Mark Janus v. American Federation of State
Citation942 F.3d 352
Date Filed2019-11-05
Docket19-1553
JudgeWood
Cited44 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 19â1553
MARK JANUS,
PlaintiffâAppellant,
v.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY AND MUNICIPAL
EMPLOYEES, COUNCIL 31; AFLâCIO, et al.,
DefendantsâAppellees,
and
KWAME RAOUL, in his official capacity as Attorney General of
the State of Illinois,
IntervenorâDefendantâAppellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 1:15âcvâ01235 â Robert W. Gettleman, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 20, 2019 â DECIDED NOVEMBER 5, 2019
____________________
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and MANION and ROVNER, Cirâ
cuit Judges.
2 No. 19â1553
WOOD, Chief Judge. For 41 years, explicit Supreme Court
precedent authorized stateâgovernment entities and unions to
enter into agreements under which the unions could receive
fairâshare fees from nonmembers to cover the costs incurred
when the union negotiated or acted on their behalf over terms
of employment. Abood v. Detroit Bd. of Educ., 431 U.S. 209
(1977). To protect nonmembersâ First Amendment rights, fairâ
share fees could not support any of the unionâs political or
ideological activities. Relying on Abood, more than 20 states
created statutory schemes that allowed the collection of fairâ
share fees, and publicâsector employers and unions in those
jurisdictions entered into collective bargaining agreements
pursuant to these laws.
In 2018, the Supreme Court reversed its prior position and
held that compulsory fairâshare or agency fee arrangements
impermissibly infringe on employeesâ First Amendment
rights. Janus v. AFSCME, Council 31, 138 S. Ct. 2448, 2461
(2018). The question before us now is whether Mark Janus, an
employee who paid fairâshare fees under protest, is entitled
to a refund of some or all of that money. We hold that he is
not, and so we aďŹrm the judgment of the district court.
I
A. History of Agency Fees
Before turning to the specifics of the case before us, we
think it useful to take a brief tour of the history behind agency
fees. This provides useful context for our consideration of Mr.
Janusâs claim and the system he challenged.
The principle of exclusive union representation lies at the
heart of our system of industrial relations; it is reflected in
both the Railway Labor Act (âRLAâ), 45 U.S.C. §§ 151â165
No. 19â1553 3
(first enacted in 1926), and the National Labor Relations Act
(âNLRAâ), 29 U.S.C. §§ 151â169 (first enacted in 1935). In its
quest to provide for âindustrial peace and stabilized laborâ
management relations,â Congress authorized employers and
labor organizations to enter into agreements under which emâ
ployees could be required either to be union members or to
contribute to the costs of representationâsoâcalled âagencyâ
shopâ arrangements. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 157, 158(a)(3);45 U.S.C. § 152
Eleventh. Unions designated as exclusive representaâ
tives were (and still are) obligated to represent all employees,
union members or not, âfairly, equitably, and in good faith.â
H.R. Rep. No. 2811, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 4.
In Railway Employment Depât v. Hanson, 351 U.S. 225(1956), a case involving the RLA, the Supreme Court held that âthe requirement for financial support of the collectiveâbargaining agency by all who receive the benefits of its work is within the power of Congress under the Commerce Clause and does not violate either the First or the Fifth Amendments.âId. at 231
. In approving agencyâshop arrangements, the Court said, âConâ gress endeavored to safeguard against [the possibility that compulsory union membership would impair freedom of exâ pression] by making explicit that no conditions to memberâ ship may be imposed except as respects âperiodic dues, initiâ ation fees, and assessments.ââId.
Hanson thus held that the
compulsory payment of fairâshare fees did not contravene the
First Amendment.
Several years later, in Intâl Assân of Machinists v. Street, 367
U.S. 740(1961), the Court discussed the careful balancing of interests reflected in the RLA, observing that âCongress did not completely abandon the policy of full freedom of choice embodied in the [RLA], but rather made inroads on it for the 4 No. 19â1553 limited purposes of eliminating the problems created by the âfree rider.ââId. at 767
. The Court reaďŹrmed the lawfulness of agencyâshop arrangements while cautioning that unions could receive and spend nonmembersâ fees only in accordâ ance with the terms âadvanced by the unions and accepted by Congress [to show] why authority to make union shop agreeâ ments was justified.âId. at 768
. Legitimate expenditures were limited to those designed to cover âthe expenses of the negoâ tiation or administration of collective agreements, or the exâ penses entailed in the adjustment of grievances and disâ putes.âId.
The Court left the question whether state public
agencies were similarly empowered under state law to enter
into agencyâshop arrangements for another day.
That day came on May 23, 1977, when the Supreme Court
issued its opinion in Abood. 431 U.S. 209. There, a group of publicâschool teachers challenged Michiganâs labor relations laws, which were broadly modeled on federal law.Id. at 223
. Michigan law established an exclusive representation scheme and authorized agencyâshop clauses in collective bargaining agreements between publicâsector employers and unions.Id. at 224
. The Court upheld that system, stating that â[t]he deâ sirability of labor peace is no less important in the public secâ tor, nor is the risk of âfree ridersâ any smaller,âid.,
and that â[t]he same important government interests recognized in the Hanson and Street cases presumptively support the impingeâ ment upon associational freedom created by the agency shop here at issue.âId. at 225
. It recognized that âgovernment may not require an individual to relinquish rights guaranteed him by the First Amendment as a condition of public employâ ment.âId.
at 233â34. Nonetheless, it said that a public emâ ployee has no âweightier First Amendment interest than a priâ vate employee in not being compelled to contribute to the No. 19â1553 5 costs of exclusive union representation,âid. at 229
, and thus concluded that â[t]he diďŹerences between publicâ and priâ vateâsector collective bargaining simply do not translate into diďŹerences in First Amendment rights.âId. at 232
.
