In
Younger v. Harris,
I. Factual and Procedural Background
On November 24, 2008, Chief Judge Kenneth Wright of the Cook County Circuit Court entered General Order 2008-04. He ordered Cook County Sheriff Thomas Dart not to carry out residential evictions: (a) during two and a half weeks in the winter holiday season, (b) whenever the outside temperature dropped below 15 degrees Fahrenheit, or (c) whenever the sheriff determined that “extreme weather conditions endangered] the health and welfare of those to be evicted.” The Circuit Court has issued similar orders in previous years.
Appellant SKS & Associates, Inc. owns and manages residential rental properties in Cook County. SKS has had to use the process of eviction from time to time to deal with tenants who fail to pay rent. SKS alleges that the general order has cost it money by delaying its ability to evict those tenants. In this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the chief judge and the sheriff, SKS alleges that the chief judge’s general order violated its federal constitutional rights. SKS claims the order denied it equal protection of the laws, deprived it of property without due process of law, and amounted to an establishment of religion.
The district court dismissed the action on its own initiative, before the defendants had appeared. In a thoughtful opinion, the district court rejected the contention that the action’s dismissal deprived SKS of any remedy and determined that SKS could instead pursue state court relief by seeking a writ of mandamus. SKS filed a motion for reconsideration; after conducting a hearing, the district court denied the motion. This appeal followed. 1
II. Analysis
SKS has asked the federal courts to issue an order to compel the circuit court to process evictions more quickly. At a superficial level, this action appears to be within the scope of 42 U.S.C. § 1983: plaintiff claims that its federal constitutional rights are being violated by persons acting under color of state law, and it seeks declaratory relief.
2
Yet the relief
Abstention from the exercise of federal jurisdiction is the exception, not the rule.
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
Under established abstention doctrines, however, a federal court may, and often must, decline to exercise its jurisdiction where doing so would intrude upon the independence of the state courts and their ability to resolve the cases before them. The Supreme Court has recognized four main categories of abstention named after the cases that gave rise to them:
Pullman, Burford, Younger,
and
Colorado River.
See
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
The
Younger
doctrine requires federal courts to abstain from taking jurisdiction over federal constitutional claims that seek to interfere with or interrupt ongoing state proceedings.
FreeEats.com, Inc. v. Indiana,
In the pending state eviction actions, SKS is not a target of any effort to enforce state law. It is not even a defendant. Therefore, Younger abstention as we currently understand it does not completely fit here. Yet the Younger doctrine is instructive here because this case implicates the same principles of equity, comity, and federalism that provide the foundation for Younger to such an extent that the federal courts must abstain here.
The Supreme Court has explained that Younger abstention is rooted in the traditional principles of equity, comity, and federalism:
[Younger’s] far-from-novel holding was based partly on traditional principles of equity, but rested primarily on the “even more vital consideration” of comity. As we explained, this includes “a proper respect for state functions, a recognition of the fact that the entire country is made up of a Union of separate state governments, and a continuance of the belief that the National Government will fare best if the States and their institutions are left free to perform their separate functions in their separate ways.”
New Orleans Public Service, Inc.,
SKS is not a defendant in the pending state eviction actions, but it seeks to have a federal court tell state courts how to manage and when to decide a category of cases pending in the state courts. Federal adjudication of SKS’s claims on their merits would reflect a lack of respect for the state’s ability to resolve the cases properly before its courts. Adjudication here would thus run contrary to the “vital” considerations of comity and federalism, see
New Orleans Public Service, Inc.,
In terms of the more general equitable principles upon which
Younger
abstention is based, SKS has failed to show that it has no adequate remedy at law. See
Younger,
SKS insists that there is no adequate state remedy here, but we are not convinced. “[WJhen a litigant has not attempted to present his federal claims in related state-court proceedings, a federal court should assume that state procedures will afford an adequate remedy, in the absence of unambiguous authority to the contrary.”
Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
While the availability of just one state court remedy would be sufficient to require abstention here, SKS actually has three possible remedies available to it.
First, in any of its pending eviction cases, SKS may simply ask the court to issue an order requiring the sheriff to carry out the eviction within a certain amount of time, notwithstanding the general order. SKS contends that any such order “would be unenforceable” in light of the general order. This is plainly wrong. A state court system is capable of resolving any conflict or tension between two orders by two judges. Here, the second order would simply limit the discretion given to the sheriff by the first one. A circuit court is not forever bound by its general order and may revoke it, amend it, and allow exceptions to it as it sees fit. See
In Interest of General Order of Oct. 11, 1990,
As a second avenue for relief in the state courts, SKS might file a separate suit seeking to vacate the general order. If the circuit court (or a state appellate
As a third avenue for state court recourse, SKS may seek a writ of mandamus to compel the circuit court to rescind or vacate the general order and to compel the sheriff to timely fulfill his duty to execute orders of eviction. SKS contends that mandamus is not available because the chief judge’s issuance of the general order and the sheriffs eviction executions are both discretionary acts. “[M]andamus is used only to compel a specific duty or act, but mandamus does not lie where the order would interfere with the exercise of a discretionary act.”
DeVito v. Chicago Park District,
The only authority that gives the sheriff the discretion to delay eviction based on his own subjective weather determinations is the general order itself: “the Sheriff shall cease execution of [eviction] orders ... whenever regardless of outside temperature, extreme weather conditions endanger the health and welfare of those to be evicted.” A writ of mandamus vacating the general order would eliminate this discretion, and thus any decision to delay eviction for subjective weather concerns would be the proper target of a writ of mandamus itself. See
Farmer v. McClure,
When a section 1983 suit seeks a federal order compelling a state court to do something in an ongoing action, it calls upon the federal courts to cause friction with principles of comity and federalism. The friction would be especially gratuitous in this case. We are asked to dictate to a state court how it must handle its case adjudication, see
Christensen v. County of Boone,
We recognize that there is no general duty to exhaust state judicial or administrative remedies before pursuing a section 1983 action. See
Felder v. Casey,
This case calls for application of familiar principles to a novel
type of
lawsuit. SKS has not directed us to any comparable case in which federal courts, in the face of these principles of equity, comity, and federalism, have undertaken to supervise state court operations. SKS relies on the Sixth Circuit’s decision in
Morrison v. Lipscomb,
The claims here are not appropriate for resolution in federal court. SKS is free to pursue a remedy in state court. The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The chief judge and sheriff never filed appearances or briefs in the district court and have not participated in this appeal.
. Judge Shadur pointed out that plaintiff's original complaint did not ask for injunctive relief and that plaintiff could not obtain in-junctive relief against Judge Wright without showing that he had violated an earlier declaratory decree. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as amended by Pub.L. 104-317, § 309(c), 110
. The First and Ninth Circuits have both rejected claims seeking federal court orders compelling state court systems to speed up
. These principles of equity, comity, and federalism that we apply today have broad application. In the field of federal habeas corpus, for example, long before Congress codified the requirement for exhaustion of state remedies in 1948 in 28 U.S.C. § 2254, the Supreme Court imposed the requirement based on these principles of equity, comity, and federalism.
See Preiser v. Rodriguez,
. The Supreme Court has taken care to ensure that the doors to federal courts remain open when there are powerful reasons to believe that state courts will not protect federal constitutional rights. For example, in
Dombrowski v. Pfister,
. The Illinois circuit courts are also fully capable of resolving any federal constitutional arguments that SKS might make. As the Supreme Court pointed out in
Pennzoil,
Article VI of the United States Constitution requires all federal and state judges to swear to uphold the United States Constitution.
. See
Hanes v. Zurick,
