ORDER
INTRODUCTION
This lаwsuit challenges the constitutionality of the so-called “Maricopa Migrant Conspiracy Policy” (“MMCP” or “the Policy”). Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 3:9-10, ¶ 1. Pursuant to that Policy, allegedly “non-smuggler migrants” are “arrest[ed], detain[ed], and punish[ed] ... for conspiring to transport themselves through Maricopa Countyf]” in violation of Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 13-2319, Arizona’s human smuggling statute.
Assuming familiarity with the protracted history of this litigation, a few aspects bear mentioning to place defendants’ pending motion to dismiss in context. In We Are America/Somos America Coalition of Arizona v. Maricopa Co. Bd. of Supervisors,
Thereafter, the Board and defendant Arpaio filed the pending motion to dismiss for lack of standing the claims of those two groups of plaintiffs. See Mot. (Doc. 68). Defendant William G. Montgomery, the current Maricopa County Attorney, expressly joins in that motion. Joinder (Doc. 72). Regardless of which group of plaintiffs the defense motion is addressing, the essence of their dismissal argument is the same; that is, the allegations by both are too broad and generalized to satisfy the injury in fact element of Article III standing. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, maintain that they have sufficiently alleged injury, and case law does not support the specificity which defendants are demanding herein.
BACKGROUND
The complaint asserts four separate claims. First, plaintiffs contend that the United States Constitution and the Immi
Mirroring those substantive claims, plaintiffs are seeking, inter alia, a declaration “that the [MMCP] ... (a) constitutes an unconstitutional program of state regulation of international migration; (b) actually conflicts with the federal government’s regulation of international migration; (c) violates plaintiffs’ rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures; (d) violates plaintiffs’ rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to due process of law; and (e) is inconsistent with and violative of Ariz.Rev.Stat. §§ 13-2319 and 13-1003
DISCUSSION
I. Mootness
Before addressing the merits of the parties’ respective standing arguments, the court must address the issue of mootness. Partially due to the election in November, 2010 of a new Maricopa County Attorney, and partially because it had been roughly three and a half years since the filing of the amended complaint,
Because “[u]nder Arizona law, the Board is neither charged with the legal authority to enforce the Arizona Criminal Code, including A.R.S. § 13-2319, ... nor with the authority and duty to make prosecutorial decisions as to whom to charge and what charges to actually prosecute against individual suspects!,]” it is taking “no position” as to whether this аction is moot. Supp. Br. (Doc. 74) at 1:23-28, ¶ 1.
On the other hand, defendant Joseph Arpaio, “in his official capacity as the duly elected Sheriff of Maricopa County, is charged with the legal authority and duty to enforce the Arizona Criminal Code, including A.R.S. § 13 — 2319[.]” Id. at 2:1-3, ¶ 2 (emphasis added). What is more, defendant Arpaio avows that he “will continue” to enforce that statute “when probable cause exists for arresting persons engaged in human smuggling.” Id. at 2:4-5, ¶ 2.
Defendant Montgomery’s supplemental brief readily dispels any doubt as to whether this action has become moot. In his capacity as Maricopa County Attorney, Montgomery advises that his “enforcement policy has not changed from the previous County Attorney Defendants [sic].” Supp. Br. (Doc. 73) at 2:8-9, ¶ 3 (emphasis added). Therefore, defendant Montgomery unequivocally declares “that this matter is not moot.” Id. 2:10 ¶4. Plaintiffs agree. See Resp. (Doc. 75) at 4:1-2 (“[D]efendants admit they continue to pursue the challenged policy and correctly affirm that this matter is not moot.”) Accordingly, despite the election of a new Cоunty attorney and the passage of time, undoubtedly this action is not moot. Thus, the court will proceed to the merits....
II. Article III Standing
Arguing that neither the organizations nor the taxpayers have standing, defendants are moving for dismissal of the complaint based upon Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). Mot. (Doc. 68) at 1:23. The former Rule and not the latter is the proper procedural vehicle for this motion, however. “Article III standing is a species of subject matter jurisdiction.” Cariajano v. Occidental Petroleum Corp.,
A jurisdictional attack under that Rule can be either facial or factual. Id. (citation omitted). Here, defendants are facially attacking the complaint due to lack of standing,
A. Constitutional Considerations
In every case, the issue of standing is a threshold determination of “whether the litigant is entitled to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or of particular issues.” Warth v. Seldin,
The “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing” is comprised of three elements. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
“First, the plaintiff must have suffered an ‘injury in fact’ — an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) ‘actual or imminent, not “conjectural” or “hypothetical.”’ Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of-the injury has to be ‘fairly ... trace[able] to the challenged action of the defendant, and not ... th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the court.’ Third, it must be ‘likely,’ as opposed to merely ‘speculative,’ that the injury will be ‘redressed by a favorable decision.’ ”
Winn,
B. Scope of Inquiry
Before determining whether any or all of the remaining plaintiffs are “allowed to have their case heard in [this] court,” it is necessary to address the scope of the standing issues defendants’ motion raises. See id. Defendants first seek dismissal of the organizations’ claims due to lack of standing. Continuing, they separately argue for dismissal of the taxpayers’ claims, also due to lack of standing. Reversing that order, plaintiffs’ are taking the position that if the court “affirms its view [in We Are America II] regarding taxpayer[s’] ... standing, it need not reach the question of [the] ... organizations’ stand
Undoubtedly that is the general rule at the appellate level. See, e.g., Watt v. Energy Action Educ. Found.,
That general rule does not strictly prohibit a district court, in a multiple plaintiff case such as this, from considering the standing of the other plaintiffs even if it finds that one plaintiff has standing. Thorsted v. Gregoire,
Moreover, in Town of Southold v. Town of E. Hampton,
In addition to this case law supporting the court’s view that it may address the standing of one group of plaintiffs even if another has standing, there are several compelling reasons for addressing the standing of all of the remaining plaintiffs herein. First, the court cannot overlook the narrow scope of defendants’ dismissal motion. Defendants are facially challenging the allegations in the complaint, and separately seeking dismissal of the organization and taxpayer plaintiffs solely because each group purportedly lacks standing. Thus, finding that the taxpayers have standing, but not addressing the organizations’ standing, or vice versa, would not fully address defendants’ motion. Arguably, proceeding in that way also would leave at least some of the plaintiffs in a state of legal limbo.
