NAACP v. Bureau of the Census
Citation945 F.3d 183
Date Filed2019-12-19
Docket19-1863
Cited21 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 19-1863
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED
PEOPLE; PRINCE GEORGEâS COUNTY, MARYLAND; PRINCE GEORGEâS
COUNTY MARYLAND NAACP BRANCH; ROBERT E. ROSS; H.
ELIZABETH JOHNSON,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
v.
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS; STEVEN DILLINGHAM, Acting Director, Bureau
of the Census; WILBUR ROSS, Secretary of Commerce; THE UNITED STATES,
Defendants - Appellees,
and
DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States
Defendant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
Paul W. Grimm, District Judge. (8:18-cv-00891-PWG)
Argued: October 30, 2019 Decided: December 19, 2019
Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, and KEENAN and RICHARDSON, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge Keenan
wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge Gregory and Judge Richardson joined.
ARGUED: Rachel Brown, YALE SCHOOL OF LAW, New Haven, Connecticut; Jessica
Ring Amunson, JENNER & BLOCK, LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Thais-Lyn
Trayer, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for
Appellees. ON BRIEF: Michael J. Wishnie, Renee Burbank, Nikita Lalwani, Joshua
Zoffer, Daniel Ki, Peter Gruber Rule of Law Clinic, YALE LAW SCHOOL, New Haven,
Connecticut; Susan J. Kohlmann, Jeremy M. Creelan, Michael W. Ross, Jacob D.
Alderdice, Logan J. Gowdey, JENNER & BLOCK LLP, New York, New York; Anson C.
Asaka, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED
PEOPLE, INC., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellants. Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney
General, Mark B. Stern, Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Washington, D.C.; Robert K. Hur, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees.
2
BARBARA MILANO KEENAN, Circuit Judge:
The Enumeration Clause of the Constitution requires that Congress conduct an
âactual Enumerationâ of the population every ten years, the results of which are used for
the apportionment of Congressional representatives and the allocation of federal funding.
U.S. Const. art. I, § 2, cl. 3; amend. XIV, § 2. But, despite its paramount importance in
our constitutional scheme, no Census ever has counted the population accurately.
Wisconsin v. City of New York, 517 U.S. 1, 6 (1996). Instead, it is widely acknowledged
that each decennial Census inevitably results in an âundercountâ of the American public.
This undercount is not spread uniformly across the population. Id.The Census Bureau long has recognized that the undercount affects African Americans and other âracial and ethnic minority groups to a greater extent than it does whites.âId.
And, because the results of the Census directly impact both political representation and the allocation of federal funding, this âdifferential undercountâ has had the effect of disproportionately reducing the amount of political representation and funding that undercounted communities receive.Id.
This appeal addresses a challenge to the âmethods and meansâ that the Census
Bureau has adopted for the 2020 Census, and the contention that the 2020 Census will
produce an even greater differential undercount. Plaintiffs-Appellants are the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Prince Georgeâs County,
Maryland; Prince Georgeâs County, Maryland, NAACP Branch; Robert E. Ross; and H.
Elizabeth Johnson (collectively, the plaintiffs). They represent âhard-to-countâ
communities that historically have suffered the greatest harms from differential
3
undercounts, and that directly will lose federal funding if, as the plaintiffs assert, the
differential undercount increases in 2020. Defendants-Appellees are the Census Bureau
and its Director, the Secretary of Commerce, and the United States (collectively, the
defendants).
The plaintiffsâ claims, brought under both the Enumeration Clause and the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA, or Act), 5 U.S.C. §§ 701 et seq., were dismissed by
the district court. The court first dismissed the Enumeration Clause claims, holding that
they were unripe and would not be justiciable until after the Census was completed.
Separately, the court held that the plaintiffsâ claims under the APA failed to identify any
âagency actionâ within the meaning of the Act, and therefore were not subject to judicial
review.
On appeal, the plaintiffs argue that the district court erred in dismissing both sets of
claims. According to the plaintiffs, their claims under both the APA and the Enumeration
Clause are based on âsix discrete decisionsâ set forth in the Census Bureauâs final plans
for the 2020 Census, and each decision directly and imminently will exacerbate the
differential undercount of the communities the plaintiffs represent. Thus, the plaintiffs
contend that their claims are ripe and are subject to review under both the APA and the
Enumeration Clause.
