Ferri was a criminal defendant in federal court who received appointed counsel, Ackerman, pursuant to the Criminal Justice Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3006A. After his federal conviction, Ferri filed a malpractice action in Pennsylvania state court alleging that Ackerman negligently performed his duties as defense counsel during the federal proceedings, causing Ferri harm. The state trial court dismissed the complaint on the ground that, because Ackerman had been appointed under federal law to perform functions in a federal criminal case, he was absolutely immune from malpractice liability. The Pennsylvania appellate courts affirmed, concluding that federal law—either through the CJA or as a matter of federal common law implementing federal judicial functions—conferred immunity on court-appointed defense counsel for acts within the scope of their court-related representation. The U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari to determine whether federal law mandated such immunity and thus preempted state malpractice liability.
Does federal law—by virtue of the Criminal Justice Act or federal common law—confer immunity on federally appointed criminal defense counsel from state-law malpractice claims arising out of their representation in federal criminal proceedings?
Absent a clear congressional directive or a significant conflict between a state cause of action and uniquely federal interests, the Supreme Court will not create or infer a federal immunity that displaces state tort law. The Criminal Justice Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3006A, does not grant court-appointed defense counsel immunity from malpractice liability, and such counsel are not federal officials entitled to official immunity for acts within the traditional functions of defense representation.
No. Federal law does not confer immunity on court-appointed defense counsel from state-law malpractice suits. The judgment recognizing such immunity was reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with the absence of any federally mandated immunity.
The Court began by examining the text and structure of the Criminal Justice Act and found no express language granting immunity to court-appointed counsel. The statute's purpose is to secure adequate representation for indigent defendants and to provide a compensation mechanism for appointed lawyers, not to alter traditional state malpractice regimes or shield counsel from accountability to their clients. The legislative history likewise contained no indication that Congress intended to immunize appointed defense counsel from negligence claims. Turning to federal common law and Supremacy Clause concerns, the Court emphasized that creating an immunity that would displace state tort law requires a showing of a significant conflict with federal policy or a clear implication that federal interests would be frustrated by state liability. Defense counsel's core obligation is to the client, and the adversarial nature of criminal defense differentiates defense attorneys from judges and prosecutors—actors who may receive absolute or qualified immunities because their roles are integral to the impartial functioning of the judicial process or the sovereign's prosecutorial function. Extending similar immunity to defense counsel would be doctrinally unsound and unsupported by federal interests. The Court further reasoned that allowing malpractice suits would not meaningfully interfere with the administration of federal criminal justice. If anything, potential malpractice liability may incentivize diligence and competent performance, aligning with the CJA's goal of quality representation. Moreover, attorney regulation and malpractice standards are traditionally matters of state concern, and the existence of malpractice liability poses no substantial obstacle to the functioning of federal courts. Therefore, there was no basis to infer a federal immunity that would preempt state law. The Court concluded that any immunity for appointed defense counsel would have to arise, if at all, from state law, not from federal statute or federal common law.
Ferri v. Ackerman is a foundational case on the limits of implied federal immunities and the preservation of state tort law against preemption absent clear congressional command. It teaches that defense counsel—whether privately retained or court-appointed—serve the client, not the state, and are presumptively subject to ordinary malpractice standards. For law students, the case highlights how to analyze preemption and federal-common-law claims: identify the asserted federal interest, assess statutory text and history for a clear statement, and evaluate whether a significant conflict justifies displacing state law. Ferri also serves as a professional-responsibility touchstone, reinforcing that accountability to the client remains central even when representation is supported by a federal appointment and compensation scheme.
Ferri v. Ackerman delineates a clear boundary: federal appointment under the Criminal Justice Act does not transform defense counsel into federal officials cloaked with immunity from malpractice suits. By declining to imply federal immunity absent a clear congressional directive or a demonstrable conflict with federal interests, the Court preserved the traditional state-law domain over attorney malpractice and professional standards.