Eva Moore v. John Urquhart ( 2018 )


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  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    EVA MOORE; BROOKE SHAW;                         No. 16-36086
    CHERRELLE DAVIS; NINA DAVIS,
    individually and on behalf of all                D.C. No.
    others similarly situated,                  2:16-cv-01123-TSZ
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                              OPINION
    JOHN URQUHART, in his official
    capacity as King County Sheriff,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Washington
    Thomas S. Zilly, Senior District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted June 15, 2018
    Seattle, Washington
    Filed August 16, 2018
    Before: Milan D. Smith, Jr. and Paul J. Watford, Circuit
    Judges, and Douglas L. Rayes,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Watford
    *
    The Honorable Douglas L. Rayes, United States District Judge for
    the District of Arizona, sitting by designation.
    2                      MOORE V. URQUHART
    SUMMARY**
    Constitutional Law / Mootness / Landlord-Tenant
    The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal of a class
    action challenging the constitutionality of Washington
    Revised Code § 59.18.375 (“§ 375”), which allows tenants to
    be evicted from their homes without a court hearing.
    Plaintiffs rent an apartment in King County, Washington,
    and their landlord filed an unlawful detainer action seeking to
    evict them under Washington’s Residential Landlord-Tenant
    Act. Washington Revised Code § 59.18.375 (“§ 375”)
    applies when the basis for eviction is non-payment of rent:
    The landlord must serve the tenant with a written notice
    advising the tenant that the landlord is entitled to an eviction
    order without a hearing unless the tenant takes one of two
    actions, either paying the amount the landlord claims is owed
    or disputing the amount in a sworn written statement. If the
    tenant does not take either of these actions, then the landlord
    is entitled to a writ of restitution.
    The panel held that the original plaintiffs had standing to
    sue at the time they filed this action, which is the relevant
    time frame for analyzing Article III standing. The panel also
    held that plaintiffs who were subsequently added to the action
    did not have standing to sue because their circumstances left
    their prospects of injury too speculative to support Article III
    standing.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    MOORE V. URQUHART                          3
    With respect to mootness, the original plaintiffs conceded
    that their claim for declaratory and injunctive relief had
    become moot because the writ of restitution expired, and they
    eventually settled their dispute with their landlord. The panel
    held that one of the mootness exceptions applied, however,
    because the dispute was capable of repetition, yet evading
    review. The panel held that the otherwise moot dispute
    remained live for Article III purposes.
    Turning to the merits, the panel held that the district court
    dismissed plaintiffs’ action based on a misreading of the
    statute in question when the district court held that § 375
    required state courts to schedule a hearing in all cases before
    a writ of restitution could be issued. The panel held that the
    text of § 375 makes clear that a hearing is not mandatory.
    The panel held that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine did not
    apply here because plaintiffs were not asking the district court
    to review and reject the judgment entered against them in
    state court.
    The panel held that the Sheriff’s two alternative
    arguments for affirmance of the district court’s judgment
    lacked merit. First, the panel held that the contention that
    plaintiffs’ action must be brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
    was without merit because plaintiffs sought to recover only
    declaratory and injunctive relief against the Sheriff in his
    official capacity, and to obtain that relief plaintiffs did not
    need a statutory cause of action. The panel held that the
    plaintiffs could rely on the judge-made cause of action
    recognized in Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    (1908); and the
    Sheriff was a proper defendant in an Ex parte Young suit
    seeking to enjoin enforcement of § 375.
    4                  MOORE V. URQUHART
    Second, the panel also rejected the Sheriff’s argument that
    he was entitled to judicial immunity. The panel held that
    common law judicial immunity was of no help to the Sheriff
    because it only barred suits seeking damages, and it did not
    preclude a court from granting declaratory or injunctive
    relief. The panel also held that the expanded scope of judicial
    immunity afforded under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as amended by
    the Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1996, did not limit
    injunctive relief against an executive branch officer enforcing
    a court order, and the Sheriff was not entitled to immunity
    from plaintiffs’ request for declaratory and injunctive relief.
    The panel held that Sheriff’s remaining arguments were
    without merit. The panel reversed, and remanded for further
    proceedings.
    COUNSEL
    Toby J. Marshall (argued) and Elizabeth A. Adams, Terrell
    Marshall Law Group PLLC, Seattle, Washington; Rory
    O’Sullivan, King County Bar Association Housing Justice
    Project, Seattle, Washington; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    David J. Hackett (argued) Senior Deputy Prosecuting
    Attorney, King County Prosecuting Attorney, Seattle,
    Washington, for Defendant-Appellee.
