DeOtte v. State of NV
Citation20 F.4th 1055
Date Filed2021-12-17
Docket19-10754
Cited23 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Case: 19-10754 Document: 00516136542 Page: 1 Date Filed: 12/17/2021
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
December 17, 2021
No. 19-10754
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Richard W. DeOtte, on behalf of himself and others similarly situated;
Yvette DeOtte; John Kelley; Alison Kelley; Hotze
Health & Wellness Center; Braidwood Management,
Incorporated, on behalf of itself and others similarly situated,
PlaintiffsâAppellees,
versus
State of Nevada,
MovantâAppellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
USDC No. 4:18-CV-825
Before Higginbotham, Southwick, and Engelhardt, Circuit
Judges.
Leslie H. Southwick, Circuit Judge:
This case involves a dispute about the effect of provisions in the
Religious Freedom and Restoration Act on the contraceptive mandate found
in the Affordable Care Act. The case became moot with issuance of the
Supreme Courtâs decision in Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter and Paul
Home v. Pennsylvania, 140 S. Ct. 2367 (2020). The principal remaining issue
is whether to leave in place the injunction that had been issued by the district
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No. 19-10754
court. We VACATE the judgment below and REMAND with instructions
to dismiss as moot.
THE ACA AND THE CONTRACEPTIVE MANDATE
We begin with an abbreviated history of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (the âACAâ) and its contraceptive mandate, then
explain the background of this case.
The ACA requires covered employers to provide women with
âpreventive care and screeningsâ without cost-sharing requirements âas
provided for in comprehensive guidelines supported by the Health Resources
and Services Administrationâ (âHRSAâ), an agency of the Department of
Health and Human Services (âHHSâ). 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-13(a)(4). Shortly
after passage, the HHS, the Department of the Treasury, and the
Department of Labor (together, âthe Departmentsâ) began promulgating
rules under Section 300gg-13(a)(4). Little Sisters, 140 S. Ct. at 2374.
In 2011, the Departments adopted rules including the contraceptive
mandate, which required health plans to include coverage for all
contraceptive methods approved by the Food and Drug Administration. See
77 Fed. Reg. 8725(Feb. 15, 2012). The rules created exemptions from the contraceptive mandate for religious employers.76 Fed. Reg. 46,621
, 46,623 (Aug. 3, 2011) (to be codified at 26 C.F.R. pt. 54; 29 C.F.R. pt. 2590; 45 C.F.R. pt. 147). This exemption was ânarrow[ly] focus[ed] on churches . . . [and] is known as the church exemption.â Little Sisters,140 S. Ct. at 2374
. In 2013, the Departments promulgated another final rule that created an accommodation process for religious nonprofits who did not qualify for the church exemption.78 Fed. Reg. 39,870
, 39,873â75 (July 2, 2013) (to be
codified at 26 C.F.R. pt. 54; 45 C.F.R. pt. 147, 156; 29 C.F.R. pts. 2510, 2590;
45 C.F.R. pts. 147, 156). The accommodation was different from the
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exemption: under the accommodation, qualifying nonprofits were required
to provide a self-certification form to the health insurer, which would exclude
contraceptive coverage from the plan and provide those services to the
employees separately. Id. at 39,875, 39,878.
Those rules were challenged in courts. In 2014, the Supreme Court
held that the contraceptive mandate violated the Religious Freedom and
Restoration Act (âRFRAâ) as applied to closely held corporations with
religious objections, and the religious accommodation must apply to them as
well as religious nonprofits. Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 573 U.S. 682, 691â93 (2014). Assuming without deciding that free access to contraceptives was a compelling government interest, the Court held that extending the accommodation to closely held corporations was a less restrictive means of achieving it.Id.
at 691â92. In response, the rules were changed to allow for- profit corporations to use the self-certifying accommodation previously reserved for religious non-profits (â2015 Rulesâ).80 Fed. Reg. 41,318
,
41,346 (July 14, 2015) (to be codified at 26 C.F.R. pt. 54; 29 C.F.R. pts. 2510,
2590, 45 C.F.R. pt. 147).
In 2015, the Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari in a case that
would have allowed it to determine whether the self-certifying
accommodation itself violated RFRA, as many religious groups had argued,
because completing the certification caused them to take an action that led to
health insurers providing employees with the contraceptives to which they
objected. Zubik v. Burwell, 577 U.S. 971, 971 (2015). Instead, though, the Supreme Court remanded without deciding the question in light of supplemental briefing by the parties. Zubik v. Burwell,578 U.S. 403
, 407â410 (2016). In that briefing, the petitioners and the government agreed that an alternative approach was possible where employees would receive contraceptive coverage from insurers without affirmative action by employers.Id.
at 407â08. The Court ordered the parties on remand to reach
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an approach that accommodated religious objections while meeting womenâs
contraceptive needs. Id.
