KENTUCKY PRESS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY, Defendant,
Janice Marshall, in her official capacity as the Clerk of the Franklin Circuit Court and The Franklin District Court and on behalf of all others similarly situated; Eleanore Garber, in her official capacity as Family Court Judge and on behalf of all others similarly situated; Deborah Deweese, in her official capacity as District Judge and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 05-5224.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Argued: November 29, 2005.
Decided and Filed: July 7, 2006.
ARGUED: Jon L. Fleischaker, Dinsmore & Shohl, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellant. D. Brent Irvin, Office of the Attorney General, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Jon L. Fleischaker, R. Kenyon Meyer, Jeremy S. Rogers, Dinsmore & Shohl, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellant. D. Brent Irvin, Office of the Attorney General, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellees. Karen Quinn, Timothy G. Arnold, Gail Robinson, Kentucky Department of Public Advocacy, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Amici Curiae.
Before: NORRIS and BATCHELDER, Circuit Judges; RICE, District Judge.*
OPINION
ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff-Appellant Kentucky Press Association ("KPA"), a non-profit corporation whose members include newspapers throughout Kentucky, appeals the dismissal for failure to state a claim of its suit against Defendants-Appellants the Commonwealth of Kentucky and various Kentucky court officials (collectively, "the Commonwealth"), claiming violation of KPA's First Amendment right of access to court proceedings. Specifically, KPA makes a facial challenge to four Kentucky statutory provisions, claiming that they deny the media any access to Kentucky's juvenile court proceedings and records pertinent thereto. The district court rejected the Commonwealth's jurisdictional, abstention, and sovereign immunity arguments, but held that KPA's complaint did not state a claim for a First Amendment right of access to juvenile records and proceedings. Because KPA has not challenged the relevant statutes in the Kentucky courts, which could well render an interpretation of these statutes that provides for the access that KPA seeks and thus avoids the constitutional issue presented in this case, we will dismiss the appeal for failure to present a case or controversy sufficiently ripe for adjudication, and remand this case to the district court with instructions that it be dismissed on that ground.
BACKGROUND
KPA filed suit in the district court, making a facial challenge to the constitutionality of four provisions of the Kentucky Uniform Juvenile Code ("KUJC"). K.R.S. § 610.070(3) provides that "[t]he general public shall be excluded" from juvenile hearings, and allows access only to the immediate families of parties before the court, victims and their families, witnesses, attorneys, certain government officials, and "such persons admitted as the judge shall find have a direct interest in the case or in the work of the court, and such other persons as agreed to by the child and his attorney." K.R.S. § 610.320(3) provides that the mental, medical, treatment, psychological, law enforcement, and court records of juveniles "shall not be opened to scrutiny by the public," with exceptions for law enforcement and court records regarding certain serious offenses. K.R.S. § 610.330 mandates that the juvenile court order that all records pertaining to the particular juvenile proceeding be sealed, provided the petitioning juvenile meets the relevant prerequisites for expungement. And finally, K.R.S. § 610.340 generally requires that all juvenile records remain confidential, allowing disclosure only to a limited class of individuals, including "persons authorized to attend a juvenile court hearing pursuant to K.R.S. 610.070," and in situations "ordered by the court for good cause." K.R.S. § 610.340(1)(a).
