convert this action into a suit against the county.
Having concluded Arterbury is liable under state law, we are clear in the view that liability likewise exists under, ,1.983. It is an established principle that a person confined in a state or county prison is within the protection of 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and the right of a state prisoner to be free from cruel and unusual punishment, or to be within the protection of the Eighth Amendment, is one of the rights that a state prisoner may, in a proper case, enforce under § 1983. Jordan v. Fitzharris,
It is equally well settled that Arterbury, holding the public office of county farm superintendent, was acting under color of state law within the meaning of § 1983. With the plaintiff having the protection of the statute and Arterbury being subject to its terms, the only question remaining is whether the plaintiff has shown the violation of a federally protected right, or that he has been subjected “to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities
Imprisonment under the extra hazardous conditions to which plaintiff was needlessly exposed, and which culminated in permanently maiming and totally disabling him, was so severe and shocking to the conscience, and so utterly disproportionate to the crime — petty larceny for taking of articles of the retail value of $2.11 — as to constitute cruel and inhuman punishment. It is not that the armed trusty system is to be viewed as “cruel and unusual” in itself, but rather the unprovoked, grossly negligent shooting of a prisoner by one negligently entrusted with firearms that violates the constitutional right. Indeed, it is our view that the moral sense of all reasonable men of this day would be shocked by the punishment visited upon the plaintiff, yet a minor, as a direct result of inattentive and careless prison administration.
Liability against Arterbury having been established, there remains our duty to assess compensatory damages in fair and reasonable amount to plaintiff, Arthur Roberts, in this action brought directly for his own benefit. As previously noted,
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plaintiff, because of the shooting, has lost the sight of both eyes, and has recurring headaches, occasional fainting spells and probable brain damage. With a life expectancy of almost 50 years, he will be totally disabled as long as he lives. Correct determination of legal damages is not without its difficulty, particularly since no proper proof of damage has been made for the apparently considerable accrued hospital, medical, nursing and other special services rendered plain
Judgment in accordance with this Opinion will be entered this date.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 1983, provides that:
“Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.” While plaintiff and all defendants were, at the time suit was instituted, residents of Leflore County, Mississippi, federal jurisdiction is unaffected, for diversity of citizenship is not a jurisdictional requisite in Section 1983 actions. Jackson v. Martin, 261 E.Supp. 902 (N.D.Miss. 1966); see also Walton v. City of Atlanta, 181 E.2d 693 (5 Cir. 1950), cert. den.
. Miss.Code Ann. § 7185-16 (Supp.1968), provides, in pertinent part, as follows: “Whenever any child thirteen (13) years of age or older is brought before any justice of the peace court or municipal court charged with the commission of a misdemeanor under a state law or municipal ordinance, such court shall, unless prosecution is permitted by order of the youth court, transfer the case to the Youth Court of the county, to be dealt with as a case of delinquency in accordance with the provisions of this act $ $ * ”
Miss.Code Ann. § 7185-06 (Supp.1968), provides that:
“[T]he [Youth Court] judge shall fix a date and designate a place for the hearing of the case concerning said [allegedly delinquent] child, and shall order the clerk of the court to issue summons to the person having the custody or control of the child, requiring such person to appear personally and bring the child before the court at the time and place stated * *
Miss.Code Ann. § 7185-16 (Supp.1968), provides that:
“After conviction and sentence of any child * * * prosecuted for a misdemeanor * * * by a justice of the peace or municipal court, the Youth Court of the county shall have full power to stay the execution of such sentence and to release such child on good behavior, or other such order as the court may see fit to make.”
. Columbus Williams was also sued as a defendant but personal process was never had upon him and the ease went to trial accordingly. His deposition was taken in Chicago, Illinois, by plaintiff’s counsel and will be later referred to.
. The Leflore County Supervisors, eaeh sued individually and in official capacity, are: Ulysses F. Smith, W. J. Lipscomb, Robert H. Swanzy, James D. Green and James M. Hooper, Jr.
. See Memorandum Opinion dated March 31, 1967, citing, among other authorities, Pierson v. Ray, 5 Cir.,
. Judge Clayton’s Memorandum Opinion concluded that the allegations that Arterbury, acting under color of state law, deprived plaintiff of privileges and immunities secured to him by the Fourteenth Amendment, sufficiently state a federal claim under § 1983. See Monroe v. Pape,
. On January 5, 1965, an initial youth court petition had been filed against plaintiff for breaking and entering Mississippi Valley College and stealing a bicycle, and all statutory formalities had been complied with, resulting in the transfer of plaintiff to justice of the peace court for criminal prosecution. After Judge Pollard made his determination on the morning of April 15, 1965, that plaintiff should be prosecuted in city court, the court officials made certain entries that date on the Youth Court docket, which were erased after a decision was reached between Charles Deaton, Youth Court Counselor, and the court clerk that “for bookkeeping purposes” a supplemental petition should be filed. This was done on April 16, process had on plaintiff’s father and order entered April 19, 1965 transferring case. There was, in fact, no hearing on April 19, the only hearing having occurred on April 15, but no formal judgment was signed by the judge of the youth court prior to April 19.