    Jeffrey T. Even, Deputy Solicitor General; Robert W.
    Ferguson, Attorney General; Office of the Attorney General,
    Olympia, Washington; for Amicus Curiae State of
    Washington.
    MOORE V. URQUHART                         5
    OPINION
    WATFORD, Circuit Judge:
    This is a class action challenging the constitutionality of
    a Washington statute that allows tenants to be evicted from
    their homes without a court hearing. Plaintiffs seek
    declaratory and injunctive relief against the Sheriff of King
    County, whose office enforces the challenged statute by
    executing the eviction orders. The district court dismissed
    the action with prejudice on grounds that the Sheriff rightly
    does not attempt to defend on appeal. We conclude that the
    Sheriff’s alternative arguments for affirmance also lack merit
    and therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    I
    The plaintiffs in this action, Eva Moore and Brooke
    Shaw, rent an apartment together in King County,
    Washington. (We will ignore for now a second set of
    plaintiffs who lack standing to bring suit for reasons
    explained a bit later.) In May 2016, after plaintiffs fell
    behind on their rent, their landlord filed an unlawful detainer
    action seeking to evict them.
    Under Washington’s Residential Landlord-Tenant Act,
    Wash. Rev. Code § 59.18.010 et seq., a landlord has two
    distinct pathways to pursue eviction: one that is available in
    all cases, and a second, alternative procedure available only
    when the ground for eviction is non-payment of rent. Both
    procedures start out the same way, with the landlord filing an
    action in superior court and serving the tenant with a
    summons and complaint. §§ 59.12.070, 59.18.365. If the
    landlord pursues the generally applicable procedure, the
    6                   MOORE V. URQUHART
    landlord must request, and the court must schedule, a “show
    cause” hearing at which the tenant can appear and present any
    legal or equitable defenses available to contest her eviction.
    §§ 59.18.370, .380. If the tenant fails to show up for the
    hearing, or if the court rejects the tenant’s asserted defenses
    at the hearing, the court will issue a “writ of restitution”
    directing the county sheriff to restore possession of the
    property to the landlord. Under this procedure, a hearing will
    always be scheduled before a writ of restitution is issued.
    The second procedure, the one at issue here, is authorized
    by Washington Revised Code § 59.18.375, which for ease of
    reference we will refer to as § 375. As noted, it applies only
    when the basis for eviction is non-payment of rent. Under
    § 375, the landlord serves the tenant with a written notice, the
    terms of which are dictated by statute. The notice must
    advise the tenant that “[t]he landlord is entitled to an order
    from the court directing the sheriff to evict you without a
    hearing,” unless the tenant takes one of two actions.
    § 59.18.375(7)(f). The two actions are spelled out as follows:
    YOU MUST DO THE FOLLOWING BY THE
    DEADLINE DATE:
    1. Pay into the court registry the amount your
    landlord claims you owe set forth above and
    continue paying into the court registry the
    monthly rent as it becomes due while this
    lawsuit is pending;
    OR
    2. If you deny that you owe the amount set
    forth above and you do not want to be evicted
    MOORE V. URQUHART                           7
    immediately without a hearing, you must file
    with the clerk of the court a written statement
    signed and sworn under penalty of perjury
    that sets forth why you do not owe that
    amount.
    
    Id. If the
    tenant fails to take either of these actions within the
    stated deadline, the landlord is entitled to “immediate
    issuance of a writ of restitution without further notice to the
    [tenant].” § 59.18.375(4). No hearing is required under
    § 375, although a hearing will be held if the tenant requests
    one. 
    Id. The statutorily
    prescribed notice does not advise
    tenants of their right to request a hearing.
    The landlord in this case chose to evict plaintiffs using the
    procedure authorized by § 375. In late May 2016, the
    landlord served them with the notice just described. It gave
    plaintiffs until June 6, 2016, to take one of the two specified
    actions. They did not have the $3,300 the landlord claimed
    they owed, so they could not pay that amount into the court
    registry. Nor could they truthfully assert that they did not
    owe the $3,300, so they took no action within the stated
    deadline. On June 21, 2016, without holding a hearing, the
    court issued a writ of restitution directing the Sheriff to evict
    plaintiffs from their apartment. On June 27, 2016, before the
    Sheriff could execute the writ, plaintiffs filed a motion to stay
    its execution, which the court granted.
