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Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 117 S.Ct. 1055,
520 U.S. 43, 137 L.Ed.2d 170 (1997)
Supreme Court of the United States
ARIZONANS FOR OFFICIAL ENGLISH and Robert D. Park, Petitioners
v.
ARIZONA et al.
No. 95‑974.
Argued Dec. 4, 1996.
Decided March 3, 1997.
Syllabus [FN*]
FN* The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court
but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the
reader. See United States v. Detroit
Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U.S. 321, 337, 26 S.Ct. 282, 287, 50 L.Ed. 499
(1906).
Maria‑Kelly F. Yniguez, an Arizona state employee at the
time, sued the State and its Governor, Attorney General, and Director of the
Department of Administration under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that State
Constitution Article XXVIII‑‑key provisions of which declare
English "the official language of the State," require the State to
"act in English and in no other language," and authorize state
residents and businesses "to bring [state‑court] suit[s] to enforce
th[e] Article"‑‑violated, inter alia, the Free Speech Clause
of the First Amendment. Yniguez used
both English and Spanish in her work and feared that Article XXVIII, if read
broadly, would require her to face discharge or other discipline if she did not
refrain from speaking Spanish while serving the State. She requested injunctive and declaratory
relief, counsel fees, and "all other relief that the Court deems just and
proper." During the early phases
of the suit, the State Attorney General released an opinion expressing his view
that Article XXVIII is constitutional in that, although it requires the
expression of "official acts" in English, it allows government
employees to use other languages to facilitate the delivery of governmental
services. The Federal District Court
heard testimony and, among its rulings, determined that only the Governor, in
her official capacity, was a proper defendant. The court, at the same time, dismissed the State because of its
Eleventh Amendment immunity, the State Attorney General because he had no
authority to enforce Article XXVIII against state employees, and the Director
because there was no showing that she had undertaken or threatened any action
adverse to Yniguez; rejected the
Attorney General's interpretation of the Article on the ground that it
conflicted with the measure's plain language;
declared the Article fatally overbroad after reading it to impose a
sweeping ban on the use of any language other than English by all of Arizona
officialdom; and declined to allow the
Arizona courts the initial opportunity to determine the scope of Article
XXVIII. Following the Governor's
announcement that she would not appeal, the District Court denied the State
Attorney General's request to certify the pivotal state‑law question‑‑the
Article's correct construction‑‑to the Arizona Supreme Court. The District Court also denied the State
Attorney General's motion to intervene on behalf of the State, under 28 U.S.C.
§ 2403(b), to contest on appeal the court's holding that the Article is
unconstitutional. In addition, the
court denied the motion of newcomers Arizonans for Official English Committee
(AOE) and its Chairman Park, sponsors of the ballot initiative that became
Article XXVIII, to intervene to support the Article's constitutionality. The day after AOE, Park, and the State
Attorney General filed their notices of appeal, Yniguez resigned from state
employment to accept a job in the private sector. The Ninth Circuit then concluded that AOE and Park met standing
requirements under Article III of the Federal Constitution and could proceed as
party appellants, and that the Attorney General, having successfully obtained
dismissal below, could not reenter as a party, but could present an argument,
pursuant to § 2403(b), regarding the constitutionality of Article XXVIII. Thereafter, the State Attorney General
informed the Ninth Circuit of Yniguez's resignation and suggested that, for
lack of a viable plaintiff, the case was moot. The court disagreed, holding that a plea for nominal damages
could be read into the complaint's "all other relief" clause to save
the case. The en banc Ninth Circuit
ultimately affirmed the District Court's ruling that Article XXVIII was unconstitutional,
and announced that Yniguez was entitled to nominal damages from the State. Finding the Article's "plain
language" dispositive, and noting that the State Attorney General had
never conceded that the Article would be unconstitutional if construed as
Yniguez asserted it should be, the Court of Appeals also rejected the Attorney
General's limiting construction of the Article and declined to certify the
matter to the State Supreme Court. Finally, the Ninth Circuit acknowledged a
state‑court challenge to Article XXVIII's constitutionality, Ruiz v. State,
but found that litigation no cause to stay the federal proceedings.
Held: Because the case was
moot and should not have been retained for adjudication on the merits, the
Court vacates the Ninth Circuit's judgment and remands the case with directions
that the action be dismissed by the District Court. This Court expresses no view on the correct interpretation of
Article XXVIII or on the measure's constitutionality. Pp. 1067‑1075.
(a) Grave doubts exist as to the standing of petitioners AOE and Park
to pursue appellate review under Article III's case‑or‑controversy
requirement. Standing to defend on
appeal in the place of an original defendant demands that the litigant possess
"a direct stake in the outcome." Diamond v. Charles, 476 U.S. 54, 62,
106 S.Ct. 1697, 1703, 90 L.Ed.2d 48. Petitioners' primary argument‑‑that,
as initiative proponents, they have a quasi‑legislative interest in
defending the measure they successfully sponsored‑‑is dubious
because they are not elected state legislators, authorized by state law to
represent the State's interests, see Karcher v. May, 484 U.S. 72, 82, 108 S.Ct.
388, 395, 98 L.Ed.2d 327. Furthermore,
this Court has never identified initiative proponents as Article‑III‑qualified
defenders. Cf. Don't Bankrupt
Washington Committee v. Continental Ill. Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago,
460 U.S. 1077, 103 S.Ct. 1762, 76 L.Ed.2d 338. Their assertion of representational or associational standing is
also problematic, absent the concrete injury that would confer standing upon
AOE members in their own right, see, e.g., Food and Commercial Workers v. Brown
Group, Inc., 517 U.S. 544, 551‑553, 116 S.Ct. 1529, 1534, 134 L.Ed.2d 758
(1996), and absent anything in Article XXVIII's state‑court citizen‑suit
provision that could support standing for Arizona residents in general, or AOE
in particular, to defend the Article's constitutionality in federal court.
Nevertheless, this Court need not definitively resolve the standing of AOE and
Park to proceed as they did, but assumes such standing arguendo in order to
analyze the question of mootness occasioned by originating plaintiff Yniguez's
departure from state employment. See,
e.g., Burke v. Barnes, 479 U.S. 361, 363, 364, 107 S.Ct. 734, 93 L.Ed.2d 732,
n. Pp. 1067‑1068.
(b) Because Yniguez no longer satisfies the case‑or‑controversy
requirement, this case is moot. To
qualify as a case fit for federal‑court adjudication, an actual
controversy must be extant at all stages of review, not merely at the time the
complaint is filed. E.g., Preiser v.
Newkirk, 422 U.S. 395, 401, 95 S.Ct. 2330, 2334, 45 L.Ed.2d 272. Although Yniguez had a viable claim at the
outset of this litigation, her resignation from public sector employment to
pursue work in the private sector, where her speech was not governed by Article
XXVIII, mooted the case stated in her complaint. Cf. Boyle v. Landry, 401 U.S. 77, 78, 80‑81, 91 S.Ct. 758,
758‑759, 759‑760. Contrary
to the Ninth Circuit's ruling, her implied plea for nominal damages, which the
Ninth Circuit approved as against the State of Arizona, could not revive the
case, as § 1983 actions do not lie against a State, Will v. Michigan Dept. of
State Police, 491 U.S. 58, 71, 109 S.Ct. 2304, 2312; Arizona was permitted to participate in the appeal only as an
intervenor, through its Attorney General, not as a party subject to an
obligation to pay damages; and the
State's cooperation with Yniguez in waiving Eleventh Amendment immunity did not
recreate a live case or controversy fit for federal‑court adjudication,
cf., e.g., United States v. Johnson, 319 U.S. 302, 304, 63 S.Ct. 1075,
1076. Pp. 1068‑1071.
(c) When a civil case becomes moot pending appellate adjudication,
the established practice in the federal system is to reverse or vacate the
judgment below and remand with a direction to dismiss. United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S.
36, 39, 71 S.Ct. 104, 106‑107.
This Court is not disarmed from that course by the State Attorney
General's failure to petition for certiorari.
The Court has an obligation to inquire not only into its own authority
to decide the questions presented, but to consider also the authority of the
lower courts to proceed, even though the parties are prepared to concede
it. E.g., Bender v. Williamsport Area
School Dist., 475 U.S. 534, 541, 106 S.Ct. 1326, 1331. Because the Ninth Circuit refused to stop
the adjudication when it learned of the mooting event‑‑Yniguez's
departure from public employment‑‑its unwarranted en banc judgment
must be set aside. Nor is the District
Court's judgment saved by its entry before the occurrence of the mooting event
or by the Governor's refusal to appeal from it. AOE and Park had an arguable basis for seeking appellate review; moreover, the State Attorney General's
renewed certification plea and his motion to intervene in this litigation
demonstrate that he was pursuing his § 2403(b) right to defend Article XXVIII's
constitutionality when the mooting event occurred. His disclosure of that event to the Ninth Circuit warranted a
mootness disposition, which would have stopped his § 2403(b) endeavor and
justified vacation of the District Court's judgment. The extraordinary course of this litigation and the federalism
concern next considered lead to the conclusion that vacatur down the line is
the equitable solution. Pp. 1071‑
1072.
(d) Taking into account the novelty of the question of Article
XXVIII's meaning, its potential importance to the conduct of Arizona's
business, the State Attorney General's views on the subject, and the at‑least‑partial
agreement with those views by the Article's sponsors, more respectful
consideration should have been given to the Attorney General's requests to
seek, through certification, an authoritative construction of the Article from
the State Supreme Court. When
anticipatory relief is sought in federal court against a state statute, respect
for the place of the States in our federal system calls for close consideration
of the question whether conflict is avoidable. Federal courts are not well equipped to rule on a state
statute's constitutionality without a controlling interpretation of the
statute's meaning and effect by the state courts. See, e.g., Poe v. Ullman, 367 U.S. 497, 526, 81 S.Ct. 1752, 1767‑1768
(Harlan, J., dissenting). Certification
saves time, energy, and resources and helps build a cooperative judicial
federalism. See, e.g., Lehman Brothers v. Schein, 416 U.S. 386, 391, 94 S.Ct.
