Opinion
This suit attacks the use of dues collected by the State Bar of California to finance lobbying, amicus curiae briefs and other activities, including election campaign activities, politically or ideologically objectionable to plaintiffs, Upon analysis of the constitutional status and legislative structure of the State Bar, we conclude that the State Bar may use dues to finance any activity, except election campaigning, which is germane to its statutory mission to promote “the improvement of the administration of justice.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6031, subd. (a).) 1
Acting pursuant to its statutory authority, the State Bar for many years has lobbied the Legislature and other governmental agencies, filed amicus curiae briefs in pending cases, held an annual conference of delegates at which issues of current interest are debated and resolutions approved, and engaged in a variety of education programs. In 1982 the State Bar publicized the inaugural speech by its new president, Anthony Murray, in which he addressed the confirmation of appellate justices in the impending election. The State Bar subsequently disseminated material on that subject to local bar associations and other organizations.
All of these activities were financed primarily from membership dues, as are all bar activities except the bar examination. The State Bar levies *1157 membership dues pursuant to statutory authority (§ 6140) subject to a maximum limit set annually by the Legislature. Every attorney engaged in active practice in California is required to be a member of the bar (§§ 6125-6126) and to pay the dues assessed; a refusal to pay results in the suspension of membership (§ 6143), which deprives the attorney of the right to practice law in California (§ 6225).
Plaintiffs contend that the activities in question constitute the advancement of political and ideological causes, and cannot constitutionally be financed from mandatory dues. This is an issue of first impression in this state. Courts of some other jurisdictions have limited the use of bar dues, but there is no consensus concerning those limits.
When we set out to analyze the issue, we are confronted immediately with two competing paradigms. The State Bar argues that we should view it as a government agency, which may use revenues from any source for any purpose within the scope of its authority. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argue that we should view the bar as a labor union or private association whose right to use dues money is restricted by constitutional principles.
We believe the governmental agency paradigm more closely fits the case of the California State Bar. Accordingly, we conclude the bar may use dues to finance all activities germane to its statutory purpose, a phrase which we construe broadly to permit the bar to comment generally upon proposed legislation or pending litigation. By analogy to governmental agencies, however, the bar may not engage in election campaigns; thus certain of the activities in connection with the 1982 election exceeded its statutory power.
I. Proceedings in This Action.
Plaintiffs, 21 members of the State Bar, filed suit against the bar and its Board of Governors. Their complaint alleged that “[t]he State Bar of California, by and through its Board of Governors, has expended and will continue to expend substantial portions of the revenues derived from . . . mandatory dues payments to advance political and ideological causes, including, but not limited to: “a. lobbying the California State Legislature on various matters . . . ;
“b. submitting briefs amicus curiae in various cases . . . ;
“c. financing meetings of the Conference of Delegates at which political and ideological causes are advanced . . . ;
“d. publicizing the political and ideological speeches of its president, Anthony M. Murray . . . ;
*1158 “e. financing a so-called ‘public information’ project designed to disseminate to the general public a particular ideology regarding judicial retention elections. . . .”
Plaintiffs then alleged that they do not subscribe to many of the political and ideological causes promoted by the bar, and object to the use of mandatory dues to advance any of the political and ideological views of the Board of Governors or the conference of delegates. They sought a declaration that defendants have violated their constitutional rights, an injunction restraining defendants from using bar dues or the name of the State Bar to advance political and ideological causes or beliefs, and an injunction compelling defendants to reimburse the bar for all funds expended for political and ideological purposes since September 12, 1982.
Plaintiffs attached a partial list of the bills which the bar has lobbied for or against, of the cases in which it has appeared as amicus curiae, and of resolutions adopted by the conference of delegates. They also attached a copy of Anthony Murray’s inaugural address when he became president of the bar on September 12, 1982, a press release describing that address, and a later press release dated October 8. (Although the complaint referred to “speeches,” the September 12 speech is apparently the only one at issue.) Finally, plaintiffs attached a copy of an educational packet entitled “The Case for an Independent Judiciary” distributed by the bar in October of 1982. The packet included a copy of Murray’s inaugural address, a resolution of the Board of Governors, a sample speech, fact sheets on crime and conviction rates, judicial retention elections, and judicial performance, and suggestions for speech fora and media coverage.
Defendants answered, admitting that they have used dues to finance all of the described activities, but maintaining that such expenditures did not violate plaintiffs’ rights. 2 Defendants then moved for summary judgment or adjudication of issues. In support, they submitted declarations which described the bar’s legislative and amicus curiae program and asserted that the bar usually acted only in matters which affect the bar itself, the attorney-client relationship, or the administration of justice. In lobbying or filing amicus curiae briefs the bar’s representatives purport to act only on behalf of the State Bar, and not to represent the views of each of its members. Plaintiffs filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, but submitted no declarations.
The trial court granted summary judgment for defendants, finding that the State Bar was a governmental agency authorized to do the acts in *1159 question. The court further found that the plaintiffs had failed to show that the individual defendants acted without due care or in bad faith.
The Court of Appeal reversed. The majority opinion by Justice Sparks divided State Bar activities into two categories. The first, regulatory activities, included the testing and admission of bar applicants and the disciplining of members. These activities, the Court of Appeal said, were akin to those of a governmental agency. The bar’s administration-of-justice function—a function which included all the activities here challenged—it found akin to the actions of a labor union. Such action it held, could be financed from mandatory dues only if the particular action in question served a state interest important enough to overcome the interference with dissenters’ First Amendment rights. 3 4 Each lobbying activity, it said, and each amicus curiae brief, would have to be examined, with the State Bar bearing the burden to justify its action.
The Court of Appeal further held that the Murray speech and educational packet constituted election campaigning unauthorized by statute. It further found that the Board of Governors’ approval of such unauthorized expenditures may subject its members to personal liability, and raised a triable issue concerning their good faith and exercise of due care. We granted the defendants’ petition for review.
II. Structure and Function of the State Bar *
Although the parties submitted much documentation in support of and in opposition to the respective motions, there is no real factual dispute about the State Bar and its activities. As we recently recounted, “[i]n 1927, the Legislature adopted the State Bar Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6000 et seq.) establishing ‘what is known as an “integrated” bar, i.e., an organization of members of the legal profession of the state with a large measure of self-government, performing such functions as examining applicants for admission, formulating rules of professional conduct, disciplining members for misconduct, preventing unlawful practice of the law, and engaging in study and recommendation of changes in procedural law and improvement of the administration of justice.’ (1 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (1970 ed.) Attorneys, § 157, p. 168.)”
