UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FIFTH CIRCUIT
____________
No. 97-20138
No. 98-20001
____________
JOHN D HARRIS; ET AL,
Plaintiffs,
JOHN D HARRIS; HARRIS COUNTY UTILITY DISTRICT,
No 1,2,3,4,5,8,10,93,145,236,262,350 and 356
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
versus
CITY OF HOUSTON,
Defendant - Appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court
For the Southern District of Texas
August 11, 1998
Before KING, EMILIO M. GARZA, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:
These consolidated appeals challenge the district court’s
refusal to enjoin the City of Houston’s annexation of a residential
area known as Kingwood. Finding that we can no longer grant
plaintiffs the relief they requested below, we vacate the district
court’s prior orders and remand with instructions to dismiss the
case as moot.
I
In January 1996, the City of Houston, Texas (the “City”) began
discussing the possibility of annexing a relatively affluent, non-
minority-dominated residential area north of the City, known as
“Kingwood.” Throughout the year, the City mayor met with various
representatives from Kingwood, and the City Council held various
hearings on the subject. On December 11, 1996, the City Council
enacted separate ordinances annexing Kingwood and abolishing its
thirteen utility districts——effective the following day.
On December 23, 1996, the City requested preclearance of the
annexation from the Department of Justice (“DOJ”), pursuant to § 5
of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (“Voting Rights Act”), P. L. No.
89-110, 79 Stat. 439 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 1973 et
seq.). The City held a special election on January 18, 1997, and
a resulting runoff election on February 15——both unrelated to the
issue of annexation.1 Because the DOJ did not grant preclearance
until February 24, Kingwood residents were not permitted to
participate in these elections. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973 (holding that
no change in voting takes effect until precleared). The parties
agree that as of the date of this appeal, the annexation of
Kingwood has been fully accomplished, and no further obstacles
remain to Kingwood residents voting in City elections.
This suit, instituted in October 1996, before the City
actually accomplished the annexation, was brought by many different
1
The special election was held to fill a vacant at-large City
Council seat and to consider a proposed charter amendment and a
proposed ordinance, both of which were placed on the ballot by a
petition of City residents. The run-off election in February was
for the City Council seat.
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plaintiffs alleging different injuries as well as separate causes
of action. The one common denominator for the group was their
unanimous request for relief——an injunction against the annexation
and all efforts to implement it. Mary Almanderez and Thomas
Phillips (“minority plaintiffs”), minority residents of the City,
alleged that both the purpose and effect of the annexation were to
dilute the votes of minority residents, in violation of the Voting
Rights Act and the Fifteenth Amendment. Kingwood’s thirteen
utility districts——namely Harris County Utility Districts Nos. 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 8, and 10 and Harris County Municipal Utility Districts
Nos. 93, 262, 350, and 356 (collectively, “Utility Districts” or
“Districts”)——claimed that the December 11 ordinances exceeded the
City’s statutory annexation authority as set out in various
sections of the Texas Local Government Code. John D. Harris, a
resident of Kingwood, alleged that permitting the annexation to go
forward before the January election would deprive him of his right
to vote in violation of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
In addition to requesting an injunction against the annexation
and all implementing actions such as the seizure of property and
the provision of certain basic services to Kingwood residents,
Almanderez, Phillips, Harris and the Utility Districts
(collectively “plaintiffs”) requested that the district court stay
the annexation at least until the January election and preferably
until some final decision could be reached on the state-law claims
of the Utility Districts. In the alternative, the plaintiffs
requested that if the annexation went forward, the special election
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scheduled for January 18th be enjoined until the City received
preclearance and could permit Kingwood residents to vote. The
plaintiffs also requested declaratory relief to the effect that the
City’s actions were unconstitutional and invalid under state law.
At no time did any plaintiff request damages, nominal or
compensatory, nor did any plaintiff request that the district court
invalidate the special election or dismantle the annexation once
accomplished.2
Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied
plaintiffs’ request for preliminary injunctive relief and dismissed
the claims of the Utility Districts for lack of standing. Harris
and the Utility Districts (“appellants”) appealed from this order,
but before we heard arguments in the case, the district court
entered a final judgment denying all relief to the plaintiffs. The
appellants subsequently filed a second notice of appeal, and on
their unopposed motion we consolidated the first appeal from the
district court’s denial of a preliminary injunction with the second
appeal from the district court’s final judgment in favor of the
2
The plaintiffs’ second amended complaint does request that
the district court “enjoin the annexation and all efforts to
implement the annexation as void ab initio.” In other pleadings,
the plaintiffs request that the district court find the annexation
void or declare it void under state law. Yet the relief requested
as a result of those proposed findings was always the same——enjoin
or stay the annexation and its implementation until the election or
at least until a determination of the merits of the state-law
claims. Simply by phrasing their new appellate claims for relief
in terms of “voiding” the annexation, as opposed to disannexing or
undoing the annexation, does not eliminate the fact that the
plaintiffs sought only an injunction or a stay below. Had they
wished to bring any other claim for relief, they could have moved
to amend their complaint.
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City. The minority plaintiffs appealed neither from the denial of
preliminary injunctive relief, nor from the district court’s final
judgment. Their claims regarding the allegedly discriminatory
purpose and impact of the annexation, styled under the Voting
Rights Act as well as the Fifteenth Amendment, are therefore not
before us.3
II
“To qualify as a case fit for federal-court adjudication, ‘an
actual controversy must be extant at all stages of review, not
merely at the time the complaint is filed.’” Arizonans for
Official English v. Arizona, 520 U.S. 43, ___, 117 S. Ct. 1055,
1068, 137 L. Ed. 2d 170 (1997). Whether an actual controversy
remains at this stage of the litigation is a question that we
resolve de novo.4 See Elder v. Holloway, 510 U.S. 510, 516, 114 S.
Ct. 1019, 1023, 127 L. Ed. 2d 344 (1994) (noting that questions of
3
Any claims relating to § 5 of the Voting Rights Act are also
not before us, given that a three-judge panel was convened pursuant
to § 5 specifically to address those claims. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973c
(authorizing the appointment of a three-judge court to adjudicate
claims of § 5 violations). The three-judge panel held a hearing on
December 17, 1996, and issued its order three days later, stating
that no violations of § 5 had occurred. No party has appealed from
this decision.
4
Although the appellants allege in their reply brief that the
City has raised the issue of mootness for the first time on appeal,
they do not dispute that we must address the issue. See Joseph v.
City of New Orleans, 110 F.3d 252, 253 (5th Cir. 1997) (noting that
we must examine the basis of our jurisdiction, even sua sponte when
necessary). Cf. Marathon Oil Co. v. Ruhrgas, No. 96-20361, 1998 WL
329842, at *4 (5th Cir. June 22, 1998) (en banc) (“The requirement
that jurisdiction be established as a threshold matter ‘spring[s]
from the nature and limits of the judicial power of the United
States’ and is ‘inflexible and without exception.’”) (quoting
Mansfield, C. & L.M.R. Co. v. Swan, 111 U.S. 379, 382, 4 S. Ct.
510, 511, 28 L. Ed. 462 (1884)).
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law generally “must be resolved de novo on appeal”).
As an initial matter, we find it beyond dispute that a request
for injunctive relief generally becomes moot upon the happening of
the event sought to be enjoined. See, e.g., Garza v. Westergren,
908 F.2d 27, 29 (5th Cir. 1990) (holding plaintiff’s request for an
injunction to stay a contempt proceeding moot “[b]ecause the
contempt proceeding has occurred”); Seafarers Int’l Union of N. Am.
v. National Marine Servs., Inc., 820 F.2d 148, 151-52 (5th Cir.
