Court Opinion

ID: 9449275
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-04 15:00:34.097771+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:36:32.798172
License: Public Domain

20-664-cv
Havens v. James

                          In the
              United States Court of Appeals
                    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

                          AUGUST TERM 2020
                            No. 20-664-cv

    JIM HAVENS, INDIVIDUALLY AND O/B/O ROC LOVE WILL END
         ABORTION, AN UNINCORPORATED ASSOCIATION,
                       Plaintiff-Appellant,

                                  v.

LETITIA A. JAMES, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK,
IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF
            NEW YORK, CITY OF ROCHESTER, NEW YORK,
                      Defendants-Appellees.

            On Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Western District of New York

                     ARGUED: SEPTEMBER 29, 2020
                      DECIDED: AUGUST 4, 2023

Before:       LOHIER, NARDINI, and MENASHI, Circuit Judges.

       In 2005, a federal district court entered a permanent injunction
against several pro-life advocates enjoining them from entering the
public sidewalk within fifteen feet of the entrance of any abortion
clinic in the Western District of New York. Twelve years later, in 2017,
Plaintiff-Appellant Jim Havens, who was not a named party to the
2005 permanent injunction, started sidewalk counseling near the
Planned Parenthood facility in Rochester, New York. After
Defendants-Appellees the New York Attorney General and the City
of Rochester decided that Havens was bound by the 2005 permanent
injunction, he sued, seeking a declaratory judgment that he was not
bound by the injunction. He also moved for a preliminary injunction
to prevent the defendants from applying the injunction to his
counseling activities. The district court dismissed his suit for failure
to state a claim and denied his motion for a preliminary injunction.

      We hold that a person who is not a named party to an
injunction or legally identified with a named party is bound by the
injunction only from acting for the benefit of, or to assist, an enjoined
party in violating the injunction. The allegations in Havens’s
complaint do not establish that he so acted and therefore state a claim
for declaratory relief. We reverse the judgment of the district court
insofar as it dismissed Havens’s complaint and vacate the judgment
insofar as it denied Havens’s motion for a preliminary injunction. We
remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

      Judge Lohier dissents in a separate opinion.

             JOHN T. REFERMAT, Refermat Hurwitz Daniel PLLC,
             Rochester, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

             DUSTIN J. BROCKNER, Assistant Solicitor General (Barbara
             D. Underwood, Solicitor General, Victor Paladino, Senior
             Assistant Solicitor General, on the brief), for Letitia A.

                                   2
             James, Attorney General of the State of New York,
             Albany, NY, for Defendant-Appellee Letitia A. James.

             SPENCER L. ASH for Timothy R. Curtin, Corporation
             Counsel of the City of Rochester, Rochester, NY, for
             Defendant-Appellee City of Rochester.

MENASHI, Circuit Judge:

      In 2005, a federal district court entered a permanent injunction
against several pro-life advocates. The “Arcara Injunction,” named
after the district judge who issued it, enjoined the named defendants
from, among other things, entering the public sidewalk within fifteen
feet of the entrance of any abortion clinic in the Western District of
New York and from aiding and abetting others to do the same.

      Twelve years later, in 2017, Plaintiff-Appellant Jim Havens
began sidewalk counseling near the Planned Parenthood facility in
Rochester, New York. 1 Havens invited others to join him, and they
eventually formed an association, ROC Love Will End Abortion
(“ROC”). 2 Havens, who was neither a party to the Arcara Injunction
nor aware of it, did not avoid the fifteen-foot buffer zone defined in
the Arcara Injunction. Defendants-Appellees Letitia A. James, the
Attorney General of the State of New York, and the City of Rochester,
however, informed Havens that he and ROC were prohibited from

1 Sidewalk counseling “involves offering information about alternatives to
abortion and help pursuing those options.” McCullen v. Coakley, 573 U.S.
464, 472 (2014).
2 The association was initially called ROC Sidewalk Advocates for Life. In
2019, it became ROC Love Will End Abortion.

                                    3
entering the buffer zone because he and his group were acting in
concert with defendants named in the Arcara Injunction.

      To clarify his rights and to avoid arrest, Havens sued the
Attorney General and the City, seeking a declaration that he and his
group were not subject to the Arcara Injunction. He also sought a
preliminary injunction to prevent the defendants from enforcing the
injunction against him and his group. Havens now appeals the
district court’s dismissal of his suit for failure to state a claim, its
denial of his motion for a preliminary injunction, and its decision to
dismiss his complaint with prejudice without granting him leave to
amend.

      We hold that a person who is not a named party to an
injunction and who is not legally identified with such a party is bound
by the injunction only from acting for the benefit of, or to assist, a
named party in violating the injunction. According to the allegations
in his complaint, Havens did not so act. The complaint therefore states
a claim for the declaratory relief Havens seeks. Accordingly, we
reverse the district court’s dismissal of Havens’s complaint. We
vacate the district court’s denial of Havens’s motion for a preliminary
injunction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.

