Official Immunity Issues When Suing Government Employees
One issue that arises in personal injury cases against government employees, such as county or city employees, is the doctrine of official immunity. Common law official immunity protects government employees from liability for civil tort claims. In determining whether official immunity applies, the court looks to the nature of the act or actions by the government employee resulting in injury to the plaintiff.
Whether the decisions leading to the conduct were discretionary or ministerial. Whether an act is ministerial or discretionary affects the official immunity analysis by the court.
The law of common law official immunity has been developed by our courts. A duty is discretionary if it involves more individual professional judgment that necessarily reflects the professional goal and factors of a situation. A duty is ministerial if it is absolute, certain, and imperative, involving merely the execution of a specific duty arising from fixed and designated facts. The duty must dictate the scope of the employee’s conduct.
Official immunity does not apply: (1) when a ministerial duty is either not performed or is performed negligently, or (2) when a willful or malicious wrong is committed. Malice means nothing more than the intentional doing of a wrongful act without legal justification or excuse, or, otherwise stated, the willful violation of a known right. Each case requires looking at the duties of the government employees and circumstances surrounding the events supporting the clam.
I argued the official immunity issue before the Minnesota Court of Appeals on April 20, 2016 in a case involving personal injuries sustained by a client while a vulnerable adult patient at the Ramsey County Detox Center. My client had his right elbow broken and wrist injured during an escort by Detox staff to a seclusion room. Ramsey County asserted that the acts of its employees were protected by official immunity and we argued they were not. A decision by the three-judge panel will be issued within ninety days. The case is Marc Hall v. Ramsey County, et al.


Share On: