Showing posts with label injunctions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label injunctions. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2017

Appeals Court Sustains Temporary Restraint on Trump Immigration EO

“You got your tricks
Good for you
But there’s no gambit I don’t see through”

Yesterday the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit unanimously held that the federal trial judge in Seattle who granted a nationwide temporary restraining order (TRO) suspending Trump’s immigration ban executive order (EO) did not exceed his discretion.  The Court of Appeals therefore rejected Donald Trump’s emergency motion.  The per curiam (unsigned, with authorship attributed simply to the court) appellate opinion, styled an “Order” by the three-judge panel, held that the President and official defendants had failed to show that they were likely to establish on appeal of the TRO that the EO was lawful.  In assessing legality, the court primarily focused on individuals’ rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, though it also noted (without definitively ruling) that the plaintiff states’ arguments that the EO unconstitutionally discriminated on the basis of religion were serious.  The Court also held that Trump had failed to show that irreparable injury would follow if the trial judge’s TRO were not immediately lifted.

The lawsuit, filed by the states of Washington and Minnesota, challenged three aspects of the EO.  As the appellate court explained, “section 3(c) of the Executive Order suspends for 90 days the entry of aliens from seven countries,” all of which have majority-Muslim populations, as widely observed in the media following issuance of the EO.  Sections 5(a)-5(c) stop the US from accepting refugees for 120 days, afterward requires prioritization of claims based on religious persecution where someone is a religious minority (such as, e.g., Christians from the seven countries at issue), and indefinitely bars refugees from Syria.  Third, section 5(e) of the EO specifies that it is in the national interest to make exceptions to the EO (pursuant to authority in section 3(g)) “when the person is a religious minority in his country of nationality facing religious persecution.”

The district court judge had held a hearing and subsequently entered a nationwide TRO temporarily halting enforcement of the EO, and the Trump administration filed an emergency motion with the Court of Appeals, defending the claimed lawfulness of the order under the Constitution and federal statutes and asking the court to stay the TRO.  The oral argument in the case revealed concerns about the order from all three judges – William C. Canby, Richard R. Clifton, and Michelle T. Friedland – with Canby’s and Friedland’s concerns including worries whether the EO was intended to discriminate on the basis of religions against Muslims; Clifton seemed more skeptical of the latter claim.
Photo: -, AFP/Getty Images

The unanimous opinion arguably reflected this range of opinion.  After a brief analysis of why the Court of Appeals had jurisdiction to review the TRO, the court turned to the states’ standing to sue in federal court over the EO.  Federal case law limits the sorts of disputes that can be heard in the federal courts, limiting them to ones where the plaintiffs have “standing,” roughly meaning a sufficiently concrete stake in the dispute.  Here, the EO directly affects immigrants and only derivatively harms the plaintiff states themselves.  State universities are arms of the state for legal purposes here, and the court concluded that the linkage between the EO and harm to the states was straightforward:  “The necessary connection can be drawn in at most two logical steps: (1) the Executive Order prevents nationals of seven countries from entering Washington and Minnesota; (2) as a result, some of these people will not enter state universities, some will not join those universities as faculty, some will be prevented from performing research, and some will not be permitted to return if they leave.”  The court therefore concluded the states had standing for the suit to begin with.

The court also held that it had the authority in our constitutional scheme of governance to review the states’ legal claims, emphatically rejecting the administration’s claims that the President’s determinations about the national security necessity of his EO were judicially unreviewable, a point on which the panel had pressed the administration’s attorney at oral argument.  The court conceded that he was entitled to judicial deference in such matters, but invoked a range of Supreme Court precedents to hold that the judiciary nonetheless has an important role to play in ensuring the government acted constitutionally.  These included the George W. Bush-era “War on Terror” case Boumedienne v. Bush.

To decide whether it should stay the trial court’s TRO, the Court of Appeals applied well established case law requiring it to consider four factors.  Those are “(1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies.”  Concerning the last factor, the court observed that different aspects of the public interest support each side in the case.  “On the one hand, the public has a powerful interest in national security and in the ability of an elected president to enact policies. And on the other, the public also has an interest in free flow of travel, in avoiding separation of families, and in freedom from discrimination.”  But the court had noted that that factor, and the third, only came into play if the party seeking the stay – here, Trump – established both of the first factors.  As noted above, the court held that he had not prevailed on those prongs.

