MEMORANDUM OPINION
This сase presents a challenge to one of the rules of the Illinois Supreme Court regulating admission to the Illinois bar. The practical question is whether the applicant is entitled to admission without taking the Illinois state bar examination. The rule in question, Illinois Supreme Court Rule 705(a)(1) 1 allows admission on a foreign license without examination, provided the applicant has practiced for five of the seven yeаrs immediately preceding his application in a state in which he has been licensed.
Plaintiff J. Kenneth Lowrie was admitted to the bar of the State of Michigan in 1969. Plaintiff practiced law as an Assistant United States Attorney in Michigan from 1969 until 1971. He then worked as a *536 Special Attorney for the United States Department of Justice in St. Louis, Missouri, from 1971 until 1975. From 1975 until 1977 plaintiff was assigned to the Organized Crime Strike Force of the Department of Justice in Springfiеld, Illinois. From 1977 until the present, he has served in the same capacity for the Department of Justice in Chicago, Illinois. At all times since his admission to the Michigan bar in 1969, plaintiff has practiced exclusively in the federal courts. Only the first two years of his practice were in Michigan. See Complaint, ¶ 9.
In 1979 plaintiff applied for admission to the Illinois bar under Rule 705(a)(1). He was denied admission on the obvious ground that he had not practiced for five of the preceding seven years in the State of Michigan. He then applied to the Illinois Supreme Court for a waiver of the requirements of Rule 705(a)(1), which request was denied. Plaintiff has now filed this suit in which he challenges the constitutionality of Rule 705(a)(1). Defendants have moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
Plaintiff first attacks the Illinois rule as a denial of equal protection of the law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. He argues that the distinction between applicants who have practiced five years in the state in which they were licensed and those who have practiced for five years in a state in which they are not licensed bears no rational relation to the apparent objective of the Illinois rule of insuring the competence of attorneys entering Illinois practice without taking the bar examination. Plaintiff points out that had he worked for the Justice Department in Detroit for the past five years, he would clearly satisfy the requirement of the Illinois rule. Even though the work he has done for the Justice Department in Illinois is substantially similar to the work he might have done in Detroit, plaintiff has been denied admission under Rule 705(a)(1) because the actual location of his practice hаs not been in a state in which he is licensed.
To satisfy the equal protection requirement, the state must demonstrate that “it is conceivable that the [rule] bears a rational relationship to an end of government which is not prohibited by the Constitution.”
Ktsanes v. Underwood,
*537
Plaintiff does not dispute the legitimacy of the state interest in the character and fitness of its attorneys, but argues that the identical objective is accomplished by Illinois Supreme Court Rule 705(a)(3), which provides that the applicant must prove his “good moral character and general fitness to practice law ...” and must submit a certificate from a judge of a court in the state in which he is licensed attesting to his membership in good standing and admission to the bar of that state. Plaintiff’s Supplemental Memorandum in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 3.
See also
Exhibit C, ¶ 12 to Plaintiff’s Complaint. However, as discussed above, we do not agree that these two rules are duplicative: 705(aX3) assumes that thе state has had an opportunity to observe and police the professional conduct of the applicant; 705(a)(1) insures that the state has had that opportunity. In addition, the fact that alternative, or less restrictive, measures might exist or be devised to effectuate a state’s legitimate purpose is irrelevant. “Legislation need not deal with all phases of a problem in the same way, so long as the distinctions drawn have some basis in practical experience.”
South Carolina v. Katzenbach,
Turning to plaintiff’s next argument, we find his claim under the Supremacy Clause of Article VI of the United States Constitution to be insubstantial. It is argued that the Illinois rule discriminates against federal attorneys assigned to work in various states and effectively prevents them from pursuing their livelihood. However, plaintiff and others similarly situated are not prevented from practicing law in Illinois, but are simply required, at most, to take the same bar examination that most other applicants take. Plaintiff has not suggested any law of the United States, even expansively construed, which is contravened by the Illinois bar licensing requirements. The federal government has not undertaken any regulatory or licensing system for lawyers, whether or not they are federally employed. This function resides with the states.
See Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
Nor dо we think the rule violates plaintiff’s right to interstate travel to pursue his profession. The constitutional “right to travel” under the Equal Protection and Privileges and Immunities Clauses to the Constitution does not imply that a citizen “carries with him from state to state an absolute right ... to practice ... a profession . . . . ”
Hawkins
v.
Moss,
*538
We have no jurisdictiоn over the question of whether plaintiff qualifies for an exemption from the requirements of Illinois Supreme Court Rule 705(a)(1).
4
This is a matter for the Illinois Supreme Court, and its determination can be challenged only by a petition for certiorari to the United States Supreme Court.
Woodard v. Virginia Board of Bar Examiners,
The motion to dismiss is granted.
ON MOTION TO RECONSIDER
Plaintiff has filed a motion to reconsider our Memorandum Opiniоn and Order of February 26, 1981 (“Mem. Op.” or “Memorandum Opinion”) dismissing this action. The filing of this motion has given us an opportunity to reassess the grounds for our earlier opinion. For reasons discussed below the motion to reconsider is denied.
Plaintiff presents a number of arguments for reconsideration, some of which are repetitive of arguments he presented at the earlier pleading stage. We remain unpersuaded by plaintiff’s аrguments.
