Blanchard v. Lampert ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                  FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                         Tenth Circuit
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                           August 3, 2020
    _________________________________
    Christopher M. Wolpert
    Clerk of Court
    TAYLOR S. BLANCHARD,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.                                                          No. 18-8020
    (D.C. No. 1:17-CV-00124-SWS)
    ROBERT LAMPERT, Wyoming                                      (D. Wyo.)
    Department of Corrections Director, in his
    official capacity; RICK CATRON,
    Wyoming Women’s Center Warden, in his
    official capacity,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    _________________________________
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    _________________________________
    Before HOLMES and CARSON, Circuit Judges. 1
    _________________________________
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines
    of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for
    its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    1
    While the late Honorable Monroe G. McKay was assigned to, and
    participated in the oral argument of, this matter before his death on March 28, 2020,
    his vote was not counted. Yovino v. Rizo, ––– U.S. ––––, 
    139 S. Ct. 706
    , 710, 
    203 L. Ed. 2d 38
    (2019) (federal court may not count the vote of a judge who dies before a
    decision is issued). “The practice of this court permits the remaining
    two panel judges if in agreement to act as a quorum in resolving the appeal.” United
    States v. Wiles, 
    106 F.3d 1516
    , 1516 n.* (10th Cir. 1997); see also 28 U.S.C.
    § 46(d) (noting circuit court may adopt procedures permitting disposition of an
    appeal where remaining quorum of panel agrees on the disposition). The
    remaining panel members have acted as a quorum with respect to this Order and
    Judgment.
    The Constitution limits federal judicial power to “Cases” and “Controversies.”
    U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. Once a plaintiff no longer suffers from an actual injury that
    a court can redress by a favorable decision, her case is moot, and the district court
    must dismiss it for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Today we decide whether the
    civil action Plaintiff Taylor S. Blanchard filed in the United States District Court for
    the District of Wyoming became moot upon her release from a Florida boot camp
    program. In the end, we agree with the district court that, when it dismissed the case
    as moot, Plaintiff had not presented the court with a redressable claim. Plaintiff’s
    arguments to the contrary are either unpersuasive or unpreserved. Thus, exercising
    jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.
    I.
    In 1987, the Wyoming legislature passed the Youthful Offender Act, Wyo.
    Rev. Stat. § 7-13-1001, et seq., which established a program for first-time criminal
    offenders under the age of twenty-five. Instead of incarceration at a traditional
    prison, eligible individuals can attend an intense, six-month “boot camp” program
    that provides instruction, training, and programming. If an individual successfully
    completes the program, the sentencing judge may amend the sentence and place the
    individual on probation. Under the statute, the Wyoming Department of Corrections
    administers the program.
    When the state district court sentenced her, Plaintiff, who is female, was a
    first-time criminal offender under the age of twenty-five who qualified for the boot
    camp program. And before she appeared for sentencing, no Wyoming trial judge had
    2
    ever recommended placement of a female offender in the boot camp program. 2
    Based on her criminal offense, a Wyoming state trial judge sentenced Plaintiff to a
    lengthy six- to ten-year term of incarceration. But at her request, the state trial judge
    recommended that Plaintiff enter the boot camp program—a recommendation that
    could allow Plaintiff, upon successful completion, to serve only a probation sentence.
    Although the state trial judge recommended boot camp, the Wyoming
    Department of Corrections incarcerated Plaintiff in the Wyoming Women’s Center in
    Lusk, Wyoming. Plaintiff filed a grievance asking for the opportunity to participate
    in boot camp. A prison employee rejected the grievance, stating that classification
    decisions “are non-grievable.”
    Plaintiff then filed this lawsuit, alleging Robert Lampert, the Director of the
    Wyoming Department of Corrections, and Rick Catron, the Warden of the Wyoming
    Women’s Center, violated her right to equal protection by denying her access to the
    boot camp program based on her sex. In her complaint, Plaintiff asked for “the same
    opportunity to participate in and complete a Youthful Offender program as men
    prisoners, either a program operated by the [Wyoming Department of Corrections] in
    Wyoming or a similar program operated in another state.”
