Opinion
BAXTER, J.
In this case, we confront a narrow but important issue: are individual members of an elected school board immune from a suit seeking damages against them personally for their successful votes to terminate the employment of the school district’s superintendent, even when the complaint
alleges race and age discrimination in violation of California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA; Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.)?
We conclude as follows: the Tort Claims Act (§810 et seq. (hereafter sometimes the Act))
generally affords a public employee personal immunity from suit when the act or omission for which recovery is sought resulted from “the exercise of the discretion vested in him.” (§ 820.2.) This “discretionary act” immunity extends to “basic” governmental policy decisions entrusted to broad official judgment. The decision of an elected school board whether to replace the school district’s highest appointed official is such a determination! The board’s free, open, and candid consideration of an issue of this magnitude should not be subject to judicial interference by means of lawsuits seeking to hold individual board members accountable for their motives. As a matter of law, participating board members therefore enjoy personal immunity under section 820.2. This immunity applies even where the dismissed official alleges that the members’ votes were cast for reasons that violated FEHA. Because the Court of Appeal reached a contrary result, its judgment must be reversed.
Facts
In September 1992, plaintiff Richard Caldwell sued the Paramount Unified School District (PUSD) and individual defendants Joseph Montoya III, Vivian Hansen, and Janet Miller. Plaintiff’s second amended complaint, at issue here, alleged as follows:
In August 1991, plaintiff, then 66 years old, was serving as superintendent of PUSD under a contract effective through June 30, 1992. On August 13, 1991, the board of education of PUSD (Board) voted, by three to two, that plaintiff’s contract not be renewed. Defendants Montoya, Hansen, and Miller, as members of the Board, cast the three deciding votes. Montoya’s “motivation” was that plaintiff is not Hispanic or Latino. Miller and Hansen were “motivat[ed]” by plaintiff’s age. Hansen had a further motive to retaliate for public positions taken by plaintiff’s wife as a member of the Paramount City Council. Plaintiff obtained this information from newspaper reports of “statements and actions by the individual defendants which indicated or suggested that they had acted from impermissible motives.” As a result of the Board’s action, plaintiff’s employment was terminated effective July 1, 1992.
The complaint stated causes of action against PUSD for breach of contract, for violation of FEHA, and for retaliatory discharge in violation of public policy. The three individual defendants were included in the FEHA claims, Montoya for race discrimination (§ 12940, subd. (a)), Miller and Hansen for age discrimination (§ 12941, subd. (a)). Hansen was also included in the public-policy claim. The complaint sought compensatory and punitive damages against all defendants.
The individual defendants demurred, claiming discretionary act immunity under section 820.2. The trial court agreed, sustained the demurrer, and entered judgment dismissing the individual defendants from the action.
The Court of Appeal, Second District, Division Five, reversed in a sharply divided decision. Justice Armstrong concluded that the face of plaintiff’s complaint does not establish defendants’ claim of personal immunity for discretionary acts, because such immunity turns on the factual question whether defendants’ challenged conduct involved conscious consideration of risks and benefits. (Citing
Johnson
v.
State of California
(1968) 69 Cal.2d 782, 794-795, fn. 8 [73 Cal.Rptr. 240, 447 P.2d 352].)
Moreover, Justice Armstrong determined, the individual defendants are not entitled to immunity under another provision of the Tort Claims Act, section 820.9. Section 820.9 provides personal immunity to certain executive and legislative officials of local public entities, including school board members, against suits seeking to impose vicarious liability for an “act or omission of the . . . entity,” but the statute expressly declines to afford immunity for “that individual’s own wrongful conduct.” The instant complaint, Justice Armstrong concluded, is based not on vicarious or imputed liability, but on personal wrongs directly committed by the individual defendants.
Presiding Justice Turner concurred in Justice Armstrong’s analysis but wrote a lengthy separate opinion urging an additional ground for reversing the judgment of dismissal. As a matter of law, the concurring opinion asserted, section 820.2 can never provide immunity against FEHA claims. Justice Turner reasoned as follows: section 820.2 accords immunity for discretionary acts “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute.” FEHA is such a statutory exception, because the “employees] ” covered by FEHA include public agencies such as school districts, and individuals who cause or assist a covered “employer” to commit employment practices forbidden by FEHA are personally liable under the statute, either as “agents” or as “aiders and abetters.” Therefore, by the express terms of section 820.2, whenever FEHA makes a public employee individually liable, that liability prevails over the immunity for discretionary acts.
