These appeals present issues concerning local taxpayers’ ability to sue local tax officials for alleged federal constitutional violations. Both cases stem from news reports in 2009 claiming that then-Illinois State Representative Paul Froehlich had offered property tax reductions to his constituents and implying that he received campaign contributions and political support in exchange. The news reports claimed that Rep. Froehlich arranged for many of his constituents’ property taxes to be reduced on appeal to the Cook County Board of Review. The plaintiffs in these two cases, Louis Capra and Satkar Hospitality (and two of its owners), had appealed their property tax assessments and had won such reductions on appeal. After several news reports highlighted the potential impropriety of their reductions, though, both were called back before the Board of Review and the Board reversed both reductions.
Capra and Satkar Hospitality filed these separate federal lawsuits against the Cook County Board of Review and its individual members and staff alleging several constitutional violations. We address the two cases together because the issues involved are so similar. As both district courts held, the individual defendants are entitled to absolute quasi-judicial immunity and the Board itself is not. We conclude, however, that the damages claims against the Board cannot proceed. They are not cognizable in federal courts under Fair Assessment in Real Estate Ass’n v. McNary,
I. Factual and Procedural Background
In April and May 2009, a political blog and a Chicago television station began reporting' on Illinois State Rep. Paul Froehlich. The reports suggested that Rep. Froehlich "offered his constituents reductions in 'their county property taxes in exchange for political favors. A companion appeal, Satkar Hospitality v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., No. 11-3572, addresses the content of the reports in greater detail, but here it suffices to say
Both plaintiffs here, Satkar Hospitality and Louis Capra, appealed their property tax assessments for the years 2007 and 2008 and won reductions. But in June 2009, after the publicity about Rep. Froehlich, both were called back before the Board of Review for new hearings. Both plaintiffs’ complaints allege that in these second hearings, the Board inquired not into the value of their properties but into the nature of their relationships with Rep. Froehlich. The Board rescinded the reductions for both plaintiffs. Plaintiffs allege that the Board, when questioned about its actions, claimed that “we can do anything we want.”
The plaintiffs filed these federal lawsuits against the Board itself as well as its three commissioners (Larry Rogers, Joseph Berrios, and Brendan Houlihan), its chief deputy commissioner (Scott Guetzow), and its first assistant commissioners (Thomas Jaconetty and John Sullivan). Both complaints allege that the Board and its commissioners and staff (the “individual defendants”) violated the plaintiffs’ right to equal protection by singling them out for their association with Rep. Froehlich, their right to due process by arbitrarily rescinding their reductions without a.- fair hearing, and their First Amendment rights by retaliating against them based on their political ties to Rep. Froehlich. Both plaintiffs also allege that any appeal available to them from the Board’s decisions would not satisfy due process. They allege that their appeals before the state tax appeal board are “red-flagged” and could take seven to eight years to decide. They also allege that appeal to the Cook County Circuit Court would not provide impartial review because judges in that court are slated for election by the county Democratic Party, of which two individual defendants are leaders.
In the Satkar Hospitality case, the district court denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim but granted the individual defendants’ motion to dismiss on the ground that they are absolutely immune because their work reviewing tax appeals is quasi-judicial. Satkar Hospitality Inc. v. Cook County Bd. of Review,
In the Capra case, the district court also found that the individual defendants were entitled to quasi-judicial absolute immunity but that the Board was not. Capra v. Cook County Bd. of Review, No. 11-cv-4028,
II. Analysis
These section 1983 actions for damages against the Board and its members and staff face obstacles they cannot overcome. We begin by explaining why the individual defendants are entitled to quasi-judicial absolute immunity. We then explain why the Board itself is not entitled to the same absolute immunity but that the damages claims against the Board itself must be dismissed without prejudice based on comity concerns under Fair Assessment in Real Estate Ass’n v. McNary,
A. Quasi-Judicial Absolute Immunity for Individual Defendants
“Absolute' immunity is available to members of quasi-judicial adjudicatory bodies when they perform duties that are functionally comparable to those of a judicial officer,” regardless of the identity of the actor. Tobin for Governor v. Illinois State Bd. of Elections,
We considered the function and role of the Tazewell County Board of Review in light of the six factors for analyzing quasi-judicial immunity articulated in Butz: (1) the need to assure that the individual can perform her functions without harassment
Heyde controls here. The Tazewell County Board of Review serves the same function as the Cook County Board of Review, just in a different county. The Boards are defined and governed by parallel Illinois statutes.
