Moyle v. United States, 603 U.S. ___ (2024)
Docket No.
23-726
Granted:
January 5, 2024
Argued:
April 24, 2024
Decided:
June 27, 2024
Opinions
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to
formal revision before publication in the United States Reports.
Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme
Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543,
pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal
errors.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 23–726 and 23–727
_________________
Mike Moyle, Speaker of the Idaho House
of Representatives, et al., PETITIONERS
23–726v.
United States
Idaho, PETITIONER
23–727v.
UNITED STATES
on writs of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 26, 2024]
Per Curiam.
The writs of certiorari before judgment are
dismissed as improvidently granted, and the stays entered by the
Court on January 5, 2024, are vacated.
It is so ordered.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 23–726 and 23–727
_________________
Mike Moyle, Speaker of the Idaho House
of Representatives, et al., PETITIONERS
23–726v.
United States
Idaho, PETITIONER
23–727v.
UNITED STATES
on writs of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 26, 2024]
Justice Jackson, concurring in part and
dissenting in part.
In 1986, Congress passed the Emergency Medical
Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), which requires hospitals to
provide stabilizing treatment when patients present with emergency
medical conditions. See 42 U. S. C. §1395dd. Sometimes,
an abortion is the only way to stabilize a patient and, therefore,
comply with EMTALA. But Idaho law prohibits abortions unless the
treating physician believes that the abortion is “necessary to
prevent the [patient’s] death.” Idaho Code Ann. §18–622(2)(a)(i)
(Supp. 2023).
Recognizing the clear conflict between EMTALA
and Idaho law, a Federal District Judge issued an injunction that
had the effect of ensuring that Idaho physicians would be able to
provide the abortion care EMTALA requires. Five months ago, this
Court stayed that injunction. As a legal matter, this Court’s stay
meant that unless a doctor could actually say that the abortion was
necessary to prevent a patient’s death, that doctor could no longer
provide abortion care that she viewed as reasonably necessary to
keep a patient from losing her uterus, going into organ failure, or
avoiding any number of other serious health risks. Compare
§18–622(a)(i) with 42 U. S. C. §1395dd(e)(1)(A). As a
practical matter, this Court’s intervention meant that Idaho
physicians were forced to step back and watch as their patients
suffered, or arrange for their patients to be airlifted out of
Idaho.
This months-long catastrophe was completely
unnecessary. More to the point, it directly violated federal law,
which in our system of government is supreme. See Art. VI,
cl. 2. As Justice Kagan explains, EMTALA plainly requires
doctors to provide medically necessary stabilizing abortions in
limited situations. See ante, at 4–6 (concurring opinion).
To the extent that Idaho law conflicts with EMTALA, the State’s law
must give way. I join in Justice Kagan’s statutory analysis, see
ibid., and I concur in the Court’s per curiam
decision to lift its stay, which should not have been entered in
the first place. I dissent in part because, in my view, the Court
is wrong to dismiss these cases as improvidently granted.
I
This Court typically dismisses cases as
improvidently granted based on “circumstances . . . which
‘were not . . . fully apprehended at the time certiorari
was granted.’ ” The Monrosa v. Carbon Black Export,
Inc., 359 U. S. 180, 183 (1959) (some alterations in
original). This procedural mechanism should be reserved for that
end—not turned into a tool for the Court to use to avoid issues
that it does not wish to decide.
The reasons that justified our grant of
certiorari in these cases still hold true today. See this Court’s
Rule 11. The importance of recognizing Congress’s judgments in
EMTALA remains as imperative as ever. The United States is still
hamstrung in its ability to enforce federal law while States pass
laws that effectively nullify EMTALA’s requirements. And, on the
ground, healthcare providers “have been all but paralyzed by legal
uncertainties,” placing pregnant patients at risk while they are
waiting to be transferred out of State to receive the care they
need. Brief for St. Luke’s Health System as Amicus Curiae
14–15.
If anything, the need for a clear answer to the
Supremacy Clause question has only increased in the intervening
months. Other States across the country have enacted legislation
that gives rise to the same sort of legal conflict that Idaho has
created. This pre-emption issue is not going away anytime soon and
will most certainly return to this Court. Indeed, it already has.
Just three days before we granted this petition, the Fifth Circuit
decided a similar case, affirming a permanent injunction that
prevents the United States from enforcing EMTALA’s requirements
with respect to stabilizing emergency abortions prohibited by Texas
law. See Texas v. Becerra, 89 F. 4th 529, 533
(2024). The United States has already petitioned for certiorari in
that case. See Pet. for Cert. in Becerra v. Texas,
O. T. 2023, No. 23–1076.
Nor has there been any change in today’s cases
that might eliminate or undermine the need for this Court’s review.
The Government continues to maintain (correctly, in my view) that
EMTALA’s plain text requires hospitals to provide certain emergency
abortions when doing so is the only way to stabilize an emergency
condition. Brief for United States 12–20. Idaho continues to
criminalize the provision of such abortions unless doing so is
necessary to prevent the patient’s death. Idaho Code Ann.
§18–622(2)(a)(i). And both Idaho and the United States still agree
that Idaho law directly criminalizes emergency care that the
Federal Government reads EMTALA to require. See Tr. of Oral Arg.
16–17, 65–66. Idaho’s lawyers may have changed their tune about the
exact types of medical care that fall in the gap between state and
federal law, but the fundamentals of this dispute remain the
same.
II
Most importantly, as Justice Kagan observes,
the conflict between the state and federal law—as they are actually
being interpreted and applied on the ground—is both substantial and
significant. Ante, at 4–6. It is a clash that clearly exists
despite the attempt by Idaho’s counsel to muddy the waters
concerning the scope of the State’s law.
The textual conflict is plain. EMTALA requires
stabilizing treatment if a patient has an acute medical condition
that is so severe “that the absence of immediate medical attention
could be reasonably expected to” either result in a serious health
risk, or seriously threaten bodily functions or organs. 42
U. S. C. §§1395dd(b)(1), (e)(1)(A). In such cases, EMTALA
requires hospitals “to provide such medical treatment of the
condition as may be necessary to assure, within reasonable medical
probability, that no material deterioration of the condition is
likely to . . . occur.” §1395dd(e)(3)(A). Idaho’s broad
criminalization of abortion—unless the treating physician believes
that the abortion is “necessary to prevent the [patient’s] death,”
Idaho Code Ann. §18–622(2)(a)(i)—conflicts with the text of EMTALA.
Put simply, under federal law, a hospital must provide an
emergency abortion that is reasonably necessary to preserve a
patient’s health within the meaning of EMTALA. But, under Idaho
law, a doctor cannot provide this care (required by federal law)
without committing a criminal act.
From the beginning of this litigation, the
United States has emphasized the host of emergency medical
conditions that require stabilizing abortions—even when the
procedure is not necessarily life saving. That list includes
pre-eclampsia, preterm premature rupture of the membranes (PPROM),
sepsis, and placental abruption, to name just a few examples.
Having now been sued over its interference with EMTALA’s
protections for people experiencing these conditions, Idaho has
shifted its position, both here and before the District Court,
recharacterizing abortions in these scenarios as life-saving care
permitted under Idaho law.
Some of my colleagues appear to view this
convenient rhetorical maneuver as a material change that (also
conveniently) reduces the conflict between state and federal law to
the point that a ruling from this Court is no longer warranted. See
ante, at 6–7 (Barrett, J., concurring). But it is both
legally and factually implausible to say that Idaho’s current
litigating position actually mitigates the conflict between that
State’s law and EMTALA.
The conflict between state and federal law still
exists—in real life. Idaho cannot credibly maintain that its law
always permits abortions in cases of PPROM or pre-eclampsia
such that its mandate never conflicts with federal law. The
same medical condition can present with different risks in
different patients. See, e.g., Brief for Physicians
for Reproductive Health as Amicus Curiae 10–11; Brief for
Physicians for Human Rights as Amicus Curiae 11–19. And,
often, a doctor simply does not know what the risks are or whether
a patient might face death. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 103–104; 2 App.
615–617. Such a doctor, observing the different legal thresholds
for action under state and federal law—not to mention the severe
criminal penalties for a miscalculation—would surely be cowed into
not providing abortion care that medical standards warrant and
federal law requires. Do not take my word for this; it is
already happening.[1]* So
it is strange, to say the least, that this Court would shirk its
duty to resolve a pressing legal issue on the basis of
representations that defy medical realities.
In any event, the representations Idaho’s
counsel made during oral argument and in the State’s briefs filed
in this Court are not a definitive interpretation of Idaho law.
That authority remains with the Idaho Supreme Court, which has
never endorsed the State’s position. To the contrary, the Idaho
Supreme Court has emphasized that, to avoid criminal liability, a
doctor must subjectively believe that an abortion is necessary to
prevent death. Planned Parenthood Great Northwest v.
State, 171 Idaho 374, 445–446, 522 P. 3d 1132, 1203–1204
(2023). And that is to say nothing of local prosecutors, who may
not be aware of (or care about) Idaho’s newfound interpretation of
its abortion ban, and who are highly incentivized to enforce the
law to the hilt. See Idaho Code Ann. §63–3642 (Supp. 2023)
(withholding funding from local governments if their officials
decline to enforce Idaho felony laws, which include these felony
abortion laws); see also Brief for Idaho Coalition for Safe
Healthcare, Inc., as Amicus Curiae 14–24 (discussing myriad
ways in which state and local officials in Idaho have targeted
physicians). Still, some of my colleagues latch onto the bald
representations of Idaho’s counsel, using them as an escape hatch
that justifies our dispensing with having to issue a merits ruling
in these cases.
We cannot simply wind back the clock to how
things were before the Court injected itself into this matter. Our
intervention has already distorted this litigation process. We
permitted Idaho’s law to go into effect by staying the District
Court’s injunction in the first place, then allowed this matter to
sit on our merits docket for five months while we considered the
question presented. It is too little, too late for the Court to
take a mulligan and just tell the lower courts to carry on as if
none of this has happened. As the old adage goes: The Court has
made this bed so now it must lie in it—by proceeding to decide the
merits of the critical pre-emption issue this case presents.
We have granted certiorari and heard argument.
We have had ample opportunity to consider the issues. The parties
were well represented on both sides, and dozens of amici
have weighed in. What is more, the necessary legal reasoning is
straightforward, and the answer to the question presented is—or at
least should be—quite clear: Idaho law prohibits what federal law
requires, so to that extent, under the Supremacy Clause, Idaho’s
law is pre-empted. See Mutual Pharmaceutical Co. v.
Bartlett, 570 U. S. 472, 479–480 (2013) (“[I]t has long
been settled that state laws that conflict with federal laws are
‘without effect’ ” (quoting Maryland v.
Louisiana, 451 U. S. 725, 746 (1981))). There is simply
no good reason not to resolve this conflict now.