Justice Godoy Perez dissented, relying primarily upon section 820.9’s “vicarious immunity” for members of local governing boards. As the dissent noted, section 820.9, unlike section 820.2, does not qualify its immunity with the phrase “except as otherwise provided by statute.”
The dissent argued that the entity responsible for terminating plaintiff’s employment was PUSD itself, and that any liability sought to be imposed on individual members of the Board is thus derivative and vicarious. In the dissent’s view, the fact that PUSD was legally required to act through the collective votes of the Board members does not mean that those votes, cast in an official capacity and individually meaningless, were personal wrongs for which section 820.9 withholds immunity.
We granted review. Contrary to the Court of Appeal majority, we conclude as a matter of law that section 820.2 affords discretionary act immunity to the individual Board members against both the common law and FEHA causes of action stated in plaintiff’s complaint.
Discussion
The common law of California long provided that a governmental official has personal immunity from lawsuits challenging his or her discretionary acts within the scope of authority. (E.g.,
Lipman
v.
Brisbane Elementary Sch. Dist.
(1961) 55 Cal.2d 224, 233 [11 Cal.Rptr. 97, 359 P.2d 465]
(Lipman).)
This common law immunity was said to extend to “all executive public officers when performing within the scope of their power acts which require the exercise of discretion or judgment.”
(Hardy
v.
Vial
(1957) 48 Cal.2d 577, 582 [311 P.2d 494, 66 A.L.R.2d 739].) The immunity was absolute, and it protected an official “notwithstanding malice or other sinister motive.”
(Ibid.)
The historical basis of the rule was that fear of civil lawsuits might deter officials from the zealous and unflinching discharge of their public duties.
(Hardy
v.
Vial, supra,
48 Cal.2d at p. 582; see
Gregoire
v.
Biddle
(2d Cir. 1949) 177 F.2d 579, 581 (L. Hand, J.).) On more than one occasion, we applied the rule liberally to protect the officials of public agencies, such as school districts and state colleges, when they took discretionary actions within the scope of their authority and duty concerning the employment of academic or administrative personnel.
(Lipman, supra,
55 Cal.2d 224, 233-234 [school district trustees personally immune for investigating fitness of district superintendent];
Hardy
v.
Vial, supra,
at p. 583 [state college officials personally immune for “conspiracy” with outsiders to secure dismissal of professor].)
In
Muskopf v. Corning Hospital Dist.
(1961) 55 Cal.2d 211 [11 Cal.Rptr. 89, 359 P.2d 457], this court repudiated any inference in the common law that
government entities
are generally immune from suit for the negligent
ministerial
acts of public employees acting in the scope of their authority.
Lipman, supra,
a companion case to
Muskopf,
held that the government retained some immunity for the
discretionary
acts of its officials, but suggested that this immunity was not necessarily coextensive with that afforded to the officials themselves.
(Lipman, supra,
55 Cal.2d at p. 229.)
In the wake of
Muskopf
and
Lipman,
the Legislature enacted the Tort Claims Act. The Act governs all public entities and their employees (§§811.2, 811.4) and all noncontractual bases of compensable damage or injury that might be actionable between private persons (§§ 810.8, 814). It establishes the basic rules that public
entities
are immune from liability except as provided by statute (§ 815, subd. (a)), that public
employees
are liable for their torts except as otherwise provided by statute (§ 820, subd. (a)), that public entities are vicariously liable for the torts of their employees (§ 815.2, subd. (a)), and that public entities are immune where their employees are immune, except as otherwise provided by statute (§ 815.2, subd. (b)).
The traditional immunity for discretionary acts is addressed in section 820.2. This statute provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute, a public employee is not liable for an injury resulting from his act or omission where the act or omission was the result of the exercise of the discretion vested in him, whether or not such discretion be abused.”
The Senate Legislative Committee comment appended to section 820.2 declares that the statute “restates the pre-existing California law. Lipman v. Brisbane Elem. School Dist., 55 Cal.2d 224 [11 Cal.Rptr. 97, 359 P.2d 465] (1961); Hardy v. Vial, 48 Cal.2d 577 [311 P.2d 494] (1957); White v. Towers, 37 Cal.2d 727 [235 P.2d 209, 28 A.L.R.2d 636] (1951). The discretionary immunity rule is restated here in statutory form to ensure that, unless otherwise provided by statute, public employees will continue to remain immune from liability for their discretionary acts within the scope of their employment.” (Sen. Legis. Committee com., 32 West’s Ann. Gov. Code (1980 ed.) § 820.2, pp. 226-227.)