B. No Absolute Immunity for the Board of Review
The Cook County Board of Review argues that it should also be entitled to the same quasi-judicial absolute immunity since it performs the same functions. Unlike individuals sued in their individual capacities, though, municipal entities are not entitled to absolute immunity. The Supreme Court made this quite clear in Monell v. Department of Social Services:
*710 we express no views on the scope of any municipal immunity beyond holding that municipal bodies sued under § 1983 cannot be entitled to an absolute immunity, lest our decision that such bodies are subject to suit under § 1983 “be drained of meaning.”
More recently, we explained in Hernandez v. Sheahan,
The Board points to no examples of a circuit court applying absolute immunity to a municipal entity, and we have found none. Most of the cases it cites involved state entities, which frequently will be protected from suit by Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity or its statutory parallel under Will v. Michigan Dep’t of State Police,
The Board also cites a district court opinion from Louisiana, that extended absolute quasi-judicial immunity to a city alcohol control board, but the Fifth Circuit later interpreted the case as finding only immunity only for individual defendants. Compare Brossette v. City of Baton Rouge,
Given Monell and the history ■ of the Civil Rights Act, extending absolute immunity to the Board here would be a dramatic expansion of immunity that would severely limit the scope of section 1983 further than Congress intended and further than the Supreme Court ever has. Insulating municipalities from suit on a theory of quasi-judicial immunity when a policy, custom, or policymaker has violated the Constitution would, as the Supreme Court noted in Monell, drain that important decision of its meaning.
C. Comity
1. The General Rule of Abstention
There is, however, another narrower reason that these suits cannot proceed against -the Board itself. . In Fair Assessment in Real Estate Ass’n v. McNary,
Like the Tax Injunction Act, this comity doctrine “serves to minimize the frictions inherent in a federal system of government” and embodies longstanding “federal reluctance to interfere with state taxation.” Empress Casino Joliet Corp. v. Balmoral Racing Club, Inc.,
Fair Assessment has been applied consistently to bar plaintiffs from bringing section 1983 suits challenging the validity or imposition of state and local taxes in federal courts unless the available state remedies for those injuries are not adequate, plain, and complete. In Werch v. City of Berlin,
Capra and Satkar Hospitality’s lawsuits fall squarely within the rule of Fair Assessment. The plaintiffs challenge the application of a local tax under section 1983 on federal constitutional grounds. We must abstain from considering the claims unless the available state remedies are not adequate, plain, and complete.
2. The Exception to Abstention
After we raiséd the Fair Assessment abstention problem, plaintiffs argued that their cases fall within the exception because there are no “adequate, plain, and complete” state remedies available to them. We disagree.
In determining whether available state remedies are “adequate, plain, and complete” for purposes of Fair Assessment, we have used the comparable standard from the Tax Injunction Act, which bars federal courts from enjoining state taxes where a “plain, speedy and efficient” state remedy is available. 28 U.S.C. § 1341. See Werch,
State remedies are “plain, speedy and efficient” if they provide the taxpayer with a “full hearing and judicial determination at which she may raise any and all' constitutional objections to the tax'.” Rosewell v. LaSalle Nat’l Bank,
Under Illinois law, taxpayers dissatisfied with a decision of a county Board of Review have two options for appeal. They can either appeal to the Property Tax Appeal Board (PTAB), 35 Ill. Comp. Stat. § 200/16-160, or file a tax objection complaint directly with a county circuit court, § 200/23-15. See also Millennium Park Joint Venture, LLC v. Houlihan, 241 Ill.2d
Thus, through either the PTAB or the circuit courts, any statutory or constitutional claims can be heard by a state court of general jurisdiction and can be appealed through the Illinois court system to the Illinois Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of the United States'. In Heyde we found that these appeal procedures were adequate for Fair Assessment purposes, noting that we “have continually found that the available state procedures for challenging the Illinois tax system are acceptable” under Fair Assessment.
