Jessie Grace, III v. Darrel Vannoy, Warden , 826 F.3d 813 ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 15-30064   Document: 00513555378     Page: 1   Date Filed: 06/20/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 15-30064                           FILED
    June 20, 2016
    JESSIE J. GRACE, III,                                              Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Petitioner - Appellee
    v.
    DARREL VANNOY, WARDEN, LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY,
    Respondent - Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DENNIS, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
    EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge:
    Jessie Grace filed a habeas petition in federal court, challenging his
    state-court conviction for second-degree murder. During the federal habeas
    proceedings, the district court discovered that Grace potentially had additional
    habeas claims against the State of Louisiana. Because dismissing Grace’s
    petition to allow him to exhaust those new claims in state court would cause
    his already-exhausted claims to become time-barred, the district court entered
    a stay pursuant to Rhines v. Weber, 
    544 U.S. 269
    (2005), in which the Supreme
    Court addressed this very dilemma. The State appeals the district court’s order
    granting the stay, but we DISMISS the appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
    Case: 15-30064     Document: 00513555378     Page: 2   Date Filed: 06/20/2016
    No. 15-30064
    I.
    Grace was convicted in 1994 of second-degree murder. He has been
    pursuing post-conviction relief ever since. After exhausting several claims in
    Louisiana state court, he filed a habeas petition in federal court. The district
    court held an evidentiary hearing, during which the district court reviewed in
    camera the district attorney’s file on Grace. On review of the file, the district
    court concluded that the grand jury testimony revealed potential habeas claims
    that were previously unavailable to—and were thus unexhausted by—Grace,
    who had not previously had access to that testimony. Accordingly, the district
    court recognized that if Grace were to amend his petition to add his
    unexhausted claims, it would be a “mixed” petition (containing both exhausted
    and unexhausted claims). Dismissing his petition while he exhausted his new
    claims in state court would cause his previously exhausted claims to become
    time-barred, so the district court stayed his petition sua sponte pursuant to
    Rhines v. Weber, 
    544 U.S. 269
    (2005). The State appealed the stay.
    Grace moved to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. A prior panel
    of this court granted the motion and dismissed the appeal, holding that the
    district court’s order granting the stay was not an appealable collateral order.
    In the prior panel’s view, the order was not an “important questio[n],” nor
    would it be “effectively unreviewable on appeal from the final judgment.” Grace
    v. Cain, 624 F. App’x 169, 171-72 (5th Cir. 2015) (per curiam) (unpublished),
    reh’g granted, opinion withdrawn, No. 15-30064, 
    2016 WL 104339
    (5th Cir.
    Jan. 7, 2016) (per curiam). The prior panel also rejected the State’s petition for
    mandamus. 
    Id. at 170
    n.1.
    The State filed a petition for rehearing en banc, and this court requested
    a response from Grace. On reconsideration, the prior panel treated the petition
    for rehearing en banc as a petition for panel rehearing, granted that motion,
    and withdrew its order dismissing the appeal. Grace, 
    2016 WL 104339
    , at *1.
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    As a result, the case was sent to this panel and the motion to dismiss was
    carried with the case. 
    Id. II. Grace
    argues that we lack appellate jurisdiction because the district
    court’s stay order is neither an appealable final order nor an appealable
    collateral order. The State primarily contends that the order is an appealable
    collateral order. Although courts of appeals generally have jurisdiction only
    over final orders, a “small class” of collateral orders are “too important to be
    denied immediate review.” Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter, 
    558 U.S. 100
    ,
    106, 116 (2009). That “small category includes only decisions that are
    conclusive, that resolve important questions separate from the merits, and that
    are effectively unreviewable on appeal from the final judgment in the
    underlying action.” 
    Id. at 106.
    All three requirements must be satisfied for
    appellate jurisdiction to exist. 
    Id. at 107.
          We assume, without deciding, that the question here has been
    conclusively determined and that it is separate from the merits. But it is not
    sufficiently important or effectively unreviewable under the collateral-order
    doctrine. The sole issue presented in this appeal is whether the district court
    abused its discretion in granting the stay—whether the stay should have been
    granted is the only question “resolved” by the district court that the State
    challenges. Thus, the inquiry under the collateral-order doctrine is whether
    that question is an “important questio[n] separate from the merits . . . that [is]
    effectively unreviewable on appeal from the final judgment.” 
    Mohawk, 558 U.S. at 107
    . Rhines v. Weber, standing alone, did not affect the importance of that
    question. The issue is not whether the district court can stay a habeas
    petition—all agree that the district court can do so under Rhines—it is whether
    the district court abused its discretion in doing so here.