                          BACKGROUND

                                   I

      In 1999, the State of New York, along with Planned Parenthood
of Rochester and other abortion providers, sought injunctive relief
regulating the conduct of pro-life advocates outside of abortion clinics
in the Western District of New York. New York ex rel. Spitzer v.
Operation Rescue Nat’l, 273 F.3d 184, 191-92 (2d Cir. 2001). The
plaintiffs alleged that the defendants had violated the Freedom of

                                   4
Access to Clinic Entrances Act of 1994 (“FACE”), which makes it
unlawful for anyone who

      by force or threat of force or by physical obstruction,
      intentionally injures, intimidates or interferes with or
      attempts to injure, intimidate or interfere with any
      person because that person is or has been, or in order to
      intimidate such person or any other person or any class
      of persons from, obtaining or providing reproductive
      health services.
18 U.S.C. § 248(a)(1).

      After a twenty-three-day hearing, the district court determined
that the defendants had likely violated FACE by “threatening
violence, engaging in minor acts of violence, and imposing a
‘constructive obstruction’ that amounted to physical obstruction.”
Operation Rescue Nat’l, 273 F.3d at 192. The district court issued a
preliminary injunction in 2002, which was converted into a
permanent injunction in 2005. 3 The Arcara Injunction enjoined
conduct beyond what FACE prohibits: it enjoined the defendants
from “being present within fifteen feet of either edge of any doorway,
walkway or driveway entrance to any” abortion facility and from
“inducing, directing, aiding or abetting in any manner, others to take
any of the actions described” in the injunction. App’x 21-22. The
injunction listed the parties it bound, including Mary Melfi (now
Mary Jost), Michael McBride, Robert Pokalsky, and Rescue Rochester,
an organization led by Michael Warren.

      In 2017, Havens started to sidewalk counsel and pray outside
Planned Parenthood of Rochester. Havens invited others to join him,

3 Order, New York ex rel. Spitzer v. Operation Rescue Nat’l, No. 99-CV-209A
(W.D.N.Y. Oct. 31, 2005), ECF No. 200.

                                    5
and they eventually formed ROC. Using materials that he acquired
from Sidewalk Advocates for Life, a national sidewalk counseling
support group, Havens offered training sessions to people interested
in sidewalk counseling. The training described non-violent and
non-confrontational methods of initiating conversations with women
to discuss options other than abortion. Some of the training sessions
were held at Focus Pregnancy Help Center, a pregnancy center with
which Jost is associated. 4

       In the latter part of 2017, security guards at Planned
Parenthood of Rochester told Havens that the Arcara Injunction
required him—and anyone with him—to observe a fifteen-foot buffer
zone on the public sidewalk. Havens, who was not a party to the
injunction and had not been aware of it, reviewed the terms of the

4 The complaint alleges that Jost “participates” in Focus Pregnancy Help
Center. App’x 13. In her opposition to Havens’s motion for a preliminary
injunction, the Attorney General submitted a copy of Focus Pregnancy Help
Center’s “About Us” webpage, which indicated that Jost founded the
center. App’x 94. The Attorney General argues that, even though we are
considering a motion to dismiss, we may take judicial notice of the contents
of the center’s webpage. We do not agree. In prior cases, we have taken
judicial notice only of official government websites to determine facts that
were not central to the dispute. See, e.g., United States v. Akinrosotu, 637 F.3d
165, 168 (2d Cir. 2011) (taking judicial notice of “the official website for the
Bureau of Prisons … for the limited purpose of obtaining the BOP’s
projected date for the defendant’s release from prison”). Not every website
is a “source[] whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned,”
Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(2), and it is generally inappropriate for a court to rely
on internet research when considering a motion to dismiss. “[W]e are
limited on a motion to dismiss” to “the allegations of the complaint.” Nunes
v. CNN, Inc., 31 F.4th 135, 142 (2d Cir. 2022). Regardless, Jost’s specific role
at Focus Pregnancy Help Center does not affect our decision in this case.

                                       6
injunction. He disagreed with the security guards’ assessment and
continued his sidewalk counseling activities.

       On several occasions in 2017 and 2018, Planned Parenthood of
Rochester security guards called the Rochester Police Department to
complain that Havens was violating the fifteen-foot buffer zone
imposed by the Arcara Injunction. The Rochester Police, after visiting
the location and consulting Havens, agreed with Havens that he and
those with him were not bound by the Arcara Injunction. But in June
2018, the Rochester Police Department reversed its position and
insisted that Havens and ROC were bound by the Arcara Injunction.
The police “verbally informed” Havens that he and his group had to
comply with the fifteen-foot buffer zone. App’x 6. 5 Havens and ROC
followed the directive despite its adverse impact on their ability to
engage in sidewalk counseling.

