Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood Great Plains v. Hawley ( 2018 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 17-1996
    ___________________________
    Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, on behalf of itself, its
    patients, physicians and staff; Reproductive Health Services of Planned
    Parenthood of the St. Louis, on behalf of itself, its patients, physicians, and staff;
    Ronald Yeomans, on his own behalf and on behalf of his patients
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    Josh Hawley, in his official capacity as Attorney General of the State of Missouri;
    Dr. Randall Williams, in his official capacity as Director of Department of Health
    and Senior Services
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendants - Appellants
    Daniel Knight, in his official capacity as Boone County Prosecutor; Jean Peters
    Baker, in her official capacity as Jackson County Prosecutor; Dan Patterson, in his
    official capacity as Green County Prosecutor; Theresa Kenney, in her official
    capacity as Jasper County Prosecutor
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendants
    ------------------------------
    Foundation for Moral Law
    lllllllllllllllllllllAmicus on Behalf of Appellant(s)
    National Abortion Federation
    lllllllllllllllllllllAmicus on Behalf of Appellee(s)
    Eagle Forum Education and Legal Defense Fund
    lllllllllllllllllllllAmicus on Behalf of Appellant(s)
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Western District of Missouri - Jefferson City
    ____________
    Submitted: March 15, 2018
    Filed: September 10, 2018
    ____________
    Before WOLLMAN, SHEPHERD, and ERICKSON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    SHEPHERD, Circuit Judge.
    Invoking the Constitution to enjoin the laws of a state requires more than
    “slight implication and vague conjecture.” Fletcher v. Peck, 
    10 U.S. 87
    , 128 (1810)
    (Marshall, C.J.). At a minimum, it requires adequate information and correct
    application of the relevant standard. Because we conclude that the preliminary
    injunction in this case was entered based on less than adequate information and an
    insufficient regard for the relevant standard, we vacate the preliminary injunction and
    remand.
    I.
    The roots of this case can be traced to 2007. That year, the Missouri legislature
    amended the statutory definition of “ambulatory surgery center” (“ASC”) to include
    -2-
    most facilities that performed abortions.1 A number of consequences followed, two
    of which are at issue here. The first flows from statutory language. By law, all
    doctors who perform abortions at ASCs must be “privileged to perform surgical
    procedures in at least one licensed hospital in the community.” 
    Id.
     § 197.215.1(2).
    The implementing regulations have further refined the “in the community”
    requirement to mean a licensed hospital that is 15 minutes away. 
    Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 19, § 30-30.060
     (1)(C)(4). We refer to this as the “Hospital Relationship
    Requirement.”
    The second consequence at issue flows from enacting regulations. The
    Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (“DHSS”) has delegated
    authority to enact health and safety regulations for abortion facilities. 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 197.225.1
    . Pursuant to that authority, the DHSS has adopted a number of physical
    design and layout requirements specifically for facilities that perform surgical
    abortions. 
    Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 19, § 30-30.070
    (1) (“This regulation does not
    apply to abortion facilities that do not perform surgical abortions.”).2 We refer to
    these regulations collectively as the “Physical Plant Regulations.” These
    requirements, however, are not fixed in stone. Instead, they are waivable upon
    written request. 
    Id.
     § 30-30.070(2) (“Requests for deviations from requirements on
    physical facilities shall be in writing to the [DHSS].”). We refer to this specific
    provision as the “Waiver Provision.” The record contains one instance in normal
    1
    The definition of ASC included “any establishment operated for the purpose
    of performing or inducing any second or third-trimester abortions or five or more
    first-trimester abortions per month.” 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 197.200
     (2007). More
    recently, Missouri has amended Section 197.200 to separately define an “abortion
    facility” as any facility performing abortions. 
    Id.
     § 197.200. That definitional change
    does not impact our decision here.
    2
    The regulations were changed during the pendency of these proceedings to
    exempt facilities that only provided medicinal abortions.
    -3-
    course where a minor request was made—and granted—for waiver from a single
    design requirement.
    A.
    This is not the first time these laws have been challenged. Prior to the current
    suit, Appellee Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood Great Plains
    (“Comprehensive Health”) brought facial and as-applied challenges to the statutory
    classification of abortion facilities as ASCs almost immediately after the provision
    went into effect in 2007.3 Comprehensive Health succeeded in its as-applied
    challenge only. The district court enjoined the ASC statutory classification (and
    attendant requirements) for two facilities Comprehensive Health operated: one in
    Kansas City and one in Columbia.