In the wake of Zubik, the Departments in 2016 published a request for
information to reach an accommodation that satisfied the needs of both
religious objectors and female employees of religious objectors. 81 Fed. Reg.
47741, 47741â45. Ultimately, the Departments could not arrive at a solution, and they did not modify the rules at that time.Id.
In 2017, the Departments tried again to satisfy Zubik by modifying the rules related to the contraceptive mandate. In relevant part, the Departments promulgated interim final rules (âIFRsâ) that broadened the exemption to include for-profit and publicly traded entities who had religious objections to contraceptives, without having to use the self-certifying accommodation (â2017 Rulesâ).82 Fed. Reg. 47,792
, 47,835 (Oct. 13, 2017) (to be codified at 26 C.F.R. pt. 54; 29 C.F.R. pts. 2510, 2590; 45 C.F.R. pt. 147). The 2017 Rules also gave the individuals the option to obtain insurance that excluded contraception coverage so that individuals would not have to choose between policies that included contraceptive care or no policy at all.Id.
The 2017 Rules included a lengthy
explanation of why RFRA compelled the rule changes. Id. at 47, 800â06.
Litigants then challenged the 2017 Rules. Two district courts issued
nationwide injunctions that enjoined enforcement of the 2017 Rules for
procedural defects, thereby re-instating enforcement of the 2015 Rules with
the church exemption and self-certifying accommodation. Pennsylvania v.
Trump, 281 F. Supp. 3d 553, 585 (E.D. Pa. 2017), revâd sub nom. Pennsylvania v. President United States,816 F. Appâx 632
(3d Cir. 2020); California v. HHS,281 F. Supp. 3d 806
, 831â32 (N.D. Cal. 2017). When the 2017 Rules became final, they were enjoined as the IFRs had been. Pennsylvania v. Trump,351 F. Supp. 3d 791
, 797â98 (E.D. Pa. 2019); Fed. Reg. 57, 536, 57,
537 (Nov. 15, 2018) (to be codified at 26 C.F.R. pt. 54; 29 C.F.R. pt. 2590; 45
C.F.R. pt. 147).
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FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The Plaintiffs sued the Secretaries of the three Departments in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas in 2018,
seeking relief from the nationwide injunctions that blocked enforcement of
the 2017 Rules and required enforcement of the 2015 Rules. They amended
their complaint in February 2019.
The Plaintiffs sued either as individuals or as employers and sought
class certification for those similarly situated. Both categories of plaintiffs are
morally opposed to long-acting contraceptives, viewing them as equivalent to
abortion. Neither opposes other forms of contraception by married couples
to prevent pregnancy, but both object to the contraceptive mandateâs
requirement that insurers provide it to others because, as their complaint
states, such contraception âencourages illicit sexual activity outside of
marriage.â The Individual Plaintiffs seek an option for an insurance policy
that does not include contraceptive coverage, believing that the
contraceptive mandate âforces religious believers to choose between
purchasing health insurance that makes them complicit in abortifacient
contraception and sexual activity outside of marriage [because their
premiums subsidize contraceptives for others], or forgoing health insurance
entirely.â The Employer Plaintiffs argue that the contraceptive mandateâs
self-certifying accommodation violates RFRA because â[i]t forces the
company to become complicit in the provisionâ of contraceptives to others.
The Plaintiffs sought to enjoin enforcement of the contraceptive
mandate against individual and employer religious objectors â enforcement
that was then occurring only because of the injunctions against enforcement
of the 2017 Rules. The Defendants never filed a responsive pleading.
The district court certified the two classes of plaintiffs described
above â individual and employer â on March 30, 2019. The Plaintiffs filed
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a motion for preliminary injunction, then on April 1, asked the court to
convert that motion to a motion for summary judgment and for a permanent
injunction. In response, the Defendants did not oppose summary judgment
or a permanent injunction, conceding that the objected-to 2015 Rules were
âinsufficientâ to satisfy RFRA. They did, however, oppose class-wide relief
âat this time.â
The state of Nevada, acting through its attorney general, sought to
intervene on May 24, 2019. The district court granted the Plaintiffsâ motion
for summary judgment and permanent injunction on June 5, 2019, without
yet ruling on intervention. The permanent injunction granted relief to the
Plaintiffs that in essence imposed the 2017 Rules. Nevada filed a notice of
appeal from the June 5 merits order on July 3 to protect its right to appeal âin
the event intervention [was] granted after the time to appealâ that order had
run. On July 9, an additional 21 states and the District of Columbia filed a
brief as amicus curiae, opposing the Plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment
and permanent injunction and supporting Nevadaâs motion to intervene.
