This case is before the Court on interlocutory appeal from the District Court’s determination that counsel representing appellants in the underlying cause should be disqualified. We reverse.
Appellee in this case is James O’Connor, plaintiff in a lawsuit brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988) alleging that the medical treatment he received as a prisoner in the Missouri correctional system was inadequate. O’Connor was granted leave to proceed in forma pauperis and filed his section 1983 complaint pro se. He asked the court to appoint counsel to represent him in the case.
The law firm of Riezman & Blitz, P.C., entered its appearance on behalf of the defendant Missouri Department of Corree-
On June 5, 1991, the court granted O’Connor’s motion to disqualify. The court held that O’Connor had standing to raise the issue by motion, apparently reaching that conclusion because O’Connor had standing to bring his civil rights claim in the first instance. O’Connor v. Hutcheson, No. 90-1374C(3) (E.D.Mo. June 5, 1991) (order granting motion to disqualify) (hereinafter “Order”) reprinted in Appellants’ Addendum at 1, 2-3 (“Both parties appear to agree that plaintiff and defendants have adverse legal interests in this matter and are true adversaries. Therefore, the Court concludes that plaintiff has satisfied Article III standing requirements.”) (citation omitted). The court also determined that a motion to disqualify was the proper manner in which to raise O’Con-nor’s claims concerning opposing counsel.
On the merits, the court held that Missouri’s retention of private law firms to represent state employees in prisoner civil rights cases violates state law. The court further concluded that, even if such contracts are authorized by Missouri law, they are in conflict with 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d)(1988), the federal statute that empowers the federal courts to request the services of counsel to represent indigent parties in federal court. 2 Thus, the court reasoned, such state law violates the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution and therefore is invalid.
The District Court granted defendants’ unopposed motion for certification of its disqualification order for interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b)(1988). Both parties have represented to this Court that hundreds of prisoner civil rights cases now pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, where the state defendants are represented by private counsel retained by the Missouri Attorney General to act as special assistant attorneys general, have been stayed pending the outcome of this appeal. Thus the need for the prompt resolution of the question presented by this appeal is apparent.
“[W]e review
de novo
the questions of law certified by the district court.”
Simon v. G.D. Searle & Co.,
The District Court entered forbidden territory when it held that the Missouri Attorney General violates Missouri law when he contracts with private law firms to engage their attorneys’ services as “special assistant attorneys general.” This holding
Even if it were constitutionally permissible for a federal court to conclude that the Missouri Attorney General is violating state law, it is by no means clear that such a violation has occurred here. The case primarily relied upon by the District Court in so holding and by O’Connor in his argument is
State v. Crockett,
The court’s holding that the Missouri Attorney General’s retention of private counsel conflicts with 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) and thus offends the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause is equally unavailing. Under section 1915(d), “[t]he court may request an attorney to represent any such person [proceeding in forma pauperis] unable to employ counsel.” The District Court here declared:
The majority of cases in which this Court appoints an attorney to represent an indigent litigant in a civil case are prisoner civil rights cases. The Court must maintain separate listings of attorneys who work for law firms designated as “special assistant attorneys general,” and must bypass those attorneys in appointing an attorney to an indigent prisoner civil rights ease. Thus, the Court concludes that the appointment of “special assistant attorneys general” interferes with the authority of this Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1915 to appoint attorneys to represent indigent litigants in civil cases.
Order at 6-7,
reprinted in
Appellants’ Addendum at 6-7.
3
Therefore, according to
We believe the District Court erred. This record simply does not support the conclusion that the Missouri Attorney General’s hiring of private law firms as special assistant attorneys general to represent state employees in prisoner civil rights cases interferes in any significant way with the operation of 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). There is neither any necessary conflict between this practice based on state law and section 1915(d) nor is there any showing that as a practical matter it renders section 1915(d) unworkable. At most, the record shows that some attorneys, their number small in comparison to the total number of attorneys in the relevant geographical area, who otherwise would be available for appointment under section 1915(d) must be bypassed, and that the District Court, at some apparent inconvenience to itself, must keep those attorneys on a list separate from the regular appointment list. This is watery broth indeed, and it is far from sufficient to pass for a Supremacy Clause stew.
