On October 20, 1970, the district judge entered an order supported by a detailed opinion, permanently enjoining Leander Perez, Jr., the District Attorney of Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, from further prosecuting the appellee, Gary Duncan, in the Louisiana state courts on a charge of simple battery. Duncan v. Perez, E.D.La.1970,
The facts are gone into fully in the district court opinion, and will be repeated here only to the extent necessary to our disposition. On October 18, 1966, the appellee, a 19 year old Negro, intervened in a street confrontation between two of the appellee’s young relatives, a nephew and cousin, and four young white boys. Each of the boys involved was about twelve years of age. This incident occurred near the then recently integrated Bootheville-Venice School in
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Plaquemines Parish, and led to the filing of a charge against Gary Duncan of cruelty to a juvenile, allegedly because Duncan slapped Herman Landry, Jr., one of the white boys, on the arm. The charge was based upon an affidavit sworn to by Landry, Sr., before a Justice of the Peace in Port Sulphur, Louisiana. The Justice of the Peace at nearby Venice was avoided because he was Landry, Sr.’s step-father. When it was discovered at a preliminary hearing that the cruelty to a juvenile charge was applicable only in a parent-child situation, that charge was dropped and the battery charge substituted. Following a non-jury trial, appellee was found guilty of simple battery on January 25, 1967, and sentenced to two months in prison and a fine of $150.00, with an additional twenty days in prison if the fine was not paid. The conviction was denied review in the Louisiana Supreme Court’s State v. Duncan,
On January 3, 1969, appellee instituted this action pursuant to Title 42, U.S. C. § 1983, Title 28, U.S.C. § 1343(3) and Title 28, U.S.C. §§ 2201-2202, in an effort to bar his retrial on the simple battery charge.
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Trial was held below June 8, 1970, at which time the district judge agreed to take judicial notice of the record made before him in the case of Sobol v. Perez, E.D.La., 1968,
1. The simple battery prosecution was being maintained by Leander Perez, Jr., in bad faith and for purposes of harassment;
2. There was no legitimate state interest in the reprosecution of appellee;
3. The reprosecution of appellee would deter and suppress the exercise of federally secured rights by Negroes in Plaquemines Parish; and
4. Injunctive relief was not barred by the Anti-Injunction statute, Title 28, U.S.C., § 2283.
As noted above, the tenor and holding of Younger v. Harris was accurately and prophetically anticipated by the careful opinion below. We read Younger v. Harris to hold that an individual is not entitled to federal injunctive relief against a state prosecution which has been instituted by state offi-
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ciáis in good faith unless irreparable injury to the state court defendant (as was shown in Dombrowski v. Pfister, 1965,
“ * * * whether Duncan slapped or simply touched the white youth on the arm, it is clear beyond dispute that any violation that may have occurred was so slight and technical as to be generally reserved for law school hypothetical rather than criminal prosecutions. The white boy was not hurt and displayed no bruise minutes after the incident. De minimus ‘batteries’ of this kind occur repeatedly in Plaquemines Parish and elsewhere and do not become the subject of criminal proceedings.”
We have carefully studied the district court’s detailed opinion, his carefully buttressed conclusions of law, and the resultant order for permanent injunction in the light of the “clearly erroneous” concept by which we are bound. Rule 52(a), F.R.Civ.P., McAllister v. United States, 1954,
The judgment of the district court is in all respects
Affirmed.
Notes
. Younger v. Harris, 1971,
. After the Supreme Court’s decision in Duncan, the Louisiana legislature reduced the maximum sentence for simple battery from two years to six months. As a result, appellee, prior to the issuance of the district court’s opinion and order, faced retrial without a jury.
. The district court’s opinion notes inter alia that appellee was, during the course of the first simple battery prosecution, subjected to multiple arrests, repeated resettings of unusually high pre-conviction bail, the unusually severe sentence, the unlawful demand for a double appeal bond, the comments of the appellant Perez and the state trial judge, and the arrest of his chief counsel on a baseless charge of the unlawful practice of law. In the latter connection and for an insight into the bitterness inherent throughout in this proceeding and its byproducts, see Sobol v. Perez, E.D.La. 1968, 289 P.Supp. 392, holding that So-bol’s arrest was made in bad faith and for purposes of harassment. His further prosecution was enjoined. Sobol v. Perez was not appealed.
. Some related matters are further documented and explicated by our opinion in Plaquemines Parish School Board v. United States, 5 Cir. 1969,
