Hand,et al v. Scott,et al
Opinion of the Court
*1207Appellants Rick Scott, in his official capacity as Governor of the State of Florida, and the other three members of Florida's Executive Clemency Board (Pam Bondi, Adam H. Putnam, and Jimmy Patronis) (collectively, the "State Executive Clemency Board") have appealed from the district court's orders entered in favor of appellees James Michael Hand and eight other convicted felons who have completed their sentences and seek to regain their voting rights in Florida. In the underlying lawsuit, the appellees facially challenged, under the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause and the First Amendment, Florida's scheme of voter reenfranchisement for convicted felons, claiming that the State Executive Clemency Board exercised "unbridled discretion" to deny voter reenfranchisement in the absence of any articulable standards. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of appellees, entering a declaratory judgment, permanently enjoining the State Executive Clemency Board from "enforcing the current unconstitutional vote-restoration scheme" and "ending all vote-restoration processes," and commanding the State Executive Clemency Board to "promulgate specific and neutral criteria to direct vote-restoration decisions" along with "meaningful, specific, and expeditious time constraints" on or before April 26, 2018.
Currently before this Court is the State Executive Clemency Board's time-sensitive Motion for Stay Pending Appeal, seeking provisionally to stay the district court's injunctions, until this appeal is heard. The parties agree that four factors are relevant to granting a stay: "(1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies." Nken v. Holder,
*1208I.
First, the State Executive Clemency Board has shown it will likely succeed on the merits of the Equal Protection claim. The appellees have claimed that Florida's "standardless" voter reenfranchisement regime facially violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. They do not say that the defendants actually discriminated against any of them on the basis of race or any other invidious grounds. Rather, the heart of their claim is that the State Executive Clemency Board's unbounded discretion will yield an unacceptable "risk" of unlawful discrimination.
For starters, we are bound to follow Supreme Court precedent in Beacham. Beacham v. Braterman,
In Beacham, a convicted felon in Florida challenged the refusal to grant him a pardon and the concomitant restoration of his civil rights, including the right to register to vote. Id. at 182-83. He claimed that since there were no "established specific standards to be applied to the consideration of petitions for pardon," the plenary denial of that right violated both the Equal Protection Clause and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Id. at 183. A three-judge district court panel squarely rejected the claim, holding that state officials may constitutionally exclude from the franchise convicted felons and that Florida's standardless scheme did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment. The court reasoned that the discretionary pardon power, which included within its ambit the restoration of civil rights, "has long been recognized as the peculiar right of the executive branch of government," and that the exercise of that executive power was free from judicial control. Id. at 184. Accordingly the district court denied the relief sought in the complaint and dismissed the cause. The Supreme Court, in a summary decision, affirmed the holding of the three-judge district court.
The district court concluded that, "[u]nlike a fine wine, [ Beacham ] has not aged well," but it remains binding precedent that cannot, as the district court suggested, simply be ignored. We are bound by the Supreme Court's summary determinations. See Picou v. Gillum,
*1209Richardson v. Ramirez,
Other precedents confirm the broad discretion of the executive to grant and deny clemency. In Connecticut Board of Pardons v. Dumschat,
Perhaps of even greater importance, we are obliged to recognize that § 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment expressly empowers the states to abridge a convicted felon's right to vote. It reads this way:
Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the Executive and Judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State.
U.S. Const. amend., XIV § 2 (emphasis added). And the Supreme Court has explicitly cited the text of § 2 as it has recognized the power of the state to bar felons from voting. Thus, for example, it has held that "the exclusion of felons from the vote has an affirmative sanction in § 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment." Richardson,
It is also true, however, that since Beacham, the Supreme Court has recognized that, at least in limited circumstances, a state's pardon power may be cabined by judicial decree. Thus, in Hunter, the Supreme Court made it clear that a state's method for reenfranchising a convicted felon would violate equal protection if the scheme had both the purpose and effect of invidious discrimination. Justice Rehnquist wrote for a unanimous Court:
*1210Presented with a neutral state law that produces disproportionate effects along racial lines, the Court of Appeals was correct in applying the approach of Arlington Heights to determine whether the law violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment: "[O]fficial action will not be held unconstitutional solely because it results in a racially disproportionate impact.... Proof of racially discriminatory intent or purpose is required to show a violation of the Equal Protection Clause."
