Stacey Johnson v. Tim Griffin ( 2023 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 22-1922
    ___________________________
    Stacey Eugene Johnson
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Tim Griffin,1 Attorney General, in his official capacity; Erin Hunter, Sevier
    County Prosecuting Attorney, in her official capacity; Kermit Channell, Director of
    the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory, in his official capacity
    Defendants - Appellants
    Stacey Pectol, Clerk of the Courts of the Arkansas Supreme Court, in her official
    capacity
    Defendant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Arkansas - Central
    ____________
    Submitted: January 10, 2023
    Filed: June 5, 2023
    ____________
    Before KELLY, ERICKSON, and STRAS, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    1
    Tim Griffin has been appointed to serve as the Attorney General of the State
    of Arkansas, and is substituted as appellant pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate
    Procedure 43(c).
    KELLY, Circuit Judge.
    Stacey Johnson has been incarcerated on death row in Arkansas since 1997.
    After he was denied relief in state court under Arkansas’s postconviction DNA
    testing statute, Johnson filed this federal lawsuit against several Arkansas officials
    under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    . The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on both
    standing and immunity grounds. The district court 2 denied the motion, and the
    defendants appeal.
    I.
    In 1993, Carol Heath was found dead in her home in Sevier County, Arkansas.
    Johnson was charged with her murder, and he was convicted of capital murder and
    sentenced to death the following year. That conviction was later reversed on appeal
    because of an evidentiary error. See Johnson v. State (Johnson I), 
    934 S.W.2d 179
    ,
    180 (Ark. 1996). Johnson was re-tried in 1997, and a jury again found him guilty of
    Heath’s murder and sentenced him to death. The Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed
    Johnson’s conviction and death sentence on direct appeal. See Johnson v. State
    (Johnson II), 
    27 S.W.3d 405
    , 408 (Ark. 2000).
    Following his second conviction, Johnson unsuccessfully sought
    postconviction relief in state court. See Johnson v. State (Johnson III), 
    157 S.W. 151
    , 158 (Ark. 2004) (ordering retesting of certain DNA evidence); Johnson v. State
    (Johnson IV), 
    235 S.W.3d 872
    , 874–76 (Ark. 2006) (concluding that Johnson III
    “contained a factual error” and that further DNA testing was not warranted). He
    then petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus in federal court, which was also
    unsuccessful. See Johnson v. Norris, 
    537 F.3d 840
    , 842–43 (8th Cir. 2008)
    2
    The Honorable Kristine G. Baker, United States District Judge for the Eastern
    District of Arkansas.
    -2-
    (affirming the district court’s denial of habeas relief), cert. denied, 
    555 U.S. 1182
    (2009).
    Arkansas scheduled Johnson’s execution for April 20, 2017. Shortly before
    that date, Johnson filed a petition in state court under Arkansas’s postconviction
    DNA testing statute, which is known as Act 1780. 3 See 
    Ark. Code Ann. §§ 16-112
    -
    201 to -208 (Repl. 2016). Johnson sought DNA testing on 26 pieces of physical
    evidence related to Heath’s murder, including swabs taken from Heath’s body and
    Caucasian hairs found at the crime scene that have never been tested. Johnson, who
    is Black, argued that the proposed DNA testing might collectively point to a specific
    Caucasian perpetrator and thus raise a reasonable probability that Johnson is
    innocent.4 A state trial court denied the petition, but the Arkansas Supreme Court
    stayed Johnson’s execution the day before it was to be carried out and remanded his
    case for an evidentiary hearing. Johnson v. State, No. CR-17-312, 
    2017 WL 1455044
    , at *1 (Ark. Apr. 19, 2017).
    On remand, the state trial court again denied Johnson’s Act 1780 petition. See
    Johnson V, 591 S.W.3d at 268–69. And the Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed that
    decision on appeal. Id. at 266. The court explained that DNA testing is authorized
    under Act 1780 “only if it can provide materially relevant evidence that will
    significantly advance the petitioner’s claim of innocence in light of all evidence
    3
    As described by the Arkansas Supreme Court, “Act 1780 provides that a writ
    of habeas corpus can issue based on new scientific evidence proving the actual
    innocence of a wrongfully convicted person.” Johnson v. State (Johnson V), 
    591 S.W.3d 265
    , 269 (Ark. 2019) (citing 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 16-112-201
    (a)(1)). The Act
    authorizes postconviction DNA testing “only under specified conditions,” however,
    and “[f]ailure to meet any one condition precludes” such testing “as a matter of law.”
    
    Id. at 270
    .
    4
    Act 1780 requires that a petitioner show, among other things, that the
    proposed DNA testing “may produce new material evidence that would” (A) support
    a theory of defense that “[w]ould establish the [petitioner’s] actual innocence” and
    (B) “[r]aise a reasonable probability that the [petitioner] did not commit the offense.”
