The plaintiffs have moved to dismiss the defendants’ appeal from an order of the district court on the ground that it is not an appealable order. The motion raises questions concerning federal appellate jurisdiction in the context of a major constitutional litigation. The plaintiffs had brought suit to enforce the federal “motor voter” law (National Voter Registration Act of 1993, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1973gg
et seq.)
against the governor and other officials of the State of Illinois, which had refused to comply with the law on the ground that it was unconstitutional. We upheld the constitutionality of the law and affirmed so much of the district court’s injunction as commanded the defendants to obey it.
Association of Community Organizations for Reform v. Edgar,
The defendants argue that the order is a final decision and therefore appeal-able under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. One of the plaintiffs, the United States, agrees that the order is appealable but believes that it is appealable not as a final decision but as an order modifying an injunction. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). The order in fact seems to fall between two stools. It is not final in any
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ordinary sense of the word, since compliance proceedings continue before the district court with regard to Spanish-language assistance and no doubt other issues as well. And it does not purport to modify the injunction. It interprets the injunction, but interpretations of injunctions as distinct from modifications of them are not appealable, provided they really are interpretive, and do not change the meaning of — that is, modify — the original injunction.
Motorola, Inc. v. Computer Displays Int’l, Inc.,
The position of the United States is untenable. To modify an injunction is to change it. The injunction has not been changed. It commanded Illinois to comply with the motor-voter law; it still commands that. An injunction that merely commands compliance with a statute (in order to attach the sanction of contempt to continued noncompliance) is as vague as the statute, and invites interpretation. Whether a requirement of verifying a new voter’s address violates the statute and consequently the injunction as well is an archetypal issue of interpretation and the resolution of it clarifies, it does not modify, the injunction. Cf.
Major v. Orthopedic Equipment Co.,
Had the judge couched his rulings as supplementary injunctions, they would be appealable even if they did no more than make explicit what had been implicit in the original, vague injunction. Injunctions are appealable under section 1292(a)(1) whether they are primary or supplementary.
Eli Lilly & Co. v. Medtronic, Inc.,
The defendants’ position on appeal-ability, as opposed to that of the United States, depends on the uncertain meaning of “final decision” in postjudgment proceedings. The injunction that we modified and.affirmed in our previous decision was a final judgment — so when are subsequent orders “final”? The simplest and most sensible approach, one that we have expressly endorsed, most recently in
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Ruggiero,
We do not want to be besieged by successive appeals in injunctive proceedings. The position of the defendants, if accepted, would make virtually all postjudgment orders immediately appealable. If the board of elections wants to stick to its guns, it can refuse to submit a compliance plan that omits the regulations that the district judge believes invalid. Although an order to submit a plan of compliance, like a discovery order, is not an injunction,
Mercer v. Magnant,
The United States points out,- sensibly as it seems to us, that the dispute over appealability would have been avoided had the district judge, instead of issuing “orders” invalidating state regulations, simply directed the state to submit a compliance plan and then rejected it as noncomplying in various particulars. There would be no basis for arguing that the rejection was an appealable order. But this is, from a practical standpoint, what the judge did; and the fact that he used inapt words ought not convert an unappealable ruling into an appealable order.
The appeal is therefore
Dismissed.