Johnson
v.
State of California, supra,
69 Cal.2d 782
(Johnson),
was our first case to construe section 820.2. There, after a parolee of the California Youth Authority (Authority) assaulted his foster mother, she and her husband sued the State of California (State), claiming that the Authority had placed the child in their care without warning of his known dangerous propensities. The State argued that because the parole agent had to exercise professional judgment in deciding how much confidential psychological information to release, the discretionary immunity of section 820.2 should apply.
After finding a duty of care based on the “special relationship” between the Authority and the foster parents, this court rejected the claim of immunity. It held that even if the decision to
grant
parole was an immune exercise of discretion, thus insulating both the agent and the State from suit, subsequent judgments about how to
implement
that decision were not similarly protected.
Our opinion reasoned as follows: almost all acts involve some choice among alternatives, and the statutory immunity thus cannot depend upon a literal or semantic parsing of the word “discretion.”
(Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d at pp. 787-790.) Moreover, the Act provides that a public employee sued personally for performance of duties may obtain both defense and indemnity from the employer, absent bad faith. (See § 825 et seq.) Hence, fears that personal exposure to damage suits and judgments would deter the vigorous performance of public responsibilities are no longer a policy basis for immunity.
(Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d at pp. 790-793.)
Under these circumstances,
Johnson
concluded, a “workable definition” of immune discretionary acts draws the line between “planning” and “operational” functions of government.
(Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d at pp. 793, 794.) Immunity is reserved for those
“basic policy decisions
[which have] . . . been [expressly] committed to coordinate branches of government,” and as to which judicial interference would thus be “unseemly.”
(Id.
at p. 793, italics in original.) Such “areas of quasi-legislative policy-making ... are sufficiently sensitive”
(id.
at p. 794) to call for judicial abstention from interference that “might even in the first instance affect the coordinate body’s decision-making process”
(id.
at p. 793).
On the other hand, said
Johnson,
there is no basis for immunizing lower-level, or “ministerial,” decisions that merely implement a basic policy already formulated.
(Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d at p. 796.) Moreover, we cautioned, immunity applies only to
deliberate and considered
policy decisions, in which a “[conscious] balancing [of] risks and advantages . . . took place. The fact that an employee normally engages in ‘discretionary activity’ is irrelevant if, in a given case, the employee did not render a considered decision. [Citations].”
(Id.
at p. 795, fn. 8.)
Recognizing that “it is not a tort for government to govern”
(Dalehite
v.
United States
(1953) 346 U.S. 15, 57 [97 L.Ed. 1427, 1452, 73 S.Ct. 956] (dis. opn. of Jackson, J.)), our subsequent cases have carefully preserved the distinction between policy and operational judgments. Thus, we have rejected claims of immunity for a bus driver’s decision not to intervene in one passenger’s violent assault against another
(Lopez
v.
Southern Cal. Rapid Transit Dist.
(1985) 40 Cal.3d 780, 793-795 [221 Cal.Rptr. 840, 710 P.2d 907]), a college district’s failure to warn of known crime dangers in a student parking lot
(Peterson
v.
San Francisco Community College Dist.
(1984) 36 Cal.3d 799, 815 [205 Cal.Rptr. 842, 685 P.2d 1193]), a county clerk’s libelous statements during a newspaper interview about official matters
(Sanborn
v.
Chronicle Pub. Co.
(1976) 18 Cal.3d 406, 415-416 [134 Cal.Rptr. 402, 556 P.2d 764]), university therapists’ failure to warn a
patient’s homicide victim of the patient’s prior threats to kill her (Tarasoff v.
Regents of University of California
(1976) 17 Cal.3d 425, 444-447 [131 Cal.Rptr. 14, 551 P.2d 334, 83 A.L.R.3d 1166]), and a police officer’s negligent conduct of a traffic investigation once undertaken
(McCorkle
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1969) 70 Cal.2d 252, 261-262 [74 Cal.Rptr. 389, 449 P.2d 453]).