The district court denied Nevadaâs motion to intervene on July 29 because
Nevada did not satisfy the interest requirement of Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 24(a). The court also denied permissive intervention. It entered
final judgment that same day.
Nevada appealed these rulings: (1) final judgment; (2) granting class
certification (and later amending it); (3) granting summary judgment and
permanent injunction; and (4) denying intervention.
Arguing lack of standing, the Plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss all of
Nevadaâs appeals except the appeal of the order denying intervention. We
carried that motion with the case. In September 2019, the Defendants also
filed a notice of appeal, then voluntarily dismissed it in December 2019. In
January 2020, we stayed further proceedings pending the Supreme Courtâs
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decision in Little Sisters. In a July 2020 decision, the Court vacated the
injunctions that prevented enforcement of the 2017 Rules, holding that the
procedural challenges before it were unmeritorious. Little Sisters, 140 S. Ct.
at 2386.
Thereafter, the Plaintiffs renewed their motion in this court to dismiss
Nevadaâs appeal of all orders other than the denial of intervention. Our
decision today resolves that motion and the other issues before us.
DISCUSSION
The first question is whether the underlying dispute about the 2017
Rules is moot. The Plaintiffs argue we need not address the effect of
mootness because Nevadaâs appeal fails for a reason that predated mootness.
They contend there never was a case to become moot because Nevada has
never had Article III standing to appeal the district courtâs merits orders.
They argue: âThe case between the plaintiffs and defendants is not moot;
that case is over â and it ended when the defendants [the Department
Secretaries] abandoned their appeal and allowed the district courtâs
judgment to become final and conclusive between the parties.â The
Plaintiffs urge us not to disturb the injunctions, while Nevadaâs aim is to have
the injunctions vacated.
Despite the Plaintiffsâ recommendation, we will start with the issue of
mootness. To some extent, we suppose, that forecasts our resolution of the
issue of whether Nevada should have been allowed to intervene.
I. Mootness
â[M]ootness is a threshold jurisdictional inquiry.â Louisiana Envât
Action Network v. U.S. EPA, 382 F.3d 575, 580 (5th Cir. 2004). A case is
moot âonly when it is impossible for a court to grant any effectual relief
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whatever to the prevailing party.â Knox v. Service Emps. Intâl Union, Local
1000, 567 U.S. 298, 307(2012) (quotation marks and citation omitted). âA controversy is mooted when there are no longer adverse parties with sufficient legal interests to maintain the litigation.â Goldin v. Bartholow,166 F.3d 710, 717
(5th Cir. 1999). The court is âobligated to address issues of jurisdiction, including mootness, prior to addressing the merits of an appeal.âId. at 714
. âGenerally, any set of circumstances that eliminates actual controversy after the commencement of a lawsuit renders that action moot.â Center for Individual Freedom v. Carmouche,449 F.3d 655, 661
(5th
Cir. 2006). Because Little Sisters granted the relief these Plaintiffs sought in
the present litigation by vacating the injunctions that required the
contraceptive mandate to be enforced against the Plaintiffs, mootness is an
obvious issue.
The Plaintiffs filed this suit seeking relief from the Defendantsâ
enforcement of the 2015 Rules against them, enforcement that resulted from
the other district courtsâ nationwide injunctions against the 2017 Rules.
Little Sisters vacated the district court injunctions against the 2017 Rules,
thereby reinstating the rules. See 140 S. Ct. at 2386. Because the Plaintiffs through that decision received the relief they sought in this litigation, âit becomes impossible for the court to grant any effectual relief whatever to [the] prevailing party.â See City of Erie v. Papâs A.M.,529 U.S. 277, 287
(2000) (quotation marks omitted) (alteration in original). The Supreme
Court has done the work that Plaintiffs wanted the district court in this case
to do, and no appeal to us can change that. Article IIIâs case-or-controversy
requirement is no longer met.
Nevada argues that the case is not moot because states could succeed
in challenging the 2017 Rules as arbitrary and capricious or the new
Presidential Administration could change the rules. If either occurred, the
district courtâs injunction would remain, requiring that the Defendants
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exempt the two classes of plaintiffs from the contraceptive mandate.