Strictly to illustrate, the court makes several assumptions. First, it assumes arguendo that the taxpayer plaintiffs have standing. Second, it assumes that those plaintiffs will prevail on the merits and receive the declaratory and injunctive relief sought. Third, the court assumes that there are no further motions directed solely at the organizations. Based upon that set of assumptions, the organizations would remain as plaintiffs hereto, effectively piggybacking on the taxpayers’ claims.
Even under that scenario, at some point in this litigation the court would have to resolve the issue of the organizations’ standing. Resolution of that issue is necessary because of the basic constitutional tenet that a “plaintiff must maintain a personal stake in the outcome of the litigation throughout its course.” See Gollust v. Mendell,
The Ninth Circuit’s decision in Was-den, swpra, is instructive. In Wasden, an obstetrician-gynecologist, who performed abortions, including some on minors, and Planned Parenthood of Idaho, a not-for-profit organization that did not perform abortions, brought a constitutional challenge to an Idaho statute governing minors’ access to abortion services. Before issuing an injunction permanently enjoining certain parts of that statute, the district court found that because the physician had standing, it did not need to consider Planned Parenthood’s standing. Wasden,
Second, resolving the standing issue as to both the organizations and the taxpayers now is consistent with the fact that defendants are separately arguing for dismissal of each of those two plaintiff groups. Defendants’ clear1 intent was for the court to separately decide the issue of standing as to the organizations and the taxpayers. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 6:1-2 (after discussing the standing of the organizations, and prior to addressing taxpayer standing, defendants argue that “the Court should dismiss the organization^] ... from this lawsuit for lack of standing[ ]”). Thus, if one group of plaintiffs lack standing, defendants would at least be entitled to partial dismissal, even if the other group survives this motion to dismiss. By contrast, if defendants were moving for summary judgment on the dual grounds of lack of standing and the merits, plaintiffs’ suggestion that the court need not reach the issue of the organizational plaintiffs’ standing, if it finds that the taxpayers have standing, would carry far more weight.
Third, the court cannot disregard the Ninth Circuit’s explicit directive that “[o]n remand [that] th[is] district court must still determine whether the organizational and taxpayer plaintiffs have standing to pursue their claims.” We Are America III,
Finally, although not entirely dispositive, the interests of judicial economy would not be served in proceeding as plaintiffs urge, i.e., not addressing the taxpayer standing issue on this motion to dismiss. In contrast, on appeal, clearly the interests of judicial economy are best served when, after satisfying itself that one plaintiff has standing, the court directly proceeds to the merits, leaving unresolved the standing of the other plaintiffs. Judicial economy concerns run the opposite direction here, however. Delaying resolution of the issue of whether the organizations have standing could easily prolong this already fairly protracted litigation.
For all of these reasons, the court will not heed plaintiffs’ suggestion and address only the issue of taxpayer standing. Instead, the court will begin its standing analysis with the organizations, as did the defendants, the moving parties. Next, independent of its determination as to the standing of the organizations, the court
2. Organizations
“It is well established that an organization ‘may have standing in its own right to seek judicial relief from injury to itself and to vindicate whatever rights and immunities the association itself may enjoy.’ ” American Fed’n of Gov’t Employees Local 1 v. Stone,
a. “Injury in Fact”
In Havens, the seminal organizational standing case, an organization promoting equal housing alleged that an apartment complex owner engaged in unlawful discriminatory practices by “steering” away black renters. Havens,
Reasoning that “[i]f, as broadly alleged, petitioners’ steering practices have perceptibly impaired [the organization’s] ability to provide counseling and referral services for low — and moderate — home-seekers[,]” the Supreme Court held “there can be no question that [it] has suffered injury in fact.” Id. (emphasis added). The Havens Court further reasoned that “[s]uch concrete and demonstrable injury to the organization’s activities — with the consequent drain on the organization’s resources — constitutes far more than simply a setback to the organization’s abstract societal interests!.]” Id. (citation and footnote omitted). Moreover, although the injury resulted from the organization’s “noneconomic interest in encouraging opening housing[,]” that did “not deprive [it] of standing.” Id. at 379 n. 20,
an organization may satisfy the Article III of injury in fact if it can demonstrate: (1) frustration of its organizational mission; and (2) diversion of its resources to combat the particular housing discrimination in question.
