This is a civil action for declaratory and injunctive relief, compensatory damages, and attorney’s fees and costs. Jurisdiction is alleged under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff contends that his First Amendment rights of freedom of speech and of association are violated by Wisconsin’s requirement that all practicing attorneys belong to the state bar association. Alternately, he contends that if mandatory bar membership does not violate the Constitution, the *1480 use of his membership dues to fund political and ideological activities is unconstitutional.
Defendants argue that plaintiffs suit is barred by the principles of res judicata, Eleventh Amendment immunity, and by the Tax Injunction Act, and that even if it is not barred, the Supreme Court has held that mandatory bar associations are constitutional. They contend also that procedures instituted by the Wisconsin supreme court ensure the protection of dissident members’ constitutional rights.
I conclude that plaintiffs suit is not barred. I conclude also that the requirement that plaintiff belong to the State Bar of Wisconsin as a condition of practicing law in Wisconsin abridges his rights of free speech and free association under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and is not justified by a compelling state interest.
The case is before the court on the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment. Based on the parties’ proposed findings of fact, affidavits, and admissions on file, I find there is no genuine dispute as to the following material facts.
FACTS
Plaintiff is a lawyer licensed to practice law in Wisconsin.
The State Bar of Wisconsin is an association of all lawyers licensed to practice law in Wisconsin.
In 1956, the Supreme Court for the State of Wisconsin ordered that all lawyers become members of the State Bar of Wisconsin on a two-year trial basis. In 1958 the order was made permanent.
Since 1956 the state supreme court has reviewed the status of the State Bar of Wisconsin several times. On each occasion, the court has decided to uphold the requirement of mandatory membership in the State Bar of Wisconsin for all lawyers licensed to practice in the state.
The structure and organization of the State Bar is governed by supreme court rules, and its operations are governed by the State Bar By-Laws.
The affairs of the State Bar are managed and directed by the board of governors, which is structured in such a way as to obtain representation of members from all geographic areas of the state.
The State Bar conducts annual and midwinter conventions, at which an Assembly of Members is held. The agenda includes major policy issues such as those relating to the administration of justice, the legal profession, the structure, organization and funding of the State Bar, legislative issues, and the annual budget. The assembly may consider and take binding action upon any matter on the agenda of the assembly other than the budget.
The activities of the State Bar are conducted by and through its board of governors, the assembly, and fifteen sections that focus on specific areas of the law, conduct research, and publish quarterly news letters on law practice and changes in the law. Bar activities are also conducted by and through thirteen standing committees and approximately twenty-five special committees serving a variety of purposes and by and through the three membership divisions.
The cost of conducting operations of a bar association of approximately 15,000 members is substantial. Annual expenses approach $2 million, not including continuing legal education activities, which are separately funded.
Annual dues for membership in the State Bar for the fiscal years beginning July 1, 1983, 1984, and 1985 were $100 annually for a lawyer in active practice more than three years. Dues were raised to $115 annually for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1986.
Payment of annual membership dues to the State Bar is a condition of a lawyer’s right to practice law. Under the by-laws of the State Bar, the Executive Director of the Bar must certify to the supreme court and to all courts in Wisconsin the names of all lawyers who have not paid State Bar membership dues.
Under supreme court rules, the dues of members who object to the State Bar’s *1481 legislative activities must be reduced on a pro rata basis in the amount of all State Bar expenses for legislative advocacy. Approximately 30 per cent of State Bar members opted to reduce their dues in the 1986— 87 fiscal year. Accordingly, the Bar’s budget for legislative advocacy was reduced from $27,119.00 to approximately $18,-844.70. In an added effort to protect the rights of Bar members, the State Bar enacted a by-law providing for an arbitration proceeding in the event of a dispute over the calculation of the dues reduction.
The supreme court of Wisconsin exercises ultimate, direct, and exclusive control over the integrated State Bar. The supreme court has exercised its authority of review and regulation of the State Bar and its activities on numerous occasions.
Effective January 1, 1977, the supreme court created a nine-member Board of Attorneys Professional Competence. The board is funded by an assessment of all lawyers separate from State Bar dues. For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1986, the board assessment for a full-time lawyer in practice more than three years was $9.00. The board administers the system for admission to practice law in Wisconsin and the rules governing continuing legal education, which are established by the supreme court. The State Bar does not administer the supreme court rules that govern the system for admission to practice law in Wisconsin or the rules governing continuing legal education. Effective January 1, 1977, the supreme court adopted a requirement of fifteen hours of continuing legal education per year for each lawyer admitted to practice in Wisconsin. Supreme court rules govern continuing legal education for Wisconsin lawyers.
The State Bar offers continuing legal education to Wisconsin lawyers through its ATS-CLE division’s programs and publications. By order of the supreme court, no State Bar dues may be used to subsidize the State Bar ATS-CLE programs and publications. No dues are so used.
Effective January 1, 1977, the supreme court created a nine-member Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility. The board is funded by an assessment of all lawyers separate from State Bar dues. For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1986, the board assessment for a full-time lawyer in practice for more than three years was $49.70. The board administers the supreme court rules that govern the system for disciplining lawyers in Wisconsin. The State Bar is responsible for dividing the state into districts for professional responsibility committees, and for appointing members of those committees. In 1985, the supreme court denied State Bar petitions to make the Bar an official decision-maker on questions of lawyer ethics and the unauthorized practice of law.
Supreme court rules establish a Client Security Fund to reimburse losses caused to the public by dishonest lawyers. The fund is capitalized by an annual assessment of lawyers necessary to maintain a balance of $100,000. The assessment per lawyer may not exceed $11 in any year. The Client Security Fund is administered by the State Bar, but the assessment for the fund is in addition to State Bar annual membership dues, and it is kept separate from them.
