About six and one-half years ago, plaintiffs commenced this action in the Western District of Wisconsin challenging the constitutionality of a Wisconsin statute. After part of their complaint was dismissed, in 1973 the district judge abstained on the authority of
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
At the time their first complaint was filed, the four plaintiffs were students at the University of Wisconsin Law School and were classified as nonresidents for tuition purposes. Their October 27,1971, complaint was a class action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging Wis.Stats. § 36.16 and seeking injunctive, declaratory and monetary relief. Section 36.16, which defined residents and nonresidents for tuition purposes, 1 was asserted to be unconstitutional *1328 on its face because subsection (l)(ae) “granted resident status to resident women who are wives of resident working husbands, but not to resident men who are husbands of resident working wives” and unconstitutional as interpreted by the defendant officials because it was being construed “so as to create an irrebutable [sic] presumption of non-residency for such students who commence their studies shortly after establishing residency in the State of Wisconsin” (Complaint f23).
Before the original defendants answered the complaint, on November 15,1971, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint which added several defendants. The defendants were and are those who were then serving as Governor of Wisconsin, Regents of the University of Wisconsin, the President of the University of Wisconsin, and the Chancellor, Registrar, Residency Examiner and the members of the Committee on Appeals from Non-Resident Tuition of the University of Wisconsin, Madison campus. All were sued in both their individual and official capacities and the Regents also were sued as a collective body. The amended complaint set forth facts and allegations about each of the named plaintiffs in order to indicate that they were bona fide residents of the state, such as the dates upon which plaintiffs moved to Wisconsin, acquired drivers’ licenses, registered automobiles, registered to vote, and paid state income taxes. Plaintiffs Lister, Cooney and Turley further alleged that they were dependent upon the earnings of their wives, who were full-time employees of Wisconsin employers. In a part of the amended complaint that became important in the district court’s January 1972 order, plaintiffs explained that Cooney had applied for resident status to the Registrar, Residency Examiner and “Committee for resident status” in January of 1971, that Thiel had done so in August and Lister in September of that same year and that Turley had not applied because he viewed such an application as a futile exercise. As to the constitutional issues involved, the amended complaint added the contention that Section 36.16 “granted exemptions from nonresident tuition to nonresidents while denying resident status to plaintiffs * * * apparently in reference to sections of the statute such as (l)(ab) and (4), which exempt from nonresident tuition members of the armed forces and certain athletes.
On December 3, 1971, defendants moved to dismiss the amended complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, lack of personal jurisdiction and failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Reasoning that no case or controversy existed as to the semesters for which a plaintiff failed to apply to the University officials for an exemption, in an opinion and order on January 24,1972, the district court dismissed claims for damages for those semesters. 2 Also involved in the January 24 opinion and its subsequent reconsideration (but no longer pivotal issues on this appeal) were plaintiffs’ requests for an interlocutory injunction, for summary judgment and for the convening of a three-judge court, and the district court’s further inquiry into whether subject matter jurisdiction was lacking because of an insufficient amount in controversy. 3
By December of 1972, three of the four named plaintiffs had been granted resident *1329 status for their remaining semesters; therefore pursuant to a stipulation and order granting leave for filing they filed a second amended complaint. That pleading added two reasons why Section 36.16 was unconstitutional: first, it asserted that the language in subsection (3) excluding from resident tuition those in Wisconsin “principally to obtain an education” was vague, created an impermissible classification and interfered with the right to travel; next it added that the Section had been administered in an arbitrary and irrational manner, without objective standards or adequate reasons for refusals.
Shortly after the second amended complaint was filed, plaintiffs moved for partial summary judgment and defendants responded with a motion to dismiss and a motion to stay further proceedings. This motion to stay initially was premised on the existence of two pending state court claims similar to those in plaintiffs’ second amended complaint. In granting the motion to stay in an opinion and order on July 11, 1973, however, the Court assumed that there were no state court actions pending 4 but concluded that Pullman abstention was appropriate because plaintiffs’ constitutional claims could be substantially altered or obviated altogether if the state court resolved two issues of state law: “whether the statute creates an irrebuttable presumption against resident classification for students coming to Wisconsin principally for their education and whether the statute authorizes different treatment for males married to female residents than for females married to male residents” (Mem. op. 11). The district court retained jurisdiction of the action pending resolution in state court of the assertedly unclear issues of state law. 5
Rather than appealing this order, plaintiffs commenced an action in the Circuit Court for Dane County, Wisconsin, against the Board of Regents and Thomas H. Hoover, Registrar at the Madison campus. The complaint, filed in September 1973, sought declaratory relief and a refund of the nonresident tuition previously paid.
6
Defendants demurred on two grounds, the significant ground for this appeal being that “the court lacks jurisdiction over the subject matter in that the plaintiffs have not followed the dictates of Section 285.01 regarding an action for debt against a state agency.” Although plaintiffs contend that the Circuit Court for Dane County in the nonresident tuition context had declined to
*1330
read the statute in that manner, defendants argued that Section 285.01
7
requires that apart from any appeal to University officials a claim must be made to the state legislature before an action can be brought against the state. See, e.
g., Trempeleau County v. State,
Based on that dismissal and a December 21,1973, opinion by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in
Hancock v. Regents of University of Wisconsin,
That motion was still pending before the district judge almost two years later when plaintiffs’ appeal of the dismissal of their state court action was decided by the Wisconsin Supreme Court. In
Lister v. Board of Regents,
In June 1976, plaintiffs presented the district court with the Lister opinion and again moved that the abstention order be vacated. In addition to the arguments previously asserted in their May 10, 1974, motion, plaintiffs emphasized the state court’s refusal to construe the statute, the burden-someness of the legislative claims procedure, and the legislature’s rejection of Hancock’s claim on similar facts. On July 30, 1976, the district court dismissed the action on its own motion. While accepting that *1331 “the plaintiffs’ effort has been in good faith,” the court noted that plaintiffs were quickly advised in the state courts that “they had chosen the wrong course within the state system.” It further explained that the reasons for abstention were undiminished and therefore concluded that “three years has been sufficient time within which to retain jurisdiction in this court awaiting state adjudication of state issues, and that plaintiffs must accept responsibility for their choice of a course of litigation within the state system.” After the district court denied plaintiffs’ motion seeking reconsideration and pledging to file a claim with the legislature, plaintiffs filed this appeal from the judgment dismissing the complaint.
The issues raised by the parties on appeal all concern jurisdiction and can be divided into two groups. The first group of issues relates to abstention and involves both whether the district court’s initial decision to abstain was correct and whether its dismissal following abstention was justified. Because they are less substantial, we consider second a group of two issues based on the jurisdictional limits set by Article III of the federal Constitution: whether plaintiffs’ claims for refunds for semesters for which no application for resident tuition was filed with University officials constitute a “case or controversy” and whether all of plaintiffs’ claims have become moot during the long period of litigation. We conclude that all of plaintiffs’ damage claims are still properly before the court below and that abstention is no longer appropriate; therefore we reverse the district court’s order of January 24,1972, dismissing part of plaintiffs’ amended complaint and its order of July 30, 1976, dismissing the action as a whole and direct the district court to hear the merits of the damage claims.
I. The Abstention Issues
The fundamental question underlying both the decision to dismiss and the continuing willingness to abstain is whether a federal court that orders abstention to obtain a clarifying interpretation of state law is expected to wait until the federal litigant pursues state non-judicial remedies such as the claim to the legislature involved here if the state courts refuse to clarify the law until those non-judicial remedies are pursued.
11
At least as applied to the facts of this case, our answer is that the district court should not have waited. See
Vickers v. Trainor,
The first reason why waiting for additional state proceedings was inappropriate is that it is inconsistent with the general concern of federal courts about the delay inherent in a decision to abstain (see
Bellot-ti v. Baird,
This case was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Waiting for non-judicial proceedings also is inconsistent with the related federal policy of not requiring exhaustion of state non-judicial remedies in such cases.
