One Shaw filed an action for damages and injunctive relief under
42 U.S.C. § 1983 against petitioner and others, claiming that
they had deprived him of his constitutional rights. Upon the death
of Shaw before trial, respondent executor of his estate was
substituted as plaintiff. Petitioner and the other defendants filed
a motion to dismiss on the ground that Shaw's death abated the
action. The District Court denied the motion. The court held that
the applicable survivorship rule was governed by 42 U.S.C. §
1988, which provides that the jurisdiction conferred on district
courts for the protection of civil rights shall be exercised
conformably with federal laws so far as such laws are suitable,
"but in all cases where they . . . are deficient in the
provisions necessary to furnish suitable remedies . . . the common
law, as modified and changed by the constitution and statutes of
the [forum] State"
shall apply as long as they are "not inconsistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States." The court found the
federal civil rights laws to be "deficient in not providing for
survival," and then held that, under Louisiana law, an action like
Shaw's would survive only in favor of a spouse, children, parents,
or siblings, none of whom was alive at the time of Shaw's death,
but refused to apply the state law, finding it inconsistent with
federal law. In place of the state law, the court created "a
federal common law of survival in civil rights actions in favor of
the personal representative of the deceased." The Court of Appeals
affirmed.
Held: The District Court should have adopted the
Louisiana survivorship law, which would have caused Shaw's action
to abate. Pp.
436 U. S.
590-595.
(a) There is nothing in § 1983, despite its broad sweep, to
indicate that a state law causing abatement of a particular action
should invariably be ignored in favor of a rule of absolute
survivorship. No claim is made that Louisiana's survivorship laws
do not in general comport with the underlying policies of §
1983, or that Louisiana's decision to restrict certain survivorship
rights to the relations specified above is unreasonable. Pp.
436 U. S.
590-592.
(b) The goal of compensating those injured by a deprivation of
rights provides no basis for requiring compensation of one who is
merely suing
Page 436 U. S. 585
as decedent's executor. And, given that most Louisiana actions
survive the plaintiff's death, the fact that a particular action
might abate would not adversely affect § 1983's role in
preventing official illegality, at least in situations such as the
one here, where there is no claim that the illegality caused
plaintiff's death. P.
436 U. S.
592.
545 F.2d 980, reversed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and STEWART, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ.,
joined. BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN
and WHITE, JJ., joined,
post, p.
436 U. S.
595.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
In early 1970, Clay L. Shaw filed a civil rights action under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Louisiana. Four years later, before trial had
commenced, Shaw died. The question presented is whether the
District Court was required to adopt as federal law a Louisiana
survivorship statute, which would have caused this action to abate,
or was free instead to create a federal common law rule allowing
the action to survive. Resolution of this question turns on whether
the state statute is "inconsistent with the Constitution and laws
of the United States." 42 U.S.C. § 1988. [
Footnote 1]
Page 436 U. S. 586
I
In 1969, Shaw was tried in a Louisiana state court on charges of
having participated in a conspiracy to assassinate President John F
Kennedy. He was acquitted by a jury, but within days was arrested
on charges of having committed perjury in his testimony at the
conspiracy trial. Alleging that these prosecutions were undertaken
in bad faith, Shaw's § 1983 complaint named as defendants the
then District Attorney of Orleans Parish, Jim Garrison, and five
other persons, including petitioner Willard E. Robertson, who was
alleged to have lent financial support to Garrison's investigation
of Shaw through an organization known as "Truth or Consequences."
On Shaw's application, the District Court enjoined prosecution of
the perjury action,
Shaw v. Garrison, 328 F.
Supp. 390 (1971), and the Court of Appeals affirmed, 467 F.2d
113 (CA5 1972). [
Footnote 2]
Since Shaw had filed an action seeking damages, the parties
continued with discovery after the injunction issued. Trial was set
for November, 1974, but in August, 1974, Shaw died. The executor of
his estate, respondent Edward F. Wegmann (hereafter respondent),
moved to be substituted as plaintiff,
Page 436 U. S. 587
and the District Court granted the motion. [
Footnote 3] Petitioner and other defendants then
moved to dismiss the action on the ground that it had abated on
Shaw's death.
The District Court denied the motion to dismiss. It began its
analysis by referring to 42 U.S.C. § 1988; this statute
provides that, when federal law is "deficient" with regard to
"suitable remedies" in federal civil rights actions, federal courts
are to be governed by
"the common law, as modified and changed by the constitution and
statutes of the State wherein the court having jurisdiction of
[the] civil . . . cause is held, so far as the same is not
inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United
States."
The court found the federal civil rights laws to be "deficient
in not providing for survival."
Shaw v.