Pacific Properties,
Directly tracking the language of Pacific Properties, the defendants herein contend that the organizations have not sufficiently pled injury in fact because they make only “broad, unspecific, and generalized allegations that the prosecutions of illegal immigrants for violating the [MMCP] frustratefs] their general mission[s] and causes them to divert resources which purportedly would be used elsewhere.” Mot. (Doc. 68) at 4:15-18. Similarly tracking Pacific Properties, the organizations counter that they have alleged “that Maricopa’s challenged policy frustrates their mission and causes them to divert resources to assist migrants defendants unlawfully arrest, jail and prosecute.” Resp. (Doc. 69) at 9:17-19 (citing “Complaint (Dkt. No. 1
In any event, more narrowly focusing on diversion of resources, next the defendants
It is nearly impossible to discern the precise contours of defendants’ sweeping assertions that the organizations have not adequately pled injury in fact. After carefully parsing the relevant case law and scrutinizing the complaint, defendants’ argument appears to be two-fold. First, evidently defendants believe that because the complaint does not explicitly allege that the MMCP has “frustrated” the missions of any of the organizations, that is a critical omission. Second, by stressing the purportedly “voluntary” nature of the organizations’ activities, the court surmises that defendants believe that the organizations have not adequately pled injury in fact because they do not allege that as a result of the MMCP, they have been “forced” to divert their resources. Put differently, because the organizations are purportedly acting “by their own choosing[,]” defendants believe any injury is self-inflicted. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 3:26. Hence, that injury is not sufficient for standing purposes.
These arguments are not availing because Havens and its progeny do not require the exactitude which defendants urge is necessary for an organization to plead injury in fact. Admittedly, the first element of organizational injury in fact is “ ‘a frustration of its mission.’ ” City of Lake Forest,
Two Ninth Circuit cases, among others, illustrate both points. In Pacific Properties,
As to diversion of resources, in Pacific Properties the complaint alleged that “ ‘in order to monitor the violations and educate the public regarding the discrimination at issue, [the organization] has had (and, until the discrimination is corrected, will continue) to divert its scarce resources from other efforts to promote awareness of-and compliance with-federal and state accessibility laws and to benefit the disabled com
Along these same lines, in Combs,
Based upon those allegations, the district court found that the organization alleged “that defendant’s discrimination against African Americans ha[d] caused [the organization] to suffer injury to its ability to provide outreach and education (i.e., counseling).” Id. The Ninth Circuit did not disagree, holding that the organization had “direct standing to sue because it showed a drain on its resources from both a diversion of resources and frustration of its mission.” Id.; see also Comm. for Immigrant Rights of Sonoma County v. County of Sonoma,
Before discussing whether the present complaint satisfies the injury in fact pleading standards of Havens and its progeny, it is necessary to clarify the standard of review. This need is particularly acute given defendants’ argument that the or
The organizations, “as the parties] asserting federal jurisdiction when it is challenged,” must “make the showings required for standing.” See DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno,
In the present case, there are four plaintiff organizations: (1) We Are America/So-mos America Coalition of Arizona (“WAA/SAC”); (2) the Arizona Hispanic Community Forum (“AHCF”); (3) the League of United Latin American Citizens (“LULAC”); and (4) Friendly House. Each
Despite these similarities, the organizations’ allegations differ in terms of defining their respective missions. With the exception of LULAC, there is a common thread though. WAA/SAC, AHCF and Friendly House all provide social services to immigrants. “[D]eliver[y] [of] social services and humanitarian assistance to migrants! ]” is among WAA/SAC’s many “purposes!.]” Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 5:1-2, ¶ 5, 4:25; ¶ 5. Similarly, as part of its “mission” AHCF allegedly “provide[s] needy Hispanics charitable assistance.” Id. at 5:15, ¶ 6; 5:21-22, ¶ 6. Likewise, Friendly House alleges that its “purposes include providing social and legal services to immigrants, including counseling and therapy for immigrants who have suffered traumatic experiences or abuse, and legal assistance to immigrants applying for lawful immigration status.” Id. at 6:2-24, ¶ 8.
In terms of providing such services to those detained or incarcerated pursuant to the MMCP (“the MMCP immigrants”), WAA/SAC specifically alleges that “the unlawful [MMCP]” makes it “more difficult, time-consuming, and expensive than delivering like services to undetained and uncharged migrants.” Id. at 5:1-2, ¶ 5; 5:7-9, ¶ 5. AHCF alleges as well that “delivering services to incarcerated migrants is difficult, costly and time-consuming.” Id. at 5:27-28, ¶ 6. Additionally, WAA/SAC and AHFC both allege that they are “providing services to migrants detained under the [MMCP] that [they] do[ ] not normally provide undetained migrants, including cash to ameliorate the hardships of confinement.” Id. at 5:11-13, ¶ 5; at 5:28-6:2, ¶ 6.
Taken together and bearing in mind that defendants’ motion to dismiss is a facial attack to standing, the court finds that as to WAA/SAC, AHFC and Friendly House, the complaint’s allegations comport with the central teaching of Havens. That is, they sufficiently allege that the purportedly unlawful MMCP “perceptibly impairs” the ability of those three organizations to provide social services to immigrants who have not been charged, detained or incarcerated pursuant to the MMCP. To the extent, as alleged, that those three organizations are expending resources to provide services to the MMCP immigrants, it necessarily follows that they have fewer resources to provide services to immigrants whom the MMCP does not impact. As in Havens, these “concrete and demonstrable injuries] to the ... activities” of WAA/ SAC, AHFC and Friendly House, “with the consequent drain on the[ir] resources ... constitute far more than simply a setback to the ... abstract societal interests” of those organizations. See Havens,
The fact, as defendants stress, that the organizations are acting “by their own ehoosing[,]” i.e., any purported injury is self-inflicted, does not preclude a finding that they have adequately pled injury in fact. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 3:24 and 26. Of course, an organization “cannot manufacture [an] injury by incurring litigation costs or simply choosing to spend money fixing a problem that otherwise would not affect the organization at all.” City of Lake Forest,
In the present case, the defendants have not pointed to any allegations in the complaint, and the court discerns none, suggesting that the organizations are somehow “manufacturing” an injury by incurring litigation costs. Further, given that as part of their missions WAA/SAC, AHFC and Friendly House all provide social services to immigrants, it can hardly
Moreover, to the extent that the defendants are arguing that the organizations’ voluntary diversion of resources means they have not alleged an injury in fact, the court disagrees. In Equal Rights Ctr. v. Post Props., Inc.,
The D.C. Circuit pointed out that in two of its earlier organizational standing decisions, the plaintiffs “chose to redirect their resources to counteract the effects of the defendants’ allegedly unlawful acts; they could have chosen instead not to respond.” Id. As the Court was quick to stress, “[i]n neither case did [its] standing analysis depend on the voluntariness or involuntariness of the [organizations’] expenditures.” Id. “Instead, [the Court] focused on whether [the organizations] undertook the expenditures in response to, and to counteract, the effects of the defendant’s alleged discrimination rather than in anticipation of litigation.” Id.