Monroe v. Pape,
Third, to the extent that abstention decisions consider the friction created by federal interventions into subjects of significant state concern (see
Vickers v. Trainor,
Although these three considerations present a powerful case for establishing a general rule against continuing to abstain after a state court requires resort to potentially time-consuming non-judicial proceedings before it clarifies the law, we need not go so far here. Even assuming that significant problems of delay, the related federal policy of non-exhaustion and the absence of a substantial comity concern must be balanced against the extent of the ambiguity in state law and the resulting need for clarification (see IA Moore’s Federal Practice 10.203[1] at 2115-2116), we note as a fourth consideration here the fact that the district judge’s concerns about the ambiguities in the state law seem relatively unpersuasive.
The district court’s July 11, 1973, opinion offered only briefly two possible constructions of Section 36.16 that might alter substantially the constitutional issues presented. 13 First, it suggested that the last sentence in Section 36.16(3) (see note 1 supra) “might be construed by a state court to provide that a student from another state who is in Wisconsin principally to obtain an education cannot be classified as a bona fide resident solely on the basis of his attendance at an educational institution in Wisconsin” (Mem. op. 9-10). Apparently this suggestion means that the state courts might read the statute to exclude automatically from resident classification any student who came to Wisconsin principally to obtain an education. Put in context, however, the part of the sentence concerned with the evaluation of resident status of students in the state “principally to obtain an education” is related to and modified by the phrase “by virtue of attendance at educational institutions.” Thus the more reasonable reading of that sentence, which is part of a subsection devoted to listing the *1333 factors that should be considered in determining bona fide residence, is that attendance at an educational institution is not to be a factor in making out a case as a bona fide resident. Even assuming the correctness of the district court’s reading, it could be argued that the plaintiffs’ claims would not be altered substantially because the. court’s reading simply places more reliance on the phrase plaintiffs challenge as vague, “principally to obtain an education.”
Alternatively, the district court suggested that the broad language of Section 36.16(3) might be construed to require that males who marry bona fide female residents are entitled to resident status as are females who marry bona fide male residents. In the absence of further explanation by the district court or the State of Wisconsin in its briefs and argument, we do not find any such broad language in Section 36.16(3), which we read as listing factors to determine bona fide status in the first sentence (see
Hancock v. Regents of University of Wisconsin,
The district court’s decision to dismiss the case recognized that plaintiffs acted in good faith and apparently relied solely on the fact that “plaintiffs must accept responsibility for'their choice of a course of litigation within the state system.” Based on the above reasons why on these facts plaintiffs did not need to pursue the non-judicial remedies available to them, we disagree that plaintiffs made the wrong choice and therefore see no justification for the dismissal. 15 For the same reasons, rather than dismissing the case, at least after the Lister opinion by the Wisconsin Supreme Court the district judge should have granted plaintiffs’ motion to vacate the stay and taken up the merits of the case, despite his identification of some unclear issues of state law.
In holding not'only that the dismissal was unwarranted but also that the district court must now decide this case even assuming the existence of some ambiguity, our decision is consistent with analogous cases and principles. As a general matter, for example, the Supreme Court recently has recognized that in appropriate circumstances harms such as delay can outweigh the need for clarification and dictate that abstention be avoided. See
Mayor v. Educational Equality League,
More specifically, although this case appears to be one of first impression, an anal
*1334
ogous problem in the interrelationship between the Fifth Circuit and the Texas state courts has produced a similar result. After the Fifth Circuit
en banc
ordered abstention in
United Services Life Ins. Co. v. Delaney,
II. Article III Issues
Taken together, defendants’ arguments based on lack of jurisdiction potentially have relevance as defenses when the merits of the case are heard but have little or nothing to do with the power of this Court or the district court to hear the case. Both the claim that no case or controversy exists as to some semesters and the claim that the case is now moot are without merit and therefore do not alter our decision to send the case to the district court with directions to hear the merits.
