*446In these consolidated cases, Plaintiffs bring claims under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA") and the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment challenging the decision of Secretary of Commerce Wilbur L. Ross, Jr. to reinstate a question concerning citizenship status on the 2020 census questionnaire. See generally New York v. U.S. Dep't of Commerce ,
Remarkably, despite the foregoing, Defendants now seek a stay of the trial and related pre-trial submissions (most of which are due today and therefore presumably done already) pending resolution of a forthcoming petition to the Supreme Court for writs of mandamus and certiorari. (See
*447(Docket No. 402). Their request is based primarily on an October 22, 2018 Order from the Supreme Court, denying Defendants' application to stay two of this Court's prior Orders (namely, its July 3, 2018 Order authorizing extra-record discovery, (see July 3rd Tr. 76-89) and its August 17, 2018 Order authorizing a deposition of Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore (see Docket No. 261) ) and staying, at least temporarily, a third Order (namely, the Court's September 21, 2018 Order authorizing a deposition of Secretary Ross, see New York v. United States Dep't of Commerce ,
In other circumstances, the Court might well agree - albeit, only as an exercise of its discretion over case management - that the Supreme Court's Order warrants hitting the pause button and postponing trial, as the Supreme Court's resolution of Defendants' forthcoming petition could bear on this Court's analysis of the merits. But Defendants' own "urgen[t]" need for finality calls for sticking with the trial date. (Gov't Stay Mot. 4). And, in light of the all-too-familiar factors relevant to the question whether a stay should be granted pending mandamus, see New York v. United States Dep't of Commerce ,
A. Defendants Fail to Show the Likelihood of Irreparable Harm
First and foremost, Defendants fall far short of establishing a "likelihood that irreparable harm will result from the denial of a stay." Hollingsworth v. Perry ,
So what do Defendants cite as their irreparable harm in the absence of a stay? They complain that, without a stay, they "will be forced to expend enormous resources engaging in pretrial and trial activities that may ultimately prove to be unnecessary." (Gov't Stay Mot. 3).
When pressed on that point at oral argument, Defendants asserted a new theory of harm not advanced in their written motion: some sort of dignitary harm flowing from the Court's "scrutiny" of "an executive branch agency." (Oct. 24th Tr. 12-14). But that novel theory of harm fails for several reasons. First, the decisions of executive branch agencies are not immune from scrutiny by the federal courts; indeed, the APA expressly invites such scrutiny. See 5 U.S.C §§ 702, 705 ;
*449Sackett v. EPA ,
And third, although trials in APA cases are - as Defendants emphasize - "unusual" (Oct. 24th Tr. 13), they are far from unprecedented. Courts have subjected executive agencies to trials in APA cases where, as here, there are colorable claims of bad faith or pretext, see, e.g. , Buffalo Cent. Terminal v. United States ,
B. Defendants Fail to Show a Likelihood of Success on the Merits of Any Question that Would Justify a Stay of Trial
Defendants' failure to show the likelihood of irreparable harm is, by itself, fatal to their stay application, but they also fail to show that a likelihood of success on the merits warrants a stay of trial. See Hollingsworth ,
Perhaps recognizing that, Defendants confidently predict that the Supreme Court is likely to opine that this Court erred in authorizing extra-record discovery in the first place. (Gov't Stay Mot. 2-3). But they base that prediction almost exclusively on the dissent from the Supreme Court's Order. (See id. at 1-3). It should go without saying that the dissent did not carry the day in the Supreme Court; instead, it represents the views of only two Justices. More to the point, there is nothing in the Supreme Court's Order itself that supports Defendants' confident prediction. Admittedly, the Supreme Court's Order states that "[t]he denial of the stay with respect to" the July 3, 2018 Order "does not preclude the applicants from making arguments with respect to" that Order. In re Dep't of Commerce ,
In fact, for several reasons, the Court concludes that the Supreme Court is unlikely to disturb the July 3, 2018 Order in advance of this Court's consideration of *451the merits. First, that Order pertained to discovery, which - apart from the possible deposition of Secretary Ross - will be complete when Defendants file their petition with the Supreme Court. (See Docket No. 401).
