Wendy Townley v. Ross Miller ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •                                                                  FILED
    FOR PUBLICATION                      SEP 05 2012
    MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS              U .S. C O U R T OF APPE ALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    WENDY TOWNLEY; AMY                     Nos. 12-16881, 12-16882
    WHITLOCK; ASHLEY GUNSON;
    HEATHER THOMAS; DAX WOOD;              D.C. No. 3:12-cv-00310-RCJ-
    CASJA LINFORD; WESLEY                  WGC
    TOWNLEY; JENNY RIEDL; TODD             District of Nevada,
    DOUGAN; BRUCE WOODBURY;                Reno
    JAMES W. DEGRAFFENREID,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,     AMENDED ORDER
    v.
    ROSS MILLER, Secretary of State of
    Nevada,
    Defendant - Appellant,
    and
    KINGSLEY EDWARDS,
    Intervenor-Defendant.
    WENDY TOWNLEY; AMY
    WHITLOCK; ASHLEY GUNSON;
    HEATHER THOMAS; DAX WOOD;
    CASJA LINFORD; WESLEY
    TOWNLEY; JENNY RIEDL; TODD
    DOUGAN; BRUCE WOODBURY;
    JAMES W. DEGRAFFENREID,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,
    v.
    ROSS MILLER, Secretary of State of
    Nevada,
    Defendant,
    and
    KINGSLEY EDWARDS,
    Intervenor-Defendant -
    Appellant.
    Submitted to Motions Panel September 4, 2012
    Before: REINHARDT, WARDLAW, and BEA, Circuit Judges.
    The order issued September 4, 2012 is hereby amended and this amended
    order is designated for publication.
    Appellants Ross Miller, Nevada Secretary of State, and Kingsley Edwards, a
    Nevada voter, appeal from the district court’s preliminary injunction order
    enjoining Nevada’s nearly 37-year-old statute that requires a “None of These
    Candidates” option on the ballot in statewide elections for state or federal office.
    The district court entered its preliminary injunction order, dated August 22,
    2012, on August 24, 2012. The preliminary injunction order reads in part:
    2                                    12-16881
    [T]he Court grants [Docket Number] 15 Motion for Preliminary
    [I]njunction. Defendant Secretary of State Ross Miller, his agents,
    employees, affiliates, and all those acting in concert with him, are enjoined
    from allowing “None of these candidates” to appear on voting ballots.
    [Defendant’s counsel]’s oral motion to stay pending appeal is denied.
    Written ruling of the Court will issue. Court adjourns.
    (emphasis omitted).
    The notices of appeal of the grant of the preliminary injunction were filed
    immediately thereafter, on August 24 and 25, 2012. The filing of these notices of
    appeal, consolidated by this court on August 28, 2012, divested the district court of
    jurisdiction over the preliminary injunction. See Griggs v. Provident Consumer
    Disc. Co., 
    459 U.S. 56
     (1982); Davis v. United States, 
    667 F.2d 822
     (9th Cir. 1982)
    (filing of a notice of appeal generally divests the district court of jurisdiction over
    the matters appealed, although the district court may act to assist the court of
    appeals in the exercise of its judgment). We therefore have jurisdiction over these
    appeals from the district court’s August 22, 2012 and August 24, 2012 orders
    granting appellees’ motion for preliminary injunction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (a)(1).
    Appellants’ emergency motions to stay the district court’s August 22, 2012
    order pending appeal are granted. See Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
    
    555 U.S. 7
     (2008).
    3                                      12-16881
    Appellant Ross Miller’s motion for leave to file an oversized emergency
    motion to stay the district court’s August 22, 2012 order is granted.
    Appellees’ motion for leave to file an oversized opposition to appellants’
    emergency motions to stay the district court’s August 22, 2012 order is granted.
    The briefing schedule established previously shall remain in effect.
    4                                  12-16881
    FILED
    SEP 05 2012
    MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
    U .S. C O U R T OF APPE ALS
    JUDGE REINHARDT, Concurring:
    I concur fully in this court’s order, including its determination that this court
    has jurisdiction over the appeals from the district court’s preliminary injunction. I
    write separately only to add that there is an alternative basis for our jurisdiction
    over the appeals—a basis that would exist even if the district judge had not entered
    his minute order issuing the preliminary injunction.
    Before doing so, however, I wish to make clear that the panel is in
    agreement that the basis for our grant of the stay of the district court’s order
    pursuant to Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    555 U.S. 7
     (2008), is that the
    likelihood of success on the merits favors the state. Plaintiffs’ arguments offer an
    inadequate basis for this court to conclude that Nevada’s 37-year-old statute
    providing for “None of these candidates” ballots is contrary to the Constitution or
    to any federal statute. A failure to stay forthwith any injunction issued by the
    district court would accordingly result in irreparable injury to the State of Nevada
    and its citizens, and would be directly contrary to the public interest.
