CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs are eight adults who were adopted as infants and Yesterday’s Children, which is a not-for-profit Illinois corporation consisting of approximately 6,000 adults who were also adopted as infants. Their civil rights complaint was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against four Illinois officials
and the presiding judge, County
Division, of the Circuit Court of Cook County. Plaintiffs sought injunctive relief and a declaratory judgment that two Illinois statutes
violate the First, Fifth, Ninth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments because they prevent the individual plaintiffs from ascertaining their natural parents’ identity. They also sought a declaratory judgment that defendant officials and officials of private agencies acting under color of state law violate those amendments by preventing plaintiffs from ascertaining the identity of their natural parents. The individual plaintiffs claim that they were denied access by defendants to the names of their natural parents or, in one instance, the name of her natural brother.
Seven of the named plaintiffs are members of Yesterday’s Children. None of the plaintiffs sought any relief in the Illinois courts.
According to plaintiffs, Illinois has maintained a statutory and “actual policy” of preventing adopted children from discovering the names and circumstances of their natural parents and blood relatives. Similarly, adoption agencies formalized by Illinois statute and licensed by the employees of the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services have denied adoptees this information. Adoptees have been able to review their adoption records “only if they can demonstrate critical medical reasons to justify their request” (Complaint par. 27). Plaintiffs claim that their constitutional rights have been violated by the two statutes in question,
by a General Order entered by the presiding judge of the County Division of the Circuit Court of Cook County on February 21, 1974, which provides that “ * * * all adoption files in the offices of the Clerk of the Circuit Court shall be impounded and shall be released only upon an order issued from the County Division of the Circuit Court,” and “by the action of state officials and private child adoption agencies acting under the color of state law” (Complaint par. 32).
The constitutional violations are alleged as follows (Complaint pars. 33-35):
“The State of Illinois has denied the Plaintiffs their Fourteenth Amendment rights to the equal protection of the laws by preventing their access to information concerning their background, based on the suspect classification of their status as adoptees.
“The Plaintiffs’ rights to acquire useful information (including the right to determine their natural heritage) have been violated. These liberties are protected by a penumbra of rights emanating from the Bill of Rights, specifically the First,
Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth amendments of the U.S. Constitution.
“The Plaintiffs’ rights to be free from involuntary servitude as protected by the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution have been violated by the statutes and actions complained of. As adopted infants the Plaintiffs were placed into a chattel status — an unfortunate but explicable happenstance. However, the state’s continued insistance [sic] on maintaining that chattel status even into adulthood and until death violates the Plaintiffs’ Thirteenth Amendment rights.”
In June 1975, the district judge to whom the case was originally assigned declined to convene a three-judge court on the ground that this General Order of the Circuit Court of Cook County “lies at the heart of the matter” and should be reviewed before any statutory question need be reached. In October 1975, he dismissed the complaint without prejudice on the ground of abstention because “the complaint involves a basic question of State public policy which has not been passed upon by the State courts,
i. e.,
whether the plaintiffs should generally be deprived of access to the record of their personal origins.”
The dismissal was appealed and in May 1976 this Court handed down an order holding that a three-judge court was required to hear plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge because the complaint “presented a substantial federal question.” By dictum,
the panel considered abstention to be inappropriate.
In August 1977, a three-judge district court granted defendants’ motions to dismiss the action without prejudice on the grounds of abstention.
The opinion reasoned that the Illinois courts could “apply the [two] statutes in such a way as to withstand constitutional attack” (mem.op. 6). To support abstention, the opinion relied principally on
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services
v.
Hodory,
431 U.S. 471, 97 5. Ct. 1898, 52 L.Ed.2d 513;
Bellotti v. Baird,
428 U.S. 132, 96 S.Ct. 2857, 49 L.Ed.2d 844; and
Juidice v. Vail,
430 U.S. 327, 97 S.Ct. 1211, 51 L.Ed.2d 376.
We have jurisdiction of this appeal from that decision because the three-judge district court did not reach the merits of plaintiffs’ constitutional arguments (MTM,
Inc. v. Baxley,
420 U.S. 799, 95 S.Ct. 1278, 43 L.Ed.2d 636), nor do we. Our affirmation is based solely on abstention.
I.
