Kenneth L. Smith appeals the district court’s dismissal of two separate lawsuits stemming from the denial of his application for admission to the Colorado bar. The present litigation focuses on asserted deficiencies he alleges existed in the judicial process provided to him in his previous legal challenges. In particular, Mr. Smith objects to the resolution of cases by non-precedential unpublished decisions, a practice permitted by procedural rules issued and enforced by the Colorado courts and by this circuit. 1 As explained below, we agree with the district court that neither of the cases under review can properly proceed in federal district court. We therefore affirm.
I
Background
Mr. Smith graduated from law school, passed the state bar examination, and passed the professional ethics examination, all prerequisites to obtaining a license to practice law in Colorado. When he was ordered to submit to a mental status examination by the Board of Law Examiners’ Hearing Panel, however, he refused. Primarily because Mr. Smith refused to submit to that examination, the Hearing Panel recommended to the Colorado Supreme Court that his application be denied. After consideration of the record, including Mr. Smith’s application, the Hearing Panel’s report and recommendation, Mr. Smith’s exceptions to that report, and the responses filed by the Board of Law Examiners, the Colorado Supreme Court denied the application for admission to the State Bar. Mr. Smith then filed an action in federal district court challenging the admission process on constitutional grounds. That action was dismissed pursuant to the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine.
2
In the meantime, Mr. Smith challenged the bar admission process in state court on state and federal (42 U.S.C. § 1983) grounds. The state trial court summarily dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, citing the state supreme court’s exclusive authority over matters pertaining to bar admissions.
See Colo. Sup.Ct. Grievance Comm. v. Dist. Ct.,
He subsequently filed the two actions currently before us. In the first, he sued the justices of the Colorado Supreme Court, challenging the state court’s use of non-precedential unpublished decisions to dispose of appeals. He contends this creates a system “wherein [the Colorado] appellate courts are free to affirm irregular (and even flagrantly unconstitutional) decisions in unpublished opinions-while having no effect upon [the state’s] ‘official’ published law.” Rec. (Appeal No. 04-1470), vol. I, doc. 1 at 2. Specifically, he alleges the state trial court failed to follow controlling precedent, and the state’s non-publication rules enable an affirmance of that decision without legal accountability. 3 He argues the “continued enforcement and operation of these rules” would deny him various constitutional protections. Id. at 7.
In a separate action, Mr. Smith made similar allegations regarding this circuit’s use of non-precedential decisions, citing our unpublished resolution of his first federal suit. See Rec. (Appeal No. 04-1468), vol. I, doc. 1 at 2-4, 6-9. He contends this practice violates the same rights he invoked in his challenge to the state practice, as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. In addition to seeking relief with respect to this court’s rules, he requested a writ of mandamus ordering the state trial judge to address the merits of his challenge to the state bar admission process. We address each of his claims in turn.
II
Challenge to State Court Non-Publication Practice
The district court invoked Article III and held that Mr. Smith lacked standing to challenge the state’s non-publication practice. The fundamental requirements of standing are an injury in fact caused by the conduct complained of that will likely be redressed by a favorable decision in the case.
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
“Standing is determined as of the time the action is brought.”
Nova Health Sys. v. Gandy,
an injury in fact must be actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical. Allegations of possible future injury do not satisfy the requirements of Art[icle] III. A threatened injury must be certainly impending to constitute injury in fact. An Article III injury must be more than a possibility. The threat of injury must be both real and immediate.
Id. at 1155 (quotation marks, ellipses and citations omitted). Mr. Smith cannot make this required showing because the manner of resolution of his future appeals is entirely speculative.
Mr. Smith advances two alternative arguments for standing that we briefly address. Invoking the First Amendment and citing
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
Mr. Smith contends the uncertainty produced by the use of non-precedential decisions could indirectly affect the exercise of First Amendment rights, asserting one might curtail speech for fear that subsequent litigation will result in an unpublished decision denying constitutional protection in a manner wildly inconsistent with what would have otherwise been decided in a published opinion. That contention is so speculative and riddled with assumptions that it cannot serve as the basis for standing even if the consideration of third-person injury were permissible here.
