Ricci v. Okin, M.D. ( 1992 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    October 30, 1992

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________

    No. 92-1812

    ROBERT SIMPSON RICCI, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,

    v.

    ROBERT L. OKIN, M.D., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ___________


    WILLIAM F. WELD, ETC., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellants.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM AN ORDER OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    David Ferleger, Special Assistant Attorney General, with whom
    _______________
    Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General, Douglas H. Wilkins, Assistant
    _________________ ___________________
    Attorney General, and Kim E. Murdock, Special Assistant Attorney
    ________________
    General, were on brief for appellants.
    Nonnie S. Burnes with whom Michael J. Pineault, Hill & Barlow,
    _________________ ____________________ ______________
    P.C. and Beryl W. Cohen were on brief for appellees.
    ____ ______________

    ____________________

    ____________________

















    BREYER, Chief Judge. This appeal arises out of a
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    set of consolidated cases concerning the Commonwealth of

    Massachusetts' care and education of its mentally retarded

    citizens. Plaintiffs first brought these cases against the

    state in the early 1970's. In 1977 the district court

    entered a set of consent decrees, aimed at improving care

    conditions, and the court, during the next several years,

    actively oversaw their implementation. By 1986, conditions

    had improved to the point where, on October 9, 1986, the

    court entered an order (the "October 1986 Order") which, in

    the court's view, represented a "step of disengagement."

    The Order required the state to create an Office of Quality

    Assurance ("OQA"), to monitor further compliance with the

    decrees, to assure mentally retarded persons of the services

    to which the law entitled them, and to carry out various

    related responsibilities. It set forth a list of specific

    "tasks" that the state was to accomplish. The October 1986

    Order seemed to contemplate the court's final withdrawal

    from supervision of the consent decrees after three years,

    for it said that "[d]uring the three years following this

    court's disengagement, the parties and the [OQA] Director

    may seek this court's counsel or clarification as to its

    orders." It added that "[n]inety (90) days prior to the end























    of this three year period, the court shall hold a hearing to

    review implementation of this final order." It said, in an

    Appendix, that the OQA was "initially chartered for a three

    year term." And, in the opinion explaining the Order, the

    court said that the OQA "shall be maintained by the

    Commonwealth for a three year period, to commence on the

    date of this court's disengagement."

    As October 1989 approached, the parties agreed to

    extend the October 1986 Order. In September 1989, the court

    ordered that "[a]ll provisions of the order and memorandum

    entered on October 9, 1986 . . . shall remain in effect

    until June 30, 1990." Subsequently, with the parties'

    consent (with either both consenting, or with one consenting

    and the other acquiescing), the court further extended its

    October 1986 Order -- to September 30, 1990, then to

    December 31, 1990, then to March 31, 1991, then to June 30,

    1991, then to September 30, 1991, then to December 31, 1991,

    and, then to June 30, 1992.

    On March 13, 1992, the state defendants moved for

    "a hearing in June, 1992, or at the Court's convenience in

    that period, 'to review implementation'" of the October 1986

    Order. The district court asked the parties to file reports

    on the status of the state's compliance. On April 2 the


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    court requested further detailed submissions, including a

    report from OQA; it set forth a timetable for those

    submissions; and, it said that after it had received those

    submissions, it would schedule a further conference. The

    defendants protested that the court's request for detailed

    submissions indicated that the court was imposing upon them

    new duties, not previously foreseen or agreed to; they asked

    the court for an interpretation of the October 1986 Order

    and various underlying consent decrees. On April 24, the

    court responded that the "defendants' recent filings

    indicate . . . the likelihood, if not inevitability, of an

    evidentiary hearing . . . ." It added that the issues the

    defendants had raised would be decided after the hearing and

    after the parties had "an opportunity to state their

    respective positions in briefs and at oral argument."

    About six weeks later, in early June, the

    plaintiffs moved to "extend all provisions of . . . [the

    October 1986 Order], including an extension of the Office of

    Quality Assurance's term, up to and including December 31,

    1992." On June 24, 1992, the district court granted the

    plaintiffs' motion, thereby extending the October 1986 Order

    for six more months. The district court considered the

    request for extension "reasonable," in light of the facts


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    that plaintiffs were supposed to respond to the defendants'

    submissions by mid-July, that the OQA was to submit a report

    by mid-August, and that the court, thereafter, would have

    "to assess defendants' compliance . . . ."

    Defendants now appeal the district court's order

    of June 24, 1992, extending the October 1986 Order for six

    months (the "June 1992 extension"). They basically claim

    that the district court should have permitted the October

    1986 Order to terminate because they had completed all the

    "tasks," and fulfilled all the requirements, that it

    contained -- a claim that plaintiffs strongly dispute.

    Plaintiffs add that we should not decide whether the

    defendants have, or have not, fulfilled their obligations

    under the October 1986 Order because the district court has

    not yet had the opportunity to determine the matter. They

    argue that we lack jurisdiction to hear this interlocutory

    appeal.

    We agree with the plaintiffs that we lack

    jurisdiction to hear this appeal. The June 1992 extension

    is not a "final" order within the meaning of 28 U.S.C.

