AD HOC COMMITTEE ON JUDICIAL ADMINISTRATION, etc., et al.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 73-1129.
United States Court of Appeals,
First Circuit.
Argued Sept. 7, 1973.
Decided Dec. 20, 1973.
Jerry Cohen, Waltham, Mass., with whom Harold Brown, Boston, Mass., was on brief, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Lawrence T. Bench, Asst. Atty. Gen., with whom Robert H. Quinn, Atty. Gen., and Walter H. Mayo III, Asst. Atty. Gen., were on brief, for defendants-appellees.
Before COFFIN, Chief Judge, KILKENNY* and CAMPBELL, Circuit Judges.
LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Circuit Judge.
In a class action1 brought under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, plaintiffs allege that Massachusetts' failure to provide "court facilities, judges, clerical personnel, and other facilities" violates their Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The federal judiciary is asked to order enlargement and restructuring of the entire state court system. Plaintiffs are an unincorporated association of Massachusetts attorneys and an eldеrly plaintiff in a pending Massachusetts civil suit. The defendants are the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the state legislature and the governor.
The complaint charges that, through no procrastinating techniques of their own choosing, criminal defendants must wait well beyond one year to obtain а trial, and civil litigants must bide their time at least two years, but frequently four years or more. Such delay is said to deprive civil litigants of liberty and property without due process of law. A due process claim is also asserted on behalf of attorneys forced to endure "substantial confiscation оf their opportunity to survive economically." Finally, the complaint alleges that the poor and elderly are deprived of equal protection of the laws because such groups are less able to withstand the effects of lengthy delay.
The prayer for relief asks the district court to order defendants to provide short and long term proposals to alleviate the congestion "and to implement such programs with adequate funding"; it further requests the court to fashion other orders necessary to resolve the court crisis and to retain jurisdiction in order to supervise its decree.
The district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a justiciable cause of action, and on the ground that the Eleventh Amendment bars the action against defendants.
Courts in Massachusetts, as in many other states, have been overtaken by an explosion of litigatiоn, causing congestion and delays which defy solution even by the most active lawyers and jurists. See Annual Report of the Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, the Honorable G. Joseph Tauro, The State of the Judiciary, 57 Mass.L. Q. 209, 223-25 (1972). The problem is by no means limited to the state judiciary; thе federal courts are likewise overtaxed. We do not dispute the general proposition that residents of the Commonwealth might well benefit from more judges and from enlarged court facilities. However, court-managed reshaping of government institutions-not to mention of other courts-is nоt a task to be undertaken lightly. Whether it is to be undertaken at all depends on "justiciability", a word used to distinguish causes which courts may properly handle from those they may not.
In Baker v. Carr,
The duty to be identified in the instant case is nothing less than a state's duty under the federal constitution to furnish timely judicial remedies for all its citizens and in all types and classes of litigation. The district court would have to translate the due process clause into formulae and timetables establishing the maximum permissible delay. This would not be easily done. To date, delay as an aspect of due process has been defined in the context of a particular case; a court looks at the effect of delay on the parties, at their diligence, at the nature of the case, and at the interests at stake. The Supreme Court has not quantified even in criminal cases the right to a speedy trial. "We cannot definitely say how long is too long in a system where justice is supposed to be swift but deliberate." Barker v. Wingo,
Formulating the general duty is, moreоver, plagued by other considerations such as whether the state's duty to afford a trial within a particular time differs as between classes of civil actions, or whether the constitution permits different timetables in different counties and regions. See Missouri v. Lewis,
If formulating a generalized constitutionаl duty applicable to the entire state court system is difficult, determining whether and in what respect the duty is being violated is equally so.4 See A.B.A. Approved Standards Relating to Speedy Trial Sec. 2.3 (1968); Rosenberg, Court Congestion: Status, Causes, and Proposed Remedies, in The Courts, The Public and The Law Explosiоn 29 (H. Jones, ed. 1965). Much of the delay from filing to trial can be attributed to a host of factors: discovery, negotiation, investigation, strategy, and, of course, counsel's engagement on other matters or even procrastination. To extrapolate from court statistics a picture of thоse cases where inability to obtain a trial has reached due process proportions is difficult.5
Most difficult of all, however, would be for the district court to attempt to mold a remedy. See De Kosenko v. New York,
In any event, a federal judge faced with the awesome task of ordering measures to cut down the waiting period in a state's judiciary could hardly consider merely the augmentation of resources. He would also have to inquire into the administration of the system, its utilizatiоn of personnel, the advisability of requiring adoption of techniques such as pre-trial conferences, different calendar arrangements, split trials, and the like, and countless other administrative matters about which books have been written and courses taught, and as to the relative valuе of which there remains much dispute.
Related to the manageability of relief are other considerations that bear on justiciability. A question is nonjusticiable if it turns on policy determinations outside judicial discretion. Baker v. Carr, supra,
Moreover, one might doubt the wisdom of casting a federal district court in the role of receiver for a state judicial branch. Cf. Younger v. Harris,
The courts always remain open in individual cases to complaints of unconstitutional deprivation through delay. And, of course, principles announced in one case may be such as to control other-possibly many other-later cases. But we decline to ask the federal district court to forego its usual adjudicatory role in favor of the sweeping administrative and legislative functions urged upon us.
Affirmed.
Notes
Of the Ninth Circuit sitting by designation
The class consists of all persons in the Commonwealth and the following subclasses: (1) all defendants in pending criminal proceedings; (2) all parties in all pending civil prоceedings; (3) the state's judicial branch; (4) litigants of moderate or modest means represented by attorneys in the Ad Hoc Committee on Judicial Administration; (5) all persons of advanced age or in minority and underprivileged groups; and (6) all members of the Massachusetts bar
Such a class compоsition poses problems. The group "all persons in the Commonwealth" most likely contains individuals with interests adverse to each other and to the class representatives, namely those desiring to retain the present system rather than pay, through higher taxes, for improvements. 3B Moore's Federal Practice p 23.07 (2d ed. 1969). Subclass (1) may be precluded by the Supreme Court's ad hoc approach to the right to speedy trial. Barker v. Wingo,
The Eleventh Amendment bars the action against the Commonwealth. Hans v. Louisiana,
The extent of a person's right to have access to the state court remains uncertain. Boddie v. Connecticut,
The reapportionment case relied upon by plaintiffs, Mahan v. Howell,
Plaintiffs presumably would have the court either ignore state provisions which permit the advancement of criminal and civil cases on an ad hoc basis or presume their ineffectiveness. M.G.L.A. c. 277 Secs. 72, 72A; c. 231 Sec. 59A
The difficulty with predicting the effect of granting the relief plaintiffs request further distinguishes the instant case from other affirmative relief situations. See, e. g., United States v. Montgomery County Bd. of Education,
Rouse v. Cameron,