A. Case or Controversy
Defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims for semesters in which reclassification by University officials was not sought was accepted without explanation by the district court on the ground that “no genuine controversy exists.” Defendants support that ruling by citing the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s decision in
Hancock,
in which that court held a similar case nonjusticiable because “the plaintiff never requested a change in status * * * and, therefore, the defendants had no opportunity to deny the requested change and it follows that no controversy existed with respect to that year.”
Apparently this argument has two dimensions. On one level, the level chosen by defendants at oral argument, the argument is that even though the parties may now have adverse interests because plaintiffs seek money from defendants, there was no adverse interest at the time of the tuition
*1335
payment since no request was made or refused at the start of some semesters. Cf.
A different and somewhat more plausible form of the argument is that the dispute is not ripe for judicial decision because, as in other instances in which a plaintiff’s case has come to court before being disposed of by an administrative agency (see, e.
g., Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
Although plaintiffs’ failure to request reclassification for some semesters therefore does not render this case non-justiciable, it may be considered on remand, at least if the good faith defense is applicable, because defendants’ lack of knowledge of plaintiffs’ *1336 claims and their possible inability under state law to act on those claims could be relevant to good faith or perhaps another defense. As a matter of Article III jurisdiction, however, defendants’ argument may reflect how the Wisconsin courts interpret the judicial powers under that state’s constitution but it is not persuasive as a limit on the constitutional powers of federal courts.
B. Mootness
As to all of the counts, defendants argue that even assuming they once presented a justiciable case they no longer do so because the case has become moot. Based on the facts that the statute has been replaced and the plaintiffs are no longer students at the University, plaintiffs do not vigorously contest the mootness of their claims for injunctive and declaratory relief (see, e.
g., Kerrigan v. Boucher,
The argument that the claims for damages or reimbursement are “incidental” misconceives the type of damages requested in cases that have been declared moot on this ground and the reasons for declaring cases moot on this ground. While drawing a firm line between incidental damages and damages necessary to sustain a controversy is not necessary here because of the significant amount of damages requested, it is important to note that none of the cases cited by defendants involved more than nominal damages, such as one dollar. See e.
g., Kerrigan v. Boucher,
Whether the $7,000 recovery is precluded by the Eleventh Amendment is an issue that should be considered by the district court on remand, but it does not affect the jurisdiction of this Court or the district court.
19
A state’s immunity is a defense that must be pleaded and proven by a defendant (see
Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Adams,
No concluding statement highlighting the unfortunate and apparently avoidable delays in the adjudication of plaintiffs’ federal claims is necessary because the facts of this case, particularly the six and one-half years of proceedings in two sets of courts without any judge considering the merits of the claims, present a powerful lesson of the lengthy delays that abstention can bring. If this case serves to remind the courts that abstention “is an extraordinary and narrow exception to the duty of a District Court to adjudicate a controversy properly before it”
(Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
Notes
. Section 36.16 provided in pertinent part: “36.16 Nonresident tuition at university; exceptions
“(l)(a) Any adult student who has been a bona fide resident of the state for one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university, or any minor student whose parents have been bona fide residents of the state for one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university, or any minor student whose natural par-
ents are divorced or legally separated who has resided substantially in this state during his years of minority and at least one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university or whose mother or father has been a bona fide resident for one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university, or any minor student who is an orphan and who has resided substantially in this state during his years of minority and at least one year next preceding
*1327 the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university or whose legal guardian has been a bona fide resident for one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university, or any minor student under guardianship in this state pursuant to ch. 48 or 880 who has resided substantially in this state during his years of minority and at least one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university or whose legal guardian if a person has been a bona fide resident of the state for one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university, shall while he continues a resident of the state be entitled to exemption from nonresident tuition, but not from incidental or other fees and tuition in the university.