Garrison, 391 F.
Supp. 1353, 1361 (1975). It then held that, under Louisiana
law, an action like Shaw's would survive only in favor of a spouse,
children, parents, or siblings. Since no person with the requisite
relationship to Shaw was alive at the time of his death, his action
would have abated had state law been adopted as the federal rule.
But the court refused to apply state law, finding it inconsistent
with federal law, and, in its place, created "a federal common law
of survival in civil rights actions in favor of the personal
representative of the deceased."
Id. at 1368.
On an interlocutory appeal taken pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1292(b), the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
affirmed. The court first noted that all parties agreed that, "if
Louisiana law applies, Shaw's § 1983 claim
Page 436 U. S. 588
abates." 545 F.2d 980, 982 (1977). Like the District Court, the
Court of Appeals applied 42 U.S.C. § 1988, found federal law
"deficient" with regard to survivorship, and held Louisiana law
"inconsistent with the broad remedial purposes embodied in the
Civil Rights Acts." 545 F.2d at 983. It offered a number of
justifications for creating a federal common law rule allowing
respondent to continue Shaw's action: such a rule would better
further the policies underlying § 1983, 545 F.2d at 984-985;
would "foste[r] the uniform application of the civil rights laws,"
id. at 985; and would be consistent with "[t]he marked
tendency of the federal courts to allow actions to survive in other
areas of particular federal concern,"
ibid. The court
concluded that, "as a matter of federal common law, a § 1983
action instituted by a plaintiff prior to his death survives in
favor of his estate."
Id. at 987.
We granted certiorari, 434 U.S. 983 (1977), and we now
reverse.
II
As both courts below held, and as both parties here have
assumed, the decision as to the applicable survivorship rule is
governed by 42 U.S.C. § 1988. This statute recognizes that, in
certain areas "federal law is unsuited or insufficient
to
furnish suitable remedies;'" federal law simply does not "cover
every issue that may arise in the context of a federal civil rights
action." Moor v. County of Alameda, 411 U.
S. 693, 411 U. S. 703,
702 (1973), quoting 42 U.S.C. § 1988. When federal law is thus
"deficient," § 1988 instructs us to turn to "the common law,
as modified and changed by the constitution and statutes of the
[forum] State," as long as these are "not inconsistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States." See n 1, supra. Regardless of the
source of the law applied in a particular case, however, it is
clear that the ultimate rule adopted under § 1988 "`is a
federal rule responsive to the need whenever a federal right is
impaired.'"
Page 436 U. S. 589
Moor v. County of Alameda, supra at
411 U. S. 703,
quoting
Sullivan v. Little Hunting Park, Inc.,
396 U. S. 229,
396 U. S. 240
(1969).
As we noted in
Moor v. County of Alameda, and as was
recognized by both courts below, one specific area not covered by
federal law is that relating to "the survival of civil rights
actions under § 1983 upon the death of either the plaintiff or
defendant." 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 702
n. 14. [
Footnote 4] State
statutes governing the survival of state actions do exist, however.
These statutes, which vary widely with regard to both the types of
claims that survive and the parties as to whom survivorship is
allowed,
see W. Prosser, Law of Torts 900-901 (4th
ed.1971), were intended to modify the simple, if harsh,
19th-century common law rule: "[A]n injured party's personal claim
was [always] extinguished . . . upon the death of either the
injured party himself or the alleged wrongdoer."
Moor v. County
of Alameda, supra at
411 U. S. 702
n. 14;
see Michigan Central R. Co. v. Vreeland,
227 U. S. 59,
227 U. S. 67
(1913). Under § 1988, this state statutory law, modifying the
common law, [
Footnote 5]
Page 436 U. S. 590
provides the principal reference point in determining survival
of civil rights actions, subject to the important proviso that
state law may not be applied when it is "inconsistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States." Because of this
proviso, the courts below refused to adopt as federal law the
Louisiana survivorship statute and in its place created a federal
common law rule.
III
In resolving questions of inconsistency between state and
federal law raised under § 1988, courts must look not only at
particular federal statutes and constitutional provisions, but also
at "the policies expressed in [them]."
Sullivan v. Little
Hunting Park, Inc., supra at
396 U. S. 240;
see Moor v. County of Alameda, supra at
411 U. S. 703.
Of particular importance is whether application of state law "would
be inconsistent with the federal policy underlying the cause of
action under consideration."
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency,
Inc., 421 U. S. 454,
421 U. S. 465
(1975). The instant cause of action arises under 42 U.S.C. §
1983, one of the "Reconstruction civil rights statutes" that this
Court has accorded "
a sweep as broad as [their] language.'"
