Crank v. Utah Judicial Council

2001 UT 8, 20 P.3d 307, 414 Utah Adv. Rep. 14, 2001 Utah LEXIS 12, 2001 WL 95791
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2001
Docket990171
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 2001 UT 8 (Crank v. Utah Judicial Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crank v. Utah Judicial Council, 2001 UT 8, 20 P.3d 307, 414 Utah Adv. Rep. 14, 2001 Utah LEXIS 12, 2001 WL 95791 (Utah 2001).

Opinion

DURRANT, Justice:

[ 1 Plaintiff Loren Crank, Jr., appeals the trial court's denial of attorney fees in his action to enforce a consent decree that required defendant Utah Judicial Council ("the Council") to revise its method for preparing master juror lists in the Seventh Judicial District, San Juan County, Utah. Crank also appeals the court's decision to strike his motion to find Judge Lyle R. Anderson in contempt for failure to implement the requirements of the same consent decree. Judge Anderson cross-appeals the court's denial of his motion for attorney fees.

BACKGROUND

T2 Crank initially filed suit in 1998, bringing claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in state district court. He resides in Montezuma Creek and is an enrolled member of the Navajo Tribe. He brought the action on behalf of the class described as Navajo, Paiute, and Ute Native Americans in San Juan County. 1 His suit alleged discriminatory under-representation of Native Americans on juries in the Seventh Judicial District Court. The identified defendants in the action were the Council, which was responsible for preparing the master jury lists, and the three judges of the Seventh Judicial District Court.

T8 The parties arrived at a settlement agreement (the "Agreement"), which was confirmed by the district court in the form of a consent decree in 1996. 2 In conjunction with its approval of the Agreement, the court *310 dismissed with prejudice the actions against the individual judges of the Seventh District. It also retained jurisdiction for the purpose of monitoring and enforcing compliance with the Agreement.

14 The ultimate goal of the Agreement was to ensure more equitable representation of Native Americans on San Juan County juries. That goal implicated the entire jury selection process. According to practices established before Crank's original suit, the Council compiles a master list drawn from voter registration and driver's license lists. From this master list the Council randomly draws a specified number of names which comprise the "questionnaire list." The questionnaire list is sent to the district court clerk, who mails a questionnaire to each individual on the list for the purpose of ascertaining minimum jury service qualifications. After qualification has been verified, those individuals are eligible to receive summonses to serve as jurors in particular cases.

1 5 The Agreement required the Council to formulate a plan that would provide for "District Questionnaire Lists ... to the Seventh District Court [containing] on average, plus or minus, 5 percent of the estimated percentage of adult Native Americans in San Juan County in any given year." The target percentage was to be achieved "as soon as is reasonably practicable, and no later than January 81, 1997." This deadline was not absolute, however. Anticipating potential administrative difficulties, the Agreement specifically permitted the Council to petition the district court for an extension of time.

16 The Agreement did not define how the actual percentage of Native American adults living in San Juan County was to be measured. The only indication of a specific reference percentage was contained in an attached exhibit, which compared prior percentages of Native Americans included on prior jury questionnaire lists to the percentage of Native Americans residing in San Juan County as reported by the 1990 census figures. The 1990 census indicated that 51.68 percent of the adult residents of San Juan County were Native American.

T7 The Agreement did not specify the method by which the target jury questionnaire list percentage was to be achieved. In San Juan County, 500 names are drawn from the master list to compose a questionnaire list. 3 With a random draw of a sizeable number of people, the proportion of any given identifiable group on the master list will, as a matter of statistical probability, approximate the same proportion of that group on the questionnaire list. Ideally, the master list should include all eligible adults residing in the district and produce representative proportions of Native Americans on the questionnaire lists. However, the Agreement did not describe how the questionnaire lists should be brought into compliance if, for any reason, a random draw did not generate a percentage of Native Americans within the designated range.

18 The Agreement included a number of monitoring requirements. The Council was required to file its plan with the district court within six months, and annual reports were to be submitted for the first three years. As with the other deadlines contained in the Agreement, however, the Council could petition the court for an extension. To the extent further disputes arose, the Agreement required the parties to "engage in reasonable discussions to resolve their differences informally," prior to re-instituting litigation. The Council was granted "reasonable discretion to undertake actions and implement policies" in furtherance of the Agreement's mandates.

T 9 The Council undertook implementation of the Agreement by conducting negotiations with representatives of the Navajo Nation. The two fundamental aspects of the Council's negotiations concerned establishment of a protocol for ensuring equitable representation of Native Americans on San Juan County juries and acquisition of an accurate list of adult Native Americans living within the territorial jurisdiction of the Navajo Nation. The Council encountered unanticipated difficulties in both aspects of its negotiations.

*311 110 With respect to the comprehensive protocol, the Council's goal was to obtain an agreement encompassing all phases of the process by which Native Americans under the jurisdiction of the Navajo Nation would be identified and selected for jury duty and required to appear. 4 Approval of the protocol became more complicated than anticipated and had not been finalized even at the time of trial. 5 The Council remained in contact with Crank's counsel, but did not file its plan or any other reports with the court.

{11 The Council's parallel attempt to obtain a useable list of eligible tribal members also met with complications. This list was intended to supplement the master jury list. By merging the tribal list with existing driver's license lists and voter registration lists, the Council hoped to account for virtually all Native Americans living within San Juan County. Although the Agreement specified a target percentage of Native Americans only with respect to the questionnaire lists, the Council took the position that the only legitimate method of meeting this goal was to ensure accurate representation of Native Americans on the master list. The Council reasoned that accurate representation on the master list should produce questionnaire lists that complied with the Agreement's requirements without necessitating any special supplemental measures, such as drawing additional Native American names after a random draw had failed to produce a questionnaire list within the Agreement's designated percentage range.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 UT 8, 20 P.3d 307, 414 Utah Adv. Rep. 14, 2001 Utah LEXIS 12, 2001 WL 95791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crank-v-utah-judicial-council-utah-2001.