On the other hand, we have concluded that the discretionary act statute does immunize officials and agencies against claims that they unreasonably delayed regulations under which a murdered security guard might have qualified himself to carry a defensive firearm
(Nunn
v.
State of California
(1984) 35 Cal.3d 616, 622-623 [200 Cal.Rptr. 440, 677 P.2d 846]), or negligently released a violent juvenile offender into his mother’s custody
(Thompson
v.
County of Alameda
(1980) 27 Cal.3d 741, 747-749 [167 Cal.Rptr. 70, 614 P.2d 728, 12 A.L.R.4th 701]).
Under this standard, there seems little doubt that votes by members of a school district’s governing board whether to renew the superintendent’s employment contract qualify as discretionary acts within the meaning of section 820.2. Indeed, in
Lipman, supra,
55 Cal.2d 224, this court specifically held that community inquiries by school district trustees concerning a superintendent’s fitness for continued employment must be considered immune discretionary acts within the scope of authority because, among other things, “[t]here is a vital public interest in securing free and independent judgment of school trustees in dealing with personnel problems.”
(Id.
at p. 230.)
The Senate Legislative Committee comment for section 820.2 states that the statute was intended to codify this aspect of Lipman’s analysis. (Sen. legis. committee com., 32 West’s Ann. Gov. Code,
supra,
§ 820.2, pp. 226-227.) If a school district’s governing board may thus freely
investigate
whether to terminate the employment of the district’s superintendent, surely the board’s final decision not to renew the superintendent’s contract is entitled to similar protection.
Moreover, the decision about who should serve as superintendent of a school district particularly satisfies the immunity justifications set forth in
Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d 782. The statutes specifically limit the length of a superintendent’s contract and otherwise place the superintendent’s employment within the sole authority and discretion of the district’s governing board. (Ed. Code, §§ 35010, 35026, 35031, 35163, 35164.) The matter is therefore “expressly entrusted to a coordinate branch of government” at its highest level.
(Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d at p. 793.)
The superintendent, in turn, is the district’s foremost appointed official, with primary responsibility for representing, guiding, and administering it. (Ed. Code, § 35035.) The governing board’s choice about who should occupy this crucial post is therefore a peculiarly sensitive and subjective one, with fundamental policy implications. There is a “vital public interest” (see
Lipman, supra,
55 Cal.2d at p. 230) in encouraging
both
unfettered debate and judgment about the issue
and
candid public explanation by the politically accountable board members of the reasons for their votes.
Judicial abstention with respect to the individual participants is thus appropriate. Where such an important policy issue is at stake, it would be unwise and unseemly to hold individual board members personally accountable at law for things they said or considered in the course of deliberations, or for their subsequent explanations of their decision. (See
Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d at pp. 793-794.) Accordingly, the board’s collective determination whether to hire or fire a person as the district’s superintendent must be considered a basic policy decision, immune from civil damage actions that seek to hold individual board members liable for the motives behind their votes.
We are not persuaded by the Court of Appeal majority’s conclusion that the complaint fails to disclose a
conscious balancing of risks and benefits
necessary to qualify for immunity under
Johnson, supra.
(69 Cal.2d at p. 794, fn. 8.)
Johnson
precludes a finding of immunity solely on grounds that “the [affected] employee’s
general course of duties
is ‘discretionary’ . . .”
(ibid.,
italics added), and requires a showing that “the specific conduct giving rise to the suit” involved an
actual
exercise of discretion, i.e., a “[conscious] balancing [of] risks and advantages”
(id.
at pp. 794, 795, fn. 8). But
Johnson
does not require a
strictly careful, thorough, formal, or correct
evaluation. Such a standard would swallow an immunity designed to protect
against claims of carelessness, malice, bad judgment, or abuse of discretion in the formulation of policy. (See
Hardy
v.
Vial, supra,
48 Cal.2d 577, 582.) A fair reading of the instant complaint reveals allegations that the Board made an
actual, conscious, and considered
collective policy decision to replace plaintiff as superintendent. The complaint admits of no theory that the Board acted unconsciously or failed to weigh pros and cons. On the contrary, it asserts that Board members
did
purposefully employ standards they deemed relevant, but that the standards employed were wrong and impermissible. For reasons already stated, claims of
improper
evaluation cannot divest a discretionary policy decision of its immunity.