The correct balance, according to Abood, was to âprevent[]
compulsory subsidization of ideological activities by employâ
ees who object thereto without restricting the Unionâs ability
to require every employee to contribute to the cost of collecâ
tiveâbargaining activities.â Id. at 237. And for four decades folâ lowing Abood, courts, state publicâsector employers, and unâ ions followed this path. See, e.g., Locke v. Karass,555 U.S. 207
(2009); Lehnert v. Ferris Faculty Assân,500 U.S. 507
(1991); Chiâ cago Teachers Union v. Hudson,475 U.S. 292
(1986); Ellis v. Railâ way Clerks,466 U.S. 435
(1984). Agencyâshop arrangements, the Court repeatedly held, were consistent with the First Amendment and validly addressed the risk of free riding. See Commâcns Workers of America v. Beck,487 U.S. 735, 762
(1988) (âCongress enacted the two provisions for the same purpose, eliminating âfree riders,â and that purpose dictates our conâ struction of § 8(a)(3) ⌠.â); Ellis,466 U.S. at 447, 452
, 456 (reâ ferring in three places to the freeârider concern); see also Lehnert,500 U.S. at 556
(Scalia, J., concurring).
In time, however, the consensus on the Court began to
fracture. Beginning in Knox v. Serv. Emps. Intâl Union, 567 U.S.
298(2012), the rhetoric changed. Abood began to be characterâ ized as an âanomaly,â and the Court started paying more atâ tention to the âsignificant impingement on First Amendment rightsâ Abood allowed and less to the balancing of employeesâ rights and unionsâ obligations.Id.
at 310â11. Building on Knox, Harris v. Quinn criticized the reasoning in Hanson and Abood as âthin,â âquestionable,â and âtroubling.â573 U.S. 616
, 631â 6 No. 19â1553 35 (2014). Harris worried that Abood had âfailed to appreciate the conceptual diďŹculty of distinguishing between union exâ penditures that are made for collectiveâbargaining purposes and those that are made to achieve political endsâ and to anâ ticipate âthe practical administrative problems that would reâ sult.âId. at 637
. The Harris Court also suggested that â[a] unâ ionâs status as exclusive bargaining agent and the right to colâ lect an agency fee from nonâmembers are not inextricably linked.âId. at 649
.
Nonetheless, and critically for present purposes, these obâ
servations did not lead the Court in Harris to overrule Abood.
Informed observers thought that Abood was on shaky ground,
but it was unclear whether it would weather the storm, be reâ
stricted, or be overturned in its entirety. That uncertainty conâ
tinued after the Court signaled its intention to revisit the issue
in Friedrichs v. California Teachers Assân, 135 S. Ct. 2933(2015), which wound up being aďŹrmed by an equally divided Court.136 S. Ct. 1083
(2016).
B. Janusâs Case
PlaintiďŹ Mark Janus was formerly a childâsupport specialâ
ist employed by the Illinois Department of Healthcare and
Family Services. Through a collective bargaining agreement
between Illinoisâs Department of Central Management Serâ
vices (âCMSâ) (which handles human resources tasks for Illiâ
noisâs state agencies) and defendant American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees (âAFSCMEâ), Counâ
cil 31, AFSCME was designated as the exclusive representaâ
tive of Mr. Janusâs employee unit. Mr. Janus exercised his
right not to join the union. He also objected to CMSâs withâ
holding $44.58 from his paycheck each month to compensate
AFSCME for representing the employee unit in collective
No. 19â1553 7
bargaining, grievance processing, and other employmentâreâ
lated functions.
Initially, however, Mr. Janus was not involved in this litiâ
gation. The case began instead when the thenâgovernor of Ilâ
linois challenged the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act
(âIPLRAâ), which established an exclusive representation
scheme and authorized public employers and unions to enter
into collective bargaining agreements that include a fairâshare
fee provision. 5 ILCS § 315/6. Under that law, a union desigâ
nated as the exclusive representative of an employee unit was
âresponsible for representing the interests of all public emâ
ployees in the unit,â whether union members or not,
§ 315/6(d). Fairâshare fees were earmarked to compensate the
union for costs incurred in âthe collective bargaining process,
contract administration and pursuing matters aďŹecting
wages, hours and conditions of employment.â § 315/6(e).
The district court dismissed the governor for lack of standâ
ing, but at the same time it permitted Mr. Janus (and some
others) to intervene as plaintiďŹs. Mr. Janus asserted that the
stateâs compulsory fairâshare scheme violated the First
Amendment. He recognized that Abood stood in his way, but
he argued that Abood was wrongly decided and should be
overturned by the high court. Although the lower courts that
first considered his case rejected his position on the ground
that they were bound by Abood, see Janus v. AFSCME, Council
31, 851 F.3d 746, 747â48 (7th Cir. 2017) (âJanus Iâ), Janus preâ served his arguments and then, as he had hoped, the Supreme Court took the case. This time, the Court overruled Abood. Janus,138 S. Ct. at 2486
(âJanus IIâ). It held that agencyâshop arrangements that require nonmembers to pay fairâshare fees and thereby 8 No. 19â1553 âsubsidize private speech on matters of substantial public concern,â are inconsistent with the First Amendment rights of objectors, no matter what interest the state identifies in its auâ thorizing legislation.138 S. Ct. at 2460
. This is so, the Court explained, because âthe First Amendment does not permit the government to compel a person to pay for another partyâs speech just because the government thinks that the speech furthers the interests of the person who does not want to pay.âId. at 2467
.
Several aspects of the Courtâs opinion are relevant to Mr.
Janusâs current claim for damages. First, the Court characterâ
ized the harm inflicted by the agencyâfee arrangement as
âcompelled subsidization of private speech,â 138 S. Ct. at
2464, whereby âindividuals are coerced into betraying their convictions,âid.
It was not concerned in the abstract with the
deduction of money from employeesâ paychecks pursuant to
an employment contract. Rather, the problem was the lack of
consent (where it existed) to the use of that moneyâi.e. to supâ
port the unionâs representation work. In other words, the case
presented a First Amendment speech issue, not one under the
Fifth Amendmentâs Takings clause.
