DICKINSON, Presiding Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. The sole question presented in this interlocutory appeal is whether a DeSoto County justice court clerk's negligence in failing to cancel an arrest warrant subjects the county to a tort lawsuit. We hold that, for the negligent act complained of in this case, the county has immunity under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act. So we reverse the trial court's failure to grant summary judgment, and we render a judgment in DeSoto County's favor.
¶ 2. The facts necessary to decide this case are undisputed. A domestic dispute led a justice court judge to issue an arrest warrant for T.D., and then cancel the warrant after she complied with the judge's order to attend an anger-management course. However, because the justice court clerk failed to send a cancellation notice to the local sheriff's office, DeSoto County deputies later arrested T.D. and held her in jail until they discovered the mistake.
¶ 3. The plaintiffs sued DeSoto County for the clerk's negligence. DeSoto County moved for summary judgment, claiming immunity under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act. The circuit judge denied that motion. DeSoto County appealed.
¶ 4. "Sovereign immunity" — which refers to a "government's immunity from being sued in its own courts without its consent"
¶ 5. In 1984, the Mississippi Legislature enacted the Mississippi Tort Claims Act
The circuit judge found that, under the undisputed facts of this case, DeSoto County did not enjoy immunity. We disagree.
¶ 6. We review matters of statutory interpretation de novo,
¶ 7. Section 11-46-9 grants immunity to DeSoto County if: (1) its justice court clerk was "acting within the course and scope of [her] employment or duties" (there is no dispute that she was), and (2) the claim arises "out of a ... judicial action or inaction, or administrative action or inaction of a ... judicial nature...."
¶ 8. This claim arises from both a judicial action and an administrative inaction of a judicial nature. Once the parties appeared, the justice court judge should not have left the arrest warrant outstanding.
¶ 9. The circuit judge found that other jurisdictions do not supply immunity to clerks under similar circumstances. But where our statutes are clear, we do not look to other states' interpretations of their own statutes.
¶ 10. For instance, in City of Bayou La Batre v. Robinson, the Alabama Supreme Court applied common-law judicial immunity, rather than statutory provisions similar to those found in our Tort Claims Act.
¶ 11. And in Franklin v. Dayton Probation Services Department, the Court of Appeals of Ohio found that a municipal clerk's action was not immune because it fell within a reckless and wanton exception to immunity, a provision that is not at issue here.
¶ 12. Here, DeSoto County claims statutory judicial-action immunity under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act.
¶ 13. Because the Mississippi Tort Claims act provides immunity for the clerk's failure to issue notice of the cancelled warrant, we reverse the circuit judge's denial of DeSoto County's motion for summary judgment and render judgment in the county's favor.
¶ 14.
WALLER, C.J., LAMAR, PIERCE AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR. CHANDLER, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY RANDOLPH, P.J., KITCHENS AND KING, JJ.
CHANDLER, Justice, dissenting:
¶ 15. I respectfully dissent. I would hold that the clerk's failure to forward the warrant cancellation notice did not "arise out of a legislative or judicial action or inaction, or administrative action or inaction of a legislative or judicial nature." Miss.Code Ann. § 11-46-9(1)(a) (Rev. 2012). Therefore it should not be afforded immunity under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act.
¶ 16. The clerk's deposition testimony reflects the following questions and answers:
¶ 17. The clerk was not in a position to exercise discretion or judgment in choosing whether or not to cancel the warrant. Rather, the clerk had a routine ministerial responsibility to cancel warrants for charges that had been remanded to the file.
¶ 18. The analysis of whether judicial immunity applies, that is, whether the act at issue is "judicial in nature," focuses on whether the act involves an element of judicial discretion and is not merely ministerial. See Antoine v. Byers & Anderson, Inc., 508 U.S. 429, 436, 113 S.Ct. 2167, 124 L.Ed.2d 391 (1993) (stating that "when judicial immunity is extended to officials other than judges, it is because their judgments are `functional[ly] comparab[le]' to those of judges — that is, because they, too, `exercise a discretionary judgment' as a part of their function") (quoting Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409, 423 n. 20, 96 S.Ct. 984, 47 L.Ed.2d 128 (1976)). As the trial court noted in its order denying summary judgment, state jurisdictions across the country (including those interpreting their respective state tort claims acts) have decided with relative uniformity that failure to cancel a warrant under similar factual circumstances to those we have here is ministerial in nature and not covered by immunity. See Franklin v. City of Dayton Probation Servs. Dep't, 672 N.E.2d 1039 (Ohio Ct.App.1996); Pittman v. Lower Court Counseling, 110 Nev. 359, 871 P.2d 953 (1994), overruled on other grounds by Nunez v. City of North Las Vegas, 116 Nev. 535, 1 P.3d 959 (2000); Smith v. Lewis, 669 S.W.2d 558 (Mo.App.1983); Cook v. City of Topeka, 232 Kan. 334, 654 P.2d 953 (1982); Mauro v. Cnty. of Kittitas, 26 Wn.App. 538, 613 P.2d 195 (1980); Dalton v. Hysell, 56 Ohio App.2d 109, 381 N.E.2d 955 (1978), superseded by statute; Calhoun v. City of Providence, 120 R.I. 619, 390 A.2d 350 (1978); Connell v. Tooele City, 572 P.2d 697 (Utah 1977); Stine v. Shuttle, 134 Ind.App. 67, 186 N.E.2d 168 (1962).
