Case Information
*2 Before MURNAGHAN and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges, and CLARKE, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation. _________________________________________________________________ Affirmed by published opinion. Senior Judge Clarke wrote the opin- ion, in which Judge Murnaghan and Judge Williams joined. _________________________________________________________________ COUNSEL
ARGUED: Deborah Koff Ross, ACLU-NC LEGAL FOUNDA- TION, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellants. Grady L. Balentine, Jr., Assistant Attorney General, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appel- lees. ON BRIEF: Ellen W. Gerber, High Point, North Carolina; C. Frank Goldsmith, Marion, North Carolina; Catherine Weiss, Louise Melling, Talcott Camp, Reproductive Freedom Project, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION, New York, New York, for Appellants. Michael F. Easley, North Carolina Attorney General, Raleigh, North Carolina for Appellees. Paul Stam, Jr., Theodore S. Danchi, Apex, North Carolina, for Amicus Curiae. _________________________________________________________________ OPINION
CLARKE, Senior District Judge:
This case comes before the Court on appeal of the District Court's denial of a preliminary injunction enjoining enforcement of North Carolina's Act to Require Parental or Judicial Consent for an Un- emancipated Minor's Abortion, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-21.6 to .10 ("the Act"). In their complaint, Appellants challenge the Act as violating various provisions of the U.S. Constitution on its face. On November 30, 1995, the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina entered a preliminary injunction partially enjoining enforcement of the Act. On May 22, 1996, this Court vacated the Dis- trict Court's order in its entirety and remanded for further proceed- ings. Appellants then renewed their motion for a preliminary *3 injunction. That motion was denied by the District Court on Decem- ber 18, 1996. Manning v. Hunt, No. 1:95cv229 (W.D.N.C. Dec. 18, 1996). Appellants now appeal the District Court's decision. For the reasons set forth below, this Court affirms the District Court's opin- ion. I.
A.
Under the terms of the Act, an unemancipated minor may not obtain an abortion unless the physician obtains the written consent of the minor and:
(1) A parent with legal custody of the minor, or (2) The legal guardian or legal custodian of the minor, or, (3) A parent with whom the minor is living, or (4) A grandparent with whom the minor has been living for at least six months immediately preceding the date of the minor's written consent. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-21.7(a) (Michie 1996). These requirements do not apply when, in the physician's best judgment, it is determined that a medical emergency exists which requires an immediate abortion. Id. § 90-21.9. The Act contains a judicial bypass of these consent requirements.
Under the bypass procedure, the minor may petition a state district court for a waiver of the above consent requirement if the persons empowered to give consent refuse to do so or are unavailable within a reasonable time or manner, or if the minor elects not to seek the required consent. Id. § 90-21.7(b). The minor may proceed on her own or through a guardian ad litem, and the state district court is required to advise her of her right to counsel and appoint counsel if she so requests. Id § 90-21.8(c). The Act requires court proceedings regarding a petition for the waiver of parental consent be confidential *4 and be given precedence over other matters before the court. Id. § 90-21.8(d). If the minor so requests, no notice will be served upon her parents, guardian, or custodian regarding the petition. Id. § 90-21.8(f). Under no circumstances is the state district court to wait more than seven days from the time of the petition's filing before holding its hearing and ruling on the petition unless the minor agrees to an extension of time. Id. During the hearing, the state district court is required to hear evidence regarding emotional development, matu- rity, intellect, alternatives to the abortion, and any other evidence deemed useful. Id. The record of the evidence must be maintained in a confidential manner. Id. § 90-21.8(f). The state district court is required to waive the consent requirement if it finds that (1) the minor is mature and well-informed enough to make the decision to abort her pregnancy on her own, (2) it would be in the minor's best interest to waive the consent requirement, or (3) the minor is a victim of rape or incest. Id. § 90-21.8(e). Pursuant to rules enacted by the North Carolina Supreme Court, the state district court must issue its ruling at the conclusion of the hearing. If the court finds that the minor has been the victim of rape or incest, it is required to report this finding to the Director of North Car- olina's Department of Social Services. Id. § 90-21.8(f). This require- ment is consistent with another North Carolina statute which places on all persons a duty to report child abuse, neglect, or death due to maltreatment. Id. § 7A-543. All information received by the Depart- ment of Social Services is to be held in the strictest confidence. Id. § 7A-544. Of course, the Department's investigation may well bring the allegations of rape or incest to the attention of the minor's parents. The Act provides that the minor may appeal a denial of her petition by the state district court to the superior court. Id. § 90-21.8(h). The minor must file the appeal within 24 hours from the date of the issu- ance of the state district court's order. Id. This hearing is de novo and, by statute, is to be held as soon as possible within seven days of the filing of the appeal. Id. The North Carolina Supreme Court has imple- mented rules requiring that the superior court issue its decision within 48 hours of its hearing. Further appeals may be made to the North Carolina Court of Appeals and Supreme Court, but the Act contains no provisions governing such appeals. In the only state court opinion regarding the Act that has come to our attention, the North Carolina *5 Court of Appeals has ruled that the minor does not have an appeal as of right to the appellate courts beyond the superior court, but may petition for a writ of certiorari, which the appellate courts must review promptly under standard procedures. In re Doe, ___ S.E.2d ___, ___, No. COA 97-323 (N.C. Ct. App. June 3, 1997). Any person who, with knowledge or with reckless disregard as to whether the patient is an unemancipated minor, intentionally performs an abortion on an unemancipated minor and who intentionally or knowingly fails to conform to the Act's requirements is guilty of a class 1 misdemeanor. Id. § 90-21.10. B.
