The plaintiffs in this case are certain local government units in Will County, Illinois, and a group of local taxpayers; the defendants are the County of Will, the county tax assessor, and two banks that act as collectors and depositories of taxes. On appeal the plaintiffs challenge the district court’s dismissal, in deference to parallel state court proceedings, of their federal complaint, which charged that the defendants violated state law by failing to distribute collected tax revenues plus interest to the local public entities, thereby conspiring to deprive and actually depriving them of property without due process, and of the equal protection of the laws, in violation of 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 (1976 & Supp. V 1981).
I
On June 17,1981, the Board of Education of Valley View Community Unit School District No. 365U (“the Board”) and the school district itself, recipients of county tax revenues, and eleven individual taxpayers filed suit in federal district court on behalf of themselves and all other similarly situated individuals and public entities within Will County (except Will County itself). Their complaint alleged that Kent Bosworth, the Will County Treasurer and ex officio County Collector, by retaining tax revenues for substantial periods and transferring accrued interest to the county treasury, violated his duty under Illinois law to distribute collected taxes allocated to each of the public entities by the first of each month, 1 his duty to distribute to the entities any interest earned on the money withheld, 2 and his obligation under the Illi *1318 nois Constitution not to be compensated out of collected fees. 3 The plaintiffs also alleged that the two bank defendants, as deputy tax collectors, see Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 120,1665 (1981), and as depositories of taxes, see id. K 674, equally breached these duties. Finally, they alleged that the banks and Will County conspired with Bosworth to breach these duties, the banks profiting by the investment of the tax revenues at below-market rates, and the county profiting by the transfer of the interest earned on the revenues to its treasury. The Board and the school district alleged that these violations deprived them of property and of the equal protection of the laws (because another local public entity- — Will County itself — was not subject to these deprivations). The individual plaintiffs claimed that the violations of Illinois law deprived them of property by subjecting them to possible increases in assessments for the public entities’ debt financing or possible losses of services. The plaintiffs sought various forms of relief, including a declaratory judgment that the taxes and interest were unlawfully withheld, an injunction against further withholding, an accounting of all interest earned on the taxes, damages for the difference between the market rate of interest and the amount of interest actually earned, and punitive damages.
On the defendants’ motion to dismiss, the district court first addressed the various plaintiffs’ standing to sue. It concluded that the public entities lacked standing on the ground that political subdivisions of a state have no constitutional rights that they may invoke against their creator, citing
Williams v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore,
*1318 Compensation of officers and employees and the office expenses of units of local government shall not be paid from fees collected.
*1319
The district court then considered whether it should abstain from deciding the case despite the existence of a live issue. It concluded that abstention was proper because of the existence of parallel state court proceedings, under the rationale of
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
On appeal the plaintiffs challenge both the district court’s rulings on standing and its decision to abstain, and the defendants urge reversal of the ruling that the plaintiffs have standing on any claim, as an alternative ground for affirming the judgment. Because we affirm the decision to abstain, though for reasons somewhat different than those relied on by the district court, we need not reach the standing questions addressed below.
II
The defendants urge numerous grounds for abstention or dismissal in support of the district court’s judgment. Their first argument is based on the Tax Injunction Act, which provides:
The district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.
28 U.S.C. § 1341 (1976). They argue that compelling the distribution of collected taxes is as disruptive to state autonomy as suspending the collection of taxes, and conclude that the Act’s prohibition applies. They cite
California v. Grace Brethren Church,
Despite the inapplicability of the Tax Injunction Act itself, a federal court may nevertheless exercise its discretion to withhold equitable relief in reliance on the “fundamental principle of comity between federal courts and state government that is essential to ‘Our Federalism,’ particularly in the area of state taxation,” that underlies the Act.
Fair Assessment in Real Estate Association v. McNary,
We find the defendants’ further argument that abstention is proper under the rationale of
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
Finally, the defendants argue that abstention is proper under the doctrine of
Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co.,
III
None of the well-established avenues for dismissal or abstention, therefore, supports the district court’s order. In such cases federal courts have a “virtually unflagging obligation ... to exercise the jurisdiction given them.”
Colorado River,
One consideration has determinative force in the present case. Between the time of the district court’s decision and oral argument in this court the parties in one of the two parallel state suits entered a consent decree that established the plaintiffs’ entitlement to prompt distribution of collected taxes and provided injunctive relief.
Board of Education of Valley View Community Unit School District No. 365U v. Bosworth,
No. 80 MR 42 (12th Judicial Circuit,
*1322
Sept. 1,1982). Moreover, in an unpublished decision issued three days after we heard oral argument and recently affirmed by the Illinois Supreme Court (but never directly brought to our attention by the parties),
6
the Illinois Appellate Court ruled in the second parallel state suit “that the [public entities within Will County] are entitled to the interest monies which they claim,” reversing the unpublished decision (buried in the record on appeal but not mentioned in the parties’ briefs) of the Circuit Court of Will County dismissing the complaint.
Board of Commissioners of Bolingbrook Park District
v.