Finally, the Court's decision to authorize extra-record discovery was, and remains, well founded. In fact, if anything, it is on firmer ground today than it was on July 3, 2018, as the Court has since held that Plaintiffs allege a plausible claim that Defendants violated the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. See New York ,
Even without the equal protection claim, however, the Court's decision to authorize extra-record discovery was sound. For starters, although judicial review of agency action is generally limited to the administrative record, see, e.g. , Florida Power & Light Co. v. Lorion ,
Notably, even the Justices who dissented from the Supreme Court's Order seem to accept that there is a "bad faith" exception *453to the record rule. See In re Dep't of Commerce ,
If those circumstances, taken together, are not sufficient to make a preliminary finding of bad faith that would warrant extra-record investigation, it is hard to know what circumstances would - short of an agency head's outright confession that his reasons were pretextual (in which case, of course, there would be no need for discovery). In fact, circumstances far short of those present in these cases have been found by other courts to justify discovery beyond the administrative record. See, e.g. , Pub. Power Council v. Johnson ,
C. Issuance of a Stay Would Injure Plaintiffs and Harm the Public Interest
In short, Defendants fail to carry their burden on either of the first two, and "most critical," factors in the analysis of whether a stay is warranted. Nken v. Holder ,
In their pending motion before the Second Circuit, Defendants contend that a stay of trial would not prevent resolution of Plaintiffs' claims before the census questionnaires have to be printed. (Motion for Stay ("2d Cir. Stay Mot."), at 9, Docket No. 68, No. 18-2856 (2d Cir. Oct. 25, 2018); see also Oct. 24th Tr. 11-12). The Court does not share their confidence. There is no telling when the Supreme Court will issue a decision on Defendants' forthcoming petition. It could do so in days; or it could take months. If the Supreme Court's decision does not affect this Court's plan to proceed with a trial, the Court would then have to reschedule trial - no small task given the upcoming holidays, the parties' schedules (including two trials in parallel cases pending in other districts scheduled in January), and the Court's own congested calendar.
* * * *
In short, as prudent as it might be under other circumstances to await further guidance from the Supreme Court, there are good reasons not to do so here and instead to proceed to trial as scheduled. Time is of the essence. At bottom, Defendants are seeking a preemptive ruling from the Supreme Court on a decision that this Court has not yet even made - namely, what evidence the Court may consider in ruling on the merits - thereby seeking to disrupt "the appropriate relationship between the respective courts." Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay ,
Put simply, the pending challenge to this Court's Order authorizing a deposition of Secretary Ross notwithstanding, Defendants provide no basis to deviate from the well-established and well-justified procedures that have generally been applied in federal courts for generations - whereby district courts decide cases in the first instance, followed by an appeal by the losing party, on a full record, to the court of appeals and, thereafter, a petition to the Supreme Court. Defendants may yet have their day to argue the merits in the Supreme Court. But for many salutary reasons, that day should not come before this Court has decided the merits in the first instance. See, e.g. , Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord ,
Accordingly, Defendants' motion for a stay of trial and associated deadlines is DENIED. The Clerk of Court is directed to terminate Docket No. 397.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
Defendants clarified on the record at the conference held on October 24, 2018, that - despite language in their letter motion to the contrary (see Gov't Stay Mot. 2 (asking the Court to "stay all extra-record discovery") ) - they are not actually seeking a stay of extra-record discovery. (Oct. 24th Tr. 18-19).
