Mildred DAUBERT and Ethel Royster, Individually and on
behalf of all other persons similarly situated,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Donald E. PERCY, Individually and as Secretary of the
Department of Health and Social Services,
Defendant-Appellant.
No. 82-2787.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued April 7, 1983.
Decided Aug. 4, 1983.
Robert W. Larsen, Wis. Dept. of Justice, Madison, Wis., for defendant-appellant.
Margaret J. Vergeront, Legal Action of Wisconsin, Inc., Madison, Wis., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Before CUMMINGS, Chief Judge, COFFEY, Circuit Judge, and WEIGEL, Senior District Judge.*
CUMMINGS, Chief Judge.
In 1973, as part of a consent decree a federal district court in Wisconsin issued a permanent injunction against the Secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Health and Social Services ordering him and his successors in office to make certain welfare payments. Seven years later, a successor, a defendant in this suit, moved under Rule 60(b)(5) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for relief from that judgment. In October 1980 the district court granted the motion and improperly amended the 1973 injunction so that the Secretary, on behalf of the state, could refuse to make some of the payments required by the 1973 judgment. Plaintiffs appealed from that decision and while the appeal was pending, the Wisconsin legislature amended the statute that underlay the original 1973 judgment, making that judgment unsound. In an unpublished opinion,
The Eleventh Amendment was not intended to insulate a state from the risk that a judgment affording its officials relief from a seven-year-old injunction might be reversed on appeal. The showing required for such relief is difficult to make--"Nothing less than a clear showing of grievous wrong evoked by new and unforeseen conditions" will do, United States v. Swift,
The funds which defendants oppose paying are not compensation for loss prior to the entry of the 1973 injunction. They are funds which were required to be paid by that prospective injunction but were withheld because the injunction was erroneously modified in October 1980. Absent the erroneous modification and consistently with the Eleventh Amendment, defendants would have provided the benefits until the April 1, 1981, Wisconsin legislative change. The 1973 injunction was admittedly permissible under the Eleventh Amendment. That Amendment does not bar the September 1982 order at issue because it was only effectuating the prior injunction during the brief period before the Wisconsin legislature acted.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Stanley A. Weigel, Senior District Judge of the Northern District of California, is sitting by designation