(Saleeby
v.
State Bar
(1985)
In addition to these powers, the board is empowered to “aid in all matters pertaining to the advancement of the science of jurisprudence or to the improvement of the administration of justice. . . .” (§ 6031, subd. (a).)
6
This has been called the “laudable general purpose of the [State Bar] act.”
(Herron
v.
The State Bar
(1931)
To carry out its functions, the State Bar is governed by a Board of Governors of 22 members, 16 of whom are members of the State Bar and 6 of whom are nonattorneys appointed by the Governor of the state with approval of the Senate. (§§ 6010, 6011, 6013.5.) Fifteen of the attorney members of the board are elected by the members of the State Bar from geographical areas established by the Legislature, and one member is elected by the board of directors of the California Young Lawyers Association. (§§ 6012, 6013, 6013.4.) The board elects the officers of the State Bar. (§§ 6021-6024.) The State Bar has established a conference of delegates, which consists of representatives of voluntary local and special bar associations. The conference meets once a year to consider proposals, many of which are intended for legislative action. The board has also established committees or sections open to members of the bar interested in particular areas of the law and which advise the board in those areas.
The bar employs attorneys who represent it in disciplinary actions and other litigation, including the present case. On direction of the Board of Governors, the attorneys file briefs amicus curiae in litigation affecting the bar or its members. The bar also employs lobbyists to present the position of the board to the Legislature and state agencies.
III. The State Bar, for the Purpose of Expenditure of Dues, Is Analogous to a Governmental Agency.
The issue we face today came before the United States Supreme Court in
Lathrop
v.
Donohue
(1961)
Consequently the treatment of bar dues remains an unsettled question. We recognize certain similarities between the bar and a labor union which would support imposing upon the bar those restrictions which limit union expenditures. The bar is an association composed of members of a particular profession. It is governed by a board, the majority of whom are elected by the members. It holds annual meetings. Although much of its activity is done to promote the public interest, it also regularly acts on behalf of the special interest of its members.
The California Constitution, statutes, and judicial decisions, however, appear to envision the bar as a governmental agency. The State Bar Act of 1927, codified in sections 6000-6087, provides in section 6001 that “[t]he State Bar of California is a public corporation.” This declaration attained constitutional status with the enactment in 1966 of article VI, section 9 of the state Constitution, which asserts that “[t]he State Bar of California is a public corporation. Every person admitted and licensed to practice law in this State is and shall be a member of the State Bar except while holding office as a judge of a court of record.”
What is a “public corporation”? When the State Bar Act was enacted in 1927, this term was defined by a statute, since repealed: a public corporation is one “formed or organized for the government of a portion of the state.” (Former Civ. Code, § 284.) Construing that statute, a 1917 decision said that “[p]ublic corporations . . . are those corporations formed for political and governmental purposes and vested with political and governmental powers.”
(Bettencourt
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(1917)
In
State Bar of California
v.
Superior Court
(1929)
It was further argued in
State Bar of California
v.
Superior Court, supra,
This decision does not answer the question whether a public corporation is necessarily a governmental agency. But it is significant that all other public corporations in California—water districts, school districts, reclamation districts, etc.—are clearly considered governmental entities. Conversely, no labor union or professional association is classified as a public corporation.
Apart from its denomination as a public corporation, other aspects of the bar show its governmental nature. The Board of Governors includes six public members appointed by the Governor, who are not members of the bar. (§ 6013.5.) The presence of “consumer representatives” on state regulatory boards is a common phenomenon, but no law permits the Governor to appoint nonmembers as officers of a labor union or private association. Section 6008 declares that “[a]ll property of the State Bar is hereby declared to be held for essential public and governmental purposes” and is exempt from taxation. Section 6026.5 requires public meetings; a similar requirement applies to governmental regulatory boards but not to unions or private
*1164
associations. Section 6001, subdivision (g) states that “[n]o law of this State restricting, or prescribing a mode of procedure for the exercise of powers of state public bodies or state agencies . . . shall be applicable to the State Bar, unless the Legislature expressly so declares”—an unnecessary enactment unless laws governing the exercise of powers of state public bodies or state agencies would otherwise apply to the bar. In
Chronicle Pub. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1960)
A recent amendment to section 6031 further indicates that the Legislature views the bar as a governmental agency. Subdivision (b), added by the amendment, provides that “the board [of governors] shall not conduct or participate in, or authorize any committee, agency, employee, or commission of the State Bar to conduct or participate in any evaluation, review, or report on the qualifications, integrity, diligence, or judicial ability of any specific justice [of an appellate court] . . . without prior review and statutory authorization by the Legislature.” If the State Bar is considered a private association, the constitutionality of this statute is suspect. It is a content-defined prohibition of a particular form of political speech by a named organization, imposed, apparently, because the Legislature objected to bar attempts to influence the voters. It would be difficult to justify a prohibition on political speech by a private association, especially one enacted because the speaker is thought too knowledgeable and influential with the voters. If the bar is thought of as a governmental agency, on the other hand, section 6031, subdivision (b), merely defines the scope of authority of the agency, and raises no constitutional question.
As we noted earlier, the Court of Appeal divided the State Bar’s function into two parts. It held that in regulating the admission of members to the bar, and disciplining current members, the bar performed a govern *1165 mental function, but in all other activities it was analogous to a private association. We reject this holding on two grounds. The first is simply that the reason we view the bar as analogous to a governmental agency is not only that it performs a governmental function, but that the state Constitution, statutes, and court decisions treat it as a governmental agency. Those enactments and decisions do not differentiate according to the specific activity performed by the bar. Thus the bar is a public corporation, whether it is disciplining members or filing amicus curiae briefs; it is exempt from taxation and immune from tort liability both when examining applicants for admission and when lobbying the Legislature. Its stature under the California Constitution, its structure, and its government are the same for all its functions. We conclude that however classified, it must be regarded as a single entity.
Second, the Court of Appeal’s dichotomy, viewing lobbying and amicus curiae activity as that of a private association, would frustrate the legislative purpose underlying the bar’s authority to promote the administration of justice. Under the Court of Appeal’s view, whenever the bar proposed to advise the Legislature or the courts of its views on a matter, it would first have to engage in the three-step analysis set out in
Ellis
v.
