Yarls v. Bunton

905 F.3d 905
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 2018
DocketNo. 17-30779
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 905 F.3d 905 (Yarls v. Bunton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yarls v. Bunton, 905 F.3d 905 (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

DON R. WILLETT, Circuit Judge

This is a constitutional challenge to Louisiana public defenders' practice-now discontinued-of placing indigent, non-capital defendants on waitlists for appointed counsel. Appellants allege this practice, the result of chronic budgetary shortfalls, violates poor defendants' Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments rights to a speedy trial and to assistance of counsel. They seek a declaratory judgment that such waitlists are unconstitutional and injunctive relief requiring Appellees-the Louisiana State Public Defender and the Chief District Defender for Orleans Parish-"to provide competent counsel to individuals on waiting lists." (Interestingly, Appellees neither resist federal jurisdiction nor oppose Appellants' requested relief.)

Appellants dub this "a constitutional crisis of unprecedented dimension." Certainly, the constitutional safeguards due indigent arrestees awaiting representation is a weighty matter. So too is another constitutional safeguard: the mootness doctrine derived from Article III's "case or controversy" requirement. And on mootness, all parties concede a fundamental point: The Louisiana Legislature's recent $5 million reallocation of indigent-defense funding has eliminated all waitlists for non-capital defendants. As the State Public Defender *908plainly puts it, "Current waitlists in the districts for non-capital defendants are non-existent."1 Appellants discount the revenue boost as an insufficient stopgap given public defenders' caseloads. The legal upshot, though, is unmistakable: The controversial waitlists are no longer in controversy. And no waitlists = no live case or controversy = no jurisdiction.

We thus DISMISS this appeal as moot.

I

Louisiana funds representation for non-capital defendants through legislative appropriations at the state level, supplemented by traffic tickets and other local fines assessed by each defender district. During a 2015 funding shortage, the Orleans Public Defender (OPD) and about 30 other districts implemented Restriction of Services (ROS) protocols as a triage measure. The protocols resulted from a statewide audit that determined, "in light of current caseloads," OPD was unable to "provide constitutional, ethical representation to its clients" as required by the Rules of Professional Conduct. Because the Rules are black letter law in Louisiana,2 ROS protocols prescribed waitlists for non-capital defendants to keep attorney caseloads within reasonable limits.

This suit originated when Appellants-Darwin Yarls, Jr., Leroy Shaw, and Douglas Brown-requested appointed counsel after being arrested on non-capital felony charges in Orleans Parish. The state court appointed OPD to represent them. But OPD responded that, due to excessive caseloads and staff shortages, it could not accept Appellants as clients and instead placed them on a waitlist for appointed counsel. Appellants thus lacked representation for preliminary hearings to scrutinize the allegations against them, challenge probable cause determinations, or request lower bail. Appellants were ultimately detained without counsel for several months. Each has since been released.

Appellants filed a proposed class action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking to represent a class of Orleans Parish arrestees who had been waitlisted. Appellants first requested a declaratory judgment that the waitlists violated their Sixth Amendment right to counsel and their Fourteenth Amendment rights to equal protection and due process. They asserted that due to Chief District Defender Derwyn Bunton's and OPD's refusal to represent them, they faced "an unduly heightened risk of prolonged and unnecessary pretrial detention." Appellants later amended their complaint to seek injunctive relief too, specifically requesting that Appellees be ordered to develop a plan to provide appointed counsel for each waitlisted defendant and to submit various reports.

After several months of negotiation, the parties submitted a Joint Motion for Final Declaratory and Partial Injunctive Relief. The accompanying Proposed Order declared that OPD waitlists violated proposed class members' constitutional rights. The district court went another route. It dismissed the case, citing Younger abstention, justiciability, and federalism concerns.3 Appellants then filed an unopposed *909Motion for Relief from Judgment. The district court denied the motion, and Appellants appealed.

Then in 2017, after this appeal was filed, the Louisiana Legislature amended the Public Defender Act to steer $5 million more to district defenders for non-capital indigent defense. Nobody disputes that this added revenue eliminated non-capital waitlists. Appellants remained unmoved, however, branding Louisiana's funding for indigent defense "inherently inadequate and unreliable," adding, "conditions in Orleans may soon deteriorate once again," necessitating future waitlists.

II

We review a district court's Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal de novo and may affirm "on any grounds supported by the record, including a party's lack of standing."4 Lack of standing means lack of jurisdiction. And lack of jurisdiction means lack of judicial power. The nub of today's "dispute" is undisputed: Louisiana no longer maintains waitlists for non-capital defendants. The case, thus moot, must be dismissed.

A

Article III's case-or-controversy requirement imposes an "irreducible constitutional minimum of standing,"5 which consists of three elements: (1) a plaintiff must have suffered an "injury in fact-an invasion of a legally protected interest which is ... concrete and particularized, and ... actual or imminent"; (2) there must be "a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of"; and (3) the injury must be likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.6

Importantly, having Article III standing at the outset of litigation is not enough. "There must be a case or controversy through all stages of a case"-not just when a suit comes into existence but throughout its existence.7 "A case becomes moot-and therefore no longer a 'Case' or 'Controversy' for purposes of Article III-'when the issues presented are no longer 'live' or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.' "8 "No matter how vehemently the parties continue to dispute the lawfulness of the conduct that precipitated the lawsuit, the case is moot if the dispute 'is no longer embedded in any actual controversy about the plaintiffs' particular legal rights.' "9

Here, both sides acknowledge that the Louisiana Legislature's recent reallocation of indigent-defense funding has eliminated the practice of putting non-capital defendants on waitlists. The State Public Defender describes the current situation this way: "None of the districts currently in restriction of services report a waitlist for the appointment of counsel for non-capital defendants." Simply put, there *910

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Bluebook (online)
905 F.3d 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarls-v-bunton-ca5-2018.