Sovereign immunity, or crown immunity, is a legal doctrine whereby a sovereign or state cannot commit a legal wrong and is immune to civil suit or criminal prosecution, strictly speaking in modern texts in its own courts. A similar, stronger rule as regards foreign courts is named state immunity.
In its older sense, sovereign immunity is the original forebear of state immunity based on the classical concept of sovereignty in the sense that a sovereign could not be subjected without his or her approval to the jurisdiction of another.
There are two forms of sovereign immunity:
- immunity from suit (also known as immunity from jurisdiction or adjudication)
- immunity from enforcement.
Furthermore, sovereign immunity of a state entity may be waived. A state entity may waive its immunity by:
- prior written agreement
- instituting proceedings without claiming immunity
- submitting to jurisdiction as a defendant in a suit
- intervening in or taking any steps in any suit (other than for the purpose of claiming immunity).
By country
Australia
There
is no automatic Crown immunity in Australia and the Australian
Constitution does not establish a state of unfettered immunity of the
Crown in respect of the States and the Commonwealth. The Constitution of Australia
establishes items which the States and the Commonwealth legislate on
independently of each other, in practice resulting in the States
legislating on some things and the Commonwealth legislating on others.
In some circumstances this can create ambiguity as to the applicability
of legislation where there is no clearly established Crown immunity. The
Australian Constitution does however, in s. 109,
declare that, "When a law of a State is inconsistent with a law of the
Commonwealth, the latter shall prevail, and the former shall, to the
extent of the inconsistency, be invalid." Based on this, depending on
the context of application and whether a particular statute infringes on
the executive powers of the State or the Commonwealth the Crown may or
may not be immune from any particular statute.
Many Acts passed in Australia, both at the State or the Federal
level, contain a section declaring whether the Act binds the Crown, and,
if so, in what respect:
- Commonwealth Acts may contain wording similar to: "This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities", or specify a more restricted application.
- State Acts may contain wording similar to: "This Act binds the Crown in right of [the State] and, in so far as the legislative power of the Parliament of [the State] permits, the Crown in all its other capacities."
Whilst there is no ambiguity surrounding the first aspect of this
declaration with respect to binding the Crown with respect to the State
in question, there have been several cases in respect of the
interpretation of the second aspect extending it to the Crown in its
other capacities. Rulings by the High Court of Australia
on specific matters of conflict between the application of States laws
on Commonwealth agencies have provided the interpretation that the Crown
in all of its other capacities includes the Commonwealth, therefore if a
State Act contains this text then the act may bind the Commonwealth
subject to the s. 109 test of inconsistency.
A landmark case which set a precedent for challenging broad Crown
immunity and established tests for the applicability of State laws on
the Commonwealth was Henderson v Defence Housing Authority in 1997.
This case involved the arbitration of a dispute between Mr. Henderson
and the Defence Housing Authority (DHA). Mr. Henderson owned a house
which the DHA had leased to provide housing to members of the Australian Defence Force (ADF). Under the NSW Residential Tenancies Act 1997, Mr. Henderson sought orders from the Residential Tenancies Tribunal
to enter the premises for the purposes of conducting inspections. In
response, DHA claimed that as a Commonwealth agency the legislation of
NSW did not apply to it
and further sought writs of prohibition attempting to restrain Mr.
Henderson from pursuing the matter further. Up until this point the
Commonwealth and its agencies claimed an unfettered immunity from State
legislation and had used s. 109 to justify this position, specifically
that the NSW Act was in conflict with the Act which created the DHA and
s. 109 of the Constitution applied. Mr. Henderson took the case to the
High Court and a panel of 7 justices to arbitrate the matter. By a
majority decision of 6:1 the court ruled that the DHA was bound by the
NSW Act on the basis that the NSW Act did not limit, deny or restrict
the activities of the DHA but sought to regulate them, an important
distinction which was further explained in the rulings of several of the
justices. It was ruled that the NSW Act was one of general application
and therefore the Crown (in respect of the Commonwealth) could not be
immune from it, citing other cases in which the same ruling had been
made and that it was contrary to the rule of law. As a result of this
case, the Commonwealth cannot claim a broad constitutional immunity from
State legislation.