Railway Clerks
(1984)
Such a procedure would be an extraordinary burden. Hundreds of bills come before each legislative session; cases affecting the administration of *1166 justice arise frequently. Bar action, to be effective, must take place before the legislative session ends or the case is submitted. The bar has neither time nor money to undertake a bill-by-bill, case-by-case Ellis analysis, nor can it accept the risk of litigation every time it decides to lobby a bill or brief a case. 12 Thus the likely result of the Court of Appeal’s approach would be to deter the bar from conducting any lobbying or filing any amicus curiae briefs. If those activities promote the administration of justice by providing the Legislature and the courts with expert legal assistance, as we believe, an approach which would deter all lobbying and amicus curiae activity would frustrate the state interest underlying the establishment of an integrated bar.
Furthermore, the one area where the Legislature has indicated displeasure with the bar’s activity concerns election campaigning. Yet if the bar is viewed as a private association, it would have a constitutional right to participate fully in political campaigns. (See
Abood
v.
Detroit Board of Education, supra,
We recognize that most of the cases from other jurisdictions which have addressed the subject of integrated bar dues have applied the labor union analogy to the bar.
(Gibson
v.
The Florida Bar
(11th Cir. 1986)
IV. The Consequences of Viewing the State Bar as a Governmental Agency.
If the bar is considered a governmental agency, then the distinction between revenue derived from mandatory dues and revenue from other sources is immaterial. A governmental agency may use unrestricted revenue, whether derived from taxes, dues, fees, tolls, tuition, donation, or other sources, for any purposes within its authority.
*1168
Two Court of Appeal decisions illustrate the point. In
Erzinger
v.
Regents of University of California
(1982)
In
Miller
v.
California Com. on Status of Women
(1984)
We conclude that the State Bar, considered as a government agency, may use dues for any purpose within the scope of its statutory authority. The concurring and dissenting opinion disputes this conclusion, arguing *1169 that even if the bar is a governmental agency its use of dues should be subject to restrictions hitherto imposed only on labor unions and other private associations. But no precedent supports the imposition of such restrictions on a governmental agency. Moreover, as we have previously explained (ante, pp. 1165-1166), applying the labor union test to the bar would impose upon the bar the massive burden of analyzing all proposed activities under vague and uncertain standards designed for organizations of quite different purpose and structure, and would probably discourage the bar from carrying out its statutory functions. 19
Having decided that the bar may use dues for any authorized purpose, we next inquire into the scope of its authority. As previously noted, section 6031, subdivision (a) authorizes the bar to “aid in all matters pertaining to the advancement of the science of jurisprudence or to the improvement of the administration of justice.” In the context of lobbying and amicus curiae activities, this language should be read broadly. Laws are the business of lawyers. The drafting of a proposed law, the understanding of the relationship between that law and existing legislation, and the appreciation of the practical impact of the proposed legislation are matters which often require expert legal knowledge and judgment. Whatever the subject of the proposed law, it is likely that among the members of the State Bar are some with the needed expertise, whose collective advice can lead to significant improvements in the legislative proposal. “The state has a valid interest in drawing upon [lawyers’] training and experience in order to promote improvements in the administration of justice and to advance jurisprudence. The better attuned the legal machinery is to the public’s needs of health, safety, and welfare, the better the state will be able to perform its job of protecting and serving the public. The input and feedback on proposed legislation and court rules is invaluable to the state in fine-tuning its legislative and judicial systems.”
(Falk I, supra,
Thus we do not distinguish between proposed legislation of substantive character and that which aims only at procedural changes. Substantive legislation has procedural effects, as, for example, when a change in tort law affects the number of cases settled and the number going to trial. And even if the proposed bill seems at first glance to relate entirely to substantive *1170 matters unrelated to the practice of law, the advice of expert practitioners could still be crucial; an example might be a bill concerning community property which has consequences, unforeseen by its author, upon estate planning or federal tax liability.
We conclude that a bill-by-bill, case-by-case, review of bar lobbying and amicus curiae briefs is unnecessary and unworkable. We do not impose such scrutiny on lobbying and litigating by other governmental agencies. The Legislature is well aware of the bar’s activities, and that the bar’s authority for those activities derives from section 6031. Knowing these matters, the Legislature has annually approved bar dues, some of which go to support lobbying and amicus curiae briefs, and has amended section 6031 to prohibit one specific activity—the rating of appellate judges. We infer that the Legislature essentially approves a broad construction of the statute which would permit the bar’s existing activities.
Holding a conference of delegates also falls within the bar’s authority. (Cf.
Ellis
v.
Railway Clerks, supra,
The bar’s actions in connection with the 1982 election present a different issue. We have no doubt that the bar’s actions related to the administration of justice. Indeed few matters bear as directly upon the administration of justice as the standards for the appointment and retention of judges. In
Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
We recognized that “[frequently . . . the line between unauthorized campaign expenditures and authorized informational activities is not so clear. ... In such cases, the determination of the propriety or impropriety of the expenditure depends upon a careful consideration of such factors as
*1171
the style, tenor and timing of the publication; no hard and fast rule governs every case.” (
The present case is one of those we anticipated in
Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
The educational packet, sent to local bar associations and other interested groups, contained Murray’s speech, a sample speech entitled “The Case for an Independent Judiciary” (a quite restrained and philosophical exposi *1172 tion), sample letters to organizations which might provide a speech forum, and a sample press release. It also included fact sheets on crime and conviction rates, judicial selection and retention, and judicial performance and removal criteria. It concluded with quotations concerning judicial independence from Hamilton, Madison, Jefferson, and others. 23
The bar may properly act to promote the independence of the judiciary; such conduct falls clearly within its statutory charge to advance the science of jurisprudence and improve the administration of justice. In the present case, however, the nature and timing of the 1982 publication (see
Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
In view of the absence of any prior authority in California construing section 6031, and the obvious difficulty of the issue, we cannot fairly hold the governors personally liable for the 1982 expenditures. The bar has long been concerned with promoting and defending the independence of the judiciary. It formally endorsed the initiative which established the present system of judicial retention elections in place of partisan elections.
24
It has frequently debated and proposed measures for merit selection and life tenure for judges. As we noted earlier, it is charged with an ethical obligation to defend the judiciary from unfair attack. (See fn. 21,
ante.)