The Court found that any legitimate interest AFSCME had
in those fees had to yield to the objecting employeesâ First
Amendment rights. In so doing, it rejected the approach to
free riding that earlier opinions had taken, holding to the conâ
trary that âavoiding free riders is not a compelling interestâ
and thus Illinoisâs statute could not withstand âexacting scruâ
tiny.â 138 S. Ct. at 2466. Yet it came to that conclusion only
after weighing the costs and benefits to a union of having exâ
clusive representative status: on the one hand, the union inâ
curs the financial burden attendant to the requirement to
No. 19â1553 9
provide fair representation even for nonmembers who deâ
cline to contribute anything to the cost of its services; on the
other hand, even with payments of zero from objectors, the
union still enjoys the power and attendant privileges of being
the exclusive representative of an employee unit. The Courtâs
analysis focused on the union rather than the nonmembers:
the question was whether requiring a union to continue to repâ
resent those who do not pay even a fairâshare fee would be
suďŹciently inequitable to establish a compelling interest, not
whether requiring nonmembers to contribute to the unions
would be inequitable.
Nor did the Court hold that Mr. Janus has an unqualified
constitutional right to accept the benefits of union representaâ
tion without paying. Its focus was instead on freedom of exâ
pression. That is why it said only that the state may not force
a person to pay fees to a union with which she does not wish
to associate. But if those unions were not designated as excluâ
sive representatives (as they are under 5 ILCS §§ 315/6 and
315/9), there would be no obligation to act in the interests of
nonmembers. The only right the Janus II decision recognized
is that of an objector not to pay any union fees. This is not the
same as a right to a free ride. Freeâriding is simply a conseâ
quence of exclusivity; drop the duty of fair representation,
and the union would be free to cut oďŹ all services to the nonâ
members.
Finally, the Court did not specify whether its decision was
to have retroactive eďŹect. The language it used, to the extent
that it points any way, suggests that it was thinking prospecâ
tively: âThose unconstitutional exactions cannot be allowed
to continue indefinitely,â 138 S. Ct. at 2486; âStates and publicâ sector unions may no longer extract agency fees from 10 No. 19â1553 nonconsenting employees,â id; âThis procedure violates the First Amendment and cannot continue,âid.
In the end, howâ ever, the Court remanded the case to the district court for furâ ther proceedings, in particular those related to remedy.Id. at 2486
.
C. District Court Proceedings
The most immediate eďŹect of the Courtâs Janus II opinion
was CMSâs prompt cessation of its collection of fees from Mr.
Janus and all other nonmembers of the union, and thus the
end of AFSCMEâs receipt of those monies. That relief was unâ
doubtedly welcome for those such as Mr. Janus who fundaâ
mentally disagree with the unionâs mission, but matters did
not stop there. Still relying on 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for his right of
action, Mr. Janus followed up on the Courtâs decision with a
request for damages from AFSCME in the amount of all fairâ
share fees he had paid. The State of Illinois joined the litigaâ
tion as an intervenorâdefendant in support of AFSCME.
The district court entered summary judgment for
AFSCME and Illinois on March 18, 2019. Janus v. AFSCME,
Council 31, No. 15 C 1235, 2019 WL 1239780(N.D. Ill. Mar. 18, 2019) (âJanus IIIâ). It began with the observation that in 1982, the Supreme Court held that private defendants could in some circumstances act âunder color of state lawâ for purâ poses of section 1983 by participating in stateâcreated proceâ dural schemes. Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co., Inc.,457 U.S. 922
, 941â42 (1982). Although such private defendants are not entiâ tled to the identical immunity defenses that apply to public defendants, the Court later indicated, they may be entitled to an aďŹrmative defense based on good faith or probable cause. Wyatt v. Cole,504 U.S. 158, 169
(1992) (âWyatt Iâ). Noting that
âevery federal appellate court that has considered the goodâ
No. 19â1553 11
faith defense [to a damages action] has found that it exists for
private parties,â the court followed that rule and found that
the defense applies here. The key question, it said, is whether
the defendantâs reliance on an existing law was in good faith.
Given the fact that âthe statute on which defendant relied had
been considered constitutional for 41 years,â it found good
faith. In so doing, it rejected the idea that earlier intimations
from the Court that Abood ought to be overruled undermined
the necessary good faith. Accordingly, it held that Mr. Janus
was not entitled to damages.
Mr. Janus timely filed a notice of appeal on March 27, 2019.
We heard oral argument in both Mr. Janusâs appeal and a reâ
lated case, Mooney v. Ill. Educ. Assân, No. 19â1774, on Septemâ
ber 20, 2019. The predicate for each case is the sameâthe Suâ
preme Courtâs decision in Janus IIâbut whereas Mr. Janus
seeks damages from the union, Mooney insists that her claim
lies in equity and is one for restitution. As we explain in more
detail in a separate opinion filed in Mooney, we find no subâ
stantive diďŹerence in the two theories of relief, and so much
of what we have to say here also applies to Mooneyâs case.
II
This appeal presents only questions of law. Accordingly,
we review the district courtâs grant of summary judgment in
favor of AFSCME de novo. Mazzai v. RockâNâAround Trucking,
Inc., 246 F.3d 956, 959 (7th Cir. 2001).
A. Retroactivity
We begin with the question whether Janus II is retroactive.
If it is not, that is the end of the line for Mr. Janus, because the
unionâs collection of fairâshare fees was expressly permitted
by state law and Supreme Court precedent from the time he
12 No. 19â1553
started his covered work until the Courtâs decision, which all
agree marked the end of his payments. If it is, then we must
reach additional questions that also bear on the proper resoâ
lution of the case. As we noted earlier, the Supreme Courtâs
opinion did not address retroactivity in so many words.
