La Liga de Ciudades de P.R. v. FOMB ( 2024 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 22-1062
    IN RE: THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO
    RICO, AS REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE COMMONWEALTH OF PUERTO RICO; THE
    FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, AS
    REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE PUERTO RICO SALES TAX FINANCING
    CORPORATION, a/k/a Cofina; THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND
    MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, AS REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE
    EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT SYSTEM OF THE GOVERNMENT OF THE
    COMMONWEALTH OF PUERTO RICO; THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND
    MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, AS REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE
    PUERTO RICO HIGHWAYS AND TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY; THE FINANCIAL
    OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, AS
    REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE PUERTO RICO ELECTRIC POWER AUTHORITY
    (PREPA); THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO
    RICO, AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE PUERTO RICO PUBLIC BUILDINGS
    AUTHORITY,
    Debtors,
    LA LIGA DE CIUDADES DE PUERTO RICO,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO;
    AUTORIDADE DE ASESORIA FINANCIERA Y AGENCIA FISCAL (AAFAF);
    CENTRO DE RECAUDACION DE INGRESOS MUNICIPALES (CRIM);
    ADMINISTRACION DE SEGUROS DE SALUD DE PUERTO RICO (ASES); LUIS
    M. COLLAZO RODRIGUEZ, in his Official Capacity as Administrator
    of the Sistemas de Retiro de los Empleados del Gobierno y la
    Judicatura del Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Laura Taylor Swain,* U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Barron, Chief Judge,
    Lipez and Montecalvo, Circuit Judges.
    Guillermo J. Ramos Luiña, with whom Tanaira Padilla Rodríguez
    was on brief, for appellant.
    Lucas Kowalczyk, with whom Timothy W. Mungovan, John E.
    Roberts, Martin J. Bienenstock, Mark D. Harris, Guy Brenner, and
    Proskauer Rose LLP were on brief, for the Financial Oversight and
    Management Board for Puerto Rico, appellee.
    Ashley M. Pavel, with whom John J. Rapisardi, Maria J.
    DiConza, Peter Friedman, and O'Melveny & Myers LLP were on brief,
    for AAFAF, ASES, and Luis M. Collazo Rodriguez, in his official
    capacity as administrator of the Sistemas de Retiro de los
    Empleados del Gobierno y la Judicatura del Estado Libre Asociado
    de Puerto Rico, appellees.
    Fernando Van Derdys for CRIM, appellee.
    Edwin Quiñones and Quiñones, Arbona & Candelario on brief for
    the Senate of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, amicus curiae.
    Jaime L. Sanabria Montañez and ECIJA SBGB on brief for United
    States Representatives Nydia M. Velázquez, Alexandria Ocasio
    Cortez, and Ritchie Torres, amici curiae.
    July 25, 2024
    *  Of the   Southern    District   of   New   York,   sitting   by
    designation.
    Lipez, Circuit Judge.      This case follows an unsuccessful
    effort    by    Puerto    Rico   to   enact    legislation -- known   as   "Law
    29" -- to eliminate the burden on Puerto Rico's municipalities of
    complying with the Commonwealth's reformed public pension funding
    scheme.    In previous litigation, the Title III court overseeing
    Puerto Rico's debt restructuring issued an Order and Opinion (the
    "O&O") declaring Law 29 "a nullity" and "of no effect."                    The
    correctness of that determination, which was never appealed, is
    not directly at issue.
    Instead, plaintiff-appellant        La Liga de Ciudades de
    Puerto Rico ("La Liga") insists that the O&O did not authorize the
    Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico ("the
    Board") to recover the funds the municipalities had retained under
    the auspices of Law 29 for approximately one year, before the O&O
    took effect.      Interpreting its own prior order to reach a contrary
    conclusion,       the    district     court1   granted   defendant-appellees'
    assorted motions to dismiss, some on the merits and another for
    lack of standing.         In the end, we affirm on the merits.         Before
    doing so, however, because of an issue noted at oral argument by
    the panel and advanced by our colleague in a dissent, we must
    1 For the sake of clarity, when referencing the court that
    authored the O&O in the prior Law 29 litigation, we use the term
    "Title III court," and when referencing the court that authored
    the order now on appeal, we use "district court." Both terms refer
    to the court overseeing Puerto Rico's debt restructuring under
    PROMESA, which authored both orders.
    - 3 -
    explain at some length why La Liga has standing to pursue the
    claims now before us.
    I.
    To   resolve   this   matter,   we   must   recount   the   facts
    underlying the proceeding directly at issue on appeal and those of
    the prior Law 29 litigation.     Because we are reviewing a decision
    granting motions to dismiss, we "accept as true all well-pleaded
    facts alleged in the complaint and draw all reasonable inferences
    therefrom in the pleader's favor."        Lee v. Conagra Brands, Inc.,
    
    958 F.3d 70
    , 74 (1st Cir. 2020) (quoting Lanza v. Fin. Indus.
    Regul. Auth., 
    953 F.3d 159
    , 162 (1st Cir. 2020)).
    A. The Law 29 Litigation
    1. PROMESA
    In 2016, Congress enacted the Puerto Rico Oversight,
    Management, and Economic Stability Act ("PROMESA"), 
    Pub. L. No. 114-187, 130
     Stat. 549 (2016) (codified at 
    48 U.S.C. §§ 2101
    -
    2241).   The law addressed an unprecedented "fiscal emergency" in
    the Commonwealth, caused by "[a] combination of severe economic
    decline, . . . accumulated operating deficits, lack of financial
    transparency, management inefficiencies, and excessive borrowing."
    
    48 U.S.C. § 2194
    (m).     These conditions left "the Government of
    Puerto Rico . . . unable to provide its citizens with effective
    services" and "affected the long-term economic stability of Puerto
    Rico by contributing to the accelerated outmigration of residents
    - 4 -
    and businesses."        
    Id.
        In enacting PROMESA, Congress sought to
    "provide the Government of Puerto Rico with the resources and the
    tools it needs to address" this "crisis" by "provid[ing] an
    oversight mechanism to assist the Government of Puerto Rico in
    reforming   its    fiscal     governance,"   with   the     ultimate    goal    of
    "encouraging      the   Government   of    Puerto    Rico    to   resolve      its
    longstanding     fiscal   governance      issues   and   return   to    economic
    growth."    
    Id.
     § 2194(n).
    PROMESA created the Financial Oversight and Management
    Board, an entity with "wide-ranging authority to oversee and direct
    many   aspects    of    Puerto   Rico's    financial      recovery     efforts."
    Pierluisi v. Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. (In re Fin.
    Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.), 
    37 F.4th 746
    , 750 (1st Cir. 2022).
    The Board exercises "primarily local power[]" to "supervis[e]
    aspects of Puerto Rico's fiscal and budgetary policies."                    Fin.
    Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. v. Aurelius Inv., LLC, 
    140 S. Ct. 1649
    , 1655, 1665 (2020).
    PROMESA requires the governor of Puerto Rico, under the
    Board's oversight, to annually promulgate "Fiscal Plans," see 
    48 U.S.C. § 2141
    , which are "roadmaps for Puerto Rico 'to achieve
    fiscal responsibility and access to the capital markets,'" Méndez-
    Núñez v. Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. (In re Fin. Oversight
    & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.), 
    916 F.3d 98
    , 104-05 (1st Cir. 2019) (quoting
    
    48 U.S.C. § 2141
    (b)(1)).           The Fiscal Plan must "provide for
    - 5 -
    estimates of revenues and expenditures" and "adequate funding for
    public   pension      systems,"      among      other      things,    
    48 U.S.C. § 2141
    (b)(1), and must be approved by the Board before it can take
    effect, see 
    id.
     § 2141(c)(3).
    PROMESA requires the Board to review "any law" enacted
    by Puerto Rico "to ensure that the enactment or enforcement of the
    law   will   not   adversely    affect       the    territorial      government's
    compliance with the Fiscal Plan."            Id. § 2144.      This "multi-step,
    back-and-forth" review process begins with the governor submitting
    to the Board a certification containing a formal estimate of the
    law's fiscal impact and attesting to whether it complies with the
    Fiscal Plan.       Pierluisi, 37 F.4th at 751 (analyzing 
    48 U.S.C. § 2144
    (a)(1)-(5)).       The    Board    "may      take    such   actions   as     it
    considers necessary, consistent with [PROMESA]," to enforce Puerto
    Rico's   compliance    with    the   certification         requirement     and    the
    Fiscal Plan, "including preventing the enforcement or application
    of the law."        
    48 U.S.C. § 2144
    (a)(5).             PROMESA also prohibits
    Puerto Rico from "enact[ing], implement[ing], or enforc[ing] any
    statute, resolution, policy, or rule that would impair or defeat
    the purposes of [PROMESA], as determined by the Oversight Board,"
    
