Case: 18-60487 Document: 00515086236 Page: 1 Date Filed: 08/21/2019
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
No. 18-60487
FILED
August 21, 2019
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
JEFFERY A. STALLWORTH,
Plaintiff,
versus
GOVERNOR DEWEY PHILLIP "PHIL" BRYANT; et al.,
Defendants,
versus
JOSH HARKINS; DEAN KIRBY; PHILLIP MORAN; CHRIS CAUGHMAN;
NICKEY BROWNING; JOHN A. POLK; MARK BAKER; ALEX MONSOUR,
Respondents–Appellants,
versus
JACKSON MUNICIPAL AIRPORT AUTHORITY;
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF THE JACKSON MUNICIPAL AIRPORT
AUTHORITY, each in his or her official capacity as a Commissioner on the
Board of Commissioners of the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority;
DOCTOR ROSIE L. T. PRIDGEN, in her official capacity as a Commissioner
on the Board of Commissioners of the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority;
REVEREND JAMES L. HENLEY, JR., in his official capacity as a
Commissioner on the Board of Commissioners of the Jackson Municipal
Airport Authority;
LAWANDA D. HARRIS, in her official capacity as a Commissioner on the
Board of Commissioners of the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority;
VERNON W. HARTLEY, SR., in his official capacity as a Commissioner on
the Board of Commissioners of the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority;
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EVELYN O. REED, in her official capacity as a Commissioner on the Board
of Commissioners of the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority;
DOCTOR ROSIE L. T. PRIDGEN, individually as citizens of the City of
Jackson, MS, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated;
LAWANDA D. HARRIS, individually as citizens of the City of Jackson, MS,
on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated;
VERNON W. HARTLEY, SR., individually as citizens of the City of Jackson,
MS, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated;
EVELYN O. REED, individually as citizens of the City of Jackson, MS, on
behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated;
JAMES L. HENLEY, JR., individually as citizens of the City of Jackson, MS,
on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated,
Intervenors–Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Mississippi
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
This is a discovery dispute stemming from a challenge to recent changes
to the governance of the Jackson-Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport
(“airport”) via Mississippi Senate Bill 2162 (“S.B. 2162”). The Jackson Munici-
pal Airport Authority (“JMAA”), the Board of Commissioners of JMAA
(“Board”), and each member of the Board, in their official and individual capac-
ities, sued the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and the two counties in which
the airport is located, claiming that S.B. 2162 violates, inter alia, the Four-
teenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause and the equal protection com-
ponent of the Mississippi Constitution.
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Plaintiffs served document subpoenas on eight state legislators (the
“Legislators”) who are not parties to the case, seeking communications between
the Legislators “and any person, including members of the Mississippi legis-
lature and any governmental agency, body or its representative(s)” about
S.B. 2162 or the airport. Claiming legislative privilege, the Legislators refused
to comply. The magistrate judge (“MJ”) granted in part the plaintiffs’ motion
to enforce the subpoenas, ordering the Legislators to produce a privilege log
and any relevant information previously shared with third parties. The dis-
trict court affirmed. Because the plaintiffs lack standing, we vacate and
remand with instruction to dismiss the equal protection claim.
I.
A.
In April 2016, the Mississippi Legislature enacted S.B. 2162, 1 amending
the Airport Authorities Law, MISS. CODE ANN. §§ 61-3-1 et seq., and trans-
ferring control of the airport from the five-member JMAA to a new nine-
member board, the Jackson Metropolitan Area Airport Authority. 2 Under the
new arrangement, Jackson officials appoint only two commissioners; the other
seven are appointed by state officials and officials from neighboring counties. 3
That structure is unique: Mississippi law grants every other municipality
1 S.B. 2162 was introduced by five of the appellants—Senators Josh Harkins, Dean
Kirby, Philip Moran, Chris Caughman, and Nickey Browning. It was referred to a committee
chaired by another appellant, Senator John A. Polk, and then to committees chaired by
appellants Mark Baker and Alex Monsour in the Mississippi House of Representatives.