“(ab) Nonresident members of the armed forces who are stationed in this state and their wives and children shall be entitled to the exemptions provided in par. (a) during the period that such member of the armed forces is stationed in this state.
“(ac) Any female student who attended the university as a minor student exempt from the fees for nonresident tuition, and, who would continue to be entitled to the exemptions provided in par. (a) except for having married a nonresident, shall continue to be entitled to such exemptions.
* !(< # Jfc # $
“(ae) Any female who marries a bona fide resident shall be entitled to the exemptions provided in par. (a) effective the semester following her marriage and while continuing to reside in this state.
* * * * * *
“(b) Any student who has not been a resident of the state for one year next preceding the beginning of any semester for which such student registers at the university, except as above provided, shall not be exempt from the payment of the nonresident tuition fees.
“(c) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the board of regents shall charge a nonresident tuition fee at the rate of not less than $200 per school year for any student who shall not have been exempted by this section, and may prescribe special rates of tuition for professional and graduate courses and for teaching extra studies, and for students in the university extension, and summer session divisions. The board of regents may fix the nonresident tuition fee of any resident of another state maintaining a university [residence] at a sum less than $200 per school year but not below the sum fixed in such other state for attendance by residents of Wisconsin at the university maintained by such other state.
“(d) The board of regents of the university may remit nonresident tuition either in whole or in part, but not other fees, to a number of
needy and worthy nonresident students, not exceeding 8% of the number of nonresident students registered in the preceding year, upon the basis of merit, to be shown by suitable tests, examinations or scholastic records and continued high standards of scholastic attainment. The board of regents may remit nonresident tuition in whole or in part, but no other fees, to additional individual students at the university not exceeding 2% of the number of nonresident students registered in the preceding year who, in the judgment of the board of regents, are deserving of relief from the assessment of nonresident tuition because of extraordinary circumstances.
******
“(2) In addition to the number of remissions of nonresident tuition authorized under sub. (1), each state senator and each * * * representative to the assembly may recommend for attendance at the university a nonresident whose scholastic qualifications entitle him to attend the university and whose nonresident tuition for the school year for which recommended shall be remitted by the board of regents. Not more than one such remission shall be made for any one member and each nonresident whose tuition shall have been remitted under this subsection shall be entitled to continue in attendance at the university for the period for which recommended if such nonresident continues to meet the university’s general standards for continuance therein as a student. Such recommendations shall be submitted annually to the board of regents in such manner as the board of regents may designate not later than the end of the first week of instruction of the semester in which the remission of tuition is to be effective, provided that a state senator or * * * representative to the assembly who assumes office during a school year may make a recommendation for the 2nd semester of that year only when a recommendation of his predecessor is not effective for that term and provided further that should any nonresident student so recommended for any year fail to matriculate for any semester a successor for such semester may be recommended by such state senator or * * * representative to the assembly.
“(3) In determining bona fide residence, filing of state income tax returns in Wisconsin, eligibility for voting in this state, of Wisconsin, motor vehicle registration in Wisconsin, and employment in Wisconsin shall be considered. Notwithstanding the provisions of par. (l)(a), a student from another state who is in this state principally to obtain an education will not be considered to have established a residence in Wisconsin by virtue of attendance at educational institutions.
“(4) In addition to the remission of resident and nonresident tuition under sub. (1), the university shall as athletic scholarships grant full remission of fees, and resident and nonresident
*1328 tuition up to the maximum number of students enrolled on the Madison campus for whom such remission is permitted under Big Ten rules, as recommended by the Madison campus athletic director.”
. The district court did not state in its order how many semesters were involved and the complaint leaves the question unclear. Compare, e. g., fl 40 with fl 27. It is clear, however, that the dismissal at least did affect recovery for one semester by named plaintiff Turley. See fl 40.
. The age of this case is reflected by the fact that, because the complaint was filed before
Lynch v. Household Finance Corp.,
. Plaintiffs had brought before the court evidence that one of the state cases was about to be dismissed on stipulation and the other was subject to a stipulated continuance pending resolution of another case.