Analysis of the State Court Construction of Challenged Statutes and General Order.
After this appeal was filed, the Circuit Court of Cook County, County Division, County Department, handed down an unreported opinion dealing with the above statutory provisions in
In the Matter of Daniel Doe,
76 Co 2436 (November 22, 1977). In that case, an emotionally disturbed adoptee, represented by the same counsel as these plaintiffs, sought knowledge of his familial background at the suggestion of his psychiatrist, and the court decided that the adoption record should be released on the following conditions:
“It is therefore ordered that_be appointed as investigator and friend of the court to investigate this matter. He shall contact the biological parents and the adoptive parents, give them notice of
the pendency of this proceeding and that the records will be released if the evidence of substantial harm is not presented to this Court. The biological parents and the adoptive parents will be given leave to intervene and show by a preponderance of the evidence that substantial harm will transpire if the relief requested is granted.
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CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs are eight adults who were adopted as infants and Yesterday’s Children, which is a not-for-profit Illinois corporation consisting of approximately 6,000 adults who were also adopted as infants. Their civil rights complaint was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against four Illinois officials
and the presiding judge, County
Division, of the Circuit Court of Cook County. Plaintiffs sought injunctive relief and a declaratory judgment that two Illinois statutes
violate the First, Fifth, Ninth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments because they prevent the individual plaintiffs from ascertaining their natural parents’ identity. They also sought a declaratory judgment that defendant officials and officials of private agencies acting under color of state law violate those amendments by preventing plaintiffs from ascertaining the identity of their natural parents. The individual plaintiffs claim that they were denied access by defendants to the names of their natural parents or, in one instance, the name of her natural brother.
Seven of the named plaintiffs are members of Yesterday’s Children. None of the plaintiffs sought any relief in the Illinois courts.
According to plaintiffs, Illinois has maintained a statutory and “actual policy” of preventing adopted children from discovering the names and circumstances of their natural parents and blood relatives. Similarly, adoption agencies formalized by Illinois statute and licensed by the employees of the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services have denied adoptees this information. Adoptees have been able to review their adoption records “only if they can demonstrate critical medical reasons to justify their request” (Complaint par. 27). Plaintiffs claim that their constitutional rights have been violated by the two statutes in question,
by a General Order entered by the presiding judge of the County Division of the Circuit Court of Cook County on February 21, 1974, which provides that “ * * * all adoption files in the offices of the Clerk of the Circuit Court shall be impounded and shall be released only upon an order issued from the County Division of the Circuit Court,” and “by the action of state officials and private child adoption agencies acting under the color of state law” (Complaint par. 32).
The constitutional violations are alleged as follows (Complaint pars. 33-35):
“The State of Illinois has denied the Plaintiffs their Fourteenth Amendment rights to the equal protection of the laws by preventing their access to information concerning their background, based on the suspect classification of their status as adoptees.
“The Plaintiffs’ rights to acquire useful information (including the right to determine their natural heritage) have been violated. These liberties are protected by a penumbra of rights emanating from the Bill of Rights, specifically the First,
Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth amendments of the U.S. Constitution.
“The Plaintiffs’ rights to be free from involuntary servitude as protected by the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution have been violated by the statutes and actions complained of. As adopted infants the Plaintiffs were placed into a chattel status — an unfortunate but explicable happenstance. However, the state’s continued insistance [sic] on maintaining that chattel status even into adulthood and until death violates the Plaintiffs’ Thirteenth Amendment rights.”
In June 1975, the district judge to whom the case was originally assigned declined to convene a three-judge court on the ground that this General Order of the Circuit Court of Cook County “lies at the heart of the matter” and should be reviewed before any statutory question need be reached. In October 1975, he dismissed the complaint without prejudice on the ground of abstention because “the complaint involves a basic question of State public policy which has not been passed upon by the State courts,
i. e.,
whether the plaintiffs should generally be deprived of access to the record of their personal origins.”
The dismissal was appealed and in May 1976 this Court handed down an order holding that a three-judge court was required to hear plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge because the complaint “presented a substantial federal question.” By dictum,
the panel considered abstention to be inappropriate.
