Institute for Legal, Legislative and Educational Action
From yesterday’s decision in In re Ezell: The plaintiffs seek a writ of mandamus to enforce their right to the relief mandated in our most recent decision in this matter. See Ezell v. City of Chicago (“Ezell II”). In Ezell II we invalidated, on Second Amendment grounds, three Chicago regulations governing the siting and operation of firing ranges:
(1) Section 17â5â0207 of the Chicago Municipal Code, which permits firing ranges only in manufacturing districts with a specialâuse permit; (2) Section 17â9â0120, which bars a firing range from locating within 100 feet of another range or within 500 feet of any district that is zoned for residential use or planned residential use, or any preexisting school, dayâcare facility, and multiple other uses; and (3) Section 4â151â100(d), which prohibits anyone under age 18 from entering a firing range. Our decision concluded with the mandate language typically used in this situation: We remanded and directed the district court to issue an injunction “consistent with this opinion.”
Ezell II was released on January 18, 2017. Although we could have stayed the mandate to give the City a period of time to promulgate new regulations to replace the unconstitutional provisions, see Moore v. Madigan, 702 F.3d 933, 942 (7th Cir. 2012), we did not do so.
That was not an oversight. Unlike in Moore v. Madigan, here there was no reason to stay the mandate. By way of brief explanation, Moore was a Second Amendment challenge to an Illinois law prohibiting the carrying of firearms outside the home. A panel of this court struck down the law but stayed the issuance of the mandate for 180 days to give state authorities time to fill the regulatory gap with a permitting system to govern the carrying of firearms outside the home.
The situation here is very different. As a consequence of the City’s regulatory regime, Chicago has no publicly accessible firing ranges at present. Firing ranges do not open overnight. Myriad practical considerations and the current state of the City’s regulatory scheme ensure that it will be some time before any range operator approaches the City with a viable proposal to open a firing range.
As clearly explained in our opinion, the invalidation of the manufacturingâdistrict and bufferâzone restrictions puts “the ball squarely in the City’s court to decide which districts it will now open to firing ranges and on what terms.” Moreover, the City has “a host of [additional] regulations to guard against environmental and fire hazards and otherwise ensure that shooting ranges will be properly constructed, maintained, and operated.” Under these circumstances, the temporary regulatory vacuum created by the invalidation of these three regulations entails none of the exigencies that justified the decision to stay the mandate in Moore v. Madigan.
The City knows all this. Still, when our mandate issued on February 9, the City asked the district judge to stay for 180 days the effective date of “any injunction and judgment” issued in compliance with the mandate in order to allow it to research and enact new zoning rules to replace the unconstitutional provisions. The judge set a briefing schedule on the motion, to be followed by a status conference on April 25, 2017.
That precipitated the present mandamus petition. The plaintiffs claim a present enforceable right to the entry of judgment consistent with the mandate without further delay.
“The mandate rule requires a lower court to adhere to the commands of a higher court on remand.” Our mandate is straightforward and requires the district court to enter a simple judgment enjoining the three invalid regulations. That has not yet occurred.
“One of the less controversial functions of mandamus is to assure that a lower court complies with the spirit as well as the letter of the mandate issued to that court by a higher court.” An appellate mandate directing the district court to enter an injunction gives the prevailing party an enforceable right to that relief; once the mandate issues, the district court has a plain legal duty to enter a conforming judgment without undue delay.
Staying the effective date over the objection of the prevailing party in order to give the losing party extra time to adjust its affairs violates that plain legal duty and the prevailing party’s rights and may be remedied by mandamus. “Where a lower court has failed to comply with a mandate of a reviewing court, compliance with such mandate may be compelled by writ of mandamus.”
So mandamus may be used to enforce compliance with our mandate. The present petition, however, is premature. The plaintiffs have not yet asked the district court to enter the judgment to which they are entitled. Although no rule expressly requires a formal motion to that effect — the district court has a legal duty to comply with the mandate — proceeding directly to mandamus without first asking the district court to perform its duty is irregular and blindsides the district judge.
With these clarifications, we deny the petition for mandamus without prejudice to refiling should it become necessary, “though we trust that it will not be necessary.”
Judge Rovner disagreed with the panel majority’s analysis:
A request for a writ of mandamus is premature. The remedy of mandamus is a drastic and extraordinary one. Cheney v. U.S. Dist. Ct. for D.C., 542 U.S. 367, 380 (2004). This court can issue a writ of mandamus only if the party requesting the writ has no other adequate means to attain the relief requested.
We do not know whether the plaintiffs have any other adequate means of relief because they have never asked the district court for any relief at all. The district court has not received any input from either party regarding the substance of an injunction, whether it should be stayed while the City revises its zoning regulations, and, if so, for how long. It is not at all clear to me that there is one obvious path or form of the injunction, and it is neither aberrant nor an abuse of discretion for a district court to seek input from the parties before issuing an injunction upon remand from an appellate court. It is, however, outside the norm for this court to prejudge a matter before the district court has had the opportunity to consider it, and for that reason a writ of mandamus is not an appropriate remedy here.