Barnes v. State of Miss. ( 1993 )


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  •                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _______________________
    No. 92-7264
    _______________________
    HELEN B. BARNES, M.D., ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    versus
    THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, ET AL.,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Mississippi
    _________________________________________________________________
    (May 26, 1993)
    Before JOHNSON, GARWOOD, and JONES, Circuit Judges.
    EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
    The State of Mississippi appeals a decision by the
    district court holding unconstitutional its law requiring minors in
    some cases to obtain the consent of both parents before getting an
    abortion.    The district court entered a preliminary injunction
    barring enforcement of the statute.
    Despite the recent efforts of a three-justice plurality
    of the Supreme Court, passing on the constitutionality of state
    statutes regulating abortion after Casey has become neither less
    difficult nor more closely anchored to the Constitution.       Planned
    Parenthood v. Casey, ___ U.S. ___, 
    112 S. Ct. 2791
    (1992).       That
    Mississippi's statute was carefully framed to steer among the
    shoals of caselaw has simplified our task somewhat. Further, based
    on   the   rationale   for   stare    decisis   articulated      by   the   Casey
    plurality, we believe the "central holdings" of pre-Casey decisions
    remain intact and compel approval of this statute.               We vacate the
    preliminary    injunction    and     remand   for   entry   of   an   order    of
    dismissal.
    I
    Subject to significant exceptions, the 1986 law, Miss.
    Code Ann. §§ 41-41-51 through 41-41-63, forbids an unemancipated
    minor to obtain an abortion unless she has the consent of both
    parents or the approval of the state Chancery Court.                   In cases
    where the parents are divorced or are unmarried and separated, then
    only the consent of the parent with primary custody is required.
    § 41-41-53(2)(a).      Similarly, if only one parent is available in a
    reasonable time, only the consent of the available parent is
    necessary.     § 41-41-53(2)(b).         If the pregnancy was caused by
    sexual intercourse with the minor's father or stepfather, only the
    consent of the mother is required.          § 41-41-53(2)(c).     Further, the
    statute permits abortions on minors without parental consent in
    cases of medical emergency.          § 41-41-57.
    The law contains a judicial bypass provision allowing
    minors to circumvent the parental consent requirement by applying
    for approval in state court.            § 41-41-53(3).      If the minor is
    unable to satisfy the parental consent requirements or chooses not
    to follow that route, she may file a petition in Chancery Court for
    court approval to have that consent waived.            The statute mandates
    2
    that the state court proceedings be confidential and anonymous.       A
    breach of confidentiality carries a criminal penalty.       § 41-41-61.
    It further provides that the Chancery Court will rule on the
    petition within 72 hours after it is filed; otherwise the minor may
    go ahead with the abortion.    § 41-41-55(3).    The statute calls on
    judges to waive the parental consent requirement if 1) the minor is
    mature and well-informed enough to make the decision on her own, or
    2) the abortion would be in her best interests.            Finally, it
    provides for an expedited confidential and anonymous appeal of any
    denial of the waiver.
    Pursuant to the statute, the Mississippi Supreme Court
    promulgated Rule 10.01 of the Mississippi Uniform Rules of Chancery
    Court.   The rule specifies Chancery Court procedures for the
    consent waiver.     In particular, it provides that the petition
    should contain an allegation that 1) the minor is mature and well
    informed enough to make the decision on her own, or 2) that one or
    both of the parents has engaged in a pattern of physical, sexual,
    or emotional abuse against her, or that notification of her parents
    would not be in her best interest.
    The   appellees,    consisting   of   doctors   and   clinics,
    launched a facial challenge to the statute's constitutionality.
    The district court initially granted a preliminary injunction
    barring enforcement of the statute until the Mississippi Supreme
    Court promulgated its rules regarding parental consent waiver
    proceedings.    The district court then stayed the proceedings for
    four years awaiting the outcome of various Supreme Court rulings on
    3
    abortion.     In March 1992, it held the statute unconstitutional on
    the sole ground that the Mississippi Supreme Court's implementing
    rule   unduly      restricts     a     minor's      access     to   an   abortion.
    Accordingly, it denied the state's motion to lift the preliminary
    injunction on enforcement of the law.               The state appeals.
    II
    The   appellees     argue       that   this    qualified    two-parent
    consent/judicial        bypass        statute       regulating      abortion      is
    unconstitutional.       The statute is flawed, they contend, because
    requiring the approval of two parents does not serve any important
    state interest, unduly restricts a minor's access to abortion, and
    intrudes on the family's right to structure its relationships as it
    sees fit.     For example, the statute gives one parent the power to
    veto   the   abortion   even     if    the    other   parent     consents   to   the
    procedure.      This, they argue, has the effect of changing power
    relations within the family. The judicial bypass does not save the
    statute, in the appellees' view, because it involves too much
    judicial intrusiveness into a private family decision.
    A
    The Supreme Court has upheld less intrusive parental
    consultation statutes in the past.              Parental involvement statutes
    may be divided into four groups, in ascending order of the burden
    they impose on the minor's exercise of her limited right to an
    abortion:          one-parent         notification         statutes,     two-parent
    notification statutes, one-parent consent statutes, and two-parent
    consent statutes.        The Court upheld a one-parent notification
    4
    statute in H.L. v. Matheson, 
    450 U.S. 398
    , 
    101 S. Ct. 1164
    (1981).