In August 1977, a three-judge district court granted defendants’ motions to dismiss the action without prejudice on the grounds of abstention.
The opinion reasoned that the Illinois courts could “apply the [two] statutes in such a way as to withstand constitutional attack” (mem.op. 6). To support abstention, the opinion relied principally on
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services
v.
Hodory,
431 U.S. 471, 97 5. Ct. 1898, 52 L.Ed.2d 513;
Bellotti v. Baird,
428 U.S. 132, 96 S.Ct. 2857, 49 L.Ed.2d 844; and
Juidice v. Vail,
430 U.S. 327, 97 S.Ct. 1211, 51 L.Ed.2d 376.
We have jurisdiction of this appeal from that decision because the three-judge district court did not reach the merits of plaintiffs’ constitutional arguments (MTM,
Inc. v. Baxley,
420 U.S. 799, 95 S.Ct. 1278, 43 L.Ed.2d 636), nor do we. Our affirmation is based solely on abstention.
I.
Analysis of the State Court Construction of Challenged Statutes and General Order.
After this appeal was filed, the Circuit Court of Cook County, County Division, County Department, handed down an unreported opinion dealing with the above statutory provisions in
In the Matter of Daniel Doe,
76 Co 2436 (November 22, 1977). In that case, an emotionally disturbed adoptee, represented by the same counsel as these plaintiffs, sought knowledge of his familial background at the suggestion of his psychiatrist, and the court decided that the adoption record should be released on the following conditions:
“It is therefore ordered that_be appointed as investigator and friend of the court to investigate this matter. He shall contact the biological parents and the adoptive parents, give them notice of
the pendency of this proceeding and that the records will be released if the evidence of substantial harm is not presented to this Court. The biological parents and the adoptive parents will be given leave to intervene and show by a preponderance of the evidence that substantial harm will transpire if the relief requested is granted. Absent such a showing, this Court will order the adoption records be opened for petitioner’s examination, and the original birth certificate be opened for the petitioner’s inspection., Ill.Rev. Stat. Ch. 4, § 9.1-18, Ch. 111% § 73-17.
“If the investigator is unable to locate the biological parents or the adoptive parents within a reasonable period of time, the petitioner will be required to publish notice of the pendency of this proceeding for 30 days in a publication of general circulation. If no appearance is made, and no showing of substantial harm is presented, the relief requested will be granted.”
In the well-reasoned opinion, the state court judge noted that no Illinois appellate court had yet interpreted the statutory provisions in question but that most states requiring the sealing of adoption records permit the unsealing of those records upon a showing of good cause. Judge Schneider observed that in Scotland adoption records have been open to any adoptee who has reached the age of 17, and that Parliament recently enacted a similar law for England and Wales. After noting the arguments that the Illinois statutes might violate the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, be inconsistent with the penumbra of rights emanating from the Bill of Rights in the Federal Constitution or be unconstitutionally vague, the court concluded that under the Illinois statutes, the rights of adoptees, their biological parents, and their adoptive parents have to be weighed against “possible detrimental effects.” Consequently, the court adopted the above procedure “to balance those rights, and on the basis of the unique facts in each case, arrive at an equitable and just solution.”
It is thus apparent that the
Daniel Doe
court would not limit the unsealing of adoption records to cases where adoptees can show “a probable and serious hereditary problem” or “critical medical reasons,” as claimed by plaintiffs (Br. 3, 5) or where “genetic, medical, psychological or other problems manifest themselves as requiring such information or where neither party objects to the disclosure.”
Instead in
Daniel Doe
the following standard has seemingly been read into the statutes and General Order: the petitioner must show by a preponderance of the evidence that, as an adult, he or she has a real and immediate need for such records, and if such a showing is made, the biological and adoptive parents in order to avoid unsealing must show by a preponderance of the evidence that substantial harm will transpire if the relief requested is granted.
II.
Application of Abstention Principles
Despite this construction by one state trial court, it appears that abstention to allow more expanded consideration by the Illinois courts may “materially alter the constitutional issue presented”
(Ohio Bureau of Employment Services v. Hodory,
431 U.S. 471, 481, 97 S.Ct. 1898, 1905, 52 L.Ed.2d 513), and that the benefits of such abstention are not “too speculative to justify or require avoidance of the question presented.”