       Havens’s lawyers wrote to the City of Rochester to explain their
view that Havens and ROC were not bound by the Arcara Injunction.
On September 6, 2018, the City responded by letter that Havens and
ROC were not bound by the injunction “[s]o long as police do not
have reason to believe that Mr. Havens and his organization are
acting in concert with any named defendants.” App’x 11.

       Any reprieve that letter afforded was short-lived. Two weeks
later, in a joint letter to Havens, the City and the Attorney General
stated that they had reviewed evidence that Havens and ROC were
acting in concert with defendants named in the Arcara Injunction and
accordingly needed to remain outside the buffer zone. The letter did

5 In April 2019, while Havens and his group were sidewalk counseling
outside the buffer zone, the Rochester Police handed him a stack of letters
to pass out to his group. The letter warned that failure to comply with the
Arcara Injunction could result in “arrest[] for criminal contempt.” App’x 38.

                                     7
not identify the named parties with whom Havens and ROC were
purportedly acting in concert or describe the evidence that the City
and the Attorney General had reviewed.

      Havens’s lawyers requested additional information. The
Attorney General responded by letter, stating that certain evidence
established that Havens and ROC coordinated their activities with
Jost and Rescue Rochester, two defendants named in the Arcara
Injunction. The Attorney General did not explain how Havens and
ROC had acted in concert with Jost and Rescue Rochester or identify
the evidence that the Attorney General had reviewed.

      Havens alleges that a news reporter provided him with the
evidence on which the City and the Attorney General relied. That
evidence included (1) Facebook posts by Rescue Rochester and by
Havens that promoted training sessions at Focus Pregnancy Help
Center and (2) a mailing from Rescue Rochester and a website post by
Focus Pregnancy Help Center that encouraged participation in
Havens’s and ROC’s monthly sidewalk counseling outside Planned
Parenthood of Rochester.

      Havens also alleges that McBride, Pokalsky, and Warren
engaged in sidewalk counseling at Planned Parenthood of Rochester.
According to his complaint, Havens consulted with counsel and then
informed the three individuals that, as named parties to the
injunction, they must avoid entering the buffer zone.

                                 II

      On July 2, 2019, Havens, individually and on behalf of ROC,
sued the Attorney General and the City. Havens sought a declaration
that the Arcara Injunction does not bind him, ROC, or its members
and an order enjoining the defendants from enforcing the injunction

                                  8
against them. 6 At the same time, Havens moved for a preliminary
injunction. The defendants each opposed the motion and moved to
dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).

       The district court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss,
denied Havens’s motion for a preliminary injunction, and dismissed
the complaint with prejudice. The district court concluded that
Havens, although not a party to the Arcara Injunction, gave
“benefit[]” to several named parties and was therefore “in active
concert or participation” with those parties when he “sidewalk
counseled” within the fifteen-foot buffer zone. Havens, 435
F. Supp. 3d at 507-08. In holding that Havens was “bound by the
terms of the Arcara Injunction,” the district court rejected Havens’s
argument that he did not aid and abet a named party’s violation of
the Arcara Injunction. Id.

       The district court then denied as moot Havens’s motion for a
preliminary injunction. Id. at 508. The district court further held that
even if the motion were not moot it would be “meritless” because the
“face of the complaint clearly demonstrates the great lengths to which

6 Havens also requested nominal damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
App’x 6, 17. The district court did not address the damages claim but
explained that the request “for declaratory and injunctive relief boils down
to one question: whether [the] plaintiffs are ‘persons bound’ by the Arcara
Injunction.” Havens v. James, 435 F. Supp. 3d 494, 503 (N.D.N.Y. 2020). We
agree with the district court that the sufficiency of Havens’s complaint as to
all three remedies—a declaratory judgment, an injunction, and nominal
damages—turns on whether he is bound by the Arcara Injunction. There is
no question that the defendants are state actors and that preventing Havens
from sidewalk counseling, if he is not bound by the Arcara Injunction,
would violate his constitutional rights. For the reasons that follow, we
conclude that Havens’s complaint is sufficient with respect to the three
requested remedies.

                                      9
[Havens] and enjoined parties went to coordinate their efforts to
violate the Arcara Injunction.” Id. at 508-09.

       This appeal followed.

                                DISCUSSION

       This case requires us to clarify the circumstances in which an
injunction may be applied to someone who is not a party to the
injunction. We hold that a person who is not a named party to an
injunction and who is not legally identified with a named party is
bound by the injunction only from acting for the benefit of, or to assist,
a named party in violating the injunction.

