Attala County, MS Branch v. Evans

37 F.4th 1038
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 2022
Docket20-60913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 37 F.4th 1038 (Attala County, MS Branch v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attala County, MS Branch v. Evans, 37 F.4th 1038 (5th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

Case: 20-60913 Document: 00516359240 Page: 1 Date Filed: 06/16/2022

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED June 16, 2022 No. 20-60913 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

Attala County, Mississippi Branch of the NAACP; Antonio Riley; Sharon N. Young; Charles Hampton; Ruth Robbins,

Plaintiffs—Appellants,

versus

Doug Evans, in his official capacity as District Attorney of the Fifth Circuit Court District of Mississippi,

Defendant—Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi USDC No. 4:19-CV-167

Before Elrod, Southwick, and Costa, Circuit Judges. Leslie H. Southwick, Circuit Judge: A county chapter of the NAACP and four individual Plaintiffs brought suit against the district attorney for the Mississippi counties in which they live, claiming he regularly discriminates against black potential jurors by striking them from juries because of their race. The Plaintiffs asserted violations of their own constitutional rights to serve on juries. The district court determined that it should apply one of the Supreme Court’s abstention Case: 20-60913 Document: 00516359240 Page: 2 Date Filed: 06/16/2022

No. 20-60913

doctrines and dismissed the case. We do not analyze abstention and instead conclude that the Plaintiffs do not have standing. We AFFIRM. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The Mississippi Fifth Circuit Court District covers seven counties, including Attala County, in the north central region of the state. The District Attorney for that district is Doug Evans, who, according to the complaint, has held the office since 1992. In November 2019, this suit began with the filing of a complaint in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi against Evans in his official capacity as District Attorney. The organizational Plaintiff is the chapter of the NAACP in Attala County. It brought suit “on behalf of its members, who are Black citizens of Attala County, are qualified for jury service in Circuit Court, and are subject to Evans’ policy, custom, or usage of racial discrimination in jury selection.” The four individual Plaintiffs are African-Americans who reside in the state’s Fifth Circuit Court District and are eligible for jury service. Suit was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for an alleged violation of their Fourteenth Amendment rights of prospective jurors. The complaint refers to news reports of an investigation by a group of journalists into criminal trials in the state’s Fifth Circuit District. The data the journalists compiled allegedly supports that Evans and his office strike jurors due to their race. The complaint also specifically refers to the multiple trials of Curtis Flowers for murder, which generated claims that Evans and his office were improperly striking black jurors. We detail those. Flowers’s first conviction was reversed for “numerous instances of prosecutorial misconduct” at trial, though not misconduct in jury selection. Flowers v. State, 773 So. 2d 309, 327 (Miss. 2000). Flowers was again convicted after a second trial, and there too the Mississippi Supreme Court

2 Case: 20-60913 Document: 00516359240 Page: 3 Date Filed: 06/16/2022

reversed. Flowers v. State, 842 So. 2d 531, 564–65 (Miss. 2003). The court described instances of prosecutorial misconduct and admonished the state to give Flowers a fair trial instead of engaging “in tactics which mirror ‘prosecution overkill.’” Id. at 564. The conviction that followed a third trial was reversed because of the prosecutor’s actions in jury selection: the appeal “present[ed] [the court] with as strong a prima facie case of racial discrimination as [it had] ever seen in the context of a Batson challenge.” Flowers v. State, 947 So. 2d 910, 935 (Miss. 2007) (referring to Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986)). The fourth and fifth trials ended with mistrials. See Flowers v. Mississippi, 139 S. Ct. 2228, 2237 (2019). The sixth trial resulted in a conviction, but the United States Supreme Court reversed. Id. at 2251. The Court stated that in each of the first four trials, prosecutors “appeared to proceed as if Batson had never been decided. The State’s relentless, determined effort to rid the jury of black individuals” in the first four trials, and the striking of five of six black jurors in the sixth trial, required reversal. Id. at 2246, 2251. According to the Plaintiffs’ brief, Evans then requested that the state circuit judge who had presided over the latest trial contact the Mississippi Attorney General to determine if she would agree to have her office accept the case. See Miss. Code. Ann. § 7-5-53. Contact was made; the Attorney General took the case, and, after review, that office moved to dismiss all charges. The state circuit court granted the motion in September 2020. Plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that Evans’s practices violated the constitutional rights of prospective jurors such as themselves. They also sought an injunction preventing Evans from continuing in these alleged practices, and attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. They did not seek damages.

3 Case: 20-60913 Document: 00516359240 Page: 4 Date Filed: 06/16/2022

Evans moved to dismiss on the basis that Plaintiffs lacked standing, that the claims were not ripe, and that the court should abstain. The district court did not discuss standing or ripeness, but it held that abstention was compelled by the Supreme Court’s decision in O’Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.S. 488 (1974). It therefore dismissed the suit. The Plaintiffs timely appealed. DISCUSSION The Plaintiffs’ opening brief in this court understandably focused on the sole basis of the district court’s ruling, which was that abstention was appropriate. Evans’s responsive brief defended that ruling but also argued in the alternative that a lack of standing, which it also had urged in its motion to dismiss, was independently available as a basis to dismiss. In reply, the Plaintiffs presented significant argument as to why they had standing. A district court’s judgment can be affirmed on any basis, even one not reached by the court, that is supported by the record. Lindsey v. Bio-Medical Applications of La., L.L.C., 9 F.4th 317, 327 (5th Cir. 2021). We will use that authority to consider the question of standing and, since it supports affirmance, will not reach the issue of abstention. 1 It is axiomatic that a plaintiff seeking redress in federal court must meet the initial “requirement imposed by Article III of the Constitution by alleging an actual case or controversy.” City of Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 101 (1983). One aspect of the case-or-controversy requirement is that a plaintiff must establish standing to sue. Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA, 568

1 Our reluctance to analyze abstention arises in part from the fact that our research does not reveal any Supreme Court or Fifth Circuit opinions in which abstention as analyzed in Younger or Littleton applied when the plaintiffs had not been parties to state- court proceedings, nor could they be in the future. Past and prospective jurors are essential to the criminal proceedings, but they are not parties.

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37 F.4th 1038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attala-county-ms-branch-v-evans-ca5-2022.