    One month after Plaintiff filed her complaint and consistent with the relief she
    sought in her lawsuit, the Wyoming Department of Corrections transferred Plaintiff
    2
    Although the record is not clear on this point, Plaintiff was perhaps the first
    female offender to ever request placement in Wyoming’s boot camp program.
    3
    to a four-month boot camp program for women in Florida—a development Plaintiff
    described as “much-welcomed.”
    Shortly after she arrived in Florida, Plaintiff filed her First Amended
    Complaint. In that pleading, Plaintiff generally alleged that the Florida program was
    inferior to Wyoming’s boot camp program because it provides fewer rehabilitative
    services and programming than that provided to the men in Wyoming’s male-only
    boot camp. 3 And, even though she originally sought placement “in a similar program
    operated in another state,” Plaintiff moved the goal post in her First Amended
    Complaint by seeking an injunction prohibiting officials from sending her to another
    state unless they likewise sent men to out-of-state boot camps. 4 In her words,
    Plaintiff sought:
    [T]he same opportunity to participate in and complete Wyoming’s Youthful
    Offender program as men prisoners, and to send women to an out-of-state
    program only if men are sent to out-of-state programs on a comparable and
    equitable basis, that is, such out-of-state placement should not be based on
    gender but rather on gender-neutral principles.
    After Plaintiff substantially completed the Florida boot camp and her
    graduation became imminent, Defendants moved to dismiss the First Amended
    Complaint based on mootness. Defendants argued that Plaintiff’s case would become
    3
    As becomes relevant below, the Florida boot camp was two months shorter
    than the Wyoming boot camp and allegedly provided no drug treatment to inmates.
    The First Amended Complaint, however, did not seek redress for these two alleged
    deficiencies in the Florida program.
    4
    Plaintiff’s First Amended Complaint purported to be on behalf of a class of
    plaintiffs, with Plaintiff acting as their class representative. The district court denied
    Plaintiff’s request to certify a class—a decision Plaintiff does not appeal.
    4
    moot once she graduated from boot camp because she would no longer be a first-time
    offender and thus would be statutorily ineligible to participate in a boot camp for
    first-time offenders in Wyoming. As a result, Defendants reasoned that the district
    court could no longer provide redress for her allegations.
    In response to the motion to dismiss, Plaintiff contended that the court should
    grant her leave to add additional plaintiffs so her case could survive Defendants’
    mootness challenge. 5 Plaintiff explained that “[t]he purpose of the [Second Amended
    Complaint] is to add fifteen women as named plaintiffs . . . [who] suffered the
    identical injury that Ms. Blanchard suffered.” Plaintiff conceded that her “Fourteenth
    Amendment claim was destined to expire upon her graduation from boot camp, a
    period far too short for that claim to be fully adjudicated in the district court and on
    appeal.” She therefore asked the district court to grant her not-yet-filed motion for
    leave to file a second amended complaint so she could add parties.
    Three days before her boot camp graduation, Plaintiff filed a motion for leave
    to file a second amended complaint. In that motion, Plaintiff maintained that the
    Second Amended Complaint sought “merely to add new Plaintiffs to the existing
    5
    Defendants argued to the district court that the First Amended Complaint did
    not seek redress for her allegations regarding out-of-state placement or placement
    into an “inferior” boot camp program. Plaintiff did not dispute that statement in her
    response to Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
    5
    lawsuit, and does not add a new claim.” 6 She argued that she filed her motion in
    sufficient time to join additional Plaintiffs prior to her case becoming moot.
    On January 19, 2018, Plaintiff graduated from boot camp in Florida. After
    receiving notice that she successfully completed the Florida boot camp program, the
    state trial judge modified her lengthy six- to ten-year prison sentence to a five-year
    term of probation, thus ending Plaintiff’s period of boot camp incarceration.
