Case Information
*1 PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ______________ No. 20-2936 ______________ COUNTY OF BUTLER; COUNTY OF FAYETTE; COUNTY OF GREENE; COUNTY OF WASHINGTON; NANCY GIFFORD; MIKE GIFFORD, husband and wife
doing business as Double Image Styling Salon; PRIMA CAPELLI INC, a Pennsylvania Corporation; MIKE KELLY;
MARCI MUSTELLO; DARYL METCALFE; TIM BONNER; STEVEN SCHOEFFEL; PAUL F. CRAWFORD,
trading and doing business as Marigold Farm; CATHY HOSKINS, trading and doing business as Classy Cuts Hair
Salon; RW MCDONALD & SONS INC; STARLIGHT DRIVE IN LLC, a Pennsylvania Corporation; SKYVIEW DRIVE IN LLC, a Pennsylvania Limited Liability Company
v.
GOVERNOR OF PENNSYLVANIA; SECRETARY PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, Appellants ______________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civil No. 2-20-cv-00677) District Judge: Honorable William S. Stickman, IV *2 ______________ Argued July 22, 2021 ______________ Before: CHAGARES, JORDAN, and SHWARTZ, Circuit
Judges (Filed: August 11, 2021) J. Bart DeLone [ARGUED]
Sean A. Kirkpatrick
Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania Strawberry Square
Harrisburg, PA 17120
Daniel B. Mullen
Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania 1251 Waterfront Place
Mezzanine Level
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Claudia M. Tesoro
Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania 1600 Arch Street, Suite 300
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Counsel for Appellants
Daniel M. Vannella
Office of Attorney General of New Jersey Division of Law
25 Market Street
Hughes Justice Complex
1st Floor, West Wing
Trenton, NJ 08625
Counsel for Amicus State of New Jersey Thomas E. Breth
Ronald T. Elliott
Thomas W. King, III [ARGUED]
Jordan P. Shuber
Dillon McCandless King Coulter & Graham 128 West Cunningham Street
Butler, PA 16001
Counsel for Appellees
Lawrence J. Joseph
1250 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 700-1A Washington, DC 20036
Counsel for Amicus Eagle Forum Education & Legal Defense Fund
Christian D. Wright
Office of Attorney General of Delaware Delaware Department of Justice
820 North French Street
Carvel Office Building
Wilmington, DE 19801
Counsel for Amicus State of Delaware *4 Anthony R. Holtzman
K&L Gates
17 North Second Street
18th Floor
Harrisburg, PA 17101
Counsel for Amici Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Pennsylvania Administrator of the House Majority Caucus, Pennsylvania Chair of the House Appropriations Committee, Pennsylvania Chair of the House Majority Caucus, Pennsylvania Chair of the House Policy Committee, Pennsylvania House of Representatives Majority Whip, Pennsylvania Secretary of the House Majority Caucus, Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Matthew H. Haverstick
Joshua J. Voss
Kleinbard
Three Logan Square
1717 Arch Street, 5th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Counsel for Amici Pennsylvania Senate Republican Caucus, Pennsylvania House Republican Caucus David R. Kott [ARGUED]
McCarter & English
100 Mulberry Street
Four Gateway Center, 14th Floor
Newark, NJ 07102
Counsel for Amicus New Jersey Business & Industry Association
Jeffrey M. Schwab
Liberty Justice Center
141 West Jackson Street, Suite 1605 Chicago, IL 60604
Counsel for Amicus Liberty Justice Center Shawn M. Rodgers
Goldstein Law Partners
11 Church Road
Hatfield, PA 19440
Counsel for Amicus Commonwealth Partners Chamber of Entrepreneurs
______________ OPINION OF THE COURT ______________
SHWARTZ, Circuit Judge.
On various dates between March and July 2020, the Governor and Secretary of Health of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (“Defendants”) entered orders to address the COVID-19 pandemic. Plaintiffs, comprised of Pennsylvania citizens, elected officials, and businesses, challenge three pairs of directives: stay-at-home orders, business closure orders, *6 and orders setting congregation limits in secular settings. [1] The United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania concluded that the orders violated the United States Constitution, County of Butler v. Wolf, 486 F. Supp. 3d 883, 891 (W.D. Pa. 2020), and Defendants appealed. While the appeal was pending, circumstances changed.
On the health front, society has learned more about how COVID-19 spreads and the efficacy of masks, therapeutics have been developed, and vaccines have been manufactured and distributed. In fact, more than 60% of Pennsylvanians have received a COVID vaccine.
There also have been changes on the legal front. An amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution and a concurrent resolution of the Commonwealth’s General Assembly now restricts the Governor’s authority to enter the same orders. Pa. Const. art. IV § 20(d); H.R. 106, 2021 Gen. Assemb., Reg. Sess. (Pa. 2021) (concurrent resolution terminating the Governor’s March 6, 2020, proclamation of disaster emergency, as amended and renewed). In addition, the challenged orders have expired by their own terms.
I [2]
The issue before us is whether those events moot this
case. We hold that they do. “[A]n appeal is moot in the
*7
constitutional sense only if events have taken place during the
pendency of the appeal that make it impossible for the court to
grant any effectual relief whatsoever.” In re World Imports
Ltd.,
No exception to mootness applies. As Plaintiffs have
conceded, the voluntary cessation doctrine does not apply here
because the orders expired by their own terms and not as a
response to the litigation. See Trump v. Hawaii,
the orders expired after more than half of all adults in
Pennsylvania were vaccinated. We generally presume that
government officials act in good faith, and we will not depart
from that practice under these circumstances. See Marcavage
v. Nat’l Park Serv.,
A plaintiff bears the burden to show that the “capable of
repetition yet evading review” exception applies, see Belitskus
v. Pizzingrilli,
Thus, no exception to mootness applies, and we will dismiss the appeal.