Mr. Janus relies primarily on Harper v. Virginia Depât of Taxâ
ation, 509 U.S. 86(1993), for the proposition that âa rule of fedâ eral law, once announced and applied to the parties to the controversy, must be given full retroactive eďŹect by all courts adjudicating federal law.âId. at 97
; see also Reynoldsville Casâ ket Co. v. Hyde,514 U.S. 749, 752
(1995) (âHarper⌠held that, when (1) the Court decides a case and applies the (new) legal rule of that case to the parties before it, then (2) it and other courts must treat that same (new) legal rule as âretroactive,â applying it, for example, to all pending cases, whether or not those cases involve predecision events.â). Mr. Janusâs asserâ tion is that all Supreme Court cases, without exception, âmust be applied retroactively.â AFSCME responds that â[i]t is not at all clear, in the first place, that the Supreme Courtâs decision in this case is to be applied retroactively.â We agree with AFSCME that the rules of retroactivity are not as unbending as Mr. Janus postulates. Even in Harper, the Court said only that its âconsideration of remedial issues meant necessarily that we retroactively applied the rule we announced ⌠to the litigants before us.â509 U.S. at 99
. Right and remedy are two diďŹerent things, and the Court has taken great pains to evaluate them separately. See, e.g., Franklin v. Gwinnett Cnty. Pub. Schs.,503 U.S. 60
, 65â66 (1992) (âAs we
have often stated, the question of what remedies are available
under a statute that provides a private right of action is
No. 19â1553 13
âanalytically distinctâ from the issue of whether such a right
exists in the first place.â).
Retroactivity poses some knotty problems. The Supreme
Court disapproved of what it called âselective prospectivityâ
in Harper (that is, application of the new rule to the party beâ
fore the court but not to all others whose cases were pending),
but it did not close the door on âpure prospectivityââi.e.,
wholly prospective force, equally inapplicable to the parties
in the case that announces the rule and all othersâas used in
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 411 U.S. 192(1973) (âLemon IIâ). In that case, after invalidating a Pennsylvania program permitting nonpublic sectarian schools to be reimbursed for secular eduâ cational services, see Lemon v. Kurtzman,403 U.S. 602
(1971) (âLemon Iâ), the Court aďŹrmed a district court order permitâ ting the state to reimburse the schools for all services perâ formed up to the date of Lemon I. Lemon II,411 U.S. at 194
. One
could argue that similar reliance interests on the part of
AFSCME and the state argue for pure prospectivity here.
On the other hand, in later decisions the Supreme Court
has stated that the âgeneral practice is to apply the rule of law
we announce in a case to the parties before us ⌠even when
we overrule a case.â Agostini v. Felton, 521 U.S. 203, 237(1997). Only when there is âgrave disruption or inequity involved in awarding retrospective relief to the petitionerâ does the opâ tion of pure prospectivity come into play. Ryder v. United States,515 U.S. 177
, 184â85 (1995). See also Suesz v. Medâ1 Sols., LLC,757 F.3d 636, 650
(7th Cir. 2014) (en banc).
Rather than wrestle the retroactivity question to the
ground, we think it prudent to assume for the sake of arguâ
ment that the right recognized in Janus II should indeed be apâ
plied to the full sweep of people identified in Harper (that is,
14 No. 19â1553
Mr. Janus himself and all others whose cases were in the pipeâ
line at the time of the Courtâs decision). That appears also to
be the approach the district court took. We thus turn to the
broader question whether Mr. Janus is entitled to the remedy
he seeks.
B. Requirements under Section 1983
Section 1983 supports a civil claim against âevery person
who, under color of any statute ⌠of any State ⌠subjects, or
causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States ⌠to
the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities seâ
cured by the Constitution and laws.â 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
1. AFSCME is a âpersonâ that can be sued
To be liable under section 1983 a defendant must be a âperâ
sonâ as Congress used that term. While âpersonâ is a broad
word, the Supreme Court has held that states do not fall
within its compass. See Will v. Michigan Depât of State Police,
491 U.S. 58(1989). But it is hard to find other exclusions. The union, as an unincorporated organization, is a suable âperâ son,â and we are satisfied that it is suďŹciently like other entiâ ties that have been sued under section 1983 to permit this acâ tion. Compare Monell v. Depât of Soc. Servs. of City of New York,436 U.S. 658, 690
(1978) (municipalities and other local govâ ernment units are âpersonsâ for purposes of section 1983); Walsh v. Louisiana High School Athletic Assân,616 F.2d 152, 156
(5th Cir. 1980) (voluntary association of schools); Frohwerk v. Corr. Med. Servs.,2009 WL 2840961
(N.D. Ind. Sept. 1, 2009) (prison contractors). Cf. Citizens United v. Fed. Election Commân,558 U.S. 310
(2010).
No. 19â1553 15
2. AFSCME acted âunder color ofâ state law
The next question is whether AFSCME acted under color
of state law. Unions generally are private organizations. See,
e.g., Hallinan v. Fraternal Order of Police of Chi. Lodge No. 7, 570
F.3d 811, 815(7th Cir. 2009). Nonetheless, private actors someâ times fall within the statute. See Lugar,457 U.S. at 935
. Indeed, the âcolor of lawâ requirement for section 1983 is more expanâ sive than, and wholly encompasses, the âstate actionâ requireâ ment under the Fourteenth Amendment.Id.
For our purposes,
the analysis is the sameâif AFSCMEâs receipt from CMS of
the fairâshare fees is attributable to the state, then the âcolor
of lawâ requirement is satisfied.
A âprocedural scheme created by ⌠statute obviously is
the product of state actionâ and âproperly may be addressed
in a section 1983 action.â Id. at 941. â[W]hen private parties make use of state procedures with the overt, significant assisâ tance of state oďŹcials, state action may be found.â Tulsa Profâl Collection Servs., Inc. v. Pope,485 U.S. 478
(1988); see also Aposâ tol v. Landau,957 F.2d 339, 343
(7th Cir. 1992). Here, AFSCME
was a joint participant with the state in the agencyâfee arâ
rangement. CMS deducted fairâshare fees from the employâ
eesâ paychecks and transferred that money to the union,
which then spent it on authorized laborâmanagement activiâ
ties pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement. This is
suďŹcient for the unionâs conduct to amount to state action.
We therefore conclude that AFSCME is a proper defendant
under section 1983.