First, plaintiff again argues that this court is not free to imply a concern for character and fitness as support for Rule 705(a)(1) since that purpose is expressly dealt with elsewhere in the same rule, Rule 705(a)(3). We addressed this issue in our Memorandum Opinion at 4-5. When applying the rational basis test, this court is free to uphold a classification based upon “a[ny] state of facts that reasonably can be conсeived to constitute a distinction or difference in state policy. . . . ”
Allied Stores v. Bowers,
Plaintiff also construes our earlier opinion as holding that the Illinois rule bears no *539 rational relationship to any state objeсtive of insuring the competence of attorneys. Upon re-reading the language in this section of our opinion, we can understand how plaintiff would arrive at this conclusion. It is not the interpretation we intended, however, and we take this opportunity to clarify and amend that portion of our earlier opinion.
To the extent that the Illinois rule attempts to insure that an attorney is knowledgeable in Illinois state lаw, there is no rational basis for the rule, and certainly none for its application in this case.
See
Mem. Op. at 6 n.2. However, competency in Illinois law is an issue distinct from the state’s compelling interest in an applicant’s general competency
(see Keenan v. Board of Law Examiners,
Second, we remain unpersuaded by plaintiff’s references to cases in which a one-year residency requirement prior to admission to the state bar, or to the taking of the bar exam, has been held unconstitutional.
Lipman v. Van Zant,
Since Rule 705 does not discriminate against alien practitioners as a group, does not infringe upon a fundamental right (see Mem. Op. at 539-540) and does not invidiously discriminate against a sub-class of alien practitioners protected by the 14th Amendment, the proper standard for review, as discussed above, is whether there is any conceivable basis to support the rule. As we have nоted, plaintiff has failed to meet his burden under this standard.
Finally, plaintiff’s evidence that Michigan does manage to police some attorneys who are licensed in Michigan but practicing elsewhere does not satisfy plaintiff’s burden of proof. Illinois could reasonably assume that the policing of attorneys is easier, more reliable and more effective when the attorney practices in the state in which he is licensed. 2 For example, it is probable that the clients of an attorney not practicing in Michigan would not know that the attorney is licensed in Michigan. Those clients would be less likely to bring the unethical conduct or incompetence of the attorney to the attention of the Michigan bar than would be the case if the attorney practiced in Michigan.
The motion for reconsideration is denied.
Notes
. The full text of Illinois Supreme Court Rule 705(a)(1) is as follows:
(a) Any person who has been admitted to practice in the highest court of law in any other State or territory of the United States or the District of Columbia may make application to the Board of Law Examiners for admission to the bar, without examination, upon the following conditions:
(1) The educational qualifications of the applicant are such as would entitle him to write the bar examination in this State at the time he seeks admission, and he has resided and actively and continuously practiced law in such other jurisdiction for a period of at least five years of the seven years immediately prior to making the application.
. A member of the bar of Michigan (such as plaintiff here) who has resided for the last five years in Illinois and practiced in the federal courts in Illinois might know more, rather than less, about Illinois law than an individual praсticing in his home state in compliance with Rule 705(a)(1).
. Indeed, plaintiff’s work is exclusively concerned with federal criminal law and the prosecution of cases in the federal courts. His position with the Justice Department precludes his acceptance of outside employment that might involve private clients or the state courts.
. The Illinois Board of Law Examiners and the Illinois Supreme Court have denied plaintiffs request for an exemption. Exemptions have been granted by other states in cases similar to this one.
See State Bar of Georgia v. Granoff,
. Plaintiff cites these cases as holding that (1) any residency requirement for admission to the bar is unconstitutional, and (2) should this court find that a residency requirement may be constitutional, the five years required by Rule 705 is patently unreasonable in light of the fact that Lipman, Webster and Keenan all found one year to be unreasonable. Plaintiff misinterprets these cases which are, in any event, inapplicable to this case. See pp. 539-540 infra.
Although all three courts found that one year of in-state residency was an unreasonably long period of time in light of the state’s interests, “[t]his is not to say that [the state] cannot require a reasonаble period of residency prior to taking the bar examination.”
Webster,
We are also somewhat perplexed by plaintiffs argument that five years is too long a requirement. We have never understood plaintiff as objecting to the length of the requirement in Rule 705, or to the fact that the rule only permits consideration of the last seven years of practice. Rather, plaintiff has objected solely to the fact that the rule requires the five years of practice to be in the licensing state of the applicant. Plaintiff has not practiced in his licensing state for approximately 10 years. Therefore, plaintiff has no standing to attack the length of the residency requirement per se; any relief granted by this court on such a theory, e. g., shortening the requirement to one year of practice in the licensing state, would afford plaintiff no relief.
. We recognize that this plaintiff does not fit the “worst case” model, i. e., an attorney who has practiced in five jurisdictions in five years, making it difficult to assess either his character or his competency over a period of time. Lowrie has been subject to the authority of the federal government continuously for five years, which regulates the conduct of its attorneys pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 2303. The circumstances оf Lowrie’s employment may satisfy those concerns which are the reasonable basis for Rule 705. Nonetheless, our review is limited to the general validity of the rule
(Ktsanes v. Underwood,
We have found that the application of the rule to Lowrie does not discriminate against him in a manner that violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Tо the extent that the application of the rule in Lowrie’s case is unnecessary, we balance the interest of the state in preserving the rule against the hardship its application works upon Lowrie in this particular case. When balanced against the legitimacy of the state’s concerns and the reasonableness of the rule’s application in most cases within its sphere, the small burden upon Lowrie — taking the bar examination, as must all other applicants to whom the privilege of admission on a foreign license is not extended, including all residents of Illinois — does not justify striking down Rule 705. As we noted in our earlier Memorandum Opinion at 5-6, Lowrie presents at most a case for an exemption from Rule 705, not a case for striking it down. The reasonableness of the denial of such an exemption is an issue for the United States Supreme Court, not this court.
