Plaintiffs brought this pro se action for damages on the ground that the defendant Town of Flower Mound, which taxes them and interferes with their liberty, does not have a republican form of government. The district court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction sua sponte. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3). After dealing with a question concerning our own jurisdiction, we affirm.
I. Appellate Jurisdiction
We raise the question of our own jurisdiction sua sponte. The district court entered an order reciting “that this action is dismissed in its entirety with prejudice.” Plaintiffs appeal from this order. Our examination of the record and the docket sheet indicates that a final judgment was never entered. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 58 (“Every judgment shall be set forth on a separate document.”).
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, “[t]he courts of appeals ... have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts of the United States” (emphasis added). By its terms, § 1291 does not require a “final judgment,” nor does it incorporate any procedural rule.
Rule 4(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure provides that the time to appeal in a civil case runs from “the date of
*500
the entry of the judgment
or order
appealed from” (emphasis added). In
United States v. Indrelunas,
Taking the Court’s “mechanical application” language perhaps too literally, this court applied
Indrelunas
in a long line of decisions to
dismiss
appeals when no separate document had been entered by the district court. The reported decisions include
State Nat’l Bank v. United States,
Our understanding of
Indrelunas,
however, was rejected by the Supreme Court in
Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis,
While Mallis thus permits us to take jurisdiction, it does not require us to do so. 1 Mallis makes it clear that we do not lack power to hear appeals from orders disposing of the entire litigation when the appellee does not invoke the separate document requirement; but there remains the question whether this court should adhere to its rule and refuse to exercise jurisdiction whenever the parties have attempted to bring an appeal without obtaining entry of a final judgment. 2
Thus, we are confronted with a question of
stare decisis.
3
It is the firm
*501
rule of this circuit that a panel cannot disregard precedent absent an “overriding” Supreme Court decision.
See Washington v. Watkins,
Although
Mallis
does not require us to modify our rule, we nevertheless conclude that it is an overriding change in the law. Our adoption of the separate document rule was based entirely on the theory that
Indrelunas
required the rule.
See State Nat’l Bank
v.
United States,
We conclude that we are free to hold that we may take jurisdiction of an appeal from a “final decision” under § 1291, even though no separate judgment has been entered, when the parties fail to raise the issue. 5
*502
In so holding, we wish to stress three points. First,
Indrelunas
is still the law. See
Mallis,
Second, this decision does not change the law when the appellee does object to the failure to enter the judgment as a separate document. 7
Third, it remains the better practice to have the judgment entered as a separate document.
See Turner v. Air Transp. Lodge 1894,
Since neither party to this appeal has raised the failure to obtain entry of the judgment as a separate document, we have jurisdiction and we proceed to the merits.
II. A Republican Form of Government
Plaintiffs allege that the government of the Town of Flower Mound is a nullity because all power is reposed in the “Tcwn Council,” which plaintiffs allege is a legislature. Plaintiffs argue that this claim presents a federal question under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 by virtue of the Guaranty Clause of the United States Constitution, which provides: “The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government .... ” U.S.Const. art. IV, § 4. Even if the Guaranty Clause has any application to a municipal government, the question whether a government is a nullity because its form violates the Clause is a nonjusticiable political question.
*503
Luther v. Borden,
Plaintiffs also argue that the question whether the Town is organized in violation of the Texas Constitution
9
presents a federal question because the treaty by which Texas became part of the Union conditioned the state’s entry on the United States’ approval of its constitution. Thus, plaintiffs argue, the Texas Constitution is federal law. We decline the plaintiffs’ invitation to transform most state law into federal law.
10
Congress has conditioned the entry of virtually every state since the original 13 on its approval of the state’s constitution. “A Constitution thus supervised by Congress would, after all, be a Constitution of a state .... Its force would be that of a state Constitution, and not that of an act of Congress.”
Coyle v. Smith,
Finally, plaintiffs contend that they presented a federal question in their claim that they were illegally arrested. The district court rejected this argument twice, first implicitly in its opinion and order dismissing the suit, and then expressly in its order denying plaintiffs’ motion to amend the order. The district court read the plaintiffs’ complaint to allege that the arrest was illegal only because the Town’s form of government was illegal. We agree that this is the only fair reading of plaintiffs’ allegation:
“It is a true and material fact that the Plaintiff while driving on the county roads within the alleged corporate town limits was accosted by a member of the Legislative Police and ordered to halt his motor vehicle for inspection of Plaintiff’s driver license, said action being an unlawful search and seizure by the Defendants’ Legislative Police, since only police of a true executive department have search and seizure authority, all of which was *504 contrary to the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” (emphasis added).