C. Statute of Limitations
Mr. Janusâs claim is also timely under the applicable statâ
ute of limitations. Section 1983 does not have its own organic
16 No. 19â1553
statute of limitations but rather borrows the state statute of
limitations for personalâinjury actions. Wilson v. Garcia, 471
U.S. 261, 279(1985). In Illinois, this is two years. 735 ILCS § 5/13â202. âThe claim accrues when the plaintiďŹ knows or should know that his or her constitutional rights have been violated.â Draper v. Martin,664 F.3d 1110, 1113
(7th Cir. 2011).
In this case, the statute began running on the date of the
Supreme Courtâs decision in Janus II: June 27, 2018. Mr. Janus
neither knew nor should have known any earlier that his conâ
stitutional rights were violated, because before then it was the
settled law of the land that the contrary was true. Thus, his
suit is timely.
III
A. Existence of Goodâfaith Defense
We now turn to the ultimate question in this case: to what
remedy or remedies is Mr. Janus entitled? As the Supreme
Court wrote in Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229(2011), retâ roactivity and remedy are distinct questions. âRetroactive apâ plication does not ⌠determine what âappropriate remedyâ (if any) the defendant should obtain.âId. at 243
; see also Ameriâ can Trucking Assâns, Inc. v. Smith,496 U.S. 167, 189
(1990) (pluâ rality opinion) (â[T]he Court has never equated its retroactivâ ity principles with remedial principlesâŚ.â). It thus does not necessarily follow from retroactive application of a new rule that the defendant will gain the precise type of relief she seeks. See Powell v. Nevada,511 U.S. 79, 84
(1994). To the conâ trary, the Supreme Court has acknowledged that the retroacâ tive application of a new rule of law does not âdeprive[] reâ spondents of their opportunity to raise ⌠reliance interests entitled to consideration in determining the nature of the No. 19â1553 17 remedy that must be provided.â James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,501 U.S. 529, 544
(1991).
Sometimes the law recognizes a defense to certain types of
relief. An example that comes readily to mind is the qualified
immunity doctrine, which is available for a public employee
if the asserted constitutional right that she violated was not
clearly established. See, e.g., Ashcroft v. alâKidd, 563 U.S. 731
(2011). We must decide whether a union may raise any such
defense against its liability for the fairâshare fees it collected
before Janus II.
This is a matter of first impression in our circuit. But, as
the district court noted, every federal appellate court to have
decided the question has held that, while a private party actâ
ing under color of state law does not enjoy qualified immunâ
ity from suit, it is entitled to raise a goodâfaith defense to liaâ
bility under section 1983. See Clement v. City of Glendale, 518
F.3d 1090, 1096â97 (9th Cir. 2008); Pinsky v. Duncan,79 F.3d 306
, 311â12 (2d Cir. 1996); Vector Research, Inc. v. Howard & Howard Attorneys P.C.,76 F.3d 692
, 698â99 (6th Cir. 1996); Jorâ dan v. Fox, Rothschild, OâBrien & Frankel,20 F.3d 1250
, 1275â78 (3d Cir. 1994); Wyatt v. Cole,994 F.2d 1113
, 1118â21 (5th Cir.
1993) (âWyatt IIâ).
Mr. Janus takes issue with this consensus position. He
points to the text of section 1983, which we grant says nothing
about immunities or defenses. That, he contends, is the end of
the matter. âShall be liable to the party injuredâ is mandatory
language that, in his view, allows for no exceptions. The probâ
lem with such an absolutist position, however, is that the Suâ
preme Court abandoned it long ago, when it recognized that
liability under section 1983 is subject to commonâlaw immunâ
ities that apply to all manner of defendants.
18 No. 19â1553
The Court discussed that history in Wyatt I, where it noted
that despite the bareâbones text of section 1983, it had âacâ
corded certain government oďŹcials either absolute or qualiâ
fied immunity from suit if the tradition of immunity was so
firmly rooted in the common law and was supported by such
strong policy reasons that Congress would have specifically
so provided had it wished to abolish the doctrine.â 504 U.S. at
163â64 (quoting Owen v. City of Independence, 445 U.S. 622, 637(1980)) (internal quotation marks omitted). In Wyatt I, the Court had to decide how far its immunity jurisprudence reached, and specifically, whether private parties acting under color of state law would have been able, at the time section 1983 was enacted (in 1871), to invoke the same immunities that public oďŹcials had. (That is more than a bit counterfacâ tual, as the Court did not recognize this type of private liabilâ ity until 1982, but we put that to one side.) Surveying its imâ munity jurisprudence, including Mitchell v. Forsyth,472 U.S. 511
(1985), Harlow v. Fitzgerald,457 U.S. 800
(1982), Wood v. Strickland,420 U.S. 308
(1975), and Pierson v. Ray,386 U.S. 547
(1967), the Court âconclude[ed] that the rationales mandating qualified immunity for public oďŹcials are not applicable to private parties.â504 U.S. at 167
.
The Court recognized that this outcome risked leaving priâ
vate defendants in the unenviable position of being just as
vulnerable to suit as public oďŹcials, per Lugar, but not proâ
tected by the same immunity. Id. at 168. But, critically for AFSCME, the Court pointed toward the solution to that probâ lem. It distinguished between defenses to suit and immunity from suit, the latter of which is more robust, in that it bars recovery regardless of the merits.Id. at 166
. It then confirmed that its ruling rejecting qualified immunity did ânot foreclose the possibility that private defendants faced with § 1983 No. 19â1553 19 liability under [Lugar] could be entitled to an aďŹrmative deâ fense based on good faith and/or probable cause or that § 1983 suits against private, rather than governmental, parties could require plaintiďŹs to carry additional burdens.â Wyatt I,504 U.S. at 169
.
