In this case Wisconsin lawyers, John Cro-setto, Kenneth Doran, and Douglas Kammer (“Plaintiffs”), have alleged that the State Bar of Wisconsin, Stephen Smay (the Executive Director of the Wisconsin Bar), and the Justices of the Wisconsin Supreme Court (“Defendants”), violated Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights by requiring Plaintiffs both to join the Wisconsin State Bar and to contribute money for certain political causes in order to practice law in the State. The district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment finding that Defendants acted in good faith and holding that Defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. Furthermore, the district court denied Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction, upholding the constitutionality of Wisconsin’s integrated bar and compulsory membership dues. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand this case to the district court for a factual finding.
I. Background
The issue presented here is not wholly new to this court and we are mindful of the long history of litigation surrounding Wisconsin’s mandatory bar rule. In 1943, the Wisconsin legislature enacted a bill directing that there “shall be an association to be known as the ‘State Bar of Wisconsin’ composed of persons licensed to practice law in this state, and membership in the association shall be a
*1398
condition precedent to the right to practice law in Wisconsin.” Wis.Stat. § 256.31 (1943). Construing the statute to be merely advisory, the Wisconsin Supreme Court initially declined to integrate
1
the State’s bar, and allowed the bar association membership to remain voluntary.
See Integration of Bar Case,
By 1956, the Wisconsin Supreme Court had become concerned that “too many lawyers have refrained or refused to join [the voluntary bar association], that membership in the voluntary association [had] become static, and that substantial minority of the lawyers in the state [were] not associated with the State Bar Association.”
In the Matter of the Integration of the Bar,
A significant portion of Wisconsin lawyers opposed the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s decision and filed a lawsuit alleging th'at Wisconsin’s integrated bar violated the First Amendment. This lawsuit ultimately reached the Supreme Court of the United States.
Lathrop v. Donohue,
Unsatisfied by the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s dues-reduction compromise, a Wisconsin lawyer filed a federal class action suit challenging the facial constitutionality of Wisconsin’s integrated bar,
Levine v. Supreme Court of Wisconsin,
The district court stayed all its proceedings pending the outcome of
Levine
I’s appeal which was then before the Seventh Circuit. Subsequently, we reversed
Levine I
on appeal, holding that
Lathrop
still controlled the constitutionality of integrated bars and allowed Wisconsin to enforce its integrated bar.
See Levine v. Heffeman,
After the Court in
Keller
upheld California’s integrated.bar, the Wisconsin Bar began the process of re-integrating. In March 1991, the State Bar approved a petition to the Wisconsin Supreme Court to reinstate the State Bar as a mandatory organization. Following a public hearing, the Wisconsin Supreme Court reestablished the integrated bar, effective July 1,1992, under a new set of Court rules and State Bar by laws.
3
See In Matter of State Bar. of Wisconsin: Membership,
Meanwhile, Plaintiffs continued pressing their constitutional objections' through this ease, Crosetto. In Crosetto, Plaintiffs alleged that before Keller, (1) Defendants had forced Plaintiffs to financially support the State Bar’s political and other legislative activities contrary to the First and Fourteenth Amendments, (2) confiscated Plaintiffs’ property without due process of law, and after Keller (3) Defendants implemented a dues reduction plan that still failed the most recent pronouncements of the Supreme Court of the United States. In support of their allegations, Plaintiffs contend that among other things, Defendants commingled resources between the State Bar and its political action committee failed to keep adequate records so that dissenting bar members may obtain a proper refund, and used dues money for political activities unrelated to the regulation of the legal profession.
The Justices of the Wisconsin Court filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiffs complaint against them in that, as Justices, they were absolutely immune from suit for the quasi-legislative conduct, and further, that Plaintiffs lacked any immediate threat of injury. The District Court'granted the Justices’ motion dismissing them from the case. Then the remaining defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion, dismissed the rest of Plaintiffs’ ease, and denied Plaintiffs’ counter motion for a preliminary injunction against the State’s integrated bar rule,
II. Analysis
In their appeal, Plaintiffs argue the. following: (A) the federal courts have subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ claims against (1) the State Bar Association as an entity, and (2) the Justices of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, (B) the doctrine of. qualified, immunity does not bar Plaintiffs’ damage claims against the defendant Smay (the Bar’s Executive Director) for his alleged official misconduct, and (C) both Wisconsin’s present integrated bar and dues reduction plan fail to pass constitutional muster thus entitling Plaintiffs to injunctive relief. We shall address these arguments serially.