    id.
       § 2128(a)(2),     and    it    prohibits       the     Commonwealth        from
    "reprogramming" any budgeted funds unless the Board "certifies
    such reprogramming will not be inconsistent with the Fiscal Plan
    - 6 -
    and Budget," id. § 2144(c)(1)-(2).           The Board may "seek judicial
    enforcement" of these requirements.          Id. § 2124(k).
    Title    III   of   PROMESA   creates   a   debt   restructuring
    process "akin to municipal debt restructuring under Chapter 9 of
    the bankruptcy code."       Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. v. Ad
    Hoc Grp. of PREPA Bondholders (In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd.
    for P.R.), 
    899 F.3d 13
    , 18 (1st Cir. 2018); see also 48 U.S.C.
    §§ 2161–2177.       We refer to the district court overseeing those
    proceedings as the "Title III court." In 2017, the Board commenced
    a   Title   III     debt   adjustment     proceeding    on   behalf   of   the
    Commonwealth and several of its instrumentalities, under which the
    original Law 29 litigation and the present case arose as adversary
    proceedings.
    2. Transition to the "PayGo" System and Law 29
    The Board approved a Fiscal Plan for the 2017 fiscal
    year in March 2017.        See Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. v.
    Vázquez Garced (In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.), 
    616 B.R. 238
    , 242 (D.P.R. 2020).            Among numerous reforms, the 2017
    Fiscal Plan called for Puerto Rico's public employee pension system
    to transition to a "Pay-as-you-Go" or "PayGo" model.              Later that
    year, Puerto Rico enacted legislation, known as "Act 106," that
    implemented this transition.       Act 106 directed the Commonwealth to
    deliver all pension disbursements to Puerto Rico's retired public
    employees directly from its general fund as those payments came
    - 7 -
    due.         Puerto         Rico's         public            employers -- including
    municipalities -- would finance those disbursements by reimbursing
    the Commonwealth each month for benefits payments to retirees
    associated with that employer.             See id. at 242-43.
    The PayGo system was a key component of subsequent Fiscal
    Plans, including the 2019 Fiscal Plan.                 See id. at 242.         However,
    shortly after that Plan's certification, lawmakers in Puerto Rico
    passed Law 29, formally titled the "Act for Reductions of the
    Administrative Burdens of the Municipalities."                          Id.        Law 29
    expressly aimed to circumvent the PayGo system as it applied to
    Puerto    Rico's    municipalities,             proclaiming          that     it     would
    "eliminate[] the obligation of municipalities to contribute to the
    Government health plan and 'Pay as you Go system.'"                     Id.    Instead,
    it shifted those costs to the Commonwealth.
    Before Ricardo Rosselló, Puerto Rico's then-Governor,
    signed Law 29, the Board warned him and Puerto Rico's legislative
    leaders    that     Law     29     would        have     a     significant          fiscal
    impact -- "approximately $311 million for FY20 and $1.7 billion
    over the next five fiscal years" -- and that the law did not appear
    to   "compl[y]    with    the    Certified      Fiscal       Plan,    which    includes
    municipalities'     full        payment    of    their       obligations       to     [the
    Government health plan] and PayGo."                    Id. (second alteration in
    original).   Despite these warnings, Governor Rosselló signed Law
    29 on May 17, 2019, and the law took immediate effect.                        Id.
    - 8 -
    The    Governor   subsequently         delivered   to   the    Board   a
    compliance certification as required under 
    48 U.S.C. § 2144
    (a)(2).
    Id. at 242-43.     The certification represented that Law 29 "[was]
    not significantly inconsistent with the [2019 Fiscal Plan]."                  Id.
    at 243 (second alteration in original).             The Board took issue with
    the certification, notifying the Governor and its legislative
    leaders that it determined that the Commonwealth's certificate was
    "deficient" because it "failed to provide the formal estimate of
    the fiscal impact that [Law 29] will have."                Id. (alteration in
    original).      The Board directed the             Commonwealth to submit a
    corrected certificate, but the Commonwealth ignored that request.
    See id.
    3. Law 29 Litigation and the Order and Opinion
    In     July   2019,     the    Board      commenced     an    adversary
    proceeding   claiming   that     Law    29   was    not   properly     certified,
    inconsistent with the 2019 Fiscal Plan, and impaired and defeated
    the purposes of PROMESA, thus making it invalid.                See id. at 240-
    41.   The complaint named Puerto Rico's governor and the Fiscal
    Agency and Financial Advisory Authority ("AAFAF," for its Spanish
    acronym) as defendants.2        The Board sought a declaration that Law
    2The city of San Juan and two organizations representing the
    mayors of multiple municipalities sought to intervene.         The
    district court denied those motions, finding the interests of the
    municipalities adequately represented by the Governor. See Order
    on Mots. to Intervene at 2, In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for
    P.R., Title III Case No. 17-BK-3283, Adv. Proc. No. 19-393-LTS
    - 9 -
    29 was a nullity and of no effect.            Id. at 241, 244.   The Board
    also sought a permanent injunction barring the enforcement of Law
    29.   Id. at 244.
    The Title III court issued its O&O on April 15, 2020,
    granting the Board summary judgment on all relevant counts.3           Id.
    at 241.     Specifically, the court held that the Governor had failed
    to properly certify Law 29.         Id. at 247-48.   Accordingly, the court
    "deemed [Law 29] a nullity."          Id. at 248.    The court further held
    that Law 29 was "unenforceable and of no effect," because the Board
    had determined that the law impaired or defeated the purposes of
    PROMESA.        Id. at 250.   Based on these conclusions, the court issued
    a permanent injunction against "implementing and enforcing" Law
    29.       Id.     At the defendants' request, the court stayed the
    effective date of its O&O through May 6, 2020 to allow time for
    the Board and the Commonwealth to negotiate a process through which
    (D.P.R. July 23, 2019), ECF No. 35; Order on Mot. to Intervene at
    3, In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R., Title III Case No.
    17-BK-3283, Adv. Proc. No. 19-393-LTS (D.P.R. Sep. 4, 2019), ECF
    No. 70. These rulings were not appealed.
    The Title III court denied summary judgment on three counts.
    3
    One count asked the court to declare Law 29 a nullity and enjoin
    its enforcement under separate provisions of PROMESA.      Finding
    that relief duplicative, the court declined to award summary
    judgment on that count. See Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 256 n.11.
    The remaining counts sought prospective relief related to the
    Commonwealth's submission of compliance certificates for Law 29
    and in general.   See id. at 250, 255-56.
    - 10 -
    the municipalities would meet their PayGo obligations.          Id. at
    257.   The O&O was never appealed.
    B. The present case
    1. Factual Background
    Puerto Rico applied Law 29 for nearly a year, from its
    enactment in May 2019 until the O&O took effect in May of 2020
    (the "challenged period").     During this time, the municipalities
    did not pay the PayGo fees required under Act 106, nor did they
    make contributions to their employees' health care plans.           The
    Board estimated that the municipalities retained $197.3 million
    under the auspices of Law 29.
    The Board took the position that the O&O had declared
    Law 29 null and void from its inception, and it therefore concluded
    that the municipalities needed to repay to the Commonwealth the
    funds they owed for the challenged period.       To recoup that debt,
    the Board reached an agreement with Puerto Rico's government
    whereby   the   Centro   de   Recaudacion   de   Ingresos   Municipales
    ("CRIM"), which collects property taxes for the municipalities,
    would divert to the Commonwealth certain disbursements that would
    otherwise have gone to the municipalities.        The recovery of the
    municipalities' debts has been incorporated into each subsequent
    Fiscal Plan.     The complaint states that this arrangement has
    - 11 -
    deprived the municipalities of "not less than Three Hundred Forty
    Million Dollars ($340,000.00)."4
    Plaintiff-appellant La Liga is a not-for-profit, non-
    partisan     membership    organization.        Its      formal       membership
    consists of    the   democratically-elected      mayors       of   Puerto   Rico
    municipalities.      The purpose of La Liga is to advocate for the
    interests of the municipalities its member-mayors were elected to
    represent.     La Liga concedes that the municipalities cannot rely
    on Law 29 to excuse PayGo or benefit obligations arising after the
    O&O's effective date.       However, La Liga disputes that the O&O
    nullified Law 29 retroactively to cover the challenged period.                It
    therefore protests the Board's efforts to recover the funds the
    Commonwealth    paid   during   that   time    to     cover     the    municipal
    obligations.
    2. Procedural Background
    Asserting      organizational      standing     to      bring    this
    adversary proceeding, La Liga's complaint named as defendants
    (1) the Board, (2) CRIM, and (3) various Puerto Rico executive
    branch entities and officials, including AAFAF, a fiscal agent and
    advisor for the municipalities; the Administración de Seguros de
    4 We note the significant discrepancy between the two figures
    stated in the complaint. The record does not clarify the precise
    value of the alleged loss, but, as mentioned, the Board estimated
    that the municipalities had retained $197.3 million under Law 29,
    giving some sense of the scale of the dispute. Ultimately, the
    exact figure is immaterial to the issues on appeal.
    - 12 -
    Salud de Puerto Rico ("ASES"), the public corporation that manages
    Puerto       Rico's      public        health    insurance        system;    and   the
    administrator of Puerto Rico's Employee Retirement System ("ERS").5
    In its complaint, La Liga alleged that the O&O nullified
    Law 29 only as of the order's effective date, and thus the back
    payments orchestrated by the Board were improper.                     La Liga argued
    that nothing in the O&O expressly invalidated Law 29 retroactively
    to cover the challenged period.                 Moreover, La Liga asserted that
    the Title III court lacked the authority to enter such an order,
    and thus the O&O should not be read to do so.                        Accordingly, La
    Liga requested a declaration that the municipalities' purported
    debt does not exist and that the withholdings offsetting that debt
    were       unlawful.      In    addition,       La   Liga   sought    an    injunction
    prohibiting appellees from diverting any more funds from the
    municipalities as back payments and ordering them to return funds
    wrongly diverted.
    Appellees       moved    to   dismiss.       The    executive   branch
    defendants filed a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    12(b)(1) asserting that La Liga lacked standing to bring the action
    against them.          The Board and CRIM each filed a motion under Rule
    12(b)(6), arguing that La Liga had failed to state a claim for
    5   We call these defendants the "executive branch defendants."
    - 13 -
    relief because the O&O by its terms applied to the challenged
    period.6
    The district court granted all three motions to dismiss.
    Citing Supreme Court precedent, it      held that   La Liga lacked
    constitutional standing to sue the executive branch defendants, as
    the municipalities' injury was neither traceable to their conduct
    nor redressable by them.   See Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1992).     The district court granted the Board and
    CRIM's motions to dismiss on the merits.    It held that the O&O -
    - which the district court had itself authored -- did apply to the
    challenged period when it declared Law 29 a "nullity" and "of no
    effect."
    La Liga timely appealed, arguing that the district court
    erred both in finding that La Liga lacked standing to sue the
    executive branch defendants and in granting the motion to dismiss
    on the merits as to CRIM and the Board.
    II.
    We begin by addressing La Liga's standing. The arguments
    against La Liga's constitutional standing have accumulated over
    time.   In the district court, only the executive branch defendants
    6 Although the Board also moved to dismiss for lack of standing
    on statutory grounds, the district court concluded that there was
    "a clearer basis" for dismissing the action against the Board on
    the merits.   The district court therefore did not opine on La
    Liga's standing with respect to the Board, and the Board has not
    renewed this statutory standing argument on appeal.
    - 14 -
    challenged La Liga's constitutional standing, and only as to its
    ability to sue them.    In its appellate briefing, CRIM newly argued
    that La Liga lacked standing to sue it as well.         At oral argument,
    the panel questioned for the first time whether La Liga had
    standing to sue at all.     Our dissenting colleague argues that La
    Liga does not. Because we have an independent obligation to assure
    ourselves of our jurisdiction, see Ryan v. U.S. Immigr. & Customs
    Enf't, 
    974 F.3d 9
    , 17 n.4 (1st Cir. 2020), these belated and never-
    pressed standing arguments are properly before us.
    A. Standard of Review
    Our analysis of La Liga's standing is de novo.         See Me.
    People's All. & Nat. Res. Def. Council v. Mallinckrodt, Inc., 
    471 F.3d 277
    , 284 (1st Cir. 2006).         At the pleading stage, we "apply
    [to questions of standing] the same plausibility standard used to
    evaluate a motion under Rule 12(b)(6)." Gustavsen v. Alcon Lab'ys,
    Inc., 
    903 F.3d 1
    , 7 (1st Cir. 2018).          Thus, to assess La Liga's
    standing,   we   must   "accept   as   true   all   well-pleaded   factual
    averments in [its] . . . complaint and indulge all reasonable
    inferences therefrom" (quoting Katz v. Pershing, LLC, 
    672 F.3d 64
    ,
    70 (1st Cir. 2012)).     Accordingly, La Liga "need not definitively
    prove [its] injury or disprove [appellees'] defenses" but need
    only "plausibly plead on the face of [its] complaint"                facts
    supporting standing.     Tyler v. Hennepin Cnty., 
    598 U.S. 631
    , 637
    (2023) (citing Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561).
    - 15 -
    B. Organizational Standing
    Article III of the U.S. Constitution authorizes federal
    courts    to    adjudicate      only     "Cases"     and   "Controversies,"   and
    "standing is an essential and unchanging part of the case-or-
    controversy requirement."           Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560.        To establish
    standing, a complaint must demonstrate three elements: (1) the
    plaintiff suffered an "injury in fact"; (2) the defendant caused
    the injury, meaning it is "fairly traceable to the challenged
    action of the defendant, and not the result of the independent
    action of some third party"; and (3) it is "likely . . . that the
    injury will be 'redressed by a favorable decision.'"                 Id. at 560-
    61 (cleaned up) (quoting Simon v. E. Ky. Welfare Rts. Org., 
    426 U.S. 26
    , 38, 41–42, 43 (1976)).
    1.    La Liga's Assertion of Organizational Standing
    La Liga claims to have organizational standing,7 which
    allows an organization that has not suffered an injury in fact to
    sue on behalf of its members when "(a) its members would otherwise
    have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks
    to   protect        are   germane   to    the     organization's   purpose;   and
    (c) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires
    7 Courts often refer to this concept of standing as
    "associational standing." See generally, e.g., United Food & Com.
    Workers Union Loc. 751 v. Brown Grp., Inc., 
    517 U.S. 544
     (1996).
    Following La Liga's lead, we use the phrase "organizational
    standing" in this opinion.
    - 16 -
    the participation of individual members in the lawsuit."8               Hunt v.
    Wash. State Apple Advert. Comm'n, 
    432 U.S. 333
    , 343 (1977).
    La Liga alleges that Puerto Rico's municipalities have
    been deprived of significant revenue to which they were entitled.
    Such an "out-of-pocket loss" is "a quintessential injury in fact."
    Wiener v. MIB Grp., Inc., 
    86 F.4th 76
    , 86 (1st Cir. 2023).                  While
    La Liga has thus clearly alleged that the municipalities have
    suffered an Article III injury, it must also show that it is a
    proper party to sue on their behalf, according to organizational
    standing principles.
    In support of its effort to sue on the municipalities'
    behalf,    La   Liga    alleges    that   it   is     a   "not-for-profit    and
    nonpartisan     corporation . . . whose         members       are   Mayors    of
    Municipalities     of     Puerto     Rico      from       diverse   ideological
    persuasions."     It further alleges that
    La   Liga's   vision   is  "to   unite   local
    governments in a nonpartisan effort to improve
    the quality of life of the Puerto Rican
    people."   Its mission is to "strengthen the
    capacity of local governments and communities
    in order to better face . . . various social,
    structural,      fiscal    and      governance
    challenges." Consistent with that vision and
    mission, La Liga develops and implements
    various initiatives, tempered to the needs and
    realities of municipal governments and their
    communities.     The most recent initiative
    developed and adopted by La Liga is to defend
    the decimated municipal finances from the
    8   Only the first requirement is in dispute.
    - 17 -
    onslaught of austere measures imposed by the
    Oversight Board.
    Thus, La Liga explains that it "has organizational standing to
    bring this action since the strengthening of municipal finances is
    germane to La Liga's mission and purpose, the Municipalities that
    are headed by La Liga's members have suffered substantial economic
    loses . . . and     the     participation      of   the   individual     La   Liga
    members is not necessary."        See Hunt 
    432 U.S. at 343
    .
    As the dissent sees it, La Liga has a standing problem
    because its formal members are not the municipalities but their
    democratically-elected mayors. And because La Liga has not alleged
    that its member-mayors are legally authorized to represent the
    municipalities in court, the argument goes, "the record does not
    suggest that any member-mayor's standing to bring this suit could
    rest on an injury to that mayor's municipality."               See, e.g., City
    of Bos. Delegation v. FERC, 
    897 F.3d 241
    , 248-50 (D.C. Cir. 2018)
    (holding that a mayor lacked standing to litigate based on injury
    to his city because he lacked legal authority to do so).                      Thus,
    the complaint does not meet the first Hunt requirement that La
    Liga's members "have standing to sue in their own right."                      
    432 U.S. at 343
    .
    Our    dissenting     colleague's        doubt   about   La    Liga's
    standing   to    sue   on    behalf    of   non-member      municipalities      is
    unfounded.       Indeed,    whether    La   Liga's    member-mayors      possess
    - 18 -
    standing in their own right, via the legal authority to sue on
    their   municipalities'   behalf,   is   simply   not   relevant   to   our
    standing inquiry.    That is because, as we will explain in more
    detail below, the municipalities represented by La Liga's member-
    mayors have sufficient "indicia of membership" in La Liga to make
    them functionally akin to members in the organization themselves.
    See 
    id. at 344
    .   Since it is beyond dispute that the municipalities
    would themselves have Article III standing to bring the present
    lawsuit, and the remaining requirements of organizational standing
    are also satisfied, La Liga has organizational standing to sue on
    behalf of municipalities that are, "for all practical purposes,"
    the equivalent of its formal members.       Id.
    2. The "Indicia of Membership" Test
    In Hunt, the Supreme Court introduced the so-called
    "indicia of membership" test to explain why the plaintiff in that
    case had organizational standing to sue on behalf of non-members,
    just as La Liga seeks to do here. See id. at 343-45. The plaintiff
    in Hunt was a state commission composed of commissioners who were
    elected by, drawn from, and represented the interests of apple
    growers and sellers in Washington state who were injured by a North
    Carolina statute that would have burdened the Washington apple
    industry in its efforts to ship apples into North Carolina.             The
    Washington State Apple Advertising Commission brought suit to
    enjoin this law on behalf of its constituency of apple growers and
    - 19 -
    dealers, even though they were not "members" of the organization
    in any formal sense (indeed, it had no members).
    The    Court    explained     that     the     Commission     "for    all
    practical purposes" "represent[ed] the Washington apple industry"
    because "its purpose [was] the protection and promotion of the
    Washington apple industry," which was the "primary beneficiary of
    its    activities,      including     the       prosecution    of    this    kind    of
    litigation."        Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 344
    .           "Moreover, while the apple
    growers and dealers [were] not 'members' of the Commission,"
    formally      speaking,      "they   possess[ed]      all     of    the   indicia    of
    membership."         
    Id.
     (emphasis added).           For instance, "they alone
    elect[ed] the members of the Commission; they alone [could] serve
    on the Commission;" and they financed the Commission.                       
    Id.
        "In a
    very   real    sense,       therefore,    the     Commission    represent[ed]       the
    State's growers and dealers and provide[d] the means by which they
    express[ed]         their    collective     views      and     protect[ed]         their
    collective interests." 
    Id. at 345
    . Cautioning against "exalt[ing]
    form over substance," the Court found standing easily proven in
    support of the Commission's effort to sue on behalf of non-members.
    