    On July 5, 2016, plaintiffs filed this action in state court
    challenging the constitutionality of § 375. In substance, they
    contend that § 375 violates the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment because it authorizes a tenant’s
    8                  MOORE V. URQUHART
    eviction without requiring a court hearing beforehand.
    Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint later in July, which is
    the operative complaint here. The amended complaint added
    an additional set of plaintiffs, Cherrelle Davis and Nina
    Davis, and restyled the action as a class action brought on
    behalf of “[a]ll tenants who have been or will be served by
    the King County Sheriff’s Office with a writ of restitution
    issued pursuant to RCW 59.18.375 on or after July 18, 2013.”
    The amended complaint requests a declaration that § 375 is
    facially unconstitutional and an injunction prohibiting the
    Sheriff from enforcing writs of restitution issued pursuant to
    the statute. The Sheriff removed the action to federal court.
    Because plaintiffs’ action challenges the constitutionality
    of a state statute, the district court invited the State of
    Washington to intervene to defend the statute. See 28 U.S.C.
    § 2403(b). Before the State entered an appearance, though,
    the district court granted the Sheriff’s motion for judgment on
    the pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c).
    The court held that § 375 does not violate the Due Process
    Clause because, contrary to plaintiffs’ contention, the statute
    actually does require a hearing in all cases before a writ of
    restitution may be issued. Under that reading of the statute,
    the court concluded, plaintiffs had not stated a claim that
    § 375 was unconstitutional and any further attempt to amend
    the complaint would be futile. The court accordingly
    dismissed the action with prejudice and denied plaintiffs’
    motion for class certification as moot.
    II
    Our first order of business is to determine whether we
    have jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs’ appeal. The Sheriff
    argues that we do not, both because plaintiffs lack standing to
    MOORE V. URQUHART                          9
    sue and because the case is now moot.            We find both
    arguments unpersuasive.
    The original plaintiffs, Moore and Shaw, had standing to
    sue at the time they filed this action, which is the relevant
    time frame for analyzing Article III standing. Davis v.
    Federal Election Commission, 
    554 U.S. 724
    , 734 (2008).
    When they filed suit on July 5, 2016, Moore and Shaw had
    been served with a writ of restitution issued under § 375. The
    writ had not been executed and had not yet expired—it
    remained valid until July 21, 2016. Plaintiffs therefore
    plausibly alleged: (1) that they faced a concrete,
    particularized, and imminent injury (being evicted from their
    home); (2) that the injury was fairly traceable to the conduct
    they sought to enjoin (the Sheriff’s execution of a writ of
    restitution issued under § 375); and (3) that the injury would
    likely be redressed by a favorable ruling (invalidating § 375
    would void the writ authorizing their eviction). Those
    allegations suffice to establish Article III standing. See 
    id. at 733;
    Yesler Terrace Community Council v. Cisneros, 
    37 F.3d 442
    , 446–47 (9th Cir. 1994).
    However, we agree with the Sheriff that neither of the
    Davis plaintiffs had standing to sue when they were added to
    the action toward the end of July. By then, a state court judge
    had not only issued a writ of restitution authorizing their
    eviction under § 375; the Sheriff had executed the writ and
    evicted them, rendering them homeless as a result. A
    favorable ruling invalidating § 375 would not redress the
    injury they had already suffered, as the amended complaint
    seeks only declaratory and prospective injunctive relief, not
    damages. (The amended complaint does request nominal
    damages, but at oral argument plaintiffs’ counsel disclaimed
    any intent to pursue such damages.) It is true that at some
    10                  MOORE V. URQUHART
    point in the future the Davises might find another apartment,
    might again be unable to pay the rent, and thus might again
    face eviction through proceedings brought under § 375. But
    at the time they were added as plaintiffs, the Davises were not
    even renting an apartment. That circumstance left their
    prospects of future injury too speculative to support Article
    III standing. See Clapper v. Amnesty International USA,
    
    568 U.S. 398
    , 410 (2013); City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
    
    461 U.S. 95
    , 105–06 (1983).
    With respect to mootness, Moore and Shaw concede that
    their claims for declaratory and injunctive relief have become
    moot. The writ of restitution has long since expired, and they
    eventually settled the dispute with their landlord over unpaid
    back rent. But there are exceptions to the mootness doctrine,
    one of which provides that an otherwise moot dispute remains
    live for Article III purposes if it is “capable of repetition, yet
    evading review.” 