Under these circumstances, we conclude as a matter of law that the Board of Governors
*1173
could reasonably believe that it had the authority to take action in opposition to what it perceived to be an attack on an independent judiciary. Under
Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
V. Conclusion.
In light of the structure of the California State Bar, as imposed in the state Constitution, statutes, and court decisions, we conclude that the activities of the bar should be governed by the standards applicable to governmental agencies. Thus lobbying, amicus curiae briefs, and the annual conference of delegates can be financed through dues as presently done. The bar, however, may not engage in election campaigning; its activities in publicizing Murray’s 1982 speech and distributing the educational packet violated that prohibition. In light of past uncertainty concerning the scope of the bar’s authority, however, we hold that the governors are not personally liable for the unauthorized expenditures.
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Mosk, J., Arguelles, J., and White (Clinton W.), J., * concurred.
I concur in the majority’s conclusions that the State Bar is precluded from engaging in election campaigning and that the bar’s publication of President-elect Anthony Murray’s 1982 speech and distribution of the educational package violated that prohibition. I further concur in the majority’s holding that the bar governors are not personally liable for reimbursement of the unauthorized electioneering expenditures. I respectfully dissent, however, from its holding that, because of the State Bar’s status as a governmental agency, its expenditure of objecting members’ mandatory dues for political or ideological causes is lawful and exempt from constitutional scrutiny.
Discussion
The majority opinion considers the California State Bar to be “best described as analogous to a governmental agency.” If viewed as a governmental agency, the majority declares, the bar is not subject to First Amendment constraints when spending its objecting members’ mandatory dues because a governmental agency may expend tax revenues to perform its statutory duties without restrictions and “the distinction between revenue derived *1174 from mandatory dues and revenue from other sources is immaterial.” (Maj. opn. at p. 1167.) Therefore, the majority concludes, the bar may properly spend funds for “all matters pertaining to the advancement of the administration of justice,” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6031, subd. (a)), which it defines expansively as virtually anything having to do with law, except electioneering.
While it correctly characterizes the State Bar as a governmental agency, the majority opinion is incorrect in concluding that because the State Bar is a governmental agency its expenditure of objecting members’ dues is exempt from First Amendment scrutiny. That error is grounded in the majority’s failure to recognize the significance of a crucial fact: The California State Bar derives its funds from membership dues which all attorneys, and only attorneys, in California are required by law to pay as a condition precedent to pursuing their livelihood—the practice of law—in the state. It is this fact—compelled membership in a professional association with mandatory dues as a condition to practice the profession of law—that subjects the State Bar to the constitutional scrutiny from which most other governmental agencies may be exempt. In an unbroken line of cases, the United States Supreme Court has held that, when a state compels membership in an association as a condition precedent to earning a livelihood, the association’s objecting members’ First Amendment rights are infringed by its expenditure of mandatory membership dues for philosophical, political or ideological causes.
Resistance to coerced association and intolerance of government-enforced support of philosophical, religious, political or ideological causes animated the founding of our nation and the drafting of its Constitution. Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1779 “that to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves is sinful and tyrannical.” (Brant, James Madison: The Nationalist (1948) p. 354.) Madison warned that “the same authority which can force a citizen to contribute three pence only of his property for the support of any one establishment, may force him to conform to any other establishment in all cases . . . .” (II Writings of James Madison (Hunt ed. 1901) p. 186.)
These principles have guided the United States Supreme Court’s First Amendment jurisprudence. “If an association is compelled, the individual should not ... be required to finance the promotion of causes with which he disagrees.”
(Machinists
v.
Street
(1961)
The United States Supreme Court has thus steadfastly invalidated coerced association to the extent it enforces financial support of political and ideological causes to which a member objects. In a series of decisions, the court has prohibited unions from expending the mandatory dues of objecting members for such causes not sufficiently related to the governmental interests justifying coerced association.
(Ellis, supra,
In this connection it is essential to keep in mind that except as to expenditures for electioneering, the principal question in this case is not whether the State Bar may lawfully make the expenditures at issue, but whether in doing so it may utilize the compulsory dues of objecting members and thereby compel those members to support causes they oppose. Simply concluding, as the majority does, that the State Bar is authorized to make the expenditures to which plaintiffs object does not resolve the constitutional question of whether plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights are infringed by the expenditure of their compulsory dues for political and ideological activities to which they object.
*1176 I. Expenditure of Dues for Political and Ideological Activities Violates the First Amendment
A. Historical Origins
In
Railway Employes' Dept.
v.
Hanson
(1956)
Just such a challenge was presented in
Machinists
v.
Street, supra,
*1177 B. The Court’s Consideration of Integrated Bar Associations
In a companion case to
Street, supra,
The United States Supreme Court concluded that by integrating the bar the Wisconsin Legislature and Supreme Court had advanced the public interest “ ‘by maintaining high standards of conduct in the legal profession and by aiding in the efficient administration of justice’ ”
(Lathrop, supra,
at pp. 831-832 [
First, it is significant that the court considered the
regulatory
function of the Wisconsin State Bar to be the primary justification for the compulsory membership requirement. (See Schneyer,
The Incoherence of the Unified Bar Concept: Generalizing from the Wisconsin Case
(1983) Am. B. Found. Res. J. 1, 54-55 [“Basically, Brennan saw the state bar as a public agency created to fund and administer regulatory or governmental programs.”].) Second, the court employed language reminiscent of its commerce clause decisions. This suggests that the state’s regulatory or police power, similar in scope to Congress’ commerce clause power (see
ante,
fn. 2), was the actual source of authority underlying integration of the bar. (Accord
Herron
v.
State Bar
(1944)
The court managed to avoid the plaintiff’s claim that the bar’s use of his mandatory dues to support political activities violated the First Amendment by finding the record insufficiently developed in this regard.
(Lathrop, supra,
Thus, at the very least,
Lathrop, supra,
The majority in this case avoids the constitutional issue by labeling the State Bar as a “governmental agency,” and concluding that a “governmental agency may use
unrestricted
revenue ... for any purposes within its authority.” (Maj. opn, at p. 1167, italics added.) What the majority fails to recognize, however, is that under federal constitutional law the use of objecting members’ mandatory dues for political or ideological purposes is
not unrestricted. Abood, supra,
Further, the majority’s effort to distinguish the California State Bar from the integrated bars of other states, including Wisconsin, whose courts have uniformly applied the
Abood
holding to analyze the question of use of mandatory bar dues (see
post,
pp. 1180-1181), is unpersuasive. Simply saying that none of these states’ bars “rest upon a constitutional and statutory structure comparable to that of the California State Bar” does not explain why such a distinction renders the California State Bar immune from the First Amendment constraints, while the Wisconsin Bar is not. The United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Lathrop, supra,
C. The Constitutional Issue
In
Abood,
the United States Supreme Court first addressed the constitutional issues raised when a union, or, as I would hold, an integrated state bar, spends objecting members’ dues for political or ideological purposes. Because the freedom to associate for the purpose of advancing ideas and beliefs is protected by the First Amendment, the court reasoned that “contributing to an organization for the purpose of spreading a political message is protected by the First Amendment.”