Mr. Janus rejects the line that the Court drew between
qualified immunity and a defense to liability; he sees it as
nothing but a labeling game. But Wyatt I directly refutes this
criticism. Adding to the language above from the majority,
Justice Kennedy, in concurrence, explained why a defense on
the merits might be available for private parties even if imâ
munity is not. âBy casting the rule as an immunity, we imply
the underlying conduct was unlawful, a most debatable propâ
osition in a case where a private citizen may have acted in
goodâfaith reliance upon a statute.â 504 U.S. at 173(Kennedy, J., concurring). The distinction between an immunity and a defense is one of substance, not just nomenclature, and âis imâ portant because there is support in the common law for the proposition that a private individualâs reliance on a statute, prior to a judicial determination of unconstitutionality, is conâ sidered reasonable as a matter of law.âId. at 174
; see also Luâ gar, 457 U.S. at 942 n.23 (âJustice Powell is concerned that priâ vate individuals who innocently make use of seemingly valid state laws would be responsible, if the law is subsequently held to be unconstitutional, for the consequences of their acâ tions. In our view, however, this problem should be dealt with not by changing the character of the cause of action but by establishing an aďŹrmative defense.â). The Wyatt I Court remanded the case to the Fifth Circuit, which decided that the âquestion left open by the majorityââ whether a goodâfaith defense is available in section 1983 20 No. 19â1553 actionsââwas largely answeredâ in the aďŹrmative by the five concurring and dissenting justices. Wyatt II,994 F.2d at 1118
.
The court accordingly held âthat private defendants sued on
the basis of Lugar may be held liable for damages under § 1983
only if they failed to act in good faith in invoking the unconâ
stitutional state procedures, that is, if they either knew or
should have known that the statute upon which they relied
was unconstitutional.â Id.
Other circuits followed suit. In Jordan, the Third Circuit
noted âthe [Supreme Courtâs] statement [in Wyatt I] that perâ
sons asserting section 1983 claims against private parties
could be required to carry additional burdens, and the stateâ
ments in Lugar which warn us [that] a too facile extension of
section 1983 to private parties could obliterate the Fourteenth
Amendmentâs limitation to state actions that deprive a person
of constitutional rights and the statutory limitation of section
1983 actions to claims against persons acting under color of
law.â 20 F.3d at 1277 (cleaned up). Those considerations, the
court said, lead to the conclusion that ââgood faithâ gives state
actors a defense that depends on their subjective state of
mind, rather than the more demanding objective standard of
reasonable belief that governs qualified immunity.â Id. The
Sixth Circuit concurred in Vector Research, 76 F.3d at 699, as did the Ninth Circuit in Clement, 518 F.3d at 1096â97. Most recently, in a case decided after Harris v. Quinn, the Second Circuit allowed a goodâfaith defense to a section 1983 claim for reimbursement of agency fees paid prior to decision. Jarvis v. Cuomo,660 F. Appâx 72
, 75â76 (2d Cir. 2016). Mr. Janus pushes back against these decisions with the arâ gument that there is no commonâlaw history before 1871 of private parties enjoying a goodâfaith defense to constitutional No. 19â1553 21 claims. As we hinted earlier, however, the reason is simple: the liability of private parties under section 1983 was not clearly established until, at the earliest, the Courtâs decision in United States v. Price,383 U.S. 787
(1966). For nearly 100 years,
nothing would have prompted the question.
We now join our sister circuits in recognizing that, under
appropriate circumstances, a private party that acts under
color of law for purposes of section 1983 may defend on the
ground that it proceeded in good faith. The final question is
whether that defense is available to AFSCME.
B. Goodâfaith Defense for AFSCME
Although this is a new question for us, we note that every
district court that has considered the precise question before
usâwhether there is a goodâfaith defense to liability for payâ
ments collected before Janus IIâhas answered it in the aďŹrmâ
ative.1 While those views are not binding on us, the unanimity
of opinion is worth noting.
1 See Hamidi v. SEIU Local 1000, 2019 WL 5536324(E.D. Cal. Oct. 25, 2019); LaSpina v. SEIU Pennsylvania State Council,2019 WL 4750423
(M.D. Pa. Sept. 30, 2019); Casanova v. International Assân of Machinists, Local 701, No. 1:19âcvâ00428, Dkt. #22 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 11, 2019); Allen v. Santa Clara Cty. Correctional Peace Officers Assân,2019 WL 4302744
(E.D. Cal. Sept. 11, 2019); Ogle v. Ohio Civil Serv. Emp. Assân,2019 WL 3227936
(S.D. Ohio July 17, 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â3701 (6th Cir.); Diamond v. Pennsylvania State Educ. Assân,2019 WL 2929875
(W.D. Pa. July 8, 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â2812 (3d Cir.); Hernandez v. AFSCME California,386 F. Supp. 3d 1300
(E.D. Cal. 2019); Doughty v. State Employeeâs Assân, No. 1:19âcvâ00053â PB (D.N.H. May 30, 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â1636 (1st Cir.); Babb v. California Teachers Assân,378 F. Supp. 3d 857
(C.D. Cal. 2019); Wholean v. CSEA SEIU Local 2001,2019 WL 1873021
(D. Conn. Apr. 26, 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â1563 (2d Cir.); Akers v. Maryland Educ. Assân,376 F. Supp. 3d 563
(D. Md. 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â1524 (4th Cir.); Bermudez v.
22 No. 19â1553
The first task we have under Wyatt I is to identify the âmost
closely analogous tortâ to which we should turn for guidance.
504 U.S. at 164 (citations and internal quotation marks omitâ
ted). Arguing in some tension with his statuteâofâlimitations
position, Mr. Janus says that his claim lacks any common law
analogue. His backâup position is that good faith is pertinent
only if the underlying oďŹense has a stateâofâmind element,
and he asserts that the most analogous tort in his case lacks
such an element.