Hunter v. Underwood,
The problem for the appellees in this case, however, is that they have not shown (nor have they even claimed) that Florida's constitutional and statutory scheme had as its purpose the intent to discriminate on account of, say, race, national origin, or some other insular classification; or that it had the effect of a disparate impact on an insular minority. All we have is the assertion by the appellees and a statement by the district court that there is a real "risk" of disparate treatment and discrimination, precisely because the Florida regime is standardless. Such a risk of discrimination, however, is likely insufficient under Beacham and Hunter.
Moreover, we have rejected, en banc, that Florida's felon-disenfranchisement regime was enacted with a discriminatory purpose, and the appellees have not offered anything suggesting otherwise. See Johnson v. Governor of State of Fla.,
II.
We also conclude that the State Executive Clemency Board will likely succeed on the merits of the First Amendment claim. The appellees allege that Florida's felon-reenfranchisement regime facially violates the First Amendment because it vests the Executive Clemency Board with "unfettered discretion" to engage in a "standard-less process of arbitrary and discriminatory decision-making, which is untethered to any laws, rules, standards, criteria, or constraints of any kind, and unconstrained by any definite time limits," thereby abridging their right to vote and creating an impermissible risk of "arbitrary, biased, and/or discriminatory treatment." [Plaintiffs' Mot. for Summ. J. at 16, 18] The appellees expressly disclaim reliance on any anecdotal examples of discrimination and offer nothing suggesting that any of them were the victims of viewpoint discrimination, asserting that "[f]acial attacks on the discretion granted a decisionmaker are not dependent on the facts surrounding *1211any particular permit decision," since "[t]he success of a facial challenge on the grounds that an ordinance delegates overly broad discretion to the decisionmaker rests not on whether the administrator has exercised his discretion in a content-based manner, but whether there is anything in the ordinance preventing him from doing so." [Appellees' Resp. to Mot. for Stay at 10] The appellees, therefore, suggest that "actual discrimination need not be proven." [Id. at 12]
Their theory likely fails for at least three reasons. First, our case law establishes that the First Amendment affords no greater voting-rights protection beyond that already ensured by the Fourteenth Amendment. Because a standardless pardon process, without something more, does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment, it follows that it does not run afoul of the First Amendment. In the second place, Florida's power to disenfranchise voters is expressly sanctioned by § 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment. And finally, no First Amendment challenge to a felon-disenfranchisement scheme has ever been successful.
It is well established in this Circuit that the First Amendment provides no greater protection for voting rights than is otherwise found in the Fourteenth Amendment. In Burton v. City of Belle Glade,
Because Florida likely has established that its felon-reenfranchisement regime does not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, it is unlikely indeed that the same exercise of the pardon power violates the First Amendment. Since a standardless reenfranchisement scheme, without more, does not state a claim for an Equal Protection violation based on invidious discrimination, it likely follows that a standardless scheme, without more, cannot establish a First Amendment violation based on viewpoint discrimination. While a discretionary felon-reenfranchisement scheme that was facially or intentionally designed to discriminate based on viewpoint-say, for example, *1212by barring Democrats, Republicans, or socialists from reenfranchisement on account of their political affiliation-might violate the First Amendment, cf. Hunter,
In the wake of Beacham, Dumschat, Woodard, and Smith, a purely discretionary clemency regime does not, without something more, violate the Fourteenth Amendment. As we see it, a constitutional challenge arising under the First Amendment but asserting the same basic claim-that standardless clemency regimes create an unacceptable risk of discriminatory determinations-is unlikely to yield a different result. In other words, the appellees likely cannot succeed by bringing the same challenge using only a different label or nomenclature.
It's also pretty clear that, in a reenfranchisement case, the specific language of the Fourteenth Amendment controls over the First Amendment's more general terms. Cf. Graham v. Connor,
Moreover, although First Amendment attacks on discretionary pardon schemes have been few and far between, the Supreme Court "ha[s] strongly suggested in dicta that exclusion of convicted felons from the franchise violates no constitutional provision." Ramirez,
Finally, the First Amendment cases cited by the appellees appear inapposite to a reenfranchisement case. Those cases established the longstanding and important but (for our purposes) unremarkable point that a state cannot vest officials with unlimited discretion to grant or deny licenses *1213as a condition of engaging in protected First Amendment activity. See, e.g., Forsyth Cty. v. Nationalist Movement,
The long and short of it is that the State Executive Clemency Board is likely to succeed as well on the merits of the appellees' facial First Amendment claim.