                                        I

       We have long recognized that “no court can make a decree
which will bind any one but a party” because a court’s “jurisdiction
is limited to those over whom it gets personal service, and who
therefore can have their day in court.” Alemite Mfg. Corp. v. Staff, 42
F.2d 832, 832-33 (2d Cir. 1930) (L. Hand, J.); see also Whole Woman’s
Health v. Jackson, 142 S. Ct. 522, 535 (2021) (“Consistent with historical
practice, a federal court exercising its equitable authority may enjoin
named defendants from taking specified unlawful actions. But under
traditional equitable principles, no court may lawfully enjoin the
world at large.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). The principle
that “everyone should have his own day in court” is “fundamental”
and “part of our deep-rooted historic tradition.” Richards v. Jefferson
County, 517 U.S. 793, 797-98 (1996) (internal quotation marks
omitted). 7

7 See also Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. 32, 40 (1940) (“It is a principle of general
application in Anglo-American jurisprudence that one is not bound by a
judgment in personam in a litigation in which he is not designated as a

                                       10
      For that reason, “[c]ourts have carefully distinguished between
entering an injunction against a non-party, which is forbidden, and
holding a non-party in contempt for aiding and abetting in the
violation of an injunction that has been entered against a party, which
is permitted.” Additive Controls & Measurement Sys., Inc. v. Flowdata,
Inc., 96 F.3d 1390, 1395 (Fed. Cir. 1996). Accordingly, “the only
occasion when a person not a party may be punished” for contempt
is when “he has helped to bring about … an act of a party.” Alemite,
42 F.2d at 833. The nonparty must either be “legally identified” with
the enjoined party or “abet” the enjoined party’s violation of the
injunction. Id. By contrast, a court may not “punish[] the conduct of
persons who act independently and whose rights have not been
adjudged” in the earlier proceeding. Regal Knitwear Co. v. NLRB, 324
U.S. 9, 13 (1945); Chase Nat’l Bank v. City of Norwalk, 291 U.S. 431, 437
(1934) (same).

      These principles inform our understanding of Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 65(d), which provides that an injunction binds the
parties to the injunction; their officers, agents, and employees acting
in that capacity; and those “who are in active concert or participation”
with the enjoined parties to violate the injunction. Fed. R. Civ. P.
65(d)(2). Rule 65(d) “codified the common law rules the court set forth
in Alemite.” Additive Controls, 96 F.3d at 1395; see Reich v. Sea Sprite Boat

party or to which he has not been made a party by service of process.”);
Baker v. Baker, Eccles & Co., 242 U.S. 394, 403 (1917) (“The fundamental
requisite of due process of law in judicial proceedings is the opportunity to
be heard. To hold one bound by the judgment who has not had such
opportunity is contrary to the first principles of justice.”) (citations
omitted); Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. 738, 802 (1824)
(argument of Mr. Wright) (“An injunction binds no person but the parties
to the suit.”); Fellows v. Fellows, 4 Johns. Ch. 25 (N.Y. Ch. 1819) (“[Y]ou
cannot have an injunction, except against a party to the suit.”).

                                     11
Co., 50 F.3d 413, 417 (7th Cir. 1995) (Easterbrook, J.) (“Rule 65(d)
simply restates a norm of federal equity practice.”). 8 Thus, “Rule
65(d)(2) does not really add or detract from the range of persons that
were bound by a decree under basic equity practice and due-process
principles applied on the equity side of the federal courts prior to
1938.” 9 The “essence” of the rule “is that defendants may not nullify
a decree by carrying out prohibited acts through aiders and abettors,
although they were not parties to the original proceeding.” Regal
Knitwear, 324 U.S. at 14; see also Next Invs., LLC v. Bank of China, 12
F.4th 119, 134 (2d Cir. 2021) (“The relevant inquiry under Rule 65(d)
is whether the nonparty … aided or abetted the [enjoined parties’]
violations of the court’s orders.”). “Aiding and abetting a party is not
acting independently.” Eli Lilly & Co. v. Gottstein, 617 F.3d 186, 193 (2d
Cir. 2010).

       Under an aiding-and-abetting theory, a court must first
conclude that “the party subject to the court’s mandate committed

8 See also Dr.’s Assocs., Inc. v. Reinert & Duree, P.C., 191 F.3d 297, 303 (2d Cir.
1999) (“We conclude that the district court’s injunction was not authorized
by Rule 65(d) because the injunction bars the nonparty appellants from
prosecuting lawsuits that do not aid or abet the federal defendants in
violating the injunctions entered against them.”).
9 11A CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT, ARTHUR R. MILLER & MARY KAY KANE,
FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 2956 (3d ed. 2022). To read Rule 65(d)
in any other way “might be a violation of the Rules Enabling Act, which
provides that a federal rule ‘shall not abridge, enlarge, or modify any
substantive right.’” Id. (footnote omitted) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2072); see also
Grupo Mexicano de Desarrollo, S.A. v. All. Bond Fund, Inc., 527 U.S. 308, 322
(1999) (“Notwithstanding the fusion of law and equity by the Rules of Civil
Procedure, the substantive principles of Courts of Chancery remain
unaffected.”) (quoting Stainback v. Mo Hock Ke Lok Po, 336 U.S. 368, 382 n.26
(1949)); Alemite, 42 F.2d at 832 (citing Seaward v. Paterson, [1897] 1 Ch 545).