    The parties have advised both this court and the district court that, in order
    for Nevadans in the military to cast their ballots in the forthcoming Presidential
    5                                      12-16881
    election, the complex process of printing the statewide ballots must be completed
    no later than September 22, 2012, and that the printing of all such ballots must
    begin by September 7, 2012. Although the district judge acknowledged his
    awareness of these facts, he has deliberately attempted to avoid entering any order
    that would allow an appeal before that date. His dilatory tactics appear to serve no
    purpose other than to seek to prevent the state from taking an appeal of his decision
    before it must print the ballots. As set forth below, these attempts to frustrate the
    jurisdiction of the appellate court, and, necessarily, the Supreme Court—at least
    until the issue in this case is mooted—itself constitutes a sufficient basis for our
    exercise of jurisdiction.
    The district judge’s intent to evade appellate review is plain from the record.
    Indeed, the district judge essentially admitted as much, as evidenced by the
    transcript of the hearing held August 22, 2012, regarding the motion for
    preliminary injunction. At that hearing, counsel for the state requested that the
    district judge rule in time to permit an appeal to the Ninth Circuit before the ballot
    deadline; the district judge, however, displayed no interest in Defendants’ ability to
    appeal:
    6                                     12-16881
    MR. BENSON: Well, we have a problem in the procedural sense in
    that if we -- in order to get to the Ninth Circuit between now and
    September 7th --
    THE COURT: Well, that's your problem. I’m just trying to
    accommodate your problem with regard to notifying the printer.
    Although the district judge’s response was entirely out of keeping with the
    importance and time sensitiveness of this case, it, alone, would not suffice to
    evidence deliberate delay.
    The court’s comment, however, followed numerous and substantial delays
    caused by the district judge, which, in the face of efforts by both parties to expedite
    consideration of the matter,1 can only be explained as a deliberate attempt to evade
    review by higher courts. For example, when the district judge who had originally
    been assigned to this case withdrew from the case on June 11, 2012, the current
    district judge as Chief Judge took until July 3, 2012, to reassign the case—and,
    when he did so, he reassigned it to himself. The resultant delay had the prejudicial
    1
    Plaintiffs specifically requested expedited treatment of the preliminary injunction,
    marking their motion “EXPEDITED TREATMENT REQUESTED.” The parties
    also filed a request for an expedited briefing schedule. They further explained the
    importance of an expeditious ruling during the oral hearing on the preliminary
    injunction motion.
    7                                      12-16881
    effect of rendering moot the parties’ request for expedited briefing. Further, the
    district judge then waited almost three weeks, until July 20, 2012, to even schedule
    a hearing on the preliminary injunction. The date he eventually chose—August 22,
    2012—resulted in another month-long delay in the resolution of this proceeding.
    At the August 22, 2012, hearing, the parties once again urged the court to
    issue its ruling as soon as possible; in response, the district judge assured the
    parties that he would rule quickly:
    MR. BENSON: With regard to preparing the order and all of that, we
    have a ballot deadline, printing deadline coming up very quickly.
    THE COURT: That’s why I’m announcing this orally now.
    MR. BENSON: I appreciate that, your Honor.
    THE COURT: Even though I would like more time to study it, but --
    MR. BENSON: And with regard to the written order, my
    understanding is that an appeal cannot be taken until a written order is
    put in the record so --
    THE COURT: Right. I’ll try to do that as quickly as I can.
    8                                        12-16881
    As set forth in the district judge’s recent order in response to the notices of appeal,
    however, the district judge has so far refused to issue a fully-reasoned explanation
    for his preliminary injunction (a precondition, under his view, for appellate
    review). Despite his promise to rule “quickly,” more than a month has passed since
    the completion of briefing on that issue—and 13 days have passed since the
    August 22 hearing—without such a reasoned ruling. It is now three work days
    before the printing of ballots must commence, and the district judge has exhibited
    no signs of issuing the written explanation that he believes is essential for appellate
    review.
    The district judge was fully aware that his efforts might affect this court’s
    jurisdiction and that Defendants were seeking appellate review of his decision.
