David Ciraci v. J.M. Smucker Company ( 2023 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 23a0040p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    ┐
    DAVID A. CIRACI; CARLA GROSJEAN; MEGAN L.
    │
    MORR; JOSEPH M. ADAMS,
    │
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,             >        No. 22-3462
    │
    │
    v.                                                   │
    │
    J.M. SMUCKER COMPANY,                                      │
    Defendant-Appellee.        │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio at Akron.
    No. 5:21-cv-02347—John R. Adams, District Judge.
    Argued: January 26, 2023
    Decided and Filed: March 14, 2023
    Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; CLAY and BUSH, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Warner D. Mendenhall, MENDENHALL LAW GROUP, Akron, Ohio, for
    Appellants. Tracy K. Stratford, JONES DAY, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF:
    Warner D. Mendenhall, MENDENHALL LAW GROUP, Akron, Ohio, for Appellants. Tracy K.
    Stratford, JONES DAY, Cleveland, Ohio, Yvette McGee Brown, JONES DAY, Columbus,
    Ohio, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Chief Judge. Four employees of the J.M. Smucker Company sought religious
    exemptions from the company’s vaccine requirements. When the company refused, they filed
    this free-exercise claim under the First Amendment against Smucker’s.               Constitutional
    No. 22-3462                 Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                         Page 2
    guarantees conventionally apply only to entities that exercise sovereign power, such as federal,
    state, or local governments, and, in some other instances, tribal governments. Smucker’s may be
    a big company. But it is not a sovereign. Even so, did Smucker’s become a federal actor—did it
    exercise sovereign power?—for purposes of this free-exercise claim when it sold products to the
    federal government and when it imposed the vaccine mandate because the federal government
    required it to do so as a federal contractor? No, as the district court correctly held. We affirm.
    I.
    Jerome Monroe Smucker founded the J.M. Smucker Company in 1897, “selling apple
    cider and apple butter [from] the back of his horse-drawn wagon.” The J.M. Smucker Company,
    Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, https://tinyurl.com/jydeev5s (last visited Mar. 13, 2023).
    Today, Smucker’s sells jelly, jam, peanut butter, pet food, and coffee in all fifty states and
    around the world. Four in five American pantries contain Smucker’s products.
    During World War II, the Army added Smucker’s apple butter to GIs’ ration kits.
    Smucker’s has supplied apple butter and other items to the federal government ever since,
    making it a federal contractor.
    In 2021, by Executive Order and related guidance, President Biden directed all federal
    contractors to “ensure that all [their] employees [were] fully vaccinated for COVID-19,” unless
    such employees were “legally entitled” to health or religious accommodations.              Kentucky
    v. Biden, 
    23 F.4th 585
    , 589–90 (6th Cir. 2022); see 
    86 Fed. Reg. 50985
    , 50985 (Sept. 14, 2021);
    Safer Federal Workforce Task Force, COVID-19 Workplace Safety: Guidance for Federal
    Contractors and Subcontractors (Sept. 24, 2021), https://tinyurl.com/ynf3c8kw (hereinafter
    Guidance). The order made contractors “responsible for considering, and dispositioning, such
    requests for accommodations.” Guidance at 10.
    Smucker’s responded in two steps.              On September 10, 2021, it notified its
    U.S. employees that it would “ask and expect” them to “be fully vaccinated.” R.1-1 at 1. It
    emphasized that this step involved “a vaccine expectation, and not a mandate,” but warned that
    “a mandate [was] on the horizon.” 
    Id.
     Then, a month later, in the face of “deadlines in the
    federal order,” Smucker’s announced a formal vaccine mandate. R.1-2 at 1. Consistent with the
    No. 22-3462                 Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                       Page 3
    Executive Order, Smucker’s promised that it would recognize exemptions to its mandate based
    on “sincerely held religious beliefs.” R.1-3 at 8.
    David Ciraci, Carla Grosjean, Megan Morr, and Joseph Adams all worked at Smucker’s.
