Lead Opinion
Two Arizona public school districts and several of their students brought suit in federal court against the Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction and the county treasurers and school superintendents of Pima and Navajo Counties seeking declaratory and injunctive relief holding that AR.S. § 15-991.02, which requires county treasurers to remit a portion of a school district’s ending cash balance to a state fund used for equalization among rich and poor districts, violates the Federal Impact Ad Law, 20 U.S.C. §§ 236-244, and the Supremacy Clause in Article VI of the United States Constitution, by taking some of their federal Impact Ad funds.
The Indian Oasis-Baboquivari and Whiter-iver Unified School Districts receive federal funds under the Impact Aid law. The federal law was enacted to compensate local school districts whose finances are impacted negatively by federal activities in the area. Among those eligible for Impact Aid are school districts, such as Indian Oasis and Whiteriver, serving pupils who live on Indian reservations.
Arizona had a complicated procedure for equalizing funding among its school districts. AR.S. § 15-991.02 was enacted in 1992 as a supplement to its equalization assistance legislation. It required county treasurers to remit a portion of the ending cash balance in the school districts’ maintenance and operation funds for use by the state for equalization assistance.
Both school districts and three of their students brought this suit to challenge the constitutionality of § 15-991.02. The complaint alleges that § 15-991.02 has the effect of taking a portion of the funds the districts got from the federal government pursuant to the federal Impact Aid Law because the state statute includes Impact Aid within the calculation of funds that must be remitted to the state for state equalization purposes. This, they contend, violates the federal statute and the Supremacy Clause, and will cause irreparable harm in that without those funds, the districts will have to curtail important programs and projects.
The state moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of standing. The district court held that under City of South Lake Tahoe v. California Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
II
A
Indian Oasis and Whiteriver acknowledge the general rule of political subdivision standing doctrine that prohibits a political subdivision from bringing suit against the state of which it is a part, but argue that we should recognize an exception to the rule for constitutional challenges under the Supremacy Clause. They submit that the rule itself stems from cases involving individual rights, such as due process or equal protection, and should not be applied to claims that a state law interferes with federal law. Otherwise, the districts contend, they are powerless to challenge the state’s violation of federal law in a federal court.
As the district court concluded, however, the districts’ argument is foreclosed by South Lake Tahoe, which is controlling authority in this circuit. In that case, the City of South Lake Tahoe alleged that land use regulations adopted by the California Tahoe Regional Planning Agency violated the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, and conflicted with the plans and ordinances of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, a bistate agency approved by Congress, in violation of the Supremacy Clause. We held that the City, as a political subdivision of the state, could not challenge the statutes of the state itself, or one of its other political subdivisions, on constitutional grounds. Accordingly, we concluded, the standing component of federal jurisdiction was lacking and the City’s claims, based on the Constitution, were properly dismissed.
Because a panel of this circuit may not overturn circuit precedent “unless an en banc decision, Supreme Court decision, or subsequent legislation undermines those decisions,” Clow v. United States Dept. of Housing & Urban Dev.,
B
Assuming that we do feel constrained by South Lake Tahoe, Indian Oasis and Whiteri-ver alternatively contend that it is no longer good law in light of Lawrence County v. Lead-Deadwood School District,
In Lead-Deadwood, the Supreme Court of South Dakota had sustained a state statute regulating distribution of funds that units of local government received from the federal government. The United States Supreme Court concluded that Congress intended local governments to have more discretion in spending federal aid than the State would allow them, and therefore held that the statute was invalid under the Supremacy Clause.
In Seattle School District, school districts disgruntled with an Initiative that would have prohibited busing for desegregation purposes, sought to prevent the state from enforcing it on the ground that to do so would offend the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Holding that the Initiative violated the Constitution, the Court went on to consider the state’s argument that attorney’s fees should not have been awarded to the school districts because state-funded entities are not eligible to receive such awards from the state. Seattle School Dist.,
We have no difficulty dismissing the impact of Lead-Deadwood, as the suit by a political subdivision in that case was brought and litigated in state court, and was decided before ASARCO, Inc. v. Kadish,
It is well settled, however, that the exercise of jurisdiction in a case is not precedent for the existence of jurisdiction. In United States v. Los Angeles Tucker Truck Lines, Inc.,
The effect of the omission was not there raised in briefs or argument nor discussed in the opinion of the Court. Therefore, the case is not a binding precedent on this point. Even as to our own judicial power or jurisdiction, this Court has followed the lead of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall who held that this Court is not bound by a prior exercise of jurisdiction in a case where it*1244 was not questioned and it was passed sub silentio.
