MYRON H. THOMPSON, District Judge.
The individual plaintiffs in Phase 2A of this lawsuit are prisoners with serious mental illnesses in the custody of the defendants, the Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC or the Department) and its Commissioner, Jefferson Dunn. The Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program (ADAP), Alabama's protection and advocacy organization for people with disabilities, is also a plaintiff.
In this phase, the plaintiffs assert the claim that the Department is in violation of two statutes: Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 12131 et seq., and § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, codified at 29 U.S.C. § 794.
This case has twice been bifurcated for administrative convenience of the court and the parties. In September 2015, this case was divided into two distinct phases, with the first phase, Phase 1, involving ADA claims unrelated to mental health and the second phase involving all other claims. Then, in September 2016, Phase 2 of this case was further bifurcated into Phase 2A, encompassing an Eighth Amendment claim related to the treatment of prisoners with mental illness, involuntary-medication claims, and an ADA claim of prisoners with only mental disabilities; and Phase 2B, involving Eighth Amendment claims related to medical and dental care.
The parties reached a settlement of the plaintiffs' Phase 1 ADA claims for prisoners with physical disabilities. After an exhaustive approval process, the court approved the Phase 1 settlement agreement,
During the Phase 2A trial, the parties, with the able assistance of United States Magistrate Judge John E. Ott of the United States District Court for Northern District of Alabama, reached a settlement of the remainder of the plaintiffs' ADA claims: the Phase 2A ADA claim now before the court concerning prisoners with only mental disabilities. After a hearing, the court preliminarily approved the proposed Phase 2A ADA settlement agreement. In its preliminary approval order, the court provisionally certified a settlement class and established a procedure for providing putative class members with notice of the agreement and an opportunity to object and submit comments on the agreement's fairness.
After receiving written comments from putative class members, the court held three days of fairness hearings. During the first two days, the court heard from a representative group of putative class members—selected by the court with the input of the parties—who had submitted comments on the proposed agreement. During the third day, counsel for the parties responded to various comments made by various witnesses and other questions raised by the court. Additionally, the court considered affidavits, submitted by ADAP, from experts in the mental-health field opining on the adequacy, fairness, and reasonableness of the agreement.
After the hearing, the court entered an order granting final approval of the proposed phase 2A ADA settlement agreement and granted the parties' request that their settlement agreement be entered as a consent decree.
Broadly speaking, the agreement does two things: (1) it applies the provisions of the Phase 1 ADA settlement agreement to prisoners with only mental disabilities; and (2) it requires the Department to administer an adaptive-behavior and life-skills course for mentally disabled inmates.
The settlement agreement applies the substantive provisions of the Phase 1 ADA settlement to prisoners with only mental disabilities. These include, most relevantly, requirements that the Department: conduct a self-assessment to identify necessary changes to policies concerning disabled prisoners' ability to communicate and access programs, and create a transition plan, listing changes to be made and deadlines for those changes; provide reasonable accommodations for disabled prisoners to access the programs offered by the Department; make individualized assessments of disabled prisoners housed in residential treatment and stabilization units to ensure that they have reasonable access to the Department's programs; screen, test, track, and periodically re-evaluate prisoners for disabilities or changes in disability status; avoid increasing a prisoner's security level solely based upon a disability; implement a procedure for receiving and processing prisoners' requests for accommodations and appeals of denials, including specified forms, repositories to submit forms, and assistance for prisoners in completing and submitting forms; appoint an ADA coordinator for each of its facilities, as well as a state-wide coordinator, to handle ADA requests, process appeals, produce monthly reports, and assess compliance; provide initial and annual ADA training to correctional officers and enhanced training to ADA coordinators; create a quality-assurance program that includes audits of the identification of disabled prisoners and of accommodation requests and appeals.
In addition to the incorporation of these Phase 1 provisions, the parties agree to four closely related "Substantive Provisions," which provide for the creation and administration of an adaptive-behavior and life-skills course for the settlement class. More specifically, these provisions include:
In addition to these substantive provisions, the settlement agreement contains the following implementation provisions, which were also included in the Phase 1 consent decree:
Additionally, as in Phase 1, the parties agreed that no part of the agreement applies to death-row prisoners. The court previously dismissed "any claim initially brought in this action or remaining in Phase 2A or 2B of this action that ADOC fails to identify, track, and accommodate the intellectual disabilities of death row inmates." Judgment Dismissing Claims Related to Prisoners on Death Row (doc. no. 925). Accordingly, the parties simply reiterate their intent to "remove from the resolution of the claims Plaintiffs have asserted under the Acts any claim concerning the identification, tracking and accommodation of any intellectual disability of any current or future Inmate in the custody of ADOC under a death sentence. . . ." Proposed Phase 2A ADA Settlement Agreement (doc. no. 1100) at 12.
