ROMINGER LEGAL
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Opinions - 5th Circuit
Need Legal Help?
LEGAL RESEARCH CENTER
LEGAL HEADLINES - CASE LAW - LEGAL FORMS
NOT FINDING WHAT YOU NEED? -CLICK HERE
This opinion or court case is from the Fifth Circuit Court or Appeals. Search our site for more cases - CLICK HERE

LEGAL RESEARCH
COURT REPORTERS
PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS
PROCESS SERVERS
DOCUMENT RETRIEVERS
EXPERT WITNESSES

 

Find a Private Investigator

Find an Expert Witness

Find a Process Server

Case Law - save on Lexis / WestLaw.

 
Web Rominger Legal

Legal News - Legal Headlines

 


IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
_____________________
No. 93-2079
_____________________
LAWRENCE R. ALBERTI, Et Al.,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
Cross-Appellants,
versus
JOHNNY KLEVENHAGEN, The
Sheriff of Harris County,
Et Al.,
Defendants-Third Party
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
versus
ANN RICHARDS, The Governor
of Texas, Et Al.,
Defendants-Third-Party
Defendants-Appellants
Cross-Appellees.
_______________________
Nos. 93-2353 & 93-2651
_______________________
LAWRENCE R. ALBERTI, ET AL.,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
versus
JOHNNY KLEVENHAGEN, The Sheriff of
Harris County, ET AL.,
Defendants-Third Party
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
versus
ANN RICHARDS, The Governor of
Texas, ET AL.,
Defendants-Third Party
Defendants-Appellants.

_________________________________________________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
_________________________________________________________________
(February 23, 1995)
Before KING and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges, and LAKE, District
Judge.*
KING, Circuit Judge:
In this appeal, we are asked once again to examine
proceedings involving the conditions of confinement at the Harris
County jails and the respective responsibilities of the State of
Texas and Harris County for ensuring that those facilities comply
with constitutional standards. In the most recent district court
proceedings surrounding the jails, the district court, sua
sponte, entered a "final order" which, inter alia, modified a
1975 "Consent Judgment" and other subsequent orders. The final
order also mandated the implementation of a remedial plan that
was jointly submitted by the County and State. Further, the
district court's order dictated that the State pay the full
expense of the programs included in the joint remedial plan with
the exception of certain programs falling within the traditional
role of county detention facilities. Additionally, the district
court set the constitutional capacity of the jails at 112.5% of
design capacity, ordering the State to pay a fine for each inmate
in excess of that cap housed in the Harris County jails. The
district court also allocated the costs of monitors appointed to
* District Judge of the Southern District of Texas, sitting
by designation.
2

survey the conditions of the jails, taxing the State for ninety-
percent of fees incurred by the monitors and the County for the
remaining ten-percent of the monitors' fees. The State appealed
and the plaintiff-prisoners cross-appealed. We affirm in part
and reverse and remand in part.
I. Background
Because so many of the issues raised in this appeal are
controlled by the principle of law of the case,1 we set forth the
relevant history of this case and the rulings of prior panels of
this case in some detail. This case originated almost two
decades ago when Lawrence Alberti and his fellow inmates (the
"plaintiff-prisoners"), complaining of the conditions in the
Harris County jails, filed a class action lawsuit against certain
Harris County officials (collectively the "County").2 The
district court, based on extensive hearings, found the conditions
1 Under the law of the case doctrine, we follow the prior
decisions in a case as the law of that case. Thus, we will not
reexamine issues of law addressed by a prior panel opinion in a
subsequent appeal of the same case unless: "(i) the evidence on a
subsequent trial was substantially different, (ii) controlling
authority has since made a contrary decision of the law
applicable to such issues, or (iii) the decision was clearly
erroneous and would work a manifest injustice." North
Mississippi Communications v. Jones, 951 F.2d 652, 565 (5th
Cir.), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 184 (1992). Additionally, the
doctrine extends to those issues "decided by necessary
implication as well as those decided explicitly." Dickinson v.
Auto Center Mfg. Co., 731 F.2d 1092, 1098 (5th Cir. 1983).
2 A full recitation of the facts relating to this case is
included in two of our earlier opinions, Alberti v. Sheriff of
Harris County, 937 F.2d 984, 986-992 (5th Cir. 1991), cert.
denied, 112 S. Ct. 1994 (1992), and In re Clements, 881 F.2d 145
(5th Cir. 1989).
3

in the jail to be inhumane. See Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris
County, 937 F.2d 984, 987 (5th Cir. 1991) (Alberti I).
Subsequently, on February 4, 1975, the plaintiffs and the County
entered into a "Consent Judgment" calling for renovations of
existing facilities, the development of a new jail, and
improvements in staff and security at the jails. See Alberti v.
Sheriff of Harris County, No. 72-H-1094, slip op. at 1 (S.D. Tex.
Feb. 4, 1975); see also Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 987. The
litigation, however, was far from over, and the "district court
retained jurisdiction to issue interim orders." Id. Ten months
later, in December of 1975, the district court issued an opinion
providing guidelines for streamlining the criminal justice
system, implementing an effective pretrial release program, and
improving the living conditions in the jails. See Alberti v.
Sheriff of Harris County, Texas, 406 F. Supp. 649, 654 (S.D. Tex.
1975).
By 1982, the County had completed a new jail (the "Franklin
Jail"), with more than three times the capacity of the old
central jail (the "old San Jacinto Jail"). The County also
maintained a detention center in Humble, Texas, and upon the
opening of the Franklin Jail, the County closed the old San
Jacinto Jail. Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 987. The district court,
however, remained involved in the jails' operation and addressed
staffing and supervision concerns in the jails. Id. (discussing
Alberti v. Klevenhagen, 606 F. Supp. 478 (S.D. Tex. 1985), and
Alberti v. Heard, 600 F. Supp. 443 (S.D. Tex. 1984)). After
4

consulting with an expert, the County determined that it would
need additional space, and therefore the County authorized
construction of a third jail (the "new San Jacinto Jail") and the
renovation of the old San Jacinto Jail. Id.
Eager to be free from the yoke of litigation, in February of
1987, the County filed a motion for final judgment and permanent
injunction. In order to assess the County's compliance with its
prior orders and to determine the maximum capacity of the jails,
the district court appointed three monitors--a special master, a
medical monitor-assessor, and a jail monitor-assessor
(collectively the "monitors"). Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 987. The
monitors examined eighteen conditions and found that the County
had complied fully with nine conditions, had complied partially
with seven conditions, and had failed to comply with only two
conditions of the court's prior orders. Additionally, the
monitors found that, as of June 1, 1987, the county jails'
population exceeded their design capacities by only five percent.
Id. Although the County had made substantial progress in
conforming the jails to constitutional requirements, the monitors
recommended that the court continue supervising the jails in
light of the County's "inordinate delay in achieving substantial
compliance." Id.
Meanwhile, the State of Texas was embroiled in a separate
controversy involving the conditions of its own prisons. After
years of litigation, in 1985, the State entered into a
stipulation, requiring it to limit its prison population to
5

ninety-five percent of capacity. Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 987
(discussing Ruiz v. Lynaugh, 811 F.2d 856 (5th Cir. 1987)). This
agreement translated into difficulties for the County; in order
to stay within the limits set by its stipulation, the State
periodically refused to admit "convicted felons sentenced to the
State prison system, and ready for transfer, but awaiting
transfer in the county jails." Id. Two years later, the State
attempted to create a more orderly system of admissions by
adopting a "scheduled admissions policy" which set daily quotas
on the number of transfer-ready felons from each County that the
State would accept into its prisons.
The State's policies were disastrous for the County.
Whereas the County had been near compliance with the district
court's orders in 1987, by September of 1988, the monitors found
that the population of the county jails had swelled to thirty
percent over design capacity, resulting in dangerous
overcrowding.3 The monitors determined that the appropriate
population levels at the Franklin Jail and the detention center
3 As we noted in Alberti I, the monitors described a grim
situation in the County's jails:
All systems are impossibly stressed, including food
service, programming, elevators, recreation,
classification, maintenance, visiting, supplies of
clothing and bedding, security, medical care, and
mental health services. So far these stressed systems
have not broken down completely under the population
pressures, but the Monitors believe that there is no
elasticity left in the institution and its service
systems.
Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 988.
6

