Case Information
*2 Before FAGG, ROSS and BOWMAN, Circuit Judges
___________
ROSS, Circuit Judge.
*3 The State of Missouri, the Missouri Department of Corrections, the Division of Classification and Treatment, and the Western Missouri Correctional Center (WMCC) (collectively referred to as defendants) appeal from a judgment of the district court granting declaratory relief to plaintiffs, former inmates at WMCC, on their claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12213 (ADA). Because we [1] agree with defendants that plaintiffs' claims were moot, we vacate the judgment.
In 1994, Robert Hickman, Christopher Barber, Jerry Newman and Donald Lane, paraplegics who were confined at WMCC, filed a complaint alleging ADA violations in the prison's facilities and services. By the time of the district court's July 1997 opinion, [2]
plaintiffs had been released on parole. Because of their release and because defendants "had substantially complied with the ADA" as to on-site facilities and "were continuing to correct deficiencies[,]" the court refused to grant injunctive relief. However, the court [3] granted plaintiffs’ request for declaratory relief, finding that certain of WMCC's facilities and programs violated the ADA.
On appeal, the State argues that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to issue declaratory relief because plaintiffs' claims were moot at the time of the court's decision. We agree. "Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and can only hear actual 'cases or controversies' as defined under Article III of the Constitution." Neighborhood Transp. Network, Inc. v. Pena, 42 F.3d 1169, 1172 (8th Cir. 1994). "When a case . . . no longer presents an actual, ongoing case or controversy, the case is moot and the federal court no longer has jurisdiction to hear it." [1] Before trial, plaintiffs dismissed Correctional Medical Services as a defendant.
Also, before trial, the district court granted the individual defendants' motion for summary judgment on the grounds of qualified immunity. Plaintiffs have not appealed that decision. At trial, the court granted Barber's motion to withdraw from the case. Plaintiffs have not cross-appealed the district court's denial of injunctive relief
or any other aspect of the court's judgment.
Id. This requirement applies to all stages of the litigation, id., and "applies with equal
force to actions for declaratory judgment as it does to actions seeking traditional coercive
relief." Marine Equip. Management Co. v. United States,
Because plaintiffs have been released on parole and are no longer confined at
WMCC, their claims are moot. See Martin v. Sargent,
1985) (ordinarily claim "to improve prison conditions is moot if [plaintiff] is no longer
subject to those conditions"). Contrary to plaintiffs' argument, their claims do not fall
within the "capable-of-repetition-yet-evading-review" exception to the mootness doctrine.
This exception "applies only in exceptional situations, where the following two
circumstances [are] simultaneously present: (1) the challenged action [is] in its duration
too short to be fully litigated prior to cessation or expiration, and (2) there [is] a
reasonable expectation that the same complaining party [will] be subject to the same
action again[.]" Spencer v. Kemna,
As to the "evading-review" prong, "the focus of our analysis . . . is not on the length of time over which the particular action challenged occurred." Clark v. Brewer, 776 F.2d 226, 229 (8th Cir. 1985). "Rather, the proper inquiry is whether the [challenged] activity is by its very nature short in duration, so that it could not, or
probably would not, be able to be adjudicated while fully alive." Id. (emphasis in original;
internal quotation omitted). For example, in Clark, this court held that a challenge to a
prison's close management segregation policy satisfied the first prong because the
"segregation w[ould] normally terminate and the inmate w[ould] be returned to the
general penitentiary population long before a challenge to his
*5
segregation. . . c[ould] be litigated fully." Id.; see also Roe v. Wade,
In this case, plaintiffs have not shown that the duration of the alleged illegal
conditions is "always so short as to evade review." Spencer,
We also do not believe that plaintiffs meet the "capable-of-repetition" prong.
Relying on Honig v. Doe,
*6
at risk of that injury." Id. at 320. However, "[g]iven the unique circumstances and
context of th[e] case," the Court was willing to assume that a plaintiff whose "very
inability to conform his conduct to socially acceptable norms that render[ed] him
‘handicapped’" would "again engage in the type of misconduct that precipitated th[e]
suit." Id. at 320-21. In contrast, here, plaintiffs are "in control of the type of conduct that
will put [them] in jail again and subject [them] to the same deprivations alleged in [their]
complaint." Reimers v. Oregon,
Nor, contrary to plaintiffs' argument, does the voluntary-cessation doctrine save
their claims from being moot. It is true that "[g]enerally, the 'voluntary cessation of
allegedly illegal conduct . . . does not make the case moot.' " United States v. Mercy
Health Serv.,
*7 Moreover, the doctrine is inapplicable because "resumption of the challenged conduct does not depend solely on the defendants' capricious actions." Allen v. Likins, 517 F.2d 532, 535 (8th Cir. 1975) (internal quotation omitted). "The defendants cannot resume their allegedly illegal conduct [as to plaintiffs] until [they] voluntarily commit[] an act justifying [their] parole revocation." Id.
Finally, plaintiffs suggest that there is a general public-interest exception to
mootness. In support, they note that this court has not yet decided whether the ADA
applies to prisons and assert that it was in the public interest for the district court to do
so. However, there is no such exception in federal courts. "[A]lthough state law may
save [a] case from mootness based on public interest, federal courts require litigants'
rights be affected." Spencer,
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand with directions to dismiss the complaint as moot.
We note that the district court stayed plaintiffs' motion for attorney's fees
pending resolution of this appeal. Although in some circumstances an award of fees
may save a case from being moot, see Community Publishers, Inc. v. DR Partners, No.
95-2976,
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Rock Sch. Dist. v. Special Sch. Dist. 1,