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    The Supreme Court has explained that, under the collateral-order
    doctrine, importance and unreviewability are inseparable inquiries. See
    
    Mohawk, 558 U.S. at 107
    (explaining that requirement of “sufficiently strong”
    justification for immediate appeal “finds expression” in importance and
    unreviewability conditions). Bare unreviewability does not suffice; “the
    decisive consideration is whether delaying review until the entry of final
    judgment ‘would imperil a substantial public interest’ or ‘some particular value
    of a high order.’” 
    Id. (noting that
    the unreviewability inquiry “simply cannot
    be answered without a judgment about the value of the interests that would be
    lost” without immediate appeal); cf. 
    id. (rejecting argument
    that order
    requiring disclosure of purportedly privileged material was appealable
    collateral order). So even if a ruling “may burden litigants in ways that are
    only imperfectly reparable by appellate reversal of a final district court
    judgment,” that alone “has never sufficed.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks
    omitted). Indeed, “the chance that the litigation at hand might be speeded, or
    a ‘particular injustic[e]’ averted,” is insufficient. 
    Id. To sum
    up, whether a
    question is unreviewable for purposes of the collateral-order doctrine depends
    on a value judgment about what is lost unless the party is permitted to
    immediately appeal.
    “Absent a Moses Cone situation, stay orders rarely satisfy [the collateral-
    order] requirements, and therefore, are usually not reviewable as collateral
    orders.” Kershaw v. Shalala, 
    9 F.3d 11
    , 14 (5th Cir. 1993). This case does not
    present a Moses Cone situation, and that fact is also critical to understanding
    why Johnson v. State of Texas, 
    878 F.2d 904
    (5th Cir. 1989)—on which the
    State heavily relies—is distinguishable.
    In Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Corp., one
    party to a construction dispute, Mercury, wanted to arbitrate and the other,
    Moses Cone, did not. 
    460 U.S. 1
    , 7-8 (1983). Moses Cone sought a declaratory
    4
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    judgment and an injunction in state court to block arbitration, while Mercury
    filed an action in federal court to compel arbitration. 
    Id. The issue
    in both the
    federal and state cases was identical: whether the parties had to arbitrate. 
    Id. The federal
    district court stayed the case pending the state court’s resolution
    of that issue, so Mercury appealed. 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court held that the district court’s stay order was
    appealable under the collateral-order doctrine. 
    Id. at 13.
    The Court explained
    that the district court’s stay order “would be entirely unreviewable if not
    appealed now,” because “[o]nce the state court decided the issue of
    arbitrability, the federal court would be bound to honor that determination as
    res judicata.” 
    Id. at 12.
    Put another way, “the res judicata effect of the state
    proceedings meant that the denial of an immediate appeal would end the
    federal case. There would be no more merits over which to litigate.” EEOC v.
    Neches Butane Prods. Co., 
    704 F.2d 144
    , 151 (5th Cir. 1983) (discussing Moses
    Cone). Not only would the propriety of the stay be unreviewable, but “[t]he
    immediate prospect of an adverse and final ruling on the merits clearly
    presented the most extreme example of the kind of important and irreparable
    loss that would justify an otherwise impermissible interlocutory appeal . . . .”
    
    Id. at 150;
    see 
    Kershaw, 9 F.3d at 14
    n.4 (noting that, as with other abstention
    doctrines, result of stay order in Moses Cone was that “the resolution of the
    state case necessarily terminate[d] the federal case”). 1
    This case does not present a Moses Cone situation. Here, the district
    court stayed proceedings to permit Grace to exhaust his claims in state court
    before returning to federal court. Unlike in Moses Cone, the issues before the
    federal and state courts are not identical. Resolution of the state case will not
    1Indeed, that is why the Court also held that the order was an appealable final order
    under section 
    1291. 460 U.S. at 8-10
    .
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    “necessarily terminat[e] the federal case”; the state case does not present “the
    immediate prospect of an adverse and final ruling on the merits” of Grace’s
    federal habeas petition; and it will not have any res judicata effect. 
    Kershaw, 9 F.3d at 14
    n.4; see Neches 
    Butane, 704 F.2d at 150
    , 151. And unlike in Moses
    Cone, “the practical effect” of the district court’s order is not the same as a
    dismissal—once Grace exhausts his claims in state court (assuming he does
    not obtain post-conviction relief), he will return to federal court and the stay
    will be lifted. 
    2 460 U.S. at 13
    .