    It   upheld    a   two-parent    notification     statute   that   includes      a
    judicial bypass provision, in Hodgson v. Minnesota, 
    497 U.S. 417
    ,
    
    110 S. Ct. 2926
    (1990) (Kennedy plurality opinion).1               Finally, it
    upheld a one-parent consent statute, with a judicial bypass, in
    Planned Parenthood Ass'n of Kansas City v. Ashcroft, 
    462 U.S. 476
    ,
    
    103 S. Ct. 2517
    (1983).         The remaining question is whether a two-
    parent consent statute impermissibly crosses the line so as to
    impose an undue burden on the minor's right to an abortion.             
    Casey, 112 S. Ct. at 2819
    (plurality) (formulating "undue burden" standard
    for abortion regulations).
    As noted above, the Court scrutinizes consent statutes
    more closely than it does notification statutes, and two-parent
    laws more closely than one-parent laws. Thus, a two-parent consent
    statute arguably raises more serious questions than the other
    parental involvement statutes.              The appellees contend that the
    constitutionality of a two-parent consent/judicial bypass law is an
    open question. Mississippi argues that the matter has been settled
    in favor of constitutionality.              Mississippi appears to have the
    better of the argument.
    In Bellotti v. Baird, 
    443 U.S. 622
    , 637, 
    99 S. Ct. 3035
    (1979), a fractured Court struck down a state law that required
    minors to obtain the consent of both parents before an abortion
    1.    In   Ohio v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, 
    497 U.S. 502
    , 110 S.
    Ct. 2972   (1990) ("Akron II"), decided in tandem with Hodgson, the Court left
    open the   precise question whether parental notification statutes require a
    judicial   bypass provision.
    5
    could be performed.     The plurality opinion struck the law down on
    the grounds that its judicial bypass provision was constitutionally
    
    inadequate. 443 U.S. at 645
    .     However, the opinion stated:     "We
    are not persuaded that, as a general rule, the requirement of
    obtaining    both   parents'   consent   unconstitutionally    burdens   a
    minor's right to seek an abortion."       
    Id. at 649.
      In outlining the
    constitutional requirements for such a statute, the Court said:
    "We therefore conclude that if the state decides to require a
    pregnant minor to obtain one or both parents' consent to an
    abortion, it also must provide an alternative procedure whereby
    authorization for the abortion can be obtained."              
    Id. at 643
    (emphasis added).     Thus, if the statute had contained an adequate
    judicial bypass the four members of the plurality stood ready to
    uphold it.    A fifth, Justice White, was prepared to uphold the
    statute in Bellotti even without a judicial bypass.           
    Id. at 657
    (White dissenting).
    Although the court in Bellotti did not uphold a two-
    parent consent statute, it did indicate that it would do so under
    different circumstances.       The appellees urge that this statement
    amounts to dicta and need not be followed.       That characterization
    of the Bellotti plurality was disputed by the plurality 
    itself, 443 U.S. at 651
    n.32, and was challenged just two years ago, 
    Hodgson, 497 U.S. at 498
    (Kennedy plurality).
    Even if the comment on two-parent consent statutes in
    Bellotti is dicta it is persuasive dicta, particularly in light of
    Justice Kennedy's plurality opinion in 
    Hodgson, 497 U.S. at 498
    .
    6
    There,    he    relied    on    Bellotti   to   uphold    a    two-parent    notice
    requirement.      Justice Kennedy argued that since Bellotti approved
    a two-parent consent statute with a judicial bypass, it follows
    that     the    less     onerous   two-parent     notice       statute   must    be
    constitutional.         
    Id. at 498
    (Bellotti "requires us to sustain the
    statute before us here").          Justice O'Connor, also citing Bellotti,
    joined the plurality on the broad grounds that a bypass provision
    tailors "a       parental      consent   provision   so   as    to   avoid   unduly
    burdening the minor's limited right to obtain an abortion."                  
    Id. at 461
    (O'Connor concurring).          Thus, five justices (Rehnquist, White,
    O'Connor, Scalia, and Kennedy) in Hodgson viewed Bellotti as
    settling the question in favor of the constitutionality of a two-
    parent consent/judicial bypass statute.
    B
    Even if Bellotti is not directly controlling, a two-
    parent consent statute with a judicial bypass is constitutional.
    An abortion regulation is unconstitutional only if it places an
    "undue burden" on the exercise of the right, that is, if it "has
    the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path
    of a woman seeking an abortion."           
    Casey, 112 S. Ct. at 2820
    .         Thus,
    a regulation that places a burden on the exercise of the right is
    constitutional unless the burden is "undue."                  The state may enact
    laws that are "calculated to inform the woman's free choice, not
    hinder it."       
    Id. "Regulations which
    do no more than create a
    structural mechanism by which the State, or the parent or guardian
    of a minor, may express profound respect for the life of the unborn
    7
    are permitted, if they are not a substantial obstacle to the
    woman's exercise of the right to choose."               
    Id. at 2821.
         As long as
    Casey remains authoritative, the constitutionality of an abortion
    regulation thus turns on an examination of the importance of the
    state's interest in the regulation and the severity of the burden
    that regulation imposes on the woman's right to seek an abortion.
    Contrary to the appellees' contentions, the state does
    have   an   important    interest   at       stake   in   parental     involvement
    statutes.     The state's interest, in part, is in ensuring that
    someone other than the immature minor and the abortion provider has
    a hand in making an important decision that fundamentally affects
    the minor's health and welfare.          The Supreme Court has recognized
    that "the guiding role of parents in the upbringing of their
    children     justifies    limitations        on   the     freedom    of    minors."
