Geary v. Nat'l Newspaper Publishers Assoc.
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Opinion
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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 21-CV-620
CAROLE GEARY, APPELLANT,
V.
NATIONAL NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION, APPELLEE.
Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2019 CA 005245 B)
(Hon. Florence Y. Pan, Trial Judge)
(Submitted June 8, 2022 Decided August 4, 2022)
Manotti L. Jenkins and D. Margeaux Thomas were on the brief for appellant.
Johnine P. Barnes and Robert W. Angle were on the brief for appellee.
Before BECKWITH and ALIKHAN, Associate Judges, and FISHER, Senior Judge.
ALIKHAN, Associate Judge: Appellant Carole Geary appeals the trial court’s
orders granting summary judgment in favor of appellee National Newspaper
Publishers Association (“NNPA”) and denying her motion to alter or amend the
judgment under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 59(e). Because the only claim that Ms. Geary
advances on appeal is moot—and was moot at the time the trial court ruled—we
vacate and remand with instructions to dismiss the claim. 2
I.
The NNPA is the nation’s largest association of Black-owned newspapers. Its
membership is divided into five geographical regions, and each region has two
representatives on the organization’s Board of Directors. The representatives serve
for staggered two-year terms and their tenure is limited to two consecutive terms.
In 2017, a board representative for NNPA’s Region Three was elevated to a
different position, creating a year-long vacancy for a Region Three board position
from 2017-2018. Ms. Geary assumed the seat for the remainder of the term, although
there is some dispute—not strictly relevant to this appeal—about whether she did so
validly. The major dispute that leads to this appeal is about the 2018-2020 term.
Ms. Geary contends that, in 2018, she was elected to a full two-year term
representing Region Three until June 2020. The NNPA very much disputes whether
Ms. Geary was validly elected to the seat, and in 2019, Region Three members voted
to remove her from the board on the basis that she had not been properly elected.
Ms. Geary, in turn, disputes the validity of her removal.
Significant litigation ensued. Ultimately, as relevant here, the trial court
concluded that Ms. Geary’s request for a declaration that she had been improperly
removed from the board in 2019 was moot because her 2018-2020 term had expired
by the time the court rendered its decision in May 2021. But, rather than dismissing 3
the claim as moot, the court granted summary judgment. 1 The court thereafter
denied Ms. Geary’s Rule 59(e) motion, finding no basis to reconsider the summary
judgment decision. This appeal followed.
II.
We begin—and end—with the threshold question whether Ms. Geary’s claim
is moot. “As a general rule, the mootness doctrine prevents courts from deciding
cases ‘when the issues presented are no longer live or when the parties lack a legally
cognizable interest in the outcome.’” Fraternal Ord. of Police, Metro. Lab. Comm.
v. District of Columbia, 113 A.3d 195, 198 (D.C. 2015) (quoting Settlemire v. D.C.
Off. of Emp. Appeals, 898 A.2d 902, 904-05 (D.C. 2006)). Because this court is not
bound by the case or controversy requirement of Article III, it has “greater flexibility
to hear cases than the federal courts,” but it nonetheless “‘follow[s] the principles of
standing, justiciability, and mootness’ for prudential reasons.” Id. at 199 (quoting
Atchison v. District of Columbia, 585 A.2d 150, 153 (D.C. 1991)).
The arguments that Ms. Geary advances on appeal are all in service of her
claim that she is entitled to a declaratory judgment that her 2019 removal from the
board was improper. But that claim is moot because, even if we were to find fault
1 The court also granted summary judgment to the NNPA on Ms. Geary’s request to inspect and copy certain records. Ms. Geary does not appeal that issue, so we leave that portion of the judgment undisturbed. 4
with her removal, Ms. Geary’s two-year term would have naturally expired in June
2020. Declaratory relief would not put Ms. Geary back on the board, nor would it
permit her to vote on board matters long since concluded. See McBryde v. Comm.
to Rev. Cir. Council Conduct & Disability Ords. of the Jud. Conf. of the U.S., 264
F.3d 52, 55 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (holding that claims related to a judge’s expired
suspension and disqualification were moot because “[n]o relief sought in th[e] case
would return to [the judge] the cases he was not assigned or otherwise improve his
current situation”). Any determination we could render would thus be “merely
advisory and lead to no practicable relief.” Healey v. Barker Found., 469 A.2d 1244,
1246 (D.C. 1983).
Ms. Geary contends that her claim is not moot because “[d]eclaratory relief
will help to redress the stigmatization and harm that the removal from the Board
caused to [her] reputation.” While a concrete injury to one’s reputation can give rise
to standing, see Meese v. Keene, 481 U.S. 465, 473-74 (1987), some “claims of
reputational injury can be too vague and unsubstantiated to preserve a case from
mootness,” McBryde, 264 F.3d at 57. What we have here are claims of the “vague
and unsubstantiated” variety. Ms. Geary laments that she is a “pariah” and has a
“hostile relationship that continues with the current NNPA leadership.” She asserts
that a declaratory judgment would “help restore her credibility among her peers in
the organization.” But she has presented nothing more than her own conclusory 5
allegations, and that is simply not enough to save her case from mootness. Cf.
Advanced Mgmt. Tech., Inc. v. FAA, 211 F.3d 633, 636-37 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
(providing, in the standing context, examples of sufficient allegations of reputational
harm). 2
At base, Ms. Geary is claiming that “she [i]s entitled to have her rightful
election to the Board of Directors respected and acknowledged by the organization.”
But it is well established that the mere “‘desire for vindication’—that is, ‘a
declaration that a person was wronged’—is inadequate to create a live controversy.”
Fraternal Ord. of Police, 113 A.3d at 199 (quoting Settlemire, 898 A.2d at 907); see
Settlemire, 898 A.2d at 907 (“The ‘legal interest’ at stake ‘must be more than simply
the satisfaction of a declaration that a person was wronged.’” (quoting Lankford v.
City of Hobart, 73 F.3d 283, 288 (10th Cir. 1996))). “While the emotional
satisfaction of a victory may be important to a litigant, ‘emotional involvement in a
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