Filed: December 26, 1996
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 96-1434
Wayne Harter, et al,
Plaintiffs - Appellees,
versus
C. D. Vernon, etc., et al,
Defendants - Appellants.
O R D E R
The Court amends its order filed November 22, 1996, as
follows:
On page 2, first full paragraph, line 4 -- the period after
the word "panel" is removed and replaced with a comma; the word
"see" should be lower case.
For the Court - By Direction
/s/ Patricia S. Connor
Clerk
PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
WAYNE HARTER; ROBERT PAYNE,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
C. D. VERNON, individually and in
his official capacity as Sheriff of
No. 96-1434
Rockingham County; ROCKINGHAM
COUNTY,
Defendants-Appellants,
GUILFORD COUNTY,
Movant.
Filed: November 22, 1996
_________________________________________________________________
ORDER
A member of the Court requested a poll on whether this case
should be reheard en banc. A majority of judges in active service
voted that it should not be reheard en banc.
Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judges Russell, Widener, Wilkins,
Luttig, and Williams voted for rehearing en banc. Judges Hall,
Murnaghan, Ervin, Niemeyer, Hamilton, Michael, and Motz voted
against rehearing en banc.
Judge Luttig filed an opinion dissenting from the denial of rehear-
ing en banc, in which Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judges Russell,
Wilkins, and Williams joined.
Entered at the direction of Judge Motz for the Court.
LUTTIG, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Out of respect for the rule of law and principles of stare decisis,
and in order to avoid confusion concerning the law in our circuit, we
have adopted for our court a rule that one panel cannot overrule or
modify a published opinion of another panel, see, e.g., Norfolk &
Western Ry. v. Director, OWCP, 5 F.3d 777, 779 (4th Cir. 1993); a
modification of precedent may only be made by the full court sitting
en banc. The necessary corollary of this rule is that in those instances
in which a later opinion impermissibly attempts to modify an earlier
opinion, the earlier opinion remains the controlling law in the circuit
with respect to matters as to which the two opinions unquestionably
conflict. Were it otherwise, willing panels, unconstrained by any
sense of obligation to the principles of stare decisis, our own internal
rules, or notions of collegiality, could run roughshod over prior prece-
dent, effectively repealing a rule whose importance to both the rule
of law and to the orderly operation of a court is beyond dispute.
Most frequently, in instances where it is believed by certain mem-
bers of the court (or for that matter, members of the bar) that an opin-
ion effectively overrules or modifies a prior opinion, it may at least
reasonably be argued that it does not do so, either because the facts
are sufficiently different from those of the earlier case as to render the
earlier case inapposite or because the issue presented in the later case,
although perhaps closely related, is actually different from that in the
earlier case and does not require application of the same principle of
law. In such instances, of course, it simply falls to the members of the
bar, and ultimately to the court, to reconcile the two authorities in a
principled way.
Because of the respect that we accord each other, it is the rare occa-
sion when, even upon careful examination, not only is it apparent that
a panel opinion is demonstrably at odds with prior caselaw, but it can-
not reasonably be contended otherwise. In my judgment, Harter v.
Vernon, No. 96-1434, is, because of its flagrant disregard of our
recent opinion in Gray v. Laws, 51 F.3d 426 (4th Cir. 1995), such an
opinion. Consequently, under our own rules, it seems to me that it (as
opposed to Gray) cannot hereafter be regarded as controlling author-
ity on questions of Eleventh Amendment immunity with regard to
matters where the two opinions conflict.
2
The ways in which the panel opinion attempts to alter Gray are
numerous and undeniable. Indeed, if the panel opinion is placed
alongside Gray, it is obvious that, despite its disclaimers, the panel
opinion was authored as if Gray had never even been written.
