This suit sought a United States district court declaratory decree that state welfare
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fraud defendants are constitutionally entitled to appointed counsel in cases in which the sentence is a fine, but not imprisonment. Such misdemeanor defendants are entitled to counsel under
Argersinger v. Hamlin,
Without reaching the merits of the constitutional contentions, the district court dismissed the complaint for lack of standing of one plaintiff, and for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted as to the other two plaintiffs, holding that considerations of federal-state comity preclude a federal court’s intervention in a pending state court prosecution absent a showing of bad faith, harassment, or other unusual circumstances that call for equitable relief. We affirm.
.This suit was filed in federal district court against Judges of the County Court, Criminal Division in Dade County, Florida, and the State Attorney for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit. All three plaintiffs were recipients of public assistance funds and were defendants in criminal prosecutions for welfare fraud.
The prosecutions resulted from the State of Florida’s effort to prune the welfare rotes by prosecuting public assistance recipiente who, on the basis of false representations, received more public assistance benefits than they were entitled to. Prosecutions were brought under the state’s newly revised fraud statute, amended to include these types of welfare crimes. See, Fla. Stat. § 409.325 (1973). See also Fla.Stat. § 11.50 (1976 Supp.). The state’s attorney was responsible for initiating such prosecutions. Beginning in 1973, this state-wide campaign proved immensely successful. The number of persons receiving public assistance was reduced from 331,172 in January 1973 to 271,940 by June 1974. Florida achieved the largest reduction of any large state in the number of people receiving welfare assistance.
All three plaintiffs, Ruthena Williams, Ernestine Lowe, and Annie Marie Brown, were prosecuted for welfare fraud. All three were unable to afford the assistance of privately retained counsel. Although requests for counsel were made, none were appointed.
Although plaintiff Ruthena Williams was convicted of welfare fraud, her conviction was reversed on appeal, and currently no state prosecution is pending against her. The district court ruled that Williams lacked standing to bring this suit. That court noted that the Williams’ conviction for welfare fraud had been reversed on appeal after the state’s attorney confessed error in that there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction. Nothing in the record indicates that Williams would be subject to any further prosecution. She has received no welfare assistance since February 1974. At oral argument plaintiff’s counsel conceded that due to length of time the claims against Williams are no longer viable. Based on the foregoing the district court’s dismissal of the Williams’ claims is affirmed.
Prosecution of the case against plaintiff Ernestine Lowe was stayed pending the outcome of this suit. Subsequent to the filing of briefs on appeal, counsel notified the Court that the state criminal charges against Ernestine Lowe had been dismissed. The complaint filed with the district court made no assertion that Lowe was subject to any future welfare fraud prosecution. At oral argument counsel conceded that Lowe presented no viable claims on this appeal. We, therefore, affirm the dismissal of Lowe’s complaint.
Although this case was filed as a class action no class was certified by the district court. Plaintiffs never filed a motion for certification. Therefore, only the claim of plaintiff Annie Marie Brown requires consideration here.
Brown pled not guilty to a charge of welfare fraud in June 1974. Thereafter, *473 she was induced by state agency representatives to change her plea to guilty. The state court ordered her to pay restitution at the rate of $50 a month to the Florida Division of Family Services. Subsequently the court vacated the guilty plea and granted a new trial. Scheduling of the new trial was deferred pending the outcome of this litigation, which was commenced on September 26, 1974. The prosecution is now pending.
In these circumstances, the district court ruled that the considerations of comity set forth in
Younger v. Harris,
vital consideration, the notion of “comity,” that is, a proper respect for state functions, a recognition of the fact that the entire country is made up of a Union of separate state governments, and a continuance of the belief that the National Government will fare best if the states and their institutions are left free to perform their separate functions in their separate ways.
Plaintiff contends that her suit for declaratory relief will not foreclose a state prosecution as would an injunction. She makes no attempt to secure an injunction or declaratory relief against the enforcement of a state criminal statute on the grounds of its unconstitutionality as in Younger. Brown seeks only declaratory relief that to deny her the assistance of appointed counsel is unconstitutional.
But
Younger
did not turn on the proposition that a state statute was being challenged for its unconstitutionality. It rested on the reciprocal doctrine of federal-state comity, the fundamental policy against federal interference with state criminal prosecutions.