were ninety-five percent of design capacity, and the monitors
recommended that the district court set population caps that, in
time, would allow the proper population level to be obtained.
See Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 988.
After receiving the monitors' report, the court sua sponte
ordered the County to deliver at least 290 transfer-ready felons
per week to the Texas Department of Corrections (later Texas
Department of Criminal Justice--Institutional Division). The
State, however, refused to accept the transfers, and admitted
only the number of prisoners from the County specified in its
scheduled admissions policy. See id. Thus, the County was
unable to comply with the court order. See id.
The County's inmate population continued to balloon, and in
December of 1988, the County argued that it could not comply with
the court's order without the State's participation. Thus, the
County moved the district court to force the plaintiff-prisoners
to join the State as a defendant. The court refused the motion,
but allowed the County to file a third-party complaint against
the State.4 Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 988; see also In re Clements,
881 F.2d at 148. After several months of procedural wrangling,
the plaintiffs and the State entered a joint request that certain
pending motions be transferred to the court adjudicating the
state prison conditions case, the Ruiz court. Although the
4 The county brought suit against the governor of Texas,
the director of the Texas Department of Corrections, and the
Texas Department of Corrections' governing board. All officials
were sued in their official capacities. In re Clements, 881 F.2d
at 148.
7

district court denied the requests, we granted a writ of mandamus
and transferred to the Ruiz court:
so much of the relief portion of the third-party
complaint as seeks an injunction of ordering our
individual petitioners (in their official capacities)
[the third-party State defendants] to receive or take
prisoners into TDC confinement or to otherwise take
action in the operation or management of the TDC-
operated confinement facilities.
Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 989 (quoting In re Clements, 881 F.2d at
154). We, however, declined to stay the impending bench trial in
the Alberti case, noting that "until the liability merit issues
in the third-party complaint [were] determined, there [was] no
occasion to transfer any portion of the third-party complaint."
In re Clements, 881 F.2d at 154.
Meanwhile, the monitors continued their work, and they saw
the population of the county jails continue to swell. "To put
this in some perspective," the monitors noted, "Harris County now
has more prisoners sleeping on the floor of its detention
facilities than the total number of convicted offenders
incarcerated in fourteen states." Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 989.
In a report issued on April 11, 1989, the monitors revised their
recommendations and suggested that, after periodic reductions,
the jails' population be capped at the design capacity of the
jails. The situation did not improve, and by June of 1989, the
monitors commented that prison conditions were "intolerable[]
[and] shocking to the conscience." Id. at 990. Late in the
summer of 1989, the jails' population was at almost 189% of
8

design capacity--forty-five percent of which (more than 3400)
were transfer-ready felons.
From August 14 through August 18, 1989, the district court
held a merits liability bench trial. See id. Witnesses
testified about the deleterious effects of the overcrowding on
the jails, and one of the monitors described how protection
suffered as a result of "inadequate staff, inadequate ventilation
and food service, supply shortages, precarious fire safety, and a
medical system on the verge of collapse." Alberti I, 937 F.2d at
990.
After hearing the testimony and conducting additional
hearings, the district court issued its findings of fact and
conclusions of law on September 25, 1989. The court found that,
primarily as a result of "extreme overcrowding," the conditions
in the jails were "cruel and unusual in violation of the Eighth
and Fourteenth Amendments." As the district court described,
overcrowding was so severe that:
2800-2900 prisoners slept on floor each night, forming
a "human carpet" in some of the cellblocks, that the
staff was inadequate to assure the safety of all
prisoners, that there has been a great increase in the
disciplinary violations, that there were problems with
plumbing and ventilation, that fire safety was
"severely compromised," that supplies and food service
were inadequate, that medical care conditions reflected
"conscious indifference towards the inmates' serious
medical needs," and that county judges gave greater
weight to pretrial release recommendations than state
judges.
Id. at 990. Additionally, the district court found that under
Texas law, the County was responsible for the violations, but the
court also found that the State was jointly liable "because,
9

under Texas law, it had the `primary responsibility for convicted
felons.'" Id. (quoting Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Art. 4413(401) §
1.02) (repealed 1991)). Finally, the district court transferred
the County's third-party complaint against the State to the Ruiz
court. Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 990.
The focus of the litigation then turned to the remedial
aspects of the case. On March 15, 1990, after the State and the
County had submitted their remedial plans and the courts had held
hearings, the combined courts entered a joint remedial order.
This order was replaced by a second order, nunc pro tunc, on
April 5, 1990. Id. at 991. The order required, inter alia, the
State and the County to reduce the county jails' population and
compelled the State to remove more than 9,000 transfer-ready
felons from the county jails. Additionally, the order mandated
the development of alternatives to incarceration and prescribed
the release of prisoners for noncompliance with the order. Id.
As the order was implemented, the situation in the county
jails began to improve. The County completed the renovations of
the old San Jacinto jail, increasing its total design capacity.
Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 991. Moreover, a year after the bench
trial, the jails' population stood at 130% of capacity, and the
number of transfer-ready felons had dropped to under 1100. Id.
On September 7, 1990, after the previous order expired, a
third remedial order was entered. Id. This order, among other
things, required the County to occupy the new San Jacinto Jail by
September 1 of the following year, and mandated "`a substantial
10

daily fine for each day beyond September 1, 1991 [that the
County] fail[ed] to occupy'" the new San Jacinto Jail. Alberti
I, 937 F.2d at 991. The order also set a time table for jail
population reduction and established population caps. Finally,
the order prescribed the development of alternatives to
incarceration in the event of non-compliance. Id.
Over the next few weeks, when the County failed to meet the
population goals by the dates specified in the prior orders, the
district court issued a series of orders commanding the release
of more than 250 pretrial and convicted misdemeanants. The State
and the County appealed these orders, and, on September 21, 1990,
we granted a partial stay on the district court's orders. Later,
we withdrew the stay "on the understanding that, first the
combined courts would not release felons without sufficient
notice for application by the parties for further stay, and,
second, that the parties would work together `to obtain a process
that will protect the integrity of the criminal justice system as
well as the rights of prisoners.'" Id.
In October of 1990, the district court held a hearing to
consider new proposed remedial plans. Two days after that
hearing, the court entered an order noting that "clearly the
County and State defendants have not yet developed a feasible
strategy for addressing the overcrowding problem in Harris County
detention facilitates that precludes the need for further release
of inmates." Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 991. The court noted that
the prison populations had "climbed to more than 1800 over their
11

constitutional capacities and more than 500 over the [target]
caps imposed by the Court in early September." Id. Thus, the
court concluded that "[t]he failure of County and State officials
to develop alternatives leaves the Court with no choice but to
rely on further releases." The court, however, did note that
"elements of a possible plan had surfaced" and ordered "the
County and State defendants [to] meet and [to] work with the
Special Masters . . . to develop an acceptable plan for dealing
with the short-term population crisis in Harris County
facilities." Id. at 992.
After further procedural machinations in which the court
gave the County and the State extensions to develop a remedial
plan, on February 7, 1991, the court found that the jails still
exceeded the population limits set in the September 1990 order.
Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 992. Consequently, the court issued a
fourth remedial order. This order superseded all of the prior
remedial orders and required, among other things, that the County
reduce the jails' population to constitutional capacity within
forty-five days. See id. This order also required that county
prisoners make up less than seventy-five percent of the
population and that transfer-ready felons constitute less than
twenty-five percent of the population.
Further, the order instructed the county sheriff to transfer
certain inmates to other Texas county detention facilities "if
necessary to meet the overall population cap." Moreover, the
district court ordered the State to remit $750,000 to the court,
12

the proceeds of which would be used to reimburse the County for a
per prisoner per diem paid to the counties receiving transferred
prisoners. Under this order, the County would not be reimbursed
for prisoners sent to other counties when the jail population of
non-transfer-ready felons exceeded seventy-five percent of the
population cap.5
The County and the State both sought to modify the February
7 order. Id. Additionally, the State filed a notice of appeal
and a motion to vacate. See Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 992. The
State also asked this court for a writ of mandamus vacating the
district court's order requiring the State to deposit $750,000
and enforcing or modifying our decision in In re Clements. In
the alternative, the State requested a stay of the portion of the
order requiring the $750,000 deposit, a writ of prohibition,
summary reversal, or certification to the Texas Supreme Court.
See Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 992.
The district court altered its order on March 15, 1991 and
also denied the motions to vacate or to stay the order. The
State and County filed new notices of appeal. Five days after
5 This fourth remedial order, unlike the previous three,
was issued solely by the Alberti court. Judge Justice, who was
presiding over the state prison Ruiz case, wrote separately to
"`clarify [his] relationship to the relief set forth.'" Id. at
992. Judge Justice, while conceding that the order was within
the scope of the Alberti case, "suggested that the requirement
that the state deposit $750,000 `seemingly falls within the
purview of Ruiz . . . .'" Id. Nevertheless, Judge Justice
stated that he would "abstain from deciding whether, under Texas
law the state was obligated to pay costs incurred by the county
in housing [transfer-ready] felons in other counties'
facilities." Id.
13