Id.
The fact that a state trial judge read a type of good cause requirement into
the statutes and General Order
does not remove their ambiguity for two reasons. First, good cause is subject to many diverse interpretations. See
Bellotti v. Baird,
428 U.S. 132, 143-146, 148, 96 S.Ct. 2857, 49 L.Ed.2d 844.
While it could be argued that Judge Schneider offered a more specific standard than good cause, even that arguably more specific standard does not contraindicate the benefits of abstention because it merely substitutes for good cause several other broad terms that were not defined in the unreported
nisi prius
opinion and will have to await further interpretation. The
Daniel Doe
opinion does indicate that on the facts there, the petitioner must show by a preponderance of the evidence that he has a real and immediate need for the information; and if such a showing is made, the biological and adoptive parents must show by a preponderance of the evidence that substantial harm will result if the information is released. However, the opinion offers little reasoning for finding that the petitioner had shown a “real and immediate need,” and given the procedural posture of the case, the parents had not yet made a showing, and therefore the term “substantial harm” was left undefined.
Second, even if Judge Schneider’s unap-pealed opinion did define conclusively all the unclear standards, until an Illinois reviewing court (which will of course be fully competent to adjudicate constitutional claims,
Doran v. Salem Inn Inc.,
422 U.S. 922, 930, 95 S.Ct. 2561, 45 L.Ed.2d 648) considers the statute and the General Order, their construction will remain in doubt despite Judge Schneider’s persuasive opinion. As the Second Circuit held in
Connecticut State Federation of Teachers v. Board of Education,
538 F.2d 471, 485 (1976), decisions by state trial judges, particularly unreported decisions, generally provide insufficient clarity to make abstention inappropriate, at least in the absence of a similar decision by the state’s appellate courts.
Cf.
Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch,
387 U.S. 456, 87 S.Ct. 1776, 18 L.Ed.2d 886.
Given this need for appellate review of the
Daniel Doe
interpretation and the ambiguities that remain despite that interpretation, this case is one in which the state courts by further explicating the standards for unsealing may construe the statutes and General Order so as to materially alter plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge. See
Kusper v. Pontikes,
414 U.S. 51, 54-55, 94 S.Ct. 303, 38 L.Ed.2d 260;
Harrison v. NAACP,
360 U.S. 167, 177, 79 S.Ct. 1025, 3 L.Ed.2d 1152. Like the statute in
Bellotti,
the Illinois statutes and General Order challenged here and the standards of proof implied therein are “susceptible” to so many different interpretations,
requirements and applications that “it is impossible to define precisely the constitutional issue presented.” 428 U.S. at 148, 96 S.Ct. at 2866.
Plaintiffs seek to avoid abstention by arguing that their case includes a claim that merely being required to appear in court infringes their right to information and their right to equal protection and that therefore no conceivable state court construction would materially alter that claim. However, a fair reading of plaintiffs’ complaint reveals that the essence of that complaint disputes the standards on which courts could release the information and not the requirement of a court appearance. See e.
g.
124. Had this Court in its May 1976 order in this case understood the complaint to be merely objecting to the requirement of a court appearance, judging from its reasoning it probably would have declined to convene a three-judge court based on the lack of a substantial federal question.
Indeed, not only does this case satisfy the
Hodory
branch of abstention, but it is arguably a case in which there are “difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case then at bar.”
Colorado River Water Conservation District, supra,
424 U.S., at 814, 96 S.Ct. at 1244.
Under either branch of abstention, unlike the plaintiffs in
Vickers v. Trainor,
546 F.2d 739 (7th Cir. 1976), plaintiffs here have not demonstrated that “substantial personal consequences” (see
Bellotti v. Baird, supra,
428 U.S. at 151, 96 S.Ct. 2857) would result from whatever delay a state adjudication would entail.
Unfortunately,
Daniel Doe
is not the final Illinois word in construing these statutes and General Order, and at least in the absence of equitable considerations to the contrary it is advantageous in this case to allow the state courts of review to define the statutes and General Order further. Therefore, we agree with the court below that it was inappropriate for it to reach the merits of this controversy.
Order affirmed.