' Plaintiffs are members of the State Bar of California who object to political positions taken by the Bar. They contend that their freedom of association rights under the First Amendment are violated by their being forced to belong to an organization that publicly espouses views with which they disagree. Plaintiffs seek to enjoin the political activities of the Bar that are not germane to its regulatory functions, even though plaintiffs are not required to finance these political activities with their dues. The district court dismissed the complaint on the ground that the Supreme Court has upheld mandatory bar membership so long as members are not compelled to contribute to political activities.
See Keller v. State Bar of California,
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs are several current and former California public officials who belong to the State Bar of California. Plaintiff Bill Morrow represents California’s 73rd assembly district; Barry Keene is a former state senator; and J. Bruce Henderson is a former member of the San Diego City Council. Defendants are the State Bar and Mel Assagai, a former executive officer of the State Bar who in 1996 was given a two-year contract as a lobbyist for the State Bar.
California maintains a unified bar. In a unified bar, regulatory functions (such as admission, continuing education, and attorney discipline) are combined with non-regulatory activities (such as arranging social functions, obtaining rental car discounts for members, and political lobbying) in a single organization in which membership is mandatory. More than half of the states have unified bars.
Plaintiffs disapprove of the California State Bar’s political activities in support of four 1997 California bills. The bills would have raised the ceiling on pain and suffering damages in medical negligence cases, prohibited civil compromises in domestic violence cases, defined a state claim for a hostile work environment, and permitted state law claims for discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
Plaintiffs do not complain about how the State Bar spends their mandatory dues. In compliance with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Keller,
the State Bar allows members to seek a refund of the proportion of their dues that the State Bar has spent on political activities unrelated to its regulatory function.
See id.,
The district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim. It ruled on the basis of the Supreme Court’s decision in Lathrop, which upheld mandatory state bar membership in the face of similar objections. See id. The district court noted that plaintiffs are not compelled to endorse or financially support any position of the Bar. They are free to disagree publicly with the State Bar’s political stances. The court also noted that in light of the huge size of the California Bar, the political positions of the Bar are unlikely to be attributed to all its individual members.
The plaintiffs appeal, contending the district court erred as a matter of law. We review de novo.
See Stone v. Travelers Corp.,
DISCUSSION
The issue is whether plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights are violated by their compulsory membership in a state bar association that conducts political activities beyond those for which mandatory financial support is justified. The Supreme Court has twice visited the question of bar membership.
*1176
In
Lathrop,
A majority of the Court in
Lathrop
was unable to agree on whether the use of mandatory dues to support political or ideological activities by the Wisconsin Bar would violate Lathrop’s First Amendment rights.
See id.
at 844,
The Court drew its distinction between regulatory and ideological activities from a line of labor union cases. The most important of those cases,
Abood v. Detroit Bd. of Ed.,
Plaintiffs stress that the Court recognized in
Ellis
that mandatory assessments by a labor union constitute a significant intrusion on First Amendment rights that can be justified only by compelling state interests. Plaintiffs contend no such interests justify mandatory bar memberships. The difficulty with this argument is that the Court decided
Keller
after
Ellis
and
Abood.
On the question of mandatory bar membership, the issue presented here,
Keller
reaffirmed Lathrop’s holding that “lawyers admitted to practice in the State may be required to join and pay dues to the State Bar.”
Keller,
The plaintiffs in this case do not contend that mandatory bar membership restricts, directly or indirectly, their ability to express their own views or to disagree with the positions of the Bar. Nor do they contend that membership compels them to express any particular ideas or make any particular utterances of any kind. This case is thus unlike
Wooley v. Maynard,
Plaintiffs nevertheless contend that language in
Keller
leaves open the question whether membership alone may cause the public to identify plaintiffs with State Bar positions in violation of plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights. It is difficult for us to accept plaintiffs’ interpretation of this passage since the Court in
Keller
reaffirmed
Lathrop
on this very point.
See Keller,
In addition to their claim for relief based on [the California Bar’s] use of their mandatory dues, petitioners’ complaint also requested an injunction prohibiting the State Bar from using its name to advance political and ideological causes or beliefs. This request for relief appears to implicate a much broader freedom of association claim than was at issue in Lathrop. Petitioners challenge not only their “compelled financial support of group activities,” but urge that they cannot be compelled to associate with an organization that engages in political or ideological activities beyond those for which mandatory financial support is justified under the principles of Lathrop and Abood. The California courts did not address this claim, and we decline to do so in the first instance.
Id.
at 17,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