Plaintiffs-Appellants are physicians, who practice in North Caro- lina, and the Raleigh Women's Health Organization, Inc. Dr. Richard O. Manning is medical director of the Western Carolina Medical Clinic in Asheville, North Carolina, and of Family Reproductive Health in Charlotte, North Carolina. Dr. Manning states that many of his patients are minor women who need abortions. Dr. Takey Crist is a physician practicing obstetrics and gynecology in Onslow County, North Carolina, and claims that he routinely performs abortions on unemancipated minors. The Raleigh Women's Health Organization, Inc., located in Wake County, North Carolina, provides health and educational services to women, including abortions through the twen- tieth week of pregnancy. Many of its patients are unemancipated minors seeking abortions who cannot obtain parental consent or involve their parents in their decision to have an abortion. Defendants-Appellees are officials within the government of North Carolina and are sued in their official capacities. These officials are bound to carry out the laws of North Carolina, including the Act which is the subject of this litigation and its provisions for prosecu- tion of anyone who performs an abortion which does not comply with the Act's requirements. Appellants filed this facial challenge -- in which the Appellants argue that the Act is unconstitutional based on its language and the language of the rules accompanying it without consideration of the actual application of the Act -- seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive relief enjoining enforcement of the Act on November 2, *6 1995. Appellants claim that the Act violates the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The Act, as argued in their complaint, imposes an undue burden on the right of a pregnant unemancipated minor to an abortion by (1) failing to clearly define the term "parent with custody," (2) failing to provide an adequate, expeditious, and confidential judicial bypass for preg- nant minors who appeal a denial of her petition to the appellate courts of North Carolina, (3) requiring that a pregnant minor file her appeal of a denial of her petition by the state district court to the superior court within 24 hours of the state district court's decision, (4) requiring that the hearing before the superior court be held de novo, (5) requiring that the minor state affirmatively that she does not want her parents, custodian, or guardian to be informed of her deci- sion to have an abortion, and (6) requiring that a judge who finds that the minor was the victim of rape or incest report such finding to the Department of Social Services ("reporting requirement"). In its first opinion on Appellants' motion for a preliminary injunc- tion, the District Court below partially granted the motion and enjoined enforcement of the Act's reporting requirement. Both parties appealed the District Court's decision. A panel of this Court found that the District Court had improperly applied this Circuit's prevailing caselaw with regard to the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction, vacated the District Court's order, and remanded the case for proceed- ings consistent with its opinion. See Manning v. Hunt, Nos. 95-3181, 95-3182 (4th Cir. May 22, 1996). Appellants again moved the District Court for a preliminary injunction against enforcement of the Act. By Order dated December 18, 1996, Manning v. Hunt, No. 1:95cv229 (W.D.N.C. Dec. 18, 1996), the District Court denied Appellants' motion in its entirety and refused to enjoin enforcement of the Act. The District Court first found that Appellants had standing to challenge the Act in federal court. The District Court then reached the issue of the preliminary injunction and found that the Appellants had failed to make the required showing of likelihood of irreparable harm to the plaintiffs, that whatever likelihood of harm to the plain- tiffs might exist was outweighed by the likelihood of harm to the state of North Carolina, that Appellants were not likely to succeed on the merits, and that the public interest was advanced by a denial of injunctive relief.
Appellants now appeal the District Court's order of December 18, 1996. The sole issue decided by the District Court and which is now pending before this Court is whether a preliminary injunction should issue barring enforcement of the Act. Appellants claim the District Court abused its discretion by failing to hold that the balance of hard- ships favors them, by failing to hold that they are likely to succeed on the merits in their challenge that the Act's judicial bypass provi- sion is unconstitutional on its face, by failing to hold that enjoining the Act is in the public interest, and because the District Court errone- ously interpreted the Act's medical emergency exception to require a court order before a minor may obtain an emergency abortion. II.
