This civil action is before the Court on several motions, including plaintiffs Motion for Temporary Injunction [Doc. 6], plaintiffs motion to amend the complaint filed on December 27, 2013 [Doc. 10], Plaintiffs Motion to Strike and Withdraw the December 27, 2013 Motion to Amend the Complaint and File in its Place this Motion to Amend with Amended Complaint Attached [Doc. 20], plaintiffs Motion for Scheduling Conference [Doc. 24], plaintiffs Motion for Leave to File the Attached Amended Application for Temporary Injunction in Excess of Twenty-Five Pages [Doc. 25], plaintiffs Motion for Temporary, Limited EDTN CM-ECF Access [Doc. 30], plaintiffs Application for Temporary Injunction Prohibiting Governor Has-lam From Making Appointments to New Terms of Office for Tennessee Appellate Judges [Doc. 32], and plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 33], Defendants have filed responses to some of these motions [Docs. 13, 14, 26, 35]. The Court held a hearing on Thursday, January 30, 2014 [Doc. 28].
The Court has thoroughly considered all of the filings in this action filed up to and including February 26, 2014,
I. Background
This action concerns what is commonly referred to as the “Tennessee Plan.” The Tennessee Plan is the method by which state appellate judges are evaluated and selected for office. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 17-4-101 et seq.; see also State of Tennessee Executive Order No. 34 (Oct. 16, 2013). The part of the plan most relevant to this litigation is that if a “vacancy” occurs in an office of an appellate court judgeship after July 1, 2009, by death, resignation, or otherwise, the governor shall fill the vacancy by appointing one of the three persons nominated by the Judicial Nominating Commission (“JNC”). See TenmCode Ann. § 17-4-112.
On May 24, 2013, Judge Joseph M. Tip-ton, a judge on the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals, notified Governor Bill Haslam that he would not seek retention for another term in the August 2014 election [Doc. 1 ¶¶ 5-6]. The JNC ultimately submitted nominees to fill the position, and Governor Haslam appointed Robert H. Montgomery, Jr. [See id. ¶ 20; Doc. 14].
Plaintiff, Herbert S. Moncier (“Moncier”), has an interest in filling Judge Tip-ton’s position [Id. ¶ 1]. While he did not submit his name to the JNC for consideration, plaintiff requested that Coordinator of Elections Mark Goins allow his name to be placed on the August 2014 ballot as a
On October 18, 2013, plaintiff filed this action, pro se [Doc. 1]. He seeks declaratory and injunctive relief on behalf of “himself, and for the people of the State of Tennessee,” against defendants Bill Has-lam, Governor of the State of Tennessee, and Coordinator of Elections Mark Goins. He asserts that this Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 1331 and 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988 [Id. ¶4], According to plaintiff, in implementing the Tennessee Plan, defendants are violating the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution because they are denying access to the August 2014 ballot and the right to political association.
This matter came before the Court as a result of plaintiff filing a motion for injunc-tive relief [Doc. 6]. In his motion for in-junctive relief, plaintiff asks the Court to direct Goins to provide plaintiff a nominating petition to be on the ballot for the August 2014 general election for the office of judge of the Tennessee Criminal Court of Appeals for the Eastern Section; to perform his duties as Tennessee’s Coordinator of Elections to provide plaintiff and the Knox County Election Commission instructions as to the requirements for plaintiff to qualify to be on the August ballot; and to provide such information for each office of the Tennessee Supreme Court, Tennessee Court of Appeals, and Tennessee Criminal Court of Appeals.
Along with his motion for injunctive relief, and during the course of this litigation, plaintiff has filed multiple motions to amend his complaint.
In a later motion to amend, plaintiff asserts he seeks to amend the complaint to include factual allegations about events occurring after he filed his last-filed motion to amend [Doc. 20], He also argues he has “proffered a more particularized statement” — particularly nineteen statements [See Doc. 20-1 ¶ 2(1)-(19) ] — of his standing and he seeks to include more specific statements with respect to his alleged violations of constitutional rights. He further requests to amend the declaratory and injunctive relief sought.
II. Analysis
Standing is a threshold question in every federal case, and standing consists of two components: Article III standing and prudential standing. Warth v. Seldin,
To establish Article III standing, a plaintiff must demonstrate:
(1) it has suffered an injury in fact that is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical; (2) the injury is fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant; and (3) it is likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.