Nevadaâs argument that the case is still ripe because the current rules might
be changed by the executive branch does not support that an injury is âactual
or imminentâ; rather, it is âconjectural or hypothetical.â See Lujan v.
Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992) (citation and quotation marks
omitted). The Plaintiffs no longer have a cognizable injury. This underlying
dispute is moot.
II. Remedy in light of mootness
Nevada is a denied intervenor, not a party, yet seeks vacatur. The
Plaintiffs acknowledged in oral argument, as they must, that had vacatur been
requested by a party, we would have jurisdiction. The Plaintiffs argue that
because Nevada has not yet been allowed to intervene and should not be, we
lack jurisdiction to vacate because this appeal needs to be dismissed for
absence of a proper appellant.
Vacatur of a lower court judgment generally follows when a case
becomes moot during an appeal. The Supreme Court stated it was the
established practice of the Court in dealing with a civil case
from a court in the federal system which has become moot
while on its way here or pending our decision on the merits is
to reverse or vacate the judgment below and remand with a
direction to dismiss.
United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36, 39 (1950). The reason is that
vacatur
clears the path for future religitation of the issues between the
parties and eliminates a judgment, review of which was
prevented through happenstance. When that procedure is
followed, the rights of all parties are preserved; none is
prejudiced by a decision which in the statutory scheme was
only preliminary.
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Id. at 40.
Close to fifty years later, the Supreme Court emphasized that vacatur
is not automatic; it is âequitable reliefâ and must âtake account of the public
interest.â U.S. Bancorp Mortg. Co. v. Bonner Mall Pâship, 513 U.S. 18, 26(1994). Precedents âare not merely the property of private litigants and should stand unless a court concludes that the public interest would be served by a vacatur.âId.
(quoting Izumi Seimitsu Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha v. U.S. Philips Corp.,510 U.S. 27, 40
(1993) (Stevens, J., dissenting)). A court must assess âthe equities of the individual caseâ to determine whether vacatur is proper. Staley v. Harris Cnty.,485 F.3d 305, 312
(5th Cir. 2007) (en banc). This consideration centers on (1) âwhether the party seeking relief from the judgment below caused the mootness by voluntary actionâ; and (2) whether public interests support vacatur.Id.
at 310 (quoting U.S. Bancorp,513 U.S. at 24
, 26â27). We will give some background, then give our explanation of
what the Supreme Court is telling courts facing such issues.
Our authority to vacate comes from a statute that provides that an
appellate court âmay affirm, modify, vacate, set aside or reverse any
judgment, decree, or order of a court lawfully brought before it for review.â
28 U.S.C. § 2106 (emphasis added). The Plaintiffs argue that an appeal by a
nonparty is not âlawfully brought,â thus precluding authority to vacate.
The Plaintiffs elaborate on the central point with two separate
arguments. First, â[t]he district courtâs judgment and classwide injunction
have not been âlawfully brought beforeâ this [c]ourt, because Nevada lack[ed]
Article III standing to appeal those district-court rulings.â They present the
question about standing as one primarily about Nevadaâs injury in fact from
the district courtâs order. In their view, âNevada never had standing to
appeal the district courtâs judgment â either before or after the Supreme
Courtâs ruling in Little Sisters.â
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Second, the Plaintiffs draw a distinction between parties and
nonparties seeking vacatur. In briefing before this court, the Plaintiffs argue
that had the Defendants appealed and sought vacatur, this court would have
jurisdiction to vacate: âthe losing party that appeals an adverse district-court
judgment retains standing to seek vacatur on appeal â even after the case
has become moot â because he will suffer injury from the preclusive effect
below.â Because Nevada was never a party, the Plaintiffs claim we lack
jurisdiction to vacate.
We take the two arguments â standing and nonparty status â in
reverse order to decide if Nevada has lawfully brought the case here.
A. Nevadaâs nonparty status
Certainly, had the federal defendants continued with their appeal, we
would have authority to vacate. The difficult issue is whether Nevada
âlawfully broughtâ this appeal to us. Nevada was not a party to this lawsuit
because the district court denied intervention, but Nevada argues that denial
was error. 1 We need to decide, then, whether intervention should have been
allowed. If so, we then must decide whether Nevada has any injury that
allows it to appeal to seek vacatur.
i. Jurisdiction to decide whether Nevada should have been
allowed as an intervenor
We may examine the merits of the denial of intervention to determine
our jurisdiction to vacate the district court injunction. The D.C. Circuit has
described a similar situation where the sole named plaintiff in a putative class
action petitioned the court for interlocutory review of the district courtâs
denial of class certification. In re Brewer, 863 F.3d 861, 867 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
1
Nevada has standing to appeal the denial of intervention, as the Plaintiffs concede.