Finally, the agreement is predicated on—and defendants consent to—the certification of a settlement class consisting of "any current or future inmate in the physical custody of ADOC who has a disability as defined in 42 U.S.C. § 12102 and 29 U.S.C. § 705(9)(B) relating to or arising from mental disease, illness, or defect."
Judicial policy favors the settlement of class actions.
In approving this agreement, the court had to make four determinations. First, because the agreement was predicated upon class certification, the court had to determine whether the requirements of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 23(a) and (b) were met. Second, the court assessed whether Rule 23(e)'s procedural and substantive protections, ensuring that the settlement class was given notice and an opportunity to comment on or object to the agreement, were satisfied. Third, because the proposed settlement included an award of attorneys' fees to plaintiffs' counsel, Rule 23(h) required the court to find that such a fee award is "reasonable." Finally, the court evaluated the proposed settlement's compliance with the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), 18 U.S.C. § 3626, which establishes certain requirements for affording prospective relief in cases involving prisons, including when that prospective relief takes the form of a court-enforceable settlement.
In its final approval order, the court certified a class of prisoners to which the agreement applies. Class certification is appropriate under Rule 23(a) if the putative class representatives can show that "(1) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable; (2) there are questions of law or fact common to the class; (3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class; and (4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a).
In addition to the Rule 23(a) requirements, a class action is maintainable only if it falls within one of three categories of cases set forth in Rule 23(b). Here, the plaintiffs sought certification under Rule 23(b)(2). To qualify under 23(b)(2), a plaintiff must show that "the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds that generally apply to the class, so that final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting the class as a whole." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2). This requirement applies whether or not the parties contest settlement approval.
Previously, the court provisionally certified a settlement class defined to include "any current or future inmate in the physical custody of the Alabama Department of Corrections who has a disability as defined in 42 U.S.C. § 12012 and 29 U.S.C. § 705(9)(B) relating to or arising from mental disease, illness, or defect." Phase 2A Preliminary Settlement Approval Order (doc. no. 1205) at 2. Having considered the parties' joint statement in support of the proposed settlement, the court concluded that final class certification was appropriate for purposes of this settlement.
The court notes that, in conducting this analysis, it had the benefit of briefing on a contested motion for class certification filed prior to settlement of the Phase 2A ADA claim.
"[A]ny analysis of class certification must begin with the issue of standing"; only if the court finds that the named plaintiffs have standing may it consider whether they have "representative capacity, as defined by Rule 23(a), to assert the rights of others."
The individual named plaintiffs clearly have standing to assert the ADA claim brought in Phase 2A and now resolved in the instant agreement.
In addition, the plaintiffs' Phase 2A ADA claim is not moot. Mootness, like standing, is a threshold question of justiciability.
Before agreeing to settle, the Department had argued that certification of a Phase 2A ADA settlement should not be granted because the Phase 2A ADA claim was moot; they contended that the Phase 1 ADA settlement covered all potential ADA claims for all prisoners, including those with solely mental disabilities—who are the focus of the Phase 2A agreement. However, the Phase 1 consent decree expressly excludes inmates whose disabilities "relate solely to or aris[ing] solely from mental disease, illness, or defect." Phase 1 ADA Consent Decree (doc. no. 728) at 5. Because prisoners with solely mental disabilities were expressly excluded from the Phase 1 consent decree—and nothing has changed with respect to the allegations of these prisoners—the claim of the proposed settlement class presented a live case or controversy against the Department, and their claim was not moot.
In approving the Phase 2A settlement agreement, the court also found that the requirements of Rule 23(a) and Rule 23(b)(2) have been satisfied and that class certification was appropriate.
Rule 23(a)(1)'s numerosity requirement is satisfied if joinder—the usual method of combining similar claims—would be impractical.
In this case, the plaintiffs submitted evidence that, as of February 2016, there were 3,416 prisoners on the mental-health caseload.