II
When a case becomes moot while an appeal is pending,
appellate courts generally follow the “established practice” of
vacating a district court’s judgment with directions to dismiss.
See United States v. Munsingwear,
III
For the foregoing reasons, we will dismiss the appeal, vacate the judgment, and remand with instructions for the District Court to dismiss the Complaint as moot.
County of Butler, et al. v. Governor of Pennsylvania, et al. , No. 20-2936
Jordan, J., concurring
_________________________________________________
I join my colleagues’ opinion in full but write separately to note two things I think worth mentioning. First, the question of mootness in this case is not, to my mind, a simple or easy one. The Governor’s emergency powers have been reduced and the immediate sense of emergency has abated to a large degree, but both in reported public statements and in argument before us, “[t]he Wolf administration maintains that dissolving the disaster emergency does not affect a health secretary’s disease-prevention authority to issue mask-wearing and stay- at-home orders or shut down schools and nonessential businesses.” Marc Levy, Lawmakers Vote to End Emergency Declaration, Extend Waivers , Associated Press (June 10, 2021), available at https://apnews.com/article/pa-state-wire- health-coronavirus-pandemic-government-and-politics- f3980f25e76458063e1a4629f874c56a. (See audio recording of oral argument held on July 22, 2021 at 2:53-3:55 (https://www2.ca3.uscourts.gov/oralargument/audio/20- 2936CountyofButlerv.GovernorofPA.mp3).) Whether that position is legally sound is not before us and I make no comment on it. The point is that the Defendants-Appellants in this case – Governor Wolf and the Commonwealth’s Secretary of Health – have taken that position, so the possibility of future executive orders of the type challenged here is not fanciful. But such orders would have to be just that – in the future – because it is undisputed that the challenged orders have all expired, and a legal remedy aimed at those particular orders is, by definition, impossible. The case is thus moot, *13 unless one of the two well-known exceptions to mootness applies.
As described in the Court’s opinion today, one of those exceptions is found in the “voluntary cessation” doctrine. If the person responsible for the challenged action stops it but can readily start it again, the dispute can rightly be said to still be live. But, as also noted in the Court’s opinion, the Plaintiffs conceded at oral argument that the voluntary cessation doctrine does not apply in this case. ( Id . at 51:57-54:12.)
That leaves the other exception to mootness, which reaches behavior that is capable of repetition yet evading review. I agree with my colleagues that the Plaintiffs have failed to show that the orders at issue satisfy the requisites for application of that doctrine. In particular, I doubt that “there is a reasonable expectation that the same complaining part[ies] will be subject to the same action again.” United Steel Paper & Forestry Rubber Mfg. Allied Indus. & Serv. Workers Int’l Union v. Virgin Islands , 842 F.3d 201, 208 (3d Cir. 2016) (quoting Kingdomware Techs., Inc. v. United States , 136 S. Ct. 1969, 1976 (2016)). The Plaintiffs insist that this case is not moot because the orders at issue are indeed capable of repetition yet evading review, but we have only their speculation that the same kind of heavily restrictive orders will be issued once more. Given the recent, wide-spread reporting that the Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus is causing increased concern among many public health authorities, the Plaintiffs’ position ought not be rejected out of hand, and it has not been. Nevertheless, as noted in our opinion today, we have been given little reason to doubt the representations by the Governor and Secretary that the public health circumstances have changed so dramatically since the time the challenged *14 orders were entered that there is no reasonable expectation that they will be re-imposed. So the case is over.
Which leads to the second and final point I want to make. The Plaintiffs have argued this case with an understandable vigor, believing, as they obviously do, that fundamental rights are at stake and were not properly respected by Pennsylvania’s governmental officials. Without in anyway signaling a view on the merits – something I and the panel have assiduously avoided doing – I note simply that our ruling today should not be read as reflecting a lack of appreciation for the feelings generated by this case, nor as indicating a failure to understand that there are real-world consequences flowing from governmental responses to the unprecedented (at least in our lifetime) pandemic we are yet working our way through. The legal arguments of the Plaintiffs, of the elected and appointed officials on the other side of the “v.”, and of the amici aligned on either side have all been carefully considered, with full sympathy for the parties’ good faith and sincerity. For all of that, though, a merits decision cannot be given because there is simply no longer a case or controversy to be decided. The boundaries of our jurisdiction are set, and the case-or- controversy requirement embedded in Article III of the Constitution serves as a bulwark against judicial overreach. That is to everyone’s benefit, even if it can at times be frustrating to those who have worked for and want an answer from the courts.
We are not through with COVID, and the unexpected may yet occur, but, under the rules governing our jurisdiction, considering the merits of this appeal or leaving the District Court’s decision extant would be a mistake. I therefore concur in the opinion and judgment of the Court.
Notes
[1] Each pair of directives consisted of substantially identical orders, one issued by the Governor and the other issued by the Secretary of Health.
[2] The District Court had subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343. We have
[3] Whether, as a general matter, orders functionally
evade review when they are of sufficiently short duration that
they cannot be addressed through the appellate process is not
something we need to consider here, since Plaintiffs’ argument
fails on the second prong of the “capable of repetition yet
evading review” test, as described herein. Cf. Brach v.
Newsom, -- F.4th --,