Griffin v. Breckenridge, 403 U. S. 88,
403 U. S. 97
(1971), quoting United States v. Price, 383 U.
S. 787, 383 U. S. 801
(1966).
Despite the broad sweep of § 1983, we can find nothing in
the statute or its underlying policies to indicate that a state law
causing abatement of a particular action should invariably be
ignored in favor of a rule of absolute survivorship. The
Page 436 U. S. 591
policies underlying § 1983 include compensation of persons
injured by deprivation of federal rights and prevention of abuses
of power by those acting under color of state law.
See, e.g.,
Carey v. Piphus, 435 U. S. 247,
435 U. S. 254
(1978);
Mitchum v. Foster, 407 U.
S. 225,
407 U. S.
238-242 (172);
Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.
S. 167,
365 U. S.
172-187 (1961). No claim is made here that Louisiana's
survivorship laws are in general inconsistent with these policies,
and indeed most Louisiana actions survive the plaintiff's death.
See La.Code Civ.Proc.Ann., Art. 428 (West 1960);
La.Civ.Code Ann., Art. 2315 (West 1971). Moreover, certain types of
actions that would abate automatically on the plaintiff's death in
many States -- for example, actions for defamation and malicious
prosecution -- would apparently survive in Louisiana. [
Footnote 6] In actions other than those
for damage to property, however, Louisiana does not allow the
deceased's personal representative to be substituted as plaintiff;
rather, the action survives only in favor of a spouse, children,
parents, or siblings.
See 391 F.Supp. at 1361-1363;
La.Civ.Code Ann., Art. 2315 (West 1971);
J. Wilton Jones Co. v.
Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 248 So. 2d 878 (La.App. 1970 and
1971) (en banc). [
Footnote 7]
But surely few persons are not
Page 436 U. S. 592
survived by one of these close relatives, and in any event no
contention is made here that Louisiana's decision to restrict
certain survivorship rights in this manner is an.unreasonable one.
[
Footnote 8]
It is therefore difficult to see how any of § 1983's
policies would be undermined if Shaw's action were to abate. The
goal of compensating those injured by a deprivation of rights
provides no basis for requiring compensation of one who is merely
suing as the executor of the deceased's estate. [
Footnote 9] And, given that most Louisiana
actions survive the plaintiff's death, the fact that a particular
action might abate surely would not adversely affect § 1983's
role in preventing official illegality, at least in situations in
which there is no claim that the illegality caused the plaintiff's
death. A state official contemplating illegal activity must always
be prepared to face the prospect of a § 1983 action being
filed against him. In light of this prospect, even an official
aware of the intricacies of Louisiana survivorship law would hardly
be influenced in his behavior by its provisions. [
Footnote 10]
Page 436 U. S. 593
It is true that § 1983 provides
"a uniquely federal remedy against incursions under the claimed
authority of state law upon rights secured by the Constitution and
laws of the Nation."
Mitchum v. Foster, supra at
407 U. S. 239.
That a federal remedy should be available, however, does not mean
that a § 1983 plaintiff (or his representative) must be
allowed to continue an action in disregard of the state law to
which § 1988 refers us. A state statute cannot be considered
"inconsistent" with federal law merely because the statute causes
the plaintiff to lose the litigation. If success of the § 1983
action were the only benchmark, there would be no reason at all to
look to state law, for the appropriate rule would then always be
the one favoring the plaintiff, and its source would be essentially
irrelevant. But § 1988 quite clearly instructs us to refer to
state statutes; it does not say that state law is to be accepted or
rejected based solely on which side is advantaged thereby. Under
the circumstances presented here, the fact that Shaw was not
survived by one of several close relatives should not itself be
sufficient to cause the Louisiana survivorship provisions to be
deemed "inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United
States." 42 U.S.C. § 1988. [
Footnote 11]
Page 436 U. S. 594
IV
Our holding today is a narrow one, limited to situations in
which no claim is made that state law generally is inhospitable to
survival of § 1983 actions and in which the particular
application of state survivorship law, while it may cause abatement
of the action, has no independent adverse effect on the policies
underlying § 1983. A different situation might well be
presented, as the District Court noted, if state law "did not
provide for survival of any tort actions," 391 F. Supp. at 1363, or
if it significantly restricted the types of actions that survive.
Cf. Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 258
(failure of common law to "recognize an analogous cause of action"
is not sufficient reason to deny compensation to § 1983
plaintiff). We intimate no view, moreover, about whether abatement
based on state law could be allowed in a situation in which
deprivation of federal rights caused death.
See supra at
436 U. S. 592,
and n. 10;
cf. Brazier v. Cherry, 293 F.2d 401 (CA5 1961)
(deceased allegedly beaten to death by policemen; state survival
law applied in favor of his widow and estate).