. The opinion of July 11, 1973, also denied plaintiffs’ request for a three-judge court on the grounds that the complaint focused more on the statute’s administration than the statute itself and that it would be possible to enjoin the administration without declaring the statute unconstitutional. Although plaintiffs did not challenge this ruling at the time, in response to a question at oral argument they contended with some support (given one of the challenges in the October 1971 complaint and another in the December 1972 complaint, both of which were directed at the statutory language itself) that the holding that a three-judge court was unnecessary may have been an extremely narrow interpretation of the now repealed 28 U.S.C. § 2281. See
Stone v. Egeler,
. The state suit sought recovery only for the four named plaintiffs. At about the same time the state suit was filed, the district court accepted the parties’ stipulation that the federal action could not be maintained as a class action.
. Section 285.01 provides:
“Actions against state; bond. Upon the refusal of the legislature to allow a claim against the state, the claimant may commence an action against the state by service as provided in s. 262.06(3) and by filing with the clerk of court a bond, not exceeding $1,000, with 2 or more sureties, to be approved by the attorney general, to the effect that he will indemnify the state against all costs that may accrue in such action and pay to the clerk of court all costs, in case he fails to obtain judgment against the state.”
. Hancock’s claim for his third year was held not justiciable by the Wisconsin Supreme Court because he had not applied to the appropriate University officials for resident status.
. The Court listed the amounts sought at $1,551 by Lister, $3,091 by Cooney, $770 by Thiel, and $1,551 by Turley; the total amount at issue was $6,963.
. The Court stated in a footnote that Section 36.27(2), which replaced Section 36.16, itself was replaced in 1975 by a new Section 36.-27(2), which was similar in format to the original Section 36.16 involved in this action. It concluded that in several key respects, however, “the two sections differ substantially.”
. Because of our disposition of this case, it is unnecessary to decide whether the fact that plaintiffs pursued state remedies in good faith is sufficient by itself to avoid a dismissal in this context.
. Even those commentators who have objected to the proposition that exhaustion is not required in Section 1983 cases probably would not require exhaustion here in light of the burdensome legislative procedure involved and the failure to provide interim relief. See, e. g., Note, Exhaustion of State Administrative Remedies in Section 1983 Cases, 41 U.Chi.L.Rev. 537 (1974).
. Defendants compounded that omission by not offering any explanations of how the state courts could have clarified the statute. Wisconsin has no procedure whereby important state law questions can be certified by a federal court to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Cf.
Elkins v.
Moreno,-U.S.-,-,
. Although not identified as unclear by the defendants or the district court and apparently believed to be clear by the district court, there may be some ambiguity in Section 36.16(l)(ae) itself. Plaintiffs’ argument based on that Section seems to assume that the word “marries” means “is married to;” if the Section is limited only to those whose spouses were bona fide residents at the time of their marriage, then plaintiffs may not have standing to challenge the alleged sex discrimination because they would not qualify for the statute’s benefits even if the statute were extended to males. Compare
Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld,
. While the Supreme Court has advised that retaining jurisdiction pending state court clari-flcation is the “proper course”
(American Trial Lawyers Association v. New Jersey Supreme Court,
. Apparently neither the Fifth Circuit nor any other circuit has faced the situation in which a state court subsequent to federal equitable abstention has refused jurisdiction on the ground that a litigant’s reservation of his federal claims under
England v. Louisiana School Board of Medical Examiners,
. Contrary to plaintiffs’ lengthy argument, it should be noted that some courts in Section 1983 cases have applied the ripeness doctrine to preclude jurisdiction based on failure to await a clear state administrative determination. See, e.
g., Mendez v. Heller,
. In its January 24, 1972, order, for example, the district court noted that “the essence of this dispute appears to be money.”
. We do not decide which defendants, if any, can successfully urge the bar of the Eleventh Amendment.
