The plaintiff in this unfortunately protracted, thirteen-year-old civil rights suit appeals from the dismissal of the suit on summary judgment. The parties have showered us with 198 pages of briefs, but the essential facts, duly simplified, and the legal issues, can be stated briefly. Creek, the plaintiff, is a real estate developer who wanted to build a 216-unit apartment complex in the Village of Westhaven, Illinois. Westhaven, now known as “Orland Hills,” is an all-white suburb of Chicago. Creek needed a permit from the Village in order to proceed. All was going swimmingly — the Village was eager for the development — until January 9, 1979, when the Village learned that Creek was asking the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for federal rent support for 40 percent of the units. Creek contends — we must assume for purposes of this appeal correctly — that the Village, knowing that rent support would make the development attractive to black people and wishing to keep Westhaven white, determined to prevent Creek from going forward with the development. So it denied him the permit on pretextual grounds.
*189 Creek sued in Illinois state court on August 29, 1979, for an injunction against the Village’s withholding the permit. The court issued the injunction on April 14,1980. This was a final judgment, terminating Creek’s suit. The Village neither complied with the judgment nor appealed it. A month later the Westhaven Homeowners Association, acting in cahoots with the Village to block Creek’s development, sued HUD in federal district court to invalidate HUD’s approval of rent support for Creek’s development. Creek returned to state court to seek enforcement of the injunction against the Village. On August 28, 1980, the court entered a consent order directing the Village to issue the permit and requiring the Homeowners Association, although it was not a party to the state court suit, to drop the federal suit. Which it did. But the Village defied the consent order by not issuing the permit. Shortly afterward, the defendants, who include not only the Village but also other municipal corporations and a variety of local officials, began what the parties describe as a “letter-writing campaign” but is better described as a far-reaching, concerted effort to enlist the efforts of state and federal officials to prevent Creek from building a rent-supported apartment complex in Westhaven. The motive, we assume for purposes of deciding this appeal, was racial.
On July 1, 1980, Creek had transferred his interest in the development to Pheasant Ridge Venture, a limited partnership in which he retained a 90 percent share as sole general partner, thus giving up 10 percent of his interest. He claims that he was forced to do this by the delays brought about by the defendants’ unlawful behavior. A couple of months later Pheasant Ridge Venture transferred its interest to a joint venture with Shell Development Corporation. The joint venture, called PRV/Shell, reapplied for rent support, finally obtaining the necessary financial commitments in March 1988. Construction of the apartment complex was begun then and completed sometime before the end of 1993 (the record is unclear exactly when). PRV/Shell was permitted to intervene as a plaintiff in Creek’s federal suit and eventually settled its claims for $1 million, out of which Creek, by virtue of his interest in the partnership, received some $136,000. The settlement agreement reserved “the individual claims not asserted or which later may be asserted by J. Fred Creek.”
Creek contends that the complex as eventually built was smaller than it would have been but for the defendants’ conduct (only 176 units) and less profitable. He seeks by way of damages the difference between the financial benefits that would have accrued to him had the defendants not delayed the project and the more modest though not negligible benefits that did accrue to him. He claims that the reduction in the size and profitability of the venture reflected, in part; changes in federal law. But he cannot recover damages for any lost profit that is due to those changes even if, as he also argues, he would have gotten the project under way before the changes went into effect had it not been for delay caused by the defendants’ unlawful acts. Causation in the law is not to be equated to “but for” causation. E.g.,
Siefken v. Village of Arlington Heights,
The district judge, however, did not merely throw out part of Creek’s damages claim; she threw out Creek’s entire suit. The ground was res judicata. The district judge believed that Creek’s only viable claim was the claim that he had asserted in the
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state court suit filed in 1979. That suit had been concluded by the entry of a final judgment on April 14 of the following year. Creek had actually requested damages in that suit, though he later abandoned that request. Neither the request for damages nor its abandonment has any significance to the issue of res judicata. You cannot split a claim into a request for damages and a request for injunction and litigate each in a separate suit.
Torres v. Rebarchak,
But that is provided that you can obtain both forms of relief in one suit. If, when the claim arises, the amount of damages cannot be quantified, then you can delay bringing your suit for damages until they can be quantified. E.g.,
Brunswick Corp. v. Riegel Textile Corp.,
Not only when the state court suit was filed in 1979 but also when it was concluded in April of 1980, and at all times in between, Creek knew that he had lost valuable time but he could not estimate his full damages because he did not know when he would, at last, obtain the permit and the necessary federal financing and thus be able to go forward with the project. He could not — or at least there is no indication that he did — know that in July of 1980 he would have to abandon his hope of developing the apartment complex all by himself and bring in a 10 percent partner, thereby surrendering 10 percent of the profits from the project. Of course, if he surrendered this expectation for a commensurate present-value sum, he would no more be injured than any other entrepreneur who decides to share risk and reward by selling a piece of his enterprise. But we must assume in the present posture of the case that he received inadequate consideration because of his distressed circumstances brought about by the defendants’ conspiracy.
In a case of continuing injury the victim can bring successive suits unless it is feasible (as in a personal-injury suit for lost earnings caused by a permanent disability) to quantify the entire future damages and reduce them, through discounting, to a present value that can then be awarded to the plaintiff in a lump sum as his damages. That was not the case here, so Creek was entitled to bring a fresh suit even if the conduct complained of in it was the same conduct complained of in the state court suit.
Id.
at 598,
There is an alternative basis for not treating the first judgment as res judicata — that
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the second (that is, the present) suit challenged unlawful acts committed
after
the first suit, and hence is based on different facts, see
LaSalle National Bank v. County of DuPage,
We have focused on events between April 14, 1980, and July 1, 1980, for Creek must prove that he was injured in consequence of those events in order to counter the defense of res judicata by showing that he was injured by wrongful conduct that occurred after the final judgment in his first suit. But that is only his alternative counter to the defense of res judicata. His main counter, which we also found meritorious, is that the first judgment was not res judicata because damages could not yet be quantified, and this means that he can base his claim for damages on conduct that occurred before as well as after April 14, provided it was before July 1.