                                        12
contempt.” Levin v. Tiber Holding Corp., 277 F.3d 243, 250 (2d Cir.
2002); see id. (“The district court erroneously held that [the nonparty]
aided and abetted a violation of the court order without reaching the
predicate question of whether [the party] itself committed
contempt.”); see also Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833 (“[I]f the [party] is not
involved in the contempt, the [nonparty] cannot be; the decree has not
been disobeyed.”).

       A court must next conclude that “the challenged action” of the
nonparty “was taken for the benefit of, or to assist, a party subject to
the decree” in violating the injunction. Arista Records, LLC v. Tkach,
122 F. Supp. 3d 32, 36 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (Nathan, J.) (quoting Adcor
Indus., Inc. v. Bevcorp, LLC, 411 F. Supp. 2d 778, 794 (N.D. Ohio 2005));
Spin Master Ltd. v. 158, 463 F. Supp. 3d 348, 380 (S.D.N.Y. 2020) (same);
see also NML Capital, Ltd. v. Republic of Argentina, 727 F.3d 230, 243 (2d
Cir. 2013) (“Every injunction issued by a district court automatically
forbids others … from assisting in a violation of the injunction.”); Goya
Foods, Inc. v. Wallack Mgmt. Co., 290 F.3d 63, 75 (1st Cir. 2002)
(observing that, to subject a nonparty who “aids or abets an enjoined
party in transgressing a court order,” it is “essential” that “the
challenged action must be taken for the benefit of, or to assist, a party
subject to the decree”); Additive Controls, 154 F.3d at 1353 (“Non-
parties are subject to contempt sanctions if they act with an enjoined
party to bring about a result forbidden by the injunction.”). 10 The

10 See also Note, Binding Nonparties to Injunction Decrees, 49 MINN. L. REV.
719, 724 (1965) (“Although the aider or abettor may not act on the order of
the party-defendant, he resembles an agent to the extent that he acts for the
benefit of the party-defendant and therefore lacks an independent interest
in the merits of the injunction. Given this legal identity of interests, there is
no reason to deny the plaintiff a civil remedy against the aider or abettor as
well as the party-defendant.”). The district court acknowledged the
appropriate standard. See Havens, 435 F. Supp. 3d at 504 (“Non-parties thus

                                       13
enjoined party must, in essence, be the principal or the intended
beneficiary of the nonparty’s conduct. Only when the nonparty acts
to benefit or to assist the enjoined party can it be said that the
nonparty does not “act independently,” Regal Knitwear, 324 U.S. at
13-14, such that the judicial power may properly enjoin the nonparty
on the “assumption that the named defendant [was] an adequate
representative of the rights” of the nonparty in the original
proceeding, Spin Master, 463 F. Supp. 3d at 380 (quoting WRIGHT,
MILLER & KANE, supra note 9, § 2956).

       In Alemite, for example, we explained that “an employee who
refused to move cars of the defendant railway after a mandatory
injunction had directed it to accept those of another [rail]road” was
properly held in contempt because his refusal was “imputed” to his
employer, the enjoined defendant. 42 F.2d at 833 (describing Ex parte
Lennon, 166 U.S. 548 (1897)). But if the same person “had not been in
the defendant’s employ” or “if his act had been without the scope of
his authority,” he “would have escaped” contempt because “it is not
the act described which the decree may forbid, but only that act when
the defendant does it.” Id. In other words, the employee could be held
in contempt for violating the injunction only insofar as he acted to
benefit or to assist the railway. See Additive Controls, 96 F.3d at 1395
(“The court [in Alemite] … concluded that the non-party, Joseph Staff,
could be held in contempt of the injunction against his former
employer (the enjoined party) if, but only if, Staff aided and abetted

act in ‘concert or participation’ with enjoined parties where they have
‘actual knowledge of the judicial decree and violated it, and ... the
challenged action was taken for the benefit of, or to assist, a party subject to
the decree.’”) (quoting Arista Records, 122 F. Supp. 3d at 36).

