            Case: 15-11690    Date Filed: 08/16/2018   Page: 1 of 29


                                                                       [PUBLISH]



              IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                         ________________________

                               No. 15-11690
                         ________________________

                     D.C. Docket No. 2:14-cv-00213-SLB,
                        Bkcy No. 11-bkc-05736-TBB9


ANDREW BENNETT,
Jefferson County Tax Assessor, Bessemer Division,
RODERICK V. ROYAL,
Former Birmingham City Council President,
MARY MOORE,
Alabama State Legislator,
JOHN W. ROGERS,
Alabama State Legislator,
WILLIAM R. MUHAMMAD, et al.,

                                                Plaintiffs - Appellees,

versus

JEFFERSON COUNTY, ALABAMA,

                                                Defendant - Appellant.

                         ________________________

                  Appeal from the United States District Court
                     for the Northern District of Alabama
                         ________________________
                              (August 16, 2018)
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Before TJOFLAT, MARTIN, and JORDAN, Circuit Judges.

JORDAN, Circuit Judge:

      Generally speaking, the doctrine of equitable mootness “permits courts

sitting in bankruptcy appeals to dismiss challenges (typically to confirmation

plans) when effective relief would be impossible.” Ullrich v. Welt (In re Nica

Holdings, Inc.), 810 F.3d 781, 786 (11th Cir. 2015). We have applied the doctrine

in the Chapter 11 reorganization context, see, e.g., First Union Real Estate Equity

& Mortg. Invs. v. Club Assocs. (In re Club Assocs.), 956 F.2d 1065, 1067–71 (11th

Cir. 1992), and in Chapter 13 cases, see, e.g., Hope v. Gen. Fin. Corp. of Ga. (In re

Kahihikolo), 807 F.2d 1540, 1543 (11th Cir. 1987), and we have assumed without

deciding that it applies in Chapter 7 cases, see Nica Holdings, 810 F.3d at 786 n.4,

but until today we have not been asked to apply the doctrine in a Chapter 9

municipal bankruptcy case.

                                          I

      Municipal bankruptcy proceedings are usually complicated affairs, and the

Chapter 9 proceeding for Jefferson County, Alabama—involving about $3.2 billion

in total sewer-related debt—has proved to be no different. A detailed chronology

can be found in Bennett v. Jefferson County, 518 B.R. 613, 616–26 (N.D. Ala.

2014), and In re Jefferson County, 474 B.R. 228, 236–45 (Bankr. N.D. Ala. 2012),

but the relevant facts and procedural history are set forth below.


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                                          A

       Jefferson County filed for bankruptcy in November of 2011. In June of

2013, following 18 months of negotiations, the County announced that it had come

to an agreement in principle with almost all of its major creditors.

       The final settlement, reached in November of 2013, provided that the

County would issue and sell in public markets new sewer warrants (through an

indenture) in the amount of approximately $1.785 billion, with the proceeds and

other funds being used to redeem and retire the prior sewer warrants (which, again,

totaled about $3.2 billion) at a reduced and compromised amount of about $1.8

billion.

       Pursuant to the settlement, the County would cut over $100 million in

general fund expenditures, the creditors would write off a significant amount in

outstanding debt, and the County (or the bankruptcy court if the County failed to

act) would implement a series of single-digit-percent sewer rate increases over 40

years. The County would not be able to decrease sewer rates in a given fiscal year

unless it could somehow offset the decrease (by, for example, increasing its

customer base). Over the course of these 40 years—the planned time period for

retiring the new sewer warrants—sewer rates would increase about 365%, which is

not far off of the national increase in inflation in the previous 40 years. With

respect to non-sewer debt, warrants would be repaid in full on terms favorable to



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the County through the exchange of existing general obligation warrants and

school warrants for new warrants. See Bennett, 518 B.R. at 623–25.

        At the confirmation hearing before the bankruptcy court on November 21,

2013, a group of Jefferson County ratepayers objected to the County’s proposed

plan.    They argued that the plan validated corrupt government activity (e.g.,

bribery) that procured the execution of some of the prior sewer warrants and led to

the debt crisis; that the plan, by taking the ability to set rates out of the hands of

elected Jefferson County commissioners, infringed on their rights to vote and to be

free from overly burdensome debt without due process; and that the plan was not

feasible because it was imposed over a service area with a declining population and

falling income levels, and because it increased costs for a long period of time

without any consideration of the users’ ability to pay. See id. at 626. One of the

claims asserted by the ratepayers was that certain of the prior sewer warrants were

invalid because they violated provisions of the Alabama Constitution and the

United States Constitution. See id. at 626–27.

        The bankruptcy court entered a confirmation order over the ratepayers’

objections on November 22, 2013, the day following the hearing. The order in part

dismissed pending claims, and barred any and all persons from commencing or

continuing any action to assert the claims made by the ratepayers prior to the start

of, or in, the Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceeding.