* * *
Despite the clarity of the legal issue and the
dire need for an answer from this Court, today six Justices refuse
to recognize the rights that EMTALA protects. See ante, at
4–7 (Barrett, J., concurring); post, at 4–11
(Alito, J., dissenting). The majority opts, instead, to
dismiss these cases. But storm clouds loom ahead. Three Justices
suggest, at least in this context, that States have free rein to
nullify federal law. See post, at 11–14 (Alito, J.,
dissenting). And three more decline to disagree with those
dissenters on the merits. See ante, at 4–7
(Barrett, J., concurring). The latter group offers only
murmurs that “petitioners have raised a difficult and consequential
argument” about Congress’s authority under the Spending Clause.
Ante, at 6 (Barrett, J., concurring). So, as of today,
the Court has not adopted Idaho’s farfetched theories—but it has
not rejected them either.
Instead, the Court puts off the decision. But
how long must pregnant patients wait for an answer? Until we
confront the pending petition that the Government filed with us
after the Fifth Circuit enabled Texas’s flouting of EMTALA? Until
these very cases return to us in a few years? Will this Court just
have a do-over, rehearing and rehashing the same arguments we are
considering now, just at a comparatively more convenient point in
time? Or maybe we will keep punting on this issue altogether,
allowing chaos to reign wherever lower courts enable States to
flagrantly undercut federal law, facilitating the suffering of
people in need of urgent medical treatment.
After today, there will be a few months—maybe a
few years—during which doctors may no longer need to airlift
pregnant patients out of Idaho. As Justice Kagan emphasizes,
portions of Idaho’s law will be preliminarily enjoined (at least
for now). Ante, at 2, 4. But having not heard from this
Court on the ultimate pre-emption issue, Idaho’s doctors will still
have to decide whether to provide emergency medical care in the
midst of highly charged legal circumstances with no guarantee that
this fragile detente over the State’s categorical prohibitions will
be maintained. Cf. ante, at 8 (Barrett, J., concurring)
(“Even with the preliminary injunction in place, Idaho’s ability to
enforce its law remains almost entirely intact”).
So, to be clear: Today’s decision is not a
victory for pregnant patients in Idaho. It is delay. While this
Court dawdles and the country waits, pregnant people experiencing
emergency medical conditions remain in a precarious position, as
their doctors are kept in the dark about what the law requires.
This Court had a chance to bring clarity and certainty to this
tragic situation, and we have squandered it. And for as long as we
refuse to declare what the law requires, pregnant patients in
Idaho, Texas, and elsewhere will be paying the price. Because we
owe them—and the Nation—an answer to the straightforward
pre-emption question presented in these cases, I respectfully
dissent.
Notes
1
*See Brief for Idaho Coalition
for Safe Healthcare, Inc., as Amicus Curiae 7–13 (providing
examples in Idaho where doctors’ lack of certainty prevented them
from providing medically necessary abortions); see also Brief for
St. Luke’s Health System as Amicus Curiae 14–16 (same);
Brief for Amanda Zurawski et al. as Amici Curiae 29–30
(same); Brief for Physicians for Human Rights as Amicus
Curiae 12–17 (same).
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 23–726 and 23–727
_________________
Mike Moyle, Speaker of the Idaho House
of Representatives, et al., PETITIONERS
23–726v.
United States
Idaho, PETITIONER
23–727v.
UNITED STATES
on writs of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 26, 2024]
Justice Kagan, with whom Justice Sotomayor
joins, and with whom Justice Jackson joins as to Part II,
concurring.
An Idaho law prohibits abortions unless
necessary to prevent a pregnant woman’s death; the law makes no
exception for abortions necessary to prevent grave harms to the
woman’s health, like the loss of her fertility. Before the law
could take effect, the Federal Government sued the State under the
Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA). That law
requires a Medicare-funded hospital to provide essential care to
patients experiencing medical emergencies. The Government’s suit
contended that EMTALA preempts the Idaho abortion law in a narrow
class of cases: when the state law bars a hospital from performing
an abortion needed to prevent serious health harms.
The District Court, believing the Government was
likely to prevail in its suit, entered a preliminary injunction.
During the year that the injunction was in place, women in Idaho
were able to obtain abortions in medical emergencies. Idaho
meanwhile sought to get the injunction lifted. When the en banc
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit declined to stay the
injunction, Idaho filed an emergency application here. This Court
stayed the injunction and granted the State’s petition for
certiorari before judgment. With that stay in effect, Idaho could
enforce its abortion ban even when terminating a pregnancy was
necessary to prevent grave harm to the woman. The on-the-ground
impact was immediate. To ensure appropriate medical care, the
State’s largest provider of emergency services had to airlift
pregnant women out of Idaho roughly every other week, compared to
once in all of the prior year (when the injunction was in effect).
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 66, 113.
I concur in the Court’s decision today to vacate
its stay and dismiss the writ of certiorari before judgment as
improvidently granted. I do so because Idaho’s arguments about
EMTALA do not justify, and have never justified, either emergency
relief or our early consideration of this dispute. With this
Court’s writ of certiorari dismissed, the lower courts can proceed
with this litigation in the regular course. And with this Court’s
stay dissolved, the District Court’s preliminary injunction will
again take effect. That will prevent Idaho from enforcing its
abortion ban when the termination of a pregnancy is needed to
prevent serious harms to a woman’s health.
I
EMTALA requires hospitals to provide abortions
that Idaho’s law prohibits. When that is so, Idaho’s law is
preempted. The Court’s ruling today follows from those
premises.
Federal law and Idaho law are in conflict about
the treatment of pregnant women facing health emergencies. EMTALA
requires a Medicare-funded hospital to offer an abortion when
needed to stabilize a medical condition that seriously threatens a
pregnant woman’s life or health. See 42 U. S. C. §1395dd.
Idaho allows abortions only when “necessary to prevent” a pregnant
woman’s “death.” Idaho Code Ann. §18–622(2)(a)(i) (Supp. 2023). By
their terms, the two laws differ. What falls in the gap between
them are cases in which continuing a pregnancy does not put a
woman’s life in danger, but still places her at risk of grave
health consequences, including loss of fertility. In that
situation, federal law requires a hospital to offer an abortion,
whereas Idaho law prohibits that emergency care. And the record
shows that, as a matter of medical reality, such cases exist. For
example, when a woman comes to an emergency room with PPROM, the
serious risk she faces may not be of death but of damage to her
uterus, preventing her from having children in the future. See 2
App. 594; see also id., at 615–616 (similar for
pre-eclampsia). Idaho has never suggested that its law would allow
an abortion in those circumstances. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 23
(stating that although the threat of death need not be
“imminen[t],” only that threat can justify an abortion); see also
id., at 25–28, 33–34. That is why hospitals in Idaho have
had to airlift medically fragile women to other States to receive
abortions needed to prevent serious harms to their health. See
id., at 66, 103–104, 113–115. Those transfers measure the
difference between the life-threatening conditions Idaho will allow
hospitals to treat and the health-threatening conditions it will
not, despite EMTALA’s command.
Given that conflict, I agree with the Court’s
decision today to step back from its early intervention in this
dispute. In the first stage of this suit, the District Court
considered both sides’ medical evidence and entered a preliminary
injunction against Idaho’s law on the ground of preemption. See 623
F. Supp. 3d 1096, 1103–1105, 1110, 1117 (2022). After the
Idaho Supreme Court construed the law, the District Court revisited
its findings, and reaffirmed its entry of the injunction. See 2023
WL 3284977, *1, *5 (May 4, 2023). In line with standard practice,
that decision now can go to the Court of Appeals, and the District
Court can afterward consider further evidence and arguments for the
purpose of final judgment. Idaho is not entitled to anything more.
It mainly argues that EMTALA never requires a hospital to “offer
medical treatments that violate state law,” even when they are
needed to prevent substantial health harms. Tr. of Oral Arg. 4. In
my view, that understanding of EMTALA is not “likely to succeed on
the merits,” and so cannot support a stay of the injunction.
Nken v. Holder, 556 U. S. 418, 434 (2009).
Neither does the State’s argument provide any basis for this Court
to short-circuit the proceedings below. Today’s ruling thus puts
the case back where it belongs, and with the preliminary injunction
in place.
II
Justice Alito’s dissenting opinion requires a
brief response. His primary argument is that although EMTALA
generally obligates hospitals to provide emergency medical care, it
never demands that they offer an abortion—no matter how much that
procedure is needed to prevent grave physical harm, or even death.
See post, at 4–15. That view has no basis in the
statute.
EMTALA unambiguously requires that a
Medicare-funded hospital provide whatever medical treatment is
necessary to stabilize a health emergency—and an abortion, in rare
situations, is such a treatment. The statutory obligation kicks in
when an individual arrives at a hospital with an “emergency medical
condition,” which is one involving serious jeopardy to health.
§1395dd(e)(1)(A). The hospital must then “stabilize” the condition.
§1395dd(b)(1)(A). That means offering the medical treatment
necessary to ensure that “no material deterioration of the
condition” is likely to occur. §1395dd(e)(3)(A). The statute does
not list particular treatments—for example, defibrillation, blood
transfusion, or mechanical ventilation. What it instead requires is
the treatment that is medically appropriate to stabilize the
patient. And when a pregnancy goes terribly wrong, that treatment
may be an abortion. Termination of the pregnancy (which is often of
a non-viable fetus) may be the only way to prevent a woman’s death
or serious injury, including kidney failure or loss of fertility.
See 623 F. Supp. 3d, at 1101, 1103–1105. I do not understand
Justice Alito to dispute that medical fact. And from that fact, a
statutory obligation arises. It does not matter that EMTALA “does
not mention abortion.” Post, at 12; see post, at 5.
Neither, as just noted, does EMTALA mention any other treatment.
The statute simply requires the hospital to offer the treatment
necessary to prevent the emergency condition from spiraling
downward. And on rare occasions that means providing an
abortion.
The statute’s references to protecting an
“unborn child” do not lead to a different result. Contrary to
Justice Alito’s view, none alters EMTALA’s command when a pregnancy
threatens the woman’s life or health. Three of the four provisions
Justice Alito cites concern the treatment of women in labor
(including all those with healthy pregnancies). Those provisions
ensure that a hospital, in considering the transfer of a woman to
another facility, takes account of risks to not only the woman but
also her “unborn child.” §1395dd(c)(1)(A)(ii), (2)(A),
(e)(1)(B)(ii). The provisions have no application to women who are
not in labor, but instead are experiencing a different
pregnancy-related condition. The fourth provision (included within
the definition of “emergency medical condition”) specifies that a
hospital must treat a condition that “plac[es] the health of the
individual (or, with respect to a pregnant woman, the health of the
woman or her unborn child) in serious jeopardy.”