Certainly WAA/SAC, AHFC and Friendly House could have chosen not to respond and stood silently by in the wake of the allegedly unlawful MMCP. The fact that they chose to act by expending time and money to “respon[d] to, and ... counteract ... the effects of’ the allegedly unlawful MMCP, further supports this court’s view that those three organizations have sufficiently plead injury in fact at this motion to dismiss stage. See id.
The procedural posture of this case bolsters that conclusion. The fact that this is a facial attack on the sufficiency of the complaint’s standing allegations, compels the court to reiterate that it must presume that the general allegations that “[t]he MMCP is diverting the limited resources” of WAA/SAC, AHFC and Friendly House, “thus making their work and achievement of their goals more difficult and costly[,]” Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 5:2-4, ¶ 5; at 5:23-25, ¶6; and at 6:24-26, ¶8, “embraee[ ]those specific facts that are necessary to support” their standing claim. See Legal Services Corp.,
Because it is a closer call than with the other organizations, until now the court, deliberately, has not considered the sufficiency of the injury in fact allegations as to LULAC. Like WAA/SAC, AHFC and Friendly House, LULAC generally alleges that “the MMCP is diverting [its] limited resources ..., thus making [its] work and achievement of their goals more difficult and costly.” Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 6:10-12, ¶ 7. Also like those other three organizations, LULAC claims to be “expending time and resources delivering services to migrants detained in Maricopa County jail facilities pursuant to the [MMCP].” Id. at 6:12-14. In particular,
At least from a pleading standpoint, LULAC is in a markedly different situation than the other three organizations. Mostly that is because unlike WAA/ SAC, AHFC and Friendly House, LULAC does not explicitly allege that “[i]ts primary goals” include providing social services tо immigrants. See id. at 6:809, ¶ 7. Rather, LULAC sweepingly alleges that “its primary goals include promoting and protecting the legal, political, social, and cultural interests of Latinos in the United States.” Id. at 6:7-9, ¶ 7 (emphasis added). Even under the relatively lenient standards of review here, the complaint’s allegations as to LULAC amount to nothing more than “simply a setback to [its] abstract societal interests!.]” See Havens,
b. “Causal Connection” & “Redressability”
Despite arguing that dismissal is “appropriate” because plaintiffs do not “allege facts establishing the ‘irreducible’ elements required for legal standing[,]” defendants’ motion only addresses the first of those elements — injury in fact. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 3:20-21 (citation omitted). Perhaps defendants are not challenging the other two elements of constitutional standing, causation and redressability, because the complaint adequately alleges both.
At least on the face of it, the complaint sufficiently alleges a causal connection between the organizations’ injuries and the MMCP. The organizations’ injuries (except for LULAC), as discussed above, are “fairly trace[able]” to the MMCP “and not ... th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the court.” See Winn,
In sum, at this juncture, the court finds that the complaint adequately alleges organizational Article III standing as to WAA/SAC, AHFC and Friendly House, but not as to LULAC.
c. Compliance
Defendants conclude their discussion of organizational standing by stating that “any alleged future harm by the organizational Plaintiffs can be avoided if illegal aliens simply comply with” Arizona’s human smuggling, conspiracy and solicitation statutes. Mot. (Doc. 68) at 5:21-23. To support this assertion, defendants quote from Jones v. City of Los Angeles,
As the organizations are quick to respond, that is exactly what they are contending — “that [the MMCP] is unlawful [.]” Resp. (Doc. 69) at 11:11 (emphasis in original). Hence, the organizations further contend that “they are under no obligation to avoid running afoul of’ the “unlawful [MMCP].” Id. at 11:11-12 (emphasis in original). At this point, the organizations have the stronger position.
According to the complaint, Maricopa County Sheriffs deputies stopped the vehicles in which the former individual plaintiffs were traveling. See, e.g., Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at ¶¶ 25 and 26; at 14, ¶ 30. Further, allegedly the deputies detained аnd interrogated those individuals, despite not “developfing] any reason whatsoever to believe that plaintiffs ... were themselves alien smugglers, or that any of them were transporting or had conspired to transport others for gain.” Id. at ¶¶ 27 and 32. On a broader scale, the complaint also alleges that “in furtherance of the [MMCP], the Maricopa County Sheriffs deputies stopped, detained, and arrested 54 individuals on suspicion of conspiring to transport themselves in violation of § 13-2319.” Id. at ¶ 41.
