Glover v. Johnson

138 F.3d 229, 1998 WL 83102
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1998
DocketNos. 95-1521, 96-1852, 96-1931 and 96-1948
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 138 F.3d 229 (Glover v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glover v. Johnson, 138 F.3d 229, 1998 WL 83102 (6th Cir. 1998).

Opinions

RYAN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAUGHTREY, J., joined. WELLFORD, J. (pp. 254-256), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting-in part. .

OPINION

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

More than 20 years ago, two separate groups of plaintiffs brought class actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on behalf of all female prison inmates in Michigan. Since then, almost all of the principal players, plaintiffs and defendants alike, have departed the scene through retirement, death, or release from prison. But the two cases live on, and judging from the arguments of the parties and the extensive opinions of the district court, we are not appreciably closer to a resolution than we were two decades ago— and the end does not appear to be in sight.

In one of the two suits, which were consolidated by the district court, the plaintiffs challenged “the entire range of treatment programs for female prisoners including educational opportunities, vocational and apprenticeship training,- prison industry and work pass programs, wage rates, and library facilities as compared to those offered to male prisoners,” as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Glover v. Johnson, 478 F.Supp. 1075, 1077 (E.D.Mich.1979). In the second case, the plaintiffs “claimed that their rights to equal protection and their right to access to the courts ha[d] been violated by [the State of Michigan’s] failure to provide the female prisoners ... an adequate law library comparable to those provided for male prisoners.” Id. at 1094. After a lengthy trial, the district court found for.the plaintiffs ip both cases, entered a remedial “Final Order,” and has been supervising these aspects of the Michigan women’s correctional system ever since. During the course of the district court’s supervision, we have entertained more than a dozen appeals; now, the case is before us once again. This time we are presented with three separate appeals which we have consolidated for decision. We are asked to review the district court’s judgments (1) denying the defendants’ motion to terminate the district court’s oversight of the female inmates’ educational and vocational opportunities and their access to the courts; (2) granting, in part, the plaintiffs’ motion to impose contempt sanctions against the defen[233]*233dants; and (3) granting the plaintiffs’ motion for attorney fees.

For reasons we will fully explain, we conclude that the judgment of the district court in the first appeal, concerning termination of judicial oversight, must be vacated, and the matter remanded for further proceedings. We will retain jurisdiction. The district court’s judgments imposing contempt sanctions and attorney fees will be affirmed in part and reversed in part, and these matters too will be remanded for further proceedings, but as to these, we will not retain jurisdiction.

I.

INTRODUCTION

Despite the district court’s patient, dedicated, and persistent effort over the long history of this lawsuit, it has been unable to accomplish the two tasks before it:. (1) achieving compliance on behalf of Michigan’s women prisoners with Fourteenth Amendment equal-protection guarantees and with First Amendment access-to-court guarantees, and (2) terminating the federal-court supervision of Michigan’s women’s prison system. The first of these tasks, of course, is also the plaintiffs’ goal in filing this lawsuit; it became the district court’s task when the plaintiffs prevailed on the merits in Í979. The second task, on the other hand, is simply a necessary corollary to any extended federal-court oversight of State matters.

With all due respect, we believe the district court’s inability to achieve these two tasks stems in large part from the court’s loss of proper perception regarding its role. Very substantially because of unfocused and misdirected advocacy by both sides in this litigation, and particularly because of the recalcitrant defendants’ foot-dragging, the district court has been preoccupied with attempting to force the defendants to comply with the details, even the minutiae, of the intermediate methodologies the court has devised for remedying the constitutional deficiencies it found in 1979. The court has lost sight of the forest for its long-time attention ■to the trees.

■ We' write today not only to decide the specific questions' presented by these appeals, but also to clarify the district court’s dual missions and, in the process, refocus the attention of all concerned on the tasks at hand: remedying the constitutional infirmities the district court found existed in 1979, and terminating this litigation as speedily as possible.

II.

BACKGROUND

• The protracted history of this ease has been sketched on many occasions' in the published opinions of the district' court and this court. In lieu of still another detailed recitation, we will restate only those facts necessary to an understanding of these consolidated appeals, and leave the reader to the multiple other opinions in order to fill the interstices. But that having been said, in order- to afford the reader an adequate understanding of the basis for our decision today, we must nevertheless burden this opinion with a rather extensive review of the district court’s orders and the parties’ efforts at complying with them.

In 1979, the district court conducted a 10-day bench, trial, after which it issued a lengthy opinion holding both that “[significant discrimination against the female prison population occurs in several areas of programming ... in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment,” id. at 1083, and that the prisoners’ right of access to court was impeded not because there was no law library — one was provided and it was adequate — but by the need for legal training, see id. at 1097. Two years later the court’s judgment was supplemented with a “Final Order,” which the district court characterized as “the culmination of lengthy negotiations” between the court and the parties, and which set forth in considerable detail the required remedial actions. See Glover v. Johnson, 510 F.Supp. 1019, 1020 (E.D.Mich.1981). The court also stated its intention to “retain[] jurisdiction until it is satisfied that the terms of the Orders have been complied with in all respects.” Id. The defendants did not file ap[234]*234peals to this court from either the 1979 judgment or the 1981 “Final Order.” .

For seven or eight years following the issuance of the Final Order, the parties were repeatedly before the district court, and before this court a number of times, debating the efficacy of the district court’s order seeking to achieve the constitutionality it found lacking in 1979, and the propriety of several of the district court’s enforcement methodologies. With each passing year the district court became increasingly less satisfied with the defendants’ compliance.

Ultimately, but certainly not finally, in 1989, the district court issued a lengthy opinion and order, surveying the defendants’ “unwillingness or inability to make progress towards implementing the programs ordered” at earlier stages of the case, and noting that the defendants had consistently “met the use, and threatened use, of [the district.court’s] contempt power with studied indifference.” Glover v. Johnson, 721 F.Supp. 808, 812, 811 (E.D.Mich.1989).

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Bluebook (online)
138 F.3d 229, 1998 WL 83102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-johnson-ca6-1998.