Pontarelli Limousine, Incorporated v. City of Chicago

929 F.2d 339, 1991 WL 46657
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1991
Docket90-1923
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 929 F.2d 339 (Pontarelli Limousine, Incorporated v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pontarelli Limousine, Incorporated v. City of Chicago, 929 F.2d 339, 1991 WL 46657 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

Ten livery companies licensed by the City of Chicago sue the City in this case, claiming that it denied them equal protection of the laws by refusing to allow them to use dispatchers’ booths at O’Hare Airport, which is owned by the City. A jury awarded the plaintiffs more than $400,000 in damages, but the district judge then entered judgment for the City (the only remaining defendant) notwithstanding the verdict. 735 F.Supp. 782 (N.D.Ill.1990). The plaintiffs ask us to reinstate the verdict.

This litigation has its origin almost twenty years ago when the City, distressed by *340 traffic congestion at O’Hare, established a livery dispatch system. Until then livery drivers had been accustomed to park their cars outside the terminals while they hawked within for “walk-up” passengers— arriving passengers who had not arranged for ground transportation in advance. The parked cars blocked traffic. The principal offenders were the suburban livery services, simply because most livery business at the airport is suburban. Taxi service (and now the rapid-transit system, the “subway” or “el” as it is loosely and inconsistently called) is cheaper than livery service for destinations in Chicago, but more expensive for most destinations in the suburbs. Under the livery dispatch system, drivers are forbidden to park at the terminal unless and until they have a passenger. Either they have a prior arrangement to pick up the passenger when he arrives or they wait in a satellite lot until summoned by a dispatcher stationed in a booth in the terminal. The dispatcher hawks fares the way the drivers themselves used to do, only without blocking traffic.

Because livery dispatch booths were considered unsightly and the dispatchers boorish and raucous, the City wanted to limit the scope of the livery dispatch system. To this end it confined the right to use the booths to dispatchers for suburban livery services. It was not that those dispatchers were considered more refined and mannerly than dispatchers for City-licensed services would have been, but that, for the economic reason already indicated, the principal demand for livery service among “walk-up” passengers was for service to suburban destinations rather than to destinations in the city. Two Chicago-licensed livery services, however, became affiliates of suburban livery services, and the dispatchers for those suburban livery services began to dispatch the occasional “walk-up” passenger seeking transportation to the city to Chicago-licensed livery services affiliated with the suburban services. This development precipitated in 1977 a lawsuit in Illinois state court against the City of Chicago by three Chicago-licensed livery services— not the plaintiffs in this case — that were not affiliated with suburban livery services. This was the Chicago Courtesy litigation. It was a triumph for the plaintiffs. In 1982 the court found a denial of equal protection, awarded damages of $1.9 million, and entered an injunction. The plaintiffs agreed to a reduction of the damages award to $1.2 million in exchange for the City’s dropping its appeal. In 1986, in exchange for some further consideration, the plaintiffs agreed with the City to vacate the 1982 judgment and the state court did so.

This suit, filed in 1983, is essentially a reprise of the Chicago Courtesy litigation. The plaintiffs complain about the different access to the dispatch booths for suburban and urban liveries, about the different treatment of affiliated and nonaf-filiated liveries, and finally — the only new twist — about the different treatment between themselves and the plaintiffs in Chicago Courtesy, who like themselves are not affiliated with suburban liveries yet continued, notwithstanding the vacation of the 1982 judgment, to use the livery dispatch booths at O’Hare (which, by the way, the City has since shut down). The first question on appeal, indeed — so close are the two cases — is whether the district judge erred in refusing to give the judgment in Chicago Courtesy collateral estoppel effect in this case, which would establish that the City had denied these plaintiffs the equal protection of the laws. He did not err. A vacated judgment has no collateral estoppel or res judicata effect under Illinois law, Matchett v. Rose, 36 Ill.App.3d 638, 649, 344 N.E.2d 770, 779 (1976) (or any other law, No East-West Highway Committee, Inc. v. Chandler, 767 F.2d 21, 24 (1st Cir.1985)), and Illinois law is determinative on the question because the judgment in question was rendered by an Illinois state court. 28 U.S.C. § 1738. The plaintiffs rely on In re Memorial Hospital, 862 F.2d 1299 (7th Cir.1988), for the contrary position. But that was a case in which we refused to vacate a judgment. Had we done so, then — as our opinion made clear — the judgment could not have been used in future litigation. Indeed this was one of the considerations that moved us not to vacate it. *341 Id. at 1302. Maybe the judge in Chicago Courtesy should not have vacated the judgment in that case either, but he did so, and thus deprived it of any future effect.

The principal question is whether the district judge was right to hold that, as a matter of law, the conduct of the City in failing to give the plaintiffs equal, or for that matter any, access to the livery dispatch booths did not deny the plaintiffs the equal protection of the laws. He was right.

The equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment has a history. The primary purpose behind it was to prevent the southern states from making the newly freed blacks outlaws by denying them the protection of criminal, tort, and other state laws. The Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. (16 Wall.) 36, 67-72, 21 L.Ed. 394 (1873); Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U.S. 303, 306-07, 25 L.Ed. 664 (1879); Palmer v. Thompson, 403 U.S. 217, 220, 91 S.Ct. 1940, 1942, 29 L.Ed.2d 438 (1971). That purpose defines the core of the amendment’s protection but a century and more of interpretation have marked out a broader periphery within which one can find decisions broadly, though not always completely, forbidding public discrimination against blacks and other groups (including other racial and ethnic minorities, children born out of wedlock, women, and aliens) believed to be particularly vulnerable to governmental oppression. None of those decisions supports the position of these livery companies, which instead implicitly appeal to a miscellany of decisions in which persons belonging to groups that the courts have not singled out for special protection under the equal protection clause, including business groups complaining about being placed at a competitive disadvantage by protectionist governmental action, for example by unequal taxation, have been held to have been denied equal protection.

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Bluebook (online)
929 F.2d 339, 1991 WL 46657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pontarelli-limousine-incorporated-v-city-of-chicago-ca7-1991.