Case Information
*3 TALLMAN, Circuit Judge:
This аppeal arises from two consolidated cases in which Kennard Lee Davis, a prisoner suffering from schizoaffective disorder and who is proceeding pro se, sought damages from California prison officials under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Davis moved for appointment of a guardian ad litem pursuant to Rule 17(c)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides that:
A minor or an incompetent person who does not have a duly аppointed representative may sue by a next friend or by a guardian ad litem. The court must appoint a guardian ad litem— or issue another appropriate order —to protect a minor or incompetent person who is unrepresented in an action.
(emphasis added). The district court recognized throughout the pendency of both cases that Davis was, and remains, incompetent but denied his request for a guardian ad litem because the Pro Bono Coоrdinator for the Eastern District of California advised the court that no one was available to undertake the representation. In response, the court stayed Davis’s cases indefinitely until he was found “restored to competency” and “capable of protecting his own interests through self-representation.” We must determine whether, under Rule 17(c)(2), the district court erred by declining to *4 appoint a guardian ad litem and instead staying Davis’s cases indefinitely until he is found to be restored to competency. We vacate the district court’s stay order and remand with instructions.
I
In 2008, Davis brought a § 1983 action in federal court against prison officials at California State Prison, Sacramento. Davis alleged that, in retaliation for filing numerous lawsuits and prisoner complaints, prison officials forced him to push a cart containing over 100 pounds of legal documents for over half a mile while handcuffed. Davis contended that when he sought medical help for his resulting injuries, prison medical staff were deliberately indifferent by denying him treatment. After 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(a) screening, the district court determined that Davis’s complaint stated cognizable claims for excessive force, deliberate indifference to medical needs, and retaliation.
In 2010, Davis filed a second action against prison medicаl staff in which he alleged that the staff, in retaliation for Davis’s numerous inmate appeals, denied him adequate medical care by leaving a pin in his left hand after surgery. The district court screened that complaint and found that it stated a cognizable claim under the First and Eighth Amendments. In September 2011, Davis filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the prison medical staff from denying him adequate medical care.
In both аctions, Davis filed numerous motions for
appointment of a guardian ad litem or appointment of
counsel.
[1]
In support of his motions, Davis submitted a
In Davis’s first § 1983 action, Davis filed motions for assignment of
counsel or appointment of a guardian ad litem in September 2010 and July
2011. The September 2010 motion was construed as a motion for
appointment of counsel under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(1), which was denied
by the magistrate judge, who cited a lack of extraordinary circumstances.
*5
6
D AVIS V . W ALKER
declaration from California Department of Corrections
psychiatrist Dr. W. White, who treated Davis and diagnosed
him as suffering from schizoaffective disorder (bipolar type),
impulse control disorder, and substance-related mental
disorder. Dr. White found that Davis had a history of
hallucinations, delusions, and mood episodes, including
mania, and that Davis posed a danger to himself. Davis also
submitted evidenсe that he has been under court-ordered
long-term involuntary medication pursuant to
Keyhea v.
Rushen
,
At the same time Davis’s two § 1983 actions were pending in the Eastern District of California, Davis was pursuing habeas relief in the Central District from a prior criminal conviction. In his habeas action, Davis had been evaluated by a court-appointed mental health specialist, who The magistrate judge did not address Davis’s alternative request for appointment of a guardian ad litem.
In Davis’s second action, Davis filed motions for assignment of
counsel or appointment of a guardian ad litem in September 2010, August
2011, and February 2012. The motions filed in September 2010 and
August 2011 were also construed as motions for appointment of counsеl
and were denied. The magistrate judge again did not address Davis’s
alternative request for appointment of a guardian ad litem.
A
Keyhea
order permits the long-term involuntary medication of an
inmate upon a court finding that the course of involuntary medication is
recommended and that the prisoner, as a result of mental disorder, is
gravely disabled and incompetent to refuse medication, or is a danger to
himself or others.
See Keyhea
,
found him tо be incompetent. The district court there appointed a guardian ad litem and found that Davis “does not have the ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and does not have a rational nor factual understanding of the proceedings against him.”
In October 2011, Davis’s first § 1983 action was reassigned to the same magistrate judge and district court *6 judge before whom the second action was рending. In February 2012, the magistrate judge addressed Davis’s outstanding July 2011 request for a guardian ad litem or counsel.
