NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
No. 16-2690
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JILL STEIN and LOUIS NOVAK, ) FILED
Dec 06, 2016
)
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
Plaintiffs-Appellees, )
)
v. ) ORDER
)
CHRISTOPHER M. THOMAS, in his official )
capacity as Director of Elections for the State of )
Michigan, )
)
& )
)
JEANETTE BRADSHAW, NORMAN D. )
SHINKLE, JULIE MATUZAK, and COLLEEN )
PERO, in their official capacities as Members of the )
Michigan Board of Canvassers, )
)
Defendants, )
)
& )
)
The MICHIGAN REPUBLICAN PARTY, )
)
& )
)
WILLIAM D. SCHUETTE, in his official capacity )
as Attorney General of the State of Michigan, )
)
Intervenors-Defendants-Appellants. )
Before: CLAY, MCKEAGUE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
Defendant-Intervenors, the Michigan Republican Party and Michigan Attorney General
Bill Schuette (“Defendants”), appeal the temporary restraining order issued by the district court
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on December 5, 2016, requiring Michigan election officials to commence recounting the
presidential votes cast in the recent presidential election two days earlier than would have been
provided for under Michigan law. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s
temporary restraining order.1
BACKGROUND
On November 8, 2016, the nation conducted a general election to determine, among other
offices, the forty-fifth President of the United States. Republican Party presidential candidate
Donald J. Trump (“Trump”) was declared the winner in the State of Michigan by 10,704 votes.
On November 30, 2016, Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein (“Stein”) petitioned
the State of Michigan for a recount of its presidential ballots. Trump subsequently objected to
the recount, arguing among other things that the recount was invalid under Michigan law. On
December 2, 2016, the Michigan State Board of Canvassers deadlocked as to Trump’s
objections. Pursuant to Michigan law, Trump’s objections therefore were automatically rejected.
See Mich. Comp. Laws § 168.22d(2). Michigan law provides that after the State Board of
Canvassers resolves objections to a recount, the recount cannot begin until two business days
have passed (“waiting period law”). See id. § 168.882(3). Because December 2, 2016 was a
Friday, the recount therefore could not begin until Wednesday, December 7, 2016, two business
days and four days total after the Board of Canvassers’ decision.
Federal law requires that all disputes over a state’s delegation to the Electoral College be
resolved by December 13, 2016. See 3 U.S.C. § 5. On December 2, 2016, Stein and Michigan
voter Louis Novak filed the instant federal lawsuit against Michigan election officials in the
Eastern District of Michigan asserting that Michigan’s waiting period law would make it
impossible for the recount to be completed by the federal deadline. Plaintiffs asserted various
First and Fourteenth Amendment claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 all seeking the same relief—an
1
We GRANT Attorney General Schuette’s motion to intervene in this appeal, but DENY his and the Michigan
Republican Party’s separate motions to stay the district court’s order AS MOOT.
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order requiring the recount to begin immediately without observing the waiting period law.
Stein also filed an application for a temporary restraining order seeking the same relief. On
December 5, 2016, the district court granted the restraining order and required the recount to
begin at noon the same day. Defendants filed a notice of appeal in this Court challenging the
restraining order, and have moved us for a stay of the district court’s order.
While these federal proceedings were going on, Trump filed applications before the
Michigan Court of Appeals and the Michigan Supreme Court attacking the recount on
substantive grounds under Michigan law. The parties filed briefing before the Michigan Court of
Appeals on December 5, 2016, and that court will hear arguments on the matter on December 6,
2016.
DISCUSSION
I. Article III Standing
At the outset, we are obliged to determine whether Article III standing exists to
adjudicate this matter. We note that this is a separate question from whether a Stein had the right
to initiate the recount in the first place, an issue of Michigan state law that is not before us, and
will in any event be determined by the Michigan courts. In order to establish Article III
standing, a party must demonstrate: (i) that she has suffered an injury in fact that is (ii) fairly
traceable to the conduct being challenged, and (iii) the injury will likely be redressed by a
favorable decision from the federal court. See, e.g., Wittman v. Personhuballah, 136 S. Ct. 1732,
1736 (2016).
We hold that Stein and Novak have demonstrated Article III standing to bring this
lawsuit. Michigan law provides for election recounts under certain circumstances. See Mich.