County of Will,
No. 82-140, slip op. at 6 (Ill.App. Nov. 5,1982), rev’g No. 81 CH 415 (12th Judicial Circuit, Feb. 3, 1982),
aff’d,
The district court did more than abstain, however: it dismissed the complaint outright. In our recent decision in
Evans Transportation Co. v. Scullin Steel Co.,
Notes
. See Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 120, j[ 761 (1979) (current version at id (1981)), which provided in relevant part:
[T]he county collector shall on the first day of June and the first day of each and every month thereafter, pay over to the other proper authorities or persons the amounts in his hands and payable to them as taxes, not theretofore paid over ....
. See id. ch. 85, U 902 (1981), which provides in relevant part:
To the extent a public agency [defined by id. H 901 to include counties] has custody of *1318 funds not owned by it or another public agency [defined by id. to include school districts] and does not otherwise have authority to invest such funds, the public agency may invest such funds as if they were its own.... All earnings accruing on any investments or deposits made pursuant to the provisions of [the Investment of Public Funds] Act shall be credited to the public agency by or for which such investments or deposits were made, except where by specific statutory provisions such earnings are directed to be credited to and paid to a particular fund.
The defendants argued that the relevant statute is id. ch. 36, H 22.1, which provides:
All earnings accruing on any investments or deposits made by the County Treasurer whether acting as such or as County Collector, of county monies as in this Act is defined, shall be credited to and paid into the County Treasury for the benefit of the county corporate fund to be used for county purposes, except where by specific statutory provisions such earnings are directed to be credited to and paid to a particular fund.
After the filing of the plaintiffs’ federal complaint, id. ch. 120, H 761, see supra note 1, was amended to provide in relevant part:
[T]he county collector in counties with a population of 3,000,000 or more, shall on the first day of June and the first day of each and every month thereafter, pay over to the other proper authorities or persons the amounts in his hands and payable to them as taxes, not theretofore paid over. In counties with a population of less than 3,000,000, the county collector shall within 30 days after due date and at 30-day intervals thereafter, pay over to the other proper authorities or persons the amounts in his hands and payable to them as taxes, not theretofore paid over. Taxes collected in counties with a population of less than 3,000,000 and not distributed to other proper authorities shall be invested in accordance with the provisions of [id. ch. 102, KU 34-35], and the interest accrued on monies held by the county collectors in excess of 30 days after the due date and the succeeding 30 day intervals thereafter, shall be distributed along with the principal amount of taxes.
(Emphasis added.)
. See 111. Const, art. 7, § 9(a), which provides in relevant part:
. On March 31, 1983, the plaintiffs in this suit filed a complaint against the same defendants in the Circuit Court for the Twelfth Judicial Circuit, making similar allegations and seeking similar relief as in their federal complaint. The bank defendants urge this court to take judicial notice of the filing as further support for abstention. The plaintiffs argue that the suit was filed only because the relevant statute of limitation was about to run, and not because their zeal to litigate their claims in a federal forum had abated. Because we affirm the district court’s decision to abstain without considering this third state suit, we need not resolve this controversy.
. The bank defendants also cite
Board of Library Trustees of Wood Dale Public Library District v. County of DuPage,
No. 81 CH 575 (18th Judicial Circuit, Sept. 15, 1981) (later . reversed,
see infra),
and
Board of Education of Aptastisic-Tripp School District No. 102 v. County of Lake,
No. 81 CH 479 (19th Judicial Circuit, n.d.), but failed to attach copies of these decisions to their brief, in violation of Seventh Circuit Rule 9(d). Either for inscrutable reasons or through oversight, the defendants failed to cite the similar decision in the second of the parallel state suits relied on by the district court below to justify abstention.
Board of Commissioners of Bolingbrook Park District v. County of Will,
No. 81 CH 415 (12th Judicial Circuit, Feb. 3, 1982);
see
Record 50. In any case, that decision has been reversed on appeal. No. 82-140 (Ill.App. Nov. 5, 1982),
aff'd,
. On May 16, 1983, in response to the bank defendants’ “Motion for Court to Take Judicial Notice of Parallel State Court Proceeding” filed May 10, 1983, see supra note 4, the plaintiffs did state that this suit was “pending upon the .County’s motion for leave to appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court.” This oblique reference, which was unaccompanied by a copy of the decision, see Seventh Circuit Rule 9(d), and which incorrectly noted the appellate case number as 83-145, was the first indication provided to this court that the Illinois Appellate Court had taken jurisdiction or acted at all. Such a failure to keep the court informed is especially inexcusable in a case of this kind.
. The incompleteness of the record makes it impossible for us to determine the degree to which this case is already or likely to become moot. Although the Supplemental Record contains the consent decree and stipulation of dismissal of certain counts of Board of Education of Valley View Community Unit School District No. 365U v. Bosworth, No. 80 MR 42 (12th Judicial Circuit), we cannot determine which, if any, issues are still pending in that case, because no copy of the amended complaint is included; the original complaint, see Record 46, clearly does not correspond to the stipulation. Should the district court determine on remand that the entire case is moot, dismissal will be proper.
