Lead Opinion
Thеse three appeals arise from two closely related suits brought by Alleghany Corporation to invalidate, on federal constitutional grounds, portions of the insurance holding company statutes of Wisconsin and Indiana. Acting under the authority of Wis.Stat. §§ 600.03(13), 611.72, 617.11(1), and Ind.Code §§ 27-1-23-1 et seq., respectively, the insurance commissioners of these states turned down Alleghany’s application for permission to acquire 20 percent of the common stock of The St. Paul Companies, Inc., an insurance holding company. Alleghany could have sought review of the commissioners’ decisions in the courts of the respective states, but it did not do so. The appeals present the single question whether, becausе of this omission, the doctrine of Younger v. Harris,
St. Paul owns insurance companies incorporated in ten separate states, each of which is among the 47 states that hаve nearly identical statutes requiring anyone who wants to acquire more than ten percent of the stock of either an insurance company incorporated in the state, or the ;parent of such a company, to obtain the approval of the state insurance commissioner. The commissioner is to render a written decision after a full hearing, the decision to be based on specified criteria including the applicant’s integrity and financial strength and the competitive effects of the proposed acquisition. Allegha-ny filed applications in all ten states. Four granted the application. Four — including Wisconsin and Indiana — turned it down. It is pending in one (Delaware). And it was withdrawn in another (Illinois) pending the determination, in proceedings already begun to challenge the rulings by the insurance commissioners in the other states, of the constitutionality of the insurance company holding statutes. Proceedings there are — galore. The four approvals gave rise to two appeals to state courts by St. Paul from the commissioners’ ruling. In one, a state supreme court reversed the decision of the lower courts not to review the commissioner’s approval, and remanded for that review, St. Paul Cos. v. Hatch,
The controversy between Alleghany and the insurance commissioners is a live one. Even though Alleghany has already been turned down by several of the commissioners, and it needs the permission of all to go ahead with the acquisition, this is only if the statutes are constitutional. If they are not, Alleghany does not require permission under these statutes.
If Alleghany had sought judicial review of the Wisconsin or the Indiana commissioner’s ruling in a state court, as it could have done, Wis.Stat. § 227.53(1); Ind.Stat. § 4-21.5-5-3(a), and had lost, it could not have maintained a suit in federal district court to invalidate the ruling, whether on constitutional or any other grounds—provided only that the state courts would have had jurisdiction to consider Alleghany’s federal claims, and they would have. Wis. Stat. § 227.57(8); Ind.Code § 4-21.5-5-14(d)(2). The qualification is essential, but if it is satisfied the suit in federal court would be barred by res judi-cata. Button v. Harden,
It will help in analyzing the issue to step back a pace and ask, could these two federal court suits be maintained if Alleghany had not applied to the commissioners for approval? Ex parte Young,
Our conclusion that Alleghany could have brought its suits challenging the insurance holding company statutes without first applying to the insurance commissioners for permission to acquire the St. Paul Companies would be mistaken if there were a general requirement of exhausting state
All this is not to say that anyone who brings suit in federal court to enjoin the operation of a state statute, or other state action, is, by virtue of Ex parte Young, automatically entitled to an injunction, provided that all jurisdictional requirements such as ripeness are satisfied and the plaintiff can demonstrate that his federal rights have indeed been violated. The right to an injunction depends on more than just presenting a good legal claim to a court having jurisdiction. Part of the more consists of general equitable considerations and another part, though it is applicable only to a subclass of injunction suits, consists of considerations of comity — the interest in harmonious relations between sovereigns and therefore between the federal government and the states. It is in regard to considerations of equity and comity that the doctrine of Younger v. Harris comes into play. Its central meaning is that a federal district court may not, save in exceptional circumstances, enjoin, at the behest of a person who has actually or arguably violated a state statute, a state court proceeding to enforce the statute against that person. Illinois v. General Electric Co., supra,
These grounds are at their strongest when, as in Younger itself, the state is prosecuting a person for a crime. Allowing him to block the prosecution by obtaining an injunction from a federal judge would come close to allowing a state criminal defendant to remove his criminal prosecution into federal court — a course that would wreck the balance between federal and state prerogatives that is struck in the habeas corpus statute. And it would do this gratuitously, since the defendant can interpose his federal defenses in the state action and will even have a later shot at a federal forum — not only the Supreme Court under the certiorari jurisdiction, but also, and more practically, the district court under the habeas corpus jurisdiction, provided only that he is convicted and imprisoned, and if not his interest in having access to a federal forum will be much reduced.