KPA maintained in the district court that these provisions, on their face, violate KPA's First Amendment right of access to judicial proceedings, as first established by the Supreme Court in Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
KPA appeals this decision, arguing that the district court erred in applying the Supreme Court's "experience and logic" test to its claim for access to juvenile proceedings. KPA emphasizes that it does not seek "boundless public access . . . [to] every juvenile court situation." Rather, KPA contends that Kentucky has thrown a complete "shroud of secrecy" over its juvenile proceedings, and that the "experience and logic" test, properly applied, at least requires that the press be given access to information about a juvenile case sufficient to determine whether to seek access to that proceeding, and that there not be an irrebuttable presumption against access to juvenile proceedings. Noting that it does not waive its jurisdictional arguments, the Commonwealth expressly presses on appeal only its jurisdictional argument that Franklin Circuit clerk Janice Marshall is not a proper defendant under the legal fiction of Ex Parte Young,
ANALYSIS
Although the Commonwealth does not expressly pursue its basic jurisdictional arguments on appeal, it has not waived them and, indeed, at oral argument, pointed out that it could not concede jurisdiction. And, we have an independent duty "to inquire sua sponte whenever a doubt arises as to the existence of federal jurisdiction." Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Ed. v. Doyle,
Ripeness is a justiciability doctrine designed "to prevent the courts, through premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements." Thomas v. Union Carbide Agric. Prods. Co.,
We find that KPA's claim that the KUJC denies the media any access to Kentucky's juvenile proceedings in violation of the First Amendment fails to satisfy each of the three prongs of the ripeness inquiry. First, that the Kentucky courts would deny KPA the access it seeks is far from certain. K.R.S. § 610.070(3) allows a judge to grant access to juvenile proceedings to "such persons admitted as the judge shall find have a direct interest in the case or in the work of the court," and under K.R.S. § 610.340(1)(a) juvenile records may be disclosed to "persons authorized to attend a juvenile court hearing pursuant to KRS 610.070" and when "ordered by the court for good cause." The Kentucky courts could reasonably interpret these provisions to allow for limited access to juvenile proceedings by the media, which arguably has a "direct interest in the . . . work of the court." Such an interpretation would transform KPA's constitutional claim, which is based on the assumption that Kentucky denies all media access to its juvenile proceedings, into just the type of "abstract disagreement[]" that the ripeness doctrine-and more to the point, Article III-prevents us from adjudicating. See Thomas,
KPA offers three basic arguments to show that it faces a concrete and cognizable harm necessitating a facial challenge to the Kentucky statutes at issue. First, KPA contends that it has attempted to gain the desired access, but that its members have been denied admission to juvenile hearings by bailiffs, and access to juvenile records by the circuit and district clerk's office. But just because bailiffs and court clerks have denied KPA the relief it seeks does not mean that Kentucky law would not provide for such access were KPA to assert such a right in the Kentucky courts pursuant to the statutory provisions at issue, which it has not done. Second, KPA argues that because it is unable to obtain any information about pending juvenile cases, it has no idea when a particular case is pending in juvenile court for which its members might want to seek access, thus forcing it to resort to a facial challenge. Although the district court found this argument persuasive, see Ky. Press Ass'n,
Neither does KPA meet the other two prongs of the test for ripeness. Although, as a facial challenge, the factual basis of KPA's claim essentially needs no further developing, there is one fact of crucial importance that has yet to be determined: whether Kentucky law, as interpreted by the Kentucky courts, completely closes juvenile proceedings and records to the media, as KPA contends. See id. Until we know the answer to this question, our adjudicating KPA's First Amendment claim would constitute entangling ourselves in an abstract disagreement, contrary to the purposes undergirding the ripeness doctrine, and in contravention of Article III. See Thomas,
Because KPA's First Amendment claim fails each of the three factors in the test for ripeness, the proper course is for us to dismiss this appeal for failure to present a case or controversy sufficiently ripe for federal court adjudication.
CONCLUSION
KPA's First Amendment claim rests upon the mere speculation that the Kentucky courts would interpret Kentucky law in a way that completely denies the media access to juvenile proceedings and records. We therefore DISMISS the appeal on ripeness grounds, and REMAND this matter to the district court with instructions that it be DISMISSED as unripe.
Notes:
Notes
The Honorable Walter H. Rice, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting by designation
Moreover,F.T.P specifically notes that the plaintiff "did not challenge the constitutionality of the closure statutes, [K.R.S. §§] 610.070 and 610.340," id. at 446, which means that not only did the Supreme Court of Kentucky not decide whether the media enjoys access rights under the "direct interest in the case or in the work of the court" clause of K.R.S. § 610.070(3), the court was not asked to interpret the KUJC in light of First Amendment concerns-yet another reason to doubt KPA's unsubstantiated claim that Kentucky law casts a complete and irrebuttable "shroud of secrecy" over the state's juvenile proceedings.