Abortion is recognized as a fundamental right protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 1 Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 155 (1973). Before the Court reaches the District Court's decision regarding the preliminary injunction, it is useful to briefly review the Supreme Court's opinions with regard to abortion in gen- eral and parental consent statutes in particular.
A.
In Roe, the Supreme Court overturned a Texas statute which pro-
hibited abortions unless an abortion was necessary to save the life of
the mother. Writing for a majority of the Court, Justice Blackmun
found that the right of personal privacy includes the right to abortion,
but that the right "is not unqualified and must be considered against
important state interests in regulation."
Subsequent to Roe, the Supreme Court's caselaw has reflected the
troublesome nature of the issues involved. The central holding of Roe
-- that a woman has a fundamental right to choose to have an abor-
tion -- has not eroded. Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v.
Casey,
A finding of an undue burden is a shorthand for the conclu- sion that a state regulation has the purpose or effect of plac- ing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus. A statute with this purpose is invalid because the means chosen by the State to further the interest in potential life must be calculated to inform the woman's free choice, not hinder it. And a statute which, while furthering the interest in potential life or some other valid state interest, has the effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman's choice cannot be consid- ered a permissible means of serving its legitimate ends. . . . In our considered judgment, an undue burden is an unconsti- tutional burden. Understood another way, we answer the question, left open in previous opinions discussing the undue burden formulation, whether a law designed to fur- ther the State's interest in fetal life which imposes an undue burden on the woman's decision before fetal viability could be constitutional. The answer is no.
Id. at 877 (plurality opinion) (citations omitted).
The difficulty presented to lower federal courts following Casey lies in the fact that only three justices -- Justices O'Connor, Ken- nedy, and Souter -- have specifically adopted this undue burden stan- dard. Other courts, however, have applied the undue burden standard in cases arising after Casey. 2 We deem it proper to follow the trend _________________________________________________________________ 2 The District Court below also correctly recognized that courts in other jurisdictions are applying the undue burden standard. See Manning, No. *10 clearly set by other courts and the District Court below. The inquiry in this case is whether the North Carolina Act places an undue burden on an unemancipated minor who wishes an abortion.
B.
Unlike its trend in general abortion jurisprudence, the Supreme Court has defined rather specific guidelines to be followed by states when enacting, and by federal courts when reviewing, statutes requir- ing parental consent before a minor may obtain an abortion. The Court now briefly reviews these guidelines and the rationales relied upon in their formulation.
The Supreme Court has consistently treated the issue of abortion
for unemancipated minors differently from that of abortion for adults.
In addition to the personal and state interests at stake when an adult
seeks an abortion is the added fact that "the status of minors under the
_________________________________________________________________
1:95cv229, slip op. at 9-10 n.4 (citing Rappa v. New Castle County, 18
F.3d 1043, 1057 (3d Cir. 1994) ("[A]ny time a regulation constituted an
undue burden, Justice O'Connor and those Justices who favored more
severe tests would form a majority to strike down the statute. Any time
a regulation did not constitute an undue burden, Justice O'Connor and
those Justices who favored rational basis review would form a majority
to uphold the statute. Thus, the undue burden test had become the law
of the land even before Casey."); Armstrong v. Mazurek,
With the interests discussed previously in mind, the Supreme Court first addressed the requirements of a valid judicial bypass in Bellotti, *12 supra. There, the Court struck down a Massachusetts statute which required parental consent or a court order upon a finding of good cause shown before a minor could obtain an abortion. The plurality opinion recognized that the states "validly may limit the freedom of children to choose for themselves in the making of important, affir- mative choices with potentially serious consequences." Bellotti, 443 U.S. at 635. Further, the plurality recognized that states often protect "youth from adverse governmental action and from their own imma- turity by requiring parental consent to or involvement in important decisions by minors." Id. at 637. At the same time, however, the plu- rality stated that "[t]he need to preserve the constitutional right and the unique nature of the abortion decision, especially when made by a minor, require a State to act with particular sensitivity when it legis- lates to foster parental involvement in this matter." Id. at 642. The plurality then set out the constitutional requirements for a valid parental consent statute. If a state requires an unemancipated pregnant minor to obtain the consent of a parent, it "also must provide an alter- native procedure whereby authorization for the abortion can be obtained." Id. at 643 (footnote omitted). Such a proceeding must com- ply with the following requirements:
A pregnant minor is entitled in such a proceeding to show either: (1) that she is mature enough and well enough informed to make her abortion decision, in consultation with her physician, independently of her parents' wishes; or (2) that even if she is not able to make this decision inde- pendently, the desired abortion would be in her best inter- ests. The proceeding in which this showing is made must assure that a resolution of the issue, and any appeals that may follow, will be completed with anonymity and suffi- cient expedition to provide an effective opportunity for an abortion to be obtained.