The grounds for denying a federal-court injunction are only slightly attenuated when instead of a criminal prosecution the state has brought a civil enforcemеnt action, such as the suit to close a pornographic movie theater in Huffman v. Pur
This clearly would be such a case if Alleghany had sued the state insurance commissioners before applying for permission to acquire St. Paul. And if this is right, then the argument that by virtue of having applied to the commissioners Alle-ghany forfeited its right under Ex parte Young to bring a suit to enjoin the enforcement of the state insurance holding company statutes yields a paradox. If accepted, the argument would deter firms in Allegha-ny’s position from applying for a state license before challenging the constitutionality of the state’s licensing scheme, since the application would channel the firm into the state court system even if it preferred to be in federal court. With firms thus induced to avoid the state regulatory process, the principles of federalism would be affronted rather than protected. Moreover, the argument we are examining implies that instead of Alleghany’s filing four suits in order to challenge the regulatory scheme (suits against the four insurance commissioners who turned it down), it would have had to file ten suits—suits against all the insurance commissioners whose permission was required under state law; for only by suing the commissioners in advance of applying for permission could Alleghany maintain these suits in federal courts.
If the state insurance commissioners had the power to decide issues of federal constitutional law, if decisions by the commissioners were given preclusive effect by the courts of the commissioner’s state, and if procedures employed by the commissioners were deemed adequately “judicial” in character to compel the federal courts to give the commissioners’ findings the same pre-clusive effect as a matter of federal common law, University of Tennessee v. Eliott,
So res judicata is not a bar to these suits. Nor, to get back on the main track, is Younger. Alleghany has not violated state law, because it has not attempted to consummate its attempted takeover of St. Paul without obtaining the required permissions from the insurance commissioners. It is not the target of a state enforcement proceeding. The plaintiff in Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
The principle on which we are proceeding is dramatically illustrated by Wooley v. Maynard, supra. The plaintiff was seeking to enjoin a state statute that required the slogan “Live Free or Die” to be embossed on license plates. He had already been convicted three times of violating the statute. He had not appealed any of these convictions. Yet Younger was held not to bar his suit; since he was seeking only prospective relief he was free to invoke the aid of a federal court, even though he could easily have raised his federal claim as a defense in the state criminal cases.
Any intimations of a broader scope for Younger arising from the fact that the plaintiff in Pennzoil was not a public agency were promptly scotched by New Orleans Public Service, Inc. (NOPSI) v. Council of City of New Orleans, — U.S. -,
NOPSI not only clarifies the scope of Pennzoil, but is a case much like the present one. A local rаtemaking body had refused to grant the request of a power company to be permitted to raise its rates. The company could have challenged the refusal in state court, but instead brought a federal suit to enjoin the refusal on federal grounds. The Supreme Court held Younger inapplicable.
This case is actually a weaker case for Younger abstention than was NOPSI. The regulatory order in NOPSI was in response to alleged negligence by the power company in failing to minimize its costs by diversifying its sources of power. Functionally, it was a remedial order. Indeed, in effect though not in legal form it was “punishment” for past misconduct by the firm. A state has, as we have been at pains to stress, a strong interest in punishing its malefactors, and this whether the punishment takes the form of a rate order or of a seizure of contraband or of a criminal sanction. The ratemaking order in NOPSI might therefore have been analogized to the disciplinary proceeding in Mid-dlesex. No such analogizing to Middlesex (or to Dayton Christian Schools) is possible here. The critical еlement of misconduct — emphasized ad nauseam not only in this opinion but in our earlier opinion in Illinois v. General Electric Co., supra,
We note, finally, that decisions from other circuits support our result. Ford Motor Co. v. Insurance Commissioner,
The decision of the district court in Indiana, refusing to abstain, is affirmed (Nos. 89-2055, 89-2056); the decision of the district court in Wisconsin, abstaining, is reversed (No. 89-1655).
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the court’s opinion but add a few words about the commissioners’ “concession” that they cannot evaluate the constitutionality of the laws they administer. How can a state “concede” that the Constitution is not supreme for its executive branch? The Supremacy Clause, Art. VI cl. 2, provides that “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall
State agencies could disregard federal rules only if the second portion of the Supremacy Clause — “the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” — meant that the Constitution is supreme only for judges. Yet the nullification debates are behind us. No one believes these days that legislative and executive branches of state governments may ignore the Constitution and federal law until slapped with an injunction. Thе Supremacy Clause establishes a hierarchy of rules, binding on all governmental actors. The Illinois Commerce Commission may not, for example, yank the certificates of two interstate carriers whose merger was approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission and issue an opinion saying something like: “We ignore the Interstate Commerce Act when making our decisions, and if you don’t like that go sue us.” Federal law is supreme for all state actors, at all times, “any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.”
