Trudy Nolles, Angie Palmer, and David M. Jeffrey (collectively “Plaintiffs”) are registered voters in Nebraska who brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action chai-
I.
In 2005, the Nebraska legislature, overriding the Governor’s prior veto, passed LB 126, which, inter alia, mandated the dissolution of all Class I school districts and required the Class I school districts to be merged into larger school districts that served students through the twelfth grade. Class I school districts provided education for students only from kindergarten through the eighth grade. LB 126 required the State Committee to issue orders by December 1, 2005, directing how each Class I school district would be merged. The orders merging the school districts were required by LB 126 to take effect on June 15, 2006, following the end of the 2005-2006 school year.
Nebraska citizens commenced a referendum effort, see Neb. Const, art. Ill, § § 1, 3, & 4, and obtained enough signatures to put the repeal of LB 126 on the ballot at the next general election, which was to be held on November 7, 2006. The referendum effort did not, however, garner enough signatures to suspend the operation of LB 126 pending the result of the election, as required under Nebraska Constitution Article III, Section 3 (requiring the signature of 10% of registered voters to suspend the operation of the challenged law). Three residents and taxpayers in Class I school districts, along with several school districts, filed suit in Nebraska state court (referred to as the “Pony Lake litigation”) seeking an injunction to prevent the State Committee from complying with LB 126 and entering consolidation orders before the November 2006 election. The state district court granted a permanent injunction, finding that the effective dates of the consolidation orders impermis-sibly burdened the people’s right of referendum.
The State Committee appealed the injunction to the Supreme Court of Nebraska. Under Nebraska law, the appeal stayed the district court’s injunction,
see
Neb.Rev.Stat. § 25-21,213 (1995), and the Supreme Court declined to issue its own temporary restraining order. On December 1, 2005, no longer under any injunction, the State Committee issued its orders of merger as required by LB 126, although the orders were not to take effect until June 15, 2006. The state court appellees then cross-appealed, claiming that LB 126’s effective dates denied them the right to vote and the right to freedom of speech protected by the United States Constitution. The Supreme Court of Nebraska reversed the district court on March 3, 2006, concluding that the trial court had misapplied Nebraska’s constitutional provisions regarding referendums and holding that Article III, Section 3 of the Nebraska Constitution clearly provided that where the referendum petition failed to garner sufficient signatures, the legislation facing the ballot was not to be suspended pending the vote.
See Pony Lake Sch. Dist. 30 v. State Comm. for the Reorg. оf Sch. Dists.,
After the Supreme Court of the United States denied the Pony Lake plaintiffs’ petition for certiorari on May 15, 2006, the current Plaintiffs, none of whom were parties to the state court litigation, brought a declaratory judgment action in federal district court on June 8, 2006, claiming that LB 126 violated the federal Constitution’s protection of the rights to vote and to freedom of speech, and the Fourteenth Amendment’s protection of the rights to substantive due process and procedural due process. They sought a declaration that the State Committee’s actions were unconstitutional and therefore null and void. In the meantime, the schоol districts were merged pursuant to LB 126 effective June 15, 2006. The federal district court stayed its ruling on the § 1983 claims to see if the voters would retain LB 126, thus mooting the claims. The referendum appeared on the ballot at the November 7, 2006, general election, and the voters of Nebraska voted to repeal LB 126. Nothing about the repeal affected the prior actions of the State Committee or otherwise authorized the re-establishment of the dissolved school districts.
The district court subsequently dismissed the federal case, finding all of the claims to be barred by res judicata based on the Pony Lake litigation. The district court also determined thаt the right to vote and the right to freedom of speech claims were mooted because the Plaintiffs did in fact vote on the referendum and that the due process claims lacked merit. The Plaintiffs appeal. 2
II.
A. Due Process
Even though not raised by the parties or addressed by the district court, we “are under an independent obligation to examine [our] own jurisdiction, and standing is perhaps the most important of the jurisdictional doctrines.”
United States v. Hays,
1. Substantive Due Process
The Plaintiffs claim that thе implementation of LB 126 prior to the referendum vote, as required by Article III, Section 3 of the Nebraska Constitution, rendered them vote in the referendum election ineffective, resulting in a fundamentally unfair election process in violation of their right to substantive due process. The contested standing issue with respect to the substantive due process claim is whether the Plaintiffs can establish an injury in fact. “A federal court cannot pronounce any statute, either of a State or of the United States, void, because irreconcilable with the constitution, except as it is called upon to adjudge the legal rights of litigants in actual controversies.”