                                      14
his former employer in violating the injunction.”). 11 The difference
between acting to “knowingly assist[]” an enjoined party and acting
independently is not “a formal distinction” but “goes deep into the
powers of a court of equity.” Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833; see also Additive
Controls, 96 F.3d at 1395-96 (“Having a relationship to an enjoined
party of the sort set forth in Rule 65(d) exposes a non-party to
contempt for assisting the party to violate the injunction, but does not
justify granting injunctive relief against the non-party in its separate
capacity.”).

       The Attorney General and the City argue that we should not
consider whether the nonparty acted to benefit or to assist the
enjoined party in violating the injunction when deciding whether the
nonparty acted “in active concert or participation.” The defendants
rely on two cases in which we said that Rule 65(d)’s active-concert
prong is “directed to the actuality of concert or participation, without
regard to the motives that prompt the concert or participation.” N.Y.

11 See also New York v. Operation Rescue Nat’l, 80 F.3d 64, 70 (2d Cir. 1996)
(“An injunction issued against a corporation or association binds the agents
of that organization to the extent they are acting on behalf of the
organization. Generally, persons who cease to act in one of the designated
capacities are no longer bound by the decree.”) (citation omitted); Cassidy
v. Puett Elec. Starting Gate Corp., 182 F.2d 604, 607 (4th Cir. 1950) (“[A]n
injunction or enjoining order … restrain[s] the officers from doing the act
prohibited in their official capacity as an officer of the corporation, or in their
individual capacity, for the benefit or in the interest of the corporation enjoined.”)
(quoting Mex. Ore Co. v. Mex. Guadalupe Mining Co., 47 F. 351, 356-57
(C.C.D.N.J. 1891)); Hoover Co. v. Exch. Vacuum Cleaner Co., 1 F. Supp. 997,
998 (S.D.N.Y. 1932) (noting that “an officer or agent who has severed
altogether his connection with” the enjoined corporation “does not violate
the injunction by doing the act himself” because “there is no restraint upon
the officer or agent personally, but only as the representative of the enjoined
defendant”).

                                         15
State Nat’l Org. for Women v. Terry, 961 F.2d 390, 397 (2d Cir. 1992),
judgment vacated sub nom. Pearson v. Planned Parenthood Margaret
Sanger Clinic (Manhattan), 507 U.S. 901 (1993); Eli Lilly, 617 F.3d at 193.
The defendants’ reliance is misplaced; our decision is fully consistent
with those cases.

       In Terry and Eli Lilly, we rejected the argument that a nonparty
could avoid Rule 65(d) because he had his own motivation for
assisting an enjoined party. But we did not remove the requirement
that the nonparty must act to assist the named party’s violation of the
injunction. 12

       The respondents in Terry, who were not named in the relevant
injunction, joined a demonstration that was “initiated and
coordinated by” a party expressly enjoined from doing so. 961 F.2d at

12 It is well established that the “motives” that prompt one’s conduct are
not the same as the mental state associated with that conduct. The criminal
law distinguishes between motive, on the one hand, and “intent (or
purpose),” on the other. 1 WAYNE R. LAFAVE, SUBSTANTIVE CRIMINAL LAW
§ 5.2 (3d ed. 2021); 22 C.J.S. Criminal Law: Substantive Principles § 34 (2022)
(“Motive, which in criminal law is that which leads or tempts the mind to
indulge in a criminal act, or the cause or reason that induces a person to
commit a crime, and which should be distinguished from, and not confused with,
intent, is not an essential element of a crime.”) (emphasis added) (footnotes
omitted); see Rosemond v. United States, 572 U.S. 65, 88 (2014) (Alito, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“Common-law commentators
recognized th[e] elementary distinction between intent and motive.”);
Carissa Byrne Hessick, Motive’s Role in Criminal Punishment, 80 S. CAL. L.
REV. 89, 94 (2006) (“[T]he conventional criminal law wisdom states that
‘motive is irrelevant.’ Criminal liability is concerned only with a
defendants’ intentions, not with her motives.”) (citing JEROME HALL,
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL LAW 153 (1947)). In Terry and Eli Lilly, we
said that if a nonparty acted to assist an enjoined party in violating a judicial
decree, the nonparty’s motive is irrelevant.

                                       16
394. We said that the relevant inquiry regarded the “actuality of
concert or participation,” not “the motives that prompt the concert or
participation.” Id. at 397. And on those facts, it was clear that the
respondents acted to assist the named party in successfully holding
the demonstration it was enjoined from organizing, so the
respondents had been in active concert or participation with the
named party. It did not matter, we said, that the respondents may
have been “independently motivated by their political, social and
moral positions” to assist the enjoined party. Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted).

