Lead Opinion
The court having received a petition for rehearing en bane of the decision issued June 24, 2006, and the petition having been circulated to all non-recused active judges of this court, less than a majority of whom favored the suggestion,
It is ORDERED that the petition be and hereby is denied. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom DAUGHTREY, MOORE, COLE, and CLAY, Circuit Judges, join, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc.
I.
Sedley Alley seeks to enjoin the state of Tennessee from executing him through its lethal injection procedure, which he alleges will cause him to experience “the terrorizing and excruciating experience of suffocation without the ability to move or to express the pain and suffering which he is experiencing,” and “extreme and excruciating pain” throughout the nerve fibers of his venous system, all without providing him sufficient anesthesia to prevent him from feeling this pain. Compl. ¶¶ 56, 68-69. According to Alley, Tennessee has prohibited using one of the chemicals involved in the lethal injection protocol to euthanize animals. Id. ¶ 81 (citing Tenn. Code Ann. 44-17-303(c)). In addition to these allegations, the district court found that Alley “provided an adequate showing on the merits of his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment claims” through his provision of “expert testimony that the current lethal injection protocol causes excruciating deaths.” D. Ct. Op., Case No. 3:06-cv-00340, at 6 (M.D.Tenn. May 11, 2006). If Alley’s allegations prove true, he will have presented a meritorious claim that the state’s lethal injunction procedure violates the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment.
Despite the grave implications of cruel and unusual punishment raised in Alley’s claim, a panel of this court reversed the district court’s stay of his execution. In subsequently ruling on the state’s still pending motion to dismiss, the district court read the panel’s rebuke of its earlier decision to be so complete that it felt compelled to grant the state’s motion to dismiss based on the panel opinion. Compare Alley v. Little, No 3:06-0340,
II.
Last month, on May 11, 2006, the district court found that a stay of Alley’s
I believe that the panel’s conclusion that Alley has little likelihood of succeeding on the merits is wrong. Despite the panel’s suggestion, it is not necessary that Alley rely on prior cases finding the lethal injection protocol to be cruel and unusual punishment. If this was the primary relevant inquiry, as the panel opinions suggest, no challenge to a method of execution would ever go forward, no matter how indifferent a state became to the pain and suffering inflicted by the process, simply because nobody else has successfully challenged the procedure before. Rather, in order to ultimately prevail, Alley needs to prove that Tennessee’s current protocol amounts to cruel and unusual punishment based on “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.” Roper v. Simmons,
As the district court initially found, Alley has made more than a sufficient showing here to establish a likelihood of success on his Eighth Amendment claim. Indeed, the fact that Tennessee allows a chemical to be used in executing humans that it prohibits for use in euthanizing animals suggests that the state’s own evolving standards of decency find its procedure offensive. Moreover, Alley has introduced evidence that Tennessee’s most recently executed prisoner consciously suffered excruciating pain during his execution by lethal injection. D. Ct. Record, R. 11, Affidavit of David Lubarsky, filed April 14, 2006. The panel has ignored these facts altogether in both of its opinions.
The district court’s findings on this issue, and its discretion to preserve the status quo were entirely ignored by the initial panel decision. See Mascio v. Public Emples. Retirement Sys.,
III.
Both panel opinions determined that Alley delayed in filing the present action and found this to be a basis for reversing the stay and dismissing the case. In its prior opinion, however, the district court explicitly found that Alley acted promptly and in good faith, given the procedural posture of his pending legal challenges and the timing of the state’s determination of his execution protocol. In light of the panel’s initial opinion, however, the district court noted in its subsequent opinion that
[although this court remains concerned about the interaction between a robust application of the ‘unnecessary delay’ doctrine and traditional concepts of ripeness in the death penalty context, it is not the function of this court to address such concerns, but rather to apply the law of the Sixth Circuit. The law of the Sixth Circuit is that unnecessary delay warrants dismissal, and that this case was unnecessarily delayed.