Id. at 643-44 (footnote omitted). Because the Massachusetts Supreme
Court had interpreted the statute to require parental consent before a
minor could obtain a court order, the statute was found to be too
restrictive and was struck down. Id. at 646-47; see also id. at 655-56
(Stevens, J., concurring in judgment).
*13
The rationales behind Bellotti have been adopted repeatedly by
subsequent Supreme Court majorities. See e.g. Hodgson v. Minnesota,
By now, then, it is clear that in order to survive constitutional scru- tiny, the judicial bypass of a parental consent statute must comply with a four-part test based on the plurality's holding in Bellotti. Such a statute must:
(i) allow the minor to bypass the consent requirement if she
establishes that she is mature enough and well enough
informed to make the abortion decision independently;
(ii) allow the minor to bypass the consent requirement if
she establishes that the abortion would be in her best inter-
ests; (iii) ensure the minor's anonymity; and (iv) provide
for expeditious bypass procedures.
Lambert v. Wicklund, ___ U.S. ___, ___,
III.
This Circuit reviews the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction
under the abuse of discretion standard. Direx Israel, Ltd. v. Break-
through Medical Corp.,
"(1) the likelihood of irreparable harm to the plaintiff if the
preliminary injunction is denied,
(2) the likelihood of harm to the defendant if the requested
relief is granted,
(3) the likelihood that the plaintiff will succeed on the mer-
its, and
(4) the public interest."
Direx Israel,
"If, after balancing those two factors [i.e. irreparable harm
to plaintiff against harm to the defendant], the balance `tips
decidedly' in favor of the plaintiff, a preliminary injunction
will be granted if `the plaintiff has raised questions going to
the merits so serious, substantial, difficult, and doubtful, as
to make them fair ground for litigation and thus for more
deliberate investigation.' As the balance tips away from the
plaintiff, a stronger showing on the merits is required."
Id. (quoting Rum Creek Coal Sales,
The Court now determines whether the District Court below abused its discretion in finding that the Appellants had failed to dem- onstrate any likelihood of irreparable harm if an injunction were *16 denied and that the balance of hardships was therefore not in Appel- lants' favor. The Court turns first to the issue of irreparable harm to the Appellants.
A.
Appellants submitted numerous affidavits in support of their motion for a preliminary injunction. Appellants argue that minors seeking abortions suffer from trauma caused by worry over a possible delay as the minor seeks a hearing date on which she can get to court or as the superior court holds a second hearing de novo to review a denial of a petition by the state district court, and by worry that these delays may prevent her from obtaining the abortion. A minor may also experience trauma, Appellants argue, because they fear that they will not be able to slip away to court without their parents or others finding out, because a note from a court for a school absence may look suspicious, or because they risk being seen at the courthouse. Appellants also argue that victims of rape or incest will be trauma- tized over the possibility of having to reveal the details of the assault in court. The delay itself is alleged to be an irreparable injury because the medical risks of an abortion increase with each week of preg- nancy. Many minors do not menstruate regularly and may not dis- cover they are pregnant until later in the pregnancy. Waiting for consent or a judicial order may cause an additional delay which increases the medical risks even further. Appellants argue that a delay will increase the cost of the abortion, and that the need to raise the necessary funds to pay for the abortion may also lengthen the delay. Appellants also argue that some minors may become so desperate that they try to self-induce an abortion or commit suicide. Some minors may wait until they are 18 years of age and no longer need consent, thereby increasing the delay and the medical risks. Minors may also choose to travel to another state where they can obtain an abortion without consent or a judicial order.
The District Court correctly emphasized that its decision regarding
irreparable injury to the plaintiff must not be based on the ultimate
issue of the constitutionality of the statute in question and recognized
that the showing necessary to demonstrate irreparable harm is less
strict in cases involving the constitutional challenge to a statute than
in cases in which there is the possibility of future monetary damages.
*17
Manning, No. 1:95cv229, slip. op. at 10 (quoting Rum Creek Coal
Sales,
Teen pregnancy is a traumatic experience which carries with it medical risks. With this the Court does not disagree. Merely recount- ing the trauma and risks involved in teen pregnancy, however, is not sufficient to preliminarily enjoin enforcement of a parental consent statute. Especially in a facial challenge in which a court is asked to enjoin a statute with little insight into how the statute is actually being implemented and its actual effect on unemancipated minors, plaintiffs must draw a correlation between the alleged injuries -- which must be more than generalized problems associated with teen pregnancy -- and the challenged provisions within the statutory scheme. The Court agrees that young pregnant minors have a need for emotional support as well as a confidential and expeditious bypass. But in no case have the Appellants tied these needs to a harm directly caused by the Act. This fact was the basis of the District Court's opinion, which made specific factual findings and found that no such correlation was made. Because the burden is on the plaintiff to demonstrate that all the requirements of Blackwelder favor granting the preliminary injunc- tion and because there is no requirement that the District Court have found differently as a matter of law, this Court finds that the District *19 Court did not abuse its discretion by determining that the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate a likelihood of irreparable injury. 3 B.
