Dеlvin Payton and five other former ar-restees who were released on bail from Illinois county jails filed this putative class action to dispute the counties’ practice (authorized by Illinois law) of imposing a bail fee, above and beyond the set bail amount, as a condition for release on bail. The plaintiffs moved for the certification of a plaintiff class including all individuals affected by the procedure in 19 named counties, while the defendants moved to dismiss the entire case. The district court agreed with the defendants, dismissed the action, and denied as moot the motion for class certification. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I
For several years, at least 19 out of Illinois’s 102 counties have followed a practice of charging a “bail fee” to detainees who are released on bail or on their own recognizance. This fee varies between $1 аnd $45, depending on the county, and is collected above any bail amount that is due.
In 1999, the Illinois General Assembly passed Illinois Public Act 91-0094, amending the Counties Code and providing that bond fees may be added to the required bond. The section was codified as part of the Illinois Bond Statute, 725 ILCS 5/110-7(b), as amended (the Act). The Act, which became effective on January 1, 2000, provides that “[t]he fees of sheriffs in counties of the first and second class, except where increased by county ordinance under this Section, shall be as follows: [¶]... ] For taking special bail, $1 in each county.” 55 ILCS 5/4-5001.
The Act also empowers county boards to increase the statutory fee by ordinance “if the increase is justified by an acceptable cost study” showing that the minimum $1 fee is not “sufficient to cover the costs of providing the service.” 55 ILCS 5/4-5001. Dealing with the deposit of bond, 725 ILCS 5/110 — 7(b) provides that “[ujpon depositing this sum and any bond fee authorized by law, the person shall be released from custody subject to the conditions of thе bail bond” (emphasis added). The plaintiffs allege that the fee is imposed even when the detainee is released on her own recognizance without posting bail. Regardless of county-specific increases, every detainee posting bond in Illinois is charged at least the statewide $1 minimum. Kane County charges an $11 fee, DuPage County charges $15, and all other counties charge between $1 and $45.
Plaintiffs Payton, Wallace, Cannon, and Clay were confined to the Kane County jail after February 1, 1998, and were granted bail by the Circuit Court of the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit. They were required to pay an $11 bond fee per bond posted before their release from custody. Plaintiffs Corson and Carson were confined to the DuPage County jail after October 1,1997, and were granted bail by the Circuit Court of the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. They paid a $15 bond fee for each bond posted as a condition of release from custody.
No plaintiffs are named who were charged a bond fee by any county other than Kane and DuPage. The complaint alleges, however, that these fees were imposed on an unknown number of individuals. Based on the generality of the practice, as now mandated by the Act, the named plaintiffs sought to represent a class consisting of (a) all persons confined to the county jail of each defendant county, on or after the inception of the bond fee practice, who рosted a cash bond and paid a bond fee to secure their pretrial release from jail; (b) all persons confined to the *676 county jail of each defendant county who were granted personal recognizance bonds and paid a bond fee to secure their pretrial release; (c) all persons confined to the county jail on or after the inception of the bond fee practice who do not have the funds to pay the bond fee to secure their pretrial release but can otherwise satisfy the bond requirements; and (d) all persons confined to the county jail of each county on or after January 1, 2000, who have posted or will post bail to obtain pretrial release. The named plaintiffs, of course, have suffered directly only from the conduct of (respectively) the counties of Kane and DuPage.
The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss on September 25, 2000, finding that the named plaintiffs lacked standing to pursue the entire lawsuit. It did not reach the question of class certification.
II
Plaintiffs present three issues for review. First, they claim that the class has standing to sue all defendants who are “juridically linked” together, in that they all follow the Illinois bail fee statute, even if not all members of the class suffered injury from a particular defendant county. Second, they argue that the district court erred in denying their motion for class certification, asserting that it shоuld have allowed the plaintiffs to proceed as a class at least against the two counties that had directly injured them. Third, if all else fails, they argue that at the very least the court should not have dismissed their second amended complaint between individually named plaintiffs and the counties that actually released them, as those are run-of-the-mine § 1983 cases. Logic dictates that we analyze the issues in reverse order, for if the plaintiffs fail on the more limited issues, they certainly cannot prevail on their broader claims.
