MEMORANDUM OPINION
Motion to Intervene as Plaintiffs
Plaintiffs’ Motion to Convene a Three-Judge Court
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss
This is a class action suit brought by Loverta Alexander, until November 1, 1968, a recipient of Aid to Families with Dependant Children, (hereafter A.F.D. C.), a federally assisted welfare program administеred by the Illinois Department of Public Aid, individually and on behalf of her son Jerome Alexander, who is eighteen years old and a full time student at Wilson Junior College, an accredited Junior College in Chicago, Illinois. On their own behalf and for all those similarly situated, plaintiffs are seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Alleging a deprivation of their rights, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, plaintiffs requеst the convening of a three-judge federal court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2282, 2284 in order to declare unconstitutional IlI.Rev.Stat. Ch. 23, § 4-1.1 and Illinois Department of Public Aid Regulation 150. Plaintiffs also seek injunctive relief restraining defendants from enforcing the challenged statute and regulation. Defendants have moved to strike and dismiss this complaint.
In an action of this kind, it is the duty of a single-judge court to make an initial determination as to the substantiality of the constitutional question raised by the plaintiffs, as well as to see whether the complaint formally alleges a basis for equitable relief and is otherwise appropriate for hearing by a three-judge court. Idlewild Bon Voyage Liquor Corp. v. Epstein,
Plaintiffs contend that the state statute and regulation in question unconstitutionally discriminate against college or university students. The challenged state statute states the eligibility rеquirements which a child must meet in order to be a recipient of A.F.D.C. payments. It provides:
“The child or children must be under age 18, or age 18 or over but under age 21 if in regular attendanсe in high school or in a vocational or technical training school.” IlI.Rev.Stat. Ch. 23, § 4-1.1.
Regarding age requirements, Illinois Department of Public Aid Regulation 150 provides, in pertinent part:
“Dependant children under 18 years of age, unless 18 through 20 years of age and in regular attendance in high school or vocational training school. (This does not include 18 through 20 year old children in college).”
Plaintiffs submit that these laws violate their right to equal protection as stated in the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. Under the current legal framework, one person, age 18 through 20, attending a vocational or technical training school may be eligible for A.F.D.C. payments in Illinois, while another person in the same age brаcket and financial condition and with the same family background but who attends a college or university, would not be eligible. Whether the different treatment afforded these two similаrly situated persons is rational and constitutional or arbitrary and unconstitutional need not, indeed, must not be settled here. Suffice it to say, the constitutional question presented is a substantial one and not foreclosed by previous judicial decision.
Further, in the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 606(a), Congress has provided that welfare payments may be
“Within the age limit set by the state, there should be a choice of attеnding a school, college or university or taking a course of vocational or technical training for gainful employment.” (Complaint, Appendix 1, at p. 2.)
Plaintiffs’ second basic contention is that Illinois’ law is not in conformity with the federal requirements and, therefore, in violation of the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution, Article VI, Clausе 2. For this reason as well, plaintiffs present a substantial constitutional question deserving to be heard by a three-judge court.
Defendants have raised various objections to thе convening of a three-judge court. For instance, they suggest that plaintiffs have neither attempted to use or exhaust state administrative remedies. Sweeny v. State Board оf Public Assistance, D.C.,
A short while before disposition was to be made оn the issue presented by the plaintiffs, Georgia Townsend and her daughter, both individually and as members of the class described in the original complaint moved for leave to be*аdd
Defendants have moved to strike and dismiss this intervening complaint for the same reasons they urged upon us with regard to the original complaint. Their contentions are rejected again for the reasons stated earlier. A new contention raised by defendants is that the Illinois Constitution Art. IV, § 26, S.H. A., prohibits suits against the state, state agencies, and state officials. Defendants cite two federal cases in support: Truitt v. State of Illinois,
The motion to intervene will be granted. The motions to convene a three-judge court to hear and decide the constitutional challenges will be granted as well. The motions to strike and dismiss will be denied.