the district court modified its order, this court also denied the
State's stay request. On March 21, 1991, the United States
Supreme Court stayed the provision, but later withdrew its stay.
See id.
The State and the County then appealed the September 25,
1990 findings of fact to this court. It is this appeal that
became Alberti I. After establishing our jurisdiction, we
examined the question of who was responsible for the condition of
the county jails. After parsing the law in this area, we
rejected the State's argument that it had no responsibility for
the conditions of the county jails. Instead, we agreed with the
district court's conclusion that "Texas law impose[d]
responsibilities on both the State and the County," and we
accepted the lower court's reasoning that "the fact that the
State of Texas has virtually complete freedom to decide who will
be responsible for the confinement of felons provides no shield
from liability for the State . . . in this case because state law
clearly places the primary responsibility for the confinement of
felons upon them." Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 992 (internal
quotations and citation omitted).
We also remanded the case to the district court to
determine, in light of the Supreme Court's decision in Wilson v.
Seiter, 501 U.S. 294 (1991), whether the County and/or the State
acted with the "deliberate indifference" required to sustain a
claim that prison conditions constitute cruel and unusual
14

punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Alberti I, 937 F.2d at
998.
We then examined the County's contention that the district
court erred in determining that the prison's constitutional
capacity equaled its design capacity. We rejected the County's
argument. We noted that because the district court "expressly
recognized its obligation to consider the `totality of the
conditions' [a]nd contemplated a number of factors in addition to
design capacity, . . . the finding was not clearly erroneous."
Id. at 1000-01.
Next we turned to the remedial issues. First, we rejected
the State's argument that the district court's orders violated
the Eleventh Amendment's prohibition against federal courts
enforcing state law against the state. See Pennhurst State
School and Hospital v. Halderman, 465 U.S. 89 (1984). We noted
that, because it is responsible for transfer-ready felons, the
State had federal constitutional duties to its own prisoners in
county jails. Agreeing with the Second and Sixth Circuits, we
commented that, "`[t]he State cannot . . . wash its hands of its
federal constitutional responsibility for the detention
conditions of such prisoners [that are convicted and awaiting
transfer] because they are temporarily housed in [other]
facilities . . . .'" Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 1001 (quoting
Benjamin v. Malcolm, 803 F.2d 46 (2d Cir. 1986)); see also Tate
v. Frey, 735 F.2d 986 (6th Cir. 1984).
15

Second, we rejected the State's contention that the district
court's orders violated the Eleventh Amendment because they
exacted monetary relief. We described that "the plaintiffs
established a federal constitutional violation, and the state is
a responsible party. The required payments are thus `a necessary
consequence of compliance in the future with a substantive
federal-question determination.'" Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 1001
(quoting Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651, 668 (1974)).
We also declined to accept the State's argument that the
district court should have abstained from ordering the State "to
pay for the housing of [transfer-ready] felons pending the
ultimate resolution of state litigation" that would determine the
respective responsibilities of the County and the State to the
conditions of confinement in the county jails. Id. at 1002. We
found that abstention was not appropriate in this case,
particularly in light of the fact that the district court remedy
flowed from the only state law on the subject and assessed
responsibility for the transfer-ready felons against the State.
Id. (discussing County of Nueces v. Texas Board of Corrections,
No. 452,071 (Dist. Ct. of Travis County, 126th Judicial Dist. of
Texas 1991)).6
6 We did note, however, that this holding was contingent,
to some degree, on the state law in the area, noting that:
[T]he state courts should eventually determine whether
the state or the county is responsible for [transfer-
ready] felons in the county jails. The Alberti court's
assessment of costs was "tentative" and "contingent on
. . . the outcome of the pending litigation in State
courts over the allocation of costs for maintaining
16

Further, the State urged a variety of procedural errors. We
rejected the State's contention that the district court lacked
the power to unilaterally issue the February 7 order. Alberti I,
937 F.2d at 1003. Similarly, we found wanting the State's
contention that its due process rights were violated because the
February 7 order was issued without a hearing. Specifically, we
noted that, "[g]iven the large number of hearings held in
Alberti, it is difficult to take this argument seriously. At any
rate, it is clear that the order was the direct product of a
hearing held on October 22, 1990." Id.
After rejecting the State's remaining arguments, we
consolidated the State's and County's various pending motions and
appeals. We then remanded the case to the district court for
"the limited purpose of allowing the district court to enter
findings of fact regarding the issue of deliberate
indifference."7 Id. at 1004. On August 7, 1991, the district
felons ready for transfer to the TDCJ-ID in county
facilities." The issue, then, is whether the state or
the county should pay for the housing of [transfer-
ready] felons in other county jails pending the
resolution of state litigation. If the state is found
liable on remand, plaintiffs are entitled to their long
awaited remedy.
Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 1002. The state courts never reached a
decision, however, because the litigation ended with a settlement
agreement.
7 We also stayed several district court orders that were
included in the appeal, pending the district court's findings of
deliberate indifference. We provided, however, that the stay
would vacate automatically if the district court found that the
State was deliberately indifferent. Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 1004.
17

court entered findings of fact, stating that "the State
defendants' and, to a much lesser degree, the county defendants'
awareness of the extremely cruel conditions in the county
facilities and their failure to take steps to remedy those
conditions constitutes deliberate indifference . . . ." The
State and the County appealed.
Meanwhile, the monitors and the parties continued their
efforts to formulate a plan to address the condition of the
jails. On June 8, 1992, the monitors entered tentative findings
of fact with the district court. The next day, the State and the
County submitted a joint remedial plan to the court. Over the
next several weeks, the State and the County submitted their
objections to the monitors' findings of fact. During the summer,
the State and County also filed numerous motions and responses
contesting who should pay the certain fees and costs associated
with the litigation.
On September 29, 1992, the district court issued its "final
order" and a memorandum opinion. In its final order, the
district court adopted the monitors' June 8 findings of fact in
their entirety and imposed certain duties on the County.8
8 The order required the county, at its own expense, to
submit a plan, including funding and scheduling, that meets the
staffing, the classification, the security, the transportation,
and the "other needs of all the County's detention facilities."
The county was also directed to submit a comprehensive medical
plan as well as a plan, including funding and scheduling, for
repair of the old San Jacinto jail ventilation system.
Additionally, the court ordered the county to submit, within
thirty days, evidence that each inmate had a mattress, and the
court imposed a "fine of $50 per day per inmate . . . for each
inmate having to sleep on the floor without a mattress."
18

Additionally, the district court mandated the implementation of
the State's and County's June 9 joint remedial plan. Moreover,
the court ordered that the State pay "the full expense of all
programs [included in the plan] except those . . . falling within
the traditional role of County detention facilities."
The order also imposed a population cap on the county jails,
determining that the constitutional capacity of the jails was
112.5% of their design capacity or 9800 inmates.9 The court
directed that these caps should be met by the spring of 1993, and
it noted that the "State defendants shall pay to the court a fine
of $50.00 per inmate over the cap per day after March 31, 1993
that the population in the Harris County facility exceeds 9800
inmates." The court also allocated the expenses of the monitors,
ordering the State to pay ninety percent of the monitors' fees
incurred after February 1, 1989 and the County to pay the
balance. Finally, the court retained jurisdiction "to resolve
request for attorney's fees and to ensure compliance with this
final order."

On November 19, 1992, the district court entered an order
denying the State's and the County's motions to alter or to amend
the September 29 order and the plaintiff-prisoners' request for
modification of that same order. The next day, we issued our
Finally, the County was commanded to remedy certain kitchen
deficiencies.
9 Specifically, the court set population caps of 4500
inmates for the new San Jacinto jail, 3950 inmates for the
Franklin jail, 475 inmates at the old San Jacinto Jail, and 875
inmates at the Humble detention center.
19

opinion reviewing the district court's August 1991 determination
that the State and the County had acted with deliberate
indifference to the constitutional rights of felons in the jails.
See Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris County, 978 F.2d 893 (5th Cir.
1992) (Alberti II), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 2996 (1993).
We affirmed the district court's determination that the
State was deliberately indifferent. Id. at 895. Similarly,
while we noted that the fact that the County faced "`arguably
formidable constraints' . . . including the dramatic increase in
the number of [transfer-ready] felons being kept the county jail,
largely beyond the county's control to prevent" made the question
of whether the County acted with deliberate indifference more
difficult, we nevertheless affirmed the district court's finding
that the County also acted with deliberate indifference. Id. at
896. We commented that "[t]he district judge was intimately
familiar with the push and shove of state government and its
response to sorry prison conditions. The trial judge was
uniquely informed of the county `mental state' and we decline to
upset it." Id. at 896.
We also addressed the County's contention that the district
court abused its discretion by placing a cap on inmate
population, because, according to the County, that was the most
intrusive remedy and therefore violated the dictates of Ruiz v.
Estelle, 679 F.2d 1115, 1144 (5th Cir.), amended in part, vacated
in part, 688 F.2d 266 (5th Cir. 1982). We roundly rejected this
argument, declaring that, "[a] numerical cap on the number of
20