Id. (footnote omitted). We have similarly declined to give controlling weight to our own implicit holdings. See, e.g., Service Employ. Int'l Union Local 102 v. San Diego (SEIU),
We see no reason why Tucker Truck should apply only when a court considers its own prior decisions, but not when an appellate court considers the decisions of the Supreme Court. Two circuits that have explicitly reached the question have so concluded. Grant v. Shalala,
Given the fact that we have explicit precedent on the point of political subdivision standing, and that the Supreme Court has never directly considered the issue, we cannot say that the weight of its implicit exercise of jurisdiction is sufficiently powerful to undermine the law by which we are bound.
Ill
The students also fault the district court for dismissing their complaint, arguing that other federal courts have recognized that students have standing to challenge state laws that have an adverse effect on their education and that the allegations in their complaint suffice to show more than a generalized grievance. Before considering these arguments, however, we must first dispose of the state’s position that the students’ appeal is premature — and we therefore lack jurisdiction over it — because the district court’s order was not a final judgment dismissing the action. While the district court did dismiss the complaint without prejudice, and with leave to amend, the students decided not to take advantage of that opportunity. When a plaintiff chooses to stand on the pleadings, an otherwise unappealable order with leave to amend may be appealed. Carson Harbor Village Ltd. v. City of Carson,
The district court held, and we agree, that their allegations fall short of averring personalized injury to themselves from the state’s enforcing § 15-991.02. “[T]he ‘injury in fact’ test requires more than an injury to a cognizable interest. It requires that the party seeking review be himself among the injured.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The complaint simply alleges that “Clifford Pablo Jr. is a student in Indian Oasis School district, David Parker and Nelson Lupe are students in Whiteriver School District.” It avers that “plaintiffs will be irreparably harmed if its funds are transferred to the Equalization Fund ...” because there is no mechanism for restoring these monies to the local district and the court would lose jurisdiction over a portion of the ease. However, “plaintiffs” in this sense must refer to the school district, as the students have no funds subject to transfer. The complaint further alleges that Whiteriver “and its students” will be irreparably harmed because the transfer of funds will jeopardize the continued receipt of federal funding, building plans and renovations to the Middle School, and capital outlay projects, forcing it to continue to work with inadequate facilities.
None of the three students has alleged a program that affects him as an individual that will be scaled back. Nor does the complaint even indicate if Lupe or Parker (who are students of Whiteriver) are of an age or live in an area where they could benefit from a new elementary school, or if either of them attends the Middle School where there is a chronic problem with the boiler that additional funds might fix. Indeed, the complaint fails to allege that these students are among the 92% of Whiteriver students who are eligible for and benefit from Impact Aid programs. Thus, the complaint affords no basis for presuming that these three students suffer particularized harm or distinct injury.
The difficulty is that we, like the district court, intuitively feel that students are in a position to suffer tangible injuries from a decrease in funding. The problem is that these students simply ride the districts’ coattails and aver no facts that suggest direct,, distinct and tangible injury to themselves. They chose not to try, and we therefore have no occasion to consider under what circumstances students might have standing.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The students’ claims are formally brought by their parents or guardians. We will refer to the State Superintendent, and the county treasurers and superintendents collectively as the "state.”
. This distinguishes our case from Board of Natural Resources v. Brown, 992 F.2d 937 (9th Cir.1993), where there was no Ninth Circuit precedent directly on point.