    
    Bellotti, 443 U.S. at 637
    .          The Court has described as "deeply
    rooted in our Nation's history and tradition" the "belief that the
    parental role implies a substantial measure of authority over one's
    children."    
    Id. at 638.
       "Legal restrictions on minors, especially
    those supportive of the parental role, may be important to the
    child's chances for the full growth and maturity that make eventual
    participation in a free society meaningful and rewarding."                   
    Id. at 638-39.
        Parental consultation is particularly important on the
    abortion decision, "one that for some people raises profound moral
    and religious concerns."      
    Id. at 640.
            The child herself may be too
    immature to make the decision. And the abortion provider cannot be
    counted on to provide "adequate counsel and support . . . at an
    8
    abortion clinic, where abortions for pregnant minors frequently
    take place."     
    Id. at 641.
    The state's interest in one-parent consent statutes is
    clear: it is to protect children from their own immaturity and
    naivete as well as from the possibly deficient advice of those
    whose business is to provide abortions.             Such statutes are plainly
    constitutional. 
    Casey, 112 S. Ct. at 2832
    ; Ashcroft, 
    462 U.S. 476
    .
    The state's interest is equally present in the two-parent consent
    context.     Indeed, it is heightened because involvement of both
    parents    in   the    decisionmaking       might   be   thought     to   increase
    reflection and deliberation on the decision, especially where the
    parents live together.2        Both parents, after all, ordinarily have
    a strong interest in helping to determine the course that is best
    for their child.       A two-parent consent statute helps to safeguard
    the interests of both parents and the family unit.                  In short, "it
    cannot be said that the requirements serve no purpose other than to
    make   abortions      more   difficult."       Casey,    112   S.   Ct.   at   2833
    (upholding      clinic   reporting    requirements).           The     two-parent
    requirement injects more "information" into the decisionmaking
    process than a one-parent requirement.              It is calculated to make
    the decision a more informed one.               
    Id. at 2820.
            Further, it
    creates a structural mechanism by which both parents may express,
    if they so choose, "profound respect for the life of the unborn."
    2.    It must be emphasized that under Mississippi's statute, the consent of
    both parents is not required if they are divorced, unmarried and living apart,
    or if one of them is not available "in a reasonable time and manner."
    9
    
    Id. at 2821.
           The important interests of the State and the parents
    in the regulation are undeniable.
    Justice Kennedy eloquently expressed the interests of the
    state and the family in Akron II:
    It is both rational and fair for the State to
    conclude that, in most instances, the family
    will strive to give a lonely or even terrified
    minor advice that is both compassionate and
    mature.    The statute in issue here is a
    rational way to further those ends. It would
    deny all dignity to the family to say that the
    State cannot take this reasonable step in
    regulating its health professions to ensure
    that, in most cases, a young woman will
    receive guidance and understanding from a
    parent.
    
    497 U.S. 502
    , 110 S. Ct. at 2984.              We believe that this statement
    is valid notwithstanding the Casey plurality's reformulation of the
    right    to    an     abortion   and     the    distinction   between   Ohio's
    notification        statute   with     judicial    bypass   and   Mississippi's
    qualified two-parent consent-plus-bypass statute.
    It remains to examine the burden thus placed on the
    minor's limited right to an abortion.              It is true that requiring
    the consent of both parents, as opposed to one, will incrementally
    increase the burden on the minor's exercise of her right to get an
    abortion.      There will be cases where one, but not both, of the
    parents will consent to the procedure.             Under a one-parent consent
    statute, that would be the end of the matter.               Under a two-parent
    consent statute, the child will have to go to court to obtain the
    abortion.      However, the bulk of the burden is in requiring the
    consent of even one parent, as a state is unquestionably entitled
    to do.   Once that objection is met the only issue is whether the
    10
    necessity of obtaining the second parent's approval crosses the
    constitutional line.      Where the state supplies an expeditious
    process for obtaining court approval, the additional burden on the
    minor is greatly relieved.     The parents still do not have a "veto"
    over the minor's decision, a consideration found dispositive in
    Planned Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 
    428 U.S. 52
    , 96 S.
    Ct. 2831 (1976) (striking down one-parent consent statute that did
    not include bypass provision).     Further, in cases where one parent
    withholds consent the minor will often have a willing supportive
    parent to accompany her to court.        The view of one of the child's
    parents that the procedure should go forward will certainly be
    given great weight by the Chancery Court (because of the statute's
    confidentiality provisions, the second parent need not even know
    that court approval is being sought).         Thus, the additional burden
    placed on the minor by requiring the approval of the second
    parent -- as opposed to requiring the approval of only one -- will
    be slight.
    The abortion providers here also complain that in some
    cases a two-parent consent statute impermissibly intrudes on family
    decisionmaking by empowering courts to choose which of the two
    disagreeing   parents   will   "win"    the   dispute   over   whether   the
    abortion should go forward.     There is more than a little irony in
    this position, coming from those who would prefer statutes that, by
    requiring neither parental consent nor notification, ignore the
    role of the family altogether.           In any event, this argument
    overlooks the fact that the statute charges the Chancery Court to
    11
    decide what is in the minor's best interest, not which parent is
    right or has the better argument.           The argument also ignores the
    alternatives    to   a   two-parent     consent    statute,    some   of   which
    increase the state's intrusion into family decisionmaking.                 In a
    one-parent consent statute, which is undeniably constitutional, a
    judge may often be in the position of overruling the wishes of both
    parents, not just one of them.           And in a world without parental
    consultation statutes, the state, making its licensed doctors
    available to perform abortions on minors without any parental
    involvement whatsoever, would often foreclose the chance of any
    family decisionmaking.