    Id.
    In Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President &
    Fellows of Harvard College ("SFA"), though we ultimately did not
    apply the "indicia of membership test, we recognized that an
    organization may sometimes sue on behalf of non-members, and we
    - 20 -
    repeated from Hunt five features to consider in applying the
    "indicia    of   membership"     test,      including:      "whether    the
    organization's purpose is to protect and promote the interests of
    its   non-members,   whether   these    non-members   are    'the   primary
    beneficiar[ies] of its activities,' and whether non-members elect
    its members, are the only people who may be members, or finance
    the organizations' activities."        
    980 F.3d 157
    , 183 (1st Cir. 2020)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 344-45
    ), rev'd
    on other grounds, 
    600 U.S. 181
     (2023).          Moreover, we note here
    that courts applying the "indicia of membership" test have been
    clear that the criteria discussed in Hunt are illustrative, not
    exhaustive.   See, e.g., Flyers Rts. Educ. Fund, Inc. v. U.S. Dep't
    of Transp., 
    957 F.3d 1359
    , 1362 (D.C. Cir. 2020); Or. Advoc. Ctr.
    v. Mink, 
    322 F.3d 1101
    , 1111 (9th Cir. 2003); Doe v. Stincer, 
    175 F.3d 879
    , 886 (11th Cir. 1999).
    In Mink, for example, the constituents of the plaintiff
    organization lacked many of the "indicia of membership" discussed
    in Hunt.9   See 322 F.3d at 1111.      Indeed, the constituents did not
    9The organization in Mink was a nonprofit legal advocacy
    organization that represented the rights of people with
    disabilities, including people with mental illness. 322 F.3d at
    1105. It sought to sue on behalf of one of its constituents, a
    mentally incapacitated criminal defendant who was detained in
    county jail while awaiting transfer to a hospital.             Id.
    Established pursuant to the Protection and Advocacy for Mentally
    Ill Individuals Act of 1986, 42 U.S.C. §§ 10801–1085, the
    organization was federally funded and, as required by statute, had
    a governing board and advisory counsel that included members of
    - 21 -
    fund the organization or solely elect its leaders, who were not
    limited to that constituency.         Id.    Nonetheless, the court found
    that    the   "indicia   of   membership"     test   had   been    satisfied,
    concluding that what "undergird[s]" the analysis is whether "the
    organization is sufficiently identified with and subject to the
    influence of those it seeks to represent as to have a 'personal
    stake in the outcome of the controversy'" and noting that its
    constituency had means to direct and influence the organization's
    activity.     Id. (quoting Vill. of Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous.
    Dev. Corp., 
    429 U.S. 252
    , 261 (1977)). Other courts have described
    the substance-over-form purpose of this "functional analysis" in
    similar terms.     See Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Chevron Chem.
    Co., 
    129 F.3d 826
    , 828 (5th Cir. 1997) (holding that the purpose
    of the "indicia of membership" test is to determine whether the
    "nature of the relationship between the [organization] and the
    relevant interests of [its non-members] satisfie[s] the goals of
    the    constitutional    standing   requirement");    Doe,   
    175 F.3d 886
    (holding that the "indicia of membership" test is satisfied when
    an organization's constituents "possess the means to influence the
    priorities and activities the [organization] undertakes"); Flyers
    Rts. Educ. Fund, 957 F.3d at 1362 (holding that the "indicia of
    the constituency or their family members, as well as a grievance
    procedure through which it was accountable to its constituents.
    Id. at 1111-12.
    - 22 -
    membership test" is satisfied where non-member constituents have
    "a sufficient amount of interaction" with the organization "to
    influence [its] activities").
    3. Applicability of the "Indicia of Membership" Test
    Before we explain why La Liga's allegations plausibly
    satisfy the "indicia of membership" test, we must address the
    dissent's argument that this test is not applicable in the present
    case.   The dissent bases that assertion on the fact that La Liga
    takes the form of a voluntary membership association.   To defend
    that claim, the dissent relies on an out-of-context reading of our
    discussion of the "indicia of membership" test in SFA, 980 F.3d at
    183-84. There, we observed that the test applies to "organizations
    that are not voluntary membership organizations."     Id. at 183.
    SFA involved a voluntary membership association suing on behalf of
    its official members: students who had been denied admission to
    Harvard.   Even though the organization was thus clearly suing on
    behalf of members who would have had standing in their own right,
    see Hunt 
    432 U.S. at 434
    , Harvard argued that, nonetheless, the
    association needed to further show that those members also bore
    the "indicia of membership," see SFA, 980 F.3d at 183; see also
    Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of
    Harvard Coll., 
    261 F. Supp. 3d 99
    , 106-09 (D. Mass. 2017) (further
    elucidating Harvard's standing argument, which would have required
    the application of the "indicia of membership test" whenever
    - 23 -
    membership organizations sue on behalf of their members to probe
    "whether [their] 'members' are 'genuine' members or not, with the
    organization's view of its own members being only one factor in
    the analysis"), aff'd, 
    980 F.3d 157
    , rev'd, 
    600 U.S. 181
    .
    With the language quoted by the dissent, we rejected
    Harvard's assertion that the "indicia of membership" test "must be
    met" in cases where a traditional membership organization is
    seeking "on [its] face" to litigate on behalf of its own members.
    SFA, 980 F.3d at 184.    Rather, we agreed that the analysis is only
    relevant in "situations in which an organization is attempting to
    bring suit on behalf of individuals who are not members."      Id. at
    184 n.21 (quoting Cal. Sportfishing Prot. All. v. Diablo Grande,
    Inc., 
    209 F. Supp. 2d 1059
    , 1066 (E.D. Cal. 2002)).
    In other words, we held in SFA only that the "indicia of
    membership" test is not relevant when a voluntary membership
    organization aims to sue on behalf of its members.        We did not
    consider the present question of whether a voluntary membership
    organization can sue on behalf of non-members who nonetheless have
    the requisite "indicia of membership."      Our common sense holding
    in SFA aligns with the purpose of the "indicia of membership" test,
    which   is    to   determine   whether,   practically   speaking,   an
    organization has the appropriate relationship with non-members to
    sue on their behalf.     See Friends of the Earth, 129 F.3d at 828.
    No such inquiry is necessary when an organization represents its
    - 24 -
    formal members in court.               It obviously can.      Here, however, La
    Liga seeks to sue on behalf of non-members.                     Thus, taken in
    context, the language from SFA upon which the dissent relies says
    nothing about the applicability of the "indicia of membership"
    test in the present circumstance.
    The dissent's argument that the "indicia of membership"
    test is unavailable to La Liga, purely because it takes the form
    of   a        voluntary   membership    organization,   is    incompatible   with
    Hunt's admonition not to "exalt form over substance."               
    432 U.S. at 345
    .          While the dissent argues that this "pithy phrase" means
    nothing more than that we should not "treat entities that are
    functionally         traditional       trade   associations    differently   for
    purposes of standing from entities that formally are," the text of
    the decision speaks of no such limitation.10                  To the contrary,
    The dissent also points to a subsequent case in which the
    10
    Supreme Court resoundingly reaffirmed the standing principles
    announced in Hunt, clarifying that even though associations may
    "not always be able to represent adequately the interests of all
    their injured members," that possibility did not "persuad[e] [the
    Court] to abandon settled principles of associational standing."
    Int'l Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agr. Implement Workers of
    Am. v. Brock, 
    477 U.S. 274
    , 290 (1986). The opinion -- which does
    not discuss the "indicia of membership" test in particular -- does
    not suggest that the possibility of inadequate representation
    presents an Article III concern, but merely explains that, under
    due process principles, individual members of an association may
    not, in some cases, be precluded from separately raising their
    individual claims. 
    Id.
     Nothing in Brock's explanation of why an
    association's members "band together," drawing upon shared
    expertise and resources to collectively vindicate their interests,
    applies with any less force to an organization's ability to
    adequately represent those who are, under the "indicia of
    - 25 -
    courts have rejected the dissent's rigid formalism.            In Friends of
    the Earth, for example, over a dissent arguing that Hunt should
    not be extended from its original context of a state agency to
    cover nonprofit organizations, the Fifth Circuit stated that there
    is "no cogent reason to limit [the 'indicia of membership'] test
    to the facts of Hunt," adding that such "formalistic argument[s]"
    "lack[]    merit"   in   the   context   of   applying   the   "indicia   of
    membership" test.        129 F.3d at 828-29 (quoting Pub. Int. Rsch.
    Grp. of N.J., Inc. v. Magnesium Elektron, Inc., 
    123 F.3d 111
    , 119
    (3d Cir. 1997)).
    Moreover, contrary to the suggestion of the dissent,
    there is nothing novel about applying the "indicia of membership"
    test to voluntary membership organizations suing on behalf of non-
    members.     Indeed, it appears to be the universal practice of
    federal courts to apply the "indicia of membership" test in this
    circumstance.11     In Nestle Ice Cream Co. v. N.L.R.B., 
    46 F.3d 578
    ,
    membership test," the functional equivalent of its members, even
    if not included in its formal membership rolls.
    11The dissent's only citation to the contrary is a concurring
    opinion in an out-of-circuit case that never mentions the "indicia
    of membership" test but merely observes that a nonprofit
    organization may not premise its assertion of standing on "the
    interests of nonmembers for whose interests [the organization]
    advocates."   Ne. Ohio Coal. for the Homeless v. Blackwell, 
    467 F.3d 999
    , 1013 (6th Cir. 2006) (McKeague, J., concurring) (emphasis
    omitted); see also 
    id.
     at 1010 n.4 (the majority agreeing with
    this assertion).    We agree that La Liga could not premise its
    standing on only the fact that it advocates for municipalities.
    Rather, the "indicia of membership" test considers the ability of
    those municipalities to influence the organization in order to
    - 26 -
    586 (6th Cir. 1995), for instance, the Sixth Circuit applied the
    "indicia of membership" test to assess whether a union had standing
    to sue on behalf of nonunion employees.         Likewise, the Seventh
    Circuit applied the "indicia of membership" test in Hope, Inc. v.
    DuPage County, 
    738 F.2d 797
    , 814-15 (7th Cir. 1984), to determine
    whether a nonprofit organization had standing to sue on behalf of
    non-member   constituents,   as    distinct   from    its   "members   and
    directors."12   Similarly, in numerous cases, district courts have
    applied the "indicia of membership" test to determine whether a
    voluntary membership organization had standing to sue on behalf of
    non-members, in several instances finding the test satisfied.13
    assure ourselves that the municipalities             are the functional
    equivalents of members in the organization.          See Section II.B.4,
    infra.
    12 Another example from the circuit courts is Interfaith
    Community Organization v. Honeywell International, Inc., 
    399 F.3d 248
     (3d Cir. 2005). In that case, the Third Circuit agreed with
    the   district  court   that   an  interfaith  organization   had
    organizational standing and expressly upheld the district court's
    findings regarding membership. 
    Id. at 258
    . The district court,
    in turn, had found that the organization had standing to sue on
    behalf of both "members of [the organization] or individuals with
    sufficient indicia of membership to be treated as members."
    Interfaith Cmty. Org. v. Honeywell Int'l, Inc., 
    188 F. Supp. 2d 486
    , 499 (D.N.J. 2002).    Thus, while the Third Circuit did not
    expressly apply the "indicia of membership" test, its embrace of
    the   district  court's   standing   analysis,  along  with   its
    acknowledged "obligation to examine our own jurisdiction and that
    of the district courts," Interfaith Cmty. Org., 
    399 F.3d at 254
    ,
    strongly suggests that the circuit court approved of the
    application of the "indicia of membership" test in that context.
    13See, e.g., Sec. Indus. & Fin. Mkts. Ass'n v. U.S. Commodity
    Futures Trading Comm'n, 
    67 F. Supp. 3d 373
    , 409-11 (D.D.C. 2014)
    (holding that association had standing to sue on behalf of
    - 27 -
    On the other hand, we are aware of no case holding the
    "indicia of membership" inapplicable because the plaintiff was a
    voluntary membership organization. The only federal court to opine
    on the argument that the "indicia of membership" test should be
    inapplicable to membership organizations suing on behalf of non-
    members found that contention, as we do, meritless.       See Sec.
    Indus. & Fin. Mkts. Ass'n v. United States Commodity Futures
    Trading Comm'n, 
    67 F. Supp. 3d 373
    , 410 (D.D.C. 2014) (stating
    that it could "divine no reason why the ['indicia of membership']
    test should not also apply to traditional trade associations that
    purport to represent, in addition to their formal members, the
    interests of informal members as well").   Stressing that such an
    "functional member" not included in "formal membership rolls");
    Interfaith Cmty. Org., 
    188 F. Supp. 2d at 499
     (finding voluntary
    membership organization had standing to sue on behalf of both
    "members of [the organization] or [non-member] individuals with
    sufficient indicia of membership to be treated as members"
    (emphasis added)); City of Philadelphia v. Beretta U.S.A., Corp.,
    
    126 F. Supp. 2d 882
    , 896 n.10 (E.D. Pa. 2000) (concluding that
    "[n]on-members"    "served    by    the    [plaintiff    membership
    organizations] [possessed] sufficient indicia of membership," but
    that the organizations lacked standing on other grounds), aff'd,
    
    277 F.3d 415
     (3d Cir. 2002).     See also Am.'s Frontline Drs. v.
    Wilcox, No. 21-1243, 
    2022 WL 1514038
    , at *7 (C.D. Cal. May 5,
    2022); Waskul v. Washtenaw Cnty. Cmty. Mental Health, 
    221 F. Supp. 3d 913
    , 918 (E.D. Mich. 2016), aff'd, 
    900 F.3d 250
     (6th Cir. 2018);
    Conservative Baptist Ass'n of Am., Inc. v. Shinseki, 
    42 F. Supp. 3d 125
    , 133 (D.D.C. 2014); United States v. City of New York, No.
    07-2067, 
    2011 WL 2259640
    , at *9 (E.D.N.Y. June 6, 2011); Int'l
    Bhd. of Elec. Workers AFL-CIO v. Citizens Telecomms. Co. of Cal.,
    No. 06-0677, 
    2006 WL 1377102
    , at *3 (E.D. Cal. May 18, 2006),
    aff'd, 
    549 F.3d 781
     (9th Cir. 2008); NAACP v. Harris, 
    567 F. Supp. 637
    , 640 (D. Mass. 1983).
    - 28 -
    approach would "formalistically" "deny plaintiffs the advantages
    of the 'indicia of membership' test," the court there held that an
    entity that did not appear on a trade association's "limited,
    formal membership rolls" nonetheless was "a functional member of
    [the trade association] for purposes of the associational standing
    analysis."    Id. at 410-11.
    Finding a       voluntary membership organization to have
    standing to sue on behalf of non-members is not even novel in our
    court. In Railway Labor Executives' Association ("RLEA") v. Boston
    & Maine Corp., we expressly held just that, citing Hunt as support.
    See 
    808 F.2d 150
    , 153 n.8 (1st Cir. 1986).              The plaintiff in that
    case   was,    as    the   district       court   put    it,    "a   voluntary,
    unincorporated association of the Chief Executive Officers of
    nineteen   standard     labor    organizations,"        who   brought   suit   to
    "protect[] the rights of the membership of the unions," not the
    rights of the executives.        
    639 F. Supp. 1092
    , 1095-96 (D. Me. 1986)
    (emphasis added); see also RLEA, 
    808 F.2d at 153
     (explaining that
    the association aimed "to prevent [the defendants] from taking
    discriminatory      action      against    the    striking      employees"     or
    "retaliating        against      the      employees       who     refused      to
    cross . . . picket lines").        We were thus aware that the plaintiff
    in that case did not premise its standing on an injury suffered by
    its formal membership.        Instead, as here, the injury was suffered
    - 29 -
    by a separate constituency of non-members.                        Nonetheless, the
    organization had standing to sue on behalf of the non-members.
    We do not agree with the dissent that RLEA has nothing
    to teach us about the applicability of the "indicia of membership"
    test   in    this   case.         True,    when    a    court    simply   exercises
    jurisdiction in a prior similar case, with no explanation, it does
    not create precedent regarding jurisdiction.                    See Lewis v. Casey,
    
