Mandatory Vacatur of Expired PLRA Preliminary Injunctions: Voice of the Experienced v. Westcott
Introduction
The Fifth Circuit’s unpublished but precedentially significant decision in Voice of the Experienced v. Westcott addresses what happens when a preliminary injunction issued in prison-conditions litigation automatically expires under the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“PLRA”), 18 U.S.C. §3626(a)(2), while the appeal of that injunction is pending. Although all parties conceded mootness once the 90-day statutory period elapsed, the remaining dispute was whether the appellate court should vacate the district court’s expired injunction under the Munsingwear doctrine.
Plaintiffs—an advocacy organization and several incarcerated individuals at the Louisiana State Penitentiary (“Angola”)—sued various Louisiana officials alleging Eighth Amendment and disability-based statutory violations arising from the farm-labor program during extreme heat. The district court issued a sweeping preliminary injunction on July 2 2024. Defendants sought emergency relief in the Fifth Circuit; a motions panel partially stayed the order. By operation of §3626(a)(2) the injunction lapsed on September 30 2024, rendering the merits appeal moot.
The Fifth Circuit’s opinion holds that (1) the appeal is constitutionally moot and (2) “Munsingwear” vacatur is not merely discretionary but required where the prevailing party’s unilateral actions—or the PLRA’s automatic sunset—prevent appellate review. The Court therefore vacated the district court’s July 2 2024 order in its entirety, clearing the path for future litigation without the precedential or practical effects of the unreviewed decision.
Summary of the Judgment
- Mootness: Because the PLRA automatically terminates preliminary injunctive relief after 90 days unless the district court converts it into final “prospective relief,” the injunction expired on September 30 2024. Without a live injunction, no party retained a “legally cognizable interest,” so Article III jurisdiction evaporated.
- Vacatur: Applying United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 (1950), the court vacated the district court’s order. It emphasized that vacatur is the default—and often mandatory—remedy where mootness “frustrates” appellate review through circumstances beyond the appellant’s control or via the unilateral acts of the winning party below.
- Outcome: Appeal dismissed as moot; July 2 2024 preliminary injunction VACATED.
Analysis
1. Precedents Cited
The opinion synthesizes several Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit cases:
- United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 (1950) – Established the practice of vacating lower-court judgments when appellate review becomes impossible due to mootness.
- U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall Partnership, 513 U.S. 18 (1994) – Clarified that vacatur is not automatic when mootness results from settlement, distinguishing voluntary relinquishment from “frustrated” review.
- Camreta v. Greene, 563 U.S. 692 (2011); Acheson Hotels, LLC v. Laufer, 601 U.S. 1 (2023) – Reaffirmed vacatur’s purpose: preventing unreviewed decisions from producing legal consequences.
- Yates v. Collier, 677 Fed. App’x 915 (5th Cir. 2017) (per curiam) and Smith v. Edwards, 88 F.4th 1119 (5th Cir. 2023) – Both addressed PLRA-expired injunctions, finding appeals moot and vacating under Munsingwear.
- Nken v. Holder, 556 U.S. 418 (2009) – Provided the four-factor test for stays pending appeal, referenced by the motions panel that partially stayed the injunction.
- Constitutional and prudential mootness cases (e.g., Already, LLC v. Nike, Inc., Moore v. Harper) underscored jurisdictional limits.
By weaving these authorities together, the panel confirmed a consistent rule: automatic expiration under §3626(a)(2) coupled with the plaintiffs’ failure to seek permanency renders the appeal moot and triggers mandatory vacatur.
2. Legal Reasoning
- Jurisdictional Inquiry. The Court first confirmed appellate jurisdiction existed initially because the district court’s order, although nominally a temporary restraining order (TRO), had the “practical effect” of an appealable preliminary injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
- Mootness Analysis.
- The injunction’s automatic lapse deprived both sides of a present, redressable stake.
- Because reversal would not free defendants from any current restraint (none existed) and affirmance would not benefit plaintiffs, the controversy became non-justiciable.
- Application of Munsingwear Vacatur.
- Vacatur is “well settled” and often obligatory to erase unreviewable decisions.
- Where the prevailing party (plaintiffs) allowed the order to sunset, or where mootness was caused by the statutory framework (PLRA), the appellants’ opportunity for review was “frustrated by happenstance.”
- The opinion distinguishes cases of voluntary forfeiture (settlements) where vacatur is discretionary, citing U.S. Bancorp.
3. Impact
The decision reinforces and slightly broadens Fifth Circuit precedent in three ways:
- Predictability Under PLRA. Litigants now have clear notice that failure to convert or renew a preliminary injunction within 90 days will (a) moot an appeal and (b) lead to vacatur of the underlying order, stripping it of precedential and preclusive weight.
- Strategic Considerations for Plaintiffs. Prisoner-plaintiffs (and public-interest organizations) must either secure a final injunction or be prepared to lose the interim ruling entirely; relying on an expired order to support future TROs—as the district court did on May 23 2025—will be ineffective after vacatur.
- Guidance for District Courts. District judges within the Fifth Circuit must perform §3626(a)(1) findings and act before day 90 if they wish their relief to persist; otherwise the order not only terminates but will likely be vacated.
Complex Concepts Simplified
- Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) §3626(a)(2): A federal statute limiting injunctive relief in prison-conditions cases. Preliminary relief “automatically expires” after 90 days unless converted into final relief with explicit factual findings.
- Preliminary Injunction vs. TRO: Both are forms of interim relief, but TROs typically last 14 days (renewable). However, appellate courts examine substance over label; if a “TRO” imposes long-term, affirmative obligations, it is treated as an appealable preliminary injunction.
- Munsingwear Vacatur: When an appeal becomes moot through no fault (or unilateral action) of the appellant, the appellate court vacates the lower-court judgment so it cannot create legal consequences—essentially wiping the slate clean.
- Mootness: A doctrine derived from Article III requiring an ongoing, real dispute. If events make the dispute academic, courts must dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
Conclusion
Voice of the Experienced v. Westcott cements a straightforward but critical rule: when a prison-conditions preliminary injunction lapses under the PLRA during appeal, the Fifth Circuit not only dismisses the case as moot but must vacate the district court’s order under the Munsingwear doctrine. The opinion harmonizes Supreme Court precedent with prior circuit decisions (Yates, Smith) and clarifies that neither statutory sunset nor the prevailing party’s inaction allows an unreviewable injunction to linger with legal or practical effect. Future litigants must be vigilant: failing to convert preliminary relief into permanent relief within 90 days will undo the entire order and nullify any strategic advantage gained at the preliminary stage.
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