1741, 1744. Contrary to the Ninth
Circuit's suggestion, this Court's decisions do not require as a condition
precedent to certification a concession by the Attorney General that Article
XXVIII would be unconstitutional if construed as Yniguez contended it should
be. Moreover, that court improperly
blended abstention with certification when it found that "unique
circumstances," rather than simply a novel or unsettled state‑law
question, are necessary before federal courts may employ certification. The Arizona Supreme Court has before it, in
Ruiz v. State, the question: What does
Article XXVIII mean? Once that court
has spoken, adjudication of any remaining federal constitutional question may
be "greatly simplifie[d]."
See Bellotti v. Baird, 428 U.S. 132, 151, 96 S.Ct. 2857, 2868. Pp. 1073‑1075.
69 F.3d 920, vacated and remanded.
GINSBURG, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Barnaby W. Zall, Washington, DC, for petitioners.
Robert J. Pohlman, Phoenix, AZ, for respondents.
Justice GINSBURG delivered the opinion of the Court.
Federal courts lack competence to rule definitively on the meaning
of state legislation, see, e.g., Reetz v. Bozanich, 397 U.S. 82, 86‑87,
90 S.Ct. 788, 790, 25 L.Ed.2d 68 (1970), nor may they adjudicate challenges to
state measures absent a showing of actual impact on the challenger, see, e.g.,
Golden v. Zwickler, 394 U.S. 103, 110, 89 S.Ct. 956, 960‑961, 22 L.Ed.2d
113 (1969). The Ninth Circuit, in the
case at hand, lost sight of these limitations. The initiating plaintiff, Maria‑Kelly F. Yniguez, sought
federal‑court resolution of a novel question: the compatibility with the Federal Constitution of a 1988
amendment to Arizona's Constitution declaring English "the official
language of the State of Arizona"‑‑"the language of ...
all government functions and actions."
Ariz. Const., Art. XXVIII, §§ 1(1), 1(2). Participants in the federal litigation, proceeding without
benefit of the views of the Arizona Supreme Court, expressed diverse opinions
on the meaning of the amendment.
Yniguez commenced and maintained her suit as an individual, not as
a class representative. A state
employee at the time she filed her complaint, Yniguez voluntarily left the
State's employ in 1990 and did not allege she would seek to return to a public
post. Her departure for a position in
the private sector made her claim for prospective relief moot. Nevertheless, the Ninth Circuit held that a
plea for nominal damages could be read into Yniguez's complaint to save the
case, and therefore pressed on to an ultimate decision. A three‑judge
panel of the Court of Appeals declared Article XXVIII unconstitutional in 1994,
and a divided en banc court, in 1995, adhered to the panel's position.
The Ninth Circuit had no warrant to proceed as it did. The case had lost the essential elements of
a justiciable controversy and should not have been retained for adjudication on
the merits by the Court of Appeals. We
therefore vacate the Ninth Circuit's judgment, and remand the case to that
court with directions that the action be dismissed by the District Court. We express no view on the correct
interpretation of Article XXVIII or on the measure's constitutionality.
I
A 1988 Arizona ballot initiative established English as the
official language of the State. Passed
on November 8, 1988, by a margin of one percentage point, [FN1] the measure
became effective on December 5 as Arizona State Constitution Article
XXVIII. Among key provisions, the
Article declares that, with specified exceptions, the State "shall act in
English and in no other language."
Ariz. Const., Art. XXVIII, § 3(1)(a).
The enumerated exceptions
concern compliance with federal laws, participation in certain educational
programs, protection of the rights of criminal defendants and crime victims,
and protection of public health or safety.
Id., § 3(2). In a final provision,
Article XXVIII grants standing to any person residing or doing business in the
State "to bring suit to enforce th[e] Article" in state court, under
such "reasonable limitations" as "[t]he Legislature may
enact." Id., § 4. [FN2]
FN1. The measure, opposed by the Governor as "sadly
misdirected," App. 38, drew the affirmative votes of 50.5% of Arizonans
casting ballots in the election, see Yniguez v. Arizonans for Official English,
69 F.3d 920, 924 (C.A.9 1995).
FN2. Article XXVIII, titled "English as the Official
Language," is set out in full in an appendix to this opinion.
Federal‑court litigation challenging the constitutionality
of Article XXVIII commenced two days after the ballot initiative passed. On November 10, 1988, Maria‑Kelly F.
Yniguez, then an insurance claims manager in the Arizona Department of
Administration's Risk Management Division, sued the State of Arizona in the
United States District Court for the District of Arizona. Yniguez invoked 42
U.S.C. § 1983 as the basis for her suit. [FN3] Soon after the lawsuit
commenced, Yniguez added as defendants, in their individual and official
capacities, Arizona Governor Rose Mofford, Arizona Attorney General Robert K.
Corbin, and the Director of Arizona's Department of Administration, Catherine Eden. Yniguez brought suit as an individual and
never sought designation as a class representative.
FN3. Derived from § 1 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, Rev. Stat.
§ 1979, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 provides in relevant part:
"Civil action for deprivation of rights.
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ..., subjects, or causes to be
subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the
jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or
immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party
injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for
redress."
Fluent in English and Spanish, Yniguez was engaged primarily in
handling medical malpractice claims against the State. In her daily service to the public, she
spoke English to persons who spoke only that language, Spanish to persons who
spoke only that language, and a combination of English and Spanish to persons
able to communicate in both languages.
Record, Doc. No. 62, ¶¶ 8, 13 (Statement of Stipulated Facts, filed Feb.
9, 1989). Yniguez feared that Article
XXVIII's instruction to "act in English," § 3(1)(a), if read broadly,
would govern her job performance "every time she [did] something."
See Record, Doc. No. 62, ¶ 10. She
believed she would lose her job or face other sanctions if she did not
immediately refrain from speaking Spanish while serving the State. See App. 58, ¶ 19 (Second Amended
Complaint). Yniguez asserted that Article XXVIII violated the First and
Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. § 2000d. She requested injunctive and declaratory
relief, counsel fees, and "all other relief that the Court deems just and
proper under the circumstances."
App. 60.
All defendants named in Yniguez's complaint moved to dismiss all
claims asserted against them. [FN4] The
State of Arizona asserted immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment. The individual defendants asserted the
absence of a case or controversy because "none of [them] ha[d] threatened
[Yniguez] concerning her use of Spanish in the performance of her job duties
[or had] ever told her not to use Spanish [at work]." Record, Doc. No. 30, p. 1. The defendants further urged that novel
state‑law questions concerning the meaning and application of Article
XXVIII should be tendered first to the state courts. See id., at 2. [FN5]
FN4. Under Arizona law, the State Attorney General represents the
State in federal court. See
Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 41‑ 193(A)(3) (1992). Throughout these proceedings, the State and all state officials
have been represented by the State Attorney General, or law department members
under his supervision. See § 41‑192(A).
FN5. Arizona law permits the State's highest court to "answer
questions of law certified to it by the supreme court of the United States, a
court of appeals of the United States, a United States district court or a
tribal court ... if there are involved in any proceedings before the certifying
court questions of [Arizona law] which may be determinative of the cause then
pending in the certifying court and as to which it appears to the certifying
court there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of the supreme court
and the intermediate appellate courts of this state." Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 12‑1861 (1994).
Trial on the merits of Yniguez's complaint, the parties agreed,
would be combined with the hearing on her motion for a preliminary injunction.
[FN6] Before the trial occurred, the State Attorney General, on January 24,
1989, released an opinion, No. I89‑009, construing Article XXVIII and
explaining why he found the measure constitutional. App. 61‑76.
FN6. The District Court, on December 8, 1988, had denied Yniguez's
application for a temporary restraining order, finding no "imminent danger
of the imposition of sanctions" against her. Record, Doc. No. 23, p. 1.
In Opinion No. I89‑009, the Attorney General said it was his
obligation to read Article XXVIII "as a whole," in line "with
the other portions of the Arizona Constitution" and "with the United
States Constitution and federal laws."
App. 61. While Article XXVIII
requires the performance of "official acts of government" in English,
it was the Attorney General's view that government employees remained free to
use other languages "to facilitate the delivery of governmental
services." Id., at 62. Construction of the word "act," as used
in Article XXVIII, to mean more than an "official ac[t] of
government," the Attorney General asserted, "would raise serious
questions" of compatibility with federal and state equal protection
guarantees and federal civil rights legislation. Id., at 65‑66. [FN7]
FN7. Specifically addressing "[t]he handling of customer
inquiries or complaints involving state or local government services," the
Attorney General elaborated:
"All official documents that are governmental acts must be in
English, but translation services and accommodating communications are
permissible, and may be required if reasonably necessary to the fair and
effective delivery of services, or required by specific federal
regulation. Communications between
elected and other governmental employees with the public at large may be in a
language other than English on the same principles." App. 74.
On February 9, 1989, two weeks after release of the Attorney
General's opinion, the parties filed a statement of stipulated facts, which
reported Governor Mofford's opposition to the ballot initiative, her intention
nevertheless "to comply with Article XXVIII," and her expectation
that "State service employees [would] comply" with the measure. See Record, Doc. No. 62, ¶¶ 35, 36,
39. The stipulation confirmed the view
of all parties that "[t]he efficient operation [and administration] of the
State is enhanced by permitting State service employees to communicate with
citizens of the State in languages other than English where the citizens are
not proficient in English." Id.,
¶¶ 16, 17. In particular, the parties
recognized that "Yniguez'[s] use of a language other than English in the
course of her performing government business contributes to the efficient
operation ... and ... administration of the State." Id., ¶ 15.
