Plaintiff Lynda Khan, an attorney representing herself pro se, sued six former or current officials of Elk Grove Village, Illinois, and two private attorneys, alleging that the defendants had wrongfully interfered with a contract between Khan and a client. Khan asserted two claims: an Illinois tort law claim for interference with contract and a federal claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. For her federal claim, Khan alleged that the defendants violated her rights under the Contracts Clause and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court dismissed the federal claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and then declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claim. Khan now appeals the dismissal of her § 1983 claim, and the defendants cross-appeal the district court’s refusing to award them attorney’s fees as the prevailing party under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. We affirm.
I. Background
We take Khan’s well-pleaded facts as true, and we take some of the background facts from our prior decision in a related case,
Serfecz v. Jewel Food Stores,
Serfecz then retained Khan to sue Jewel, and they made a contingency fee contract that promised Khan one-third of Ser-fecz’s recovery. In June 1992, Khan filed a complaint for Serfecz in federal district court against Jewel and numerous others asserting violations of the Sherman Act, breach of the lease agreement, and malicious prosecution. The district court ultimately granted summary judgment to the defendants on Serfecz’s antitrust claims and his malicious prosecution claim, but permitted the case to proceed on one part of the breach of lease claim. The district court entered a final judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) on the claims for which it had granted summary judgment, and this court affirmed.
Serfecz,
In 1994, before the grant of partial summary judgment against Serfecz, defendant Gallitano became president of the Elk Grove Board of Trustees. He publicly announced that he would have Grove Mall condemned if Serfecz did not drop his suit against Jewel. Serfecz requested a zoning change so that he could redevelop Grove Mall. Elk Grove denied the request, but Gallitano stated publicly that if Serfecz dismissed his antitrust suit against Jewel, the request would be approved. Khan alleges numerous other instances in which Gallitano and others in the Elk Grove government pressured Serfecz to abandon his legal rights. Serfecz even filed a federal civil rights suit against Gallitano and others, but he dismissed it in the Fall of 1994 when Elk Grove officials assured him that they would cooperate with his redeveloping Grove Mall. That redevelopment never happened.
We now come to the two lawsuits that principally concern us here: Elk Grove’s condemnation proceeding and Serfecz’s second federal civil rights suit. In January 1995 Elk Grove filed a proceeding to condemn Grove Mall. Serfecz hired defendant Hurley, a private attorney, to represent him. Eventually defendant Serfecz-Edlund, another private attorney who we are told is Serfecz’s niece, also joined Hurley in defending this action. Khan was not involved in this proceeding. For several months, the parties apparently tried to negotiate a settlement to this proceeding but were unsuccessful. While Hurley and Serfecz-Edlund continued to represent Serfecz in the condemnation proceeding, in August 1995 Serfecz again retained Khan to bring another federal civil rights suit. Serfecz and Khan made a second contingency fee agreement. Again, Khan would get one-third of Serfecz’s recovery. Ser-fecz agreed not to dismiss the suit without consulting Khan and agreed that she would have to be a part of any settlement negotiations. On September 8, 1995, Khan filed a complaint for Serfecz in the Northern District of Illinois against Gallitano and numerous others alleging various federal civil rights violations.
In April 1996 Hurley and Serfecz-Ed-lund finally negotiated a settlement of the condemnation proceeding with Elk Grove. Serfecz would receive nearly $7 million as compensation for the mall, and he would dismiss the civil rights action that Khan had filed on his behalf. No one apprised Khan of the negotiations and she was not involved in them. Counsel for the defendants in the civil rights case — -without Khan’s knowledge — told the district court that they had settled that case and gave the court a copy of a settlement agreement signed by Serfecz. So the court dismissed the suit with leave to refile within 30 days.