The magistrate judge recognized that Davis had been found incompetent in his pending federal habeas proceeding and was currently receiving long-term involuntary psychotropic medication as directed by the state court order. After referencing Rule 17(c), the magistrate judge noted that the court was not required to appoint a guardian ad litem if it found that Davis’s interests were otherwise adequately protected. The report and recommendation concluded:
This court has been advised by the ADR and Pro Bono Coordinator for the Eastern District of California that there is no individual available to serve as guardian ad litem for plaintiff, or to undertake the representation of plaintiff in this action. Plaintiff’s motion for appointment оf a guardian ad litem and/or 8
appointment of counsel must therefore be denied.
The magistrate judge recommended that “the most appropriate available measure” to adequately protect Davis was “to stay the cases until any party thereto provides evidence that plaintiff has been restored to competency and is capable of protecting his own interests through self- representation[.]” The magistrate judge then denied all pending motions in both cases without prejudice.
In April 2012, after conducting a de novo review of the case, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s findings and recommendations in full. The district court concluded that Rule 17(c) required the court to either appoint a guardian ad litem or issue another appropriate order, and “[t]he present order staying the above-captioned matters is such an appropriate order.” The district court stayed both of Davis’s cases until “a motion to lift the stay accompanied by evidence that plaintiff has been found to be restored to competency” was filed. The district court then administratively closed *7 Davis’s cases, which removed Davis’s cases from the district court’s active docket. Davis filed a timely appeal, and a separate panel of our court appointеd Davis pro bono counsel [4] to address whether, in light of Rule 17(c), the district court [3] Other than briefly mentioning Davis’s alternative request for appointment of counsel, the magistrate judge did not discuss whether appointment of counsel was appropriate.
[4] The court commends appellate pro bono counsel for agreeing to take on this representation given the difficulty of representing an incompetent litigant. 9
erred by declining to appoint a guardian ad litem and instead indefinitely staying Davis’s cases.
II
Before reaching the merits, we first consider whether we
have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 to review the
propriety of the district court’s stay order. Ordinarily, a stay
order is not an appealable final decision.
Moses H. Cone
Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.
,
A
The district court’s stay order is an appealable final decision under the Moses H. Cone doctrine. There, a hospital brought suit in state court against a contractor seeking a Davis also appealed the district court’s denial of his motion for a preliminary injunction. However, after obtaining pro bono counsel, Davis conceded in his Reply Brief that he no longer challenges the denial of the motion for a preliminary injunction. Therefore, we do not address that *8 issue.
10
D AVIS V . W ALKER
declaratory judgment that there was no right to arbitration
under the contract.
We extended the Moses H. Cone doctrine in Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Alabama v. Unity Outpatient Surgery Center, Inc. , 490 F.3d 718 (9th Cir. 2007), to allow the immediate appeal of a stay order that “impose[s] lengthy or indefinite delays,” even absent a res judicata risk. Id . at 723. In Blue Cross , an insurance company brought a civil suit in federal court, alleging that the defendants and their associates had enticed patients to undergо unnecessary treatments, billed Blue Cross for the procedures, and collected millions of dollars in reimbursement from Blue Cross. Id . Several defendants facing serious risk of criminal prosecution requested stays of the civil suits on the basis that discovery in the civil suit implicated their Fifth Amendment rights. Id. The district court granted the stays, and we found jurisdiction to consider their propriety. Noting that the exact length of the stays was unknown but “could easily last as lоng as the five- *9 or six-year limitations period in the criminal cases,” we concluded:
[L]engthy and indefinite stays place a plaintiff effectively out of court. Such an indefinite delay amounts to a refusal to proceed to a disposition on the merits. Even if litigation may eventually resume, such stays create a danger of denying justice by delay. Delay inherently increases the risk that witnesses’ memories will fade and evidence will become stale.
Id. at 724 (internal citations and quotations omitted). In Blue Cross , each of the stays had lasted far longer than the 18- month delays that other courts had considered sufficient to place the plaintiffs effectively out of court. Id. (citing Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Edward D. Stone, Jr. & Assocs. , 743 F.2d 1519, 1524 (11th Cir. 1984); Hines v. D’Artois , 531 F.2d 726, 732 (5th Cir. 1976)). On this basis, we concluded that jurisdiction was proper under § 1291. Id.