    518 U.S. 343
    , 352 n.2 (1996); Fed. Election Comm'n v. NRA Pol.
    Victory Fund, 
    513 U.S. 88
    , 97 (1994).                  In RLEA, however, we made
    an express finding about standing, which we explained by citing
    generally to Hunt.          We can properly glean, at least, that Hunt
    explained why the membership organization in that case had standing
    to sue on behalf of non-members, a conclusion that only the
    "indicia of membership" test discussed in Hunt could support.
    Mindful of the substance-over-form underpinnings of the
    "indicia of membership" test, and in accordance with the universal
    practice of federal courts in similar circumstances, the "indicia
    of membership" test is clearly applicable to determine whether La
    Liga   has     standing      to    sue     on     behalf    of     the    non-member
    municipalities.
    As for the dissent's argument that La Liga never invoked
    the "indicia of membership" test, that complaint rings hollow.                     As
    we   have    detailed,    there     were    no    questions       about   La   Liga's
    organizational standing throughout this litigation until the panel
    - 30 -
    raised them briefly at oral argument. While we have an independent
    obligation to confirm our jurisdiction, we must, by the same token,
    test for ourselves the allegations in La Liga's complaint against
    well-settled standing principles.        See, e.g., Hartig Drug Co. v.
    Senju Pharm. Co., 
    836 F.3d 261
    , 267 (3d Cir. 2016) (explaining
    that while "[a] court's non-waivable obligation to inquire into
    its own jurisdiction is most frequently exercised in the negative,"
    courts "have no more right to decline the exercise of jurisdiction
    which is given, than to usurp that which is not," and thus it was
    appropriate to consider arguments favoring standing not presented
    by the appellant (quoting Quackenbush v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    517 U.S. 706
    , 716 (1996))).14        More importantly, contrary to the
    dissent's assertion that La Liga has waived standing arguments it
    never had an occasion to fully flesh out, we are taking no great
    leap from what La Liga has asserted all along: that it possesses
    organizational   standing   to     sue    on   behalf   of   non-member
    14Contrary to the dissent's description, in Hartig, the Third
    Circuit concluded that it had jurisdiction on a basis that the
    appellant had not argued. See 
    836 F.3d at 267
    . Indeed, whereas
    the court concluded that it had jurisdiction because the standing
    question at issue was not an Article III issue, the appellant had
    conceded that it was.     
    Id.
        Here, by contrast, La Liga has
    consistently argued that it has organizational standing. As we
    explain below, we agree that its complaint plausibly supports
    exactly that contention. Accordingly, Guaranty National Title Co.
    v. J.E.G. Associates, 
    101 F.3d 57
     (7th Cir. 1996), in which the
    court simply found that the plaintiff's complaint and supplemental
    filings were "shockingly" sparse on the relevant jurisdictional
    question, 
    id. at 58
    , does not counsel a different result.
    - 31 -
    municipalities represented by its member-mayors.                 We need only
    apply a seminal case on organizational standing to understand why
    that approach is sound.          See Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 343-45
    .          For these
    reasons, our analysis does not run afoul of the general principle
    that we should "rely on the parties to frame the issues for
    decision."   Greenlaw v. United States, 
    554 U.S. 237
    , 243 (2008).
    4. Applying the "Indicia of Membership" test
    Satisfied      that    the    "indicia   of    membership"    test   is
    appropriate to apply in the present case, we must now determine
    whether La Liga is "sufficiently identified with and subject to
    the influence of [the municipalities] it seeks to represent," Mink,
    322 F.3d at 1111, so as to provide "the means by which they express
    their collective views and protect their collective interests,"
    Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 345
    .
    To begin, we note that La Liga's allegations, quoted
    above in full, describe it to be such a spokesperson for the
    municipalities "headed by" its member-mayors.              It alleges that its
    purpose is to "unite local governments" and thereby "strengthen
    the[ir] capacity" to meet "governance challenges," including, as
    most   relevant   here,    by     "defend[ing]      the   decimated     municipal
    finances from the onslaught of austere measures imposed by the
    Oversight Board."      Moreover, its initiatives are "tempered to the
    needs and realities of municipal governments," suggesting that the
    municipalities influence the organization's activity, including
    - 32 -
    the present effort.          To be sure, its formal membership consists of
    the   mayors    of    those     municipalities,       not     the   municipalities
    themselves.     Our task, therefore, is to determine whether it is
    plausible that an association of mayors could be functioning as a
    representative of those mayors' municipalities.
    Starting with the "indicia of membership" discussed in
    Hunt, La Liga's purpose is plainly to advocate for the interests
    of the municipalities its member-mayors represent, making these
    municipalities the "primary [and sole] beneficiar[ies] of its
    activities,"     including       this     litigation.         
    432 U.S. at 344
    .
    Moreover, La Liga's membership is elected exclusively by these
    municipalities.         Indeed,      it    is    reasonably    clear    that    these
    municipalities are La Liga's only constituents, as it appears that
    only the currently elected mayors of Puerto Rico's municipalities
    may be members, and there is no suggestion that La Liga serves the
    interests of anyone other than the municipalities, not even those
    of its member-mayors.          While La Liga's complaint does not clarify
    the source of its funding, the absence of this one indicum is not
    outcome-determinative.           See, e.g., Flyers Rts. Educ. Fund, 957
    F.3d at 1362; Mink, 322 F.3d at 1111; Doe, 
    175 F.3d at 886
    .
    It is also evident from the "nature of the relationship
    between   [La        Liga]     and   the        relevant    interests      of   [the
    municipalities]," Friends of the Earth, 129 F.3d at 828, that La
    Liga "is sufficiently identified with and subject to the influence
    - 33 -
    of"   the    municipalities       such      that    the    municipalities    are      the
    "functional equivalent" of members, Mink, 322 F.3d at 1111-12.                         On
    this score, we find it highly relevant that La Liga's formal
    membership appears to consist solely of democratically-elected
    mayors      who    (we    can    reasonably         infer)   participate        in    the
    organization        in    that        capacity,      and     expressly     on        their
    municipalities' behalf.          Considering the institutional, political,
    and   legal        mechanisms         of   accountability       inherent        in    the
    relationship between a mayor and municipality, and aided by our
    "judicial experience and common sense," Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 679 (2009), we think that La Liga's complaint plausibly
    establishes that the municipalities have considerable influence
    over La Liga's member-mayors, and, thus, La Liga itself.
    We also note that finding the "indicia of membership"
    test satisfied here aligns with our holding in RLEA.                     See 
    808 F.2d at
    153 n.8.       While we do not know the RLEA court's exact reasoning,
    the   facts       known   to    the    panel   in     that   case -- in     which      an
    association of elected labor executives had standing to sue on
    behalf of the non-member union workers they represented -- are
    closely analogous to those known to the court in the present
    case -- in which an association of elected mayors seeks to sue on
    behalf of the municipalities they represent.                    RLEA thus provides
    - 34 -
    additional    support       for    La     Liga's     standing     under     comparable
    circumstances.15
    In   short,    La     Liga    has     adequately     alleged    that    the
    municipalities are "for all practical purposes" represented by La
    Liga as if they were themselves its members.                      Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 344
    .   After all, La Liga exists to represent the interests of these
    municipalities,       its        formal     members         are   elected     by     the
    municipalities,            and       the         municipalities -- its              sole
    constituents -- are well-positioned to direct and influence the
    organization.        "In    a     very    real     sense,    therefore,     [La    Liga]
    represents the [municipalities] and provides the means by which
    they express their collective views and protect their collective
    interests."       Hunt 
    432 U.S. at 345
    .
    The dissent's effort to distinguish the facts of RLEA is
    15
    unpersuasive. Indeed, the only authority referenced by the dissent
    to distinguish RLEA is briefing by the same association in a
    different case years later, which, of course, reveals nothing about
    our thinking in RLEA. See Brief of Movant-Intervenor RLEA at 1-
    6, Am. Train Dispatchers Ass'n v. I.C.C., 
    26 F.3d 1157
     (D.C. Cir.
    1994) (No. 92-1397), 
    1993 WL 13650707
    , at *1–6.            And the
    conclusions the dissent draws from that briefing are no more
    convincing. The dissent argues that the briefing shows that the
    organization's "board was at least controlled by [its members],"
    which is reason to think that the "injured parties there . . . were
    positioned to exercise control . . . over the members of the
    organization who themselves controlled its decisions."      But the
    cited briefing says nothing about the organization's board.
    Moreover, as explained, La Liga is plausibly subject to the control
    of the municipalities in much the same way as the dissent posits
    the organization in RLEA was subject to the control of the non-
    member union employees on whose behalf it sued.
    - 35 -
    The dissent raises several additional objections, all of
    which, at their root, take issue with our common sense conclusion
    that    La    Liga   is    plausibly   subject     to   the   influence   of   the
    municipalities sufficiently to satisfy the "indicia of membership"
    test.        In the dissent's view, La Liga's effort to sue on the
    municipalities'           behalf   "risks   undermining       the   ability    of
    governments at all levels of our democratic system to determine
    who will represent them in federal court."                     For the reasons
    described above, these concerns for the preservation of democratic
    control are simply not credible.16              Nor are they supported by any
    of the discrete arguments the dissent raises.
    In City of Chicago v. Sessions, 
    2017 WL 5499167
    , at *5
    16
    (N.D. Ill. Nov. 16, 2017), the district court rejected a similar
    argument that the United States Conference of Mayors lacked
    standing to sue on behalf of its member cities, noting that there
    is "no authority for the proposition that litigation must be
    specifically authorized by members" to establish standing.
    Moreover, we note that this case is just one of many cases in which
    federal courts have found that municipal associations have
    standing to sue on behalf of municipalities or have exercised
    jurisdiction over such cases. See Iowa League of Cities v. E.P.A.,
    
    711 F.3d 844
     (8th Cir. 2013); Tex. Coal. of Cities for Util. Issues
    v. F.C.C., 
    324 F.3d 802
     (5th Cir. 2003); City of Evanston v. Barr,
    
    412 F. Supp. 3d 873
     (N.D. Ill. 2019); cf. Nat'l League of Cities
    v. Usery, 
    426 U.S. 833
     (1976); City of Portland v. United States,
    
    969 F.3d 1020
     (9th Cir. 2020); N.C. Comm'n of Indian Affs. v. U.S.
    Dep't of Lab., 
    725 F.2d 238
     (4th Cir. 1984). While not all of
    these cases bear directly on La Liga's standing, they further show
    that La Liga's effort to litigate on behalf of municipalities -- as
    similar organizations have done many times previously -- is
    nothing out of the ordinary, nor, certainly, the threat to
    democratic control that the dissent suggests.
    - 36 -
    First, the dissent argues that the election of La Liga's
    member-mayors is not a compelling "indicum of membership" because
    "La Liga's members were elected to their mayoral offices.                       They
    were not elected to La Liga."                In a similar vein, the dissent
    argues that other factors considered in Hunt are absent here. This
    argument        fails   because   the    precise     "indicia    of    membership"
    discussed in Hunt need not be present exactly as they were in that
    case to find the test satisfied.                 In neither Mink, 322 F.3d at
    1111, nor Doe, 
    175 F.3d at 88
    , did the organization's non-member
    constituents fund the organization, exert exclusive control over
    the organization, nor solely select the organization's leaders.
    Nonetheless, these constituents had enough "indicia of membership"
    to confer standing          because they had         other adequate means to
    influence their respective organizations.                 The same is true here.
    Moreover, the municipalities do solely elect La Liga's membership.
    True, the municipalities do not elect their mayors specifically to
    be members of La Liga, but they do elect them to represent the
    municipalities and to work in the municipalities' best interests,
    which is the mayors' express purpose for joining the organization.
    The dissent next argues that           there is no basis to
    conclude that "La Liga's mayors have been entrusted to unilaterally
    make      the    fraught   decision     to   sue."        But,   as   the    dissent
    acknowledges, Puerto Rico law states that a core function of mayors
    is   to    "[r]epresent     the   municipality       in    juridical    or   extra-
    - 37 -
    juridical actions brought by or against the municipality, appear
    before     any   Court    of    Justice,       forum    or   public   agency     of   the
    Government of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the Government
    of the United States of America, and support all kinds of rights,
    actions and procedures."               
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 21, § 4109
    (e).17
    This statute provides strong support for the proposition that La
    Liga's member mayors are entrusted to carry out precisely the sort
    of   litigation     now    before      us.18      In    so   reasoning,    we    do   not
    "conclude," as the dissent accuses, that "mayors are the definitive
    decisionmakers      as     to    all    matters        of    consequence   for    their
    municipalities."          Indeed, to the contrary, our observation here
    17   The remainder of this subsection provides:
    The mayor may not acquiesce to, or fail to
    answer any suit in any procedure or action in
    which the municipality is a party, without the
    prior consent of the absolute majority of the
    members of the municipal legislature.      The
    mayor shall submit to the consideration of the
    municipal legislature any transaction offer
    that   entails    any    type   of   financial
    disbursement over twenty five thousand dollars
    ($25,000),    prior    to    submitting   said
    transaction offer to the consideration of the
    juridical forum.
    18The dissent asserts that this statute does not "obviously
    settle the question of mayoral authority to sue." This argument
    is simply a recycled version of the dissent's underlying theory
    for why La Liga lacks standing. As we explained at the outset, we
    do not need to "settle" whether and under what circumstances the
    mayors   have   authority   to  initiate   litigation   on   their
    municipalities' behalf because -- if the "indicia of membership"
    test is satisfied -- it is the standing of the municipalities, and
    not the mayors, that ultimately matters.
    - 38 -
    that Puerto Rico law expressly tasks mayors with representing
    municipalities in court is simply meant to demonstrate that La
    Liga's effort in this case is consistent with the duties of its
    democratically     accountable   member-mayors      and    thus     provides
    additional reason to think that La Liga is "sufficiently identified
    with and subject to the influence of [the municipalities] it seeks
    to represent."    Mink, 322 F.3d at 1111.
    Finally, the dissent complains that La Liga has not
    described "the role that any of its member-mayors plays in deciding
    the course of action that the organization itself may take."              The
    dissent's concern appears to rest on an unsupported notion that La
    Liga's member-mayors themselves lack the means to control the
    organization, and thus the municipalities' obvious influence over
    its mayors is not enough to conclude that the municipalities
    influence the organization by extension.         We see no basis in the
    record to draw the adverse inference against La Liga that its
    member-mayors are unable to control the organization.               For one
    thing, the mayors appear to be La Liga's only formal members, and
    we can reasonably infer from this fact that they direct the
    organization.       Moreover,    La    Liga's     allegation      that    the
    organization's    initiatives    are   "tempered    to     the    needs   and
    realities    of   municipal   governments"      supports    the    plausible
    inference that the member-mayors -- those positioned to represent
    their   municipalities'       needs    and      realities -- shape        the
    - 39 -
    organization's agenda.          Simply put, there is no suggestion that
    anyone     other    than     La        Liga's       member-mayors,        acting      as
    representatives of their municipalities, direct the organization's
    activity    (subject,      in      turn,       to     the    direction        of   their
    municipalities).
    The dissent's demand that La Liga allege all of its inner
    workings is thus irreconcilable with the pleading standard.                          See
    Tyler, 598 U.S. at 637 (reminding that a plaintiff "need not
    definitively     prove"    standing       at    the    pleading       stage).19      Our
    reasonable inference, explained above, that the municipalities
    have considerable means to influence La Liga's member-mayors, and,
    thus, La Liga itself, is sufficient to satisfy the requirements of
    organizational standing on a motion to dismiss, without knowing
    all the ins and outs of La Liga's organizational structure.                         See
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561 ("At the pleading stage, general factual
    allegations" supporting standing "may suffice, for on a motion to
    dismiss    we   'presum[e]      that    general       allegations      embrace     those
    specific    facts   that     are    necessary         to    support     the    claim.'"
    (alteration in original) (quoting Lujan v. Nat'l Wildlife Fed'n,
    19 The dissent's citation to McBreairty v. Miller, 
    93 F.4th 513
    , 517-21 (1st Cir. 2024), does not support the contrary
    proposition.    In that case, which involved the denial of a
    preliminary injunction and thus had the benefit of an evidentiary
    hearing to illuminate the standing inquiry, see id. at 516, 518
    n.2, we simply held that the plaintiff had not alleged or adduced
    sufficient facts from which to infer standing. Here, however, La
    Liga has done so.
    - 40 -
    