Despite these precedents, plaintiffs maintain that appeals, through the PTAB and directly to the circuit courts are procedurally inadequate. They argue that the entire Cook County judiciary “could not adequately hear these specific cases” because the cases are highly political and “against the man who selected the majority of the county judiciary,” referring to defendant Joseph Berrios. PI. Supp. Br. 8. They refer to Berrios and his “cohorts on the Board of Review” as “corrupt. ‘Chicago-style’. politicians” whose property tax decisions,.were so “brazenly and openly” political that “to expect the Cook County judiciary to treat [the decisions] as anything other than a political hot potato is naive.” Id. at 8-9.
The federal Constitution does not prohibit popular election of state court judges. Plaintiffs’ argument amounts in essence-to an argument that'some’issues and claims are, as'a matter of federal constitutional law, simply too hot for elected- state judgés to handle fairly. To accept this theory would both accept an extraordinary expan
But plaintiffs did not appeal directly to the circuit courts. They chose instead the option of appealing tp the PTAB. They argue that the PTAB also cannot provide a plain; adequate, and complete remedy because their-cases- with the PTAB were “red-flagged,” will take too long to be decided, and will not be reviewed de novo, but rather that the PTAB will “rubber stamp” the Board’s decisions. We are not persuaded.
First, significant delay does not doom the adequacy of state remedies. In Heyde we found that a delay of more than two years alleged by the plaintiff did not render Illinois procedures inadequate.
Second, plaintiffs allege that the PTAB is not an adequate state remedial process because their cases have been “red-flagged.” In oral argument they explained that by “red-flagged” they mean that someone, within the Board of Review has been in contact with the PTAB and that nothing would be done to change the Board’s decisions.' We do not know the factual basis for this allegation, but even if the PTAB affirms the Board’s decisions and the plaintiffs can show that was because the cases were “red-flagged” or otherwise the subject of improper influence, further appeal to Illinois state courts will be available. See Huber Pontiac,
Plaintiffs also argue that PTAB review is not adequate because it is only a “rubber stamp” for the Board. PI. Supp. Br. 5. They point to provisions of the relevant regulations that place the burden of proof on the appealing property owner and require parties to prove unequal treatment by “clear and convincing evidence.” See 86 Ill. Admin. Code § 1910.63(e). By law the PTAB is required to review appeals de
The provisions plaintiffs cite do not address the standard of review but set out a burden-shifting procedure for PTAB appeals. Contesting taxpayers must first provide evidence or legal argument “sufficient to challenge the correctness of the assessment,” and once they have done so, the Board is required to provide evidence or legal argument “sufficient to support its assessment.” See 86 Ill. Admin. Code § 1910.63(b) — (c). Plaintiffs’ argument confuses the de novo standard of review with the evidentiary burdens applicable in PTAB appeals. The fact that the plaintiffs bear an evidentiary burden does not render the PTAB appeal process inadequate or incomplete. The prospect that the PTAB’s decisions on the merits of these plaintiffs’ appeals might be wrong falls well short of any showing that state remedies are inadequate.
Even if these allegations about the adequacy and partiality of the PTAB and the Cook County circuit courts plausibly affected the adequacy of those processes, they are premature. Certainly, tax appeal procedures exist in Illinois, and we have repeatedly held that those procedures are adequate for purposes of Fair Assessment and the Tax Injunction Act. See Heyde,
Thus, under Fair .Assessment, the district courts in these cases were required to abstain from considering the merits of plaintiffs’. claims for damages against the Board under section 1983 because the available state remedies were plain, adequate, and complete.
D. Final Disposition
Comity requires that the claims against the Board be dismissed without prejudice, i.e., without' a ruling on the merits. This ruling therefore should not bar plaintiffs from raising any'federal constitutional issues in their state' proceedings to appeal their property tax assessments. On this topic, we also note thát the district court in Capra erred in applying ' too-stringent pleading requirements for a class-of-one equal protection claim. The court found that Capra did not state such a claim because he did not identify in his complaint similarly situated properties that were not subject to the same (allegedly improper) reductions.