. We accordingly do not reach the state’s argument that the Impact Aid Act provides no private right of action and confers no right on political subdivisions to sue the state.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
In today’s decision, the majority bars both local school districts and their students from challenging the state’s alleged violation of federal law and improper diversion of federal funds designed to assure a full and fair education to local students in impoverished districts. In denying these parties access to the federal courts, the majority continues a dangerous and unfortunate trend insulating arbitrary and unlawful governmental action from full and fair review. Here, the majority goes too far when it bars on jurisdictional grounds all federal suits against the state by local governmental entities and political subdivision of the state. It also errs in construing the students’ pleadings in a narrow, grudging, hypertechnieal, and illiberal fashion that resuits in the dismissal of their claims as well.
The majority concludes that two Arizona school districts lack standing to bring suit in federal court to prevent enforcement of a state statute that allegedly violates federal law. I agree that our earlier decision in South Lake Tahoe v. California Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
Because the majority’s analysis contravenes Seattle School District and creates both an inter-circuit and an intra-circuit conflict, I respectfully dissent from its holding regarding the school districts. Because the opinion fails to construe the students’ pleadings in their favor, I dissent from that part of the opinion as well.
A
The majority concludes that our decision in City of South Lake Tahoe bars the school districts, which are creatures of the state constitution and state law, from bringing suit against their maker. In that case, South Lake Tahoe claimed that a state agency’s regulations violated several federal constitutional provisions, ranging from the Fourteenth Amendment to the Supremacy Clause. Id. at 231-32. In dismissing the city’s claims, we held that political subdivisions lack standing to raise federal constitutional challenges against their state. Id. at 233-34.
South Lake Tahoe did not explain whether concerns about the standing of political subdivisions or concerns about the constitutional rights they possess underlay its holding. The court discussed the issue in a section of the opinion that concerned its jurisdiction and was entitled “The City’s Standing”. Id. at 233. However, it made no reference to the usual standing criteria, and its reasoning, although elliptic, appears to be addressed to whether the city possessed a cause of action.
It is well established that “[pjolitical subdivisions of a state may not challenge the validity of a state statute under the Fourteenth Amendment.” This is true whether the defendant is the state itself or another of the state’s political subdivisions. Thus, the city may not challenge the [state agency’s] plans and ordinances on constitutional grounds. Because all of its claims are based on the Constitution, the City’s challenge was properly dismissed.
South Lake Tahoe,
Ordinarily, we would be bound to apply South Lake Tahoe as the controlling Ninth Circuit precedent, and thus we would be required to affirm the district court’s dismissal of the school districts’ claims. However, the districts point out that the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in Washington v. Seattle School District, No. 1,
B.
1.
In Seattle School District, three Washington school districts sued their state to enjoin the enforcement of a statewide voter initiative that shifted control over school busing plans from the local to the state level. The school districts contended that the initiative impeded school desegregation efforts in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Seattle School District,
South Lake Tahoe’s per se bar cannot be reconciled with Seattle School District. First, the Seattle School District Court could not have reached the merits of the school districts’ constitutional challenge or their request for attorney’s fees if the school districts had not met the standing requirements. Second, the Seattle School District Court would not have granted the relief it did if the school districts did not have the right to sue their state for violating the federal constitution. Thus, Seattle School District contradicts South Lake Tahoe’s holding whether it was based on the determination that political subdivisions lack standing in suits of the type before us or the conclusion that they have no cause of action against their states for a federal constitutional violation. Under the circumstances, we must apply the precedent of Seattle School District and not of the repudiated South Lake Tahoe ruling.
2.
The majority asserts that Seattle School District assumed sub silentio that it had jurisdiction over the school districts’ claim and that the case therefore cannot be read as repudiating South Lake Tahoe’s conclusion that political subdivisions lack standing to bring constitutional challenges against their states. This analysis is inconsistent both with Seattle School District itself and with our recent decision in Board of Natural Resources v. Brown,
Although the Court did not explicitly discuss the school districts’ standing in Seattle School District, it did not pass over the issue sub silentio either. The Court noted that allowing school districts to collect attorney’s fees from the state would encourage them to sue to ensure “compliance with and enforcement of the civil rights laws.” Seattle School District,
In Board of Natural Resources v. Brown, in trying to decide whether state agencies could mount an equal protection challenge under the Fifth Amendment against the federal government, we turned to Seattle School District for guidance. In reaching the merits of that case, the Court had reached two implicit conclusions — that the school districts had standing to sue the state notwithstanding their status as creatures of the state and that the school districts had standing to sue under the Equal Protection Clause because they were persons for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment. In Board of Natural Resources, we found the second implicit standing conclusion (that the school districts were persons) to be controlling of the case before us. Here, the majority ignores the first implicit standing conclusion (that the school districts had standing to sue the state). I fail to see any justification for accepting one implicit conclusion as binding and rejecting the other as of no significance because it is implicit.