    497 U.S. 871
    , 889 (1990))); see also Inst. of Cetacean Rsch. v.
    Sea Shepherd Conservation Soc'y, 
    153 F. Supp. 3d 1291
    , 1313 (W.D.
    Wash. 2015) (denying motion to dismiss where the organization made
    only "minimal allegations about its financial contributions or
    managerial structure" but had "plead[ed] sufficient facts to allow
    the    court       to   reasonably     infer    that    'the   organization   is
    sufficiently identified with and subject to the influence of those
    it seeks to represent'" (quoting Mink, 322 F.3d at 1111)); U.S.
    Student Ass'n Found. v. Land, No. 08-14019, 
    2010 WL 1131493
    , at *6
    (E.D. Mich. Mar. 23, 2010) (similar); cf. Bldg. & Const. Trades
    Council of Buffalo, N.Y. & Vicinity v. Downtown Dev., Inc., 
    448 F.3d 138
    ,   144-45   (2d      Cir.   2006)      (denying   challenge   to
    organizational standing that "might have some validity if this
    litigation were at the summary judgment stage," where "[d]iscovery
    on this issue would therefore be substantially complete, and the
    evidentiary adequacy of the [plaintiff's] standing allegations
    could be tested").20
    As we explain, infra, we affirm the district court's
    20
    dismissal of the complaint on the merits. But the fact that this
    case will not proceed to a more mature stage of litigation is no
    reason to depart from the pleading standard governing La Liga's
    standing allegations. See, e.g., Clementine Co., LLC v. Adams, 
    74 F.4th 77
    , 83-84 & 83 n.1 (2d Cir. 2023) (reversing district court's
    dismissal of complaint for lack of standing for failure to apply
    the proper pleading standard but ordering dismissal on the merits).
    - 41 -
    *   *   *
    In sum, we hold that the injured municipalities have
    sufficient "indicia of membership" in La Liga to satisfy the
    requirements of organizational standing.
    C. Causation and Redressability
    Having determined that La Liga has alleged a sufficient
    injury and possesses organizational standing to sue regarding that
    injury, we turn now to the remaining two elements of standing:
    causation   and    redressability.        To   establish    causation,   "the
    plaintiff [must] show a sufficiently direct causal connection
    between the challenged action and the identified harm."            Katz, 
    672 F.3d at 71
    .       That connection may not be "overly attenuated,"
    however, 
    id. at 71
     (quoting Donahue v. City of Bos., 
    304 F.3d 110
    ,
    115 (1st Cir. 2002)), nor may it stand on "conclusory assertions
    []or unfounded speculation," Hochendoner v. Genzyme Corp., 
    823 F.3d 724
    , 731 (1st Cir. 2016).
    To    satisfy   the   redressability       requirement,      "the
    plaintiff [must] allege 'that a favorable resolution of [its] claim
    would likely redress the professed injury.'"               Dantzler, Inc. v.
    Empresas Berríos Inventory & Operations, Inc., 
    958 F.3d 38
    , 47
    (1st Cir. 2020) (second alteration in original) (quoting Katz, 
    672 F.3d at 72
    ).      Though redress need not be certain, "it cannot be
    merely speculative."        
    Id.
       Likewise, the plaintiff "need not
    demonstrate that its entire injury will be redressed by a favorable
    - 42 -
    judgment, [but] it must show that the court can fashion a remedy
    that will at least lessen its injury."                 Id. at 49.
    Because     La   Liga    must      show    that   both    elements      are
    satisfied as to each defendant, we will analyze causation and
    redressability separately for all three sets of defendants.
    1. Standing as to the Executive Branch Defendants
    The   district      court     concluded      that    La    Liga     lacked
    standing to sue the executive branch defendants, citing both lack
    of causation and redressability.             We agree.
    La Liga has not shown that its injury is fairly traceable
    to the executive branch defendants.               As La Liga frames the issue,
    the executive branch defendants benefitted from the disputed funds
    only   after   they    "caved-in     to     the   pressure      of    the    Oversight
    Board['s]" "demand[s]."          Nonetheless, La Liga insists that the
    executive   branch     defendants       bear    some    responsibility        for   the
    municipalities'       losses,   as   nothing       "force[s]     [them]       . . . to
    comply with the illegality" of the Board's efforts.                         Rather, La
    Liga contends, these defendants have a "duty to act according to
    the law" and also have "fiduciary duties" to the municipalities.
    These vague assertions in La Liga's appellate briefing do not
    overcome the fact that it has not plausibly pled how the executive
    branch defendants breached any such duties in this case, nor even
    that they possess fiduciary duties to the municipalities.                           See
    A.G. ex rel. Maddox v. Elsevier, Inc., 
    732 F.3d 77
    , 83 (1st Cir.
    - 43 -
    2013)   (explaining   that   causation     is   lacking   when        based   on
    "conclusory     statement[s] . . . wholly       unsupported      by     factual
    allegations sufficient to make the plaintiff's claim plausible").
    Moreover, as the district court pointed out, La Liga
    does not explain how the executive branch defendants have "legal
    authority to direct the application of funds in a manner contrary
    to the governing budgets and fiscal plans approved by the Oversight
    Board."   [Add. 007] La Liga has not adequately alleged that "in
    fact, the asserted injury was the consequence of the defendants'
    actions" or omissions, Warth v. Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 505 (1975),
    when it fails to show that the executive branch defendants had any
    authority to directly refuse or return the funds diverted to them.
    For similar reasons, La Liga has not established that a
    judgment against the executive branch defendants would likely
    redress the municipalities' injury.        As our causation discussion
    illuminates, La Liga has not provided any basis in its complaint
    from which to conclude that these defendants have the authority to
    directly return the disputed funds to the municipalities.               La Liga
    has thus not satisfied the redressability requirement.
    In   reaching   this   conclusion,     we    reject    La     Liga's
    contention that it has standing with respect to the executive
    branch defendants because they are indispensable parties under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19(a)(1).              Whether a party is
    indispensable to an action has no bearing on whether the court has
    - 44 -
    subject matter jurisdiction over that party. Indeed, where a court
    lacks subject matter jurisdiction over a party, that party may not
    be joined.    See, e.g., Picciotto v. Cont'l Cas. Co., 
    512 F.3d 9
    ,
    22, 22 n.19 (1st Cir. 2008) (stating that joinder that "destroy[s]
    diversity"     will   "eliminat[e]      any    basis   for    original
    jurisdiction"). Thus, putting the executive branch defendants'
    purported indispensability aside, whether they are indispensable
    is irrelevant to whether La Liga has standing to sue them.
    We thus affirm the district court's order dismissing the
    complaint as to the executive branch defendants for lack of
    standing.
    2. Standing as to CRIM
    CRIM did not challenge La Liga's standing in its motion
    to dismiss but appears to do so now.21        CRIM's failure to timely
    raise its standing arguments is of no consequence, however, because
    we must confirm our jurisdiction.    See Ryan, 974 F.3d at 17 n.4.
    La Liga's complaint asserts that CRIM directly caused
    the municipalities' injury, alleging that "CRIM illegally withheld
    all disbursements to which the Municipalities were entitled and
    21 In its appellate brief, CRIM incorrectly claims that the
    district court dismissed La Liga's complaint against it for lack
    of standing.   The district court's standing analysis addressed
    only the "government parties," by which it meant AAFAF, ASES, and
    the ERS administrator. CRIM's briefing largely regurgitates the
    district court's standing analysis for those parties, suggesting
    that the analysis also applies to CRIM.
    - 45 -
    diverted the monies to the Retirement System and to ASES."                  To be
    sure,    the    complaint   also   blames    that   action    on    the   Board's
    "unilateral decision" and the Board's pressuring CRIM to comply.
    Nonetheless, CRIM's role in shepherding the disputed funding away
    from    the    municipalities -- even       begrudgingly     --    is   enough   to
    establish CRIM's place in the "chain of causation" resulting in
    the municipalities' injury.          Weaver's Cove Energy, LLC v. R.I.
    Coastal Res. Mgmt. Council, 
    589 F.3d 458
    , 467 (1st Cir. 2009)
    (quoting Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
    , 169 (1997)).
    Relief against CRIM could also conceivably redress the
    municipalities' injury. Just as CRIM diverted the disputed funding
    in the first place, La Liga has asked the "court [to] fashion a
    remedy that will at least lessen [that] injury" by ordering CRIM
    to cease that activity and redirect future funds to make up for
    the revenue wrongfully withheld.        Dantzler, 958 F.3d at 49.
    Accordingly, the complaint against CRIM survives as a
    matter of standing.
    3. Standing as to the Board
    Lastly, we consider La Liga's standing to sue the Board.
    La Liga has alleged that the Board caused the municipalities'
    alleged injury by orchestrating the repayment of the disputed
    funds.    In addition, a court could likely redress that injury by
    declaring the Board's interpretation of the O&O incorrect and
    - 46 -
    enjoining its actions.      The three elements of standing are thus
    easily satisfied.
    III.
    Having confirmed La Liga's standing to sue the Board and
    CRIM, we proceed to their assertion that the O&O did not void Law
    29 ab initio and thus did not apply to the challenged period.            La
    Liga presses two lines of attack against the Board's efforts to
    recover   the   funds   retained   by   the   municipalities   during   the
    challenged period: (1) that the O&O was not intended to nullify
    Law 29 from the time of its enactment and (2) even if the Title
    III court did intend as much, it lacked that authority and, hence,
    its order should not be construed to do so.
    A. The Intended Effect of the Order and Opinion
    The court whose judgment is now on appeal is the same
    court that authored the O&O.       A court asked to construe the scope
    and meaning of its own order is no doubt a persuasive authority.
    See, e.g., Lampkin v. UAW, 
    154 F.3d 1136
    , 1147 (10th Cir. 1998)
    (rejecting appellants' argument contesting the district court's
    interpretation of its pre-trial order because "[t]he district
    judge's interpretation of his own order is, of course, the most
    authoritative").    Here, the district court stated that La Liga had
    "misread[] the O&O, in a manner fatal to the Complaint," that
    "[t]he intended effect of the O&O could not be clearer," and that
    La Liga's arguments to the contrary were "unfounded and illogical."
    - 47 -
    The district court's emphatic rejection of La Liga's reading of
    the order is telling.
    Moreover, the district court's interpretation of the O&O
    is supported by the order's text.           The O&O repeatedly refers to
    Law 29 as a "nullity."       See Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 247-48,
    256 n.11.      That word choice indicates that the Title III court
    determined that Law 29 was legally invalid and never operative.
    See,   e.g.,   Nullity,    Black's    Law   Dictionary     (11th   ed.   2019)
    ("Something that is legally void.").          The court reinforced that
    notion by repeatedly stating that Law 29 was "of no effect."               See
    Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 250, 251, 254, 256.            On this score, we
    find instructive "the general rule . . . 'that a void act cannot
    operate to repeal a valid existing statute,' meaning that the
    existing statute 'remains in full force and operation as if the
    repeal had never been attempted.'"          LaRoque v. Holder, 
    650 F.3d 777
    , 791 (D.C. Cir. 2011) (quoting Conlon v. Adamski, 
    77 F.2d 397
    ,
    399 (D.C. Cir. 1935)). In such circumstances, "[t]he prior statute
    is 'revived' to avoid a chaotic hiatus in the law."                Aroostook
    Band of Micmacs v. Ryan, 
    484 F.3d 41
    , 62 n.27 (1st Cir. 2007)
    (quoting White Motor Corp. v. Citibank, N.A., 
    704 F.2d 254
    , 261
    (6th Cir. 1983)).       By declaring Law 29 a "nullity" and "of no
    effect,"    the   O&O   necessarily   meant   that   the    municipalities'
    preexisting pension and healthcare funding obligations "remain[ed]
    - 48 -
    in full force and operation," including during the challenged
    period.       Conlon, 
    77 F.2d at 399
    .22
    An    additional     textual     clue    comes     from    the    O&O's
    discussion of several Joint Resolutions enacted in 2018, which the
    Board had also challenged as unauthorized reprogramming.                              See
    Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 248-50.                  The defendants argued that
    this challenge was moot because the Joint Resolutions were one-
    off spending bills that had already been implemented.                      The Title
    III    court,       however,   concluded      that   PROMESA's      prohibition       on
    unauthorized reprogramming "incorporates no temporal limitations;
    it prohibits both the adoption and the carrying out of unapproved
    reprogramming legislation."              Id. at 249 (emphasis added).           Finding
    both    Law     29    and   the    Joint    Resolutions      to   be     unauthorized
    reprogramming, the court declared them both "unenforceable and of
    no effect."           Id. at 250.          This declaration as to the Joint
    Resolutions could only have been backward-looking.                      Likewise, the
    O&O invalidated the adoption of Law 29, not merely its ongoing
    enforcement.
    Indeed,      even   the     defendants   in    the      prior    Law   29
    litigation made clear that they understood the O&O to wipe out Law
    As previously noted, those preexisting obligations required
    22
    the municipalities to complete a monthly "PayGo" fee to reimburse
    the Commonwealth for pension disbursements to retired municipal
    employees under Act 106, as well as to contribute to their
    employees' health insurance plans as required by Puerto Rico law.
    - 49 -
    29 from inception.       They stated in a motion following the O&O that
    they     were   negotiating       with   the    Board     "regarding    feasible
    alternatives      to     unwind    the   effects     of    Act    29"    and   to
    "cover . . . the shortfall created by Act 29's invalidation."                  See
    Defs.'s Informative Mot. Re. Act 29 at 2, In Re Fin. Oversight &
    Mgmt. Bd. for P.R., Title III Case No. 17-BK-3283, Adv. Proc. No.
    19-393-LTS (D.P.R. May 6, 2020), ECF No. 109.                If the meaning of
    the O&O was clear to the parties immediately upon its issuance, we
    see no reason to credit La Liga's contrary interpretation now.
    La Liga offers several arguments in support of its
    alternative reading, but none is persuasive. First, La Liga points
    out that the Title III court never expressly stated that Law 29
    was void ab initio.        But, as we have detailed, the language used
    in the O&O -- referring to the law's invalidity -- made clear that
    it covered the challenged period.              The court did not have to use
    La Liga's preferred magic words.          Cf. Brown v. Davenport, 
    596 U.S. 118
    , 141 (2022) ("[T]his Court has long stressed that 'the language
    of an opinion is not always to be parsed as though we were dealing
    with [the] language of a statute.'" (alteration in original)
    (quoting Reiter v. Sonotone Corp., 
    442 U.S. 330
    , 341 (1979))).
    La Liga also invokes Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    65(d),    which   sets    forth    specific     requirements     for   injunction
    orders, as further support for its argument that the O&O failed to
    clearly void Law 29 ab initio.             But that rule applies only to
    - 50 -
    injunctions and restraining orders, not to declaratory relief.
    Although the O&O provided injunctive relief, it invalidated Law 29
    by   means   of    a    declaration.        La    Liga's   reliance   on    Gunn   v.
    University Committee to End War in Viet Nam, 
    399 U.S. 383
     (1970),
    is thus unavailing.          See id. at 388-89 (noting the requirements
    for specificity for "any order granting an injunction").
    La Liga next argues that the Title III court's entry of
    injunctive relief is inconsistent with construing the O&O to
    nullify Law 29 retroactively for the challenged period.                       To be
    sure,    "[o]rdinarily,            grants    of     equitable      relief     apply
    prospectively rather than retroactively. That is why, for example,
    plaintiffs must show a need for prospective relief in order to
    obtain an injunction."            Khalil v. Ashcroft, 
    370 F.3d 176
    , 179 (1st
    Cir. 2004).       But La Liga's argument largely elides the declaratory
    relief in the O&O, which declared that Law 29 was a "nullity" and
    "of no effect."         See, e.g., Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 256 ("Law
    29 and the Joint Resolutions are hereby declared unenforceable and
    of no effect. Defendants are, furthermore, permanently enjoined
    from implementing and enforcing Law 29.").
    Putting "[f]uture relief aside," we have acknowledged
    the "current utility" of "a declaration as to the lawfulness
    of . . . particular         acts      described     in     [the]   complaint"      to
    determine    the       parties'    rights   and    obligations     going    forward.
    Verizon New England, Inc. v. Int'l Bhd. of Elec. Workers, Local
    - 51 -
    No.   2322,    
    651 F.3d 176
    ,   189-90    (1st    Cir.   2011);    see   also
    Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 33 cmt. a (Am. L. Inst. 1982)
    ("[W]hile the declaratory action is perhaps most important as a
    kind of preventive device, its use is not so restricted; it is
    also sometimes permitted after the wrong has been committed.").
    The O&O declared Law 29 invalid from its inception, meaning the
    Commonwealth     lacked     a   legal   basis   to   divert   funds    to   the
    municipalities during the challenged period.23
    Finally, La Liga insists that the Title III court could
    only have intended to nullify Law 29 prospectively because it
    23Given our recognition that declarations may address the
    lawfulness of past actions, La Liga's invocation of out-of-circuit
    cases noting the generally prospective nature of declaratory
    relief do not advance its argument to the contrary. See McGee v.
    Solic. Gen. of Richmond Cnty., 
    727 F.3d 1322
    , 1325 (11th Cir.
    2013); CMR D.N. Corp. v. City of Philadelphia, 
    703 F.3d 612
    , 628
    (3d Cir. 2013); AmSouth Bank v. Dale, 
    386 F.3d 763
    , 786 (6th Cir.
    2004).   For instance, the observation in CMR D.N. Corp. that
    "declar[ing] the rights of litigants" is "by definition
    prospective in nature" does not conflict with the notion that those
    rights can be informed by a statute's prior validity (or lack
    thereof). 
    703 F.3d at 628
     (quoting Wilton v. Seven Falls Co., 
    515 U.S. 277
    , 286 (1995)).
    The other cases La Liga cites are even less apt.           The
    statement in Nextel Partners Inc. v. Kingston Township, 
    286 F.3d 687
    , 693 (3d Cir. 2002), that "a request for a declaratory judgment
    that a statutory provision is invalid is moot if the provision has
    been substantially amended or repealed" is irrelevant since Law 29
    had not been repealed or modified. Indeed, that statement only
    confirms that a declaration of a statute's invalidity is sometimes
    available. And Steffel v. 
    Thompson, 415
     U.S. 452 (1974), which
    generally describes the purpose of the Declaratory Judgment Act,
    does not suggest that declaratory relief may have only prospective
    impact. See id. at 466-67.
    - 52 -
    stayed the effect of its order.    La Liga argues that, if Law 29
    was a nullity from its inception, such a stay would have been
    impossible.   But the Title III court's postponement of the O&O's
    effective date says nothing about the validity of Law 29 during
    the challenged period.      The court allowed that delay at the
    defendants' request.   See Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 257.   At the
    summary judgment hearing, the defendants explained that it would
    take time for "the municipalities, the Oversight Board, and the
    government [to] work together to try to come up with another
    solution" because the nullification of Law 29 would "immediately
    [impose] a huge gap in [the municipalities'] budgets that they
    won't be able to bridge."   Transcript of Omnibus Hearing at 36:11-
    19, In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R., Title III Case No.
    17-BK-3283, Adv. Proc. No. 19-393-LTS (D.P.R. Mar. 10, 2020), ECF
    No. 105.   The Board consented to the delay, emphasizing that "what
    we're ultimately asking for is the law to be nullified so that the
    past infractions can be corrected."     Id. at 39:20-23.   Thus, the
    court granted the delay specifically because of the perceived
    fiscal impact on the municipalities of voiding Law 29 ab initio.
    B. The Title III Court's Authority to Nullify Law 29
    La Liga also argues that, regardless of the Title III
    court's intent, the court lacked the power to nullify Law 29 from
    - 53 -
    inception, and thus its order should not be construed to do so.24
    La Liga argues that PROMESA does not authorize the Title III court
    to void a duly enacted law ab initio.             La Liga also appears to
    argue     that   federal   courts,    as   a   general   matter,    lack    such
    authority.       Accordingly, the only permissible reading of the O&O
    is that it does not nullify Law 29 for the challenged period.
    1. The Title III Court's Authority Under PROMESA
    PROMESA   expresses     one   limitation    on   the   Title   III
    court's powers that is potentially relevant to its authority to
    invalidate a Puerto Rico law from its inception.              Section 305 of
    the Act states:
    Subject to the limitations set forth in
    subchapters I and II of this chapter,
    notwithstanding any power of the court, unless
    the Oversight Board consents or the plan so
    provides, the court may not, by any stay,
    order, or decree, in the case or otherwise,
    24 As we understand La Liga's argument about the Title III
    court's authority, it is focused on how to interpret the O&O and
    is not a challenge to the validity of the order. In other words,
    La Liga accepts for the purposes of this appeal that the O&O
    correctly declared Law 29 invalid but argues that, if the Title
    III court lacks the authority to void a law ab initio, the O&O
    should not be interpreted to have done so.     We thus reject the
    Board's characterization of La Liga's challenge as an improper
    collateral attack on the O&O. Moreover, the Board did not raise
    this argument below. See United States v. Parrilla Bonilla, 
    648 F.2d 1373
    , 1386 (1st Cir. 1981) ("[A]ppellate courts will not
    ordinarily consider theories presented for the first time on
    appeal."). For similar reasons, we decline to consider the Board's
    alternative argument -- likewise raised first on appeal -- that La
    Liga is collaterally estopped from making these arguments.
    - 54 -
    interfere with— (1) any of the political or
    governmental powers of the debtor . . . .
    