§1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i). The parenthetical there, added in an amendment
to EMTALA, ensures that a woman with no health risks of her own can
demand emergency-room treatment if her fetus is in peril. It does
not displace the hospital’s duty to a woman whose life or health
is in jeopardy, and who needs an abortion to stabilize her
condition. Then, the statute requires offering that treatment to
the woman.[1]
Because the Idaho law conflicts with that
requirement—prevents hospitals from doing what EMTALA commands—the
Court is right to dissolve its stay of the District Court’s
injunction. Doing so will again give Idaho women access to all the
needed medical treatments that EMTALA guarantees.
Notes
1
The amendment’s history
confirms that understanding. As originally enacted, EMTALA did not
obligate hospitals to provide medical care when a woman’s fetus,
but not the woman herself, was in peril. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 105
(Solicitor General describing “well-publicized cases” where women’s
“own health and life were not in danger, but the fetus was in grave
distress and hospitals weren’t treating them”). To fix that
problem, very large bipartisan majorities in both the House and the
Senate elected to broaden the provision, entitling a woman to
demand care for her unborn child as well as herself. See 103Stat.
2248; 135 Cong. Rec. 31431 (1989); id., at 31127;
id., at 24605; id., at 23393. The amendment would
likely have sparked far more opposition if it somehow tacitly
withdrew EMTALA’s requirement that hospitals treat women who need
an abortion to prevent death or serious harm.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 23–726 and 23–727
_________________
Mike Moyle, Speaker of the Idaho House
of Representatives, et al., PETITIONERS
23–726v.
United States
Idaho, PETITIONER
23–727v.
UNITED STATES
on writs of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 26, 2024]
Justice Barrett, with whom The Chief Justice
and Justice Kavanaugh join, concurring.
We granted certiorari before judgment in these
cases to decide whether the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor
Act (EMTALA) preempts a provision of Idaho law that prohibits
abortions except when necessary to save the life of the mother. 601
U. S. ___ (2024). Because the shape of these cases has
substantially shifted since we granted certiorari, I concur in the
Court’s judgment dismissing the writ as improvidently granted.
I
In 2022, the Department of Health and Human
Services issued guidance to “remind hospitals of their existing
obligation to comply with EMTALA.” Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Reinforcement of EMTALA Obligations Specific to
Patients Who Are Pregnant or Are Experiencing Pregnancy Loss, Note,
p. 1 (July 11, 2022) (rev. Aug. 25, 2022) (italics deleted).
The guidance tells physicians that if they believe that “abortion
is the stabilizing treatment necessary to resolve” a pregnant
woman’s emergency medical condition, they “must provide that
treatment.” Id., at 1 (italics and emphasis deleted). Any
contrary state law, the guidance continues, is “preempted.”
Ibid. (italics and emphasis deleted).
Idaho’s Defense of Life Act criminalizes the
performance of most abortions. Idaho Code Ann. §18–622 (Supp.
2023). As originally enacted, the Act allowed accused physicians to
raise an affirmative defense that “the abortion was necessary to
prevent the death of the pregnant woman.” §18–622(2)(a)(i). Soon
before the Act was set to take effect, the United States sued
Idaho, seeking to enjoin Idaho’s law “to the extent it conflicts
with EMTALA.” 1 App. 5. EMTALA, the United States argued, requires
physicians to perform abortions under certain circumstances that
Idaho’s Act would forbid.
After holding an evidentiary hearing, the
District Court identified a conflict and granted a preliminary
injunction. 623 F. Supp. 3d 1096 (Idaho 2022). The court based
its conclusion on three key assumptions: (1) The Act prohibits the
termination of ectopic pregnancies; (2) the pregnant woman’s death
must be objectively “imminent” or “certain” before a physician can
perform an abortion; and (3) the “necessary to prevent death”
exception is only an affirmative defense. Id., at 1109–1114.
The Government’s witnesses, whose testimony the court credited,
made similar assumptions. Id., at 1104–1105. They claimed
that the Act might prohibit abortions as treatment for conditions
including severe heart failure, pre-eclampsia, preterm premature
rupture of the membranes (PPROM), sepsis, and placental abruption,
because a physician could not know, “with certainty,” that an
abortion is necessary to save the mother’s life in those
circumstances. See, e.g., 1 App. 30–38. They also
assumed that the Act only permitted abortions where death was
“imminent.” See, e.g., 2 id., at 608.
After the District Court ruled, the Idaho
Supreme Court construed the Act. That court explained that the Act
“does not require objective certainty, or a particular level
of immediacy, before the abortion can be ‘necessary’ to save the
woman’s life.” Planned Parenthood Great Nw. v. State,
171 Idaho 374, 445, 522 P. 3d 1132, 1203 (2023). And “treating
an ectopic pregnancy, by removing the fetus,” the court concluded,
does not count as an “ ‘abortion’ ” under the Act.
Ibid.
Without holding a new evidentiary hearing, the
District Court denied Idaho’s motion for reconsideration. 2023 WL
3284977 (May 4, 2023). The Idaho Legislature later amended the
definition of “abortion” to exclude “[t]he removal of a dead unborn
child” and “[t]he removal of an ectopic or molar pregnancy.”
§18–604(1)(b), (c). It also changed the “life of the mother”
affirmative defense into an exception from the prohibition on
criminal abortions. §18–622(2).
The Ninth Circuit initially stayed the District
Court’s injunction, 83 F. 4th 1130 (2023), but the en banc court
vacated the panel’s stay, declined to stay the injunction, and
scheduled oral argument on the merits, 82 F. 4th 1296 (2023). We
granted Idaho’s and the Legislature’s applications to stay the
District Court’s injunction pending appeal, treated the
applications as petitions for a writ of certiorari before judgment,
and granted the petitions. 601 U. S. ___ (2024).
II
Before the Ninth Circuit had the opportunity
to review the District Court’s preliminary injunction, this Court
stayed the injunction and granted certiorari before judgment. Both
decisions were premised on the belief that Idaho would suffer
irreparable harm under the injunction and that these cases were
ready for the Court’s immediate determination. Since then, briefing
and oral argument have “shed more light on this case than in the
nature of things was afforded at the time” the Court considered
petitioners’ emergency applications. Belcher v.
Stengel, 429 U. S. 118, 119 (1976)
(per curiam) (dismissed as improvidently granted). I am
now convinced that these cases are no longer appropriate for early
resolution.
The parties dispute whether EMTALA requires
hospitals to provide abortions—or any other treatment forbidden by
state law—as necessary stabilizing care. They also disagree about
whether EMTALA, as a statute enacted under Congress’s spending
power and that operates on private parties, can preempt
state law (an issue aired for the first time in this Court). In my
judgment, it would be imprudent to answer these important questions
now. Since this suit began in the District Court, Idaho law has
significantly changed—twice. And since we granted certiorari, the
parties’ litigating positions have rendered the scope of the
dispute unclear, at best.
In its stay application, Idaho argued that the
Government’s interpretation of EMTALA would render Idaho’s Act
virtually unenforceable. As Idaho understood it, the Government’s
theory would allow physicians to perform abortions whenever
necessary to avoid “ ‘serious jeopardy’ ” to the mother’s
mental health. Stay Reply Brief in No. 23A470, p. 6. On
that broad reading, Idaho projected that emergency rooms would
function as “federal abortion enclaves governed not by state law,
but by physician judgment, as enforced by the United States’s
mandate to perform abortions on demand.” Ibid. (citation
omitted). Idaho also warned that the Government’s interpretation
would “threate[n] religious healthcare providers” by forcing
doctors and hospitals to perform abortions regardless of conscience
objections. Id., at 15. Both of these points were relevant
to the Court’s assessment of the irreparable harm that Idaho would
suffer from the preliminary injunction, Nken v.
Holder, 556 U. S. 418, 434 (2009), as well as the need
for “immediate determination in this Court,” Supreme Court Rule
11.
At the merits stage, however, the United States
disclaimed these interpretations of EMTALA. First, it emphatically
disavowed the notion that an abortion is ever required as
stabilizing treatment for mental health conditions. Brief for
United States 26, n. 5; Tr. of Oral Arg. 76–78. That is an
important concession: If restricted to conditions posing serious
jeopardy to a woman’s physical health, the Government’s reading of
EMTALA does not gut Idaho’s Act.[1] Second, the United States clarified that federal
conscience protections, for both hospitals and individual
physicians, apply in the EMTALA context. Tr. of Oral Arg. 87–89.
That is another critical point: It alleviates Idaho’s concern that
the Government’s interpretation of EMTALA would strip healthcare
providers of conscience protections.
Narrowing happened from the other direction too.
The United States identified PPROM, placental abruption,
pre-eclampsia, and eclampsia as conditions for which EMTALA
requires an emergency abortion to be available. (The same
conditions that the Government’s witnesses identified—before
Idaho’s law changed.) But in this Court, petitioners represent that
the Act permits physicians to treat each of these conditions with
emergency abortions, even if the threat to the woman’s life is not
imminent. Reply Brief in No. 23–726, pp. 21–22; Reply Brief in
No. 23–727, pp. 8–9; Tr. of Oral Arg. 23. The same is true for
the conditions identified by the Government’s witnesses (severe
heart failure and sepsis). Reply Brief in No. 23–727,
pp. 8–9.
A grant of certiorari before judgment presumes
that further proceedings below are unnecessary to the Court’s
resolution of the question presented. That was a miscalculation in
these cases, because the parties’ positions are still evolving. The
United States has clarified that EMTALA’s reach is far more modest
than it appeared when we granted certiorari and a stay. Idaho law
has materially changed since the District Court entered the
preliminary injunction, and, based on the parties’ arguments before
us, it seems that the framing of these cases has not had sufficient
opportunity to catch up. Cf. The Monrosa v. Carbon Black
Export, Inc., 359 U. S. 180, 184 (1959) (“Examination of a
case on the merits, on oral argument, may bring into ‘proper focus’
a consideration which, though present in the record at the time of
granting the writ, only later indicates that the grant was
improvident”).
On top of that, petitioners have raised a
difficult and consequential argument, which they did not discuss in
their stay applications, about whether Congress, in reliance on the
Spending Clause, can obligate recipients of federal funds to
violate state criminal law. Brief for Petitioners in No. 23–726,
pp. 48–51; Reply Brief in No. 23–727, pp. 3–4; see also
Brief for Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas as
Amicus Curiae. The District Court did not address this issue
below—nor did the Ninth Circuit, which we bypassed. We should not
jump ahead of the lower courts, particularly on an issue of such
importance. Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U. S. 709,
718, n. 7 (2005) (“[W]e are a court of review, not of first
view”); New York v. Uplinger, 467 U. S. 246, 251
(1984) (Stevens, J., concurring) (dismissing as improvidently
granted where “constitutional questions” would otherwise be
considered “premature[ly]”). The lower courts should address the
Spending Clause issue in the first instance.
For these reasons, a “deviation from normal
appellate practice” in these cases has proved to be unwise. Supreme
Court Rule 11. I therefore agree that we should dismiss the writ of
certiorari as improvidently granted and permit proceedings to run
their course in the courts below.