The panel opinion begins its analysis by boldly stating that "[t]he
test [that is] employed in the Fourth Circuit for determining whether
an agency or employee constitutes an arm of the state was first stated
in Ram Ditta v. Maryland Nat'l Capital Park and Planning Comm.,
822 F.2d 456 (4th Cir. 1987)." Op. at 4. Ram Ditta, however, is no
longer the test employed in this Circuit. Rather, the test in this Circuit
is that laid out in Gray, which expressly refined Ram Ditta in light
of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Hess v. Port Auth. Trans-
Hudson Corp., 115 S. Ct. 394 (1994).
We could not have been clearer in Gray that a modification of Ram
Ditta was required by Hess:
Hess necessitates a modification of our analysis [in Ram
Ditta] for single state entities only to the extent that it must
be read to introduce as one of the primary considerations the
concern for state sovereignty and to formulate differently
several of the other relevant considerations that we had pre-
viously enumerated.
51 F.3d at 434. In the very next sentence in Gray, we went on to say,
referring to the previous three pages of analysis of Hess and our own
precedent, that,
[a]lthough the changes in our circuit's Eleventh Amendment
analysis wrought by Hess arguably are not significant as
they bear on the single state issue before us, neither are they
inconsequential.
Id. (emphasis added). That we modified Ram Ditta cannot reasonably
be contested.
Indeed, any suggestion (such as that in today's opinion) that Ram
Ditta applied exactly the standard employed in Hess should have been
3
refuted by the fact that the Supreme Court itself vacated and
remanded for consideration in light of Hess our own opinion in
Ristow v. South Carolina Ports Auth., 27 F.3d 84 (4th Cir. 1994),
which had relied exclusively on Ram Ditta. See Ristow v. South Caro-
lina Ports Auth., 115 S. Ct. 567 (1994).
The modifications that Gray held were necessitated by Hess were
set forth in great specificity in Gray. The first and principal change,
of course, was that Hess elevated to primacy, together with the con-
cern for the state treasury, the concern for state sovereignty, stating
that these two concerns are "the Eleventh Amendment's twin reasons
for being." 115 S. Ct. at 404. As we explicitly said in Gray,
These two concerns, "the Eleventh Amendment's twin rea-
sons for being," id. at ___, 115 S. Ct. at 404, the Court
instructed, should dominate the inquiry in cases where it is
difficult to discern whether a particular entity is an arm of
the state.
Gray, 51 F.3d at 432. Today's opinion not only does not accord any
particular significance to the state sovereignty factor, it effectively
reads that factor out of the Eleventh Amendment analysis altogether
by holding that it is not an independent factor, but merely a proxy for
the other factors collectively.
In fact, in what is a most telling misstatement of Hess, today's
opinion reads as follows:
The [Supreme] Court found that these factors, which echo
the factors articulated in Ram Ditta, pointed in opposite
directions for purposes of determining the Eleventh Amend-
ment immunity of the Port Authority. The Hess Court rea-
soned that when this is the case, a court must focus on "the
impetus for the Eleventh Amendment: the prevention of fed-
eral court judgments that must be paid out of a State's trea-
sury. . . . Accordingly, Courts of Appeals have recognized
the vulnerability of the State's purse as the most salient fac-
tor in Eleventh Amendment determinations."
4
Op. at 5-6. Significantly, what the Supreme Court actually said was
not that when the factors point in opposite directions courts should
focus on the treasury question; what it said was
[w]hen indicators of immunity point in different directions,
the Eleventh Amendment's twin reasons for being remain
our prime guide. See supra at 400.
115 S. Ct. at 404. Of course, as noted, the Supreme Court had identi-
fied the "twin reasons for being" as concern for the fisc and, "[m]ore
pervasively," concern for state sovereignty. Id. at 400.
Second, although we stated in Gray that the concern for the fisc
was the most important factor, we did not hold that the impact on the
state treasury was necessarily dispositive of the inquiry. Although one
could conclude that the treasury concern was dispositive if payment
from the treasury was required, Hess did not say as much. Thus, we
said in Gray, in language that differs from that in today's opinion, in
a slight, but very important way, that,
it appears that a determination that the state treasury will be
liable for a particular judgment is largely, if not wholly, dis-
positive of entitlement to Eleventh Amendment immunity
. . . . This was essentially our holding in Bockes.