III.
As a separate matter, Florida is also likely to succeed on the merits because there are serious and substantial problems that inhere in the remedies the district court has chosen-injunctions commanding that the State Executive Clemency Board cannot refuse to reenfranchise felons and that the Governor and his cabinet must fashion out of whole cloth new standards by April 26, 2018. In particular, the injunctions flatly prohibit the State Executive Clemency Board "from ending all vote-restoration processes" for convicted felons. The district court crafted the permanent injunctions this way:
Defendants are PERMANENTLY ENJOINED from enforcing the current unconstitutional vote-restoration scheme. Defendants are also PERMANENTLY ENJOINED from ending all vote-restoration processes. On or before April 26, 2018, Defendants shall promulgate specific and neutral criteria to direct vote-restoration decisions in accordance with this Order. On or before April 26, 2018, Defendants shall also promulgate meaningful, specific, and expeditious time constraints in accordance with this Order. Defendants shall file with this Court its modified rules on or before April 26, 2018.
However, as we've noted, § 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment expressly provides for reduction of representation to the states if they deny or abridge the right to vote "except for participation in rebellion, or other crime." U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 2. Indeed, the district court acknowledged that "[i]t is well-settled that a state can disenfranchise convicted felons under Section Two of the Fourteenth Amendment." And it correctly explained that a state may do so "permanently." Nonetheless, after concluding only that the Florida regime posed a risk of discrimination among applicants, the district court enjoined Florida from exercising the authority that § 2 clearly establishes because the district court concluded that the Florida constitution "presumes a restoration process exists" only because it "bars [any] felon[ ] from voting 'until restoration of civil rights.' " Fla. Const. art. VI, § 4 (a) (emphasis added by district court). But the *1214district court cannot enjoin Florida to follow the district court's interpretation of Florida's own constitution. Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
What's more, the permanent injunctions entered by the district court command the Governor and three cabinet members to promulgate new standards no later than April 26. These standards must determine when and how to exercise the Governor's power in order to reenfranchise convicted felons. As a court sitting in equity, that seems to us to be a tall order, even assuming the district court had the authority to enter this command in the first place. After all, there are a multitude of considerations for them to study, including but not limited to whether the Clemency Board should adopt mathematical criteria, how "specific and neutral" the criteria should be, whether arrests or convictions for certain kinds of misdemeanor or felony offenses (and there are many) should be either relevant or categorically disqualifying, the kinds of rules previous Florida officials and other states have put in place and how they have worked in practice, and whether the Board should create a newly bifurcated system for processing applications involving civil rights other than voting rights, such as the right to serve on a jury or to hold or run for public office.
Thus, on this ground as well, the State Executive Clemency Board has demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success on the merits.
IV.
Having determined that the State Executive Clemency Board has made a strong showing on the merits as to all of the appellees' claims, we further believe the Clemency Board likely has met its burden overall.
The State Executive Clemency Board likely has shown irreparable harm absent a stay. Beyond whether the injunction directs the State Executive Clemency Board to do something it is by no means clear the court can compel it to do, the State Executive Clemency Board would be harmed if it could not apply its own laws to grant clemency to eligible applicants now, even if it might later be able to afford these applicants clemency pursuant to a system not yet in place and not of the State Executive Clemency Board's choosing. See Maryland v. King,
The State Executive Clemency Board also has a substantial interest in avoiding chaos and uncertainty in its election procedures, and likely should not be forced to employ a rushed decision-making process created on an artificial deadline now, just because a more thorough decision-making process could be employed later. We are reluctant to upset the system now in place-particularly since the district court order creates so truncated a schedule-when there is a good chance the district court's order may be overturned, and the system would need to be changed still again, potentially re-disenfranchising those who have been reenfranchised pursuant to the district court's injunction. Put another way, there is wisdom in preserving the status quo ante until a panel of this Court, on an expedited basis, has had an opportunity on full briefing to come to grips with the many constitutional and equitable issues *1215that have been raised. To this end, in a separate order, this Court has directed the Clerk to accelerate the briefing schedule and oral argument in the appeal.