In practice, three tests have been developed to determine whether a State law applies to the Commonwealth (and vice versa):
- does the law seek to merely regulate the activities of the Commonwealth as opposed to deny, restrict or limit them,
- is the State law constructed such that the Act binds the Crown in respect of all of its capacities, and
- is there no inconsistency between a State law and a Commonwealth law on the same matter.
If these three tests are satisfied then the Act binds the Crown in
respect of the Commonwealth. It is important to note that in Australia
there is no clear automatic Crown immunity or lack of it, as such there
is a rebuttable presumption that the Crown is not bound by a statute, as
noted in Bropho v State of Western Australia. The Crown's immunity may also apply to other parties in certain circumstances, as held in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Baxter Healthcare.
Belgium
Article 88 of the Constitution of Belgium states: "The King’s person is inviolable; his ministers are accountable."
Bhutan
According to the constitution of Bhutan, the monarch is not answerable in a court of law for
his or her actions.
Canada
Canada
inherited common law version of Crown immunity from British law.
However, over time the scope of Crown immunity has been steadily reduced
by statute law. As of 1994, section 14 of the Alberta Interpretation Act
stated, "No enactment is binding on Her Majesty or affects Her Majesty
or Her Majesty's rights or prerogatives in any manner, unless the
enactment expressly states that it binds Her Majesty." However, in more recent times "All Canadian provinces ... and the federal government (the Crown Liability Act)
have now rectified this anomaly by passing legislation which leaves the
'Crown' liable in tort as a normal person would be. Thus, the tort
liability of the government is a relatively new development in Canada,
statute-based, and is not a fruit of common law."
Since 1918, it has been held that provincial legislatures cannot bind the federal Crown, as Fitzpatrick CJ noted in Gauthier v The King:
Provincial legislation cannot proprio vigore [i.e., of its own force] take away or abridge any privilege of the Crown in right of the Dominion.
It has also been a constitutional convention that the Crown in right of each province is immune from the jurisdiction of the courts in other provinces. However this is now in question.
Lieutenant Governors do not enjoy the same immunity as the Sovereign in matters not relating to the powers of the office. In 2013, the Supreme Court refused to hear the request of former Lieutenant Governor of Quebec Lise Thibault to have charges against her dropped. She was being prosecuted by the Attorney General of Quebec
for misappropriation of public funds but invoked royal immunity on the
basis that "the Queen can do no wrong". As per convention, the court did
not disclose its reasons for not considering the matter. Thibault later
petitioned the Court of Quebec
for the same motives. Judge St-Cyr again rejected her demand, noting
that constitutional law does not grant a lieutenant-governor the same
benefits as the Queen and that in her case, royal immunity would only
apply to actions involving official state functions, not personal ones.
She was eventually declared guilty and sentenced to 18 months in jail
but was granted conditional release after serving six months.
China
China has
consistently claimed that a basic principle of international law is for
states and their property to have absolute sovereign immunity. China
objects to restrictive sovereign immunity. It is held that a state can
waive its immunity by voluntarily stating so, but that should a
government intervene in a suit (e.g. to make protests), it should not be
viewed as waiver of immunity.
Chinese state-owned companies considered instrumental to the state have
claimed sovereign immunity in lawsuits brought against them in foreign
courts before. China's view is that sovereign immunity is a lawful right
and interest that their enterprises are entitled to protect. Some examples of Chinese state-owned companies that have claimed sovereign immunity in foreign lawsuits are the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) and China National Building Material.
Denmark
Article 13 of the Constitution of Denmark
states: "The King shall not be answerable for his actions; his person
shall be sacrosanct. The Ministers shall be responsible for the conduct
of the government; their responsibility shall be determined by Statute." Accordingly, the monarch
cannot be sued in his or her personal capacity. On the other hand, this
immunity from lawsuits does not extend to the state as such and article
63 explicitly authorises the courts to judge the executive authority:
"The courts of justice shall be empowered to decide any question
relating to the scope of the executive's authority; though any person
wishing to question such authority shall not, by taking the case to the
courts of justice, avoid temporary compliance with orders given by the
executive authority."
Holy See
The Holy See, of which the current pope is head (often referred to by metonymy as the Vatican or Vatican City State, a distinct entity), claims sovereign immunity for the pope, supported by many international agreements.