Having dismissed the writ, I also agree that we
should vacate the stay. As the party seeking emergency relief from
this Court, Idaho bore the burden of showing that it would be
“ ‘irreparably injured’ ” if the preliminary injunction
remained in effect. Nken, 556 U. S., at 434. The
Court’s grant of a stay reflected, among other things, its
determination that Idaho had satisfied that burden. Now, based on
the parties’ representations, it appears that the injunction will
not stop Idaho from enforcing its law in the vast majority of
circumstances.
To be sure, the text of the two laws differs:
Idaho’s Act allows abortion only when “necessary to prevent the
death of the pregnant woman,” Idaho Code Ann. §18–622(2)(a)(i),
while EMTALA requires stabilizing care to prevent “serious
jeopardy” to the woman’s health, 42 U. S. C.
§1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i). But Idaho represents that its exception is
broader than the United States fears, and the United States
represents that EMTALA’s requirement is narrower than Idaho fears.
That matters in assessing Idaho’s irreparable harm for purposes of
the stay. The dramatic narrowing of the dispute—especially the
Government’s position on abortions to address mental health and
conscience exemptions for healthcare providers—has undercut the
conclusion that Idaho would suffer irreparable harm under the
preliminary injunction. Contrary to Idaho’s concerns at the stay
stage, the Government’s interpretation of EMTALA does not purport
to transform emergency rooms into “federal abortion enclaves
governed not by state law, but by physician judgment, as enforced
by the United States’s mandate to perform abortions on demand.”
Stay Reply Brief in No. 23A470, p. 6 (citation omitted). Nor
does it purport to deprive doctors and hospitals of conscience
protections. Cf. id., at 15. Thus, even with the preliminary
injunction in place, Idaho’s ability to enforce its law remains
almost entirely intact.
Notes
1
The United States also
clarified that if pregnancy seriously jeopardizes the woman’s
health postviability, EMTALA requires delivery, not abortion. Brief
for United States 10; Tr. of Oral Arg. 75. And it emphasized that
EMTALA requires abortion only in an “emergency acute medical
situation,” where a woman’s health is in jeopardy if she does not
receive an abortion “then and there.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 79–80. These
two temporal points also narrow the scope of EMTALA’s potential
conflict with Idaho’s Act.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 23–726 and 23–727
_________________
Mike Moyle, Speaker of the Idaho House
of Representatives, et al., PETITIONERS
23–726v.
United States
Idaho, PETITIONER
23–727v.
UNITED STATES
on writs of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 26, 2024]
Justice Alito, with whom Justice Thomas joins,
and with whom Justice Gorsuch joins as to Parts I and II,
dissenting.
This case presents an important and unsettled
question of federal statutory law: whether the Emergency Medical
Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), 42 U. S. C. §1395dd,
sometimes demands that hospitals perform abortions and thereby
preempts Idaho’s recently adopted Defense of Life Act, Idaho Code
Ann. §18–622 (Supp. 2023). Enacted nearly 40 years ago, EMTALA
requires hospitals participating in Medicare to “scree[n]” and
“stabilize” “any individual” who comes to an emergency room with an
“emergency medical condition” that jeopardizes the patient’s
“health.” §§1395dd(a), (b)(1)(A), (e)(1)(A). And if the patient is
a pregnant woman, the hospital must stabilize both “the woman” and
“her unborn child.” §1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i).
After this Court’s decision in Dobbs v.
Jackson Women’s Health Organization, 597 U. S. 215
(2022), Idaho and other States enacted new laws restricting the
performance of abortions. To protect both “maternal health and
safety” and “ ‘the life of preborn children,’ ”
Planned Parenthood Great Northwest v. State, 171
Idaho 374, 438, 522 P. 3d 1132, 1196 (2023) (quoting Idaho
Code Ann. §18–601), Idaho’s law permits an abortion only when
“necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman,”
§18–622(2)(a)(i).
Shortly before Idaho’s law took effect,
President Biden instructed members of his administration to find
ways to limit Dobbs’s reach. Protecting Access to
Reproductive Healthcare Services, Exec. Order No. 14076, 87 Fed.
Reg. 42053 (2022). In response, Government lawyers hit upon the
novel argument that, under EMTALA, all Medicare-funded
hospitals—that is, the vast majority of hospitals[1]—must perform abortions on request
when the “health” of a pregnant woman is in serious jeopardy.
§1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i). In the Government’s view, EMTALA trumps laws
like Idaho’s, which allow abortions only to preserve the life of
the pregnant woman. See Dept. of Health & Human Servs. (HHS),
Reinforcement of EMTALA Obligations Specific to Patients Who Are
Pregnant or Are Experiencing Pregnancy Loss 1 (QSO–22–22–Hospitals,
July 11, 2022). The Government sued Idaho on this preemption theory
and obtained a preliminary injunction against enforcement of the
state law “to the extent it conflicts with EMTALA.” 623
F. Supp. 3d 1097, 1117 (Idaho 2022).
The Government’s preemption theory is plainly
unsound. Far from requiring hospitals to perform abortions,
EMTALA’s text unambiguously demands that Medicare-funded hospitals
protect the health of both a pregnant woman and her “unborn
child.” §1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i). And even if there were some ambiguity
in the statutory text, we would be obligated to resolve that
ambiguity in favor of the State because EMTALA was enacted under
the Spending Clause, and as we have held time and again, conditions
attached to the receipt of federal funds must be unambiguous.
Arlington Central School Dist. Bd. of Ed. v. Murphy,
548 U. S. 291, 296 (2006); Pennhurst State School and
Hospital v. Halderman, 451 U. S. 1, 17 (1981).
Here, no one who has any respect for statutory language can
plausibly say that the Government’s interpretation is unambiguously
correct. And in any event, Idaho never consented to any
conditions imposed by EMTALA and certainly did not surrender
control of the practice of medicine and the regulation of abortions
within its territory.
Recognizing the flaws in the Government’s theory
and Idaho’s “strong” likelihood of success, this Court stayed the
preliminary injunction pending appeal on January 5. And, wisely or
not, the Court also took the unusual step of granting certiorari
before Idaho’s appeal was heard by the Ninth Circuit. See this
Court’s Rule 11. Now the Court dismisses the writ and, what is
worse, vacates the stay.
This about-face is baffling. Nothing legally
relevant has occurred since January 5. And the underlying issue in
this case—whether EMTALA requires hospitals to perform abortions in
some circumstances—is a straightforward question of statutory
interpretation. It is squarely presented by the decision below, and
it has been exhaustively briefed and argued. In addition to the
parties’ briefs, we received 46 amicus briefs, including
briefs submitted by 44 States and the District of Columbia; briefs
expressing the views of 379 Members of Congress; and briefs from
prominent medical organizations. Altogether, we have more than
1,300 pages of briefing to assist us, and we heard nearly two hours
of argument. Everything there is to say about the statutory
interpretation question has probably been said many times over.
That question is as ripe for decision as it ever will be.
Apparently, the Court has simply lost the will to decide the easy
but emotional and highly politicized question that the case
presents. That is regrettable.
Having already taken the extraordinary step of
granting certiorari before judgment in order to decide whether the
Government’s new interpretation of EMTALA is correct, we have no
good reason to change course now. This is especially so because the
Court’s decision to reexamine the stay issued in January makes it
necessary to reassess whether Idaho showed a likelihood of success
on the merits, a question that is closely related to the question
whether Idaho or the Government has correctly interpreted EMTALA. I
will therefore proceed to analyze what EMTALA means.
I
A
The text of EMTALA shows clearly that it does
not require hospitals to perform abortions in violation of Idaho
law. To the contrary, EMTALA obligates Medicare-funded hospitals to
treat, not abort, an “unborn child.”
EMTALA imposes two main obligations on covered
hospitals. First, a hospital must, within its “capabilit[ies],”
“screen” “any individual” arriving at the emergency room without
regard to the individual’s ability to pay. §§1395dd(a), (h). The
purpose of this screening is to determine whether the individual
has an “emergency medical condition,” which EMTALA defines as
follows:
“a medical condition manifesting itself by
acute symptoms of sufficient severity (including severe pain) such
that the absence of immediate medical attention could reasonably be
expected to result in—
“(i) placing the health of the individual (or,
with respect to a pregnant woman, the health of the woman or her
unborn child) in serious jeopardy,
“(ii) serious impairment to bodily functions,
or
“(iii) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ
or part.” §1395dd(e)(1)(A) (emphasis added).[2]
When a hospital determines that an “emergency
medical condition” exists, it has two options. It may provide
“treatment” within the capability of its “staff and facilities.”
§1395dd(b)(1)(A). Or it may “transfer . . . the
individual” to another hospital that “has available space and
qualified personnel for the treatment” as long as the transfer
would effect a net benefit for the patient. §§1395dd(b)(1)(B),
(c)(2)(B)(i).
At no point in its elaboration of the screening,
stabilization, and transfer requirements does EMTALA mention
abortion. Just the opposite is true: EMTALA requires the hospital
at every stage to protect an “unborn child” from harm.
Begin with the screening provision, which
requires a hospital “to determine whether or not an emergency
medical condition (within the meaning of subsection (e)(1))
exists.” §1395dd(a). “[W]ith respect to a pregnant woman,”
subsection (e)(1) defines an emergency medical condition as one
that is sufficiently serious to “plac[e] . . . the health
of the woman or her unborn child . . . in serious
jeopardy.” §1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i) (emphasis added). Thus, if the
hospital identifies an emergency medical condition threatening the
child, it must “stabilize” that condition to ensure that the
child’s health does not remain in “jeopardy.” §§1395dd(b)(1)(A),
(e)(1)(A)(i). It goes without saying that aborting an “unborn
child” does not protect it from jeopardy.
Similarly, if a hospital wants to transfer a
pregnant woman to another facility, it may not do so unless, among
other things, a physician certifies directly or through an
intermediary that the medical benefits of transfer outweigh any
“increased risks” to the woman “and, in the case of labor, to the
unborn child.” §§1395dd(c)(1)(A)(ii), (e)(1)(B). Thus, regardless
of whether a hospital chooses to treat or transfer a pregnant
woman, it must strive to protect her “unborn child” from harm.
The Government struggles mightily—but
unsuccessfully—to get around this language. First, the Government
argues that EMTALA’s repeated use of the term “individual,” coupled
with the Dictionary Act’s definition of that term, which does not
include an “unborn child,”[3]
shows that “[a]ll of EMTALA’s duties—screening, stabilization, and
transfer—run to the ‘individual’ seeking care.” Brief for United
States 41. That assertion falls flat in light of EMTALA’s express
protection of the unborn child.