2 The City of Jackson owns the land on which the Airport is located.
3 The nine commissioners on the new board are the Adjutant General of the Mis-
sissippi National Guard; the Executive Director of the Mississippi Development Authority;
one commissioner each appointed by the Jackson Mayor, the Jackson City Council, the Board
of Supervisors of Madison County, the Board of Supervisors of Rankin County, and the Lieu-
tenant Governor of Mississippi; and two commissioners appointed by the Governor of Mis-
sissippi and who must reside in Jackson. MISS. CODE ANN. § 61-3-6.
3
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exclusive authority to create an airport authority and appoint its commis-
sioners. 4 Defendant Governor Bryant signed S.B. 2162 on May 4, 2016.
Shortly before the bill took effect, JMAA, its Board, the JMAA Commis-
sioners, the Jackson Mayor, and the Jackson City Council intervened in a suit
filed by a Jackson resident to enjoin enforcement of S.B. 2162. The only per-
tinent count of the intervenor complaint is Count VII, in which the members
of the JMAA Board—suing in their individual capacities “on behalf of them-
selves and all others similarly situated”—assert that S.B. 2162 violates the
Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause and the equal protection
component of the Mississippi Constitution’s Due Process Clause. 5
Urging that S.B. 2162 effects “an illegal dilution of voting and other
rights of the citizens of Jackson, Mississippi,” the plaintiffs claim a represen-
tational injury. They posit that Jackson “officials, including the Mayor and the
City Council, currently select the JMAA Board,” but “[S.B.] 2162 strips those
officials of control” of their airport, leaving “the City’s Mayor and Council . . .
with a single appointee each to the new, nine[-]person board.” The plaintiffs
4 Compare MISS. CODE ANN. § 61-3-5 (“Any municipality . . . by resolution, may create
a public body, corporate and politic, to be known as a municipal airport authority . . . . Upon
the adoption of a resolution creating a municipal airport authority, the governing body of the
municipality . . . shall appoint five (5) persons as commissioners of the authority.”), with id.
§ 61-3-6 (“The Jackson Metropolitan Area Airport Authority is created . . . to manage, control
and enforce all necessary and beneficial matters pertaining to the operation of Jackson-
Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport and Hawkins Field Airport. The authority shall
have the same powers and duties as a municipal airport authority under this chapter . . . .
The Jackson Metropolitan Area Airport Authority shall consist of the following nine (9)
commissioners . . . .”).
5 Though the Mississippi Constitution has no equal protection clause, “Mississippi
finds an equal protection component in its Due Process Clause, MISS. CONST. art. III, § 14.”
Jeffrey Jackson et al., 3 ENCYCLOPEDIA MISS. LAW § 19:49 (2d ed. 2016); see also, e.g.,
McGowan v. State, 185 So. 826, 829 (Miss. 1939) (“Equal protection, under the law, is one of
the corner stones of the American system of government, and experience admonishes us that
these constitutional rights should be graven with a pen of iron upon the rock forever.”
(internal quotation marks omitted)).
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opine that “every other municipality in the State of Mississippi” retains the
exclusive “discretion to create a municipal airport authority to manage, con-
trol, and operate any airports owned by those municipalities.” In other words,
Jackson’s “governing officials have less opportunity and ability as compared to
the other appointing officials to exercise discretion in matters of appointing an
airport authority.” The plaintiffs conclude that S.B. 2162 “has the practical
effect of foreclosing the City’s electorate from exercising their right to elect
governing officials with unencumbered discretion to create a municipal airport
authority and appoint commissioners to manage, control and operate [it].”