The majority of the court’s legal analysis of the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the EO was devoted to explaining why Trump had not shown his order was likely to be held constitutional on appeal.  And it relied primarily on the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.  That clause forbids the government to deprive individuals of “life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”  This clause has a procedural aspect upon which the court was relying; when the government deprives people of a protected liberty interest, for example, it must afford them notice and the opportunity to be heard, that is, “the opportunity to present reasons not to proceed with the deprivation and have [those reasons] considered” by the government.  The EO, of course, did not do so, categorically excluding sweepingly defined classes of people of their previous legal opportunity to enter the U.S. Trump argued that this was not necessary, contending that (as the court put it) “most or all of the individuals affected by the Executive Order have no rights under the Due Process Clause.”

This, the court held, was wrong.  Its opinion relied on numerous Supreme Court decisions to show that lots of noncitizens have due process rights concerning their right to travel into or out of the country.  Making the textual point that the Due Process Clause protects “persons,” not just citizens, the court pointed to various classes of persons who do have due process rights relevant here.  These included “certain aliens attempting to reenter the United States after travelling abroad[,]” such as lawful permanent residents (LPRs).  Although the White House counsel reinterpreted the EO not to apply to LPRs after its initial roll-out, the court rejected the notion that this was binding in a way that saved the order from constitutional challenge on their behalf.  That move did not render the case moot because it was not “absolutely clear” that the EO would not once again be applied to LPRs.  Moreover, the court pointed to Supreme Court case law suggesting that beyond LPRs, the EO could be violating the due process rights of “other persons who are in the United States, even if unlawfully; non-immigrant visaholders who have been in the United States but temporarily departed or wish to temporarily depart; refugees; and applicants who have a relationship with a U.S. resident or an institution that might have rights of its own to assert.” (citations omitted)

Trump’s back-up position was that the TRO was overbroad in that it extended past LPRs, and even beyond “previously admitted aliens who are temporarily abroad now or who wish to travel and return to the United States in the future[,]” and in that it extended beyond Washington and Minnesota (the plaintiff states) to the entire nation.  The court rejected the former, population overbreadth claim because it would leave unprotected some noncitizens who have viable due process claims.  It rejected the latter, geographic overbreadth claim by invoking the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals decision sustaining a nationwide injunction against President Obama’s program of Deferred Action for Parents of Americans.  Without affirmatively endorsing that court’s view that “such a fragmented immigration policy would run afoul of the constitutional and statutory requirement for uniform immigration law and policy,” the Court of Appeals here said Trump had not shown that the contrary view was likely to prevail.  And, apropos both overbreadth claims, the court said it was not their role to rewrite the EO to save it from its likely unconstitutionality.  Thus, Trump had not established the likelihood that he would prevail on appeal, and so was not entitled to a stay of the trial judge’s TRO.

The Court of Appeals then also flagged the religious discrimination claims pressed by the plaintiff states against the EO, which they contended violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment and the Constitution’s equal protection limitation on federal action.  If Judge Clifton had felt particularly strongly about those claims, he might have insisted that any opinion he joined say nothing about the claim beyond ‘we don’t need to talk about it at all because we’re ruling on due process grounds.’  Yet the opinion went there.  It recounted the constitutional principle against religious favoritism embodied in the Establishment Clause.  It sympathetically recounted the states’ argument on this front, specifically affirming the propriety of relying on evidence of religious favoritism beyond the face of the EO, such as “numerous statements by the President about his intent to implement a ‘Muslim ban.’”  And, as noted earlier, it characterized the religious favoritism arguments as raising “serious allegations and present[ing] significant constitutional questions.”  Only then did it say that it would withhold judgment on those issues (as distinguished from the due process issues) until full briefing on the merits of the appeal.