1987) (“[O]nce the action that the plaintiff sought to have
enjoined has occurred, the case is mooted because ‘no order of this
court could affect the parties’ rights with respect to the
injunction we are called upon to review.’”) (quoting Honig v.
Students of the Cal. Sch. for the Blind, 471 U.S. 148, 149, 105 S.
Ct. 1820, 1821, 85 L. Ed. 2d 114 (1985)); Marilyn T., Inc. v.
Evans, 803 F.2d 1383, 1384 (5th Cir. 1986) (holding plaintiff’s
appeal from the denial of preliminary injunctive relief against the
suspension of a license moot once the license was permanently
revoked); Brown v. New Orleans Clerks and Checkers Union Local No.
1497, 590 F.2d 161, 164 (5th Cir. 1979) (holding defendants’ appeal
from the grant of an injunction moot because “[t]his court could
fashion no order that would change the relationship of the
parties”); see also Oakville Dev. Corp. v. FDIC, 986 F.2d 611, 613
(1st Cir. 1993) (holding that an appeal becomes moot once
circumstances dictate that the court can no longer grant meaningful
relief) (collecting cases). At that point, no order of the court
can affect the rights of the parties with regard to the requested
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relief. See DeFunis v. Odegaard, 416 U.S. 312, 316, 94 S. Ct.
1704, 1705, 40 L. Ed. 2d 164 (1974) (noting that the “starting
point” for an analysis of mootness is the “familiar proposition
that ‘federal courts are without power to decide questions that
cannot affect the rights of litigants in the case before them’”)
(quoting North Carolina v. Rice, 404 U.S. 244, 246, 92 S. Ct. 402,
404, 30 L. Ed. 2d 413 (1971)). Applying this general rule to the
case at hand, the claims of the appellants for prospective relief
against the annexation and the special election are indeed moot.
Kingwood has been a part of the City for almost a year and a half;
since the January 1997 election and subsequent February run-off,
the entire City Council has gone through an election cycle, with no
impediment to Kingwood’s participation. The Constitutional harms
Harris sought to enjoin, if indeed there were any, have come and
gone; we simply cannot enjoin that which has already taken place.
Harris and the Districts nevertheless raise several arguments
in an attempt to demonstrate the existence of an ongoing, live
controversy. First, the appellants cite Vieux Carre Property
Owners, Residents, & Assocs., Inc. v. Brown, 948 F.2d 1436, 1446
(5th Cir. 1991), for the proposition that “a suit is moot only when
it can be shown that a court cannot even ‘theoretically grant’
relief.” In an attempt to demonstrate how we might “theoretically”
find a remedy for their claims, the appellants suggest that we
order the annexation undone or, in the alternative, that we
invalidate the results of the January 18th election and subsequent
February run-off. These arguments illustrate not only a fatal
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misconstruction of Vieux Carre, but also an inadequate recognition
of our role in resolving, rather than reviving, legal disputes.
In Vieux Carre, an historic preservation society (the
“Society”) brought suit against the Army Corps of Engineers (the
“Corps”) alleging that the Corps had authorized the construction of
an aquarium and park on the Mississippi riverfront without the
proper consultation procedures mandated by the National Historic
Preservation Act (“NHPA”), 16 U.S.C. § 470 et seq. Vieux Carre,
948 F.2d at 1439-40. The Society “sought a judgment declaring that
the Corps must comply with the historic review process, and also
sought an injunction to keep certain non-federal parties from
proceeding with the riverfront project.” Id. at 1440. Following
an appeal and remand, the substance of which is irrelevant for our
purposes, the district court dismissed the suit as moot, in light
of the fact that the park and acquarium were “virtually complete.”
Id. at 1441. We reversed the district court’s finding of mootness,
noting that although it was possible that forcing the Corps to
perform a review under the NHPA would result in no “meaningful
relief,” it was also possible that review under NHPA standards
might, even at this late date, result in the “implement[ation] [of]
measures, great or small, in mitigation of some or all adverse
effects, if any, wrought by the park.” Id. at 1446-47. Granting
the relief of NHPA review was therefore “theoretical” not in the
sense that we had imagined possibilities beyond those requested in
the complaint, but rather in the sense that we had given the
plaintiff the benefit of the doubt as to whether certain requested
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relief would in fact ease or correct the alleged wrong.
Viewed in this light, Vieux Carre contains no support for the
appellant’s notion that we may fashion relief not requested below
in order to keep a suit viable. To the extent that any broad
language in Vieux Carre may be read as such, it is necessarily
limited by our explicit holdings in other cases, see, e.g., Marilyn
T., 803 F.2d at 1384-85 (rejecting plaintiff’s suggestion that
mootness may be avoided by granting a request for relief not first
addressed by the district court), as well as by the Supreme Court’s
recent, stinging rebuke of the Ninth Circuit in Arizonans for
Official English.
The opening paragraphs of that opinion speak with
unmistakeable clarity to the present case:
Federal courts lack competence to rule definitively
on the meaning of state legislation, nor may they
adjudicate challenges to state measures absent a showing
of actual impact on the challenger. The Ninth Circuit,
in the case at hand, lost sight of these limitations. .
. .
[The initiating plaintiff, Maria-Kelly F.] Yniguez
commenced and maintained her suit as an individual, not
as a class representative. A state employee at the time
she filed her complaint, Yniguez voluntarily left the
State’s employ in 1990 and did not allege she would seek
to return to a public post. Her departure for a position
in the private sector made her claim for prospective
relief moot. Nevertheless, the Ninth Circuit held that
a plea for nominal damages could be read into Yniguez’s
complaint to save the case, and therefore pressed on to
an ultimate decision. . . .
The Ninth Circuit had no warrant to proceed as it
did. The case had lost the essential elements of a
justiciable controversy and should not have been retained
for adjudication on the merits by the Court of Appeals.
Arizonans for Official English, 117 S. Ct. at 1059. No meaningful
distinction from Arizonans for Official English exists on the facts
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before us. The plaintiffs in this case, just like Yniguez, sought
only prospective relief below.5 On appeal, just like Yniguez, they
suggest that we “read into” their complaint additional requests for
relief and then proceed to an adjudication on the merits. As the
Supreme Court noted, however, we have “no warrant” to proceed in
such a fashion. The “case and controversy” requirement of Article
III is no mere formality——a nuisance to be brushed away before
setting down to the business of constitutional interpretation. The
appellants began this suit by requesting certain, specific relief,
and because we can no longer grant that relief, the case is moot.6
5
The fact that the appellants here requested declaratory
relief in addition to an injunction cannot save their appeal from
dismissal. Requests for declaratory relief may sustain a suit only
when the claims “challenge . . . some ongoing underlying policy”
rather than “merely attack[ing] an isolated . . . action.” City of
Houston v. HUD, 24 F.3d 1421, 1429 (D.C. Cir. 1994); see also Super
Tire Engineering Co. v. McCorkle, 416 U.S. 115, 125-26, 94 S. Ct.
1694, 1700, 40 L. Ed. 2d 1 (1974) (holding that for declaratory
relief to save a suit from mootness, “[i]t is sufficient that the
litigant show the existence of an immediate and definite
governmental action or policy that has adversely affected and
continues to affect a present interest”) (emphasis added). The
appellants make no claim on appeal that the City has a defective
annexation “policy,” or even that the City has any policy with
respect to annexations at all.