Here it is agreed that Shaw's death was not caused by the
deprivation of rights for which he sued under § 1983, and
Louisiana law provides for the survival of most tort actions.
Respondent's only complaint about Louisiana law is that it would
cause Shaw's action to abate. We conclude that the
Page 436 U. S. 595
mere fact of abatement of a particular lawsuit is not sufficient
ground to declare state law "inconsistent" with federal law.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1988 provides in pertinent part:
"The jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters conferred on the
district courts by the provisions of this chapter and Title 18, for
the protection of all persons in the United States in their civil
rights, and for their vindication, shall be exercised and enforced
in conformity with the laws of the United States, so far as such
laws are suitable to carry the same into effect; but in all cases
where they are not adapted to the object, or are deficient in the
provisions necessary to furnish suitable remedies and punish
offenses against law, the common law, as modified and changed by
the constitution and statutes of the State wherein the court having
jurisdiction of such civil or criminal cause is held, so far as the
same is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the
United States, shall be extended to and govern the said courts in
the trial and disposition of the cause, and, if it is of a criminal
nature, in the infliction of punishment on the party-found
guilty."
[
Footnote 2]
The Court of Appeals held that this Court's decision in
Younger v. Harris, 401 U. S. 37
(1971), did not bar the enjoining of the state perjury prosecution,
since the District Court's "finding of a bad faith prosecution
establishes irreparable injury both great and immediate for
purposes of the comity restraints discussed in
Younger."
467 F.2d at 122.
[
Footnote 3]
See Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 25(a)(1). As the Court of
Appeals observed, this Rule
"does not resolve the question [of] what law of survival of
actions should be applied in this case. [It] simply describes the
manner in which parties are to be substituted in federal
court once it is determined that the applicable substantive law
allows the action to survive a party's death."
545 F.2d 980, 982 (CA5 1977) (emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 4]
The dissenting opinion argues that, despite this lack of
coverage, "the laws of the United States" are not necessarily
"[un]suitable" or "deficient in the provisions necessary." 42
U.S.C. § 1988;
see post at
436 U. S. 595.
Both courts below found such a deficiency, however, and respondent
here agrees with them. 545 F.2d at 983;
Shaw v.
Garrison, 391 F.
Supp. 1353, 1358-1361 (1975); Brief for Respondent 6.
There is a survivorship provision in 42 U.S.C. § 1986, but
this statute applies only with regard to "the wrongs . . .
mentioned in [42 U.S.C.] section 1985." Although Shaw's complaint
alleged causes of action under §§ 1985 and 1986, the
District Court dismissed this part of the complaint for failure to
state a claim upon which relief could be granted. 391 F. Supp. at
1356, 1369-1371. These dismissals were not challenged on the
interlocutory appeal and are not at issue here.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 1988's reference to "the common law" might be
interpreted as a reference to the decisional law of the forum
State, or as a reference to the kind of general common law that was
an established part of our federal jurisprudence by the time of
§ 1988's passage in 1866,
See Swift v. Tyson,
16 Pet. 1 (1842);
cf. Moor v. County of Alameda, 411 U.S.
at
411 U. S. 702
n. 14 (referring to the survivorship rule "at common law"). The
latter interpretation has received some judicial and scholarly
support.
See, e.g., Basista v. Weir, 340 F.2d 74, 85-86,
n. 10 (CA3 1965); Theis,
Shaw v. Garrison: Some
Observations on 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and Federal Common Law, 36
La.L.Rev. 681, 68685 (1976).
See also Carey v. Piphus,
435 U. S. 247,
435 U. S. 258
n. 13 (1978). It makes no difference for our purposes which
interpretation is the correct one, because Louisiana has a
survivorship statute that, under the terms of § 1988, plainly
governs this case.
[
Footnote 6]
An action for defamation abates on the plaintiff's death in the
vast majority of States,
see W. Prosser, Law of Torts
900-901 (4th ed.1971), and a large number of States also provide
for abatement of malicious prosecution actions,
see, e.g., Dean
v. Shirer, 547 F.2d 227, 229-230 (CA4 1976) (South Carolina
law);
Hall v. Wooten, 506 F.2d 564, 569 (CA6 1974)
(Kentucky law).
See also 391 F. Supp. at 1364 n. 17. In
Louisiana, an action for defamation or malicious prosecution would
apparently survive (assuming that one of the relatives specified in
La.Civ.Code Ann., Art. 2315 (West 1971), survives the deceased, as
discussed in text
infra); such an action seems not to fall
into the category of "strictly personal" actions, La.Code
Civ.Proc.Ann., Art. 428 (West 1960), that automatically abate on
the plaintiff's death.