Hong Kong
In
2011, the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal ruled that absolute sovereign
immunity applies in Hong Kong, as the Court found that Hong Kong, as a Special Administrative Region of China, could not have policies on state immunity that was inconsistent with China. The ruling was an outcome of the Democratic Republic of the Congo v FG Hemisphere Associates case in 2011.
Democratic Republic of the Congo v FG Hemisphere Associates (2011)
The Democratic Republic of the Congo and its state-owned electricity company Société nationale d'électricité
(SNEL) defaulted on payments of a debt owed to an energy company,
Energoinvest. During arbitration, Energoinvest was awarded damages
against the Congolese government and SNEL. This was reassigned by
Energoinvest to FG Hemisphere Associates LLC.
FG Hemisphere subsequently learned that the Congolese government
entered into a separate joint venture with Chinese companies later, in
which the Congolese government would be paid US$221 million in mining
entry fees. As a result, FG Hemisphere applied to collect these fees in
order to enforce the earlier arbitral award. The Congolese government
asserted sovereign immunity in the legal proceedings. This was
eventually brought to the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal, when the
Congolese government fought to overturn an earlier Court of Appeal
decision which had ruled that:
- as restrictive sovereign immunity applied in Hong Kong, the Congolese government had no immunity in commercial proceedings.
- if absolute sovereign immunity had applied in Hong Kong, the Congolese government had waived their sovereign immunity rights in this case.
The Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal
ruled 3:2 that the Congolese government had not waived its immunity in
the Hong Kong courts, and that as a Special Administrative Region of
China, Hong Kong could not have policies on state immunity that was
inconsistent with China's. Therefore, the doctrine of sovereign immunity
applied in Hong Kong should be absolute, and may be invoked when
jurisdiction is sought in the foreign court in relation to an
application to enforce a foreign judgment or arbitral award, or when
execution is sought against assets in the foreign state. This means that
sovereign states are absolutely immune to the jurisdiction in Hong Kong
courts, including in commercial claims, unless the state waives its
immunity. In order to waive immunity, there must be express, unequivocal
submission to the jurisdiction of the Hong Kong courts "in the face of
the court". Claimants should establish that the state party has waived
their entitlement to immunity at the relevant stage, before proceedings
can occur in court.
Iceland
According to article 11 of the Constitution of Iceland the president can only be held accountable and be prosecuted with the consent of parliament.
India
According to Article 361 Constitution of India no legal action in the court of law can be taken against President of India and Governors of states of India as long as that person is holding either office. However, he/she can be impeached and then sued for his/her actions.
Ireland
In Byrne v Ireland, the Irish Supreme Court declared that sovereign immunity had not survived the creation of the Irish Free State
in 1922, and that accordingly the state could be sued for and held
vicariously liable for the acts and omissions of its servants and
agents.
Italy
According to the Constitution, the President of the Italian Republic is not accountable, and he is not responsible for any act of his office, unless he has committed high treason or attempted to subvert the Constitution, as stated in Article 90:
The President of the Republic is not responsible for the actions performed in the exercise of presidential duties, except in the case of high treason or violation of the Constitution. In such cases, the President may be impeached by Parliament in joint session, with an absolute majority of its members.
The Italian Penal Code makes it a criminal offence to insult the honor and prestige of the President (Art. 278), and until 2006 it was an offence to publicly give the President responsibility for actions of the Government (Art. 279 – abrogated).
The Italian Constitutional Court has declared the partial
incompatibility with the Italian Constitution of a law that forced
courts to delay all trials against the Italian Prime Minister while he
is in office. The revised version says that the trial hearings have to be scheduled in agreement between the Judge and the Government.
Malaysia
In Malaysia, an amendment to the constitution in 1993 made it possible to bring proceedings against the king
or any ruler of a component state in the Special Court. Prior to 1993,
rulers, in their personal capacity, were immune from any proceedings
brought against them.
Nigeria
Section
308 of the Nigerian constitution of 1999 provides immunity from court
proceedings, i.e., proceedings that will compel their attendance in
favour of elected executive officers, namely the President and his vice
and the Governors of the states and the deputies. This immunity extends
to acts done in their official capacities so that they are not
responsible for acts done on behalf of the state. However, this immunity
does not extend to acts done in abuse of the powers of their office of
which they are liable upon the expiration of their tenure. It is
important to note that the judiciary has absolute immunity for actions
decisions taken in their official capacity.