    They each sought religious exemptions from the vaccine mandate. After Smucker’s denied
    them, they sued the company under the free-exercise guarantee of the First Amendment. The
    district court dismissed their claim under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
    This appeal followed.
    II.
    When Smucker’s denied the claimants’ request for a religious exemption, did it do so as a
    state actor? Not in our view. Smucker’s does not perform a traditional, exclusive public
    function; it has not acted jointly with the government or entwined itself with it; and the
    government did not compel it to deny anyone an exemption.              That Smucker’s acted in
    compliance with a federal law and that Smucker’s served as a federal contractor—the only facts
    alleged in the claimants’ complaint—do not by themselves make the company a government
    actor.
    Constitutions simultaneously empower and constrain.        At the same time that they
    authorize various branches of government to exercise sovereign power, they limit that power in
    lots of ways, including through election requirements, tenure provisions, process-based
    requirements for making laws, and, most relevant for today, explicit constraints on the exercise
    of power. The first eight provisions of the Bill of Rights offer the most prominent example of
    constraints on government. Whether it is the Bill of Rights in general or the First Amendment in
    particular, these constraints typically protect citizens from the government, not from each other.
    Manhattan Comm. Access Corp. v. Halleck, 
    139 S. Ct. 1921
    , 1928 (2019). It is the rare federal
    constitutional guarantee—the prohibition on involuntary servitude counts as a glaring exception,
    see U.S. Const. amend. XIII—that regulates solely private conduct.
    Things could scarcely be otherwise with respect to most constitutional constraints. Take
    the Speech Clause. It forbids viewpoint-based limitations on speech, but private publications
    like the New York Times or Wall Street Journal may favor certain viewpoints or speakers.
    No. 22-3462                  Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                       Page 4
    Miami Herald Pub. Co. v. Tornillo, 
    418 U.S. 241
    , 258 (1974). The Free Exercise Clause
    likewise forbids discrimination based on religion, but the Catholic Church need not pick rabbis
    or imams to run its seminaries. Our Lady of Guadalupe Sch. v. Morrissey-Berru, 
    140 S. Ct. 2049
    , 2055 (2020). And so on and so forth. Applying ordinary First Amendment rules beyond
    the government would warp traditional principles of ordered liberty—impairing individual
    liberty and offering little order in return.
    By way of contrast, many federal statutes regulate private conduct and some even protect
    certain values that the Free Exercise Clause protects. The claimants, for example, could have
    separately filed a claim under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, 
    Pub. L. 88-352, 42
     U.S.C.
    § 2000e et seq. It bars private employers from discriminating against employees based on their
    faith, among other protected categories. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a). The claimants, notably, filed
    complaints with the EEOC under Title VII. At the same time, the claimants could have sued the
    federal government, which created the vaccine mandate for federal contractors. But they did not,
    requiring us to determine whether Smucker’s counts as a government actor.
    In holding the constitutional line between constraining government and constraining
    private entities, the federal courts ask whether “the specific conduct of which [a] plaintiff
    complains” is “fairly attributable” to the government. Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan,
    
    526 U.S. 40
    , 51 (1999); see Blum v. Yaretsky, 
    457 U.S. 991
    , 1004 (1982). Two sets of principles
    guide our answer. The first turns on the aggregated answers to three inquiries. Does the private
    company’s conduct involve a traditionally exclusive governmental function? Halleck, 
    139 S. Ct. at
    1928–29. Is that conduct “entwined with” government decisions or fairly attributable to the
    government based on a close “nexus” between the state and the challenged conduct? Brentwood
    Acad. v. Tenn. Secondary Sch. Athletic Ass’n, 
    531 U.S. 288
    , 296 (2001); see also Marie v. Am.