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Plaintiffs arguments focus on the merits of a qualified immunity defense with respect to both Smay and the State Bar. In so doing, Plaintiffs apparently have assumed that the State Bar, as an entity, is entitled to raise the qualified immunity defense. In fact, the question of whether a non-natural person, such as the State Bar, may raise a qualified immunity defense has yet to be settled. 4 Today we need not grapple with this question because the Constitution of the United States may not grant us any judicial power to hear either Plaintiffs’ claims against the State Bar or those against the Wisconsin Justices.
1. The State Bar Association
In our federalist system of dual sovereignty the jurisdiction of the federal courts is limited to the grants of power declared in the Constitution. Plaintiffs having brought their suit in a federal court must endeavor to surmount one of the Constitutions’ unavoidable jurisdictional hurdles, that of state sovereign immunity. While we note that a state’s sovereign immunity sets a constitutional lid on the exercise of federal judicial power, we must also be mindful that when a citizen sues his home state the Constitution’s Eleventh Amendment is evidence, but not the origin of this doctrine.
5
Hans v. Louisiana,
The Supreme Court has never directly addressed the sovereign immunity of state bars,
9
but its approach in related areas may be helpful to the analysis. For example, in holding that the actions of a state bar association constituted enough official state action to exempt a state bar from antitrust law, the Supreme Court has noted that “the regulation of the activities of the bar is at the core of the State’s power to protect the public.... Few other professions are as close to the core of the State’s power to protect the pub-lie. Nor is any trade or other profession as essential to the primary governmental function of administering justice.”
Hoover v. Ronwin,
With respect to state bar associations and sovereign immunity the lower federal courts that have addressed this issue unanimously have found particular state bars entitled to the sovereign immunity defense.
See Lewis v. Louisiana State Bar Ass’n,
We agree that a suit against a state bar association, as a general matter, may constitute a suit against the state for sovereign immunity purposes. Whether the Wisconsin State Bar, in particular, is vested with sufficient state characteristics to qualify for sovereign immunity is a factual question, however, that cannot be answered now on the record before us. 10 We therefore vacate that part of the district court’s decision holding for the State Bar of Wisconsin, and remand this case for a determination of the State Bar’s sovereign status.
After additional briefing along with any other discovery deemed appropriate, the district court must ultimately determine whether the suit against the Wisconsin State Bar Association is properly considered a suit against the state
qua
state. ‘ In making its finding the district court should consider the extent of control exercised over the Bar by the Wisconsin Supreme Court (or the State at large).
See Lewis,
If after its analysis the district court finds that a suit against the Wisconsin State Bar is a suit against the State, then unless one of *1403 the recognized exceptions to a state’s sovereign immunity applies here, 11 it must dismiss all of Plaintiffs’ claims against the Wisconsin State Bar for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
2. The State Court Justices
Plaintiffs’ claims against the Justices of the Wisconsin Supreme Court must be dismissed for jurisdictional reasons. Plaintiffs concede that any prayer for retrospective relief against the Justices “in their official capacity” would lack subject matter jurisdiction. 12 However, the limited jurisdiction of the federal courts not only bars any possible retrospective claims against the Justices, but also mandates that we dismiss Plaintiffs’ prayer for injunctive relief because it fails to present an Article III case or controversy.
Article III of the Constitution extends the judicial power of the United States only to real cases or controversies. U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 1. As a result federal courts lack the power to give advisory opinions in hypothetical cases.
Strawbridge v. Curtiss,
B. Qualified Immunity
Federal courts have subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ claims against Mr. Smay, the Executive Director of the Wisconsin State Bar, sued in his individual capacity for- allegedly violating Plaintiffs’ First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. 28 U.S.C. § 1331. However, as an individual serving in á state office, Smay may be entitled to qualified immunity.
