FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 1669
C 174 L 07
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Concerning the district and municipal court's probation and supervision services.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Strow, Ericks, O'Brien, Rodne, Kirby, Haler, Eddy, Hinkle and Lantz).
House Committee on Judiciary
Senate Committee on Judiciary
Background:
An offender convicted of a misdemeanor or gross misdemeanor offense serves his or her
confinement in a local jail and may be subject to probation with court-ordered conditions
after release. Under court rules applicable to courts of limited jurisdiction, a court has the
authority to establish a misdemeanant probation department, and the method of providing
probation services must be established by the presiding judge of the local court to meet the
needs of the court.
Generally, a person does not have a duty to protect others from the criminal acts of third
persons. Washington courts have recognized an exception to this general rule where a special
relationship exists between the person and the third party. Under this exception, a
governmental entity may be held liable for the acts of a criminal offender it is supervising if
the governmental entity fails to adequately supervise the offender and that lack of supervision
results in harm to another person. Government liability in this context is based on the
premise that the government has a "take-charge" relationship with the offender, and therefore
must exercise reasonable care to control the known dangerous propensities of the offender.
Under the doctrine of judicial immunity, judges are provided with absolute immunity from
civil liability for acts performed within their judicial capacity. Judicial immunity may also
extend to governmental agencies or executive branch officials while performing judicial
functions. Quasi-judicial immunity applies to persons performing functions that are so
comparable to those performed by judges that they should share the judge's absolute
immunity while carrying out those functions. In the offender supervision context, court
decisions have held that a probation or parole officer's duties in supervising an offender and
monitoring the offender's compliance with conditions of release are not entitled to
quasi-judicial immunity.
In a 2005 unpublished Court of Appeals decision, the Court addressed the issue of the
liability of a municipal court probation officer for the acts of an offender on probation for a
DUI offense. The Court held that the relationship between the municipal court's probation
department and the supervised probationer did give rise to a "take-charge" relationship,
which imposed a duty on the probation department to protect the public from foreseeable
behavior associated with the conditions of probation. The Court also found that judicial and
quasi-judicial immunity did not apply to the actions of the probation department, even though
the judge was the head of the probation department. The Court found that a judge acting as a
probation department head is acting in an administrative capacity, not a judicial capacity, and
that the probation officer's monitoring of the probationer is not analogous to a judicial
decision to place a defendant on probation or revoke probation.
When a superior court judge orders supervision of a misdemeanor or gross misdemeanor
defendant placed on probation, responsibility for the supervision falls initially on the
Department of Corrections (DOC), but a county may elect to assume responsibility for the
supervision of these offenders by contract with the DOC. The DOC and any county
probation department under contract with the DOC are not liable for civil damages resulting
from an act or omission in conducting superior court misdemeanant probation activities
unless the act or omission constitutes gross negligence.
Summary:
A limited jurisdiction court that provides misdemeanant supervision services is not liable for
damages based on the inadequate supervision or monitoring of a misdemeanor defendant or
probationer unless the inadequate supervision or monitoring constitutes gross negligence.
"Limited jurisdiction court" means a district court or a municipal court, and anyone acting or
operating at the direction of such court, including but not limited to its officers, employees,
agents, contractors, and volunteers.
"Misdemeanant supervision services" means pre-conviction or post-conviction misdemeanor
probation or supervision services, or the monitoring of a misdemeanor defendant's
compliance with a pre-conviction or post-conviction order of the court, including but not
limited to community corrections programs, probation supervision, pretrial supervision, or
pretrial release services.
Votes on Final Passage:
House 97 0
Senate 47 0
Effective: July 22, 2007