See Johnson, Death on the Collais
Coach: The Mystery of Louisiana Wrongful Death and Survival
Actions, 37 La.L.Rev. 1, 6 n. 23, 52, and n. 252 (1976).
See
also Official Revision Comment (c) to La.Code Civ.Proc.Ann.,
Art. 428.
[
Footnote 7]
For those actions that do not abate automatically on the
plaintiff's death, most States apparently allow the personal
representative of the deceased to be substituted as plaintiff.
See 391 F. Supp. at 1364, and n. 18.
[
Footnote 8]
The reasonableness of Louisiana's approach is suggested by the
fact that several federal statutes providing for survival take the
same approach, limiting survival to specific named relatives.
See, e.g., 33 U.S.C. § 908(d) (1970 ed., Supp. V)
(Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act); 45 U.S.C.
§ 59 (Federal Employers' Liability Act). The approach taken by
federal statutes in other substantive areas cannot, of course, bind
a federal court in a § 1983 action, nor does the fact that a
state survivorship statute may be reasonable by itself resolve the
question whether it is "inconsistent with the Constitution and laws
of the United States." 42 U.S.C.§ 1988.
[
Footnote 9]
This does not, of course, preclude survival of a § 1983
action when such is allowed by state law,
see Moor v. County of
Alameda, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
702-703, n. 14, nor does it preclude recovery by
survivors who are suing under § 1983 for injury to their own
interests.
[
Footnote 10]
In order to find even a marginal influence on behavior as a
result of Louisiana's survivorship provisions, one would have to
make the rather far-fetched assumptions that a state official had
both the desire and the ability deliberately to select as victims
only those persons who would die before conclusion of the §
1983 suit (for reasons entirely unconnected with the official
illegality) and who would not be survived by any close
relatives.
[
Footnote 11]
In addition to referring to the policies underlying § 1983,
the Court of Appeals based its decision in part on the desirability
of uniformity in the application of the civil rights laws and on
the fact that the federal courts have allowed survival "in other
areas of particular federal concern . . . where statutory guidance
on the matter is lacking." 545 F.2d at 985;
see supra at
436 U. S. 588.
With regard to the latter point, however, we do not find "statutory
guidance . . . lacking"; § 1988 instructs us to turn to state
laws, unless an "inconsistency" with federal law is found. While
the courts below found such an inconsistency, we do not agree, as
discussed in text
supra, and hence the survivorship rules
in areas where the courts are free to develop federal common law --
without first referring to state law and finding an inconsistency
-- can have no bearing on our decision here. Similarly, whatever
the value of nationwide uniformity in areas of civil rights
enforcement where Congress has not spoken, in the areas to which
§ 1988 is applicable, Congress has provided direction,
indicating that state law will often provide the content of the
federal remedial rule. This statutory reliance on state law
obviously means that there will not be nationwide uniformity on
these issues.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR.
JUSTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
It is disturbing to see the Court, in this decision, although
almost apologetically self-described as "a narrow one,"
ante at
436 U. S. 594,
cut back on what is acknowledged,
ante at
436 U. S. 590,
to be the "broad sweep" of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Accordingly, I
dissent.
I do not read the emphasis of § 1988, as the Court does,
ante at
436 U. S. 585
and
436 U. S.
593-594, n. 11, to the effect that the Federal District
Court "was required to adopt" the Louisiana statute, and was free
to look to federal common law only as a secondary matter. It seems
to me that this places the cart before the horse. Section 1988
requires the utilization of federal law ("shall be exercised and
enforced in conformity with the laws of the United States"). It
authorizes resort to the state statute only if the federal laws
"are not adapted to the object" of "protection of all persons in
the United States in their civil rights, and for their vindication"
or are "deficient in the provisions necessary to furnish suitable
remedies and punish offenses against law." Even then, state
statutes are an alternative source of law only if "not inconsistent
with the Constitution and laws of the United States." Surely,
federal law is the rule, and not the exception.
Accepting this as the proper starting point, it necessarily
follows, it seems to me, that the judgment of the Court of Appeals
must be affirmed, not reversed. To be sure, survivorship of a civil
rights action under § 1983 upon the death of either party is
not specifically covered by the federal statute. But that does not
mean that "the laws of the United States" are not "suitable" or are
"not. adapted to the object" or are "deficient in the provisions
necessary." The federal law and
Page 436 U. S. 596
the underlying federal policy stand bright and clear. And in the
light of that brightness and of that clarity, I see no need to
resort to the myriad of state rules governing the survival of state
actions.