The State Bar keeps a list of all lawyers licensed to practice law in Wisconsin. The list is a computerized mailing list that the bar uses for mailings to its membership and that it sells from time to time to various purchasers.
Supreme court rules require Wisconsin lawyers in private practice to keep trust accounts in which they place clients’ funds. Certain information regarding these trust accounts must be reported on the lawyer’s annual State Bar dues statement. The State Bar performs no function with respect to these lawyer trust account reports except to provide them to the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility on request when the board is investigating complaints against lawyers.
Revenues from State Bar dues are deposited to accounts held in the name of the State Bar.
Funds collected by the State Bar from its members to cover the budgets of the Boards of Attorneys Professional Compe *1482 tence and Professional Responsibility are turned over to an officer of the Wisconsin supreme court. The officer delivers the funds to the general accounts of the State of Wisconsin.
State Bar employees and officials are paid and reimbursed by checks drawn on State Bar accounts.
State Bar employees do not participate in the pension and health benefit plans offered by the State of Wisconsin to its employees and to employees of the Boards of Attorneys Professional Competence and Professional Responsibility.
The State Bar sets wage rates and classifications for its employees.
In 1981-82, the State Bar remodeled the State Bar center without approval from the state building commission.
The State Bar’s annual budget is set by the board of governors and does not need approval by the governor, legislature, or Wisconsin supreme court.
From time to time since July 1, 1983, the State Bar has engaged in the presentation of viewpoints on matters before the following forums: the Wisconsin State Legislature, the Governor of the State of Wisconsin, the Congress of the United States, the general public, the supreme court of Wisconsin, both in legislative matters before the court and as amicus curiae in judicial proceedings. The State Bar has also appeared as friend of the court before the Wisconsin court of appeals and circuit courts in Wisconsin.
Some of the programs sponsored by the State Bar and funded from annual membership dues are designed to inform the public about legal questions, the functions of the courts, and the administration of justice.
In a memorandum of April 9, 1986, defendant Smay informed the Board of Governors that State Bar expenses for legislative advocacy in the fiscal years beginning July 1, 1983, 1984, and 1985 were $16,539, $25,514, and $23,442, respectively — a total of $65,495.
For its fiscal years beginning July 1, 1983, 1984, and 1985, the State Bar spent the following amounts on meetings of the board of governors: $33,617.20, $40,187.05, and $41,150.28, for a total of $114,875.
At meetings held between August 17, 1984 and April 18,1986, the board of governors discussed the following matters, among others: a report by State Bar president Greg Conway concerning his appointment of a State Bar Economic Development Committee to aid economic development in Wisconsin, and the activities planned by that committee; the State Bar’s response to an invitation by a Legislative Council study committee to testify concerning revision of Wisconsin’s system for redressing medical malpractice injuries; hearings before the supreme court concerning State Bar participation in deciding questions of lawyer discipline and the unauthorized practice of law, and a supreme court proposal to institute a rebate of a portion of membership dues spent on legislative activities with which Bar members disagree; a proposal to give a $1,950 local bar grant to the Jefferson County Bar to conduct an experiment to determine the accuracy of breathalyzer machines (the proposal was voted upon and defeated); State Bar positions concerning regulation of the legal profession, legal education, the selection system for Wisconsin judges, federal administrative law judges and state agency hearing examiners, compensation of Wisconsin judges, the insanity defense in Wisconsin, product liability law, limits on compensation in wrongful death actions, no-fault auto insurance, the state inheritance tax, sales tax on professional services, diversity jurisdiction, the Legal Services Corporation; the contribution of $24,000 of State Bar money to a self-help group for alcoholic lawyers; the Boards of Attorneys Professional Competence and Professional Responsibility; publication of opinions of the court of appeals; the practice of law in Wisconsin by non-residents; prerequisites for admission to the Bar; the Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts system; the nomination of lawyers to the board of directors of the Wisconsin Bar Foundation; actions taken by the American Bar Association; a state assembly bill that would increase the staff of the state public defender; the con *1483 tribution of $1,000 to lobby against a proposed change in the state’s unemployment compensation law; a state assembly bill that would restructure the state’s prosecu-torial system (a motion directing a Bar committee to continue its study of this bill was passed); the allocation of an additional $15,000 of State Bar monies for “Public Understanding of the Law” television spots (the allocation was voted upon and passed, thereby increasing the yearly total to $20,-000); the use of approximately $4,000 for an actuarial study concerning legislative revision of the state’s medical malpractice insurance system (the expenditure was voted upon and approved); the allocation of $1,000 in start-up costs to establish a State Bar International Transaction Section (the allocation was approved); a proposal to be introduced in the Wisconsin legislature concerning child support; the appointment of a committee to study crime victim compensation (the appointment was voted upon and approved); support of the passage by the Wisconsin legislature of the budget of the state public defender (the board of governors voted to support the passage); legal malpractice insurance; the filing of a friend of court brief in Dane County circuit court in Frisch, Dudek & Slattery, Ltd. v. Wisconsin Department of Revenue (the board voted to file the brief); a resolution concerning the effective date of a marital property trailer bill; a recommendation for a candidate to fill a vacancy on the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility; a resolution supporting the candidacy of Robert Habush for President-Elect of the American Trial Lawyers Association; full-time law clerks for circuit court judges; a State Bar survey of law firm operating costs; a request from the Wisconsin Broadcasters Association to support legislation to limit electronic media liability for defamation if a retraction is broadcast; a private malpractice insurance system; a resolution concerning the qualifications for court commissioner; a request from the dean of the University of Wisconsin Law School to lobby legislators against a provision in the state budget bill requiring a state audit of private funds donated to the University of Wisconsin; a report of the Commission on Court Delay and Litigation Costs; the State Bar budget; the State Bar’s role in lawyer ethics and the prevention of the unauthorized practice of law; a revision of the Code of Professional Responsibility; the work of a State Bar committee to study revision of the Wisconsin corporation law; campaign addresses from three candidates for election as state bar delegates to the American Bar Association House of Delegates; a resolution opposing apartheid in South Africa (the resolution was voted upon and passed); a state senate bill concerning the state prosecutorial system; the funding of the committee to study Wisconsin’s business corporation law (the funding was voted upon and approved); a state senate bill concerning reform of Wisconsin’s homicide law; the expenditure of $4,000 for a survey by a committee studying the participation of women in the State Bar (the expenditure was approved); a state senate bill concerning reform in the area of medical malpractice liability and other issues related to tort reform; the establishment of a branch of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in Green Bay (the board of governors moved to support the establishment of a new branch).