Besides, there is a simple explanation for
EMTALA’s repeated use of the term “individual,” and it provides no
support for the Government’s interpretation. Most of those
references involve conduct in which only the pregnant woman can
engage, such as going to an emergency room,[4] receiving medical information,[5] consenting to or refusing treatment,[6] or filing suit.[7] Many references concern transfer to another
facility,[8] and when a
pregnant woman is transferred, her “unborn child” obviously goes
with her. Another reference concerns a woman’s “emergency medical
condition,” which, as noted, includes conditions that jeopardize
her “unborn child.”[9] And some
references expressly mention both the “individual” and “the unborn
child.”[10] No use of the
term “individual” supports the Government’s interpretation.
Second, based on a provision stating that an
individual may not be treated without consent, §1395dd(b)(2), the
Government infers that “it is for the pregnant woman, not state
law, to decide how to proceed” when her health is at risk. Brief
for United States 43. The Government’s logic is faulty. The right
to withhold consent does not necessarily carry with it the right to
demand whatever cannot be done without consent. X may
withhold consent to a contract with Y, but that does not
mean that X may demand to enter into such a contract. A
person may not be forced to assume the duties of the Presidency
without consent, but it does not follow that this person may demand
to be sworn in as President.
Or, to provide an example that is more closely
related to the matter at hand, the right to refuse medical
treatment without consent does not entail the right to demand
treatment that is prohibited by law. Cancer patients have the right
to refuse treatment that their doctors recommend, but they do not
have a right to obtain whatever treatment they want, such as the
administration of a drug that cannot legally be used in this
country. Cf. 21 U. S. C. §360bbb–0a (granting terminal
patients the right to try experimental drugs). Likewise here, a
woman’s right to withhold consent to treatment related to her
pregnancy does not mean that she can demand an abortion.
For these reasons, the text of EMTALA
conclusively shows that it does not require hospitals to perform
abortions.
B
For those who find it appropriate to look
beyond the statutory text, the context in which EMTALA was enacted
reinforces what the text makes clear. Congress designed EMTALA to
solve a particular problem—preventing private hospitals from
turning away patients who are unable to pay for medical care.
H. R. Rep. No. 99–241(I), pt. 1, p. 27 (1985); K. Treiger,
Preventing Patient Dumping: Sharpening the COBRA’s Fangs, 61
N. Y. U. L. Rev. 1186, 1188 (1986). And none of many briefs
submitted in this suit has found any suggestion in the proceedings
leading up to EMTALA’s passage that the Act might also use the
carrot of federal funds to entice hospitals to perform abortions.
To the contrary, EMTALA garnered broad support in both Houses of
Congress, including the support of Members such as Representative
Henry Hyde who adamantly opposed the use of federal funds to abet
abortion.[11]
It is also telling that the Congress that
initially enacted EMTALA in 1986 and the one that amended it in
1989 also passed appropriations riders under what is now known as
the Hyde Amendment (named after Representative Hyde) to prevent
federal funds from facilitating abortions, except in limited
circumstances. See Harris v. McRae, 448 U. S.
297, 302 (1980). Between 1981 and 1993—the very period when EMTALA
was enacted and amended—the Hyde Amendment contained only one
exception: for abortions necessary to save the life of the pregnant
woman. Congressional Research Service, E. Liu & W. Shen, The
Hyde Amendment: An Overview 1 (2022); see §204, 99Stat. 1119 (1986
Hyde Amendment). The Hyde Amendment thus prohibited federal funds
from paying for the health-related abortions that the Government
says EMTALA mandates. It would have been strange indeed if a
Congress that repeatedly sought to prevent federal funding of
abortions simultaneously enacted a law that, as interpreted by the
Government, requires hospitals and physicians to perform that very
same procedure.
The Government’s reading of EMTALA is doubly
strange given that the President who signed that law repeatedly
promised not to use federal funds to subsidize or require the
provision of abortions. Less than three months before signing
EMTALA, President Reagan told participants in the annual March for
Life that “the resources of government are not [to be] used to
promote or perform abortions.” The American Presidency Project,
Remarks to Participants in the March for Life Rally (Jan. 22,
1986). The next year, he touted his administration’s work “to
restrict the use of Federal funds to perform abortions.”
Id., Remarks to Participants in the March for Life Rally
(Jan. 22, 1987). In another 1987 speech, he promised that his
administration would “oppose any legislation that would require
individuals or institutions, public or private, to finance or
perform abortions.” Id., Remarks at a White House Briefing
for Right to Life Activists (July 30, 1987). And his 1986 and 1987
messages to Congress repeated that promise. See id., Message
to the Congress on “A Quest for Excellence” (Jan. 27, 1987);
id., Message to the Congress on America’s Agenda for the
Future (Feb. 6, 1986).
Around the same time, President Reagan’s HHS
Secretary testified before Congress that “the Administration
steadfastly opposes [the] creation of [a] program which would
encourage, promote or finance the performance of abortions.”
Statement of the Hon. Margaret M. Heckler, in Budget
Reconciliation: Hearings before the Senate Committee on Finance,
99th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 1, p. 273 (1985). It beggars belief
that President Reagan would have happily signed EMTALA into law if
it did what he “steadfastly oppose[d].” Ibid.
C
Desperate to find some crumb of support for
its interpretation, the Government scrapes together a handful of
sources that it says evidence a general understanding that EMTALA
requires hospitals to perform health-related abortions prohibited
by Idaho law. None of these sources stands for that
proposition.
First, the Government searched a vast database
of HHS enforcement decisions and located six occurring between 2010
and 2023 that it finds helpful. It is not obvious why those
enforcement decisions—which postdate EMTALA by more than 20
years—shed light on its original meaning. And it is even less clear
why they justify the Government’s claim that EMTALA preempts Idaho
law. Five of the six cases involved ectopic pregnancies, which the
Idaho law does not cover. See Idaho Code Ann. §18–604(1)(c)
(excluding ectopic pregnancies from the definition of “abortion”).
In the remaining case, the hospital was faulted, not for failing to
perform an abortion, but for discharging a sick pregnant woman
without calling for an ambulance to transport her to another
hospital.[12]
The Government also seizes upon a provision in
the Affordable Care Act stating that “[n]othing in this Act shall
be construed to relieve any health care provider from providing
emergency services as required by State or Federal law, including
. . . EMTALA.” 42 U. S. C. §18023(d) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Because this provision was placed in a
section of the Act concerning abortion, the Government infers that
it reflects a congressional understanding that EMTALA sometimes
requires abortions. Brief for United States 19–20. That inference
is totally unwarranted. The provision in question refers to the
entire massive Affordable Care Act, not just the relatively few
provisions concerning abortion. Compare §18023(d), with §18023(c)
(referring more narrowly to “this subsection”). It reaffirms the
duty of participating hospitals to comply with EMTALA, but it does
not expand what the text of EMTALA requires.[13] So this provision cannot support the
Government’s interpretation of EMTALA either.
II
As the previous Part shows, EMTALA’s text and
context decisively refute the Government’s interpretation. But
there is a third strike against the Government’s position: EMTALA
is an exercise of Congress’s spending power. And when Congress
relies on its authority to attach conditions to the receipt of
federal funds, special rules apply.
Spending Clause legislation operates “much in
the nature of a contract: in return for federal funds, the
[recipients] agree to comply with federally imposed conditions.”
Pennhurst, 451 U. S., at 17. These conditions do not
bind unless and until they are accepted, and private parties “can
opt out of spending programs” at will, “completely nullifying
whatever force the spending conditions once had.” Health and
Hospital Corporation of Marion Cty. v. Talevski, 599
U. S. 166, 201 (2023) (Thomas, J., dissenting); accord,
Townsend v. Swank, 404 U. S. 282, 292 (1971)
(Burger, C. J., concurring in result) (“[A]herence to
[Spending Clause] provisions . . . is in no way
mandatory”). “[T]he ‘legitimacy of Congress’ power’ ” to
enforce conditions tied to federal funds depends on whether the
parties who accepted federal funds also “ ‘voluntarily and
knowingly’ ” accepted the conditions. Cummings v.
Premier Rehab Keller, 596 U. S. 212, 219 (2022)
(quoting Barnes v. Gorman, 536 U. S. 181, 186
(2002)).
Because the enforcement of conditions attached
to the receipt of federal money depends on a recipient’s knowing
and voluntary consent,
“the conditions must be set out
‘unambiguously.’ ” Arlington Central, 548 U. S.,
at 296 (quoting Pennhurst, 451 U. S., at 17). And
recipients must be given a “legitimate choice whether to accept the
federal conditions.” National Federation of Independent
Business v. Sebelius, 567 U. S. 519, 578 (2012)
(opinion of Roberts, C. J.); accord, Steward Machine
Co. v. Davis, 301 U. S. 548, 590 (1937). The
Government’s interpretation founders at both points.
First, consider the requirement that EMTALA
speak unambiguously. Even if it were possible to read EMTALA as
requiring abortions prohibited by Idaho law, it is beyond dispute
that such a requirement is not unambiguously clear. The statute
does not mention abortion, let alone expressly bind hospitals to
perform abortions contrary to state law.
The need for clear statutory language is
especially important in this suit because the Government’s
interpretation would intrude on an area traditionally left to state
control, namely, the practice of medicine. We typically expect
Congress to “ ‘make its intention “clear and manifest” if it
intends to pre-empt the historic powers of the States.’ ”
Gregory v. Ashcroft, 501 U. S. 452, 461 (1991)
(quoting Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331
U. S. 218, 230 (1947)); see also Gonzales v.
Oregon, 546 U. S. 243, 274 (2006) (“[T]he background
principles of our federal system also belie the notion that
Congress would use such an obscure grant of authority to regulate
areas traditionally supervised by the States’ police power”).
Second, consider the requirement that parties be
given a choice before being bound by Spending Clause conditions.
The Government’s interpretation purports to limit Idaho’s choices
about what conduct to criminalize. But Idaho never “agree[d]” to be
bound by EMTALA,[14]
Cummings, 596 U. S., at 219, let alone to surrender its
historic power to regulate the practice of medicine or the
performance of abortions within its borders.
The Idaho Legislature takes its argument against
preemption even further. It contends that EMTALA cannot preempt the
State’s abortion regulations because Idaho is not a party to the
agreement between the Federal Government and the hospitals that
take Medicare funds. See Brief for Petitioners in No. 23–726, pp.
50–51. As it explains, States cannot be bound by terms that they
never accepted, so it is hard to see how a third party’s agreement
with the Federal Government can deprive a State of the ability to
enforce its criminal laws. Accord, Talevski, 599 U. S.,
at 212 (Thomas, J., dissenting) (“[E]ven those who held the
broadest conception of the spending power recognized that it was
only a power to spend, not a power to impose binding requirements
with the force of federal law”).
The potential implications of permitting
preemption here are far-reaching. Under the Government’s view,
Congress could apparently pay doctors to perform not only emergency
abortions but also third-trimester elective abortions or eugenic
abortions. It could condition Medicare funds on hospitals’ offering
assisted suicide even in the vast majority of States that ban the
practice. It could authorize the practice of medicine by any doctor
who accepts Medicare payments even if he or she does not meet the
State’s licensing requirements.
