LUIS A. ACEVEDO-GARCÍA, ET AL. v. HON. ROBERTO VERA-MONROIG, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS MAYOR OF ADJUNTAS, ET AL.; MARÍA E. GÓMEZ-CANDELARIA, ET AL. v. JOSÉ A. RIVERA-RODRÍGUEZ, ET AL.
Nos. 02-1139, 02-1340, 02-1529
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
July 12, 2002
[Hon. Jaime Pieras, Jr., Senior U.S. District Judge]
ON URGENT MOTION SEEKING STAY PENDING APPEAL PURSUANT TO RULE 8 OF THE RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE
Ismael Rodríguez-Izquierdo on Urgent Motion Seeking Stay Pending Appeal Pursuant to
Johanna Emmanuelli-Huertas, Jorge Martínez-Luciano and Law Offices of Pedro Ortiz-Alvarez, P.S.C. on Second Urgent Motion Requesting Stay of Execution Pending Appeal, Pursuant to
Eliezer Aldarondo-Ortiz, Pablo Landrau-Pirazzi, Claudio Aliff-Ortiz, Iván Castro-Ortiz and Aldarondo & López-Bras on Opposition to Defendants-Appellants’ Urgent Motion Seeking Stay Pending Appeal Pursuant to
Israel Roldán-González on Opposition/Reply to “Urgent Motion Requesting Stay of Execution Pending Appeal Pursuant to
Per Curiam.
In similar, albeit unrelated cases, two Puerto Rico municipalities and certain of their officers seek stays of judgment, pursuant to
In one case, No. 02-1529, the Municipality of Gurabo and two of its officials seek a stay of two orders of the district court: one, awarding plaintiffs compensatory and punitive damages; the other, ordering that plaintiffs be reinstated to their positions with the municipality. Defendants now seek a stay without the posting of any bond or conditioned upon the posting of a bond in half the amount ordered by the district court.1
Defendants claim that they should not be required to post a bond because the “municipality has a mechanism for assessing future budgetary expenses” and hence has the capacity to meet the amount of the judgment should it be affirmed on appeal. Alternatively, they argue that the $2.7 million bond set by the district court is excessive. In addition, the Gurabo defendants claim that they are entitled to a stay, pursuant to
In the second case, Nos. 02-1139 and 1140, the Municipality of Adjuntas and certain of its officers seek to stay a judgment awarding plaintiffs compensatory damages against the municipality and punitive damages against the individual defendants. The procedural posture of this case is somewhat different from that of the Gurabo case. The Gurabo defendants moved for a stay of judgment, pursuant to
In response to the opposition, the district court in the Adjuntas case, acting “in accordance with the practice and procedure of [Puerto Rico],”
The Municipality of Adjuntas now seeks a stay without the posting of any bond or conditioned upon the posting of a “reasonable” supersedeas bond. It bases its claim on the adverse public policy consequences that would attend the district court order to include the judgment in the municipal budget and on the fact that Puerto Rico law entitles municipalities to stays of
The individual defendants in the Adjuntas case seek a stay without the posting of bond on the ground that Puerto Rico law provides that the Commonwealth will “assume the payment of any judgment that may be entered against an [official of the Commonwealth sued in individual capacity for actions undertaken in the course of his employment].”2
Defendants seek to stay judgments ordering both monetary and injunctive relief. Stays of injunctive orders, such as for reinstatement, are evaluated under the traditional four-part standard applied to injunctions.3 “The sine qua non [of the stay pending appeal standard] is whether the [movants] are likely to succeed on the merits.” Weaver v. Henderson, 984 F.2d 11, 12 (1st Cir. 1993). In essence, the issuance of a stay depends on “whether the harm caused [movant] without the [stay], in light of the [movant‘s] likelihood of eventual success on the merits, outweighs
Stays of monetary judgments are ordinarily sought under either
As far as the Gurabo defendants’ request for a stay of the order of reinstatement is concerned, we do not believe that the defendants have shown a clear likelihood of success of the merits, even if they are correct in contending that the plaintiffs lack a property interest in their positions under Puerto Rico law. Their claim that the monetary judgment should be stayed because the municipality has the capacity to meet any judgment upheld on appeal was not made below and, in any event, the municipality has failed to provide this court with adequate documentation supporting its capacity. See, e.g., Sealover v. Carey Canada, 806 F. Supp. 59, 62 (M.D. Pa. 1992) (while proof of ability to pay is proper ground for omitting bond requirement, claim must be rejected where the court lacks “information necessary to make such a determination“). Nor, on the record before us, do we find any merit in the defendants’ claim that the bond set by the district court is excessive.
The Gurabo defendants also claim to be entitled to a stay pursuant to
This brings us to the Adjuntas defendants. Even though the municipality may be entitled to a stay without posting a bond in Puerto Rico courts, it is entitled to a similar stay in federal court only if the strictures of Rule 62(f) are met. The municipality has provided no argument to show that Rule 62(f) is satisfied, and, as we have already noted, such a claim does not seem likely to succeed.
With regard to the district court order that the municipality include the cost of the judgment in its 2002-2003 municipal budget (the only relief against the municipality plaintiffs now claim to be seeking), we agree that the public interest considerations brought forth by the municipality are not frivolous. See Olympia Equipment Leasing Corp., 786 F.2d at 796 (“inflexible requirement of a bond” may be inappropriate in certain situations). However, these arguments have not yet been presented in the district court.
As for the individual Adjuntas defendants, Puerto Rico law provides that the Commonwealth will in certain cases “assume the payment of any judgment that may be entered against an [official of the Commonwealth sued in his personal capacity]” due
Ordinarily, the failure of the municipalities thus far to justify stays would resolve the issue of interim relief. However, at the very least, the municipalities and the individual defendants should be given time to post supersedeas bonds; and, if they have any arguments as to why bonds in the full amount of the judgments are unnecessary and why lesser amounts will suffice, we leave it open to the district court to entertain such arguments.
Accordingly, we deny the stays sought and vacate our current temporary stay effective 10 days from the date of this order. During that period, the defendants can post bonds consistent with Rule 62(d) or return to the district court for any other relief including extensions of time or reductions in amount that that court may in its discretion be prepared to afford. The motion made by defendants/appellants in the Gurabo case “requesting certification to the Puerto Rico Supreme Court” is denied.
It is so ordered.