    Accordingly, a statute requiring the consent of a second
    parent, combined with an adequate judicial bypass mechanism, does
    not place an "undue burden" on a minor's right to seek an abortion.
    The Mississippi statute is facially constitutional.
    III
    The plaintiffs also challenge the Mississippi statute on
    the   grounds    that    its   bypass      mechanism     is   constitutionally
    defective.      The district judge agreed with the plaintiffs and
    struck the law down on this basis alone.
    Bellotti demands that a parental consent statute contain
    a judicial bypass mechanism that allows the minor to show that 1)
    she   is   sufficiently     mature    to    make   the    abortion    decision
    independently of her parents' wishes, or 2) that if she is not able
    to make the decision independently, an abortion would be in her
    best interests.      
    Bellotti, 443 U.S. at 643-44
    .
    12
    Mississippi's abortion statute tracks this language,
    providing the required grounds for waiver of parental consent.
    However, the Mississippi Supreme Court's Rule 10.01 is worded
    differently from the abortion statute and Bellotti.                  Whereas
    Bellotti and the statute require the court to consider whether an
    abortion is in the minor's best interest, the rule requires a minor
    to plead that notifying her parents of the abortion is not in her
    best   interest.      According    to     the   appellees,   this   semantic
    difference from Bellotti is fatal to the statutory scheme.                For
    several reasons, we disagree.
    As the appellees point out, there may be an occasion on
    which an abortion would be in the minor's best interest but
    parental notification would also be in her interest.             This might
    happen where the minor's parents are understanding and supportive
    (therefore, notification would do no harm) but have religious
    objections to abortion.       In such a case, appellees contend, Rule
    10.01 restricts the minor's access to the waiver and conflicts with
    Bellotti.3    A parental consent statute using parental notification
    as the guidepost for the child's best interests might well be
    unconstitutional, Glick v. McKay, 
    937 F.2d 434
    , 439 (9th Cir.
    1991), though we express no view on that issue.          The question here
    is whether this procedural rule promulgated under the authority of
    3.    Note, however, that in some cases Rule 10.01--if (improperly) read
    alone--would have the effect of increasing a minor's access to abortion. On
    at least some occasions, it will not be in the best interest of the minor to
    notify her parents and will also not be in her best interest to have an
    abortion. In such a case Rule 10.01, as it now reads, would result in a
    consent waiver. Note, too, that Rule 10.01 compels a court to grant the
    abortion if one parent has abused the child.
    13
    a     facially   constitutional      statute     renders    the    statute
    unconstitutional or unenforceable.
    It does not.   As a matter of Mississippi state law, the
    procedural rule cannot trump the substantive statute pursuant to
    which it was promulgated. Mississippi's courts must give effect to
    all constitutional laws passed by the legislature.                Kelly v.
    Mississippi Valley Gas Co., 
    397 So. 2d 874
    , 877 (Miss. 1981).         Here,
    the statute is plainly constitutional; the state courts must employ
    the   substantive   standards   it   sets   forth.      Mississippi's   own
    Chancery Rules direct a court to follow state statutes if there is
    a conflict between the rules and a statute.          Uniform Chancery Rule
    11.01 ("If there be any conflict between these rules and . . . any
    applicable Mississippi statutes, the latter shall be followed.").
    Mississippi's Chancery Courts are bound to follow the statute,
    which requires them to inquire whether an abortion is in the
    minor's best interest.
    The only possible constitutional dilemma inherent in this
    bypass rule will arise where the Chancery Court finds: 1) the minor
    is immature, 2) an abortion is in her best interests, and 3) there
    is no harm in parental notification.           At oral argument in this
    court, however, the state clearly and repeatedly vouchsafed that it
    is the official position of the Attorney General of Mississippi
    that where a Chancery Court made those findings it would be
    required under Mississippi law to grant the minor's petition. This
    necessarily follows from the position taken in the state's brief
    that any inconsistency between the rule and the statute must, under
    14
    Mississippi      law,   be    resolved    in   favor   of     the    statute.
    Consequently, assuming Mississippi courts do their duty under state
    law, and we are not entitled to presume otherwise, the bypass
    procedure is not constitutionally defective.4
    The appellees' interpretation of Rule 10.01 also suffers
    from a hypertechnical concern with the niceties of pleading. While
    the Rule establishes the kinds of allegations a minor must make to
    initiate a bypass of parental consent, it does not make those
    allegations, if proved, the sum and substance of the statutory
    "best interests" test. Rule 10.01 states that if the minor chooses
    to   represent     herself,    her   pleadings    "shall      be    liberally
    construed . . . so as to do substantial justice."           As the Court has
    stated:
    Even on the assumption that the pleading
    scheme could produce some initial confusion
    because few minors would have counsel when
    pleading, the simple and straightforward
    procedure does not deprive the minor of an
    opportunity to prove her case.     It seems
    unlikely that the Ohio courts will treat a
    minor's choice of complaint form without due
    care and understanding for her unrepresented
    status.
