A class consisting of mentally retarded citizens of Illinois who reside in nursing homes sued the state agencies that are responsible for their care. Filed in 1988, the suit complained that the state had violated the federal constitutional and statutory rights of the class members by placing them in nursing homes rather than in less restrictive environments. The suit was resolved by the entry of a consent decree in 1993 that provided for extensive injunctive relief — the kind of “regulatory” relief that is common in institutional reform litigation, such as this suit. See, e.g.,
Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk, County Jail,
A panel of this court, in an unpublished order, denied the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss the appeal for want of appellate jurisdiction. Such an order does not, however, preclude the merits panel from revisiting the jurisdictional issue.
United States v. City of Milwaukee,
The order extending the monitor was not a final decision appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. It is trae that the consent decree, though in a sense interlocutory because it contemplated continued proceedings in the district court to effect compliance with the regulatory terms of the decree, was a final decision for purposes of section 1291.
Inmates of Suffolk County Jail v. Rouse,
The approach presupposes that the post-judgment proceeding is enough like a freestanding lawsuit to enable a plausible counterpart to the conventional final judgment to be picked out. The presupposition fails when the decree is dealing with a consent decree
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that, like the one involved in this case, has no termination date. The postjudgment proceeding could drag on for many years and involve a host of far-reaching orders the consequences of which could not be undone when (if ever) the postjudgment proceeding ended with a showing of compliance so complete that the monitor’s services could be dispensed with. Some courts therefore prefer to evaluate orders in postjudgment proceedings in institutional reform litigation under the concept of “pragmatic finality.”
Stone v. City & County of San Francisco, supra,
Mandamus won’t lie here because the “error,” if that is what it was, in extending the monitor was not so egregious as to warrant immediate appellate intervention. E.g.,
Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp.,
We are mindful that most procedural orders, including those relating to masters and other judicial adjuncts, are entered before final judgment, and so in principle anyway are reviewable, albeit not immediately, when that judgment is entered. And as we said earlier, while some postjudgment proceedings have a natural terminus, a proceeding to enforce a consent decree does not. But to allow all procedural rulings in proceedings to enforce consent decrees to be immediately appealable would threaten an avalanche of interlocutory appeals, since such proceedings are frequently, as here, complex and protracted. To have to pick and choose among them on the basis of the nebulous concept of “pragmatic finality” would add a further level of complication and by its very indefiniteness incite appeals.
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The defendants cannot obtain review under the provision of section 1292(a)(1) that authorizes an immediate appeal from an order
modifying
an injunction. The provision of the consent decree which states that “the monitor’s activities shall be terminated on June 30, 1997 unless extended by order of this court” could conceivably be read as merely an acknowledgement of the judge’s power to modify the decree by extending the monitor’s term, but it would not be a plausible reading. It would make the words “unless extended by order of this court” sur-plusage, since judicial power to modify a decree is inherent and so does not require express conferral. Moreover, the decree contains an article specifying procedures for modification (Article XI), but the order appealed from here was not made on the authority of or in conformity with those procedures; the provision concerning extension appears in a different article. And the natural reading of the quoted language is not that it authorizes the modification of the decree but that it reserves a power to the court, as in
County of Suffolk v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp.,
Finally, had the parties contemplated a possible appeal from an order exei'cising the reserved power, they would have established criteria for that exercise. They would have said something like “unless
for good cause shown
the court extends the monitor.” This would have made clear that the court was not to exercise its discretion at large and would thus have given an appellate court a basis for reviewing the district court’s action. As it reads, the “unless” provision does not specify any law to apply to a motion to extend, and so, by analogy to administrative law, there is no basis for appellate second-guessing. 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2);
Lincoln v. Vigil,
It is only an analogy. Judges do not have the same leeway as other government officials to exercise power randomly or without articulable reasons. The exercise of prosecu-torial discretion and the grant of citizenship on the basis of a lottery illustrate the type of discretion that judges do
not
have except in matters of scheduling and personnel, matters of a managerial rather than an adjudicative character. Although the extension of the monitor partook of both types of judicial action, we would not read the consent decree to permit the extension of the monitor’s term without a modification of the decree if the result would be to place the district court’s action, which has potentially significant consequences for the cost and burdens of the consent decree on the state, beyond
any
possibility of appellate review. In other words, we do not read the provision as a waiver of the right to seek appellate review, though we do read it as placing the judge’s action outside the boundaries of section 1292(a)(1). If the judge had a fit and extended the monitor’s term to the year 3000, mandamus would be available to rein him in.
La Buy v. Howes Leather Co.,
In the former case, the plaintiffs could move to modify the decree to extend the term; the denial of a motion to modify an injunction is, as we noted, expressly appeal-
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able under section 1292(a)(1).
Ford v. Neese,
Dismissed.