    48 U.S.C. § 2165
    .      Hence, when the Board asks the Title III court
    for relief -- necessarily consenting to that action -- PROMESA
    does not limit the Title III court's authority to grant the
    request, so long as it accords with Title I and Title II of the
    Act, which lay out the Board's organization and responsibilities.
    La Liga has not pointed to any limitation expressed within Title
    I or Title II of PROMESA preventing the Board from asking the Title
    III court to void a Puerto Rico law ab initio, nor have we
    identified any.       To the contrary, multiple provisions of the Act
    underscore the Board's ability to make that request, and the Title
    III court's authority to grant it.
    PROMESA    grants    the    Board     far-ranging     "authority    to
    object to, and block the implementation of, local laws that are
    inconsistent with efforts to return the Commonwealth to fiscal
    solvency."      Pierluisi,      37   F.4th   at    750;   see    also   
    48 U.S.C. § 2124
    (h) ("[T]he Oversight Board shall ensure the purposes of
    this [Act] are met.").       PROMESA authorizes the Board to vindicate
    that broad mandate in court by "seek[ing] judicial enforcement of
    its authority to carry out its responsibilities under [the Act]."
    
    Id.
       §   2124(k).     The   Board     points     to   several   wellsprings    of
    authority within PROMESA that justify invalidating Law 29 from the
    time of enactment.
    - 55 -
    First, there is the "multi-step, back-and-forth process
    by which the Oversight Board reviews Commonwealth legislation for
    consistency with the statute's goals."              Pierluisi, 37 F.4th at
    751.        As relevant here, section 204(a) of PROMESA requires the
    governor to certify any new law's compliance with the Fiscal Plan
    and authorizes the Board to reject that certification and "direct
    the Governor to provide the missing estimate or certification."
    
    48 U.S.C. § 2144
    (a)(4)(A).            The governor's failure to comply
    authorizes      the   Board   to   "take   such   actions   as   it   considers
    necessary, consistent with this [Act], to ensure that the enactment
    or enforcement of the law will not adversely affect the territorial
    government's compliance with the Fiscal Plan, including preventing
    the enforcement or application of the law."                 
    Id.
     § 2144(a)(5)
    (emphasis added).
    Section 204(a)'s certification procedure begins after
    Puerto Rico has "duly enact[ed]" a law -- the deadline for the
    governor's certification is seven business days later.25                    Id.
    La Liga seizes upon PROMESA's reference to "duly enact[ed]"
    25
    statutes because in the opinion now on appeal, the district court
    stated that Law 29 "was not duly enacted" to explain the O&O's
    conclusion that Law 29 was invalid.       PROMESA's certification
    requirement only applies once a statute has been "duly enact[ed],"
    and thus Law 29 was necessarily "duly enacted" within the meaning
    of PROMESA. La Liga argues, therefore, that the district court's
    remark betrays its misunderstanding of the statutory scheme, which
    does not, in La Liga's telling, allow the Title III court to
    invalidate a Puerto Rico law based on a finding that it was not
    duly enacted.   La Liga's objection misses the district court's
    point. Law 29 was "duly enacted" as the term is used in section
    - 56 -
    § 2144(a)(1).        By   authorizing     the    Board    to   "prevent[]"   the
    "application" of that law, section 204(a)(5) plainly empowers the
    Board to oversee Puerto Rico's legislative enactments and ensure
    their compliance with the Fiscal Plan from the moment of their
    enactment.      If   it   were   otherwise,      Puerto    Rico   could    simply
    circumvent    PROMESA     by   enacting   laws    with    only    brief   effect,
    regardless of their consistency with the Act or the Fiscal Plan.26
    PROMESA also expressly authorizes the Board to seek judicial
    enforcement of its power to prevent the application of Puerto Rico
    laws.     See 
    48 U.S.C. § 2124
    (k).
    204(a), having undergone the necessary steps to enact legislation
    under Puerto Rico's constitution. However, in saying that Law 29
    was not "duly enacted," the district court was simply referring to
    the incomplete certification process required by PROMESA. Having
    failed to meet that requirement, Law 29 was invalid.
    Nor does La Liga's argument gain any traction from its
    citation to Financial Oversight & Management Board for Puerto Rico
    v. Pierluisi (In re Financial Oversight & Management Board for
    Puerto Rico), 
    634 B.R. 187
    , 194 (D.P.R. 2021). Although the court
    there noted that Puerto Rico retains legislative power under
    PROMESA, it recognized that "PROMESA gives the Oversight Board
    authority to seek judicial relief thwarting actions that the
    Oversight Board has determined frustrate or impair the purposes of
    PROMESA, and provides that the statute preempts inconsistent local
    laws and regulations." 
    Id.
     at 194 n.7.
    26 We find it relevant, moreover, that Puerto Rico has
    occasionally delayed or ignored its certification obligation.
    See, e.g., Pierluisi, 37 F.4th at 753-54 (noting delays of one and
    three months). If the Title III court could not declare laws null
    from the time of their enactment, such delay tactics might be
    rewarded by helping Puerto Rico further extend the shelf life of
    patently improper laws.
    - 57 -
    Second, the Board finds additional textual support for
    the     Title    III     court's       authority      to        nullify     Law     29    in
    section 108(a)(2) of PROMESA.                That section prohibits Puerto Rico
    from      "enact[ing],          implement[ing],            or      enforc[ing]           any
    statute . . . that would impair or defeat the purposes of this
    [Act],    as    determined       by    the    Oversight         Board."        
    48 U.S.C. § 2128
    (a)(2).           The    section    affords     the       Board     discretion     to
    determine that a Commonwealth statute "impair[s] or defeat[s]" the
    purposes of PROMESA, "trigger[ing] a statutory prohibition on
    action by the Government to go forward with the targeted statute."
    Pierluisi, 37 F.4th at 758 n.9 (quoting Vázquez Garced v. Fin.
    Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. (In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd.
    for P.R.), 
    511 F. Supp. 3d 90
    , 134 (D.P.R. 2020)).                            Having made
    that determination, section 104(k) empowers the Board to ask the
    Title    III    court    to    declare    that     such     a    law    was    improperly
    "enact[ed]," making it a nullity.                
    48 U.S.C. § 2128
    (a)(2).
    Third, the Board points out that the Title III court
    also relied upon section 204(c) to find Law 29 a "nullity" and "of
    no effect."      See Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 249-50.                   That section
    prohibits       Puerto        Rico's     government        from     "adopt[ing]"          or
    "carry[ing] out any reprogramming [of budgeted funds], until the
    Oversight Board has provided the Legislature with an analysis that
    certifies such reprogramming will not be inconsistent with the
    Fiscal Plan and Budget."               
    48 U.S.C. § 2144
    (c)(2).                Again, the
    - 58 -
    statute's language makes it clear that the Commonwealth cannot
    simply ignore PROMESA and expect its actions to have lasting legal
    effect that the Title III court is powerless to invalidate.                    Under
    section 204(c), the Board's approval is a prerequisite to any
    reprogramming of budgeted funds.           Necessarily, the remedy for an
    unauthorized     reprogramming     would,     in    certain      cases,   be     its
    nullification ab initio.      Otherwise, the Title III court could not
    remedy   the      Commonwealth's        adoption      of      an     unauthorized
    reprogramming,     leading   to    an    instant,    on-off        expenditure    of
    unbudgeted funds.
    We find persuasive these multiple sources of statutory
    authority      confirming    the    Board's        power    to      prevent    laws
    inconsistent with PROMESA from taking effect, as well as the Title
    III court's concomitant authority to enforce the Board's mandates
    by nullifying such a law from its inception.               Unable to locate any
    support in PROMESA for its competing assertion that the Title III
    court could not declare Law 29 a nullity, La Liga claims that we
    implied as much in Pierluisi.           La Liga misreads our decision.            We
    simply noted there that the Title III court had "dismissed all
    claims   for     'nullification'        because     the    Board      'ha[d]     not
    demonstrated that such drastic relief [was] warranted under the
    particular circumstances.'"         37 F.4th at 758 n.9 (alteration in
    original) (quoting Vázquez Garced, 511 F. Supp. 3d at 128, 131,
    133, 138).     Nothing in that statement, or in the district court's
    - 59 -
    underlying       opinion,       suggests    that     nullification       is    never
    available.       To the contrary, we recently affirmed the Title III
    court's "nullif[ication]" of another Puerto Rico law "and any
    actions taken to implement it."             Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for
    P.R. v. Pierluisi-Urrutia (In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for
    P.R.), 
    77 F.4th 49
    , 59 (1st Cir. 2023), aff'g 
    650 B.R. 334
     (D.P.R.
    2023).
    Lastly, La Liga insists that if the Board wanted to block
    enforcement of the statute from the time of its enactment, it
    should    have    sought    a    preliminary       injunction   or   a   temporary
    restraining order.         While this step may have been wise litigation
    strategy, the Board's failure to seek such relief sheds no light
    on what PROMESA empowers the Board or the Title III court to do.
    Indeed,    without     speculating         about     whether    a    request    for
    preliminary relief would have been granted,27 if the Title III
    court had denied temporary relief, that denial would not "preclude
    an examination of whether [the Board] should nonetheless be granted
    a declaratory judgment" of Law 29's invalidity with the benefit of
    full briefing on the ultimate merits of the law.                      Verizon New
    England, 
    651 F.3d at 189
     (first citing Powell v. McCormack, 395
    27The Board suggests that it may have been unable to obtain
    temporary relief because its harms would be purely financial, and
    thus not irreparable. See, e.g., CMM Cable Rep., Inc. v. Ocean
    Coast Props., Inc., 
    48 F.3d 618
    , 622 (1st Cir. 1995) (explaining
    that economic harm, "without more, rarely constitutes an adequate
    basis for injunctive relief").
    - 60 -
    U.S. 486, 499 (1969); and then citing Zwickler v. Koota, 
    389 U.S. 241
    , 254 (1967)).       Rather, "declaratory relief is alternative or
    cumulative" to interim relief. 28         
    Id.
    We thus conclude that PROMESA authorized the Title III
    court to invalidate Law 29 from the time of its enactment, and
    thus the O&O can be read to do so.
    2. The Title III           Court's     Fundamental     Authority    to
    Declare Law 29 a Nullity
    La Liga's final argument relies on a novel and somewhat
    perplexing theory of judicial power.             La Liga insists that the
    Title III court "lacked any authority to preclude Law 29 from
    coming into effect" but "could only enjoin its enforcement," and
    thus    the   O&O   cannot   be   read   to   invalidate   Law   29   from   its
    inception.29 We disagree.         A federal court's authority to declare
    We recognize the potential unfairness to the municipalities
    28
    of the Board's failure to attempt to block Law 29's application
    from the outset, which would have prevented the municipalities
    from accruing a large debt to the Commonwealth in reliance on Law
    29. However, La Liga has made no such equitable argument, either
    before the district court or on appeal.      Moreover, we find it
    relevant to note that the Board warned Puerto Rico's government,
    before Law 29's enactment, that the law was likely invalid. See
    Vázquez Garced, 616 B.R. at 242, and thus the municipalities were
    on notice of the risk that the law would be voided and the
    municipalities obligated to repay the funds wrongfully withheld.
    Virtually the sole authority upon which La Liga relies to
    29
    support this assertion is a law review article. See Jonathan F.
    Mitchell, The Writ-of-Erasure Fallacy, 
    104 Va. L. Rev. 933
    , 987
    (2018) ("[N]either the courts nor the executive has the power to
    prevent a duly enacted statute from taking effect.    All that a
    court can do is decline to enforce the statute and enjoin the
    executive from enforcing it.").      The basis for Mitchell's
    contention is his observation that "[t]he federal courts have no
    - 61 -
    a law void ab initio is well settled.        See, e.g., Mass. Ass'n of
    Health Maint. Orgs. v. Ruthardt, 
    194 F.3d 176
    , 178 (1st Cir. 1999)
    ("By virtue of [the Supremacy Clause], state law that conflicts
    with federal law is a nullity."); Antilles Cement Corp. v. Fortuño,
    