On February 3, 1998, Khan filed this suit. She alleged that Serfecz agreed to *832 dismiss the civil rights action only because the defendants had wrongfully coerced him. Khan asserted a federal claim under § 1983 and a state tort claim. The district court dismissed the federal claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and declined to take supplemental jurisdiction over the state claim. The defendants sought attorney’s fees as the prevailing parties under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, but the district court awarded no fees because it concluded that Khan had in good faith argued to extend existing law. Khan appealed the dismissal and the defendants cross-appealed the denial of fees.
II. Analysis
A. Khan’s § 1983 Claim
Because the district court dismissed Khan’s federal claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), we must decide a legal question: Assuming the facts alleged in the complaint are true, and giving Khan the benefit of all reasonable inferences to be drawn from those facts, has she stated a cognizable cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983?
See Kaplan v. Shure Brothers, Inc.,
1. Contracts Clause
Section 10 of Article I sets out a series of limits on the powers of the States, including the limit that “[n]o State shall ... pass any ... law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” A State violates the Contracts Clause if a “change in state law has ‘operated as a substantial impairment of a contractual relationship.’ ”
General Motors Corp. v. Romein,
2. Substantive Due Process
Khan also alleges that the defendants violated her rights under the Due Process
*833
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment provides: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Khan does not complain that the process used by the defendants was inadequate; rather she relies on the concept of “substantive due process” as a bar to the alleged deprivation, no matter what process was used. The courts have long struggled to identify the appropriate analysis for substantive-due-process claims. In a series of eases, a majority of Justices on the Supreme Court could not agree on a single analysis to use in substantive-due-process cases.
See, e.g., Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey,
“The Due Process Clause guarantees more than fair process, and the ‘liberty’ it protects includes more than the absence of physical restraint. The Clause also provides heightened protection against government interference with certain fundamental rights and liberty interests.”
Glucksberg,
[W]e have always been reluctant to expand the concept of substantive due process because guideposts for responsible decision making in. this uncharted area are scarce and open-ended. By extending constitutional protection to an asserted right or liberty interest, we, to a great extent, place the matter outside the arena of public debate and legislative action. We must therefore exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field, lest the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause be subtly transformed into the policy preferences of the members of this Court.
First, ... the Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacrificed. Second, we have required in substantive-due-process cases a careful description of the asserted fundamental liberty interest. Our Nation’s history, legal traditions, and practices thus provide the crucial guideposts for responsible decision making that direct and restrain our exposition of the Due Process Clause.
Id.
at 720-21,
We must therefore “carefully formulate the interest” that Khan wants constitutionally protected.
With this carefully formulated interest identified, we must “examin[e] our Nation’s history, legal traditions, and practices,”
Glucksberg,
Under Anglo-American contract law, a contracting party’s traditional right is to receive the value of the benefit of her bargain.
See, e.g., Sager v. Friedman,
Khan here seeks a non-contractual remedy. She wants to recover from the defendants the value she would have gotten from her contract with Serfecz had *835 they not interfered with it and Serfecz thus performed differently. Certainly in some states, including Illinois, one who wrongfully interferes with the contract rights of another is liable for damages in tort, and in dismissing Khan’s § 1983 claim the district court did not imply that Khan cannot try to vindicate her rights under Illinois’s tort law in the Illinois courts. But this does not mean that the defendants also committed a constitutional tort. Neither party provided an analysis of this tort’s place in our history and legal traditions. We have not even been told, for example, how many states recognize this tort. But even if we concluded that the tort remedy for a wrongful interference with contract was deeply rooted in our legal history and tradition—something we are in no position to find on this record—Khan has not alleged she was deprived of that remedy. That is, as we have said, Khan does not allege that she does not have a remedy in tort for whatever damages the defendants’ wrongful interference caused her. Rather, Khan asserts that she has a federal right to be free from such interference in the first place.