    1291; nor does it fall within the statutory exceptions

    permitting appeals of certain "interlocutory" orders. 28

    U.S.C. 1292. Common sense suggests that this court should


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    withhold its review until the district court enters an order

    on the merits, either accepting or rejecting defendants'

    claim of compliance. Such a decision, coming after all the

    parties have submitted relevant materials to the district

    court, would permit any subsequent appellate review to take

    place on a complete record, aided by the district court's

    own analysis and opinion. Moreover, the record indicates

    that the district court intends to consider the matter both

    thoroughly and expeditiously. Thus, the time needed to

    bring about a considered district court decision on the

    merits is comparatively short, given the many years this

    important litigation has been before the judiciary; and the

    added burden upon the state, in maintaining the existence of

    the OQA for six more months, is comparatively small. Cf.
    ___

    Carson v. American Brands, Inc., 450 U.S. 79, 84 (1981) (
    ______ ______________________

    1292(a)(1) provides for interlocutory appellate review over

    an order denying an injunction, where plaintiff shows that

    order might have a serious, perhaps irreparable,

    consequence, and that order can be effectually challenged

    only by immediate appeal); Kartell v. Blue Shield of
    _______ ________________

    Massachusetts, Inc., 687 F.2d 543, 551-52 (1st Cir. 1982)
    ___________________

    (same).




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    The only significant legal question before us is

    whether, despite the dictates of common sense, we must hear

    this appeal on the grounds that the June 1992 extension

    falls within the literal terms of the jurisdictional statute

    permitting appeals from "[i]nterlocutory orders of the

    district courts . . . continuing . . . injunctions . . . ."

    28 U.S.C. 1292(a)(1). The defendants argue that the June

    1992 extension of the October 1986 Order is an

    "interlocutory order" that "continu[es]" an injunction. In

    our view, however, the June 1992 extension does not continue
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    an injunction that would have otherwise stood "dissolved by

    lapse of the time fixed in the original order." Sierra Club
    ___________

    v. Marsh, 907 F.2d 210, 213 (1st Cir. 1990) (citation
    _____

    omitted). A careful reading of the October 1986 Order

    indicates that the Order was not to expire automatically at
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    a set time (initially set at three years) after its entry.

    Rather, the Order says that the parties may "seek" the

    court's "counsel" during the set three years and that

    "[n]inety (90) days prior to the end of this three year

    period, the court shall hold a hearing to review

    implementation . . . ." One might say that the Order

    contemplates termination after the set time; one can add
    ____________

    that it requires the district court to plan a hearing to


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    consider compliance three months prior to the expiration of

    the set time; but one cannot fairly say that the Order, by

    its own terms, simply expires while the court is in the

    midst of the very "compliance determination" proceedings

    that the Order contemplates. To the contrary, the decree,

    technically speaking, would seem to expire only after the
    _____

    court, proceeding with reasonable speed, has held the

    required hearing and found compliance. This interpretation

    draws support from the district court's own interpretation

    of the October 1986 Order, when (in 1989) that court wrote:

    In my order of October 9, 1986, I
    provided for a three year period during
    which defendants were to complete a
    number of projects affecting the various
    institutions covered by the underlying
    consent decrees. The completion of
    these tasks was, and remains, a
    prerequisite to this court's
    disengagement in these cases.
    Recognizing that it was uncertain as to
    whether all that remained to be done
    could be completed within the three year
    period, the October 9, 1986 order
    provided that I would review the
    situation during the fall of 1989.

    We concede that the October 1986 Order also says

    that the OQA will "be initially chartered for a three year

    term" and that the district court also said the OQA "shall

    be maintained by the Commonwealth for a three year period .

    . . ." But we cannot read these words (the first found in


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    the Order's Appendix; the second found in the Opinion, not

    the Order) as creating a kind of automatic termination in

    the midst of compliance proceedings and (as just explained)

    contrary to the Order's apparent intent.


    Since we cannot read the June 1992 extension as,

    technically speaking, "continuing" an injunction that would

    have otherwise expired, we are legally free to consider the

    matter from a practical point of view. See Marsh, 907 F.2d
    ___ _____

    at 214 & n.2. And the common sense considerations outlined

    above lead us to conclude that, as a practical matter, the

    June 1992 extension represents a brief procedural delay,

    necessary for the district court to resolve properly the

    substantive issues. That being so, it does not fall within

    the scope of 28 U.S.C. 1292(a)(1)'s language giving us

    jurisdiction. Id. at 214-15 (refusing interlocutory
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    appellate review over a district court order that "was a

    step in controlling the litigation before the trial court"

    and did not continue an injunction "in any jurisdictionally

    significant respect") (citation omitted). Consequently, we

    must dismiss this appeal.

    Since the question of jurisdiction is a fairly

    close one, we add that it would not likely benefit the

    appellants to obtain jurisdiction, for the practical, common


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    sense considerations we have mentioned would balance heavily

    in favor of permitting a six-month procedurally-necessitated

    extension of the October 1986 Order's life. Cf. Planned
    ___ _______

    Parenthood League v. Bellotti, 641 F.2d 1006, 1009, 1023
    __________________ ________

    (1st Cir. 1981) (issuance of preliminary injunction depends

    upon balance of harms, equities, and public interest, as

    well as likelihood of success on the merits); Chalk v.
    _____

    United States Dist. Court Cent. Dist., 840 F.2d 701, 704
    _______________________________________

    (9th Cir. 1988) (basic function of preliminary injunction is

    to preserve status quo pending determination of action on
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    merits).

    Regardless, for the jurisdictional reasons

    discussed, the appeal is

    Dismissed.
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