    Davis, 554 U.S. at 735
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). This exception applies if “(1) the challenged
    action is in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to
    cessation or expiration, and (2) there is a reasonable
    expectation that the same complaining party will be subject
    to the same action again.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks
    omitted).
    Both prongs are satisfied here. First, the challenged
    action—issuance and execution of writs of restitution under
    § 375—unfolds over a very short period of time. After a
    tenant receives the notice required under § 375, her response
    is typically due within seven days. See Wash. Rev. Code
    § 59.18.375(7)(a). If the tenant does not take one of the two
    specified actions before the deadline passes, the landlord is
    entitled to “immediate” issuance of the writ, § 59.18.375(4),
    and the writ is enforceable for only a limited period of time,
    MOORE V. URQUHART                         11
    typically 30 days. A facial challenge to § 375 cannot be fully
    litigated before the underlying dispute becomes moot,
    because in the interim the writ will either be executed or
    expire by its own terms. While the tenant may be able to stay
    the writ’s execution, see 
    id., the writ
    will nevertheless expire
    within a matter of weeks, and there is no indication in the
    statutory scheme that the writ’s expiration can be stayed. See
    Greenpeace Action v. Franklin, 
    14 F.3d 1324
    , 1330 (9th Cir.
    1992). Thus, the action will remain live for only one or two
    months, a period far too short to enable federal court review.
    See Wildwest Institute v. Kurth, 
    855 F.3d 995
    , 1003 (9th Cir.
    2017) (one or two years is typically too short a period to
    permit federal court review).
    Second, it is reasonable to expect that at some point in the
    future Moore and Shaw will again fall behind on their rent
    and thus could again be subject to eviction proceedings under
    § 375. Unlike the Davises, Moore and Shaw continue to live
    in the same apartment and pay rent to the same landlord, who
    we know is willing to invoke § 375’s procedures to evict non-
    paying tenants. Nothing in the record suggests that Moore
    and Shaw’s financial circumstances have dramatically
    improved, so they remain as vulnerable as before to the sorts
    of hardships (health issues, loss of employment, etc.) that left
    them unable to make ends meet back in June 2016. As the
    Supreme Court has acknowledged, the likelihood of future
    harm required to avoid mootness is not as high as that
    required to establish standing in the first instance. Friends of
    the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services (TOC),
    Inc., 
    528 U.S. 167
    , 190–91 (2000). In these circumstances,
    it is reasonably likely that Moore and Shaw will once again
    find themselves in need of the same declaratory and
    injunctive relief that they sought at the outset of this
    litigation.
    12                  MOORE V. URQUHART
    The Sheriff argues that, even if the plaintiffs have shown
    that this dispute is capable of repetition, they have not shown
    that it will evade review because plaintiffs could always raise
    their constitutional challenge to § 375 in the eviction
    proceedings themselves. But the availability of review in
    state court is not relevant to determining whether Article III’s
    requirements are satisfied. A dispute evades review for
    purposes of the “capable of repetition, yet evading review”
    exception if the challenged action will run its course before
    the matter can be fully litigated in federal court, including
    review on appeal. See Hubbart v. Knapp, 
    379 F.3d 773
    , 778
    (9th Cir. 2004). That is the situation here.
    III
    Turning now to the merits, we take up first the district
    court’s reasons for dismissing the action and then address the
    alternative arguments raised by the Sheriff.
    A
    The district court dismissed plaintiffs’ action based on a
    misreading of the statute in question. The court held that
    § 375 requires state courts to schedule a hearing in all cases
    before a writ of restitution may be issued. The Sheriff does
    not attempt to defend the district court’s reading of the
    statute, and the State of Washington, appearing as amicus
    curiae, affirmatively argues that the court misconstrued the
    statute. We agree that the text of § 375 precludes the district
    court’s interpretation.
    The district court correctly held that, under Washington’s
    Residential Landlord-Tenant Act, a hearing is ordinarily
    required before a writ of restitution may be issued. See
    MOORE V. URQUHART                        13
    Wash. Rev. Code §§ 59.18.370, .380. But the court erred by
    assuming that the same hearing requirement applies in
    proceedings under § 375. It does not. Section 375 provides
    an alternative, “summary method” of eviction that may be
    invoked only when the basis for eviction is non-payment of
    rent. Duvall Highlands LLC v. Elwell, 
    19 P.3d 1051
    , 1053
    (Wash. Ct. App. 2001). When a landlord proceeds under
    § 375, the landlord need not request (and the court need not
    schedule) a hearing at which the tenant may appear to present
    whatever legal or equitable defenses she may have. Instead,
    the landlord simply serves the tenant with the notice required
    under § 375. If the tenant fails to take either of the actions
    specified in the notice, the landlord is entitled, without more,
    to “immediate issuance of a writ of restitution.” Wash. Rev.