Upon our review, we hold that the plaintiffsâ APA claims, as pleaded, do not satisfy
the jurisdictional limitations on judicial review set forth in the APA. Therefore, we affirm
the district courtâs judgment dismissing those claims.
4
Nevertheless, mindful of the Supreme Courtâs recent guidance affirming judicial
review of âboth constitutional and statutory challenges to census-related decision-making,â
Depât of Commerce v. New York, 139 S. Ct. 2551, 2568 (2019), we conclude that the district
court erred in dismissing the plaintiffsâ Enumeration Clause claims as unripe, and in
precluding the plaintiffs from filing an amended complaint regarding those claims after the
defendantsâ plans for the 2020 Census became final. Additionally, we decline to address
in the first instance the defendantsâ alternative arguments for affirming the district courtâs
judgment. We therefore reverse the district courtâs dismissal of the Enumeration Clause
claims, and remand that portion of the case to allow the plaintiffs to file an amended
complaint setting forth their Enumeration Clause claims.
I.
This appeal arises from a brief but complicated procedural history, throughout
which the factual and the legal bases of the plaintiffsâ claims changed significantly. For
that reason, we begin by reviewing the proceedings below in some detail.
The plaintiffs filed this suit in March 2018, initially asserting multiple violations of
the Enumeration Clause but no claims under the APA. At the time of this initial filing, and
at the time of the plaintiffsâ first amended complaint in June 2018, the Census Bureau
lacked a permanent director and a deputy director, and openly was cancelling pre-Census
activities based on the lack of appropriations from Congress. Against this backdrop, the
plaintiffs alleged that the Census Bureauâs lack of funding and staffing, exacerbated by
âdesign flawsâ in the defendantsâ plans to rely on new technologies for the Census, would
5
lead to a dramatic population undercount. The plaintiffs averred that this undercount
disproportionately would impact African Americans and other âhard-to-countâ
communities, thereby diminishing the political representation and the amount of federal
funding that these communities would receive.
The defendants moved to dismiss the plaintiffsâ claims for failure to state a claim
and for lack of justiciability. The district court addressed the defendantsâ motion by
memorandum opinion in January 2019. The court first held that the plaintiffsâ allegations
were sufficient to confer standing under the Enumeration Clause, and that judicial review
was not barred by the political question doctrine. But, reasoning that judicial review was
premature and that the plaintiffsâ alleged injuries could be redressed after the 2020 Census
was taken, the court held that the Enumeration Clause claims challenging the âmethods
and meansâ of conducting the Census were unripe and dismissed those claims without
prejudice. However, the court allowed the Enumeration Clause claim based on
underfunding to proceed, identifying that one claim as âripeâ for relief.
Just days after the district courtâs decision, the Census Bureau announced that its
âOperational Planâ for the 2020 Census was final. 1 The plaintiffs immediately sought
leave to amend their complaint (1) to introduce claims under the APA, and (2) to âreinstateâ
their Enumeration Clause claims based on the methodology set forth in the Operational
Plan. The district court granted the plaintiffs leave to introduce claims under the APA but
1
The Operational Plan was released on December 31, 2018. From the record, it
appears that the parties did not recognize this development until February 1, 2019, when
the Census Bureau published documents affirming that the previously released Operational
Plan âreflects [the] final designâ for the Census.
6
denied leave to replead the other Enumeration Clause claims. Notwithstanding the release
of the Operational Plan, the district court determined that Enumeration Clause claims based
on the planned âmethods and means of conducting the 2020 Censusâ still were not ripe.