    Whether the state court or the federal court will have the final say on
    the merits of Grace’s federal habeas petition is simply not at issue, so staying
    the case to permit the requisite state-court exhaustion does not implicate the
    same concerns as in Moses Cone. While the case is stayed, the state court here
    is addressing Grace’s unexhausted potential claims, which are not even
    asserted in his federal habeas petition. The state court is not addressing the
    already-exhausted claims in Grace’s federal habeas petition—or, put simply, is
    not addressing the merits of this case. Thus, Moses Cone does not apply. See
    Neches 
    Butane, 704 F.2d at 151
    (holding that order was not appealable
    collateral order where petitioner was not presented “with the possibility of an
    important and irreparable res-judicata-mandated loss on the merits of the
    principal case”). “Indeed, the only real point of commonality between Moses
    Cone and this case appears to be the common use of the word ‘stay.’” 
    Id. The differences
    between Moses Cone and this case also illustrate why
    Johnson is distinguishable. 
    878 F.2d 904
    . Johnson sued Texas and other
    associated defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and the district court stayed his
    case “pending his exhaustion of state remedies by way of habeas corpus
    2 In fact, Grace would be faced with an effective dismissal if the district court had not
    stayed the case. See 
    Rhines, 544 U.S. at 275-76
    (explaining dilemma presented by mixed
    petitions).
    6
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    proceedings.” 
    Id. at 905.
    Johnson appealed, disputing that he was required to
    exhaust his habeas remedies. 
    Id. Defendants moved
    to dismiss the appeal.
    Relying on Moses Cone, this court denied the motion, holding that the stay
    order was an appealable collateral order. 3 
    Id. at 905-06.
    Importantly, the court
    framed the question on appeal as whether Johnson was in fact required to
    exhaust his state remedies before pursuing his § 1983 suit. 
    Id. at 905
    (“The
    disputed question is whether the claims made in the § 1983 suit are claims
    which must be first made the subject of habeas corpus proceedings and the
    exhaustion of state remedies in those proceedings.”). Without an interlocutory
    appeal, Johnson would have to exhaust those remedies and, on appeal from
    final judgment, the question whether he was truly required to exhaust would
    be moot. 
    Id. As in
    Moses Cone, a legal question bearing on the merits of his
    case would be irreversibly determined by the state court as a result of the stay.
    The federal court was thus deferring to the state court on the merits of
    Johnson’s case. See Dresser v. Ohio Hempery Inc., 122 F. App’x 749, 755 (5th
    Cir. 2004) (per curiam) (unpublished) (“As the district court’s stay order is
    inapposite to the complete abdication of federal jurisdiction that was present
    in Moses Cone, the stay in favor of the federal administrative proceedings here
    does not fall into that narrow class of cases in which the collateral order
    doctrine applies.”).
    But here, all agree that Grace must obtain a ruling from the state court
    before returning to federal court. The State does not dispute that he must
    exhaust his newly discovered potential claims before presenting them in
    federal court; it merely argues that those claims are meritless and thus that
    3 Since Johnson was decided, this court has sometimes interpreted Moses Cone more
    narrowly than the court did in Johnson. See, e.g., McDermott Int’l, Inc. v. Lloyds Underwriters
    of London, 
    944 F.2d 1199
    , 1203 (5th Cir. 1991) (explaining that Moses Cone “established that
    a district court’s stay that effectively allows a state court to decide the question of
    arbitrability is an appealable collateral order”).
    7
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    the stay is a waste of time. But the State does not risk losing in federal court
    if it loses in state court. Johnson, by contrast, did not acknowledge the district
    court’s authority to send his litigation to state court—he disputed that he was
    required to exhaust his habeas remedies before proceeding. Without an
    interlocutory appeal, Johnson would have been forced to do something—
    exhaust his state remedies—that he argued he was not required to do. Here,
    without an interlocutory appeal, the State is forced only to wait while Grace
    does something—exhaust his state remedies—that the State agrees Grace
    must do.