    Red Cross, 
    771 F.3d 344
    , 362–63 & n.6 (6th Cir. 2014) (noting that this court has treated the
    “entwinement” and “nexus” tests as related). Has the government compelled the company’s
    action?     Peterson v. City of Greenville, 
    373 U.S. 244
    , 248 (1963); Thomas v. Nationwide
    Children’s Hosp., 
    882 F.3d 608
    , 612 (6th Cir. 2018). The second cuts across all three inquiries
    and serves as something of a safe harbor. So long as a private company’s actions turn on
    compliance with a state or federal law, that does not by itself make the company a state actor.
    No. 22-3462                Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                        Page 5
    A.
    State-action inquiries. “[N]o one fact can function as a necessary condition across the
    board for finding state action; nor is any set of circumstances absolutely sufficient.” Brentwood
    Acad., 
    531 U.S. at 295
    . Still, we often gauge state actor status by asking three questions: does a
    private company’s conduct concern traditionally exclusive governmental functions, reflect
    entwinement, a nexus, or joint action with state officials, or involve compulsion by the
    government?    See Halleck, 
    139 S. Ct. at 1928
    .       None indicates that Smucker’s exercised
    sovereign power.
    The first inquiry—does the service involve a traditional governmental function?—does
    not help the claimants. To qualify “as a traditional, exclusive public function,” the government
    “must have traditionally and exclusively performed the function.” 
    Id. at 1929
    . For instance,
    private organizations become state actors when they administer public elections.            Smith
    v. Allwright, 
    321 U.S. 649
    , 663–65 (1944); Nixon v. Condon, 
    286 U.S. 73
    , 84–89 (1932). But
    nothing of the sort happened here. We have never relied on the government to make jelly,
    peanut butter, and other products in the Smucker’s lineup. See, e.g., Louisa M. Alcott, Little
    Women 221–23 (Little, Brown & Co. ed. 1922) (1868) (jelly); G.W. Carver, How to Grow the
    Peanut: And 105 Ways of Preparing It for Human Consumption 19 (2d ed. 1917) (peanut butter).
    Making jam simply is not a government function, whether by tradition or by the most up-to-date
    notions of what our governments should do.
    That Smucker’s carried out the government’s vaccine mandate in the course of making
    jam does not change anything. In the first place, the inquiry focuses on the entity’s underlying
    service, not the government’s regulatory mandate. Otherwise, the inquiry would collapse into a
    public function each time a regulation covered the topic. In the second place, claimants cannot
    satisfy even this friendly re-framing of the issue. A vaccine mandate does not count as “a public
    function traditionally handled just by the State.” Howell v. Father Maloney’s Boys’ Haven, Inc.,
    
    976 F.3d 750
    , 752 (6th Cir. 2020). It is hardly unheard of for private companies to make
    vaccination a condition of employment. See, e.g., W.A. Evans, State of Chicago’s Health, City
    of Chi. Bulletin of the Dep’t of Health, May 18, 1907, at 2 (smallpox); Carol Christian, Houston
    Hospital Workers Take Mandatory Flu Shots in Stride, Houston Chronicle (Jan. 19, 2013)
    No. 22-3462                 Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                       Page 6
    (influenza). No matter how you test them, Smucker’s products and its actions do not amount to
    the kinds of functions that governments alone traditionally perform.
    The second inquiry—have the actions of the government and private entity become so
    entwined as to amount to a form of collective state action?—does not move the needle either.
    Entwinement may arise when a private entity partners with, directs, or is controlled by
    government officials.    Consider some examples.          A merchant becomes entwined with the
    government when it directs a county sheriff to attach a customer’s property.               Lugar
    v. Edmondson Oil Co., 
    457 U.S. 922
    , 926 (1982). An athletic association becomes entwined
    with the government when public schools govern, operate, and fund it. Brentwood Acad., 
    531 U.S. at
    299–302. And a private store becomes entwined with the government when it conspires
    with government officials to segregate its facilities or acts in accordance with unofficial,
    unlawful, and state-enforced customs of segregation. Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 
    398 U.S. 144
    ,
    174 & n.44 (1970).