    Comprehensive Health and the State of Missouri settled the lawsuit in 2010
    (“2010 Settlement”). The parties agreed to modifications of the requirements of the
    Physical Plant Regulations for the Columbia facility and a complete waiver of the
    requirements for the Kansas City facility. And Comprehensive Health agreed to
    release any claims “whether or not now known or contemplated” that are “based on
    or arising out of the allegations in Lawsuits relating to licensure of the Columbia and
    [Kansas City] Centers.”
    B.
    The 2010 Settlement was not the last word, however. After the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, 
    136 S. Ct. 2292
    , as revised
    (June 27, 2016), Comprehensive Health sent a letter to DHSS calling both the
    3
    Comprehensive Health was formerly known as Planned Parenthood of Kansas
    and Mid-Missouri, Inc.
    -4-
    Hospital Relationship Requirement and the classification of abortion facilities as
    ASCs “unconstitutional and unenforceable.” It demanded that DHSS stop enforcing
    the provisions against Comprehensive Health facilities. This suit began shortly
    thereafter.
    Unlike its initial suit, Comprehensive Health is joined here by Reproductive
    Health Services of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region (“RHS”), and Dr.
    Ronald Yeomans—a gynecologist who wishes to provide abortions at Comprehensive
    Health facilities in Missouri. Together, Comprehensive Health and RHS represent
    every facility that provides or is seeking to provide abortions in Missouri:
    Comprehensive Health operates facilities in Kansas City and Columbia, and RHS
    operates a facility in St. Louis and has plans to operate in Springfield and Joplin. The
    complaint here sought declaratory and injunctive relief to roll back the 2007
    amendment which classified (most) abortion facilities as ASCs. It also sought
    specific relief from the Hospital Relationship Requirement. Both the ASC
    classification and the Hospital Relationship Requirement were challenged on
    substantive due process and equal protection grounds.4
    After evidentiary submissions and a brief hearing, the district court issued a
    slightly narrower preliminary injunction. It preliminarily enjoined enforcement of the
    Hospital Relationship Requirement—as well as certain associated criminal penalties
    for doctors who violate it—and the Physical Plant Regulations solely on substantive
    due process grounds. In doing so, it found that Hellerstedt “controls [its] ruling.”
    Because of that, it refused to weigh any evidence of benefits of the provisions,
    likening Missouri’s advocacy on this front to an “attempt[] to undermine Brown v.
    Board of Education, 
    347 U.S. 483
     (1954).”
    4
    The suit was brought against various Missouri officials in their official
    capacities. For ease, we refer to the state appellants collectively as “Missouri.”
    -5-
    Missouri now seeks to vacate the preliminary injunction.
    II.
    Our review of a preliminary injunction is layered: fact findings are reviewed
    for clear error, legal conclusions are reviewed de novo, and the “ultimate decision to
    grant the injunction” is reviewed for abuse of discretion. McKinney ex rel. NLRB
    v. S. Bakeries, LLC, 
    786 F.3d 1119
    , 1122 (8th Cir. 2015) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). In order to preliminarily enjoin state laws, a district court “must . . . make
    a threshold finding that a party is likely to prevail on the merits.” Planned Parenthood
    Minn., N. D., S.D. v. Rounds, 
    530 F.3d 724
    , 732-33 (8th Cir. 2008) (en banc). Put
    another way, “without a likelihood of success, an injunction is not justified.” Does
    v. Gillespie, 
    867 F.3d 1034
    , 1046 (8th Cir. 2017).
    With this framework in mind, we proceed to review the district court’s
    injunction with regards to the Physical Plant Regulations and Hospital Relationship
    Requirement separately.
    A.
    Missouri first argues that the Physical Plant Regulations were improperly
    enjoined because the Appellees had not “ripened” their claims. Drawing on
    administrative law jurisprudence, they argue “[w]here a regulatory regime provides
    for variances, a constitutional challenge to those restrictions is not ripe until the
    challenger has sought—and been denied—a variance.” So because none of the
    facilities run by Appellees had utilized the Waiver Provision, the district court’s
    injunction of the Physical Plant Regulations was improper.
    The main case they cite in support of this argument—Suitum v. Tahoe
    Regional Planning Agency, 
    520 U.S. 725
     (1997)—explicitly undercuts this point.
    -6-
    There, it was noted that “facial challenges to regulation”—the only challenges at
    issue here—“are generally ripe the moment the challenged regulation or ordinance
    is passed.” 
    Id.
     at 736 n.10. Missouri has not demonstrated why that general principle
    should not apply here.
    In fact, it would make little sense to find an exception here. The constitutional
    question in this case turns on the law’s “effect . . . on women seeking abortions.”
    Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. at 2306 (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). It is a woman’s substantive due process right that Appellees, as third-
    parties, are asserting. Singleton v. Wulff, 
    428 U.S. 106
    , 117 (1976) (noting it is the
    “constitutionally protected abortion decision” which a physician may “litigate” on a
    third-party basis). Stated differently, “[t]his suit is possible only because the
    [Supreme] Court has allowed abortion clinics and physicians to invoke a putative
    constitutional right that does not belong to them—a woman’s right to abortion.”
    Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. at 2321-22 (Thomas, J., dissenting). To hold that Appellees
    must “ripen” a facial constitutional claim, which they do not possess, would be
    incongruous with the fact that the holder of such a right could bring the same facial
    challenge without any avenue to “ripen” it. See Singleton, 
    428 U.S. at 118
    (emphasizing providers “assert the rights of women patients”). We reject Missouri’s
    argument.
    This is not to say, however, that a facial challenge to the Physical Plant
    Regulations on substantive due process grounds is justiciable at the present moment.
    To be clear, while we have said that individual organizations or facilities need not
    apply for waivers to “ripen” a facial claim, that does not mean we can decide a facial
    challenge to the Physical Plant Regulations without information about the Waiver
    Provision. Here, there is scant evidence as to how the Waiver Provision actually
    operates. As noted above, the record contains only one instance of a request for a
    minor waiver in normal course. In that case, it was granted with a single page letter
    -7-
    from DHSS. In cases like this, the “[r]ules of justiciability” counsel against a
    decision “based upon [an] amorphous and ill-defined factual record.” Renne v.
    Geary, 
    501 U.S. 312
    , 324 (1991).
    Refraining from “premature” decisions on facial challenges is a proper exercise
    of judicial restraint. See, e.g., Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party,
    
    552 U.S. 442
    , 450 (2008) (holding courts should “[e]xercis[e] judicial restraint” to
    prevent “premature interpretations of statutes in areas where their constitutional
    application might be cloudy.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). This is especially
    true when adjudicating the constitutionality of state laws. Arizonans for Official
    English v. Arizona, 
    520 U.S. 43
    , 79 (1997) (“Warnings against premature
    adjudication of constitutional questions bear heightened attention when a federal
    court is asked to invalidate a State’s law.”). And perhaps the decisive factor pointing
    towards restraint is the fact-intensive nature of the constitutional test here: the undue
    burden standard.
    Hellerstedt made clear that the undue burden standard “requires that courts
    consider the burdens a law imposes on abortion access together with the benefits
    those laws confer.” 136 S. Ct. at 2309. The standard is so intertwined with
    underlying facts that “later, concrete factual developments” can affect whether or not
    the same law violates the undue burden standard. Id. at 2305-06 (finding that res
    judicata did not bar claims because a pre-enforcement challenge was brought on a
    different factual record than the post-enforcement challenge at bar). As a result, the
    constitutional scrutiny required by the undue burden standard has been likened to a
    form of “cost-benefit analysis.” Fourteenth Amendment-Due Process Clause-Undue
    Burden-Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, 
    130 Harv. L. Rev. 397
    , 404 (2016);
    see also Clare Huntington, The Empirical Turn in Family Law, 
    118 Colum. L. Rev. 227
    , 250 (2018) (noting that the undue burden standard is “fundamentally an
    empirical inquiry”).
    -8-
    Appellees underscore just how “cloudy,” Wash. State Republican Party, 
    552 U.S. at 450
    , the “cost-benefit analysis” is currently with respect to the Physical Plant
    Regulations, Fourteenth Amendment, supra, at 404. In their brief, they admit three
    of the five facilities in Missouri providing or seeking to provide abortions—the
    centers in Kansas City and Columbia operated by Comprehensive Health and the
    RHS facility in St. Louis—do not “need[] further relief from [the Physical Plant
    Regulations] in order to provide abortion.” Appellee Br. 34.5 Granted, for the Kansas
    City and Columbia centers, this is because they obtained waivers from DHSS after
    litigation and a settlement. But, the point still stands: if DHSS operates its waiver
    process with sufficient flexibility, the Physical Plant Regulations would not lead to
    “fewer doctors, longer waiting times, and increased crowding” such that it would
    constitute an undue burden. Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. at 2313. Because the record is
    practically devoid of any information on the mechanics of the Waiver Provision, a
    court has no way to make that judgment.