In Board of Natural Resources v. Brown, we concluded that the decision by the Court to reach the merits in Seattle School District constituted an implicit ruling that the school districts had standing to bring an equal protection challenge against the state. Specifically we said: “Although standing was not discussed, the Court reached the merits of the claim and thus implicitly found that school districts are persons for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Board of Natural Resources,
Because Board of Natural Resources answers the question of our obligation to rely on the standing ruling of Seattle School District and is binding upon us, the majority is not free to adopt an erroneous interpretation of United States v. Los Angeles Tucker Truck Lines,
The majority also relies on Service Employ. Int’l Union Local 102 v. San Diego (SEIU),
Sakamoto is even less applicable. In that case, we held that Guam, as a territory, is not limited by the Commerce Clause in the same way states are. Sakamoto,
Because Board of Natural Resources mandates our interpretation of Seattle School District’s holding on the standing question, I need not rely on my independent conclusion that the Court’s implicit standing determina
Apart from Board of Natural Resources, the state suggests that the Supreme Court did not necessarily come to any conclusions regarding the standing of the school districts in Seattle School District. It contends that the Seattle School District Court could have based its jurisdiction solely on the standing of the private plaintiff-intervenors to the suit and thus would not have had to determine the standing of the school districts before reaching the merits of the constitutional question before it. The state is in error.
While Board of Natural Resources did not address the presence of the private plaintiffs in Seattle School District, it correctly concluded that the Court had implicitly conferred standing on the school districts. Although federal courts have jurisdiction if one plaintiff has standing to sue, they may only provide relief to those parties with standing. See General Building Contractors Ass’n v. Pennsylvania,
I would also note that the majority’s claim that the school districts lack standing to sue the state, Majority op. at 1241-42, is impossible to reconcile with modem standing doctrine. The districts unquestionably meet the three requirements of modem standing doctrine: injury-in-fact, causality, and redressa-bility. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
3.
To the extent that South Lake Tahoe is read as holding that political subdivisions have no cause of action against their states for violations of the federal constitution, it likewise cannot survive Seattle School District. Seattle School District rejected the argument that the districts, by virtue of being political subdivisions, did not have a legal right to sue their state under the Constitution.
[wjhile appellants suggest that it is incongruous for a State to pay attorney’s fees to one of its school boards, it seems no less incongruous that a local board would feel the need to sue the State for a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. We see no*1251 reason to disturb the judgment of the Court of Appeals on this point.
Seattle School District,
In any event, Board of Natural Resources, like other cases before it, treated the standing and cause of action requirements interchangeably, and seemed to consider them to be one and the same for purposes of determining whether the plaintiffs could sue. Unquestionably, that is how it viewed Seattle School District,
In holding that the plaintiffs’ argument is foreclosed by South Lake Tahoe, the majority not only dismisses Seattle School District and the intra-circuit conflict it creates, but it also creates a square inter-circuit conflict. As the majority itself recognizes the Fifth Circuit has reached a diametrically opposite conclusion regarding school district standing. Majority opinion at 1241-1242 (also citing state and district court cases criticizing South Lake Tahoe). In Rogers v. Brockette,
C.
The fact that South Lake Tahoe’s per se bar has been removed and that Seattle School District holds that political subdivi
D.