On two occasions during the past ten years, the supreme court has appointed a committee to review the question of the continued integration of the State Bar, as well as to review its activities and funding.
The decision reported in
Matter of Discontinuation of Wisconsin State Bar,
The proceeding that resulted in the publication of
Report of Committee to Review the State Bar,
ADDITIONAL FACTS
Under Supreme Court Rule 10.10, the Wisconsin supreme court shall appoint a committee to review the State Bar’s performance in carrying out its public functions at such time as the court deems advisable.
Under Supreme Court Rule 10.02(1), the State Bar may sue and be sued, enter into contracts, acquire, hold, encumber and dispose of real and personal property.
OPINION
Before addressing the merits of plaintiff’s suit, it is necessary to discuss defendants’ contention that the suit is barred by the principles of res judicata, Eleventh Amendment immunity, and by the Tax Injunction Act.
I. DEFENDANTS’ PROCEDURAL ARGUMENTS
1. Res Judicata
Defendants base their res judicata argument on the fact that plaintiff has participated in two proceedings before the Wisconsin supreme court, each of which addressed the issue of the continuing integration of the State Bar of Wisconsin.
See In Matter of Discontinuation of State Bar of Wisconsin as an Integrated Bar,
According to 28 U.S.C. § 1738, the authenticated “[a]cts, records and judicial proceedings” of state courts “shall have the same full faith and credit in every court within the United States and its Territories and Possessions as they have by law or usage in the courts of such State, Territory or Possession from which they are taken.” Thus, § 1738 requires a federal court to give to a state court judgment “the same preclusive effect as would be given that judgment under the law of the State in which the judgment was rendered.”
Migra v. Warren City School District Board of Education,
It is important to determine whether plaintiffs claims were raised in a prior state judicial proceeding not only for purposes of res judicata but also to establish whether the court has jurisdiction over plaintiffs claims. Federal courts do not have jurisdiction over appeals from final state court decisions.
Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
Although the determination whether plaintiffs claims are barred by the doctrine of res judicata is a matter of state law, the initial determination whether plaintiffs claims were raised in a prior state
judicial
proceeding is a matter of federal law.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
The fact that the proceedings in which plaintiff participated were held before the supreme court is not determinative. The nature of a proceeding “depends not upon the character of the body but upon the character of the proceedings.”
District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
at 477,
*1486
The proceeding in
In Matter of Discontinuation of State Bar of Wisconsin as an Integrated Bar,
Unlike the proceedings before the District of Columbia court of appeals in Feldman, the proceeding in Discontinuation of State Bar was not concerned with the adjudication of the present rights of one or more parties. It more closely resembled an administrative proceeding. Of course, whether the proceeding is best characterized as administrative, legislative, or ministerial is not relevant to the question whether the proceeding was judicial or not.
The court’s decision to maintain the bar as a mandatory bar applied not only to plaintiff but to all those who might wish to practice law in Wisconsin in the future. Although
Discontinuation of State Bar
was a response to a petition, the petitioners did not claim that their rights had been violated or that they were entitled to special relief. Rather, they informed the court of a poll they had taken which, according to petitioners, indicated that the mandatory bar was not in the interest of the court, the state of Wisconsin, or the public at large.
In Matter of Discontinuation of Wisconsin State Bar,
As its title suggests, the
Report of Committee to Review the State Bar,
Thus, in
Report of Committee,
the supreme court simply discussed the report of the Kelly Committee, accepting some of the committee’s recommendations and rejecting others. The supreme court’s review of the Kelly Committee report does not resemble the adversary proceeding in
Falk v. State Bar of Michigan,
I conclude that the proceedings before the Wisconsin supreme court were not judicial proceedings for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1738. Therefore, it is unnecessary to address defendants’ argument that plaintiff is barred by the doctrine of res judicata from bringing claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 before this court.
2. Eleventh Amendment Immunity
This defense is raised only by defendant State Bar of Wisconsin, which argues that it is a state agency, protected from suit by the Eleventh Amendment. “[I]n the absence of consent a suit in which the state or one of its agencies or departments is named as the defendant is proscribed by the Eleventh Amendment.”
Papasan v. Allain,
In determining whether a particular entity is a state agency for Eleventh Amendment purposes, courts must balance several factors.
See Morris v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority,
A judgment against the State Bar would not affect the state treasury. I have found that there is no genuine dispute with respect to the financial autonomy of the State Bar. The State Bar is empowered to sue and be sued. State Bar funds are deposited in accounts held in the name of the State Bar of Wisconsin, not in accounts of the State of Wisconsin. State Bar funds and the Bar’s annual budget are under the control of the State Bar board of governors, a body elected by members of the Bar without the approval of state officials.