See Nova Health Sys.,
Mr. Smith also asks us to rely on the principle typically invoked in cases involving mootness that a dispute “capable of repetition, but evading review” can be heard despite the lack of a presently justi-ciable case or controversy.
See, e.g., Roe v. Wade,
Ill
Challenge to Federal Non-publication Practice
When Mr. Smith filed suit against the federal defendants, he had no litigation pending in the Tenth Circuit. The focus of his challenge to this court’s use of unpublished’ decisions was the unfavorable disposition, by unpublished order and judgment, of his prior appeal regarding the constitutionality of the state bar admission process. The proper means for objecting to the non-publication of that decision would have been by petition for rehearing in this court and/or petition for certiorari review by the Supreme Court.
4
Instead, he has sought our review of this prior action by generating an entirely new stream of litigation. Although it is possible that this present case could ultimately result in an unpublished decision, this mere possibility is too speculative to support jurisdiction under Article III.
Nova Health Sys.,
We point out that the alleged injury caused by our circuit publication rules need not consistently evade review. Other circuits have addressed the validity of their non-publication rules in cases where the question of the rule’s validity arose
in the context of litigation presently before the court.
For example, courts have considered the constitutionality of publication rules where an unpublished decision relevant to the merits of an appeal was pressed by a litigant who insisted it be deemed binding precedent contrary to the circuit rule,
see Symbol Techs., Inc. v. Lemelson Med.,
IV
Mandamus Relief against State Trial Judge
The state trial court held it lacked jurisdiction to consider constitutional claims stemming from the denial of Mr. Smith’s admission to the bar because jurisdiction to hear such claims was lodged exclusively with the Colorado Supreme Court. Mr. Smith sought mandamus relief from the federal district court to compel the state trial judge’s consideration of his constitutional claims. The district court summarily rejected his claim for lack of jurisdiction under
Olson v. Hart,
In
Olson,
the plaintiff alleged the state court judge, out of spite, refused to sign a journal entry necessary to the exercise of his right to appeal. We held, if the allegation were true, the judge’s arbitrary and capricious action would violate the plaintiffs due process rights and present a cognizable § 1983 claim.
Id.
Here, Mr. Smith has requested mandamus relief claiming that the state trial court erred by limiting its jurisdiction in accordance with state law precedent,
see People v. Buckles,
Based on the foregoing analysis, we hold that the district court properly dismissed all of the claims asserted in the actions consolidated in this appeal. 5 Finally, we DENY the several motions that remain pending because none of them affects our analysis of either case or warrants relief in any collateral respect.
We AFFIRM the judgments of the district court.
Notes
. Because the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, several circuit judges, and a district judge in the circuit are named defendants in the action challenging this court's publication practice, plaintiff has moved for recusal of all Tenth Circuit judges and designation of a hearing panel from another circuit. Given "there are no pertinent, particularized allegations of bias,” we apply our general rule that, notwithstanding the inclusion of Tenth Circuit judges in the caption, "neither this court nor this panel ... is disqualified from hearing and resolving this case.”
Switzer v. Coan,
. The
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine holds that under 28 U.S.C. § 1257, the only federal court with jurisdiction to review state court judgments is the Supreme Court.
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp.,
. Mr. Smith does not claim the state practice has prevented him from relying on any unpublished decisions supporting a favorable result in his case, which was the basis for a similar challenge to a federal non-publication rule in
Anastasoff v. United States,
. In fact, Mr. Smith filed a petition for rehearing in which he argued that this court had deviated from precedent in its decision and then stated, in passing, that "he ha[d] a right to insist that it do so in a published opinion with precedential value,” Smith v. Mullarkey, No. 02-1481, Petition for Rehearing, at 1. He also noted the unpublished nature of this court’s decision in the petition for mandamus and/or prohibition he filed in the Supreme Court. In neither instance, however, did he argue that the use of unpublished decisions was unconstitutional.
. There are vague and conclusory references in Mr. Smith's briefing to an asserted tort liability of defendant Salazar, former Colorado Attorney General. Neither these refer-enees nor the underlying pleadings in the case remotely establish the existence of a cognizable claim.
