KENNETH G. GALE, Magistrate Judge.
Now before the Court is Plaintiffs' "Motion for Stay." (Doc. 160.) Plaintiffs argue that the legislative scheme for school funding challenged in their original Complaint has been changed, is under review by the Kansas Supreme Court, and faces additional changes in the 2016 Kansas legislative session. As such, Plaintiffs ask the Court to stay further proceedings in this case until a ruling is received on the "equity" challenge currently pending before the Kansas Supreme Court. Defendants oppose the request, noting the age of the case and the time, expense, and effort already invested in litigating original issues. Intervenors favor a longer stay, until the Kansas Supreme Court rules on all issues currently pending.
This old case, filed in 2010, remains, paradoxically, in the relatively early stages of litigation. The proceedings have been slowed by two journeys to the appellate court — one resulting in a reversal of an order dismissing the case (Doc. 79) and the second in an affirmation of the District Court's denial of a motion for preliminary injunction and order granting in part Defendants' motion to dismiss (Doc. 149). As a result, the parties have not engaged in discovery or otherwise moved the case towards trial.
While the case was making its appellate tours, legal changes to the law occurred, and a case is now pending before the Kansas Supreme Court which could force additional changes. Plaintiffs state frankly that they "have no desire to challenge the constitutionality of laws that are no longer in effect." (Doc. 161, at 4.) In other words, Plaintiffs appear to concede that their current action may be moot.
The question remains, however, whether Plaintiff basic challenge to the law's local Spending Cap will survive the current changes. If not, this case may be over. If, however, the same issue emerges in a new scheme, these parties and the Court may continue the inquiry presented in this case. This may all depend on an eventual motion to amend the current Complaint, which may or may not be granted, but which likely cannot be filed until the status and form of the law stabilizes.
The Court is sympathetic to the pleas of Defendants that this matter should not continue indefinitely. Even so, the Court is presented with a practical problem. If the current Motion for Stay is denied, the parties will likely engage in futile discovery and additional motions and briefing on the current Complaint and the old law, until the pending state court legal issues are resolved, at which point the Plaintiffs will likely file a motion to amend to challenge the new funding scheme. If the Court grants the Motion to Stay, litigation on the current Complaint will be avoided. The Court and parties may then be able to address the issue of whether the Complaint can be fairly amended to challenge whatever form the Spending Cap takes in a new system.
This Court has the discretion to stay the proceedings to avoid wasting resources.
The Court