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      In the confirmation order, the bankruptcy court retained jurisdiction for the

40-year life of the new sewer warrants to, among other things, adjudicate

controversies regarding the validity of actions taken pursuant to the plan, including

implementation or enforcement of the approved rate structure and issuance of the

new sewer warrants, and enter any necessary or appropriate orders or relief

(including mandamus). See Bankr. D.E. 2248 at 67–68. The disclosure statement

for the indenture contained similar language describing the bankruptcy court’s

retention of jurisdiction.

      The plan’s effective date was December 3, 2013. Although Bankruptcy

Rule 3020(e) normally imposes an automatic 14-day stay on the operation of a

confirmation order, at the confirmation hearing the ratepayers did not object to the

County’s motion (filed two weeks earlier) to waive the automatic stay. In the

absence of an objection, the bankruptcy court exercised its discretion under Rule

3020(e) to waive the automatic stay when it entered the confirmation order. See

Bennett, 518 B.R. at 626.

      The ratepayers filed their notice of appeal on December 1, 2013, two days

prior to the plan’s effective date. But they did not ask the bankruptcy court, or the

district court, for a stay of the confirmation order pending appeal. Nor did they

request that their appeal be expedited. On December 3, 2013, pursuant to the terms

of the order, the County issued the new sewer warrants. The proceeds from the



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sale of these warrants went in part towards retiring the prior sewer warrants, with

more than $1.454 billion going into a clearinghouse system to pay individual and

institutional investors. See id.

                                            B

       In the district court, the County moved to dismiss the ratepayers’ appeal,

arguing in relevant part that any challenges to the confirmation order were

constitutionally, statutorily, and equitably moot because the plan had been

consummated and the transactions that were completed could not be unwound.

The ratepayers responded that their appeal was not moot because, among other

things, the bankruptcy court could not constitutionally retain jurisdiction to

conform (if necessary) sewer rates to the plan over a 40-year period. In the

ratepayers’ view, such rates had to be set in compliance with Alabama law. As the

district court explained, the ratepayers wanted to “avoid . . . paying rates set by a

[County] Commission wh[ich] can be taken to the bankruptcy court if it enacts

rates in violation of” the approved rate structure. Bennett, 518 B.R. at 631 n.21.

The district court rejected each of the County’s mootness arguments.

       First, the district court concluded that the appeal was not moot under Article

III.   Although the consummation of the plan might limit the scope of relief

available to the ratepayers, the court concluded that it could fashion “‘some form




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of meaningful relief.’” See id. at 631 (quoting Church of Scientology v. United

States, 506 U.S. 9, 12 (1992)).

         Second, there was no “statutory mootness” under 11 U.S.C. § 364(e). Under

Eleventh Circuit precedent, said the district court, § 364(e) protects “only

transactions authorized by § 364(c) or (d),” and it did not believe that the issuance

of the new sewer warrants to pay off the prior sewer warrants was a transaction

authorized by § 364(c) or (d). Id. at 632. See also id. at 633 (“Neither subsection

(c) nor subsection (d) authorizes the bankruptcy court to allow the County to obtain

credit or incur debt by giving the lender or the bankruptcy court unlawful or

unconstitutional ratemaking authority.”).

         Third, the district court ruled that the appeal was not equitably moot despite

the failure of the ratepayers to seek, let alone obtain, a stay of the confirmation

order.     The court thought that the doctrine of equitable mootness, which is

prudential in nature, was in some tension with the Supreme Court’s reaffirmation

of the principle that federal courts have a “virtually unflagging” obligation to hear

and decides cases within their jurisdiction. See id. at 634. But it did not need to

confront those potential concerns because it held that equitable mootness does not

apply to constitutional challenges to a confirmation order in a Chapter 9

proceeding: “In the case of a Chapter 9 reorganization plan[,] finality and reliance

may be required to yield to the Constitution and the interests of the public in the



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provision of governmental services.” Id. at 636. And “applying the doctrine of

equitable mootness as the County espouse[d] would prevent both state and federal

Article III courts from deciding . . . ‘knotty state law’ and constitutional issues and

would prevent any review of a federal bankruptcy court’s assumption of

jurisdiction to enforce its unreviewed actions.” Id. at 637. Although the court

recognized that “some part or parts” of the confirmation order might be

“impossible to reverse,” the “County’s ceding of its future authority to set sewer

rates to the bankruptcy court” as a term of the new sewer warrants was “not one of

those parts.” Id. If it agreed with the ratepayers that the bankruptcy court’s

retention of jurisdiction was unconstitutional, the court could declare that provision

invalid and prevent its enforcement. See id.

      Finally, the district court explained that, even if the doctrine of equitable

mootness applied in Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceedings, it would nevertheless deny

the County’s motion to dismiss. The court could, as it had noted, grant the

ratepayers some relief by striking the terms providing for the bankruptcy court’s

retention of jurisdiction and authority to set sewer rates in the future. Moreover,

the ratepayers’ failure to obtain a stay, though significant in the equitable mootness

analysis, was not dispositive. There had been a rush to consummation, and seeking

a stay “was futile and cost-prohibitive.” Id. at 639. No stay, reasoned the court,

would have been granted. See id.



