Theophilus Green sued under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983, alleging that the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation (“DPR”) and two DPR attorneys (collectively, the “Illinois Defendants”) violated his rights to due process and equal protection in bringing administrative disciplinary proceedings against him to suspend his clinical psychologist’s license. Dr. Green also asserted a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1985 for civil conspiracy against the DPR and Health Care Service Corporation (“HCSC”). The district court dismissed some of Dr. Green’s claims and grаnted summary judgment to the defendants on the remaining claims. Dr. Green appeals, and we affirm in part and vacate in part.
I. Factual Background
Dr. Green, an African American, received a degree in clinical psychology in 1982 and from then until 1989 practiced сlinical psychology in Illinois without a license. In 1990 Dr. Green passed the Illinois clinical psychologist’s examination and obtained a license.
In 1996 the DPR instituted disciplinary proceedings against Dr. Green, alleging that he had violated Illinois law by praсticing clinical psychology without a license and by making false statements on another psychologist’s licensing application forms. After a hearing the DPR’s disciplinary board suspended Dr. Green’s license for a *664 minimum of two years and imposеd various conditions on its reinstatement. The disciplinary board also barred Dr. Green from supervising prospective licensees as long as his license was suspended and fined him $8,000. Thereafter, HCSC, which required psychologists to be licensed as а prerequisite to reimbursement, ceased all payments to Dr. Green for services that he rendered to its insureds.
Dr. Green sought administrative review in state court; the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, upheld the suspension but vacated the fine. Dr. Green аppealed to the Illinois Appellate Court.
Dr. Green’s state-court appeal was still pending when in September 1999 he filed this lawsuit. Dr. Green alleged that the Illinois Defendants violated his rights to due process and equal protection by targeting him for disciplinary action based on his race and in retaliation for his testimony in another disciplinary hearing that was favorable to the psychologist under investigation. Dr. Green further alleged that HCSC and the DPR had conspired “to deny [him] the opportunity to ... practice his profession” based on his race because HCSC (1) refused to reimburse him for services he rendered to its insureds, and (2) provided his patients’ confidential medical reports and other unspecified information to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in response to grand jury subpoenas. Dr. Green also asserted claims against the Wisconsin Department of Professional Regulation and certain of its representatives, but those claims are not a part of this appeal. Dr. Green sought a declaration that the DPR disciplinary proceedings were illegal and an award of damages. In November 1999 Dr. Green also sought a preliminary injunction ordering the DPR to restore his license.
II. The District Court Proceedings
In April 2000 thе district court denied Dr. Green’s request for injunctive relief. The court concluded that Dr. Green had not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits because he presented no evidence that the DPR proceedings were rаcially motivated.
In September the court entered orders dismissing some of Dr. Green’s claims and granting summary judgment to the defendants on the remaining claims. Specifically, the court dismissed the entire suit against the DPR and its attorneys in their official capacities, concluding that they were immune under the Eleventh Amendment of the United States Constitution. The court granted summary judgment in favor of HCSC as to the civil conspiracy claim, concluding that Dr. Green presented no evidence that HCSC’s actions were motivated by racial animus. Finally, the court granted summary judgment to the DPR attorneys in their individual capacities, a ruling that Dr. Green does not challenge on appeal.
In January 2001 the district court entered a partial judgment under Federal Rulе of Civil Procedure 54(b) as to HCSC. Dr. Green timely filed a notice of appeal, which was assigned docket number 01-1328. In June 2001 the district court entered a partial judgment under Rule 54(b) as to the Illinois Defendants. Dr. Green timely filed a notice of appeаl, which was assigned docket number 01-2399. We consolidated the appeals on our own motion.