The stipulation referred to the Attorney General's January 24, 1989,
opinion, id., ¶ 46, and further recounted that since the passage of Article
XXVIII, "none of [Yniguez's] supervisors ha[d] ever told her to change or
cease her prior use of Spanish in the performance of her duties," id., ¶
48. [FN8]
FN8. Supplementing their pleas to dismiss for want of a case or
controversy, the defendants urged that Attorney General Opinion No. I89‑
009 "puts to rest any claim that [Yniguez] will be penalized by the State
for using Spanish in her work."
Record, Doc. No. 51, p. 4, n. 1.
The District Court heard testimony on two days in February and
April 1989, and disposed of the case in an opinion and judgment filed February
6, 1990. Yniguez v. Mofford, 730 F.Supp. 309.
Prior to that final decision, the court had dismissed the State of
Arizona as a defendant, accepting the State's plea of Eleventh Amendment
immunity. See id., at 311. Yniguez's second amended complaint, filed
February 23, 1989, accordingly named as defendants only the Governor, the
Attorney General, and the Director of the Department of Administration. See App. 55. [FN9]
FN9. The second amended complaint added another plaintiff, Arizona
State Senator Jaime Gutierrez. Senator
Gutierrez alleged that Article XXVIII interfered with his rights to communicate
freely with persons, including residents of his Senate district, who spoke
languages other than English. App. 58‑59. The District Court dismissed Gutierrez's
claim on the ground that the defendants, all executive branch officials, lacked
authority to take enforcement action against elected legislative branch
officials. Yniguez v. Mofford, 730
F.Supp. 309, 311 (Ariz.1990). Gutierrez is no longer a participant in these
proceedings.
The District Court determined first that,among the named
defendants, only the Governor, in her official capacity, was a proper
party. The Attorney General, the
District Court found, had no authority under Arizona law to enforce provisions
like Article XXVIII against state employees.
730 F.Supp., at 311‑312.
The Director and the Governor, on the other hand, did have authority to
enforce state laws and rules against state service employees. Id., at 311. But nothing in the record, the District
Court said, showed that the Director had undertaken or threatened to undertake
any action adverse to Yniguez. Id., at
313. That left Governor Mofford.
The Attorney General "ha[d] formally interpreted Article
XXVIII as not imposing any restrictions on Yniguez's continued use of Spanish
during the course of her official duties," id., at 312, and indeed all
three named defendants‑‑Mofford as well as Corbin and Eden, see
supra, at 1060‑‑"ha[d] stated on the record that Yniguez may
continue to speak Spanish without fear of official retribution." 730 F.Supp., at 312. Governor Mofford therefore reiterated that
Yniguez faced no actual or threatened injury attributable to any Arizona executive
branch officer, and hence presented no genuine case or controversy. See ibid.
But the District Court singled out the stipulations that "Governor
Mofford intends to comply with Article XXVIII," and "expects State
service employees to comply with Article XXVIII." Record, Doc. No. 62, ¶¶
35, 36; see 730 F.Supp., at 312. If Yniguez proved right and the Governor
wrong about the breadth of Article XXVIII, the District Court concluded, then
Yniguez would be vulnerable to the Governor's pledge to enforce compliance with
the Article. See ibid.
Proceeding to the merits, the District Court found Article XXVIII
fatally overbroad. The measure, as the
District Court read it, was not merely a direction that all official acts be in
English, as the Attorney General's opinion maintained; instead, according to the District Court,
Article XXVIII imposed a sweeping ban on the use of any language other than
English by all of Arizona officialdom, with only limited exceptions. Id., at 314. The District Court adverted to the Attorney General's confining
construction, but found it unpersuasive. Opinion No. I89‑009, the District Court observed, is
"merely ... advisory," not binding on any court. 730 F.Supp., at 315. "More importantly," the District
Court concluded, "the Attorney General's interpretation ... is simply at
odds with Article XXVIII's plain language." Ibid.
The view that Article XXVIII's text left no room for a moderate
and restrained interpretation led the District Court to decline "to allow
the Arizona courts the initial opportunity to determine the scope of Article
XXVIII." Id., at 316. The District Court ultimately dismissed all
parties save Yniguez and Governor Mofford in her official capacity, then
declared Article XXVIII unconstitutional as violative of the First and
Fourteenth Amendments, but denied Yniguez's request for an injunction because
"she ha[d] not established an enforcement threat sufficient to warrant
[such] relief." Id., at 316‑317.
Postjudgment motions followed, sparked by Governor Mofford's
announcement that she would not pursue an appeal. See App. 98. The
Attorney General renewed his request to certify the pivotal state‑law
question‑‑the correct construction of Article XXVIII‑‑to
the Arizona Supreme Court. See Record,
Doc. No. 82. He also moved to
intervene on behalf of the State, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b), [FN10] in
order to contest on appeal the District Court's declaration that a provision of
Arizona's Constitution violated the Federal Constitution. Record, Doc. Nos. 92, 93.
FN10. Title 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b) provides:
"In any action, suit, or proceeding in a court of the United
States to which a State or any agency, officer, or employee thereof is not a
party, wherein the constitutionality of any statute of that State affecting the
public interest is drawn in question, the court shall certify such fact to the
attorney general of the State, and shall permit the State to intervene for
presentation of evidence, if evidence is otherwise admissible in the case, and
for argument on the question of constitutionality. The State shall, subject to the applicable provisions of law,
have all the rights of a party and be subject to all liabilities of a party as
to court costs to the extent necessary for a proper presentation of the facts
and law relating to the question of constitutionality."
Two newcomers also appeared in the District Court after
judgment: the Arizonans for Official
English Committee (AOE) and Robert D. Park, Chairman of AOE. Invoking Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, AOE and Park moved to intervene as defendants in order to urge
on appeal the constitutionality of Article XXVIII. App. 94‑102. AOE,
an unincorporated association, was principal sponsor of the ballot initiative
that became Article XXVIII. AOE and
Park alleged in support of their intervention motion the interest of AOE
members in enforcement of Article XXVIII and Governor Mofford's unwillingness
to defend the measure on appeal. Responding to the AOE/Park motion, Governor
Mofford confirmed that she did not wish to appeal, but would have no objection
to the Attorney General's intervention to pursue an appeal as the State's
representative, or to the pursuit of an appeal by any other party. See Record, Doc. No. 94.
Yniguez expressed reservations about proceeding further. "She ha[d] won [her] suit against her
employer" and had "obtained her relief," her counsel noted.
Record, Doc. No. 114, p. 18 (Tr. of Proceeding on Motion to Intervene and
Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment, Mar. 26, 1990). If the litigation "goes forward," Yniguez's counsel
told the District Court, "I guess we do, too," but, counsel added, it
might be in Yniguez's "best interest ... if we stopped it right
here." Ibid. The District Court agreed.
In an opinion filed April 3, 1990, the District Court denied all
three postjudgment motions. Yniguez v.
Mofford, 130 F.R.D. 410. Certification
was inappropriate, the District Court ruled, in light of the court's prior
rejection of the Attorney General's narrow reading of Article XXVIII. See id., at 412. As to the Attorney General's intervention application, the
District Court observed that § 2403(b) addresses only actions " 'to which
the State or any agency, officer, or employee thereof is not a party.'
" See id., at 413 (quoting §
2403(b)). Yniguez's action did not fit
the § 2403(b) description, the District Court said, because the State and its
officers were the very defendants‑‑the sole defendants‑‑Yniguez's
complaint named. Governor Mofford
remained a party throughout the District Court proceedings. If the State lost the opportunity to defend
the constitutionality of Article XXVIII on appeal, the District Court reasoned,
it was "only because Governor Mofford determine[d] that the state's
sovereign interests would be best served by foregoing an appeal." Ibid.
Turning to the AOE/Park intervention motion, the District Court
observed first that the movants had failed to file a pleading "setting
forth the[ir] claim or defense," as required by Rule 24(c). Ibid.
But that deficiency was not critical, the District Court said. Ibid.
The insurmountable hurdle was Article III standing. The labor and resources AOE spent to
promote the ballot initiative did not suffice to establish standing to sue or
defend in a federal tribunal, the District Court held. Id., at 414‑415. Nor did Park or any other AOE member
qualify for party status, the District Court ruled, for the interests of voters
who favored the initiative were too general to meet traditional standing
criteria. Id., at 415.
In addition, the District Court was satisfied that AOE and Park
could not tenably assert practical impairment of their interests stemming from
the precedential force of the decision.
As nonparticipants in the federal litigation, they would face no issue
preclusion. And a lower federal‑court
judgment is not binding on state courts, the District Court noted. Thus, AOE and Park would not be precluded
by the federal declaration from pursuing "any future state court
proceeding [based on] Article XXVIII."
Id., at 415‑ 416.
II
The Ninth Circuit viewed the matter of standing to appeal
differently. In an opinion released
July 19, 1991, Yniguez v. Arizona, 939 F.2d 727, the Court of Appeals reached
these conclusions: AOE and Park met
Article III requirements and could proceed as appellants; Arizona's Attorney General, however, having
successfully moved in the District Court for his dismissal as a defendant,
could not reenter as a party, but would be permitted to present argument
regarding the constitutionality of Article XXVIII. Id., at 738‑ 740.
The Ninth Circuit reported it would retain jurisdiction over the
District Court's decision on the merits, id., at 740, but did not then address
the question whether Article XXVIII's meaning should be certified for
definitive resolution by the Arizona Supreme Court.