6
Harris also argues that his constitutional claims fall
within the “capable of repetition yet evading review” exception to
the mootness doctrine because “[s]ome possibility clearly exists
that the City would implement future voting changes affecting
Plaintiffs without obtaining the requisite preclearance, again
denying Plaintiffs their rights to vote and run in elections” and
also because “if the City is correct in its assertion that a voting
rights issue becomes moot once the relevant election is held, then
the type of harm to Plaintiffs clearly is of such limited duration
that it is likely to be moot before litigation is completed.” This
thinly veiled attempt to conflate Harris’ claims with those of the
minority plaintiffs is unavailing; the minority plaintiffs have not
appealed, and their claims are not before us. Moreover, the idea
that elections may come and go with no opportunity for effective
appellate review may seem compelling, but it is so only as to those
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III
“When a civil case becomes moot pending appellate
adjudication, ‘[t]he established practice . . . in the federal
system . . . is to reverse or vacate the judgment below and remand
with a direction to dismiss.” Arizonans for Official English, 520
U.S. at ___, 117 S. Ct. at 1071 (quoting United States v.
Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36, 39, 71 S. Ct. 104, 106, 95 L. Ed.
36 (1950)). We see no reason to depart from that practice here.
The district court’s order of January 22, 1997, denying preliminary
injunctive relief to the plaintiffs and dismissing the claims of
the Utility Districts for lack of standing, and its final judgment
in favor of the City, issued November 20, 1997, to the extent that
such order and judgment address the claims of the appellants, are
therefore VACATED and the case REMANDED with instructions to
potential plaintiffs that in fact have a constitutionally protected
“right” to vote in a given election. Because voting rights are
fundamentally statutory and not constitutional in origin, see
Rodriguez v. Popular Democratic Party, 457 U.S. 1, 9, 102 S. Ct.
2194, 2199, 72 L. Ed. 2d 628 (1982) (“[T]his Court has often noted
that the Constitution does not confer the right of suffrage upon
any one, and that the right to vote, per se, is not a
constitutionally protected right”) (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted), Harris cannot refute the plain language
of 42 U.S.C. § 1973, providing that certain statutory boundary
changes have “no legal effect” with regard to conferring the
franchise until precleared by the Attorney General. To the extent
that Harris argues that his right to vote arises not from a
boundary-changing statute but from the fact of governance, this
argument is foreclosed by Holt Civic Club v. City of Tuscaloosa,
439 U.S. 60, 69, 99 S. Ct. 383, 389, 58 L. Ed. 2d 292 (1978)
(“Appellants’ argument that extraterritorial extension of municipal
powers requires concomitant extraterritorial extension of the
franchise proves too much.”).
Alternatively, even if Harris did have a constitutionally
protected right to vote in City elections as of January 1997, he
could have preserved his suit by requesting even nominal damages as
opposed to resting completely on the request for injunctive relief.
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DISMISS AS MOOT.
ENDRECORD
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DeMOSS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION -- there is no more
fundamental principle of American democracy.7 Our forefathers
fought a revolutionary war to secure the blessings of that
principle, and the resulting birth of this nation marked the
beginning of a new era of government by the people.
Consequently, as a resident of Houston I am disappointed that
this most fundamental principle has been disregarded by the Houston
City Council and its City Attorney. The City of Houston annexed
Kingwood on December 11, 1996 -- just in time to ensure that the
City could collect taxes from Kingwood residents for the entirety
of 1997. This annexation was not consensual on the part of the
residents of Kingwood, as this lawsuit so clearly indicates. On
January 18, 1997, the City of Houston held a special election to
allow its citizens to vote on several municipal issues.8 But
7
See, e.g., THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE para. 1 (U.S. 1776),
in ESSENTIAL WORKS OF THE FOUNDING FATHERS 189, 191 (Leonard Kriegel, ed.,
Bantam Books 1964) (criticizing the despotic British monarch George
III “[f]or imposing Taxes on us without our Consent”); JOHN
DICKINSON, LETTERS FROM A FARMER IN PENNSYLVANIA (1768), in ESSENTIAL WORKS OF
THE FOUNDING FATHERS, supra at 23, 60 (noting, in the course of
denouncing the Townshend Acts, that “Those who are taxed without
their own consent, expressed by themselves or their
representatives, are slaves”. (emphasis in original)); cf. THOMAS
JEFFERSON, A SUMMARY VIEW OF THE RIGHTS OF BRITISH AMERICA (1774), in ESSENTIAL
WORKS OF THE FOUNDING FATHERS, supra at 97, 112-13 (warning the British
that the Americans would not tolerate that “it be proposed that our
properties within our own territories shall be taxed or regulated
by any power on earth but our own”).
8
The issues on the ballot included (1) election of an at-
large City Council member, (2) a referendum to request an ordinance
raising the City’s minimum wage, and (3) a referendum to request an
amendment to the City Charter limiting governmental taxing
authority.
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residents of Kingwood, who had just become residents of Houston,
were not permitted to participate in those important public
decisions by the City of Houston. Democracy failed. Kingwood
residents were taxed beginning on January 1, yet had no voice at
the polls on January 18. Thomas Paine surely turned over in his
grave!
I am also disappointed that my colleagues now think that this
case is moot. Of course we are unable to provide the prospective
injunctive relief that the plaintiffs originally sought. But the
plaintiffs asked for other relief which the courts can provide, and
the serious constitutional violations asserted in this case demand
consideration. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
I.
In declaring the plaintiffs’ claims to be moot, the panel
majority observes that the following relief has been sought: (1) an
injunction against the City’s annexation and implementation efforts
(namely, seizure of property and providing municipal services);
(2) a stay of annexation until after the impending election and a
decision on the merits of the plaintiffs’ state-law claims; (3) an
injunction of the election until preclearance so that Kingwood
residents could vote; and (4) a declaratory judgment that the
City’s actions were defective under the federal Constitution and
invalid under state law. See Majority Op. at 3-4. The majority
then proceeds to characterize the plaintiffs’ requested relief in
three particular ways: (1) preliminary injunctive relief; (2)
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declaratory relief; and (3) not monetary relief. The majority then
concludes that because the annexation and voting have already taken
place, the case is mooted by the plaintiffs’ failure to request
anything other than injunctive relief of a preemptive nature. The
requested declaratory judgment is deemed by the majority to be
insufficient to create a case or controversy because the plaintiffs
have not alleged continuing injury from a defective annexation
policy. See Majority Op. at 10 n.5 (citing Super Tire Eng’g Co. v.
McCorkle, 416 U.S. 115, 125-26, 94 S. Ct. 1694, 1700 (1974), and
City of Houston v. Dep’t of Housing & Urban Dev., 24 F.3d 1421,
1429 (D.C. Cir. 1994)).
This case is not moot. The plaintiffs sufficiently
articulated a request for permanent remedial injunctive relief,
their request for declaratory judgment is justiciable, and even if
some ambiguity can be found in the pleadings, their request for
“all further relief to which they may show themselves to be justly
entitled” should compel this Court to liberally construe their
pleadings in a fashion consistent with a live, continuing
controversy.
A.
The plaintiffs plainly asked the district court to “enjoin
. . . the Annexation as void ab initio.” Majority Op. at 4 n.2.
The majority’s opinion hinges entirely on its interpretation of
this plea as a request for prospective injunctive relief
exclusively. The majority opines that the fact that the plaintiffs
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“phras[ed] their new appellate claims for relief in terms of
‘voiding’ the annexation, as opposed to disannexing or undoing the
annexation, does not eliminate the fact that the plaintiffs sought
only an injunction or a stay below.” Majority Op. at 4 n.2. This
interpretation of the plaintiffs’ complaint does not withstand
scrutiny.
The plaintiffs asked the district court to “enjoin . . . the
Annexation as void ab initio.” The verb “enjoin” means: “To
require; command; positively direct. To require a person, by writ
of injunction, to perform, or to abstain or desist from, some act.”