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       The district court later certified its ruling for interlocutory review, and

Jefferson County instituted the present appeal. We conclude that the case is not

constitutionally moot, but hold that it is equitably moot, and therefore reverse and

remand for dismissal of the ratepayers’ appeal from the bankruptcy court’s

confirmation order. We do not reach statutory mootness as a separate issue, but

touch on it briefly in discussing equitable mootness.

                                             II

       We first address Article III mootness—i.e., mootness in the jurisdictional

and constitutional sense. This doctrine, the Supreme Court has held, emanates

from the “case or controversy” requirement of Article III. See, e.g., Arizonans for

Official English v. Arizona, 520 U.S. 43, 67 (1997).1

       “[T]he party who alleges that a controversy before us has become moot has

the ‘heavy burden’ of establishing that we lack jurisdiction.” Michigan v. Long,

463 U.S. 1032, 1042 n.8 (1983). See also Mattern v. Sec’y for the Dep’t of Corr.,

494 F.3d 1282, 1285 (11th Cir. 2007); Dupree v. Palmer, 284 F.3d 1234, 1237

(11th Cir. 2002).      The district court held that the ratepayers’ appeal is not

constitutionally moot. Exercising plenary review, see Nat’l Advert. Co. v. City of

Miami, 402 F.3d 1329, 1331 (11th Cir. 2005), we agree.
1
  Not all members of the Supreme Court have agreed with the Article III characterization of
mootness. See Honig v. Doe, 484 U.S. 305, 331 (1988) (Rehnquist, C.J., concurring) (asserting
that any connection between a court’s “unwillingness to decide moot cases” and “the case or
controversy requirement of Art. III” is “attenuated”).



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      The County’s argument is essentially that we (and the district court) lack the

legal authority to issue the relief that the ratepayers seek. See County’s Opening

Br. at 28 (“[T]he dispositive question is . . . whether a reviewing court can provide

meaningful relief if it agrees with the [party challenging the bankruptcy court’s

order] that the order is erroneous”).      “But that argument—which goes to the

meaning of the [bankruptcy laws] and the legal availability of a certain kind of

relief—confuses mootness with the merits.” Chafin v. Chafin, 568 U.S. 165, 174

(2013). Cf. Moody v. Warden, 887 F.3d 1281, 1285–87, 1292 (11th Cir. 2018)

(holding that death row inmate had Article III standing to challenge his planned

execution notwithstanding the court’s ultimate conclusion that he could not obtain

legal relief). We note also that, in the one case that we have found in which the

Supreme Court addressed mootness in the context of action taken in reliance on an

unstayed order in a bankruptcy proceeding, the Court had no trouble concluding

that the case presented a justiciable controversy. See Wayne United Gas Co. v.

Owens-Ill. Glass Co., 300 U.S. 131, 134–35 (1937).

      Notably, the County does not contend—as the respondent did in Chafin—

that any of the forms of relief sought here (e.g., striking the offending jurisdictional

provision from the confirmed plan) would be “ineffectual” with respect to the

ratepayers’ harm. See Chafin, 568 U.S. at 174–76; FTC v. Phoebe Putney Health

Sys., Inc., 568 U.S. 216, 224 n.3 (2013). Nor does it contend that any “law of



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physics prevents” us from issuing relief that might provide some relief for the

ratepayers in this case. Chafin, 568 U.S. at 175. Cf. Rhodes v. Stewart, 488 U.S.

1, 4 (1988) (discussing mootness where a plaintiff seeking injunctive relief has

died).

         In sum, we have a live case under Article III. We proceed to consider the

parties’ arguments about another sort of “mootness.”

                                               III

         We review de novo the district court’s conclusion that the doctrine of

equitable mootness does not apply in the Chapter 9 context. The same standard of

review applies to the district court’s alternative ruling that, if the doctrine did

generally apply, it would not bar the ratepayers’ appeal. See In re Club Assocs.,

956 F.2d at 1069.2

         The County argues that the doctrine of equitable mootness bars the

ratepayers’ appeal from the bankruptcy court, and that the district court erred in

concluding otherwise. We agree. First, we explore what precisely the doctrine is.

Second, we explain why the doctrine can apply in a Chapter 9 proceeding like this



2
  We recognize that some other circuits review the application of the equitable mootness doctrine
under an abuse of discretion standard. See, e.g., R2 Investments, LDC v. Charter Commc’ns, Inc.
(In re Charter Commc’ns, Inc.), 691 F.3d 476, 483 (2d Cir. 2012) (acknowledging a circuit
split). If we were writing on a clean slate, we might well use that deferential standard given the
equitable and prudential foundations of the doctrine. But we applied a de novo standard in In re
Club Assocs., and as a panel we are bound by that earlier ruling.



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one. Finally, we conclude that the doctrine bars the ratepayers’ appeal from the

bankruptcy court’s confirmation order.