    Again, nothing of the sort happened here. Smucker’s has not partnered, conspired, or
    entered into a “joint venture[]” with federal officials. Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis, 
    407 U.S. 163
    , 177 (1972); cf. Adickes, 
    398 U.S. at
    152–53. It did not deny the claimants’ request for an
    exemption using federal officials’ assistance. Compare Flagg Bros., Inc. v. Brooks, 
    436 U.S. 149
    , 164–65 (1978), with Lugar, 
    457 U.S. at
    941–42. Nor has it connected itself to joint action
    with the government in some other cognizable way. Yes, it has contracted with the federal
    government. But federal contracts by themselves do not create the requisite entwinement.
    Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 
    457 U.S. 830
    , 841 (1982); see Howell, 976 F.3d at 755. The same could
    be said of many private companies that do business with the federal government and yet have
    long been treated as private rather than public actors.
    That leaves the last inquiry. Did Smucker’s deny the claimants an exemption because the
    government “compel[led]” it to do so, Halleck, 
    139 S. Ct. at 1928
    , or offered it “such significant
    encouragement . . . that [its] choice must in law be deemed to be that of the State,” Blum, 
    457 U.S. at
    1004? The Supreme Court’s cases typically look to this inquiry in a distinct setting, one
    in which the claimant seeks to sue the state or federal government and uses the actions of a
    private entity to connect the lawsuit to the government. See, e.g., 
    id.
     at 995–96 (involving
    No. 22-3462                 Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                        Page 7
    lawsuit by nursing home residents against New York State officials); Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.
    Ass’n, 
    589 U.S. 602
    , 609 (1989) (involving lawsuit by railroadmen’s union against federal
    officials). The idea is that the government cannot escape responsibility for its own actions by
    farming out tasks to private entities, lest the Constitution’s constraints become a “dead letter.”
    See United States v. Ackerman, 
    831 F.3d 1292
    , 1300–01 (10th Cir. 2016) (Gorsuch, J.).
    But that is not today’s problem. We are not being asked whether implementation of a
    federal vaccine mandate amounts to state action sufficient to sue the government. It is whether
    Smucker’s itself counts as the government. Had the claimants sued the federal government, this
    would be a different case.
    By comparison, in cases in which a claimant brings action against a private actor, that
    “plaintiff must allege . . . that state officials coerced or participated in the company’s decision-
    making to the extent required to trigger state actor status.” Wilcher v. City of Akron, 
    498 F.3d 516
    , 520 (6th Cir. 2007). To assess coercion, we examine “the specific conduct of which [the
    claimants] complain[],” meaning the denial of their religious exemptions. Sullivan, 
    526 U.S. at 51
    . In this case, the federal government never required Smucker’s to vaccinate the claimants, for
    the Executive Order did not tell Smucker’s to deny exemptions to anyone. It told Smucker’s to
    grant religious exemptions to those legally entitled to them, and let Smucker’s decide on its own
    who qualified. See Guidance at 10. The claimants contend that Smucker’s has exercised its
    discretion under the Executive Order stingily, not that Smucker’s has been dragooned by the
    government into denying an exemption.
    Blum reached a similar conclusion on parallel facts. 457 U.S. at 991. State regulations
    directed nursing homes to provide residents with “appropriate level[s]” of medical care, but they
    left individual doctors to decide which care was appropriate. Id. at 1006–09. The Supreme
    Court held that the doctors’ care decisions—their choices to transfer patients between nursing
    homes—did not amount to state action. Id. It reasoned that the State’s general directive to
    provide appropriate care did not compel any particular transfer decision. Id. at 1008 & n.19.
    The same conclusion applies here. As in Blum, the President’s Executive Order gave Smucker’s
    discretion to decide which of its employees merited religious exemptions. When Smucker’s
    exercised that discretion, the government did not coerce it.
    No. 22-3462                Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                         Page 8
    In resisting this conclusion, the claimants emphasize that the district court dismissed their
    action under Civil Rule 12(b)(6), requiring us to assume the truthfulness of the factual
    allegations in their complaint. Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009). But even if the
    claimants plausibly pleaded coercion generally, they have pleaded nothing specifically that
    shows the federal policy “dictated” their employer’s decision to deny their exemptions. Blum,
    
    457 U.S. at 1009
    .