Defendants complain that one of the costs of going to trial is "the substantial monetary expenditure on travel and hotel stays for approximately twelve attorneys and professional staff for a two-week trial in New York City." (Gov't Stay Mot. 4). That is an extraordinary complaint separate and apart from the fact that such costs do not constitute irreparable harm for the reasons discussed in the text. There are dozens of highly qualified lawyers and professional staff in the Civil Division of the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York - the office that normally represents the Government in this District. The Court can only speculate why the lawyers from that Office withdrew from their representation of Defendants in these cases. (See Docket Nos. 227, 233). Whatever the reasons for that withdrawal, however, a party should not be heard to complain about harms of its own creation.
Defendants also cite the prospect of three current or former "high-level agency officials" being called as witnesses at trial as a form of potentially irreparable harm. (Gov't Stay Mot. 4). That argument is moot, however, as the witnesses are not subject to subpoena, and the Court yesterday denied Plaintiffs' motion seeking leave to present their testimony by live video transmission or to conduct de bene esse depositions. (Docket No. 403).
In the Court's view, that result would be regrettable, as Secretary Ross's testimony is essential to fill gaps in, and clarify, the existing record. See New York ,
The language at issue is more reasonably construed as a reaffirmation of the uncontroversial proposition that "[a] denial of a stay is not a decision on the merits of the underlying legal issues." Indiana State Police Pension Tr. v. Chrysler LLC ,
The deposition of Mr. Gore is taking place today, October 26, 2018, and, thus, will be over before Defendants seek, let alone obtain, Supreme Court review. (See Docket No. 398, at 1).
True to its word, the Court strictly policed what Defendants were required to disclose during discovery. (See, e.g. , Oct. 24th Tr. 21-23, 30-39 (denying or effectively denying several of Plaintiffs' open discovery demands); Docket No. 403 (denying Plaintiffs' motion to take de bene esse depositions or reopen depositions to address newly disclosed documents); Docket No. 369 (partially denying, on deliberative-process-privilege grounds, Plaintiffs' motion to compel production of documents); Docket No. 361 (partially denying, on attorney-client-privilege grounds, Plaintiffs' motion to compel documents); Docket No. 366, at 17 (denying Plaintiffs' motions to compel interrogatory responses); Docket No. 323 (memorializing a ruling from the bench partially denying Plaintiffs' motion to compel production of documents and to respond to interrogatories); Docket No. 303 (denying Plaintiffs' motion for leave to seek third-party discovery from Kris Kobach); Docket No. 261, at 3 (denying Plaintiffs' motion to compel documents "erroneously withheld" from the administrative record); Docket No. 204 (denying Plaintiffs' motion to shorten Defendants' time to respond to discovery requests and for additional deposition time) ).
The Court's authorization to engage in extra-record discovery did not rest heavily on Plaintiffs' equal protection claim for reasons of timing: As of July 3, 2018, Defendants' motion to dismiss that claim was still being briefed. As the Court noted at the time, the Supreme Court had faulted the district court in In re United States , --- U.S. ----,
That is not to say that plaintiffs can evade the APA record rule merely by bringing a constitutional claim. First, the doors to discovery would be open only to plaintiffs who allege a plausible claim, as Plaintiffs do here. Second, a court can and should still exercise its discretion under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to limit the scope of discovery to avoid undue intrusion on the governmental decisionmaking process, as the Court did here. (July 3rd Tr. 85).
Thus, Defendants are wrong in arguing, based on the dissent from the Supreme Court's October 22, 2018 Order, that Plaintiffs " 'would suffer no hardship from being temporarily denied that which they very likely have no right to at all.' " (Gov't Stay Mot. 4 (quoting In re Dep't of Commerce ,
At present, the Court has two other trials scheduled for December and another two trials scheduled for January. Moreover, the second one in January is a bellwether trial in the General Motors LLC Ignition Switch Litigation , which is slated to last several weeks, would be difficult to reschedule, and which will likely involve dozens of pretrial motions. Thus, the fact that the other district courts overseeing challenges to Secretary Ross's decision "have scheduled trials to begin in January," as Defendants note in their motion to the Second Circuit (2d Cir. Stay Mot. 9), says nothing about this Court's ability to render a timely decision.
