PERDUE et al. v. BAKER.
S03A1154
Supreme Court of Georgia
June 9, 2003
Reconsideration denied July 14, 2003
586 SE2d 303
Mason, Harris & Bahr, William P. Mason, Brian J. Harris, for appellant. Gray & Gilliland, Charles Ratz, Garland, Samuel & Loeb, Edward T. M. Garland, Spix, Krupp & Reece, Mark V. Spix, for appellee. McKenney & Froelich, Jerome J. Froelich, Jr., David M. Kupsky, amici curiae.
ORDER OF THE COURT.
Upon consideration of the motion to dismiss filed in this case, it is ordered that it be hereby denied.
All the Justices concur, except Benham, J., who dissents.
BENHAM, Justice, dissenting.
On April 17, 2003, this Court docketed Governor Perdue‘s appeal from the trial court‘s denial of the Governor‘s petition for a writ of mandamus and injunctive relief. The Governor had sought “to compel the [Georgia] Attorney General to comply with his official duty by taking such action as is necessary and appropriate in order to dismiss the pending appeal in the Supreme Court of the United States [Georgia v. Ashcroft, Case No. 02-182],” and to have the Georgia Attorney General “restrained and enjoined from failing to comply with the requirement and direction of the Governor that he take such steps as are necessary and appropriate to dismiss the pending appeal in the Supreme Court of the United States.”1 On June 26, 2003, the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in Georgia v. Ashcroft, the case which the Governor wanted the Georgia Attorney General to remove from the U. S. Supreme Court‘s consideration. On the same day the U. S. Supreme Court issued its decision, the Georgia Attorney General filed in this Court a motion to dismiss the Governor‘s appeal since the Supreme Court‘s issuance of an opinion made
I am at a loss for an explanation of the majority‘s rationale for denying the Attorney General‘s motion to dismiss since the relief sought by the Governor is no longer available.2 The Georgia Appellate Practice Act requires this Court to dismiss an appeal “where the questions presented have become moot.”
With no explanation accompanying the majority‘s denial of the
Perhaps the majority declines to dismiss the Governor‘s appeal because the majority believes a decision on the merits of the question whether the Governor had authority to order the Attorney General to dismiss an appeal filed by the State of Georgia in the U. S. Supreme Court will somehow affect the continued viability of Georgia v. Ashcroft upon its remand to the District Court for the District of Columbia. In that regard, perhaps the majority believes that, should the Governor prevail in his appeal pending in this Court, the Governor could order the dismissal of the remanded case. Such a rationale ignores the “mandate rule,” the appellate “law of the case” doctrine applicable to the federal judiciary.3 “The ‘mandate rule’ . . . binds a lower court on remand to the law of the case established on appeal. The very structure of a hierarchical court system demands as much.” 18B Wright, Miller & Cooper, Fed. Prac. & Proc. § 4478, p. 637. A lower court violates the mandate when it fails to decide the question that the appellate court has directed it to decide. Id. at § 4478.3, p. 754. On remand, “the district court owes obedience to the mandate of the Supreme Court . . . and must carry the mandate into effect
Perhaps the majority declines to dismiss the Governor‘s appeal because the majority believes it is judicially economical to decide the issue in the abstract. The use of “judicial economy” in order to render a decision on a moot issue ignores the very rationale of the mootness doctrine and leads to the creation of “ad hoc exceptions for individual cases . . . that . . . foster uncertainty in the law and inappropriately serve to expand the jurisdiction of the court applying such exceptions. . . .” Collins v. Lombard Corp., supra, 270 Ga. at 123. Cf. Bd. of Trustees of Employees’ Retirement System v. Kenworthy, 253 Ga. 554 (322 SE2d 720) (1984) (Bullard, Judge, concurring) (judicial economy does not compel or justify a substantive determination at the expense of due process).
Or perhaps the majority seeks to keep this appeal to enact some unstated “public policy” exception to the mootness doctrine. This Court, however, rejected the Court of Appeals’ creation of a “public policy” exception that permitted that court to reach the merits of a moot appeal, and made it clear that “public policy alone would not be sufficient to bestow jurisdiction” over a case that is moot. Collins v. Lombard Corp., supra, 270 Ga. at 122-123. Furthermore, a judicially-created “public policy” exception has no place where, as here, an issue is not capable of evading review. Id.
A majority of the members of this Court have not stated a reason for the denial of the motion to dismiss and I have exhausted all reasonable but unavailable legal avenues for such a denial — the relief sought is no longer available; this is not an issue capable of repetition but evasive of review; the federal “mandate rule” prevents the district court from dismissing the case remanded to it from the Supreme Court; there is neither a judicial economy nor a public policy exception to the mootness doctrine — and I still find myself at a loss as to why the Court insists on breathing life into this moot case. Mootness is a jurisdictional issue. When an appeal is moot, Georgia law requires that it be dismissed. Since the relief the Governor sought is no longer available to him, this appeal is moot and must be dismissed. I respectfully dissent from the majority‘s decision to do otherwise.