    
    Ark. Code Ann. § 16-112-202
    (6), (8).
    -3-
    presented to the jury.” 
    Id. at 270
    . It then concluded that “none of the evidence that
    might result from” Johnson’s proposed testing “could advance [his] claim of actual
    innocence or raise a reasonable probability that he did not murder Carol Heath.” 
    Id. at 272
    .
    Johnson filed a petition for rehearing, in which he contended that the denial
    of his Act 1780 petition “implicate[d] a right to due process and access to the courts
    under the United States Constitution.” Johnson v. State, No. CR-18-700, 
    2020 WL 830044
    , at *2 (Ark. Feb. 20, 2020). The Arkansas Supreme Court declined to
    consider the merits of Johnson’s “novel constitutional arguments,” and it reaffirmed
    its denial of Johnson’s Act 1780 petition. 
    Id.
     Johnson petitioned the United States
    Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari, and that too was denied. See Johnson v.
    Arkansas, 
    141 S. Ct. 1370 (2021)
    .
    Johnson subsequently brought this § 1983 action in federal court, in which he
    asserts that Act 1780, as “authoritatively construed” by the Arkansas Supreme Court,
    violates his federal constitutional rights. Johnson sued the Attorney General of
    Arkansas, the Sevier County Prosecuting Attorney, and the Director of the Arkansas
    State Crime Laboratory in their official capacities,5 alleging in relevant part that the
    defendants’ “continued refusal to allow [him] to test key evidence in their possession
    denies him due process of law.” And he seeks an order declaring Act 1780
    unconstitutional and an injunction requiring the defendants “to release” DNA
    evidence to him “so that [he] can have the evidence tested at his own expense.”
    The defendants moved to dismiss Johnson’s complaint. As relevant to this
    appeal, they argued that Johnson lacks standing and that they are immune from suit
    under the Eleventh Amendment. The district court denied the motion in part,
    concluding that Johnson has standing to challenge Act 1780 on procedural due
    5
    Johnson also sued the clerk of the Arkansas Supreme Court, but that
    defendant was dismissed from the case after the district court determined that the
    clerk was entitled to judicial immunity.
    -4-
    process grounds 6 and that the defendants are not entitled to Eleventh Amendment
    immunity. The court granted the motion to dismiss all other claims.
    The defendants now appeal the district court’s rulings on standing and
    immunity. And we have jurisdiction over their interlocutory appeal under the
    collateral order doctrine. See McDaniel v. Precythe, 
    897 F.3d 946
    , 949 (8th Cir.
    2018) (“[W]e may hear an interlocutory appeal raising a claim of Eleventh
    Amendment immunity when the district court has rejected an immunity defense
    raised by a state defendant.”); Duit Constr. Co. v. Bennett, 
    796 F.3d 938
    , 940–41
    (8th Cir. 2015) (addressing a plaintiff’s standing to bring suit as part of an
    interlocutory appeal of a district court’s denial of Eleventh Amendment immunity).
    II.
    The merits of Johnson’s challenge to Act 1780 are not before us. Our review
    is instead limited to the threshold issues of whether Johnson has standing and
    whether the defendants are immune from suit under the Eleventh Amendment, two
    questions we review de novo. See Heglund v. Aitkin County, 
    871 F.3d 572
    , 577
    (8th Cir. 2017) (“We review standing de novo.”); Balogh v. Lombardi, 
    816 F.3d 536
    ,
    544 (8th Cir. 2016) (“We review district court determinations of Eleventh
    Amendment immunity de novo.”).
    A.
    We start with standing. See McDaniel, 
    897 F.3d at
    949–50. “The
    Constitution limits federal courts to deciding ‘Cases’ and ‘Controversies,’” and that
    limitation, “[a]mong other things, . . . requires a plaintiff to have standing.” Fed.
    Election Comm’n v. Cruz, 
    142 S. Ct. 1638
    , 1646 (2022) (quoting U.S. Const. art. III,
    6
    Johnson alleges in relevant part that “the decisions of Arkansas
    courts . . . reveal consistently unreasonable and incorrect interpretations of Act
    1780, such that virtually no litigant can meet the Act’s requirements, thereby
    depriving litigants of their procedural due process rights.”
    -5-
    § 2). To establish Article III standing, a plaintiff “must have (1) suffered an injury
    in fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the challenged conduct of the defendant, and
    (3) that is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” McDaniel, 
    897 F.3d at 950
     (quoting Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 
    578 U.S. 330
    , 338 (2016)). The plaintiff
    has the burden of establishing these elements. Agred Found. v. U.S. Army Corps of
    Eng’rs, 
    3 F.4th 1069
    , 1073 (8th Cir. 2021). To survive a motion to dismiss, a
    plaintiff need only “allege sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to support a
    reasonable and plausible inference that she satisfies the elements of Article III
    standing.” Hawse v. Page, 
    7 F.4th 685
    , 688–89 (8th Cir. 2021). And this pleading
    burden is “relatively modest.” Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
    , 171 (1997).