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 529 (6th ed. 1990). “Void” means: “Null;
ineffectual; nugatory; having no legal force or binding effect;
unable, in law, to support the purpose for which it was intended.”
Id. at 1573. “Ab initio” means: “From the beginning; from the
first act; from the inception.” Id. at 6. Thus, to paraphrase,
the plaintiffs asked the district court to require that the City
desist from actions implementing the annexation because the
annexation, from its inception, had no legal force or binding
effect. That request is indistinguishable from the majority’s
proposed formulations of “disannexing or undoing the annexation.”
Majority Op. at 4 n.2. Because the plaintiffs’ request for relief
is not, as the majority has characterized it, exclusively a request
for an injunction to prevent the commencement of an action which
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has already happened, vacating this case on mootness grounds is an
extraordinary dodge.9
B.
To find that this case is moot, the majority also determines
that the plaintiffs’ request for declaratory judgment does not
preserve a live controversy. The explanation provided is that
“[t]he appellants make no claim on appeal that the City has a
9
This analysis of the relief sought in this case amply
demonstrates that the panel majority has placed more weight on the
decision in Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 117 S. Ct.
1055 (1997), than that case will bear. See Majority Op. at 9-10.
In the Arizonans case, plaintiff Yniguez contended that Arizona’s
state constitutional provision that “the State ‘shall act in
English and in no other language’” meant that “she would lose her
job or face other sanctions if she did not immediately refrain from
speaking Spanish while serving the State.” Arizonans for Official
English, 117 S. Ct. at 1060 (quoting ARIZ. CONST. art. XXVIII,
§ 3(1)(a)). Between the time of trial and the Ninth Circuit’s
treatment of the case on appeal, Yniguez left her job with the
state. There was no longer any threat that she would be fired or
punished because she no longer worked for the state. The case was
moot because the controversy had completely vanished. Arizonans
establishes no new principles of mootness, and that decision does
not control this case.
In the present case, the plaintiffs continue to suffer from
the impact of the initially alleged violations. Kingwood residents
have challenged the City’s authority for the annexation of
Kingwood, and they continue to live in Kingwood, subject to City
governance. Former Kingwood utility districts raised similar
challenges; their property has been seized and they now serve no
function because the City provides services to Kingwood. This
impact, created by the City’s allegedly unlawful actions, did not
vanish once the annexation was accomplished and a new round of
elections was held. Thus, unlike the single plaintiff in Arizonans
who defused the litigation by removing herself from the work
environment which gave rise to the case, these plaintiffs have
alleged injuries which, if established, continue to this day, and
they have done nothing to cause those injuries to disappear.
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defective annexation ‘policy,’ or even that the City has any policy
with respect to annexations at all.” Majority Op. at 10 n.5.
The applicable law is not so simple. The mootness inquiry in
a case involving circumstances that change between the inception of
the lawsuit and the time of final decision is intensely case-
specific. See generally 13A CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT ET AL., FEDERAL PRACTICE
AND PROCEDURE § 3533.3 (2d ed. 1984). As Professor Wright’s leading
treatise notes in summary:
The central question is whether it remains
appropriate to provide a declaration of rights and
perhaps some additional remedy. The answer to this
question is controlled by remedial inventiveness,
careful assessment of present circumstances, and
wise predictions of the future. . . . As with
other aspects of justiciability, the measures of
mootness should not be taken in factual judgments
alone. Account also must be taken of the
importance of the parties’ interests, the
possibility that future events may generate new
facts or change the issues, and the difficulty and
sensitivity of the issues. Less remaining impact
or risk of future impact should be demanded if
vital interests are at stake. More may be
demanded, on the other hand, if a court is asked to
resolve issues that are difficult or sensitive,
lest a mistaken judgment harm both the parties and
others. The usefulness of present adjudication is
also undermined by the prospect that any future
dispute may provide new facts that better
illuminate or even change the issues.
Id. at 300-01. The treatise attempts to trace out several
categories of these “changed circumstances” cases. Super Tire
Engineering Co. v. McCorkle, 416 U.S. 115, 94 S. Ct. 1694 (1974),
the Supreme Court case relied upon by the majority, is an example
of a case in which a party, once engaged in a relevant course of
action, ceased that activity during the pendency of the lawsuit but
is likely to continue the interrupted course of conduct upon the
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culmination of legal proceedings. See 13A WRIGHT ET AL., supra,
§ 3533.3, at 281-84. In the present case, however, the only
changed circumstance is that the contested annexation, election,
and referenda have taken place. Analyzing the case in terms of the
plaintiffs’ state-law claims, the continuing impact is that they
must live with the consequences of the City’s actions, which the
plaintiffs contend were ultra vires, taken pursuant to incorrect
interpretations of the state’s election and annexation laws. In
this respect, the case is more akin to Wirtz v. Local 153, Glass
Blowers Association, 389 U.S. 463, 88 S. Ct. 643 (1968), in which
suit was brought to set aside an election of union officials. A
new uncontested election was held during the progress of the
lawsuit, but the Supreme Court held that the suit was not moot
because fulfillment of the relevant statutes depended upon their
fair and legal application, and the parties thus had a continuing
interest in resolving the dispute over the election even though
there was no practical remedy specifically for the alleged
violations.
Even in the framework outlined by the majority, it is less
than clear that the plaintiffs’ declaratory judgment action is not
a live controversy. The absence of a written City “policy”
concerning annexations is simply not determinative.10 Were it
10
City of Houston v. Dep’t of Housing & Urban Dev., 24 F.3d
1421 (D.C. Cir. 1994), relied upon by the majority, deals with
declaratory relief against federal agencies for the purpose of
invalidating a disputed policy. Given the case-specific nature of
these mootness determinations, as well as the other factors set out
in the text which counsel against a determination of mootness, that
case is inapposite.
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necessary to identify one, however, the relevant “policy” would be
the City’s exercise of complete municipal authority over Kingwood
as a result of the annexation, putatively accomplished in
accordance with Texas law.
The balance of factors leans in favor of exercising
jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ appeal from denial of declaratory
and injunctive relief. There are remedies available. For example,
the City could be ordered to refund taxes to the disenfranchised
voters for the portion of the year during which the City denied
them the right to vote, or the City could be required to resubmit
the referenda that appeared on the January 18 ballot to a new
special election. Parties on both sides of this litigation have a
continuing interest in determining the legality of the City’s
annexation strategies and their impact on voting rights. These
issues are likely to arise again and again as the City continues to
expand and annex outlying areas. See Storer v. Brown, 415 U.S.
724, 737 n.8, 94 S. Ct. 1274, 1282 n.8 (1974) (applying capable-of-
repetition-yet-evading-review analysis to determine that an
election challenge was not moot, despite the fact that the election
had already occurred, because “the construction of the statute, an
understanding of its operation, and possible constitutional limits
on its application, will have the effect of simplifying future
challenges, thus increasing the likelihood that timely filed cases
can be adjudicated before an election is held”); Backus v. Spears,
677 F.2d 397, 398 n.3 (4th Cir. 1982). Moreover, the plaintiffs’
interests are of paramount importance: the vindication of their
-20-
fundamental constitutional rights. The issue has been squarely
presented and thoroughly debated, and the parties now await
adjudication of their opposing positions. Plainly, then, the
declaratory judgment aspect of this case is not moot.
C.
