City of Hearne, Texas v. Milton Johnson
Opinion
This is an appeal from the denial of qualified immunity to a city attorney in a Section 1983 suit. We conclude the plaintiff does not have standing to pursue the claim in federal court. We therefore VACATE and DISMISS.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Organizers in Hearne, Texas circulated an initiative petition to force a forensic audit of the city's finances. Under the City's charter, a petition, after being signed by a required number of voters, is submitted to the City. At that point, a designated City administrator has fifteen days to transmit the petition to the city council. Within ten days of receiving the petition, the city council may adopt the measure the petition demands or send it to an election. Milton Johnson, an organizer of the petition here, submitted the petition to the City's clerk in March 2016. Johnson alleges the City's policy was to have the clerk forward petitions to the county elections administrator for verification of the required signatures. Here, though, he claims the city attorney Bryan Russ obtained the signature pages to prevent their delivery to the county elections administrator in an effort to keep the initiative from appearing on a ballot.
While Russ was allegedly preventing the signatures' certification and before any of them were certified, the city council considered Johnson's petition and voted to challenge its validity. That challenge came in the form of a lawsuit against Johnson in Texas state court on grounds having nothing to do with the signature requirement. By the end of April 2016, all of the signatures were delivered for certification.
Along with his answer to the City's suit, Johnson filed a third-party complaint
*300
against Russ and his law firm under
DISCUSSION
Johnson alleges that Russ violated his "First Amendment right to petition for redress of grievances as well as his Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection." We decline to reach the merits of Russ's qualified immunity defense to these arguments because Johnson lacks standing to assert either. 1
Neither party has questioned our jurisdiction over this appeal, but "we must raise the issue of jurisdiction on our own motion if necessary."
Bernhard v. Whitney Nat'l Bank
,
It is true that Johnson involuntarily arrived in the federal court because the defendant Russ removed the case from state court. Once in federal court, though, Johnson sought the court's resolution of Section 1983 claims against Russ. In order to have the court resolve those claims, it is Johnson's burden to demonstrate we have jurisdiction.
DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno
,
The jurisdictional question is whether Johnson has standing. He "must show: (1) [he] has suffered, or imminently will suffer, a concrete and particularized injury-in-fact; (2) the injury is fairly traceable to [Russ's] conduct; and (3) a favorable judgment is likely to redress the injury."
Houston Chronicle Publ'g Co. v. City of League City
,
We separately examine standing for Johnson's two current claims.
*301 I. First Amendment claim
The First Amendment prohibits Congress from "mak[ing a] law ... abridging ... the right of the people ... to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." U.S. CONST. amend. I. The requirements of the First Amendment generally apply to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Meyer v. Grant
,
The sort of harm Johnson alleges is a "procedural injury." "[T]he claimed injury arises from an alleged failure on the part of the injury-causing party to adhere to a prescribed process in adjudicating the petitioner's substantive rights, rather than from the substantive decision itself."
Spectrum Five LLC v. FCC
,
It is not enough to create standing to claim that the process for handling Johnson's petition was not followed. A "deprivation of a procedural right without some concrete interest that is affected by the deprivation - a procedural right
in vacuo
- is insufficient to create Article III standing."
Summers v. Earth Island Inst.
,
Thus, even if Russ failed to follow some required procedure regarding the petition signatures, his alleged actions were not an injury "connected to [a] substantive result."
Massachusetts v. EPA
,
II. Equal Protection claim
Johnson's equal protection claim relies on a theory sometimes referred to as a "class-of-one" claim. He argues Russ intentionally singled him out for treatment "different[ ] from others similarly situated" with "no rational basis for the difference in treatment."
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech
,
Here, Russ's alleged actions did not create any barrier for Johnson. Again, the city council considered the petition and acted on it seven days after Johnson submitted it and before any of the signatures were certified. By the time Johnson's claims arrived at the district court, the City had processed the petition as completely as it could have within the necessary timeframes. Johnson did not encounter any barrier erected by Russ in the processing of the petition, and he does not have standing to bring his equal protection claim.
* * *
In deciding the proper order to conclude our review, we are guided by the fact that even though this case was removed from state court, the only claims are under Section 1983 for violations of the United States Constitution. In a similar combination of a suit removed from state court that pursued only federal claims for which the plaintiff had no standing, we affirmed dismissal of the action and did not consider a remand to state court.
Williams v. Parker
,
The district court's decision is VACATED and the case is DISMISSED.
JAMES L. DENNIS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Plaintiff Milton Johnson challenges the City of Hearne's response to a petition he submitted seeking to place on the ballot an initiative requiring the City to conduct a forensic audit of its finances. Johnson alleges that the City's mishandling of his petition, on which he and others had secured 517 signatures, violated his First Amendment right to petition the government for the redress of grievances. 1 Instead *303 of deciding whether the alleged mishandling violates the Constitution, the majority incorrectly determines that Johnson lacks a sufficiently concrete injury-in-fact to pursue his claims of constitutional violation. Because I disagree with this conclusion and instead believe Johnson has demonstrated an injury-in-fact, I respectfully dissent.
To reach this result, the majority relies on the proposition that Johnson asserts merely a "procedural injury" claiming violation of "a procedural right
in vacuo
," and for that reason his injury is insufficiently concrete to confer standing under the Supreme Court's decision in
Summers v. Earth Island Institute
,
Although couched in the language and case law of standing, the majority's "procedural injury" analysis is, in reality, a veiled determination that Johnson's claims lack merit. As the majority states, "Russ's alleged misdeeds .... only injure [Johnson] to the extent they affect his ability to place the petition before the city council and ultimately on the ballot." This logic, though perhaps initially appealing, essentially states that Russ's conduct did not violate Johnson's First Amendment rights. That is, the majority essentially finds that the First Amendment's scope is narrower than Johnson asserts. Whether that is an accurate statement of the law aside, it is certainly not a determination to be made under the guise of a dismissal on standing grounds for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. The Supreme Court has cautioned against passing on the merits of a case through a determination of lack of jurisdiction: "Dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction because of the inadequacy of the federal claim is proper only when the
*304
claim is 'so insubstantial, implausible, foreclosed by prior decisions of this Court, or otherwise completely devoid of merit as not to involve a federal controversy.' "
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env't
,
Properly considered, the injury-in-fact analysis for Johnson's First Amendment claim is simple. The standard injury-in-fact analysis required by
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife
,
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
On appeal, Johnson also asserts a First Amendment retaliation claim and argues Russ's actions would chill behavior protected by the First Amendment. He did not present these arguments in his amended complaint, and he only made passing reference to retaliation in opposition to Russ's motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs waive an argument when "they fail[ ] to argue or brief it to the district court" and instead only make general reference to it.
Davidson v. Fairchild Controls Corp.
,
Although it appears unfair that Johnson should be required to demonstrate standing to a degree that would survive summary judgment when he was never put on notice that he would be required to make such a showing because no one moved for summary judgment on the basis of lack of standing below,
see
Ford v. NYLCare Health Plans of Gulf Coast, Inc.
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CITY OF HEARNE, TEXAS, Plaintiff v. Milton JOHNSON, Defendant-Cross Claimant-Appellee v. Bryan F. Russ, Jr., Cross Defendant-Appellant
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published