    Ohio v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, 
    497 U.S. 502
    , 516-17,
    
    110 S. Ct. 2972
    (1990)
    4.    In holding that the pleading requirement of Rule 10.01 does not render
    the statutory scheme unconstitutional, we do not, as the dissent suggests,
    leave minors in Mississippi to drift in uncertainty over how to proceed in
    seeking a bypass. As has been noted, the substantive requirements of the
    statute itself guide the Chancery Courts and, hence, the petitioners before
    it. To obtain judicial consent, it is enough that the minor show that she can
    meet the substantive requirements of the statute, that is, that she is
    sufficiently mature to make the decision on her own or that an abortion is in
    her best interests.
    15
    There is yet another flaw in the appellees' reasoning.
    They have launched a facial challenge to the constitutionality of
    the statute.      A facial challenge will succeed only where the
    plaintiff shows that there is no set of circumstances under which
    the statute would be constitutional.             Webster v. Reproductive
    Health   Services,    
    492 U.S. 490
    ,   524,   109   S.   Ct.   3040   (1989)
    (O'Connor concurring); Akron 
    II, 497 U.S. at 514
    ; see also Rust v.
    Sullivan, ___ U.S. ___, 
    111 S. Ct. 1759
    (1991); Barnes v. Moore,
    
    970 F.2d 12
    , 14 (5th Cir. 1992).          Although it is imaginable that
    Mississippi courts might refuse to follow a statute enacted by the
    state legislature, that does not suffice to undermine the statute's
    constitutionality.     If a Mississippi court does follow Rule 10.01
    so as to conflict with Bellotti, a plaintiff will be free to launch
    an as-applied challenge to the bypass procedure.            In the meantime,
    the Fifth Circuit is not a "roving commission[] assigned to pass
    judgment on the validity of the Nation's laws."                   Broadrick v.
    Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 610-11, 93 S. Ct 2908 (1973).5
    5.    The dissent misapprehends our application of the no-circumstances
    principle to this case. Our position is not that the bypass scheme ought to
    be interpreted to exclude the minor who can show that an abortion is in her
    best interest but cannot show that notification is not in her best interest
    and, is therefore only unconstitutional when applied to some small subset of
    Mississippi minors. On the contrary, we believe the dissent misconstrues the
    statutory scheme when it concludes that the law will be unconstitutional as to
    those few minors under all circumstances. We have not voiced an opinion on
    the law as the dissent reads it because, properly interpreted and applied by
    the Chancery Courts, Mississippi law requires them to grant any minor a bypass
    if an abortion is in her best interest. Properly interpreted and followed,
    the law will be constitutional as to all minors in Mississippi. There will be
    no "unconstitutional impact upon a small percentage of the minors seeking to
    obtain judicial consent for an abortion." See ___ F.2d ___, ___, slip op. at
    ___, n.4 (Johnson dissenting).
    16
    IV
    Finally, the abortion providers argue that the Chancery
    Court system in Mississippi will be unable to implement the statute
    in a constitutional manner.            They presented affidavits to the
    district    court     indicating     that    most    court    clerks    are   either
    unfamiliar with the bypass procedures or are completely unaware
    that   a   minor    could   obtain    an     abortion     without      her   parents'
    consent.6      They     argue   further       that    there      are   insufficient
    chancellors to hear cases and that court-appointed counsel will be
    difficult to obtain.        They worry that true confidentiality will be
    difficult or impossible to maintain since court personnel in small
    towns will recognize minors coming to court seeking the parental
    consent waiver.
    All of these objections might be appropriate in an as-
    applied challenge to the constitutionality of the statute.                     But to
    sustain a facial challenge, the plaintiffs must show that under no
    circumstances could the law be constitutional. 
    Barnes, 970 F.2d at 14
    .    Before the law is even implemented, this court is obliged to
    presume that state officials will act in accordance with the law.
    Akron 
    II, 497 U.S. at 513
    ("We refuse to base a decision on the
    facial     validity    of   a   statute      on     the   mere    possibility     of
    unauthorized, illegal disclosure by state employees.").                      There is
    no demonstrated pattern of abuse or defiance here that would
    warrant the court to presume otherwise.                   Too, remand for an a
    6.    It is unsurprising that clerks in Mississippi courts would be unfamiliar
    with the statute since the district court, at the behest of these plaintiffs,
    has barred enforcement of the statute since its enactment.
    17
    priori factual determination on whether a state was ready to
    implement its bypass procedure would likely draw upon "evidence"
    that is very speculative.
    Moreover, this Court has once before encountered these
    plaintiffs complaining of intolerable conditions for the exercise
    of abortion rights in Mississippi.         
    Barnes, 970 F.2d at 14
    .     In
    Barnes, this Court turned away their facial challenge to a 24-hour
    waiting period.    As in this case, the plaintiffs there argued that
    this Court should remand to the district court for an evidentiary
    hearing on whether the regulation imposed an "undue burden" on
    Mississippi's minors despite the fact that the Supreme Court in
    Casey   had     upheld   an   almost    identical    Pennsylvania     law.
    "Mississippi ain't Pennsylvania," the plaintiffs said.         This Court
    refused to remand the case for an evidentiary hearing, ruling that
    a facial challenge to a statute required more than a derogatory
    remark and    brief   about   conditions   in   Mississippi.    The   same
    principle applies here.
    V
    The      Mississippi    abortion      statute   is    facially
    constitutional.     Accordingly, this Court vacates the preliminary
    injunction and remands to the district court for entry of an order
    of dismissal.
    REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions.
    18
    JOHNSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    This    writer    is   compelled   to   agree    with   the    majority's
    conclusion that the Supreme Court has voiced approval for a two-
    parent consent requirement with an adequate judicial bypass.7
    However, in my view, the judicial bypass procedure at issue in the
    instant   case,   as   contained   in    both   the   statute      and   in   the
    Mississippi Supreme Court's procedural rules, is constitutionally
    deficient.     Accordingly, the instant dissent is made from the
    decision of the majority to vacate the district court's injunction
    against enforcement of Mississippi's parental consent statute.
    The foremost flaw in the majority opinion is its refusal to
    come to grips with the real issue presented by this appeal--that
    being whether Mississippi's judicial bypass is adequate in the
    context of a parental consent statute.               In fact, the majority
    opinion skirts around the issue to the extent that it is difficult
    to discern its actual holding.          Portions of the opinion suggest
    7. A two-parent consent requirement has never been approved by
    the Supreme Court. In Hodgson v. Minnesota, 
    110 S. Ct. 2926
    (1990), the Court did approve a two-parent notice requirement
    that provided for a judicial bypass. A majority of the Justices
    agreed that any legitimate state interest in requiring parental
    notification would be fully satisfied by a requirement that one
    parent be notified. 
    Id. at 2945
    (Stevens, J.). The requirement
    that both parents be notified was therefore held to be
    unconstitutional. The same would obviously be true for a two-
    parent consent requirement since consent requirements are much
    more burdensome than notice requirements and must be examined
    more closely. Nonetheless, a different majority in Hodgson held
    that a two-parent notice requirement, though unconstitutional
    standing alone, could nonetheless be saved by an adequate
    judicial bypass. 
    Id. at 2970
    (Kennedy, J.). While the issue was
    not before the Supreme Court, I must agree that this same
    majority strongly indicated that a two-parent consent statute
    with an adequate judicial bypass would also be constitutional.
    19
    that the challenged language in Mississippi's Rule 10.01 is indeed
    invalid because it conflicts with Bellotti v. Baird, 
    99 S. Ct. 3035
    (1979), and with Mississippi's statutory requirements for the
    judicial bypass. If that is the majority's intent, the majority is
    actually     only    objecting      to   the   district   court's   decision   to
    continue the injunction rather than to surgically strike the
    offending language from the rule.              It is difficult to believe that
    the majority intends this interpretation because that would make
    the   bulk   of     the   opinion    nothing     more   than   misguided   dicta.
    Nevertheless, to the extent that this is the intended holding of
    the majority, this writer would whole-heartedly agree that the
    language in Rule 10.01 is invalid.8
    On the other hand, portions of the majority opinion seem to
    approve Mississippi's parental consent procedure simply because the
    statute itself complies with Bellotti.             According to the majority,
    the unconstitutional requirements set forth in Rule 10.01 are of no
    moment because the statute must "trump" the procedural rule.                 What
    the majority forgets--or at least ignores--is that the Supreme
    Court has made it clear that a two-parent consent requirement is
    unconstitutional.9         Such a requirement can only be saved by an
    adequate judicial bypass.           Because the procedural rule at issue is
    a part of the judicial bypass provided by Mississippi, this Court
    8. This writer would still affirm the judgment of the district
    court for the precise reason given by Judge Wingate. Merely
    striking the offending language in Rule 10.01 would leave minors
    without direction on how to proceed or what to allege in their
    complaints.
    9.    See supra note 1.
    20
    cannot avoid passing on the constitutionality of the language
    contained in Rule 10.01. The district court held that the language
    in   Rule   10.01     meant   that    Mississippi's    judicial      bypass   was
    inadequate to save the two-parent consent requirement.                   Although
    the majority struggles mightily to avoid the issue, it is that
    precise     holding   of   the   district    court    that    is   now   squarely
    presented for review.
    Limitations on a Minor's Right to an Abortion
    At this hour, it is beyond debate that the Constitution
    protects the right of every woman to decide whether and when to
    conceive and bear children, including the right to choose to
    continue or to terminate a pregnancy. Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
    
    112 S. Ct. 2791
    , 2816 (1992).           This right is in no way diminished
    by a woman's minority.        Hodgson v. Minnesota, 
    110 S. Ct. 2926
    , 2936
    (1990).     Of course, as is the case for all other constitutional
    protections, a woman's freedom in this area is not unlimited.                 The
    Supreme     Court   has    recognized    that   the   State    has   legitimate
    interests in the health of the pregnant woman and in protecting the
    potential life within her.           However, any attempts by the State to
    further its legitimate interests must be calculated to inform a
    woman's free choice, not to hinder it.            "An undue burden exists,
    and therefore a provision of law is invalid, if its purpose or
    effect is to place a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman
    seeking an abortion before the fetus attains viability."                   
    Casey, 112 S. Ct. at 2821
    .
    21
    To    be   sure,   where   the   woman   seeking   an    abortion    is   an
    unmarried minor, the State has a special interest in encouraging
    her to seek the advice and counsel of her parents.            Hodgson, 110 S.
    Ct. at 2942; Bellotti v. Baird, 
    99 S. Ct. 3035
    , 3046 (1979).
    However, a State cannot lawfully authorize an absolute parental
    veto over the decision of a minor to terminate her pregnancy.
