This appeal from the dismissal on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment of a suit for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 requires us to consider questions under the First, Fourteenth, and Twenty-First Amendments, and also whether local legislators and judicial officers, and their municipal employer, have absolute immunity from such a suit.
The plaintiffs owned a bar in the Village of Shorewood, Illinois, and they allege that the defendants — a police officer, the police chief, and virtually the entire officialdom of the Village, as well as the Village itself — interfеred with and eventually destroyed their business, in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. According to the complaint as fleshed out by a factual summary in the plaintiffs’ memorandum opposing summary judgment, in 1976 the Village had issued the plaintiffs a Class A liquor license, which allowed them to offer live entertainment along with liquor, and although the license was for only one year it was renewed for each of the three succeeding years. But in 1979 the defendants began to harass the plaintiffs— arresting customers and employees on baseless charges, demanding proof of age from customers who obviously were many years over the legal drinking age, and bringing groundless proceedings to take away their Class A license. Defendant Talaga, who was both mayor and local liquor control commissioner, first tried to destroy the plaintiffs’ business by suspending their license for 30 days for alleged infractions of the Village’s liquor control ordinance. On appeal to the Illinois Liquor Control Commission, the suspension was reducеd to five days. But then, in a ten-minute meeting of the Village Board of Trustees (whose other members are also named as defendants), Talaga rammed through an ordinance reducing the number of Class A liquor licenses in the Village from four to three, and informed the plaintiffs that their license would not be renewed for 1980. The plaintiffs appealed to the Illinois Liquor Control Commission, which reversed, holding that they were entitled to a hearing before a decision was made not to renew their license and granting them a stay to еnable them to continue operating under their expired 1979 license. No hearing was held on remand. Instead, Talaga revoked the plaintiffs’ license on trumped-up charges. Again the Illinois Liquor Control Commission reversed. In 1981 the defendants again refused to renew the plaintiffs’ license, again without a hearing, and were again reversed. Weary of the endless hassle, the plaintiffs tried-to sell their business, but the defendants interfered with their selling efforts and eventually the plaintiffs had to shut down their bar and surrender their liquor license. Thе plaintiffs attribute the de *948 fendants’ animosity to the fact that the live entertainment in the bar was provided by a rock and roll band.
The district judge dismissed the complaint, but not because any of the plaintiffs’ factual allegations was shown in pretrial discovery to be baseless. He held that since the defendants never did succeed in yanking the plaintiffs’ license (except for the five-day suspension which went into effect after the plaintiffs had been accorded due process by the Illinois Liquor Control Commission, and а three-hour closing as to which the plaintiffs’ right to a subsequent hearing gave them all the process that was due), there was no deprivation of plaintiffs’ property, even if a liquor license is property (the defendants argue it is not). He also held that while the plaintiffs may have had a First Amendment right to play rock and roll music they had no constitutional right to sell liquor at the same time.
Since
Board of Regents v. Roth,
“Property” in the Illinois Liquor Control Act need not mean the same thing as “property” in the due process clause.
Perry v. Sindermann,
So we must look behind labels, cf.
Quinn v. Syracuse Model Neighborhood Corp.,
Although the Liquor Control Act does not prescribe equivalent protections for nonrenewal, it does provide (again in section 1) that “any licensee may renew his license at the expiration thereof, provided he is then qualified to receive a license and the premises for which such renewal license is sought are suitable for such purposеs .... ” These criteria for renewal are undemanding, which suggests that the Illinois legislature expected most licenses to be
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renewed as a matter of course. From here it is only a step to equating nonrenewal with revocation and requiring the same safeguards against arbitrary nonrenewal as the statute expressly provides against arbitrary revocation. That step was taken in
City of Wyoming v. Liquor Control Comm’n of Illinois,
This is so even though section 1 provides that renewal is not a “vested right” but a “privilege” that shall not prevent the local liquor control commissioner “from decreasing the number of licenses to be issued .... ” If the number is reduced just to eliminate a particular licensee, which is what the plaintiffs allege was done here, the principle of City of Wyoming — that you may not do indirectly by nonrenewal what you could not do directly by revocation— comes into play. Otherwise City of Wyoming would be a dead letter.
We must consider next whether the defendants could be found to have
deprived
the plaintiffs of their property rights. The defendants never succeeded in taking away the plaintiffs’ license either by revocation or nonrenewal; their efforts to do so were thwarted by the Illinois Liquor Control Commission; and though the brief suspensions were deprivations, see
North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem, Inc.,
The principle is familiar from the related area of takings of property that are subject to the just compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment. If government makes your house uninhabitable, that is a taking of your property even if you retain a clear title.
Barbian v. Panagis,
The First Amendment claim in this case is separate from the plaintiffs’ claim to have been deprived of property. Freedom of speech is one of the liberties the due process clause has been held to protect. Although the authors of the First Amend-
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merit were concerned with protecting political rather than cultural expression, see, e.g., Chafee, Free Speech in the United States 7-33 (1948), and therefore might not have thought it a violation of the First Amendment for Congress to pass a law forbidding the playing of Haydn’s string quartets on federal government lаnds, the modern view is different. If the defendants passed an ordinance forbidding the playing of rock and roll music in the Village of Shorewood, they would be infringing a First Amendment right,
Fact Concerts, Inc. v. City of Newport,
The defendants did not go that far; the allegation is that they suppressed the playing of rock and roll music in one bar. Whether or not they did this to deter the other bar owners in the Village frоm playing rock and roll, they were restricting “free speech,” just as they would have been doing if they had tried to prevent the plaintiffs from playing rock and roll music softly in a private home. Since freedom of speech is not absolute, the defendants might be able to justify the restriction in this case— might be able to show that liquor and rock and roll music are an explosive mixture. Cf.