prisoners is not an overly intrusive remedy. It gives the county
maximum flexibility in determining on its own how to meet
population goals." Alberti II, 978 F.2d at 896.
On March 24, 1993, the district court issued an order that
among other things, denied the State's "Motion to Modify Final
Order or to Stay Imposition of Fines." The State argued that it
had made a good-faith effort to meet the population caps imposed
in the September 29, 1992 final order and therefore it should not
be subjected to the fines set out in that final order. While
acknowledging the State's efforts, the court noted that "[t]he
current conditions at the Harris County jail are barbaric and
cannot be tolerated another eight or nine months. Inmates are
sleeping on floors with backed-up sewage, are riding in dangerous
elevators, and are being exposed to tuberculosis and other
diseases."
The court reasoned that "[b]ecause of the egregious
conditions caused by the drastic overcrowding, caused in turn by
the State's inability to accept its own prisoners . . . the Court
cannot and will not modify or stay the March 31, 1993 deadline."
The court did, however, alter one portion of the September 29,
1992 order, "clarifying" that "the provision in the September 29
order relating to a `fine' is more properly described as a
sanction to be paid into the Court's Registry for appropriate use
pursuant to orders of this Court to alleviate, as much as
possible given the extreme overcrowding, the conditions at the
Harris County facilities." A little more than two weeks later,
21

on April 7, 1993, the district court entered an order to
"implement the sanctions provisions of the September 29, 1992
Final Order."
The State then appealed the district court's September 29,
1992 order, the March 24, 1993 order, and the April 7, 1993
order. The plaintiff-prisoners cross-appealed, and so we come to
Alberti III. The State contends that the district court erred in
requiring the State to pay what it characterizes as "anticipatory
contempt fines" without a hearing. The State also argues that
the district court abused its discretion by establishing the
constitutional capacity of the jails without a hearing. Next,
the State asserts that the district court erred in its allocation
of the costs of the monitors, of the fines, and of the joint
remedial plan between the County and the State. Finally, in the
alternative, the State argues that we should certify the question
of the respective responsibilities of the State and the County to
the Texas Supreme Court to conform the allocation of
responsibility between the State and the County to state law.
The plaintiff-prisoners cross-appeal, arguing that the district
court improperly modified the 1975 consent judgment and other
subsequent orders.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review the imposition of sanctions for an abuse of
discretion. Citronelle-Mobile Gathering, Inc. v. Watkins, 943
F.2d 1297, 1303 (11th Cir. 1991). Similarly, we have noted that
22

the district courts have broad discretion in taxing costs of
court, and we will reverse only upon a clear showing of abuse of
discretion. Sidag Aktiengesellschaft v. Smoked Foods Prods. Co.,
854 F.2d 799, 801-02 (5th Cir. 1988); see also In re Hunt, 754
F.2d 1290, 1294 (5th Cir. 1985). We use the same standard to
examine a district court's decision whether to hold an
evidentiary hearing. Weinberger v. Great Northern Nekoosa Corp.,
925 F.2d 518, 527 (1st Cir. 1991) ("Normally, we review the
decision not to convene an evidentiary hearing only for abuse of
discretion.").
III. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
First, the State maintains that the district court lacked
jurisdiction to assess the sanctions because of the pendency of
Alberti II in this court. This argument is without merit.
Although notice of appeal typically divests the district court of
jurisdiction, "a district court maintains jurisdiction as to
matters not involved in the appeal . . . ." Farmhand, Inc. v.
Anel Eng'g Indus., 693 F.2d 1140, 1145 (5th Cir. 1982).
Additionally, we have stated that "[t]he district court maintains
jurisdiction for other matters, such as ordering stays or
modifying injunctive relief." Id. at 1146. Finally, "we have
recognized the continuing jurisdiction of the district court in
support of its judgment, as long as that judgment has not been
superseded." Id. Accordingly, "[u]ntil the judgment has been
23

properly stayed or superseded, the district court may enforce it
through contempt sanctions." United States v. Revie, 834 F.2d
1198, 1205 (5th Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 487 U.S. 1205 (1988).
In the instant case, we specifically denied the State's
motion for a stay in the district court during the pendency of
the Alberti II appeal. Alberti v. The Sheriff of Harris County,
Nos. 90-2441, 90-6034, 91-2210, 91-2274, slip op. (5th Cir. Aug.
9, 1991). The district court retained jurisdiction to enforce
its judgment that the State was primarily responsible for the
unconstitutional conditions in the county jails. See Revie, 834
F.2d at 1205; Farmhand, 693 F.2d at 1146.
B. Assessment of the Sanctions
The State also argues that the district court violated the
State's due process rights by issuing a contempt finding without
affording the State a hearing. The State contends that the fines
included in the September 29 final order are in essence
"anticipatory contempt findings" imposed without a show-cause
hearing and therefore violate due process and the Eleventh
Amendment. Finding that the State received all of the process it
was due, we reject the State's argument.
The characterization of the contingent payments ordered by
the court affects the procedures required for their
implementation. The district court initially characterized its
$50 per inmate charge as a fine. Later, on March 24, 1993, the
court "clarified" its order, describing the $50 charge as a
24

remedial sanction. The County and the plaintiff-prisoners argue
that the district court's "clarification" illustrates that the
penalty for violating the cap is remedial. Thus, the County and
the plaintiff-prisoners conclude that the State has "not been
ordered to pay money because they violated a federal court order;
they have simply been directed to provide funds to alleviate
unconstitutional conditions caused by their failure to reduce
populations to constitutional acceptable levels."
To determine the character of the sanction imposed by the
court, we must examine the nature of the court's actions. See
United Mine Workers v. Bagwell, 114 S. Ct. 2552, 2557 (1994)
(noting that in the contempt context, "the stated purposes of the
sanction . . . cannot be determinative" and commenting that the
nature of a sanction is "properly drawn, not from the subjective
intent of the . . . court[], but from an examination of the
character of the relief itself." ( internal quotation omitted)).
The Supreme Court recently noted that, "the paradigmatic
civil contempt sanction order . . . involves confining a
contemnor indefinitely until he complies with an affirmative
command such as an order `to pay alimony, or to surrender
property ordered to be turned over to a receiver, or to make a
conveyance.'" Bagwell, 114 S. Ct. at 2557 (quoting Gompers v.
Bucks Stove & Range Co., 221 U.S. 418, 442 (1911)). The Court
then described the closest analogy to that paradigm civil
contempt situation--"a per diem fine imposed for each day a
25

contemnor fails to comply with an affirmative court order." Id.
That is precisely what happened in the instant case.
Although the court did not specifically describe its fines
as contempt sanctions, the monetary penalties in the order accrue
only to the extent that the court-ordered population caps are
exceeded. Thus, the court order mandates a maximum inmate
population and imposes a fine if that order is violated.
The fact that the fines are not to be paid to the court, but
are remedial in nature, does not undermine the conclusion that
the sanctions are for contempt. In fact, "a contempt sanction is
considered civil if it `is remedial and for the benefit of the
complainant . . . .'" Id. (quoting Gompers, 211 U.S. at 498);
see also Lamar Fin. Corp. v. Adams, 918 F.2d 564, 566 (5th Cir.
1990) (noting that a sanction is civil contempt "[i]f the purpose
of the sanction is to coerce the contemnor into compliance with a
court order, or to compensate another party for the contemnor's
violation"); Petroleos Mexicanos v. Crawford Enters., 826 F.2d
392, 399 (5th Cir. 1987) ("[S]anctions for civil contempt are
meant to be `wholly remedial' and serve to benefit the party who
has suffered injury or loss at the hands of the contemnor").
The nature of the contempt guides the proceedings which are
required before a court can issue sanctions. Civil contempt
sanctions "are considered to be coercive and avoidable through
obedience, and thus may be imposed in an ordinary civil
proceeding upon notice and an opportunity to be heard." Bagwell,
114 S. Ct. at 2557; see also id. at 2559 (noting that "because
26

civil contempt sanctions are viewed as nonpunitive and avoidable,
fewer procedural protections for such sanctions have been
required").

