Adeline HOOVER, Janice L. Peters, and Jack M. Roper,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Jeffrey WAGNER, Judge in and for the Circuit Court of
Milwaukee County Branch 38, and Philip Arreola,
Chief of Police, City of Milwaukee,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 94-1699.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Nov. 10, 1994.
Decided Feb. 2, 1995.
Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing En Banc Denied March 6, 1995.
Michael Bertling, Carroll, Parroni & Postlewaite, Eau Claire, WI, Frederick Herbert Nelson, Mathew D. Staver (argued), Staver & Associates, Orlando, FL, Joseph H. Helm, Jr., David E. Wells, McLario & Helm, Menomonee Falls, WI, for Adeline Hoover, Janice L. Peters, Jack M. Roper.
Peter C. Anderson, Asst. Atty. Gen. (argued), Wisconsin Dept. of Justice, Madison, WI, Rudolph M. Konrad, Office of City Atty., Milwaukee, WI, for Jeffrey Wagner.
Rudolph M. Konrad, Office of City Atty., Milwaukee, WI, for Philip Arreola.
Before POSNER, Chief Judge, and COFFIN* and BAUER, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Chief Judge.
This is a suit for declaratory and injunctive relief against a Milwaukee state judge and the city's chief of police. It is brought under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 and charges infringement of the right to free speech conferred by the First Amendment. The plaintiffs are two anti-abortion demonstrators plus a journalist who reports on anti-abortion demonstrations and who, we infer from his having joined with the other plaintiffs in bringing the suit, is sympathetic to their position. The suit seeks a declaration that the injunction which the state judge issued in the case of State v. Missionaries to the Preborn, now pending on appeal to Wisconsin's intermediate court of appeals, is vague and overbroad and infringes the plaintiffs' freedom of speech. The suit also seeks an injunction against the enforcement of the state court injunction by the police in a manner that will deter the plaintiffs' exercise of their freedom of speech even more than the unenforced injunction would do.
The state court's injunction prohibits the named defendants "and all persons acting in concert with them and having received notice of" the injunction from trespassing on or blocking access to specified abortion clinics in Milwaukee; from congregating, demonstrating, or otherwise protesting within 25 feet of the entrances to the clinics; from photographing license plates of cars of people using the clinics; and from refusing to desist from "sidewalk counseling" at the request of the person being counseled. There are other provisions but these will suffice to indicate the injunction's character. The plaintiffs say in their complaint--truthfully, we must assume, because there is no other source of facts at this stage--that they want to protest abortions at the clinics named in the injunction (or, in the case of the journalist, to report on these protests), but without breaking the law, and that they are deterred from engaging in lawful protests by a well-grounded fear that the injunction will be interpreted as prohibiting, on pain of criminal contempt, persons such as themselves, who are not named in the injunction, from being seen talking to or even just standing near named defendants. They claim--and again we must take the claim at face value given the state of the record--that they or persons similarly situated have been threatened with arrest, arrested, and even prosecuted for violation of the injunction when the only evidence of violation was that they were seen in the vicinity of abortion clinics that were being picketed by defendants named in the injunction.
The district judge dismissed the suit, finding that the plaintiffs had no standing to sue. They had, he thought, nothing to fear from the injunction. Under Wisconsin law, a nonparty to an injunction is not considered to be acting "in concert" with a party to an injunction merely by associating with the party; the association must have the purpose and effect of assisting the party to violate the injunction. Dalton v. Meister,
We do not agree with the district court's ruling on standing. All that a plaintiff need show to establish standing to sue is a reasonable probability--not a certainty--of suffering tangible harm unless he obtains the relief that he is seeking in the suit. Pennell v. City of San Jose,
Perhaps anticipating our conclusion that all three plaintiffs have standing to sue, the defendants have tendered two alternative grounds upon which to uphold the dismissal of the suit. The first is the Younger doctrine, and the second the Rooker- Feldman doctrine. Younger v. Harris,
Nor is there any indication that they have as yet committed a colorable violation of the state court injunction for which they may be prosecuted. In such a case Younger, as interpreted in such cases as Hicks v. Miranda,
No problem, respond the defendants; the plaintiffs should have intervened in the state court injunction proceeding and then they could have gotten the adjudication they want, in the state courts. Of course if they had tried to intervene in that proceeding they might have been met by a ruling, similar to the district judge's in our case, that they had no standing. Or might not; it would depend on Wisconsin's rules of standing. We don't have to get into that. There is no duty to intervene to stave off the use of a case as res judicata against one. Martin v. Wilks,