The three constitutional standing requirements that plaintiffs must satisfy are injury-in-fact, causation, and redressability. In this case, I have no doubt that the allegations of the school districts are sufficient to meet those requirements. They assert that they will lose a portion of their Federal Impact Aid funds if the state of Arizona enforces its state statute. By claiming a “direct, pocketbook injury,” the school districts satisfy the injury-in-fact requirement of Article III standing. See Barrows v. Jackson,
Finally, the school districts meet the re-dressability requirement. The only possible question here is whether, because the state has the legal authority to abolish the school districts, any judicial decision in this case would be advisory. However, the Fifth Circuit has convincingly rejected this argument and concluded that a school district’s preemption claim against its state is redressable. Rogers,
The school districts’ pleadings also satisfy the prudential standing requirements set forth in Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc.,
For purposes of applying the Data Processing test, I assume that the plaintiffs have a valid cause of action and consider only whether they are protected by the “federal guarantee in question.” See Self-Insurance Institute v. Korioth,
The school districts are suing to preclude the enforcement of a state law which they contend violates federal law; thus, their claims arise directly under the Supremacy Clause and necessarily “come within the zone of interests protected by the [that] Clause.”
E.
Having concluded that the school districts have standing to sue, I now address the question whether they may assert a valid cause of action against their state under the Supremacy Clause. Although Seattle School District establishes that there is no per se bar to such constitutional actions, the state relies on an early line of Supreme Court cases which sets forth specific limits on the kinds of challenges that may be brought by municipalities and similar entities. In my opinion, those early cases do not foreclose the challenge at issue here.
The line of eases begins with Dartmouth College v. Woodward,
[i]f the act of incorporation be a grant of political power, if it create a civil institution, to be employed in the administration of government ... the subject is one in which the legislature of the state may act according to its own judgment, unrestrained by any limitation of power imposed by the constitution of the United States.
Dartmouth College,
Almost a century later, Hunter adopted a similar view. It declared that municipal corporations, as political subdivisions of the state, are largely subject to their creator’s will and thus without federal constitutional protection in many respects.
The State, therefore, at its pleasure may modify or withdraw all such powers, may take without compensation such property, hold it itself, or vest it in other agencies, expand or contract the territorial area, unite the whole or a part of it with another municipality, repeal the charter, and destroy the corporation. All this may be done, conditionally or unconditionally, with or without the consent of the citizens, or even against their protest. In all these respects the State is supreme and its legislative body, conforming its action to the state constitution, may do as it will, unrestrained by any provision of the Constitution of the United States.
Although Dartmouth College and Hunter appeared to set forth an expansive view of state power, and thus a narrow view of the constitutional protections afforded to municipal agencies, the Court subsequently explained the limitations implicit in those decisions. In Gomillion v. Lightfoot,
[i]t is imperative that generalizations, based on and qualified by the concrete situations that gave rise to them, must not be applied out of context in disregard of variant controlling facts. Thus, a correct reading of the seemingly unconfined dicta of Hunter and kindred cases is not that the State has plenary power to manipulate in every conceivable way, for every conceivable purpose, the affairs of its municipal corporations, but rather that the ■ state’s authority is unrestrained by the particular prohibitions of the Constitution considered in those cases.
Gomillion,
After surveying the Court’s early precedents, Gomillion concluded that although in its dealings with its political subdivisions the state was immunized against certain specified constitutional restrictions, it was bound by a number of others. As the Court stated:
This line of authority conclusively shows that the Court has never acknowledged that the States have power to do as they will with municipal corporations regardless of consequences. Legislative control of municipalities, no less than other state power, lies within the scope of relevant limitations imposed by the United States Constitution.
Gomillion,
When a State exercises power wholly within the domain of state interest, it is insulated from judicial review. But such insulation is not carried over when state power is used as an instrument for circumventing a federally protected right.
Gomillion,
Gomillion explained that the Court’s early cases set forth two relatively simple propositions. First, that as a result of Dartmouth College’s early holding regarding the distinction between a contract and a grant of political power, “no constitutionally protected contractual obligation arises between a State and its subordinate governmental entities solely as a result of their relationship.” Gomillion,
In bringing their Supremacy Clause challenge, the Indian Oasis and Whiteriver School Districts do not seek to enforce either of the constitutional restraints which have traditionally been held inapplicable to relations between states and their political subdivisions. They are neither attempting to use
It is not necessary to decide generally what types of constitutional restraints apply to a state’s relations with its political subdivisions and which do not.