In accordance with the district courtâs instructions, the plaintiffs filed a second
amended complaint (Complaint) identifying six âirrational design choicesâ in the
Operational Plan. The plaintiffs asked the court to âset asideâ each âdesign choiceâ under
Section 706(2) of the APA. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). As pleaded, those âchoicesâ were: (1) âa
plan to hire an unreasonably small number of enumerators;â (2) âa drastic reduction in the
number of Census Bureau field offices;â (3) âcancellation of crucial field tests;â (4) âa
decision to replace most in-field address canvassing with in-office address canvassing;â
(5) âa decision to make only extremely limited efforts to count inhabitants of housing units
that appear vacant or nonexistent based on unreliable administrative records;â and (6) âa
significant reduction in the staffing of the Bureauâs partnership program.â
The defendants filed a renewed motion to dismiss, seeking dismissal of the APA
claims, as well as the remaining Enumeration Clause claim that was based on
underfunding. The district court granted the defendantsâ motion in its entirety.
The district court dismissed the plaintiffsâ underfunding claim, holding that the
claim had been rendered moot by recent Congressional appropriations, and that the
plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the adequacy of those appropriations. Next,
addressing the APA claims, the court held that the plaintiffs had failed to identify any
reviewable âagency actionâ over which the court could exercise jurisdiction. Finally, the
court held that despite the fact that the APA claims were articulated as requests to âset
7
aside agency actionâ under Section 706(2), those claims were, in substance, requests to
âcompel agency actionâ under Section 706(1). Therefore, the court concluded that the
APA claims failed on the additional ground that the actions the plaintiffs sought to compel
were not ârequired by law,â a precondition for claims brought under Section 706(1).
Accordingly, the court granted the defendantsâ motion and dismissed the Complaint.
II.
On appeal, the plaintiffs argue that the district court erred in dismissing the APA
claims on jurisdictional grounds, and in dismissing the Enumeration Clause claims as
unripe. We address each argument in turn.
A.
We begin by considering the APA claims, which the district court dismissed after
concluding that the face of the Complaint failed to identify any âagency actionâ reviewable
under the Act. We review de novo the district courtâs assessment of its jurisdiction under
the APA. Invention Submission Corp. v. Rogan, 357 F.3d 452, 454(4th Cir. 2004). Because the district court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction based on the face of the Complaint, we accept the truth of the factual allegations contained in the Complaint and draw all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffsâ favor. Kerns v. United States,585 F.3d 187, 192
(4th Cir. 2009).
Judicial review under the APA is limited to review of âfinal agency action.â 5
U.S.C. § 704. To constitute âfinal agency actionâ within the meaning of Section 704, the
challenged action must have two characteristics. Vill. of Bald Head Island v. U.S. Army
8
Corps of Engârs, 714 F.3d 186, 193-94(4th Cir. 2013). First, the challenged action must be âcircumscribed and discrete.âId. at 194
(citation omitted); see also Norton v. S. Utah Wilderness All.,542 U.S. 55, 62-63
(2004). This requirement derives from the APAâs definition of âagency action,â which includes âthe whole or a part of an agency rule, order, license, sanction, relief, or the equivalent or denial thereof, or failure to act.â5 U.S.C. § 551
(13); see also5 U.S.C. § 701
(a)(2) (adopting the definition given in Section 551). All five specific examples given in this definition are âdiscreteâ in character, and only actions that share this âcharacteristic of discretenessâ are reviewable under the APA. Norton,542 U.S. at 62-63
. Thus, even claims based on an agencyâs âfailure to actâ must allege the failure to take âdiscreteâ agency action.Id. at 63
.
Second, the âagency actionâ must be âfinal.â Vill. of Bald Head Island, 714 F.3d at
194. Agency action is âfinalâ if two preconditions are satisfied: (1) the action must be the âconsummation of the agencyâs decisionmaking process,â and (2) the action must be one âby which rights or obligations have been determined or from which legal consequences will flow.âId.
(quoting Bennett v. Spear,520 U.S. 154, 177-78
(1997)); see also Franklin v. Massachusetts,505 U.S. 788, 797
(1992) (âThe core question is whether the agency has
completed its decisionmaking process, and whether the result of that process is one that
will directly affect the parties.â).