First. In
Sullivan v. Little Hunting Park, Inc.,
396 U. S. 229
(1969), a case that concerned the availability of compensatory
damages for a violation of § 1982, a remedial question, as
here, not governed explicitly by any federal statute other than
§ 1988, Mr. Justice Douglas, writing for the Court, painted
with a broad brush the scope of the federal court's choice of law
authority:
"[A]s we read § 1988, . . . both federal and state rules on
damages may be utilized,
whichever better serves the policies
expressed in the federal statutes. . . . The rule of damages,
whether drawn from federal or state sources, is a federal rule
responsive to the need whenever a federal right is impaired."
396 U.S. at
396 U. S. 240
(emphasis added).
The Court's present reading of § 1988 seems to me to be
hyperlogical and sadly out of line with the precept set forth in
that quoted material. The statute was intended to give courts
flexibility to shape their procedures and remedies in accord with
the underlying policies of the Civil Rights Acts, choosing
whichever rule "better serves" those policies (emphasis added). I
do not understand the Court to deny a federal court's authority
under § 1988 to reject state law when to apply it seriously
undermines substantial federal concerns. But I do not accept the
Court's apparent conclusion that, absent such an extreme
inconsistency, § 1988 restricts courts to state law on matters
of procedure and remedy. That conclusion too often would interfere
with the efficient redress of constitutional rights.
Second. The Court's reading of § 1988 cannot easily be
squared with its treatment of the problems of immunity and damages
under the Civil Rights Acts. Only this Term, in
Page 436 U. S. 597
Carey v. Piphus, 435 U. S. 247
(1978), the Court set a rule for the award of damages under §
1983 for deprivation of procedural due process by resort to
"federal common law." Though the case arose from Illinois, the
Court did not feel compelled to inquire into Illinois' statutory or
decisional law of damages, nor to test that law for possible
"inconsistency" with the federal scheme, before embracing a federal
common law rule. Instead, the Court fashioned a federal damages
rule, from common law sources and its view of the type of injury,
to govern such cases uniformly State to State. 435 U.S. at
435 U. S.
257-259, and n. 13.
Similarly, in constructing immunities under § 1983, the
Court has consistently relied on federal common law rules. As
Carey v. Piphus recognizes,
id. at
435 U. S. 258
n. 13, in attributing immunity to prosecutors,
Imbler v.
Pachtman, 424 U. S. 409,
424 U. S.
417-419 (197); to judges,
Pierson v. Ray,
386 U. S. 547,
386 U. S.
554-555 (1967); and to other officials, matters on which
the language of 1983 is silent, we have not felt bound by the tort
immunities recognized in the particular forum State and, only after
finding an "inconsistency" with federal standards, then considered
a uniform federal rule. Instead, the immunities have been fashioned
in light of historic common law concerns and the policies of the
Civil Rights Acts. [
Footnote
2/1]
Third. A flexible reading of § 1988, permitting resort to a
federal rule of survival because it "better serves" the policies of
the Civil Rights Acts, would be consistent with the methodology
employed in the other major choice of law provision in the federal
structure, namely, the Rules of Decision Act. 28
Page 436 U. S. 598
U.S.C. § 162. [
Footnote
2/2] That Act provides that state law is to govern a civil
trial in a federal court "except where the Constitution or treaties
of the United States or Acts of Congress otherwise require or
provide." The exception has not been interpreted in a crabbed or
wooden fashion, but, instead, has been used to give expression to
important federal interests. Thus, for example, the exception has
been used to apply a federal common law of labor contracts in suits
under § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act, 1947, 29
U.S.C. § 185(a),
Textile Workers v. Lincoln Mills,
353 U. S. 448
(1957); to apply federal common law to transactions in commercial
paper issued by the United States where the United States is a
party,
Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States, 318 U.
S. 363 (1943); and to avoid application of governing
state law to the reservation of mineral rights in a land
acquisition agreement to which the United States was a party and
that bore heavily upon a federal wildlife regulatory program,
United States v. Little Lake Misere Land Co., 412 U.
S. 580 (1973).
See also Auto Workers v. Hoosier
Cardinal Corp., 383 U. S. 696,
383 U. S. 709
(1966):
"[S]tate law is applied [under the Rules of Decision Act] only
because it supplements and fulfills federal policy, and the
ultimate question is what federal policy requires."
(WHITE, J., dissenting.)
Just as the Rules of Decision Act cases disregard state law
where there is conflict with federal policy, even though no
explicit conflict with the terms of a federal statute, so, too,
state remedial and procedural law must be disregarded under §
1988 where that law fails to give adequate expression to important
federal concerns.
See Sullivan v. Little Hunting Park, Inc.,
supra. The opponents of the 1866 Act were distinctly aware
that the legislation that became § 1988 would
Page 436 U. S. 599
give the federal courts power to shape federal common law rules.