    Code § 59.18.375(4). The text of § 375, by dictating the
    contents of the notice that tenants must receive, makes clear
    that a hearing is not mandatory. The notice advises the tenant
    that if she fails to take either of the specified actions, the
    landlord will be “entitled to an order from the court directing
    the sheriff to evict you without a hearing.” § 59.18.375(7)(f)
    (emphasis added). The district court erred by holding that
    this provision requires a hearing in all cases.
    None of this is to say that a hearing is prohibited in
    proceedings under § 375. As mentioned earlier, the statute
    provides that a “show cause” hearing will be held if the tenant
    requests one. Indeed, even if a writ of restitution has already
    been issued, the tenant can still request “a hearing on the
    merits and an immediate stay of the writ of restitution.”
    § 59.18.375(4). The very presence of this provision, of
    course, confirms that a writ of restitution may be issued under
    § 375 without a hearing having been held beforehand.
    14                  MOORE V. URQUHART
    The district court relied heavily on Housing Authority of
    the City of Pasco and Franklin County v. Pleasant, 
    109 P.3d 422
    (Wash. Ct. App. 2005), where the court stated that the
    Residential Landlord-Tenant Act creates a “mandatory duty”
    to hold a hearing before a writ of restitution is issued. 
    Id. at 427.
    But the court in that case was interpreting the statutory
    provisions governing the generally applicable eviction
    procedure created by §§ 59.18.370 and 59.18.380, under
    which a hearing is required. The court did not construe the
    separate eviction procedure authorized by § 375, a provision
    inapplicable on the facts at issue there because the tenant’s
    eviction was based on lease violations and criminal activity,
    not on failure to pay rent. 
    Id. at 424.
    We do not read the
    decision in Pleasant as holding (or even suggesting) that the
    mandatory hearing requirement applicable under
    §§ 59.18.370 and 59.18.380 applies in proceedings brought
    under § 375.
    In dismissing plaintiffs’ action with prejudice, the district
    court also stated that the action “seems to be in the nature of
    mandamus,” a form of relief the court believed it lacked
    jurisdiction to grant. The court’s statement was predicated on
    its erroneous reading of § 375. Having held that § 375
    requires a hearing in all cases, the court construed plaintiffs’
    complaint as requesting an injunction compelling the judges
    of King County Superior Court to conduct the hearings that
    § 375 supposedly requires. But plaintiffs seek no such relief.
    They have instead requested an injunction prohibiting the
    Sheriff from enforcing a state statute that is allegedly
    unconstitutional because it does not require a hearing. As we
    explain below, that is a form of relief the district court has
    jurisdiction to grant.
    MOORE V. URQUHART                              15
    Finally, the district court suggested that this case might be
    barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, which precludes
    federal district courts from exercising jurisdiction over cases
    “brought by state-court losers complaining of injuries caused
    by state-court judgments rendered before the district court
    proceedings commenced and inviting district court review
    and rejection of those judgments.” Exxon Mobile Corp. v.
    Saudi Basic Industries Corp., 
    544 U.S. 280
    , 284 (2005). The
    doctrine does not apply here because plaintiffs are not asking
    the district court to review and reject the judgment entered
    against them in state court. The state court judgment merely
    resolved the landlord’s unlawful detainer action; it did not
    resolve whether § 375 is facially constitutional, the challenge
    plaintiffs seek to litigate here. Thus, rather than seek to
    overturn the state court judgment itself, plaintiffs have instead
    challenged the facial validity of the statute under which their
    state court proceedings were conducted, an independent claim
    that “encounters no Rooker-Feldman shoal.” Skinner v.
    Switzer, 
    562 U.S. 521
    , 532 (2011). As the Court noted in
    Skinner, “a state-court decision is not reviewable by lower
    federal courts, but a statute or rule governing the decision
    may be challenged in a federal action.” 