The plaintiffs further contend that S.B. 2162 altered governance of the
airport for race-based reasons. Before S.B. 2162, all five commissioners were
black, which, the plaintiffs aver, made the airport “the only airport in the State
of Mississippi managed and operated by a Board comprised solely of African
Americans.” They further allege that the City of Jackson is approximately 79%
black and 18% Caucasian, which roughly matched the racial composition of
Jackson officials when S.B. 2162 was enacted. 6 The State of Mississippi,
however, is 37% black and 59% Caucasian. 7 Under the new arrangement, the
Governor and Lieutenant Governor select five of the nine commissioners. Two
more are selected by Madison County and Rankin County officials, and both of
those counties are majority Caucasian. 8 Taking control of the airport away
from Jackson, the intervenors conclude, “demonstrates the City and its citizens
and taxpayers have been invidiously excluded because of race, in whole or in
6 See U.S. DEP’T COMMERCE, Mississippi: 2010—Census of Population and Housing 90
(Sept. 2012), available at https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/cph-1-26.pdf. The plaintiffs
assert that Jackson was governed by “five African Americans and two Caucasians” when S.B.
2162 was enacted.
7 Id. at 84.
8 Madison County is 57% Caucasian and 38% black, and Rankin County is 77% Cau-
casian and 19% black. Id.
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part, from any control of its Airport by [S.B.] 2162.”
B.
During discovery, the JMAA and its five commissioners, suing in their
official capacities (“JMAA plaintiffs”), served document subpoenas on the eight
Legislators. Additionally, four of the five commissioners suing in their indi-
vidual capacities (“individual plaintiffs”) served identical subpoenas on four of
the same Legislators. 9 The subpoenas requested, in relevant part, communi-
cations between the Legislators “and any person, including members of the
Mississippi legislature and any governmental agency, body or its represen-
tative(s)” about S.B. 2162 or the Airport. 10 The plaintiffs averred that the sub-
poenas sought information relevant to “establishing an equal protection viola-
tion under federal law.”
The Legislators refused to comply, specifically objecting to Request 3.
They first asserted that any responsive information would be relevant only to
the equal protection claim brought by the individual plaintiffs and not to the
JMAA plaintiffs’ claims. The Legislators secondly maintained the requested
“communications between members of the Mississippi Legislature and govern-
ment officials regarding [S.B.] 2162’s consideration and passage . . . per-
tain[ing] to the Legislators’ thought processes or the communications they
9Those Legislators include Representative Baker and Senators Kirby, Caughman,
and Harkins. The relevant board members are Pridgen, Harris, Hartley, and Reed.
10 Request 3 reads in full as follows:
3. Any and all documents, including but not limited to, email communications
and text messages and any documents attached thereto (stored or otherwise)
exchanged by (sent to and/or from) you and any person, including members of
the Mississippi legislature and any governmental agency, body or its represen-
tative(s) regarding Senate Bill 2162 and/ or [sic] the Jackson-Medgar Evers
International Airport from January 1, 2014 to present. The responsive infor-
mation is requested to be produced on a disk, in single page Tiff files, a sum-
mation load file, and OCR.
6
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had”—would be protected by the legislative privilege.
The JMAA plaintiffs and the individual plaintiffs moved to enforce the
subpoenas, and the MJ partially granted the motion. Observing that “motiva-
tions behind [an] allegedly discriminatory law are relevant in determining
whether an [equal protection] violation has occurred,” the MJ found that
Request 3 “appears reasonably tailored to seek documents which may shed
light on the Legislators’ motivations in drafting and passing [S.B.] 2162.” The
MJ did not distinguish between the relevance of the information sought by the
JMAA plaintiffs’ and the individual plaintiffs’ subpoenas.
Regarding the privilege claim, the MJ determined that any applicable
privilege was waived for “documents or information otherwise protected by the
legislative privilege . . . shared with third parties” and ordered the Legislators
to produce such materials. The MJ also faulted the Legislators for invoking
legislative privilege “without producing an accompanying privilege log,” as
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(5)(A)(ii) requires. He ordered them to
“produce a privilege log identifying” documents responsive to Request 3 but
withheld under a claim of privilege so that the plaintiffs could challenge privi-
lege claims over particular documents. The district court upheld the discovery
order 11 but, predicting this interlocutory appeal, ruled that “the [L]egislators
will not have to comply with the [MJ’s] opinion until the mandate issues from
New Orleans or Washington, D.C.”
II.
We generally review a subpoena enforcement order for abuse of discre-
tion. United States v. Zadeh, 820 F.3d 746, 750 (5th Cir. 2016). We review
The district court did not distinguish between the eight subpoenas issued by the
11
JMAA plaintiffs and the four subpoenas issued by the individual plaintiffs.