    The district court then dismissed Plaintiff’s case on mootness grounds and
    denied Plaintiff’s motion for leave to file a second amended complaint. The district
    court based its decision on the relief Plaintiff requested in her First Amended
    Complaint: an injunction ordering Defendants to place her in Wyoming’s boot camp
    program. Because Plaintiff had served her time and successfully completed a boot
    camp program, the district court determined that it could no longer grant Plaintiff
    effective relief. Plaintiff appealed.
    II.
    We begin our analysis by looking to the Constitution. Without a “Case” or
    “Controversy,” we lack the power to act. U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. This “case-or-
    controversy limitation underpins both standing and mootness jurisprudence.” Rhodes
    6
    In a reply brief filed the same day the district court dismissed the case as
    moot, Plaintiff sought to recant her concession in her motion to file a second
    amended complaint that the case would become moot upon her graduation. Plaintiff
    stated: “Admittedly, the brief Ms. Blanchard filed in support of her motion to amend
    states that her individual claim will likely become moot on January 19, 2018 when
    Ms. Blanchard graduates from Boot Camp. That statement was ill-advised and is
    now recanted.” Plaintiff never tried to recant any such statements or take a different
    position in response to the motion to dismiss upon which the district court ruled.
    6
    v. Judiscak, 
    676 F.3d 931
    , 933 (10th Cir. 2012). When a plaintiff no longer suffers
    from an actual injury that the district court can redress by a favorable judicial
    decision, her case becomes moot.
    Id. In her briefing,
    Plaintiff challenges the district court’s conclusion that her
    graduation rendered her equal protection claim moot. On appeal, she argues that she
    did not receive drug treatment in the Florida boot camp unlike males in Wyoming’s
    boot camp. Plaintiff alleges that her claims are not moot because even after her
    discharge, the district court could have ordered that Defendants give her two more
    months of boot camp or place her in drug treatment equivalent to that afforded to
    male boot camp inmates. We reject Plaintiff’s appellate arguments for the reasons
    discussed below.
    We first address Plaintiff’s argument that her claims are not moot because the
    district court could have ordered Defendants to incarcerate her in boot camp for
    another two months—a period equivalent to that served by males in Wyoming’s boot
    camp program. At oral argument, Plaintiff’s counsel conceded that she did not seek
    additional incarceration in boot camp as a remedy in this case. Thus, we will not
    disturb the district court’s order dismissing her case based on that theory. United
    States v. Edgerton, 
    438 F.3d 1043
    , 1047 n.3 (10th Cir. 2006) (explaining that we will
    not reach a conceded argument).
    Her second argument meets the same fate, but for a different reason. On
    appeal, Plaintiff asserts that her claims are not moot because, after her release, the
    district court could have granted her partial relief by ordering that Defendants
    7
    provide her with drug treatment equivalent to that received by males in Wyoming
    boot camp. But Plaintiff raises this argument for the first time on appeal. And where
    “a plaintiff pursues a new legal theory for the first time on appeal, that new theory
    suffers the distinct disadvantage of starting at least a few paces back from the block.”
    Richison v. Ernest Group, Inc., 
    634 F.3d 1123
    , 1127 (10th Cir. 2011). “If the theory
    was intentionally relinquished or abandoned in the district court, we usually deem it
    waived and refuse to consider it.”
    Id. “By contrast, if
    the theory simply wasn’t
    raised before the district court, we usually hold it forfeited.”
    Id. In her original
    Complaint, Plaintiff requested the opportunity to participate in
    a boot camp program in Wyoming “or a similar program operated in another state.”
    But after Defendants provided the relief she sought by sending her to boot camp in
    Florida, Plaintiff changed theories and filed a First Amended Complaint. 7 In her
    First Amended Complaint, the operative pleading in this appeal, Plaintiff sought
    assurance that present and future women prisoners in Wyoming will be able to
    participate in an in-state boot camp program comparable to the men’s program.