Kugler v. Helfant,
An injunction against a trial without appointed counsel would, of course, be direct federal interference in the state criminal prosecution. The issuance of only declaratory relief would not seem to alter the result. In
Samuels v. Mackell,
[Ojrdinarily a declaratory judgment will result in precisely the same interference with and disruption of state proceedings that the long-standing policy limiting injunctions was designed to avoid.
Plaintiff argues that
Younger v. Harris
has no application to this case since there is no opportunity to vindicate her constitutional rights in state court. The Supreme Court recognized that
Younger
“presupposes the opportunity to raise and have timely decided by a competent state tribunal the federal issues involved.”
Gibson v. Berryhill,
Since the state court system would have the opportunity to rule on the right to counsel issue, comity compels the federal court not to intervene unless the plaintiff sustains the burden of proving bad faith, harassment, or other unusual circumstances.
This case does not present a situation like that in Gibson v. Berryhill, supra, in which the Supreme Court held that a state Board of Optometry was incompetent to adjudicate the issues pending before it by reason of the members’ personal interest in the case. The obvious bias of the Board precluded the predicate of Younger’s application, which otherwise would have prevented federal intervention in the state administrative proceeding to suspend and revoke licenses of individual optometrists.
More recently the Court in
Kugler v. Helfant,
The need to allow state courts to adjudicate federal constitutional questions in cases pending before those tribunals is the workable result of comity and federalism. Unless a situation such as
Gibson
is present there is no reason to doubt that state courts can adequately entertain plaintiff’s claims. Article VI of the United States Constitution “declares that ‘the Judges in every State shall be bound’ by the Federal Constitution, laws and treaties.”
Huffman v. Pursue, Ltd.,
The failure of the state trial court to appoint counsel for the indigent defendant does not indicate that the constitutional right would not be vindicated at the state appellate level. Plaintiff never really presented her claim of counsel to the Florida appellate courts. This Court will not enter into valid state proceedings upon the presage of plaintiff that her claim will not be recognized in Florida courts. The concern of comity is not whether a state litigant would win or lose, but whether the claim to constitutional right would be fairly considered. This point was recognized by the Supreme Court in
Huffman v. Pursue, Ltd., supra,
at 608-611,
*475 [W]e are of the opinion that the considerations of comity and federalism which underlie Younger permit no truncation of the exhaustion requirement merely because the losing party in the state court of general jurisdiction believes that his chances of success on appeal are not auspicious.
The plaintiffs below made no effort to utilize orderly state court procedures before resort to the federal system. The refusal by the state trial court to consider Duke and Haylon’s federal constitutional claims . . . did not alter the duty to pursue state remedies. * * * A party may not invoke the aid of a federal court, alleging that his state remedies are inadequate, without having first tested the sufficiency of those remedies and having found them to be wanting.
Plaintiff’s reliance on
Gerstein v. Pugh,
[t]he injunction was not directed at the state prosecutions as such, but only at the legality of pretrial detention without a judicial hearing, an issue that could not be raised in defense of the criminal prosecution. The order to hold preliminary hearings could not prejudice the conduct of the trial on the merits.
Finally, Brown argues that the right to counsel issue has been resolved against her position by the Florida Supreme Court. She cites
Rollins v. Florida,
[Tjhere was also no imprisonment . . for the misdemeanors on which the appellants were tried. Each of the appellants was sentenced to a fine, with the condition that if the fine was not paid imprisonment for a certain number of days would result. The fines were not paid, the appellants were imprisoned; they subsequently established their indigency, and they were released from prison. We hold that this procedure did not violate Argersinger. We also hold that there was no violation of Tate v. Short, since the appellants were released once they established their indigency.
Plaintiff relies on a number of cases which, it is argued, would compel reversal of the district court’s dismissal. These cases are distinguishable from the case
sub
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judice. Cleaver v. Wilcox,
Conover v. Montemuro,
Finally,
Gillilard v. Carson,
The Court concludes further that there is imminent danger that members of the class of indigent citizens facing prosecution in the Municipal Court will similarly have their clearly established constitutional rights violated and suffer irreparable harm by being unlawfully deprived of their personal liberty.
The district court properly declined to consider the merits of Brown’s constitutional claim under the federal-state comity guidelines of Younger v. Harris and subsequent decisions.
AFFIRMED.