Because the burden of proving that each of the Blackwelder prongs
favors the granting of a preliminary injunction is on the plaintiff, a
finding that the plaintiff has failed to demonstrate any likelihood of
irreparable injury would be sufficient to deny injunctive relief. See
Direx Israel,
North Carolina has enacted its parental consent statute with a judi- cial bypass to further these interests. If the preliminary injunction were granted, North Carolina would have no statutory scheme designed to further its interests with regard to minors who seek abor- tions. Further, it would have one less avenue to discover the sexual abuse of children and take action to protect these innocent victims. Preventing North Carolina from pursuing these interests by enjoining the Act would prevent it from protecting those minors who become pregnant. Enjoining the Act would also prevent North Carolina from keeping parents involved and submit this most important and poten- tially catastrophic problem of a child exclusively to a doctor who does not have as extensive a knowledge of the child's background, person- ality, and maturity. To the extent that the state has an interest in pro- tecting the child from a difficult family situation, North Carolina has created a judicial bypass for children who cannot rely on the family the way most children in healthy family units can. The Supreme Court's repeated recognition of these state interests and the use of parental consent statutes with judicial bypasses to further those inter- ests is sufficient for our purposes here; this Court need not have spe- cific evidence beyond the statutory scheme and North Carolina's *21 reason for enacting it to recognize that an injunction would prevent North Carolina from pursuing these interests, causing harm to the state.
Nor is this finding of harm to the state a recognition of some gen-
eral "states' rights" argument revolving around federal court interfer-
ence in a state's administration of its programs. Appellants rely on
Darr, supra, in this regard. In Darr, this Circuit upheld a preliminary
injunction granted to enjoin Maryland's enforcement of its federally-
funded foster care program which was alleged to be poorly adminis-
tered. Maryland argued that the principles of federalism protected it
from federal court interference in the administration of state pro-
grams.
The Court now addresses the likelihood of success on the merits of
Appellants' facial challenge to the Act. The District Court found that
the Appellants had failed to show a likelihood of success on the mer-
its in this litigation. Manning, No. 1:95cv229, slip op. at 28. The
strength of the showing required of a plaintiff on the likelihood of
success on the merits depends on the result of the balance of hard-
ships, discussed supra part IV. Even if Appellants had shown that the
balance of hardships favored them so that we were required to apply
the least strict standard in our analysis on the likelihood of success on
the merits, this Court finds that Appellants have failed to raise "`ques-
tions going to the merits so serious, substantial, difficult, and doubt-
ful, as to make them fair ground for litigation and thus for more
deliberate investigation.'" Direx Israel,
With regard to parental consent statutes, the Supreme Court has
"been over most of this ground before," Casey,
Because this is a facial challenge, Appellants carry a heavy burden.
"A facial challenge to a legislative Act is, of course, the most difficult
challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish
that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be
valid. The fact that the . . . Act might operate unconstitutionally is
insufficient to render it wholly invalid, since we have not recognized
an `overbreadth' doctrine outside the limited context of the First
Amendment." United States v. Salerno,
As already discussed, when reviewing the Act's judicial bypass, a
court's primary focus is on the standards set forth by the Supreme
Court in Bellotti. If the specific provision at issue is addressed by
Bellotti and satisfies its standards, then the provision cannot be said
to be an undue burden on the minor's right to an abortion. If the
Bellotti standards do not address the specific provision, the court then
turns to whether the provision is an undue burden on the minor's right
to an abortion irrespective of Bellotti. See supra part II.B.
_________________________________________________________________
applies. Id. at 1103 (citing Janklow, ___ U.S. at ___,
Appellants argue that, although it purports to do so, the Act does
not satisfy Bellotti's requirements that the judicial bypass procedures
maintain the confidentiality of the minor
5
or provide her with an
expeditious decision on her petition. It is clear that the statute pro-
vides for expedition and confidentiality in the provisions which obvi-
ously apply to hearings before the state district courts and superior
courts. Appellants' challenge is based on the argument that these pro-
visions do not apply to the North Carolina Court of Appeals and
Supreme Court. Appellants argue that the Act contains no guaranty
of confidentiality or expedition, as required by Bellotti,
State legislatures need only provide the framework for a proper judicial bypass which complies with Bellotti. See Ashcroft, 462 U.S. at 491 n.16. North Carolina contends that the Act specifically pro- vides for a confidential judicial bypass. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-21.8 ("Court proceedings under this section shall be confidential . . . ."); id. § 7A-675 ("The court's entire record of a proceeding involving con- sent for an abortion on an unemancipated minor . . . is not a matter _________________________________________________________________ 5 Appellants also challenge the reporting requirement as violating Bellotti's mandate of confidentiality. The Court discusses this argument at infra part V.B. 6 While the Court concludes that expeditious determinations on appeal to the North Carolina Court of Appeals and Supreme Court can be expected in all judicial bypass cases, it would have simplified the prob- lems with which this Court has had to contend if the Act provided a level of specificity for expedition in the state appellate courts which mirrored the expedition contained in the statute with respect to the state district court and superior court hearings.