Comp. Laws §§ 168.880 et seq. Stein and Novak have invoked the recount right created by
Michigan law, and although the Michigan state courts may eventually decide otherwise, to date,
no court has held that Stein and Novak’s recount petition was invalid. Accordingly, Plaintiffs’
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allegations that the waiting period law will make it functionally impossible to exercise their state
law recount right alleges an injury in fact sufficient to satisfy Article III. This injury is fairly
traceable to the waiting period law, which as the district court noted, would have eliminated
roughly one-third of the time available for the recount.
Moreover, Plaintiffs’ injury was redressable by a favorable order from the district court.
Indeed, by obtaining the temporary restraining order Plaintiffs sought, the recount was initiated
in sufficient time to be completed by the December 13, 2016 federal deadline. Accordingly,
Plaintiffs are properly before our Court.
II. Appealability of the Temporary Restraining Order
Plaintiffs assert that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal because a temporary restraining
order is not a reviewable interlocutory order. We disagree.
Generally, temporary restraining orders are not immediately appealable. See Office of
Pers. Mgmt. v. Am. Fed'n of Gov't Employees, AFL–CIO, 473 U.S. 1301, 1303–05 (1985). We
have acknowledged exceptions to this rule that permit appeal whenever irreparable harm will
occur before the order expires, or the order requires “affirmative action” rather than simply
preserving the status quo. Ne. Ohio Coalition for Homeless & Serv. Emps. Int’l Union, Local
1199 v. Blackwell, 467 F.3d 999, 1005–06 (6th Cir. 2006).
Here, the district court’s temporary restraining order required affirmative action—it
ordered Michigan officials to begin the recount two days before the time provided under
Michigan law. We therefore hold that the district court’s order was an appealable interlocutory
order.
III. Propriety of the Temporary Restraining Order
We review a district court’s decision to grant a temporary restraining order for abuse of
discretion. Id. at 1009. “To determine whether a TRO should be stayed,” we consider the same
factors used to determine whether the TRO should be issued in the first place, including:
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“(1) whether the movant has a strong likelihood of success on the merits, (2) whether the movant
would suffer irreparable injury absent a stay, (3) whether granting the stay would cause
substantial harm to others, and (4) whether the public interest would be served by granting the
stay.” Id. “These factors are not prerequisites that must be met, but are interrelated
considerations that must be balanced together.” Mich. Coal. of Radioactive Material Users, Inc.
v. Griepentrog, 945 F.2d 150, 153 (6th Cir. 1991). “For example, the probability of success that
must be demonstrated is inversely proportional to the amount of irreparable injury the movants
will suffer absent the stay.” Blackwell, 467 F.3d at 1009.
We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting the temporary
restraining order at issue here. Plaintiffs have made a compelling showing that they will be
irreparably harmed in the absence of the temporary restraining order. Defendant Thomas
admitted before the district court that it would have been extremely difficult and unlikely—a
“monumental undertaking”—for the State to have completed the recount before the December
13, 2016 federal deadline if it had observed the waiting period law. If the recount could not be
completed by the federal deadline, the right to a recount provided under Michigan law would
have been effectively worthless. Facing the potential that Plaintiffs’ state recount right may have
been deprived entirely by the waiting period law, we cannot say that the district court abused its
discretion in determining that Plaintiffs would suffer irreparable harm without a TRO.
Because Plaintiffs made an extremely strong showing of irreparable harm, they were not
required to make as a strong a showing of a likelihood of success on the merits. Blackwell, 467
F.3d at 1009. Plaintiffs met this lowered bar. As the district court recognized, once a state
legislature vests its citizens with election rights, those rights are fundamental and are protectable
by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. See, e.g., Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98, 104 (2000) (non-
precedential); League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Brunner, 548 F.3d 463, 476 (6th Cir. 2008).
Plaintiffs made a sufficient showing that the State of Michigan granted them a right to a recount;
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once that premise is established, we think it clear that the State could not use arbitrary or
unreasonable procedural rules to make that right a nullity.
When evaluating whether state election procedures violate First and Fourteenth
Amendment election rights, we use the framework set out by the Supreme Court in Anderson v.
Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780, 788–89 (1983), and Burdick v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428, 434 (1992).
Under the Anderson/Burdick framework, we weigh the burden to a plaintiff’s First and
Fourteenth Amendment rights against the interests put forward by the State as justifications for
its election procedures. Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434. Our inquiry is rigorous when the burden on a
plaintiff’s rights is severe, and more relaxed when the burden is slight or minimal. Id.