But Khan has failed to show why the right to be free from tortious interference by state actors is a fundamental right deeply rooted in our history and tradition or implicit in the concept of ordered liberty. Khan has not shown why having a state-law remedy for whatever injury the defendants caused her is inadequate under the federal constitution. Khan’s burden was great and she did not meet it. So we will not create a redundant federal right that simply mirrors the available state-law tort. We reached a similar conclusion in
Horwitz-Matthews,
where the plaintiffs brought a Contracts Clause claim because a city repudiated its contract with them. We rejected that claim because the city had done nothing to prevent the plaintiffs from seeking damages under state eon-tract law for the alleged breach.
See
The defendants do not rely exclusively on the
Glucksberg
analysis; in fact they principally assert that the appropriate analysis is whether they acted arbitrarily or irrationally. Numerous cases have used similar formulations.
See Contreras v. City of Chicago,
Justice SOUTER, relying on Justice Harlan’s dissenting opinion in Poe v. Ullman, would largely abandon this restrained methodology, and instead ask “whether [Washington’s] statute sets up one of those ‘arbitrary impositions’ or ‘purposeless restraints’ at odds with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” In our view, however, the development of this Court’s substantive-due-process jurisprudence ... has been a process whereby the outlines of the “liberty” specially protected by the Fourteenth Amendment—never fully clarified, to be sure, and perhaps not capable of being fully clarified—have at least been carefully refined by concrete examples involving fundamental rights found to be deeply rooted in our legal system. This approach tends to rein in the subjective elements that are necessarily present in due-process judicial review.
*836
Although the Court in
Lewis
used a substantially different analysis than it had in
Glucksberg,
this does not mean that the
Glucksberg
analysis does not apply here. The circumstances in
Lewis,
a high-speed chase where government officials had to make split-second decisions, has no resemblance to the situation in this case. And the Court made clear that its shocks-the-conscience analysis was not generally applicable to all substantive-due-process claims. 523 U.S. at —,
In any event, we would reach the same conclusion whether we ask if the defendants’ conduct shocks our conscience or if the defendants violated a fundamental right deeply rooted in our tradition and history: Khan’s claim fails. The defendants’ alleged conduct is certainly obnoxious to general notions of good government: they apparently used their offices to coerce a citizen who was annoying one of their supporters. As to Serfecz, this conduct might have been a violation of
his
federal constitutional rights; that was the basis of the civil rights action Khan filed on his behalf. But Serfecz valued the offered settlement of the condemnation proceeding more than he valued his cause of action in his civil rights suit. It may be that, as Khan alleges, he only so valued that suit because the defendants wrongfully influenced him—by coercion or otherwise—but
as to Khan
that merely makes their conduct tortious. So Khan’s remedy is to seek tort damages, which she is free to do in state court.
Cf. Lewis,
523 U.S. at —,
B. Defendants’ Claim for Attorney’s Fees
Section 1988, Title 42, United States Code, provides: “(b) In any action or proceeding to enforce ... [42 U.S.C.
*837
§ 1983] ... the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” Having prevailed on Khan’s § 1983 claim, the defendants sought attorney’s fees. Although the language of the statute seems not to distinguish between prevailing parties, prevailing plaintiffs receive attorney’s fees as a matter of course, but prevailing defendants only receive attorney’s fees if the plaintiffs claim was “frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless.”
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
The parties dispute the appropriate standard of review for this issue. The statute’s plain text obviously makes the awarding of attorney’s fees a matter of the district court’s discretion, and the courts have so interpreted it.
Jaffee v. Redmond,
As they did in the court below, the defendants focus on the supposed frivolity of Khan’s substantive-due-process claim rather than her Contracts Clause claim. The defendants argue that the district court misapprehended the well established law of this circuit when it concluded that Khan had made a good faith argument for an extension of existing law. The defendants argue that our prior decisions, particularly
Wroblewski v. City of Washburn,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The defendants have not challenged, so we need not determine, whether Khan alleged sufficient facts to show that Hurley and Serfecz-Edlund, both private persons, could be liable under § 1983.
See Fries v. Helsper,
. Contreras was decided just after Glucksberg and did not rely on that decision in its analysis.
