Appellants are five school-age children who live in Boston, Massachusetts.
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In combination with five other children and an advocacy group, Boston’s Children First, they brought suit, claiming that the Boston elementary school assignment program denied them their preferred school assignments based on their race, in violation of federal and state law.
Boston’s Children First v. City of Boston,
A
Appellants argue first that this Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), which provides for appellate jurisdiction of “[ijnterloeutory orders ... granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions.... ” They suggest that the district court’s dismissal of their claims for injunctive relief, based on the determinatiоn that they lacked standing, amounted to a refusal of an injunction appealable pursuant to § 1292(a)(1).
Orders in which the district court
expressly
denies a request for injunctive relief are immediately appealable as of right under § 1292(a)(1).
Casas Office Machs. v. Mita Copystar Am., Inc.,
This Court has held that the dismissal of some claims for injunctive relief when other claims rеmain pending does not “expressly” deny an injunction.
Plymouth County Nuclear Info. Comm., Inc. v. Boston Edison Co.,
The district court’s determination that the five appellants lacked standing to seek injunctive relief does have the “practical effect” of denying an injunction, because it has “erected a ‘legal barrier’ foreclosing any meaningful future consideration of a formal application” for injunctive relief by these particular appellants.
Plymouth Nuclear,
Appellants seek to distinguish Plymouth Nuclear by arguing that their failure to press their claims for temporary relief resulted from delays attributable to appel-lees or the district court: namely, the alleged failure of appellees to cooperate with discovery orders and the court’s suggestion that a renewed motion for a preliminary injunction would fail unless additional evidence was unearthed during discovery. Even if these discovery-related complaints are justified, however, their timing makes appellants’ argument meritless. The original motion for a preliminary injunction was denied on August 10, 1999. Appellants did not attempt to renew that motion until over nine months later, on May 19, 2000, 3 which was coincidentally the same day that the district court partially granted defendants’ motion to dismiss. It was not until a month later, at a June 20, 2000 scheduling conference, that the district court indicated that the renewed motion would probably fail because insufficient new evidence had emerged (via discovery) in the preceding ten months. The reasons why appellants withdrew their May 19 renewed motion for preliminary injunction and delayed its resubmission are irrеlevant: it is their failure to press their original motion for a preliminary injunction that is indicative of the lack of serious harm.
Even if we were to ascribe minimal weight to appellants’ failure to press their request for interim relief, appellants have madе no showing that this order is of the
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type that can be “effectually challenged only by immediate appeal.”
Casas,
Appellants also argue that the dismissal of their claims for permanent injunctive relief “effectively denied” their renewed motion for a preliminary injunction, which had not yet been filed when this order issued.
4
In other words, because the district court found that these five plaintiffs lacked standing to seek injunctive relief, they could not be included in a renewed petition for preliminary relief. Even if we assume that this is so, and even if we were to read § 1291(a)(1) as applicable to the “effective denial” of an as yet unrequested preliminary injunction, we have previously denied interlocutory review of the refusal of a permanent injunction despite the assumption that such refusal would “foreclose any meaningful future consideration” of claims for injunctive relief.
See Plymouth Nuclear,
B
Appellants would alternatively premise this Court’s jurisdiction on the “collateral order doctrine,” which provides a narrow exception to the final judgment rule.
Midland Asphalt Co. v. United States,
(1) an issue essentially unrelated to the merits of the main dispute, capable of review without disrupting the main trial; (2) a complete resolution of the issue, not one that is “unfinished” or “inconclusive”; (3) a right incapable of vindication on appeal from final judgment; and (4) an important and unsettled question of controlling law, not merely a question of the proper exercise of the trial court’s discretion.
United States v. Sorren,
We need not determine whether this order is final, urgent, and important, because it is clearly not separable in the manner contemplated by the collateral order doctrine. For an order to be collateral, it must not be “enmeshed in the factual and legal issues comprising the plaintiffs cause of action.”
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
C
Appellants also suggest that this Court has jurisdiction pursuant to the “pragmatic finality” doctrine, which they undеrstand as allowing this Court to premise its jurisdiction on an ad hoc balancing of “the inconvenience and costs of piecemeal review and the danger that delay will create an injustice.”
Gillespie v. U.S. Steel Corp.,
D
Because we have no jurisdiction pursuant to § 1292(a)(1), and no exception to the final judgment rule applies, we dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. Some time after the decision underlying this appeal had issued, this Court granted a wriL of mandamus to recuse the district judge, based on an appearance of partiality stemming from that judge’s public comments.
Boston’s Children First v. City of Boston,
. Interlocutory orders denying preliminary injunctive relief may almost always be immediately appealed pursuant to § 1292(a)(1).
E.g., CMM Cable Rep., Inc. v. Ocean Coast Props., Inc.,
. The renewed motion for a preliminary injunction was later withdrawn.
. The renewed motion was actually filed the same day that the order issued (May 19, 2000), but as we have noted, was later withdrawn.