In nearly every instance, the complaint alleges that “said stops, detentions, and arrests were conducted without probable cause to believe that any of the persons seized had committed or were committing a cognizable criminal offense because nowhere does Arizona law make it a crime to conspire to transport oneself in violation of § 13-2319.” Id. (emphasis added). Basically then, the complaint alleges that the individuals did not engage in any unlawful behavior so as to warrant the stops, detentions and arrests complained of therein. So construed, the complaint alleges “plaintiffs need not engage in unlawful conduct to become subject to the unlawful practices[,]” i.e., the MMCP, “they seek to enjoin.” See Armstrong v. Davis,
The amended complaint, as did the original, alleges that four of the five taxpayer plaintiffs “reside[] in and pay[] taxes to defendant MARICOPA COUNTY and to the State of Arizona.” Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 8, ¶¶ 11; and 13-15. A fifth taxpayer, Steve Gallаrdo, allegedly “resides in and pays taxes to the State of Arizona.” Id. at 8, ¶ 12:12-13 (emphasis added). Nowhere in the complaint does it allege that Gallardo is a taxpayer in any county, much less Maricopa. Regardless of their taxpayer status, these five plaintiffs uniformly allege that “[d]efendants are using ... taxes paid by [them] to” implement the “illegal [MMCP].” Id. They also identically “challenge[ ] the [MMCP] as an illegal diversion” or “illegal expenditure of taxpayer funds.” Id. at 8, ¶¶ 11-15 (emphasis added).
Municipal taxpayers, as discussed herein, are subject to different rules of standing than are state taxpayers. Therefore, the court will separately address plaintiff Gallardo’s asserted standing as an Arizona state taxpayer. Prior to addressing the merits, the court must address the possible impact of We Are America I upon the issue of the taxpayers’ standing.
When it comes to municipal taxpayer standing, this court is not writing on an entirely clean slate. Even prior to remand, that issue had arisen in this litigation. Lack of standing was one of three dismissal arguments defendants proffered in We Are America I. Ultimately, however, “[b] ecause it appeared] that Younger abstention may be required,” the court expressly found that it “need not address questions of Article III standing at th[at] time.” We Are America I,
Aware that that isolated comment “may not constitute a formal, dispositive ruling,” plaintiffs are not explicitly invoking the law of the case doctrine. Resp. (Doc. 69) at 2:7 (emphasis added). That doctrine “posits that when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case[.]” United States v. Park Place Assoc., Ltd.,
Plaintiffs construe the pending dismissal motion as doing “little more than reiterating] [defendants’] earlier argument that the taxpayer plaintiffs lack standing because they have not alleged a ‘“direct dollar-and cents injury” ’ flowing from the arrest and prosecution of non-smuggler migrants.” Id. at 3:12-16 (citation omitted). The repetitive nature of defendants’ taxpayer standing argument is significant for two reasons, according to plaintiffs. First, those defense arguments were “answered”
For instance, the municipal taxpayer plaintiffs have sufficiently pled the injury of improper expenditures of municipal funds. See Cammack v. Waihee,932 F.2d 765 , 770 (9th Cir.1991) ... Plaintiffs have alleged that they object to Defendant Maricopa County’s use of tax funds for the arrest, detainment, prosecution, and imprisonment of mi*1104 grants for conspiracy to smuggle themselves in violation of Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 13-2319____ While Defendants may be correct that arrests, detainments, and prosecutions will not increase the fixed salary expenditures for the employees carrying out those duties, the same cannot be said for the additional incremental costs of housing and feeding individuals in the county jails. Therefore, Plaintiffs have pled sufficient facts to demonstrate their standing as municipal taxpayers.
We Are America I,
A comparison of defendants’ taxpayer standing arguments herein and those in their We Are America I reply shows that there is a substantial overlap between the two. Compare Mot. (Doc. 68) at 6:16-7:7 with Reply (Doc. 42) at 3:27-5:2. That overlap does not, however, persuade this court to now simply adoрt wholesale, without any further consideration, its earlier comments regarding municipal taxpayer standing. Indeed, there are compelling substantive and procedural reasons for squarely addressing that issue anew.
One reason for revisiting the issue of taxpayer standing is that the court’s previous comments pertained only to municipal taxpayers; it did not mention state taxpayer standing. However, one of the five taxpayers herein, Mr. Gallardo, alleges only that he is a state taxpayer. As such, that plaintiff is subject to different rules of standing, and the court’s prior comments had absolutely no bearing on him.
The court also cannot ignore the procedural posture of this case. It is on remand from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, with an explicit instruction to determine taxpayer as well as organizational standing. See We Are America III,
Moreover, this court’s comments in We Are America I regarding municipal taxpayer standing can fairly be described as “casual[,]” having been “uttered in passing without due consideration of the alternatives[.]” See Gonzalez v. Arizona,
a. Municipal Taxpayers
A quick perusal of the complaint readily shows that the County taxpayers are “challeng[ing] the [MMCP] as an illegal
Primarily relying upon Doremus v. Board of Ed. of Hawthorne,
In rejoinder, the taxpayers maintain that their standing “simply requires the ‘injury’ of an allegedly improper expenditure of municipal funds.’ ” Resp. (Doc. 69) at 4:17-18 (quoting Cammack,
i. Injury
To adequately plead Article III standing, the taxpayers herein, like the organizations, must allege injury, causation and redressability. See Arakaki v. Lingle, 477 F.3d 1048, 1062 (9th Cir.2007). The defendants narrowly confine their lack of standing argument to the injury requirement, as they did with the organizations. Accordingly, that will be the primary focus of this court’s analysis as well.
