We granted certiorari in
Mason v. State,
I.
On December 3, 1976, the parole board granted parole to Larry Smith, who had been incarcerated in the Colorado State Reformatory since 1974, serving an indeterminate to thirty-year term for aggravated *1290 robbery. 1 On February 3, 1978, during the course of an armed robbery in Texas, Smith killed twenty-six-year-old Michael Mason, the husband of the plaintiff Marilyn A. Mason and the father of Christopher Lee Mason.
On October 17, 1979, Marilyn A. Mason filed a complaint in her individual capacity, as representative of Michael D. Mason’s estate, and as next friend of Christopher Lee Mason, alleging that the parole board carelessly and negligently granted Smith parole on December 3, 1976. The defendants — the state of Colorado, the parole board, and the individual members of the parole board — moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that they were immune from suit under the doctrine of official immunity. The Chaffee County District Court granted the motion, 2 ruling that the individual members of the parole board enjoyed immunity for their discretionary acts and that this immunity transferred to the parole board as an entity and to the state of Colorado under section 24-10-106(2), 10 C.R.S. (1982). 3 The district court determined that the parole board members were absolutely immune for their discretionary acts as board members and that the state and the parole board could not “be made to answer for actions for which the individual employees were granted immunity.”
In the court of appeals the plaintiff conceded on the basis of that court’s decision in
Cooper v. Hollis,
II.
The question before us is whether the rationale for granting parole board members quasi-judicial immunity, a form of official immunity,
4
also entitles the parole board as an entity and the state of Colorado to quasi-judicial immunity. Judges traditionally have been immune from suit for their judicial acts because of the importance of an independent judiciary in which
*1291
a judge may act without apprehension of the personal consequences.
See Bradley v. Fischer,
In
Higgs v. District Court,
When parole board members decide whether to deny, grant, or revoke parole, they perform a function that is essentially judicial in nature.
Anderson v. Boyd,
*1292
At the time of Smith’s parole, the parole board consisted of four members appointed by the governor. § 17-2-201(1), 8 C.R.S. (1978),
7
and it acted as an entity because any action by the board required the concurrence of at least two members.
See
§ 17-2-201(9)(a), 8 C.R.S. (1978). If the fact that the parole board acts as an entity has significance, the same concerns that require that the individual members of the parole board be immune to suit also require that the parole board as an entity and the state of Colorado be immune.
See Pate v. Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles,
Contrary to the court of appeals’ conclusion that only individuals are entitled to official immunity, it is the quasi-judicial immunity of the state and its entities that entitles the members of the parole board to quasi-judicial immunity. “Even when a State is subject to tort liability, it and its governmental agencies are immune to the liability for acts and omissions constituting (a) The exercise of a judicial or legislative function.... ” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895(B)(3), at 400 (1979). It is this judicial immunity of the state and its governmental agencies that may be extended to governmental officers performing quasi-judicial functions. See id. comment c, at 402-03. 9
We recognize that the absolute quasi-judicial immunity of the parole board members, the parole board as an entity, and the state leaves the plaintiff without remedy even if the parole board’s release of Smith was careless and negligent. Qualified immunity, as contrasted with absolute immunity, would leave the parole board liable for conduct involving discretionary functions violating “clearly established statutory or
*1293
constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Higgs,
The parole board’s discretion, however, has limits. At the time Smith was paroled, granting or denying parole required the concurrence of at least two members of the parole board, after an interview with the inmate. § 17-2-201(9)(a). When two members did not concur, a third member was to review the record, interview the applicant if necessary, and cast the deciding vote. Id. 'Moreover, if parole was granted, it could be revoked after a hearing in front of a parole board member, subject to an appeal before three members of the parole board. §§ 17-2-103, 8 C.R.S. (1978); 17-2-201(9), 8 C.R.S. (1978). Parole may be revoked both for a violation of the laws and for violation of a condition of parole. See § 17-2-103(1). The discretion of parole board members is also circumscribed by the statutory limit on the members’ terms and the requirement of reappointment by the governor. § 17-2-201(1), 8 C.R.S. (1978).
The plaintiff asserts that even if the parole board and the state are immune from suit, their quasi-judicial immunity is waived by the state’s purchase of insurance under section 24-10-104(1), 10 C.R.S. (1982). 10 This section concerns the waiver or nonwaiver of sovereign immunity, a type of immunity not at issue in this case. The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act was based largely on recommendations of the legislative council in a report to the General Assembly. Colorado Legislative Council, Governmental Liability in Colorado, Research Pub. No. 134 at xxvii-lii (Nov. 1968). That report acknowledged the existence of common law bases for nonliability apart from sovereign immunity, id. at 16-17, and noted that a public entity should not be liable for an employee’s negligence if the employee is immune from suit. Id. at 141.
Because we hold that the policies that entitle the individual members of the parole board to quasi-judicial immunity also entitle the parole board as an entity and the state of Colorado to quasi-judicial immunity, we need not determine the standard of care to be applied by a trial court in determining the parole board or the state’s liability.
Judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the court of appeals with directions to reinstate the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The district court originally sentenced Smith to two concurrent terms of twenty to thirty years in the state reformatory after Smith pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery and first degree assault. Smith’s minimum fixed term was changed to an indeterminate minimum term to comply with the statute then in effect.
Smith v. Johns,
. The case was transferred from the Denver District Court to Chaffee County District Court on a motion for change of venue. The Chaffee County District Court treated the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment under C.R.C.P. 56.
. Section 24-10-106(2) provides as follows:
Nothing in this section shall be construed to constitute a waiver of sovereign immunity' where the injury arises from the act, or failure to act, of a public employee where the act is the type of act for which the public employee would be or heretofore has been personally immune from liability.
. Official immunity also encompasses judicial, legislative, prosecutorial, and presidential immunity.
See Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
.
See, e.g., Douglas v. Muncy,
. Parole board members are entitled to quasi-judicial immunity for the board’s quasi-judicial functions, not for the board’s supervisory functions.
See Anderson,
. Section 17-2-201 has been amended extensively since 1976. See § 17-2-201, 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.). The discussion of section 17-2-201 in the text involves the provisions in effect in 1976.
. In 1976 the parole board could parole any person sentenced to the state penitentiary who had served his minimum sentence less time allowed for good behavior or who had been sentenced to the state reformatory when "there [was] a strong and reasonable probability that the person [would] not thereafter violate the law and that his release from institutional custody [was] compatible with the welfare of society." § 17-2-201(3)(b), (c), 8 C.R.S. (1978). The parole board also has authority to revoke parole based on the recommendation of a parole officer or a director or assistant director of the division of adult services. See §§ 17-2-201(9), 17-2-103(1), 8 C.R.S. (1978). Section 17-2-103 also has been amended extensively since 1976. See § 17-2-103, 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.).
.Because we hold that the state of Colorado and its entities are entitled to quasi-judicial immunity, we need not address the state of Colorado and the parole board's assertion that they are entitled to the individual employees’ quasi-judicial immunity under the theory of respondeat superior.
. Section 24-10-104(1) provides as follows:.
Notwithstanding any provision of law or of this article to the contrary, if a public entity provides insurance coverage provided by an insurance company authorized to do business in this state to insure itself against liability for any injury or to insure any of its employees against his liability for any injury resulting from an act or omission by such employee acting within the scope of his employment, then such public entity shall be deemed to have waived the defense of sovereign immunity in any action for damages for any such injury insured against....
