This court is slow to revise the judgment of the highest court
of a Territory on matters of local administration.
Judges of United States courts are not liable to civil actions
for their judicial acts.
Bradley v.
Fisher, 13 Wall. 335.
The principle of immunity of judges from civil action for their
official acts is so deep-seated in the system of American
jurisprudence that this Court will regard it having been carried
into the Philippine Islands as soon as the American Courts were
established therein.
Page 231 U. S. 107
The immunity of judges of the Supreme Court of the Philippine
Islands from civil action for official acts is the same as that of
judges of the United States.
Act No.190 of the Philippine Commission did not impose any
liability to civil actions for official acts on any judge of the
Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands; that act related only to
inferior judges.
A statute such as that involved in this case, providing that no
judge shall be liable to civil action for official acts done in
good faith, will not be construed as rendering such judges liable
to civil action for acts done in bad faith by implication.
Quaere whether the Philippine Commission has power to
enact legislation making any judge liable to civil action for
official acts.
21 Phil. 308 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by the plaintiffs in error against a
Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands. Its
allegations, much abridged, are as follows: the plaintiff Alzua had
a judgment, in cause No. 3274, declared to be a first lien upon two
stores, among other things, of Martinez, widow of Soler, and Riu,
the judgment debtors; the sheriff levied; two Solers, sons of
Martinez, demanded that the sheriff dismiss the levy, as they were
owners of the stock levied upon; the plaintiff Alzua gave the
sheriff a bond, on October 14, 1905, and thereupon the sheriff
proceeded to advertise and sell the property concerned. On the same
October 14, the above-mentioned Solers brought
Page 231 U. S. 108
suit (No. 4017) against the sheriff and the present plaintiff,
Alzua, alleging that the Solers owned and were entitled to
possession of the property and praying for an injunction and
damages. The trial court decided for the sheriff, and Alzua and the
Solers appealed to the supreme court. On March 27, 1907, that
court, including the defendant, affirmed the decision, postponing a
statement of the grounds, and ordered judgment in twenty days and a
return of the record ten days thereafter. The term ended on March
31. In vacation, on April 8, the defendant, without consulting the
other judges, changed the judgment of affirmance to one of
reversal, and gave orders accordingly; so that, on July 29, the
record was returned to the court below with judgment reversed. The
defendant then prepared a decision, filed September 14, which was
signed by five justices, including the defendant, and, with intent
to injure Alzua, falsely stated therein that the Solers were
preferred creditors of Martinez and Riu, well knowing that they
alleged themselves to be owners, and that Martinez and Riu were not
parties to the suit, and could not be bound by the decision. No
final judgment has been rendered in the cause.
On August 22, 1907, the Solers brought another suit, No. 5719,
against the sheriff, Alzua, her husband and the other obligors on
the bond given to the sheriff, to which Martinez and Riu afterwards
were made parties, alleging that the Solers had a preferred credit
in the previously mentioned property. On November 29, the court
dismissed the suit as to all but Martinez, who confessed liability,
and entered judgment against her. The Solers appealed to the
supreme court, and the case was submitted to six judges, including
the defendant. The defendant prepared a decision, and, with intent
to injure the plaintiff, set forth further false statements,
viz., that, in the demand on the sheriff that he dismiss
the levy, the guardian
ad litem of the Solers alleged that
their claim was a
Page 231 U. S. 109
preferred claim, whereas they claimed as owners and partners;
that the supreme court had decided in the former suit, No. 4017,
that the Solers had a preferred credit for P. 9,868.29, whereas the
defendant knew that the decision in 4017 had not been pleaded or
put in evidence; that the cause No. 5719 was brought upon the bond
for the above sum together with damages, etc., p. 11,068; the
defendant, knowing that the sheriff, acting sheriff, Martinez, and
Riu were also defendants, and that the first named sum alone was in
issue and no damages proved; that the cause No. 5719 was instituted
on October 1, 1907, well knowing that it was begun on August 22,
before, not after, the last decision (of September 14) in the
former case; that the record in No. 5719 shows that the bond was
given to the sheriff after issue of an injunction in No. 4017,
whereas it does not, and finally that the sureties on the bond had
bound themselves thereby to respond to the Solers for the amount of
the claim that the Solers had against Martinez and Riu, whereas the
bond was given to the sheriff, and the Solers were not parties to
it.