Based on the likely number of class members and the fluidity of the class, the court finds that joinder would be impractical and that the plaintiff class is sufficiently numerous to warrant class certification.
Rule 23(a)(2) requires plaintiffs seeking class certification to show that "there are questions of law or fact common to the class." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(2). There is no requirement "that all . . . question[s] of law or fact raised by the dispute be common."
In their pre-settlement opposition to plaintiffs' motion for class certification, defendants had argued that commonality was lacking because the putative class was "expansive," encompassing prisoners with a wide range of disabilities, and that plaintiffs sought to "challenge the entire panoply of possible ADA violations." Defendants Opposition to Plaintiffs' Motion for Class Certification (doc. no. 476) at 23. They argued that the plaintiffs' claim was "not a single, homogenous claim," except at "the highest level of abstraction," but rather "many different ADA claims touching on many different ADA requirements that Plaintiffs[] ha[d] lumped together for purposes of this lawsuit."
However, as discussed at length in the Phase 1 settlement approval opinion, defendants' former objections on this basis were misguided.
Rule 23(a)(3) requires the named plaintiffs' claim to be "typical of the claims or defenses of the class" as a whole. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a). While the commonality and typicality inquiries both "focus on whether a sufficient nexus exists between the legal claims of the named class representatives and those of individual class members[,] . . . typicality refers to the individual characteristics of the named plaintiff in relation to the class."
In this case, the named plaintiffs' claim satisfied the typicality requirement because it was identical to those of the settlement class as a whole: namely, that the Department employed methods of administration which resulted in discrimination against prisoners with mental disabilities. Accordingly, the typicality requirement was met.
Rule 23(a)(4) requires the court to find that the "representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class." This analysis "encompasses two separate inquiries: (1) whether any substantial conflicts of interest exist between the representatives and the class; and (2) whether the representatives will adequately prosecute the action."
In this case, there was no conflict of interest between the named representatives and the class as a whole. Most of the reforms the settlement requires facially benefit all mentally disabled prisoners. For example, requiring ADOC to establish an ADA grievance procedure should benefit all prisoners with mental disabilities in seeking and receiving accommodations.
In addition, the court was convinced that the named representatives and their counsel would adequately represent the settlement class. "The vigor with which [] named representative[s] and [their] counsel will pursue the class claim[] is assessed by considering the competency of counsel and the rationale for not pursuing further litigation."
A class action is maintainable under Rule 23(b)(2) if (1) the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the class and (2) final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting the class as a whole.
As previously explained in the commonality discussion, liability in this case is premised on the notion that ADOC's policies and procedures result in systematic discrimination against the members of the settlement class because of their mental disabilities. ADOC's actions—or refusals to act—thus apply generally to the class. In addition, injunctive relief in the form of a consent decree is appropriate respecting the class as a whole. Therefore, class certification pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2) is appropriate.
Under Rule 23(e), the settlement of a class action requires court approval. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(A). The court may approve a settlement that is binding on a class only if it determines that the settlement is "fair, adequate, and reasonable and is not the product of collusion between the parties."
Rule 23(e) requires that notice to the class be provided "in a reasonable manner to all class members who would be bound by the proposal." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e). "The court must ensure that all class members are informed of the agreement[] and have the opportunity to voice their objections."
The court's order preliminarily approving the agreement contained specific procedures for the Department to give notice of the proposed agreement to members of the provisionally certified class and to distribute an approved notice and comment form. The notice form included a description of the case, a definition of the class, a list of the provisions of the settlement agreement, an indication of its preclusive effects, and notice of the agreement concerning attorneys' fees. Additionally, the notice included directions for obtaining a copy of the agreement, contact information for class counsel, along with an invitation for prisoners to inquire about the settlement, an announcement of the fairness hearing, and instructions for prisoners to exercise their right to comment about or object to the settlement. The comment form allowed respondents to select from a list of general topics at issue, and to indicate whether they wished to testify at a fairness hearing.
The notice form was posted in each dormitory and library within the prison system, and copies of the comment form were made available in the libraries and shift commanders' offices. Copies of the agreement were made available for viewing in the law library or another location within each facility and were provided upon request to any prisoner lacking access to that location. Prisoners who were not housed in dormitories were hand-delivered a copy of the notice and comment forms and a pre-stamped envelope. Weekly oral announcements also notified all prisoners of the settlement and opportunity to comment or object.
