On this appeal five plaintiff appellants seek to maintain a class action for a declaratory judgment to the effect that Massachusetts criminal defendants who are unable to afford stenographers or other means to record the testimony at probable cause hearings, Mass. G.L. c. 276, §§ 38, 42, have been constitutionally deprived by the Commonwealth’s failure to create a transcript. They are faced at the outset with a claim that jurisdiction for declaratory relief does not exist. If none of the named plaintiffs may maintain this action on their own behalf, they may not seek such relief on behalf of a class.
O’Shea v. Littleton,
1974,
It is agreed that all five plaintiffs are indigent, and had probable cause determinations made against them at hearings at which there were no stenographers or tape recordings, it not being the court’s practice to make such records,
1
although Massachusetts permits parties to do so on their own. All five were thereupon “bound over” to the grand jury, and subsequently indicted. Two have been tried and acquitted. Except on the claim that they may commit future crimes, so as to raise the question in futuro, it is impossible to see how these two plaintiffs have any interest in the issue.
2
A speculative future interest is not enough.
Golden v. Zwickler,
1969,
However, the complaint seeks relief not against plaintiffs’ custodians but against state court judges. Federal courts normally have no jurisdiction to decide cases which present no active controversy between the parties at the time of decision.
Golden v. Zwickler,
ante.
3
With regard to any present connection with the named plaintiffs, defendants are functus officio and are not exposed even to a civil action for damages.
Pierson v. Ray,
1967,
Nonetheless, plaintiffs correctly argue that it would be a simple matter to substitute their custodians, who would presumably be represented by present counsel, and with whom there does exist a live controversy, as defendants. There seems no good reason to avoid a decision on the merits, if there is a legitimate defendant.
Cf. Hensley v. Municipal Court,
ante,
No useful purpose would be served by our repeating the extensive discussion contained in the majority and dissenting opinions of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court,
Commonwealth v. Britt,
Although the Massachusetts probable cause hearing is of a substantive character,
see Myers v. Commonwealth,
*47
With regard to plaintiffs equal protection claim, the question is not whether the state has denied equal protection in furnishing a transcript to a defendant who can pay for it but not to one who cannot,
cf. Roberts v. LaVallee,
1967,
The matter of equal protection in this area is a question of degree.
Ross v. Moffitt,
1974,
Non constat that a recording, if effected by the state, cannot be withheld because of lack of ability to pay,
Roberts v. LaVallee,
ante;
cf. Britt v. North Carolina,
1971,
Affirmed.
Notes
. A few comparable Massachusetts courts have been making recordings on an experimental basis. Plaintiffs, correctly, do not contend that this is a denial of equal protection in those courts that are not part of the experiment.
Cf. Aguayo v. Richardson,
2 Cir., 1973,
. Although the two acquitted plaintiffs were incarcerated for want of bail, awaiting trial, when the action was brought, their claim is mooted even if regarded as a habeas proceeding, since there is no present custody, or conviction,
cf. Carafas v. LaVallee,
1968,
. The “evading review” exception,
Roe v. Wade,
1973,
. We realize that since plaintiffs are losing the case on the merits, post, the Commonwealth now may be the one to regrét that plaintiffs’ class action claim fails.