    Id. Even if
    plaintiffs
    could have litigated their constitutional challenge in the
    unlawful detainer proceedings, as the district court appeared
    to assume, that fact might be relevant to preclusion analysis,
    but it would not trigger application of the Rooker-Feldman
    doctrine. See 
    id. at 533
    n.11 (“Rooker-Feldman is not simply
    preclusion by another name.”) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).1
    1
    Plaintiffs’ action is not barred by claim preclusion, as the Sheriff
    incorrectly asserts, because Washington law (which determines the
    preclusive effect of the judgment here, see Kremer v. Chemical
    Construction Corp., 
    456 U.S. 461
    , 466 (1982)) does not grant a judgment
    16                      MOORE V. URQUHART
    B
    The Sheriff raises two principal arguments in defense of
    the district court’s judgment. First, he contends that
    plaintiffs’ action must be brought, if at all, under 42 U.S.C.
    § 1983 and that the amended complaint fails to state a viable
    claim under that statute. Second, the Sheriff argues that
    plaintiffs’ action is barred in any event by the doctrine of
    judicial immunity.
    The Sheriff’s first argument is plainly without merit.
    Plaintiffs would be required to proceed under 42 U.S.C.
    § 1983 if they sought to recover money damages. But they
    are seeking only declaratory and injunctive relief against the
    Sheriff in his official capacity—a declaration that § 375 is
    facially unconstitutional and an injunction barring him from
    enforcing writs of restitution issued under the statute. To
    obtain that relief, plaintiffs do not need a statutory cause of
    action. They can rely on the judge-made cause of action
    recognized in Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    (1908), which
    permits courts of equity to enjoin enforcement of state
    statutes that violate the Constitution or conflict with other
    federal laws. See Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center,
    Inc., 
    135 S. Ct. 1378
    , 1384 (2015).
    Congress may enact statutes with a detailed remedial
    scheme that explicitly or implicitly displaces the judge-made
    claim preclusive effect unless the parties to the first suit were identical to,
    or in privity with, those in the second. See Spokane Research & Defense
    Fund v. City of Spokane, 
    117 P.3d 1117
    , 1123 (Wash. 2005); Landry v.
    Luscher, 
    976 P.2d 1274
    , 1277–78 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999). The Sheriff is
    not in privity with Moore and Shaw’s landlord, the opposing party in the
    unlawful detainer proceedings.
    MOORE V. URQUHART                        17
    equitable remedy available under Ex parte Young. In such
    cases, a plaintiff must rely on a statutory cause of action in
    order to bring suit. See, e.g., 
    id. at 1385–86;
    Seminole Tribe
    of Florida v. Florida, 
    517 U.S. 44
    , 75–76 (1996). But
    Congress has enacted no statute that would foreclose an Ex
    parte Young action to enjoin enforcement of an allegedly
    unconstitutional state law like § 375. The only statute the
    Sheriff identifies, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, at most imposes
    limitations on the remedies available in certain actions
    brought against judicial officers, as we discuss below.
    Section 1983 does not displace the availability of an Ex parte
    Young action altogether.
    Actions under Ex parte Young can be brought against
    both state and county officials, see Planned Parenthood of
    Idaho, Inc. v. Wasden, 
    376 F.3d 908
    , 919–20 (9th Cir. 2004),
    so it is unnecessary for us to resolve the parties’ dispute over
    whether the Sheriff acts on behalf of King County or the State
    of Washington when he executes writs of restitution. The
    only issue is whether the Sheriff has at least “some
    connection” to enforcement of the allegedly unconstitutional
    eviction procedure authorized by § 375. 
    Id. at 919.
    He does,
    because Washington law assigns county sheriffs the power
    and duty to serve and execute writs of restitution issued under
    § 375. Wash. Rev. Code § 59.18.390. The Sheriff’s role in
    executing those writs makes him a proper defendant in an Ex
    parte Young suit seeking to enjoin enforcement of § 375.
    The Sheriff’s second argument is that, even if plaintiffs
    have a viable cause of action under Ex parte Young, he is
    nonetheless entitled to judicial immunity for his conduct.
    Judicial immunity is a common law doctrine developed to
    protect judicial independence. Pierson v. Ray, 
    386 U.S. 547
    ,
    554 (1967). It bars suits against judges, and other officials
    18                  MOORE V. URQUHART
    who exercise “discretionary judgment” similar to that of
    judges, when the plaintiff’s suit is predicated on actions taken
    in the judge’s judicial capacity. Antoine v. Byers &
    Anderson, Inc., 
    508 U.S. 429
    , 436 (1993). The Sheriff is
    correct that a similar immunity has also been extended to
    protect non-judicial officers, like sheriffs, who are sued
    merely for carrying out a non-discretionary duty to execute
    lawfully issued court orders. See, e.g., Engebretson v.