“Absent special circumstances, ..., standing cannot be based on a plaintiffs mere status as a taxpayer.” Winn,
Drawing a distinction between federal and municipal taxpayers, the Frothingham Court “noted with approval the standing of municipal residents to enjoin the ‘illegal use of the moneys of a municipal corporation[’].” DaimlerChrysler,
The interest of a taxpayer of a municipality in the application of its moneys is direct and immediate and the remedy by injunction to prevent their misuse is not inappropriate. It is upheld by a large number of state cases and is the rule of this court ... The reasons which support the extension of the equitable remedy to a single taxpayer in such cases are based upon the peculiar relation of the corporate taxpayer to the corporation which is not without some resemblance to that subsisting between stockholder and private corporation.
Frothingham,
In considering Frothingham’s prohibition on taxpayer standing, the Supreme Court in Doremus,
The Doremus taxpayers did not satisfy that standard because the litigаted grievance, i.e., the reading of Bible verses, was “not a direct dollars-and-eents injury but [wa]s a religious difference.” Id. The taxpayers did “not eharge[ ] ... coneede[ ] nor prove[ ] that the brief interruption in the day’s schooling caused by compliance with the statute adds cost to the school expenses or varies by more than an incomputable scintilla the economy of the day’s work.” Id. at 431,
In Cammack, supra, state and municipal taxpayers brought an Establishment Clause challenge to the creation of a Good Friday state holiday. For the first time, the Ninth Circuit was forced to address the “injury requirements ... for municipal” as opposed to state “taxpayer standing.” Cammack,
Turning to the issue of taxpayer “ ‘pocketbook’ injury!,]” the Cammack Court found that the taxpayer’s “allegations satisfied] the Doremus pocketbook injury requirement for standing!]” because the taxpayers “set forth their status as state and municipal taxpayers and specifically ... stated the amount of funds appropriated and allegedly spent by the taxing governmental entities as a result of the Good Friday holiday.” Id. at 771.
The government argued in Cammack, to no avail, that the taxpayers did not have standing “because the bare declaration of Good Friday, as a state holiday does not, standing alone, involve any expenditures of tax revenues.” Id. Rejecting this contention, the Court explained that “legislative enactments are not the only government activity which the taxpayer may have standing to sue.” Id. Then, based upon the complaint’s assertion that the state law “proclaims a state holiday in violation of the federal and state constitutions, and that state and municipal tax revenues fund the paid holiday for government employees!,]” the Ninth Circuit held that “this allegation identifies an expenditure of public funds sufficiently related to [the taxpayers’] constitutional claim.” Id. So, ultimately the determinative factor in Cammack was not the monetary amount alleged, but that the state and municipal taxpayers “asserted the necessary injury — actual expenditure of tax dollars [.]” Id. at 772 (emphasis added).
Applying Doremus to a municipal taxpayer, the Ninth Circuit reached the opposite result in Doe v. Madison School Dist. No. 321,
Further, despite “alleging] that defendants spеnt tax dollars on renting a hall, printing graduation programs, buying decorations, and hiring security guards[,]” the Court held that those “expenditures [did] not establish taxpayer standing[,]” because they were “ordinary costs of graduation that the school would pay whether or not the ceremony included a prayer.” Id.; see also Cole v. Oroville Union High Sch. Dist.,
As the foregoing amply shows, “improper expenditure of public funds” is the crux of any claim that a municipal taxpayer satisfies the injury in fact prong of constitutional standing. See, e.g., Cammack,
Clearly, in the present case the taxpayers are claiming an “unconstitutional expenditure of government funds” in that they expressly allege that “the MMCP is an illegal expenditure of [their] funds,” and that defendants are using those “funds ... to arrest, detain and incarcerate migrants pursuant to the [MMCP].” See Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 8-9, ¶¶ 11; and 13-15. Although defendants contend that these allegations do not constitute a “direct dollars-and-cents” injury, the сourt disagrees. In this case, the alleged injury is not in the form of an activity, such as school prayer, where undoubtedly no costs are incurred as a result thereof.
Further, in contrast to cases such as Doremus, Madison School and Cole, where no additional costs were expended due to the challenged activities, the defendants herein will incur additional costs if the MMCP remains in effect. In fact, as this court previously observed, while there are some fixed expenditures associated with implementing the MMCP, there are also “additional incremental costs of housing and feeding individuals in the county jails.” We Are America I,
The Ninth Circuit in Cammack did acknowledge that the taxpayers “specifically ... stated the amount of funds appropriated and allegedly spent by the taxing governmental entities as a result of the Good Friday holiday.” Id. at 771. The Court did so, however, while employing the Hoohuli framework, i.e., the “pleadings must ‘set forth the relationship between taxpayer, tax dollars, and the allegedly illegal government activity[.]’ ” Id. at 769 (quoting Hoohuli v. Ariyoshi,
Moreover, it strikes the court that at the motion to dismiss stage, perhaps the more relevant inquiry is whether the alleged injury is capable of measurement, not whether the complaint alleges a specific dollar amount. Certainly there is no reason why, as the taxpayers mention, that additional costs associated with booking, detaining, and prosecuting “non-smuggler migrants” in accordance with the MMCP cannot be measured. See Resp. (Doc. 69) at 5:23 (citations and footnote omitted). Further, where as here, there are allegations of tax expenditures resulting from the challenged activity, a direct dollars- and-cents injury is self-evident. This is in juxtaposition to school prayer which by its nature has no concomitant tax expenditures, and thus could never be capable of a monetary measurement.