      In Eli Lilly, a court order prevented David Egilman from
releasing confidential medical documents with a few narrow
exceptions, including via subpoena. Egilman arranged with “an
Alaskan attorney and an advocate for patients’ rights,” James
Gottstein, to subpoena Egilman to release those documents. 617 F.3d
at 190. When the two men spoke, Gottstein “[u]nderst[ood] that
Egilman would not produce the … documents except pursuant to a
subpoena,” and Egilman “knew that Gottstein intended to distribute
the … documents when he obtained them.” Id. at 191. “After talking
to Egilman about [the] confidential documents and their mutual
desire to see those materials disseminated to the public, Gottstein
intervened in an unrelated case” and issued a subpoena to Egilman—
calculated to obtain the documents—within hours of the intervention.
Id. at 190. We noted that “[t]he district court’s finding that Gottstein
conspired with Egilman to violate [the court order] is amply
supported by the record.” Id. at 191. Because there was “no question
that Gottstein and Egilman were in close contact with one another and
strategized how best to facilitate the dissemination of documents
protected by [the order],” we determined that Gottstein “plann[ed] an
end run around the protective order.” Id. at 192.

                                  17
       Given this evidence of coordination, we described as
unavailing Gottstein’s attempt to justify his conduct as “act[ing]
independently as a lawyer in the interests of his client.” Id. at 193. We
explained that “the record does not support a finding that Gottstein
acted independently of Egilman, which is the end of the matter.” Id.
Thus, we distinguished between a nonparty’s motives, on the one
hand, which are irrelevant to the question of aiding and abetting, and
the necessary inquiry into whether the nonparty was “acting
independently” or was aiding and abetting a named party, on the
other. Id. Because “Gottstein schemed with Egilman to bypass the
protective order,” we held that he “aided and abetted the latter’s
violation of the same,” and “[a]iding and abetting a party is not acting
independently” even if one has one’s own motives for doing so. Id. at
192-93.

       Nothing in Terry or Eli Lilly conflicts with the rule that a
nonparty acts “in active concert or participation” with an enjoined
party only when the nonparty’s “challenged actions” were “taken for
the benefit of, or to assist, a party subject to the decree” in violating
the injunction. Arista Records, 122 F. Supp. 3d at 36. To the contrary, in
both cases we relied on evidence that the nonparty had aided and
abetted the enjoined party to violate the injunction. 13 The sentence on

13 The elements of criminal aiding and abetting parallel the requirements
of Rule 65(d). Cf. Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh, 143 S. Ct. 1206, 1220 (2023) (noting
that “‘aiding and abetting is an ancient criminal law doctrine’ that has
substantially influenced its analog” in the civil context of tort) (alteration
omitted) (quoting Cent. Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver,
N.A., 511 U.S. 164, 181 (1994)). Those elements are “the commission of the
underlying offense by someone, a voluntary act or omission, and a specific
intent that such act or omission promote the success of the underlying
criminal offense.” United States v. Perry, 643 F.2d 38, 46 (2d Cir. 1981);
LAFAVE, supra note 12, § 13.2 (“It may generally be said that one is liable as

                                       18
which the defendants rely means only that if a nonparty aids and
abets such a violation, “the motives that prompt the concert or
participation” do not excuse it. Eli Lilly, 617 F.3d at 193 (emphasis
added); see also Hessick, supra note 12, at 94 (“A bad motive does not
establish liability, and a good motive, standing alone, is not a defense
to most crimes.”).

      The dissenting opinion would hold that a nonparty need not
act for the benefit of or to assist an enjoined party in violating the
injunction in order to be bound by the injunction against the enjoined
party. In doing so, the dissenting opinion disagrees even with the
district court in this case, which itself explained that a nonparty aids
and abets an enjoined party when the nonparty’s action “was taken
for the benefit of, or to assist, a party subject to the decree.” Havens,
435 F. Supp. 3d at 504 (quoting Arista Records, 122 F. Supp. 3d at 36).
Instead, the dissenting opinion would instruct courts to “watch what
the[] [nonparties] do.” Post at 5. That begs the question of what a court
should be looking for when it examines what the nonparty did. We

an accomplice to the crime of another if he (a) gave assistance or
encouragement or failed to perform a legal duty to prevent it (b) with the
intent thereby to promote or facilitate commission of the crime.”). The
similarity to criminal aiding and abetting makes sense in light of the
historical practice in which aiding and abetting the violation of an
injunction subjected the aider and abettor to criminal rather than civil
liability. In early cases, “the aider or abettor [was] liable for criminal
contempt for flouting the authority of the court, but not for civil contempt
for breach of the injunction.” Note, supra note 10, at 723; see Seaward, 1 Ch
at 555-56 (“In the one case the party who is bound by the injunction is
proceeded against for the purpose of enforcing the order of the Court for
the benefit of the person who got it. In the other case the Court will not
allow its process to be set at naught and treated with contempt.”). In this
case, Havens was threatened with arrest for criminal contempt. See supra
note 5.

