This is the second appeal arising out of the district court’s oversight of a 1977 settlement stipulation between officials of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and a class of mental patients at the Rio Piedras Psychiatric Hospital in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The lengthy history of this case was summarized in our opinion in the first appeal,
see Roberto Navarro-Ayala, et al. v. Rafael Hernandez Colon, et al.,
The lawsuit that initiated these proceedings was brought on behalf of residents of the Rio Piedras Psychiatric Hospital (“Rio Piedras”). Some years after entry of the stipulation, a Master was appointed. Two years later, measures were begun to reduce the patient population at Rio Piedras. Various persons who had been or would have been assigned to Rio Piedras were placed in other facilities in Puerto Rico, including the Guerrero Therapeutic Community (“Guerrero”) in Aquadilla. On January 9, 1991, the district court ordered, inter alia, that the Master investigate whether patients formerly at Rio Piedras and now at Guerrero had been “ ‘confined’ there [i.e., at the latter institution] during the past three years.” The Commonwealth’s Assistant Secretary for Mental Health was directed to provide the Master with information necessary to evaluate “rehabilitation programs serving patients transferred from [Rio Piedras].”
On April 19, 1991, the Master filed his seventeenth report with the district court. That report found that patients at Guerrero were in fact “confined.” The report went on to conclude that Guerrero patients were not being provided with treatment consistent with the provisions of Puerto Rico’s Mental Health Code, P.R.Laws Ann., tit. 24, § 4001, et seq, and that such failure violated the patients’ constitutional right “not to be denied, without due process, the statutory protections and procedures guaranteed by [the Mental Health Code].”
Having received the Master’s report, the court issued an order on May 23, 1991. The order stated that “the conclusions and recommendations of the Special Master’s Seventeenth Report in all respects are accepted and adopted by the court” and ordered the following:
1) that the parties submit briefs on “appropriate remedial action for defendants’ systematic denial of the rights” under the Mental Health Code of former Rio Piedras patients transferred to Guerrero;
2) that the “Master investigate whether defendants are complying with the liberty and treatment entitlements mandated by [the Mental Health Code]” with respect to patients then being treated at Rio Piedras.
3) that the “Master investigate to determine whether the Medical Directors of [Guerrero] and [Rio Piedras] are in fact presently implementing the provisions in [the Mental Health Code]” concerning the procedures for admitting voluntary patients.
Defendants appeal both from the foregoing orders applying at Guerrero and from those applying at Rio Piedras. Their appeal was argued on December 3, 1991, shortly before we issued our opinion in Navarro I. Now that that opinion has issued, it is obvious that the challenged orders, at least insofar as they apply to Guerrero, need, as a practical matter, to be reconsidered in light of Navarro I. In that case, we ruled that “[a]n ongoing oversight of the ... treatment received by former Rio Piedras patients at Guerrero is outside both the terms of the stipulation and any general remedial power that can be implied therefrom.” Id. at 1347.
For reasons set forth below, however, we conclude that all of the orders being challenged in this appeal, including those pertaining to Guerrero, are ones over which this court lacks appellate jurisdiction. To be sure, in different circumstances, we might possibly find authority to review the Guerrero orders within our extraordinary mandamus powers. But Navarro I had not come down when these orders were issued, and we are altogether confident that the district court will hereafter act in full conformity to our opinion in Navarro I. We thus see no occasion to consider the possibility of mandamus review.
We next consider whether or not we have appellate jurisdiction over the orders from which this appeal was taken. As we find no such jurisdiction, we dismiss the appeal.
The question of appellate jurisdiction is most easily analyzed if we consider the separate requirements of the district court’s orders. First, the district court has required the parties to brief the question of remedies for alleged constitutional violations at Guerrero. Several circuits have held that an order to submit a remedial plan following a finding of unlawful conduct is not a final appealable order under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See Balla v. Idaho State Board of Corrections,
Nor is that portion of the orders appealable either as an injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) or as a collateral order under the doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Loan Corp.,
The appeal is dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
So ordered. No costs.
Notes
. It is, of course, doubtful that such a remedy will ever be ordered in light of Navarro I, but, by the same token, the parties are now at liberty to approach the district court for relief from the briefing order in light of Navarro I.