The notice and comment forms and copies of the proposed agreement were made available in English, Spanish, Braille, and in large print. Upon request, prisoners were to receive assistance in reading the documents and in writing comments.
During the comment period, a weekly announcement was made in every housing unit in each ADOC facility, informing inmates about the proposed settlement and reminding inmates of the date by which any comments were required to be filed.
Secure and clearly labeled comment boxes were placed in each facility for prisoners to submit comment forms, and the Department's staff was required to collect comment forms from prisoners lacking the freedom of movement within their facilities. The comment boxes and forms were transmitted to the Department's general counsel, and a representative of the clerk of court met with the parties to open the comment boxes. Prisoners were also given the option to submit comments by mail directly to the clerk of court.
Notice of the proposed agreement was posted by March 6, 2017, and prisoners were given until April 5, 2017, to submit comments. Comments received by mail after this date were also docketed. More than one hundred prisoners submitted comments or objections to the proposed agreement. While far fewer prisoners submitted comments during the Phase 2A ADA settlement comment period than during the Phase 1 ADA settlement comment period,
One matter concerning the submission of comments warrants additional discussion. On May 12, 2017, the court received a letter apparently signed by eight prisoners housed at Donaldson Correctional Facility's segregation unit. The signatory prisoners requested an update on the status of Phase 2 of this lawsuit. Of particular concern were a couple of statements suggesting that prisoners in segregation at Donaldson Correctional Facility had not received any notice, whatsoever, of the status of this lawsuit.
The court subsequently ordered the parties to investigate the allegations stated in the letter, and to file a joint report of their findings. The parties filed a joint report of their findings and reported that the prisoners had received sufficient notice. In the report, counsel for the parties contended that many of the prisoners who signed the letter either refused to view the settlement or provide comments on it when give an opportunity to do so. The Department was required to maintain records of its distribution of the notice of settlement to prisoners in segregation units. The parties attached records to their joint report showing the prisoners' names, identification and bed numbers, the date, a signature of a witness correctional officer, and a box marked "Received paperwork, refused to sign" for each of the signatory prisoners of the letter. Additionally, because the court received four comments from prisoners at Donaldson, that facility must have complied to some extent with the notice and comment procedure provided for in the court's preliminary settlement approval order.
Finally, during their investigation into allegations contained in the letter, ADAP was given the opportunity to interview each of the signatory prisoners to the letter. During the fairness hearing, ADAP's counsel reported that they were satisfied that these prisoners had in fact been given an opportunity to view and provide comments on the settlement agreement. And, moreover, any complaints they had were irrelevant to the agreement. For each of these reasons, the court is satisfied that the prisoners within ADOC were given adequate notice and an opportunity to comment on the proposed agreement.
Prisoners who submitted comments to the court raised a range of issues, many of which were relevant; some of which were not.
Of the directly pertinent comments and testimony, the vast majority expressed discontent with existing prison conditions, rather than with the adequacy or fairness of the agreement or of any specific provision of it. Indeed, many expressed support for the agreement.
As mentioned earlier, the agreement provides that the adaptive-behavior and life-skills training program for prisoners with mental disabilities must include a variety of courses; be completed within a six-month period, unless an extension is otherwise necessary; be taught by trained individuals; be small enough to ensure "meaningful participation by affected inmates"; and be repeated periodically to ensure competence in program courses.
Finally, those prisoners who would most benefit from the adaptive-behavior and life-skills training program should have access to it under the terms of the agreement. The agreement provides that the following categories of prisoners will be enrolled in the program: prisoners diagnosed with an intellectual disability; prisoners who meet the IQ and adaptive-behavior requirements defined under the Phase 1 consent decree, but who do not meet the "age of onset" requirement of the DSM-V; and prisoners who ADOC determines would "substantially benefit" from the program.
Other prisoners commented that the identification process should include training for Department staff to recognize and respond to prisoners with disabilities. These prisoners complained that their disabilities are frequently ignored by Department staff. They further complained that many disabled prisoners had received disciplinaries for their reactions to certain stimuli—reactions which resulted from their mental disabilities. The agreement addresses these complaints to the extent that it requires ADOC officials and staff to be trained to recognize prisoners with disabilities and to provide accommodations where appropriate. Specifically, the agreement provides—by incorporation of the Phase 1 consent decree—that "ADOC will provide initial and periodic training concerning the provisions and requirements of the ADA to both security staff . . . and ADA Coordinators." Phase 1 ADA Consent Decree (doc. no. 728) at 55-57.