(Abood, supra,
Thus,
Abood
holds that the First Amendment prohibits the state from coercing an individual, by threatening the loss of his livelihood, to financially support ideological or political causes to which he objects.
(Abood, supra,
Thus, when the State Bar spends a portion of compulsory membership dues on political or ideological causes rather than on regulatory functions, the identical First Amendment concerns which faced the United States Supreme Court in
Abood, supra,
I would join the jurisdictions that apply Abood’’s constitutional analysis. Indeed, as the cited decisions clearly demonstrate, federal constitutional law compels that analysis. As I explain in the next section, simply labeling the State Bar as a “governmental agency” does not, the majority to the contrary notwithstanding, exempt this case from First Amendment analysis.
II. Governmental Expenditure of Mandatory Dues Is Not Equivalent to Governmental Expenditure of Taxes
The majority errs further in broadly stating—without benefit of authority—that a “governmental agency may use unrestricted revenue, whether derived from taxes, dues, fees, tolls, tuition, donation, or other sources, for any purposes within its authority.” (Maj. opn. at p. 1167.) I agree that such a rule would apply to revenue derived from general taxes. It is well established that taxpayers may be required to financially support governmental programs and messages to which they are ideologically or conscientiously opposed. (See, e.g.,
Graves
v.
Commissioner
(6th Cir. 1978)
*1182
Similarly, I perceive no First Amendment violation in the expenditure of revenues from license fees for purposes substantially related to regulation of the particular profession or industry. Indeed, this court has validated the State Bar Act “as a regulatory measure under the police power . . . and . . . held that the reasonable expenses necessary to pay the costs of enforcement of the act. . . may be imposed upon the membership in the form of fees or dues. [Citations.]”
(Herron
v.
State Bar, supra,
We face a far different situation, however, when we consider the expenditure by a state agency of dues paid by a small and limited segment of the public, imposed as a condition precedent to the exercise of a profession, and expended for purposes not related to regulation of the profession. The Court of Appeal decisions to which the majority points do not support its conclusion that the source of revenue is “immaterial” to a determination of the propriety of its expenditure. To the contrary, when the revenue in question is derived from mandatory dues as a condition precedent to the practice of a profession, the ends to which the money is devoted are highly material.
In
Miller
v.
California Com. on Status of Women
(1984)
The other decision to which the majority refers,
Erzinger
v.
Regents of University of California
(1982)
The students in Erzinger charged the University was interfering with their right to free exercise of religion, not their speech and associational rights. Unlike plaintiffs here, the Erzinger plaintiffs were not compelled to become members in an association, the threshold event which triggers First Amendment scrutiny of governmental action for violation of the constitutionally protected speech and associational rights. (See ante, p. 1180.) Furthermore, the registration fees at issue in Erzinger were used strictly to finance health care within the paying group, as compared to the instant case where the State Bar fees at issue are allegedly used in part to promote political and ideological causes of concern to the general public.
Moreover, a student denied admission for failure to pay registration fees has more options, and is injured far less, than an attorney denied the right to practice law for failure to pay bar dues. It is obviously a greater hardship for the attorney to move to a different state and qualify there for admission to practice than it is for a student to enroll in a different college or university. Consistent with this distinction, courts have recognized that the pursuit of one’s livelihood, be it the practice of law or some other profession, is a fundamental right.
(Supreme Court of New Hampshire
v.
Piper
(1985)
Further, the purported analogy between taxes and mandatory dues has been questioned, and rejected, by courts and commentators alike. In
Young Americans for Freedom
v.
Gorton
(1978)
Federal courts, in considering constitutional challenges to the use of integrated bar membership dues for political activities, have consistently rejected the claim that they have no jurisdiction by operation of statutes that prevent the federal courts from considering questions concerning the proper use of state taxes.
(Levine
v.
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
(W.D.Wis. 1988)
In Abood, supra,
Commentators have offered various reasons to distinguish taxes from mandatory dues for First Amendment purposes. Some have suggested that, as a practical matter, the sheer number of taxpayers and the complexity of government financing preclude making the Abood analysis applicable to objecting taxpayers. (Cantor, Forced Payments to Service Institutions and Constitutional Interests in Ideological Non-Association (1983) 36 Rutgers L.Rev. 3, 24, fn. 125 [citing United States v. Lee, supra, 455 U.S. at pp. 259-261 (71 L.Ed.2d at pp. 133-135)].) Others explain the distinction by arguing that the impact on objecting taxpayers from government “ideological” expenditures is less intrusive than the impact of controversial expenditures on dissenting union fees payors. (Tribe, American Constitutional Law (2d ed. 1988) § 12-4, fn. 14, p. 808.)
Whether or not one finds these arguments persuasive, one point is clear; a majority of the justices in
Lathrop
v.
Donohue, supra,
*1185
The majority engages in pure sophistry when it states that “no precedent supports the imposition of such [First Amendment] restrictions on a governmental agency.” (Maj. opn. at p. 1169.) What the majority refuses to recognize is that most of the cases involving constitutional challenges to, and limitations on, the use of mandatory bar dues involved
governmental
agencies—state bar associations. (See, e.g.,
Schneider
v.
Colegio de Abogados de P.R., supra,
Indeed, while the majority agrees that “all
Lathrop
decided was that the
constitutional issues
concerning the use of bar dues
should be decided-,
it did not decide those issues” (maj. opn. at p. 1162, italics added [citing
Abood, supra,
Moreover, other jurisdictions have recognized that the First Amendment constrains governmental agencies which compel membership. In
Good
v.