As for injury to the appellees, they surely have an interest in regaining their voting rights sooner rather than later, especially since some of them apparently have been waiting a long time to have their rights restored. By the same token, however, since the injunctive relief fashioned by the district court permanently enjoins the defendants from enforcing the current voter-restoration scheme, in the absence of a stay the Governor is barred from reenfranchising anyone (including any of the nine appellees). Nor have the appellees explained why they've waited until now to sue over these rights, nor, finally, have they shown that denying a stay will necessarily increase the speed with which their voting rights may be restored, considering that this Court has accelerated briefing of the merits and oral argument so that the matter can be resolved quickly.
Moreover, a stay of the district court's order would serve any number of substantial public interests: allowing the continued restoration of voting rights to convicted felons while the suit progresses; ensuring proper consultation and careful deliberation before overhauling the State Executive Clemency Board's voter-eligibility requirements; and preserving autonomy of the State Executive Clemency Board's exercise of its power to pardon.
In short, the State Executive Clemency Board has met its burden under Nken. Accordingly, the appellants' motion is GRANTED, and the injunctions entered by the district court are STAYED pending the resolution of this appeal.
The Clerk is directed to treat any motion for reconsideration of this order as a non-emergency matter.
Concurring in Part
The U.S. Constitution allows states to ban people convicted of felonies from exercising their right to vote. See Richardson v. Ramirez,
In Florida, a person with a felony conviction may legally vote only if the Governor and two additional members of the Clemency Board ("Board") restore her voting rights. See Fla. R. Exec. Clemency 4. The Board's power in this regard is without limit. The Board has the "unfettered discretion to grant [restoration of the right to vote] at any time, for any reason."
The plaintiffs in this case are nine Floridians who have been convicted of felonies and have served their sentences. They are, however, not eligible to vote, because their restoration applications have either been rejected or have been pending for years.
I.
A stay pending appeal "is an intrusion into the ordinary process of administration and judicial review." Nken v. Holder,
In reviewing a party's application for a stay, we consider four factors to "ensure that courts do not grant stays pending appeal improvidently." Chafin v. Chafin,
(1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies.
Nken,
The first two of these factors are "the most critical."
II.
The defendants have demonstrated, at most, a mere possibility they may succeed on appeal as to the plaintiffs' First Amendment claims. This demonstration is not enough, in my view, to entitle them to "an intrusion into the ordinary processes of administration and judicial review." Nken,
The District Court ruled that Florida's vote restoration scheme violated two First Amendment rights: the right to Free Expression and the right to Free Association. In order to reach these conclusions, the *1217District Court necessarily and actually found that voting constitutes the sort of expressive and associational activity protected by the First Amendment. The District Court decision on the plaintiffs' First Amendment claims is on sound legal footing that could well be adopted by the merits panel of judges of this Court through de novo review.
Despite the defendants' arguments to the contrary, precedent does not require us to reject the reasoning of the District Court.
Indeed, in his concurring opinion in Vieth v. Jubelirer, Justice Kennedy suggested that the right to vote may have First Amendment protections. See
Neither does this Circuit's precedent foreclose the plaintiffs' First Amendment *1218claims. The defendants ask us to rule otherwise based on a footnote in Burton v. City of Belle Glade,
III.
I am therefore aware of no precedent that directly forecloses the plaintiffs' First Amendment claims. We must next inquire into whether precedent from the Supreme Court and our Court supports their claims.
Our First Amendment rights of free expression and free association are most critical when they are invoked to ensure citizens' free and full participation in the political process. "Speech is an essential mechanism of democracy." Citizens United v. Fed. Election Comm'n,
The question, then, is whether there is a compelling argument that these rights of speech and association encompass the right to vote. I believe there is. As I've said, the Supreme Court has left open the possibility that the First Amendment offers distinct protections for the right to vote. See, e.g., Shapiro,
Beyond that, the Supreme Court has invalidated regulatory regimes that burden the right to vote expressly on First Amendment grounds. Striking down a state regime establishing early filing deadlines *1219for independent presidential candidates, the Court noted that "we base our conclusions directly on the First and Fourteenth Amendments and do not engage in a separate Equal Protection Clause analysis." Anderson v. Celebrezze,
This should come as no surprise. Indeed, the Supreme Court has said that the right to vote is "the essence of a democratic society," and "any restrictions on [it] strike at the heart of representative government." Reynolds,
IV.