Here, as explained earlier, Plaintiffs would have essentially lost their state-recognized
recount right entirely if the waiting period law had been followed. This is a severe burden, and
requires us to closely scrutinize the justifications put forward for the waiting period. As the
district court correctly recognized, the justification put forward by Defendants—that the waiting
period allows for judicial review before the state spends resources on a recount—is simply not
compelling enough to justify de facto nullifying Plaintiffs’ right to invoke the recount procedures
afforded them under Michigan law. The district court did not abuse its discretion in determining
that Plaintiffs made a sufficient showing of success on the merits in light of the irreparable harm
Plaintiffs would have suffered without relief.
The two other TRO factors also justify the district court’s decision. First, the TRO did
not cause substantial harm to the State of Michigan or its citizens; it merely required the recount
to start a day-and-a-half earlier than it otherwise would have. Likewise, given that Michigan has
chosen to provide for potential recounts, we believe the public interest was served by relaxing a
procedural requirement that would have effectively nullified that right.
Finally, we wish to emphasize the narrowness of the question we decide today. We do
not decide that there is a freestanding constitutional right to a recount, or that Plaintiffs validly
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invoked a recount under Michigan law, or that Plaintiffs should necessarily prevail on the merits
of this suit. We merely hold that given the strong showing of irreparable harm here, Plaintiffs’
colorable arguments that their state-created recount right was being arbitrarily abridged, and the
relatively minimal stakes involved in starting the recount slightly earlier than it otherwise would
have, the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting a temporary restraining order.
IV. Defendants’ Arguments
Defendants offer several arguments in support of their position, but we pause to address
two briefly. First, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs could have initiated a recount or raised
concerns about the vulnerability of Michigan’s election machinery earlier than they did, and that
therefore Plaintiffs’ suit should be barred by the doctrine of laches. This argument lacks merit.
Plaintiffs indisputably filed their recount petition within two days after the final certification of
Michigan’s presidential vote. See Mich. Comp. Laws § 168.880. We doubt that laches can ever
be invoked when Plaintiffs have complied with statutory time limits. But in any event,
Defendants have made no showing of the sort of bad faith or inexcusable delay necessary to
invoke the doctrine here. Moreover, Plaintiffs do not ask this Court to find that Michigan’s
election results were tainted by fraud; they merely argue that the waiting period law was
unconstitutional as applied to them. Given the narrowness of the issues properly before the
Court, we decline to weigh in on any issues concerning the propriety of the recount or
Michigan’s presidential canvas, which are best left to the Michigan courts at this stage.
Second, Defendants urge us to abstain from deciding the questions presented in this
appeal under the doctrines announced in Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co., 312 U.S. 496
(1941), and Burford v. Sun Oil Co., 319 U.S. 315 (1943). Pullman abstention is appropriate
where a litigant asks a federal court to reach a constitutional question predicated on the federal
court’s own, non-binding interpretation of state law. Moore v. Sims, 442 U.S. 415, 425 (1979).
Burford abstention is appropriate “where timely and adequate state-court review is available and
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(1) a case presents difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial
public import whose importance transcends the results in the case at bar, or (2) the exercise of
federal review of the question in a case and in similar cases would be disruptive of state efforts to
establish a coherent policy with respect to a matter of substantial public concern.” Caudill v.
Eubanks Farms, Inc., 301 F.3d 658, 660 (6th Cir. 2002).
Neither doctrine is appropriate here. We have not decided a single state law issue or
interpreted a single Michigan statute in deciding this appeal. We merely took the waiting period
law at face value, and evaluated whether the district court abused its discretion in temporarily
restraining its operation. This inquiry involved only established federal standards governing
TROs, and federal constitutional principles stemming from the First and Fourteenth
Amendments. Because we did not decide any state law questions, Pullman and Burford are
inapposite.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion by
issuing a temporary restraining order halting operation of the waiting period law. We therefore
AFFIRM the district court’s temporary restraining order. If, subsequently, the Michigan courts
determine that Plaintiffs’ recount is improper under Michigan state law for any reason, we expect
the district court to entertain any properly filed motions to dissolve or modify its order in this
case.
McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Because it is obvious that the district court
overstepped its bounds in numerous ways by inserting itself into what were orderly election
processes in accordance with state law, I dissent from the denial of the motion to stay.