Finally, the plaintiffs concluded their complaint by asking
for “all further relief to which they may show themselves justly
entitled.” There is a reason why a phrase like this is put into a
complaint. The federal courts operate under a system of “notice
pleading.” See Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 47-48, 78 S. Ct. 99,
103 (1957). As long as it is plain what claims the plaintiff has
asserted and what relief has been sought, a failure to recite magic
words should not preclude relief. Cf., e.g., Federal Savings &
Loan Ins. Corp. v. Texas Real Estate Counselors, Inc., 955 F.2d 261
(5th Cir. 1992) (plaintiff’s pleadings, requesting “any other
relief, both special and general, to which it may be justly
entitled,” would be construed to include an unarticulated claim for
prejudgment interest).
Moreover, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and precedent
of the Supreme Court specifically prohibit our Court from
dismissing this case on the grounds that the plaintiffs asked the
district court to “enjoin . . . the Annexation as void ab initio”
rather than asking that the court “disannex” or “undo” the
offensive conduct. “[E]very final judgment shall grant the relief
to which the party in whose favor it is rendered is entitled, even
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if the party has not demanded such relief in the party’s
pleadings.” FED. R. CIV. P. 54(c). “[A] federal court should not
dismiss a meritorious constitutional claim because the complaint
seeks one remedy rather than another plainly appropriate one.”
Holt Civic Club v. City of Tuscaloosa, 439 U.S. 60, 65, 99 S. Ct.
383, 387 (1978). The plaintiffs made it plain what relief they are
seeking, and we should not play word games in order to hide behind
a mootness dismissal. The majority’s opinion dismissing this case
on mootness grounds is therefore indefensible.
Having concluded that this case is not moot, I now turn to the
merits of the plaintiffs’ case.
II.
The plaintiffs alleged that “the proposed annexation of the
Kingwood area would violate the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments
of the United States Constitution because it would deny or abridge
the voting rights of John Harris and other Kingwood residents.” In
the course of rejecting this claim, the district court found there
is no credible evidence of racial animus with respect to the
annexation of Kingwood. The trial court determined that “[t]he
credible evidence establishes that the Kingwood annexation was
pursued for legitimate financial and policy reasons and not for an
improper racially discriminatory purpose.” As indicated infra, the
district court correctly determined that the annexation was not
motivated by discriminatory intent, and therefore the plaintiffs’
-22-
Fifteenth Amendment claim is foreclosed.11 But the broad allegation
of a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, however, remains as a
completely viable and valid claim in this case.
The right to vote has been declared to be and is generally
accepted as a “fundamental” right for the purposes of the
Fourteenth Amendment. See Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 554-55,
84 S. Ct. 1362, 1377-78 (1964).12 The Supreme Court has made it
abundantly clear that “a citizen has a constitutionally protected
right to participate in elections on an equal basis with other
citizens in the jurisdiction.” Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.S. 330,
336, 92 S. Ct. 995, 1000 (citing Evans v. Cornman, 398 U.S. 419,
421-22, 426, 90 S. Ct. 1752, 1754-55, 1756 (1970); Kramer v. Union
Free Sch. Dist. No. 15, 395 U.S. 621, 626-28, 89 S. Ct. 1886,
1889-90 (1969); Cipriano v. City of Houma, 395 U.S. 701, 706, 89 S.
Ct. 1897, 1900 (1969); Harper v. Virginia State Bd. of Elections,
383 U.S. 663, 667, 86 S. Ct. 1079, 1081 (1966); Carrington v. Rash,
380 U.S. 89, 93-94, 85 S. Ct. 775, 778, 779 (1965); and Reynolds,
377 U.S. at 562, 84 S. Ct. at 1381). The right to participate in
elections as protected by the Fourteenth Amendment includes the
11
The Fifteenth Amendment protects against denial or
abridgment of the right to vote “on account of race, color, or
previous condition of servitude.” U.S. CONST. amend. xv. The
Voting Rights Act draws its constitutional authority from the
Fifteenth Amendment. See City of Rome v. United States, 446 U.S.
156, 173, 100 S. Ct. 1548, 1559 (1980).
12
“Undeniably the Constitution of the United States
protects the right of all qualified citizens to vote . . . . The
right to vote freely for the candidate of one’s choice is of the
essence of a democratic society, and any restrictions on that right
strike at the heart of representative government.” Reynolds, 377
U.S. at 554-55, 84 S. Ct. at 1377-78.
-23-
right of a municipality’s bona fide residents to vote in elections
for municipal representatives. See, e.g., Carrington, 380 U.S. at
94, 85 S. Ct. at 779.
On December 11, 1996, Kingwood was annexed by Houston. On
January 18, 1997, Houston held an election in which Kingwood
residents were not permitted to participate. The Kingwood
residents’ voting rights were thereby compromised. This impairment
of the Kingwood residents’ constitutional right to vote must be
reviewed under the strict scrutiny standard. See Kramer, 395 U.S.
at 626-27, 89 S. Ct. at 1889-90; see generally JOHN E. NOWAK & RONALD
D. ROTUNDA, CONSTITUTIONAL LAW § 14.31 (4th ed. 1991). Strict scrutiny
requires that the restriction of a constitutional right be
justified by a narrowly tailored compelling state interest. See,
e.g., Messer v. Meno, 130 F.3d 130, 136 (5th Cir. 1997).
The City’s position does not satisfy strict scrutiny. The
City contends first that no fundamental right is implicated because
no right to vote accrued until preclearance was obtained.
Secondly, the City claims that it had no option but to conduct the
election as it did because a special election to fill the vacancy
on the City Council was required by state law, see TEX. LOC. GOV’T
CODE ANN. § 26.045 (Vernon Supp. 1998), and the date of the election
was regulated by state law, see, e.g., TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN.
§ 41.001(a) (Vernon 1986). Furthermore, the City contends that
under federal law, the Kingwood voters could not participate in an
election prior to preclearance. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. The City
could not get preclearance before taking final action on the
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annexation, and it would not be practicable for the City to have
attempted to time the annexation to allow for preclearance because
the amount of time needed by Department of Justice varies.
Finally, the City says it would have also been undesirable or
impracticable to delay annexation or the effective date of
annexation until after the election because the City’s taxes are
assessed based on the value of property holdings on January 1, and
therefore the end of the year is the only practical time to annex
territory.13 There is nothing which is “narrowly tailored” or
“compelling” about the City’s position.
A.
The City’s first point -- that voting rights are contingent
upon preclearance -- is unconvincing because it implies that a
fundamental constitutional right is limited by the operation of a
federal statute protecting one aspect of that right. The City’s
reliance on the Voting Rights Act is misplaced because Section 5 of
the Voting Rights Act does not purport to affirmatively permit
elections to take place with less than full participation by all
eligible voters.14 The Act’s prohibition on certain elections
13
My quarrel is not with the City’s timing of the
annexation so as to reap the maximum tax benefit, but rather with
the City’s subsequent refusal to accommodate the newly annexed
residents’ right to vote.
14
Section 5 provides, in pertinent part:
Whenever a State or political subdivision
. . . shall enact or seek to administer any . . .
standard, practice, or procedure with respect to
voting different from that in force or effect on
-25-
states that prior to preclearance, “no person shall be denied the
right to vote for failure to comply” with some change in a
political unit’s voting process. 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. Though this
language has been construed to prohibit newly annexed voters from
participating in an election after annexation and before
preclearance because of potential infringement upon the right to
vote through vote dilution affecting those citizens who resided in
the municipality prior to annexation, see Perkins v. Matthews, 400
U.S. 379, 91 S. Ct. 431 (1971), the statute in no way requires
proceeding with an election based on the old, pre-annexation
boundaries and denying the voters in the newly-annexed area the
right to vote. See Duncan v. Town of Blacksburg, Va., 364 F. Supp.
