1. The underlying allegations are as follows:
According to [appellee]'s complaint, [appellee] received a traffic ticket in DeKalb County in 2013. He alleged that he appeared in recorder's court and was ordered to pay a fine and that he timely paid the fine, but the staff of the recorder's court failed to close his case. Moreover, he asserted, the court staff falsely informed the Georgia Department of Driver Services [ (DDS) ] that [appellee] had failed to appear for his hearing, that he had failed to pay his fine, and that his driving privilege should be suspended. See OCGA § 17-6-11 (b) [ (2011).].
In his complaint, [appellee] alleged that on August 9, 2013, an officer with theRockdale County Sheriff's Office arrested [appellee] for driving on a suspended license and took him into custody. [Appellee] asserted that he spent significant time in custody before bonding out. He alleged that on September 26, 2013, an officer with the Newton County Sheriff's Office arrested [appellee] for driving on a suspended license and took him into custody. According to [appellee], at the time of his Rockdale County and Newton County arrests, he was on first offender probation; and the Rockdale County and Newton County arrests led to the initiation of probation revocation proceedings for which [appellee] was arrested and jailed from November 12, 2013, until December 10, 2013. According to [appellee]'s complaint, at some point, the recorder's court realized that it had provided [DDS] with incorrect information. [Appellee] alleged in the complaint that the court sent a notice of suspension withdrawal to the department. This led to the dismissal of the Rockdale County and Newton County charges and the withdrawal of the probation revocation petition, according to [appellee]. Nonetheless, [appellee] claimed, he lost his job because of these events.
[Appellee] alleged in his complaint that at the relevant time, [Judge] Withers was the chief judge of the DeKalb County Recorder's Court and ... Thompson was the court administrator. According to [appellee], [appellants] were aware that the recorder's court was understaffed, dysfunctional, and unable to process its cases, and Judge Withers also knew that the court's computer systems produced unreliable data because the systems were flawed or because employees routinely entered data incorrectly, and that employees routinely failed to communicate correct information to [DDS].
[Appellee] sent the county ante litem notice of his claims on November 14, 2014. He filed this action for damages alleging that the defendants failed to perform their ministerial duties with due care and that their actions led to [appellee]'s unlawful arrests. In addition to his state law claims, [appellee] asserted claims under42 USC § 1983 ( § 1983 ), alleging that the county, through Judge Withers, the final policymaker, and Thompson, had violated his constitutional rights by maintaining customs and policies that caused his deprivation of liberty. These customs included chronically understaffing and underfunding the recorder's court; failing to adequately train employees; failing to implement an audit system that would have caught mistakes; hiring pursuant to a quota system, which increased the rate of errors in the court's communications with [DDS]; and failing to adequately discipline and terminate employees. And they knew that these customs and practices repeatedly had led to innocent persons being arrested, yet they failed to correct the problems.
Schroeder v. DeKalb County,
2. The United States Supreme Court has long recognized the doctrine of judicial immunity which shields judges from being sued and from being held civilly liable for damages based on federal law as a result of carrying out their judicial duties. See Forrester v. White,
The court in which the charges are lodged shall immediately forward to [DDS] ... the driver's license number if the person fails to appear and answer to the charge against him or her. The commissioner of driver services shall, upon receipt of a license number forwarded by the court, suspend the driver's license and driving privilege of the defaulting person until notified by the court that the charge against the person has been finally adjudicated.
The statute, at the time of the events in question, thus made it clear that the court was obligated to report to DDS the status of a traffic case pending before it, including any final adjudication.
We cannot, as appellee urges in this appeal, closely examine all the underlying factual allegations
3. In his complaint, appellee does not make any distinction between the alleged actions taken by Judge Withers and the alleged actions taken by Thompson. To the extent Thompson acted at the direction of Judge Withers in fulfilling the function of reporting the disposition of traffic cases to DDS, he was acting as an "extension of the court" or "arm of the judge" such that he is immune from suit based on quasi-judicial immunity. See Considine v. Murphy,
4. Because judicial immunity and quasi-judicial immunity are absolute, appellee's claims pursuant to § 1983 cannot be sustained. See Pierson v. Ray,
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Melton, C.J., Nahmias, P.J., Blackwell and Boggs, JJ., Judge Amanda Harper Mercier, and Chief Judge Stephen Louis A. Dillard concur. Hunstein, and Peterson, JJ., not participating.
Notes
See Schroeder v. DeKalb County,
More specifically, the Court of Appeals made the following rulings relevant to this appeal: (1) the trial court erroneously dismissed appellee's claims that appellants, in their individual capacities, negligently performed ministerial acts, particularly because it noted it was too early in the litigation to determine whether the acts complained of were ministerial or discretionary (id. at 751-752,
The Court of Appeals also affirmed the trial court's dismissal of appellee's claims against Judge Withers and Thompson in their official capacities because of the untimeliness of his ante litem notice.
The United States Supreme Court has set forth the rationale for the doctrine of judicial immunity as follows:
If judges were personally liable for erroneous [judicial] decisions, the resulting avalanche of suits, most of them frivolous but vexatious, would provide powerful incentives for judges to avoid rendering decisions likely to provoke such suits. The resulting timidity would be hard to detect or control, and it would manifestly detract from independent and impartial adjudication. Nor are suits against judges the only available means through which litigants can protect themselves from the consequences of judicial error. Most judicial mistakes or wrongs are open to correction through ordinary mechanisms of review, which are largely free of the harmful side-effects inevitably associated with exposing judges to personal liability.
(Citations omitted.) Id. at 226-227,
The Court of Appeals stated in Maddox v. Prescott:
Our courts have consistently held that judges are immune from liability in civil actions for acts performed in their judicial capacity. Upshaw v. Oliver,(1832); Gault v. Wallis, 1 Dud. 241 (1875) ; Calhoun v. Little, 53 Ga. 675 , 106 Ga. 336 (1897) ; Peacock v. National Bank & Trust Co. of Columbus, Ga., 32 S.E. 86 , 241 Ga. 280 (1978) ; West End Warehouses, Inc. v. Dunlap, 244 S.E.2d 816 , 141 Ga. App. 333 (1977). 233 S.E.2d 284
It is ultra-important in our democracy to preserve the doctrine of judicial immunity to enable our judges to exercise within their lawful jurisdiction untrammeled determination without apprehension of subsequent damage suits. Hill v. Bartlett,, 840, 126 Ga. App. 833 (1972). 192 S.E.2d 427
(Punctuation omitted.)
OCGA § 17-6-11 was substantially amended in 2017. See Ga. L. 2017, pp. 608-609, § 1. Most significantly, the statute now provides that the "clerk of court" rather than the "court" is tasked with making reports to DDS. See OCGA § 17-6-11 (b) (1) (2017).
This is in contrast to the situation in Forrester v. White,
Here, appellee opines that appellants negligently hired, supervised and/or trained court employees, that the court's computer system was flawed, that the court was understaffed, and that the court was otherwise dysfunctional.
"If we were to examine, instead, the factual details of the particular act being challenged, 'then any mistake of a judge in excess of his authority would become a "nonjudicial" act, because an improper or erroneous act cannot be said to be normally performed by a judge.' "
We express no opinion as to the type of immunity, if any, applicable to the "John Doe" court personnel who were named in the complaint below, but are not parties involved in this appeal.
Having found that absolute immunity applies, we need not address the other theories of immunity raised by appellants.