Associated Students of Univ. of Washington
(1975)
Thus, the majority’s assertion that subjecting governmental agencies to First Amendment restrictions is unprecedented does not withstand scrutiny. On the contrary, the weight of authority supports the view that when a state requires membership in a governmental entity, the authorized use of compelled dues for political or ideological purposes to which its members object is subject to constitutional constraints. 8
The issue left unresolved by
Lathrop,
whether the First Amendment is violated by the State Bar’s use of mandatory dues for political or ideological causes to which some members object, has subsequently been addressed by analogy in the United States Supreme Court’s union decisions. (See
Ellis, supra,
*1187 III. The Constitutionality of Expending Objecting Members’ Dues for Political and Ideological Causes
A. The Constitutional Standard
A threshold issue precedent to any First Amendment analysis is whether the State Bar is legally authorized to make the expenditures to which plaintiffs object. Indeed, if the objectionable expenditures are precluded by statute or decisional law, there is no need for further inquiry. (Ellis, supra, 466 U.S. at pp. 444-445 [80 L.Ed.2d at pp. 439-440].)
The State Bar is, as the majority point out, statutorily authorized to expend funds for a broad range of activities.
9
(See maj. opn.,
ante,
at p. 1169.) Howéver, it is only if, or when, an expenditure
is authorized
by law that we are required to analyze the constitutionality of the expenditure of objecting members’ mandatory dues under the First Amendment.
(Ellis, supra,
466 U.S. at p.447 [
The majority has properly identified
Ellis
v.
Railway Clerks, supra,
First, it must be determined whether the activity is “germane” to the purpose which justified compulsory membership in the bar in the first place. (
If an expenditure serves the state’s interest in the delivery of quality legal services to the public and the improvement of the legal profession, the second step of the
Ellis
analysis requires that we determine “whether these expenses involve additional interference with the First Amendment interests of objecting employees . . . .” (
Thus, if a bar activity impinges upon First Amendment interests beyond the interference inherent in compulsory membership in the first instance, the bar must identify a governmental interest that justifies such additional interference. For example, the investigation of charges of attorney misconduct or the administration of the bar examination do not appear to interfere with members’ First Amendment interests. Lobbying the Legislature for approval of the bar’s proposed budget, however, would seem to implicate bar members’ First Amendment rights. Nonetheless, such activity would appear justified by the governmental purposes underlying the requirement of compulsory membership in the State Bar. Without an adequate budget, the bar would be unable to conduct activities designed to advance the delivery of quality legal services to the public and to improve the legal profession.
I do not suggest the governmental interest that may justify additional interference with objecting bar members’ First Amendment rights is
limited
to advancing the delivery of quality legal services or to improving the legal profession. As the majority suggests, in some circumstances the state’s interest “ ‘in drawing upon [lawyers’] training and experience’ ” may adequately justify additional infringement of bar members’ First Amendment rights. (See maj. opn.,
ante,
at p. 1169 [quoting
Falk I, supra,
*1189 B. Applying the Standard to the Present Case
In seeking declaratory relief, plaintiffs challenge the State Bar’s expenditure of objecting members’ dues to fund the cost of lobbying the Legislature, filing briefs amicus curiae, holding conventions of the State Bar Conference of Delegates, disseminating the speeches of its then president-elect and conducting a public information program concerning the election of justices.
Because this matter comes to us on summary judgment, the record is not sufficiently developed to apply the constitutional standard to most of the expenditures plaintiffs challenge. Thus, I shall undertake to discuss only the constitutional parameters within which the objectionable activities should be analyzed.
1. Lobbying and Litigation Activities
The constitutionality of the bar’s expenditure of objecting members’ dues to fund the cost of lobbying the Legislature or filing amicus curiae briefs cannot be determined in the abstract. The trial court would first have to determine whether the lobbying or litigation activity of which plaintiffs complain serves the governmental interest in advancing the delivery of quality legal services to the public or improving the legal profession. If so, the court would then determine whether the challenged activity involves interference with First Amendment rights beyond that occasioned by compulsory bar membership itself. If it does, the State Bar would have the burden
(see Railway Clerks
v.
Allen
(1963)
2. Conference of Delegates
There can be little doubt that some conference activities serve the state’s interest in advancing the delivery of quality legal services to the public or in improving the legal profession. It also seems possible that some conference activities do not additionally infringe objecting members’ First Amendment rights beyond the infringement inherent in compelled membership.
It appears likely, however, that expenditures for some conference activities would be found to impinge additionally upon objecting members’ First Amendment rights. As to these expenditures, the bar would have the opportunity to identify a governmental interest justifying the expenditure. The record before us is insufficient to make this determination. Further, the trial *1190 court made no such determination and it would be the trial court’s function in the first instance to do so. Thus, it would remain to the trial court to determine upon sufficient evidence whether any of plaintiffs’ dues was expended in violation of their First Amendment rights.
3. Bar Officers’ Speeches and Public Information Programs
Plaintiffs do not object to publication of bar officers’ speeches or public information programs in general. Generally, insofar as publication of speeches or information programs serves the state’s interest in advancing the delivery of quality legal services to the public or improving the legal profession, the bar may fund such activities with objecting members’ mandatory dues. If such activities do serve these interests, the court would have to determine whether the challenged expenditures interfere with objecting members’ First Amendment rights beyond the interference inherent in compulsory bar membership. If they do, the court would then determine if the challenged expenditures are nonetheless justified by some other sufficient governmental interest.
I do agree, however, with the majority that President-elect Anthony Murray’s speech and the public education materials, by virtue of their content and timing, constituted the adoption of a specific position in a public election. Consequently, I agree that, as a matter of law, such election activities were not legally authorized expenditures under our decision in
Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
IV. Remedies, Reimbursement and Procedure
A. Declaratory and Injunctive Relief
To the extent that plaintiffs could, within the purview of their pleadings, establish in further proceedings that the State Bar has used mandatory membership dues of objecting members in excess of its legal authority to expend funds, or in violation of the First Amendment principles I have discussed, plaintiffs should be entitled to the declaratory relief they seek.
To the extent that they have established or could establish that funds were spent in excess of governing legal authority, they should also be entitled to injunctive relief to prevent such expenditures in the future.
(Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
*1191 B. Reimbursement
Plaintiffs have requested no monetary relief from the State Bar itself. 11 The only monetary relief plaintiffs have requested is for “an injunction [or writ of mandate to] issue compelling respondent and defendant members of the Board of Governors to reimburse the Treasury of the State Bar of California for all State Bar funds” wrongly expended. The State Bar, however, has not sought reimbursement from defendant governors and the authority of plaintiffs to seek reimbursement on the bar’s behalf is dubious at best, as evidenced by plaintiffs’ failure to assert any such authority. In any event, I agree with the majority that the governors cannot be held personally liable for reimbursement to the State Bar in view of the historical practices of the bar and in the absence of any record showing the governors knew any expenditures were unauthorized or failed to exercise “reasonable diligence” in authorizing the subject expenditures. (Stanson v. Mott, supra, 17 Cal.3d at pp. 226-227.)