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While that petition was pending, the plaintiff settled his individual claims and
stipulated in district court to the dismissal of the claims. Id.
At almost the same time, four individuals sought to intervene both in
the interlocutory appeal to the D.C. Circuit and in district court. Id.Those same individuals later sought to appeal the dismissal of the named plaintiff and the denial of class certification.Id.
The D.C. Circuit stated that the dismissal deprived the court of âany live claims or adverse parties unless one of the two motions for intervention is granted.âId. at 868
. Intervention could not be granted, the court held, unless âthis court or the district court [has] jurisdiction over the case, notwithstanding the apparent absence of either live claims or adverse parties at the moment.âId.
First, the court noted the circularity problem created by the situation:
âIntervention can overcome the apparent jurisdictional problem created by
the stipulated dismissal, but a court may grant intervention only if it has
jurisdiction to do so.â Id.In answering the jurisdiction question, that court said: â[W]e have jurisdiction to determine our own jurisdiction, United States v. Ruiz,536 U.S. 622, 628
(2002), and we conclude we have jurisdiction to hear the motion for intervention.âId.
The court next considered the effect of a stipulated dismissal on a
federal courtâs jurisdiction to hear a post-dismissal motion for intervention.
Id. at 868. The court held âthat mootness, albeit accelerated by the
immediacy of a stipulated dismissal, is what gives a dismissal pursuant to
Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(ii) its jurisdictional effect. And if a motion to intervene can
survive a case becoming otherwise moot, then so too can a motion to intervene
survive a stipulated dismissal.â Id. at 870 (emphasis added). It therefore
held that it had jurisdiction to hear the motion to intervene, notwithstanding
the dismissal of the named plaintiffâs claims. Id.
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Although the general rule is that intervention in a case that does not
exist âis a legal impossibility,â several circuits have held that dismissal of the
underlying action does not moot an appeal of the denial of a motion to
intervene. See CVLR Performance Horses, Inc. v. Wynne, 792 F.3d 469, 474
(4th Cir. 2015) (quotation marks omitted) (explaining that the Third, Tenth,
and Eleventh Circuits allow the appeal of a motion denying intervention to
continue after dismissal, the Second Circuit does not, and the Ninth and D.C.
Circuits have divergent precedents).
We have held that intervention can be permitted even after dismissal
of the case. Ford v. City of Huntsville, 242 F.3d 235, 239â41 (5th Cir. 2001). A court can allow âintervention as of right in a jurisdictionally and procedurally proper suit that has been dismissed voluntarily,â even when nothing is left before the district court. Sommers v. Bank of Am., N.A.,835 F.3d 509
, 513 n.5 (5th Cir. 2016); see also Odle v. Flores,899 F.3d 342
(5th Cir.
2017) (per curiam).
The rationale for allowing an appeal is that although final judgment
was entered, âthe intervention controversy is still alive because, if it were
concluded on appeal that the district court had erred in denying the
intervention motion, and that the applicant was indeed entitled to intervene
in the litigation, then the applicant would have standing to appeal the district
courtâs judgment.â DBSI/TRI IV Ltd. Pâship v. United States, 465 F.3d 1031,
1037(9th Cir. 2006) (quoting Canatella v. California,404 F.3d 1106
, 1109 n.1
(9th Cir. 2005)). That is the situation here: a would-be intervenor seeks party
status to appeal and request vacatur.
The Supreme Court has compared a motion to intervene after final
judgment for the purpose of appealing an earlier denial of class certification
to other post-judgment motions to intervene for the purpose of appeals.
United Airlines v. McDonald, 432 U.S. 385, 395 n.16 (1977) (citing other cases
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allowing post-judgment intervention for appeal). That also is analogous to
what Nevada seeks here.