In the instant case, after reviewing the pleadings and
hearing oral argument, the district court, on March 24, 1993,
entered an order rejecting, inter alia, the State's motion to
modify the final order and to stay the imposition of fines.
Prior to entering that order, the district court heard the
State's contentions that the court should stay the fine, but
found the court found State's reasons inadequate. This hearing
took place before the March 31, 1993 deadline for the reduction
in prison population, and only after this hearing did the
sanctions take effect. This afforded the State adequate notice
and opportunity to be heard.
The Eleventh Circuit's decision in Mercer v. Mitchell, 908
F.2d 763 (11th Cir. 1990), does not militate against this
conclusion. In that case, without conducting any hearing, the
district court noted that "it [would] accept no excuses for not
complying with its cap" and "directed the parties to submit a
statement to the court indicating the number of prisoners held in
violation of the cap." Id. at 766. The Mercer court found that
this deprived the defendant county of its due process rights.
Specifically, the court described the typical proceeding
satisfying the requirements of due process:
[T]he defendant is allowed to show either that he did
not violate the court order or that he was excused from
complying. Typically, a defendant will argue that he
should not be held in contempt because changed
27

circumstances would make strict enforcement of the
order unjust. In such a case, the defendant should
move the court to modify the order, and the hearing on
the show-cause order would take on the appearance of a
hearing on a motion to modify an injunction. If the
court determines that the order should be modified and
that the defendant's conduct did not violate the order
as modified, then ordinarily it would be unjust to hold
the defendant in contempt. If, however, the court
concludes that the order should not be modified and
that the defendant did not comply with the order, then
the court may hold him in contempt and impose sanctions
designed to ensure compliance.
Mercer, 908 F.2d at 768 (second emphasis added). In the instant
case, the district court conducted a hearing. The court provided
the State the with an opportunity to explain why it should not be
required to adhere to the order and why the order should be
modified. The court, however, found the State's contentions
inadequate and concluded that no modification of the sanctions
was in order. Even under the standard of Mercer, the district
court's actions in this case met due process requirements.10
10 The state also maintains that the fines imposed in this
case are "anticipatory contempt fines" and per se violative of
due process. This contention is without merit. As noted above,
the Supreme Court recently described per diem fines as "a close
analogy" to the paradigmatic coercive, civil contempt sanction--
confinement contingent upon compliance of a court order.
Bagwell, 114 S. Ct. at 2257-58. In the subject case, the fines
imposed by the court are to be assessed for each day the court
order is violated. They do not violate due process, particularly
in light of the hearing afforded to the state. Cf. NLRB v. A.W.
Thompson, Inc., 651 F.2d 1141, 1145 (5th Cir. 1981) (describing
how after repeated violations of an order "we would normally have
no qualms about imposing a schedule of prospective fines"); NLRB
v. Schill Steel Products, Inc., 480 F.2d 586, 599 (5th Cir. 1973)
(imposing a "compliance fine against the Company of $500 for each
day and every violation of the [court's order], and a further
compliance fine of $1000 per day each violation [of the Court's
order] continues.)
28

C. Allocation of Fines
The State next contends that the district court erred in
holding the State solely responsible for paying the sanctions for
overcrowding. We reject this argument.
As noted above, the district court clearly has the power to
assess contempt fines for a violation of its population cap
order. See Bagwell, 114 S. Ct. at 2257-58; A. W. Thompson, Inc.,
651 F.2d at 1145; Schill Steel Prods., 480 F.2d at 599. Here,
the district court specifically found that the "majority of the
problems . . . at the Harris County Facility result from the
large number of TDCJ inmates which the State will not receive."
The court also noted that "the primary responsibility for the
overcrowding crisis in the Harris County Jail Facility lies with
the State Defendants who have the power and the ability through
legislation to act to resolve the situation. The State has
declined to do so." In light of these determinations, the
district court did not abuse its discretion by concluding that it
could ensure compliance with its order by fining the State for
overcrowding. The fact that the Court did not identically fine
the County to ensure its compliance with the court order does not
indicate an abuse of discretion.11
11 Contrary to the State's assertions, the County does
have some responsibility for ensuring the constitutionality of
the conditions of the jails. As noted above, the district
court's September 29, 1992 order specifically required the county
to undertake specific action at the jails, and imposed daily
fines if those actions were not taken.
29

The State next argues that the allocation of the fines is
erroneous because it ignores the relative responsibilities of the
County and the State for the prisons under state law. We find
this argument to be without merit.
In Alberti I, we noted that, "the state courts should
eventually determine whether the state or the county is
responsible for [transfer-ready felons] in the county's jails."
Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 1002. Nevertheless, we agreed with the
district court that "the fact that the State of Texas has
virtually complete freedom to decide who will be responsible for
the confinement of felons provides no shield for liability for
the State Defendants in this case because state law clearly
places primary responsibility for the confinement of felons upon
them." Id. at 997.
Moreover, in denying the State's petition for prohibition,
stay, and rehearing, we rejected the State's contention that "the
legislature, by enacting H.B. 93, and the parties by their
settlement agreement, ha[d] changed the legal relationship
between the state and the counties" in any way that affected our
finding in Alberti I. Thus, we refused to upset our affirmance
of the district court's conclusion that the State had a
responsibility for transfer-ready felons in county jails.
Similarly, in Alberti II, we were unpersuaded by the State's
argument that under Texas law, it was not responsible for
transfer-ready felons. Alberti II, 978 F.2d at 895 (rejecting
the contention that the State's responsibility for the care of
30

felons in the county jails had become uncertain "in light of
rulings by the Ruiz court and legislation proposed by the Texas
legislature; both signal[ing] that prisoners who are ready for
transfer to TDC remain the responsibility of the county until
their transfer to TDC.").
Simply, current Texas law does not affect the State's
liability for the unconstitutional conditions directly
attributable to the State's refusal to accept transfer-ready
felons. The district court, after dealing with this case for two
decades, determined the most appropriate methods for ensuring
that the jails meet constitutional standards. In assessing
sanctions against the State to meet this goal, the court did not
abuse its discretion.

Finally, we reject the State's invitation to certify the
question of the relative responsibilities of the County and the
State to the Texas Supreme Court. Under Texas Rule of Appellate
Procedure 114(a), a question of law can be certified to the
Supreme Court of Texas "`if it appears to the certifying court
that there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of the
Supreme Court of Texas.'" Lucas v. United States, 807 F.2d 414,
418 (5th Cir. 1986) (quoting Tex. R. App. P. 114(a); accord
Swearingen v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., 968 F.2d 559, 564
(5th Cir. 1992). We have also noted, however, that
"[c]ertification does not constitute a panacea for resolution of
those complex or difficult decisions of state law which have not
31

been answered by the highest court of the state." Swearingen,
968 F.2d at 564 (internal quotation and citation omitted).
In this case, although the Texas Supreme Court has not
passed on the relative responsibilities of the State and the
County regarding conditions of overcrowding caused by the State's
refusal to accept transfer-ready felons, we have previously held
that, "we are not persuaded that the state's duty [in regard to
the problems of the jails is] so uncertain." Alberti II, 978
F.2d at 895. Moreover, we have repeatedly rejected the State's
contention that state law absolves the State of all of its
responsibility for transfer-ready felons. Accordingly, we reject
the State's invitation to certify this question to the Texas
Supreme Court.
D. Allocation of the Costs of the Joint Remedial Plan
The State also argues that the district court erred by
requiring the State to fund all of the costs of the joint
remedial plan except for those costs "falling within the
traditional role of County detention facilities." Specifically,
the State contends that the court: (1) "should not have imposed a
remedy at odds with the statutes implementing the settlement
agreements in the state court lawsuits"; and (2) should not have
"specifically requir[ed] [the] State defendants to fund the
creation of alternatives to incarceration in Harris County." We
reject both of these arguments.
32