643, 647 (W.D. Va. 1973). This is evident both from the text of
Section 5 and the hierarchical supremacy of Fourteenth Amendment-
November 1, 1964 . . . such State or subdivision may institute an
action in the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia for a declaratory judgment that such qualification,
prerequisite, standard, practice, or procedure does not have the
purpose and will not have the effect of denying or abridging the
right to vote on account of race or color, or in contravention of
the guarantees set forth in section 1973b(f)(2) of this title, and
unless and until the court enters such judgment no person shall be
denied the right to vote for failure to comply with such
qualification, prerequisite, standard, practice, or procedure:
Provided, That such qualification, prerequisite, standard,
practice, or procedure may be enforced without such proceeding if
the qualification, prerequisite, standard, practice, or procedure
has been submitted by the chief legal officer or other appropriate
official of such State or subdivision to the Attorney General and
the Attorney General has not interposed an objection within sixty
days after such submission, or upon good cause shown, to facilitate
an expedited approval within sixty days after such submission, the
Attorney General has affirmatively indicated that such objection
will not be made.
42 U.S.C. § 1973c (emphasis supplied).
-26-
protected voting rights over Voting Rights Act-created voting
rights.
B.
The City’s second point is also unconvincing because it merely
describes how the City painted itself into a corner and as a result
denied the franchise to nearly 40,000 voters.
The City’s contention that state law required the City to hold
the election on January 18 is simply not true. John Peavy, the
previous occupant of the open City Council seat, resigned on July
30, 1996, with his resignation to be effective upon the election
and qualification of his successor. The next general election of
the City was scheduled for November 1997, more than 270 days away,
and therefore a special election was required to fill this vacancy.
With respect to filling the vacant seat on the City Council,
the timing requirement of Local Government Code § 26.045 specified
that “[t]he special election shall be held on an authorized uniform
election date prescribed by the Election Code that occurs before
the general election and that allows enough time to hold the
election in the manner required by law.”15 The authorized uniform
15
The pertinent statute provides, in its entirety:
If a vacancy occurs on the governing body of a
municipality with a population of 1.5 million or
more and more than 270 days remain before the date
of the next general election of members of the governing body, the
governing body shall order a special election in the district in
which the vacancy occurred, or in the entire municipality if the
vacancy occurred in an at-large position, to fill the vacancy. The
special election shall be held on an authorized uniform election
date prescribed by the Election Code that occurs before the general
-27-
election dates are: “(1) the third Saturday in January; (2) the
first Saturday in May; (3) the second Saturday in August; or (4)
the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.” TEX. ELEC.
CODE ANN. § 41.001(a) (Vernon 1986). The City has not explained to
this Court why the special election could not have been held on the
first Saturday in May following the annexation rather than the
third Saturday in January, which was the date selected. The first
Saturday in May would have allowed the full sixty days needed by
the Department of Justice to act on the preclearance application
from December 23, 1996, the date of its filing, and then an
additional seventy-two days after preclearance to tend to the
administrative details of the election.16
It should be noted that this Texas statute requires that the
election be scheduled to allow “enough time to hold the election in
the manner required by law.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 26.045
(Vernon Supp. 1998). Surely, the holding of elections “in the
manner required by law” means not holding elections that violate
the Constitution. See U.S. CONST. art. VI, § 2.
election and that allows enough time to hold the election in the
manner required by law and shall be conducted in the same manner as
the municipality’s general election except as provided by
provisions of the Election Code applicable to special elections to
fill vacancies.
TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 26.045 (Vernon Supp. 1998) (emphasis
supplied).
16
Although I refer here and throughout this opinion to
application to the Department of Justice for the preclearance
required by § 5, the City also had the more time-consuming option
of applying to the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
-28-
There were two other issues on the ballot: limiting the City’s
taxing authority and raising the minimum wage in Houston. Both
issues were placed on the ballot as a result of a signature drive
in support of each referendum.17 The sufficiency of the petition
for each issue was verified by City Secretary Anna Russell on
December 6, 1996.
The proposed limitation on taxing authority took the form of
a charter amendment. With respect to the timing of referenda on
charter amendments, Texas law provides:
The ordinance ordering the election shall
provide for the election to be held on the first
authorized uniform election date prescribed by the
Election Code or on the earlier of the date of the
next municipal general election or presidential
general election. The election date must allow
sufficient time to comply with other requirements
of law and must occur on or after the 30th day
after the date the ordinance is adopted.
TEX. LOC. GOV’T ANN. § 9.004(b) (Vernon 1986) (emphasis supplied).
With respect to timing of the referendum on the proposed
ordinance regarding minimum wages, the City Charter provides that
once the issue had been certified,
the council, within ten days after receipt thereof,
except as otherwise provided in this Chapter, shall
17
A campaign called Tax Vote ’97 was organized for the
purpose of forcing a referendum on a measure that would prohibit
the City Council from raising taxes and certain fees without the
permission of voters. The plan was announced on October 25, 1996.
On November 12, a petition with over 20,000 signatures was
presented to the City.
On October 8, 1996, the Living Wage campaign kicked off. The
plan was to collect signatures to force a referendum on raising the
minimum wage in Houston to $6.50 per hour. A petition with
approximately 30,000 signatures was turned over to the City on
November 6, 1997.
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either pass such ordinance or resolution without
alteration, or submit it to the popular vote at a
special election, which must be held within thirty
days after the date of the ordering thereof;
provided, however, that if any other municipal
election is to be held within sixty days after the
filing of the petition said proposed ordinance or
resolution shall be submitted without alteration to
be voted upon at such election.
HOUSTON CITY CHARTER art. VIIb, § 2.
While the City contends that these referenda had to be
considered on January 18, an examination of the controlling law
shows this not to be the case. Just as in the case of electing a
new at-large council member, with respect to the charter amendment
Texas law requires that enough time be allowed “to comply with
other requirements of the law.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 9.004(b)
(Vernon 1986). As explained supra, the Constitution’s protections
of voting rights constitute requirements of law with which the City
must comply. If Texas law did not provide this escape clause, it
would be unconstitutional as applied in this case, where voting
rights were infringed. And for that very reason, because the City
Charter does not provide any apparent mechanism for accommodating
external legal problems which may be encountered in the scheduling
of certain elections, its Article VIIb, Section 2(c) is
unconstitutional as applied in this case. Strict scrutiny applies
to test the legality of the scheduling provision, and there
certainly was no legitimate government interest in refusing to
delay submission of the referenda until preclearance was obtained.
Thus, the City was not empowered to proceed with these referenda
-30-
prior to preclearance because that action violated the Kingwood
residents’ constitutional rights.
C.
It is apparent that once the annexation ordinance for Kingwood
was passed finally on second reading on December 12, 1996, the City
of Houston was faced with something of a Hobson’s choice as to
whether it should hold the election on January 18, 1997, which is
the subject matter of this case. The law has been crystal clear
since 1971 that
Changing boundary lines by annexations which
enlarge the city’s number of eligible voters also
constitutes the change of a "standard practice or
procedure with respect to voting." Clearly
revision of boundary lines has an effect on voting
in two ways: (1) by including certain voters within
the city and leaving others outside, it determines
who may vote in the municipal election and who may
not; (2) it dilutes the weight of the votes of the
voters to whom the franchise was limited before the
annexation, and the "right of suffrage can be
denied by a debasement or dilution of the weight of
a citizen’s vote just as effectively as by wholly
prohibiting the free exercise of a franchise."
