delivered the opinion of the court.
The question presented here is whether the cloak of sovereign immunity protects the administrators and a surgical intern of the University of Virginia Hospital (hospital), an organ of the state, in an action for wrongful death brought by the personal representative of a former patient who is alleged to have died because of negligence in the diagnosis, treatment, and care of his injury.
Writs of error were sought to a ruling of the trial court sustaining pleas of immunity filed by the hospital, the administrators and the surgical intern. We refused a writ of error to this ruling as it applied *406to the hospital and this portion of the judgment has become final. We granted a writ of error to the ruling as it applied to the administrators and the surgical intern.
The essential facts for decision on the pleas of immunity, gleaned from the proceedings and from an evidentiary hearing upon the pleas, are not in dispute.
John F. Harlan, Jr., (Harlan) is the Chief Administrator of and is responsible for overall administrative supervision of the hospital. He is not a physician.
Alex H. Sawyer (Sawyer), who is not a physician, is an assistant administrator of the hospital. He is subject to the direction and control of Harlan and, as a part of his duties, has direct administrative supervision of the emergency room at the hospital.
Andrew R. Pulito (Pulito), on the date of the alleged negligence, was a recent medical school graduate in his first year of a five-year postdoctoral training program. His position was that of a surgical intern. Pulito was a salaried employee of the hospital. He was not fully licensed to practice medicine, having completed only a part of the licensing examinations, as is the case with most interns. Pulito could only practice at the hospital in an approved training and instruction program under the supervision of the licensed physicians of the hospital staff. Code § 54-276.7. Under the training program Pulito was required to provide “house services” which included a period of service on the surgical staff in the emergency room of the hospital.
The pleadings allege that Elmer R. Lawhorne (Lawhorne), the deceased, on March 8, 1970, received a severe blow on his head. On March 9 he was taken to the emergency room of the hospital where he was seen, treated and released by Pulito. The motion for judgment alleges that X rays were taken of Lawhorne’s head which revealed that he had sustained a fractured skull but his mother, who accompanied him, was not so advised. It further alleges that Lawhorne and his mother were advised by “agents” of the hospital that “there was nothing seriously wrong” with Lawhorne. The following day, March 10, Lawhorne’s “condition worsened” and he was returned to the hospital where it was “discovered that [Lawhorne] had suffered a fractured skull on March 8.” Lawhorne subsequently died on March 24, allegedly as the result of the delay “in diagnosing and treating the fractured skull.”
Pulito is alleged to have been negligent in (1) not properly determining that Lawhorne suffered from a fractured skull, and (2) not *407summoning Lawhorne to the hospital for further treatment when Pulito later determined from the X rays that Lawhorne had suffered a fractured skull.
Harlan and Sawyer are alleged to have been negligent “in that the staff and procedures [at the hospital] were inadequate properly to diagnose and treat [Lawhorne’s] wound, and inadequate to summon him to said hospital when error was discovered.”
It has long been the settled law in Virginia that a hospital which is an organ of the state is immune, under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, from actions in tort. Maia's Adm’r. v. Eastern State Hospital, 97 Va. 507, 34 S.E. 617 (1899).
This immunity is also available to an employee of the state or of one of its agencies who performs supervisory functions or exercises discretionary judgment within the scope of his employment. He will not be held liable for simple negligence, because his acts are the acts of the Commonwealth. City of Richmond v. Long’s Adm’rs., 17 Gratt. (58 Va.) 375, 378 (1867); Sayers v. Bullar, 180 Va. 222, 229, 22 S.E.2d 9, 12 (1942).
However, an employee of a state agency who performs duties which do not involve judgment or discretion but which are purely ministerial, is hable for injury which results from his negligence. Wynn v. Gandy, 170 Va. 590, 197 S.E. 527 (1938); Rives v. Bolling, 180 Va. 124, 21 S.E.2d 775 (1942); and Berry v. Hamman, 203 Va. 596, 125 S.E.2d 851 (1962). Nor does the cloak of sovereign immunity protect a state employee who commits an intentional tort, Elder v. Holland, 208 Va. 15, 155 S.E.2d 369 (1967), or one whose act is so negligent as to take him outside the scope of his employment. Sayers v. Bullar, supra; see Crabbe v. School Board and Albrite, 209 Va. 356, 164 S.E.2d 639 (1968).
Here it is clear that Harlan and Sayers were exercising discretionary powers in performing their duties as administrators of the hospital, and they were clearly entitled to have their pleas of immunity sustained. Public policy dictates that this should be the rule and, in spite of the plaintiff’s assertion to the contrary, the doctrine of respondeat superior has no application to public officers who act through subordinates in the performance of their official duties. City of Richmond v. Long’s Adm’rs, supra; Sawyer v. Corse, 17 Gratt. (58 Va.) 230, 240-41 (1867).
We also find that Pulito, the surgical intern, is entitled to the cloak of sovereign immunity. He was an employee of the hospital, an organ *408of the Commonwealth, vested with and required to exercise discretion and judgment in connection with those persons who presented themselves as patients at the emergency room of the hospital. In performing these duties he was required, in the exercise of his best judgment, either to treat and release the patients or to treat and admit them to the hospital.
Pulito had no right to choose his patients, and no contractual relationship was created between him and the hospital’s patients. He received no compensation from the patients for his services, his only compensation being the salary paid him by the hospital.
In pleadings and at argument counsel for the personal representative has not claimed that Pulito was guilty of more than simple negligence. He has neither alleged nor claimed that Pulito committed an intentional tort or that Pulito was so negligent as to take himself outside the scope of his employment.
Clearly Pulito, an employee of an agency of the Commonwealth, was performing within the scope of his employment, discretionary, not ministerial, acts. Since the personal representative has failed to allege or establish that the claim falls within one of the exceptions to the sovereign immunity rule as it applies to discretionary employees, we find no error in the trial court’s ruling that sovereign immunity extends to Pulito.
Affirmed.