    The claimants object that the standard announced in Blum applies only to government
    defendants, and that a looser approach befits suits against private entities. If anything the
    opposite is true, as Crowder v. Conlan explains. 
    740 F.2d 447
    , 450 (6th Cir. 1984). In Crowder
    a doctor sued his private employer, a nursing home, for disciplining him. 
    Id.
     at 448–49. He
    alleged that his employer acted for the State because, among other aspects of the case, the State
    heavily regulated it, 
    id. at 451
    , and he sought to distinguish Blum by arguing that it applied only
    to lawsuits against government entities, 
    id. at 450
    . We rejected his claim, reasoning by analogy
    from Blum. 
    Id. at 451
    . Because the doctor did not allege that the State had pressured his
    employer into disciplining him, Blum meant that the nursing home had not acted for the State.
    
    Id.
     So too here. A regulation that told Smucker’s to grant religious exemptions did not compel
    it to deny them, even if we suppose that it compelled Smucker’s at all.
    B.
    Compliance with federal law. Consistent with our answer to all three inquiries and
    consistent with the Supreme Court’s most recent case in this area (Halleck) is this safe-harbor
    reality: Smucker’s did not become a state actor merely by complying with a generally applicable
    law.
    When a private company complies with federal law, that does not by itself make the
    company a government actor. See Halleck, 
    139 S. Ct. at 1932
    . Else, every regulated private
    company would be a public entity, a conclusion that would come as a surprise to many and that
    would alter heaps of foundational precedents going back to the founding. See, e.g., Trs. of
    Dartmouth Coll. v. Woodward, 
    17 U.S. 518
    , 665–66 (1819). As the Supreme Court put the point
    nearly a half century ago, the run-of-the-mine reality “that a business is subject to state [or
    No. 22-3462                 Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                        Page 9
    federal] regulation does not by itself convert its action into that of the State” or the federal
    government. Jackson v. Metro. Edison Co., 
    419 U.S. 345
    , 350 (1974). The same is true of
    companies that do business with governments. As the Court put the point a few years ago:
    “Numerous private entities in America obtain government licenses, government contracts, or
    government-granted monopolies. If those facts sufficed to transform a private entity into a state
    actor, a large swath of private entities in America would suddenly be turned into state actors and
    be subject to a variety of constitutional constraints on their activities.” Halleck, 
    139 S. Ct. at 1932
    . To be regulated does not make one a regulator. To sell to the government does not make
    one the government. Not even “extensive regulation” of a private company makes it a “state
    actor” by itself. 
    Id.
    Common experience and common sense confirm this conclusion. Federal law often
    directs firms to achieve particular outcomes. But we do not describe the private decisions that
    follow as state action. Under federal law, for example, Smucker’s may not sell jam containing
    “filthy” or “unfit” berries. 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 331
    (b), 342(a)(3). When Smucker’s rejects berries as
    “unfit,” has it acted as the State? Must it afford its supplier due process before rejecting its
    berries? Doubly doubtful. When Smucker’s separates the “fit” from the “unfit” berries, it acts
    privately rather than publicly, and it has no obligation to comply with the Constitution’s due
    process imperatives.
    Caselaw proves the point. The Supreme Court has told us on many occasions that
    conduct is not “fairly attributable to the State,” Sullivan, 
    526 U.S. at 51
    , merely because a law or
    regulation induces it. Start with Jackson, in which a public utility shut down several delinquent
    customers’ electricity without notice. 
    419 U.S. at
    346–47. The utility held a certificate of
    convenience and necessity from the State of Pennsylvania, which had ordered the utility to
    supply power to Pennsylvanians and had approved a general tariff laying out the utility’s
    termination practices. 