C. Constitutionally Mandated Procedure
As to expenditures in violation of the First Amendment, the Constitution requires the bar to adopt procedures to allow members to identify the expenditures to which they may legitimately object and to prevent the bar from utilizing objecting members’ dues for such purposes.
(Hudson, supra,
475 U.S. at pp. 302-303 [89 L.Ed.2d at pp. 244-245, 106 S.Ct. at pp. 1073-1074];
Abood, supra,
The majority has described such a procedure as “an extraordinary burden.” (Maj. opn.,
ante,
at p. 1165.) The procedure the majority envisions would require the bar, “whenever [it] proposed to advise the Legislature or the courts of its views on a matter, [to] first. . . engage in the three-step analysis set out in
Ellis
v.
Railway Clerks
(1984)
As
Hudson, supra,
Therefore, ¿ontrary to the majority’s assumption, the State Bar would not have to perform the three-step
Ellis
analysis prior to each instance in which it seeks to advise the Legislature or the courts of its view on a matter. Instead, according to
Hudson, supra,
While such a procedure would likely result in some additional administrative burden to the bar and perhaps prove at times to be somewhat inconvenient, such additional burden or inconvenience is hardly sufficient to justify contravention of the constitutional mandate. It is noteworthy that unions representing government employees have developed, and have operated successfully within the parameters of,
Abood
procedures for over a decade.
12
(See Morris, The Developing Labor Law (2d ed. 1983) ch. 29, p. 1417.) Indeed, the Michigan State Bar has operated under a modified
Abood
procedure since 1985. (Admin. Order No. 1985-1 (1985)
*1193 V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, with the exception of the cause asserting the governors’ personal liability to reimburse the State Bar for expenditures made in violation of
Stanson
v.
Mott, supra,
Panelli, J., and Agliano, (Nat A.), J., * concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all California statutory citations are to the Business and Professions Code.
Defendant Phyllis Hix answered separately, asserting only the defense of failure to state a cause of action. She is not involved in this appeal.
Justice Puglia, concurring, maintained that the bar must prove that financing such activities from mandatory dues served a compelling state interest that cannot be achieved by less restrictive means.
The discussion in this section is adapted from the Court of Appeal opinion of Justice Sparks.
“An integrated bar is a compulsory association of attorneys that conditions the practice of law in a particular state upon membership and mandatory dues payments." (Note, First *1160 Amendment Proscriptions on the Integrated Bar: Lathrop v. Donohue Re-Examined (1980) 22 Ariz. L. Rev. 939, 941, fn. omitted.) It is to be distinguished from a voluntary bar association in which membership is optional with the lawyers of the state. (See Winters, Bar Association Organization and Activities (1954) p. 1.)
The board is also authorized by that subdivision to aid in “all matters that may advance the professional interests of the members of the State Bar and such matters as concern the relations of the bar with the public.”
The parties and the court appeared to assume that “a portion of the state” meant a geographical portion. One amicus curiae in the present case, however, contends that “portion” can be defined in other ways, and that the State Bar does govern a portion of the state, namely the attorneys of California in the practice of their profession.
These are districts which perform services for landowners within a geographic area. Although their structures vary (many having been created by special statute), generally they are governed by an elected board. The electors may consist of all residents, or of landowners, and the latter may vote in proportion to the value of their holdings. Such districts generally have the power to levy taxes.
School districts represent another type of nonmunicipal public corporation.
Former Code of Civil Procedure section 1881, subdivision 5, provided that “[a] public officer cannot be examined as to communications made to him in official confidence, when the public interest would suffer by the disclosure.” This statute has been superseded by Evidence Code sections 1040-1042.
The tort claims act applies to “public entities,” defined as including “the State, the Regents of the University of California, a county, city, district, public authority, public agency, and any other political subdivision or public corporation in the State.” The Law Revision Commission Comment states that “[t]his definition is intended to include every kind of independent political or governmental entity in the state.”
Serious conceptual difficulties arise in applying this three-step analysis to the State Bar. The first step asks whether an activity is germane to the purpose of compulsory membership. We know the functions of the State Bar—they are set out in statute—but the concurring and dissenting opinion impliedly suggests that the purpose of compulsory membership may be a more limited one, the delivery of quality legal services and the improvement of the legal profession. (Post, pp. 1185-1186.) It does not explain this distinction.
The second step inquires whether the activity imposes a burden on First Amendment rights additional to that imposed by compulsory membership. The cases, however, do not elucidate which uses of dues impose burdens subsumed in compulsory membership, and which impose additional burdens.
The last step examines whether there is a state interest sufficient to justify the additional burden on objectors’ rights. We have no guidance on what interest will meet this criterion: the Michigan Supreme Court, which considered this matter twice, was unable to reach agreement.
(Falk
v.
State Bar of Michigan
(1981)
The situation is not analogous to a labor union, which serves a much more limited function and constituency. The function of the bar is not limited to promoting the self-interest of its members, but extends to promoting the improved administration of justice. Thus the bar is properly concerned with legislation other than just that which affect the earnings and working conditions of attorneys.
The bar as a private association would be subject to limitations on what election activities it could finance from dues. (Cf.
Ellis
v.
Railway Clerks, supra,
The one exception is
Sams
v.
Olah
(1969)
Only one of these cases gives any reason for applying the labor union paradigm to an integrated bar instead of viewing it as a governmental agency.
Gibson
v.
The Florida Bar, supra,
We find the argument unpersuasive. A city government is representative of a segment of the state’s population which, by reason of geography, shares common interests; a bar association is representative of a segment which, by reason of career, shares common interests. Each, we think, is a governmental agency, which to fulfill its statutory function must be able to spend money on controversial matters.
In
Lathrop
v.
Donohue, supra,
Section 8246 provides in subdivision (a) that “[t]he commission is expressly authorized to inform the Legislature of its position on any legislative proposal pending before the Legislature and to urge the introduction of legislative proposals.”
Other cases approving lobbying by governmental agencies
include Stanson
v.