Perkins, 400 U.S. at 388, 91 S. Ct. at 437 (quoting Reynolds, 377
U.S. at 555, 84 S. Ct. at 1378). Consequently, the City certainly
knew (or its legal counsel reasonably should have known) that the
completion of annexation would produce the duty and responsibility
on the part of the City to comply with the terms and provisions of
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act regarding preclearance of voting
changes by the Department of Justice. The process of annexation of
Kingwood officially began with the passage of the annexation
ordinance on first reading on October 12, 1996. While it is true
-31-
that an application for preclearance cannot be submitted to the
Department of Justice until final passage of the annexation
ordinance, the City certainly knew (or its legal counsel should
have known) that preclearance would ultimately be required before
any election could be held which included the newly-annexed area.
The special election on January 18, 1997 was obviously scheduled by
the City during the time that the annexation process was being
finalized, with clear awareness on the part of the City that final
completion of the annexation process would undoubtedly occur before
the end of December 1996 so that the annexation would be applicable
for tax purposes as of the tax assessment date of January 1, 1997.
Once the annexation ordinance was finally passed, the City had
three choices.
First, the City could have changed the date of the then-
scheduled special election from January 18, 1997 to May 3, 1997,
thereby allowing sufficient time for preclearance by the Department
of Justice to occur. If the Department of Justice gave pre-
clearance, the election would then have been held on May 3 with all
residents of the City of Houston, including the residents of
Kingwood, being permitted to vote. On the other hand, if the
Department of Justice refused preclearance, either the annexation
could have been repealed and an election held based on pre-
annexation boundaries, or the election could have been rescheduled
for a later date to allow time for compliance with other mandates
of the Department of Justice.
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The second alternative was to proceed with the election as
scheduled on January 18 and permit the newly-annexed residents of
Kingwood to vote in that election. This alternative would put the
City in technical noncompliance with the Voting Rights Act and
would have given the minority plaintiffs in this case grounds for
an injunction to stay the holding of such an election. See, e.g.,
Lopez v. Monterey County, Cal., 117 S. Ct. 340, 347 (1996). If the
Department of Justice ultimately determined that the annexation met
preclearance requirements, the injunction, if one had issued, would
have been lifted, and the election would have been scheduled for a
new date at which all the qualified voters in the City would have
been permitted to vote. Or, if no injunction had been sought, the
election which actually took place would have been validated
because the Department of Justice did, in fact, ultimately preclear
the annexation. Cf. Perkins, 400 U.S. at 396-97, 91 S. Ct. at 441.
Under this scenario, if the Department of Justice had determined
that the annexation could not satisfy the requirements of the
Voting Rights Act, the injunction, if any, would have been
continued in effect until the City took whatever action was
mandated by the Department of Justice as being necessary to secure
preclearance. If no injunction had issued, the election itself
would have been subject to being declared invalid for noncompliance
with the Voting Rights Act. See id.
The third alternative which the City might have chosen was the
one which the City actually chose: holding the special election on
January 18, but denying the right of the newly-annexed residents of
-33-
Kingwood to vote in the election. It is important to note that
this denial of the right to vote was purely the idea of the City,
which it implemented without valid authority. This unconsti-
tutional course of action was not required by nor the result of any
decision by the federal district court nor by the Department of
Justice. There is nothing in the record in this case which shows
when and who made the decision to deny the newly-annexed citizens
of Kingwood the right to vote. The annexation ordinance itself
says nothing about denying the right to vote to the citizen of the
area to be annexed, and there is no other ordinance adopted by the
City Council in this record which addresses this subject. And as
was ultimately demonstrated by the grant of preclearance by the
Department of Justice, there was, in fact, no grounds or basis for
denying the voters of the newly-annexed Kingwood area to vote in
this election. Had the City simply waited, Kingwood residents
would have been able to participate. This error of judgment by the
City of Houston can certainly not be categorized as harmless.
There were 40,000 registered and qualified voters in the Kingwood
area who could and should have been permitted to vote in this
election.
Of the three foregoing options which the City had upon final
passage of the annexation ordinance, the only one which permitted
the City to simultaneously satisfy its obligations under the Voting
Rights Act to seek preclearance and its obligations under the
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Fourteenth Amendment and its own City Charter18 to enforce the
voting rights of its newly-annexed citizens was the first one
described: postponing the then-scheduled special election from
January 18, 1997 to May 3, 1997. There is nothing in this case
which shows that the City had a "compelling" interest in holding
the special election only on January 18, 1997. Good common sense
and sound constitutional policy would require a governmental entity
to recognize a rule that when it exercises the power of annexation,
it has duties and obligations to both its existing citizens under
the Voting Rights Act and its newly-annexed citizens under the
Fourteenth Amendment. Those duties require a moratorium on the
conduct of all elections during the period following the effective
date of annexation until preclearance has been obtained in
satisfaction of the Voting Rights Act. I regret that the
"mootness" decision of my colleagues precludes this Court from
addressing and adopting that rule.
D.
The City claims that the opinion of a three-judge court in
Dotson v. City of Indianola, 514 F. Supp. 397 (1981), gives it
authority to deny the right to vote to the new Kingwood residents.
18
See H OUSTON C ITY C HARTER art. I, § 2b (“[W]hen such
ordinance [providing for the extension of the boundary limits of
the City of Houston] is finally passed the said territory so
annexed shall be a part of the City of Houston, and the inhabitants
thereof shall be entitled to all the rights and privileges of other
citizens . . . . (emphasis supplied)).
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In my view, the reliance of the City on the language in Dotson is
completely misplaced.
The facts in Dotson are very straightforward. In May 1965,
May 1966, September 1966, and July 1967, the City of Indianola
completed annexations of various areas of land to its boundaries.
Each of these annexations added new eligible voters to the
electoral base for Indianola. Indianola conceded that it had never
obtained preclearance of any of these annexations as required by
Section 5. Indianola implemented and relied upon these annexations
in the municipal elections conducted in 1968, 1969, 1973, and 1977.
In each of these elections persons residing in the newly-annexed
areas participated both as voters and candidates.
In October 1975, the Assistant United States Attorney General
for the Civil Rights Division initiated correspondence with the
attorney for Indianola, notifying the city that these annexations
required preclearance under Section 5. The city was requested to
submit the necessary documentations for the Attorney General to
review these annexations. The City of Indianola essentially never
responded to these requests.
In August 1980, the Department of Justice again wrote to the
city attorney, asking for the previously requested additional
information. In October 1980, Nelson Dotson and other black adult
citizens, residents, and qualified voters brought an action seeking
declaratory and injunctive relief against the mayor and aldermen of
Indianola because the four annexations to the corporate limits of
Indianola which had occurred in 1965-67 had never been precleared.
-36-
The plaintiffs sought an order setting aside the 1977 municipal
elections and scheduling a special election to choose new city
officials. At the time of the Dotson opinion, the incumbent mayor
and aldermen had been elected in 1977, and four of the five
aldermen resided in the annexed areas.
During consideration of this matter by the three-judge court,
the city attorney for Indianola represented to the court "that all
the requested preclearance information ha[d] been submitted to the
Attorney General of the United States as of May 1, 1981." While
the three-judge court declined to void the 1977 elections and call
a special election because the general election for these offices
would "be conducted November 8 and December 10 of th[at] year," it
did issue the following statement as prospective injunctive relief:
However, Indianola cannot continue to hold
elections based upon uncleared post-annexation city
limits. Unless and until the City obtains
clearance of its post-Act annexations in accordance
with Section 5, all future elections must be
conducted on the basis of the city boundaries as
they existed before the unprecleared annexations
were made, and citizens residing in such annexed
areas may not participate in future municipal
elections, either as electors or as candidates.