Let’s consider the chronology once again. Presidential election candidate Jill Stein
received approximately one percent of the nearly 4.8 million votes cast in Michigan in the
presidential election that culminated on November 8, 2016. Results of the election have been
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certified by the Board of State Canvassers and names of the presidential electors have been
transmitted by the Michigan Governor to the United States Secretary of State, as required by
federal law. Undeterred by the results of the election, Stein filed her petition for a recount under
M.C.L. § 168.879, less than one week ago, on November 30, 2016, alleging she was “aggrieved
on account of fraud or mistake.” Objections to the request were filed on December 1, 2016, and
the Board of State Canvassers timely addressed the matter, held a hearing, and rejected the
objections on December 2. Michigan Director of Elections, defendant Christopher M. Thomas,
in fulfillment of his duties and in compliance with M.C.L. § 168.882(3), thereupon directed that
the recount would commence on December 7, after two business days had elapsed since the
ruling of the Board. Thus, an orderly and expedited process for addressing Stein’s request in
accordance with state law was well under way.
Stein was not satisfied however. She commenced litigation in federal district court on
December 2, demanding, in contravention of an undisputedly clear and unambiguous state law,
that the recount be commenced immediately. She moved the court for a temporary restraining
order enjoining enforcement of the state-law mandated “delay” until December 7. The district
court took the extraordinary measure of scheduling a hearing on Sunday morning at 10:30 a.m.,
December 4, and issued a temporary restraining order requiring commencement of the recount at
noon on Monday, December 5. That is, even though a temporary restraining order is an
extraordinary remedy designed for the limited purpose of preserving the status quo pending
further proceedings on the merits, see University of Texas v. Camenisch, 451 U.S. 390, 395
(1981), the district court peremptorily intervened to disrupt the status quo. And the court did so
on the thinnest of legal foundations—based on a speculative showing of harm and undefined
showing of legal entitlement to relief.
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The district court justified its decision by concluding that Stein had shown “a likelihood
of success on the merits” of the claim that the two-day waiting period could result in a violation
of the First Amendment right to vote, without even identifying any factual basis for Stein’s
allegation that she was aggrieved on account of fraud or mistake. Instead, the court relied
implicitly on the showing that Michigan’s voting machines, like voting machines across the
nation, are vulnerable to potential hacking or cyberattack—despite the absence of any evidence
of such tampering. Nor did the district court identify the precise nature of the supposed violation
of the First Amendment right to vote posed by this vulnerability.
The court observed that the right to vote is fundamental, albeit not defined in the
Constitution, and paid lip service to the Anderson/Burdick standard that applies to such a claim.
See Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780 (1983), and Burdick v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428 (1992).
Yet, the court failed to apply the first step of the Anderson/Burdick analysis, which requires
assessment of the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to First Amendment rights. If
the state regulatory scheme is generally applicable and non-discriminatory, as is Michigan law,
then, pursuant to the Supreme Court’s most recent guidance, it is deemed to impose no more than
a minimal burden and is presumed to pass constitutional muster. Ohio Democratic Party v.
Husted, 834 F.3d 620, 631 (6th Cir. 2016) (citing Crawford v. Marion Cty. Election Bd., 553
U.S. 181, 200, 202–03 (2008)). The district court failed to explain how permitting the recount
process to proceed in accordance with state law imposed or threatened any cognizable burden on
Stein’s or co-plaintiff Louis Novak’s right to vote.
The majority essentially gives Stein a pass on this fundamental prerequisite to injunctive
relief, observing that she was only required to meet a “lowered bar” because her showing of
irreparable harm is “extremely strong.” Really?
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The district court concluded that Stein had shown a likelihood of irreparable harm if,
pursuant to Michigan law, the recount were not commenced until December 7, based on the
showing that completing the recount by the December 13 “safe harbor date” would be a
“monumental undertaking.” There is no dispute: the recount process is demanding. But the
process is governed by presumptively valid state law. Stein made her request for recount, under
state law, only on November 30; and her request was in the process of being granted under the
provisions of that same state law when she, on the same day objections were overruled,
December 2, complained that the state law process was too slow. For the sake of accelerating
the process by two days, the district court ordered defendants, in contravention of state law, to
commence the recount immediately, on December 5. Yes, the time period within which the
recount must be accomplished, per federal law, is short, but the record is devoid of any showing
that the constitutionally protected right to vote, whether Stein’s or that of co-plaintiff Michigan
voter Louis Novak, is threatened with irreparable harm if the statutorily prescribed process is
permitted to run its course.