We recognize that various opinions allowing post-judgment
intervention differ from our case in that, as one court put it, â[i]ntervention
can overcome the apparent [mootness] problem.â In re Brewer, 863 F.3d at
868. This case will remain moot even if we allow intervention. We conclude, though, that even though mootness would remain, there is some life to the case because of the relief the parties are contesting, namely, vacatur. Thus the âintervention controversy is still alive because, if it were concluded on appeal that the district court had erred in denying the intervention motion . . . then the applicant would have standing toâ seek vacatur of the district court order. See DBSI/TRI IV Ltd. Pâship,465 F.3d at 1037
.
ii. Sufficiency of interest to allow Nevadaâs intervention
We next analyze whether the denial of intervention by the district
court was error, which, if corrected, allows Nevada to become a party and
seek vacatur of the district courtâs injunction. 2 The four requirements for
intervention as of right are these:
(1) the application . . . must be timely; (2) the applicant must
have an interest relating to the property or transaction which is
the subject of the action; (3) the applicant must be so situated
that the disposition of the action may, as a practical matter,
impair or impede his ability to protect that interest; (4) the
2
Rule 24(c) provides: âA motion to intervene . . . must state the grounds for intervention
and be accompanied by a pleading that sets out the claim or defense for which intervention is
sought.â Plaintiffs contend Nevadaâs failure to include such pleading was fatal to its motion to
intervene. The district court declined to preclude Nevadaâs intervention on such grounds, noting
the circuit split around the approach to enforcement of Rule 24(c), with a majority favoring a
permissive interpretation of the rule. See International Marine Towing Inc. v. S. Leasing Partners,
Ltd., 722 F.2d 126, 129 (5th Cir. 1983) (âIn view of our lenience in the past and the fact that the
district courtâs act might be considered equivalent to authorizing intervention, we will not dismiss
for failure to comply with Rule 24(c)).â). We follow a permissive approach here.
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applicantâs interest must be inadequately represented by the
existing parties to the suit.
WalâMart Stores, Inc. v. Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commân, 834 F.3d 562, 565(5th Cir. 2016) (alteration in original) (quoting Texas v. United States,805 F.3d 653, 657
(5th Cir. 2015.
The district court concluded that Nevada established all of Rule
24(a)âs requirements except that it failed to show it had âan interest relating
to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action.â Id. That is
the only requirement we need to consider now.
To meet this requirement, the âapplicant must have a âdirect,
substantial, legally protectable interest in the proceedings.ââ Edwards v. City
of Houston, 78 F.3d 983, 1004(5th Cir. 1996) (quoting NOPSI v. United Gas Pipe Line Co.,732 F.2d 452
, 463 (5th. Cir. 1984)). We have observed that the preceding quotation is a ââgloss on the ruleâ [that] may not âprovide any more guidance than does the bare term âinterestâ used in Rule 24 itself.ââ Texas v. United States,805 F.3d 653, 657
(5th Cir. 2015) (quoting 7C Charles Alan Wright et. Al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 1908.1 (3d ed. 2007)). What is important is âwhether the intervenor has a stake in the matter that goes beyond a generalized preference that the case come out a certain way,â as when the party âseeks to intervene solely for ideological, economic, or precedential reasons.â Id. This focus on the partyâs interest is âprimarily a practical guide to disposing of lawsuits by involving as many apparently concerned persons as is compatible with efficiency and due process.â Sierra Club v. Espy,18 F.3d 1202, 1207
(5th Cir.
1994) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
An interest is insufficiently direct when it requires vindication in a
separate legal action or the intervenor is too removed from the dispute. Walâ
Mart, 834 F.3d at 568. A âlegally protectableâ right is not identical to a
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âlegally enforceableâ right, such that âan interest is sufficient if it is of the
type that the law deems worthy of protection, even if the intervenor . . . would
not have standing to pursue her own claim.â Texas, 805 F.3d at 659. The
intervenor must itself possess the right it seeks to assert in the action.
NOPSI, 732 F.2d at 466.
The First, Third, and Ninth Circuits held that states had standing to
challenge the 2017 Rules. Massachusetts v. U.S. Depât of HHS, 923 F.3d 209,
212, 227â28 (1st Cir. 2019); Pennsylvania v. President United States,930 F.3d 543
, 561â65 (3d Cir. 2019); California v. Azar,911 F.3d 558, 570
(9th Cir. 2018). In these cases, the states established standing because they demonstrated with reasonable probability that the 2017 Rules would cause the state financial injury through strain on its healthcare programs. Massachusetts, 923 F.3d at 226â27; Pennsylvania,930 F.3d at 564
; Azar,911 F.3d at 573
. For example, in Azar, the states submitted declarations and analyses projecting anticipated costs of women losing coverage, and while the states did not identify a specific woman who would turn to state programs after losing coverage, the predicted costs were enough to show it was reasonably probable the 2017 Rules would cause economic harm to the states. Azar, 911 F.3d at 572â73. The statesâ interests in challenging the 2017 Rules were established similarly in Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. See Massachusetts,923 F.3d at 219
, 223â25 (establishing financial injury through
regulatory analysis and declarations demonstrating anticipated lost
coverage); Pennsylvania, 930 F.3d at 561â63 (establishing financial injury
through regulatory analysis demonstrating anticipated lost coverage).
