Miсhael A. DUNN, et al., Plaintiffs, v. James B. CAREY, Delaware County Sheriff, et al., Defendants.
Nos. 86-2101, 86-2102.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 22, 1986. Decided Dec. 16, 1986.
808 F.2d 555
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and REMANDED.
Lawrence M. Reuben, Atlas, Hyatt & Reuben, P.A., Fergus Kear, Indianapolis, Ind., for plaintiffs.
H. Erskine Cherry, Braddock, Cherry, Godfrey & Clase, Anderson, Ind., for defendants.
Before FLAUM and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges, and SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge.
Michael Dunn and two others filed suit in 1978, on behalf of a class of inmates, contending that conditions at the Delaware County Jail violated the constitutional rights of prеtrial detainees. The case was settled in 1984 by a consent decree providing for the construction of a new “Public Safety Complex” in Delaware County. The Complex was to include a new city hall for Muncie, Indiana, and new police facilities as well as a new jail. Under the decree the city and county governments would lease the Complex, and the cost of the lease would be directly funded by new taxes.
Richard Amburn and Effie Mae Kingen, who were not parties to the federal litigation, complained to the Indiana State Board
Contending that the pending state action prevented their borrowing the money to build the Complex, the parties in the federal action asked the district judge to join Amburn and Kingen as parties and to enjoin the conduct of the state case. The judge dismissed the petition to join Amburn and Kingen. 110 F.R.D. 439 (S.D.Ind. 1986). We have jurisdiction of the appeal from this decision because the federal parties wanted an injunction against Amburn and Kingen. The court‘s refusal to add them as parties was just the procedural device by which it denied the injunction, and under
The district judge concluded that adding Amburn and Kingen as parties is inappropriate because no relief against them is available. None is available, the judge held, bеcause Amburn and Kingen have invoked in state court remedies against the collection of taxes. The judge read the Tax Injunction Act,
The several litigants want two sorts of relief. Amburn and Kingen want an injunction against the assessment of taxes, and they have asked a state court for this. The federal parties want an injunction against the conduct of state litigation, and they have asked a federal court for this. The Tax Injunction Act applies only to requests that federal courts interfere with the collection of state taxes; a separate Anti-Injunction Act,
The Tax Injunction Act provides:
The 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 courts of suсh State.
The natural reading of this language is that district courts confronted with requests to “enjoin, suspend or restrain” state taxes shall stay their hands unless there are no “plain, speedy and efficient” state remedies. The district judge was not requested in this case to interfere with the collection of a tax; he was asked to interferе with the conduct of litigation. If he had interfered as requested, the result would have been to allow the collection of a tax. On the other hand, the request to enjoin state litigation brought into play the Anti-Injunction Act of 1793,
A court of the United States may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State court except as expressly authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments.
This statute exactly describes what the federal parties want: an “injunction to stay
Although the district court concluded that
The parties have not identified, and we have not found, any legislative history suggesting that the statute deals with injunctions against litigation, or forbids injunctions that might increase state taxes. If the statute had this effect, then injunctions that compel or lead inevitably to the collection of state taxes, as in Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U.S. 267 (1977), wоuld fall under a cloud. Injunctions that lead to taxes must be scrutinized under the eleventh amendment and related principles of governmental immunities, see Papasan v. Allain, --- U.S. ---, 106 S.Ct. 2932, 2939-43 (1986); Gary A. v. New Trier High School District No. 203, 796 F.2d 940 (7th Cir. 1986). They do not face an additional hurdle under
The irrelevance of
Things might be otherwise if the federal case had been adjudicated on the merits rather than ended by a consent decree. The federal plaintiffs’ claim arises under the Constitution and
Because a consent decree‘s force comes from agreement rather than positive
Our case involves arguments of exactly this sort. Amburn and Kingen believe that by consenting to build an entire new governmental complex and to sign leases that directly increase taxes, the defendants in this suit exceeded their authority as a matter of state law. Amburn and Kingen have chosen the forum designated by the state for the resolution of such claims. We cannot say that their claims are transparently frivolous. A court must be alert to the possibility that the consent decree is a ploy in some other struggle. Perhaps the defendants have been frustrated by their inability to win political approval for the construction of a new city hall for Muncie. The federal litigation may have offered an opportunity to achieve other goals, and the “consent” to build a whole governmental complex may have been what defendants received in exchаnge for giving plaintiffs what they wanted. See Donald L. Horowitz, Decreeing Organizational Change: Judicial Supervision of Public Institutions, 1983 Duke L.J. 1265, 1294-95; cf. Chicago & Grand Trunk Ry. v. Wellman, 143 U.S. 339, 345 (1892) (feigned adversarial litigation does not support federal jurisdiction); Firefighters, 106 S.Ct. at 3077 (federal court is more than a recorder of private contracts). We do not imply that this particular decree was a conscious evasion or that the litigation became collusive; for all we know it remained adversarial, and the settlement is a genuine compromise. But people who were not parties to the consent decree are entitled to use the ordinary means to find out, and these means include challenging the authority оf the governmental parties to act on behalf of the people of Indiana. The district court therefore was wise not to join Amburn and Kingen in the federal litigation.
AFFIRMED.
SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge, concurring.
I agree with the majority that the district court properly denied the federal parties’ request to enjoin the state court tax suit. The Anti-Injunction Act,