    Mahoney, 
    724 F.3d 1034
    , 1039–40 (9th Cir. 2013); Moss v.
    Kopp, 
    559 F.3d 1155
    , 1163 (10th Cir. 2009); Coverdell v.
    Department of Social and Health Services, 
    834 F.2d 758
    , 765
    (9th Cir. 1987). In such cases, if the judicial officer who
    issued the order is entitled to immunity, so too is the
    executive officer who did nothing more than execute the
    order. The executive officer’s immunity (sometimes called
    “quasi-judicial” immunity) is derivative of the judge’s own
    immunity. Smith v. City of Hammond, 
    388 F.3d 304
    , 306–07
    (7th Cir. 2004); 
    Coverdell, 834 F.2d at 765
    .
    Common law judicial immunity is of no help to the
    Sheriff in this action, for it only bars suits seeking damages.
    It does not preclude a court from granting declaratory or
    injunctive relief. Pulliam v. Allen, 
    466 U.S. 522
    , 541–42
    (1984). Because the King County Superior Court judges who
    issue writs of restitution would not be entitled to common law
    judicial immunity in a suit seeking declaratory and injunctive
    relief, neither is the Sheriff.
    In 1996, Congress amended 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to limit the
    circumstances in which injunctive relief may be granted
    against judges. As a statutory matter, Congress expanded the
    scope of judicial immunity by providing that “in any action
    brought against a judicial officer for an act or omission taken
    in such officer’s judicial capacity, injunctive relief shall not
    MOORE V. URQUHART                        19
    be granted unless a declaratory decree was violated or
    declaratory relief was unavailable.”          Federal Courts
    Improvement Act of 1996 (FCIA), Pub. L. No. 104-317,
    § 309(c), 110 Stat. 3847, 3853 (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1983).
    Section 1983 (as amended by the FCIA) therefore provides
    judicial officers immunity from injunctive relief even when
    the common law would not.
    The Sheriff contends that he is covered by the expanded
    scope of judicial immunity afforded under § 1983. We will
    assume without deciding that the limitations on injunctive
    relief Congress imposed in the FCIA generally apply in
    actions brought under Ex parte Young. We nonetheless
    conclude that Congress did not intend these limitations to
    apply in cases like this one.
    The text of the FCIA bars injunctive relief against “a
    judicial officer” for acts or omissions taken in the officer’s
    “judicial capacity.” That language is closely associated with
    the immunity extended to judges and their equivalents, not
    with the immunity afforded to officers who execute court
    orders. Congress chose in the FCIA to focus on judicial
    officers acting in a judicial capacity because it sought to
    “restore[] the doctrine of judicial immunity to the status it
    occupied prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Pulliam v.
    Allen, 
    466 U.S. 522
    (1984).” S. Rep. No. 104-366, at 36
    (1996). In that case, the Court held that common law
    “judicial immunity is not a bar to prospective injunctive relief
    against a judicial officer acting in her judicial 
    capacity.” 466 U.S. at 541
    –42 (emphasis added). The case involved a
    state court judge, not a law enforcement official.
    As Congress was undoubtedly aware, use of the term
    “judicial” implicates the familiar three-branch structure of
    20                 MOORE V. URQUHART
    government. The judicial branch encompasses officials other
    than those with the title “judge,” such as court clerks. See
    Shadwick v. City of Tampa, 
    407 U.S. 345
    , 351 (1972). But
    the Sheriff is a quintessential executive branch official. See
    Chisom v. Roemer, 
    501 U.S. 380
    , 399 (1991) (referring to
    sheriffs as “executive officers”). And exercising the power
    to break down someone’s door, enter their home, and carry
    their belongings to the sidewalk is a quintessentially
    executive function, not a judicial one. Indeed, it is difficult
    to see how a law enforcement official carrying out a judge’s
    order could be deemed to have acted in a “judicial” capacity,
    given how courts have defined what it means for an act to be
    “judicial” in character. See, e.g., Stump v. Sparkman,
    
    435 U.S. 349
    , 362 (1978) (to be “judicial,” an act must at
    least involve “a function normally performed by a judge”).