                                         A

      The doctrine of equitable mootness appears to have emerged at least a few

decades ago in the various federal courts of appeals. See, e.g., Am. Grain Ass’n v.

Lee-Vac, Ltd., 630 F.2d 245, 247–48 (5th Cir. 1980); Trone v. Roberts Farms, Inc.

(In re Roberts Farms, Inc.), 652 F.2d 793, 796–98 (9th Cir. 1981); In re Cont’l

Airlines, 91 F.3d 553, 557–67 (3d Cir. 1996) (en banc); Ross Elgart, Bankruptcy

Appeals and Equitable Mootness, 19 Cardozo L. Rev. 2311, 2323–27 (1998). As

far as we can tell, the Supreme Court has never endorsed it. Nor, however, has the

Supreme Court, nor any court of appeals, rejected the concept outright.        See

Ochadleus v. City of Detroit (In re City of Detroit), 838 F.3d 792, 800 (6th Cir.

2016) (2–1 decision applying equitable mootness in the context of a Chapter 9

municipal bankruptcy and noting that “even if the Supreme Court would abolish

equitable mootness, it has not yet done so (nor has any circuit)”). Cf. Wayne

United Gas Co., 300 U.S. 131, 133–35 (denying an attempt to dismiss a

bankruptcy appeal as moot due to the sale of the debtor’s property in a separate

state-court proceeding, because the creditors proceeded in state court “with full

knowledge” that the debtor was simultaneously seeking reconsideration of the

order dismissing its bankruptcy petition).



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      Essentially, this doctrine provides that reviewing courts will, under certain

circumstances, reject bankruptcy appeals if rulings have gone into effect and would

be extremely burdensome, especially to non-parties, to undo. The use of the word

mootness (and the invocation of the consequences that arise from a mootness

finding) in the term equitable mootness is a legal fiction, akin to the use of the

word “eviction” (and the analogous invocation of relevant consequences) in the

term “constructive eviction.”    See, e.g., Detroit, 838 F.3d at 798 (“Equitable

mootness is not technically ‘mootness’—constitutional or otherwise—but is

instead ‘a prudential doctrine . . . ’”); id. at 806 (Moore, J., dissenting) (“Despite

the name, equitable mootness bears no relation to ‘mootness.’ Indeed, in an

equitably moot appeal, the relief sought is the opposite of moot—the consequences

of granting it would be so great that they are deemed inequitable.”).

      The doctrine, then, does not reference actual mootness at all. As the leading

bankruptcy treatises explain, its application turns on equitable and prudential

concerns which focus on whether it is reasonable to entertain the contentions of the

parties challenging an order of the bankruptcy court. See William L. Norton, Jr. &

William L. Norton III, 8 Norton Bankr. Law & Practice § 170:87 (3d ed. 2018); 7

Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 1129.09[1] & n.2 (16th ed. 2018). It would perhaps be

more appropriate for us to file the doctrine under the rubrics of forfeiture, waiver,

or laches. See In re One2One Commc’ns, LLC, 805 F.3d 428, 449–50 (3d Cir.



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2015) (Krause, J., concurring) (noting that “there are effective alternatives that do

not suffer from the prudential, statutory, and constitutional defects of equitable

mootness,” including “the equitable defense of laches”). Cf. N. Pac. Ry. Co. v.

Boyd, 228 U.S. 482, 508–10 (1913) (explaining that in some scenarios—such as

when harm results to others—laches may prevent a delayed challenge by a creditor

to a foreclosure sale of the debtor’s assets). But it seems too late to change the

nomenclature now.

                                         B

      Given that we are being asked to apply equitable mootness in a new setting,

it makes sense to take a step back and consider the doctrine’s origins. By the mid-

1990s, most federal circuits had applied a version of the doctrine, and some had

even referred to it as “equitable mootness.” See generally Cont’l Airlines, 91 F.3d

at 558 (citing cases from the First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Ninth, Eleventh,

and D.C. Circuits).

      For our part, we have used variations of the term equitable mootness

(including “equitably moot”) in three published opinions involving bankruptcy

appeals: Florida Agency for Health Care Administration v. Bayou Shores SNF,

LLC (In re Bayou Shores SNF, LLC), 828 F.3d 1297, 1328 (11th Cir. 2016); Nica

Holdings, 810 F.3d at 786; and Alabama Department of Economic & Community

Affairs v. Ball Healthcare–Dallas, LLC (In re Lett), 632 F.3d 1216, 1225 (11th Cir.