We review a dismissal for lack of standing
de novo. Rifkin v. Bear Stearns & Co., Inc.,
A. The Individual Cases
The named plaintiffs set forth individual claims against DuPage and Kane Counties — the counties from whose jails they were released upon posting of bond and the payment of the contested bond fee. It is hard to see how they could have failed to state a claim under the notice pleading regime of FED. R. CIV. P. 8, which the Supreme Court recently re-emphasized in
Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A.,
The district court did not mention any grounds for the dismissal of the individual claims of these named plaintiffs against Kane and DuPage Counties, nor
*677
did it explain why it thought that they lacked standing to sue. “Article III requires that the plaintiff has suffered an ‘injury in fact’ which is fаirly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant and ‘likely,’ as opposed to merely ‘speculative,’ to be ‘redressed by a favorable decision.’ ”
Doe v. County of Montgomery,
It appears instead that what the district court meant tо say was that the plaintiffs lacked “standing” to bring a class action. However, putting to one side the problem inherent in conflating the standing inquiry with the inquiry under Rule 23 about the suitability of a plaintiff to serve as a class representative, the proper remedy for this shortcoming is not dismissal of the entire action, but rather an order denying class certification and permitting the case to continue as an individual suit. We accordingly reverse this part of the district court’s order and remаnd for the reinstatement of the individual actions.
B. Class Action Against DuPage and Kane Counties
It is also unclear why the district court thought that the proposed class action against DuPage and Kane Counties could not go forward (at least to the point of a Rule 23 certification decision), since named representatives from each of those jails were before the court, and the existence of the state law strongly suggests that these were not the only people who paid a releasе fee. Indeed, on the same day as it dismissed the present action, the district judge granted class certification in two cases based on the same occurrences, one brought by plaintiffs challenging Kane County practices
(Coleman v. County of Kane,
Given our reversal of the dismissal of the individual actions, we also reverse the district court’s judgment dismissing the putative class actions against DuPage and Kane Counties and remand for further appropriate proceedings. On remand, the parties must consider among other things the possible consequences of the outcome in Ringswald and Coleman for this suit.
C. Class Action Against Other 17 Counties
We turn now to the thorniest issue in this case: the propriety оf maintaining a *678 suit against the other 17 counties, for which we have no specific named plaintiffs.
We can dispose at the outset of one of the appellants’ arguments. They contend that the district court should have certified both a plaintiff and a defendant class. App. Br. at 11. But no one really asked for certification of a defendant class of 19 counties, or all Illinois counties, and thus we cannot fault the district court for failing to do so. The motion for clаss certification filed on April 17, 2000, discusses only the requirements for a plaintiff class and argues only the Rule 23 requirements with respect to the plaintiffs. Even though the motion concludes by asking summarily for “an order certifying this action be maintained as a class action with regard to both plaintiffs and defendants,” the motion was insufficient to serve as a proper request for a defendant class. Moreover, it is too late to request such certification for the first time on apрeal. Defendant classes must be treated with great care in any event, as we have noted in the past, see
Ameritech Ben. Plan Comm. v. Communication Workers of Am.,
But if the defendant counties, 19 in all, are not linked as a class, how can they all be sued by a class represented by six named plaintiffs who have direct claims against only two of them? In some sense, this is a classical problem of standing: to bring a valid case, a plaintiff must allege that a defendant — the very defendant sued — has somehow wronged her in a legally cognizable way. See
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The real question, therefore, is whether for standing purposes we may look only to the named plaintiffs, or if, once the requirements of Rule 23 are met, the true plaintiff is the class as a whole. If the latter is true, then the question arises whether it is enough that some members of the class were injured by at least one named defendant. (There is obviously no logistical reason why all 19 counties cannot be named as separate defendants.) The plaintiffs argue that both of those propositions are correct: the class action device does indeed entitle the group as a whole (represented by people from less than all counties) to sue all 19 counties, and it is enough that someone in the class was injured by one of the defendants. In this respect, they invoke the so-called “juridical link” doctrine, which would entitle them to sue all similarly situated counties in a single case if they can show thаt their injuries arise out of a common legal rule (the Act) that is binding on, and followed to various degrees by, all the named counties.