51 F.3d at 433-34 (citations omitted; emphasis added). There is noth-
ing whatsoever in Hess to support the assertion in today's opinion that
Hess "held" that "the state treasury factor [is] `dispositive.'" See Op.
at 9.
Third, we specifically held in Gray that where the state treasury
will not be affected by the judgment, whether or not immunity will
obtain
must be determined by resort to the other relevant consider-
ations referenced by the Court, chief among which are
whether the suit will jeopardize "the integrity retained by
[the] State in our federal system," and whether the state
possesses such control over the entity claiming Eleventh
5
Amendment immunity that it can legitimately be considered
an "arm of the state."
Gray, 51 F.3d at 434 (quoting Hess, 115 S. Ct. at 400) (emphasis
added). Today's opinion, in stark contrast, reads as follows:
The state treasury factor is also significant when the state
treasury will not pay the judgment. If that is the case, then
"the most salient factor in Eleventh Amendment decisions"
weighs against a finding of immunity. Hess, 115 S. Ct. at
404. Although in that situation, a court should consider the
other Ram Ditta factors, Hess makes clear that the impact on
the state treasury is generally determinative when the state
will not have to pay for a judgment: . . .
Op. at 7-8. In short, the proposed opinion simply ignores altogether
the nuanced analysis required in Gray. Although one can conclude
that the treasury concern may be dispositive if payment from the trea-
sury is required, see Bockes v. Fields, 999 F.2d 788, neither Hess nor
Gray implied that Eleventh Amendment concerns are to be dis-
counted and downgraded when the state treasury is not implicated.
Yet this is exactly what today's opinion purports to do.
And the list of inconsistencies between today's opinion and Gray
goes on.
To say, as the court today does, that we did not "articulat[e] the
particulars of the Eleventh Amendment inquiry in Gray," see Op. at
6, is, as should be apparent even from the selected quotations above,
simply disingenuous. The majority's view that the Gray court must
not have detailed the particulars of the analysis because it remanded
to the district court is a non sequitur. Gray obviously did not remand
for the district court to develop the Eleventh Amendment analysis; it
remanded for that court to apply our analysis in the first instance so
as to determine whether the particular officials in that case were enti-
tled to immunity.
I believe the full court is remiss for not addressing the serious
breach of our own rules represented by the panel's opinion. Absent
6
clarification from us, not only do we telegraph how little respect we
have for our own precedent and the centrality of stare decisis in our
jurisprudence, but we also hopelessly confuse the district courts of
this circuit by requiring them to apply Gray (which they are emphati-
cally obliged to do, notwithstanding today's opinion) even in the face
of arguments grounded in Harter's unmistakable attempt to "rewrite"
Gray.
Because of the panel's disregard of our court's precedent in Gray,
and the consequent affront to the rule of law in our circuit, I would
summarily vacate the panel's decision. At the very least, however, I
would rehear the case en banc so that the modifications made to Gray
by today's opinion (which collectively result in a more restrictive
interpretation of the Eleventh Amendment than even that in Hess)
would, at a minimum, enjoy the imprimatur of legitimacy, and so that
the district courts within our circuit would not be subjected to the
utterly confusing directions from our court that results from today's
decision. Left to stand, the bar of our court, as well as the district
courts of our circuit, cannot be faulted for wondering whether the
operative "rule" of the court is that a panel is bound by earlier prece-
dent unless, through an exercise of raw judicial power, the panel
decides that it will not be so bound. When, even as colleagues, we
accord our own precedent so little respect, we should hardly be sur-
prised when others do likewise.
Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judges Russell, Wilkins, and Williams
join in this opinion.
7