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2011). In each of these cases, we held that the doctrine did not apply in the

particular circumstances presented. But it would be incorrect to say that we have

never endorsed or applied the doctrine, because in these three cases we relied on

earlier decisions in which we had dismissed bankruptcy appeals as “moot”

(simpliciter) while overtly relying on equitable considerations. See, e.g., Club

Assocs., 956 F.2d at 1069 (“The test for mootness reflects a court’s concern for

striking the proper balance between the equitable considerations of finality and

good faith reliance on a judgment and the competing interests that underlie the

right of a party to seek review of a bankruptcy court order adversely affecting

him.”). 3

       Over the years, we have identified a number of important considerations for

deciding whether the doctrine bars an appeal. The facts will weigh in favor of

finding equitable mootness when allowing an appeal to go forward will impinge

upon actions taken to one’s detriment in “good faith reliance on a [final and

unstayed] judgment.” Id. at 1069–70. Cf. Doll v. Grand Union Co., 925 F.2d

1363, 1371 (11th Cir. 1991) (discussing the equitable defense of promissory

estoppel).    Or—all the more—when permitting an appeal will interfere with

actions taken without knowledge that any claims are still pending final resolution.
3
 For other Eleventh Circuit cases holding that bankruptcy appeals were barred by equitable and
prudential considerations, see Miami Ctr. Ltd. P’ship v. Bank of N.Y., 838 F.2d 1547, 1553 (11th
Cir. 1988); Gwinnett Bank & Trust Co. v. Matos (In re Matos), 790 F.2d 864, 865–66 (11th Cir.
1986); and Kahihikolo, 807 F.2d at 1543.



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See, e.g., Markstein v. Massey Assocs., Ltd., 763 F.2d 1325, 1327 (11th Cir. 1985)

(holding that foreclosure sale of disputed property to a non-party would not be

voided, but remanding for consideration of claim regarding repayment of funds

wrongly held by the original creditor). The more substantially the party aggrieved

by a judgment has allowed the egg of that judgment to be scrambled—the more

that people have acted in ways that render inequitable the relief sought by the

aggrieved party—the less likely we will be willing to consider ordering anyone to

countenance “the pains that attend any effort to unscramble an egg.” In re UNR

Indus., Inc., 20 F.3d 766, 769 (7th Cir. 1994). See also Bayou Shores, 828 F.3d at

1328 (“The equitable mootness doctrine seeks to avoid an appellate decision that

‘would knock the props out from under the authorization for every transaction that

has taken place and create an unmanageable, uncontrollable situation for the

[b]ankruptcy [c]ourt.’”).     The more complex a transaction (or a series of

transactions) is, and the longer the time that has passed since the confirmation of

the plan, the harder it will be to undo the past.

      Conversely, if the relief sought does not undermine actions that may have

been taken in reliance on the judgment, or if no such actions have been taken, then

there will be no reason to conclude that an appeal is equitably moot. See, e.g.,

Russo v. Seidler (In re Seidler), 44 F.3d 945, 949 (11th Cir. 1995) (matter was not

equitably moot because the debtor had not yet recorded satisfaction of putative



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creditor’s lien that bankruptcy court concluded had been satisfied and had not sold

the home); Markstein, 763 F.2d at 1327 & n.1, n.2 (dismissing appeal insofar as it

challenged the validity of the foreclosure sale of the debtor’s asset, but remanding

because, “if the [debtor’s] property sold at foreclosure for an amount in excess of

the mortgage debt[,] the excess [might] go into the debtor’s estate”).

      We are sensitive to the “interests that underlie the right of a party to seek

review of a bankruptcy court order adversely affecting him.” Club Assocs., 956

F.2d at 1069. Consequently, courts will be less likely to find an appeal equitably

moot if the aggrieved party sought a stay (especially if it did so promptly), if a stay

was unjustifiably denied or was justifiably not requested, or if appellate review was

sought reasonably promptly. Compare Nica Holdings, 810 F.3d at 787 (addressing

appeal on the merits where the bankruptcy court rejected one motion to stay as too

early and, immediately afterward, another one as too late, so that “there was never

a time when [the appellant] could file a motion to stay”), with Club Assocs., 956

F.2d at 1070–71 (dismissing appeal and endorsing the bankruptcy court’s

conclusion that the aggrieved party’s failure to immediately seek a stay was

“deliberate”). Other equitable considerations may also weigh against concluding

that an appeal is “equitably moot,” as we observe below in weighing the

circumstances here. See, e.g., Dill Oil Co., LLC v. Stephens (In re Stephens), 704

F.3d 1279, 1283 (10th Cir. 2013).



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      We have said that equitable mootness is rooted in the “general [principles]

of appellate procedure.” Lee-Vac, 630 F.2d at 248. To be sure, Congress has

codified one part or another of the doctrine at certain points in time. See, e.g., id.

at 247–48 (former Bankruptcy Rule 805); UNR, 20 F.3d at 769 (enumerating

“[s]everal [statutory] provisions . . . provid[ing] that courts should keep their hands

off consummated transactions”). But we have since rejected attempts to strictly

read any such codifications. See Lee-Vac, 630 F.2d at 247–48. And we have not

inferred too much from the removal of any such codifications from the Bankruptcy

Code. See UNR, 20 F.3d at 769 (“Section 1127(b), unlike § 363(m), does not place

any limit on the power of the court of appeals, but the reasons underlying

§§ 363(m) and 1127(b)—preserving interests bought and paid for in reliance on

judicial decisions, and avoiding the pains that attend any effort to unscramble an

egg—are so plain and so compelling that courts fill the interstices of the Code with

the same approach.”); Miami Ctr., 838 F.2d at 1553 (“The Eleventh Circuit, like

other circuits, has recognized the continuing viability and applicability of the

mootness standard in situations other than transfers by a trustee under § 363(b) or