III. Analysis
On appeal Dr. Green challenges the district court’s denial of injunctive relief and the grant of summary judgment as to his civil conspiracy claim. Dr. Greеn also contends that the district court erred in failing to enter a default judgment in favor
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of his co-plaintiffs. At the outset, we dispense with Dr. Green’s default judgment argument. Any claims that Dr. Green’s co-plaintiffs, Associated Psychological Services and Psychological Solutions, P.C., might otherwise have are not before us. The co-plaintiffs were unrepresented before the district court, which never decided any of their claims. Additionally, the co-plaintiffs are unrepresented before this court and have not filed notices of appeal on their own behalf. See
Lewis v. Lenc-Smith Mfg. Co.,
A. Civil Conspiracy
Dr. Green’s argument is difficult to grasp, but he appears to contend that the district cоurt erred in granting summary judgment by ignoring evidence that establishes the existence of a conspiracy between HCSC and the DPR. First, Dr. Green highlights two affidavits — one from Allen Piening, the psychologist in whose disciplinary hearing Dr. Green testified, and one from J. Chris Goodman, Dr. Piеn-ing’s attorney. Dr. Green argues that these affidavits show that the DPR targeted him for prosecution based on his race. Second, Dr. Green claims that he presented evidence that HCSC breached an unspecified legal duty to investigate the DPR’s сharges and assist him in establishing that he was immune from the disciplinary proceedings.
We first note that the district court relied on documents extraneous to the complaint but nonetheless analyzed the conspiracy claim in the context of a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Thus, the court effectively converted HCSC’s motion to dismiss into one for summary judgment, see Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(c), but the record is not clear as to whether the court gave Dr. Green the requisite notice of conversion and an opportunity to respond,
see id:, Massey v. Helman,
To establish a claim for civil conspiracy under § 1985(3), a plaintiff must demonstrate (1) the existence of a conspiracy, (2) a purpose of depriving a person or clаss of persons of equal protection of the laws, (3) an act in furtherance of a conspiracy, and (4) an injury to person or property or a deprivation of a right or privilege granted to U.S. citizens.
Hernandez v. Joliet Police Dep’t,
The record contains no evidence that anyone representing HCSC had any relationship or contact with anyone representing the DPR before or during the disciplinary proceedings, let alone spеcifically agreed to injure Dr. Green. Mr. Goodman’s and Dr. Piening’s affidavits are not evidence of a conspiracy; they do not mention HCSC and are limited to the affiants’ observations about Dr. Piening’s and Dr. Green’s disciplinary hearings. Nor do the affidavits contain anything to suggest that the Illinois Defendants targeted Dr. Green based on his race. Similarly, Dr. Green’s bare assertion that HCSC breached a legal duty to help him develop an immunity defense to the disciplinary proceedings, while being legally unsupрortable, in no way suggests collusion with the DPR. Dr. Green cannot establish the existence of a conspiracy, and summary judgment was appropriate for that reason. Thus, we need not analyze the other shortcomings of his claim.
B. The Illinois Defendants
We do not reach the merits of Dr. Green’s challenge to the denial of his request for injunctive relief because we agree with the Illinois Defendants that the district court should have abstained under
Younger v. Harris,
As an initial matter, we reject Dr. Green’s argument on appeal that the DPR waived its Younger argument. We recognize that a state may waive Younger abstention, sеe
Ohio Bureau of Employment Servs. v. Hodory,
The
Younger
factors all favor abstention. First, Dr. Green’s state-court administrative review action, which plainly is judicial in nature, was pending when he filed this lawsuit. Whether the state action is still pending does not matter for our purposes,
see Majors,
Second, the DPR proceedings implicate important state interests in the regulation and licensing of mental health-care professionals.
See Majors,
Third, state-court administrative reviеw of the DPR proceedings constitutes an adequate opportunity for Dr. Green to raise his due process and equal protection challenges. See
Ohio Civil Rights Comm’n v. Dayton Christian Schs., Inc., 477
U.S. 619, 629,
Finally, Dr. Green does not claim that any extraordinary circumstances exist that make abstention inappropriate.
See Ramsden v. AgriBank, FCB,
The district court should have abstained, and the only remaining question is how — by dismissing or merely staying the action. A stay is appropriate when a plaintiff is foreclosed from bringing his damages claims in thе state proceeding.
See Majors,
Accordingly, the district court’s decision is Affirmed as to Dr. Green’s civil conspiracy claim against HCSC. The district court’s order as to the Illinois Defendants is VaCated and this case is RemaNded with directions to dismiss under Younger v. Hams as to the Illinois Defendants. Dr. Green’s Petition For Certification of State Law Question, filed on May 24, 2001, is Denied as moot.