Mott
(1976)
Under the concurring and dissenting opinion, the State Bar would have the worst of both the private and the governmental worlds. It would be subject to constitutional restrictions on its use of dues, as are private associations, but would not enjoy the constitutional rights of private associations to endorse candidates and engage in political campaigns.
The same reasoning applies to lobbying before administrative agencies, and to the filing of amicus curiae briefs. Agencies and courts, in their interpretation of laws, also benefit from the collective advice of the bar.
Murray asserts a proposition which counsel for the State Bar have not chosen to argue here—that it is the proper role and indeed duty of the bar to defend the judiciary from unjustified attack because judges are inhibited from election campaigning themselves. Amici curiae adopt the argument and refer us to the American Bar Association Code of Professional Responsibility, Ethical Consideration, EC 8-6, which states that “[a]djudicatory officials, not being wholly free to defend themselves, are entitled to receive the support of the bar against unjust criticism.”
As
Stanson, supra,
“After reviewing the relevant judicial authorities, the Attorney General concluded that although the advertisement did not explicitly urge a ‘Yes’ vote and did disclose relevant factual information, the use of public funds to pay for the advertisement would nonetheless be improper. The opinion reasoned: ‘Viewed as a whole, the advertisement cannot properly be held to be a publication primarily designed to educate the voters as to the activities carried on by or the conditions of the schools of the district. . . . The style, tenor and timing of the advertisement placed by the board of trustees points plainly to the conclusion that the publication was designed primarily for the purpose of influencing the voters at the forthcoming school bond election.’ (35 Ops. Cal.Atty.Gen. 112, 114.)” (
In distributing these materials, the bar acted pursuant to a unanimous resolution of the Board of Governors declaring “that it is the duty of the legal profession and all of its members to . . . [t]ake steps to maintain and promote understanding and confidence, among the citizens of this state and the nation, in the need for an independent judiciary. ...” The resolution further declared “that the State Bar should take necessary and appropriate steps to support these principles and to aid the profession and the public in understanding them.”
The present system was an outgrowth of an earlier proposal for reform of judicial elections in Los Angeles County. That proposal was drafted by the bar, which lobbied for passage of the constitutional amendment through the Legislature and then campaigned unsuccessfully for its approval by the voters. (See Smith, The California Method of Selecting Judges (1951) 3 Stan.L.Rev. 571.)
Presiding Justice, Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, Division Three, assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
A union shop agreement is a provision in a collectively bargained agreement which requires employees, within a certain period of time after being hired, to join and maintain membership in the union. (See § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C. § 152, Eleventh.)
The court noted that the commerce clause power “often has the quality of police regulations.”
(Hanson, supra,
The court emphasized that “the bulk of State Bar activities” were involved in raising educational and ethical standards, with the ultimate objective of improving the quality of legal services available to the public.
(Lathrop, supra,
Further, the court indicated that because the membership requirement was limited “to the compulsory payment of reasonable annual dues,” it considered insignificant any infringement upon members’ associational rights.
(Lathrop, supra,
The United States Supreme Court has since “rejected the concept that constitutional rights turn upon whether a government benefit is characterized as a ‘right’ or as a ‘privilege.’ ”
(Sugarman
v.
Dougall
(1973)
In
DeMille
v.
American Fed. of Radio Artists
(1947)
In a
pre-Abood
constitutional challenge to state bar expenditures for political and ideological causes
(Sams
v.
Olah
(1969)
In determining that a physician’s hospital privileges are a vested fundamental right, the court held that a primary consideration was whether the interest in question “ ‘directly relates to the pursuit of [one’s] livelihood.’ ”
(Anton
v.
San Antonio Community Hosp., supra,
The majority asserts that the position advocated in this concurring and dissenting opinion would subject the State Bar to the “worst of both the private and the governmental worlds” by, on the one hand, subjecting it to constitutional restrictions in its use of dues and, on the other hand, precluding it as a state agency from endorsing political candidates and engaging in political campaigns. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 1169, fn. 19.)
What this assertion fails to recognize is that if an association derives the benefit of the force of government to compel individuals to join the association and pay membership dues, then that association should be limited in its use of those dues and that indeed such limitation is commanded by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Such indifference to the First Amendment rights of the 115,000 members of the California State Bar is remarkable stemming as it does from acknowledged champions of First Amendment liberties. By focusing on the distinction between private and governmental entities, the majority’s approach gives the State Bar the best of both worlds, and State Bar members the worst of both worlds. In contrast, by focusing on the distinction between compulsory and voluntary association, the concurring and dissenting opinion strikes a balance between the rights of the State Bar and its members.
In addition to the statutory provisions authorizing the bar to perform various regulatory functions, the Board of Governors is authorized to “aid in all matters pertaining to the advancement of the science of jurisprudence or to the improvement of the administration of justice, including, but not by way of limitation, all matters that may advance the professional interests of the members of the State Bar and such matters as concern the relations of the bar with the public.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6031, subd. (a).)
As the majority point out, however, the State Bar as a governmental agency is precluded from participating in election campaigns.
(Stanson
v.
Mott
(1976)
The majority apparently equates the statutory functions of the State Bar with the state interests that may justify interference with members’ associational rights. (See maj. opn., ante, at p. 1165, fn. 11.) It is hornbook law, however, that not all statutes rise to a level that justify *1188 state interference with basic constitutional rights. (See Tribe, American Constitutional Law, supra, § 12-2, p. 792.) As stated above, I adopt the United States Supreme Court’s explication of the state interests which justify compulsory bar membership because I consider it to be authoritative.
With the exception of their prayer for costs and attorneys’ fees.
The majority suggests that the “more limited functions and constituency” of a labor union (maj. opn. fn. 12, ante, at p. 1166) properly subject it to Ellis analysis, while the State Bar’s improvement of the administration of justice function render it inappropriate for application of the constitutionally mandated Ellis test. The majority’s equation of statutory functions with justifying state interests again leads it astray. As I have shown, the relevant initial inquiry must be to determine which state interests justified compulsory bar membership in the first instance. Without benefit of briefing by the parties, I hesitate to make this determination unilaterally. I note, however, that at the time of integration of the bar, improvement of the “administration of justice” connoted interests far narrower than those the majority now ascribes to the phrase. (See, e.g., Winters, Bar Association Organization and Activities (1954) p. 171 [defining the field of the administration of justice as “[t]he organization, personnel and operation of the courts, the bar and their allied agencies and institutions”].)
Presiding Justice, Court of Appeal, Sixth Appellate District, assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