Wuliger,
(1) a plaintiff must assert his own legal rights and interests, without resting the claim on the rights or interests of third parties; (2) the claim must not be a ‘generalized grievance’ shared by a large class of citizens; and (3) in statutory cases, the plaintiffs claim must fall within the ‘zone of interests’ regulated by the statute in question.
Wuliger,
The standing inquiry focuses not on the merits of the claim, but on the party bringing the claim. Valley Forge Christian Coll. v. Ams. United for Separation of Church and State, Inc.,
Defendants assert that plaintiff lacks the requisite standing to challenge the constitutionality of the Tennessee Plan [Doc. 14]. Defendants state plaintiff has not alleged in his complaint that he has suffered any particularized injury as a result of any defendant, and instead, asserts that he and the people of Tennessee have been or will be deprived of their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to vote for appellate judges. Thus, they claim, the claimed injury is not particularized and distinct but abstract and common to all. The Court agrees.
“The Supreme Court has long held that a plaintiff does not have standing ‘to challenge laws of general application where their own injury is not distinct from that suffered in general by other ... citizens.’ ” Johnson v. Bredesen,
In Johnson v. Bredesen, the plaintiffs filed a § 1983 suit, arguing they were prohibited by the Tennessee Plan from voting in a popular election for candidates to fill the seats of two Tennessee Supreme Court Justices in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article VI, section 3 of the Tennessee Constitution.
Other cases addressing a challenge to Tennessee’s election methodology have
The district court’s October 16 memorandum determined that, as to his First Amendment right to be a candidate, the Supreme Court has held that a state may regulate a candidate’s interest in any state office and that state judges need not be elected. Hooker v. Anderson, No. 3:00— 0510 (M.D.Tenn. Oct. 16, 2000) (citations omitted). As to his Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process right, the district court likewise determined the plaintiff did not have a right to run for state office. Id. Regarding his procedural due process rights, the district court stated that the plaintiff did not have a property right to participate as a candidate in the election for appellate judge and that, as a voter, state law afforded him a process to challenge a judicial election and he had been afforded due process. Id. Finally, as to his equal protection claim, the district court said there were no facts indicating that the plaintiff was being treated differently than any other voter in the elections. Id. See also Hooker v. Sasser,
The Court finds that plaintiffs case is no different from these previous attacks on Tennessee laws pertaining to the election of officials. At bottom here, plaintiffs complaint is a generalized grievance that involves “abstract questions of wide public significance.” Warth,
While the Court recognizes plaintiffs injury in that he was denied the opportunity to be placed on the August 2014 ballot, it is difficult to find, on the basis of his allegations and arguments, that his claim is not a generalized grievance shared by a large class of citizens, all of whom are denied the opportunity to be placed on the August 2014 ballot. Undoubtedly, any Tennessean who desires to run for the office of an appellate judge would encounter the exact same obstacles that plaintiff has asserted here. The Court thus finds that plaintiff has failed to demonstrate standing. See Hein,
Plaintiff nonetheless argues that he has articulated at least nineteen reasons for standing in his latest proposed amended complaint [See Doc. 20-1 ¶ 2(1)-(19); Doc. 31]. The Court finds that none of these asserted reasons establish standing.
Plaintiff primarily characterizes his complaint as one of ballot access and political association. He argues that the provisions of the Tennessee Plan violate his rights, as well as the rights of other Tennesseans, to access the ballot and to political association under the First and Fourteenth Amendment, relying primarily upon Anderson v. Celebrezze,
In addition, plaintiff claims that the “right of a qualified voter to challenge a state election law is clearly established” and thus establishes standing [Doc. 31]. He cites Baker v. Carr, in support, but his reliance on Baker is misplaced.