Abel v. Miller,
The doctrine of qualified immunity “is intended to provide governmental officials with the ability ‘to anticipate reasonably when their conduct may give rise to liability for damages.’ ”
Id.
at 1533 (quoting
Anderson v. Creighton,
Plaintiffs have not begun to meet their burden. The constitutional rights allegedly breached by Smay were not clearly established to a sufficient legal consensus at the time of the- alleged violation. Far from being clearly established in 1990,
Keller,
C. Integrated Bar Dues
All that remains of Plaintiffs’ case is their prayer for an injunction “to prevent the reintegration of the Wisconsin State Bar under the revised Wisconsin Supreme Court rules and State Bar by-laws governing legislative activities.” Magistrate’s Report at 40. After considering the merits of Plaintiffs’ argument, the district court concluded that the Wisconsin rules and by-laws 14 readily met the requirements established by the Supreme Court in Keller and therefore denied Plaintiffs’ motion. We agree.
Plaintiffs assert that the compulsory dues plan set out in the State Bar’s bylaws and the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s rules is facially invalid for failing to comply with
Keller
(which expanded
Hudson
to the arena of state bar associations).
15
However, as noted
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by the district court, the requirements of
Keller
and
Hudson
were the foundation on which the Wisconsin rules were promulgated.
See Magistrate’s Report
at 40. The language of Wisconsin’s SCR 10.03(5)(b) follows the language of
Keller
in defining what activities may be funded with compulsory dues.
16
Finally, as the district court found, the new Wisconsin rules and by-laws seem to incorporate all the
Hudson
procedural' requirements.
17
In
Hudson,
the Supreme Court held that in order to protect the rights of dissenting union employees, a union collecting a fair-share or agency fee must provide procedural safeguards to prevent “compulsory subsidization of ideological activity by employees who object thereto without restricting the Union’s ability to require every employee to contribute to the cost of collective-bargaining activities.”
The Wisconsin rules follow the law of Keller and Hudson in the following ways: (1) SCR 10.03(5)(b)(2) requires that the Bar provide written notice to all members before the beginning of each fiscal year, describing those activities the Bar has determined are chargeable and those which are non-ehargeable, informing members as to the cost of those activities and describing how those amounts were calculated; (2) SCR 10.-03(5)(b)(3) — (5) sets up a procedure whereby those who contend that the calculation is incorrect may challenge the calculation and have their challenge promptly determined by an impartial arbitrator; (3) State Bar Bylaws Article 1, Section 5(b) provides that a member demanding arbitration need not pay any dues until October 31 or 15 days following the arbitrator’s decision, whichever is later. Therefore because Plaintiffs have failed to identify any defect in the Wisconsin Bar’s compulsory dues plan, we hold this plan constitutional both facially and as applied, and thus affirm the district court’s denial of Plaintiffs’ motion for injunctive relief.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons we affirm that part of the district court’s judgment to dispose of Plaintiffs’ suit against the Justices of the Supreme Court and defendant Smay, vacating in part and remanding this case back to the district court for a factual determination of the status of Plaintiffs’ suit with respect to' the state.
AffiRmed in part, Vacated in part, and Remanded.
Notes
. An integrated bar is one requiring both membership and the payment of dues as- conditions of practicing law within the state.
. Notwithstanding Levine II the Wisconsin Supreme Court continued its suspension of the bar integration rule until July 1, 1992.
.See Wisconsin SCR 10.03(5)(b) and Wisconsin State Bar Bylaws, art. 1, sec. 5. The newly-enacted Wisconsin Supreme Court Rule 10.-03(5)(b) provides the following:
1. The state bar may use compulsory dues only for activities reasonably intended for the purpose of regulating the legal profession or improving the quality of legal services offered by members of the state bar. Other activities must be supported by voluntary dues, user fees or other sources of revenue.
2. Prior to the beginning of each fiscal year, the state bar shall publish written notice of the activities that can be supported by compulsory dues and the activities that cannot be supported by compulsory dues. The notice shall indicate the cost of each activity, including all appropriate indirect expense, and the amount of dues to be devoted to each activity. The notice shall set forth each member's pro rata dues to be devoted to activities that cannot be supported by compulsory dues. The notice shall be sent to every member of the state bar along with the annual dues statement. A
member of the state bar may withhold the pro rata portion of dues budgeted for activities that cannot be supported by compulsory dues.