Concerning AOE's standing, the Court of Appeals reasoned that the
Arizona Legislature would have standing to defend the constitutionality of a
state statute; by analogy, the Ninth
Circuit maintained, AOE, as principal sponsor of the ballot initiative, qualified
to defend Article XXVIII on appeal. Id., at 732‑733; see also id., at 734, n. 5 ("[W]e hold
that AOE has standing in the same way that a legislature might."). AOE Chairman Park also had standing to
appeal, according to the Ninth Circuit, because Yniguez "could have had a
reasonable expectation that Park (and possibly AOE as well) would bring an
enforcement action against her" under § 4 of Article XXVIII, which
authorizes any person residing in Arizona to sue in state court to enforce the
Article. Id., at 734, and n. 5. [FN11]
FN11. In a remarkable passage, the Ninth Circuit addressed
Yniguez's argument, opposing intervention by AOE and Park, that the District
Court's judgment was no impediment to any state‑court proceeding AOE and
Park might wish to bring, because that judgment is not a binding precedent on
Arizona's judiciary. See 939 F.2d, at
735‑736. The Court of Appeals
questioned the wisdom of the view expressed "in the academic
literature," "by some state courts," and by "several individual
justices" that state courts are "coordinate and coequal with the
lower federal courts on matters of federal law." Id., at 736 (footnote omitted).
The Ninth Circuit acknowledged "there may be valid reasons not to
bind the state courts to a decision of a single federal district judge‑‑which
is not even binding on the same judge in a subsequent action." Id., at 736‑737. However, the appellate panel added, those
reasons "are inapplicable to decisions of the federal courts of
appeals." Id., at 737. But
cf. ASARCO Inc. v. Kadish, 490 U.S.
605, 617, 109 S.Ct. 2037, 2045, 104 L.Ed.2d 696 (1989) ( "state courts ...
possess the authority, absent a provision for exclusive federal jurisdiction,
to render binding judicial decisions that rest on their own interpretations of
federal law"); Lockhart v.
Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364, 375‑376, 113 S.Ct. 838, 845‑846, 122
L.Ed.2d 180 (1993) (THOMAS, J., concurring) (Supremacy Clause does not require
state courts to follow rulings by federal courts of appeals on questions of
federal law).
Having allowed AOE and Park to serve as appellants, the Court of
Appeals held Arizona's Attorney General "judicial[ly] estoppe[d]"
from again appearing as a party. Id.,
at 738‑739; see also id., at 740
("[H]aving asked the district court to dismiss him as a party, [the
Attorney General] cannot now become one again."). [FN12] With Governor Mofford choosing not to seek
Court of Appeals review, the appeal became one to which neither "[the]
State [n]or any agency, officer, or employee thereof [was] a party," the
Ninth Circuit observed, so the State's Attorney General could appear pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b). See 939 F.2d,
at 739. [FN13] But, the Ninth Circuit
added, § 2403(b) "confers only a limited right," a right pendent to
the AOE/Park appeal, "to make an argument on the question of [Article
XXVIII's] constitutionality." Id.,
at 739‑740.
FN12. Because the Court of Appeals found AOE and Park to be proper
appellants, that court did not "address the question whether the Attorney
General would have standing to appeal under Article III if no other party were
willing and able to appeal." 939
F.2d, at 738. The Court of Appeals
assumed, however, that "whenever the constitutionality of a provision of
state law is called into question, the state government will have a sufficient
interest [to satisfy] Article III." Id., at 733, n. 4. Cf. Maine v.
Taylor, 477 U.S. 131, 137, 106 S.Ct. 2440, 2446, 91 L.Ed.2d 110 (1986)
(intervening State had standing to appeal from judgment holding state law
unconstitutional); Diamond v. Charles,
476 U.S. 54, 62, 106 S.Ct. 1697, 1703, 90 L.Ed.2d 48 (1986) ("a State has
standing to defend the constitutionality of its statute").
FN13. The full text of 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b) is set out supra, at
1063, n. 10.
Prior to the Ninth Circuit's July 1991 opinion, indeed the very
day after AOE, Park, and the Arizona Attorney General filed their notices of
appeal, a development of prime importance occurred. On April 10, 1990, Yniguez resigned from state employment in order
to accept another job. Her resignation
apparently became effective on April 25, 1990. Arizona's Attorney General so informed the Ninth Circuit in
September 1991, "suggest[ing] that this case may lack a viable plaintiff
and, hence, may be moot." Suggestion of Mootness in Nos. 90‑15546
and 90‑15581 (CA9), Affidavit and Exh. A.
One year later, on September 16, 1992, the Ninth Circuit rejected
the mootness suggestion. Yniguez v.
Arizona, 975 F.2d 646. The court's
ruling adopted in large part Yniguez's argument opposing a mootness
disposition. See App. 194‑204
(Appellee Yniguez's Response Regarding Mootness Considerations). "[T]he
plaintiff may no longer be affected by the English only provision," the
Court of Appeals acknowledged. 975
F.2d, at 647. Nevertheless, the court
continued, "[her] constitutional claims may entitle her to an award of
nominal damages." Ibid. Her complaint did "not expressly
request nominal damages," the Ninth Circuit noted, but "it did
request 'all other relief that the Court deems just and proper under the
circumstances.' " Id., at 647, n.
1; see supra, at 1061. Thus, the Court of Appeals reasoned, one
could regard the District Court's judgment as including an "implicit
denial" of nominal damages. 975
F.2d, at 647, n. 2.
To permit Yniguez and AOE to clarify their positions, the Ninth
Circuit determined to return the case to the District Court. There, with the Ninth Circuit's permission,
AOE's Chairman Park could file a notice of appeal from the District Court's judgment,
following up the Circuit's decision 14 months earlier allowing AOE and Park to
intervene. Id., at 647. [FN14] And next, Yniguez could cross‑appeal
to place before the Ninth Circuit, explicitly, the issue of nominal
damages. Id., at 647, and n. 2. [FN15]
FN14. In their original notice of appeal, filed April 9, 1990, AOE
and Park targeted the District Court's denial of their motion to
intervene. See App. 150‑151. Once granted intervention, their original
notice indicated, they would be positioned to file an appeal from the judgment
declaring Article XXVIII unconstitutional.
See id., at 150.
FN15. The Ninth Circuit made two further suggestions in the event
that Yniguez failed to seek nominal damages:
A new plaintiff "whose claim against the operation of the English
only provision is not moot" might intervene; or Yniguez herself might have standing to remain a suitor if she
could show that others had refrained from challenging the English‑only
provision in reliance on her suit. See
975 F.2d, at 647‑648. No state
employee later intervened to substitute for Yniguez, nor did Yniguez endeavor
to show that others had not sued because they had relied on her suit.
In line with the Ninth Circuit's instructions, the case file was
returned to the District Court on November 5, 1992; AOE and Park filed their second notice of appeal on December 3,
App. 206‑208, and Yniguez crossappealed on December 15, App. 209.
[FN16] The Ninth Circuit heard argument
on the merits on May 3, 1994. After
argument, on June 21, 1994, the Ninth Circuit allowed Arizonans Against
Constitutional Tampering (AACT) and Thomas Espinosa, Chairman of AACT, to
intervene as plaintiffs‑appellees.
App. 14; Yniguez v. Arizona, 42
F.3d 1217, 1223‑1224 (1994) (amended Jan. 17, 1995). AACT was the principal opponent of the
ballot initiative that became Article XXVIII.
Id., at 1224. In permitting
this late intervention, the Court of Appeals noted that "it d[id] not rely
on [AACT's] standing as a party." Ibid.
The standing of the preargument participants, in the Ninth Circuit's
view, sufficed to support a determination on the merits. See ibid.
FN16. On March 16, 1993, the District Court awarded Yniguez nearly
$100,000 in attorney's fees. Record,
Doc. No. 127. Governor Mofford and the
State filed a notice of appeal from that award on April 8, 1993. Record, Doc.
No. 128. Because the Ninth Circuit
ultimately affirmed the District Court's judgment on the merits, the appeals
court did not reach the state defendants' appeal from the award of fees. 69 F.3d, at 924, n. 2, 927.
In December 1994, the Ninth Circuit panel that had superintended
the case since 1990 affirmed the judgment declaring Article XXVIII
unconstitutional and remanded the case, directing the District Court to award
Yniguez nominal damages. 42 F.3d 1217
(amended Jan. 17, 1995). Despite the Court of Appeals' July 1991 denial of
party status to Arizona, the Ninth Circuit apparently viewed the State as the
defendant responsible for any damages, for it noted: "The State of Arizona expressly waived its right to assert
the Eleventh Amendment as a defense to the award of nominal damages." Id.,
at 1243. The Ninth Circuit agreed to
rehear the case en banc, 53 F.3d 1084 (1995), and in October 1995, by a 6‑to‑5
vote, the en banc court reinstated the panel opinion with minor
alterations. 69 F.3d 920.
Adopting the District Court's construction of Article XXVIII, the
en banc court read the provision to prohibit
" 'the use of any language other than English by all officers
and employees of all political subdivisions in Arizona while performing their
official duties, save to the extent that they may be allowed to use a foreign
language by the limited exceptions contained in § 3(2) of Article XXVIII.'
" 69 F.3d, at 928 (quoting 730
F.Supp., at 314).
Because the court found the "plain language"
dispositive, 69 F.3d, at 929, it rejected the State Attorney General's limiting
construction and declined to certify the matter to the Arizona Supreme Court,
id., at 929‑931. As an additional
reason for its refusal to grant the Attorney General's request for
certification, the en banc court stated:
"The Attorney General ... never conceded that [Article XXVIII]
would be unconstitutional if construed as Yniguez asserts it properly should be." Id., at 931, and n. 14. [FN17] The Ninth
Circuit also pointed to a state‑court challenge to the constitutionality
of Article XXVIII, Ruiz v. State, No. CV92‑ 19603 (Sup.Ct. Maricopa
County, Jan. 24, 1994). In Ruiz, the
Ninth Circuit observed, the state court of first instance "dispos[ed] of
[the] First Amendment challenge in three paragraphs" and "d[id]
nothing to narrow [the provision]."
69 F.3d, at 931. [FN18]
FN17. The Court of Appeals contrasted Virginia v. American
Booksellers Assn., Inc., 484 U.S. 383, 108 S.Ct. 636, 98 L.Ed.2d 782 (1988), in
which this Court certified to the Virginia Supreme Court questions concerning
the proper interpretation of a state statute.