The State's first contention is disposed of easily. As
noted above, we have found, on multiple occasions, that neither
state law nor the state court settlement agreement affects the
State's liability for the unconstitutional conditions in the
Harris County jails caused by the State's refusal to accept
transfer-ready felons. In prior proceedings of this case, we
have held that state law imposes a responsibility on the State
for those transfer ready-felons, and we have affirmed the
district court's findings that the State acted with conscious
disregard in shirking that responsibility. Consequently, we also
have affirmed the district court's findings that the State was
liable--the settlement agreement and state law notwithstanding--
for the unconstitutional conditions that it helped to create and
to maintain in the county jails. We find no error in the court's
conclusion that the "primary responsibility [for the
unconstitutional prison conditions], and therefore the primary
financial burden [to alleviate those conditions], falls on the
state." See Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 997 (upholding the district
court's determination that "state law clearly places the primary
responsibility for the confinement of felons" on the state).
As to the State's second argument, we disagree with the
contention that the district court's order allocating the costs
of the joint plan improperly infringed upon the State's ability
to manage its prisons. Cf. Ruiz, 679 F.2d at 1148 (finding that
a court order mandating the use of specific programs to relieve
overcrowding in state prisons "unnecessarily invade[d] the
33

management responsibility of state officials"). The district
court did not mandate programs for the State to institute;
instead, it merely required that the State pay for programs which
the State itself, in conjunction with the County, developed as
part of the joint remedial plan to correct the overcrowding
situation in the county jails. This did not constitute an abuse
of discretion.
The district court order requires the State to fund programs
to relieve the overcrowding for which it is in part responsible.
In earlier proceedings in this case, we rejected the State's
argument that the district court is forbidden from ordering
monetary relief; we stated in Alberti I that "the plaintiffs
established a federal constitutional violation, and the state is
a responsible party. The required payments are thus `a necessary
consequence of compliance in the future with a substantive
federal question determination.'" Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 1001
(quoting Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651, 668 (1974)). The order
in this case is similar.
The district court found that the State's actions were the
primary cause of the constitutional violations at the county
jail. The court also noted that without state-funded action, the
constitutional violations would continue.12 Because the payments
12 In a memorandum opinion entered contemporaneously with
its September 29, 1992 final order, the district court stated
that:
[T]he County Defendants were approaching compliance
with the orders of this Court until the State
Defendants abdicated their responsibility for receiving
34

are to ensure that the State's future treatment of transfer-ready
felons is constitutional, the district court's order regarding
the funding of the joint remedial plan is well within the power
of the district court and the contours of the Constitution. See
id.; Edelman, 415 U.S. at 664-68.
E. Allocation of the Costs of the Monitors
The State next avers that the district court improperly
taxed the State for ninety percent of the costs of the monitors.
We also reject this contention.
The guidelines for compensation of special masters (or
referees, auditors, examiners, and assessors) is set forth in
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 53(a). This Rule provides, in
part, that, "[t]he compensation to be allowed to a master shall
be fixed by the court, and shall be charged upon such of the
convicted felons, leaving the inmates in the county
jails indefinitely. It was at this point the prison
population began to soar.
This conduct on the part of the State will
continue to result in unconstitutional overcrowding
unless the State begins to identify, implement and fund
necessary changes to its prison system. . . .
. . . [T]he majority of the problems identified by
the Monitor at the Harris County facility result from
the large number of TDCJ inmates which the State will
not receive. For example, the extensive educational
and vocational programs recommended by the monitor are
not constitutionally required in a traditional County
detention facility where inmates are typically released
in a relatively short time. Because the conduct of the
State Defendants has converted the Harris County Jail
into a major facility for convicted felons, such
programs become more important.
35

parties . . . as the court may direct . . . ." Fed. R. Civ. P.
53(a).
The State first contends that it cannot "be assessed any of
the monitors' costs as costs of court because [the] Monitors
w[ere] appointed solely to deal with issues arising from the suit
between the County and the Plaintiffs . . . ." This position is
insupportable. Perceiving the effect of the State's actions on
the jails as early as December of 1987, the district court
altered the charge of the monitors. At that time, the court
issued an order stating that "in view of the sudden and sharp
increase in the population of the Harris County Jail due in part
to the imposition of population quotas by the [TDC], the Monitors
shall review the cause(s) of the overcrowding and assess its
impact [on the jails]." Thus, by the end of 1987, the monitors
were evaluating the impact of the State's actions on the county
jails. See Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 987.
Although the monitors were specifically instructed to
determine the effect of State action as early as December of
1987, the court did not charge the State for any of the monitors'
expenses incurred before the State became a party to the lawsuit.
The State was joined as a party to the lawsuit in January of
1989, see id., and the district court's final order taxed the
State for ninety percent of the monitors' fees incurred from
February 1, 1989.
The State asserts that because it is asked to reimburse the
County for fees that the County has already paid to the monitors,
36

the State is actually being required "to pay damages to the
County in violation of the Eleventh Amendment." This is simply a
misstatement of the law. We have held that:
an assessment of costs against the state is not
prohibited by the state's Eleventh Amendment immunity.
Moneys paid for a special master are included in the
recoverable costs under Rule 54(d) of the Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure; a district court does not abuse its
discretion by taxing the losing party with the full
share of the Special Master's fee.
Gary W. v. Louisiana, 601 F.2d 240, 246 (5th Cir. 1979).
The district court determined that the actions of the
State were the primary cause of the overcrowding plaguing the
county's jails. It is this overcrowding that in large part
necessitated the monitors' presence. We find no authority, and
the State cites none, for the proposition that the district court
abused its discretion by holding the State responsible for
ninety-percent of the costs of the monitors for the time period
after the State entered the litigation.13
F.
The Termination of the Consent Decree and All Prior
Orders
On cross-appeal the plaintiff-prisoners argue that the
district court erred: (1) in sua sponte vacating the consent
decree and all other remedial orders; and (2) in sua sponte
raising the inmate population caps for the jails. Specifically,
13 Similarly, for the reasons detailed above, we reject the
State's contentions that it cannot be liable for the monitors'
fees because the "allocation of the Monitors' costs . . . runs
afoul of the allocation of responsibilities to the state and
county actors under current state law."
37

the prisoners argue that the district court's actions violated
the doctrine of the law of the case and the dictates of due
process.
1. The nature of the February 4, 1975 "Consent Judgment"
Initially, we must establish the character of the February
4, 1975 order. The County argues that the consent judgment was
not really a consent decree. This contention is without merit.
The Supreme Court has described a consent decree as
"an agreement between the parties to a case after careful
negotiation has produced agreement on [its] precise terms."
Local Number 93, Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters v. City of
Cleveland, 478 U.S. 501, 522 (1986) (internal quotation omitted).
Moreover, we have noted that "[o]nce the district court enters
the settlement as a judicial consent decree ending the lawsuit,
the settlement takes on the nature of a judgment." Ho v. Martin
Marietta Corp., 845 F.2d 545, 547 (5th Cir. 1988); see also 1B
James WM. Moore et al., Moore's Federal Practice ¶ 0.409[5], at
III-151 (2d ed. 1993) ("The judgment is not, like the settlement
agreement out of which it arose, a mere contract inter partes.
The court is not properly a recorder of contracts; it is an organ
of government constituted to make judicial decisions, and when it
has rendered a consent judgment it has made an adjudication."
(emphasis added)).
In the instant case, the parties intended to settle the
case. The consent judgment specifically states that it was
38

entered only when "the parties being desirous of effecting a just
settlement of this action, and a compromise of the claims therein
. . . ha[d] agreed to the terms of such a settlement." See
Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris County, Texas, No. 72-H-1094, slip
op. at 1 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 4., 1975). Thus, the entire settlement
clearly was entered into with the consent of the parties,
notwithstanding the fact that the court required the parties to
agree to certain provisions before the court accepted the
settlement. Moreover, the settlement, which was signed by the
attorneys for the commissioners court, the attorney for the
sheriff of Harris County, and the attorneys for the plaintiff-
prisoners, was plainly labeled as "CONSENT JUDGMENT." See
Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris County, No. 72-H-1094, slip op. at 1
(S.D. Tex. Feb. 4., 1975).
The nature of the February 4, 1975 order is also indicated
by the court's and the parties' treatment of it. The courts and
the parties (until the County's recent position) treated the
February 4, 1975 consent judgement as a final judgment in which
the district court "retained jurisdiction to issue any and all
interim orders necessary for immediate relief in this action
until such time and as the terms are complied with by the
Defendants Commissioners Court and the Sheriff." Id. (emphasis
added); see, e.g., Alberti I, 937 F.2d at 987 ("[T]he district
court retained jurisdiction to issue further interim orders.");
Alberti v. Heard, 600 F. Supp. 443, 446 (S.D. Tex. 1984) (noting
that after the consent judgment the district court "retained
39

jurisdiction" ); Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris County, 406 F.
Supp. 649, 654 (S.D. Tex. 1975) ("On February 4, 1975, counsel
signed and this Court approved, a Consent Judgment by which
defendants generally agreed to bring presently existing
facilities and operations into compliance with federal and state
standards."). Simply, we are unconvinced that over the past two
decades the parties and the courts have misapprehended the nature
of the decree.
The fact that the "Consent Judgment" was a final judgment on
the merits is not undermined by the court's issuance of numerous
orders after February 4, 1975. These orders were not
"interlocutory orders," as the County asserts; rather, those
orders were the very interim orders that the court described as
"necessary for immediate relief," and they were fully consistent
with the nature of the February 4 order as a consent judgment.
As the First Circuit noted, "The entry of a consent decree
does not `kill' a case or terminate the district court's
jurisdiction. Rather, when . . . an injunction entered pursuant
to a consent decree has ongoing effects, the issuing court
retains authority to enforce it." In re Pearson, 990 F.2d 653,
657 (1st Cir. 1993); see also Ho, 845 F.2d at 548 (noting that a
court has continuing jurisdiction over a consent decree); cf.
Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail, 112 S. Ct. 748, 754-57
(1992) (discussing the district court's orders that were issued
subsequent to a consent decree). Clearly, the February 4, 1975
order was--just as it was labeled--a consent judgment.
40