    As in Moses Cone, the stay in Johnson had the practical effect of a
    dismissal: “[I]t placed Johnson in the same situation as if there had been
    dismissal without prejudice in that he could not return to federal court with
    his § 1983 claims until he had exhausted state remedies as ordered by the
    district 
    court.” 878 F.2d at 906
    . Not so here. If the district court had instead
    dismissed Grace’s petition because of the unexhausted claims, AEDPA’s
    statute of limitations likely would have barred him from returning to federal
    court. That dilemma is precisely what the Supreme Court sought to cure by
    permitting district courts to stay mixed petitions. 4
    Both Moses Cone and Johnson allowed interlocutory appeals because,
    without one, a state court decision would moot a legal question in the
    appellant’s federal case. Here, the only question mooted in the absence of an
    appeal is whether the district court abused its discretion by granting the stay,
    an issue that does not affect the merits of Grace’s claims. That is the same
    question mooted every time a court of appeals refuses to exercise collateral-
    4 In fact, Grace could refuse to prosecute the unexhausted claims, leaving only
    exhausted claims in his petition—vitiating the need for a stay. He thus need not wait for the
    state court before returning to federal court.
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    order jurisdiction over a discretionary stay. For all these reasons, Johnson does
    not control. 5
    The only harm to the State caused by a refusal to exercise appellate
    jurisdiction is that the litigation might be prolonged. True, the State has an
    interest in “reduc[ing] delays in the execution of state and federal criminal
    sentences, particularly in capital cases.” 
    Rhines, 544 U.S. at 276
    . Yet in Rhines
    itself, the Supreme Court recognized that stays of mixed petitions were
    “compatible with AEDPA’s purposes” in the limited circumstances it outlined.
    
    Id. In those
    circumstances, which the district court found to exist here, “the
    petitioner’s interest in obtaining federal review of his claims outweighs the
    competing interests in finality and speedy resolution of federal petitions.” 
    Id. at 278.
    And a district court, in issuing Rhines stays, already takes delay into
    account because it must find that the petitioner is not employing dilatory
    tactics. 
    Id. Thus, the
    Supreme Court implicitly de-emphasized the importance
    of the state’s interests in finality and speedy resolution of mixed federal
    petitions. If those interests do not outweigh a petitioner’s interest in obtaining
    federal review, it is hard to see how they constitute “substantial public
    interest[s]” or “value[s] of high order” such that they merit interlocutory
    review. 
    Mohawk, 558 U.S. at 107
    .
    After all, the “chance that the litigation at hand might be
    speeded . . . does not provide a basis for jurisdiction” under the collateral-order
    doctrine. 
    Id. The State’s
    interests here are not appreciably more valuable than
    5 Although this case and Johnson both involve determinations by the district court
    that state habeas claims be exhausted for federal litigation to proceed, the interests lost in
    the absence of an interlocutory appeal differ. Johnson’s argument that he was not required
    to exhaust would be mooted, while here the State agrees that Grace is required to exhaust.
    The only argument of the State that is mooted without an appeal is whether the district court
    abused its discretion in granting the stay—not whether the district court could grant the
    stay.
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    every other litigant’s interest in interlocutory review of a garden-variety order
    staying his case. (Indeed, Grace was sentenced to life in prison; he is not
    delaying execution of a capital sentence.) As a result, this appeal does not
    present an “important questio[n] separate from the merits” that is not
    “‘adequately vindicable’ or ‘effectively reviewable’” on appeal from final
    judgment; the stay order merely “burden[s] [the State] in ways that are only
    imperfectly reparable by appellate reversal of a final district court judgment.” 6
    
    Id. That is
    insufficient. Id.; cf. Matter of Rupp & Bowman Co., 
    109 F.3d 237
    ,
    240 (5th Cir. 1997) (“Although . . . delaying review of the abstention
    decision . . . may cause [the parties] additional litigation-related expenses, we
    do not view such delays as sufficient to convey jurisdiction under the collateral
    order doctrine.”).
    A few additional points merit discussion. In one sense, a decision to stay
    litigation will never be reviewable on appeal because we would not have the
    chance to review the appropriateness of the stay—the question would be moot
    on appeal from final judgment. That, however, is true of all stays. Cf. Neches
    6 Lewis v. Beddingfield, 
    20 F.3d 123
    (5th Cir. 1994) (per curiam), on which the State
    also relies, merits only a brief mention. There, as in Johnson, Lewis filed a § 1983 suit and
    the district court stayed the case pending his state criminal case. 
    Id. at 124.
    On appeal, this
    court stated that “[f]or purposes of appellate jurisdiction, the district court’s decision to stay
    a suit pending state court proceedings is a final order.” 
    Id. Lewis is
    distinguishable for the
    same reasons as Johnson. Although the court in Lewis did not rely on Moses Cone’s holding
    that the stay was a final order, that holding cannot be defensibly extended to the
    circumstances presented here. See Moses 
    Cone, 460 U.S. at 8-10
    (noting that stay order would
    put party “effectively out of court” because of the res judicata effect of the state court’s
    decision).