    Planned Parenthood v. Danforth, 
    96 S. Ct. 2831
    , 2843 (1976).                   A
    parental consent requirement, although it would be unconstitutional
    standing    alone,      can   nonetheless     be   saved     by   an   adequate
    "alternative procedure" whereby authorization for the abortion can
    be obtained.     
    Bellotti, 99 S. Ct. at 3048
    .        In such an alternative
    proceeding, a pregnant minor is entitled to show either (1) that
    she is mature enough and well informed enough to make the decision
    herself or (2) that the abortion would be in her best interests.
    Additionally, to allow the minor an effective opportunity to obtain
    an abortion, all acceptable judicial bypass procedures must (3)
    insure anonymity and (4) be conducted with expediency.                   Ohio v.
    Akron Center for Reproductive Health, 
    110 S. Ct. 2972
    , 2979-80
    (1990) (Akron II); 
    Bellotti, 99 S. Ct. at 3048
    .
    Is Mississippi's Rule 10.01 Constitutional?
    The plaintiffs below admit that the statutory portion of
    Mississippi's judicial bypass complies with the standards set forth
    in Bellotti.      The statute itself provides that parental consent
    shall be waived if the court finds either: "(a) [t]hat the minor is
    mature and well-informed enough to make the abortion decision on
    22
    her own; or (b) [t]hat performance of the abortion would be in the
    best interests of the minor."      MISS. CODE ANN. § 41-41-55.       However,
    the statute specifically directs the Mississippi Supreme Court to
    issue rules to insure that the bypass proceedings are handled in an
    "expeditious, confidential and anonymous manner."            MISS. CODE ANN. §
    41-41-55(6).   And it is one of the procedural rules so promulgated
    that has given rise to this litigation. Mississippi Chancery Court
    Rule    10.01(4),   the   actual   procedural     rule    attacked    by   the
    plaintiffs,    states     that   the    minor's   petition    for    judicial
    authorization shall allege either or both of the following:
    (a) [t]hat the complainant is sufficiently mature and well
    informed to intelligently decide whether to have an abortion
    without the notification of her parents, guardian, or
    custodian;
    (b) [t]hat one or both of her parents, her guardian, or her
    custodian was engaged in a pattern of physical, sexual, or
    emotional abuse against her, or that the notification of her
    parents, guardian, or custodian otherwise is not in her best
    interest.
    MISS. CH. R. 10.01(4) (emphasis added).
    The district court found that Rule 10.01 stood in direct
    conflict both with the Mississippi parental consent statute and
    with the standards enunciated in Bellotti.               The district court
    reasoned that the pleading requirements set forth in the rule
    impermissibly narrow the Bellotti standards because they would have
    the effect of denying authorization to some minors even though
    abortion would be in their best interests.               The district court
    noted that simply correcting the rule by striking the offending
    language would leave minors without any guidance as to how to
    proceed or what to allege in their complaints.                Therefore the
    23
    district court continued the injunction against enforcement of
    Mississippi's parental consent statute until Rule 10.01 is amended.
    Mississippi argues before this Court that the language in Rule
    10.01    must   be   constitutional    because    identical   language     was
    approved by the Supreme Court in Akron II.                However, as the
    district court correctly noted, Akron II dealt with a notice
    requirement,     while   the    instant    case   deals   with    a    consent
    requirement.     Consent statutes are by nature significantly more
    burdensome and imposing than notice statutes and must be attended
    with greater protection.
    From a constitutional standpoint, the key consideration for
    any parental involvement requirement is whether it results in
    another person having an absolute veto power over a minor's right
    to have an abortion.       
    Danforth, 96 S. Ct. at 2843
    .          The Supreme
    Court has repeatedly held that where a minor is mature enough to
    make her own decision or where the abortion would be in her best
    interests she must be permitted to have the abortion.            
    Bellotti, 99 S. Ct. at 3048
    .      To the extent that a parental involvement statute
    results in veto power over a minor in either of these two classes,
    it is unconstitutional. Such a statute can nonetheless be saved by
    an alternative bypass procedure, if the bypass is adequate to
    ensure   that   minors   in    the   two   protected   classes   can    obtain
    authorization for the abortion without any parental involvement.
    A consent requirement like the one considered in Danforth
    expressly grants an absolute parental veto.            Therefore, a consent
    24
    requirement will only be valid if accompanied by an alternative
    procedure that guarantees that minors in the protected classes will
    be able to have an abortion without parental consent.        On the other
    hand, a parental notice requirement does not expressly grant
    absolute veto power.       The Supreme Court has declined to equate
    notice with consent in all cases.           H.L. v. Matheson, 
    101 S. Ct. 1164
    , 1172 n.17 (1981). Nonetheless, the Court has recognized that
    there are circumstances where a requirement of notice would be
    equivalent to a requirement of consent--for example, when parents
    hold strong views on abortion and could be expected to obstruct or
    prevent the minor from exercising her rights, perhaps by resorting
    to physical or emotional abuse.          See 
    Hodgson, 110 S. Ct. at 2945
    -
    46.   To the extent that a notice requirement results in a parental
    veto and to the extent that this veto affects the two protected
    classifications     of   minors,   the    notice   requirement   would   be
    unconstitutional.    To save such a notice requirement, an adequate
    judicial bypass need only address those situations where notice can
    be the equivalent of consent--in other words, situations where
    notice would not be in the minor's best interests such as where the
    minor has been the victim of physical or emotional abuse.