    670 F.3d 310
    , 323 (1st Cir. 2012) ("Consequently, state laws that
    'interfere with, or are contrary to the laws of Congress' are void
    ab initio." (quoting Gibbons v. Ogden, 
    22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 1
    , 211
    (1824))).
    Indeed,    as   mentioned   already,   we   have   affirmed   a
    declaration by the Title III court "nullifying" a Puerto Rico law
    "and any actions taken to implement it."           Pierluisi-Urrutia, 77
    F.4th at 59, 66.      That order, much like the O&O under consideration
    authority to erase a duly enacted law from the statute books, and
    they have no power to veto or suspend a statute." Id. at 936.
    Thus, while in popular parlance a court "strikes down" an invalid
    law, "the statute continues to exist . . . and it remains a law
    until it is repealed by the legislature that enacted it." Id. A
    "future court" remains free to "reviv[e] and enforc[e] the formerly
    disapproved statute." Id. at 942.
    Without opining on the ideas the author expresses, it is clear
    to us that the article does not lend La Liga any support. Indeed,
    the article agrees that "retroactivity is ubiquitous in the law,"
    that this is "especially true of judicial decisionmaking," and
    that judicial decisions often have "retroactive effect beyond the
    parties to the lawsuit." Id. at 996. It is impossible to square
    these elementary principles with La Liga's apparent contention
    that the Title III court could not have declared Law 29 ineffective
    from its inception.    Nor in doing so did the Title III court
    exercise an unwarranted judicial veto over Puerto Rico's
    legislative enactments, as La Liga's misplaced reliance on
    Mitchell's article seems to suggest. It simply adjudicated the
    law's validity in light of PROMESA.
    - 62 -
    here, declared the contested law void ab initio due to Puerto
    Rico's failure to submit a proper formal estimate of the law's
    fiscal impact and upon the Board's determination that the law
    "impair[s] or defeat[s] the purposes of [PROMESA]."             Id. at 58
    (alterations in original).    As the Title III court aptly put it,
    "[t]he only way to prevent the enforcement and application of the
    law . . . [was] to nullify it ab initio."        Pierluisi-Urrutia, 650
    B.R. at 358 (citing 48 U.S.C § 2144(a)(5)).
    Here,   acting   similarly,    the   Title   III   court   simply
    exercised its authority to award "an immediate and definitive
    determination of the legal rights of the parties," Aetna Life Ins.
    Co. v. Haworth, 
    300 U.S. 227
    , 241 (1937), when it declared that
    Law 29 was invalid because it flouted the requirements of PROMESA
    and that, as a result, Puerto Rico's municipalities were never
    validly relieved of their obligation to fund their employees'
    pensions and health care plans.30
    The Title III court unquestionably had the authority to
    make that declaration.      Accordingly, we find no fault in the
    30  La Liga stresses throughout its brief that the
    municipalities were not parties to the litigation and thus should
    not be bound by the O&O. But the Board never sought to enforce
    the O&O against the municipalities. Rather, it negotiated with
    Puerto Rico's central government to recover the funds unlawfully
    withheld under Law 29. Moreover, as political subdivisions of the
    Commonwealth, the municipalities were likely in privity with the
    defendants in the Law 29 litigation, as reflected by the district
    court's orders finding the municipalities' interests adequately
    represented. See supra note 2.
    - 63 -
    Board's interpretation of the O&O to cover the challenged period
    and   its   efforts    to   retrieve    the   funds   withheld   by   the
    municipalities under Law 29.
    IV.
    The O&O declared Law 29 "a nullity" and "of no effect."
    We agree with the district court that this judgment retroactively
    applied to Law 29 from its inception.         Accordingly, we affirm the
    dismissal of La Liga's complaint.
    So ordered.
    -Dissenting Opinion Follows-
    - 64 -
    BARRON, Chief Judge, dissenting.       Suppose a voluntary
    membership organization wants to sue to redress an injury to a
    non-member.    Does the organization have Article III standing to do
    so if none of its members do?        One might think that the answer
    must be no, given that neither the organization nor any of its
    members has been injured.       But the majority concludes that "well-
    settled standing principles," reveal that the answer is clearly
    yes.   For that reason, the majority holds that Liga de Ciudades de
    Puerto Rico ("La Liga") -- whose members are mayors of Puerto Rican
    municipalities -- has Article III standing to sue here to redress
    injuries    that   only   the    member-mayors'   municipalities   have
    suffered.     Moreover, according to the majority, La Liga has such
    standing even though the organization has not so much as mentioned
    the theory of standing on which the majority relies.
    In my view, there are no "well-settled principles" that
    justify our overlooking La Liga's appellate waiver.       Accordingly,
    I respectfully dissent, especially because, in sua sponte finding
    organizational standing here, the majority is setting a novel
    precedent that risks undermining the ability of governments at all
    levels of our democratic system to determine who will represent
    them in federal court.
    I.
    There is no doubt that La Liga bears the burden of
    establishing that it has standing.       Nor is there any doubt that we
    - 65 -
    must look to La Liga's complaint to determine whether that burden
    has been met.       See Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 562
    (1992).    The complaint makes the following pertinent allegations.
    "La Liga is a not-for-profit and nonpartisan corporation
    organized and existing pursuant to the Laws of the Commonwealth of
    Puerto Rico, whose members are Mayors of Municipalities of Puerto
    Rico."    La Liga's "mission is 'to strengthen the capacity of local
    governments and communities in order to better face the various
    social, structural, fiscal and governance challenges.'"
    In    service      of   that   mission,   "La   Liga   develops     and
    implements       various    initiatives,      tempered      to   the    needs   and
    realities of municipal governments and their communities."                      The
    most   recent     of   those    "initiatives"    is   the    one   in   which   the
    organization seeks "to defend the decimated municipal finances
    from the onslaught of austere measures imposed by the [Financial
    Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico]."
    The complaint then concludes as to standing as follows:
    La Liga has organizational standing to bring
    this action since the strengthening of the
    municipal finances is germane to La Liga’s
    mission and purpose, the Municipalities that
    are headed by La Liga's members have suffered
    substantial economic losses as a result of the
    illegal withholding and diversion of municipal
    funds by Defendant Centro de Recaudación de
    Ingresos   Municipales    . . .   to   off-set
    inexistent debts, and the participation of the
    individual La Liga members is not necessary
    for the issuance of the remedies herein
    requested.
    - 66 -
    To the majority, these limited allegations so clearly
    show that La Liga has standing that La Ligan need not make any
    further argument that it does.      The majority explains that is so
    because of the "well-settled standing principles," that were set
    forth by the Supreme Court of the United States in Hunt v.
    Washington   State   Apple   Advertising   Commission,   
    432 U.S. 333
    (1977), and are reflected in our Court's decision in Railway Labor
    Executives' Ass'n v. Boston & Maine Corp. ("RLEA"), 
    808 F.2d 150
    (1st Cir. 1986).     But I cannot see how those "principles" show as
    much.
    II.
    In Hunt the Supreme Court made clear that a "traditional
    voluntary membership organization" may have standing to sue even
    if it has not been injured.         
    432 U.S. at 342-43
    .         Such an
    organization, the Court explained, may base its standing on an
    injury to one of its members.       But, to do so, the organization
    must show that: (a) the member "would otherwise have standing to
    sue in their own right [based on the injury in question]; (b) the
    interests [the organization's claim] seeks to protect are germane
    to the organization's purpose; and (c) neither the claim asserted
    nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual
    members in the lawsuit."     
    Id. at 343
    .   But cf. Int'l Union, United
    Auto., Aerospace & Agr. Implement Workers of Am. v. Brock, 
    477 U.S. 274
    , 289, 290 (1986) ("We are not prepared to dismiss out of
    - 67 -
    hand the . . . concern that associations allowed to proceed under
    Hunt will not always be able to represent adequately the interest
    of all of their injured members" because such an association "might
    lack resources or experience or might bring lawsuits without
    authorization from its membership," or because "the litigation
    strategy selected by the association might reflect the views of
    only a bare majority -- or even an influential minority -- of the
    full membership.").
    The complaint reveals that La Liga sought to rest its
    standing in this case on this three-part test.          The majority
    rightly recognizes, however, that La Liga cannot do so.     The only
    members that La Liga claims to have are the mayors, while the only
    injuries that it alleges were to the non-member municipalities.
    To be sure, the Supreme Court did later refine Hunt's
    three-part test.   It held that a traditional voluntary membership
    organization sometimes can base its standing on the standing of
    one its members to redress an injury to a third party.      See N.Y.
    State Club Ass'n, Inc. v. City of New York, 
    487 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1988).
    But this refinement also does not help La Liga, as the record does
    not suggest that any member-mayor's standing to bring this suit
    could rest on an injury to that mayor's municipality.    See City of
    Bos. Delegation v. FERC, 
    897 F.3d 241
    , 248-50 (D.C. Cir. 2018)
    (holding that the Mayor of the City of Boston lacked standing to
    represent the City where the only identified support for that
    - 68 -
    authority   was   the   fact   that   "the   Mayor   regularly   initiated
    litigation on behalf of the City," and the specified process by
    which the City's Code permitted the City to initiate litigation
    did not give the mayor unilateral authority to bring suit).             In
    fact, the majority does not disagree, as it asserts that a member-
    mayor's authority to bring suit to redress an injury to that
    mayor's municipality is simply "not relevant to" La Liga's standing
    in this case.     Maj Op. at 19.31
    Why, then, does the majority think that Hunt clearly
    supports La Liga's standing here?          The majority's answer depends
    on the additional organizational standing test -- often referred
    to as the "indicia of membership" test -- that Hunt also sets
    forth.    And that is so, according to the majority, even though La
    Liga has not mentioned the test at any point in this litigation,
    including after a question was specifically raised at oral argument
    about how the organization could have standing if none of the
    member-mayors did.      The majority thus appears to be of the view
    31 A Puerto Rico statute does provide that a mayor may
    "[r]epresent the municipality in juridical or extra-juridical
    actions brought by or against the municipality" but that a "mayor
    may not acquiesce to . . . any suit in any procedure or action in
    which the municipality is a party, without the prior consent of
    the absolute majority of the members of the municipal legislature."
    21 L.P.R. § 4109(e). Needless to say, we have no briefing from La
    Liga about the possible relevance of this measure to its standing,
    and, in the absence of La Liga's having addressed it, I do not
    read this measure to so obviously settle the question of mayoral
    authority to sue that it is dispositive of that question.
    - 69 -
    that it is so clear that La Liga has standing under this test that
    the organization need not make any argument that it does.             But,
    insofar as that is the majority's view, I cannot agree.
    III.
    By way of background, Hunt developed the "indicia of
    membership" test to address a peculiar issue that arose in that
    case.     A    state-created   entity,    the   Washington   State   Apple
    Advertising Commission ("Commission"), had claimed that it had
    standing to sue based solely on injuries to apple growers and
    dealers in that state.      See Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 336, 342
    .
    Hunt explained that it was clear that, under the three-
    part test described above, a traditional trade association of apple
    growers and dealers could sue based on injuries that only its
    grower- and dealer-members had suffered.        See 
    id. at 342-43
    .   Hunt
    acknowledged, though, that the Commission was not itself such an
    association, "for it ha[d] no members at all."         
    Id. at 342
    .
    So, Hunt moved on to address the separate contention
    that the Commission nonetheless could rest its standing on the
    injuries to the state's apple growers and dealers.            See 
    id. at 344
    .    The Court then held that the Commission could because, in
    function rather than form, the Commission's relationship to those
    growers and dealers was no different from a traditional trade
    association's relationship to its members.           See 
    id. at 344-46
    .
    The "indicia of membership" test was born, therefore, to test
    - 70 -
    whether the Commission, despite not being a traditional trade
    association, functioned in the way that one did.
    The    majority   does   not   dispute   this   account   of   the
    "indicia of membership" test's origins.         The majority nonetheless
    concludes that the test is relevant here, even though La Liga
    is -- unlike the Commission -- itself a traditional voluntary
    membership organization in all the ways that a traditional trade
    association is.
    I do not see why the majority is so confident of this
    conclusion.   It is one thing to conclude -- as Hunt did -- that an
    unusual entity, which a state created to promote a certain trade,
    has standing to sue based on injuries to participants in that trade
    just as a trade association would have standing to sue based on
    injuries to its members.       It is quite another to conclude -- as
    the majority now does -- that such an association itself may claim
    "members" for standing purposes that it has voluntarily chosen to
    exclude from its ranks.
    To that very point, after Hunt, the Court acknowledged
    concerns   with    allowing    a    traditional     voluntary   membership
    organization to rest its standing on injuries that only its members
    had suffered.     See Brock, 477 U.S. at 289.        Doing so, the Court
    explained, could raise questions in some circumstances about the
    representativeness of the organization with respect to the injured
    parties.   See id. at 289-90.       The Court then concluded that those
    - 71 -
    concerns were mitigated by the fact that "[t]he very forces that
    cause individuals to band together in an association will thus
    provide some guarantee that the association will work to promote
    their interests."    Id. at 290.
    Injured parties that an organization has chosen to keep
    off its membership rolls, however, cannot be said to have "band[ed]
    together" in that organization.     Id.       Thus, Brock's rationale for
    allowing traditional voluntary membership organizations to sue
    based on injuries to their members has no application here.
    Not surprisingly, then, nothing in Hunt clearly shows
    that the "indicia of membership" test applies to a traditional
    voluntary membership organization like La Liga.         And (setting RLEA
    aside for now) nothing in any of our own precedents does either.
    Indeed, our most recent account of the test described it as
    applying   to   "organizations   that   are    not   voluntary   membership
    organizations."     Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President
    & Fellows of Harvard Coll. ("SFA"), 
    980 F.3d 157
    , 183 (1st Cir.
    2020), rev'd on other grounds, 
    600 U.S. 181
     (2023) (emphasis
    added).
    Nor is there a body of out-of-circuit precedent that
    suggests that it is "well-settled" that the "indicia of membership"
    test applies to an organization that already has members of its
    own.   To the contrary, some circuit-level authority goes the other
    way.   See Ne. Ohio Coal. for the Homeless v. Blackwell, 467 F.3d
    - 72 -
    999, 1013 (6th Cir. 2006) (McKeague, J., concurring) ("Insofar as
    plaintiffs'         standing    implicitly       rests     on   assertion     of   the
    interests of nonmembers for whose interests plaintiff Northeast
    Ohio Coalition for the Homeless advocates, e.g., homeless persons,
    plaintiffs      are    operating       outside      the   bounds    of   traditional
    associational standing.              They rely on a form of representational
    or third-party standing for which they have cited no controlling
    or even persuasive precedent."); see also 
    id.
     at 1010 n.4 ("Judge
    McKeague's concurring opinion correctly notes that the Northeast
    Ohio Coalition for the Homeless apparently seeks to assert a form
    of      representational            standing      never     recognized       by    any
    court    --    standing        on    behalf    of   the    group    served    by   the
    organization.").
    The     majority       does      enlist     various    out-of-circuit
    precedents to support the assertion that a voluntary membership
    organization may claim "members" under the "indicia of membership"
    test that the organization will not let become actual members.
    But a review of those cases turns up but two district-court
    decisions that, in applying the test, found that a voluntary
    membership organization could claim members for standing purposes
    that it had excluded from membership for all others.                         See Sec.
    Indus. & Fin. Mkts. Ass'n v. U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n,
    - 73 -
    