    The district court nevertheless made such a judgment, and we conclude that in
    doing so it committed an error of law. “It would take a very hardy [DHSS] Director,”
    according to the district court, “to agree voluntarily to establishment of abortion
    clinics . . . out of compliance with ASC standards.” And so it enjoined the
    regulations on the presumption that a DHSS Director would act less than scrupulously
    on any waiver application.6 Our starting point, though, is the polar opposite: “‘[t]he
    5
    Appellees also concede that only one of the two remaining facilities is seeking
    to provide surgical abortions and thus only that facility will be subject to the Physical
    Plant Regulations. Appellee Br. 4 n.1 (noting that only Springfield facility is seeking
    to provide surgical abortion).
    6
    The district court also suggested in a footnote that the law at issue in
    Hellerstedt contained a waiver provision for abortion facilities. Hellerstedt, however,
    noted that the law before it “neither grandfathers nor provides waivers for any of the
    facilities that perform abortions.” 136 S. Ct. at 2315.
    -9-
    good faith of [state] officers and the validity of their actions are presumed.’” Robbins
    v. Becker, 
    794 F.3d 988
    , 995 (8th Cir. 2015) (second alteration in original) (quoting
    Sunday Lake Iron Co. v. Wakefield Twp., 
    247 U.S. 350
    , 353 (1918)). The district
    court’s rationale is further called into question by the waiver granted by the DHSS in
    2015—the only evidence in the record regarding the operation of the Waiver
    Provision in the normal course.
    In sum, we believe a substantive due process challenge to the Physical Plant
    Regulations—governed by the “cost-benefit analysis” required by the undue burden
    standard—is not currently fit for judicial resolution given the paucity of evidence on
    how DHSS will grant waivers. Again, we emphasize this is distinct from the position
    Missouri has advocated. We are not holding that a facial claim must be “ripened.”
    We simply hold that we lack sufficient information to make a constitutional
    determination on the Physical Plant Regulations. Any ruling now would mean “our
    disposition . . . would lack the clarity and force which ought to inform the exercise
    of judicial authority.” Geary, 
    501 U.S. at 324
    . Furthermore, hardship would not be
    imposed by withholding constitutional judgment. Cf. Parrish v. Dayton, 
    761 F.3d 873
    , 875 (8th Cir. 2014) (courts must assess “hardship to the parties of witholding
    court consideration” (internal quotation marks omitted)). No facilities currently
    providing abortions would be closed because of the Physical Plant Regulations. Cf.
    Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. at 2301 (imposition of regulations caused closure of more than
    ten abortion facilities). And currently it appears that only one prospective location
    (Springfield) is seeking to provide surgical abortions, meaning that the Physical Plant
    Regulations is pertinent only to that facility. See supra note 6. If that one facility
    applied for a waiver, we would have some semblance of a record as to how the DHSS
    exercises the Waiver Provision. In other words, we would not have to “wade through
    a quagmire of what-ifs”—if litigation is pursued—to assess the facial validity of the
    Physical Plant Regulations. Mo. ex rel. Mo. Highway & Transp. Comm’n v. Cuffley,
    -10-
    
    112 F.3d 1332
    , 1338 (8th Cir. 1997). Or a waiver application by the Springfield
    facility may mean that litigation is not pursued at all.
    On remand, the district court should not consider a facial challenge on
    substantive due process grounds to the Physical Plant Regulations. That does not end
    the matter, though. The Appellees asked for broader injunctive relief from the
    statutory ASC classification, 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 197.200
     (2007), but the district court
    entered a less capacious injunction of only the Physical Plant Regulations. Broader
    relief is likely foreclosed because Appellees trained the complaint (and injunction
    arguments) solely on the Physical Plant Regulations. But, given the “narrow” nature
    of our review at this stage, we leave it to the district court to decide this question in
    the first instance. Taylor Corp. v. Four Seasons Greetings, LLC, 
    315 F.3d 1039
    , 1041
    (8th Cir. 2003).
    B.
    We now shift to the Hospital Relationship Requirement. Unlike the Physical
    Plant Regulations, the Hospital Relationship Requirement operates by statute, is
    unwaivable, and is enforced by criminal penalty. The district court erred in enjoining
    it (and related criminal provisions) because the district court did not apply the plain
    language of Hellerstedt.7
    7
    Missouri argues that Appellees lack standing to pursue a challenge to the
    Hospital Relationship Requirement if, as we have decided, the Physical Plant
    Regulations are non-justiciable. They argue that any challenge is not redressable
    because the Physical Plant Regulations act as an independent barrier to operating
    abortion facilities. Factually, that is not accurate given the limited scope of the
    Physical Plant Regulations which apply only to facilities providing surgical abortions.