Some prisoners commented that the Department should consider a prisoner's mental-health history, including any mental-health records, in making a determination about whether a prisoner has a mental-health disability. The agreement covers this concern, because it requires the Department to consider any previously identified disabilities when the Department screens prisoners for disabilities.
Some commenters suggested that prisoners should be identified not only as they enter the prison system, but also after exposure to the prison system, to determine whether such exposure has had any effect on their mental health or disability status. The agreement addresses these concerns as well. It states that "ADOC will continue to periodically screen, evaluate and test Inmates for disabilities while Inmates are in ADOC's custody to ensure that any change in an Inmate's disability status is identified, treated and accommodated."
The agreement establishes a grievance procedure for each ADOC facility. "Effective February 1, 2017, any Inmate who has, or believes he or she has, a disability as defined by the Acts may make Requests for Accommodations and pursue Appeals of decisions concerning Requests for Accommodations." Proposed Phase 2A ADA Settlement Agreement (doc. no. 1100) at 46.
The agreement further provides for the appointment of an ADA coordinator who is required to "receive and respond to all ADA Request Forms for that facility or transmit ADA appeals to the Statewide ADA Coordinator." Phase 1 ADA Consent Decree (doc. no. 728) at 48-54.
Finally, the agreement contains strict deadlines for responding to prisoner requests for accommodations. The agreement states: "Facility ADA Coordinators will, upon receipt [of a request for accommodation or other ADA form], immediately review all ADA requests to determine whether a request concerns an urgent situation. In the event of an urgent situation, the Facility ADA Coordinator will respond to the request in writing and provide, if required, the requested accommodation within three (3) days of receipt of the request, not including weekends and holidays. In all other situations, the Facility ADA Coordinator will respond to the request in writing within ten (10) days of receipt of the request, not including weekends or holidays."
In some ways, these concerns are addressed by added procedures that identify prisoners with disabilities, as previously discussed, and by those provisions that require the Department to accommodate prisoners with disabilities. Indeed, the agreement contains "new procedures concerning the identification of inmates with disabilities in order to assign inmates with disabilities to facilities that are appropriate for their individualized needs." Phase 1 ADA Consent Decree (doc. no. 728) at 19. The agreement also has provisions that prevent the denial of access to facilities or programs because of a person's disability. If the Department restricts access to programming for prisoners housed in the residential treatment units or stabilization units of a particular prison, "ADOC must conduct an individualized assessment as to why such programming would pose a risk to the Inmate or others, or why the Inmate's current mental health status precludes being able to meaningfully participate in the [adaptive-behavior and life-skills training] Program."
Next, four prisoners commented on the inability of prisoners to ensure that the Department will comply with all of the provisions in the agreement. The agreement, however, provides a monitoring mechanism to ensure that the Department is in compliance. The parties have agreed to allow ADAP to serve as an independent monitor to ensure that the Department complies with the settlement terms.
Finally, one prisoner objected specifically to the attorneys' fee provision of the agreement. The prisoner complained that it is not fair for the attorneys to receive significant compensation for their services but for the prisoners, who have suffered disability discrimination, to receive nothing by way of monetary compensation. Prisoners voiced this concern during the Phase 1 settlement approval process as well. There, the court explained that, although the court understands that commenters alleging past harms may feel that they are entitled to damages, the plaintiffs here have sought only injunctive relief for their claims. Moreover, an unnamed class member cannot be precluded from bringing a claim for damages stemming from the same conditions challenged in the class action if the class representatives sought only injunctive or declaratory relief.
The court considered appointing a guardian ad litem to advocate for the interests of the unnamed class members who, due to cognitive and communication-related disabilities, are incapable of understanding the terms of the settlement agreement or of submitting intelligible comments on them. However, as it did during the Phase 1 settlement approval process, the court found that ADAP, which has a federal mandate to advocate for and ensure the protection of disabled Alabamians, was best situated to voice the concerns of these class members. The court therefore instructed ADAP to file a brief discussing whether the settlement agreement was a fair, adequate, and reasonable resolution of the clams of class members with mental disabilities. The court further requested ADAP to supplement its brief with one or more expert opinions addressing the fairness of the agreement to ensure that the basis of ADAP's opinions were sufficiently reliable.