In Lead-Deadwood, a school district sought a writ of mandamus to compel a county to distribute federal funds to it in accordance with a state statute. Lead-Deadwood,
The Supreme Court ruled for the county, holding that the state statute violated the Supremacy Clause. The Court explained that “[t]he strong congressional concern that local governments have maximum flexibility in this area indicates that counties should not encounter substantial interference from the State in allocating funds to the area of greatest need.” Lead-Deadwood,
The fact that in Lead-Deadwood the county raised its constitutional claim as a defense
Moreover, other courts have expressly concluded that political subdivisions may invoke the Supremacy Clause against their state and may do so by filing actions for declaratory or injunctive relief. Rogers,
F.
Finally, the state contends that we may affirm the district court’s dismissal of the school districts’ preemption claims on other grounds. Principally, the state argues that the nature of the Impact Aid law precludes the school districts from suing to enforce its preemptive effect. This contention is based on two separate but equally erroneous propositions.
The state argues first that by permitting the school districts to enforce the preemptive effect of the Impact Aid Law, we would somehow be impermissibly affording them a private right of action under that statute. This argument is based on a misunderstanding of the nature of the school districts’ challenge. The school districts are suing to enforce the Supremacy Clause, not the Federal Impact Aid Law itself. They do not seek the right to compel the federal government to provide them with Impact Aid funds. Instead, they seek only to prevent the state from enforcing a state law which they contend violates the Impact Aid law and therefore the federal constitution’s mandate that federal law take precedence over the conflicting laws of the several states. In such actions, it is the Supremacy Clause itself that provides plaintiffs with the right to sue. As we have stated: “‘[t]he best explanation of Ex Parte Young [
Moreover, a plaintiff may sue directly under the Supremacy Clause even if the as-sertedly preemptive federal statute does not provide a cause of action or give rise to enforceable rights that could serve as the basis for a § 1983 suit on preemption grounds. See Golden State Transit v. City of Los Angeles,
The state’s second argument is that by including a provision for cutting off Impact Aid funds in non-complying states, Congress intended to preclude plaintiffs from suing to enforce the statute’s preemptive effect. This argument proves far too much. Under the state’s view, there would never be a cause of action for preemption as long as the preempting statute contained any enforcement or termination provision. The result, of course, would be that the right to sue under the Supremacy Clause would become non-existent, except in the rarest of circumstances. This approach is wholly inconsistent with Shaw v. Delta Air Lines Inc.,
Thus, I find no basis for affirming the district court’s dismissal of the school districts’ action.
II.
Unlike the school districts, the students do not face any obstacle to establishing their standing by virtue of a special relationship with the state. The only question regarding the students’ standing is whether they meet the general constitutional and prudential standing requirements that are applicable to all plaintiffs who seek to establish federal court jurisdiction.
Although the district court recognized that the Supreme Court has conferred standing on students and parents of students “who are directly affected by the laws and practices against which their complaints are directed,” Abington School District v. Schempp,
Both the district court and majority, however, erred in reading the students’ complaint. The reviewing court “must accept as true all material allegations of the complaint, and must construe the complaint in favor of the complaining party.” Warth v. Seldin,
To be sure, the complaint could have made more specific reference to the individual students’ injuries. However, it is not only criminal trials that need not be perfect in this judicial system of ours.
Contrary to the majority’s contention, the complaint clearly alleges that Pablo, Lupe, and Parker will be harmed directly because they will be denied the benefit of school programs that will be discontinued or scaled back as a result of the enforcement of the challenged state law. The majority misreads the complaint and relies on selective quotations to conclude otherwise. To say that it reads the complaint ungenerously or with a hostile eye would be an understatement. For instance, paragraph 52 of the complaint alleges:
The Whiteriver School District and its students will be irreparably harmed by the transfer of its cash balance funds to the County Equalization Fund because the school district must continue to work with grossly inadequate facilities which have a direct impact on the district’s ability to function as shown in the attached Exhibits E and J. For example, chronic problems with a more than thirty-year-old boiler at the Middle School threatens Middle School students with loss of heat and/or hot water and cancellation of classes in affected areas.