    More importantly, as we emphasized earlier, this is a third-party facial challenge. The
    concern on facial review is whether “in a large fraction of the cases in which [the
    Hospital Relationship Requirement] is relevant, it will operate as a substantial
    -11-
    As noted in our prior discussion, Hellerstedt’s rendition of the undue burden
    standard is fairly straightforward: it “requires that courts consider the burdens a law
    imposes on abortion access together with the benefits those laws confer.” 136 S. Ct.
    at 2309. Indeed it emphasized there is “an independent constitutional duty to review
    factual findings where constitutional rights are at stake.” Id. at 2310 (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Thus, Hellerstedt did not find, as a matter of law, that
    abortion was inherently safe or that provisions similar to the laws it considered would
    never be constitutional. Instead, it held that the “District Court applied the correct
    legal standard” when it “weighed the asserted benefits against the burdens.” Id. The
    district court here explicitly refused to “weigh[] the asserted benefits” stating that to
    do so “would be impermissible judicial practice.”
    In light of Hellerstedt the district court erred in so ruling. On remand, the
    district court should, at the very least, weigh the state’s “asserted benefits.” Despite
    the district court’s assertions to the contrary, Hellerstedt’s analysis of the purported
    benefits of the law at issue were, of course, related to what the law in that case
    regulated: abortion in Texas. And so the Supreme Court recognized that “before the
    act’s passage, abortion in Texas was extremely safe.” Id. at 2311 (emphasis added)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).8
    obstacle to a woman’s choice to undergo an abortion.” Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa.
    v. Casey, 
    505 U.S. 833
    , 895 (1992).
    8
    The district court observed that “Hellerstedt’s factual conclusions were not
    confined to Texas” because the “majority relied on Wisconsin and Alabama case law
    and amicus briefs and materials unrelated to Texas.” Hellerstedt cited other cases to
    show that its “answer is consistent with the findings of the other Federal District
    Courts.” 136 S. Ct. at 2312. It cited those cases after weighing the benefits put
    forward by Texas as a way to show that its own analysis was “consistent,” not
    supported, by those of other courts. In other words, Hellerstedt’s reliance on similar
    cases did not excuse courts from weighing any purported benefits as the district court
    did here. Additionally, while Hellerstedt may have cited sources from outside of
    -12-
    No such determination about abortion in Missouri was made here. Perhaps
    there was a unique problem Missouri was responding to under its inherent “police
    power.” See Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 560
    , 569 (1991) (“The traditional
    police power of the States is defined as the authority to provide for the public health,
    safety, and morals.”). Such a problem may require a different response than what was
    needed in Texas, and the Hospital Relationship Requirement may be appropriate
    given “[Missouri’s] legitimate interest in seeing to it that abortion, like any other
    medical procedure, is performed under circumstances that insure maximum safety for
    the patient.” Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. at 2309 (quoting Roe v. Wade, 
    410 U.S. 113
    , 150
    (1973)). Or perhaps the Hospital Relationship Requirement is consistent with a more
    exacting medical regulatory scheme than that present in Texas. Cf. id. at 2315
    (finding Texas regulated procedures similar to abortion less heavily which undercut
    its safety argument).9 But, given no such inquiry was made—and no findings
    ascertained—we remand for the district court to do that which Hellerstedt instructed:
    “consider[] the evidence in the record—including expert evidence, presented in
    stipulations, depositions, and testimony” and then “weigh[] the asserted benefits
    against the burdens.” Id. at 2310.
    III.
    As a final note, we address the 2010 Settlement Agreement. To re-emphasize,
    only one current plaintiff, Comprehensive Health, was a party to that agreement.
    Whether Comprehensive Health stays in the suit or not does not affect the disposition
    of this case. RHS may properly maintain any of the remaining justiciable facial
    Texas, those sources informed the benefit/burden analysis of the Texas law at issue.
    9
    The district court made an attempt at some findings along these lines, but then
    suggested “[t]he record is not clear enough . . . to make findings.”
    -13-
    claims on its own.10 The district court explicitly did not decide the issue. While we
    note the broad language in the release, we “decline to decide” in the first instance
    “whether the release language bars [Comprehensive Health’s] claims.” Lynch v.
    Nat’l Prescription Adm’rs, Inc., 
    787 F.3d 868
    , 874 (8th Cir. 2015).
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the preliminary injunction entered on May
    2, 2017 in its entirety and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ______________________________
    10
    The same attorneys represent Comprehensive Health, RHS, and Yeomans in
    this action. Missouri does not press any argument on appeal that RHS is covered by
    the 2010 Settlement.
    -14-