See, for example, the protesting remarks of Congressman
Kerr relative to § 3 of the 1866 Act (which contained the
predecessor version of § 1988):
"I might go on, and in this manner illustrate the practical
working of this extraordinary measure. . . . [T]he authors of this
bill feared, very properly too, that the system of laws heretofore
administered in the Federal courts might fail to supply any
precedent to guide the courts in the enforcement of the strange
provisions of this bill, and not to be thwarted by this difficulty,
they confer upon the courts the power of judicial legislation, the
power to make such other laws as they may think necessary. Such is
the practical effect of the last clause of the third section [of
§ 1988]. . . . "
"That is to say, the Federal courts may, in such cases, make
such rules and apply such law as they please, and call it
common law."
(Emphasis in original). Cong.Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 1271
(1866).
Fourth. Section 1983's critical concerns are compensation of the
victims of unconstitutional action and deterrence of like
misconduct in the future. Any crabbed rule of survivorship
obviously interferes directly with the second critical interest,
and may well interfere with the first.
The unsuitability of Louisiana's law is shown by the very case
at hand. It will happen not infrequently that a decedent's only
survivor or survivors are nonrelatives or collateral relatives who
do not fit within the four named classes of Louisiana statutory
survivors. Though the Court surmises,
ante at
436 U. S.
591-592, that "surely few persons are not survived" by a
spouse, children, parents, or siblings, any lawyer who has had
experience in estate planning or in probating estates knows that
that situation is frequently encountered. The Louisiana
survivorship rule applies no matter how malicious or
ill-intentioned a defendant's action was. In this case, as
Page 436 U. S. 600
the Court acknowledges,
ante at
436 U. S. 586
n. 2, the District Court found that defendant Garrison brought
state perjury charges against plaintiff Shaw "in bad faith and for
purposes of harassment,"
328 F.
Supp. 390, 400, a finding that the Court of Appeals affirmed as
not clearly erroneous. 467 F.2d 113, 122. The federal interest in
specific deterrence, when there was malicious intention to deprive
a person of his constitutional rights, is particularly strong, as
Carey v. Piphus intimates, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 257
n. 11. Insuring a specific deterrent under federal law gains
importance from the very premise of the Civil Rights Act that state
tort policy often is inadequate to deter violations of the
constitutional rights of disfavored groups.
The Louisiana rule requiring abatement appears to apply even
where the death was intentional and caused, say, by a beating
delivered by a defendant. The Court does not deny this result,
merely declaiming,
ante at
436 U. S. 594,
that, in such a case, it might reconsider the applicability of the
Louisiana survivorship statute. But the Court does not explain how
either certainty or federalism is served by such a variegated
application of the Louisiana statute, nor how an abatement rule
would be workable when made to depend on a fact of causation often
requiring an entire trial to prove.
It makes no sense to me to make even a passing reference,
ante at
436 U. S. 592,
to behavioral influence. The Court opines that no official aware of
the intricacies of Louisiana survivorship law would "be influenced
in his behavior by its provisions." But the defendants in Shaw's
litigation obviously have been "sweating it out" through the
several years of proceedings and litigation in this case. One can
imagine the relief occasioned when the realization dawned that
Shaw's death might -- just might -- abate the action. To that
extent, the deterrent against behavior such as that attributed to
the defendants in this case surely has been lessened.
As to compensation, it is no answer to intimate, as the
Court
Page 436 U. S. 601
does,
ante at
436 U. S.
591-692, that Shaw's particular survivors were not
personally injured, for obviously, had Shaw been survived by
parents or siblings, the cause of action would exist despite the
absence in them of so deep and personal an affront, or any at all,
as Shaw himself was alleged to have sustained. The Court propounds
the unreasoned conclusion,
ibid., that the
"goal of compensating those injured by a deprivation of rights
provides no basis for requiring compensation of one who is merely
suing as the executor of the deceased's estate."
But the Court does not purport to explain why it is consistent
with the purposes of § 1983 to recognize a derivative or
independent interest in a brother or parent, while denying similar
interest to a nephew, grandparent, or legatee.
Fifth. The Court regards the Louisiana system's structuring of
survivorship rights as not unreasonable.
Ante at
436 U. S. 592.
The observation, of course, is a gratuitous one, for, as the Court
immediately observes,
id. at
436 U. S. 592
n. 8, it does not resolve the issue that confronts us here. We are
not concerned with the reasonableness of the Louisiana survivorship
statute in allocating tort recoveries. We are concerned with its
application in the face of a claim of civil rights guaranteed the
decedent by federal law. Similarly, the Court's observation that
the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.
