Rеversed by published opinion. Judge GREGORY wrote the opinion, in which Judge LUTTIG and Judge BROADWATER joined.
In this case we examine whether a gun-show promoter and an exhibitor at that promoter’s gun shows have standing to challenge in federal court a county law that denies public funding to venues that display and sell guns. We hоld that no such standing exists. Accordingly, we reverse the ruling of the district court.
I.
Since 1990, Frank Krasner Enterprises,. Ltd. (“Krasner”) has been in the business of putting on gun shows in the state of Maryland. For his shows in Montgomery County, Maryland, Krasner has biannually leased between .13,000 to 18,000 square feet of space at a venue in the City оf Gaithersburg called the Montgomery County Agricultural Center (“Ag Center”).
On May 16, 2001, the Montgomery County Council amended Chapter 57 of the Montgomery County Code. Exclusively at issue here is section 57-13 of the Code, entitled “Use of Public Funds.”
(a) The County must not give financial or in-kind support to any organization that allows the display and sale of guns at a facility owned or controlled by the organization. Financial or in-kind support means any thing of value that is not generally available to similar organizations in the County, such as a grant, special tax treatment, bond authority, free or discounted servicеs, or a capital improvement constructed by the County.
(b) An organization referred to in subsection (a) that receives direct financial support from the County must repay the support if the organization allows the display and sale of guns at the organization’s facility after recеiving the County support. The repayment must include the actual, original value of the support, plus reasonable interest calculated by a method specified by the Director of Finance.
Montgomery Co., Md.Code § 57-13. This section applies to guns sold and support received aftеr December 1, 2003. Less than a month after section 57-13 became law, the Ag Center sent a letter to Kras-ner stating that, “we have been forced to make financial decisions to stop conducting activities which would invoke the County to impose financial sanctions on the Ag Center.” J.A. 54. The letter made clear that this decision was a result of the Coun
The Ag Center’s decision does not appear economically irrational: the County had given the Ag Center a total of more than $500,000 over the past ten years for certain discrete projects, and while the County was under no obligation to give the Ag Center anything, the record reveals no reason — other than holding gun shows— that the Ag Center could not expect to receive more funding from the County in the future.
As you know, from the very beginning of the gun show discussions back in October 2000, the Board of Directors attempted to steer clear of taking a political position on the matter of gun control, because it is not inherent to the Ag Center’s mission in the community to take political positiоns on matters not directly related to agriculture.
J.A. 54.
Krasner, RSM, Inc., and a member of MCSM responded to the Ag Center’s decision by suing Montgomery County in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. Importantly, the Ag Center is not a party to this lawsuit, and the Appellees assert only their rights, not Ag Center’s. Appellees’ Br. at 17-20. The lawsuit claims that the County’s spending provision violates Maryland’s “Tillie Frank” law,
The district court found against the County on the state-law claim and declined to reach the constitutional issues. Frank Krasner Enter., Ltd., v. Montgomery Co., Md.,
II.
The standing doctrine is an indispensable expression of the Constitution’s limitation on Article III courts’ power to adjudicate “cases and controversies.” Allen v. Wright,
The Supreme Court has held that two strands of standing exist: Article III standing, whiсh enforces the Constitution’s case or controversy requirement, and “prudential” standing, which embodies “judicially self-imposed limits on the exercise of federal jurisdiction.” Elk Grove Unified Sch. Dist. v. Newdow,
In Allen v. Wright,
Cases after Allen have held that when a plaintiff is not the direct subject of government action, but rather when the “asserted injury arises from the government’s allegedly unlawful regulation (or lack of regula
We have previously denied standing because the actions of an independent third party, who was not a party to the lawsuit, stood between the plaintiff and the challеnged actions. In Burke v. Charleston,
We are not alone. In San Diego County Gun Rights Committee v. Reno,
We thus find that the Appellees lack standing for failure to establish the causation and redressability prongs.
This would, then, be just the sort of advisory opinion federal courts must not give. In short, where a law only indirectly raises a plaintiffs prices by withholding funding to a third party not before the court, the directly affected third-party alone (here, the Ag Center, renting space), not the downstream plaintiff (Krasner) or any party even further downstream (RSM, Inc.), has standing to challenge the law in federal courts.
III.
Krasner is once-removed from the County’s actions and the Ag Center’s rights — whatever they may have been— and RSM, Inc. is still another link down the broken chain of causation, and this is all too much for us. Thus, the Appellees lack standing. Accordingly, the district court’s ruling to the contrary is
REVERSED.
Notes
. At these gun shows, approximately 20-25% of the 220 to 320 tables rented are rented to firearms dealers. The remainder are rented to businesses selling firearms-relаted merchandise and to organizations that distribute gun-related information. A member of a group called Montgomery Citizens for a Safer Maryland, which rented space but did not sell firearms, sued individually and on behalf of the group. This plaintiff was dismissed by the district court for lack of standing and did not appеal.
. Section 57-11 of the Code, enacted along with section 57-13, explicitly prohibits the possession or sale of guns in certain circumstances that would affect Krasner. However, the County conceded early on in this litigation that it would not apply section 57-11 to the Ag Center becausе doing so would impermis-sibly impede on the authority of the City of Gaithersburg, which has, as is its right, exempted itself from all County regulations on which the City also has legislative authority. See Gaithersburg City Code § 2-6; Md.Code Ann., art 23A, § 2B(b)(2); Md.Code Ann., criminal law, § 4-209.
.Specifically, the letter stated that the Ag Center's Board of Directors appreciated Kras-ner’s professional manner but, because of the new law, "now find ourselves in a difficult position. Therefore, until the County changes the legislation that imposes financial sanctions on violators of the gun show law, no further gun shows will be permitted in the grounds of the Montgomery County Agricultural Center, Inc.” J.A. 54.
. Nor, however, does the record reveal that the Ag Center would receive any more funding, nor does it explain the Center's other sources of funding.
. The law, Md.Code Ann., art 23A, § 2B(a) (2001), is so called because it was written to reverse the decision of Town of Forest Heights v. Tillie Frank,
. The requirements of prudential standing are decidedly less settled. See Elk Grove Unified Sch. Dist.,
. Other courts have dismissed similarly indirect injuries under the prudential, rather than Article III, strand of standing. In Ben Oehrleins and Sons and Daughter, Inc. v. Hennepin County, Minnesota,
. We will assume without analysis that the "injury in fact” requirement is satisfied by the potential economic injury.
. This, in turn, would necessitate Krasner either passing along the costs to table-renters like RSM, Inc. (who may have to pass along costs to purchasers, etc.), or else charging higher admission and/or securing less profits.
