Smith, Ed H. v. City of Chicago

457 F.3d 643, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 20126, 2006 WL 2243308
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 2006
Docket04-2755, 04-4009
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 457 F.3d 643 (Smith, Ed H. 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
Smith, Ed H. v. City of Chicago, 457 F.3d 643, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 20126, 2006 WL 2243308 (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

SYKES, Circuit Judge.

This case is satellite litigation emanating from the long-running legal battle over the remapping of Chicago’s aldermanic wards following the 1990 census. Though it presents only a claim for unreimbursed attorneys’ fees and related litigation expenses, it is dressed up in constitutional clothing. The plaintiffs are Chicago aldermen who challenged the City’s ward map in court and then claimed that the City’s refusal to finance their legal expenses in that litigation violated their equal protection and free speech rights.

Illinois law requires the City Council to redraw Chicago’s aldermanic ward bound *645 aries after each national census. The City’s attempt to create a new ward map after the 1990 census generated more than its share of federal litigation. Chicago’s aldermen were divided (with a few exceptions) into two opposing camps during the political struggle over the new ward boundaries — the “Administration Aider-men,” aligned with Mayor Richard M. Daley, and the “Opposition Aldermen.” When the two sides could not agree, their competing ward maps were submitted to Chicago’s voters via referendum as required by state law. The map proposed by the Administration Aldermen was adopted by voters and became law.

The new map was challenged in several federal lawsuits, and the two aldermanie factions lined up against each other in the consolidated litigation. As the case progressed, the City Council authorized payment of the litigation-related attorneys’ fees and expenses of the Administration Aldermen who intervened to defend the map but not the Opposition Aldermen who sued to invalidate it. This decision spawned the present lawsuit, in which the Opposition Aldermen argued that this unequal treatment in the payment of attorneys’ fees was unconstitutional. The suit remained pending while the redistricting litigation proceeded to trial, appeal, remand for limited retrial, and ultimately settlement. The Opposition Aldermen partially prevailed and were awarded some $8 million in attorneys’ fees under the fee-shifting provisions of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1988 and 1973Í (e).

About $250,000 in litigation expenses, however, were not included in the fee award, and those remaining unpaid expenses are at issue in this action. The district court granted summary judgment for the City on the free speech claim. Following a bench trial on the equal protection claim, the court concluded that the City’s decision to pay the litigation expenses of the aldermen who defended the City’s remap ordinance in court but not those who challenged it failed the rational-basis test. The court was strongly influenced by an earlier decision of the City Council to pay the litigation expenses of aldermen who sued the former mayor in an unrelated set of lawsuits stemming from the “Council Wars” of the mid-1980s. This, the court said, required the City “live with [its] decisions and treat other plaintiff-aldermen in like fashion.” The court awarded the Opposition Aldermen their unreimbursed legal expenses plus prejudgment interest.

We reverse. No fundamental right or suspect classification is implicated here, so the City’s action is reviewed only for a rational relationship to a legitimate governmental interest. This is a lenient standard, but the district court failed to treat it as such. Defending the City’s ordinances against legal challenge is unquestionably a legitimate municipal interest, and it was entirely rational for the City to pay the litigation expenses of the aldermen who intervened on the City’s side in defense of the duly adopted ward map but not those of the aldermen who sued to invalidate it. That the City Council authorized payment of legal expenses for certain other plaintiff-aldermen in unrelated litigation years earlier does not obligate the City to finance all subsequent aldermanie litigation against it — by operation of the Equal Protection Clause or any other principle. The City is thus not required to “live with” its prior decisions in the sense suggested by the district court.

The free speech clause of the First Amendment does not provide an alternative basis upon which to uphold the judgment. The government’s decision not to subsidize the exercise of a constitutional right does not infringe the right. This *646 case does not involve viewpoint discrimination within a government-sponsored speech forum or a generalized subsidy program for private litigation. The City’s decision not to underwrite the Opposition Aldermen’s legal challenge to the ward map did not violate their free speech rights.

I. Background

Illinois law provides that if the Chicago City Council fails to pass a redistricting ordinance in the year that a national census is conducted, proposed ordinances supported by at least one-fifth of the aldermen may be submitted to the electorate for a referendum vote. See 65 ILCS 20/21-38, 20/21-40 (2002). A referendum vote became necessary in the remapping process that followed the 1990 census when the so-called Administration Aldermen and Opposition Aldermen could not reach consensus on a new aldermanic ward map. On March 17, 1992, the voters of Chicago approved the ward map submitted by the Administration Aldermen, and this map consequently achieved the status of a City ordinance.

Three lawsuits challenging the validity of the redistrieting ordinance followed closely on the heels of the referendum. In the first, Barnett v. Daley, nine voters alleged that the map violated the Voting Rights Act; they named all 50 aldermen as defendants in the suit. The 50 aldermen were dismissed as defendants at an early stage of the Barnett litigation. The second suit, also alleging violations of the Voting Rights Act, was brought by the Opposition Aldermen. In this ease, Smith v. Daley, no aldermen were named as defendants. The third suit, Bonilla v. City Council, was brought by Latino voters and also did not name any aldermen as defendants. The Administration Aldermen were permitted to intervene as defendants in all three cases for purposes of defending the remap ordinance, and they retained private legal counsel to represent them. The Opposition Aldermen also retained private counsel for purposes of pursuing their claims as the plaintiffs in Smith. The City of Chicago and the mayor, also defendants in the three cases, were represented by the office of the City Corporation Counsel.

The three eases were consolidated for a 48-day bench trial, and the district court entered judgment for the defendants on all claims. See Barnett v. City of Chi, 969 F.Supp. 1359 (N.D.Ill.1997). On appeal, this court affirmed the judgment in Bonil-la but, for reasons not relevant here, vacated the judgments in Barnett and Smith and remanded with directions for a limited retrial. Barnett v. City of Chi, 141 F.3d 699, 706 (7th Cir.1998).

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457 F.3d 643, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 20126, 2006 WL 2243308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-ed-h-v-city-of-chicago-ca7-2006.