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de novo a district court’s determination of controlling law, In re Avantel, S.A.,
343 F.3d 311, 318 (5th Cir. 2003), as well as questions of subject-matter jur-
isdiction, Houston Ref., L.P. v. United Steel, Paper & Forestry, Rubber, Mfg.,
765 F.3d 396, 400 (5th Cir. 2014).
III.
The parties agree that the subpoenas seek information relating to the
equal protection claim brought as Count VII. As we have explained, that count
was brought by only the individual plaintiffs—that is, the JMAA board mem-
bers suing in their individual capacities. Thus, to the extent the order required
the Legislators to comply with Request 3 in the subpoenas issued by the JMAA
plaintiffs, the district court abused its discretion in ordering the Legislators to
comply with a production order unrelated to those plaintiffs’ claims.
That leaves the four subpoenas issued on behalf of plaintiffs Pridgen,
Harris, Hartley, and Reed—suing “in their individual capacities and as citizens
and taxpayers of the City of Jackson and the State of Mississippi”—and served
on Representative Baker and Senators Kirby, Caughman, and Harkins. The
Legislators contend that because the individual plaintiffs were without stand-
ing to pursue the equal protection claim, the district court lacked jurisdiction
to enforce their subpoenas. We agree.
A.
“[F]ederal courts are confined to adjudicating actual ‘cases’ and ‘contro-
versies.’” Henderson v. Stalder, 287 F.3d 374, 378 (5th Cir. 2002) (quoting U.S.
CONST. art. III, § 2, cl. 1). “One element of the case-or-controversy requirement
is that [plaintiffs], based on their complaint, must establish that they have
standing to sue.” Raines v. Byrd, 521 U.S. 811, 818 (1997). “The Judicial
Branch may not ‘accept for adjudication claims of constitutional violation . . .
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where the claimant has not suffered cognizable injury.” 12
To have standing, “the plaintiff[s] must have suffered an injury in fact”—
“an invasion of a legally protected interest” 13—that is “concrete, particularized,
and actual or imminent; fairly traceable to the challenged action; and
redressable by a favorable ruling.” 14 “Since they are not mere pleading require-
ments but rather an indispensable part of the plaintiff’s case, each element
must be supported . . . with the manner and degree of evidence required at the
successive stages of litigation.” Barber, 860 F.3d at 352 (citation omitted).
“At the pleading stage, general factual allegations of injury resulting
from the defendant’s conduct may suffice” to establish standing. Defs. of Wild-
life, 504 U.S. at 561. “Thus, we will not dismiss for lack of standing if we rea-
sonably can infer from the plaintiffs’ general allegations” that they have
standing. Hotze v. Burwell, 784 F.3d 984, 992 (5th Cir. 2015). But the “infer-
ence must be reasonable . . . .” Id. “A federal court is powerless to create its
own jurisdiction by embellishing otherwise deficient allegations of standing.”
Id. at 993 (quoting Whitmore v. Arkansas, 495 U.S. 149, 155–56 (1990)). It
follows that “if the plaintiff does not carry his burden clearly to allege facts
demonstrating that he is a proper party to invoke judicial resolution of the
dispute, then dismissal for lack of standing is appropriate.” Id. (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
Because whether the plaintiffs have standing implicates whether the
12 Barber v. Bryant, 860 F.3d 345, 352 (5th Cir. 2017) (quoting Valley Forge Christian
Coll. v. Ams. United for Separation of Church & State, Inc., 454 U.S. 464, 471 (1982)).
13 Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
14Texas v. United States, 809 F.3d 134, 150 (5th Cir. 2015) (quoting Clapper v.
Amnesty Int’l USA, 568 U.S. 398, 409 (2013)), aff’d by an equally divided court, 136 S. Ct.
2271 (2016) (mem.).