of public record, shall be maintained separately from any juvenile record, shall be withheld from public inspection, and may be exam- ined only by order of the court, by the unemancipated minor, or by the unemancipated minor's attorney or guardian ad litem."). With regard to expedition at the appellate level, North Carolina relies on already existing procedures. North Carolina has provided statutory authority for discretionary review by the North Carolina Supreme Court of any adverse decision by the superior court. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-31. Further, the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure state:
To prevent manifest injustice to a party, or to expedite deci-
sion in the public interest, either court of the appellate divi-
sion [Court of Appeals or Supreme Court] may . . . suspend
or vary the requirements or provisions of any of these rules
in a case pending before it upon application of a party or
upon its own initiative, and may order proceedings in accor-
dance with its directions.
N.C.R. App. P. 2. After argument was heard in this case, the North
Carolina Court of Appeals found that the Act's judicial bypass "pro-
vide[s] expeditious appellate review without unduly burdening the
constitutional rights of the minor" while continuing "to insure the sta-
tutorily required confidentiality." In re Doe, ___ S.E.2d at ___, slip
op. at 6 & 7.
The District Court below agreed with North Carolina. Manning,
1:95cv229, slip op. at 16-19. The District Court found that Bellotti's
expedition requirements were met by the ability of the minor to seek
an appeal directly to the state Supreme Court, obviating the time
needed to seek a hearing at the Court of Appeals, and the ability of
the minor to move for and the appellate courts to grant an expedited
hearing and decision pursuant to the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
The District Court also found that the provisions of the Act with
regard to confidentiality apply generally to all "[c]ourt proceedings
under this section," N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-21.8(d), and are not limited
on the face of the Act to the state district and superior court levels.
Appellants cite several cases from other circuits which deal with
similar issues. Appellants argue these cases require this Court to find
*27
that, because the Act does not state with specificity the time lines
which appellate courts above the superior court level must follow in
order to provide an expeditious hearing and can be read such that its
requirement of confidentiality does not apply to the appellate courts,
the Act is unconstitutional on its face. For example, in Causeway
Medical Suite v. Ieyoub,
The Ninth Circuit found that this lack of specificity at the state district
court level violated the requirements of Bellotti. Id. at 441. In Zbaraz
v. Hartigan,
With respect, the Court finds this reasoning unpersuasive. Because
this Court departs from the reasoning used by these other circuits, the
Court finds it necessary to discuss its reasoning for departure at some
length. These opinions rely upon an assumption that state courts will
ignore the mandates of Bellotti if given the chance. Such an assump-
tion is improper. State judges are bound, just as federal judges are, to
uphold the Constitution of the United States and to follow the opin-
ions of the United States Supreme Court. See U.S. Const. art. VI
("This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States . . . shall be the
supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be
*28
bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to
the Contrary notwithstanding."); Martin v. Hunter's Lessee,
The fault the Supreme Court found with the judicial bypass at issue
in Akron I was not in the generality of the statute, but the lack of pro-
cedures for making the necessary determinations called for in a judi-
cial bypass by Bellotti. Akron I,
Applying this standard to the North Carolina Act, the Court finds that the Appellants have failed to make the required showing. The North Carolina Act provides the state courts with full jurisdiction and statutory authority to fulfill their duties under the judicial bypass. The Act specifically provides unemancipated pregnant minors an absolute right to an expeditious and confidential hearing initially at the state district court and an appeal as of right to the superior court. Hearings and decisions at these two levels must conclude within, at most, 17 days. 8 By judicial interpretation, minors have access to review of erro- neous lower court decisions by applying for a writ of certiorari to the North Carolina Court of Appeals and Supreme Court. In re Doe, supra. The North Carolina Court of Appeals has already demonstrated that this structure is sufficient to correct a misapplication of the Act by the lower courts. See id. (reversing superior court's denial of peti- tion because superior court failed to apply all provisions of Act and ordering waiver of parental consent). When appeals above the supe- rior court are heard, procedural rules -- such as those giving the minor the opportunity to bypass the North Carolina Court of Appeals or which allow the appellate courts to expedite the minor's appeal -- are in place which will enable the appellate courts to comply with Supreme Court mandates to provide an expeditious hearing. When hearing the appeal in In re Doe, the North Carolina Court of Appeals demonstrated its understanding of the expedition requirements by hearing and deciding an appeal in a minor's petition only four days after the appeal was filed. See In re Doe, ___ S.E.2d at ___, slip op. at 1. Further, nothing on the face of the Act exempts the appellate courts from the Act's confidentiality requirements, and there is no reason to assume that the North Carolina courts will not interpret the Act to require confidentiality at the appellate court level. Again, in the only state opinion on which this Court can rely, the North Carolina Court of Appeals referred to continuing confidentiality during any appeals above the superior court level. Id. at ___, slip op. at 6-7. On their face, then, these provisions of the Act comply with Bellotti and _________________________________________________________________ 8 This time period is calculated based on circumstances in which the petition is denied at the first court level and each actor within the bypass takes the maximum amount of time allowed to act: the state district court seven days to hear the petition and deny it, the minor 24 hours to appeal, the superior court seven days to hear the appeal and 48 hours to issue its decision. *31 are not an undue burden on a minor's right to an abortion. The Dis- trict Court therefore did not err in finding that the Appellants were not likely to succeed on the merits with these claims.