(c).”) (citing cases); Sewanee Land, Coal & Cattle, Inc. v. Lamb (In re Sewanee

Land, Coal & Cattle, Inc.), 735 F.2d 1294, 1296 (11th Cir. 1984) (explaining that

the absence of an equivalent to Rule 805 in new bankruptcy rules did not call for a

different outcome under the new rules, and holding that an appeal of the sale of



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real property was equitably moot because the court was “powerless to grant

relief”).4

                                               C

       We have never addressed whether equitable mootness applies in the Chapter

9 context.     Because the doctrine is driven by its principles rather than any

particular codification or arbitrary limitation, see Lee-Vac, 630 F.2d at 247–48, and

because we see no respect in which these principles are bound to come into play

any less in the Chapter 9 context than in the contexts of Chapters 11 or 13, we see

no reason to reject the doctrine here.              Indeed, in ways these principles will

sometimes weigh more heavily in the Chapter 9 context precisely because of how

many people will be affected by municipal bankruptcies. “‘If the interests of

finality and reliance are paramount to [analysis of equitable mootness for] a

Chapter 11 private business entity with investors, shareholders, and employees, . . .

then these interests surely apply with greater force to the [County’s] Chapter 9

Plan, which affects thousands of creditors and residents.’” Detroit, 838 F.3d at

803. Nor do we see any reason why the doctrine’s principles would not be self-

cabining in this context as they are in other bankruptcy contexts. We therefore join

4
  We have, in this respect, perhaps differed somewhat from some other circuits, which have
varied in how much they have focused on statutory provisions or rules in interpreting the
doctrine. See, e.g., Detroit, 838 F.3d at 807–08 (Moore, J., dissenting) (discussing development
of the doctrine in several circuits); Castaic Partners II, LLC v. Daca–Castaic, LLC (In re Castaic
Partners II, LLC), 823 F.3d 966, 968 (9th Cir. 2016) (“statutory mootness codifies part, but not
all, of the doctrine of equitable mootness”).



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the two other courts that have addressed this question in concluding that equitable

mootness can apply in Chapter 9 cases. See id. at 804–05 (2–1 decision); Franklin

High Yield Tax-Free Income Fund v. City of Stockton (In re City of Stockton), 542

B.R. 261, 274 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2015) (citing an earlier Ninth Circuit case, Lionel v.

City of Vallejo (In re City of Vallejo), 551 F. App’x 339 (9th Cir. 2013), which

reached the same result but did not indicate that the question was disputed).

      The district court concluded that Chapter 9 is different in ways that required

it to hold that equitable mootness does not apply in this context. The ratepayers,

defending the district court’s decision, contend that the doctrine has no role in

municipal bankruptcies because Chapter 9 “implicates public concerns” and

potentially involves constitutional issues (like the ones they are asserting).   See

Appellees’ Br. at 4. These are important points, and we have duly considered

them. Nevertheless, we are still persuaded that equitable mootness can apply in

Chapter 9 cases.

      The main theme running through the district court’s reasoning, and the

ratepayers’ arguments, is that municipalities and their bankruptcies implicate

issues of sovereignty, whereas corporations or individuals and their bankruptcies

do not—and that, accordingly, it is important for us to tread carefully where self

governance is concerned. See Bennett, 518 B.R. at 636–38. In a certain sense this

observation rings true: the Bankruptcy Code arguably gives more (but certainly



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different) protection to government entities under Chapter 9 than to private persons

and entities who seek bankruptcy protection. See Detroit, 838 F.3d at 803.

      But this argument doesn’t speak to the threshold question of whether

equitable mootness can apply in any case—it only speaks to whether it applies in

particular cases. We see no reason why, for example, if a run-of-the-mill creditor

of a municipality (which would have no greater basis in a Chapter 9 case than in

any other bankruptcy case for laying claim to any equities of constitutional

proportion) objects to a Chapter 9 bankruptcy plan, that creditor should be able to

avoid equitable mootness merely because the bankruptcy proceedings happen to be

under Chapter 9. Just as in other kinds of bankruptcy proceedings, concerns about

finality, reliance, and equity will be at play.

      In addition, it is not at all clear in which direction the ratepayers’ federalism

arguments will cut from one Chapter 9 bankruptcy to the next. Given the interests

of the municipality and those of its residents (among others), there is a

countervailing argument that a court ought to be more solicitous to the

municipality that has obtained confirmation of its plan and thus be especially

inclined to pull the trigger of equitable mootness.        In the present case, the

ratepayers (to whom a state’s or municipality’s rights ultimately accrue) are

challenging the confirmed bankruptcy plan’s alleged trampling of their state-based




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rights, but what about the actual state entity (for whose sovereignty Chapter 9

procedures reflect such concern)?