In American Booksellers, the Ninth Circuit noted, "the State
Attorney General conceded [the statute] would be unconstitutional if construed
as the plaintiffs contended it should be." 69 F.3d, at 930.
FN18. The Ruiz case included among its several plaintiffs four
elected officials and five state employees.
After defeat in the court of first instance, the Ruiz plaintiffs
prevailed in the Arizona Court of Appeals.
Ruiz v. Symington, No. 1 CA‑CV 94‑0235, 1996 WL 309512
(Ariz.App., June 11, 1996). That court
noted, with evident concern, that "the Ninth Circuit refused to abstain and
certify the question of Article [XXVIII]'s proper interpretation to the Arizona
Supreme Court, although the issue was pending in our state court
system." Id., at *4. "Comity," the Arizona intermediate
appellate court observed, "typically applies when a federal court finds
that deference to a state court, on an issue of state law, is
proper." Ibid. Nevertheless, in the interest of uniformity
and to discourage forum shopping, the Arizona appeals court decided to defer to
the federal litigation, forgoing independent analysis. Ibid.
The Arizona Supreme Court granted review in Ruiz in November 1996, and
stayed proceedings pending our decision in this case. App. to Supplemental Brief for Petitioners 1.
After construing Article XXVIII as sweeping in scope, the en banc
Court of Appeals condemned the provision as manifestly overbroad, trenching
untenably on speech rights of Arizona officials and public employees. See id., at 931‑948. For prevailing in the § 1983 action, the
court ultimately announced, Yniguez was "entitled to nominal
damages." Id., at 949. On remand, the District Court followed the
en banc Court of Appeals' order and, on November 3, 1995, awarded Yniguez $1 in
damages. App. 211.
AOE and Park petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari to the
Ninth Circuit. [FN19] They raised two
questions: (1) Does Article XXVIII
violate the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment by "declaring
English the official language of the State and requiring English to be used to
perform official acts"?; (2) Do
public employees have "a Free Speech right to disregard the [State's]
official language" and perform official actions in a language other than
English? This Court granted the
petition and requested the parties to brief as threshold matters (1) the
standing of AOE and Park to proceed in this action as defending parties, and
(2) Yniguez's continuing satisfaction of the case‑or‑controversy
requirement. 517 U.S. 1102, 116 S.Ct.
1316, 134 L.Ed.2d (1996).
FN19. The State did not oppose the petition and, in its Appearance
Form, filed in this Court on January 10, 1996, noted that "if the Court
grants the Petition and reverses the lower court's decision ... Arizona will
seek reversal of award of attorney's fees against the State." See supra, at 1066, n. 16.
III
Article III, § 2, of the Constitution confines federal courts to
the decision of "Cases" or "Controversies." Standing to sue or defend is an aspect of
the case‑or‑controversy requirement. Northeastern Fla. Chapter, Associated Gen. Contractors of America
v. Jacksonville, 508 U.S. 656, 663‑664, 113 S.Ct. 2297, 2301‑2302,
124 L.Ed.2d 586 (1993) (standing to sue);
Diamond v. Charles, 476 U.S. 54, 56, 106 S.Ct. 1697, 1700, 90 L.Ed.2d 48
(1986) (standing to defend on appeal).
To qualify as a party with standing to litigate, a person must show,
first and foremost, "an invasion of a legally protected interest"
that is "concrete and particularized" and " 'actual or
imminent.' " Lujan v. Defenders of
Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560, 112 S.Ct. 2130, 2136, 119 L.Ed.2d 351 (1992)
(quoting Whitmore v. Arkansas, 495 U.S. 149, 155, 110 S.Ct. 1717, 1722‑1723,
109 L.Ed.2d 135 (1990)). An interest
shared generally with the public at large in the proper application of the
Constitution and laws will not do. See Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S., at 573‑576,
112 S.Ct., at 2143‑2154.
Standing to defend on appeal in the place of an original defendant, no
less than standing to sue, demands that the litigant possess "a direct
stake in the outcome." Diamond,
476 U.S., at 62, 106 S.Ct., at 1703 (quoting Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.S.
727, 740, 92 S.Ct. 1361, 1369, 31 L.Ed.2d 636 (1972) (internal quotation marks
omitted)).
The standing Article III requires must be met by persons seeking
appellate review, just as it must be met by persons appearing in courts of
first instance. Diamond, 476 U.S., at
62, 106 S.Ct., at 1703. The decision
to seek review "is not to be placed in the hands of 'concerned
bystanders,' " persons who would seize it "as a 'vehicle for the vindication
of value interests.' " Ibid.
(citation omitted). An intervenor
cannot step into the shoes of the original party unless the intervenor
independently "fulfills the requirements of Article III." Id., at 68,
106 S.Ct., at 1706‑1707.
In granting the petition for a writ of certiorari in this case, we
called for briefing on the question whether AOE and Park have standing,
consonant with Article III of the Federal Constitution, to defend in federal
court the constitutionality of Arizona Constitution Article XXVIII. Petitioners
argue primarily that, as initiative proponents, they have a quasi‑
legislative interest in defending the constitutionality of the measure they
successfully sponsored. AOE and Park
stress the funds and effort they expended to achieve adoption of Article
XXVIII. We have recognized that state
legislators have standing to contest a decision holding a state statute
unconstitutional if state law authorizes legislators to represent the State's
interests. See Karcher v. May, 484 U.S.
72, 82, 108 S.Ct. 388, 395, 98 L.Ed.2d 327 (1987). [FN20] AOE and its members, however, are not
elected representatives, and we are aware of no Arizona law appointing
initiative sponsors as agents of the people of Arizona to defend, in lieu of
public officials, the constitutionality of initiatives made law of the State.
Nor has this Court ever identified initiative proponents as Article‑III‑
qualified defenders of the measures they advocated. Cf. Don't Bankrupt Washington Committee v. Continental Ill. Nat.
Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, 460 U.S. 1077, 103 S.Ct. 1762, 76 L.Ed.2d 338
(1983) (summarily dismissing, for lack of standing, appeal by an initiative
proponent from a decision holding the initiative unconstitutional).
FN20. Cf. INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 930, n. 5, 939‑940,
103 S.Ct. 2764, 2773, 2778‑2779, 77 L.Ed.2d 317 (1983) (Immigration and
Naturalization Service appealed Court of Appeals ruling to this Court but
declined to defend constitutionality of one‑House veto provision; Court held Congress a proper party to defend
measure's validity where both Houses, by resolution, had authorized
intervention in the lawsuit).
AOE also asserts representational or associational standing. An association has standing to sue or
defend in such capacity, however, only if its members would have standing in
their own right. See Food and
Commercial Workers v. Brown Group, Inc., 517 U.S. 544, 551‑553, 116 S.Ct.
1529, 1534; Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm'n, 432 U.S. 333,
343, 97 S.Ct. 2434, 2441, 53 L.Ed.2d 383 (1977). The requisite concrete injury to AOE members is not
apparent. As nonparties in the
District Court, AOE's members were not bound by the judgment for Yniguez. That judgment had slim precedential effect,
see supra, at 1064, n. 11, [FN21] and it left AOE entirely free to invoke
Article XXVIII, § 4, the citizen suit provision, in state court, where AOE
could pursue whatever relief state law authorized. Nor do we discern anything flowing from Article XXVIII's citizen
suit provision‑‑which authorizes suits to enforce Article XXVIII in
state court‑‑ that could support standing for Arizona residents in
general, or AOE in particular, to defend the Article's constitutionality in
federal court.
FN21. As the District Court observed, the stare decisis effect of
that court's ruling was distinctly limited.
The judgment was "not binding on the Arizona state courts [and did]
not foreclose any rights of [AOE] or Park in any future state‑court
proceeding arising out of Article XXVIII." Yniguez v. Mofford, 130 F.R.D. 410, 416 (D.Ariz.1990).
We thus have grave doubts whether AOE and Park have standing
under Article III to pursue appellate
review. Nevertheless, we need not
definitively resolve the issue.
Rather, we will follow a path we have taken before and inquire, as a
primary matter, whether originating plaintiff Yniguez still has a case to
pursue. See Burke v. Barnes, 479 U.S.
361, 363, 364, 107 S.Ct. 734, 736, 737, 93 L.Ed.2d 732, n. (1987) (leaving
unresolved question of congressional standing because Court determined case was
moot). For purposes of that inquiry,
we will assume, arguendo, that AOE and Park had standing to place this case
before an appellate tribunal. See id.,
at 366, 107 S.Ct., at 737 (STEVENS, J., dissenting) (Court properly assumed
standing, even though that matter raised a serious question, in order to
analyze mootness issue). We may
resolve the question whether there remains a live case or controversy with
respect to Yniguez's claim without first determining whether AOE or Park has
standing to appeal because the former question, like the latter, goes to the
Article III jurisdiction of this Court and the courts below, not to the merits
of the case. Cf. U.S. Bancorp Mortgage
Co. v. Bonner Mall Partnership, 513 U.S. 18, 20‑22, 115 S.Ct. 386, 389‑390,
130 L.Ed.2d 233 (1994).
IV
To qualify as a case fit for federal‑court adjudication,
"an actual controversy must be extant at all stages of review, not merely
at the time the complaint is filed."
Preiser v. Newkirk, 422 U.S. 395, 401, 95 S.Ct. 2330, 2334, 45 L.Ed.2d
272 (1975) (quoting Steffel v. Thompson, 415 U.S. 452, 459, n. 10, 94 S.Ct.
1209, 1216, n. 10, 39 L.Ed.2d 505 (1974)) (internal quotation marks
omitted). As a state employee subject
to Article XXVIII, Yniguez had a viable claim at the outset of the litigation
in late 1988. We need not consider
whether her case lost vitality in January 1989 when the Attorney General
released Opinion No. I89‑009.