The State Bar’s financial autonomy is an important sign of its overall independence. The facts that the State Bar sets its own wage rates and classifications, that State Bar employees do not participate in health and pension plans offered to state employees, and that the Bar may initiate building projects without approval of the Wisconsin building commission, rebut the contention *1488 that the State Bar is a state agency in the usual sense.
Defendants point out that the State Bar is subject to the supervision and control of the Wisconsin supreme court.
See State ex rel. Armstrong v. Board of Governors,
In determining immunity from suit, the effect of a judgment on the state treasury and the interference with public administration seem the most critical factors. I have determined that a judgment against defendant would not affect the state treasury. Although the State Bar is under the supervision of the Wisconsin supreme court, it is largely a self-governing entity. Its day-to-day decisions are not subject to approval by the supreme court, the legislature, or a state agency. A judgment against defendant State Bar would not interfere significantly with state administrative functions. Therefore, I conclude that defendant State Bar is not a public agency for purposes of the Eleventh Amendment, and hence is not immune from suit.
3. Tax Injunction Act
Defendants contend that plaintiffs claims are barred under the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341, which states that district courts “shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the court of such State.” According to defendants’ argument, the collection of State Bar membership dues under the rule establishing the mandatory bar is a collection of a tax, and therefore this court lacks jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs requests for an injunction against collection of dues and for an order requiring refund of past dues.
A determination of a “tax” under the Tax Injunction Act is a matter of federal law. Courts must look to the congressional policies underlying the Act rather than to the labels attached to what is alleged to be a tax.
Timber Ridge Associates v. City of Hartford,
State Bar membership dues are not a part of Wisconsin’s state revenue raising operations. They are deposited to an account belonging to the State Bar, not to the State of Wisconsin. The dues are expended for State Bar operations, and are under the control of the board of governors, a body elected by the membership. Neither an injunction against the collection of State Bar dues nor an order requiring the refund of past dues would violate the Tax Injunction Act.
Having addressed defendants’ procedural arguments and determined that plaintiff’s suit is not barred, I turn next to the merits of plaintiff’s constitutional arguments.
II. CONSTITUTIONALITY OF MANDATORY BAR MEMBERSHIP
1. The Nature of Plaintiffs First Amendment Claims
Plaintiff contends that mandatory bar membership violates his rights of freedom of association and speech, or alternatively, that the use of his dues to support political and ideological activities, or any activities unrelated to the purposes for which the unified Bar was created, violates those rights. Plaintiff’s primary challenge is to the constitutionality of conditioning the practice of law upon membership in the State Bar of Wisconsin. I begin by looking to the nature of the rights asserted by plaintiff.
The right to associate with others in pursuit of political, social, economic, educational, religious, and cultural ends is protected by the First Amendment.
Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
The analysis of plaintiff’s First Amendment claims is complicated by the fact that plaintiff asserts a negative right: the right not to associate with the State Bar of Wisconsin, and the right not to give financial support to speech with which he disagrees. The analysis would be relatively straightforward if this case were one in which plaintiff claimed the right to associate with other lawyers for the purpose of engaging in activities such as informational programs directed toward the lay public, the study of proposed legislation, or efforts to assist lawyers suffering from alcoholism. Clearly, such ends of association would be protected by the First Amendment.
But this is not a case in which lawyers desire to associate for expressive ends and need the protection of the First Amendment to do so. In this case, their association is protected by the state. In fact, the state does more than protect the Bar: the state
requires
lawyers to join the Bar in its pursuit of expressive ends. Thus, where once lawyers associated voluntarily with one another, they are now members of a state-mandated association. This transformation of the right to associate from an act of individual choice into an act of the state is what plaintiff challenges. He asserts his “right of self-determination in matters that touch individual opinion and personal attitude.”
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette,
The matters touching plaintiffs “individual opinion and personal attitude” are not limited to specific activities of the Bar such as lobbying. Plaintiff’s right to self-determination extends to the matter of compulsory membership in a professional organization. To join or not to join such an organization is itself an expression of one’s “individual opinion and personal attitude.”
See Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
The First Amendment protects negative rights. Freedom of speech includes freedom not to speak,
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Public Utilities Commission of California,
These cases express the logical corollary of the First Amendment right to do something, whether the “something” be public speech or association for the pursuit of other protected ends. The essence of that right is individual choice, and of necessity, choice involves the decision not to do something as well as the decision to do something. Plaintiff argues that the First Amendment protects his choice not to join the Bar in the first instance, and also his choice not to join the Bar in collective “speech,” or “expression.” 6
2. The Balancing Test
Even if the First Amendment protects plaintiff's choice not to join the Bar, however, there might be instances in which the State would be justified in denying him this choice. The right to associate and not to associate is not absolute.
Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
In every First Amendment case, the question is what degree of infringement upon the right of association is permissible under the Constitution. Over the years, the Supreme Court has attempted to answer this question in a manner that would provide guidance to the lower courts and others facing the same question in different factual situations. In
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette,
The Supreme Court still employs the “balancing test” enunciated in the
Douds
case. But in later cases its formulation of the test strikes a balance between the more absolutist vision of First Amendment rights in
Barnette
and the “ad hoc” position of
Douds.
According to the more recent test, “[i]nfringments on [the right to associate for expressive purposes] may be justified by regulations adopted to serve compelling state interests, unrelated to the suppression of ideas, that cannot be achieved through means significantly less restrictive of associational freedoms.”
Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
3. Lathrop v. Donohue
Defendants have contended from the outset that plaintiff’s First Amendment challenge to compulsory bar membership was put to rest in 1961 in
Lathrop v. Donohue,
In
Lathrop v. Donohue,
a Wisconsin lawyer challenged the recently unified State Bar on constitutional grounds before the Wisconsin supreme court, which rejected the challenge.