The juridical link doctrine arose out of the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
La Mar v. H & B Novelty & Loan Co.,
This court has never addressed the juridical link doctrine squarely, even though several district courts within this circuit have accepted it. See,
e.g., Weiss v. Winner’s Circle of Chicago, Inc.,
No. 91 C 2780,
In Fallick, the Sixth Circuit, using juridical link analysis, concluded that once a plaintiff had established a claim against one of the named defendants, the rest of the determination about the suitability of class certification would proceed as usual under Rule 23. Id. at 423. The court reasoned that, in the presence of the concerted action contemplated in La Mar, it is not necessary that each named plaintiff have individual standing to sue each named defendant. Instead, a plaintiff who has standing to sue at least one of the named defendants also “has standing to challenge a practice even if the injury is of a sort shared by a large class of possiblе litigants.” Id.
Similarly, the Eleventh Circuit in
Moore
held that a group of named plaintiffs could bring a claim against several defendants— including those against whom the named plaintiffs did not have a direct claim— finding that they were needed for “complete relief’ because of their linked action.
Finally, relying on
Moore,
the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts recently endorsed the juridical link doctrine for a plaintiff class in which the named plaintiffs were not directly harmed by all the named defendants, analogizing thе analysis to that performed under permissive joinder. See
Weld v. Glaxo Wellcome Inc.,
In our case, given that the bail bond fee is imposed pursuant to a state statute, and that county sheriffs are for this purpose an arm of the state, see
Scott v. O’Grady,
We come therefore to the central issue in this case, which is whether these named plaintiffs may represent a class that includes people from the other 17 named counties. We have begun our analysis with the question of class certification, mindful of the Supreme Court’s directive to cоnsider issues of class certification pri- or to issues of standing. See
Ortiz v. Fibreboard Corp.,
Because the district court never undertook this inquiry, it would be premature for this court to do so without a proper record. We note only that Rule 23(a) inevitably requires consideration of the typicality of the claims presented by the named parties (Rule 23(a)(3)), which allows exploration of the question whether the essence of the suit relates to the state statute or if the named representatives’ сlaims are more particular to each individual county. The numerosity, commonality, and adequacy of representation-factors will also require further development on remand, subject to whatever ruling the court may make with respect to the related class actions and with respect to the individual claims. Because this action was pending at the time the Ringswald and Coleman suits were decided, and because the plaintiffs here are seeking monetary relief in pаrt, the court will also need to consider whether the other litigation is capable of barring claims that would have required the procedural protections of Rule 23(b)(3), including especially the right to opt out of the related case.
We close with' a few observations about the use of the class action device to consolidate claims that are common to plaintiff class members, where the defendants have not had the same interactiоns with each member of the class. We understand
Ortiz
to rest on the long-standing rule that, once a class is properly certified, statutory and Article III standing requirements must be assessed with reference to the class as a whole, not simply with reference to the individual named plaintiffs. The certification of a class changes the standing aspects of a suit, because “[a] properly certified class has a legal status separate from and independent of the interest asserted by the named plaintiff.”
Whitlock v. Johnson,
This question of “standing” is just one part of a rather complex network of rules regulating class actions, under which the named plaintiff is the critical actor for some purposes, every individual member of the class is relevant for other purposes, and the class as a whole is the focal point for yet other purposes. For instance, the citizenship requirement for purposes of diversity jurisdiction in a class action hinges entirely оn the citizenship of the named plaintiffs. See
Supreme Tribe of Ben-Hur v. Cauble,
We see no reason to truncate potentially efficient uses of the class action device when they are otherwise not prohibited and here the class action device may be superior to 19, or 102, different cases in each Illinois county challenging the effects of the same state statute. Compare
In re Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc.,
This is not a case where the named plaintiff is trying to piggy-back on the injuries of the unnamed class members. That, of course, would be impermissible, in light of the fact that “a named plaintiff cannot acquire standing to sue by bringing his action on behalf of others who suffered injury which would hаve afforded them standing had they been named plaintiffs; it bears repeating that a person cannot predicate standing on injury which he does not share. Standing cannot be acquired through the back door of a class action.”
Allee v. Medrano,
IV
For the foregoing reasons we Reveese the judgment of the district court and Remand this case for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