Norway
Article 5 of the Constitution of Norway states: "The King's person is sacred; he cannot be censured or accused. The responsibility
rests with his Council." Accordingly, the monarch
cannot be prosecuted or sued in his or her personal capacity, but this
immunity does not extend to the state as such. Neither does immunity
extend to the monarch in his capacity as an owner or stakeholder in real
property, or as an employer, provided that the suit does not allege
personal responsibility for the monarch.
Philippines
Article XVI, Section 3 of the Philippines Constitution states: "The State may not be sued without its consent."
Spain
The Spanish monarch
is personally immune from prosecution for acts committed by government
ministers in the King's name, according to Title II, Section 56,
Subsection 3 of the Spanish Constitution of 1978.
The person of the King is inviolable and shall not be held accountable. His acts shall always be countersigned in the manner established in section 64. Without such countersignature they shall not be valid, except as provided under section 65(2).
At the time of the June 2014 abdication of King Juan Carlos the Spanish constitution did not state whether an abdicated monarch retains his legal immunity, but the government was planning to make changes to allow this.
Legislation has been passed, although unlike his previous immunity, the
new legislation does not completely shield the former sovereign. Juan
Carlos must answer to the supreme court, in a similar type of protection
afforded to many high-ranking civil servants and politicians in Spain.
The legislation stipulates that all outstanding legal matters relating
to the former king be suspended and passed "immediately" to the supreme
court.
Sri Lanka
By the Constitution of Sri Lanka, the President of Sri Lanka has sovereign immunity (till the period of office).
Sweden
Chapter 5, Article 8 of the Swedish Constitution states: "The King
or Queen
who is Head of State cannot be prosecuted for his or her actions. Nor
can a Regent be prosecuted for his or her actions as Head of State."
This only concerns the King as a private person, since he does not
appoint the government, nor do any public officials act in his name. It
does not concern other members of the Royal Family, except in such cases
as they are exercising the office of Regent when the King is unable to
serve. It is a disputed matter among Swedish constitutional lawyers
whether the article also implies that the King is immune against
lawsuits in civil cases, which do not involve prosecution.
Singapore
In Singapore, state immunities are codified in the State Immunity Act of 1979,
which closely resembles the United Kingdom's State Immunity Act 1978.
Singapore's State Immunity Act has phrases identical to that of Section 9
of United Kingdom's State Immunity Act, and does not allow a foreign
state, which has agreed to submit a dispute to arbitration, to claim
jurisdictional immunity in judicial proceedings relating to the agreed
arbitration, i.e. "where a State has agreed in writing to submit a
dispute which has arisen, or may arise, to arbitration, the state is not
immune as respects proceedings in the courts in Singapore which relate
to the arbitration".
The President of Singapore does to a certain extent have sovereign immunity subjected to clause 22k(4). (See Part V under government regarding the President of Singapore)
United Kingdom
Immunity in proceedings
Historically, the general rule in the United Kingdom has been that the Crown has never been able to be prosecuted or proceeded against in either criminal or civil cases. The only means by which civil proceedings could be brought were:
- by way of petition of right, which was dependent on the grant of the royal fiat (i.e. permission);
- by suits against the Attorney General for a declaration; or
- by actions against ministers or government departments where an Act of Parliament had specifically provided that immunity be waived.
The position was drastically altered by the Crown Proceedings Act 1947
which made the Crown (when acting as the government) liable as of right
in proceedings where it was previously only liable by virtue of a grant
of a fiat. With limited exceptions, this had the effect of allowing proceedings for tort and contract to be brought against the Crown. Proceedings to bring writs of mandamus and prohibition were always available against ministers, because their actions derive from the royal prerogative.
Criminal proceedings are still prohibited from being brought against Her Majesty's Government unless expressly permitted by the Crown Proceedings Act.
As the Crown Proceedings Act only affected the law in respect of
acts carried on by or on behalf of the British government, the monarch
remains personally immune from criminal and civil actions.
However, civil proceedings can, in theory, still be brought using the
two original mechanisms outlined above – by petition of right or by suit
against the Attorney General for a declaration.
Other immunities
The monarch is immune from arrest in all cases; members of the royal household are immune from arrest in civil proceedings.