3. A member of the state bar who contends that the state bar incorrectly set the amount of dues that can be withheld may deliver to the state bar a written demand for arbitration. Any such demand shall be delivered within 30 days of receipt of the members’s dues statement.
4. If one or more timely demands for arbitration are delivered, the state bar shall promptly submit the matter to arbitration before an impartial arbitrator. All such demands for arbitration shall be consolidated for hearing. The •costs of the arbitration shall be paid by the state bar.
5. In the event the decision of the arbitrator results in an increased pro rata reduction of dues for members who have delivered timely demands for arbitration for the fiscal year, the state bar shall offer such increased pro rata reduction to members first admitted to the state bar during that fiscal year and after the date of the arbitrator’s decisions.
. Not only was the non-natural person issue not briefed for us, but Plaintiffs resisted discussing this possible objection even after several pointed queries from this court during oral argument.
. We mention this fact only because, in explicating the Hans doctrine, some courts have used "the Eleventh Amendment" as a short-hand substitute for the Hans doctrine's authority and origin. While convenient, this characterization is imprecise. The text of the Eleventh Amendment clearly does not provide for immunity when a citizen sues his resident state. U.S. Const, amend. XI. ("The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.”).
. The States passed the Eleventh Amendment in reaction to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Chisholm v. Georgia,
2 U.S. (2 Dali.) 419,
"Can we suppose that, when the Eleventh Amendment was adopted, it was understood to be left open for citizens of a State to sue their own state in the federal courts, while the idea of suits by citizens of other states, or of foreign states, was indignantly repelled? Suppose that Congress, when proposing the Eleventh Amendment, had appended to it a proviso that nothing therein contained should prevent a State from being sued by its own citizens in cases arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States: can we imagine that it would have been adopted by the States? The supposition that it would is almost an absurdity on its face.
"The truth is, that the cognizance of suits and actions unknown to the' law, and forbidden by the law, was not contemplated by the Constitution when establishing the judicial power of the United States.”
Hans,
. Though criticized, especially by the academy, the
Hans
doctrine has been repeatedly affirmed.
Monaco v. Mississippi,
. We say ordinarily because there are exceptions to this bar which concededly make the Eleventh Amendment and
Hans
immunity peculiar jurisdictional rules. For example, Congress can abrogate state sovereign immunity,
see Welch v. Texas Department of Public Transportation,
. Neither
Keller,
Nor can the Supreme Court's review in either
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
. The parties never addressed the issue of sovereign immunity, but because it is jurisdictional, we raise it
sua sponte. See Pennhurst,
. For example, while we recognize that a general appearance by an authorized representative of the state may constitute an implied consent to suit under some circumstances, thus waiving the sovereign immunity defense,
see,
e.g.,
Hankins v. Finnel,
. Brief for Appellant at 42,
Crosetto v. State Bar,
No. 92-3899 (7th Cir.1993).
See also supra
pp. 1400-02. Only prospective relief can be sought against the Justices sued in their official capacity.
See Ex Parte Young,
.Hudson prohibited, as a violation of the First Amendment, a labor union from using union dues for political contributions against union member's will.
. See supra note 3 and accompanying text discussing SCR 10.03(b) and State Bar Bylaws.
.
See supra
note 9 discussing
Keller.
The
Keller
decision singularly rejected the notion that the “[s]tate [b]ar, considered as a government agen
*1405
cy, may use dues for any purpose within the scope of its statutory authority,”
. In Keller the Supreme Court opined that “the guiding standard must be whether the challenged expenditures are necessarily or reasonably incurred for the purpose of regulating the legal profession or improving the quality of the legal service available to the people of the State”, which compares closely to the language from SRC 10.03(5)(b), "[t]he state bar may use compulsory dues only for activities reasonably intended for the purpose of regulating the legal , profession or improving the quality of legal services offered by members of the state bar.”
. See súpra note 3 and accompanying text.
