Danny Homan, Steven J. Sodders, Jack Hatch, Pat Murphy, and Mark Smith v. Terry Branstad, Governor, State of Iowa, and Charles M. Palmer, Director, Iowa Department of Human Services

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 29, 2015
Docket14–0178
StatusPublished

This text of Danny Homan, Steven J. Sodders, Jack Hatch, Pat Murphy, and Mark Smith v. Terry Branstad, Governor, State of Iowa, and Charles M. Palmer, Director, Iowa Department of Human Services (Danny Homan, Steven J. Sodders, Jack Hatch, Pat Murphy, and Mark Smith v. Terry Branstad, Governor, State of Iowa, and Charles M. Palmer, Director, Iowa Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Danny Homan, Steven J. Sodders, Jack Hatch, Pat Murphy, and Mark Smith v. Terry Branstad, Governor, State of Iowa, and Charles M. Palmer, Director, Iowa Department of Human Services, (iowa 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 14–0178

Filed May 29, 2015

DANNY HOMAN, STEVEN J. SODDERS, JACK HATCH, PAT MURPHY, and MARK SMITH,

Appellees,

vs.

TERRY BRANSTAD, Governor, State of Iowa, and CHARLES M. PALMER, Director, Iowa Department of Human Services,

Appellants.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott D.

Rosenberg, Judge.

The Governor and the director of the department of human

services appeal from the district court’s grant of a temporary injunction

prohibiting them from closing the Iowa Juvenile Home. REVERSED AND

REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Jeffrey S. Thompson, Solicitor

General, Meghan L. Gavin and Timothy L. Vavricek (until withdrawal),

Assistant Attorneys General, for appellants.

Mark T. Hedberg, Nathaniel R. Boulton, and Sarah M. Wolfe of

Hedberg & Boulton, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees. 2

MANSFIELD, Justice.

During the 2013 legislative session, the Iowa General Assembly

appropriated funds for the operation of the Iowa Juvenile Home (IJH) in

Toledo for the 2014 fiscal year (July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014).

Approximately five months into that fiscal year, the Iowa Department of

Human Services (DHS) decided to close the home and find alternative,

judicially approved placements for the twenty-one girls who resided

there.

Two state senators, two state representatives, and the president of

the labor organization representing employees at the IJH filed suit

against the Governor and the director of DHS. In addition to other relief,

the plaintiffs sought a determination that the defendants’ refusal to

spend appropriated funds to continue operating the IJH was

unconstitutional. Agreeing with the plaintiffs, the district court entered a

temporary injunction preventing closure of the IJH.

The Governor and the DHS director sought interlocutory review of

this injunction. We granted their request and stayed the injunction

pending appeal. Meanwhile, the general assembly declined to fund

ongoing operations of the IJH for the 2015 fiscal year (July 1, 2014 to

June 30, 2015).

The Governor and the DHS director raise several arguments as to

why the injunction was wrongly entered. The plaintiffs, on the other

hand, contend the injunction was properly granted. We decline to reach

either side’s arguments. Instead, we determine the case is moot because

the legislature is no longer appropriating funds for the operation of the

IJH. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and

remand with instructions to dismiss the case as moot. 3

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On June 20, 2013, subject to exceptions not relevant here, the

Governor approved an act of the general assembly appropriating funds

for health and human services for the 2014 fiscal year running from July

1, 2013 to June 30, 2014. See 2013 Iowa Acts ch. 138. Section 17 of

the act included, in part, an appropriation to DHS for the continued

operation of the IJH:

Sec. 17. JUVENILE INSTITUTIONS. There is appropriated from the general fund of the state to the department of human services for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2013, and ending June 30, 2014, the following amounts, or so much thereof as is necessary, to be used for the purposes designated:

1. For operation of the Iowa juvenile home at Toledo and for salaries, support, maintenance, and miscellaneous purposes, and for not more than the following full-time equivalent positions:

............................... $ 8,859,355

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FTEs 114.00

Id. ch. 138, § 17.

On August 20, 2013, responding to reports of improper use of

seclusion and restraint at the IJH, the Governor issued Executive

Order 82, which created the Iowa Juvenile Home Protection Task Force.

See Exec. Order No. 82 (2013), available at https://governor.iowa.gov/

sites/default/files/documents/Executive-Order-82.pdf. The executive

order noted, among other things, that “protecting the health, safety and

welfare of Iowa’s children is of the utmost importance,” and “all Iowa

children deserve the best care and education we can provide.” Id. The

executive order directed DHS to conduct “trauma-informed care training”

for IJH staff within thirty days. Id. In addition, the executive order

charged the task force with the following responsibilities: 4 a. Make recommendations about how to improve services for [IJH] residents; b. Review incident data to ensure a high-level of care is delivered at the Iowa Juvenile Home; c. Recommend a strategy for the permanent elimination of seclusion rooms outside the cottage setting; d. Recommend a strategy outlining the transition of the Iowa Juvenile Home’s education plan from being managed from the Department of Human Services to Area Education Agency 267; and e. Reach other goals and objectives as requested by the Office of the Governor.

Id. The task force was directed to “report its findings and make them

available to the public no later than October 15, 2013.” Id.

Despite this tight time schedule, the IJH task force issued its

report to the Governor on October 9. 1 Iowa Juvenile Home Protection

Task Force, Report of the Iowa Juvenile Home Protection Task Force

(Oct. 9, 2013), available at https://dhs.iowa.gov/sites/default/

files/Report%20of%20the%20Iowa%20Juvenile%20Home%20Protection

%20Task%20Force.pdf. The task force stated it had undertaken its

investigation “with one over-riding goal: to make recommendations

guided solely by the best interests of Iowa’s youth.” Id. (cover letter). The

task force made several findings. Among other things, it criticized the

housing of two separate populations of girls at the IJH—namely, girls

who had been adjudicated delinquent and girls who had been

adjudicated children in need of assistance (CINA). Id. at 2. Also, the

task force found the IJH’s physical plant “is, in many respects, outdated

and unsuitable for the use to which the IJH is put.” Id. Additionally, it

noted that the IJH’s control rooms “have an extreme ‘prison-like’

1The plaintiffs cited and discussed the IJH task force report in their petition but

did not attach a copy. We take judicial notice of the report’s actual contents. See King v. State, 818 N.W.2d 1, 6 & n.1 (Iowa 2012) (taking judicial notice of reports and studies referenced in the plaintiffs’ petition and citing authority for doing so). 5

appearance and contribute to the creation of the ‘corrections culture’

that was prevalent at the [IJH] in the past.” Id. The report also observed

that private placements could enable the CINA youth to benefit from

federal funding and would allow both the CINA youth and the delinquent

youth to receive additional services upon reaching eighteen years of age.

Id. at 4.

The task force then made a series of recommendations based on

“the best interests of the youth.” Id. at 4–7. Among other things, the

task force advised that CINA girls no longer be admitted to the IJH. Id.

at 6. Further, it recommended that if delinquent girls are to be placed at

the IJH, “the cottages currently on the campus should be replaced with

living units that are designed per current standards . . . and with

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Danny Homan, Steven J. Sodders, Jack Hatch, Pat Murphy, and Mark Smith v. Terry Branstad, Governor, State of Iowa, and Charles M. Palmer, Director, Iowa Department of Human Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danny-homan-steven-j-sodders-jack-hatch-pat-murphy-and-mark-smith-v-iowa-2015.