The majority concludes that the two Whiteri-ver students fail to allege a concrete injury because the complaint does not indicate “if either of them attends the Middle School where there is a chronic problem with the boiler that additional funds might fix.” Majority opinion at 1245. Paragraph 52 of the complaint, however, alleges a chronic boiler problem as merely one example of the many shortcomings in the physical plant of the district, not as the sum total of all its defects. Any possible ambiguity in paragraph 52 is resolved by Exhibit E, which is referenced in the complaint and attached to it. That exhibits says in part, “The architects have con
That Schempp and Valley Forge involved challenges by students under the Establishment Clause, while the students’ claims in this case arise under the Supremacy Clause, does not affect the analysis. We have previously held that the state’s regulation of its public schools may result in injuries to students sufficient to give them standing in a case that did not involve an Establishment Clause violation. See Johnson v. Stuart,
I would also note that the students in a particular school district have an interest in the financial health of that District which cannot be said to be shared even by the other citizens of the county in which the districts are located. Cf ASARCO, Inc. v. Kadish,
Moreover, the students’ complaint satisfies the causation and redressability requirements set forth in Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
causation and redressability ordinarily hinge on the response of the regulated (or regulable) third party to the government action or inaction — and perhaps on the response of others as well. The existence of one or more of the essential elements of standing ‘depends on the unfettered choices made by independent actors not*1260 before the courts and whose exercise of broad and legitimate discretion the courts cannot presume either to control or to predict,’ ASARCO Inc. v. Kadish,490 U.S. 605 , 615,109 S.Ct. 2037 , 2044,104 L.Ed.2d 696 (1989) (opinion of Kennedy, J.); see also Simon [v. Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights Org.], supra, 426 U.S., [26] at 41-42, 96 S.Ct., [1917] at 1925, 1926 [48 L.Ed.2d 450 (1976)]; and it becomes the burden of the plaintiff to adduce facts showing that those choices have been or will be made in such manner as to produce causation and permit redressability of injury. E.g., Warth, supra,422 U.S., at 505 ,95 S.Ct., at 2208 . Thus, when the plaintiff is not himself the object of the government action or inaction he challenges, standing is not precluded, but it is ordinarily ‘substantially more difficult’ to establish. Allen, supra,468 U.S., at 758 ,104 S.Ct., at 3328 ; Simon, supra,426 U.S., at 44-45 ,96 S.Ct., at 1927 ; Warth, supra,422 U.S., at 505 ,95 S.Ct., at 2208 .
Lujan,
The burden that Lujan says that plaintiffs may face when they are not the directly regulated party presents no problem on this appeal. The difficulties that Lujan refers to generally involve proof of causation and re-dressability and are more likely to occur at the time of summary judgment or trial. In any event, Lujan makes clear that plaintiffs need not “adduce facts” to establish standing at the time of pleading. Id. Instead, they need only make “general factual allegations of injury resulting from the defendant’s conduct ... for on a motion to dismiss Ve presum[e] that general allegations embrace those specific facts that are necessary to support the claim.’ ” Id. (quoting Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation,
The students satisfy the prudential standing requirements as well. They are arguably within the zone of interests of both the Supremacy Clause, as they challenge the enforcement of an assertedly preemptive state law, see ANR Pipeline,
Finally, as I have explained, the students allege a concrete rather than a generalized grievance. They fairly allege specific educational harms that they will suffer as students in their school districts as a result of the state law’s enforcement. Cf. Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Environmental Study Group, Inc.,
Because the students meet both the constitutional and prudential aspects of standing, I would conclude that they meet that jurisdictional requirement.
Because I conclude that both the school districts and the students have standing to sue, and because I also conclude that there is no legal barrier to the school districts’ assertion of a valid cause of action under the Supremacy Cause, I most respectfully and emphatically dissent. It is regrettable that the majority’s erroneous application of standing doctrine prevents the school district and its students from suing to receive the benefits to which they appear to be entitled under federal law.