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court has jurisdiction, even nonparty witnesses refusing to comply with a dis-
covery order may challenge standing. 15 That is because “the subpoena power
of a court cannot be more extensive than its jurisdiction.” U.S. Catholic
Conference, 487 U.S. at 76. Thus, “if a district court does not have subject-
matter jurisdiction over the underlying action, and the process was not issued
in aid of determining that jurisdiction, then the process is void.” 16
B.
The Legislators claim that the individual plaintiffs lack standing be-
cause they have not “establish[ed] that effective and meaningful participation
in the affairs of the airport constitutes a legally protected interest.” The Leg-
islators maintain that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over
the equal protection claim and thus had no authority to act on the document
subpoenas. The plaintiffs respond that the collateral order doctrine is too nar-
row to allow the Legislators “to raise, for the first time, arguments for dismissal
of claims advanced against the parties in the underlying case,” a retort that is
inconsistent with United States Catholic Conference, 478 U.S. at 76.
The individual plaintiffs lack standing to bring their equal protection
claim because they have failed to demonstrate injury to a legally protected
interest. They assert that S.B. 2162 transgresses the “right” of Jackson voters
“to elect governing officials with unencumbered discretion to create a
15 See U.S. Catholic Conference v. Abortion Rights Mobilization, Inc., 487 U.S. 72, 76
(1988) (“hold[ing] that a nonparty witness can challenge the court’s lack of subject-matter
jurisdiction in defense of a civil contempt citation, notwithstanding the absence of a final
judgment in the underlying action”).
16Id.; see also Port Drum Co. v. Umphrey, 852 F.2d 148, 150 n.2 (5th Cir. 1988) (ob-
serving that “[i]n some instances, such as an appeal from a civil contempt order, non-parties
and former parties may utilize the rules to challenge on-going proceedings . . . because non-
parties cannot seek to challenge the proceedings once the original suit is at an end” (citing
U.S. Catholic Conference, 487 U.S. 72)).
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municipal airport authority and appoint commissioners to manage, control and
operate [it].” Put differently, they allege that SB 2162’s “selection scheme . . .
deprives the Individual Plaintiffs and the citizens of the City of Jackson of
effective and meaningful participation in the affairs of [the airport.]”
The plaintiffs cite no precedent supporting their theory that Jackson
voters have a right to elect officials with the exclusive authority to select muni-
cipal airport commissioners. Though voters may have standing to challenge
state action that effectively dilutes their ability to select their representa-
tives, 17 that is not the injury the individual plaintiffs press here. Their theory,
instead, is that S.B. 2162 withdraws the ability of their elected officials to
control, exclusively, the composition of the airport’s governing board.
That Jackson “has been singled out by [S.B.] 2162” does not establish
that a legally protected interest of the individual plaintiffs has been violated.
Cities are creatures of states, and though their authority to do so is not un-
limited, 18 states may, under some circumstances, treat different cities dif-
ferently. 19 That the State of Mississippi has enacted a different method for the
appointment of certain municipal airport commissioners and not others does
not mean that plaintiffs, as residents and taxpayers of Jackson, have suffered
a concrete and particularized, actual and imminent injury to interests
17See, e.g., Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 207–08 (1962) (holding that plaintiffs had
standing to challenge state redistricting maps as diluting the efficacy of their votes).
18 Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.S. 339, 342–44 (1960) (acknowledging “the breadth
and importance of . . . the State’s political power” over “its political subdivisions” but noting
that a state does not have “plenary power to manipulate in every conceivable way, for every
conceivable purpose, the affairs of its municipal corporations”).
19 See, e.g., White v. Gautier Util. Dist. Jackson Cty. (In re Validation of $7,800,000
Combined Util. Sys. Revenue Bond), 465 So.2d 1003, 1016–17 (Miss. 1985) (explaining that
certain laws applicable to only one local political unit can be consistent with the Mississippi
Constitution).
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protected by the Equal Protection Clause. 20
C.