Creek would be in even better shape if, as he argues, his right to seek damages is not cut off at July 1, 1980. If Pheasant Ridge Venture were a corporation, this argument would of course fail. A shareholder has no right to seek damages for an injury to.the corporation, even if he is the sole shareholder.
Carney v. General Motors Corp.,
A partnership did sue here — Pheasant Ridge Venture’s successor, PRV/Shell, was a plaintiff in this suit until it settled with the defendants. But Creek’s right to seek damages terminated on July 1, 1980, though he remains free, as we have said, to show if he can that the loss he incurred when he gave up his 100 percent share in the project on that day was caused by unlawful acts committed by the defendants before the earlier of either July 1, 1980, or the date on which he decided to form the limited partnership and give away 10 percent of the partnership to a limited partner or partners.
But all this is on the assumption that res judicata is the only possible basis for the dismissal of Creek's suit. The defendants argue as is their right that there are alternative grounds, grounds not reached by the district judge but not waived and therefore available to support the judgment if they are good grounds. The only ground that has any possible merit, so the only one we shall discuss, is that the municipal defendants were privileged by the speech and petition clauses of the First Amendment to oppose Creek’s development by lobbying state and federal officials and by suing HUD to prevent the provision of rent subsidies. The defendants argue that the fact that the motive for these efforts was racial, as we must assume it was, is irrelevant.
We need not decide whether the lobbying, the “letter-writing campaign,” was privileged, because we have already held that Creek’s claim for damages ended no later than July 1,1980, and the campaign did not begin until the following month. That leaves the suit brought by the Homeowners Association. We noted earlier that although the Association is no longer a defendant, the other defendants remain potentially liable for its acts, as its coconspirators.
A lawsuit can be a form of constitutionally protected petition for the redress of grievances. E.g.,
McDonald v. Smith,
Nor is it out of the question that a municipality could have First Amendment rights. This question looms as critical because of the contorted procedural posture of the case. If the Homeowners Association’s suit was not frivolous, that gets the association off the hook but it is already off the hook because it is no longer a defendant. Immunities, however, are personal. A conspirator does not acquire a coconspirator’s immunity.
Dennis v. Sparks,
Only a few cases address the question whether municipalities or other state subdivisions or agencies have any First Amendment rights. All but one, and that not a case against a municipality, answer “no.”
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Democratic National Comm.,
To the extent, moreover, that a municipality is the voice of its residents — is, indeed, a megaphone amplifying voices that might not otherwise be audible — a curtailment of its right to speak might be thought a curtailment of the unquestioned First Amendment rights of those residents. See Meir Dan-Cohen, “Freedoms of Collective Speech: A Theory of Protected Communications by Organizations, Communities, and the State,” 79
Calif.L.Rev.
1229, 1261-1263 (1991); cf.
Student Government Ass’n v. Board of Trustees, supra,
Even if municipalities do have First Amendment rights, however, a question we need not decide, we do not think they have the right to foment, whether through speech or otherwise, governmental discrimination on grounds of race. The “or -otherwise” is of course the simpler case, as many cases hold that states may not take actions that encourage private racial discrimination. E.g.,
Reitman v. Mulkey,
At argument we put to the Village’s lawyer the following hypothetical case, which is close enough to the facts alleged by Creek to assist our analysis. Illinois sheriffs are independent of county government; and suppose the county executive, acting in his role as the maker of policy for the county government, writes the sheriff of the county urging him not to hire any black deputy sheriffs. The sheriff, though not bound to follow the county executive’s advice, is persuaded by it and therefore refuses to hire blacks. Blacks not hired because of this decision sue the county government, alleging racial discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. We do not think that the county could interpose the First Amendment as a defense. Speech by government, even when not cast in the form of a command, even when addressed to another organ of government that is not subordinate to it, as in our hypothetical ease, cannot be equated for all *194 purposes to speech by an individual. It remains an official act, and when its purpose and tendency are, as alleged here, to promote discrimination that violates the Fourteenth Amendment, so too does the act. A contrary conclusion would permit government to undermine the duties that the Constitution imposes upon it and would thus be infected by the same vice that has persuaded judges not to allow a municipality to use the Fourteenth Amendment as a shield against the state that has created and under state law controls it. We are mindful that NAACP v. Hunt, supra, held that flying the Confederate flag from the Alabama state eapitol did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment. But the flag’s effect in encouraging the violation of the equal protection clause was tenuous at best, whereas here the Village’s litigation and lobbying activity is alleged to have been motivated solely by racial prejudice and to have had as its sole object the exclusion of black people from the Village.
We need not decide how far the principle that the Fourteenth Amendment does not shield the advocacy of racial discrimination by municipalities binds the municipality’s officials themselves. We suppose a public official campaigning for reelection has considerable rights of free speech short of incitement, cf.
Joyner v. Whiting,
To summarize:
1. Creek’s suit against the defendants who remain in the suit is not barred by res judicata or by inability to prove injury.
2. The suit against the Village is not barred by the First Amendment, either, and whether the officials of the Village who have also been joined as defendants have a First Amendment defense cannot be determined on the record before us.
3. The suit should not have been dismissed, and the judgment dismissing it must be reversed.
4. But Creek cannot obtain damages (a) for any injury that occurred after July 1, 1980, because the right if any to such damages belongs to other entities, or (b) for any damages resulting from changes in federal law, because those damages were not caused by the defendants’ unlawful conduct.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