Lathrop v. Donohue,
The Court found that Wisconsin had a legitimate interest in a unified bar. Using language reminiscent of the language of its *1492 commerce clause decisions, the Court formulated that interest as follows:
Both in purport and in practice the bulk of State Bar activities serve the function, or at least so Wisconsin might reasonably believe, of elevating the educational and ethical standards of the Bar to the end of improving the quality of the legal service available to the people of the State, without any reference to the political process. It cannot be denied that this is a legitimate end of state policy. We think that the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in order to further the State’s legitimate interests in raising the quality of professional services, may constitutionally require that the costs of improving the profession in this fashion should be shared by the subjects and beneficiaries of the regulatory program, the lawyers, even though the organization created to attain the objective also engages in some legislative activity.
Id.
at 843,
The Court viewed the issue of freedom of association in
Lathrop
as involving
“only
[ ...] a question of compelled financial support of group activities, not [ ...] involuntary membership in any other aspect.”
Id.
at 828,
The character of the Bar as presented to the Supreme Court in
Lathrop
was that of a quasi-public agency.
See
Schneyer, The Incoherence of the Unified Bar Concept at 54-55 (“Basically, Brennan saw the state bar as a public agency created to fund and administer regulatory or governmental programs”). In 1961, “[t]he most extensive activities of the State Bar” were “those directed toward post-graduate education of lawyers [ ...].”
Lathrop v. Donohue,
Since the Supreme Court’s decision in
Lathrop,
however, the character of the State Bar of Wisconsin has changed from what was presented to the Court. In 1976, the Wisconsin supreme court created the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility and the Board of Attorneys Professional Competence to administer lawyer discipline and bar admission requirements, with their financial support derived from assessments on all Wisconsin lawyers separate from the mandatory membership dues. In 1977, the state supreme court required the Bar’s ATS-CLE continuing legal education programs to be completely self-supporting.
See In re Regulation of the Bar,
Defendants argue that membership dues are still spent on activities related to the important functions of continuing legal education, lawyer discipline, and professional competence. They note, for example, that the Bar spends time and money appointing members to various regional professional responsibility committees, which report instances of possible lawyer misconduct or medical incapacity to the administrator of the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility. They assert as well that Bar publications like the Wisconsin Bar Bulletin and the lawyer-to-lawyer referral service are also funded by membership dues and are in the interest of professional education and competence.
Although the activities cited by defendants are relevant to the goals of professional responsibility and competence, they are of a quite different nature from those presented to the Supreme Court twenty-seven years ago in Lathrop. It is not the Bar but arms of the Wisconsin supreme court that are primarily responsible for the “educational and ethical standards” of Wisconsin lawyers; and it is not Bar membership dues that support these arms. The Bar challenged by plaintiff is not the same bar examined in Lathrop. These changes in the responsibilities of the State Bar weaken Lathrop’s authority. See 20 Am Jur.2d Courts § 191 (1965) (stare decisis does not apply where facts are essentially different).
The character of the State Bar is not the only thing to have changed since
Lathrop.
The Supreme Court’s analysis of First Amendment cases has changed as well. Justice Black noted in
Lathrop
that the Court was employing the case-by-case (that is, “ad hoc”) balancing test derived from
American Communications Association v. Douds. Lathrop v. Donohue,
4. The Seriousness of the Infringement on Plaintiffs First Amendment Rights
There may be no need to balance governmental interest against the right to freedom of association if the government’s infringement on that right is minimal.
See Elrod v. Burns,
Although the Bar has changed materially since Lathrop was decided, mandatory membership in the Bar still consists solely in the payment of dues, just as it did when Lathrop was decided. There is no requirement that members attend meetings or social activities, or that they espouse personally the positions taken by the Bar. The Supreme Court did not consider the mandatory payment of dues a very significant infringement on plaintiff Lathrop’s First Amendment right not to associate. Justice Harlan, for example, saw a substantive difference between Lathrop’s claim and the plaintiffs' First Amendment claims in Barnette.
What seems to me obvious is the large difference in degree between, on the one hand, being compelled to raise one’s hand and recite a belief as one’s own, and, on the other, being compelled to contribute dues to a bar association fund which is to be used in part to promote the expression of views in the name of the organization (not in the name of the dues payor), which views when adopted may turn out to be contrary to the views of the dues payor. I think this is a situation where the difference in degree is so great as to amount to a difference in substance.
Lathrop v. Donohue,
It is necessary to determine whether the Court would take the same view as it did in Lathrop of the infringement on plaintiff’s First Amendment rights. If it would still find the mandatory payment of dues an insignificant infringement, there is no need to require defendants to show a compelling state interest in order to justify the dues requirement.
a. Forced association with the ideas of others
Justice Harlan’s “difference in degree” argument was based in part on his contention that Lathrop himself could not be identified personally with positions taken by the State Bar.
Lathrop v. Donohue,
However, in the years following the
Lathrop
decision, the Court has been receptive to less restrictive readings of the First Amendment than Justice Harlan's.
See, e.g., New York Times v. Sullivan,
For example, in
Wooley v. Maynard,
In
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Public Utilities Commission of California,
There is little danger that people will identify plaintiff personally with the State Bar’s positions, assuming they know that all lawyers in Wisconsin must belong to the State Bar. Yet Wooley and Pacific Gas indicate that the Court does not restrict the definition of compelled association to the identification of an individual with views he does not share. This restricted definition implies that an individual’s assoeiational right is infringed only when others might have the mistaken impression that he associates voluntarily when in fact he does not. But in Wooley and Pacific Gas the Court did not require the plaintiffs to allege the risk of mistaken impressions. Rather, the Court focused on the idea of compulsion itself. It held that the plaintiffs had the right to be free from forced participation in the dissemination of ideas, even where the chance of their personal identification with those ideas was remote.