Dotson, 514 F. Supp. at 403. It is this quoted language upon which
the City of Houston relies.
For the City of Houston to now extrapolate from the quoted
language in Dotson a general rule authorizing it to deny
unilaterally the voters of the newly-annexed Kingwood area the
right to vote is, in my humble opinion, preposterous. The quoted
language cannot qualify as a holding with precedential value in
this case. The jurisdiction of a three-judge court convened to
-37-
address a claimed violation of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act
is extremely limited. Essentially, the district court panel
hearing a Section 5 challenge is charged with determining whether
the action taken and complained of by the plaintiffs constitutes a
voting change within the meaning of Section 5; if it does, the
court must then determine whether that change has received
preclearance under the terms of Section 5. See Perkins, 400 U.S.
at 383-84, 91 S. Ct. at 434. If the answer to the first question
is yes and the second question is no, the three-judge panel has
jurisdiction to give the plaintiffs such temporary relief as may be
necessary to allow for the preclearance review. See, e.g., id. at
396-97, 91 S. Ct. at 441. Given this narrow and limited
jurisdiction, the precedential value of the precatory statement by
the Dotson panel as to the rights of "citizens residing in such
annexed areas" seems greatly diminished to me. This case concerns
the voting rights of newly-annexed citizens who were
disenfranchised when they were excluded from participation in an
election. That issue was not before the three-judge court convened
in Dotson, nor was it before the three-judge court previously
convened in this litigation.19
19
Moreover, the distinctions between the two cases are
legion. In Dotson the newly-annexed areas had been permitted to
vote; in the present case, the newly-annexed areas were denied the
right to vote by the City itself. In Dotson, the city never
attempted to secure preclearance until after the lawsuit was
actually before the court some thirteen years later; here, the City
filed preclearance papers shortly after the final annexation vote,
and the preclearance process was underway at the time the
plaintiffs asked for injunctive relief. In Dotson the elections in
question were regularly scheduled primary and general elections; in
this case, the election in question was a special election, the
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E.
The City’s decision to hold the January 18 special election
violated both the United States Constitution and the City’s own
charter. Faced with the choices of disenfranchising the Kingwood
residents or rescheduling the special election, the City chose to
deny 40,000 newly-annexed residents their right to vote.
The only way the City could prevail on the issue of the denial
of the Kingwood residents’ voting rights would be to show some
sufficiently compelling and narrowly tailored government interest.
The inconvenience of rescheduling the election does not meet this
high standard. With respect to the requirements of state law, I
would hold that the City’s conduct does not satisfy strict
scrutiny, given the statutory options available to avoid this
result. To the extent that the City Charter may be construed to
have required that the referendum on the proposed increase in the
minimum wage take place prior to preclearance of the City’s new
boundaries, it is unconstitutional as applied. I would therefore
conclude that John Harris, the Kingwood resident who sought to vote
timing of which was subject to various options under the statutes.
In Dotson four of the five city aldermen resided in the areas which
had been annexed without preclearance; in our case, neither the
mayor nor any City Council member resided in Kingwood. In Dotson
there was a demonstrated history of non-compliance with the Voting
Rights Act; there is no evidence whatsoever that the City of
Houston had a history of non-compliance. Finally, and most
significantly, there is nothing in the Dotson opinion which would
indicate that the plaintiffs in that case were contesting the
validity of the annexations themselves, nor that the plaintiffs in
Dotson were asserting any claim or right under the Fourteenth
Amendment as distinguished from their claims under the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973 et seq., which derives its
authority from the Fifteenth Amendment.
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and run for office in the January 18 special election, has proved
a violation of constitutional magnitude. I would reverse this
aspect of the district court’s judgment and remand to the district
court so that an appropriate remedy could be fashioned.
III.
The remaining claims in this case, raised by the utility
district plaintiffs, concern the City’s power to annex Kingwood.20
The merits of these claims need not be closely examined because the
issue presented to the Court on appeal is whether or not the
plaintiffs have standing to bring the claims, and thus whether or
not they were properly dismissed below. The district court
initially declined to address these claims, noting that the state-
law issues raised would not render annexation void ab initio, and
therefore the claims must be brought in the name of the state in a
quo warranto21 proceeding. The state-law claims were subsequently
dismissed.
It has been firmly established by a line of Texas Supreme
Court precedent that “[t]he only proper method for attacking the
validity of a city’s annexation of territory is by quo warranto
20
The minority plaintiffs below alleged voting rights
violations under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and § 2 of
the Voting Rights Act. These plaintiffs did not appeal from the
judgments below, and therefore their claims are not before our
Court.
21
Literally, “by what authority.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY,
supra, at 1256. “The purpose of a quo warranto proceeding is to
question the right of a person or corporation, including a
municipality, to exercise a public franchise or office.” Alexander
Oil Co. v. City of Seguin, 825 S.W.2d 434, 436-37 (Tex. 1991).
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proceeding, unless the annexation is wholly void.” Alexander Oil
Co. v. City of Seguin, 825 S.W.2d 434, 436 (Tex. 1991) (citing
Hoffman v. Elliott, 476 S.W.2d 845, 846 (Tex. 1972) (per curiam);
Graham v. City of Greenville, 67 Tex. 62, 68, 2 S.W. 742, 745
(1886); Kuhn v. City of Yoakum, 6 S.W.2d 91, 91 (Tex. Comm’n App.
1928, judgm’t adopted)).
The Texas Supreme Court compiled the following compendium of
circumstances in which an annexation had been held void rather than
merely voidable:
Historically, private challenges of annexation
ordinances have been sustained and the ordinance
held void in the following instances: an annexation
of territory exceeding the statutory size
limitations; an attempted annexation of territory
within the corporate limits of another municipality
or which was not contiguous with its own limits; an
attempted annexation in which the boundary of the
annexed territory did not close using the
description contained in the ordinance. The common
trait in these cases is whether the municipality
exceeded the annexation authority delegated to it
by the Legislature. The power to annex is
committed to the political branches of state
government; it is a legislative prerogative.
Id. at 438 (citations omitted). The violations alleged by the
plaintiffs do not suggest that this annexation was completely
beyond the bounds of the annexation authority granted by the state.
The plaintiffs allege the following irregularities: failure to
negotiate a strategic partnership agreement with the districts
(TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 43.0751(b) (Vernon Supp. 1998));
annexation before September 1, 1997 ((TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN.
§ 43.0751(m) (Vernon Supp. 1998)); and failure to provide an
adequate service plan (TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 43.056(a), (g)
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(Vernon Supp. 1998)). None of these allegations strike the city’s
fundamental authority to annex Kingwood. They merely point to
questions of procedure -- when or how to annex, but not if the City
could annex.
Each of the utility district plaintiffs’ allegations is the
proper subject of a quo warranto proceeding. The district court’s
initial reaction is certainly correct, and the state law claims
were properly dismissed.
IV.
This case is not moot. I respectfully dissent from my
colleagues’ opposite conclusion. On the merits, I would conclude
that the right of Plaintiff John Harris and the other Kingwood
residents to vote and participate in the January 18 special
election was violated. The right to vote is truly fundamental, and
therefore the decision of the City of Houston to hold an election
during the period between annexation and preclearance and to deny
the residents of Kingwood the right to vote at such election
constituted a violation of the Kingwood residents’ constitutional
rights.
I would, therefore, reverse the judgment of the district court
which denied relief to Plaintiff John Harris, and I would remand
that portion of this case to the district court for the fashioning
of appropriate declaratory or injunctive relief.
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The other plaintiffs’ complaints are meritless, and I would,
therefore, affirm the district court’s denial of relief as to all
plaintiffs other than Harris.
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