This is аn appeal from a dismissal of a class action. The appellants are juveniles who have been adjudged dependent, neglected, or delinquent by Arizona state courts and who are presently placed in private, child-caring facilities in Arizona. In 1977, they brought a class action in federal district court against the Governor of Arizona and the director of the Arizona State Department of Economic Security seeking declaratory and injunctive relief on the grounds that the U. S. Constitution and Arizona state law required the defendants to devote additional funding to private agеncies that care for children in the state’s custody.
The district court dismissed the action pursuant to Younger v. Harris,
I Equitable Restraint
Younger v. Harris,
Younger and its progeny share two principal characteristics: (1) the plaintiffs sought to enjoin the continuation of a state proceeding or sought to enjoin state officials from enforcing a state statute,
When these characteristics are not present, however, the Supreme Court has refused to find the Younger concerns sufficiently compelling to warrant federal equitable restraint, even where a plaintiff could have raised his claim in a pending state proceeding. See Gerstein v. Pugh,
The case at bar lacks both of the factual circumstances characterizing past Younger decisions. First, the juveniles are not seeking to enjoin any state proceeding, nor are they seeking to enjoin state officials from enforcing any state law. They are instead requesting an order that would require Arizona to spend more money to fund dispositional alternatives for juveniles in state custody. This relief may enrich the variety of dispositional alternatives available to a juvenile court judge, and, to this extent, affect pending and ongoing state juvenile proceedings. It does not, however, have the wholly disruptive consequences associatеd with enjoining a state judicial proceeding or enjoining further enforcement of a state statute.
Second, the juveniles’ claim can not be fairly characterized as a “defense” to the enforcement of any Arizona state statute or statutory procedure. The juveniles are nоt contesting the validity of any state statute, nor the right of the state to enforce any law against them. Moreover, the juveniles’ claim is not of a sort that would be presented during the normal course of a state proceeding. Their cause of action arises after a court has committed а juvenile to the state’s custody. The state argues that a juvenile may still invoke the jurisdiction of the committing court to modify a placement. Even if that is correct, a juvenile wishing to invoke the court’s jurisdiction must act functionally as a plaintiff to revive the state court’s active jurisdiction. As a praсtical matter, the state court has completed its work once it has made its initial placement decision. The coherency of the state action is not disrupted by subsequent federal judicial action, undercutting the need expressed by Younger for federal equitable restraint.
In sum, Younger does not apply here. The relief the appellants seek is not similar to the types of relief the Supreme Court has found to be sufficiently disruptive or intrusive as to warrant equitable restraint. Nor is the appellants’ claim capable of being raised as a defense to an ongoing state enforcement action. The district court therefore erred in dismissing action pursuant to Younger.
II Abstention
Since the district court erred in dismissing the action under Younger, we must reach the question whether abstention would have been appropriate under Railroad Commission v. Pullman,
(1) The complaint “touches upon a sensitive area of social policy upon which the federal courts ought not to enter unless no alternative to its adjudication is open.”
(2) “Such constitutional adjudication plainly can be avoided if a definite ruling on the state issue would terminate the contrоversy.”
(3) The possibly determinative issue of state law is doubtful.
Canton v. Spokane School District No. 81,
This case seems to be a prime candidate for Pullman abstention. The substance of the appellants’ complaint clearly “touches upon a sensitive area of social policy.” The appellants propose interjecting the federal courts into issues affecting the рroper care of juveniles held in the state’s custody. These issues have traditionally been left exclusively to the states. These issues are also shot through with serious budgetary, sociological, and political questions.
The second Pullman criterion is also met. The gravamen of the juveniles’ claim is that the states’ “failure to reimburse a private, residential child-caring agency for the agency’s cost of care for children placed in that agency” violates both the guarantees of the U. S. Constitution and guarantees of Arizona state law. The only injunctive relief the juveniles seek is to require the state to reimburse private child-caring agencies for their full cost of care.
The statute the appellants rely upon to support their state claim could be interpreted in a way to give them the relief they seek. The appellants rely principally upon Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 46-134(2)(c)(i), which obligates the Arizona State Department of Economic Security to:
(2) Administer child welfare activities, including:
(c) Providing cost of care of:
(i) Children, adjudicated by the court as dependent, neglected or delinquent, who are in foster family homes or institutions, except state institutions.
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 46-134(2)(c)(i) (Supp. 1979) (emphasis added). The appellants read the words “cost of carе” in this section to require the state to pay for additional counseling, therapy, education, diagnosis and child care staff. This interpretation is not wholly implausible, given the state judicial emphasis on rehabilitating and treating juveniles within the state’s custody. See, e. g., McBeth v. Rose,
The third Pullman criterion is also satisfied. The determinative issue of state law is doubtful. The Arizona state courts have never had the opportunity to construe Ariz. Rev.Stat.Ann. § 46-134(2)(c)(i). Serious interpretive questions remain unresolved. First, it is uncleаr whether the state legislature in enacting Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 8-134(2)(c)(i) meant to confer an implied cause of action to individuals to enforce the statute’s command. Second, it is unclear what level of care is required under the statute. Compare with McRedmond v. Wilson,
The case at bar appears indistinguishable from Mamey v. Cabell, No. 79-3260 (9th Cir. April 29, 1980). The plaintiffs in Manney were juveniles who brought a civil rights action alleging that confinement conditions at a California state juvenile facility violated the United States and California Constitutions and various state statutes. As in the present case, the state courts had not determined whether the relevant statute created a statutory “right to treatment.” Given the absence of state decisions to aid in interpreting the plaintiffs’ state claim, the court held that Pullman compelled abstention. See also George v. Parratt,
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. See Moore v. Sims,
. See Moore v. Sims,
. The state also argues that the judgment below can be affirmed on the ground that the district court could have awarded summary judgment in their favor. The state moved for summary judgment in the district court. However, the district court did not rule on the motion, preferring instead to dismiss the appellants’ complaint pursuant to Younger.
The state’s argument is not persuasive. It is not clear from the record that the district court would have awarded summary judgment in the appellees’ favor. The substance of the appellants’ claim — that the Constitution confers a “right to treatment” upon juveniles in the state’s custody — is a substantial and difficult question. See Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 535,