Nevada argues that its interest in this suit meets the Rule 24(a)(2)
requirements. It says it has a legally protectable interest based on the
financial strain caused by an increase in women relying on its family planning
programs, but it distinguishes this interest from âa mere economic interest
not directly related [to] this litigation.â Instead, it explains it also has an
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interest âin the provision of contraception care to preserve resulting public
health gains and to conserve financial resources that were previously
expended attempting to address unplanned pregnancies.â
For support of that interest, Nevada attached two declarations to its
motion for intervention. In one, Beth Handler, Deputy Administrator of
Community Health Division of Public and Behavioral Health for the Nevada
DHHS, stated that 379,000 Nevada women of child-bearing age âreceive
private insurance coverage and could be affected by Plaintiffsâ proposed class
action relief.â Based on the national numbers and estimates of which
employers would choose the exemption, she estimated that âbetween 600
and 1200 Nevada women would be harmedâ by the injunction. See 83 Fed.
Reg. 57,578, 57580. She also believed that in 2014, before the contraceptive
mandate, 194,000 women in Nevada were in need of publicly funded family
planning, but Nevada was able to meet only 10% of the need. Those numbers,
she believed, would increase without the 2015 Rules. Also, in 2010 before
the contraceptive mandate, Nevada saw 29,000 unintended pregnancies.
She identified a 35% decrease in abortions for women ages 15â19 and a 10%
decrease for women ages 20â24 from 2012â2017.
Kathryn Host, Acting Vice President for Domestic Research of the
Guttmacher Institute, provided a similar declaration in which she explained
the impact of the contraceptive mandate more generally, and the benefits that
she believed flowed from it.
Lastly, Nevada relies on its âquasi-sovereignâ interests at issue,
which âconsist of a set of interests that the State has in the well-being of its
populace.â Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. v. Puerto Rico, ex rel., Barez, 458 U.S.
592, 602(1982). â[I]f the health and comfort of the inhabitants of a State are threatened, the State is the proper party to represent and defend them.âId.
at 603â04 (quoting Missouri v. Illinois,180 U.S. 208, 241
(1901)).
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The Plaintiffs describe Nevadaâs interests as (1) preservation of
gained public-health benefits and (2) conserving its financial resources that it
previously spent on addressing unplanned pregnancies. The Plaintiffs find
these interests inadequate for several reasons.
First, the Plaintiffs argue Nevadaâs interest in the outcome of the
proceedings is not âdirectâ because it depends on speculation about
independent choices made by other parties and even Nevada itself. The
Plaintiffs argue that any injury to Nevada is too attenuated from the outcome
of the litigation here.
Second, the Plaintiffs dispute the substantiality of the interest that
Nevada claims to have demonstrated. Not only do the Plaintiffs take issue
with Nevadaâs â600 to 1200â figure of women who will be harmed, but they
contend that Nevada has not sufficiently described the harm. Further, the
Plaintiffs argue that the number of women who work for objecting employers
is not the relevant number for calculating Nevadaâs financial interest because
it fails to account for alternatives such as who will obtain contraceptives from
other sources, or who will actually become unintentionally pregnant, or who
will choose not to abort. Moreover, because the 2017 Rules, which track the
district courtâs injunction here, are currently in effect, they argue that
Nevada has no interest in the outcome of the litigation. Finally, the Plaintiffs
reject that Nevadaâs interest is âlegally protectableâ because no law protects
a state from an increase in expenditures in social-welfare programs. How
much Nevada expends on public health and welfare programs will be
completely within Nevadaâs control.
We evaluate the arguments. The âproperty or transaction that is the
subject of the actionâ is the contraceptive mandate. FED. R. CIV. P.
