For many years it has been a crime in Illinois to employ a “professional strikebreaker.” 820 ILCS 30/2. (A “professional strikebreaker” is anyone who repeatedly works during strikes. 820 ILCS 30/l(c). One neеd not be a goon to fit the definition.) In 2003 the state extended the prohibition to acquisition of strike-breaking labor from any “day or professional labor service agency”. 2003 111. Laws 375. When that amendment to the Employment of Strikebreakers Act took effect on January 1, 2004, workers of the Congress Hotel in Chicago were on strike, and the Hotel was operating with replacement workers. Soon the Illinois Department of Labor asked the Hotel for information about the origins of its labor force. The civil investigative demand invoked the Day and Temporary Labor Services Act, 820 ILCS 175/1 et seq., which has its own administrative apparatus. But as that Act also supplies the definition of “day and temporary labor service agenсy” for purposes of the Strikebreakers Act, see 820 ILCS 30/1 (e), the Hotel concluded that it was in the state’s cross-hairs and filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Strikebreakеrs Act is preempted. See Golden State Transit Corp. v. Los Angeles,
The district court did not explain the provenance of this “imminence” requirement. Courts occasionally say that оne or another plaintiff has standing because a threat of prosecution is imminent, but that is a far cry from holding that only an imminent criminal prosecution suffices. When the Supreme Court usеs the word “imminent” in describing the requisites of standing, it says that the injury must be “actual or imminent, not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’ ” Whitmore v. Arkansas,
Courts frequently engage in pre-enforcement review based on the potential cost thаt compliance (or bearing a penalty) creates. Think of Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
If a criminal prosecution of the Hotel really were imminent, then a federal court might well abstain on comity grounds — for the prosecution would offer the Hotel an opportunity to present its legal arguments, and states are entitled tо insist that their criminal courts resolve the entire dispute. See, e.g., Younger v. Harris,
Defendants offer an alternative ground of affirmance: that the 2004 version of the Strikebreakers Act already has been held to be preempted. See Caterpillar Inc. v. Lyons,
Decisions of district courts bind the litigants but have no authoritative effect elsewhere in the circuit (or even in the same district). See, e.g., Midlock v. Apple Vacations West, Inc.,
Federal officials are not bound by district judges’ (or even circuits’) legal decisions; thеy must comply with the judgment but need not apply the ruling more widely. As the Court explained in United States v. Mendoza,
Perhaps more to the point, Caterpillar is a federal judgment under federal substantive law, so its preclusive effect is determined by fedеral rules. See Semtek International, Inc. v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
The judgment is reversed, and the ease is remanded for -decision on the merits.