The declaration goes on to allege that, with the same intent,
the defendant did not discuss the actual questions or evidence;
that he obtained the signatures of the other judges upon his
representation that the decision set forth an impartial and fair
statement of the case, he knowing the contrary, and further, that
Justice Elliott, who sat at the hearing, did not sign the decision,
and was not informed of it. It further alleges that defendant
omitted the names of Martinez and Riu, and directed the clerk to
enter judgment against the other defendants only, knowing who were
parties and what had been the judgment below. Thereafter, on
February 8, 1910, pursuant to the decision and defendant's orders,
judgment was entered against Alzua and three others for P. 11,068,
with interest, on the ground that the Solers were creditors of
Martinez and Riu, and preferred to Alzua, although it is said
Martinez
Page 231 U. S. 110
and Riu were absolved by the judgment. Averments are reiterated
that the defendant performed all the acts alleged in relation to
Nos. 4017 and 5719 wrongfully, with intent to injure the plaintiff,
with knowledge of the facts set forth, and that such knowledge
appears from inspection of the decisions in Nos. 4017 and 5719.
Execution issued, and the present plaintiffs paid the judgment in
5719, but to do so had to sell their property at a great sacrifice.
The plaintiffs therefore seek judgment for the actual value of the
property sold, the income that would have been realized, and
punitive damages -- P. 115,000 in all. A demurrer to the
declaration was sustained by both courts below, and the plaintiffs
being unable to better their case by amendment, judgment was
entered and the complaint dismissed.
Abridged once more, this complaint is that the defendant,
without jurisdiction, entered a judgment against the plaintiff,
contrary to an order of the full court, and, in the opinion by
which the full court ratified the change, made a false statement of
fact; that, in the opinion of the full court in a second suit, he
inserted various false statements, including one attributing to the
first judgment an effect that it could not have in the
circumstances, all with full knowledge and intent to injure the
plaintiff, which knowledge appears from inspection of the opinions,
and that the plaintiff had to pay the second judgment at a
sacrifice.
It is apparent that there are other difficulties beside the
immunity of the judge in the way of such a suit. In the first
place, the Supreme Court of the Philippines decides that the judge
had jurisdiction to make the change -- a matter of local
administration on which we should be very slow to revise the
judgment.
Gray v. Taylor, 227 U. S.
51;
Fox v. Haarstick, 156 U.
S. 674,
156 U. S. 679.
Next, the judges, on inspection of the opinions and records which
they regard as incorporated in the complaint, and for which they
were responsible by their assent, are of opinion that the
statements in the former opinions were
Page 231 U. S. 111
correct and that the decisions were right, and, of course,
reject the suggestion that they were deceived when they rendered
the judgments. It might be added that the complaint hardly makes it
clear that any of the alleged misstatements, some of which at
least, were irrelevant to the result, were the determining causes
of the judgment of which the plaintiff complains.
But, however it may be as to the matters that we have stated, we
regard it as fundamental that the immunity of the defendant from
this suit is the same as that of judges in the United States, which
is established beyond dispute.
Bradley v.
Fisher, 13 Wall. 335;
Randall v.
Brigham, 7 Wall. 523. Whatever may have been the
Spanish law, this is a principle so deep-seated in our system that
we should regard it as carried into the Philippines by implication
as soon as we established courts in those islands. Acts of
Philippine Commission Nos. 136, 222. Act of Congress of July 1,
1902, c. 1369; §§ 1, 5, 32 Stat. 691, 693. Reasons
somewhat analogous to those adverted to in
Carrington v. United
States, 208 U. S. 1,
208 U. S. 7, make
the rule perhaps more important in the Philippines than it is here.
It is true that, in Act No.190, § 9, of the Philippine
Commission (1901), it is provided that
"no judge, justice of the peace, or assessor shall be liable to
a civil action for the recovery of damages by reason of any
judicial action or judgment rendered by him in good faith, and
within the limits of his legal powers and jurisdiction,"
and it is argued that this imports that any judge shall be
liable for a judgment rendered in bad faith. But, without
considering the question of power, we are of opinion, for the
reasons to which we have referred, that this should not be
construed to convey such an implication, at least as to judges of
the supreme court. The section is shown to have had in mind
inferior judges and the like by its mention of justices of the
peace and assessors, as to whom a different rule has been held to
prevail.
Page 231 U. S. 112
We think it manifest that the question on which the decision of
this cause depends needs no further argument, and that the judgment
should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.