24(a)(2). The question is whether Nevada has any interest relating to that
mandate. See Texas, 805 F.3d at 657. We conclude that Nevadaâs interest
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âgoes beyond a generalized preference that the case come out a certain way.â
Id.Through the affidavits of Handler and Host, Nevada has established a financial interest in federally mandated contraceptive provision so its state fisc does not have to fill the void if exceptions are carved out of the mandate. This holding accords with the holdings of our sister circuits in Azar, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts, which found standing on similar facts. Nevada also argues it has a quasi-sovereign interest, but as in Azar, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts, the panel need not reach this argument because its fiscal injury alone is sufficiently direct to allow it to intervene. See Azar,911 F.3d at 570
; Pennsylvania, 930 F.3d at 561â62; Massachusetts, 923 F.3d at 227â28. Further, Nevadaâs interest is heightened here because the Defendants have abandoned any defense of the contraceptive mandate. In light of the liberal construction in favor of intervention, WalâMart,834 F.3d at 565
, the district court erred by holding Nevadaâs interest was insufficient
to establish intervention as of right as an intervenorâdefendant.
Nevada should have been granted intervention as of right.
B. Nevadaâs standing to appeal the district courtâs injunction
Even if Nevada satisfies the requirements to intervene in the district
court, Nevada still must show it has standing to appeal. The Plaintiffs argue
Nevada lacks standing to appeal because âit failed to introduce evidence that
it will suffer injury from this classwide relief.â
Standing to appeal requires injury from the judgment of the lower
court. Texas v. United States, 945 F.3d 355, 374(5th Cir. 2019), as revised (Jan. 9, 2020), revâd on other grounds, California v. Texas,141 S. Ct. 2104
(2021). Though related, the intervention question is not dispositive of the
standing-to-appeal question; rather, an intervenor must still demonstrate an
injury from the district courtâs judgment to establish appellate standing. Id.
at 376. Standing includes injury in fact, a causal connection, and
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redressability. Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560. An injury in fact is âan invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.âId. at 560
(quotation
marks and citations omitted).
Appellate standing is measured at the time of filing the notice of
appeal, and mootness refers to standing that does not persist throughout a
case. Center for Individual Freedom, 449 U.S. at 661. Moreover, in all
Munsingwear situations, the underlying case is moot, so the court cannot
redress the injury that initially led to the suit or the appeal. It can redress
only the preclusive-effect injury, but that is sufficient for standing to vacate or
there would never be Munsingwear vacatur. 3 Similarly, we refused in an
earlier case to dismiss for lack of standing after a case became moot because
dismissing the appeal on that basis âwould lead to the problem at the heart
of the Munsingwear doctrine â that an order may become unappealable due
to no fault of the losing party, thus denying review of a possibly erroneous
decision.â Goldin, 166 F.3d at 720.
Nevada suffers the preclusive effect of the district-court order with
equal force as a party to the lawsuit because of the nationwide scope of the
injunction and the resulting inability to relitigate the issue of whether the
2017 Rules violate RFRA. This is sufficient to establish appellate standing:
âa party may be aggrieved by a district court decision that adversely affects
its legal rights or position vis-Ă -vis other parties in the case or other potential
litigants.â Texas, 945 F.3d at 377 (quotation marks omitted). The district
3
Though a preclusion injury is sufficient, it may not be necessary. See Alfa Intâl Seafood,
Inc. v. Ross, 320 F. Supp. 3d 184, 188 (D.D.C. 2018) (âPlaintiffs, however, cite no authority for the
proposition that, to establish standing, a party or putative intervenor seeking vacatur must show that
allowing the adverse decision to remain will have an âadverse precedential effect. . . . [Such
requirement] would make little sense.â).
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court held that Nevada suffered such injury, and that the nationwide
injunction re-implementing the 2017 Rules is otherwise unappealable.
Moreover, Nevadaâs preclusive-effect injury would be redressed by a
favorable court ruling that vacated the injunctions. The Munsingwear
doctrine is a remedy for the preclusive effect of an unappealable district-court
judgment, making the preclusive injury sufficient for jurisdiction to vacate.
U.S. Bancorp, 513 U.S. at 22. Vacatur is also proper under U.S. Bancorpâs equitable considerations. U.S. Bancorp requires parties to demonstrate both that they did not cause the suit to become moot and that public interests favor vacatur. Staley,485 F.3d at 310
(citing U.S. Bancorp,513 U.S. at 26
). Here,
both considerations are met â Nevada did not cause the case to become
moot; it was moot after the ruling in Little Sisters, and vacatur serves public
interests in that it vacates a permanent injunction that Nevada never had
proper opportunity to litigate the merits of before the district court.
Regardless, the Plaintiffs conceded Nevada was entitled to vacatur at oral
argument. Vacatur is therefore appropriate in this case.
* * *
The judgment below is VACATED. We REMAND to the district
court with instructions to dismiss as moot.
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