    67 F. Supp. 3d 373
    , 410 (D.D.C. 2014); Interfaith Cmty. Org. v.
    Honeywell Int'l, Inc., 
    188 F. Supp. 2d 486
    , 498-99 (D.N.J. 2002).32
    In other words, there plainly is a novel question for us
    to resolve about whether the "indicia of membership" test has any
    application to La Liga.      I therefore do not see why we should
    excuse La Liga from having to address the question.
    IV.
    Let us posit, though, that (as the majority concludes)
    it would be "no great leap," to apply the "indicia of membership"
    test to a traditional voluntary membership organization like La
    Liga.     The question still would remain as to whether it is "well[
    ]settled" that the test is met in a case like this one.        Here,
    too, the majority answers the question in La Liga's favor even
    though La Liga has not weighed in on it.     But, again setting RLEA
    aside for the moment, I cannot agree with the majority's decision
    to give that answer.
    32  The majority asserts that the Third Circuit affirmed the
    standing ruling in Interfaith Community Organization v. Honeywell
    International, Inc., but it is not apparent that the Third Circuit
    did so based on the district court's "indicia of membership"
    ruling, as the Third Circuit simply said that "the individual
    plaintiffs," some of whom were formal members of the organization,
    "have standing, and [the defendant] does not challenge the District
    Court's membership findings." 
    399 F.3d 248
    , 258 (3d Cir. 2005).
    Thus, the Third Circuit may have held no more than that the
    plaintiff-organization had standing solely based on the injuries
    to its formal members.
    - 74 -
    Consider the factors that we most recently described as
    relevant    to   the    "indicia        of    membership"    test:    whether    the
    "organization's purpose is to protect and promote the interests of
    its non-members"; "whether these non-members are 'the primary
    beneficiar[ies]        of   [the    organization's]         activities,'";      "and
    whether [the] non-members elect its members, are the only people
    who may be members, or finance the organizations' activities,
    including litigation costs, through assessments levied upon them."
    SFA, 980 F.3d at 183 (quoting Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 344-45
    ) (first
    alteration in original).           The majority concludes (albeit without
    the benefit of La Liga having so argued) that the first two of
    these indicia are present.
    The majority recognizes that this conclusion does not
    suffice to show that the "indicia of membership" test is met.                   So,
    if we are going by the factors that we most recently said matter
    in applying the test, the dispositive questions would seem to be
    these: do "[the municipalities] elect [La Liga's] members"?; "are
    [the municipalities] the           only [ones]       who may be       [La Liga's]
    members"?; and do the municipalities "finance the organizations'
    activities, including litigation costs, through assessments levied
    upon them"?      
    Id.
     (citing Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 344-45
    ).
    This is not a case, however, in which only the injured
    parties    can   be    members     of   the    organization    that    is   seeking
    standing.     It also is not one in which -- as far as the record
    - 75 -
    reveals -- the injured parties finance that organization.                        Thus,
    insofar as our most recent account of what matters under the
    "indicia of membership" test is our guide, everything would appear
    to hinge on whether there is evidence of the "elect" factor.
    SFA took the "elect" factor from Hunt.                 It did so based
    on Hunt's reliance on the growers and dealers involved in that
    case having elected each of the commissioners onto the Commission.
    See Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 344
    .            There is no similarly clear evidence
    here, however, that the "elect" factor is present.
    La Liga's members were elected to their mayoral offices.
    They were not elected to La Liga.                   It was only after each mayor
    had been elected to the office of mayor that -- from all the
    complaint reveals -- each mayor then either chose to join La Liga
    or not, seemingly as that individual mayor wished.
    I   do   not   see   how    it   is    evident    that    this   factual
    distinction between our case and Hunt is immaterial.                    The "indicia
    of membership" test exists to ensure that the organization that
    asserts standing based on an injury to a non-member in a "real
    sense . . . represents the [non-members] and provides the means by
    which   they      express    their    collective       views   and     protect   their
    collective interests."             
    Id. at 345
    .         It thus would seem quite
    material that the municipalities did not elect the mayors to La
    Liga    and   that     the   mayors      instead     merely    chose    to   join   the
    organization through the exercise of their own discretion.
    - 76 -
    I should add that there are other factual distinctions
    between our case and Hunt that also appear to be material.          Hunt
    did   not     indicate   that   even     direct     election   to   the
    organization -- when combined with the organization's purpose
    being to benefit the injured parties and its activities primarily
    benefiting them -- showed the test was satisfied.       The Court there
    also emphasized (1) the direct control that the commissioners
    exercised over the Commission, (2) that only growers and dealers
    could be commissioners, (3) the role that assessments levied on
    the dealers and growers played in funding the Commission, and
    (4) the fact that the conduct challenged in the Commission's
    suit -- North Carolina's prohibition on the sale of apples labeled
    as belonging to a particular state -- "could reduce the amount of
    the assessments due the Commission and used to support i[t]s
    activities."    
    Id.
    Indeed, the Court gave special weight to the fourth
    factor.     It noted that, because of the "financial nexus" between
    the Commission and the relief sought in the litigation, "the
    interests of the Commission itself may be adversely affected by
    the outcome of this litigation."         
    Id.
          The Court ultimately
    concluded that "[t]his financial nexus between the interests of
    the Commission and its constituents coalesce[d] with the other
    factors noted above to 'assure that concrete adverseness which
    sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely
    - 77 -
    depends for illumination of difficult constitutional questions.'"
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added) (quoting Baker v. Carr, 
    369 U.S. 186
    , 204
    (1962)).
    We have no basis for concluding that any of the four
    ties enumerated above are present in this case.   And we certainly
    have no basis for concluding that there is a "financial nexus"
    between La Liga's funding and the remedy that it seeks in this
    litigation.
    The   majority   nonetheless   concludes    that   these
    distinctions between this case and Hunt are trivial.     It reasons
    that Hunt makes clear that the "indicia of membership" test is met
    so long as "the organization is sufficiently identified with and
    subject to the influence of those it seeks to represent as to have
    a 'personal stake in the outcome of the controversy.'"   Or. Advoc.
    Ctr. v. Mink, 
    322 F.3d 1101
    , 1111 (9th Cir. 2003) (quoting Vill.
    of Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 
    429 U.S. 252
    , 261
    (1977)).   "[A]ided by . . . judicial experience and common sense,"
    the majority then goes on to conclude that La Liga clearly is such
    an organization "[c]onsidering the institutional, political, and
    legal mechanisms of accountability inherent in the relationship
    between a mayor and municipality" (quotation omitted) (emphases
    added).    Accordingly, the majority concludes that it is so clear
    that La Liga satisfies the "indicia of membership" test that we
    - 78 -
    may overlook the fact that La Liga has failed to make any argument
    that it does.
    Common sense does indicate that mayors play important
    roles within their local governments. But city councils also wield
    power, while state and local laws distribute all kinds of powers
    among all kinds of city officials.          In fact, I know of no local
    jurisdiction    that   concentrates   all    its   powers   in   a   single
    executive.     I thus do not see how we can rely on common sense to
    conclude that mayors are the definitive decisionmakers as to all
    matters of consequence for their municipalities, let alone that La
    Liga's mayors have been entrusted to unilaterally make the fraught
    decision to sue a higher level of government that La Liga has made
    here.   See City of Bos. Delegation, 
    897 F.3d at 248-50
    ; cf. Va.
    House of Delegates v. Bethune-Hill, 
    587 U.S. 658
    , 663 (2019) ("[I]f
    the State had designated the House to represent its interests, and
    if the House had in fact carried out that mission, we would agree
    that the House could stand in for the State.").        And so it is hard
    for me to see how it is at all clear that, even though La Liga has
    an interest in the well-being of Puerto Rico's municipalities, see
    Mink, 322 F.3d at 1111, La Liga "in a very real sense . . . provides
    the means by which [the municipalities] express their collective
    views and protect their collective interests" in relation to the
    litigation at hand.     Hunt, 
    432 U.S. at 345
    ; see also Brock, 477
    U.S. at 290 (focusing on this same concern).
    - 79 -
    V.
    There does remain to address our post-Hunt decision in
    RLEA.   The majority appears to be of the view that this precedent
    clarifies whatever Hunt on its own does not when it comes to La
    Liga's standing.         Here too, however, the majority relies on a
    highly debatable reading of precedent -- and a reading that, like
    the underlying precedent itself, La Liga has not even mentioned.
    In    RLEA,    the   Railway      Labor   Executives'   Association
    ("RLEA") -- which, as its name implies, was comprised of members
    who     were     executives      of       unions      representing    railway
    employees -- sought to base its standing solely on injuries that
    had been suffered by union-member railway employees, none of whom
    was a member of the RLEA itself.             See 
    808 F.2d at 153
    , 153 n.8.
    In a one-sentence footnote, we held that the RLEA had standing
    under Hunt.     See 
    id.
     at 153 n.8.       We did not refer, however, either
    to the "indicia of membership" test or to the portion of Hunt that
    discussed it.     See 
    id.
        Instead, we merely cited to the first page
    of Hunt.   
    Id.
    We thus left unclear whether our standing ruling rested
    on the part of Hunt that addressed when a traditional voluntary
    membership organization has standing based on a member's standing,
    see 
    432 U.S. at 343
    ; see also N.Y. State Club Ass'n, 487 U.S. at
    9 (articulating this application of Hunt), or the part of Hunt
    that applied the "indicia of membership" test, see 432 U.S. at
    - 80 -
    344-45.    That makes it a stretch, in my view, to treat our never-
    since-cited, one-sentence footnote in RLEA as if it were our last
    word on the significant jurisdictional question of whether the
    "indicia of membership" test applies to a voluntary membership
    organization.      See United States v. Vaello-Madero, 
    956 F.3d 12
    , 17
    (1st Cir. 2020) ("[W]e would be remiss in complying with our own
    duty were we to blindly accept the applicability of [prior cases]
    without engaging in a scrupulous inquiry into their relevance,
    application, and precedential value."), rev'd on other grounds,
    
    596 U.S. 159
     (2022); see also Lewis v. Casey, 
    518 U.S. 343
    , 352
    n.2 (1996) (stating that a prior case reaching the merits did not
    bind the Court to conclude there was jurisdiction because "standing
    was neither challenged nor discussed" in the prior case and because
    "[the     Court]   ha[s]   repeatedly   held   that   the   existence   of
    unaddressed jurisdictional defects has no precedential effect"
    (emphasis added) (citing Fed. Election Comm'n v. NRA Pol. Victory
    Fund, 
    513 U.S. 88
    , 97 (1994))).
    Even assuming, though, that RLEA did hold that the
    "indicia of membership" test applies to such an organization, there
    still would be the question of whether RLEA establishes that the
    test is satisfied in a case like this one.       I cannot see how it is
    so clear that RLEA does that La Liga need not make any argument to
    that effect.
    - 81 -
    RLEA's members were union executives and so, like La
    Liga's   mayors,    were   not   themselves    directly    elected    to   the
    organization.      But, as best I can tell, the RLEA's board was at
    least controlled by the labor executives.           See Brief of Movant-
    Intervenor RLEA at 1-6, Am. Train Dispatchers Ass'n v. ICC, 
    26 F.3d 1157
     (D.C. Cir. 1994) (No. 92-1397), 
    1993 WL 13650707
    , at *1–
    6 (describing the structure of RLEA).         In other words, the injured
    parties there -- railway employees -- were positioned to exercise
    control (albeit indirectly through the executives' unions) over
    the members of the organization who themselves controlled its
    decisions much as the apple growers and dealers in Hunt were
    positioned to exercise control over the commissioners who in turn
    controlled the Commission.        La Liga's complaint says not a word,
    however, about the role that any of its member-mayors plays in
    deciding the course of action that the organization may take,
    including with respect to important decisions such as bringing a
    suit like this one.
    Nor did RLEA, like Hunt, have any occasion to consider
    the   special      questions     concerning   democratic     control       over
    government executives that a case such as this one implicates.
    That case at most implicated private organizational bylaws, not
    democratically chosen structures of government control.              For this
    reason, too, I cannot see how RLEA so clearly supports La Liga's
    standing here that it can save the day.
    - 82 -
    VI.
    The majority emphasizes that Hunt premised its "indicia
    of membership" test on the notion that we should not "exalt form
    over substance."         
    432 U.S. at 345
    .         The majority also points out
    that   on   a   motion    to    dismiss    we     must    construe   the   complaint
    generously, see Tyler v. Hennepin County, 
    598 U.S. 631
    , 637 (2023)
    (citing Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561).               Neither observation persuades me
    that we may hold that La Liga has standing under the "indicia of
    membership" test when La Liga has not itself argued that it does.
    In admonishing us not to "exalt form over substance,"
    Hunt was using a pithy phrase to warn us not to treat entities
    that are functionally traditional trade associations differently
    for purposes of standing from entities that formally are.                     See 
    432 U.S. at 345
    .      It was not encouraging courts to permit traditional
    voluntary membership organizations to claim members that they do
    not have.       I thus do not see how we may treat that admonition as
    an   invitation     to   permit       voluntary    membership      associations    of
    government officials to sue based on injuries to the member-
    officials'      governments      if    those    officials    are     not   themselves
    authorized to decide when those governments may sue to redress
    those injuries.
    Likewise,          although    we      must     construe       complaints
    generously, see Gustavsen v. Alcon Lab'ys, Inc., 
    903 F.3d 1
    , 7
    (1st Cir. 2018), parties still must allege the facts and make the
    - 83 -
    arguments necessary to establish that we have jurisdiction over
    their cases, see McBreairty v. Miller, 
    93 F.4th 513
    , 518 (1st Cir.
    2024).   Yet La Liga's complaint fails to allege many of the facts
    that Hunt and SFA suggest matter or that would appear to matter
    even under the more general understanding of the "indicia of
    membership" test that the majority distills from Hunt.
    In   any   event,   our     obligation   to   make     reasonable
    inferences in construing a complaint does not permit us to overlook
    the party-presentation rule.        See Greenlaw v. United States, 
    554 U.S. 237
    , 243 (2008) ("In our adversary system . . . we follow the
    principle of party presentation.       That is, we rely on the parties
    to frame the issues for decision and assign to courts the role of
    neutral arbiter of matters the parties present.").             Indeed, that
    rule serves aims like those that Article III itself serves in
    requiring courts to resolve concrete disputes between parties
    rather than "questions in the abstract" that no party has chosen
    to litigate.   N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen, 
    597 U.S. 1
    , 25 n.6 (2022).    I thus find it ironic that the majority chooses
    to premise its Article III jurisdiction here on arguments that no
    party to this supposed case or controversy has even made.
    The majority does point to out-of-circuit authority that
    it contends permits us to resolve issues relating to standing that
    were not made below.    See Hartig Drug Co. v. Senju Pharm. Co., 
    836 F.3d 261
    , 267-73 (3d Cir. 2016).        But the plaintiff-appellant in
    - 84 -
    that case had argued on appeal that its complaint's allegations of
    antitrust injury did suffice to establish Article III standing
    despite the defendant-appellee's arguments to the contrary. 
    Id. at 271
    .     The    reviewing     court    then    agreed     with   the    plaintiff-
    appellant's contention that those allegations did so.                  
    Id. at 272
    .
    That the panel went on to consider whether, although the district
    court had wrongly dismissed the complaint for lack of Article III
    jurisdiction, dismissal on the merits was still proper based on a
    ground   --    failure   to   state     an    antitrust    claim   --    that   the
    defendant-appellee had not raised on appeal is of no moment here.
    The problem in our case concerns waiver by the appellant not the
    appellee.      Compare Carrozza v. CVS Pharmacy, Inc., 
    992 F.3d 44
    , 59
    (1st Cir. 2021) ("[A]ppellants cannot raise an argument on appeal
    that was not squarely and timely raised in the trial court."
    (cleaned up)), with United States v. George, 
    886 F.3d 31
    , 39 (1st
    Cir. 2018) ("We are at liberty to affirm a district court's
    judgment on any ground made manifest by the record, whether or not
    that particular ground was raised below.").
    Indeed, La Liga has not merely failed in its appellate
    briefing to advance the only theory for our having jurisdiction
    that the majority embraces.           La Liga also has stayed mum about the
    seeming defect in its standing even though it was asked about that
    defect at oral argument.          See Guar. Nat. Title Co. v. J.E.G.
    Assocs., 
    101 F.3d 57
    , 59 (7th Cir. 1996) ("[I]t is not the court's
    - 85 -
    obligation to lead counsel through a jurisdictional paint-by-
    numbers scheme.    Litigants who call on the resources of a federal
    court must establish that the tribunal has jurisdiction, and when
    after   multiple   opportunities    they   do   not   demonstrate   that
    jurisdiction is present, the appropriate response is clear.").
    VII.
    For all these reasons, I would dismiss this complaint on
    the ground that La Liga has failed to meet its burden to show that
    it has standing.    I therefore respectfully dissent.
    - 86 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 22-1062

Filed Date: 7/25/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/25/2024