    Relevant to our analysis here are two Supreme Court cases that directly
    addressed the same type of constitutional claim that Johnson brings in this case. In
    District Attorney’s Office for the Third Judicial District v. Osborne, the Court
    explained that if state law authorizes prisoners to demonstrate their innocence by
    way of postconviction DNA testing, that state-created liberty interest is subject to
    the Due Process Clause’s procedural protections. 
    557 U.S. 52
    , 67–68 (2009); see
    
    id. at 69
     (“Federal courts may upset a State’s postconviction relief procedures only
    if they are fundamentally inadequate to vindicate the substantive rights provided.”).
    And in Skinner v. Switzer, the Court held that a procedural due process challenge to
    a state’s postconviction DNA testing statute “is properly pursued in a § 1983 action.”
    
    562 U.S. 521
    , 525 (2011). Like the defendants in both of those cases, Johnson
    sought to establish his innocence through a state postconviction DNA testing
    statute—here, Arkansas’s Act 1780. He alleges that Arkansas courts have arbitrarily
    denied him “the very right” to DNA testing that Act 1780 “purports to create.” See
    Osborne, 
    557 U.S. at 72
     (indicating that a prisoner can assert as part of a procedural
    due process claim that certain postconviction procedures provided by state law were
    “arbitrarily denied to him”). And he seeks relief by bringing a § 1983 action
    challenging Act 1780’s constitutionality on procedural due process grounds. See
    Skinner, 562 U.S. at 530 (“[The defendant] challenges, as denying him procedural
    due process, Texas’ postconviction DNA statute ‘as construed’ by the Texas
    courts.”).
    -6-
    In neither Osborne nor Skinner did the Supreme Court question the prisoner’s
    standing to bring the procedural due process claims at issue in those cases. And in
    the years since, a § 1983 action against a state prosecuting authority has become the
    principal means by which prisoners can challenge the constitutionality of state
    postconviction DNA testing statutes. See, e.g., Reed v. Goertz, 
    143 S. Ct. 955
    , 960
    (2023) (involving a procedural due process challenge to Texas’s postconviction
    DNA testing statute brought against a state prosecutor); Morrison v. Peterson, 
    809 F.3d 1059
    , 1064 (9th Cir. 2015) (involving a similar challenge brought against a
    district attorney); Alvarez v. Att’y Gen. for Fla., 
    679 F.3d 1257
    , 1258 (11th Cir.
    2012) (involving a similar challenge brought against the Attorney General of Florida
    and a state prosecutor); see also LaMar v. Ebert, 
    681 F. App’x 279
    , 286 (4th Cir.
    2017) (per curiam) (unpublished) (observing that “no court—including the Supreme
    Court—has either identified or assessed a standing issue when the convicted person
    has sued a prosecutor for denial of access to post-conviction DNA testing”).
    The defendants here nonetheless argue that Johnson lacks standing because
    they “have no connection” to the Arkansas judiciary’s enforcement of Act 1780 and,
    as a result, have not caused Johnson any redressable injury. They further argue that
    Osborne and Skinner “never addressed what state officials, if any, are proper Article
    III defendants.” But any lingering doubt about a prisoner’s standing to bring the
    distinct procedural due process claim recognized in those two cases was dispelled
    by the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Reed v. Goertz, 
    143 S. Ct. 955 (2023)
    .
    In Reed, a prisoner on death row brought a § 1983 action asserting that
    Texas’s postconviction DNA testing law “failed to provide procedural due process,”
    and the named defendant was the state prosecutor who had opposed the prisoner’s
    state-court motion for DNA testing. 143 S. Ct. at 960. The Supreme Court
    ultimately decided when the statute of limitations for such claims begins to run. Id.
    at 959 (holding that the statute of limitations begins to run “at the end of the state-
    court litigation”). But before reaching that result, the Court rejected Texas’s
    threshold argument that the prisoner lacked standing. See id. at 960.
    -7-
    Reed establishes that Johnson has standing to bring his procedural due process
    claim against the Sevier County Prosecuting Attorney. First, like the prisoner in
    Reed, Johnson has “sufficiently alleged an injury in fact”—namely, “denial of access
    to” the DNA evidence he wishes to test pursuant to Act 1780. Id. Second, Johnson
    alleges that the Sevier County Prosecuting Attorney has possession and control of
    that evidence yet, like the state prosecutor in Reed, continues to “den[y] access to”
    it, “thereby caus[ing]” Johnson’s injury. Id. And third, Johnson’s injury is
    redressable because, as explained in Reed, “if a federal court concludes that
    [Arkansas’s] post-conviction DNA testing procedures violate due process, that court
    order would eliminate” the Prosecuting Attorney’s “justification for denying DNA
    testing.” Id.; see id. (noting that such a court order would significantly increase the
    likelihood that the state prosecutor “would grant access to the requested evidence”
    and that the prisoner “therefore would obtain relief that directly redresses the injury
    suffered” (cleaned up)).