While the Government is not troubled by the
potential consequences of its preemption argument, Congress was
sensitive to state prerogatives. The Medicare Act, in which EMTALA
is situated, disclaims any construction that would “authorize any
Federal officer or employee to exercise any supervision or control
over the practice of medicine or the manner in which medical
services are provided” in a particular State. 42 U. S. C.
§1395. This disclaimer evidences a desire to “minimize federal
intrusion” into state healthcare regulation. Massachusetts
Medical Soc. v. Dukakis, 815 F. 2d 790, 791 (CA1
1987) (opinion of Breyer, J.). EMTALA’s narrow preemption clause
also respects core state powers by providing that the Act “do[es]
not preempt any State or local law requirement, except to the
extent that the requirement directly conflicts with a requirement
of this section.” §1395dd(f ). This phrasing signals that
EMTALA’s default position is coexistence with state law.
In response to the Legislature’s argument, the
Government claims that a handful of our cases have held that
Spending Clause statutes can preempt the laws of non-consenting
States, but those cases do not begin to settle the question at
hand. Two are entirely inapposite.[15] And the remaining cases simply upheld the Federal
Government’s ability to prevent the use of federal money for
purposes other than those intended by Congress.[16] The Government has not identified any
decision holding that a federal law enacted under the Spending
Clause preempts a state criminal law or public health
regulation.
For present purposes, it is not necessary to
decide whether the Legislature’s theory is correct. At a minimum,
however, it provides yet another reason to be wary about
interpreting EMTALA to displace the core powers of a non-consenting
State without unmistakable clarity regarding the meaning of the
federal law.
* * *
In sum, the Government’s new interpretation of
EMTALA is refuted by the statutory text, the context in which the
law was enacted, and the rules of interpretation that we apply to
Spending Clause legislation. We should reject the Government’s
interpretation and put that matter to rest.[17]
III
Even if the Court is unwilling to decide the
statutory interpretation question, there is no excuse for vacating
the stay of the preliminary injunction. In order to obtain that
injunction, the Government was required to make a strong showing
that it was likely to prevail on the merits. See Munaf v.
Geren, 553 U. S. 674, 690 (2008). And as I have
explained, its argument was almost certain to lose. That in itself
is sufficient to preclude continuation of the preliminary
injunction.
Why then have six Justices voted to vacate the
stay? The per curiam itself provides no explanation. In
separate opinions, three of the six agree with the Government’s
interpretation of EMTALA, see supra, at 15, n. 17, and
that at least is an explanation that would make sense if the
premise (the correctness of the Government’s interpretation) were
sound. As for the remaining three, their only explanation is that
“the injunction will not stop Idaho from enforcing its law in the
vast majority of circumstances” and that therefore Idaho cannot
show that it will be irreparably harmed by allowing the injunction
to remain in place during the pendency of the appeal. Ante,
at 7 (Barrett, J., joined by Roberts, C. J., and Kavanaugh,
J., concurring). That justification is patently unsound.
“ ‘[A]ny time a State is enjoined by a court from effectuating
statutes enacted by representatives of its people, it suffers a
form of irreparable injury.’ ” Maryland v. King,
567 U. S. 1301, 1303 (2012) (Roberts, C. J., in
chambers). And in this case, Idaho’s injury is not abstract. As I
will explain, it is very likely that the preliminary injunction
will lead to more abortions, including in at least some cases where
the fetus is viable. The State of Idaho wants to prevent that; the
preliminary injunction stands in its way. Isn’t that enough to
constitute irreparable harm?
The Justices who have joined Justice Barrett’s
concurrence claim that the parties’ briefs and oral arguments seem
to have narrowed the degree to which EMTALA, as interpreted by the
Government, conflicts with the Idaho law, ante, at 7–8, but
all the parties continue to insist that the laws conflict. The
Solicitor General argued that EMTALA’s focus on a pregnant woman’s
health is broader than Idaho’s life-of-the-mother exception. In
forceful terms, she told us: “In Idaho, doctors have to shut their
eyes to everything except death,” whereas under EMTALA, a physician
is supposed to think about serious threats to a pregnant woman’s
health. Tr. of Oral Arg. 102. In light of this perceived conflict,
the Solicitor General said it was “gravely mistaken” to suggest
that “there really isn’t in operation a difference between” EMTALA
and Idaho law. Id., at 101–102.
Idaho agreed that the Government’s
interpretation of EMTALA conflicts with state law. In particular,
the State worried that “the United States’ novel theory” would
“authorize emergency-room doctors to perform abortions” for
mental-health reasons and would thus “turn emergency rooms into
federal abortion enclaves governed not by state law but by
subjective physician judgment.” Brief for Petitioner in No. 23–727,
p. 30; see also Tr. of Oral Arg. 45–46.
Thus, whatever narrowing may have occurred
during briefing and argument in this Court, both the Government and
the State of Idaho fervently maintain that it matters whether the
Idaho law is enforced. Do any Justices in the majority seriously
disagree? Do any of them think that the parties, not to mention
their armies of amici, are fighting about nothing?
Three of the six Justices in the majority also
agree that there is a conflict—and judging from their fiery
rhetoric, a big one. See ante, at 1 (Kagan, J., joined by
Sotomayor, J., and by Jackson, J., as to Part II, concurring);
ante, at 7 (Jackson, J., concurring in part and dissenting
in part). And they are correct to this extent: there is a real
conflict.
A
I begin with the Government’s argument that
“there are numerous conditions” that may afflict a pregnant woman
“where a doctor’s immediate concern is not death.” Tr. of Oral Arg.
103. In those cases, the Government explains, a doctor might be
worried about serious risks to the woman’s “health.” Ibid.
In the Government’s telling, EMTALA requires hospitals to perform
an abortion on demand in these circumstances.
Idaho law says otherwise. An Idaho doctor may
not perform an abortion unless the doctor “determine[s], in his
good faith medical judgment . . . , that the
abortion [is] necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant
woman.” Idaho Code Ann. §18–622(2)(a)(i). And even then, the doctor
must “attemp[t] to perform the abortion in the manner that
. . . provide[s] the best opportunity for the unborn
child to survive,” unless doing so “would . . . pos[e] a
greater risk of the death of the pregnant woman.”
§622(2)(a)(ii).
These standards do not require a doctor to be
“objective[ly] certai[n]” that the abortion is “ ‘necessary’
to save the woman’s life.” Planned Parenthood, 171 Idaho, at
445, 522 P. 3d, at 1203 (emphasis deleted). Nor does Idaho law
require that the risk of death be particularly immediate.
Ibid. Indeed, the Idaho Supreme Court has explained that the
law “leaves wide room for the physician’s ‘good faith medical
judgment’ on whether [an] abortion was ‘necessary.’ ”
Ibid.; accord, id., at 446, 522 P. 3d, at 1203
(noting that the Act “imposes a subjective standard based on the
individual physician’s good faith medical judgment”). And any
latitude, it said, “ ‘operates for the benefit, not the
disadvantage, of the pregnant woman.’ ” Id., at
445–446, 522 P. 3d, at 1203–1204. Even so, Idaho’s law is
focused on “death,” and a doctor must be able to say in “good
faith” that he or she was acting to preserve the woman’s life, not
simply her health. Idaho Code Ann. §18–622(2)(a)(i).
These different considerations—health versus
life—may lead to different outcomes. For instance, consider the
situation of a woman who experiences a condition that was discussed
in the briefs and at argument: preterm prelabor rupture of
membranes (PPROM), which occurs when a woman’s amniotic sac breaks
before the 37th week of pregnancy. 1 App. 295. The Members of this
Court are not physicians and should therefore be wary about
expressing conclusions about medical issues. But guidance provided
by prominent medical institutions is sufficient to show how Idaho
law and EMTALA, as interpreted by the Government, may conflict in
such cases.
If a woman experiences PPROM between the 34th
and 37th week of pregnancy and does not go into labor, her
physician is likely to recommend that labor be induced.[18] In that situation, it does not
appear that the risk of conflict is high.
On the other hand, when PPROM occurs earlier
than that, the chances of conflict are greatly increased. If PPROM
occurs before the 34th week and the woman’s pregnancy continues,
she may experience conditions such as an infection of the amniotic
fluid, inflammation of the uterine lining, hemorrhage, or
sepsis.[19] However,
life-threatening complications are not inevitable, and according to
the PPROM Foundation, death is “extremely rare.”[20] A physician may try to delay labor by
putting the woman on bed rest and administering steroids to help
the baby’s lungs grow and antibiotics to prevent
infection.[21]
When PPROM occurs before the 24th week of
pregnancy, the potential for conflict appears to be even higher.
But in that situation, it may still be possible to manage the
situation until the baby can be delivered,[22] and there is a chance of a good outcome for
both the mother and child, although studies have yielded different
results.[23] Thus, when
PPROM occurs before the 34th week of pregnancy, there is a risk to
the health of both the woman and her unborn child.
In these situations, the Defense of Life Act
requires doctors to consider whether performing an abortion is
necessary to prevent the woman’s death. Because this is a
“subjective” standard, Planned Parenthood, 171 Idaho, at
446, 522 P. 3d, at 1204, different doctors may reach different
conclusions about when PPROM endangers the woman’s life. At least
some may conclude in some cases of PPROM occurring before the 34th
week of pregnancy that the woman’s life is not endangered since she
may never develop a serious infection, let alone life-threatening
sepsis or any other potentially fatal condition, if she receives
proper treatment. See 1 App. 306–307. Rather, those doctors may
believe that Idaho law requires them to try to delay delivery long
enough to save the child’s life, unless PPROM becomes sufficiently
“severe” to cause “infection and serious risk of sepsis.” See,
e.g., 2 id., at 547. [24]
According to the Government’s experts, however,
EMTALA requires a hospital to perform an abortion at the woman’s
request whenever PPROM is diagnosed, even if the woman has not yet
developed an infection or any other health complications. That is
because, they assert, it can be “reasonably expected” that, in “the
absence of immediate medical attention,” PPROM would “plac[e] the
health” of the pregnant woman “in serious jeopardy” or cause
“serious dysfunction” to her reproductive organs.
§§1395dd(c)(1)(A)(ii), (e)(1)(A)(i) and (iii); see,
e.g., 2 App. 594 (“Providing stabilizing treatment in
the form of termination of pregnancy at the point of diagnosis
would be an appropriate means to preserve the patient’s
reproductive organs at that time”). Thus, in PPROM cases, there may
be an important conflict between what Idaho law permits and what
EMTALA, as interpreted by the Government, demands. And the same may
be true with respect to other conditions that a pregnant woman may
experience.
