Zena D. Crenshaw, an attorney licensed in Indiana, sued the seven members of the Indiana Civil Rights Commission pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that they violated her due process rights when they dismissed her charge of race and sex discrimination filed against an Indiana state judge who had sanctioned her in another case. The district court, finding the defendants immune from suit, dismissed her complaint, and Crenshaw appeals. We affirm.
I.
In 1997, Indiana Superior Court Judge Jeffrey J. Dywan sanctioned Crenshaw more than $14,000 for arguing frivolous claims in her capacity as plaintiffs’ counsel in a civil case before him. Alleging that Judge Dywan’s sanction stemmed from discrimination against her because she was African-American and a woman, Crenshaw filed a charge against him with the Indiana Civil Rights Commission (“ICRC”). The ICRC is a body authorized by state statute to receive and investigate complaints alleging discriminatory practices. See Ind. Code § 22-9-l-6(e) (1998). The ICRC dismissed the charge. The Commission found that Crenshaw sought to dispute a Superior Court ruling, and that the ICRC lacked authority to overrule a decision of the Superior Court. Crenshaw appealed the dismissal to the full Commission, which upheld the finding and dismissed her charge.
Crenshaw then brought this lawsuit undеr § 1983 against the seven Commissioners of the ICRC in their personal capacities. She alleged that since her charge against Judge Dywan met thе statutory requirements of form and content, the ICRC was obligated to investigate it. Crenshaw alleged that in choosing not to investigate, the Commissioners participated in “a scheme to cover-up allegations of impropriety associated with the state courts of Indiana.” Further, she alleged that because they dismissed her charge, the Commissioners contravened Indiana public policy and deprived her of thе right to have her charge investigated, her right to an impartial tribunal, and unbiased and equal access to Judge Dywan’s courtroom. Finally, she alleged that the defendants’ actions caused her to suffer inconvenience, mental suffering, and monetary expense.
The district 'court dismissed thе complaint with prejudice. It found that the Commission members functioned in an adjudicative capacity and were therefore entitled tо absolute quasi-judicial immunity from civil suit. Rejecting Crenshaw’s argument that the ICRC members did not perform their required investigative tasks, the court observed that Crenshaw’s argument was “precisely what the doctrine of quasi-judicial immunity eschews.” The court subsequently denied Crenshaw’s
II.
We review de novo the district сourt’s dismissal of an action for failure to state a claim.
Porter v. DiBlasio,
On appeal, Crenshaw argues that in not investigating her complaint against Judge Dywan, the Commissioners failed to follow Indiana state law and were actually seeking “other ends” rather than implementing the Indiana Civil Rights Law, thereby depriving her of her constitutional right to due process. Further, Crenshaw takes issue with the district court’s determination that the defendants are immune from liability. Since a public officer is not individually liable for her, performance of discretionary acts, but may be liable for “non-feasance of a ministerial aсt,” Crenshaw accuses the Commission members of “nonfeasance” and argues that they are not entitled to immunity because they were derеlict in their “ministerial duty” and did not perform an adjudicatory function.
See Adden v. Middlebrooks,
Crenshaw’s argument is unpersuasive. Crenshaw is not entitled to relief because the Commissioners are immune from liability, and “absolute immunity defeats a suit- at thе outset so long as the official’s actions were within the scope of the immunity.”
Imbler v. Pachtman,
Here, the Commission mеmbers acted in a functionally adjudicatory capacity when they determined that they lacked jurisdiction to review and consider her сomplaint.
See Shannon v. Shannon,
Even if we did not dispose of this case on immunity grounds, Crenshaw still would not prevail because she failed to allege a cognizable § 1983 claim. Although her complaint and her appellate
But this assertion is not sufficient to raise a procedural due process claim. Such a claim requires Crеnshaw to identify a property interest,
Board of Regents v. Roth,
We note, furthermore, that Crenshaw has already received a remedy for what she perceived as Judge Dywan’s improper sanctions against her and her client. At oral argument Crenshaw revealed for the first time that the sanctions had been reversed by the Indiana Court of Appeals.
Crenshaw v. Hoffmann-LaRoche, Inc.,
Because the Commissioners perform a quasi-judicial adjudicatory role, they are entitled to immunity. Accordingly, we Affirm the district court’s dismissal of her suit. We decline defendant’s request to sanction Crenshaw.
Affirmed.