As the case law makes clear, these two characteristics of âfinal agency actionâ are
prerequisites to APA review, whether a plaintiff seeks to âcompel agency actionâ under
Section 706(1) or to âset aside agency actionâ under Section 706(2). See Norton, 542 U.S.
at 62-63; Vill. of Bald Head Island,714 F.3d at 195
; see also City of New York v. United
9
States Depât of Def., 913 F.3d 423, 432(4th Cir. 2019). However, when a plaintiff asks a court to compel agency action under Section 706(1), one additional requirement applies. In such cases, the plaintiff must show that the action the plaintiff seeks to compel is one that the agency is âlegally requiredâ to take. Norton,542 U.S. at 63-64
.
The plaintiffs argue that their claims meet these jurisdictional requirements, and that
the district court erred in holding otherwise. According to the plaintiffs, the âdesign
choicesâ at issue are discrete, because those choices can be analyzed âwithout referenceâ
to one another. The plaintiffs also assert that the challenged decisions are final, because
each will lead directly to a differential undercount. Finally, the plaintiffs contend that
because they have presented each APA claim exclusively as a request to âset aside agency
actionâ under Section 706(2), it is not necessary to show that any action of the Census
Bureau is ârequired by law.â After considering these arguments, we conclude that the
district court did not err in dismissing the APA claims, because they do not meet the
jurisdictional requirement of âfinal agency actionâ within the meaning of the APA.
Initially, like the district court, we observe that there is tension between the
substantive allegations in the Complaint and the plaintiffsâ contention that their APA
claims do not seek to âcompel agency action.â See 5 U.S.C. § 706(1). Although styled as
claims to âset aside agency actionâ under Section 706(2), the essence of the plaintiffsâ APA
claims is that the Census Bureau is not doing enough to ensure an accurate enumeration in
the 2020 Census, and must be compelled to do more. See Compl. ¶ 217 (âDefendants have
adopted a program for the 2020 Census . . . that inadequately addresses the challenge of
reaching hard-to-count populations.â). Under such circumstances, we question whether
10
the plaintiffs can avoid the strict limitations on suits to âcompel agency actionâ under
Section 706(1) simply by framing their APA claims as requests to âset asideâ the Census
Bureauâs âdecisionsâ not to act. 2 Nevertheless, we need not decide whether the plaintiffs
are required to proceed under Section 706(1), because we hold that the âdesign choicesâ at
issue lack âdiscretenessâ and âfinality,â requirements that apply to suits brought under both
Section 706(1) and Section 706(2). See Norton, 542 U.S. at 62-63.
The majority, if not all, of the plaintiffsâ APA claims fail because they do not
challenge actions that are âcircumscribedâ and âdiscrete.â See id.; Vill. of Bald Head
Island, 714 F.3d at 194. In fact, the plaintiffs disavow any argument that the alleged deficiencies in the Operational Plan are âsimply the result of a choice of methodology.â Instead, as pleaded, the plaintiffs allege only that the defendantsâ âdesign choicesâ are insufficient in light of various other factors. See, e.g., Compl. at ¶ 69 (alleging âinsufficient planned hiring of enumeratorsâ); ¶ 114 (alleging âinsufficient network of area census officesâ); ¶ 160 (challenging the âsufficiencyâ of plan to rely on administrative records); ¶ 168 (alleging âinsufficient partnership program staffingâ) (formatting altered). So described, these claims bear little resemblance to the type of âcircumscribedâ actions specifically identified in the text of the APA as reviewable. See5 U.S.C. § 551
(13) (listing
2
We also question whether the injuries alleged by the plaintiffs, as pleaded, are
redressable by an order âsetting asideâ the Census Bureauâs âdecisions,â the sole remedy
available under Section 706(2). Nevertheless, because we affirm the dismissal of the APA
claims for lack of âfinal agency action,â we need not determine whether the plaintiffsâ
insistence on proceeding under Section 706(2) renders their claims non-redressable.
11
the âwhole or a part of an agency rule, order, license, sanction, relief or the equivalent or
denial thereofâ as reviewable actions); see also Norton, 542 U.S. at 62-63.