Moreover, the Court of Appeals held that Trump and the other federal defendants failed to show that they would suffer irreparable injury – that could not be addressed with an eventual favorable decision possibly after a full trial – and so was not legally entitled to a stay of the TRO.  The court recognized that combatting terrorism was certainly a powerful governmental interest.  But, it noted: “Despite the district court’s and our own repeated invitations to explain the urgent need for the Executive Order to be placed immediately into effect, the Government submitted no evidence to rebut the States’ argument that the district court’s order merely returned the nation temporarily to the position it has occupied for many previous years.”  It rejected the government’s claim to superior knowledge of risks of terrorism, rightly noting that the government frequently provides courts evidence under seal, so that their claims can be assessed while secrecy is preserved.  In contrast, the court found that the states had provided ample evidence of the irreparable harms the EO causes, including “that the travel prohibitions harmed the States’ university employees and students, separated families, and stranded the States’ residents abroad. ”


It’s not at all clear whether the Trump administration will seek review of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in the Supreme Court.  They well might, on the theory that they have little or nothing to lose.  At worst, the Supreme Court would affirm the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, leaving the status quo (pre-EO) in place.  On the other hand, if Trump can convince five Justices of the Supreme Court that the TRO was overbroad in a way that should be reigned in, Trump might claim a victory about which he could crow in public, in social media.  It’s not clear that he would be able to – particularly with revelations that he is signing executive orders without appreciating what they do.  The doctrine of judicial deference to the Executive presupposes a reasonably competent or properly functioning president, which it regrettably is increasingly unclear the United States enjoys today.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Utah Officials Ask Court to Stop Same-Sex Couples Marrying

“There’s safety in numbers/And the more the merrier am I”

The same day U.S. District Judge Robert Shelby held that Utah’s ban on recognizing marriages of same-sex couples was unconstitutional (in Kitchen v. Herbert, addressed here), the state’s Governor and Attorney General asked him to stay his decision.  (Interestingly, the third named defendant, the Clerk of Salt Lake County, did not join in this motion.)  If successful, their motion for a stay of the judgment pending the appeal they said they’ll file would probably put a stop to same-sex couples marrying in Utah at least until a ruling on the merits by the federal appellate court (the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit).  It seems unlikely Judge Shelby would grant the stay, and if the Tenth Circuit does, it probably would not be because of the legal reasoning in the state official’s motion, which is surprisingly weak.

When a loser in federal court asks for a stay of the court’s judgment in order to preserve the status quo during an appeal, Tenth Circuit rules require the court considering such a motion to consider four factors:  “(a) the likelihood of success on appeal; (b) the threat of irreparable harm if the stay or injunction is not granted; (c) the absence of harm to opposing parties if the stay or injunction is granted; and (d) any risk of harm to the public interest.”  The state official’s arguments on these points in their six-page motion are mighty slim.  I recognize that they filed this motion the same day the trial judge ruled in the case, but they should have been prepared for the possibility that he would rule against them and not stay his judgment.  (After all, that’s what Chief Judge Vaughn Walker did in the federal litigation that held California’s Proposition 8 unconstitutional.)

It can be hard to convince judges that they made a mistake in their rulings.  But the state officials did not even make much effort here.  Their position basically was a safety-in-numbers argument:  we’ve got lots of cases we cited upholding laws excluding same-sex couples from marriage.  Yet it is not enough to say “many other courts have concluded that the opposite-sex definition of marriage rationally serves society’s interests in regulating sexual relationships between men and women so that the unique procreative capacity of those relationships benefits rather than harms society, by increasing the likelihood that children will be born and raised in stable family units by their biological mothers and fathers.”  Not when those cases were decided before the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in United States v. Windsor at the end of June 2013.  And not when this court’s 53-page decision explained why those arguments are (to use a technical term) bogus.  And the state’s closing observation, that in most states with marriage equality it has “been accomplished through the democratic process,” is without more a non sequitur in a section of a motion devoted to the legal correctness of the ruling they seek to stay.

Next, parties seeking to stay a judgment are supposed to show that they will face “irreparable harm” if the stay is denied and the judgment allowed to be operative.  Having failed in the trial court to identify any plausible adverse consequences of letting same-sex couples marry, the state official defendants here did the best they could, offering two injuries.  First, they relied on precedents that say, when a state is enjoined from enforcing its democratically adopted laws, it faces irreparable injury.  That may be true for constitutional laws, but if a law is unconstitutional, the state had no business adopting it, and being enjoined from enforcing it is not much of if any “injury.”  Second, consistent with their narrative in the trial court that the marriage bans were enacted not to hurt lesbigay people but to help all of society, the state officials benevolently suggested that same-sex couples would suffer irreparable injury if allowed to marry “under a cloud of uncertainty” before all appeals were resolved.  The state officials assume that the trial court will be reversed (“when their marriages are declared invalid,” they write (my emphasis)), so this argument as well as the state-cannot-enforce-its-laws argument depend on how likely it is that the trial court will be reversed.  Independently, one might of course think that same-sex couples are in a better position to evaluate for themselves whether the possibility of a future marriage invalidation is more harmful than the reality of continuing in the present with no legal relationship recognition.