Plaintiffs alleging class-of-one equal protection claims do not need to identify specific examples of similarly situated persons in their complaints. As we explained in Geinosky v. City of Chicago,
Even in a case where a plaintiff would need to identify a similarly situated person to prove his case, ... we see no basis for requiring the plaintiff to identify .the person in the complaint____Rule 8(a)(2) -requires- only “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Even the more demanding pleading requirements under Iqbal and Twombly do not require*718 a plaintiff to identify specific comparators in a complaint.
Id. at 748 n. 3. Here the plaintiffs alleged in Satkar Hospitality that “[similarly situated property owners, who had not contributed to Rep. Froehlich, were not singled out thusly,” Satkar Compl. ¶ 51, and in Capra, “[similarly situated taxpayers who were not suspected of associating with Rep. Paul Froehlich were not denied the right to petition the Board of Review.” Capra Compl. ¶ 41. At the pleading stage these allegations suffice.
III. Conclusion
In the Capra appeal, No. 12-2540, we affirm the judgment. The claims against the individual defendants are dismissed with prejudice, and the due process and equal protection claims against the Board of Review are dismissed without prejudice. In the Satkar Hospitality appeals, we affirm the judgment in favor of the individual defendants in No. 12-3116, and remand for dismissal of the claims against the Board of Review without prejudice in No. 12-2848.
Notes
. The Satkar Hospitality complaint also included as defendants the local television station, political blog, and reporters and staff members of both, and alleged defamation and false light claims under Illinois law. The appeal from dismissal of those counts is pending in Satkar Hospitality v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., No. 11-3572.
. In Satkar Hospitality, the Board argued before the district court that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine barred subject matter jurisdiction and that the Board was protected by Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity. The district court correctly rejected both arguments, which have not been renewed on appeal.
. The Tazewell Board is governed by sections 200/16-20 through 200/16-90 of chapter 35 of the Illinois code, which apply to counties with fewer than- 3,000,000 residents. The Cook County Board is governed by sections 200/16-95 through 200/16-155, which apply to the only county with more than 3,000,000 residents. The language is not identical, but the powers, duties, and required procedures are equivalent.
. Other circuits have held similarly that municipal entities are not entitled to the immunities that protect their officers. See Bass v. Attardi,
. The parties did not raise or address Fair Assessment in the district courts or in this court. We raised the issue at oral argument and ordered the parties to file post-argument briefs addressing the case. We view abstention under Fair Assessment as comparable to other abstention doctrines rooted in federalism concerns, which an appellate court may raise even if it is not a jurisdictional issue that must be raised. See Int'l Coll. of Surgeons v. City of Chicago,
. In Werch we said that the court lacked ‘jurisdiction” to hear such a claim, but the Supreme Court has not been clear on whether Fair Assessment removes such suits from federal court jurisdiction or rather precludes courts from hearing certain cases even though they might fall within their jurisdiction. Compare Hibbs v. Winn,
. The regulations provide in part: "The Property Tax Appeal Board may consider appeals based upon contentions of law. Such contentions of law must be concerned with the correct assessment of the subject property. If contentions of law are raised, the party shall submit a brief in support of his position.” 86 Ill. Admin. Code § 1910.65(d). The second sentence of that provision could be interpreted as allowing constitutional challenges to the Board of Review procedures used to determine the "correct assessment,” or perhaps might be interpreted more narrowly. We have found no Illinois case law that would bar the PTAB from considering such challenges. We recognize that the Supreme Court has said on several occasions that uncertainty surrounding the scope of a state remedy "may make it less than 'plain.' ” See Rosewell,
. We need not address the extent to which plaintiffs would need to provide evidence of near-exact similarly situated property owners after discovery. But the question is an open and interesting one, especially in light of Swanson v. City ofChetek, where we reversed summary judgment for a defendant and held that a "clear showing of animus, absent a robust comparison to a similarly situated individual, may sustain a class-of-one equal protection claim.”