ADAP filed a brief in support of the agreement. In it, ADAP submitted the opinions of two experts in the mental-health field: Dr. Robert Babcock, a licensed psychologist and Board Certified Behavioral Analysis; and Dr. Timothy Stone, a licensed psychiatrist and Medical Director of the Chilton-Shelby Mental Health Center.
In addition to considering the views of class members, the court considered the opinion of class counsel.
Class counsel contended that the proposed agreement was a fair, adequate, and reasonable resolution of plaintiffs' Phase 2A ADA claim. Counsel submitted that the "Settlement Agreement is the product of arm's-length, serious, informed and non-collusive negotiations between knowledgeable counsel who have vigorously prosecuted and defended this litigation." Joint Motion for Preliminary Approval (doc. no. 1175) at 2. Moreover, counsel pointed out that the terms of this agreement are similar (indeed, they are to a large extent identical) to the terms of the Phase 1 consent decree that this court earlier approved and that the relief contemplated by the agreement is extensive.
Before the fairness hearing, however, the court requested supplemental briefing on whether the processes established in the agreement for seeking accommodations or appealing denials of requests for accommodations are meaningfully available to prisoners with mental disabilities. The parties filed a joint supplemental brief with regard to this question.
In their brief, the parties state that the joint duties of ADOC (with its identification, referral, and reporting duties) and ADAP (with its accounting and oversight duties) create a system of shared responsibility over prisoners with mental disabilities to ensure that they have meaningful access to the benefits of the agreement. The agreement provides mechanisms for ADOC to identify prisoners with mental disabilities, including by providing additional training to ADOC employees. The agreement further provides that ADAP will have reasonable access to "facilities, documents, staff, procedures, logs, records, inmates, and other similar informational sources in order to ensure [] compliance." Phase 1 ADA Consent Decree (doc. no. 728) at 69. If ADAP finds ADOC is not in substantial compliance with the agreement, then ADAP may provide recommendations for bringing ADOC into compliance with the terms of the Phase 1 consent decree or the agreement.
Upon consideration of the comments and objections from class members, as well as the views of ADAP, independent experts, and class counsel, the court found that none of the comments seriously called into question the fairness, adequacy, or reasonableness of the agreement.
Based on the evidence and argument presented by the parties and class members, the court determined that the Phase 2A ADA settlement is fair, adequate, and reasonable.
The substantive provisions of the agreement represent a highly favorable result for the plaintiff class. Plaintiffs challenged the Department's treatment of disabled prisoners at a systemic level. They argued that the Department's policies and procedures were grossly inadequate to ensure compliance with the ADA and that, because of these inadequate policies and procedures, prisoners were being discriminated against on the basis of disability.
The Phase 2A ADA agreement, in conjunction with the Phase 1 agreement, essentially gives the class all of the ADA remedies plaintiffs sought at the outset of this litigation. Notably, even if plaintiffs had proceeded to and prevailed at trial on their Phase 2A ADA claim, the parties would have still been confronted with the task of fashioning a remedial plan. Any such plan would likely have closely resembled that contained in the Phase 2A ADA settlement agreement with which the court was presented. Moreover, because systemic changes are involved (for example, the creation and implementation of a new computer system, and assessment and training of tens of thousands of people), it would not have been feasible to order significantly more rapid compliance than is contemplated in the agreement. If anything, settlement means that change will come more quickly.
During and shortly following the preliminary approval hearing, the court expressed significant concerns regarding two particular aspects of the settlement agreement: first, whether the parties intended to incorporate any of the stipulations the parties entered into during the Phase 1 settlement approval process into the Phase 2A ADA settlement agreement; and, second, whether the agreement represented a settlement of all potential current and future claims that prisoners could bring under the ADA.
The first question the court had was whether, and if so which, stipulations entered into during the Phase 1 ADA settlement approval process were meant to be incorporated into the Phase 2A ADA settlement agreement. The parties entered into a number of stipulations during the Phase 1 settlement approval process, including those found in documents numbers 560, 563, 575, 576, 638, 696, 709, and 719. Accordingly, during the preliminary approval hearing, the court asked the parties whether they intended to incorporate all or some of these stipulations into the agreement.
