Plaintiffs Mozell Brooks, Delores Brooks and Tee Massie 1 brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action individually and on behalf of a proposed class of all other medically needy indigent residents of the Walker County Hospital District against the District and its Board of Managers. Plaintiffs alleged that they were denied without due process of law an entitlement to free medical services they claim is guaranteed them by Article IX, § 9 of the Texas Constitution. 2 The district court dismissed the action on the grounds that this was a proper case for Pullman abstention. 3 We agree with the district court and therefore affirm.
*336 As alleged in their pleadings, each оf the plaintiffs is an indigent and medically needy resident of the Walker County Hospital District. Plaintiffs Mr. and Mrs. Brooks are physically unable to work due to medical problems. Mrs. Brooks suffers from diabetes and is in continuous need of insulin; she also suffers from heart problems, gall bladder problems, and other medical difficulties. Plaintiff Massie is unable to afford medicine which has been prescribed for him. Massie was previously hospitalized within the hospital district but was not informed of his right to free medical carе. As a result he has at present over $600 in unpaid hospital and physicians’ bills, some of which will not be covered by Medicare. Massie was informed by a hospital social worker that Massie’s $200 hospital bill would not be written off as part of the hospital’s indigent care obligation because it was a Medicare deductible amount.
As alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint, defendants have failed and refused to institute any system whatsoever for providing or paying for necessary medical сare other than hospital care. Defendants have also failed to institute orderly, consistent, and rational policies and procedures for the provision of free hospital and medical care to the low income residents of the district, and to give proper and effective notice of the availability of such care.
Pullman
abstention is a judge-made doctrine which postpones the exercise of federal jurisdiction in order to clarify ambiguous state law issues in the state courts when resolution of such issues might eliminate or substantially modify a federal constitutional question.
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
We begin by noting that the ambiguity of state law required for invocation of
Pullman
abstention definitely exists in this case. We do not share plaintiffs’ views about the clarity of the mandate of Article IX, § 9 of the Texas Constitution. The fact that hospital districts are established with “full respоnsibility for providing medical and hospital care to needy inhabitants” might be read to require free services, as plaintiffs contend, but it might also be read to require only that such services be provided at a reduced rate commensurate with the patient’s ability to pay.
Cf. Ibarra v. Bexar County Hospital District,
Plaintiffs have pointed to several opinions of the Attorney General of Texas which have discussed Article IX § 9, but we do not find these to clarify markedly the difficult issues presented here. No authoritative construction of the nature of the entitlement has emerged from the Texas courts.
5
Moreover, a full treatment of the scope of the entitlement created by state law must necessarily consider the effects of enabling legislation for hospital districts, as well as any regulatory framework established for administration of the districts. “[WJhere the challenged statute is part of an integrated scheme of related constitutional provisions, statutes, and regulations, and whfere the scheme as a whole calls for clarifying interpretation by the state courts,” the Supreme Court has regularly required abstention.
Harris County Commissioners Court v. Moore,
Plaintiffs argue that even if the scope of the entitlement is unclear, the federal constitutional question of denial of due process cannot bе avoided no matter how the entitlement is construed. Of course it is possible that no entitlement to completely free medical services might exist at all based on the State’s construction of its constitution. But let us accept
arguendo
that some form of entitlement to some form of
*338
medicаl care must exist under any reasonable construction of the constitution, and related statutory and regulatory provisions. To the extent that the plaintiffs’ claim is that they were denied notice and a hearing on their ability to qualify for free (оr less expensive) medical care (regardless of whether they would, after a hearing, be found to qualify for such care), their argument has some force. Yet it is an axiom of due process jurisprudence that the type of procеss which is due turns upon the nature of the entitlement and an analysis of the governmental and private interests affected.
E.g., Mathews
v.
Eldridge,
Plaintiffs insist nevertheless that abstention is frowned upon in § 1983 cases, and that abstention in this case will work an undue hardship on them. We are not unsympathetic to either of these arguments. However, we think that on balance, strong policy reasons militate in favor of abstention. We deal here with a question of considerable local importance. It is an issue which may have a significant financial impact on the State of Texas as well as on its indigent inhabitants, and it is an issue touching upon a sensitive area of state policy. The fact that it also involves construction of the State’s own constitution merely enhances its local importance. Harris County Commissioner’s Court, supra; Reetz, supra. The better course, we think, is to allow the Texas courts the first opportunity to address the difficult questions of state health care law and policy raised by plaintiffs’ suit. Cf. Ibarra, supra (abstention proper in § 1983 cаse to determine if under state constitution county hospital districts must treat indigent aliens and legal residents alike with respect to non-emergency medical services). The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A fourth plaintiff in the original action, Edwina Bicknell, is now deceased.
. Tex.Const. art. IX, § 9 provides in pertinent part:
The Legislature may by law provide for the creation, establishment, maintenance and operation of hospital districts composed of one or more counties or all or any part of one or more counties with power to issue bonds for the purchase, construction, acquisition, repair or renovation of buildings and improvements and equipping same, for hospital purposes; providing for the transfer to the hospital district of the title to any land, buildings, improvements and equipment located wholly within the district which may be jointly or separately owned by any city, town or county, providing that any district so created shall assume full responsibility for providing medical and hospital сare for its needy inhabitants and assume the outstanding indebtedness incurred by cities, towns and counties for hospital purposes prior to the creation of the district, if same are located wholly within its boundaries, and a pro rata portiоn of such indebtedness based upon the then last approved tax assessment rolls of the included cities, towns and counties if less than all the territory thereof is included within the district boundaries; . . . . ”
(Emphasis added).
. Ordinarily a district court will retain jurisdiction over a case whеn it abstains in a
Pullman
situation. However, the idiosyncracies of Texas law prevent retention of federal jurisdiction and thus dismissal without prejudice was the proper disposition.
See generally Moore
v.
El Paso County,
. Several panels of this circuit have held that an appellate court’s standard of review of a district court’s decision to invoke or refuse to invoke
Pullman
abstention is one of abuse of discretion.
Duncan
v.
Poythress,
. Plaintiff's cite
Monghon & Sisson
v.
Van Zandt County,
We received an
amicus curiae
brief from Dallas Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now citing a number of Texas cases and statutes which purportedly clarity the “interest” created by the State Constitution.
Amicus
cites
Willacy County
v.
Valley Baptist Hospital,
None of the cases cited by
amicus
says that indigents are entitled to
free
medical care, аs plaintiffs allege. Most have to do with the constitutionality of the enabling legislation of the specific hospitals.
Moore v. Edna Hospital District,