The plaintiffsâ description of their claims confirms this assessment. For example,
in alleging that the Census Bureau plans to hire an âinsufficientâ number of Enumerators,
the plaintiffs notably do not allege that any specific number of Enumerators is required to
conduct the Census. Instead, over the course of forty-five paragraphs, the plaintiffs explain
that the number of Enumerators the Census Bureau plans to hire is âinsufficientâ because
of numerous other problems in the broader Non-Response Follow-Up Program (NRFU),
as reflected in the Operational Plan. As alleged, these problems include overreliance on
the first ever âInternet Self-Responseâ option for completing the Census, insufficient
testing of ânew protocolsâ and ânew technologies,â and an âirrationally optimisticâ
assumption that increased use of administrative records will reduce NRFU workload.
Thus, these challenges under the APA to the number of Enumerators that the Census
Bureau proposes to hire are neither âcircumscribedâ nor âdiscrete.â The sufficiency of the
number of Enumerators hired inextricably is dependent on the other programs and
decisions that the plaintiffs themselves identify.
This same jurisdictional defect, the failure to identify actions that are
âcircumscribedâ and âdiscrete,â also forecloses the APA claims that challenge the
âinsufficient network of area census offices,â the overreliance on administrative records
within the NRFU program, the increased use of âin-office address canvassing,â and
âinsufficient partnership program staffing.â As those allegations make clear, the identified
âdecisionsâ are âinsufficientâ only in relation to one another and to the broader Operational
12
Plan that the plaintiffs deem âinadequateâ in its entirety. Thus, while we acknowledge the
general principle that the multiplicity of an agencyâs failings is not a barrier to judicial
review, we conclude that this principle does not carry the day given the content of the
particular pleadings before us.
Contrary to their position on appeal, the plaintiffs do not actually challenge multiple
discrete decisions made by the Census Bureau. Instead, as pleaded, the various âdesign
choicesâ being challenged expressly are tied to one another. âSetting asideâ one or more
of these âchoicesâ necessarily would impact the efficacy of the others, and inevitably
would lead to court involvement in âhands-onâ management of the Census Bureauâs
operations. See Norton, 542 U.S. at 66-67. This is precisely the result that the âdiscretenessâ requirement of the APA is designed to avoid.Id. at 67
; see also City of New York,913 F.3d at 434
; Clear Sky Car Wash LLC v. City of Chesapeake, Va.,743 F.3d 438, 445
(4th Cir. 2014); Vill. of Bald Head Island,714 F.3d at 194
. For these reasons, we hold
that the plaintiffs have failed to identify any âfinal agency actionâ subject to judicial review
under the APA.
Our conclusion is not altered by the fact that one of the APA claims pertains to the
cancellation of specific field tests, a decision that occurred in 2016. Even if we were to
assume that this decision was a âdiscreteâ action, the decision nevertheless falls outside the
scope of APA review because the cancellation of those field tests did not âgive rise to legal
consequences, rights, or obligations.â Invention Submission Corp., 357 F.3d at 458
(internal quotations omitted). Instead, as pleaded, the decision to cancel field tests impacts
the plaintiffs only insofar as the decision leaves the Census Bureau âless preparedâ to
13
handle any âunforeseenâ problems that âmayâ arise from the actual procedures set forth in
the Operational Plan, a confluence of circumstances that the plaintiffs assert would create
a disproportional impact on undercounted communities. These attenuated allegations
amount to little more than a âbest guessâ regarding the consequences of cancelling the tests
at issue. Therefore, because the Complaint fails to include specific facts indicating that the
Census Bureauâs decision to cancel the field tests gave rise to âlegal consequences, rights,
or obligations,â see id.,we hold that the cancellation of field tests does not constitute âfinal agency actionâ under the APA. See Franklin,505 U.S. at 797
.
In concluding that the plaintiffs have failed to identify a âfinal agency actionâ
subject to judicial review, we emphasize that our holding is based on the broad, sweeping
nature of the allegations that the plaintiffs have elected to assert under the APA. Our
decision today neither disturbs the âbasic presumption of judicial reviewâ embodied by the
APA, Abbott Labs. v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 140(1967), 3 nor conflicts with the Supreme Courtâs recent guidance that courts can and frequently should âentertain[] both constitutional and statutory challenges to census-related decisionmaking.â Depât of Commerce,139 S. Ct. at 2568
. Instead, we merely reaffirm and apply the longstanding
jurisdictional requirements that must be satisfied when proceeding under the APA.