Baker dealt with a challenge to Tennessee’s 1901 Apportionment Act under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The plaintiffs brought the case on their own behalf and on behalf of all qualified voters in Tennessee. They asserted that the act — which was the last reapportionment act passed by the Tennessee General Assembly prior to the plaintiffs filing suit in 1961, despite the fact that Tennessee’s population had grown from 2,020,616 to 3,567,089 — constituted “arbitrary and capricious state action, offensive to the Fourteenth Amendment in its irrational disregard of the standard of apportionment prescribed by the States’ Constitution or of any standard, effecting a gross disproportion of representation to voting population.” Id. at 207,
The Supreme Court found that “[t]he injury ... [they] assert[ed] [was] that this classification disfavors the voters in the counties in which they reside, placing them in a position of constitutionally unjustifiable inequality vis-a-vis voters in irrationally favored counties.” Id. at 207-08,
Plaintiff has also not alleged that he is being treated differently from any other voter in Tennessee. See Mixon v. Ohio,
Plaintiff further asserts that the “First Amendment Grievance Clause” provides standing. He relies upon Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri, — U.S. -,
Finally, plaintiff argues that under Article I, Section 17 of the Tennessee Constitution, he has a constitutional right to sue where a public officer acts in violation of a constitutional right and that under Tenn.Code Ann. § 29-35-110, he has the right as a private citizen to sue, in the name of the state of Tennessee, officers who violate or fail to faithfully perform their duties pursuant to the United States Constitution. Private citizens, though, cannot bring an action alleging misconduct without evincing a special interest that is not common to the public at large. Badgett v. Rogers,
Plaintiff further argues that in the context of this case, § 1988(a) authorizes the adoption of these state-law claims into federal law in order to render the Civil Rights Act fully effective, thereby creating a cause of action for which plaintiff has the necessary standing. Yet, in Moor v. Alameda County,
Accordingly, the Court finds that plaintiff lacks standing to assert the claims set forth not only in his complaint, but in his proposed amended complaints. While
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth herein, the Court will DENY plaintiffs Motion for Temporary Injunction [Doc. 6], plaintiffs motion to amend the complaint filed on December 27, 2013 [Doc. 10], Plaintiffs Motion to Strike and Withdraw the December 27, 2013 Motion to Amend the Complaint and File in its Place this Motion to Amend with Amended Complaint Attached [Doc. 20], plaintiffs Motion for Scheduling Conference [Doc. 24], plaintiffs Motion for Leave to File the Attached Amended Application for Temporary Injunction in Excess of Twenty-Five Pages [Doc. 25], plaintiffs Motion for Temporary, Limited EDTN CM-ECF Access [Doc. 30], plaintiffs Application for Temporary Injunction Prohibiting Governor Haslam From Making Appointments to New Terms of Office for Tennessee Appellate Judges [Doc. 32], and plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 33] for lack of standing and DISMISS this action. Consequently, the Court will DIRECT the Clerk to close this case.
ORDER ACCORDINGLY.
Notes
. This hearing occurred prior to the filing of some of plaintiff's motions, and the Court has endeavored to consider all of plaintiff's filings, in addition to the arguments presented on January 30, 2014, in issuing this memorandum opinion and corresponding order in prompt fashion. See Fed.RXiv.P. 1 (mandating "the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding").
. In light of the Court's order on January 22, 2014 [Doc. 22], the Court has not considered plaintiff's Amended Application for Temporary Injunction [Doc. 21],
.The Court declines to discuss every point raised by the parties in the many filings before the Court given Rule l’s mandate. Instead, the Court discusses primarily those issues and arguments related to the threshold issue of standing. Nonetheless, the Court has reviewed and considered the entire record in reaching the determination that plaintiff lacks standing.
. Plaintiff moved to substitute his initial motion to amend the complaint, which the Court granted [See Doc. 8].
. Afler commencing this action, plaintiff filed a parallel lawsuit in state court [See Doc. 14-1]. Shortly after defendants asserted that this Court should abstain from the issues raised in this case because of that state-court action, plaintiff non-suited the litigation [Doc. 29],
. One of the plaintiffs, John Jay Hooker, also argued that he was denied an opportunity to be a candidate for the Tennessee Supreme Court, but he did not pursue that claim on appeal.
. Along the same lines, in plaintiff's latest motion for an injunction, he asks the Court to enjoin Governor Haslam from making an appointment to the office of Supreme Court Justice William Koch, Jr., and from making any further appointments to a new term of any office of a Tennessee appellate judge for terms beginning September 1, 2014 [Doc. 32], This type of relief would benefit not only plaintiff, but also any Tennessean who desires to run for the office of an appellate judge.
. Because of the overlapping nature of plaintiff’s asserted reasons for standing, the Court addresses some of the reasons for standing together. With respect to all of plaintiff's reasons, the Court finds that plaintiff has failed to meet his burden to demonstrate he has standing.
. In Anderson, the Supreme Court addressed the First Amendment validity of a law requiring that independent candidates file paperwork to be on the general election ballot earlier than other candidates.