So the Younger doctrine does not apply to this case, and let us turn to Rooker- Feldman. That doctrine teaches that the Supreme Court of the United States is the only federal court that has jurisdiction to review the decision of a state court, with some irrelevant exceptions such as federal habeas corpus for state prisoners. The application of the doctrine to interlocutory decisions of state courts (remember that an appeal is pending from the state court's injunction in Missionaries to the Preborn ) is an open question. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. v. Moran,
The defendants argue that the plaintiffs are trying to get us to reverse or at least modify the state court injunction, and that a decision which grants relief in the form of an injunction is no different, for purposes of the Rooker- Feldman doctrine, from any other decision or judgment. Port Authority Police Benevolent Ass'n v. Port Authority of N.Y. & N.J. Police Dept.,
The plaintiffs make a further argument against the application of the Rooker- Feldman doctrine in this case. It is that the injunction is in effect a statute or ordinance, which regulates their behavior in a fashion they claim to be unconstitutional and should be treated accordingly--that is, as a statute or ordinance rather than as a judgment. This reclassification would if accepted free them from the clutches of Rooker- Feldman. There is some merit to the approach. Injunctions often do function quite like statutes. Henson v. East Lincoln Township,
So the Eleventh Circuit held in Cheffer v. McGregor,
We need not pursue the interesting question of the propriety of classifying injunctions as statutes for purposes of the doctrine, or endorse the reasoning in Cheffer (a decision since vacated by the court sitting en banc and remanded to the district court for reconsideration in light of Madsen, see
The modern law of equity is a system of rules administered by regular judges rather than a compendium of moral principles administered by ecclesiastical officials, as the Lord Chancellors of England, who invented English equity jurisprudence, originally were. In specific classes of case, injunctions now issue pretty much as a matter of course. Walgreen Co. v. Sara Creek Property Co., supra,
The plaintiffs seek equitable remedies against a state judge and the chief of police of a major city. They want the federal court to tell the state judge to rewrite his injunction to make it clearer, to refrain from convicting anybody who does not really and truly violate the injunction as revised, and to tell the police chief and the judge not to infer that people are assisting in violating the injunction from their mere proximity to defendants named in the injunction. The relief that the plaintiffs seek is at once an insult to the judicial and law enforcement officials of Wisconsin, an interference with an ongoing state court proceeding, and an empty but potentially mischievous command to these officials to avoid committing any errors in the enforcement of the injunction--and if a plaintiff were erroneously convicted for violating the state court injunction, would that put the prosecutor, the judge, and, if there were a jury, the jury in contempt of the federal injunction?
This extraordinary relief is sought on the basis of a handful of examples in which Milwaukee police officers may have overenforced the injunction. The alleged instances of overenforcement are not tied in any coherent way to the wording of the injunction, since the words "in concert" have been given a precise and legally unexceptionable meaning, as Judge Reynolds correctly noted, by Wisconsin case law. The plaintiffs' able counsel, when pressed at oral argument, was unable to suggest a useful amendment to the injunction and acknowledged that what he really wants from the federal courts is a firm warning to Wisconsin officialdom that they are not to trample on his clients' constitutional rights. In so characterizing the aim of the suit he came perilously close to acknowledging that what he is seeking is an advisory opinion, which federal courts have no power to issue. United States National Bank v. Independent Ins. Agents of America, Inc., --- U.S. ----, ----,
Except for pointing out that declaratory relief is discretionary in a way that injunctive relief is not, we have thus far treated the request for relief against the state judge interchangeably with the request for relief against the police. But there is another difference between these requests besides the form of the relief sought. When cases speak of enjoining other judicial proceedings, they almost always mean enjoining the parties to the proceeding from going forward with active litigation of the proceeding. They do not mean placing the judge in that proceeding under an injunction. Formally there was no power at common law to enjoin a judge, but there was a device called a "writ of prohibition" by which a court could in effect enjoin the judge of another court. Pulliam v. Allen,
In urging affirmance on grounds different from the district court's, the defendants in this case hewed closely to Younger and Rooker- Feldman. They did not make the broader equitable argument that has persuaded us that the judge was right to dismiss the suit. But when matters of comity are involved, the ordinary doctrines of waiver give way, as in Younger itself.
The judgment dismissing the suit is affirmed, but on the ground not of lack of standing but of want of equity.
MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED.
Notes
Hon. Frank M. Coffin of the First Circuit