Defendants’ fare no better with their contention that “any public funds spent by the[m] in enforcing the [MMCP] [are] merely incidental to their duty to enforce Arizona law and do[ ] not confer standing on the[se] taxpayer^] [.]” Mot. (Doc. 68) at 7:1-3 (citations omitted). Defendants cite two cases, both outside this Circuit, Dash v. Mitchell,
First, the issue of municipal taxpayer standing, which this defense motion raises, was not at issue in either Dash or Reich. The court in Dash examined, inter alia, the standing of two plaintiffs vis-a-vis their status as federal taxpayers and District of Columbia taxpayers. See Dash,
Defendants’ reliance upon Dash and Reich is misplaced for the additional reason that central to both courts’ analysis was the Supreme Court’s decision in Flast v. Cohen,
For all of these reasons, the court finds that the complaint adequately alleges injury in fact for purposes of Article III standing as to the municipal taxpayers, Kyrsten Sinema, Steve Lujan, Cecilia Menjivar, and LaDawn Haglund. The court thus denies defendants’ motion for dismissal due to lack of standing as to the just listed plaintiffs.
Once again, the procedural posture of this case heavily factors into this determination. It may be thаt as this litigation proceeds, the municipal taxpayers will be required to make a further showing of injury. See e.g. PLANS, Inc. v. Sacramento City Unified Sch. Dist.,
ii. “Casual Causation” & Redressability
As with the organizations, the defendants are not contesting the adequacy of the municipal taxpayers’ allegations of causation and redressability — the other two elements of constitutional standing. The court’s earlier discussion of those elements with respect to the organizations applies with equal force to the municipal taxpayers.
To reiterate, at least on the face of it, the complaint sufficiently alleges a causal connection between municipal taxpayers’ injuries and the MMCP. Those injuries are “fairly trace[able]” to the MMCP “and not ... th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the court.” See Winn,
b. State Taxpayer
As to plaintiff Gallardo, the complaint succinctly alleges:
[He] is an elected member of the Arizona State House of Representatives, representing Distriсt 13, north of Tucson, Arizona. He resides in and pays taxes to the State of Arizona. Defendants are using state taxes paid by plaintiff GALLARDO to arrest, detain and incarcerate migrants pursuant to the [MMCP]. Plaintiff GALLARDO challenges the [MMCP] as an illegal diversion of taxpayer funds.
Am. Compl. at 8:10-17, ¶ 12 (italicized emphasis added). Clearly, plaintiff Gallardo is challenging the MMCP strictly on the basis that he is an Arizona state taxpayer, and not as a county taxpayer.
Despite the foregoing, defendants maintain that all five taxpayers “claim standing ... by virtue of their status as county taxpayers.” Mot. (Doc. 68) at 6:14 (emphasis in original). Hence, in arguing for dismissal as against the taxpayers, defendants focus exclusively on county or municipal taxpayer standing. Inexplicably, plaintiffs also confine their analysis to the municipal taxpayer standing.
Even though the parties overlooked this pleading discrepancy between plaintiff Gallardo and the other four taxpayer plaintiffs, the court cannot. That is because of the difference between the legal principles governing municipal taxpayer standing and those governing federal and state taxpayers. With the exception of Establishment Clause cases, ordinarily federal taxpayers, like “state taxpayers[,] have no standing under Article III to challenge state tax or spending decisions simply by virtue of their status as taxpayers.” DaimlerChrysler,
Here, as the complaint alleges, plaintiff Gallardo’s standing is based solely upon his status as an Arizona state taxpayer. After DaimlerChrysler, however, those allegations are insufficient to confer standing upon Mr. Gallardo. See DaimlerChrysler,
The fact that as a state taxpayer plaintiff Gallardo is challenging a municipal policy, as opposed to a state policy, does not alter the analysis. Regardless of the na
B. Prudential Considerations
Defendants’ standing argument is narrowly circumscribed, as is evident. Defendants confined their argument to “Article III standing, which enforces the Constitution’s case-or-controversy requirement,” and more narrowly, to the injury in fact prong of that requirement. See Elk Grove Unified Sch. Dist. v. Newdow,
The inquiry continues because there is a second “strand” of standing, which defendants did not address — “prudential standing[.]” See Newdow,
At least at this point, there are no readily discernible prudential limitations on the exercise of this court’s jurisdiction. Nevertheless, the court is acutely aware of its ongoing obligation to “sua sponte examine jurisdictional issues such as standing.” See Chapman v. Pier 1 Imports (U.S.), Inc.,
III. Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine,
Ignoring that distinction, solely with respect to the organizations, the defendants imply that Rooker-Feldman “bars” the present action. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 5:17. Defendants accurately recite the foregoing general principle of Rooker-Feldman, id. at 5:17-18, but they critically ignore the Ninth Circuit’s “formulation” of that doctrine. See Noel v. Hall,
“A suit brought in federal district court is a ‘de facto appeal’ forbidden by Rooker-Feldman when a federal plaintiff asserts as a legal wrong an allegedly erroneous decision by a state court, and seeks relief from a state court judgment based on that decision.” Carmona,
Applying that formulation here, the organizations rightly contend that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine does not bar their action. The organizations are not “assert[ing] as a legal wrong any” legal errors by the Arizona state courts, or any other state court for that matter. See id. Nor are they “seekfing] relief from a state court judgment[]” of any kind. See id. Thus, despite defendants’ suggestion to the contrary, this action is not a prohibited de facto appeal under Rooker-Feldman.