In
PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins,
[t]o require the owner to specify the particular ideas he finds objectionable enough to compel a response would force him to relinquish his “freedom to maintain his own beliefs without public disclosure.” [...] Thus, the right to control one’s own speech may be burdened im-permissibly even when listeners will not assume that the messages expressed on private property are those of the owner.
Id.
at 100,
b. Mandatory Payment of Dues
In
Lathrop
the Court found that there was no infringement of the plaintiff's right to associate because the payment of dues was the only manifestation of his compelled association. Justice Harlan compared the dues requirement to taxes and licensing fees.
Lathrop v. Donohue,
Recent Supreme Court cases have undercut the Court’s conclusion in
Lathrop
that the payment of dues money was insignificant because it was the only way in which Lathrop was compelled to associate. The most important of these cases is
Buckley v. Valeo,
In defining “speech” broadly in
Buckley,
the Court indicated that the distinction between freedom of association and freedom of speech is not always clear. The law limiting financial contributions in
Buckley
“impose[d] direct quantity restrictions on political
communication and association
by persons, groups, candidates, and political parties [ ...]” (emphasis added).
Id.
at 18,
The potential seriousness of compelled contributions was recognized in
Machinists v. Street,
To be required to help finance the union as a collective-bargaining agent might well be thought, therefore, to interfere in some way with an employee’s freedom to associate for the advancement of ideas, or to refrain from doing so, as he sees fit. But the judgment in Hanson and Street is that such interference as exists is constitutionally justified by the legislative assessment of the important contribution of the union shop to the system of labor relations established by Congress.
Id.
at 222,
Certainly, if individual teachers are ideologically opposed to public-sector unionism itself, as are the appellants in this case [ ...], one would think that compelling them to affiliate with the union by contributing to it infringes their First Amendment rights to the same degree as compelling them to contribute to a political party.
Abood
at 257,
*1498 Cases like Buckley and Abood make Justice Harlan’s comparison of bar membership dues with taxes less convincing because they focus on the voluntary nature of financial contributions to particular groups (in Abood, the involuntariness of the contributions provoked the Court's scrutiny under the First Amendment). Although taxpayers may object on occasion to the way their taxes are used, taxes support governmental services that benefit a majority of citizens. Bar membership dues do not benefit the public, except in a very indirect way. Rather, they support services that benefit members of a particular, and rather exclusive, group. Members of this group could choose not to benefit from the services financed by membership dues without becoming “free riders” — that is, without becoming like non-union employees who benefit from the union’s collective bargaining or like citizens who would continue to benefit from government services like highways and police protection even if they refused to pay taxes. 16 In short, considerations of policy and administration that apply to taxes distinguish them from dues exacted by particular groups for the exclusive benefit of those groups. As a consequence, one cannot dismiss plaintiff’s claim simply by saying that compulsory membership dues are no different from licensing fees or taxes.
Moreover, like the plaintiff in
Wooley,
plaintiff is faced with a serious penalty for failure to comply with the “mere” payment of money. In
Wooley,
the plaintiff was charged with a misdemeanor when he taped over the motto on his license plate. In this case, plaintiff is faced with the loss of his livelihood. Indeed, he is faced with the loss of a right to practice law. In
Supreme Court of New Hampshire v. Piper,
No one would dispute that reasonable conditions may be attached to a lawyer’s right to practice law, and that ethical regulations and educational requirements are reasonable requirements to which lawyers should be subject. But these are no longer the primary responsibility of the Bar. Plaintiff is precluded from practicing law if he does not support television spots promoting public understanding of the law, the publication of a lawyer-to-lawyer directory, or a law office management consulting service, to name but a few of the Bar’s activities. The penalty attached to the failure to pay membership dues underscores the significance of the infringement on plaintiff’s right to associate and to speak.
In summary, the Court appears to have adopted a less literal approach to the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of speech and association than it did in Lathrop. The Court measures the “degree of difference” between the compelled affirmation of belief in Barnette and more indirect forms of compelled association and speech against a more finely marked yardstick than Justice Harlan's. Some people, especially some lawyers, may still share Justice Harlan’s skepticism about the constitutional significance of mandatory bar membership dues. Perhaps this is because lawyers and courts have been willing to watch over others’ First Amendment rights but have seldom trained their eyes on the constitutional implications of their own activities. Union shops are a concern while unified bars are not. In other words, it may be difficult for lawyers and courts to dissociate their roles as adjudicators and “officers of the court” from their roles as private citizens who share the same rights under the Constitution as railway workers, school teachers, and utility companies. One might object that as officers of the court, lawyers are never mere private citizens and hence, that there is nothing illegitimate in requiring them to belong to a professional organization. Yet as Justice Black observed,
*1499 [t]he mere fact that a lawyer has important responsibilities in society does not require or even permit the State to deprive him of those protections of freedom set out in the Bill of Rights for the precise purpose of insuring the independence of the individual against the Government and those acting for the Government.
Lathrop,
In the union shop cases, the infringements on employees’ First Amendment rights not to associate and not to speak were upheld, not because the infringement itself was minimal, but because the governmental interest at stake was compelling. Therefore, I must now determine whether the governmental interest asserted by defendants to justify the mandatory bar is sufficiently compelling to outweigh the infringement on plaintiffs First Amendment rights of association and speech.
5. The Union Shop Analogy and the Question of Compelling State Interest
Courts have often compared the mandatory bar to the union shop.