      Finally, we recognize that, given the centrality of constitutional rights to the

fabric of our republic, there is a fair argument to be made that we should allow

some leniency when a party who has allowed a bankruptcy plan to go into effect

asserts constitutional claims on appeal. But the mere fact that a potential or actual

violation of a constitutional right exists does not generally excuse a party’s failure

to comply with procedural rules for assertion of the right. A “constitutional right,

or a right of any other sort, may be forfeited in criminal as well as civil cases by

the failure to make timely assertion of the right before a tribunal having

jurisdiction to determine it.” Henderson v. United States, 568 U.S. 266, 271

(2013) (internal quotation marks omitted). And we generally allow those with

constitutional rights to waive them. See, e.g., Wellness Int’l Network, Ltd. v.

Sharif, 135 S. Ct. 1932, 1944–45 (2015) (permitting litigants to consent to

disposition by the bankruptcy court of claims that would have otherwise required

an Article III tribunal for adjudication).

      Ultimately, we think the correct result is to join the Sixth Circuit and the

Ninth Circuit B.A.P. in allowing equitable mootness to apply in the Chapter 9

context. As for federalism concerns, it will be appropriate to note them when




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deciding whether the doctrine should bar an appeal in a particular bankruptcy case.

We do precisely this below.

                                          D

        Having explained the law that underpins our equitable mootness inquiry, and

having concluded that the doctrine can apply in a Chapter 9 case such as this, we

now explain why equitable mootness bars the ratepayers’ appeal.

        First, and critically, the ratepayers here have never asked any court to stay

the implementation of the plan that the bankruptcy court confirmed—not the

bankruptcy court itself, not the district court, and not this court—and consequently

no court has ever stayed the implementation of the plan. Indeed, the ratepayers

had the opportunity to defend the automatic 14-day stay when Jefferson County

asked the bankruptcy court to waive it, but they raised no objection then either.

Nor did the ratepayers ever ask that their appeal be expedited. Consequently, when

Jefferson County commenced this appeal, the bankruptcy court’s confirmation

order (and the plan) had been in effect, never having been stayed, for more than a

year.

        We acknowledge that the “failure to obtain a stay does not necessarily

preclude review of [an] appeal.” Club Assocs., 956 F.2d at 1070. For example, if

the relief sought on appeal does not seriously undermine the actions that parties

have taken in good faith reliance on the judgment, or with no knowledge at all of



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the pending litigation, then there may be no reason to conclude that the appeal is

equitably moot. See, e.g., Seidler, 44 F.3d at 949 (party which prevailed before the

bankruptcy court in dispute over title to home retained the property in question, so

the dispute was not equitably moot). We may also be less concerned that a stay

was not granted if, for example, a court appears to have refused a stay on

inappropriate grounds. See Nica Holdings, 810 F.3d at 787.

      Claiming this “not necessarily preclude[d]” rubric for themselves, the

ratepayers contend (and the district court held) that seeking a stay would have been

futile because the ratepayers could never have raised sufficient money to post a

supersedeas bond for a plan confirmation with billions of dollars at stake. See

Bennett, 518 B.R. at 639–40. We see things differently. For starters, even if the

bankruptcy court (which had confirmed the plan over the ratepayers’ objections)

had been inclined to deny a stay, the same certainly could not be said of the district

court (which has agreed with the ratepayers on at least some of their arguments).

On this record, we do not think it can fairly be said that seeking a stay and/or

requesting that the appeal be expedited were fool’s errands. We come to this

conclusion in part by rejecting a premise of the ratepayers’ argument: that a bond

would necessarily have been required for a stay of limited duration. Given the

unique nature of a Chapter 9 proceeding, the ratepayers could have asked for

limited stay relief on another basis, such as meeting the traditional requirements for



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obtaining a preliminary injunction—likelihood of success on the merits, irreparable

harm, etc. Cf. Ind. State Police Pension Trust v. Chrysler LLC, 556 U.S. 960, 960

(2009) (endorsing the application of these factors in deciding whether to stay a

bankruptcy court order authorizing the sale of assets); Poplar Grove Planting &

Refining Co. v. Bache Halsey Stuart, Inc., 600 F.2d 1189, 1191 (5th Cir. 1979)

(discussing alternatives to posting an appeal bond for the full amount of the

judgment).