¶ 19. In City of Bayou La Batre v. Robinson, 785 So.2d 1128 (Ala.2000), the city did not enjoy immunity where a judge faxed a warrant-cancellation notice wrong-side-up to a law enforcement agency. Id. at 1135. The notice was not received, resulting in an arrest that should not have occurred. Id. The Alabama Supreme Court stated:
Id. at 1133.
¶ 20. The policy behind affording judicial immunity would not be served by affording
Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.S. 547, 553-55, 87 S.Ct. 1213, 18 L.Ed.2d 288 (1967). Here, no public-policy rationale exists to protect the independence of a deputy clerk in carrying out the routine procedural duty to generate and forward a warrant recall to the local authorities. The procedure does not involve an element of choice or judgment that must be made with independence. The clerk was not faced with the task of making a discretionary judgment call as to whether the warrant should be recalled. Rather, that determination was made by the judge in remanding the charges, and the clerk was merely tasked with the ministerial duty of generating and forwarding the warrant recall.
¶ 21. While duties imposed by law are easy to label as ministerial, I do not take the position that the common law has been so abrogated that a duty must be imposed by statute in order to be classified as ministerial. Rather, even in the absence of a statutory mandate, we can determine from an examination of the circumstances on the record whether the warrant recall procedure in this case belongs under the umbrella of a "judicial act or administrative act of a judicial nature." In the similar case of Cook v. City of Topeka, 232 Kan. 334, 654 P.2d 953 (1982), in which the court noted that:
Id. at 960. That decision was made in the context of Kansas' tort claims act and is parallel to the situation face today. The indication we have from the depositions is that the issuance of a warrant recall is a routine internal procedure done by the clerks without direction from the judge. The failure to do so here was simply an omission of a routine administrative task, not an administrative task of a judicial nature.
¶ 22. DeSoto County points to Smith v. City of Saltillo, 44 So.3d 438 (Miss.Ct. App.2010), to support its assertion that immunity should apply. In Saltillo, the Mississippi Court of Appeals held, without analysis, that a municipal clerk's failure to forward a court abstract to the Mississippi Department of Public Safety was clearly "an administrative action or inaction of a legislative or judicial nature." Id. at 441. DeSoto County argues that there is no rational distinction between a clerk failing to send an abstract to a state agency so that a suspended license could be reinstated and the defendant's clerk failing to issue a warrant cancellation to the sheriff. I agree and would find that Saltillo was wrongly decided. A trial judge's (or clerk's) responsibility to send an abstract to the Department of Public Safety is an action mandated by statute. See Miss. Code Ann. § 63-11-37 (Rev.2013). The statutory mandate eliminates any element of discretion and makes the duty to forward the abstract ministerial and therefore exempt from immunity.
¶ 23. DeSoto County also points to Collins v. Tallahatchie Cnty., 876 So.2d 284 (Miss.2004), in which this Court found that
¶ 24. The majority's position would allow the term "judicial nature" to embrace a myriad of merely clerical, ministerial acts triggered by a court order. That approach would expand the scope of immunity beyond what this court has ever held or the Legislature intended. On the facts of this case, the clerk's inaction was merely administrative in nature, not an administrative act of a judicial nature, and it does not fall within Section 11-46-9(1)(a).
¶ 25. The trial court correctly found that immunity did not attach to the deputy clerk's failure to recall T.D.'s warrant after the judge remanded T.D.'s charges to the file. The deposition testimony indicates that the warrant-recall procedure was a routine ministerial task not requiring the use of judgment or discretion and not directed by the judge as part of his judicial determination to remand the charges. Because I would affirm the trial court's denial of the County's motion for summary judgment and remand the case to the DeSoto County Circuit Court for further proceedings, I respectfully dissent.
RANDOLPH, P.J., KITCHENS AND KING, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.