It follows that defendant Hansen’s demurrer to the “public policy” cause of action against her was correctly sustained. As a claim founded solely in the common law of torts (see, e.g.,
Tameny
v.
Atlantic Richfield Co.
(1980) 27 Cal.3d 167 [164 Cal.Rptr. 839, 610 P.2d 1330, 9 A.L.R.4th 314]), this cause of action could not prevail against the individual immunity provided by section 820.2.
The more difficult question is whether suit may nonetheless proceed against all three individual defendants on the FEHA causes of action. Like Justice Turner below, plaintiff argues that because the FEHA counts are exclusive creatures of the Legislature, not the common law, they fall within section 820.2’s limiting phrase “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute.” We conclude, however, that this exception to the rule of personal immunity for discretionary acts is not as broad as plaintiff suggests.
No prior California decision has interpreted the phrase “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute” as it appears in section 820.2. Furthermore, the meaning of this language is not utterly clear on its face. Because the section states that a public employee “is not
liable”
for discretionary acts
“[e]xcept
as otherwise provided by statute”
(ibid.,
italics added), one might broadly
construe it, as plaintiff does, to mean that whenever a “statute” of general application creates a
liability
applicable to public employees, the exception has been satisfied. Under this view, public employees might enjoy discretionary act immunity from common law forms of relief, but they would be stripped of such immunity for all causes of action created by statute.
But the context of the Tort Claims Act convinces us that a far more limited exception to immunity was intended. In resolving the issue, we begin with the well-settled principle that “ ‘[T]he intent of the [Act] is not to expand the rights of plaintiffs in suits against governmental entities [or employees], but to confine potential governmental liability to rigidly delineated circumstances: immunity is waived only if the various requirements of the [A]ct are satisfied.’ ”
(Brown
v.
Poway Unified School Dist.
(1993) 4 Cal.4th 820, 829 [15 Cal.Rptr.2d 679, 843 P.2d 624], quoting
Williams
v.
Horvath
(1976) 16 Cal.3d 834, 838 [129 Cal.Rptr. 453, 548 P.2d 1125], first brackets in
Brown.)
As our cases explain, the very purpose of the Act is to afford categories of immunity where, but for its provisions, public agencies or employees would otherwise be liable under general principles of law. When addressing the Act’s application, we have consistently regarded actionable duty and statutory immunity as separate issues, holding that in general, an immunity provision need not even be considered until it is determined that a cause of action would otherwise lie against the public employee or entity. This analytical treatment arises from our recognition that “the question of [actionable] ‘ “duty” ... is only a threshold issue,
beyond which
remain the immunity barriers . . . .’”
(Davidson
v.
City of Westminster, supra,
32 Cal.3d 197, 202, quoting
Whitcombe
v.
County of Yolo
(1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 698, 706 [141 Cal.Rptr. 189], italics added.)
The Act’s purpose that
specific immunities
should prevail over
general rules of actionable duty
is made particularly clear in the provisions dealing with public employees. Section 820, subdivision (a) expressly declares that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute,” a public employee
is liable
for injurious acts or omissions “to the same extent as a private person.” Succeeding sections of the Act then set forth such statutory “[e]xcept[ions],” specifically granting public employees immunity in a number of specific instances where they might otherwise be liable. Among these is section 820.2, which codifies an immunity for discretionary acts “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute.”
Even though section 820.2, like the Act in general, uses the generic phrase “is not liable” to describe the situations where suit is forbidden, the Senate
Legislative Committee comment which accompanies the section states its purpose with greater precision. The comment declares that “[t]he discretionary immunity rule is restated here in statutory form to ensure that,
unless otherwise provided by statute,
public employees will continue to remain
immune from liability
for their discretionary acts within the scope of their employment.” (Sen. legis. committee com., 32 West’s Ann. Gov. Code,
supra,
§ 820.2, pp. 226-227, italics added.)
In other words, section 820.2 does not grant or withhold its protection on the basis of whether the legal duty asserted in the lawsuit arose by common law or by statute. Instead, the section erects a separate “barrier” or “hurdle” of
immunity
at a point “beyond” the “threshold issue” of legal duty.
(Davidson
v.
City of Westminster, supra,
32 Cal.3d at p. 202, quoting
Whitcombe
v.
County of Yolo, supra,
73 Cal.App.3d at p. 706; also cf.
Lopez
v.