Baker v. Carr,
“Election law, as it pertains to state and local elections, is for the most part a preserve that lies within the exclusive competence of the state courts.” Boras
v. Town of N. Smithfield,
The Supreme Court has “ ‘consistently held that a plaintiff raising only a generally available grievance about government— claiming only harm to his and every citizen’s interest in proper application of the Constitution and laws, and seeking relief that no more directly and tangibly benefits him than it does the public at large — does not state an Article III case or controversy.’ ”
Lance v. Coffman,
— U.S. -,
The Eleventh Circuit recently recognized that
Lance
abrogated its prior precedent and held that voters in a county lacked independent standing to challenge a consent decree that increased the number of county commissioners, required a cumulative voting system, and instituted a system whereby the rotating Commission chairmanship would periodically be offered to an African-American.
See Dillard v. Chilton County Comm’n,
The Plaintiffs in this case are attempting to bring a generalized grievance shared in common by all the voters in Nebraska who voted to repeal LB 126. Because they have not asserted a personalized injury, they lack standing to assert a violation of substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Plaintiffs couch their claim as one against the actions of the State Committee in voting to dissolve the Class I school districts prior to the referendum election. We respectfully reject this characterization. First, the State Committee did not act of its own accord, exercise its own independent judgment or discretion, or “vote” in any sense of the term, but instead acted pursuant to the mandatory requirements of the Nebraska constitution and the lawful directions of the then duly-enacted LB 126, which ordered the State Committee to dissolve the school districts on or before December 1, 2005, with an еffective date of June 15, 2006. 0See Appellants’ App. at 46, LB 126 § 2(1) (“[0]n or before December 1, 2005, the State Committee ... shall enter an order dissolving any Class I school district that does not comply with the requirements of subsection (4) of section 1 of this act ....) (emphasis added);” id., LB 126 § 2(4) (“The effective date ... shall be ... June 15, 2006, for all other purposes [besides establishing residency].”).) The State Committee members did not “vote” to dissolve the school districts, but merely acted to carry out their obligatory duties as mandated by the duly enacted and then binding and effective legislation.
Second, the claim that the application of Article III, Section 3 of the Nebraska Constitution (which prevented the delaying of the implementation of LB 126 until after the referendum election) results ed in a fundamentally unfair election does not allege a personalized injury. The Plaintiffs do not allege that they were treated differently than other voters or that their votes were diluted as compared to other voters, that election officials refused to count their votes or failed to follow state election procedures, or even that the State Committee violated state law in dissolving the school districts (the Plaintiffs’ complaint is the opposite — that the State Committee followed statе law to the Plaintiffs’ detriment). Nebraska voters successfully repealed LB 126 through the referendum voting process. As in Lance, they challenge only the application of the Nebraska Constitution to the state-created referendum process. This is a generalized grievance better left to the state political and legislative process. In short, the Plaintiffs fail to allege a specific individualized injury necessary to establish standing in federal court resulting from the allegedly unfair election, that is, an injury not shared by all the voters who voted as they did in the referendum election. (See Appellants’ Suppl. Br. at. 5, arguing that there had been an injury to thе right of every voter to a fundamentally fair election). Because the Plaintiffs lack federal Article III standing, their substantive due process claim must be and is dismissed for lack of federal jurisdiction.
The Plaintiffs, all property taxpayers, also brought a procedural due process claim, alleging that the consolidation of the Class I school districts would increase property taxes for some properties located in a former Class I district, and that they were entitled to a hearing before their property taxes could be raised. None of the Plaintiffs alleged, however, that their own property taxes werе in fact (or would be) increased, only that some property taxes within the state would be raised, some would be lowered, and some would remain unchanged. Indeed, “[a]t the time this suit was filed the tax rates for the newly reorganized districts had not yet been set.” (Appellants’ Suppl. Br. at 9.) The amended complaint filed in the district court did not mention an increase in property taxes at all, but asserted only that the State Committee’s actions of dissolving school districts and changing school district boundaries were quasi-judicial actions requiring a hearing. (Appellants’ App. at 154,156.)
The Plaintiffs failed to allege a particularized injury and thus lack stаnding to bring this procedural due process claim.