      Second, and closely related to the stay question, the County and others have

taken significant and largely irreversible steps in reliance on the unstayed plan

confirmed by the bankruptcy court. Specifically, the County has issued over one

billion dollars’ worth of new sewer warrants and has used the proceeds to retire the

old sewer warrants. These new warrants were sold based on a commitment—

backed up by an unstayed court order—to set sewer rates at particular amounts

over the course of the next 40 years. The relief sought here, even if limited to

striking the provision giving the bankruptcy court jurisdiction with respect to

future rates, would seriously undermine actions taken in reliance on the

confirmation order.   If the district court were to excise the part of the plan

providing the bankruptcy court with jurisdiction to oversee disputes regarding the

required future increases in sewer rates, there would be serious uncertainty about

what would happen to the value of the new warrants, released into the market in



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the absence of a stay of the confirmation order. We think it is fair to assume that,

at the very least, whoever ultimately held those warrants would be adversely

affected. Were we to do more, as the County insists that we would be required to

do, and vacate the confirmation order in toto, any concern about the value of these

warrants would pale in comparison to the ill effects not just to investors, but to the

County and, ultimately, its residents.

      This case is, consequently, much like others in which we have refused to

allow a party fully to air the merits of its appeal because granting the relief sought

would be inequitable or practically impossible. See, e.g., Club Assocs., 956 F.2d at

1069–71 (lender’s appeal of plan reorganizing real estate entity was moot where

other parties had stepped in and made investments to revitalize the entity in

reliance on the confirmed plan); Matos, 790 F.2d at 865–66 (debtor’s appeal of

plan that allowed foreclosure sale of the debtor’s home was moot where the

mortgage lender had conducted foreclosure sale in reliance on the confirmed plan,

even though the lender itself bought the home in the sale). And it is quite unlike

the few in which we have considered applying equitable mootness but decided,

notwithstanding an unstayed judgment, that the doctrine did not apply. These

disputes have typically involved the allocation of money, and have not had any

bearing on the rights of non-parties or (other) creditors, nor on the continued




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viability of an entity rehabilitated through the bankruptcy process.     See, e.g.,

Seidler, 44 F.3d at 949; Markstein, 763 F.2d at 1327.

      Finally, as with many equitable determinations based on notions of fairness,

we look briefly at the merits and the public interest to determine whether or to

what extent a decision either way in this case might result in injustice. See In re

Club Assocs., 956 F.2d at 1071 (“The concept of mootness is based upon the

premise that a court will undertake the task of carefully examining each issue

presented on appeal.”).   See also Stephens, 704 F.3d at 1283 (“Because of the

private and public interest in resolving this legal issue, we decline to apply the

doctrine of equitable mootness.”). As we noted above, concern for the merits is

especially warranted where, as here, the challenged plan is alleged to impinge on

municipal sovereignty. Here, however, we see no such injustice.

      The core of the ratepayers’ arguments is that, through the plan, the

bankruptcy court has allowed County commissioners at one point in time to bind

future County commissioners—indeed, the County as a whole—in a way that

impermissibly reduces the autonomy of the County and the political voice of the

voters of Jefferson County (including the ratepayers). This argument is, in our

view, not very strong.

      Courts are sympathetic to concerns about end-runs around political

processes, see, e.g., INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 959 (1983), and the ratepayers



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have a point that constraining future budgetary decisions in this manner in a sense

bypasses the usual procedures. In effect, the County has bound itself to raise rates

for decades according to a particular schedule, with limited exceptions/safety

valves.   But the ratepayers are incorrect in claiming that this constitutes a

fundamental change to the way that a municipality governs.

      Elected officials can bind their successors—and consequently also their

constituents, the people—to all kinds of unavoidably long-lasting financial effects,

sometimes irreversibly: they spend budget surpluses; they run deficits; they raise

and cut taxes; they expand and contract boundaries; they sign long-term contracts;

and they enter into expensive consent decrees to resolve litigation. We know of no

authority for the proposition that such government action, which impinges on the

rights (or at least limits the ability) of future governments to undo, becomes an

illegal end-run around constitutional governance. That a Chapter 9 bankruptcy

plan subjects the residents of Jefferson County to rate increases over time, instead

of forcing them to bear the financial pain all at once, does not transmogrify it into

one that per se violates the ratepayers’ constitutional rights. Cf. Schweitzer v.

Comenity Bank, 866 F.3d 1273, 1277 (11th Cir. 2017) (“the greater power

normally includes the lesser”). We need not attempt to engage in subtle line-

drawing exercises between permissible and impermissible commitments to future

action in this appeal, because the ratepayers have not asked us to do so. They seek



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only a per se bar on such future commitments by their elected representatives in

accordance with the plan. Having evaluated the factors relevant to an equitable

mootness determination, we conclude that dismissing the ratepayers’ appeal is

appropriate.

      We note, in concluding, that no party has so far asked the bankruptcy court

to exercise its jurisdiction to force Jefferson County to adjust its sewer rates

according to the provisions of the confirmed plan. We therefore express no view

on whether the ratepayers (or anyone else) will be able to mount a challenge to

aspects of the plan in the future should the bankruptcy court in fact purport to

exercise its jurisdiction to compel an increase in rates in compliance with the plan.

                                         IV

      We reverse the order of the district court and remand for dismissal of the

ratepayers’ appeal from the plan confirmed by the bankruptcy court.

      REVERSED and REMANDED.




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