Southern Cal. Rapid Transit Dist., supra,
40 Cal.3d 780, 784-795.)
The
exception
to this general rule must therefore operate on the same analytic premise. To paraphrase the Senate legislative committee, public employees are
immune
for their discretionary acts, even those which constitute breaches of actionable duty, unless a statute otherwise provides. It follows that where the immunity provided by section 820.2 would otherwise apply, that immunity cannot be abrogated by a statute which simply imposes a general legal duty or liability on persons, including public employees. Such a statute may indeed render the employee liable for his violations unless a specific immunity applies, but it does not remove the immunity. This further effect can only be achieved by a clear indication of legislative intent that statutory
immunity
is
withheld or withdrawn
in the particular case.
FEHA does not meet this test. It generally prohibits employment discrimination by both public and private “employer[s]” and provides civil remedies when its provisions are violated. But even if those remedies extend to individuals, including public employees, as “agents” or “aiders and abetters” of culpable “employer[s]” (see fn. 3,
ante),
FEHA contains no indicia of an additional intent that individual public officials or employees may be sued despite a specific statutory immunity that would otherwise apply in a particular case. Hence, FEHA does not abrogate section 820.2’s specific grant of immunity to public employees for their discretionary acts.
Plaintiff and amicus curiae Association urge that the fundamental policy against employment discrimination can only be vindicated by a ruling that
FEHA liability prevails over the personal immunity for discretionary acts. A contrary holding, they suggest, would send the improper signal that high public officials have unique license to ignore FEHA, free of the threat of personal liability which may hang over their subordinates and private counterparts for violation of that law.
We acknowledge the importance of the rights codified by FEHA, and we do not condone invidious discrimination in the hiring, firing, or other treatment of any person who seeks or holds public employment. However, plaintiff fails to convince us that the Legislature intended the result he urges. Because plaintiff can cite no clear indication of legislative intent that FEHA suits should prevail over specific personal immunities provided by the Tort Claims Act, he is left with the argument that section 820.2, by its own terms, withholds such immunity whenever the theory of liability asserted in the lawsuit derives from “statute.” However, such a construction of section 820.2 would conflate the separate barriers of duty and immunity. Moreover, it would lead to the anomalous conclusion that discretionary act immunity protects a public employee against
all
common law suits, however fundamental, but has no such effect against
any
statutory cause of action, however mundane. As we have suggested, that does not appear to be the purpose of section 820.2’s phrase “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute.”
Nor are we convinced that we have improperly weighed any competing policies presented by the relevant legislation. Because of the special needs of government and public service, the Tort Claims Act expressly allows public employees to engage in certain acts and omissions free of suit, even when they might otherwise be liable for causing injury or violating individual rights. Among the statutory protections afforded is the immunity for discretionary acts, which leaves public officials free of unseemly judicial interference against them personally when they debate and render those basic policy and personnel decisions entrusted to their independent judgment.
(Johnson, supra,
69 Cal.2d 782, 793;
Lipman, supra,
55 Cal.2d 224, 230.)
When elected school board members, representing their constituencies, decide in whom they will repose confidence as the chief executive, policy architect, and personal symbol of a diverse public school system, they engage in the quintessential discretionary act of government. Under the Act, they are thus immune from personal suit, even if the motives which influenced their decision might otherwise give rise to actions against them grounded in FEHA.
In sum, we hold as follows: as a matter of law, the decision by members of an elected school board whether to renew the contract of the district’s superintendent is a basic policy decision, and thus a discretionary act of the kind for which public employees are entitled to personal immunity under section 820.2 of the Tort Claims Act. By the terms of section 820.2, such personal immunity applies even against liabilities imposed by prohibitory state statutes of general application such as FEHA, unless there is a clear indication of legislative intent that immunity be withdrawn in the particular case. There is nd indication of legislative intent that, notwithstanding the statutory immunity for discretionary acts, public employees may be personally sued for personnel decisions which violate FEHA. Hence, that immunity must prevail, if otherwise applicable, over FEHA claims against public employees in their individual capacities.
For the reasons herein stated, the trial court correctly sustained defendants’ demurrer to the causes of action against them personally. The Court of Appeal erred in reversing the judgment dismissing the individual causes of action.
Disposition
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed.
Lucas, C. J., Mosk, J., Kennard, J., Arabian, J., George, J., and Werdegar, J., concurred.