    Id. at 354, 357
    . In a but-for sense, the dispute grew out of Pennsylvania
    law. Without Pennsylvania’s approval of the applicable provision in its tariff, the utility could
    not have stopped providing electricity to anyone. 
    Id.
     at 354–58. Yet the Court held that the
    utility did not act for the State when it ended the service. 
    Id.
     Being a “heavily regulated . . .
    No. 22-3462                   Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                      Page 10
    utility”—even a government-sponsored monopoly, as is true for many utilities—did not make
    the utility a state actor. 
    Id. at 358
    .
    Turn to Sullivan, another case from Pennsylvania. The Keystone State authorized private
    unemployment insurers to withhold certain benefits pending review by a specialist board. 
    526 U.S. at 43
    .     As in Jackson, the insurers’ authority flowed from state law.           Absent the
    Pennsylvania law, there would have been no unemployment insurance and no authority to
    withhold it. 
    Id.
     at 44–48. Yet the Court found no state action when the insurers withheld
    benefits. 
    Id. at 58
    . It emphasized that, even if “an alleged constitutional deprivation” involved
    “a rule of conduct imposed by the State,” state action liability would not attach unless “the party
    charged with the deprivation” could “fairly be said to be a state actor.” 
    Id. at 50
    . The reality that
    the insurers exercised authority in conformity with state law did not make the insurers state
    actors. 
    Id.
    Turn to the recent decision in Halleck. New York City directed a private nonprofit
    corporation to operate its public access television channels. 
    139 S. Ct. at 1927
    . New York State
    “heavily regulate[d]” the corporation “with respect to the public access channels,” to the point
    that the corporation retained scant “editorial discretion” about its own programming. 
    Id.
     at
    1931–32. But the Court rejected the position that these regulations made the corporation’s
    programming decisions—decisions about whether particular citizens could make use of the
    public access channels—attributable to the government. 
    Id.
     “[B]eing regulated by the State,” it
    repeated, or for that matter being subjected to a State’s “direct regulatory control,” did not make
    private corporations state actors. 
    Id. at 1932
    . The contrary view “would significantly endanger
    individual liberty and private enterprise.” 
    Id.
    The lower courts, little surprise, hold to this line. Consider Sutton v. Providence St.
    Joseph Medical Center, 
    192 F.3d 826
     (9th Cir. 1999). A federal law required an employer to
    collect a job applicant’s Social Security number. 
    Id.
     at 829–30. The applicant, thinking his
    Social Security number the “Mark of the Beast,” refused and sued the employer under the First
    Amendment. 
    Id.
     The Ninth Circuit rejected the claim. 
    Id.
     It held that the employer had sought
    to collect the Social Security number in connection with a federal law and that compliance with
    No. 22-3462                  Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                           Page 11
    such laws did not make the employer a state actor. 
    Id.
     at 836–44; see also Sykes v. Bank of Am.,
    
    723 F.3d 399
    , 407 (2d Cir. 2013) (per curiam) (similar).
    All of this makes sense, too. “[I]n the usual case,” state action arises when “the State
    provide[s] a mantle of authority that enhance[s] the power of [a] harm-causing individual actor.”
    Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n v. Tarkanian, 
    488 U.S. 179
    , 192 (1988). When government
    regulations demand a particular outcome, however, they deplete rather than enhance private
    power. Put another way, a company may not borrow sovereign powers without borrowing
    sovereign responsibilities. But a regulated entity does not borrow authority from any sovereign;
    that authority is imposed on it.
    This principle—that compliance with federal law or status as a federal contractor by itself
    does not make a private entity a public one—cuts the heart out of claimants’ case. At most,
    Smucker’s required claimants to vaccinate themselves in accordance with the President’s
    Executive Order. But compliance with federal law, without more, does not make private firms
    state actors. Just as Smucker’s acts privately when it requires its suppliers to sell it fit rather than
    unfit berries, see 
    21 U.S.C. § 342
    (a)(3), so too when it requires employees to take vaccines that
    make them fit for work.