That opinion construed Article XXVIII to require the expression of
"official acts" in English, but to leave government employees free to
use other languages "if reasonably necessary to the fair and effective
delivery of services" to the public.
See App. 71, 74; supra, at 1061‑1062; see also Marston's Inc. v. Roman Catholic
Church of Phoenix, 132 Ariz. 90, 94, 644 P.2d 244, 248 (1982) ("Attorney
General opinions are advisory only and are not binding on the court.... This does not mean, however, that citizens
may not rely in good faith on Attorney General opinions until the courts have
spoken."). Yniguez left her state
job in April 1990 to take up employment in the private sector, where her speech
was not governed by Article XXVIII. At
that point, it became plain that she lacked a still vital claim for prospective
relief. Cf. Boyle v. Landry, 401 U.S.
77, 78, 80‑81, 91 S.Ct. 758, 758‑759, 759‑760, 27 L.Ed.2d 696
(1971) (prospective relief denied where plaintiffs failed to show challenged
measures adversely affected any plaintiff's primary conduct).
The Attorney General suggested mootness, [FN22] but Yniguez
resisted, and the Ninth Circuit adopted her proposed method of saving the
case. See supra, at 1065‑1066.
[FN23] It was not dispositive, the
court said, that Yniguez "may no longer be affected by the English only
provision," 975 F.2d, at 647, for Yniguez had raised in response to the
mootness suggestion "[t]he possibility that [she] may seek nominal
damages," ibid.; see App. 197‑200
(Appellee Yniguez's Response Regarding Mootness Considerations). At that stage of the litigation, however,
Yniguez's plea for nominal damages was not the possibility the Ninth Circuit
imagined.
FN22. Mootness has been described as " 'the doctrine of
standing set in a time frame: The
requisite personal interest that must exist at the commencement of the
litigation (standing) must continue throughout its existence (mootness).'
" United States Parole Comm'n v.
Geraghty, 445 U.S. 388, 397, 100 S.Ct. 1202, 1209, 63 L.Ed.2d 479 (1980)
(quoting Monaghan, Constitutional Adjudication: The Who and When, 82 Yale L.J. 1363, 1384 (1973)).
FN23. Yniguez's counsel did not inform the Court of Appeals of
Yniguez's departure from government employment, a departure effective April 25,
1990, the day before the appeal was docketed. See App. 7. It was not
until September 1991 that the State's Attorney General notified the Ninth
Circuit of the plaintiff's changed circumstances. See id., at 187.
Yniguez's counsel offered a laconic explanation for this lapse: First,
"legal research disclosed that this case was not moot"; second, counsel for the State of Arizona
knew of the resignation and "agreed this appeal should proceed." App. 196, n. 2 (Appellee Yniguez's Response
Regarding Mootness Considerations).
The explanation was unsatisfactory. It is the duty of counsel to bring
to the federal tribunal's attention, "without delay," facts that may
raise a question of mootness. See
Board of License Comm'rs of Tiverton v. Pastore, 469 U.S. 238, 240, 105 S.Ct.
685, 686, 83 L.Ed.2d 618 (1985) (per curiam).
Nor is a change in circumstances bearing on the vitality of a case a
matter opposing counsel may withhold from a federal court based on counsels'
agreement that the case should proceed to judgment and not be treated as
moot. See United States v. Alaska S.S.
Co., 253 U.S. 113, 116, 40 S.Ct. 448, 448‑449, 64 L.Ed. 808 (1920); R. Stern, E. Gressman, S. Shapiro, & K.
Geller, Supreme Court Practice 721‑722 (7th ed.1993).
Yniguez's complaint rested on 42 U.S.C. § 1983. See supra, at 1060, and n. 3. Although Governor Mofford in her official
capacity was the sole defendant against whom the District Court's February 1990
declaratory judgment ran, see supra, at 1062‑1063, the Ninth Circuit held
the State answerable for the nominal damages Yniguez requested on appeal. See 69 F.3d, at 948‑949 (declaring
Yniguez "entitled to nominal damages for prevailing in an action under 42
U.S.C. § 1983" and noting that "[t]he State of Arizona expressly
waived its right to assert the Eleventh Amendment as a defense to the award of
nominal damages"). We have held,
however, that § 1983 actions do not lie against a State. Will v. Michigan Dept. of State Police, 491
U.S. 58, 71, 109 S.Ct. 2304, 2312, 105 L.Ed.2d 45 (1989). Thus, the claim for relief the Ninth
Circuit found sufficient to overcome mootness was nonexistent. The barrier was not, as the Ninth Circuit
supposed, Eleventh Amendment immunity, which the State could waive. The stopper was that § 1983 creates no
remedy against a State. [FN24]
FN24. State officers in their official capacities, like States
themselves, are not amenable to suit for damages under § 1983. See Will v. Michigan Dept. of State Police,
491 U.S., at 71, and n. 10, 109 S.Ct., at 2312, and n. 10. State officers are subject to § 1983
liability for damages in their personal capacities, however, even when the
conduct in question relates to their official duties. Hafer v. Melo, 502 U.S. 21, 25‑31, 112 S.Ct. 358, 361‑365,
116 L.Ed.2d 301 (1991). At no point
after the nominal damages solution to mootness surfaced in this case did the
Ninth Circuit identify Governor Mofford as a party whose conduct could be the
predicate for retrospective relief.
That is hardly surprising, for Mofford never participated in any effort
to enforce Article XXVIII against Yniguez.
Moreover, she opposed the ballot initiative that became Article XXVIII,
see supra, at 1060, n. 1, associated herself with the Attorney General's
restrained interpretation of the provision, see supra, at 1061‑1062, and
was unwilling to appeal from the District Court's judgment declaring the
Article unconstitutional, see supra, at 1063.
In this Court, Yniguez raised the possibility of Governor Mofford's
individual liability under the doctrine of Ex parte Young, 209 U.S. 123, 28
S.Ct. 441, 52 L.Ed. 714 (1908). See
Brief for Respondent Yniguez 21‑22.
That doctrine, however, permits only prospective relief, not
retrospective monetary awards. See
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651, 664, 94 S.Ct. 1347, 1356, 39 L.Ed.2d 662
(1974).
Furthermore, under the Ninth Circuit's ruling on intervention, the
State of Arizona was permitted to participate in the appeal, but not as a
party. 939 F.2d, at 738‑740. The Court of Appeals never revised that
ruling. To recapitulate, in July 1991,
two months prior to the Attorney General's suggestion of mootness, the Court of
Appeals rejected the Attorney General's plea for party status, as
representative of the State. Ibid. The
Ninth Circuit accorded the Attorney General the "right [under 28 U.S.C. §
2403(b) ] to argue the constitutionality of Article XXVIII ... contingent upon
AOE and Park's bringing the appeal."
Id., at 740; see supra, at 1065. But see Maine v. Taylor, 477 U.S. 131, 136‑
137, 106 S.Ct. 2440, 2446‑2447, 91 L.Ed.2d 110 (1986) (State's § 2403(b)
right to urge on appeal the constitutionality of its laws is not contingent on
participation of other appellants).
AOE and Park, however, were the sole participants recognized by the Ninth
Circuit as defendants‑appellants.
The Attorney General "ha[d] asked the district court to dismiss him
as a party," the Court of Appeals noted, hence he "cannot now become
one again." 939 F.2d, at 740. While we do not rule on the propriety of
the Ninth Circuit's exclusion of the State as a party, we note this lapse in
that court's accounting for its decision:
The Ninth Circuit did not explain how it arrived at the conclusion that
an intervenor the court had designated a nonparty could be subject, nevertheless,
to an obligation to pay damages.
True, Yniguez and the Attorney General took the steps the Ninth
Circuit prescribed: Yniguez filed a
cross‑appeal notice, see supra, at 1065‑1066; the Attorney General
waived the State's right to assert the Eleventh Amendment as a defense to an
award of nominal damages, see 69 F.3d, at 948‑949. But the earlier, emphatic Court of Appeals
ruling remained in place: The State's
intervention, although proper under § 2403(b), the Ninth Circuit maintained,
gave Arizona no status as a party in the lawsuit. See 939 F.2d, at 738‑ 740. [FN25]
FN25. Section 2403(b) by its terms subjects an intervenor "to
all liabilities of a party as to court costs " required "for a proper
presentation of the facts and law relating to the question of
constitutionality." 28 U.S.C. §
2403(b) (emphasis added). It does not
subject an intervenor to liability for damages available against a party
defendant.
In advancing cooperation between Yniguez and the Attorney General
regarding the request for and agreement to pay nominal damages, the Ninth
Circuit did not home in on the federal courts' lack of authority to act in
friendly or feigned proceedings. Cf.
United States v. Johnson, 319 U.S. 302, 304, 63 S.Ct. 1075, 1076, 87 L.Ed. 1413
(1943) (per curiam) (absent "a genuine adversary issue between ...
parties," federal court "may not safely proceed to
judgment"). It should have been
clear to the Court of Appeals that a claim for nominal damages, extracted late
in the day from Yniguez's general prayer for relief and asserted solely to
avoid otherwise certain mootness, bore close inspection. Cf. Fox v. Board of Trustees of State Univ.
of N.Y., 42 F.3d 135, 141‑142 (C.A.2 1994) (rejecting claim for nominal
damages proffered to save case from mootness years after litigation began where
defendants could have asserted qualified immunity had plaintiffs' complaint
specifically requested monetary relief).
On such inspection, the Ninth Circuit might have perceived that
Yniguez's plea for nominal damages could not genuinely revive the case. [FN26]
FN26. Endeavoring to meet the live case requirement, petitioners
AOE and Park posited in this Court several "controversies remaining
between the parties." Reply Brief
for Petitioners 18‑19.
Tellingly, none of the asserted controversies involved Yniguez, sole
plaintiff and prevailing party in the District Court. See ibid. (describing AOE and Park as adverse to intervenor
Arizonans Against Constitution Tampering (AACT), see supra, at 1065‑1066,
AACT as adverse to the State, AOE and Park as adverse to the State).