    When Congress borrows a legal term of art, we presume that
    it knows “the meaning its use will convey to the judicial mind
    unless otherwise instructed.” Morissette v. United States,
    
    342 U.S. 246
    , 263 (1952).
    These considerations lead us to conclude that Congress
    did not intend the FCIA to apply to every official who would
    receive “judicial” or “quasi-judicial” immunity in an action
    for damages at common law. If Congress wanted the Act to
    cover not just judges and their equivalents but also law
    enforcement officials like the Sheriff, we think Congress
    would have spoken in far clearer terms. Extending immunity
    from injunctive relief to executive branch officials like the
    Sheriff would strip federal courts of the authority to enjoin
    enforcement of any facially unconstitutional state statute that
    is invoked at the behest of private parties through the courts.
    We would not lightly infer an intent to abrogate common law
    immunity doctrine in that sweeping fashion, particularly in a
    statute designed simply to overrule Pulliam v. Allen. Doing
    MOORE V. URQUHART                        21
    so would conflict with the maxim that a statute in derogation
    of the common law “must be strictly construed, for no statute
    is to be construed as altering the common law, farther than its
    words import.” Robert C. Herd & Co. v. Krawill Machinery
    Corp., 
    359 U.S. 297
    , 304 (1959) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). We therefore hold that the Sheriff is not entitled to
    immunity from injunctive relief here.
    Our holding does not conflict with the out-of-circuit
    decisions on which the Sheriff relies. In Roth v. King,
    
    449 F.3d 1272
    (D.C. Cir. 2006), the D.C. Circuit held that the
    FCIA barred injunctive relief against two high-level
    employees of the Public Defender Service for their role in
    coordinating, along with judges of the District of Columbia
    Superior Court, the “panel system” that determined which
    private attorneys were eligible to receive court appointments
    to represent indigent defendants. 
    Id. at 1287.
    Finding “no
    reason to believe that [the FCIA] is restricted to ‘judges’” and
    that the Public Defender Service’s role was “related to the
    judicial process,” the court held that the Service’s officers
    were immune. 
    Id. Like the
    D.C. Circuit, we do not hold that the FCIA
    covers only those officials who bear the title “judge.” Nor do
    we understand the D.C. Circuit to have taken the view at the
    opposite extreme—that the FCIA covers anyone who would
    have been entitled to judicial or quasi-judicial immunity in an
    action for damages at common law. The Public Defender
    Service defendants in Roth were not law enforcement
    officials like the Sheriff. Instead, they were helping to make
    discretionary decisions on the suitability of attorneys for
    court appointments that otherwise would have been made by
    the judges alone. In that respect, they were exercising the
    same kind of “discretionary judgment” as the judges
    22                 MOORE V. URQUHART
    themselves, and their acts could fairly be characterized as
    having been taken in a “judicial” capacity. 
    Antoine, 508 U.S. at 436
    ; see also Montero v. Travis, 
    171 F.3d 757
    , 761 (2d Cir.
    1999) (FCIA applies to a parole board official serving a
    “quasi-adjudicative function” in granting or denying parole).
    The Sixth Circuit’s decision in Gilbert v. Ferry, 
    401 F.3d 411
    (6th Cir. 2005), is also distinguishable. There, litigants
    sued four justices of the Michigan Supreme Court to obtain
    an injunction requiring them to recuse themselves in two
    pending cases. The plaintiffs also named as a defendant the
    court administrator responsible for scheduling the court’s
    calendar. 
    Id. at 413
    n.1. As the Sixth Circuit pointed out, the
    court administrator had “no power to remove and re-assign
    cases, but rather works solely under the supervision and
    direction of the Michigan Supreme Court.” 
    Id. He was,
    in
    other words, an officer of the judicial branch who wielded
    only the justices’ delegated authority. The Sheriff is not
    comparably situated. As we have noted, he is an executive
    branch officer. He does not work for the King County
    Superior Court, and when executing writs of restitution he is
    not performing court administrative functions delegated to
    him by the judges. His authority to execute writs of
    restitution is derived from power conferred on him by the
    legislature. See Wash. Rev. Code § 59.18.390.
    We conclude that the FCIA does not limit injunctive relief
    against an executive branch officer enforcing a court order,
    and that the Sheriff is not entitled to immunity from
    plaintiffs’ request for declaratory and injunctive relief. We
    have considered the Sheriff’s remaining arguments and find
    them to be without merit.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.