The Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400-1420 (the Act), provides federal funds to help pay the costs of educating handicapped children, including the costs of necessary private residential facilities. In order to qualify for such assistance, a state must establish a program that “assures all handicapped children the right to a free appropriate public education”. 20 U.S.C. § 1412(1). Illinois agreed to participate in this program and amended Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 122 ¶ 14-1.01 to -14.01 to comply with the requirements of the federal program.
Gary A. is a handicapped child living within New Trier High School District 203. In September 1979, at the direction of the Director of Special Education at New Trier and with the consent of his parents, Gary was placed in a private residential educational facility. The District refused to pay for more than $32,000 of the costs of the facility for the 1979-80 school year. The District relied on a state rule that excluded “therapeutic services” from the state’s program. Mr. A.’s medical insurance carrier paid $12,000, leaving a balance of $20,000 which Mr. and Mrs. A. had to pay.
In 1980 a preliminary injunction suspended the state rule in question.
Gary B. v. Cronin,
The Act provides an explicit private right of action. 20 U.S.C. §. 1415(e)(2). The federal courts may “grant such relief as the
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court determines is appropriate.”
Parks v. Pavkovic,
A
We agree with the defendants that Burlington does not control this case. The Burlington Court did not address the issue of sovereign immunity and could not have. That case was a consolidation of two actions. In one the local school board sued the state to reverse a state administrative ruling that the locality was liable for reimbursement, and in the other the state sued the locality for injunctive relief in order to force the reimbursement. Neither involved payments by the state, and the state was a defendant in only one. In both cases the state was arguing in favor of retroactive monetary relief to be paid by the locality (which was not itself entitled to eleventh amendment immunity). Because the eleventh amendment and principles of sovereign immunity apply only when monetary relief is sought against the state (not by the state), the immunity issue could not have been before the Court. Thus it is not possible to read the Burlington opinion as support for the plaintiffs.
B
A long line of cases has established that an unconsenting state may not be sued in federal court, either because of the eleventh amendment,
see, e.g., Papasan v. Allain,
— U.S. —,
The plaintiffs argue first that the state has waived its immunity by participating in this federally funded and regulated program. They cite
Students of California School for the Blind v. Honig,
The plaintiffs next argue that Congress abrogated the state’s eleventh amendment immunity by enacting the Act pursuant to § 5 of the fourteenth amendment.
5
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, supra.
The most recent statement of the law on this issue is found in
Atascadero.
Noting that “the Eleventh Amendment implicates the fundamental constitutional balance between the Federal government and the States”, the Court held that Congress may abrogate the states’ immunity “only by making its intention
unmistakably clear in the language of the statute.
”
Id.
The statute at issue in Atascadero, § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794, is similar in all relevant parts to the statute at issue in this case. Both explicitly provide a private right of action for prospective relief for all aggrieved parties. Neither explicitly provides a damages remedy or other retroactive relief. Both involve programs through which states receive federal assistance with accompanying federal regulations. In Atascadero the Supreme Court found no abrogation of the states’ constitutional immunity. Likewise, there is none in this case. 6 The eleventh amendment immunizes the state defendants from suits for the relief requested by the plaintiffs. 7
C
The local defendants argue that they too are immune under the eleventh amendment because “it is clear that the covered expenses ... are State, and not local, expenses and the State will have no recourse but to reimburse the school district through funds appropriated from the state treasury, if the judgment against the school district is not reversed.” The district court did not address the question whether the eleventh amendment applies to the local defendants because it held that the constitution does not bar any suits for retroactive relief under the Act. We have rejected this holding. Nonetheless, we
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may affirm the district court on any ground properly preserved by the parties.
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Ludwig,
The eleventh amendment applies to “States”. A local school district ordinarily is not a “State” and hence may be sued in federal court for damages or other retroactive relief for violations of federal law or the constitution.
Mt. Healthy City Board of Education v. Doyle,
The local defendants insist that they are immune because
this
judgment will be paid by the state. If they mean that state aid may find its way to the plaintiffs’ pockets, that factor was held irrelevant in
Mt. Healthy.
Indeed, any other holding would provide immunity to municipalities, because almost all receive some state funding. That is not the case.
Lincoln County v. Luning,
The local defendants also seem to argue that because the state has decided to reimburse them, and hence the state treasury will ultimately pay, the local defendants are immune. This argument also is mistaken. A state’s decision to indemnify a state employee or subdivision does not grant that employee or subdivision constitutional immunity.