Alley v. Little, No. 3:06-0340,
I do not believe that Alley delayed unnecessarily in bringing his challenge to the lethal injection protocol. Perhaps most significantly, in this circuit, until the Supreme Court’s ruling in Hill, Alley could not have even brought his present challenge under section 1983, as this Court’s precedent would have deemed it a subsequent habeas petition. See In re Sapp,
Alley also argues that his claim was not ripe until the date was set for his execution, citing Stewart v. Martinez-Villareal,
The initial panel reasoned that Alley could have presumed he would be executed by lethal injection, as it is the default method, and that his claim would have been ripe sooner than he argues. At a minimum, however, the choice offered by Tennessee creates some confusion as to when a method of execution is determined. Had Alley attempted to challenge his method of execution before the method had been chosen, or before he had even been presented with the choice under the state’s procedure, his challenge would clearly have faced issues of ripeness. If federal precedent does not clearly establish that this claim would have been unripe, it at least contributes confusion on the point. See, e.g., Beardslee v. Woodford,
Further, upon learning of his execution date, Alley immediately sought information about the protocol to be used, and upon learning of the execution protocol, promptly expressed his objections to the procedure with the state commissioner. Alley v. Little, No 3:06-0340,
Even if a court might have found Alley’s claim to be ripe had he filed it before the state determined his method of execution, this is not dispositive of the question of undue delay. The basis for dismissing a legal challenge for undue delay is the equitable principle of discouraging a plaintiff from manipulative tactics. See Nelson v. Campbell,
The recent panel opinion suggests that the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Reese v. Livingston supports its conclusion here
IV.
Along with four colleagues, I expressed concern in my earlier dissent from denial of rehearing en banc in this case about the inconsistent granting of stays of execution to allow challenges to the lethal injection procedures, and the resulting arbitrariness added to the administration of the death penalty. Alley v. Little, No. 06-5650,
This Court has an opportunity to follow the Supreme Court’s lead and to ensure that executions within our jurisdiction do not involve cruel and unusual punishment by allowing Alley’s challenge to go forward. See also Gomez v. United States Dist. Court,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom R. GUY COLE, JR., Circuit Judge, joins, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc.
The panel affirms the district court’s dismissal of Alley’s challenge to the lethal injection protocol. In so doing, it revisits its reasons for vacating the preliminary injunction and the stay of execution. Two primary reasons are articulated in support the panel’s analysis: (1) Alley unnecessarily delayed his challenge, and (2) there is a small likelihood of success on the merits. Because I believe that the panel improperly weighed these two factors, I favor rehearing en banc.
First, Alley argues that he did not unduly delay in bringing his challenge to the lethal injection protocol. The propriety of
The panel relies on the fact that Alley was originally scheduled for execution in 2004 and that he failed to bring his challenge then, thus evincing undue delay. It is true that the Tennessee Supreme Court on January 14, 2004 set an execution date of June 3, 2004. This date was not altered until May 19, 2004, when the district court stayed the matter for a determination of whether Alley’s Rule 60(b) motion constituted a habeas petition. The panel says that Alley should have challenged the lethal injection protocol during this four-month period prior to the stay.
But in order to have a ripe claim regarding the lethal injection protocol, Alley argues, two events must have taken place: (1) the execution date must be set, and (2) the warden must have presented Alley with the choice of the method of execution, and Alley must have made the choice of lethal injection (as opposed to electrocution, the other method available in Tennessee). In 2004, Alley argues that only the first of these events came to pass. I find nothing in the record that contradicts Alley’s claim. Without having been presented with this choice and without having elected lethal injection, any suit brought in the four-month period prior to the stay challenging the lethal injection protocol would have been thrown out on ripeness grounds. This being the case, I believe the panel unjustly faulted Alley for failing to file his challenge sooner.
Turning to Alley’s argument as to the likelihood of success on the merits, I agree with the panel that current law does not compel the conclusion that Tennessee’s lethal injection protocol is unconstitutional. At the same time, however, there is an affidavit from an expert in this case demonstrating that the lethal cocktail that is to be administered to Alley is insufficient to completely anesthetize him, producing a “reasonably high chance of suffering a cruel and inhumane death.” This evidence makes success on the merits at least a possibility — albeit not a foregone conclusion — and not “as speculative as any other claim about possible future changes in governing law,” as the panel concluded.
In light of the panel’s (1) failure to address the Article III ripeness concerns present in Alley’s case, and (2) failure to properly weight the expert’s affidavit as to Alley’s likelihood of success on the merits, I would grant rehearing en banc.