The parties filed a joint notice with the court, stating that all but one stipulation, document number 709, from the Phase 1 consent decree were intended to be incorporated into the Phase 2A ADA settlement agreement. The parties stipulate that the "`Phase 1 Joint Stipulation Concerning Revised Intellectual Testing of Death Row Inmates' (`Joint Stipulation') does not apply to the Settlement Agreement before the Court. (Doc. 709)." Joint Notice (doc. no. 1197) at 2. The parties further confirmed that, "Nothing in the Phase 2 ADA Settlement Agreement presently before the Court . . . relates to testing of inmates on death row for intellectual disabilities," as the court has dismissed all claims relating to prisoners sentenced to death. Joint Statement in Support of the Proposed Settlement (doc. no. 1243) at 2 n.1. The parties affirmed that all other stipulations from Phase 1 of this case, between the Phase 1 preliminary approval hearing and the entry of the Phase 1 consent decree, apply to the Phase 2A ADA agreement.
As a result, the following stipulations from Phase 1 were incorporated into the agreement and consent decree: document numbers 560, 563, 575, 576, 638, 696, and 719. The Department will not be required to change its practices regarding the testing of death-row prisoners for intellectual disabilities.
The court requested an additional stipulation that the agreement does not represent a settlement of all potential current and future claims that prisoners may bring under the ADA. The court wanted to make clear that individual prisoners may still bring claims for discrimination under the ADA if they are seeking a remedy outside of the protections provided in the agreement.
As mentioned previously, there had been some confusion about what claim plaintiffs were actually asserting under the ADA. The Department argued that the plaintiffs' claim was "not a single, homogenous claim," except at "the highest level of abstraction," but rather "many different ADA claims touching on many different ADA requirements that Plaintiffs[] ha[d] lumped together for purposes of this lawsuit." Defendants Opposition to Plaintiffs' Motion for Class Certification (doc. no. 476) at 23-24. Plaintiffs responded that they are not seeking individual accommodations under the ADA; instead, the basis of liability in this case is the notion that ADOC's policies and procedures result in systematic disability discrimination against the plaintiff class. Accordingly, the court requested a specific stipulation from the parties as to whether prisoners could still maintain a cause of action under the ADA for any individualized disability discrimination.
The parties filed a stipulation that provides that there in fact "could be claims arising under the [ADA] or [the Rehabilitation Act] . . . which may not be covered by the terms of the Phase 2A . . . Settlement Agreement." Stipulation Concerning ADA Mental Health Settlement Agreement (doc. no. 1239) at 2 (emphasis original). The parties further stipulated that prisoners are not required to submit individual claims to the dispute-resolution process outlined in the settlement agreement, unless they are seeking to enforce the terms of the agreement itself. However, if a prisoner seeks to file an individual claim, he or she cannot use the agreement in the new lawsuit and, moreover, must separately comply with all of the procedural prerequisites provided under the PLRA and under any other applicable law.
Rule 23(g) requires the court to appoint (and also to assess the suitability of plaintiffs' counsel to serve as) class counsel. The rule requires the court to consider "(i) the work counsel has done in identifying or investigating potential claims in the action; (ii) counsel's experience in handling class actions, other complex litigation, and the types of claims asserted in the action; (iii) counsel's knowledge of the applicable law; and (iv) the resources that counsel will commit to representing the class." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(A). Before appointing them as class counsel, the court must conclude that plaintiffs' counsel will "fairly and adequately represent the interests of the class." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(4).
In this case, lawyers for the plaintiff class include lawyers affiliated with the Southern Poverty Law Center, ADAP, and the law firm of Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz. In addition, lawyers from the firm Zarzaur, Mujumdar, and Debrosse have represented the interests of ADAP in this litigation.
As during the Phase 1 settlement approval proceedings, the court found that plaintiffs' counsel have fairly and adequately represented the interests of the Phase 2A ADA plaintiff class. The court echoes the observations it expressed during Phase 1,
Rule 23(h) provides that, "In a class action, the court may award reasonable attorney's fees and nontaxable costs that are authorized by law or by the parties' agreement." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h). To award attorneys' fees, however, a court must ensure that the parties have complied with the following procedures: (1) a claim for an award of attorneys' fees must be made by motion; (2) the class members must be given notice and an opportunity to object to the motion; and (3) the court must find that the award sought is reasonable.