Because we conclude that these requirements have not been met here, we affirm the district
courtâs dismissal of the APA claims for lack of jurisdiction.
3
Abrogated on other grounds by Califano v. Sanders, 430 U.S. 99 (1977).
14
B.
We turn now to consider the district courtâs decision dismissing as unripe the
plaintiffsâ Enumeration Clause challenge. We review the district courtâs dismissal of these
claims de novo, and the courtâs decision to deny leave to reintroduce the claims for abuse
of discretion. Attkisson v. Holder, 925 F.3d 606, 619(4th Cir. 2019) (leave to amend); Deal v. Mercer Cty. Bd. of Educ.,911 F.3d 183, 190
(4th Cir. 2018) (ripeness).
The ripeness doctrine derives from Article III limitations on judicial review, and
ensures that judicial intervention in a controversy is timed appropriately. Deal, 911 F.3d
at 190(citation omitted); see also Ohio Forestry Assân v. Sierra Club,523 U.S. 726
, 732- 33 (1998). When examining ripeness in the context of agency action, our inquiry generally turns on two considerations: (1) the fitness of the issues presented for judicial review; and (2) the hardship that the parties would endure by delayed adjudication. Deal,911 F.3d at 190-91
.
The plaintiffs argue that the Enumeration Clause claims that they seek to present
satisfy both these criteria. 4 Thus, the plaintiffs assert that the district court erred in holding
that such claims would be unripe until after the 2020 Census is completed, and
compounded that error in refusing to allow the plaintiffs to replead their claims after the
Operational Plan was announced. In response, the defendants do not defend the district
4
Based on their briefs and oral argument, we understand that the plaintiffs do not
seek reinstatement of their Enumeration Clause claim based on underfunding by Congress.
Therefore, we do not disturb the district courtâs dismissal of that claim, nor do we address
the reasons given by the district court for doing so.
15
courtâs ripeness analysis but maintain that the district court ultimately reached the correct
result by dismissing the Enumeration Clause claims.
We agree with the plaintiffs that the district court erred in its ripeness analysis. First,
we hold that the plaintiffsâ claims are âfitâ for review. Miller v. Brown, 462 F.3d 312, 319(4th Cir. 2006). A controversy becomes âfitâ for review when it no longer is âdependent on future uncertainties.âId.
We hold that, at the latest, this point occurred when the defendants announced that the Operational Plan was final and the plaintiffs sought leave to file an amended complaint. Once announced as part of the âfinal designâ for the Census, the procedures challenged by the plaintiffs no longer credibly could be described as âuncertain.â Id.; see also U.S. House of Representatives v. U.S. Depât of Commerce,11 F. Supp. 2d 76, 91
(D.D.C. 1998) (holding that a challenge to Census procedures becomes
ripe once it is âcertain that the Bureau will employ [the procedures] in conducting the
apportionment enumerationâ).
We also hold that delayed adjudication would result in hardship to the plaintiffs.
The Supreme Court squarely has held that it is ânot necessaryâ for courts âto wait until the
census has been conductedâ to consider challenges to the Census Bureauâs planned
procedures, âbecause such a pause would result in extremeâpossibly irremediableâ
hardship.â Depât of Commerce v. U.S. House of Representatives, 525 U.S. 316, 332(1999); see also Depât of Commerce v. New York,139 S. Ct. at 2561
(reviewing a pre-Census
challenge to the decision to add a citizenship question to the Census questionnaire). As in
House of Representatives, the injuries that the plaintiffs assert in this case arise from
procedures that the defendants intend to use, or not use, in conducting the Census. 525
16
U.S. at 320-21. Thus, the hardship that the plaintiffs would experience from the delay in
adjudicating these claims is well established.
For these reasons, we hold that the plaintiffsâ Enumeration Clause challenge to the
âmethods and meansâ to be used in the 2020 Census was ripe by the time the plaintiffs
sought leave to reintroduce those claims in February 2019, and that the district courtâs
contrary conclusion was legal error. And, because a district court necessarily abuses its
discretion when its ruling is âbased on an erroneous view of the law,â see Cooter & Gell
v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 405 (1990), we further hold that the district court abused
its discretion in denying on ripeness grounds the plaintiffsâ request to file an amended
complaint setting forth their Enumeration Clause claims.