Federal courts proclaim, when requiring state officials to pay damages for disobedience to federal law (including constitutional doctrine), that statе actors must follow the federal rules without waiting for litigation. National rules govern even though no case on all fours has been rendered. Anderson v. Creighton,
Officials may not act as if state law is the only law. Aftеr Brown v. Board of Education,
The most sonorous justification for the commissioners’ position is that they are following the law and leaving to orderly adjudication claims that their law is defective. Such an approach supposes that state rules arе the whole law of the commissioners’ jurisdictions, that national rules are a form of foreign law. Yet the Supremacy Clause integrates the legal systems. We have one body of law, with a hierarchy among rules.
*1055 The laws of the United States are laws in the several States, and just as much binding on the citizens and courts thereof as the State laws are. The United States is not a foreign sovereignty as regards the several States, but is a concurrent, and, within its jurisdiction, paramount sovereignty. Every citizen of a State is a subject of two distinct sovereignties, having concurrent jurisdiction in the State, — concurrent as to place and persons, though distinct as to subject-matter.... The disposition to regard the laws of the United States as emanating from a foreign jurisdiction is founded on erroneous views of the nature and relations of the State and Federal governments. It is often the cause or the consequence of an unjustifiable jealousy of the United States government, which has been the occasion of disastrous evils to the country.
Claflin v. Houseman,
This does not mean that constitutional questions are the first order of business for an administrator any more than for a court. Judges regularly deal with statutory questions before they take up constitutional ones. Even though deferral increases slightly the expense of obtaining a favorable decision, it is justified to ensure appropriate respect for rules established by the political branches. States might separate their decision-making not only temporally but also among officials, some specializing in statutory interpretation and others in constitutional law. Here the parallel to judicial practice breaks down. An insurance commissioner does not resolve questions of state law and then turn to the state’s Attorney General (or even to a court) for authoritative guidance on federal law; the commissioner resolves questions of state law and then issues a binding order. The person claiming a federal right is directed to comply. A judge does not resolve the statutory point, issue an injunction, and then turn to the Constitution. A judge resolves the questions of federal law before issuing a binding decision; agencies must do this too.
Abjuring administrative “аuthority” to act on the basis of federal law creates problems under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 as well as the Supremacy Clause, for it amounts to a demand that people abandon their federal remedies. Indiana and Wisconsin insist that the state as an entity will listen to constitutional (and other federal) claims only in state court. Yet § 1983 creates an entitlement to litigate in federal court, free of any efforts by the state to limit access. Felder v. Casey,
Often we are told that chaos would break out if everyone made his own decision about which legal rules are enforceable. Let us leave difficult questions to the courts, the refrain goes, so that we may have order. Although the division of labor is beneficial in the main — no one who has watched tax protesters find fantastic propositions in the Constitution, see Coleman v. CIR,
Perhaps functionaries are entitled to follow the orders of their superiors, unless clearly unlawful, so that there may be efficient and consistent administration. A commissioner of insurance is no functionary; he commands a cadre of lawyers. Any legal staff good еnough to interpret the arcane insurance laws these officials must apply can look up constitutional doctrine as well. State agencies, in conjunction with state attorneys general, possess ample legal skill — and more experience, I wager, than a randomly selected judge of a court of general jurisdiction who may not see a claim under the dormant Commerce Clause during his career. We should require no less of a commissioner of insurance than of a police official or a prison warden.
At all events, the “constitutional” question here turns out to be a dispute about the meaning of the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1011-15. If that statute authorizes states to regulate insurance holding companies, then there is no remaining issue, see Western & Southern Life Insurance Co. v. State Board of Equalization,
The role of the Constitution in administrative decision-making turns out to be irrelevant to this litigation. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1738, the decision of a state official — be he called “judge” or “commissioner” — has the same preclusive effect in federal litigation as in state litigation. Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
ORDER
Less than a week after we issued our decision, the Eighth Circuit decided two parallel cases involving Alleghany’s challenge to the state insurance holding company statutes — decided them opposite to, but apparently unaware of, our decision. Alleghany Corp. v. McCartney,
The state brought suit in Huffman to close down a pornographic theater. It obtained a judgment in state court, and the theater owner did not appeal, but instead brought a suit in federal court to enjoin the enforcement of the state statute and thus the closing of the theater. The Supreme Court held that Younger abstention was proper in these circumstances. Indeed it was. The theater owner had violated the state statute, and if you violate a state statute and the state prosecutes you (not necessarily by means of a criminal proceeding) in state court, you must stay there. That is Younger in a nutshell. It is not this case, since Alleghany has violated no state law, and since the state has not proceeded against it in state court. Alleghany applied for a license and was turned down. It did not engage in the activity for which it had sought the license, and therefore did not expose itself to an enforcement proceeding. It challenged the licensing statute. It was not required Younger or any other doctrine to file that challenge in state court.
The defendant-appellant, John J. Dillon, III, filed a petition for rehearing and suggestion of rehearing en banc on March 7, 1990. No judge in regular active service has requested a vote on the suggestion of rehearing en banc, and all of the judges on the panel have voted to deny rehearing.