See, e.g., Gibson v. The Florida Bar,
In
Railway Employes’ Department v. Hanson,
In
Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
The holding in Hanson, as elaborated in Street, reflects familiar doctrines in the federal labor laws. The principle of exclusive union representation, which underlies the National Labor Relations Act as well as the Railway Labor Act, is a central element in the congressional structuring of industrial relations. [...] It [...] frees the employer from the possibility of facing conflicting demands from different unions, and permits the employer and a single union to reach agreements and settlements that are not subject to attack from rival labor organizations.
(Citations omitted). Finally, the designation of a single union as collective bargaining representative, and the requirement that all employees support the union financially, counteract the problem of “free riders”: those employees who might “refuse to contribute to the union while obtaining benefits of union representation that neces
*1500
sarily accrue to all employees.”
Id.
However, the Court expressed its concern with the degree of impingement on employees’ First Amendment rights by restricting the activities that they may be compelled to support financially.
See Machinists v. Street
(union members could not be required to support political causes under the Railway Labor Act);
Railway Clerks v. Allen,
Motivated by these cases, the Wisconsin supreme court has responded to challenges to compulsory bar membership by providing lawyers an opportunity to deduct from their dues payments an amount representing lobbying expenses. More recently, it has approved an arbitration procedure for cases in which dissenting members disagree with the Bar about the amount of dues they may deduct.
See In the Matter of the Petition to Review State Bar Bylaw Amendments,
The similarities between the union shop and the unified bar are evident. 17 The union shop and the unified bar are associations of persons engaged in a particular kind of work. In both instances, the right of employment is conditioned upon the payment of membership dues to these associations. But the fact that unified bars look like union shops does not necessarily mean that there exists a governmental interest comparable to the interest in industrial peace that would justify the infringement on plaintiff's First Amendment rights.
It was the Supreme Court that first suggested the analogy between union shop and unified bar (although, as I have noted, Justice Douglas subsequently re-considered the appropriateness of the analogy), and the Court has alluded to the analogy since
Lathrop. See, e.g., Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
The Bar’s membership dues do not support directly continuing legal education, lawyer discipline, or matters relating to bar admissions standards. The Wisconsin supreme court has appointed special bodies to regulate these matters. Nor are other con-cededly important regulatory concerns funded by bar membership dues. By supreme court rule, special assessments apart from bar dues are levied against attorneys to maintain the Client Security Fund, a fund used to reimburse losses caused to the public by dishonest lawyers. The Wisconsin supreme court requires that lawyers keep trust accounts for clients’ funds. Although the court requires lawyers to report information regarding these trust accounts on their annual State Bar dues statements, the Bar has no responsibility in connection with the trust accounts aside from the reporting function.
Defendants argue that many other activities engaged in by the Bar constitute important state interests. It notes communication with the public and studies of proposed legislation as two examples. These activities are not insignificant, but they are not the compelling governmental interest of regulation of lawyer competence and ethics. 19 The membership dues that plaintiff is challenging are not the payments he is required to make to support the Boards of Attorneys Professional Responsibility and Professional Competence, but those that support the variety of other activities sponsored by the Bar. In the context of the balancing test, and in light of the union shop cases, I cannot find that these activities or the whole host of other Bar activities constitute a compelling state interest. 20
6. Least Restrictive Means
Even if the interests asserted by defendants were sufficiently compelling to justify an infringement on plaintiff’s First Amendment rights, defendants have made no showing that compulsory membership in the Bar is the least restrictive means of achieving those interests.
See Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Public Utilities Commission of California,
Defendants have submitted no facts tending to show that in the absence of mandatory membership, the Bar’s goals could not be achieved. 21 As of 1983, nine *1502 teen states had voluntary bar associations, including the neighboring states of Minnesota and Illinois. See Schneyer at 3. It is likely that these voluntary bar associations share many goals with the State Bar of Wisconsin. Perhaps it is possible to show that they have difficulty achieving their goals, or that the abilities or ethical standards of lawyers in the voluntary bar states are not as high as in states with mandatory bars, although Professor Schneyer's study suggests otherwise. Even if interests such as public education on legal issues and studies of proposed legislation that are asserted to justify the mandatory bar were compelling interests, defendants have not shown that the mandatory bar is the least restrictive means of achieving those interests.
7. Conclusion
I find that the payment of bar membership dues as a condition of practicing law in Wisconsin is a significant infringement on plaintiffs First Amendment right not to associate and his right not to speak. Furthermore, I find that defendants have not identified a governmental interest sufficiently compelling to outweigh the infringement on plaintiffs rights, or shown that the mandatory bar requirement is the least restrictive means of achieving thé goals embodied in the Bar’s various activities. Accordingly, I hold that under the First Amendment plaintiff may not be required to become a member of the State Bar.
Because I have found the mandatory membership requirement a constitutionally impermissible burden on plaintiffs rights of association and speech, I do not reach plaintiffs alternative argument concerning the constitutional adequacy of the Bar’s procedures for reducing the dues of dissident members by the pro rata amount spent on legislative activities.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that defendants’ motion for summary judgment is DENIED and that plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.
Notes
. Defendants concede that their res judicata argument implies a jurisdictional one. In
Randolph v. Lipscher,
. In
Jensen,
the court determined that the State Board of Tax Commissioners of the State of Indiana was a state agency; it then addressed the argument that the board was not immune from suit nevertheless because a judgment against it would not be paid out of the state treasury.
See Jensen v. State Board of Tax Commissioners of State of Indiana,
. Courts in other jurisdictions have held that unified state bars are state agencies and therefore immune from suit.
See, e.g., Krempp
v.
Dobbs,
Professor Theodore Schneyer argues that there are several, often inconsistent images of the unified state bar: the bar is at one and the same time an autonomous association, a public agency, and a "closed shop.” Schneyer, The Incoherence of the Unified Bar Concept, 1983 A.B.F. Research Journal 1, 79 (1983).