    Nor are Johnson and Lewis in tension. They present alternative holdings. In Moses
    Cone, the Supreme Court held that the district court’s stay order was a final order under
    section 1291 and that, even if it were not, it was an appealable collateral order. Similarly, in
    Lewis, the court held that the stay order was a final order; in Johnson, the court did not
    address that question but instead held that it was an appealable collateral order. We thus
    read Lewis and Johnson together to represent the same alternative holdings as Moses Cone.
    What is more, whether this appeal is a final order or a collateral order is not dispositive; if it
    is one or the other we have jurisdiction. This appeal thus does not present the question of
    whether it is one versus the other.
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    Butane, 704 F.2d at 151
    (noting that the unreviewability element regarding
    discovery order “does not differ from the probable unreviewability of virtually
    any discovery order” and dismissing for lack of jurisdiction). Bare
    unreviewability, without more, is not sufficient—if it were, every stay would be
    reviewable. See, e.g., 
    id. at 148
    (collateral-order doctrine “requires some
    showing of extraordinary harm”); see also 15A Wright & Miller, Fed. Prac. &
    Proc. § 3914.13 (2d ed. 2016) (noting that stay decisions are not normally
    reviewed on interlocutory appeal). The State’s interest in speeding this
    litigation does not sufficiently distinguish the stay here from any other
    discretionary stay that is unreviewable on interlocutory appeal.
    Whether the district court’s exercise of discretion must be reviewable on
    appeal does not speak to whether it must be reviewable on interlocutory appeal.
    Typically, orders reviewable for abuse of discretion are not appealable under
    the collateral-order doctrine. See 15A Wright & Miller, Fed. Prac. & Proc.
    3911.5, at 433-34 (2d ed. 2016) (“At times it is pointed out that collateral order
    appeal is unsuitable with respect to matters of discretion. That is a wise
    warning . . . .”). Absent interlocutory appeals of Rhines stays, moreover, we will
    still be able to prevent or remedy trial court abuses that undermine AEDPA,
    such as staying federal habeas claims for plainly unmeritorious state habeas
    exhaustion or granting excessively long stays. Abusive stay orders may be
    reviewable pursuant to a mandamus petition, if they involve a clear abuse of
    discretion and otherwise satisfy the writ’s requirements. 7
    7  In Rhines itself, the state appealed a stay—with no indication from either the Eighth
    Circuit or the Supreme Court of a jurisdictional problem—and the Supreme Court vacated
    and remanded to the Eighth Circuit to determine “whether the District Court’s grant of a
    stay . . . constituted an abuse of 
    discretion.” 544 U.S. at 279
    . But on remand, the Eighth
    Circuit remanded to the district court to consider the factors outlined by the Supreme Court.
    The district court re-entered the stay, and the state did not appeal again. The Eighth Circuit
    thus never addressed the jurisdictional question or reviewed the stay for abuse of discretion.
    See Thompson v. Frank, 
    599 F.3d 1088
    , 1090 n.1 (9th Cir. 2010) (per curiam) (explaining that
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    A final note: Since Rhines was decided, two of our sister circuits have
    addressed whether Rhines stays are appealable under the collateral-order
    doctrine, and have answered in the negative. See Howard v. Norris, 
    616 F.3d 799
    , 803 (8th Cir. 2010) (holding that order granting Rhines stay is not
    appealable collateral order); Thompson v. Frank, 
    599 F.3d 1088
    , 1090 (9th Cir.
    2010) (per curiam) (same). We join the Eighth and Ninth Circuits and hold that
    orders granting Rhines stays are not appealable collateral orders. 8
    III.
    For the reasons described above, we DISMISS this appeal for lack of
    jurisdiction and DENY the State’s alternative petition for mandamus.
    assumption of jurisdiction in Rhines is not binding because jurisdictional question was never
    addressed, and noting that Rhines pre-dated Mohawk’s clarification of the collateral-order
    doctrine).
    8 The State requests in the alternative that the court treat its appeal as a petition for
    mandamus. We may provide mandamus relief “only [in] exceptional circumstances
    amounting to a judicial usurpation of power or a clear abuse of discretion.” Cheney v. U.S.
    Dist. Ct. for the Dist. of Columbia, 
    542 U.S. 367
    , 380 (2004) (internal citations and quotation
    marks omitted). But exceptional circumstances do not exist here. The district court did not
    usurp any power; Rhines stays are permissible if justified by the circumstances. And we do
    not perceive any clear abuse of discretion. We thus deny the State’s alternative petition for
    mandamus.
    12