Jane DOE et al., Plaintiffs, Appellees,
v.
Richard J. ISRAEL, Attorney General, State of Rhode Island,
Defendant, Appellant.
Jane DOE et al., Plaintiffs, Appellees,
v.
Richard J. ISRAEL, Attorney General, State of Rhode Island,
Defendant, Appellant,
The Constitutional Right to Life Committee, Intervenor, Appellant.
Nos. 73-1177, 73-1178.
United States Court of Appeals,
First Circuit.
Heard June 5, 1973.
Decided June 6, 1973.
W. Slater Allen, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., on motion for stay and memorandum in support thereof for Richard J. Israel, Atty. Gen., Stаte of R. I.
Joseph P. Witherspoon, Austin, Tex., with whom Francis J. Boyle, Newport, R. I., was on motion for stay for The Constitutional Right to Life Committee.
Nancy Stearns, New York City, with whom Janice Goodman, New York City, Richard W. Zacks and Charles H. Edwards, Providence, R. I., were on memorandum in opposition to the stay for plaintiffs, appеllees.
ON MOTION FOR STAY PENDING APPEAL
Before COFFIN, Chief Judge, ALDRICH and CAMPBELL, Circuit Judges.
ALDRICH, Senior Circuit Judge.
Although the question presently before the court is the interlocutory one of whether a declaratory judgment оf unconstitutionality of a state statute should be stayed pending defendant's appeal, we find ourselves inevitably faced with an appraisal of thе ultimate substantive constitutional question. Plaintiffs Doe and Roe,1 alleging themselves to be a few weeks pregnant, and desirous of obtaining abortions in their home state of Rhode Island, brought this action in the district court seeking a declaratory judgment to the effect that Rhode Island Gen.Laws Secs. 11-3-1; 11-3-2; 11-3-3; 11-3-4; and 11-3-5 (73-S 287 Substitute A), pаssed by the legislature after the decision in Roe v. Wade (1973),
The first question is one of jurisdiction. No three-judge court has been sought, no injunction having been asked for. 28 U.S.C. Secs. 2281, 2283. On the other hand, the defendant stipulated that the state would recognize and abide by the judgment of the district court. Both parties seek to draw certain conclusions from this. We will assume for present purposes the correctness of defendant's claim that the statutory requirement of a three-judge court was thereby activated, and that the single judge cаme under the ordinary duty to request such a court.3 Even this assumption leaves an exception, however, for that duty is not total; no three-judge court neеd be requested if there is no substantiality to the claim that a state statute on its face is not unconstitutional. Bailey v. Patterson, 1962,
We may add that in making the assumption that by virtue of his stipulation the defendant converted this case into a three-judge one we are giving defendant an interpretation the validity of which we gravely doubt. It is elementary that defendant was not obliged to stipulate. It is, at best, singular, for a defendant voluntarily to say that he will respect a judge's order, and then to turn around and say that by his agreeing to do this he has deprived the judge of the power to make the order.
This discussion is perhaps of no рresent relevancy, any more than the argued question whether this was properly determined to be, and correctly treated as, a class suit. We mеntion it only to reach two arguments of immediate importance. First, defendant says that he has a probability of succeeding on the merits becausе plaintiffs' case is moot due to the fact that after its commencement plaintiffs voluntarily obtained abortions in New York. The fact that a plaintiff had other available relief does not moot the case, Hathaway v. Worcester City Hospital, 1 Cir., 1973,
We consider that defendant's claim of mootness is a will-o'-the-wisp and assumes the very question at issue. If a plaintiff has a right to terminate her pregnanсy-which is the legal question before us-the sooner she succeeds in doing so, the better. We have in mind the trimester trilogy, on which defendant relies in another connection, and its effect on viability and the pregnant plaintiff's health. See Roe v. Wade,
We come, then, to defendant's claim that the Rhode Island statutе differs sufficiently from the Texas statute constitutionally invalidated in Roe v. Wade to present a justiciable question on appeal. In this, defendant reliеs principally on the fact that the Rhode Island legislature had made a conclusive finding that life begins with conception. In Roe v. Wade the Court spеcifically stated that it was irrelevant, in determining the validity of Texas' statute, that Texas adopted the theory that life begins at conception. "[W]e dо not agree that, by adopting one theory of life, Texas may overide the rights of the pregnant woman that are at stake." Id. at 162,
The Court in Wade, and in Doe v. Bolton, 1973,
It is true that the Court in Wade and Bolton did not attempt to decide the point "when human life begins." No reading of the opinions, however, can be thought to empower the Rhode Island legislature to "defin[e] some creature as an unborn child, to be a human being and a person from the moment of its conception."4 If the Rhode Island statute dealt only with the part of the term of the pregnancy as to which the Court had left open to the state the capacity to create rights and remedies enforceable against the pregnant woman, we might have another question, but in making the statute all-inclusive the legislature entered into areas foreclosed by the Court from state interference.
We regard plaintiffs' expectation of prevailing on the merits so clear that we see no purpose in discussing other issues sought to be raised by the defendant.
The stay entered May 23rd is terminated forthwith, and the motions for a stay pending appeal are denied.
Notes
We disregard Smith, a third plaintiff, who failed to appear
By the term defendant we include, for convenience, intervenor The Constitutional Right To Life Committee
In this abbreviated statement we are not passing on the broad and sometimes equitable aspects of declaratory judgments which might arguably trigger 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2281. See Kennedy v. Mendoza Martinez, 1963,
Reply brief for Intervenor, p. 15