On this appeal, however, plaintiffs claim in their brief that the arrest was made without probable cause. They argue that the district court should have recognized this fact because the allegation refers to the Fourth Amendment. They also point out that the complaint’s “jurisdictional” allegations refer to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 12 and its jurisdictional counterpart, 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3). Finally, they point to Bruce Hanson’s single statement in his 110-page deposition that the stop was “a matter of [the officer’s] whim and desire.” 13
We assume for the sake of argument that a stop of plaintiffs’ automobile without probable cause would be a violation of plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights and thus actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
But cf. Delaware v. Prouse,
While complaints are to be construed liberally and leave to amend a complaint is to be granted liberally,
see
Fed.R. Civ.P. 8(f); 5 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1215, at 113, § 1216, at 124 (1969), an attempt to amend one’s pleadings in an appellate brief comes too late.
See Claus v. Gyorkey,
Notes
. See
Mallis,
. Adherence to this rule might deter careless practice. The failure of litigants before this court to ensure that a judgment is entered as a separate document is all too frequent.
.
Stare decisis
problems might be avoided by arguing that the adoption of a waiver exception by this panel would not be a departure from our precedent. None of the reported separate document cases makes it clear whether the court was raising the separate document requirement on its own motion. Therefore, we could assume that the failure to enter a separate document was raised in each of those cases by the appellee. We think, however, that such a reading of the cases would be disingenuous. In many of the cases, there is no indication that the appellee made a motion to dismiss the appeal or raised the separate document issue on his own.
See, e.g., Sassoon v. United States,
. While
Escamilla v. Santos,
While
Escamilla’s
broad language could be read as adopting the Second Circuit rule, the issue in
Escamilla
did not involve appellate jurisdiction. The panel neither cited nor considered our long Une of cases dismissing appeals under the separate document rule. Moreover, the
Escamilla
opinion simply cites
Mallis;
but, as noted above, there is nothing in
Mallis
that
requires
a court of appeals to exercise its jurisdiction when the separate document rule has not been complied with. Finally, we note that the scope of the
Escamilla
opinion is troubling. If the district court in
Escamilla
had no power to award attorneys’ fees because the “memorandum opinion” was a “final judgment,” and the case was no longer “pending,”
id.
at 1088, then logically the district court also no longer had power to enter a separate judgment and thereby begin the time to appeal. This latter result, however, is flatly inconsistent with
Indrelunas,
which was not overruled by
Mallis. See Mallis,
. Accord, Stein v. Reynolds Secs., Inc.,
. Any implication to the contrary in
Escamilla v. Santos,
. It may be that the order in this case — an order dismissing the entire action with prejudice — is appealable even when the appellee does object to the failure to enter the judgment as a separate document. None of our reported 'decisions applying the separate document rule to dismiss an appeal has involved a district court order of dismissal. See State
Nat’l Bank v. United States,
. The district court characterized its dismissal as one for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. In
Baker v. Carr,
however, the Supreme Court considered the cognizability of a Guaranty Clause question to be a question of justiciability,
see
Nevertheless, we hold that the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction was proper. “[A] suit may sometimes be dismissed for want of jurisdiction where the alleged claim under the Constitution ... is wholly insubstantial and frivolous.”
Bell v. Hood,
. Plaintiffs rest their claims on Article II, § 1 (“The powers of the Government of the State of Texas shall be divided into three distinct departments ....”) and on Article I, § 2 (“The faith of the people of Texas stands pledged to the preservation of a republican form of government .... ”).
. If a state constitution is federal law, it would seem to follow that all laws enacted under it are also federal laws.
. Plaintiffs rely on
Missouri v. Holland,
. Section 1983 is not itself a jurisdictional statute; it merely creates a cause of action.
Curtis
v.
Taylor,
. In this same deposition Hanson also testified that the officer informed him that he was exceeding the speed limit in a school zone.