    Adickes does not stand for a different rule. 
    398 U.S. at 144
    . It dealt with a department
    store that, in combination with a local police officer and in accordance with local segregation
    practices, had allegedly conspired to punish a white woman who ate with black citizens inside
    the store. 
    Id.
     at 146–48, 170. The woman sued the store, and the Court found she had pleaded
    an adequate case for state action. 
    Id.
     at 170–71. It emphasized that her lawsuit turned on an
    alleged conspiracy between the store and the police officer—an unquestioned state actor—and
    that the store had segregated its facilities at the bidding of local officials. Id.; see 
    id.
     at 174 n.44.
    Adickes stands for the unremarkable proposition that a private entity may become a state actor
    when it conspires or acts jointly with state officials, not that private firms act for the State when
    they comply with state law. 
    Id.
     at 174 n.44 (describing store as a “participant in joint activity
    with the State”); see Sutton, 
    192 F.3d at
    840–41 (reading Adickes this way).
    No. 22-3462                 Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                        Page 12
    Skinner is of an inapposite piece. 589 U.S. at 602. The Federal Railroad Administration
    ordered railroads to drug test certain railmen. Id. at 609. A union representing the railmen sued
    the federal agency, and the Court held that the drug tests—though administered by private
    railroads—counted as state rather than private searches. Id. at 610–11, 614–15. Skinner holds
    only that private activities may expose the government to a constitutional claim when the
    government compels them. It does not hold that private entities, like railroads or jam companies,
    may be sued as state actors if they comply with the law’s demands.
    The same is true of Crowder and of some other cases in which plaintiffs attempt to trace
    private action to the government on a “coercion” theory. None of these cases involves generally
    applicable laws or regulations, and none of them finds state action in the acts of private parties.
    See Crowder, 
    740 F.2d at 450
    ; Wilcher, 
    498 F.3d at
    519–20; Lansing v. City of Memphis, 
    202 F.3d 821
    , 829–35 (6th Cir. 2000).
    C.
    A few final observations. We have assumed so far that the claimants have a cause of
    action to litigate their First Amendment claims. But is that true? We ordinarily hear lawsuits
    alleging violations of federal civil rights under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    . Section 1983, however, deals
    with violations by those acting “under color of . . . State” law. It does not generally cover federal
    officials.   Strickland ex rel. Strickland v. Shalala, 
    123 F.3d 863
    , 866 (6th Cir. 1997).          If
    Smucker’s acted as a government official of any kind, it would have been as a federal official
    because Smucker’s acted in conformity with a federal Executive Order, not Ohio law. That
    means § 1983 has no role to play.
    To the extent the claimants seek damages directly under the First Amendment against a
    federal official, they must rely on the kind of implied cause of action created by Bivens v. Six
    Unknown Named Agents of Fed. Bureau of Narcotics, 
    403 U.S. 388
     (1971). But extending
    Bivens is “disfavored,” Egbert v. Boule, 
    142 S. Ct. 1793
    , 1803, 1805–06 (2022), and the
    Supreme Court has rejected Bivens claims “against private corporations acting under color of
    federal law,” Corr. Servs. Corp. v. Malesko, 
    534 U.S. 61
    , 71 (2001).
    No. 22-3462                Ciraci, et al. v. J.M. Smucker Company                     Page 13
    That leaves claimants’ demands for a declaratory judgment, reinstatement, and other
    equitable relief. In equity, it is true, claimants sometimes may “sue to enjoin unconstitutional
    actions by state and federal officers” even in the absence of a statutory cause of action.
    Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Ctr., Inc., 
    575 U.S. 320
    , 327 (2015). But today’s claimants seek
    more than a prohibitory injunction. They seek reinstatement and other affirmative relief. It is
    not clear whether, as a matter of historical equitable practice, we may infer, imply, or create a
    cause of action for such relief. But because the parties have not briefed or argued these points
    and because they do not go to our jurisdiction, we need not decide them today.
    We affirm.