§§ 908(d), 909(d) (1970 ed., Supp. V), and Federal
Employers' Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. § 59, limit survival to
specific named relatives or dependents (albeit a larger class of
survivors than the Louisiana statute allows) is gratuitous. Those
statutes have as their main purpose loss-shifting and compensation,
rather than deterrence of unconstitutional conduct. And, although
the Court does not mention it, any reference to the survival rule
provided in 42 U.S.C. § 1986 governing that statute's
principle of vicarious liability, would be off point. There it was
the extraordinary character of the liability created by §
1986, of failing to
prevent wrongful acts, that apparently
induced Congress to limit recovery to
Page 436 U. S. 602
widows or next of kin in a specified amount of statutory
damages.
Cf. Cong.Globe, 42d Cong., 1st Sess., 749-752,
756-763 (1871);
Moor v. County of Alameda, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 710,
n 26.
The Court acknowledges,
ante at
436 U. S. 590,
"the broad sweep of § 1983," but seeks to justify the
application of a rule of nonsurvivorship here because it feels that
Louisiana is comparatively generous as to survivorship anyway. This
grudging allowance of what the Louisiana statute does not give,
just because it gives in part, seems to me to grind adversely
against the statute's "broad sweep." Would the Court's decision be
otherwise if actions for defamation and malicious prosecution in
fact did not survive at all in Louisiana? The Court, by omission,
admits,
ante at
436 U. S. 591,
and n. 6, that that question of survival has not been litigated in
Louisiana.
See Johnson, Death on the Callais Coach: The
Mystery of Louisiana Wrongful Death and Survival Actions, 37
La.L.Rev. 1, 6 n. 23 (1976). Defamation and malicious prosecution
actions wholly abate upon the death of the plaintiff in a large
number of States,
see ante at
436 U. S. 591,
and n. 6. Does it make sense to apply a federal rule of
survivorship in those States while preserving a different state
rule, stingier than the federal rule, in Louisiana?
Sixth. A federal rule of survivorship allows uniformity, and
counsel immediately know the answer. Litigants identically
aggrieved in their federal civil rights, residing in geographically
adjacent States, will not have differing results due to the
vagaries of state law. Litigants need not engage in uncertain
characterization of a § 1983 action in terms of its nearest
tort cousin, a questionable procedure to begin with, since the
interests protected by tort law and constitutional law may be quite
different. Nor will federal rights depend on the arcane intricacies
of state survival law -- which differs in Louisiana according to
whether the right is "strictly personal," La.Code Civ.Proc. Ann.,
Art. 428 (West 1960); whether the action concerns property damage,
La.Civ.Code Ann., Art. 2315, � 2
Page 436 U. S. 603
(West 1971); or whether it concerns "other damages,"
id. � 3.
See 37 La.L,Rev. at 52.
The policies favoring so-called "absolute" survivorship,
viz., survivorship in favor of a decedent's nonrelated
legatees in the absence of familial legatees, are the simple goals
of uniformity, deterrence, and perhaps compensation. A defendant
who has violated someone's constitutional rights has no legitimate
interest in a windfall release upon the death of the victim. A
plaintiff's interest in certainty, in an equal remedy, and in
deterrence supports such an absolute rule. I regard as unanswered
the justifications advanced by the District Court and the Court of
Appeals: uniformity of decisions and fulfillment of the great
purposes of § 1983. 391 F. Supp. at 1359, 1363-1365; 545 F.2d
at 983.
Seventh. Rejecting Louisiana's survivorship limitations does not
mean that state procedure and state remedies will cease to serve as
important sources of civil rights law. State law, for instance, may
well be a suitable source of statutes of limitation, since that is
a rule for which litigants prudently can plan. Rejecting
Louisiana's survivorship limitations means only that state rules
are subject to some scrutiny for suitability. Here the deterrent
purpose of § 1983 is disserved by Louisiana's rule of
abatement.
It is unfortunate that the Court restricts the reach of §
1983 by today's decision construing § 1988. Congress now must
act again if the gap in remedy is to be filled.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Moor v. County of Alameda, 411 U.
S. 693 (1973), is not to the contrary. There, the Court
held that § 1988 does not permit the importation from state
law of a new cause of action. In passing dictum, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 702
n. 14, the Court noted the approach taken to the survival problem
by several lower federal courts. In those cases, because the
applicable state statute permitted survival, the lower courts had
little occasion to consider the need for a uniform federal
rule.
[
Footnote 2/2]
"The laws of the several states, except where the Constitution
or treaties of the United States or Acts of Congress otherwise
require or provide, shall be regarded as rules of decision in civil
actions in the courts of the United States, in cases where they
apply."