    Plaintiff also generally alleged in one paragraph that Wyoming should only send
    women to out-of-state programs if men are also sent to out-of-state programs and that
    the Florida program is inferior to the men’s Wyoming program.
    7
    Although Plaintiff’s original complaint sought placement out of state, at oral
    argument counsel informed the Court that “[a]t the time . . . it never occurred to me
    that they might respond by sending her to an out-of-state prison.”
    8
    In her First Amended Complaint, Plaintiff specifically requested that the
    district court:
    Issue preliminary and permanent injunctive relief on behalf of Plaintiff
    Blanchard and on behalf of the class of women she represents . . .
    ordering Defendants to immediately take all necessary and proper
    actions to ensure that present and future women prisoners in the
    custody of WDOC will be granted the opportunity to participate in an
    in-state boot camp program comparable to the men’s program at
    Newcastle, or in an out-of-state program provided that placement is
    gender neutral, that is, men and women are sent to out-of-state programs
    based on gender-neutral criteria.
    But as soon as officials discharged her from Florida boot camp, Plaintiff was no
    longer a first-time offender, making her ineligible to participate in the boot camp
    program going forward. And the district court denied class certification, which
    Plaintiff does not challenge on appeal. She therefore cannot avoid mootness on the
    ground that she brings suit on behalf of other female plaintiffs.
    Now, Plaintiff posits a new theory for the first time on appeal. She argues that
    a live dispute exists because Defendants could still provide her with drug treatment
    comparable to the drug treatment men receive in the Wyoming boot camp program.
    The idea Plaintiff advances, however, stems from a request for new and different
    relief, not merely a new argument in support of the same relief.
    Although Plaintiff’s new theory of a partial remedy is more consistent with the
    facts of the case, she never raised this argument in response to Defendants’ motion to
    dismiss so that the district court could consider it. The only time Plaintiff arguably
    raised this argument below was in her reply brief on her motion for leave to file a
    second amended complaint. And not only did Plaintiff raise the argument in a reply
    9
    brief directed to a motion other than the motion to dismiss being considered on
    appeal, she also filed it on the same day the district court dismissed the case. We
    therefore conclude that Plaintiff failed to adequately preserve the issue for appeal. 8
    See FDIC v. Noel, 
    177 F.3d 911
    , 915-16 (10th Cir. 1999) (concluding that a party
    may not raise an argument for the first time in a reply brief to the district court
    because doing so precludes a response by the non-movant and prevents reasoned
    consideration by the district court).
    In fact, Plaintiff’s original argument below merely requested that the district
    court allow her to add additional plaintiffs. Indeed, Plaintiff conceded her case was
    “destined” to be moot following her release from boot camp in both her response to
    the motion to dismiss and in her motion for leave to file a second amended
    complaint. She asserted that to save her lawsuit, the district court needed to add
    plaintiffs. 9 And it was not until her opening brief in this appeal that Plaintiff
    8
    Plaintiff’s position that the panel should consider her new theories “rest[s] on
    a misconception of the nature of appellate review.” Ball v. United States, No. 19-
    1161, --- F.3d ---- (10th Cir. July 31, 2020). “The proceedings in district court are
    not just a rehearsal, a dry run, for the ultimate performance on appeal, where the
    parties can discard what did not work below and introduce new scenes for a new
    audience.”
    Id. “We review the
    case litigated below, not the case fleshed out for the
    first time on appeal.”
    Id. 9
             Plaintiff makes no allegation and the record contains no evidence that she
    argued to the state sentencing court that she had to complete boot camp before it
    could modify her sentence. Nor did she ask that court, or the district court for that
    matter, to provide her additional incarceration in boot camp or drug treatment
    equivalent to what men receive in Wyoming. She sought to prevent dismissal in the
    district court exclusively upon her position that she needed to add additional
    plaintiffs to prevent her claims from becoming moot. Thus, Plaintiff’s failure to
    10
    developed the argument that her case still presented a live controversy because
    Defendants could provide her with equivalent drug treatment. 10 See Campbell v.