On the flip side, people seeking to stay a court’s judgment are also supposed to address the harm to the opposing side if the judgment were put on hold.  Here, the state officials argue that the only harm is delay, and that’s not irreparable, they say.  But if marriage were as symbolically powerful as their ‘responsible procreation’ arguments suggest, delay might be a more serious and not necessarily reparable harm.  Moreover, there are other harms not clearly reparable.  For example, a person might be forced to testify against her same-sex partner, for example, whereas the Utah Rules of Evidence protect spouses from being forced to do that.  Or one party might die, leaving his partner never having been able to marry.


As for risk of harm to the public interest, all the state defendants could muster for this fourth factor was to reassert the claims that the people of the state have a public interest in deciding the contours of state marriage law (again, something true only insofar as their decisions do not violate the Constitution) and that uncertainty about marriage validity harms the public interest.

[UPDATE Mon. Dec. 23, 8:15 a.m.  Over the weekend, the state officials asked the Tenth Circuit appeals court to stay the trial judgment until the trial court rules on their stay motion.  Because they were not actually asking the appellate court to put things on ice until after that court finally rules on the merits, they thought they need not address the four factors above.  But the two Tenth Circuit judges before whom this motion noted that the national and local rules governing the case did not contemplate such a stay order, and so this motion did not comply with the rules.  The ball (the stay motion, in this case) is back in Judge Shelby's court, where arguments are being held as this update is typed.]

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Prop 8 Trial Tracker Takes on Prop 8 Proponents' Appellate Brief

"Hey, Pearl, what's bugging you, girl?"

On Prop 8 Trial Tracker, Brian Devine has "attempt[ed] to provide some initial legal analysis of the Opening Brief filed by the Proponents of Prop. 8[,] writing about the issues of standing and jurisdiction."  You can read his take here.

I appreciate the value of trying to wade through the Proponents’ filings for the general public.  But I don’t know whether Brian Devine is an expert in the relevant legal areas. (I teach various courses in sexual orientation and the law, constitutional law, and federal courts.)  And the problem here is that significant parts of his analysis are wrong.

For example, he states (and reemphasizes in a comment) that “In Karcher, a New Jersey statute expressly gave the Speaker of the Assembly the right to defend the constitutionality of a law when the state’s Attorney General refused.”  I believe this is not true.  Rather, the district court “permitted this intervention [of Alan J. Karcher, in his representative capacity as Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly; Carmen A. Orechio, in his representative capacity as President of the New Jersey Senate; and the New Jersey Senate] because the Legislature had been responsible for the enactment of the statute and because no other party defendant would defend it.”  The defendants made this point in their earlier (and successful) emergency motion to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for a stay of Walker’s judgment.  Since there was no state statute there, nor here, it cannot distinguish Karcher v. May.

Moveover, Brown v. Board of Education was indeed filed as a class action, and whether or not the district court in that case (or the other state cases consolidated with Brown before the Supreme Court), the Supreme Court understood those cases as being class actions. So, since Perry was not even filed as a class action, the propriety of statewide injunction in Brown doesn’t settle the propriety of Walker’s injunction.

Likewise, Loving v. Virginia did not involve a suit for an injunction against the state; Richard and Mildred instead were seeking, and the Supreme Court granted, an overturning of their criminal sentences. Thus, even if the Proponents are right (though I don’t think they are) about the proper scope of Walker’s injunction, that would not conflict with Loving.

All this said, there is plenty of reason for hope still. My blog entry at http://cruz-lines.blogspot.com/2010/08/do-prop-8-proponents-have-standing-to.html gives a pretty lengthy, technical, and careful take on the standing issue.  I’ll also try to blog shortly about the scope of the injunction issue (just the two plaintiff couples, or everyone who may try to marry in California).  Ninth Circuit case law doesn’t clearly dictate that Walker’s injunction was too broad, and I’ll explore relevant Supreme Court precedent.  (In short, I think Vik Amar is wrong.)

But now, I must return to preparing to teach Federal Courts tomorrow morning (Monday, September 20).