When a civil case becomes moot pending appellate adjudication,
"[t]he established practice ... in the federal system ... is to reverse or
vacate the judgment below and remand with a direction to dismiss." United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S.
36, 39, 71 S.Ct. 104, 106, 95 L.Ed. 36 (1950). Vacatur "clears the path
for future relitigation" by eliminating a judgment the loser was stopped
from opposing on direct review. Id., at
40, 71 S.Ct., at 107. Vacatur is in
order when mootness occurs through happenstance‑‑ circumstances not
attributable to the parties‑‑or, relevant here, the
"unilateral action of the party who prevailed in the lower
court." U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co.,
513 U.S., at 23, 115 S.Ct., at 390; cf.
id., at 29, 115 S.Ct., at 393 ("mootness by reason of settlement
[ordinarily] does not justify vacatur of a judgment under review").
As just explained, Yniguez's changed circumstances‑‑her
resignation from public sector employment to pursue work in the private sector‑‑mooted
the case stated in her complaint. [FN27]
We turn next to the effect of that development on the judgments
below. Yniguez urges that vacatur
ought not occur here. She maintains
that the State acquiesced in the Ninth Circuit's judgment and that, in any
event, the District Court judgment should not be upset because it was entered
before the mooting event occurred and was not properly appealed. See Brief for Respondent Yniguez 23‑25.
FN27. It bears repetition that Yniguez did not sue on behalf of a
class. See supra, at 1060; cf.
Preiser v. Newkirk, 422 U.S. 395, 404, 95 S.Ct. 2330, 2335, 45 L.Ed.2d
272 (1975) (MARSHALL, J., concurring) (mootness determination unavoidable where
plaintiff‑respondent's case lost vitality and action was not filed on
behalf of a class); Sosna v. Iowa, 419
U.S. 393, 397‑403, 95 S.Ct. 553, 556‑559, 42 L.Ed.2d 532 (1975)
(recognizing class action exception to mootness doctrine).
Concerning the Ninth Circuit's judgment, Yniguez argues that the
State's Attorney General effectively acquiesced in that court's dispositions
when he did not petition for this Court's review. See id., at 24‑25;
Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 10‑11, and n. 4 (citing
Diamond v. Charles, 476 U.S. 54, 106 S.Ct. 1697, 90 L.Ed.2d 48 (1986)).
[FN28] We do not agree that this Court
is disarmed in the manner suggested.
FN28. Designated a respondent in this Court, the State was not
required or specifically invited to file a brief answering the AOE/Park
petition. In his appearance form, filed
January 10, 1996, Arizona's Attorney General made this much plain: The State‑‑aligned with
petitioners AOE and Park in that Arizona defended Article XXVIII's
constitutionality‑‑did not oppose certiorari; in the event Yniguez did not prevail here,
Arizona would seek to recoup the attorney's fees the District Court had ordered
the State to pay her. See supra, at
1066, n. 16.
We have taken up the case for consideration on the petition for
certiorari filed by AOE and Park. Even
if we were to rule definitively that AOE and Park lack standing, we would have
an obligation essentially to search the pleadings on core matters of federal‑court
adjudicatory authority‑‑to inquire not only into this Court's
authority to decide the questions petitioners present, but to consider, also,
the authority of the lower courts to proceed.
As explained in Bender v. Williamsport Area School Dist., 475 U.S. 534,
106 S.Ct. 1326, 89 L.Ed.2d 501 (1986):
"[E]very federal appellate court has a special obligation to
'satisfy itself not only of its own jurisdiction, but also that of the lower
courts in a cause under review,' even though the parties are prepared to
concede it. Mitchell v. Maurer, 293
U.S. 237, 244 [55 S.Ct. 162, 165, 79 L.Ed. 338] (1934). See Juidice v. Vail, 430 U.S. 327, 331‑332
[97 S.Ct. 1211, 1215‑1216, 51 L.Ed.2d 376] (1977) (standing). 'And if the record discloses that the lower
court was without jurisdiction this court will notice the defect, although the
parties make no contention concerning it.
[When the lower federal court] lack [s] jurisdiction, we have
jurisdiction on appeal, not of the merits but merely for the purpose of
correcting the error of the lower court in entertaining the suit.' United States v. Corrick, 298 U.S. 435, 440 [56 S.Ct. 829, 831‑ 832, 80
L.Ed. 1263] (1936) (footnotes omitted)."
Id., at 541, 106 S.Ct., at 1331 (brackets in original).
See also Iron Arrow Honor Soc. v. Heckler, 464 U.S. 67, 72‑73,
104 S.Ct. 373, 375‑376, 78 L.Ed.2d 58 (1983) (per curiam) (vacating
judgment below where Court of Appeals had ruled on the merits although case had
become moot). In short, we have authority to "make such disposition of the
whole case as justice may require."
U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co., 513 U.S., at 21, 115 S.Ct., at 390 (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted).
Because the Ninth Circuit refused to stop the adjudication when
Yniguez's departure from public employment came to its attention, we set aside
the unwarranted en banc Court of Appeals judgment.
As to the District Court's judgment, Yniguez stresses that the
date of the mooting event‑‑her resignation from state employment
effective April 25, 1990‑was some 2 1/2 months after the February 6,
1990, decision she seeks to preserve.
Governor Mofford was the sole defendant bound by the District Court
judgment, and Mofford declined to appeal.
Therefore, Yniguez contends, the District Court's judgment should remain
untouched.
But AOE and Park had an arguable basis for seeking appellate
review, and the Attorney General promptly made known his independent interest
in defending Article XXVIII against the total demolition declared by the
District Court. First, the Attorney General repeated his plea for certification
of Article XXVIII to the Arizona Supreme Court. See Record, Doc. No. 82.
And if that plea failed, he asked, in his motion to intervene, "to
be joined as a defendant so that he may participate in all post‑judgment
proceedings." Record, Doc. No.
93, p. 2. Although denied party
status, the Attorney General had, at a minimum, a right secured by Congress, a
right to present argument on appeal "on the question of
constitutionality." See 28 U.S.C.
§ 2403(b). He was in the process of
pursuing that right when the mooting event occurred.
We have already recounted the course of proceedings
thereafter. First, Yniguez did not
tell the Court of Appeals that she had left the State's employ. See supra, at 1069, n. 23. When that fact was disclosed to the court
by the Attorney General, a dismissal for mootness was suggested, and
rejected. A mootness disposition at
that point was in order, we have just explained. Such a dismissal would have stopped in midstream the Attorney
General's endeavor, premised on § 2403(b), to defend the State's law against a
declaration of unconstitutionality, and so would have warranted a path‑
clearing vacatur decree.
The State urges that its current plea for vacatur is compelling in
view of the extraordinary course of this litigation. See Brief for Respondents State of Arizona et al. 34 ("It would certainly be a strange
doctrine that would permit a plaintiff to obtain a favorable judgment, take
voluntary action [that] moot[s] the dispute, and then retain the [benefit of
the] judgment."). We agree. The
"exceptional circumstances" that abound in this case, see U.S.
Bancorp Mortgage Co., 513 U.S., at 29, 115 S.Ct., at 393, and the federalism
concern we next consider, lead us to conclude that vacatur down the line is the
equitable solution.
V
In litigation generally, and in constitutional litigation most
prominently, courts in the United States characteristically pause to ask: Is this conflict really necessary? [FN29]
When anticipatory relief is sought in federal court against a state
statute, respect for the place of the States in our federal system calls for
close consideration of that core question.
See, e.g., Poe v. Ullman, 367 U.S. 497, 526, 81 S.Ct. 1752, 1767‑1768,
6 L.Ed.2d 989 (1961) (Harlan, J., dissenting) ("[N]ormally this Court
ought not to consider the Constitutionality of a state statute in the absence
of a controlling interpretation of its meaning and effect by the state
courts."); Rescue Army v.
Municipal Court of Los Angeles, 331 U.S. 549, 573‑574, 67 S.Ct. 1409,
1421‑1423, 91 L.Ed. 1666 (1947);
Shapiro, Jurisdiction and Discretion, 60 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 543, 580‑585
(1985).
FN29. The phrasing is borrowed from Traynor, Is This Conflict
Really Necessary?, 37 Texas L.Rev. 657 (1959).
Arizona's Attorney General, in addition to releasing his own
opinion on the meaning of Article XXVIII, see supra, at 1061, asked both the
District Court and the Court of Appeals to pause before proceeding to judgment;
specifically, he asked both federal courts to seek, through the State's
certification process, an authoritative construction of the new measure from
the Arizona Supreme Court. See supra,
at 1060‑1061, and n. 5, 1062‑1063, 1066‑1067, and nn. 17, 18.
Certification today covers territory once dominated by a deferral
device called "Pullman abstention," after the generative case,
Railroad Comm'n of Tex. v. Pullman Co., 312 U.S. 496, 61 S.Ct. 643, 85 L.Ed.
971 (1941). Designed to avoid federal‑court
error in deciding state‑law questions antecedent to federal
constitutional issues, the Pullman mechanism remitted parties to the state
courts for adjudication of the unsettled state‑law issues. If settlement of the state‑law
question did not prove dispositive of the case, the parties could return to the
federal court for decision of the federal issues. Attractive in theory because it placed state‑law questions
in courts equipped to rule authoritatively on them, Pullman abstention proved
protracted and expensive in practice, for it entailed a full round of
litigation in the state court system before any resumption of proceedings in
federal court. See generally 17A C.
Wright, A. Miller, & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure §§ 4242,
4243 (2d ed.1988 and Supp.1996).
Certification procedure, in contrast, allows a federal court faced
with a novel state‑law question to put the question directly to the
State's highest court, reducing the delay, cutting the cost, and increasing the
assurance of gaining an authoritative response. See Note, Federal Courts‑‑Certification Before
Facial Invalidation: A Return to
Federalism, 12 W. New Eng. L.Rev. 217 (1990).
