Plaintiff Colleen Russman appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Ralph W. Smith, Jr., Magistrate Judge) granting a motion for summary judgment by defendant Board of Education of the Enlarged City School District of the City of Watervliet (“the Board”) and dismissing the complaint. On appeal, Russman argues that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitutiоn and section 3602-c of the New York Education Law require the Board to fund on-site special-education services for Colleen at a private parochial school. We conclude that the case has become moot and accordingly vacate the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the merits and remand with direction to dismiss the cаse for lack of jurisdiction.
BACKGROUND
Because this case has been here before, our discussion of the facts and proceedings presumes some familiarity with our prior decisions. See Russman v. Bd. of Educ.,
In 1991, the Russmans notified the Board that they intended to enroll their daughter Colleen, who is mentally retarded, in a local parochial school, St. Brigid’s Regional Catholic School (“St.Brigid’s”), and requested that the Board fund on-site
On being denied their request for on-site services at St. Brigid’s, the Russmans pursued available administrative remedies without success and then brought suit on Colleen’s behalf in district court on July 8, 1993. They claimed that the Board was obligated by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400-87, and New York state law to provide special-education services on site at St. Brigid’s. The Board responded in a summary judgment motion not only that it was' not required to provide such services, but also that the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause prohibited it from doing so:
The lawsuit has since made two appearances in this court and one in the United States Supreme Court. Earlier iterations of the case have settled the following points: (1) the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment does not bar the Board from providing on-site special-education services at parochial schools, see Russman I,
DISCUSSION
Because we conclude that the case is moot, we are no longer faced with a justiciable controversy and therefore do not address the merits of the case.
I. Mootness
The federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, their powers circumscribed at their most basic level by the terms of Article III of the Constitution, which states that they may hear only “Cases” or “Controversies.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 1. Although the “case or controversy” requirement has itself been a fertile ground for controversy through the years, at its uncontroverted core lies the principle that, at all times, the dispute before the court must be real and live, not feigned, academic, or conjectural.
The requisite dispute must persist throughout the litigation&emdash;in a case such as this, from first filing in the district court through its many ascents and de- scents of the appellate ladder&emdash;and if the dispute should dissolve at any time due to a change in circumstances, the case be- comes moot. See DeFunis v. Odegaard,
The Supreme Court has recognized an exception, however, where the dispute is “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” S. Pac. Terminal Co. v. ICC,
Mootness is a recurring phenomenon in students’ suits to vindicate constitutional rights associated with the conditions of their education: a student’s graduation ends his individual interest in the cоnditions of education at his former school. See, e.g., Bd. of Sch. Comm’rs of Indianapolis v. Jacobs,
In the present case, Colleen has received her IEP diploma from Watervliet High School. She is no longer attending school, public or parochial, and her parents have expressed no intention to re-enroll her in the future. For these reasons, a favorable decision from this court would not immediately inure to her benefit, rendering the case moot. See United States v. Constr. Prods. Research, Inc.,
The Russmans nevertheless urge that the case is “capable of repetition, yet evading review” because an IEP diploma, unlike an ordinary high-school diploma, does not terminate a recipient’s entitlement to a free appropriate public education (“FAPE”). A school district may “award a high school [IEP] diploma ... upon a finding that [a] student has achieved the educational goals ... specified in the student’s current [IEP].” N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 100.9(c). The IEP diploma
its recipient shall continue to be eligible to attend the public schools of the school district in which the student resides without the payment of tuition until the student has earned a high school diploma or until the end of the school year of such student’s 21st birthday, whichever is earlier.
N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 100.9(e); see also N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 100.5(b)(7)(iii) (stating that “[e]arning ... an [IEP] diploma shall not be deemed to be equivalent to receipt of a high school diploma ... and shall not terminate a student’s entitlement to a free public education”). Colleen is thus entitled to additional public schooling until she graduates or completes the school year that includes her twenty-first birthday. See N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 100.9(e). If she were to resume her schooling, the Russmans argue, she could (1) return to a parochial school, (2) request public special-education funds, and (3) be denied those funds by the Board. Therefore, they contend, the case is “сapable of repetition .” They further argue that, in such event, the Board’s denial would “evade review” because Colleen could not challenge the denial, including prosecution of all necessary appeals, before she would become statutorily ineligible for those funds.