    Reed specifically addressed a § 1983 action brought against a state prosecutor.
    But Johnson also has standing to bring his procedural due process claim against the
    Arkansas Attorney General and the Director of the State Crime Lab. While Johnson
    does not expressly allege that the Attorney General currently possesses any of the
    DNA evidence he wants to test, Act 1780 provides the Attorney General an
    opportunity to play a critical role in the statute’s implementation. See 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 16-112-204
    (a) (“Within twenty (20) days after the filing of the petition, the
    prosecuting attorney or the Attorney General shall respond to the petition by answer
    or motion . . . .” (emphasis added)). And here, the Attorney General responded to
    Johnson’s Act 1780 petition by opposing it in state court.7 Cf. Echols v. State, 
    373 S.W.3d 892
    , 898 (Ark. 2010) (indicating that the State and an Act 1780 petitioner
    can agree to DNA testing under the statute); 
    id. at 895
     (“The circuit court entered a
    [DNA] testing order . . . after the parties agreed to the terms of the order.”). The
    7
    The Attorney General argued on behalf of the State in Johnson V and
    contended that Johnson’s Act 1780 petition should be denied because Johnson had
    failed to meet the statutory prerequisites for postconviction DNA testing.
    -8-
    Attorney General “thereby caused,” in part, Johnson’s ongoing injury of being
    denied access to DNA testing that might prove his innocence. Reed, 143 S. Ct. at
    960; see Bennett, 
    520 U.S. at
    168–69 (explaining that the traceability requirement
    does not require that the defendant’s actions be “the very last step in the chain of
    causation”).
    As for the Director of the State Crime Lab, Johnson alleges that the Director
    has “possession” and “control” of evidence he would like to test. He further claims
    that the Director and the other defendants are “refus[ing] to allow” him “to test key
    evidence in their possession.” And these allegations—which we must accept as true
    at this stage of litigation, see Hawse, 7 F.4th at 688–89—are sufficient to meet
    Johnson’s “relatively modest” burden of establishing standing. Bennett, 
    520 U.S. at 171
    .
    In sum, Johnson has sufficiently alleged an injury in fact that was caused by
    the defendants and that would be redressed by the relief he seeks in his § 1983 action.
    He has standing to bring his procedural due process challenge to Act 1780.
    B.
    The defendants also argue that the district court erred in determining that they
    are not immune from suit under the Eleventh Amendment. The Eleventh
    Amendment “protects States and their arms and instrumentalities from suit in federal
    court.” Webb v. City of Maplewood, 
    889 F.3d 483
    , 485 (8th Cir. 2018). Yet under
    the exception to Eleventh Amendment immunity established in Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
     (1908), “a private party may sue state officials in their official capacities
    for prospective injunctive relief.” McDaniel, 
    897 F.3d at
    951–52. This exception
    applies only if the state officials being sued have “some connection to the
    enforcement of the challenged laws.” Calzone v. Hawley, 
    866 F.3d 866
    , 869 (8th
    Cir. 2017). Such a connection exists “[s]o long as a state official is giving effect to
    a state statute in a manner that allegedly injures a plaintiff and violates his
    -9-
    constitutional rights,” McDaniel, 
    897 F.3d at 952
    , which is an inquiry similar to the
    standing one. See Duit Constr. Co., 
    796 F.3d at 940
    .
    The defendants here are not immune from suit under the Eleventh Amendment
    because Johnson seeks prospective declaratory and injunctive relief and has alleged
    a sufficient connection between the defendants and Act 1780’s enforcement. The
    Sevier County Prosecuting Attorney and the Director of the State Crime Lab have a
    sufficient connection because they possess and control evidence that Johnson seeks
    to test, and they have refused to provide it to him. See Reed, 143 S. Ct. at 960
    (concluding summarily that the “Ex parte Young doctrine” applies in similar
    circumstances). And the Attorney General has a sufficient connection because he
    has refused to agree to DNA testing and opposed Johnson’s Act 1780 petition. See
    
    Ark. Code Ann. § 16-112-204
    (a); Echols, 
    373 S.W.3d at 895, 898
    .
    III.
    The order of the district court is affirmed.
    STRAS, Circuit Judge, concurring.
    Based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Reed v. Goertz, 
    143 S. Ct. 955 (2023)
    , which is indistinguishable from this case, I concur. Although the Supreme
    Court did not say much, what it did tell us resolves everything we have to decide
    here.
    ______________________________
    -10-