Duckworth v. Franzen,
There is a third possible reason why the local defendants are immune from judgment for the relief requested in this case. The state’s role under the federal statute as administrator and conduit of federal funds to the local school authorities might change the character of the local entity into an arm of the state for the limited purpose of this Act. The defendants argue that a local entity, not otherwise entitled to the state’s constitutional immunity, may obtain a “limited purpose” immunity when that entity acts pursuant to state rules enacted to carry out a federal law. Cases offer little guidance about the scope of such a “limited purpose” immunity.
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A few cases decided by the Supreme Court involved local defendants that obeyed state rules that violate federal statutory rules for the administration of federal aid programs.
Pennhurst State School & Hospital v. Halderman,
The defendants have not found a case, as we have not, in which an entity not otherwise immune under the eleventh amendment acquired immunity by virtue of its role in a state administered federal aid program. The details of the Act suggest no such immunity. 20 U.S.C. § 1411(a)(1) establishes a federal subsidy for all public schools that provide free education for the handicapped (or arrange for free private education) if the state agrees to join the federal program and follow federal guidelines. At least 75% of all funds provided to the states under this program must be sent to the “local educational agencies”. Section 1413(a)(9) requires all participating state programs to “provide satisfactory assurance that Federal funds made available under this subchapter (A) will not be commingled with State funds, and (B) will be so used as to supplement and increase the level of State and local funds expended for the education of handicapped children and in no case to supplant such state and local funds ...” Section 1411(d) grants these funds to the local school districts. The state is a conduit, as the money is earmarked for the locality. The money may best be characterized as “federal” or “local”, not “state”. The state must guarantee other expenses of educating handicapped children beyond the federal subsidy in order to receive federal funds, but that money may come exclusively from local districts if the state so decides. Nothing in the federal law requires expenditures from the state treasury, so nothing in the federal program suggests that the local defendants partake of the state’s constitutional immunity.
The federal statute contemplates states passing federal money to local school districts, which then pay for education with a combination of federal and non-federal money that may be local or state. A state
may
decide to reimburse the local school districts. Illinois has done this. The money paid by the state to the local defendants is no different from either indemnity agreements or the usual state aid, neither of which creates immunity from suit. Unless it can be said that a judgment nominally against the local government runs against the state, see
Pennhurst II,
The Supreme Court has refused to extend constitutional immunity to localities and has been hesitant to extend such immunity even to some state agencies.
Lake Country Estates v. Tahoe Planning Agency,
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Pennhurst II
suggests one final complication. In that case, as in this one, the suit was filed against both state and county officials. The Supreme Court concluded that neither the state nor the county could be ordered to afford relief on the basis of state law.
The judgment is reversed as to the state defendants and affirmed as to the local defendants. Costs to appellees.
Notes
. For simplicity’s sake we refer to them as the "local defendants" (the District, the District Board of Education, and the Superintendent of the District) and the “state defendants” (the remaining defendants).
. On appeal, the defendants do not contest the availability of a private right of action under the Act. They argue only that retroactive monetary relief is barred by the eleventh amendment. Burlington held that retroactive monetary relief is available under the Act for educational expenses incurred during the period in which a parent of a handicapped child challenged a school district’s proposed "Individual Education Program.” We are not presented with the question whether Burlington authorizes a private right of action under the Act in all situations.
.
Parks
took pains to reserve the possibility of an action for damages in "circumstances more extraordinary than those in this case.”
.
Honig
relied on
Scanlon
v.
Atascadero State Hospital,
. 20 U.S.C. § 1400(b)(9) states that this statute was passed "in order to assure equal protection of the law." We have held that this shows that Congress passed the' Act "under the authority granted to Congress by section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment”.
Parks v. Pavkovic,
. The situation might have been different if the Act had provided for relief only against the state. Then there would be a stronger argument that Congress subjected the state to federal jurisdiction. We express no opinion on whether such a statute would be sufficient to abrogate the states' immunity.
. The plaintiffs point to language in our opinion in
Parks v. Pavkovic,
. The
Mt. Healthy
test for whether an entity is an arm of the state is fact specific. Courts are instructed to look to the "nature of the entity created by state law.”
. Instrumentalities of á state do partake of the state’s eleventh amendment immunity. The state may establish such state agencies. The "nature of the
entity
created by state law" determines whether it is a "state” or a "municipality" for purposes of the eleventh amendment.
Mt. Healthy,