B.
Appellants also bring one other challenge under the confidentiality
prong of Bellotti. Appellants claim that the reporting requirement is
also a breach of the minor's confidence. The Act requires the state
judge to report any evidence that the minor was raped or is the victim
of incest discovered during the bypass procedure. N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 90-21.8(f). This duty is the same as that imposed on anyone else
who might come upon such evidence through other circumstances. Id.
§ 7A-543. Once reported, the Department of Social Services is
required to make "a prompt and thorough investigation of the abuse
or neglect, and the risk of harm to the juvenile, in order to determine
whether protective services should be provided or the complaint filed
as a petition." Id. § 7A-544. The Department of Social Services is also
required to determine if other juveniles in the home are threatened
and in need of protective services. Id. Appellants argue that if a preg-
nant minor who is the victim of rape or incest knows that this infor-
mation will be reported, she may be deterred from utilizing the
judicial bypass. The District Court did not agree and found that the
reporting requirement was designed to protect the minor and, in any
case, the minor could obtain certification for the abortion without dis-
closing the rape or incest by proving that she is mature or that the
abortion is in her best interests. Manning, 1:95cv229, slip. at 22-23.
This Court finds no abuse of discretion in the District Court's holding.
At no time has a majority of the Supreme Court held that a report-
ing requirement is unconstitutional. Appellants rely primarily on Jus-
tice O'Connor's concurrence in Hodgson, supra, and the Eighth
Circuit's opinion in Miller, supra, to support their position. In
Hodgson, the Court upheld a statute which required notification to
both parents of the minor's intention to have an abortion unless the
minor's doctor reported that she was the victim of abuse or neglect
or obtained certification through a judicial bypass, Justice O'Connor,
discussing the reporting provision, stated that the provision was "in
reality, a means of notifying the parents." Hodgson,
As previously stated, this Court should not assume on a facial chal- lenge that the Act's reporting requirement will in practice result in parental notification. See supra part V.A. The Act contains a specific statutory requirement that "[a]ll information received by the Depart- ment of Social Services, including the identity of the reporter, shall be held in strictest confidence by the Department." N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-544. Further, Bellotti requires that the fact of the abortion be kept confidential, but does not address the fact that the child has been the victim of rape or incest. The state judge can report the abuse to the Department of Social Services without revealing the fact that the child has sought or obtained an abortion. This Court does not believe that Bellotti should be construed more broadly than its holding to cover evidence of rape or incest. Most important, as was the case in Hodgson, a minor who does not disclose the abuse can still receive judicial consent if she can prove that she is mature or that the abortion is in her best interests. Thus, the Act does not require the minor to choose between obtaining the consent of a parental abuser for the abortion or reporting the parental abuser to authorities.
Lastly, this Court believes that the Appellants are advocating an unconscionable position. Appellants would have a judge, who is sworn to uphold the law, withhold vital information regarding rape or incest which would allow state authorities to end the abuse, protect the victim, and punish the abuser. Not only would Appellants' posi- tion prevent the judge from helping the victim seeking the abortion, but it would prevent the judge from helping other juveniles in the same household under the same threat of incest. This Court does not believe that the Constitution requires judges to be placed in such an untenable position. Instead, like the District Court, we agree with Jus- tice Kennedy's statement in Hodgson:
The Court challenges the efficacy of this last exception
because it believes that the statutory requirement that a phy-
sician report a minor's declaration of abuse to appropriate
authorities . . . will deter minors from using the exception.