As reflected by this holding, we decline the defendantsâ request that we examine
their alternative grounds for dismissal of the Enumeration Clause claims, including lack of
Article III standing, the political question doctrine, and because the Enumeration Clause
claims fail to state facts plausibly establishing a constitutional violation. The district court
has not considered these additional arguments in the context of the amended complaint that
will be filed when the proceedings resume in the district court. Therefore, we decline to
consider the defendantsâ additional arguments in the first instance on appeal. Like the
Supreme Court, we are a âcourt of review, not first review.â Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U.S.
709, 718 n.7 (2005).
17
III.
In remanding the case to the district court on the Enumeration Clause claims, we do
not express any view regarding the ultimate viability of such claims that may be asserted
in an amended complaint. Accordingly, for the reasons stated, we affirm the district courtâs
judgment dismissing the APA claims, reverse the courtâs judgment dismissing the
Enumeration Clause claims and denying the plaintiffs leave to file an amended complaint,
and remand the case to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART,
REVERSED IN PART,
AND REMANDED
18
GREGORY, Chief Judge, concurring:
The delegates to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia toiled all summer to
produce a lasting document that would provide stability to the government and the promise
of liberty to the governed. At the close of the Convention, Benjamin Franklin was asked
what the Framers had wrought. He answered, âA Republic if you can keep it.â
Andrew C. McLaughlin, The Courts, The Constitution and Parties: Studies in
Constitutional History and Politics 151 (1912). The life of the âRepublicâ is tied to the
Enumeration Clause of the Constitution.
That Clause mandates that Congress make an âactual Enumerationâ of persons in
the nation every ten years. U.S. Const. art. I, § 2, cl. 3. The Constitutionâs command that
a census be taken was for the purpose of apportioning the House of Representativesâthe
only house of the legislature the Framers required to be composed of âMembersâ chosen
âby the People of the several states.â Id. cl. 1. In trying to convince Anti-Federalists that
apportionment as described in the Enumeration Clause would not be subject to the political
whim of the national legislature, Alexander Hamilton said that âan actual census or
enumeration of the people must furnish the rule, a circumstance which effectually shuts the
door to partiality or oppression.â The Federalist No. 36, at 226 (Alexander Hamilton) (J.
Cooke ed., 1961) (emphasis added). The foundation of representative democracy, then,
rests in large measure upon Congressâ faithful and meaningful compliance with the
Constitutionâs mandate to count all persons in the nation.
Justice Holmes wrote, â[A] page of history is worth a volume of logic.â New York
Tr. Co. v. Eisner, 256 U.S. 345, 349 (1921). From the very beginning, the Enumeration
19
Clause was born in the tainted cauldron of racism, sexism, and classism. As the majority
opinion notes, with each Census, there has been an undercount of the people. Maj. Op. at
3. âSince at least 1940, the Census Bureau has thought that the undercount affects some
racial and ethnic minority groups to a greater extent than it does whites.â Wisconsin v. City
of New York, 517 U.S. 1, 7 (1996). To this day, the Census Bureau acknowledges the need
to count these âhard-to-count populations.â J.A. 274; Appelleesâ Br. (ECF No. 34) at 9.
That there has been a historical undercount does not obviate Congressâ constitutional
mandate. Indeed, it magnifies that responsibility.
The history and function of the Enumeration Clause evince the importance of the
constitutional issue presented here. The questionâwhether Congress, by agency of the
Executive Branchâs Bureau of the Census, has violated the Enumeration Clause of the
Constitution because it has demonstrated that it will unlikely make a meaningful and
faithful enumeration of all persons in the upcoming 2020 Censusâis not a political one.
If this constitutional question were beyond the reach of judicial review, the People would
have no ordered redress of Legislative and Executive Branch actions or inactions that
thwart their essential constitutional right. If Congress is in violation of the Enumeration
Clauseâs mandate, it cannot take refuge behind the fig leaf of deference to administrative
procedure. Nothing is more existential to the preservation of the âRepublicâ than requiring
an âactual Enumerationâ without âpartiality or oppression.â
20