This gap between the Idaho law and the
Government’s interpretation of EMTALA matters. Idaho has always
permitted abortions that are necessary to preserve the life of a
pregnant woman, but it has not allowed abortions for other
non-life-threatening medical conditions. Planned Parenthood,
171 Idaho, at 391–394, 522 P. 3d, at 1149–1152 (summarizing
Idaho’s historical restrictions); see also Dobbs, 597
U. S., at 302–330 (compiling other state statutes with
identical exceptions). This balance reflects Idaho’s judgment about
a difficult and important moral question. See Planned
Parenthood, 171 Idaho, at 437–438, 522 P. 3d, at
1195–1196. By requiring Idaho hospitals to strike a different
balance, the preliminary injunction thwarts the will of the people
of Idaho as expressed in law by their elected representatives.
B
I now turn to Idaho’s claim that the
Government’s reading of EMTALA would authorize abortions for
mental-health reasons. My colleagues dismiss this concern because
at argument, the Solicitor General “emphatically disavowed the
notion that an abortion is ever required as stabilizing treatment
for mental health conditions.” Ante, at 5 (Barrett, J.,
concurring). But it is hard to see how the Government could reach
that conclusion. At oral argument, the Solicitor General conceded
that the term “health” in EMTALA includes mental health, Tr. of
Oral Arg. 77–78, and if that is so, it is not difficult to imagine
a situation in which the Government’s interpretation of EMTALA
could require an abortion.
Suppose, for example, that a woman in the 10th
week of gestation experiences serious depression due to her
pregnancy. If she asks emergency medical professionals for
treatment, her medical care providers might conclude that her
continued pregnancy could “reasonably be expected” to seriously
jeopardize the woman’s mental health. §1395dd(e)(1)(A). Under the
Government’s reading of EMTALA, the woman would then have the right
to “make an informed decision” about the treatment she received.
Brief for United States 41. If the woman preferred to abort rather
than manage her depression alongside her pregnancy, it is not
apparent why the Government’s reading of EMTALA would not require
that abortion.
We have seen where a rule permitting abortions
to protect the psychological health of pregnant women may lead. In
Roe, the Court held that a woman had the right to obtain a
post-viability abortion that was deemed “necessary, in appropriate
medical judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the
mother.” Roe v. Wade, 410 U. S. 113, 165 (1973).
In the companion case Doe v. Bolton, 410 U. S.
179 (1973), the Court wrote that a doctor, in judging whether an
abortion was needed to preserve a pregnant woman’s health, could
consider “all factors—physical, emotional, psychological, familial,
and the woman’s age—relevant to the well-being of the patient.”
Id., at 192. That decision was viewed by many as essentially
preventing States from restricting post-viability
abortions.[25] As Harvard
Law School Professor Mary Ann Glendon put it: “[W]hen Roe is
read with Doe, third-trimester restrictions are effectively
ruled out as well—for Roe’s dictum that such restrictions
might be permissible if they did not interfere with the mother’s
health was negated by Doe’s definition of ‘health’ as
‘well-being.’ ” The Women of Roe v. Wade
(2003).
The Solicitor General tried to explain why the
Government’s interpretation would not lead down this path, but her
explanation is hard to understand. She said that mental-health
emergencies “could never lead to pregnancy termination” because
abortion “is not the accepted standard of practice to treat any
mental health emergency.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 77–78; accord, Brief for
United States 26, n. 5.
That assertion appears to be inconsistent with
the position taken by prominent medical associations that endorse
abortion for mental-health reasons as an accepted standard of
practice. See, e.g., American Psychiatric
Association, Position Statement on Abortion and Women’s
Reproductive Healthcare Rights (Mar. 2023) (“Freedom to act to
interrupt pregnancy must be considered a mental health
imperative”); American Psychological Association, Resolution
Affirming and Building on APA’s History of Support for Reproductive
Rights (Feb. 2022).
For these reasons, there is a real potential for
conflict between the Idaho law and the Government’s interpretation
of EMTALA, and in my judgment, the Court seriously errs by vacating
the stay we issued earlier this year.
* * *
Today’s decision is puzzling. Having taken the
unusual step of granting certiorari before Idaho’s appeal could be
heard by the Ninth Circuit, the Court decides it does not want to
tackle this case after all and thus returns the appeal to the Ninth
Circuit, which will have to decide the issue that this Court now
ducks. What is more, the Court vacates the stay it issued earlier
this year even though the majority fails to provide any facially
plausible explanation for doing so.
I cannot endorse this turn of events and
therefore respectfully dissent.
Notes
1
For instance, the
American Hospital Association (AHA) calculates that 96% of
hospitals have at least 50% of their inpatient days paid by
Medicare and Medicaid. AHA, Fact Sheet: Majority of Hospital
Payments Dependent on Medicare or Medicaid (Mar.
2024).
2
At oral argument, the
Solicitor General stated that, in the Government’s view, an
“impairment” or “dysfunction” under §1395dd (e)(1)(A)(i) and (ii)
may be temporary. Tr. of Oral Arg. 80.
3
The Dictionary Act
defines an “individual” to “include every infant member of the
species homo sapiens who is born alive at any stage of
development.” 1 U. S. C. §8(a). But it goes on to provide
that this definition is not to “be construed to . . .
deny . . . any legal status or legal right applicable to
any member of the species homo sapiens at any point prior to being
‘born alive.’ ” §8(c). Thus, the Act itself provides no
support for the Government’s position.
4
§1395dd(a).
5
§1395dd(c)(1)(A)(i).
6
§1395dd(b)(2).
7
§1395dd(d)(2)(A).
8
§§1395dd(b)(3), (c),
(e)(4).
9
§1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i).
10 §§1395dd(c)(1)(A)(ii) and (2)(A),
(e)(1)(A)(i).
11 See
House Vote #499 in 1986 (99th Cong.), GovTrack.US (Mar. 20, 1986),
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/99-1986/h499; Senate Vote
#379 in 1985 (99th Cong.), GovTrack.US (Dec. 19, 1985),
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/99-1985/s379.
12 Additionally, it is doubtful that
Idaho law would have prevented an abortion in this suit. The woman
was diagnosed with “[i]nevitable abortion.” Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, Hospital Surveys With 2567 Statement of
Deficiencies—2024Q1 (2010–2016 file) Row 16,961. But Idaho law does
not apply to “non-viable pregnancies . . . where the
unborn child is no longer developing.” Planned Parenthood Great
Northwest v. State, 171 Idaho 374, 445, 522 P. 3d
1132, 1203 (2023); see also Idaho Code Ann. §§18–604(1),
(11).
13 Section 18023(d) also demands
compliance with state emergency care requirements, and laws like
Idaho’s impose requirements regarding permissible emergency care
for pregnant women.
14 Only
one state psychiatric hospital accepts Medicare funds, and it does
not have an emergency room. 2 App. 531.
15 Coventry Health Care of Mo.,
Inc. v. Nevils, 581 U. S. 87, 95–99 (2017), held
that Missouri’s anti-subrogation law was preempted by the Federal
Employee Health Benefits Act with regard to contracts for health
benefits negotiated between the Federal Government and insurance
carriers. It did not present the question whether Spending Clause
conditions placed on private parties could preempt States from
enforcing their criminal statutes against any of their
residents—including parties that did not contract with the Federal
Government. And in Townsend v. Swank, 404 U. S.
282 (1971), the State itself was the recipient of the funds in
question.
16 See
Philpott v. Essex County Welfare Bd., 409 U. S.
413, 415 (1973) (attachment of Social Security benefits);
Bennett v. Arkansas, 485 U. S. 395, 398 (1988)
(per curiam) (same); Lawrence County v.
Lead-Deadwood School Dist. No. 40–1, 469 U. S. 256, 271
(1985) (use of federal payments in lieu of taxes made to
municipalities with federal facilities).
17 Justice Sotomayor, Justice Kagan, and
Justice Jackson endorse the Government’s interpretation of EMTALA
but barely bother to explain why they think the interpretation is
correct. Justice Kagan’s opinion, which Justice Sotomayor and
Justice Jackson join, argues that “EMTALA unambiguously requires
that a Medicare-funded hospital provide whatever medical treatment
is necessary to stabilize a health emergency” and in some cases
this may require an abortion. Ante, at 4 (concurring
opinion). Justice Kagan conveniently fails to note that EMTALA
defines the term “emergency medical condition” and that this
definition includes any condition that is sufficiently serious to
“plac[e] . . . the health of [a pregnant] woman or her
unborn child . . . in serious jeopardy.”
§1395dd(e)(1)(A)(i). Therefore, as I have already explained, EMTALA
demands that a covered hospital stabilize any sufficiently serious
threat to the health of an “unborn child.” Not only is Justice
Kagan’s analysis of the statutory language faulty, but she fails to
say anything about the special rules of interpretation that apply
to Spending Clause measures or how Idaho can be bound by conditions
to which it has never agreed. Justice Jackson’s opinion adds
nothing to Justice Kagan’s legal analysis, but she reads my opinion
to suggest “that States have free rein to nullify federal law.”
Ante, at 7 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part). Anyone who reads my opinion can see that it makes no such
suggestion but simply explains what the federal law in question
means.
18 See,
e.g., 1 App. 306; Mount Sinai, Premature Rupture of
Membranes,
https://www.mountsinai.org/health-library/special-topic/premature-rupture-of-membranes#:~:text=Sometimes%20the%20membranes%20break%20before,rupture%20of%20membranes%20
(June 21, 2024).
19 One
study found that 14% of women with PPROM before the point of
viability developed one or more of these complications, and
approximately 1% to 5% developed life-threatening sepsis. 1 App.
298. A review of studies after 1993 indicated that the most common
maternal morbidity is infection of the amniotic fluid, “with
approximately 37% of women developing this complication.” T. Waters
& B. Mercer, The Management of Preterm Premature Rupture of
Membranes Near the Limit of Fetal Viability, Am. J. Obstetrics
& Gynecology (AJOG), p. 231 (Sept. 2009); see also Brief for
Physicians for Reproductive Health as Amicus Curiae
18.
20 PPROM
Foundation, PPROM Facts,
https://www.aapprom.org/community/ppromfacts (June 21, 2024) (PPROM
Facts).
21 Ibid.; see also Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia, Premature Rupture of Membranes
(PROM)/Preterm Premature Rupture of Membranes (PPROM),
https://www.chop.edu/conditions-diseases/premature-rupture-membranes-prompreterm-premature-rupture-membranes-pprom
(June 21, 2024).
22 See,
e.g., S. Dayal & P. Hong, Premature Rupture of
Membranes (July 17, 2023),
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK532888.
23 “A
recent study reports a 90% survival rate for infants exposed to
prolonged PPROM occurring between 18–24 weeks who were delivered
after 24 weeks.” PPROM Facts (citing J. Brumbaugh et al.,
Neonatal Survival After Prolonged Preterm Premature Rupture of
Membranes Before 24 Weeks of Gestation, 124 Obstetrics &
Gynecology 992 (2014); see also A. Ozel et al., Outcomes of
Pregnancies Complicated by Preterm Premature Rupture of Membranes
Before and After 24 Gestational Weeks: A Retrospective Analysis, J.