Rather, this action fits squarely within the second part of the Ninth Circuit’s formulation. That is, the organizations are “asserting] as a legal wrong an allegedly illegal act[,]” i.e., the purportedly unlawful and unconstitutional MMCP, “by an adverse party,” the defendants, including the Maricopa County Attorney and Sheriff. See id. (citation omitted). Consequently, the Rooker-Feldman doctrine is not a bar to this action. See Maldonado v. Harris,
CONCLUSION
As fully discussed herein, the court denies in part and grants in part, as enumerated below, defendants’ motion to dismiss. The court is compelled to again stress the procedural posture of this motion, and, in turn, the limited scope of its holding today. Given that defendants strictly limited their motion to a facial attack on the complaint’s allegations of injury in fact, with two exceptions the court has found that the remaining plaintiffs have standing to proceed with this litigation. However, “the court is
A plaintiffs burden varies because the elements of standing “are not mere pleading requirements but rather an indispensable part of the plaintiffs case[.]” Lujan,
For all of these reasons, IT IS ORDERED:
(1) that the motion by defendants Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, Governing Body for Maricopa County; Fulton Brock, Don Stapley, Andrew Kunasek, Max W. Wilson, and Mary Rose Wilcox, Members of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors; and Joseph M. Arpaio, Maricopa County Sheriff (Doc. 68), in which Maricopa County Attorney, William G. Montgomery, joins (Doc. 72), to dismiss the claims of the plaintiffs We Are America/Somos America Coalition of Arizona; Arizona Hispanic Community Forum; Friendly House; Kyrsten Sinema; Steve Lujan; Cecilia Menjivar; an LaDawn Haglund is DENIED; but
(2) defendants’ motion to dismiss (Doc. 68), in which Maricopa County Attorney, William G. Montgomery, joins (Doc. 72) is GRANTED as to plaintiffs League of United Latin American Citizens (“LU-LAC”) and Steve Gallardo.
IT IS ORDERED.
Notes
. Section 13-2319 was amended by section four of “Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act,” as amended by H.B. 2162 ("S.B. 1070”), amended section 13-2319; and certain sections of S.B. 1070 have been preliminarily enjoined. See United States v. Arizona,
. This statute defines conspiracy and its classification as a preparatory offense.
. Hereinafter, unless necessary to distinguish between the original and the amendеd complaint, 'complaint” shall be read as referring to the amended complaint.
. Due to the court-ordered simultaneous filings herein, plaintiffs were uncertain as to what form defendants' jurisdictional challenge would take. As a precaution, ''[i]n the event defendants press[ed] the Court to look beyond the pleadings to resolve the issue of standing,” plaintiffs sought notice and an opportunity to conduct discovery. Resp. (Doc. 69) at 1 n. 1. However, because defendants' challenge is strictly facial, no additional notice or discovery is necessary.
. Plaintiffs' response cites to, inter alia, Comite de Jornaleros de Redondo Beach v. City of Redondo Beach,
. The court is acutely aware that the Ninth Circuit expounded on the issue of organizational standing, immediately after declaring that issue moot. See El Rescate,
. Presumably plaintiffs intended to cite to the amended complaint, as that is the governing pleading. See Rhodes v. Robinson,
.Defendants merely recite a few basic principles of organizational standing. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 4:4-13. Anticipating, incorrectly as it turns out, that plaintiffs would rely upon Oregon Advocacy Center v. Mink,
The organizations did briefly discuss some cases. That discussion does not advance their position any, though, because the organizations merely assert, with no analysis, that the complaint's allegations of frustration of mission and diversion of resources, are "indistinguishable” from cases such as El Rescate where courts have found standing. See Resp. (Doc. 69) at 9:18-19.
. With the exception of Friendly House, the other three plaintiff organizations appear to be asserting claims on behalf of their respective members, as well as on their own behalf. See Am. Compl. (Doc. 45) at 5:2-7, ¶ 5; at 5:23-27, 116; and at 6:10-18, ¶ 7. However, because defendants are not raising the issue of "associational” or "representational” standing as to the members, the court is similarly restricting its analysis to organizational standing. Accordingly, the standing discussion herein encompasses only the organizations, and not their members.
. Even though Jones was vacated as a result of a settlement agreement and may not be cited as binding precedent, Bell v. City of Boise,
. The court's limited analysis of this compliance issue mirrors the narrow focus of that defense argument. Because defendants did not squarely raise the issue of whether the complaint pleads a sufficient likelihood of future injury to establish standing to seek equitable remedies, the court leaves such issues for another day.
. See Resp. (Doc. 69) at 2:16.
. For the sake of brevity, “taxpayers” as used in this section shall be read as referring to the four taxpayers, Kyrsten Sinema, Steve Lujan, Cecilia Menjivar, and LaDawn Haglund, who allege, among other things, that they are Maricopa County taxpayers.
. The Supreme Court "has repeatedly construed Doremus as a state-taxpayer case.” See Smith v. Jefferson County Bd. of School Com’rs,
. The Ninth Circuit is not alone. See, e.g., ACLU-NJ v. Twp. of Wall,
. Defendants briefly proffer three additional reasons as to why the taxpayer plaintiffs supposedly have not adequately alleged standing. See Mot. (Doc. 68) at 7:8-14. None of those reasons are persuasive, however.
. Interestingly, while alleging that Mr. Gallardo has standing as an Arizona state taxpayer, plaintiffs explicitly realize that "[playment of federal or state taxes generally confers no standing.” Resp. (Doc. 69) at 3:26 (citations omitted).
. That “doctrine takes its name from two Supreme Court cases: Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