No arrest can be made "in the monarch's presence", or within the
"verges" of a royal palace. When a royal palace is used as a residence
(regardless of whether the monarch is actually living there at the
time), judicial processes cannot be executed within that palace.
The monarch's goods cannot be taken under a writ of execution, nor can distress be levied on land in their possession. Chattels owned by the Crown, but present on another's land, cannot be taken in execution or for distress. The Crown is not subject to foreclosure.
United States
In United States law, state, federal and tribal governments generally enjoy immunity from lawsuits. Local governments typically enjoy immunity from some forms of suit, particularly in tort.
In the US, sovereign immunity falls into two categories:
- Absolute immunity: pursuant to which a government actor may not be sued for the allegedly wrongful act, even if that person acted maliciously or in bad faith; and
- Qualified immunity: pursuant to which a government actor is shielded from liability only if specific conditions are met, as specified in statute or case law.
In some situations, sovereign immunity may have been waived by law.
Federal sovereign immunity
The federal government
has sovereign immunity and may not be sued anywhere in the United
States unless it has waived its immunity or consented to suit. The
United States has waived sovereign immunity to a limited extent, mainly
through the Federal Tort Claims Act, which waives the immunity if a tortious act of a federal employee causes damage, and the Tucker Act, which waives the immunity over claims arising out of contracts to which the federal government is a party. The United States as a sovereign is immune from suit unless it unequivocally consents to being sued. The United States Supreme Court in Price v. United States
observed: "It is an axiom of our jurisprudence. The government is not
liable to suit unless it consents thereto, and its liability in suit
cannot be extended beyond the plain language of the statute authorizing
it." Price v. United States, 174 U.S. 373, 375-76 (1899).
State sovereign immunity
In Hans v. Louisiana (1890), the Supreme Court of the United States held that the Eleventh Amendment
(1795) re-affirms that states possess sovereign immunity and are
therefore generally immune from being sued in federal court without
their consent. In later cases, the Supreme Court has strengthened state
sovereign immunity considerably. In Blatchford v. Native Village of Noatak (1991), the court explained that
we have understood the Eleventh Amendment to stand not so much for what it says, but for the presupposition of our constitutional structure which it confirms: that the States entered the federal system with their sovereignty intact; that the judicial authority in Article III is limited by this sovereignty, and that a State will therefore not be subject to suit in federal court unless it has consented to suit, either expressly or in the "plan of the convention". [Citations omitted.]
In Alden v. Maine (1999), the Court explained that while it has
sometimes referred to the States' immunity from suit as "Eleventh Amendment immunity"[,] [that] phrase is [a] convenient shorthand but something of a misnomer, [because] the sovereign immunity of the States neither derives from, nor is limited by, the terms of the Eleventh Amendment. Rather, as the Constitution's structure, its history, and the authoritative interpretations by this Court make clear, the States' immunity from suit is a fundamental aspect of the sovereignty which the States enjoyed before the ratification of the Constitution, and which they retain today (either literally or by virtue of their admission into the Union upon an equal footing with the other States) except as altered by the plan of the Convention or certain constitutional Amendments.
Writing for the Court in Alden, Justice Anthony Kennedy
argued that in view of this, and given the limited nature of
congressional power delegated by the original unamended Constitution,
the court could not "conclude that the specific Article I powers
delegated to Congress necessarily include, by virtue of the Necessary
and Proper Clause or otherwise, the incidental authority to subject the
States to private suits as a means of achieving objectives otherwise
within the scope of the enumerated powers".
However, a "consequence of [the] Court's recognition of preratification sovereignty as the source of immunity from suit is that only States and arms of the State possess immunity from suits authorized by federal law". Northern Insurance Company of New York v. Chatham County (2006, emphasis added). Thus, cities and municipalities lack sovereign immunity, Jinks v. Richland County (2003), and counties are not generally considered to have sovereign immunity, even when they "exercise a 'slice of state power'". Lake Country Estates, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (1979). Nor are school districts, per Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle (1977).
Additionally, Congress can abrogate state sovereign immunity when
it acts pursuant to powers delegated to it by any amendments ratified
after the Eleventh Amendment. The abrogation doctrine, established by the Supreme Court in Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer (1976), is most often implicated in cases that involve Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, which explicitly allows Congress to enforce its guarantees on the states.