. Federal courts sometimes characterize their inquiry into whether the plaintiff has a cause of action as one that concerns the party's “standing". Despite the fact that courts occasionally (and perhaps inadvertently) use the term "standing” when undertaking such inquiries, the Supreme Court has made it clear that the question whether a party has standing is distinct from the question whether it has asserted a valid cause of action. See Davis v. Passman,
The former question concerns "whether a plaintiff is sufficiently adversary to a defendant to create an Article III case or controversy, or at least to overcome prudential limitations on federal-court jurisdiction[.]" Davis,
. The inquiry into whether a party has standing to sue also differs from the inquiry into whether it has the capacity to sue. Here, there is no doubt that under state law, Arizona school districts have the capacity to sue their states. See A.R.S. §§ 15-326 and 15-444.
. Cf. LeVick v. Skaggs Companies, Inc.,
. The history of the case makes it even more unlikely that the Court would have passed over the issue of the school districts' standing sub silentio. As our opinion shows, the issue of standing was discussed extensively on appeal. See Seattle School Dist. No. 1 v. State of Wash.,
Moreover, we note that our decision in Seattle School District made no reference to South Lake Tahoe even though we decided Seattle School District almost exactly six months after South Lake Tahoe had set down the "per se” rule pre-eluding such suits for lack of standing. Thus, before the case went to the Supreme Court, there was a clear conflict within the Circuit. South Lake Tahoe held that there was a clear rule against standing in all circumstances, while Seattle School District had clearly, albeit implicitly, held to the contrary. The Supreme Court’s opinion in Seattle School District resolved the conflict in favor of the Ninth Circuit's Seattle School District decision and against our South Lake Tahoe opinion.
. See, e.g., State of Washington’s Jurisdictional Statement, Washington v. Seattle School District,
. In doing so, the court may have inadvertently demonstrated the maturing wisdom of Justice Douglas, who, having helped to create the distinctions between “cause of action” and “standing” in Data Processing Serv. Orgns. v. Camp,
. The cases are commonly referred to as the Hunter line of authority, after Hunter v. Pittsburgh,
Although the Hunter cases occasionally make reference to the “standing” of political subdivisions, the Fifth Circuit has convincingly explained that the cases are better understood as cases concerning whether a cause of action exists. At the time the cases were decided, "standing” did not have the technical jurisdictional meaning that it does today. Thus, in concluding that political subdivisions lacked “standing,” the Court “meant only that, on the merits, the municipality had no rights under the particular constitutional provision it invoked.” Rogers,
. Similarly, Trenton concludes that "[t]he power of the State, unrestrained by the contract clause or the Fourteenth Amendment, over the rights and property of cities held and used for ‘governmental purposes’ cannot be questioned.” Trenton,
. Gomillion involved a challenge by individual black voters to the state of Alabama's attempt to redraw municipal boundaries in order to prevent them from voting. Id.
. See, e.g., Board of Education of Central School Dist. No. 1 v. Allen,
. Although in Lead-Deadwood a state-created entity rather than the state itself sought to enforce the state statute, that fact does not affect the analysis. The protection that the preemption doctrine affords a political subdivision when it invokes the Supremacy Clause obtains in both cases. Cf. South Lake Tahoe,
The majority relies on ASARCO, Inc. v. Kadish,
. Seminole Tribe cf Florida v. Florida,-U.S. -,
Since plaintiffs here are suing to enforce the Supremacy Clause, Congress’ ability to abrogate the State’s sovereign immunity is not at issue here either, unlike in Seminole Tribe. In any event, we note that even were the plaintiffs suing to enforce the Federal Impact Aid Law, 20 U.S.C. §§ 236-244, that law does not implicate the state’s sovereign immunity as directly as the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, the law at issue in Seminole Tribe. That Act permitted courts, in response to a suit by an Indian tribe against the state itself, to take action directly against the state. See 25 U.S.C. § 2710(d)(7). The Federal Impact Aid Law, by contrast, permits the Secretary to withhold funds from local education agencies, 20 U.S.C. § 240(d)(1).
. Cf. Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
