PLANNED PARENTHOOD SOUTH ATLANTIC v. STEIN

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 26, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-00480
StatusUnknown

This text of PLANNED PARENTHOOD SOUTH ATLANTIC v. STEIN (PLANNED PARENTHOOD SOUTH ATLANTIC v. STEIN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PLANNED PARENTHOOD SOUTH ATLANTIC v. STEIN, (M.D.N.C. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA

PLANNED PARENTHOOD SOUTH ) ATLANTIC, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) 1:23-CV-480 ) JOSHUA STEIN, et al., ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) PHILIP E. BERGER, et al., ) ) Intervenor-Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER Catherine C. Eagles, Chief District Judge. Following the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Org., 597 U.S. 215 (2022), the North Carolina General Assembly overhauled the state’s law on abortion in 2023. That law, as amended, prohibited abortions in many situations, otherwise reduced the availability of abortions, and added many more regulatory, medical, and procedural rules and requirements for an abortion to be lawful. It imposed civil, quasi-criminal, and, for many of its provisions, criminal sanctions and penalties for its violation. The plaintiffs, Planned Parenthood South Atlantic (PPSAT) and Dr. Beverly Gray, challenged the constitutionality of various provisions of the Act. The Court refused to enjoin the new law in its entirety but entered a preliminary injunction enjoining enforcement of two provisions: one requiring documentation of the existence or probable existence of an intrauterine pregnancy and another requiring surgical abortions after 12

weeks of pregnancy be performed in a hospital. The parties agree that the material facts are undisputed. They filed and fully briefed cross-motions for summary judgment, which have been carefully considered. The provision requiring providers to document the existence or probable existence of an intrauterine pregnancy before a medical abortion is unconstitutionally vague. The

requirement does not give medical providers sufficient notice of the required conduct, and it does not include sufficient standards to prevent arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. Therefore, the statute violates the plaintiffs’ due process rights. The plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment as to the intrauterine pregnancy provision will be granted, and the intervenors’ cross-motion for summary judgment will be denied.

The requirement that surgical abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy be performed in a hospital does not violate the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights to equal protection or due process. The plaintiffs have offered credible and largely uncontroverted medical and scientific evidence that this requirement is unnecessary to protect maternal health and safety and will unnecessarily make such abortions more dangerous for many women and

more expensive. But since the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs, there is no fundamental right to abortion, see 597 U.S. at 300, and the General Assembly need only offer rational speculation for its legislative decisions regulating abortion. The intervenors have offered such speculation, and the plaintiffs have not negated every conceivable basis the General Assembly may have had for enacting the hospitalization requirement. The intervenors’ motion for summary judgment as to the hospitalization requirement will be granted, and the plaintiffs’ cross-motion will be denied.

I. Procedural History In May 2023, the North Carolina General Assembly enacted Senate Bill 20, entitled “An Act to Make Various Changes to Health Care Laws and to Appropriate Funds for Health Care Programs.” Doc. 1-1. Among other things, the Act significantly restricted access to abortions by changing and adding to the requirements of Chapter 90,

Article 1i of the North Carolina General Statutes where the law governing abortion is codified. Soon thereafter, the plaintiffs filed a verified complaint on behalf of themselves and their patients seeking abortions and sought a temporary restraining order to keep the Act from going into effect on July 1, 2023. Doc. 1. They raised several constitutional

challenges. Id. at ¶¶ 77–87. Philip E. Berger, President Pro Tempore of the North Carolina Senate, and Timothy K. Moore, Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives, moved to intervene as defendants on behalf of the General Assembly. Doc. 17. The Court granted the motion. Text Order 06/24/2023; Minute Entry 06/28/2023; Doc. 32.

The General Assembly soon passed an amended version of the Act, largely directed to resolving some of the ambiguities in the original Act, and the amended version was signed into law on June 29, 2023. Doc. 42 at ¶ 6. The next day, this Court denied the motion to enjoin enforcement of the Act as a whole. Doc. 31. But based on vagueness concerns, the Court granted the motion for a temporary restraining order prohibiting enforcement of the intrauterine pregnancy provision that required a “physician prescribing, administering, or dispensing an abortion-inducing drug” to

“[d]ocument in the woman’s medical chart the . . . existence of an intrauterine pregnancy.” Id. at pp. 8–9 ¶ 1.1 The Court refused to issue a temporary restraining order as to the hospitalization requirement, finding it unnecessary since the provision would not go into effect until October 1, 2023. Id. at p. 9 ¶ 2. The parties thereafter jointly moved to extend the temporary restraining order

pending some expedited discovery and a ruling on the preliminary injunction motion. Doc. 33. The Court granted the motion, Doc. 35, and set a schedule for expedited discovery, briefing, and a hearing. Doc. 37. The plaintiffs filed an amended verified complaint in light of the amendments to the Act passed in late June 2023. Doc. 42.2 For the same reason, they filed an amended

motion for a preliminary injunction. Doc. 48. They also filed four declarations under oath in support of their motion, Doc. 49-1; Doc. 49-2; Doc. 69-1; Doc. 69-2, deposition testimony, Doc. 74-1; Doc. 74-2; Doc. 74-3; Doc. 74-4; other exhibits, and briefs. The North Carolina Attorney General agreed with the plaintiffs, Doc. 63, and other defendants

1 All page citations are to the pagination appended by the CM-ECF system.

2 In the amended complaint, Doc. 42 at ¶¶ 82–86, the plaintiffs did not make the same broad constitutional challenges to the changes to the Abortion Law that they made in their original complaint. Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 77–87. Those challenges are no longer before the Court, as the amended complaint is the operative complaint, and the Court makes no decision on any of the claims originally asserted. took no position. Doc. 56; Doc. 58; Doc. 61; Doc. 62. The intervenors defended the constitutionality of the provisions at issue, and in opposition to the motion filed two declarations under oath, Doc. 65-1; Doc. 65-3, various exhibits, deposition testimony,

Doc. 75-2; Doc. 75-3, and briefs. After a hearing, the Court granted the plaintiffs’ amended motion for a preliminary injunction and enjoined two provisions of the law. Doc. 80 at pp. 33–34 ¶¶ 1–2. The Court found that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their claim that the intrauterine pregnancy (IUP) provision was unconstitutionally vague and on their claim that the

requirement that surgical abortions after 12 weeks be performed in a hospital violated the equal protection clause. Id. at pp. 32–33. After additional time for discovery, the plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment, Doc. 93, and the intervenors filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. Doc. 97. The plaintiffs filed five declarations under oath in support of their motion, Doc. 94-1;

Doc. 94-2; Doc. 100-1; Doc. 100-2; Doc. 100-3, deposition testimony, Doc. 94-3; Doc. 94-4; Doc. 94-5; other exhibits, and briefs. The intervenors filed declarations under oath in support of their motion, Doc. 97-2; Doc. 97-3; Doc. 97-4; other exhibits, Doc. 97-1; Doc. 97-5; Doc. 97-6; Doc. 97-7; and briefs. The Attorney General filed a response and reply in support of the plaintiffs’ position, Doc. 99; Doc.

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD SOUTH ATLANTIC v. STEIN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planned-parenthood-south-atlantic-v-stein-ncmd-2024.