    Thus, in Akron II, it was constitutionally acceptable for Ohio
    to require a minor seeking a judicial bypass to allege either that
    she was mature enough to make her own decision or that one or both
    of her parents were engaged in a pattern of physical, sexual, or
    emotional abuse against her or that the notification of her parents
    was not in her best interests.      The situations where notice would
    25
    amount to consent are amply covered by this language, and a notice
    requirement is only objectionable to the extent that it amounts to
    a parental veto for one or both of the protected classes of minors
    set out in Bellotti.        Therefore, under the language in Ohio's
    notice   requirement,    any     minor    constitutionally          entitled     to   a
    judicial bypass would be able to satisfy the pleading requirements.
    When the same language approved in Akron II is applied to a
    consent requirement, however, the situation is very different.                        As
    the district court noted, under Mississippi's Rule 10.01, an
    immature minor who could show that an abortion was in her best
    interests but who could not show that notification of her parents
    was not in her best interests (as would be the case if she had
    understanding and supportive parents who nonetheless were opposed
    to   abortion   on   religious    grounds)      would       be   unable   to    obtain
    authorization for an abortion.                Therefore, the district court
    correctly held that Rule 10.01 "impermissibly narrows the standards
    deemed essential in Bellotti."                Though identical language was
    approved by the Supreme Court as part of a notice requirement, the
    language   in   Rule   10.01     is   invalid     as    a    part   of    a    consent
    requirement because it would result in some minors being unable to
    obtain authorization for an abortion even though the abortion would
    be in their best interests.
    The Appropriate Remedy
    The majority apparently does not disagree with this writer's
    view that the language in Rule 10.01 is unconstitutional.                      Yet the
    26
    majority holds that the district court's order should nonetheless
    be    reversed     because     the      language    in    the   statute      itself        is
    constitutional.       The majority notes that, under Mississippi state
    law, a procedural rule cannot trump a state statute.                       While this is
    an    accurate      assessment         of   Mississippi       law,    the    majority's
    confidence that the statute and the rule necessarily conflict is
    misplaced. At the risk of being branded "hypertechnical," it seems
    entirely possible--albeit constitutionally impermissible given the
    language in Rule 10.01--for a state court to give effect to both.
    The   pleading      requirements        set    forth     in   Rule   10.01       are     very
    different from the rules of decision found in the statute.                                For
    the purpose of this appeal, it is immaterial that the “official
    position” of the Mississippi Attorney General’s office is that a
    court would be required to grant a minor’s petition if she can show
    that an abortion would be in her best interests; a minor will never
    have a chance to make such a showing if she cannot satisfy Rule
    10.01's pleading requirements.
    It    is   clear   that    the       language     contained    in     Rule      10.01
    impermissibly       narrows      the    Bellotti     standards       for    an    adequate
    judicial bypass. As a result, Mississippi's judicial bypass cannot
    save the otherwise unconstitutional two-parent consent requirement.
    Given       the   conclusion     that       the    language     in    Rule       10.01     is
    unconstitutional, the most sensible remedy is the one imposed by
    the district court--to continue the injunction until Mississippi
    amends Rule 10.01. Instead, the majority leaves the constitutional
    27
    infirmity intact and assures, with a sly wink and a nod, that no
    Mississippi court would actually follow the language in Rule 10.01.
    In my view, the district court made the right decision when it
    continued the injunction against the enforcement of Mississippi's
    parental consent requirement until the offending language in Rule
    10.01 was corrected.   I would affirm the judgment of the district
    court in all respects.10
    10.       As an alternative ground for reversing the district
    court, the majority notes that this is a facial challenge to a
    statute. As such, the majority contends that it should only
    succeed if the plaintiffs have shown that there is no set of
    circumstances under which the statute would be constitutional.
    While the majority correctly quotes this principle of
    constitutional law, it completely misapplies it to the facts of
    this case. It is immaterial that Mississippi's regulations will
    only have an unconstitutional impact upon a small percentage of
    the minors seeking to obtain judicial consent for an abortion.
    "Legislation is measured for consistency with the Constitution by
    its impact on those whose conduct it affects. . . . The proper
    focus of constitutional inquiry is the group for whom the law is
    a restriction, not the group for whom the law is irrelevant."
    
    Casey, 112 S. Ct. at 2829
    . In this case, the proper focus is on
    those immature minors seeking abortions who can show that an
    abortion is in their best interests but who cannot show that
    notification of their parents is not in their best interests.
    For the women in that group, the application of Rule 10.01 will
    mean that there is no set of circumstances where they will be
    able to obtain judicial authorization for an abortion.
    The majority suggests that this dissent misunderstands its
    argument on this point. Even if so, this writer doubts that he
    will be the only one to misunderstand. But in the interests of
    increased understanding all the way around, let me be perfectly
    clear on my point: In a case like this, the majority's
    application of the "no-circumstances principle" is just plain
    wrong. Whatever the merits of such an approach in another
    context, virtually every abortion case to reach the Supreme Court
    since Roe v. Wade has involved just this type of facial attack on
    state regulation. See, e.g., Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 112 S.
    Ct. 2791, 2816 (1992); Ohio v. Akron Center for Reproductive
    Health, 
    110 S. Ct. 2972
    (1990); Hodgson v. Minnesota, 
    110 S. Ct. 2926
    (1990); Webster v. Reproductive Health Servs., 
    109 S. Ct. 3040
    (1989); Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians &
    Gynecologists, 
    476 U.S. 747
    (1986).
    28