The agreement provides that the Department will pay plaintiffs' counsel $250,000.00 in fees and costs, as well as additional fees of $195.00 per hour (subject to caps) for monitoring services and fees for any litigation necessary to enforce the resulting consent decree, but only if the court finds the litigation necessary and that plaintiffs' counsel attempted to resolve the issue informally, without litigation.
Because this provision was included in the agreement, class members received notice of the plaintiff class attorneys' request for attorneys' fees during the comment period. One prisoner objected to the fee provision; however, as mentioned previously, the prisoner merely argued that the provision of fees to class counsel was unfair, given the fact that prisoners were not also being awarded monetary damages. But again, because the agreement does not foreclose the opportunity for class members to seek monetary damages for individual claims, and because the plaintiffs have sought only injunctive relief and not damages in this case, this concern is unfounded.
Nevertheless, even when both sides agree to an award of attorneys' fees, the court has an independent responsibility to assess its reasonableness, in order to guard against the risk that class counsel might agree to enter into a settlement less favorable to their clients in exchange for inappropriately high fees.
To determine whether an attorneys' fee arrangement is reasonable, the court uses the lodestar method. It does so by multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended by a reasonable hourly rate,
In support of the attorneys' fee agreement, plaintiffs' counsel submitted evidence that they incurred approximately $243,000 in litigation expenses on the Phase 2A ADA claim. Plaintiffs' counsel expended over 900 hours of billable time on this portion of the case. The $243,000 request represents a blended rate of $264.00 per hour, which the parties jointly agree represents a reasonable hourly rate for litigation of this kind. Moreover, the parties agreed on the record during the fairness hearings that the request for attorneys' fees was reasonable.
After considering the
Finally, the court notes that class counsel sought these fees pursuant to the fee provisions contained in the ADA (42 U.S.C. § 12205) and the Rehabilitation Act (29 U.S.C. § 794a), so their award is not limited by the PLRA's restrictions on attorneys' fees in prison litigation, which apply only to cases in which the attorneys' fees are authorized under 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
The PLRA provides that a "court shall not grant or approve any prospective relief unless the court finds that such relief is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violation of a Federal right, and is the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right." 18 U.S.C. § 3623(a)(1)(A). In conducting this `need-narrowness-intrusiveness' inquiry, a court is required to "give substantial weight to any adverse impact on public safety or the operation of a criminal justice system caused by the relief."
While the requirement to engage in a need-narrowness-intrusiveness analysis must be met in some circumstances, "[t]he parties are free to make any concessions or enter into any stipulations they deem appropriate" when submitting an initial settlement to the court, and the court does not need to "conduct an evidentiary hearing about or enter particularized findings concerning any facts or factors about which there is not dispute."
Here, the parties agreed that the consent decree satisfies the need-narrowness-intrusiveness requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A). Based on the court's independent review of the agreement, the court agrees.
The court further finds—and the parties again stipulate—that the consent decree will not have an adverse effect on public safety or the operation of the criminal justice system.
In addition, the PLRA's requirement that any prospective relief order must terminate within two years after court approval (or one year after the court's denial of termination of a prospective relief order),
In sum, the court is satisfied that its entry of the consent decree is in full compliance with the PLRA.
"Courts must be sensitive to the State's interest in punishment, deterrence, and rehabilitation, as well as the need for deference to experienced and expert prison administrators faced with the difficult and dangerous task of housing large numbers of convicted criminals."
As was the case during Phase 1, the parties' settlement of the Phase 2A ADA claim reflects the Alabama Department of Corrections' commitment to making manifest the rights of disabled prisoners in its custody; it represents the shouldering of significant responsibility, and presents an equally significant opportunity, by delineating a years' long process of ensuring compliance with the dictates of federal disability law. The court understands the Department's investment in this process to be genuine, and commends it for it.
The court also, again, recognizes the important role played by prisoners with mental disabilities in bringing this litigation, and commends both the named plaintiffs, as well as the numerous prisoners who submitted comments, for their advocacy on behalf of both themselves and others.
Finally, the court would like to extend a special thank you for the tireless efforts of United States Magistrate Judge John E. Ott. Without his efforts—and, indeed, much of his time—the court is convinced that this agreement would not have been possible.