The Russmans argue that the Supreme Court’s decision in Honig v. Doe is controlling. There, the plaintiff had been expelled from public school because of disruptive behavior associated with his handicap, and the expulsion was alleged to violate the IDEA’S ancestor statute, the Education of the Handicapped Act. Athough the Court found the case to be moot for one 24-year-old plaintiff, it found otherwise for 20-year-old plaintiff-intervenor Jack Smith, because the harm that Smith complained of was “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” Smith was not yet 21 and had not yet completed high school and thus, in California, was still eligible for a FAPE. Athough Smith was no longer a resident of the defendant school district, the Court reasoned that, because he was still a resident of the state, he would benefit from the statewide injunction entered by the district court if he were to re-enroll in another district. See Doe,
We believe that, unlike Doe, the present dispute is not sufficiently “capable of repetition.” Athough a plaintiff need not show a “demonstrated probability” of recurrence, there must be at least a “reasonable еxpectation” of repetition. Id. at 318 n. 6,
Finally, unlike the student in Doe, who was ultimately expelled from school, Colleen withdrew voluntarily after receiving her IEP diploma. We have no reason to believe that Colleen’s withdrawal had anything to do with the defendant’s conduct. Rather, the record suggests that Colleen withdrew because she' had reached the anticipated end of her schooling: Colleen’s 1998-99 IEP states under the heading “Adult Outcome Statement(s)” that “[Colleen] plans on achieving an IEP diploma and being employed with support services provided by community agencies,” implying that the IEP diploma was, in effect, the end of school, leading to work.
Mindful that the “capable of repetition” principle “applies only in exceptional situations,” Spencer,
II. Vacatur
Having decided that the case is moot, we must now decide whether to vacate the district court’s judgment and thereby effectively deny it res judicata and precedential consequences. When a cаse is mooted on appeal, the appellate court is not automatically compelled to simply dismiss the appeal: it retains jurisdiction to vacate the district court’s judgment and remand with direction to dismiss as moot. See Major League Baseball Props., Inc. v. Pac. Trading Cards, Inc.,
Whether we vacate the district court’s judgment or simply dismiss the аppeal, leaving the district court’s judgment intact, depends on the equities of the case; the appellant has no automatic right to vacatur. See U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall Partnership,
In considering whethеr vacatur is inappropriate, our primary concern is the fault of the parties in causing the appeal to become moot.
If we were to vacate where the party that lost in the district court has taken action to moot the controversy, the result would be to allow that party to eliminate its loss without an appeal and to deprive the winning party of the judicial protection it has fairly won.
Mfrs. Hanover Trust,
Nevertheless, not all actions taken by an appellant that cause mootness necessarily bar vacatur of the district court’s judgment. For an appellant’s conduct to constitute “forfeiture” of the benеfit of vacatur, see U.S. Bancorp,
However, we believe conduct that is voluntary in the sense of being non-accidental, but which is entirely unrelated to the lawsuit, should not preclude our vacating the decision below. Such conduct cannot be said to be a “voluntary forfeiture” of the appellant’s interest in vacatur, U.S. Bancorp,
This is such a case. Although it becаme moot because appellants withdrew Colleen from school after she earned her IEP diploma, that withdrawal appears to have been the natural and apparently long-anticipated result of receiving that diploma, which in turn was the normal culmination of her education. The case therefore is little different from those in which an appellant has simply graduated from the defendant institution after the district court’s judgment, and in which we usually have vacated the district court judgment. See, e.g., Altman,
CONCLUSION
Because the case is moot, the judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remandеd with instruction to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. The fate of decisions rendered below, on the other hand, remains an open question after an appeal has been found to be moot, as we discuss in Part II, below.
. In some cases, the public value of settled precedent may also militate against vacatur.
