MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff R.M. Perry has filed a three-count complaint for declarative and injunctive relief against defendants James Ryan (“Ryan”), in his capacity as Attorney General for the State of Illinois, and the Village of Arlington Heights (“Village”). Plaintiff challenges the constitutionality of portions of the Illinois Motor Vehicle Code and the Arlington Heights Municipal Code authorizing seizure and disposal of abandoned vehicles. Defendant Ryan has filed a motion to dismiss for lack of standing, and both defendants have filed motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). For the reasons set forth below, defendant Ryan’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing is granted, and defendants’ remaining motions are denied without prejudice.
BACKGROUND
On January 5, 1994, plaintiff brought suit against the Village of Arlington Heights challenging the constitutionality of the Village ordinance authorizing seizure of abandoned vehicles. That suit, which arose out of the Village’s October 1992 seizure of a vehicle owned by plaintiff, resulted in the granting of plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment.
See Perry v. Village of Arlington Heights,
*897
In Count I of his complaint in the instant case, plaintiff cites those same notice and hearing deficiencies in challenging the constitutionality of the Illinois Vehicle Code section authorizing seizure and disposal of abandoned vehicles. Plaintiff alleges that the Village Code (through Section 18-206) incorporates by reference that Illinois seizure and disposal statute. Previously, the Illinois Code section at issue (625 Ill. Comp: Stat. Ann. 5/4-201 to 5/4-214) was found “unconstitutionally deficient in its failure to provide adequate notice and opportunity for a hearing prior to seizure.”
Perry,
In Count II, plaintiff makes the same vagueness allegation about the Village seizure ordinance (Section 18-223). In Count III, he makes the same vagueness allegation about the Village disposal ordinance (Section 18-224). In addition, he alleges that the disposal ordinance incorporates by reference a portion of the Illinois Vehicle Code challenged in Count I, and he challenges that Illinois Code portion, citing notice and hearing deficiencies similar to those alleged in Count I. Finally, plaintiff alleges that the Village disposal ordinance unconstitutionally requires payment of fees prior to release of a seized vehicle without a hearing on the propriety of that seizure.
Plaintiff alleges that he has standing to bring this suit because the Illinois statute at issue subjects him to possible criminal penalties and because the Village ordinances, with their threat of possible seizure and disposal of his vehicle, force him to use alternate travel routes in order to remain outside the Village. Plaintiff seeks a declaration that the challenged Illinois statute and Village ordinances are unconstitutionally vague, and that the Illinois statute and the Village disposal ordinance are in violation of the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. He also seeks an injunction against defendants barring them from enforcing the challenged statute and ordinances.
Subsequent to the
Perry
decision, the Village modified its ordinance, providing preseizure steps that effectively answered all of the court’s objections except one: nothing in the revised ordinance requires the pre-seizure notice to set forth “the legal and factual basis for the presumption of abandonment.”
Perry,
Defendant Village alleges that its current pre-seizure safeguards answer plaintiffs complaint and that plaintiff therefore has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Defendant Ryan alleges that plaintiff has shown no actual or threatened injury attributable to defendant Ryan or any defendant based on the Illinois Code, and that plaintiff therefore lacks standing .to bring this suit against him. Ryan also alleges that plaintiff has failed to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
DISCUSSION
The threshold requirement for bringing a suit in federal court is that the plaintiff present a case or controversy between himself and the defendant within the meaning of Article III of the U.S. Constitution.
See Warth v. Seldin,
In ruling on a motion to dismiss for lack of standing, the material allegations of the complaint must be accepted as true, and the complaint is to be liberally construed in favor of plaintiff.
See Warth,
Plaintiffs injury here is not actual but threatened. He suffered an actual injury in the previous ease, in which his car was towed by the Village of Arlington Heights pursuant to an ordinance subsequently held to be unconstitutional.
See Perry,
Plaintiff also alleges that the challenged Illinois statute, incorporated by reference in the Arlington Heights ordinances, subjects him to possible criminal penalties. If plaintiff can show a threat of possible Village seizure of his vehicle, then there is also a threat that he would be subject to those criminal penalties. Defendant Ryan argues that plaintiff lacks standing because he has not shown any actual or threatened injury attributable to Ryan based on the Illinois Code. Nevertheless, it seems clear that plaintiff
can
allege such a threatened injury. The nexus between Ryan and the threatened injury lies in the incorporation of the Illinois Code in the Arlington Heights ordinances, an incorporation which figured prominently in the
Perry
court’s analysis.
Therefore, accepting plaintiffs allegations as true, the court concludes that plaintiff may be able to show a threatened injury, although he has not done so at this point. If he were to show such a threatened injury, then the second part of the test for standing would be met, i.e., plaintiffs injury could be traced to the challenged conduct. If plaintiff were to run afoul of the challenged ordinances and statute, the injury would be inflicted by defendants Ryan and the Village. It follows, then, that the injury is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision, thus meeting the third part of the test. Plaintiff is seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against defendants. If the court were to rule in his favor, declaring the challenged provisions unconstitutional and enjoining defendants from enforcing them, plaintiffs injury would be redressed.
Therefore, the court concludes that plaintiff has failed to allege standing in this case as to both defendants because the complaint does not allege that he ever parks or wants to park his car in the Village. Moreover, the complaint does not allege that plaintiff is a citizen or resident of Illinois. The question of where he resides would seem to have significant bearing on whether plaintiffs injury were truly threatened or instead merely “conjectural or hypothetical.”
Northeastern Florida,
Because this is a Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss for lack of standing, the court is limited to the material allegations of the complaint,
4
which must be liberally construed in favor of plaintiff.
See Jenkins,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing is granted, and defendants’ remaining motions are denied without prejudice.
Notes
. Specifically, the court held unconstitutional those provisions of the Arlington Heights Municipal Code which:
(1) permit towing of abandoned motor vehicles on private property without notice to a known owner by certified or registered mail set *897 ting forth the legal and factual basis for the presumption of abandonment;
(2) permit such towing without a prior hearing on the abandonment issue;
(3) permit a seized vehicle to be disposed of without prior notice to a known owner by certified or registered mail; and
(4) require payh'ient of fees prior to release of an impouháea vehicle without a hearing on the propriety of the seizure.
See Perry,
. The court in,
Perry
criticized that failure to define abandonment, noting that allowing such "standardless determination by a police officer of when a vehicle has been abandoned” creates a risk "that a vehicle not actually abandoned by its owner might be towed.”
. Although a prior injury cannot by itself show a threat of future injury, "past wrongs are evidence
bearing on
whether there is a real and immediate threat of repeated injury.”
O’Shea,
at 496,
. If this were a motion for summary judgment, the situation would be different. Plaintiff would then be required to go beyond the “mere allegations" of the complaint and " 'set forth' by affidavit or other evidence 'specific facts.' ”
Lujan,