Clinical Obstetrics & Gynecology, p. 231 (Nov. 2023) (reporting
that one-third of unborn children survived PPROM before viability
at a hospital between 2018–2020); E. Lorthe et al., Preterm
Premature Rupture of Membranes and 22–25 Weeks’ Gestation, AJOG, p.
5 (Sept. 2018) (determining that, when PPROM occurred between weeks
22 and 25, about half of the children survived, and roughly
three-quarters of the survivors did not have severe morbidities);
P. Wagner et al., Outcome of Pregnancies With Spontaneous
PPROM Before 24+0 Weeks’ Gestation (2016) (reporting that “[a]bout
half ” of fetuses in PPROM pregnancies that make it to
viability “will be discharged alive without major
complications”).
24 It
has been estimated that PPROM occurs in about 2% of all pregnancies
involving a single fetus and in 7% of all pregnancies involving
twins. See PPROM Facts. It is reported that in 2022, there were
22,391 live births in Idaho. March of Dimes, Fertility Rate: Idaho,
2012–2022,
https://www.marchofdimes.org/peristats/data?reg=99&top=2&stop=1&lev=slev=4&obj=1&sreg=16
(Jan. 2024). These statistics suggest that PPROM may have occurred
in as many as 500 cases. In some of these cases, the fetus may not
have been viable, and in some, the pregnant woman may not have
chosen to have an abortion even if the law allowed. Nevertheless,
it would not be surprising if the Idaho law, if allowed to be
enforced, would result in fewer abortions and more live
births.
25 See,
e.g., J. Ely, The Wages of Crying Wolf: A Comment on
Roe v. Wade, 82 Yale L. J. 920, 921, and
n. 19 (1973); J. Dellapenna, Dispelling the Myths of Abortion
History 695 (2006) (“Blackmun’s definition of a woman’s ‘health’ in
Doe as encompassing anything affecting her ‘well-being’
virtually precluded any possible regulation of abortion during the
entire months of pregnancy”); R. Ponnuru, The Party of Death 10
(2006) (“Roe required that any ban on late-term abortion
include an exception allowing abortion to protect a woman’s health;
Doe defined that exception so broadly that it swallowed up
any possibility of a ban”).
Materials
Argued. For petitioners: Joshua N. Turner, Chief of Constitutional Litigation and Policy, Boise, Idaho. For respondent: Elizabeth B. Prelogar, Solicitor General, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. VIDED. |
Reply of petitioner Idaho filed.(in 23-727) (Distributed) |
Motion of petitioners in No. 23-726 for divided argument DENIED. VIDED. |
Reply of Idaho submitted. |
Reply of petitioner Idaho filed (as to 23-727). (Distributed) |
Reply of Mike Moyle, et al. submitted. |
Reply of petitioners Mike Moyle, et al. filed. (Distributed) |
Reply of petitioners Mike Moyle, et al. filed (as to 23-726). (Distributed) |
Amicus brief of Pregnancy Justice, New York University School of Law Reproductive Justice Clinic, and If/When/How submitted. |
Amicus brief of Physicians for Human Rights submitted. |
Amicus brief of American Civil Liberties Union and ACLU of Idaho submitted. |
Amicus brief of Disability Rights Advocates and Scholars submitted. |
Amicus brief of Sanctuary for Families and 16 Other Organization submitted. |
Amicus brief of States of California, New York, et al. submitted. |
Amicus brief of Physicians for Reproductive Health submitted. |
Amicus brief of Professors Kent Greenfield, Adam Steinman, Julie C. Suk, and Joseph Thai submitted. |
Amicus brief of National Women's Law Center, et al. submitted. |
Amicus brief of National Network of Abortion Funds submitted. |
Amicus brief of County Of Santa Clara and 12 Other Cities and Counties submitted. |
Amicus brief of Idaho Coalition for Safe Healthcare, Inc. submitted. |
Amicus brief of Amnesty International, Global Justice Center, Human Rights Watch, and The Ipas Impact Network submitted. |
Amicus brief of Local Prosecutors and Law Enforcement Leaders submitted. |
Amicus brief of Chicago Abortion Fund submitted. |
Amicus brief of American Public Health Association, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Network for Public Health Law, American Medical Women's Association, and 133 Deans and Scholars submitted. |
Amicus brief of American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American College of Emergency Physicians, American Medical Association, et al. submitted. |
Amicus brief of Professor David S. Cohen, Professor Greer Donley, and Dean Rachel Rebouche submitted. |
Amicus brief of Former HHS Officials submitted. |
Amicus brief of Legal Scholars submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of Physicians for Reproductive Health filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Amicus brief of Amanda Zurawski, et al. submitted. |
Brief amici curiae of American Public Health Association, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Sanctuary for Families and 16 Other Organization filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of National Women's Law Center, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Legal Scholars filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Pregnancy Justice, New York University School of Law Reproductive Justice Clinic, and If/When/How filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Disability Rights Advocates and Scholars filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of County Of Santa Clara and 12 Other Cities and Counties filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of States of California, New York, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of American Civil Liberties Union and ACLU of Idaho filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Sanctuary for Families and 16 Other Organizations filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Amnesty International, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Professor David S. Cohen, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amicus curiae of Chicago Abortion Fund filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Professors Kent Greenfield, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of 258 Members of Congress filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Former HHS Officials filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Amicus brief of 258 Members of Congress submitted. |
Brief amici curiae of American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American College of Emergency Physicians, American Medical Association, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Amanda Zurawski, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amicus curiae of Idaho Coalition for Safe Healthcare, Inc. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Local Prosecutors and Law Enforcement Leaders filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Physicians for Human Rights filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Amicus brief of Public Citizen submitted. |
Amicus brief of Dr. Caitlin Bernard, Dr. Lauren Miller, Dr. Leilah Zahedi-Spung, and Dr. Nikki Zite submitted. |
Amicus brief of U.S. Women's Chamber of Commerce and Other Businesses submitted. |
CIRCULATED |
Brief amicus curiae of Public Citizen filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of U.S. Women's Chamber of Commerce, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amicus curiae of National Network of Abortion Funds filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief amici curiae of Dr. Caitlin Bernard, et al. filed. VIDED. (Distributed) |
Brief of United States submitted. |
Brief of respondent United States filed. VIDED. |
Brief amici curiae of American Hospital Association, et al. filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of American Hospital Association, the Association of American Medical Colleges, and America’s Essential Hospitals submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of St. Luke’s Health System, Ltd. filed. VIDED |
Amicus brief of St. Luke’s Health System, Ltd. submitted. |
Motion for divided argument filed by petitioners in No. 23-726. VIDED. |
Motion of Mike Moyle, et al. for divided argument submitted. |
Motion for divided argument filed by petitioners Mike Moyle, et al. VIDED. |
Record received from the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The record is electronic and is available on PACER. |
Amicus brief of America's Future, Judicial Action Group, U.S. Constitutional Rights Legal Defense Fund, Conservative Legal Defense and Education Fund, and Virginia Delegate Eric Zehr submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of American Center for Law and Justice filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of Christian Medical & Dental Associations filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas submitted. |
Amicus brief of Stanton International submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of National Right to Life Committee filed. VIDED. |
Brief amici curiae of States of Indiana and 21 other states filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of Manhattan Institute filed. VIDED. |
Brief amici curiae of United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, et al. filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of The American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists submitted. |
Brief amici curiae of 121 Members of Congress filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, et al. filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of Minnesota Family Council, Kansas Family Voice, and 24 Other Family Policy Organizations submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of Stanton International submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of Stanton International (Mar. 6, 2024) filed. |
Amicus brief of Charlotte Lozier Institute submitted. |
Brief amicus curiae of Stanton International (Mar. 6, 2024) filed. VIDED |
Brief amicus curiae of The American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists filed. VIDED. |
Brief amici curiae of Woman Hurt by Abortion filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of Women Hurt By Abortion submitted. |
Brief amici curiae of America's Future, et al. filed. |
Brief amici curiae of Minnesota Family Council, Kansas Family Voice, and 24 Other Family Policy Organizations filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of Charlotte Lozier Institute filed. VIDED. |
Brief amicus curiae of Institute for Faith and Family filed. VIDED. |
Brief amici curiae of Advancing American Freedom, et al. filed. VIDED. |
Amicus brief of Foundation for Moral Law, The Lutheran Center for Religious Liberty, Lutherans for Life, and Two Kingdoms Ministry submitted. |
Brief amici curiae of Foundation for Moral Law, et al. filed. VIDED. |
Record requested from the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. |
Brief of petitioner Idaho (in 23-727)filed. |
Brief of petitioners Mike Moyle, et al. filed. |
Brief of Mike Moyle, et al. submitted. |
Joint appendix (Volumes 1 of 3) filed. |
Joint appendix (Volumes 1 of 3) filed. VIDED |
Brief of petitioners Mike Moyle, et al. (as to 23-726) filed. |
Brief of petitioner Idaho (as to 23-727) filed. |
SET FOR ARGUMENT on Wednesday, April 24, 2024. VIDED. |
The joint appendix and petitioners’ briefs on the merits are to be filed on or before Tuesday, February 20, 2024. Respondent's brief on the merits is to be filed on or before Thursday, March 21, 2024. Reply briefs, if any, are to be filed with the Clerk and served upon opposing counsel on or before 2 p.m., Friday, April 12, 2024. VIDED. |
Application (23A469) referred to the Court. |
Petition GRANTED. |
Application (23A469) for stay presented to Justice Kagan and by her referred to the Court is granted. The preliminary injunction issued on August 24, 2022, by the United States District Court for the District of Idaho, case No. 1:22-cv-00329, is stayed. The application is also treated as a petition for a writ of certiorari before judgment, and the petition is granted (case No. 23-726) on the question presented in Idaho's application (23A470). The cases (23-726 and 23-727) are consolidated and a total of 1 hour is allotted for oral argument. The Clerk is directed to establish a briefing schedule that will allow the case to be argued in the April 2024 argument session. The stay shall terminate upon the sending down of the judgment of this Court. VIDED. |
Because the Court has consolidated these cases for briefing and oral argument, future filings and activity in the cases will now be reflected on the docket of No. 23-726. Subsequent filings in these cases must therefore be submitted through the electronic filing system in No. 23-726. Each document submitted in connection with one or more of these cases must include on its cover the case number and caption for each case in which the filing is intended to be submitted. Where a filing is submitted in fewer than all of the cases, the docket entry will reflect the case number(s) in which the filing is submitted; a document filed in all of the consolidated cases will be noted as “VIDED.” |
Supplemental Brief of applicants Mike Moyle, et al. filed. |
Response to application from respondent United States filed. |
Response to application (23A469) requested by Justice Kagan, due by 3 p.m. (EST) on November 30, 2023. |
Application (23A469) for a stay, submitted to Justice Kagan. |
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