Petitioners seek a writ of mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 to enforce a settlement reached in federal district court with the School Board of Orange County and the Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (HRS) for a special education program and housing for a handicapped child. For the reasons below, the writ is granted.
Petitioners are Beth Ratcliffe Smith and her daughter Natalie Dawn Smith, a 15-year-old with bilateral temporal lobe agenesis. Natalie was enrolled in an Orange County School Board special education program in 1988, and in October 1989 she was admitted to the psychiatric wing of Florida Hospital, a short-term acute care facility where she is presently being held. In January 1990, a Florida circuit court determined that Natalie should remain subject to involuntary placement in the hospital under Florida’s Baker Act. Petitioners appealed this ruling and also sued the school board and HRS in United States District Court in the Middle District of Florida under procedural due process and the federal Education of the Handicapped Act, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400, et seq. They argued that the two state agencies were not providing the free and appropriate education to which Natalie was entitled. The county agencies and petitioners reached a settlement agreement before trial resolving all issues. It provided for Natalie’s release from Florida Hospital and for supervised care, education and residence elsewhere. The agencies agreed to pay $100,000 to a private nonprofit corporation for education and up to $60,000 for housing and support staff. See record excerpts Exhibit B. At a hearing before Hon. G. Kendall Sharp to review the agreement, the district judge declined to approve the agreement and ruled from the bench:
All right. Gentlemen, the court is very concerned with where the future is going to bring this type of case. We are going to be inundated within the next couple of years with drug abuse children who are going to be infused into the school system, and if each of those children are going to cost the school system and HRS two hundred thousand dollars per year, the state of Florida is going to go broke within no time. The court cannot approve this agreement. The court finds that it is against public policy, and a cost of two hundred thousand dollars per year per child is not within the intent of either the Handicapped Children Act, the Florida statutes on education or any statutes of HRS. You’re going to have to work something out. But the court will not approve this agreement as being against public policy. We’ll stand adjourned.
Hearing tr. at 4-5. A state circuit judge two weeks after this ruling reviewed the settlement in the parallel actions under Florida law, as is required by Fla.Stat. § 744.387(3)(a), 1 and approved it. See Exhibit D.
This is not the case of a judge encouraging resistant parties to settle, but rather the opposite. Here the parties agreed to settle all issues, and the judge declined to approve based on the financial size of the settlement. A trial judge ought not try the case during a settlement hearing and should be hesitant to substitute his or her own judgment for that of counsel.
See Cotton v. Hinton,
[T]he judge must guard against the temptation to become an advocate—either in favor of the settlement because of a desire to conclude the litigation, or against the settlement because of the responsibility to protect the rights of those not parties to the settlement. In reviewing the settlement the judge is called upon to be impartial and neutral, favoring neither the proponents of the settlement nor those who are opposed or absent.
Moore’s Federal Practice, Manual for Complex Litigation 2d
§ 23.14 at 160 (1986).
See also City of Miami,
A judge is not obligated to approve any settlement that is put forth by the parties. Because a settlement is a contract, the agreement itself may be void as against public policy on rare occasions. Settlements are void against public policy, however, only if they directly contravene a state or federal statute or policy.
See Yockey v. Horn,
The settlement at issue in this ease was not against public policy. It violated no statute or policy, state or federal. In fact, the only guidance on the particular subject was Fla.Stat. § 744.387(3)(a), which was enacted to ensure that settlements involving minors protected their interests. Furthermore, Florida law is that
only
the child’s interest may be considered and that financial excessiveness is not relevant in deciding whether to approve a settlement.
Bullard v. Sharp,
The question remains whether the trial court’s error should be remedied by mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 rather
In this case the district court’s refusal to approve the settlement left the parties the option of fashioning a new one less desirable or proceeding with litigation against their will. The trial judge simply stated: “You’re going to have to work something out” and adjourned the hearing. As in
Bullard,
the parties are effectively “stymied by the refusal of the trial court to approve the settlement.”
Bullard,
Accordingly, the petition for writ of mandamus is GRANTED and the district court is DIRECTED to vacate its order disapproving the settlement agreement and approve the settlement in light of the foregoing.
Notes
. "No settlement after an action has been commenced by or on behalf of a minor or other incompetent shall be effective unless approved by the court having jurisdiction of the action.” Fla.Stat. § 744.387(3)(a).
. The Eleventh Circuit, in the en banc decision
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. Although this is a federal question case rather than a diversity case, the trial court may consider state law in evaluating whether the settlement is against public policy.