I now turn to the question of whether there is a compelling argument that defendants' scheme impermissibly burdens the plaintiffs' right to vote under the First Amendment. The plaintiffs and the District Court both liken the vote restoration scheme to a permitting or licensing scheme. This analogy is persuasive because the Board is tasked with deciding whether or not to allow-or to permit or license-someone convicted of a felony to vote again.
The Supreme Court has routinely struck down schemes that condition the exercise of First Amendment rights on permits or licenses when an official with unfettered discretion controls that process. See, e.g., Forsyth County, Ga. v. Nationalist Movement,
Our Court has done the same. See, e.g., Atlanta Journal & Constitution v. City of Atlanta Dep't of Aviation,
These decisions reflect concern that vesting officials with unbridled discretion to determine whether, and when, to allow someone to speak creates an impermissible risk of viewpoint discrimination. As the Supreme Court explained in Plain Dealer, "a law or policy permitting communication in a certain manner for some but not for others raises the specter of content and viewpoint censorship."
The defendants' vote restoration scheme gives them unbridled discretion. In the words of the Rules of Executive Clemency, the Board has "unfettered discretion" to permit an applicant to exercise her right to vote "at any time, for any reason." Fla. R. Exec. Clemency 4. And the Governor has "unfettered discretion" to deny an applicant the right to legally vote "at any time, for any reason."
It is no answer to say we should presume that the Board will exercise its discretion in good faith. The Supreme Court rejected just this defense in Plain Dealer, concluding "this is the very presumption that the doctrine forbidding unbridled discretion disallows."
Neither is the answer that, because the defendants can disenfranchise all convicted felons, their choice to selectively re-enfranchise some cannot be subject to limitations. The Supreme Court rejected a quite similar "greater-includes-the-lesser" argument in Plain Dealer.See id. at 762-69, 108 S.Ct. at 2147-50. The Court concluded that "when the government is willing to prohibit a particular manner of speech entirely ... the risk of governmental censorship is simply not implicated." Id. at 768, 108 S.Ct. at 2150. But this case is not about a complete bar-it is about the process by which the Board selectively doles out the right to vote. This case should remind us that the Court "has long been sensitive to the special dangers inherent in a law placing unbridled discretion directly to license speech, or conduct commonly associated with speech, in the hands of a government official." Id. at 767-68, 108 S.Ct. at 2149-50.
The defendants liken their vote restoration scheme to the exercise of clemency power, a power traditionally exercised with minimal limitations from the judiciary. But the defendants recognize that clemency power is not immune from judicial review and constitutional scrutiny. See Ohio Adult Parole Auth. v. Woodard,
V.
I don't believe the defendants have met their burden under Nken for a stay pending this appeal. They have demonstrated nothing more than a mere possibility of success on the merits of the plaintiffs' First Amendment claim. I would, however, modify the permanent injunction imposed by the District Judge ending all vote restoration processes. See Trump v. Int'l Refugee Assistance Project, 582 U.S. ----,
I respectfully dissent.
One plaintiff is not eligible to apply for restoration until June of 2019.
Those members are Florida's Attorney General, Florida's Chief Financial Officer, and Florida's Commissioner of Agriculture.
I agree with the majority that that the Supreme Court's summary affirmance in Beacham appears to foreclose the plaintiffs' Fourteenth Amendment claims. See Beacham v. Braterman,
Further support for this conclusion lies in the fact that Burton cited two vote dilution cases as support for this pronouncement: Washington v. Finlay,
Cook v. Randolph County,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James Michael HAND, Et Al., Appellees, v. Rick SCOTT, in His Official Capacity as Governor of Florida and Member of the State of Florida's Executive Clemency Board, Et Al., Appellants.
- Cited By
- 23 cases
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- Published