This is not a proper basis for declaring the law invalid. Laws
are not declared unconstitutional because of some general
reluctance to follow a statutory scheme the legislature finds
necessary to accomplish a legitimate state objective. . . . No
one can contend that a minor who is pregnant is somehow
less deserving of the State's protection. It is reasonable to
provide that any minor who contends that she cannot notify
her parent or parents because she is the victim of neglect or
abuse must allow the State to use its power to investigate
her declaration and protect her from harm.
Hodgson,
Appellants next claim that the de novo hearing at the superior court
after a denial at the state district court is an undue burden on the
minor's right to an abortion. The Bellotti standards do not address
whether a minor can be required to undergo a second hearing in
which she must personally recount her story to the superior court after
she has already done so to the state district court and had her petition
denied. This Court must therefore determine if the second de novo
hearing is an undue burden irrespective of Bellotti. The District Court
found that the de novo hearing before the superior court was not an
undue burden, but was instead a "bonus, a second bite of the apple,
so to speak." Manning, 1:95cv229, slip op. at 14.
*34
Appellants argue that the District Court failed to recognize the fear
and tension that a minor feels when undergoing a hearing in which
she must recount intimate details about her personal life. Appellants
argue that the Supreme Court recognized this fear and tension in
Hodgson,
The Court finds no constitutional defect with the second de novo
hearing. On the contrary, the Court finds that the second hearing can
in fact operate to make it more likely that the minor will succeed on
her petition. As the District Court recognized, a court reviewing a
petition de novo hears the issues and makes its decisions as if the peti-
tion had been originally filed in that court, "as if no hearing had been
held by the [lower court] and without any presumption in favor of the
[lower court] decision." Caswell County v. Hanks,
D.
The District Court also found that the Appellants were unlikely to
succeed in their challenge of the Act's requirement that a minor
appeal a denial of her petition by the state district court to the superior
court within twenty-four hours of the state district court's decision.
The District Court based its finding on language in Ashcroft, supra,
which it interpreted as approving of a similar requirement in a Mis-
souri parental consent statute. Appellants argue such a short time
period is an undue burden because it truncates the ability of the minor
to preserve her right to an abortion and because the requirement
would be difficult for minors to meet. Appellants primarily rely on
Planned Parenthood v. Neely,
The Court, after quoting the provision containing the twenty-four
hour time limit to appeal, stated; "We believe this section provides the
framework for a constitutionally sufficient means of expediting judi-
cial proceedings." Ashcroft,
VI.
The last prong in the Blackwelder analysis is whether a preliminary injunction would be in the public interest. The Act has been on the books since 1995, and only the reporting requirement has been sub- ject to an injunction by the District Court below in its first action on this case That injunction has not been in force since May 1996, when this Court set the injunction aside. The Act has therefore been opera- tive in its entirety for a year and in the most part for more than a year. Refusing to enjoin the Act at this point would further any interest in maintaining the status quo pending any further appeal in this case. Clearly, the Act is in the best interests of the public. The Act helps preserve the traditional line of responsibility between parent and child. The Act also helps protect the family unit as a viable and time- honored means of raising children, and yet, through its judicial bypass, takes into account exceptional cases in a confidential and expeditious manner. Given these facts, and the Court's foregoing analysis on the balance of hardships and likelihood of success on the merits, the Court finds no abuse of discretion in the District Court's determination that a preliminary injunction would not be in the pub- lic's interest. *37 VII.
Lastly, Appellants argue that the District Court erroneously inter- preted the Act's medical emergency exception to require judicial authorization of an abortion. In its discussion of whether the de novo appeal to the superior court was likely to be found an undue burden, the District Court stated: "If there is an emergency need for the abor- tion, and the attending physician so determines, immediate access to judicial authorization is provided." Manning, 1:95cv229, slip op. at 14. Interpretation of this provision was not litigated by the parties and was not properly before the District Court. Further, such an interpreta- tion would be inconsistent with the plain language of the Act, which states that in the case of a medical emergency, parental consent is not necessary, which we interpret as meaning a judicial bypass of that consent is not necessary. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-21.9 ("The require- ments of parental consent prescribed by G.S. 90-21.7(a) shall not apply when, in the best medical judgment of the physician based on the facts of the case before the physician, a medical emergency exists that so complicates the pregnancy as to require an immediate abor- tion, or when the conditions prescribed by G.S. 90-21.1(4) are met."). Given the context of the District Court's statement, this Court finds that the statement was not meant to be an interpretation of the provi- sion, and to the extent that it might have been, any interpretation of the Act to require judicial authorization before an abortion obtained for a medical emergency would be in error. VIII.
For the reasons discussed, the Court finds that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying Appellants' motion for a pre- liminary injunction and failing to enjoin enforcement of the Act. The judgment of the District Court is therefore AFFIRMED.