During oral argument, the individual plaintiffs pressed an alternative
supposed injury: That they will lose their positions as volunteer JMAA com-
missioners if S.B. 2162 is implemented. They insist that volunteers are treated
as public employees under some aspects of Mississippi law and that other
courts of appeals have generally found standing where a government volun-
teer’s position is threatened by government action. 21
Although, at this stage of litigation, we may draw reasonable inferences
from the pleadings to decide standing, the plaintiffs ask us to infer an injury
well beyond the facts pleaded. They sued in their individual capacities as citi-
zens of Jackson and as purported class representatives. In Count VII, they
pleaded only one injury: That S.B. 2162 violates the Equal Protection Clause
because it “singles out and excludes [Jackson] and its governing officials from
20Nothing in this opinion should be construed to assess the merits of Count V of the
intervenors’ complaint, which alleges that S.B. 2162 is a local law that violates Article 4, § 87
of the Mississippi Constitution. Because the subpoenas concern only Count VII, the equal
protection claim, Count V is not before us on this interlocutory appeal.
21Plaintiffs pointed to Hyland v. Wonder, 972 F.2d 1129 (9th Cir. 1992), and Barton
v. Clancey, 632 F.3d 9 (1st Cir. 2011), during oral argument. Hyland held that a volunteer
at a municipal juvenile probation department could bring a First Amendment retaliation
claim and “that a volunteer position, like other governmental benefits and privileges, can
only be denied in a manner that comports with the First Amendment.” Hyland, 972 F.2d
at 1136. In Barton, the court surveyed law from multiple circuits addressing whether depri-
vation of a position as a government volunteer triggers First Amendment scrutiny. See
Barton, 632 F.3d at 24–26 (noting that the Second, Third, Seventh, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits
have indicated that in some circumstances, a volunteer position may be a valuable govern-
ment benefit protected by the First Amendment).
Neither Hyland nor Barton shores up the intervenors’ failure to plead any facts
demonstrating that S.B. 2162 violates the Equal Protection Clause by jeopardizing the indi-
vidual plaintiffs’ positions as volunteer JMAA commissioners. And, in any event, “Equal
Protection and [First Amendment] cases call for different injury-in-fact analyses because the
injuries protected . . . are different.” Barber, 860 F.3d at 356 (internal quotation marks and
citation omitted).
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exercising the right . . . to determine how the City’s airport will be managed
and operated.”
The complaint never suggests—as counsel did during oral argument—
that the individual commissioners are volunteers reimbursed for some
expenses, that Mississippi law recognizes volunteers as public employees in
some contexts, and that the combination might give them standing to challenge
S.B. 2162 as a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. “Because we also can-
not create our own jurisdiction by embellishing otherwise deficient allegations
of standing,” Hotze, 784 F.3d at 996 (cleaned up), the individual plaintiffs lack
standing to bring Count VII. Accordingly, the district court had neither subject
matter jurisdiction over the individual plaintiffs’ equal protection claim nor
authority to order compliance with the document subpoenas seeking informa-
tion about that claim.
It follows that the order requiring the Legislators to comply with the
subpoenas issued on behalf of both the JMAA plaintiffs and the individual
plaintiffs by producing a privilege log and communications with third parties
is VACATED. This matter is REMANDED with instruction to DISMISS with-
out prejudice, for want of subject-matter jurisdiction, Count VII of the inter-
venors’ complaint.
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PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur in the opinion but with the understanding that we do not today
reach the question of whether the commissioners’ loss of their jobs at the hand
of alleged racial discrimination inevitably fails the critical threshold of
standing.
We decide only that these commissioners proceeding in their individual
capacity fail to meet the initial thresholding of standing for want of pleading.
It is evident from the record that under Mississippi law, five commissioners
oversee Jackson-Medgar Evans International, which generates millions of
dollars of revenue each year and is one of the state’s principal airports. 1 The
commissioners are appointed by the Mayor of Jackson City and serve five year
terms. 2 They define the airport’s strategic goals, as well as hire and supervise
a chief executive officer to achieve those goals. 3 As a result, the commissioners
wield substantial power over the airport of the state’s capital and are afforded
significant stature within their communities. This position of status and
authority may be a sufficient injury for their standing, an issue we do not
reach.
1 Mississippi Code §§ 61-3-5 (2019); see ROA.565 ¶ 54.
2 Id.
3 See ROA.563–64 ¶¶ 46–48.
14