The majority reads “monumental undertaking” as synonymous with “impossibility” and
characterizes the two-day period as “effectively nullifying” Stein’s right to a recount. And this is
the “extremely strong” showing of irreparable harm that is said to obviate the need for the court
to scrutinize likelihood of success on the merits. Yet, the record is devoid of any showing that
the recount will not be timely completed. Nor is it clear, to anyone apparently, what the impact
of post-December 13 completion would be. December 13 is simply a “safe harbor date.” The
electors do not actually meet and cast their votes until December 19. There is simply no
evidence on the likelihood of such dire consequences as Stein and the majority imagine.
Speculation about what may or may not happen in the future is hardly justification for federal
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court interference with what is by all appearances an orderly and expedited state election
process.
Further underscoring the impropriety of the district court’s interference is its own
acknowledgement that proceedings challenging the Board of State Canvassers’ decision were
pending in the Michigan Court of Appeals and Michigan Supreme Court since December 2 and
that the Michigan Court of Appeals had scheduled a hearing on Michigan Attorney General Bill
Schuette’s emergency complaint for writ of mandamus on December 6. Again, it was and is
abundantly clear that Michigan authorities in the executive and judicial branches have taken
great pains to fairly address the merits of Stein’s request under the law.
So, stepping back to behold this picture with perspective, we find that, even though the
Constitution recognizes the states’ clear prerogative to regulate election processes and to thereby
ensure they are accompanied by fairness and order, not chaos, see Ohio Democratic Party, 834
F.3d at 626–27; and even though a temporary restraining order is an extraordinary remedy
designed for the limited purpose of preserving the status quo (not demolishing it) pending
further proceedings on the merits; and even though plaintiff Stein was unable to muster even the
barest showing of likelihood of success and irreparable harm; and even though state court
proceedings to ensure the fairness of any recount are currently pending and poised to address any
demonstrated need for relief, a district judge has seen fit to deploy the judicial power of the
federal sovereign to intrude upon proceedings under state law that are traditionally entrusted to
the states . . . simply because he thinks, in regard to a statutory two-day period (!), that he has a
better idea than the elected representatives of the people of the State of Michigan . . . and
because he can.
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Moreover, in manifest display of partiality and overreach, the district court purports to
have granted relief even more expansive than was requested. Whereas plaintiff Stein asked the
court to enjoin any delay in commencement of the recount prior to December 7 (when the
recount otherwise would have been commenced in accordance with state law), the district court
purports to have not only ordered immediate commencement of the recount, but continuation
thereof “until further order of this Court.” And not only that: the district court further defined
the required continuation as including the requirement that “all governmental units participating
in the recount to assemble necessary staff to work sufficient hours to assure that the recount is
completed in time to comply with the safe harbor provision of 3 U.S.C. § 5.” R. 16, Temporary
Restraining Order at 7–8, Page ID 678–79.
To this, I can only respond, “Astounding!” “Just who do we think we are?” Obergefell
v. Hodges, 135 S.Ct. 2584, 2612 (2015) (Roberts, J., dissenting).
At the very least, we should stay any effect of the temporary restraining order that
extends beyond 12:01 a.m. on December 7, 2016. Even the district court’s own findings and
conclusions, as insufficient as they are, justify absolutely no relief beyond that time, when state
officials were prepared to comply with state law. By ordering commencement of the recount on
December 5, in advance of the December 7 date provided for under state law, the district court
granted Stein all the relief she had requested in her motion. By ordering continuation and
completion of the recount by December 13, the court purported to assert “power” in excess even
of the “authority” it had illegitimately claimed for itself. This overreach should be seen for what
it is: a naked and illegitimate power grab that should stand as no impediment to the state courts’
orderly adjudication of the state law issues before them in accordance with state law.
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My colleagues seem to recognize this infirmity in the district court’s order by observing
that, depending on the outcome of proceedings in the state courts, they “expect the district court
to entertain any properly filed motions to dissolve or modify its order in this case.” In my
opinion, this should be read to mean that, if the Michigan courts conclude that Stein has no right
to a recount, the temporary restraining order should be vacated. If, on the other hand, the
Michigan courts allow the recount to proceed, then the two-day waiting period relief granted in
the temporary restraining order will essentially have been mooted by the passage of time. Either
way, the temporary restraining order will cease to have any continuing vitality.
In my opinion, no issue of constitutional magnitude is implicated by any of plaintiff
Stein’s pleadings. By issuing the temporary restraining order, the district court abused its
discretion. By refusing to stay this judicial overreach, the majority perpetuates, and lends the
Sixth Circuit’s imprimatur to, modern confusion surrounding the federal courts’ limited oversight
of state election processes. I respectfully dissent.
ENTERED BY ORDER OF THE COURT
Deborah S. Hunt, Clerk