. Evans had been serving as pro tern. Judge since 1962 by virtue of a continuing order effective when the regular judge was out of the city and he sat in that capacity several times each month.
. There is no dispute concerning plaintiff’s injuries. He was immediately taken to Leflore County Hospital, rushed to University Hospital at Jackson, Mississippi, for emergency treatment, and sent back to Leflore County Hospital, where he remained until August 1965. Later, under special hospital care at Vicksburg, he spent approximately three months learning to walk with a cane, to read braille and perform other services. On March 4, 1967, he enrolled in the Mississippi School for the Blind, having completed the 9th grade at time of trial. Complete blindness has resulted with recurring headaches and occasional fainting spells. He is handicapped in the reading of braille by inability in use of his arms. Medical evidence indicates he has suffered brain injury from the accident and, with a life expectancy of 49 years, he will be wholly incapacitated.
. Complaint charges Evans with the following alleged violations of plaintiff’s constitutional rights: illegal confinement; acting as both judge and prosecutor ; failing to advise plaintiff of his right to counsel; and subjecting plaintiff to the infliction of cruel and inhuman punishment.
. The Mississippi Youth Court Act, Miss. Code Ann. § 7185-01 et seq., provides in relevant part as follows:
“§ 7185-03. Jurisdiction. — Except as otherwise provided herein, the court shall have exclusive original jurisdiction in all proceedings concerning any delinquent or neglected child residing or being in the county.” (No exceptions are here applicable).
“§ 7185-04. Retention of jurisdiction. —When jurisdiction shall have been obtained by the court in the case of any child, jurisdiction of such person as well as of any offenses by him committed may be retained or resumed by the court until he becomes twenty years of age. * * H« ”
“§ 7185-16. Transfer of misdemeanor eases from other courts unless prosecution permitted by youth court. — Whenever any child thirteen years of age or older is brought before any justice of the peace court or municipal court charged with the commission of a misdemeanor under a state law or municipal ordinance,
such court shall, unless prosecution is permitted 6y order of the youth court, transfer the case to the youth court of the county, to he dealt with as a case of delinquency in accordance with the provisions of this act,
* * *. After conviction and sentence of any child so prose
. In Bradley v. Fisher, supra, at page 651, the Court said:
“Where there is clearly no jurisdiction over the subject matter, any authority exercised is a usurped authority, and for the exercise of such authority, when the want of jurisdiction is known to the judge, no excuse is permissible.”
. As Judge Learned Hand observed in Gregoire v. Biddle,
* * * * s5«
“There must indeed be means of punishing public officers who have been truant to their duties; but that is quite another matter from exposing such as have been honestly mistaken to suit by anyone who has suffered from their errors. * * * [I]t has been thought in the end better to leave unredressed the wrongs done by dishonest officers than to subject those who try to do their duty to the constant dread of retaliation.”
. The cases are legion that cities and counties are not amenable to suit under § 1983. See, e. g., Monroe v. Pape,
. In this case, a member of the Board of Supervisors was sued for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the negligence of Northern, who had been employed for the county by defendant-supervisor. Plaintiff’s claim arose out of a traffic accident involving negligent operation by Northern of a county truck in the course of his duties. Rejecting liability, the Mississippi Supreme Court held:
“In the present case the [defendant] member of the board had nothing whatever to do with the alleged wrongful act of Northern. Gordon was acting in the capacity of road commissioner for his district; Northern, although employed by Gordon acting as such commissioner, was the servant of the county and not of Gordon. The county was the principal, not Gordon.”
. Miss.Code Ann. § 7904, provides:
“§ 7094. Convicts may be worked on public roads or other county public works. In any county where it is clearly more advantageous to the county to work the county convicts or some of them on the public roads of the county, or on other works of the county exclusively public in their character, the board of supervisors shall have the authority so to order, and in such cases the board shall establish all proper regulations for the working, guarding, safekeeping, clothing, housing and subsistence of convicts while so working, and shall provide all the necessary equipment for such purpose. And the board shall establish regulations for the discipline of convicts on said works, and on county farms, when a convict is persistently idle or refractory, and may enforce such regulations by penalties.” (Emphasis added)
. Miss.Code Ann. § 4049.5 provides, inter alia, that:
“ * * * [A]ny municipality of this state be and it is hereby authorized and empowered, within the discretion of the governing authorities, to pay and satisfy any judgment, fine, or penalty which may be made, assessed or levied by any court against any municipal agent, officer, servant, employee or appointee * * * while acting as such.”
