The township of Champaign, Illinois has a program called “General Assistance” by which it provides money to poor people out of its tax revenues. This appeal arises out of a class action that was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against officials of the township on behalf of recipients of and applicants for General Assistance, alleging that the township’s failure to promulgate written standards of eligibility, and to give applicants whose applications are denied reasons for denial, violated the rights of the class members under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The complaint sought both injunctive relief and back payment of benefits.
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The district judge denied a preliminary injunction and the plaintiffs appealed to this court, which reversed, holding that the plaintiffs were likely to prevail at trial. See
White
v.
Roughton,
More than four years after the decree was entered the township’s board of trustees repealed the ordinance under which Emergency Assistance is provided. The plaintiffs, claiming that this repeal was contrary to the clause in the decree that we have italicized, petitioned the district court for an order holding the township and its officers in civil contempt of the decree. The district court (a different judge from the one who had approved the decree) held that the repeal of emergency assistance did not violate the decree and dismissed the petition, and the plaintiffs have appealed. The dismissal of the contempt petition was a final order, appealable to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and the appeal properly brings up to us the question of the meaning of the consent decree. See, e.g.,
Sportmart, Inc. v. Wolverine World Wide, Inc.,
It is quite true, as the plaintiffs argue, that the italicized' clause, standing alone, requires the township to adhere, at least substantially, to the standards set forth in the exhibit to the decree, and that the re- • peal of emergency assistance is not substantial compliance. But it is not true that we must read one clause in one paragraph of the decree in isolation from the rest of the paragraph and the rest of the decree without reference to the decree’s evident purpose. We accept unreservedly the statement in
United States v. Armour & Co.,
Any doubts about this interpretation of
Armour
should have been dispelled by
United States v. ITT Continental Baking Co.,
Nor do we agree with the plaintiffs that interpretation is permissible only if the language of the decree is ambiguous.
Sportmart
does not support that proposition. We said there that “the ambiguity of the decree’s application to the present case is plain and resort to the circumstances surrounding the formation of the consent decree in order to construe its terms,
if ambiguity be necessary at all before resort to such extrinsic aids,
is proper.”
The plaintiffs’ further argument that “no words [in a consent decree] should be rejected for lack of meaning or surplus-age” rests on the unrealistic premise that all legal instruments are drafted with complete economy of language. The people who draft contracts and consent decrees are fallible like the rest of us and often fail to express their agreement with precision. They take a terrible risk when they do this, but if a court can figure out what they meant but failed to say, it has the power and the duty to give effect not to the words but to the intentions behind them — always supposing that these are the joint intentions of the parties at the time the contract was made or the decree formulated and not just the secret intention of one of the parties. There is “useless surplusage” in contracts as in statutes,
J.C. Penney Co.
v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
We have said that the italicized clause in paragraph 9, read literally, requires the township to adhere to the published standards attached to the decree and we understand how delighted the plaintiffs would have been to have gotten such a duty into the decree. But we do not believe that
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the parties meant to include it. The only issue in the class suit was the township’s adherence to proper procedures. The plaintiffs did not and could not claim a federal right to receive emergency assistance or any other form of poor relief from the township, see
Dandridge v. Williams,
Although the plaintiffs argue that they gave up their claim to retroactive payment of benefits in exchange for substantive welfare rights, there is not a hint of such a swap in the decree. On the contrary, the notice of the proposed settlement of the class action, prepared by the plaintiffs’ counsel, states that the township has “offered agreement to the entry of a permanent injunction and declaratory judgment requiring them to adopt and implement certain standards and procedures for administering general assistance, in return for Plaintiffs’ waiver of all claims for retroactive benefits.” These words suggest that it is the decree as a whole, not the freezing of welfare benefits at existing levels, that was the consideration for the plaintiffs’ giving up their claims for retroactive benefits.
We doubt, moreover, that the township would have agreed to specific substantive entitlements without insisting that the decree contain a more flexible machinery for modification than is implied by the traditional principle — which the plaintiffs quote in their brief with seeming relish — that “nothing less than a clear showing of grievous wrong evoked by new and unforeseen conditions should lead us to change what was decreed after years of litigation with the consent of all concerned.”
United States v. Swift & Co.,
It is pretty clear to us that paragraph 9 was just ineptly drafted and that what the parties meant to say was that the township would have to adhere in the future to written standards such as those in the exhibit, attached by way of example rather than mandate — not that it was committing itself forever to provide specific types or levels of poor relief. At least that must be our conclusion when the only evidence offered in the contempt proceeding by either party was the decree itself. The plaintiffs had the burden of proving that the defendants had violated the decree, yet they made no effort to introduce extrinsic evidence that might have supported a construction of the decree that seems, in the absence of any such evidence, unreasonable in light of the context and apparent purpose of the language they rely on.
We conclude that the township did not violate the consent decree by abandoning emergency assistance. The judgment of the district court refusing to hold the de *122 fendants in contempt of the decree is therefore
Affirmed.