2. Modification of the Consent Judgment
Given that he February 4, 1975 order was a final judgment on
the merits, we now address the propriety of the district court's
sua sponte modification of the consent decree. Several circuits
have recently examined whether a district court may modify a
consent decree on its own initiative. See United States v. City
of Miami, 2 F.3d 1497 (11th Cir. 1993); In re Pearson, 990 F.2d
653 (1st Cir. 1993). Pearson dealt, in part, with the power of a
district court to sua sponte appoint a master "to look at
possible decree-modifying changes" in the context of a consent
decree governing the treatment of patients at a treatment center.
The First Circuit noted that a court is intimately involved in a
consent decree, "stand[ing] behind the decree, ready to interpret
and enforce its provisions. This ongoing supervisory
responsibility carries with it a certain correlative discretion."
In re Pearson, 990 F.2d at 658. This discretion, the court
reasoned, is especially important when "a consent decree calls
for judicial supervision of a government-run facility." Id.
The court also noted that, in such a case, "notwithstanding the
parties silence or inertia, the district court is not doomed to
some Sisyphean fate, bound forever to enforce and interpret a
preexisting decree without ever occasionally pausing to question
whether changing circumstances have rendered the decree
unnecessary, outmoded, or even harmful to the public interest."
Id. Given the court's power to supervise its decrees, the First
Circuit concluded that the district court acted within its
41

discretion by sua sponte appointing a special master "to
ascertain the need for alteration of its ongoing activities under
a consent decree." Id. at 659.
In City of Miami, the Eleventh Circuit adopted much of the
First Circuit's analysis. In a decision regarding a consent
decree in the employment discrimination context, the court noted
that regardless of whether a decree is entered after litigation
or by consent, "a court does not abdicate its power to revoke or
modify its mandate, if satisfied that what it has been doing has
been turned through changing circumstances into an instrument of
wrong." City of Miami, 2 F.3d at 1506 (quoting United States v.
Swift, 286 U.S. 106, 114-15 (1932)). Then, relying extensively
on Pearson, the court concluded that "[w]hen the remedy
prescribed in the consent decree has been accomplished[,] a
district court does not have to await a party's motion to
terminate a decree which requires temporary supervisory
jurisdiction of an agreed upon consent decree. . . . The
district court . . . is authorized to consider sua sponte whether
termination of the consent decree is appropriate." City of
Miami, 2 F.3d at 1506.
We agree with the reasoning of the First and Eleventh
Circuits. There is little question that the district court has
wide discretion to interpret and modify a forward-looking consent
decree such as that entered in the instant case. As the Supreme
Court noted, "`sound judicial discretion may call for the
modification of the terms of an injunctive decree if the
42

circumstances, whether law or fact, obtaining at the time of its
issuance have changed, or new ones have since arisen.'" Rufo,
112 S. Ct. at 758 (quoting System Fed'n No. 91, Railway Employes'
Dep't v. Wright, 364 U.S. 642, 647-48 (1961)). Concomitant with
that discretion is the ability for a court, regardless of the
parties' silence or inertia, to modify a decree when the court
sees that the factual circumstances or the law underlying that
decree has changed.
While a court has the power to modify a consent decree, that
power is nor unfettered. The Supreme Court recently described
the analysis for determining when a modification to a consent
decree is warranted. In Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail,
112 S. Ct. 748 (1992), the Court noted that while a consent
judgment "embodies an agreement of the parties and thus in some
respects is contractual in nature," such a judgment is still "an
agreement that the parties desire and expect will be reflected in
and be enforceable as a judicial decree that is subject to the
rules generally applicable to other judgments and decrees."
Rufo, 112 S. Ct. at 757. Thus, the Court reasoned that
modification of a consent decree is governed by the same
standards that govern modifications of judgments as set forth in
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b).14 Id. at 758.
14 Rule 60(b) provides, in part:
On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court
may relieve a party or a party's legal representative
from a final judgement, order, or proceeding for the
following reasons . . . (5) the judgment has been
satisfied, released, or discharged, or a prior judgment
43

Additionally, the Court clarified the standard that district
courts should use when considering whether a modification of a
consent decree is warranted. The Court rejected the notion that
only a showing of a "`grievous wrong evoked by unforeseen
conditions'" mandates a change in a consent decree. Id. at 757-
58 (quoting Swift, 286 U.S. at 119); see also City of Miami, 2
F.3d at 1503-04 (noting the Supreme Court's rejection of the
"grievous wrong" standard). The Court observed that:
[t]he upsurge in institutional reform litigation since
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483 (1954), has
made the ability of a district court to modify a decree
in response to changed circumstances all the more
important. Because such decrees often remain in effect
for extended periods of time, the likelihood of
significant changes occurring during the life of the
decree is increased.
Rufo, 112 S. Ct. at 758. The Court also noted that "[t]he
experience of the district and circuit courts in implementing and
modifying such decrees has demonstrated that a flexible approach
is often essential to achieving the goals of reform litigation."
Id. Accordingly, the Court described the flexible standard to be
used in determining whether an institutional reform consent
decree should be modified, stating that such modification should
occur when it is established that "a significant change in
circumstances warrants revision of the decree." Id. at 760;
upon which it was based has been reversed or otherwise
vacated, or it is no longer equitable that the judgment
should have prospective application; or (6) any other
reason justifying relief from the operation of the
judgment. . . .
Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b).
44

accord City of Miami, 2 F.3d at 1503-04. Additionally, when the
modification relates to the vindication of a constitutional
right, the modification must be "suitably tailored to the changed
circumstance." Rufo, 112 S. Ct. at 760; see also id. at 760 n.7,
765.
In the instant case, the monitors entered proposed findings
of fact on June 8, 1992, and in the September 29, 1992 final
order, the district court adopted the monitors' findings of fact
as findings of the court after considering the parties'
objections. The monitors found that the County had complied with
many of the requirements set out in the consent judgment and in
other subsequent orders. The County and the State entered
objections to the monitors' findings of fact, but, notably, the
plaintiff-prisoners did not file objections to the monitors'
findings. In the memorandum opinion accompanying its final
order, the district court found that "certain issues covered in
the consent decree are now neither necessary nor desirable."
Consequently, the court sua sponte "modif[ied] the consent decree
to eliminate all issues and requirements," except for those
regarding staffing, classification, transportation, medical
treatment, ventilation of the old San Jacinto Jail, kitchen
facilities, and provision of mattresses.15
15 Specifically, the district court noted that:
The County defendants shall at their own expense .
. .:
(a) Submit . . . a plan that will either bring the
county Defendants into full compliance with the 9-
45

The monitors' findings of fact, which were adopted by the
district court, set forth in great detail the changed
circumstances of the prison surrounding almost every aspect of
the 1975 consent decree and the other subsequent orders. In
short, the monitors determined that the County was in compliance
with almost all of the provisions of the consent decree except
for those that the district court ordered the County to remedy.
The district court considered the monitors' findings of fact that
9-7 provision of the Consent decree or provide,
through some alternative plan, sufficient staff to
meet the security, the classification,
transportation, and other needs of the County's
detention facilities, such plan to include funding
arrangements and a schedule for implementation;
and
(b) Submit . . . a comprehensive written medical
plan; and
(c) Submit . . . a written plan for the immediate
repair of the Central Jail ventilation system;
and; and
(d) Submit . . . evidence that the County
Defendants have an adequate number of mattresses
such that each inmate is provided with a mattress;
. . . and
(e) Submit . . . evidence that the kitchen
equipment deficiencies described in the findings
of fact have been remedied.
We understand, and the parties do not dispute, that
this order keeps many of the provisions intact. Thus,
the County is, inter alia, still obligated: to comply
with constitutional and state standards for maintaining
the prisons; to comply with prior staffing orders; to
provide adequate medical and dental care (including
proper screening and housing of persons suspected of
insanity or drug and alcohol abusers in withdrawal); to
separate pre-trial detainees; and to comply with the
rounding requirements.
46