    Indeed, his recent post-appeal order notes the notices of appeal filed by the parties,
    and describes them as “premature.” In any event, his awareness did not put an end
    to his attempts to evade appellate review. When the appeals were filed, he
    immediately sought to frustrate our ability to entertain a stay pending appeal,
    denying that he had issued an order but scheduling a hearing on whether he should
    grant a stay of that order for September 14, 2012—fully a week after the state’s
    deadline for printing the ballots—a hearing that he deemed a precondition to this
    9                                      12-16881
    court’s “entertainment” of a stay motion.2 This last action by the district judge is
    particularly egregious in light of the fact that he swiftly denied oral motions for the
    precise same stay (made by both sets of Defendants) during the August 22, 2012,
    hearing.3
    In circumstances such as these, when a district judge’s actions might serve to
    deprive the appellate court of meaningful judicial review, an appellate court has the
    authority to exercise jurisdiction in aid of its own appellate jurisdiction. This is so
    2
    Before requesting a stay from this court, the parties are required either to request
    one from the district court or demonstrate why seeking such a stay would be
    impracticable. See Fed. R. App. P. 8(a). Here, both apply.
    3
    The district judge was presented with two such motions for a stay during the
    August 22, 2012, hearing, and denied them both times without equivocation. The
    first time was upon motion of the state:
    THE COURT: But the reason I’m announcing this orally is so that
    you’re forewarned with regard to the printing problem.
    MR. BENSON: And, finally, with regard to that, I must take an oral
    motion that the Court stay its order pending appeal. We do intend to
    take an appeal.
    THE COURT: I’ll deny that.
    MR. BENSON: Thank you, your Honor.
    THE COURT: So you have it for the record.
    Later, in response to a motion by Defendant-Intervenor, the court again denied the
    stay, stating, “I’ll deny that for the record so that you can ask the appellate court
    for a stay” (emphasis added). Indeed, the district court’s orders on this point are so
    contradictory that the state today filed a motion with the district court to clarify the
    precise state of the record regarding both the preliminary injunction and the stay.
    10                                     12-16881
    even if an appeal has not yet been properly perfected. In FTC v. Dean Foods, Co.,
    for example, the Supreme Court upheld the court of appeals’s authority to grant a
    preliminary injunction preventing a merger that would moot any subsequent
    appeal. 
    384 U.S. 597
    , 603-05 (1966). The Court noted that, “where an appeal is not
    then pending but may be later perfected,” an appellate court may exercise
    jurisdiction when doing so would be necessary to preserve its later appellate
    jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 603
    . The ability of appellate tribunals to act to preserve their
    jurisdiction is a necessary element of appellate review; “[o]therwise the appellate
    jurisdiction could be defeated . . . by unauthorized action of the district court
    obstructing the appeal.” Roche v. Evaporated Milk Ass’n, 
    319 U.S. 21
    , 25 (1943)
    (emphasis added); see also California Energy Comm’n v. Johnson, 
    767 F.2d 631
    ,
    634 (9th Cir. 1985) (reiterating this principle but declining to exercise such
    jurisdiction).
    When a decision on our part is necessary in order to permit the losing party
    below to obtain review by our court and the Supreme Court, we have the ability to
    act in order to preserve the jurisdiction of the appellate courts. In this case, that
    authority would permit us to decide the stay motion before us, even if the district
    court had not issued the injunction on August 24. Refusal to exercise our
    jurisdiction would frustrate not only our appellate authority, but also that of the
    11                                      12-16881
    Supreme Court, and would allow the district court to erroneously invalidate
    Nevada’s long-standing election process and to deprive its citizens of their right to
    participate in Presidential elections in the manner that the law prescribes. Such
    arrogance and assumption of power by one individual is not acceptable in our
    judicial system.
    I therefore wholeheartedly concur in the panel’s decision to grant the stay.4
    4
    In any event, if the district court were to succeed temporarily in blocking appellate
    jurisdiction as a result of its contention that it has not issued an injunction, the state
    would be free to commence printing the ballots immediately. Any subsequent
    attempt to disrupt that printing would be subject to an immediate stay as the
    weighing of the Winter factors would favor the state even more strongly.
    12                                     12-16881
    Counsel Listing
    K. Kevin Benson, Carson City, Nevada, filed the motion for stay of the district
    court’s order for appellant-defendant Ross Miller, Secretary of State of Nevada.
    Catherine Cortez Masto, Nevada Attorney General, was also on the motion.
    John Pablo Parris, Las Vegas, Nevada, filed the motion for stay of the district
    court’s order for appellant-intervenor-defendant Kingsley Edwards.
    Paul Swenson Prior, Las Vegas, Nevada, opposed the motion for stay of the district
    court’s order for plaintiffs-appellees Wendy Townley, Amy Whitlock, Ashley
    Gunson, Heather Thomas, Dax Wood, Casja Linford, Wesley Townley, Jenny
    Riedl, Todd Dougan, Bruce Woodbury, and James W. Degraffenreid.
    13                                   12-16881