This third-party claim for indemnity or contribution against the West Virginia Department of Highways was filed by Westinghouse Electric Corp., a Pennsylvania corporation, as defendant in a diversity tort action arising out of an accident that occurred on a West Virginia state highway. Westinghouse alleged that the Department of Highways had negligently marked the portion of highway on which the accident occurred and that this negligence had caused or contributed to the accident. The district court held the claim barred by the eleventh amendment and dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm.
As the district court noted, a claim against the West Virginia Department of Highways is, for eleventh amendment purposes, properly considered one against the state itself.
See, e.g., Florida Dept. of Health v. Florida Nursing Home Assoc.,
A state may waive its constitutional immunity and consent to suit in federal court, and when it does so, the eleventh amendment will not bar the action.
See Clark v. Barnard,
Direct waiver by statute or constitution may be found only where the state has stated its intent to subject itself to suit in federal court “by the most express language, or by such overwhelming implication from the text as [will] leave no room for any other reasonable construction.”
Murray v. Wilson Distilling Co.,
Because the eleventh amendment protects the state specifically against suit in federal court,
see Pennhurst II,
Application of the stringent Atascadero test to this case reveals Westinghouse’s claim of waiver to be without merit. The West Virginia Constitution contains no provision subjecting the state to suit in federal court. Indeed, the state constitution specifically provides that “[t]he State of West Virginia shall never be made defendant in any court of law or equity, ... except [in any] garnishment or attachment proceeding, as garnishee or suggestee.” W.Va. Const, art. VI, § 35. Westinghouse places principal reliance instead on two related provisions of the West Virginia Code dealing with liability insurance. First, Westinghouse points to W.Va. Code § 29-12-5, which requires all insurance policies purchased for the state or its agencies or departments to contain a provision by which the insurer agrees not to raise the “constitutional immunity” of the insured as a defense to third-party claims. 1 Second, Westinghouse cites W.Va. Code § 33-6-14a, which at the time of this accident required all insurance policies issued to governmental units to contain a provision by which the insurer agreed not to assert the insured’s “governmental status” as a defense to third-party claims. 2
*471 These provisions can, at most, be construed as waiving the state’s immunity from suit in state court. Neither contains the “unequivocal” statement of the state’s intention to subject itself to suit in federal court required by Atascadero, even assuming the legislature had the power under state law to do so.
Westinghouse has two additional arguments in support of its claim of waiver, neither of which meets the stringent
Atascadero
test. First, it argues that a waiver of eleventh amendment immunity may be implied to the extent the state is insured against the loss from a claim, on the ground that the fundamental purpose of the immunity doctrine is to protect the public treasury. Westinghouse cites, in support of this argument, a
pre-Atascadero
case,
West v. Keve,
Neither of these theories of waiver by the state falls within the narrow scope of that doctrine as recognized by the Supreme Court.
See Atascadero,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 29-12-5 lays out the duties of the State Board of Insurance, which is charged with responsibility for obtaining insurance for all state property, activities, and responsibilities. The statute provides, in relevant part:
Any policy of insurance purchased or contracted for by the board shall provide that the insurer shall be barred and estopped from relying upon the constitutional immunity of the state of West Virginia against claims or suits: Provided, That nothing herein shall bar the insurer of political subdivisions from relying upon any statutory immunity granted such political subdivisions against claims or suits.
. At the time of the accident involved here. Section 33-6-14a provided:
No policy or contract of public liability insurance providing coverage for public liability *471 shall be ... sold, issued or delivered to any governmental unit, agency or subdivision, unless it shall contain a provision or endorsement whereby the company issuing such policy waives, or agrees not to assert as a defense, on behalf of the policyholder or any beneficiary thereof, to any claim covered by the terms of such policy within the policy limits, the immunity from liability of the insured by reason of such insured’s ... governmental status, unless such provision or endorsement is rejected in writing by the named insured.
Act of March 4, 1967, ch. 95, 1967 W.Va. Acts 448 (amended 1985 and 1986).