Grand Faloon Tavern, Inc. v. Wicker,
The defendants argue, however, that in any event the Twenty-First Amendment, which repealed Prohibition but authorized each state to keep liquor out of the state if it wаnted to, also repealed the First Amendment in bars and therefore allows the defendants to limit live entertainment by their Class A licensees for bad reasons or no reasons. They cite
California v. LaRue,
An even better case for the defendants, though they do not cite it, is
New York State Liquor Authority v. Bellanca,
True, the plaintiffs were free to play rock and roll if they stopped operating their establishment as a bar. But this just means that a law or other official action which limits freedom of expression in some but not all circumstances is less vulnerable than a more restriсtive action — that it is easier to justify banning rock and roll music in bars in the Village of Shorewood than it would be to justify banning it everywhere within the Village limits. There still had to be some justification for the lesser restriction unless it is de minimis, which we do not think banning a particular type of music in establishments that serve liquor is; and no justification has been offered here.
Thus there are genuine issues of material fact concerning the alleged violations of the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights. But we must also consider the argument that some of the individual defendаnts— Talaga and the other members of the Village’s board of trustees — are absolutely immune from damages liability for those violations. (The district judge initially so held but later withdrew his opinion on this point when he decided that an alternative ground for dismissal was that there had been no deprivation of property or liberty.) The argument is that Talaga — who is at once mayor, president of the Village’s board of trustees, and local liquor control commissioner — has absolute immunity in the exercise of his judicial responsibilities as liquor control commissioner and of his legislative responsibilities as president of the board of trustees, and that all the trustees have absolute immunity in the exercise of their legislative responsibilities.
Although the defendants appear to believe that answering the immunity questions in favor of Talaga and the other trustees would support the district court’s dismissal of the complaint in its entirety, it would not. Not only are there other defendants, who do not and could not claim absolute immunity as judicial or legislative officers, but the complaint about Talaga extends beyond his conduct as local liquor control commissioner and president of the board of trustees to his nonjudicial, nonlegislative conduct as mayor of Shorewood. Nevertheless, the absolute-immunity doctrine might justify partial summary judgment.
Judges of course have absolute immunity from damage suits based on their judicial rulings; the question we must decide here is whether a local liquor control commissioner in Illinois is acting in a judicial capacity when passing on renewal and revocation questions and if so whether it makes a difference that he is a local rather than state officer. It is clear from Ill.Rev.Stat.1981, ch. 43, ¶ 149, that the commissioner is acting in a judicial capacity when he revokes a liquor license. He may not revoke without finding that the licensee has violated the law; he may make that finding only after notice and hearing; and he “shall reduce all evidence to writing and shall maintain an official record of the proceedings.” In addition, revocation is, as the parties to this case well know, appealable to the state Liquor Control Commission under Ill.Rev.Stat.1981, ch. 43, ¶ 153; and although the standard of review is various, in some cases it is just a substantial-evidence standard, which implies that the local commissioner is a type of first-line adjudicator, like a trial judge or his counterpart in administrative law. It is also clear that a local liquor control commissioner has the power to issue and renew — and therefore in
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appropriate cases not to renew — local liquor licenses such as these plaintiffs’ Class A license. See Ill.Rev.Stat.1981, ch. 43, ¶¶ 109, 110, 113-14, 120. It is unimportant that the statute does not prescribe the procedures for him to follow in renewal proceedings, since as we have already noted Illinois case law requires the same procedures for selective nonrenewal as for revocation.
Mary v. Ramsden,
The fact that a local liquor control commissioner is not a regular judge in a court of general jurisdiction can make no difference after
Butz v. Economou,
For this reason, it should also make no difference that Talaga is a local rather than state judicial officer. The decision that established the absolute immunity of judges from suits for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
Pierson v. Ray,
The next question is whether Talagа and the other trustees are entitled to absolute immunity for their legislative action in reducing the number of Class A liquor licenses in Shorewood from four to three. Although the Supreme Court reserved decision on the question in
Lake Country Estates, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
We have last to consider the liability of the Village of Shorewood itself. The Supreme Court’s refusal, in a much criticized (see, e.g., Comment,
Section 1983 Municipal Liability and the Doctrine of Respondeat Superior,
46 U.Chi.L.Rev. 935 (1979)) but authoritative dictum in
Monell v. Dept. of Social Services of City of New York,
“At some level of authority, there must be an official whose acts reflect governmental policy, for the government necessarily acts through its agents. Thus the question becomes one of identifying the official who has authority to make policy; then municipal liability attaches to acts performed pursuant to that policy.”
Bowen v. Watkins,
Dennis v. Sparks,
To summarize, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of the complaint except with regard to the legislative acts of the defendant trustees and the judicial and legislative acts of defendant Talaga. But this is not to say that the case must necessarily go to trial. There may be other grounds for summary judgment not considered by the district court or by us; if so, the district court can consider them on remand.
The district court’s decision dismissing the complaint is affirmed in part and reversed in part, the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, and costs in this court are awarded to the appellants.
So Ordered.