See Raines,
B. Right to Vote
The Plaintiffs claim that the State Committee violated their fundamental right to vote in the referendum election by implementing LB 126 before the general election, thus nullifying their subsequent sufficient vote to repeal LB 126. The district court dismissed the right to vote claim based on res judicata, or claim preclusiоn, applying the equitable doctrine of virtual representation and concluding that the Nebraska Supreme Court conclusively decided this issue in the
Pony Lake
litigation. The application of res judicata is a legal conclusion that we review
de novo. See St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Compaq Computer Corp.,
Under Nebraska law,
[t]he doctrine of res judicata, or claim preclusion, bars the relitigation of a matter that has been directly addressed or necessarily included in a former adjudication if (1) thе former judgment was rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, (2) the former judgment was a final judgment, (3) the former judgment was on the merits, and (4) the same parties or their privies were involved in both actions.
Ichtertz v. Orthopaedic Specialists of Neb., P.C.,
“State courts are generally free to develop their own rules for protecting against the relitigation of common issues,” as long as the state’s application of its preclusion doctrines complies with due process.
Richards v. Jefferson County, Ala.,
“[Vjirtual representation is best understood as an equitable theory rather than as a crisp rule with sharp corners and clear factual predicates, such that a party’s status as a virtual representative of a nonparty must be determined on a case-by-case basis.”
Gonzalez v. Banco Cent. Corp.,
The Supreme Court of Nebraska has not had a specific occasion to apply the doctrine of virtual representation, so we are tasked with determining how and whether that court would apply the doctrine in this case. Applying federal claim preclusion law, the Nebraska Supremе Court has held nonparties to be in privity with parties to a prior suit, noting that “privity requires, at a minimum, a substantial identity between the issues in controversy and showing the parties in the two actions are really and substantially in interest the same.”
VanDeWalle v. Albion Natl Bank,
The interest assеrted here is identical to the interests asserted in the
Pony Lake
litigation. The Plaintiffs here claim that the Committee’s actions infringed upon their constitutional right to vote on the repeal of LB 126. The
Pony Lake
plaintiffs made the same constitutional claim, asserting “their right to vote on the forced consolidation of the Class I school districts.”
Pony Lake,
Although the right to vote is an individual right, the claim here is not that the Plaintiffs were prevented from voting— they were not. Rather, the Plaintiffs claim that the Committee’s actions of consolidating the school districts (as mandated by LB 126) prior to the election deprived them of an effective vote. We view this claim as public in nature. The Committee’s actions complied with Nebraska law, and it was the Nebraska Constitution that required implementation of LB 126 prior to the referendum election that resulted in the repeal of LB 126. The Plaintiffs’ voting rights claim in this lawsuit in effect challenges the constitutionality of Nebraska’s state constitution based referendum scheme that provides for implementation of challenged legislation prior to the referendum vote unless ten percent of registered voters sign the referendum petition. This is analogous to the facts of Mere, where nonregistered voters brought Equal Protection and First Amendment challenges to the Missouri legislative scheme that allowed the disincorporation of their town based on a petition signed by a su-permajority of registered voters.
See Nieve v. St. Louis County, Mo.,
The due process concerns that limit the application of the res judicata doctrine to nonparties are lessened when the rights asserted involve issues of public concern rather than private rights.
See Richards,
The Supreme Court has noted the importance of notice before a nonparty is precluded by a prior suit.
Richards,
III.
The appeal of the due process claims is dismissed for lack of standing. The district court’s judgment on the right-to-vote claim is affirmed. The State Committee’s Motion to Strike Portions of Appellants’ Reply Brief and Argument in Support Thereof is denied.
Notes
. The Honorable Lyle E. Strom, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
. The Plaintiffs do not address the freedom of speech claim on appeal, and neither do we.
. The facts of
Lance
are somewhat analogous to the facts here. In
Lance,
a state court redrew congressional district boundaries when the Colorado legislature was unаble to agree on how to set the boundaries to accommodate an additional member of the federal House of Representatives following the 2000 census. The Colorado legislature finally reached agreement and subsequently redrew the district boundaries in 2003. The Colorado Attorney General challenged the subsequent redistricting as a violation of Article V, Section 44 of the Colorado Constitution, which limited redistricting to once per census.
See Lance,