detailed the changed circumstances as well as the State's and the
County's objections to those findings, and the court implicitly
determined that the changes in the jails over the seventeen years
of the court's supervision warranted modification of its orders.
Moreover, the court's modifications were suitably tailored to the
changed circumstances in the jails and did not violate the basic
purpose of the decree--ensuring that the County's jails are
"maintain[ed] and operat[ed] in a manner consonant with the
United State Constitution." Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris County,
Texas, No. 72-H-1094, slip op. at 1 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 4., 1975);
cf. Rufo, 112 S. Ct. at 760 (noting that in a modification, "the
focus should be on whether the proposed modification is tailored
to resolve the problems created by the change in circumstances").
Accordingly, we find no error in most of the court's
modifications to the consent decree.
There are, however, several modifications to the consent
judgment and orders which deserve special attention. First, the
district court apparently vacated the requirement set out in the
1975 order that "[i]nmates shall be provided with a clean change
of clothing every day." Alberti v. Sheriff of Harris County, 406
F. Supp. 649, 677 (S.D. Tex. 1975). Although the monitors did
not find that the County was in compliance with this order, they
did note that some of the inmates received clean clothes daily,
and that all inmates received clean clothes at least three times
a week. Further, the monitors commented that, in their
consideration of all of the conditions of the jails (including
47

the burgeoning population caused by the State's refusal to accept
transfer-ready felons), the County's laundry practices were not
"unreasonable." Considering the monitors' and the district
court's intimate association and knowledge of the jails'
conditions, we find that the district court did not err in
finding that the changed conditions of the jail warranted
modification of the laundry requirement. See Rufo, 112 S. Ct. at
760 ("Modification of a consent decree may be warranted when
changed factual circumstances make compliance with the decree
substantially more onerous[,] . . . or when a decree proves to be
unworkable because of unforeseen circumstances.").
Second and third are the portions of the December 1975 order
requiring that "weekenders"--those inmates serving time only on
the weekends--are not to stay overnight and mandating that the
County to serve warrants on individuals who do not "appear as
directed after having been released on recognizance." Alberti v.
Sheriff of Harris County, Texas, 406 F. Supp. 649, 675-76 (S.D.
Tex. 1975). We find that the district court did not err in its
modifications of these provisions. In October of 1987, the
monitors reported that the County was in substantial compliance
with both of these requirements, and the monitors did not revisit
these areas in its June 1992 report. The prisoner-plaintiffs
half-heartedly argue that the district court erred in modifying
its order, contending that if given "the opportunity to
investigate compliance and such confirmed their impression held
at the time, plaintiffs probably would have agreed that
48

modification or vacation would have been appropriate." Even
assuming that these provisions, which were not part of the
consent judgment, must meet the Rufo standards for modification,
we find no error in the district court's actions. Based on its
experience with the jails and the monitors' reports, the district
court implicitly found that the circumstances no longer required
that these portions of the order remain in effect. Notably, the
plaintiff-prisoners cite no authority for the idea that they must
be allowed the opportunity to determine whether circumstances
have actually changed, and in fact do not truly dispute that
changed circumstances warrant modification or vacation. Given
the district court's power to alter its orders and consent
decrees in appropriate circumstances, and the undisputed notion
that the circumstances have changed, we reject the notion that
the district court erred in modifying its orders regarding
"weekenders" and service of warrants on individuals who do not
appear after release on recognizance.
There is, however, one major modification to the consent
decree for which there is insufficient evidence of changed
circumstances.16 The district court modified the constitutional
16 There is also one modification to the consent decree
that lacks sufficient evidence of changed circumstances. The
district court found that copies of jail rules and regulations
should be provided to prisoners in both English and Spanish. On
that issue, the monitors noted that:
[i]n their last inspection of the Central Jail, the
Monitors found that the [county] defendants had run out
of both English and Spanish-language inmate handbooks.
. . . Even when handbooks are available they are not
always distributed to new inmates, and, on several
49

capacity of three of the county jails. As we noted above, while
the district court, particularly when it is so intimately
involved in institutional reform litigation, may alter a consent
decree upon a showing of a significant change of circumstance,
before the such a modification is made, there must be such a
showing. See Rufo, 112 S. Ct. at 760. In regard to the district
court's findings that the constitutional capacity of the jails is
112.5% of design capacity, there is nothing in the monitors'
report or in the record to indicate that such a modification in
the cap for all of the jails is warranted by a substantial change
in circumstances. For one of the facilities, the new San Jacinto
jail, the monitors recommended, in findings and recommendations
entered on June 2, 1992, that the cap be raised to 112.5% of
design capacity. The district court reviewed the monitors'
findings and recommendations and the parties' response to those
findings and recommendations, and found as "both a finding of
fact and a conclusion of law that the constitutional capacity of
the [new San Jacinto jail]" was 112.5% of design capacity.17
occasions, the [M]onitors have observed new arrivals
being taken to the floors without having received one.
. . .
The [county] defendants are not in compliance with the
Consent Decree relative to the distribution of
bilingual rule books and the posting of rules.
Because there is nothing in the record to indicate a substantial
change in circumstances that would warrant a change in this
portion of the consent decree, we reverse the final order to the
extent that the final order vacated this portion of the consent
decree.
17 The parties do not appeal this determination.
50

There are no findings by the monitors of changed circumstances in
the other county facilities. On the contrary, the monitors'
report is filled with references to the problems caused by
overcrowding, and does not indicate that the County can
constitutionally house additional prisoners. The district court
is not wedded to the monitors' findings, but without something to
indicate that there has been a substantial change in
circumstances or in the applicable law (an indication not given
in the findings of fact adopted by the court), the district court
may not alter the caps. Of course, this does not mean that the
district court is precluded from increasing or decreasing the
population caps as circumstances warrant. Instead, we merely
note that before such modification is made, the district court
must find a substantial change in circumstances.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district
court, except to the extent that the "final order" modifies the
district court's prior orders regarding the population caps of
the old San Jacinto jail, the Humble detention center and the
Franklin Jail, and the provision of jail rules, is AFFIRMED. As
to the district court's modifications in those two areas, we
REVERSE. Costs are to be borne by the State.
51

Ask a Lawyer

 

 

FREE CASE REVIEW BY A LOCAL LAWYER!
|
|
\/

Personal Injury Law
Accidents
Dog Bite
Legal Malpractice
Medical Malpractice
Other Professional Malpractice
Libel & Slander
Product Liability
Slip & Fall
Torts
Workplace Injury
Wrongful Death
Auto Accidents
Motorcycle Accidents
Bankruptcy
Chapter 7
Chapter 11
Business/Corporate Law
Business Formation
Business Planning
Franchising
Tax Planning
Traffic/Transportation Law
Moving Violations
Routine Infractions
Lemon Law
Manufacturer Defects
Securities Law
Securities Litigation
Shareholder Disputes
Insider Trading
Foreign Investment
Wills & Estates

Wills

Trusts
Estate Planning
Family Law
Adoption
Child Abuse
Child Custody
Child Support
Divorce - Contested
Divorce - Uncontested
Juvenile Criminal Law
Premarital Agreements
Spousal Support
Labor/Employment Law
Wrongful Termination
Sexual Harassment
Age Discrimination
Workers Compensation
Real Estate/Property Law
Condemnation / Eminent Domain
Broker Litigation
Title Litigation
Landlord/Tenant
Buying/Selling/Leasing
Foreclosures
Residential Real Estate Litigation
Commercial Real Estate Litigation
Construction Litigation
Banking/Finance Law
Debtor/Creditor
Consumer Protection
Venture Capital
Constitutional Law
Discrimination
Police Misconduct
Sexual Harassment
Privacy Rights
Criminal Law
DUI / DWI / DOI
Assault & Battery
White Collar Crimes
Sex Crimes
Homocide Defense
Civil Law
Insurance Bad Faith
Civil Rights
Contracts
Estate Planning, Wills & Trusts
Litigation/Trials
Social Security
Worker's Compensation
Probate, Will & Trusts
Intellectual Property
Patents
Trademarks
Copyrights
Tax Law
IRS Disputes
Filing/Compliance
Tax Planning
Tax Power of Attorney
Health Care Law
Disability
Elder Law
Government/Specialty Law
Immigration
Education
Trade Law
Agricultural/Environmental
IRS Issues

 


Google
Search Rominger Legal


 


LEGAL HELP FORUM - Potential Client ? Post your question.
LEGAL HELP FORUM - Attorney? Answer Questions, Maybe get hired!

NOW - CASE LAW - All 50 States - Federal Courts - Try it for FREE


 


Get Legal News
Enter your Email


Preview

We now have full text legal news
drawn from all the major sources!!

ADD A SEARCH ENGINE TO YOUR PAGE!!!

TELL A FRIEND ABOUT ROMINGER LEGAL

Ask Your Legal Question Now.

Pennsylvania Lawyer Help Board

Find An Attorney

TERMS OF USE - DISCLAIMER - LINKING POLICIES

Created and Developed by
Rominger Legal
Copyright 1997 - 2010.

A Division of
ROMINGER, INC.