Mr. Janus compares the First Amendment violation in his
case to conversion. But that analogy does not work, at least
with regard to the stateâs deduction of fairâshare fees and its
transfer of those fees to the union. Conversion requires an inâ
tentional and serious interference with âthe right of another
to controlâ a chattel. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 222A
(1965). At the time AFSCME received Mr. Janusâs fairâshare
fees, he had no âright to controlâ that money. Instead, under
SEIU Local 521, 2019 WL 1615414(N.D. Cal. Apr. 16, 2019); Lee v. Ohio Educ. Assân,366 F. Supp. 3d 980
(N.D. Ohio 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â3250 (6th Cir.); Hough v. SEIU Local 521,2019 WL 1274528
(N.D. Cal. Mar. 20, 2019), amended,2019 WL 1785414
(N.D. Cal. Apr. 16, 2019), appeal pendâ ing, No. 19â15792 (9th Cir.); Crockett v. NEAâAlaska,367 F. Supp. 3d 996
(D. Alaska 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â35299 (9th Cir.); Carey v. Inslee,364 F. Supp. 3d 1220
(W.D. Wash. 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â35290 (9th Cir.); Cook v. Brown,364 F. Supp. 3d 1184
(D. Or. 2019), appeal pending, No. 19â35191 (9th Cir.); Danielson v. AFSCME, Council 28,340 F. Supp. 3d 1083
(W.D. Wash. 2018), appeal pending, No. 18â36087 (9th Cir.). See also Winner v. Rauner,2016 WL 7374258
(N.D. Ill. Dec. 20, 2016) (postâHarris claim for fee reimbursement); Hoffman v. Inslee,2016 WL 6126016
(W.D. Wash. Oct. 20, 2016) (same). But see Lamberty v. Connecticut State Police Unâ ion,2018 WL 5115559
(D. Conn. Oct. 19, 2018) (dismissing for lack of standâ ing but implying plaintiffs were entitled to previously withheld fees, plus interest). No. 19â1553 23 Illinois law and Abood, the union had a right to the fees under the collective bargaining agreement with CMS. This rules out conversion. As the Supreme Court said in Chicot Cnty. Drainâ age Dist. v. Baxter State Bank,308 U.S. 371
(1940), âthe actual existence of a statute, prior to such a determination, is an opâ erative fact and may have consequences which cannot justly be ignored.âId. at 374
.
There are also at least two privileges that may be relevant
to a conversionâstyle claim: authority based upon public inâ
terest, Restatement (Second) of Torts § 265 (1965), and priviâ
lege to act pursuant to court order, Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 266 (1965). Section 265 provides that âone is privileged
to commit an act which would otherwise be a trespass to a
chattel or a conversion if he is acting in discharge of a duty or
authority created by law to preserve the public safety, health,
peace, or other public interest, and his act is reasonably necâ
essary to the performance of his duty or the exercise of his
authority.â While the usual context for the assertion of this
privilege is law enforcement, it is not too much of a stretch to
apply it to the unionâs conduct here. CMS and AFSCME acted
pursuant to state law. That sounds like action in discharge of
a duty imposed by law. Section 266, which provides a priviâ
lege when one acts pursuant to a court order, is not directly
applicable because there was no court order directing
AFSCME to receive fairâshare feesâAbood was permissive,
not mandatory. Nevertheless, CMS and AFSCME did rely on
the Supreme Courtâs opinion upholding the legality of exactly
this process.
AFSCME contends that the better analogy is to the tort of
abuse of process. Abuse of process occurs where a party âuses
a legal process, whether criminal or civil, against another
24 No. 19â1553
primarily to accomplish a purpose for which it is not deâ
signed.â Restatement (Second) of Torts § 682 (1977). Alternaâ
tively, the most analogous tort might be interference with
contract. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 766A (1979). Unâ
der the agencyâfee arrangement, a certain portion of the salary
CMS contracted to pay employees went instead to the union.
This arguably made the contract less lucrative for objecting
employees and violated their First Amendment rights.
None of these torts is a perfect fit, but they need not be. We
are directed to find the most analogous tort, not the exactâmatch
tort. This is inherently inexact. Although there are reasonable
arguments for several diďŹerent torts, we are inclined to agree
with AFSCME that abuse of process comes closest. But perâ
haps the search for the best analogy is a foolâs errand. As sevâ
eral district courts have commented, the Supreme Court in
Wyatt I embarked on the search for the most analogous tort
only for immunity purposesâthe Court never said that the
same methodology should be used for the goodâfaith defense.
See, e.g., Carey, 364 F. Supp. 3d at 1229â30; Babb, 378 F. Supp.
3d at 872â73; Diamond, 2019 WL 2929875 at *25â26. In the alâ
ternative, therefore, we leave commonâlaw analogies behind
and consider the appropriateness of allowing a goodâfaith deâ
fense on its own terms.
C. Goodâfaith Defense under Wyatt I
Like our sister circuits, we read the Courtâs language in
Wyatt I and Lugar, supplemented by Justice Kennedyâs opinâ
ion concurring in Wyatt I, as a strong signal that the Court inâ
tended (when the time was right) to recognize a goodâfaith
defense in section 1983 actions when the defendant reasonaâ
bly relies on established law. This is not, we stress, a simple
âmistake of lawâ defense. Neither CMS nor AFSCME made
No. 19â1553 25
any mistake about the state of the law during the years beâ
tween 1982 and June 27, 2018, when Janus II was handed
down. Abood was the operative decision from the Supreme
Court from 1977 onward, until the Court exercised its excluâ
sive prerogative to overrule that case. Like its counterparts
around the country, the State of Illinois relied on Abood when
it adopted a labor relations scheme providing for exclusive
representation of publicâsector workers and the remit of fairâ
share fees to the recognized union. The union then relied on
that state law in its interactions with other actors.
We realize that there were signals from some Justices durâ
ing the years leading up to Janus II that indicated they were
willing to reconsider Abood, but that is hardly unique to this
area. Sometimes such reconsideration happens, and someâ
times, despite the most confident predictions, it does not. See,
e.g., Dickerson v. United States, 530 U.S. 428(2000) (reaďŹrming the Miranda rule); see also Agostini,521 U.S. at 237
(âWe do
not acknowledge, and we do not hold, that other courts
should conclude our more recent cases have, by implication,
overruled an earlier precedent.â (cleaned up)). The Rule of
Law requires that parties abide by, and be able to rely on,
what the law is, rather than what the readers of teaâleaves preâ
dict that it might be in the future.
