Thе City of Chicago spied on and infiltrated several organizations of political dissidents. The organizations and some of their members claimed that the infiltration and subsequent adverse publicity violated their rights under the first amendment to the Constitution, applied to the states through the fourteenth. In 1975 the City stopped the infiltration and abolished the unit of the Poliсe Department that had been responsible for it. In 1981 the City consented to the entry of an injunction against investigation and infiltration in the absence of reasonable grounds to believe that the targets are violating or likely to violate the law.
Alliance to End Repression v. City of Chicago,
The plaintiffs wanted damages as well as an injunction. One group of plaintiffs agreed with the City that the organizations would accept $20,625 and the individuals $10,000 apiece. The plaintiffs in all pending actions accepted this, with five exceptions: the Alliance to End Repression, the Chicago Peace Council, William Hogan, Lucy Montgomery, and A.A. (Sammy) Rayner, Jr. These five were happy with the mоney offer and the terms of the injunction but also wanted a judicial declaration that their rights had been violated. The parties discussed the possibility of the City’s adding a confession of misconduct to the money and injunction, but they could not agree. The lawyer for these five plaintiffs explained in open court:
The Court: If the City were to agree thаt the conduct of the Red Squad in the mid-60s was in fact unconstitutional, would that satisfy you?
Mr. Gutman: If we could do it in a form — our damage claims are secondary. If we could have that in a form that would serve as a legal precedent — for example, if they did not contest that part, and we might agree to limiting the damages, as long as it was something that would servе as a legal precedent, because as we said, we are not interested in the money, it’s the principle of the constitutionality of secret police operations.
The parties ultimately agreed to submit the case to the court on stipulated facts and not to appeal the disposition. Plaintiffs agreed to accept as complete relief $10,000 for any prevailing individual and $20,625 for any prevailing organization. The district judge then held that Rayner and Hogan had not established the sort of “chilling effect” that, under
Laird v. Tatum,
Only “prevailing” parties are entitled to fees under § 1988, and the two sides disagree about what it means to prevail. The City observes that by insisting on a judicial decision, two plaintiffs gave up a sure $10,-000 while the others obtained only what they would have had without a trial. The marginal value of the decisiоn to the plaintiffs was a negative $20,000. Why, the City asks, should it be required to pay for
*875
the many hours the plaintiffs’ counsel spent to reduce the plaintiffs’ recovery? It relies on
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
More, the plaintiffs say, they won the only thing that mattered to them: the precedent. The precedential aspect of a decision may be valuable, and the award of fees may reflect the benеfits judicial decisions provide for other people. E.g.,
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
— U.S.-,
We have some doubts about the value of this precedent. The parties agreed not to appeal, which ensured that the decision would not become authoritative within the Seventh Circuit. (A decision is authoritative when it is binding because of the hierarchy among courts, rather than solely because it is persuasive.) A decision of a district judge has persuasive rather than authoritative effect, see
Colby v. J.C. Penney Co.,
Whether the slight precedential effect of an unreviewable decision is the sort of victory for which fees may be awarded is a nice question, but not one we shall decide. There is a more fundamental problem: thе absence of a “case or controversy” within the meaning of Article III. This case was settled before the judge decided it. The defendants accepted an injunction against the conduct; the parties agreed on the monetary remedy too. There followed a wager of law: the plaintiffs staked $10,- *876 000 (or $20,625) apiece that they were right. Two lost all; three won and got both the money and the precedent. The parties’ sole dispute concerned the contents of the court’s opinion. That is not a justiciable controversy. It is a request for an advisory opinion — one that cannot help the plaintiffs and has effects, if at all, on strangers to the litigation.
The parties proceed as if the legal views of the district court were the “stakes” of the litigation. The plaintiffs want to acquire an opinion containing certain views; the defendants want to avoid the expression of these views. If this kind of “controversy” were enough to keep a case alive, then an advisory opinion would be its own justification — the fact that the parties cared enough to fight would show that they had a real controversy. Whatever the merits of this as an original interpretation of Article III, it is not the Supreme Court’s view and never has been. E.g.,
Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc.,
Our case is much like
Ashcroft v. Mattis,
The Supreme Court has never dealt with a pure wager of law. It has held that the existence of monetary stakes is not enough to keep a suit alive, if the underlying question has been settled or does not concern the litigants.
Diamond v. Charles,
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Two cases might offer plaintiffs some support. In
Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
There is yet another way in which this litigation may have been live. The injunction entered in 1981 was a consent decree rather than the result of contested litigation. We have hinted that governments may be able to withdraw from consent decrees entered without authority. See
Kasper v. Board of Election Commissioners,
As it turns out, however, the plaintiffs did not ask for an injunction. They were satisfied with damages. So the case did not increase the longevity of the 1981 injunction or insulate it from a сhange of mind by a subsequent city administration. Moreover, the 1981 decree suspends the controversy for the time being. Voluntary discontinuation of a practice usually does not make a case moot, but it will end the “case or controversy” when recurrence of the dispute among these parties is very unlikely. See
Iron Arrow Honor Society v. Heckler,
Our conclusion that this case is not justiciable answers a question raised in
Deposit Guaranty National Bank v. Roper,
In our case only the desire of these five plaintiffs to obtain an advisory opinion led them to decline the City’s offer of settlement. The plaintiffs pressed on tо a trial that they could lose but not win. They got an opinion useless to themselves. Section 1988 does not contemplate that a party may “prevail” by obtaining an advisory opinion. The party must get relief useful to himself. Three of our plaintiffs obtained such relief, but they had obtained it as of the date they agreed to liquidate the damages. The аttorney’s time after that date, devoted to the pursuit of judicial advice (at the expense of two plaintiffs), is not compensable.
We should not be understood as holding that an award of attorneys’ fees may not take into account the value of a precedent. The precedent may be valuable beyond price, and thе award can recognize this. We hold only that the precedent, valuable though it is, must be a byproduct of the resolution of a real controversy. A party does not “prevail” by obtaining a precedent divorced from any other results.
The award of fees is vacated, and the case is remanded so that the judge may award to counsel the fees appropriate for work done before the parties agreed on the liquidated damages.