To declare the State Bar a state agency once and for all would ignore the unique characteristics of unified bar associations. My determination that the State Bar is not a state agency is made only for the purpose of deciding the parties’ motions and in the context of defendants’ Eleventh Amendment argument.
. Defendants cite state cases in support of the contention that a tax is money expended for public purpose or a monetary exaction that exceeds the cost of regulation. These citations are not relevant. Federal courts have held that state law is not determinative in defining "tax” for the purposes of § 1341.
. This recitation of the congressional purposes underlying the enactment of the Tax Injunction Act is not an overly restrictive interpretation of the Act, as defendants contend. Defendants argue that the Supreme Court has broadly interpreted those purposes in
Rosewell v. LaSalle National Bank,
. Plaintiff relies on a broad definition of speech. I will address this definition in a later part of the opinion.
. In
Barnette,
the Court held unconstitutional a resolution passed by a local school board requiring public school pupils to begin the school day with the pledge of allegiance and flag salute: "We think the action of the local authorities in compelling the flag salute and pledge transcends constitutional limitations on their power and invades the sphere of intellect and spirit which it is the purpose of the First Amendment to our Constitution to reserve from all official control."
Id.
. In general, the language of the Court’s commerce clause cases is typically very deferential to legislative judgment, sometimes even in the absence of extensive legislative findings. In recent years, the Court has been more willing to
presume
the legitimacy of the state’s asserted interests. Typical of this language, which is echoed in
Lathrop,
is the following passage from
Williamson v. Lee Optical Co.,
. Professor Theodore Schneyer has suggested a third factor. In Professor Schneyer’s view, Justice Brennan's plurality opinion also upheld the constitutionality of the unified bar based on Justice Brennan’s understanding of the Bar’s policy for making decisions. Justice Brennan’s understanding was based on a policy statement adopted shortly after the Bar came into existence that recommended that the rule of substantial unanimity be observed in state bar position taking. ”[W]hatever the [substantial unanimity] rule’s real effect in bar affairs, it allowed [Brennan] to treat state bar advocacy as the same, in principle, as advocacy by a private, voluntary association, in which a member’s decision to belong would be taken to indicate her consent to the activity.” Schneyer, The Incoherence of the Unified Bar Concept, 1983 Am.B.F.Res.J. 1, 55, 56 (1983) (citing
Lathrop v. Donohue,
. Of course, the Court had opened the way for inclusion of corporations within the scope of the First Amendment in the commercial speech cases, beginning with
Virginia Pharmacy Board v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc.,
. In
Lathrop,
the Court found Lathrop's complaint too vague to reach Lathrop’s First Amendment claims because Lathrop did not specify what Bar activities he found objectionable.
See Lathrop v. Donohue,
. In any event, protection under the First Amendment is not restricted to political speech, although political speech has been placed traditionally on the "highest rung” of First Amendment values.
N.A.A.C.P. v. Claiborne Hardware Co.,
. Justice Harlan had already questioned the distinction between freedom of speech and association under the circumstances present in
Lathrop,
where the condition of association was the payment of money, and where the same money was used to support various speech activities.
Lathrop v. Donohue,
. See the discussion of the union shop cases in the next section of this opinion.
. In Justice Powell’s view, ‘‘[t]hat
Buckley
dealt with a contribution limitation rather than a contribution requirement" did not diminish its relevance to the contributions challenged in
Abood. Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
. Those who chose not to join a voluntary bar association might nevertheless benefit from activities of the bar association that enhanced the public’s image of lawyers or that protected the interests of lawyers. But such non-members would not be "free riders" as that term is used in the union shop cases. In the union context, “free riders” receive a direct economic benefit as the result of the union’s collective bargaining efforts.
. In a union shop, employees must formally belong to the union, although formal membership is limited essentially to the payment of dues. In an agency shop, employees need not be union members, but they are still required to support financially the union’s collective bargaining efforts and activities related to collective bargaining.
See Ellis v. Railway Clerks,
. As discussed above, in Lathrop the Court did not examine in detail either the nature of the right asserted by the plaintiff or the significance of the claimed infringement on that right. Therefore, it did not balance the plaintiffs rights against the asserted governmental interest in the way that the Court has done in other cases cited in this opinion.
. Defendants can point to no other organization in which the state compels membership for the purpose of obtaining views on legislation. One might argue that lawyers have special competence in this area, but this argument has several weaknesses. Wisconsin’s Legislative Council already performs drafting and research work. Wis.Stat. § 13.81. Furthermore, because the Bar’s legislative activities are restricted to fields concerning the administration of justice, court reform, and legal practice, the scope of its advisory role is limited. Finally, the argument that the state has a compelling interest in obtaining lawyers’ views on legislation is undercut by recent Bar bylaws allowing members to deduct from their dues payments pro rata amounts for the Bar’s legislative activities. If the interest were compelling, there would be no reason to provide for dues reductions.
. The union shop cases are not the only cases to give substance to the “compelling state interest" guideline. In
Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
.In an affidavit, Franklyn Gimbel, a past president of the State Bar, expresses the opinion that some lawyers would be able to evade their professional responsibilities if the Bar were voluntary. He is also of the opinion that a voluntary *1502 bar association would be dominated by the metropolitan areas of Dane and Milwaukee Counties, and that the Bar would not reflect the diversity of opinions and groups that it does now. However, Gimbel’s opinions do not amount to a showing that, in fact, lawyers would evade their professional responsibilities or that the Bar would be dominated by a few, unrepresentative groups. Moreover, it is difficult to see how lawyers could evade their professional responsibilities, given the supreme court's regulation of ethics and legal education. I have already addressed the problem of forced diversity.