Notably, Mr. Janus does not allege that CMS and
AFSCME, acting pursuant to state law, failed to comply with
Abood. Mr. Janus says only that AFSCME did not act in good
faith because it âspurned eďŹorts to have agency fees placed in
escrow while their constitutionality was determined.â But
AFSCME was under no legal obligation to escrow the fairâ
share fees for an indefinite period while the case was being
litigated. Such an action, as AFSCME says, would (in the
26 No. 19â1553
absence of a court order requiring security of some kind)
âhave been hard to square with the fiduciary duty the Union
owes to its own members,â as the unitâs exclusive representaâ
tive.
Until Janus II said otherwise, AFSCME had a legal right to
receive and spend fairâshare fees collected from nonmembers
as long as it complied with state law and the Abood line of
cases. It did not demonstrate bad faith when it followed these
rules.
D. Entitlement to Money Damages
No one doubts that Mr. Janus is entitled to declaratory and
injunctive relief. The Supreme Court declared that the status
quo violated his First Amendment rights and that âStates and
publicâsector unions may no longer extract agency fees from
nonconsenting employees.â 138 S. Ct. at 2486. Mr. Janus is
now protected from that practice. Any remaining relief was
for the district court to consider. That court declined to grant
monetary damages, on the ground that AFSCMEâs goodâfaith
defense shielded the union from such liability. We agree with
that conclusion.
While this may not be all that Mr. Janus hoped for in this
litigation, it is not unusual for remedies to be curtailed in light
of broader legal doctrines. Moreover, though Mr. Janus conâ
tends that he did not want any of the benefits of AFSCMEâs
collective bargaining and other representative activities over
the years, he received them. Putting the First Amendment isâ
sues that concerned the Supreme Court in Janus II to one side,
there was no unjust âwindfallâ to the union, as Mr. Janus alâ
leges, but rather an exchange of money for services. Our
No. 19â1553 27
decision in Gilpin v. AFSCME, 875 F.2d 1310(7th Cir. 1989) is on point: [T]he union negotiated on behalf of these employees as it was required by law to do, adjusted grievances for them as it was required by law to do, and incurred exâ penses in doing these things ⌠. The plaintiďŹs do not propose to give back the benefits that the unionâs efâ forts bestowed on them. These benefits were rendered with a reasonable expectation of compensation founded on the collective bargaining agreement and federal labor law, and the conferral of the benefits on the plaintiďŹs would therefore give rise under convenâ tional principles of restitution to a valid claim by the union for restitution if the union were forced to turn over the escrow account to the plaintiďŹs and others similarly situated to them.Id. at 1316
.
We have followed similar principles in the ERISA context.
âIf restitution would be inequitable, as where the payor obâ
tained a benefit that he intends to retain from the payment
that he made and now seeks to take back, it is refused.â Operâ
ating Engârs Local 139 Health Benefit Fund v. Gustafson Const.
Corp., 258 F.3d 645, 651(7th Cir. 2001); see also Constr. Indus. Ret. Fund of Rockford, Ill. v. Kasper Trucking, Inc.,10 F.3d 465, 467
(7th Cir. 1993) (âThe welfare fund pooled the money to provide benefits for all persons on whose behalf contributions were made. Because the drivers received the health coverage for which they paid through the deductions Kasper sent to the fund, no one is entitled to restitution.â); UIU Severance Pay Tr. Fund v. Local Union No. 18âU, United Steelworkers of Am.,998 F.2d 509, 513
(7th Cir. 1993) (â[B]ecause the cause of action we
28 No. 19â1553
are authorizing is equitable in nature, recovery will not follow
automatically upon a showing that the Union contributed
more than was required but only if the equities favor it.â (inâ
ternal quotation marks omitted)). We conclude that Mr. Janus
has received all that he is entitled to: declaratory and injuncâ
tive relief, and a future free of any association with a public
union.
IV
Before closing, we emphasize again that the goodâfaith deâ
fense to section 1983 liability is narrow. It is not true, as Mr.
Janus charges, that this defense will be available to âevery deâ
fendant that deprives any person of any constitutional right.â
We predict that only rarely will a party successfully claim to
have relied substantially and in good faith on both a state statâ
ute and unambiguous Supreme Court precedent validating
that statute. But for those rare occasions, following the lead
first of the Supreme Court in Wyatt I and second of our sister
circuits, we recognize a goodâfaith defense for private parties
who act under color of state law for purposes of section 1983.
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
No. 19â1553 29
MANION, Circuit Judge, concurring. The courtâs opinion in
this challenging case is thorough, and I concur with the
courtâs ultimate conclusion. I have a couple additional
thoughts. Some might observe that Abood had some benefit
to the objectors because they no longer had to pay service
fees equal to union dues as a condition of employment. But
for 41 years, the nonunion employees had to pay their âfair
share.â
The unions received a huge windfall for 41 years. As the
Supreme Court acknowledged in Janus II, Abood was wrong,
so the unions got what the Court called a âconsiderable
windfall.â The Court in Janus II sums it up pretty well:
We recognize that the loss of payments from
nonmembers may cause unions to experience
unpleasant transition costs in the short term,
and may require unions to make adjustments
in order to attract and retain members. But we
must weigh these disadvantages against the
considerable windfall that unions have reâ
ceived under Abood for the past 41 years. It is
hard to estimate how many billions of dollars
have been taken from nonmembers and transâ
ferred to publicâsector unions in violation of
the First Amendment. Those unconstitutional
exactions cannot be allowed to continue inâ
definitely.
Janus v. AFSCME, Council 31, 138 S. Ct. 2448, 2485â86 (2018).
Even though the Supreme Court reached the wrong reâ
sult in Abood 41 years before Janus II, the unions justify their
acceptance of many millions of dollars because they acceptâ
30 No. 19â1553
ed the money in âgood faith.â Probably a better way of lookâ
ing at it would be to say rather than good faith, they had
very âgood luckâ in receiving this windfall for so many
years. Since the court is not holding that the unions must reâ
pay a portion of the windfall, they can remind themselves of
their good luck for the years ahead.