Relying on
Blue Cross
, we conclude that the stay in this
case is both lengthy and indefinite, if not infinite. Davis has
been involuntarily medicated since March 2007 and is still
unable to provide reasoned and informed consent tо accept or
refuse treatment. More importantly, Davis has been found
incompetent, and there is no indication from the record that
Davis will ever regain the competency needed to lift the stay
order.
See Lockyer v. Mirant Corp.
,
B
Even if the district court’s stay order were not appealable
under the
Moses H. Cone
doctrine, as developed in
Blue
Cross
, it would nevertheless be appealable within the
interpretation of the finality rule under
Cohen
,
In
Moses H. Cone
, the Court determined that the stay
order conclusively determined the disputed question because,
although the stay was technically open to reconsideration,
“there [was] no basis to suppose that the District Judge
contemplated any reconsideration of his decision[.]”
Cohen
’s second criterion, that the order resolves an
important issue that is completely separate from the merits,
is also satisfied. Here, the district court’s order “amounts to
a refusal to adjudicate the merits” of Davis’s § 1983 actions.
Moses H. Cone
,
The particular circumstances of this stay also satisfy
Cohen
’s third criterion because the propriety of the stay will
be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.
Lockyer
,
III
The decision to appoint a guardian ad litem under Rule
17(c) is normally left to the sound discretion of the trial court
and is reviewed only for abuse of discretion.
[6]
See United
Davis contends that we should review the district court’s decision de
novo because, as in
30.64 Acres of Land
, the district court “failed in its
legal duty to inquire into [Davis’s] circumstances and to exercise its
discretion.”
30.64 Acres of Land
,
IV
The purpose of Rule 17(c) is to protect an incompetent
person’s interests in prosecuting or defending a lawsuit.
See
Gardner ex rel. Gardner v. Parson
,
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15
district court has discretion to craft an appropriate remеdy to
protect the incompetent person, the court may not use the
Rule as a vehicle for dismissing claims or for allowing the
interests of an incompetent litigant to go completely
unprotected.
Gardner
,
Here, after the district court was informed that no one was
available to serve as a guardian ad litem, it determined that
the most appropriate remedy to protect Davis’s interests was
to stay both of Davis’s § 1983 actions, to be lifted only upon
a finding that Davis was competent and able to represent
himself pro se. Given Davis’s circumstances, this stay order
left his interests in the litigation completely unprotected and
functionally operated as a dismissal with prejudice of Davis’s
actions, contrary to Rule 17(c)’s mandate that the court
“protect [an] incompetent person who is unrepresented in an
action.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(c)(2). Davis’s long history of
mental illness and numerous involuntary medication orders,
combined with Dr. White’s psychiatric report and the federal
habeas court’s finding of incompetency, were sufficient to put
the district court on notice that Davis is incompetent and that
he shows no signs of regaining competency in the future.
Even if Davis were one day restored to competency such that
he could represent himself pro se, his ability tо litigate his
§ 1983 actions would be substantially prejudiced through
delay, as witnesses’ memories fade and evidence becomes
stale.
See Blue Cross
,
We read Rule 17(c) to require a district court to “take whatever measures it deems proper to protect an incompetent person during litigation.” 30.64 Acres , 795 F.2d at 805. Under thеse circumstances, we conclude that the district court abused its discretion by staying Davis’s cases until he is found competent (if ever). Such a stay order fails to adequately protect Davis’s interests and thus does not constitute “another appropriate order” under Rule 17(c). Instead, it amounts to a dismissal with prejudice of Davis’s actions. We therefore vacate the district court’s order and remand to the district court for action consistent with this opinion. On remand, the district court is directed to consider whether it should appoint a guardian ad litem for Davis pursuant to Rule 17(c). If the district court declines to appoint a guardian, it should heed the advice herein, and craft an appropriate order designed to protect Davis’s interests.
VACATED AND REMANDED, with instructions. Each party shall bear its own costs.
The district court is welcome to contact this court’s Pro Se Unit Supervising Attorney for assistance in locating someone outside the Eastern District of California who would be willing to accept the appointment.
