Dаvid Johnson was disbarred by the Supreme Court of Illinois in March 1998 — in part because he began to practice law before his admission to the bar, in part because he retained a 25% contingent fee in a case in which he had agreed to accept 10% of thе client’s recovery, and in part because he lied to the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission (aedo) during its investigation. Johnsоn contends in this suit that the Supreme Court and other state agencies should
Section 1983 permits damages litigation against state agents in' their individual capacities, but the district court held that the five individual defendants — the Clerk of the Supreme Court, the Director of the state bar’s Committee on Character and Fitness, the Administrator of the ARDC, and two members of the aedc’s staff — are entitled to absolute prosecutorial immunity. That conclusion is difficult to sustain, for neither the Clerk nor the Director is a “prosecutor,” and many of the аcts Johnson seeks to question occurred before the disbarment proceedings commenced. See
Buckley v. Fitzsimmons,
A remand to sort out thе subjects to which absolute immunity applies is unnecessary, however, because the suit does not come within federal jurisdiction in the first рlace. Johnson directs fire against the delay in admitting him to the bar (he took the bar exam in July 1992 after graduation from the University of Iowa but wаs, not sworn in until November 1993), but he filed suit well beyond the two-year statute of limitations applicable to § 1983 actions in Illinois.
Ashafa v. Chicago,
As we have held in similar cases, the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine eliminates most avenues of attack on attorney discipline. See, e.g.,
Leaf v. Supreme Court of Wisconsin,
According to Johnson, the
Rooker-Feld-man
doctrine leaves open the possibility of damages for the delаy in admitting him to the bar, because he challenges the actions
We very much doubt that the Constitution entitles would-be lawyers to start representing clients whenever, by thеir own lights, they should have been admitted. States provide remedies for administrative delay and are entitled to put self-help out of bounds when orderly processes are available. One orderly process that Johnson is trying to evade is the need to make arguments in the right tribunal at the designated time. Having failed to argue in the disbarment proceedings that delay in 1992-93 entitled him to practice law before his admission to the bar, Johnson now wants money damages because the ardo and the Supreme Court of Illinois violated that supрosed right. Balderdash. A litigant may not avoid the Rooker-Feldman doctrine by withholding arguments from the state court. Not even the law of res judicata (claim preclusion) permits such a maneuver, and the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, a jurisdictional limit on the power of the federal courts, is at least as broad as res judicata in this respect. Johnson’s injury stems from his disbarment, which is beyond the power of an inferior federal court to review, and as in Leaf the accusation that the individual defendants conspired to violate his rights is inextricably intertwined with the disbarment. Johnson does not contend, for example, that any of the individual defendants searched his house or performed any other act that would be actiоnable apart from the disciplinary proceedings. What we said in Leaf about the scope of the Rooker-Feld-man doctrine covers Johnson too.
The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