At oral argument in this appeal, counsel for O’Connor, in response to a question from the bench, affirmed that his Supremacy Clause argument is really a preemption argument, so we now address that issue. If Congress “intends to pre-empt the historic powers of the States” (and we have no doubt that the power of a state to choose its own counsel to defend its interests is one of these historic powers), the language of the statute should make such intention “ ‘clear and manifest.’ ”
Will v. Michigan Dept. of State Police,
In the end, however, we do not decide this ease on its merits, as we can and must dispose of it on jurisdictional grounds. O’Connor had no standing to bring his motion to disqualify on any of the bases he has asserted, including his antitrust claim, and the motion should have been dismissed for that reason in the first instance.
We note and confirm that a federal district court has the authority to supervise attorneys practicing before it.
See United States v. Agosto,
O’Connor asserts that, because he has undisputed standing to bring his section 1983 lawsuit, he also has standing to raise by motion any issue that may occur to
Under Article III of the Constitution, the jurisdiction of federal courts is limited to “cases” and “controversies.”
Flast v. Cohen,
Although O’Connor argues that standing for his motion to disqualify need not be asserted independently of standing for his section 1983 claim, he nevertheless contends that he does have independent standing with respect to his motion. According to O’Connor, his standing derives from his eligibility for appointed counsel. The argument is that the number of attorneys available for appointment is significantly diminished because the Missouri Attorney General’s contracts with eight St. Louis-area law firms for those firms’ services in representing state defendants in prisoner civil rights suits result in conflicts of interest in representing prisoners in actions against state employees for all attorneys in those firms. 5 Therefore, in O’Connor’s view, his “right” to appointed counsel is adversely and therefore unconstitutionally affected by the state’s contracts with private law firms.
O’Connor misapprehends his eligibility for appointed counsel.
See
Brief for Ap-pellee at 7 (“O’Connor, and other prisoners like him, have a right to appointed counsel under the circumstances outlined in 28 U.S.C. § 1915.”). The law is clear, however, that O’Connor and other indigent litigants have “no constitutional or statutory right ... to have counsel appointed in a civil case.”
Nelson v. Redfield Lithograph Printing,
Because O’Connor has no standing to bring a motion to disqualify appellants’ counsel on any of the grounds set forth in his motion, including his antitrust ground, we remand to the District Court with instructions that its order granting O’Con-nor’s motion be vacated, and that an order granting appellants’ motion to strike be entered.
Notes
. In its order of June 5, 1991, the District Court first said that it would "consider whether the action is a violation of antitrust laws,” then proceeded with a cursory discussion of antitrust law as it applies to these contracts, and finally concluded, "The Court need not address this issue further since plaintiffs motion will be sustained on other grounds.”
O'Connor v. Hutcheson,
No. 90-1374C(3) (E.D.Mo. June 5, 1991)
reprinted in
Appellants’ Addendum at 1, 8-10. In any event, the antitrust issue was not briefed to this Court and we do not address it.
See Jasperson
v.
Purolator Courier Corp.,
. The Supreme Court has held that 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) (1988) does not authorize a federal court to require an attorney to represent an indigent party in a case in federal court.
Mallard v. United States Dist. Court,
. In its Memorandum Opinion denying defendants’ motion for reconsideration and granting their motion for certification, the court stated its belief that the disqualification of attorneys for appointment to represent prisoners in civil rights cases because of their firms' retention by the state places a hardship upon those lawyers who are not so disqualified. O’Connor v. Hutcheson, No. 90-1374C(3) (E.D.Mo. July 19, 1991) (Memorandum Opinion denying motion for reconsideration, granting motion for certification) reprinted in Appellants' Addendum at 12, 17. It should be noted, however, that the precise number of attorneys affected by the present use of eight St. Louis law firms as special assistant attorneys general to defend prisoner civil rights cases is unclear from the record. The total number of lawyers in these eight firms appears to be approximately 360, as contrasted with the nearly 7,000 licensed attorneys who are in the geographical area encompassed by the Eastern District of Missouri and are theoretically available for appointment. We say "theoretically" because we do not know how many of these 7,000 licensed attorneys actually practice law.
. We have serious doubts that the district courts have such authority, absent a finding of ethical violations.
See, e.g., Jensen v. Satran,
. As we noted supra at n. 3, the record is inadequate to support this argument.