. Particularly elucidative are the observations found in State ex rel. Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. v. Forbes, 1937,
“Board of supervisors are not mere ministerial agents of the state. Prior to the adoption of the State’s Constitution of 1832 many of the duties now imposed on such boards were discharged by a county court. They appear in the judiciary articles of the Constitutions of 1832 and 1890, in the first under the name of boards of police
*
*
*
and in the second under their present name. * * * and are charged with duties judicial, legislative and executive; and in McNulty v. Vickery,
. By statute, members of boards of supervisors are personally liable ior: appropriation of money, for an object not authorized by law (§ 2944) ; the practice of nepotism (§ 4051); diversion of county bond proceeds (§ 2926-10) ; failure to comply with provisions as to publication of proceeds (§ 2889); withholding of county funds from the county tax collector (§ 3008) ; maintaining interest in public contracts (§§ 2301, 2302, 2920; Constitution § 109) ; failure to comply with provisions respecting county bonds (§ 4323); exceeding the county budget (§ 9118-10) ; maintaining interest in claim against county budget (§ 2313) ; and willful delay of presentations of any claim against the county budget (§ 9118-12).
. See pertinent annotation in
. Zellner v. Wallace,
. As held in Selico v. Jackson,
“It is well settled that a public official is immune from civil suit based upon discretionary acts performed within the scope of his authority, regardless of the motives with which he performs his duties, and this immunity is not abrogated by the Civil Rights statutes.” See, e. g., Dunn v. Estes,
. It is noteworthy, we think, that Mississippi was first to extend legislative immunity to legislators of all grades — e. g., members of boards of supervisors, city couneilmen, etc., Jones v. Loving,
. The test for determining whether a particular act is ministerial or discretionary was well stated in Poyner v. Gilmore,
“The most important criterion, perhaps, is that [if] the duty is one which has been positively imposed by law and its performance required at a time and in a manner or upon conditions which are specifically designated, the duty to perform under the conditions specified not being dependent upon the officer’s judgment or discretion, the act in discharge thereof is ministerial.” (Emphasis added)
. Additionally, Miss.Code Ann. § 7915 (1942 Reeomp.) provides that:
“An official, or guard, or other employee having the custody of any county prisoner, or any official or employee of the county having the custody of any county prisoner, who shall maltreat or abuse any such convict, or who shall knowingly permit the same to be done * * * shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor * *
. The last annotation includes an opinion by the Kentucky Court of Appeals in Ratliff v. Stanley,
“In all of these cases the liability of the jailer for such injuries is recognized where he had reasonable ground to apprehend the danger to the prisoner. The law imposes the duty on a jailer to exercise reasonable and ordinary care and diligence to prevent unlawful injury to a prisoner placed in his custody, but he cannot be charged with negligence in failing to prevent what he could not reasonably anticipate.”
. See, e. g., Lunsford v. Johnston, 5 Tenn. C.C.A., aff’d
. See, e. g., American Creosote Works of Louisiana v. Harp,
. In Jordan v. Fitzharris, the Court said at p. 679:
“The Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, creates a cause of action for deprivations, by persons acting under color of state law, of rights secured by the Constitution. See Monroe v. Pape,
. Eighth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States:
“Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”
. In Jordan v. Eitzharris, supra,
“The first approach is to ask whether under all of the circumstances the punishment in question is ‘of such character * * * as to shock general conscience or to be intolerable to fundamental fairness.’ * * * Such a judgment must be made in the light of developing concepts of elemental decency. * * * Secondly, a punishment may be cruel and unusual if greatly disproportionate to the offense for which it is imposed. * * * Finally, a punishment may be cruel and unusual when, although applied in pursuit of a legitimate penal aim, it goes beyond what is necessary to achieve that aim; that is, when a punishment is unnecessarily cruel in view of the purpose for which it is used.”
. See fn. 9, page 977, of this Opinion.
. This may he due to the fact that such expenses may have already been paid by the county. In any event, independent claims by Eddie Roberts, father and sole surviving parent, for recovery of medical expenses and reduced earning capacity of plaintiff during his minority have been waived since Eddie Roberts brought suit for the minor plaintiff as father and guardian. Anderson v. Jenkins,