Most States have adopted certification procedures. See generally 17A Wright, Miller, &
Cooper, supra, § 4248. Arizona's
statute, set out supra, at 1061, n. 5, permits the State's highest court to
consider questions certified to it by federal district courts, as well as
courts of appeals and this Court.
Both lower federal courts in this case refused to invite the aid
of the Arizona Supreme Court because they found the language of Article XXVIII
"plain," and the Attorney General's limiting construction
unpersuasive. See 730 F.Supp., at 315‑316, 69 F.3d, at 928‑931.
[FN30] Furthermore, the Ninth Circuit
suggested as a proper price for certification a concession by the Attorney
General that Article XXVIII "would be unconstitutional if construed as
[plaintiff Yniguez] contended it should be." Id., at 930; see id., at 931, and n. 14. Finally, the Ninth Circuit acknowledged the
pendency of a case similar to Yniguez's in the Arizona court system, but found
that litigation no cause for a stay of the federal‑court
proceedings. See id., at 931; supra, at 1066, and n. 18 (describing the
Ruiz litigation).
FN30. But cf. Huggins v.
Isenbarger, 798 F.2d 203, 207‑210 (C.A.7 1986) (Easterbrook, J.,
concurring) (reasoned opinion of State Attorney General should be accorded
respectful consideration; federal
courts should hesitate to conclude that "[a State's] Executive Branch does
not understand state law").
A more cautious approach was in order. Through certification of novel or unsettled questions of state
law for authoritative answers by a State's highest court, a federal court may
save "time, energy, and resources and hel[p] build a cooperative judicial
federalism." Lehman Brothers v.
Schein, 416 U.S. 386, 391, 94 S.Ct. 1741, 1744, 40 L.Ed.2d 215 (1974); see also Bellotti v. Baird, 428 U.S. 132,
148, 96 S.Ct. 2857, 2866‑2867, 49 L.Ed.2d 844 (1976) (to warrant district
court certification, "[i]t is sufficient that the statute is susceptible
of ... an interpretation [that] would avoid or substantially modify the federal
constitutional challenge to the statute"). It is true, as the Ninth Circuit observed, 69 F.3d, at 930, that
in our decision certifying questions in Virginia v. American Booksellers Assn.,
Inc., 484 U.S. 383, 108 S.Ct. 636, 98 L.Ed.2d 782 (1988), we noted the State's
concession that the statute there challenged would be unconstitutional if
construed as plaintiffs contended it should be, id., at 393‑396, 108
S.Ct., at 643‑645. But neither
in that case nor in any other did we declare such a concession a condition
precedent to certification.
The District Court and the Court of Appeals ruled out
certification primarily because they believed Article XXVIII was not fairly
subject to a limiting construction.
See 730 F.Supp., at 316 (citing Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451, 467, 107
S.Ct. 2502, 2512‑2513, 96 L.Ed.2d 398 (1987)); 69 F.3d, at 930. The
assurance with which the lower courts reached that judgment is all the more
puzzling in view of the position the initiative sponsors advanced before this
Court on the meaning of Article XXVIII.
At oral argument on December 4, 1996, counsel for petitioners AOE
and Park informed the Court that, in petitioners' view, the Attorney General's
reading of the Article was "the correct interpretation." Tr. of Oral Arg. 6; see id., at 5 (in response to the Court's
inquiry, counsel for petitioners stated:
"[W]e agree with the Attorney General's opinion as to [the]
construction of Article XXVIII on [constitutional] grounds."). The Ninth Circuit found AOE's
"explanations as to the initiative's scope ... confused and self‑contradictory,"
69 F.3d, at 928, n. 12, and we agree that AOE wavered in its statements of
position, see, e.g., Brief for Petitioners 15 (AOE may "protect its
political and statutory rights against the State and government
employees"), 32‑39 (Article XXVIII regulates Yniguez's
"language on the job"), 44 ("AOE might ... sue the State for
limiting Art. XXVIII"). Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals understood that
the ballot initiative proponents themselves at least "partially endorsed
the Attorney General's reading."
69 F.3d, at 928, n. 12. Given
the novelty of the question and its potential importance to the conduct of
Arizona's business, plus the views of the Attorney General and those of Article
XXVIII's sponsors, the certification requests merited more respectful
consideration than they received in the proceedings below.
Federal courts, when confronting a challenge to the
constitutionality of a federal statute, follow a "cardinal principle": They "will first ascertain whether a
construction ... is fairly possible" that will contain the statute within
constitutional bounds. See Ashwander
v. TVA, 297 U.S. 288, 348, 56 S.Ct. 466, 483‑484, 80 L.Ed. 688 (1936)
(Brandeis, J., concurring); Ellis v. Railway, Airline & Steamship Clerks,
466 U.S. 435, 444, 104 S.Ct. 1883, 1890, 80 L.Ed.2d 428 (1984); Califano v. Yamasaki, 442 U.S. 682, 692‑
693, 99 S.Ct. 2545, 2553‑2554, 61 L.Ed.2d 176 (1979); Rescue Army, 331 U.S., at 568‑569, 67
S.Ct., at 1419‑1420. State
courts, when interpreting state statutes, are similarly equipped to apply that
cardinal principle. See Knoell v.
Cerkvenik‑Anderson Travel, Inc., 185 Ariz. 546, 548, 917 P.2d 689, 691
(1996) (citing Ashwander ).
Warnings against premature adjudication of constitutional
questions bear heightened attention when a federal court is asked to invalidate
a State's law, for the federal tribunal risks friction‑generating error
when it endeavors to construe a novel state Act not yet reviewed by the State's
highest court. See Rescue Army, 331
U.S., at 573‑574, 67 S.Ct., at 1421‑1423. "Speculation by a federal court about the meaning of a state
statute in the absence of prior state court adjudication is particularly
gratuitous when ... the state courts stand willing to address questions of
state law on certification from a federal court." Brockett v. Spokane Arcades, Inc., 472 U.S.
491, 510, 105 S.Ct. 2794, 2805, 86 L.Ed.2d 394 (1985) (O'CONNOR, J.,
concurring).
Blending abstention with certification, the Ninth Circuit found
"no unique circumstances in this case militating in favor of
certification." 69 F.3d, at
931. Novel, unsettled questions of
state law, however, not "unique circumstances," arenecessary before
federal courts may avail themselves of state certification procedures.
[FN31] Those procedures do not entail
the delays, expense, and procedural complexity that generally attend abstention
decisions. See supra, at 1073. Taking advantage of certification made
available by a State may "greatly simplif[y]" an ultimate
adjudication in federal court. See
Bellotti, 428 U.S., at 151, 96 S.Ct., at 2868.
FN31. Arizona itself requires no "unique
circumstances." It permits
certification to the State's highest court of matters "which may be
determinative of the cause," and as to which "no controlling
precedent" is apparent to the certifying court. Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 12‑1861 (1994).
The course of Yniguez's case was complex. The complexity might have been avoided had
the District Court, more than eight years ago, accepted the certification
suggestion made by Arizona's Attorney General. The Arizona Supreme Court was not asked by the District Court or
the Court of Appeals to say what Article XXVIII means. But the State's highest court has that very
question before it in Ruiz v. Symington, see supra, at 1066, and n. 18, the
case the Ninth Circuit considered no cause for federal‑court
hesitation. In Ruiz, which has been
stayed pending our decision in this case, see supra, at 1066, n. 18, the
Arizona Supreme Court may now rule definitively on the proper construction of
Article XXVIII. Once that court has
spoken, adjudication of any remaining federal constitutional question may
indeed become greatly simplified.
* * *
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
vacated, and the case is remanded to that court with directions that the action
be dismissed by the District Court.
It is so ordered.
APPENDIX TO
OPINION OF THE COURT
ARTICLE
XXVIII. ENGLISH AS THE OFFICIAL LANGUAGE
§ 1. English as the
official language; applicability
Section 1. (1) The English language is the official language of
the State of Arizona.
(2) As the official language of this State, the English language
is the language of the ballot, the public schools and all government functions
and actions.
(3)(a) This Article applies to:
(i) the legislative, executive and judicial branches of
government[,]
(ii) all political subdivisions, departments, agencies,
organizations, and instrumentalities of this State, including local governments
and municipalities,
(iii) all statutes, ordinances, rules, orders, programs and
policies[,]
(iv) all government officials and employees during the performance
of government business.
b) As used in this Article, the phrase "This State and all
political subdivisions of this State" shall include every entity, person,
action or item described in this Section, as appropriate to the circumstances.
§ 2. Requiring this state
to preserve, protect and enhance English
Section 2. This State and
all political subdivisions of this State shall take all reasonable steps to
preserve, protect and enhance the role of the English language as the official
language of the State of Arizona.
§ 3. Prohibiting this
state from using or requiring the use of languages other than English; exceptions
Section 3. (1) Except as provided in Subsection (2):
(a) This State and all political subdivisions of this State shall
act in English and in no other language.
(b) No entity to which this Article applies shall make or enforce
a law, order, decree or policy which requires the use of a language other than
English.
(c) No governmental document shall be valid, effective or
enforceable unless it is in the English language.
(2) This State and all political subdivisions of this State may
act in a language other than English under any of the following circumstances:
(a) to assist students who are not proficient in the English
language, to the extent necessary to comply with federal law, by giving
educational instruction in a language other than English to provide as rapid as
possible a transition to English.
(b) to comply with other federal laws.
(c) to teach a student a foreign language as a part of a required
or voluntary educational curriculum.
(d) to protect public health or safety.
(e) to protect the rights of criminal defendants or victims of
crime.
§ 4. Enforcement; standing
Section 4. A person who
resides in or does business in this State shall have standing to bring suit to
enforce this Article in a court of record of the State. The Legislature may enact reasonable
limitations on the time and manner of bringing suit under this subsection.