    Ackerman, 
    903 F.3d 14
    , 18 (1st Cir. 2018) (“Our jurisprudence simply does not
    allow a litigant to switch horses in mid-stream”). Plaintiff’s failure to raise her new
    theory appears unintentional and therefore amounts to forfeiture. But because she
    raised her argument for the first time on appeal, she cannot “prevail unless [she] can
    successfully run the gauntlet created by our rigorous plain-error standard of review.”
    United States v. Rosales-Miranda, 
    755 F.3d 1253
    , 1258 (10th Cir. 2014).
    Plaintiff, however, did not argue for plain error in her brief, even in the
    alternative. Rather, she contends we can review her claim de novo because it is a
    new argument directed to a previously raised issue. Her argument for de novo review
    fails, however, as the Court’s “long-standing practice has been to review newly
    raised (but not waived) legal arguments under what substantively amounts to (and
    what we have more recently described as) the plain error standard.” 
    Richison, 634 F.3d at 1128
    (emphasis added). To be sure, “[a]ffording plenary appellate review to
    make such arguments to the state sentencing court or the district court further
    demonstrates that her position on appeal is a new one.
    10
    Besides being unpreserved, Plaintiff’s eleventh-hour argument is
    problematic for other reasons. At oral argument, the parties informed the panel for
    the first time that the Wyoming Department of Corrections is providing Plaintiff with
    drug treatment. So Plaintiff’s argument, to the extent that it assumes that she never
    received drug treatment, is admittedly false. And Plaintiff has never argued that the
    drug treatment she is now receiving is not equivalent to the drug treatment that males
    receive in Wyoming’s boot camp.
    11
    newly raised legal theories would do much to undermine this adversarial and
    appellate order.”
    Id. at 1130. 11
    Plaintiff has not tried to show how her new legal theory satisfies the plain
    error standard. “And the failure to do so—the failure to argue for plain error and its
    application on appeal—surely marks the end of the road for an argument for reversal
    not first presented to the district court.”
    Id. at 1131.
    In her response to Defendants’
    motion to dismiss, Plaintiff did not argue that she had a live claim because
    Defendants afforded her only partial relief. And she did not seek to cure her failure
    by asking the district court to reconsider its order dismissing her case as moot. She
    cannot now revisit that decision on appeal without at least satisfying the plain error
    standard of review, which she has failed to do.
    III.
    Ultimately, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that it could no longer
    grant Plaintiff effective relief under the First Amended Complaint. When the district
    court dismissed her case, Plaintiff had completed her term of incarceration, which
    11
    Our job is “to correct errors made by the district court in assessing legal
    theories presented to it, not to serve as a ‘second-shot forum.’”
    Id. (quoting Tele- Communications,
    Inc. v. C.I.R., 
    104 F.3d 1229
    , 1233 (10th Cir. 1997)). Our
    reluctance “to command do-overs” in the district court explains why we treat
    arguments for affirming the district court differently than arguments for reversing it.
    Id. Although “we may
    affirm on any basis supported by the record, even if it
    requires ruling on arguments not reached by the district court or even presented to us
    on appeal,” the same is not true for reversing the district court.
    Id. “If a newly
    raised
    legal theory is entitled to appellate review at all—if it wasn’t waived before the
    district court—it may form a basis for reversal only if the appellant can satisfy the
    plain error standard of review.”
    Id. 12
    caused her to be statutorily ineligible for placement in Wyoming’s boot camp
    program. Thus, the district court could not grant her the relief she sought, which, as
    prayed for in her First Amended Complaint, necessarily required it to order
    Defendants to further incarcerate her in a Wyoming boot camp.
    The district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED. 12
    Entered for the Court
    Joel M. Carson III
    Circuit Judge
    12
    Plaintiff moved to supplement the record on appeal to include the deposition
    of Scott Abbott. We GRANT Plaintiff’s motion.
    13