                                     19
have held repeatedly that the nonparty must have been “[a]iding and
abetting a party” rather than “acting independently.” Eli Lilly, 617
F.3d at 193. We do not believe a nonparty can be said to be aiding and
abetting a party if he did not act for the benefit of or to assist the party
in a violation. The dissenting opinion would depart from these
precedents to hold that a nonparty may be bound by an injunction
even when the nonparty did not so act. That would expand the equity
power so broadly “as to make punishable the conduct of persons who
act independently and whose rights have not been adjudged
according to law,” Regal Knitwear, 324 U.S. at 13, and who have “had
no day in court,” Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833. 14

                                      II

       A nonparty acts “in active concert or participation” if the
nonparty aids and abets an enjoined party’s violation of the
injunction, which requires showing that the challenged action was
taken for the benefit of, or to assist, a party subject to the decree in

14 Cf. Twitter, 143 S. Ct. at 1220-21 (“Importantly, the concept of ‘helping’ in
the commission of a crime—or a tort—has never been boundless. That is
because, if it were, aiding-and-abetting liability could sweep in innocent
bystanders as well as those who gave only tangential assistance. … [C]ourts
have long recognized the need to cabin aiding-and-abetting liability to cases
of truly culpable conduct.”). The dissenting opinion cites an illustration
from the Second Restatement of Torts for the proposition that it does not
matter whether the aider and abettor acted to benefit or to assist the
tortfeasor when he encouraged the tortious conduct. See post at 8 (citing
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 876(b) cmt. d, illus. 4 (Am L. Inst. 1979)).
But the Restatement makes clear that this encouragement results in liability
because it “operates as a moral support to a tortfeasor” and can be a
“substantial factor in causing the resulting tort,” making the encourager
“responsible for the consequences of the other’s act.” Restatement (Second)
of Torts § 876(b) cmt. d. In other words, whatever the encourager’s motive
for doing so, he acts to assist the tortfeasor in accomplishing the tort.

                                      20
violating it. One allegation in the complaint suggests a connection
between Havens and a party to the Arcara Injunction: Havens held
sidewalk counseling trainings at Focus Pregnancy Help Center, an
organization with which Jost is associated. This allegation is not
enough to conclude that Havens entered the buffer zone for the
benefit of, or to assist, Jost in her own violation of the Arcara
Injunction. Thus, the district court erred in dismissing Havens’s
complaint.

                                     A

      When reviewing a motion under Rule 12(b)(6), “the only facts
to be considered are those alleged in the complaint, and the court
must accept them, drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s
favor, in deciding whether the complaint alleges sufficient facts to
survive.” Doe v. Columbia Univ., 831 F.3d 46, 48 (2d Cir. 2016). The
court’s function is “not to weigh the evidence that might be presented
at a trial but merely to determine whether the complaint itself is
legally sufficient.” Festa v. Loc. 3 Int’l Brotherhood of Elec. Workers, 905
F.2d 35, 37 (2d Cir. 1990). The district court departed from its role at
the motion-to-dismiss stage by impermissibly drawing inferences
against Havens.

      The district court first found that Jost and Rescue Rochester
promoted Havens’s activities. Havens, 435 F. Supp. 3d at 505-06. But
Havens did not allege that. He alleged only that he was told by a news
reporter that the Attorney General had evidence to that effect. In fact,
Havens put the entire allegation in quotation marks because the
language is a direct quotation from an email he received from the
reporter.

      The Attorney General argues that because Havens failed to
challenge the accuracy of the reporter’s descriptions in the district

                                    21
court, he cannot do so on appeal. Yet on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion,
Havens was not obliged to deny the veracity of somebody else’s
statement; such a motion must be decided by reference only to
Havens’s own allegations. See Festa, 905 F.2d at 37. The Attorney
General further suggests that Havens conceded the truth of the
reporters’ statements. Not so. In his opposition to the defendants’
motion to dismiss, Havens described the reporter’s statements as
“what defendants claim as their basis for asserting that plaintiffs are
bound by the injunction.” 15 The “concession” on which the Attorney
General relies is an argument that Havens made in the alternative—
that, even if the district court were to accept the second-hand reports
as true, it would still be insufficient to show that he acted in active
concert with the enjoined parties to violate the injunction. 16

      The district court also inferred from the complaint that Havens
protested “shoulder to shoulder” with McBride and Pokalsky and
that Warren “coordinate[s] his efforts to sidewalk counsel” with

15Memorandum in Opposition at 6 n.2, Havens v. James, 435 F. Supp. 3d 494
(W.D.N.Y. 2019) (No. 19-CV-6482), ECF No. 11.
16 We agree with that alternative argument. Havens cannot be bound by
the Arcara Injunction on the basis that Jost and Rescue Rochester promoted
his activities. The Arcara Injunction does not expressly prohibit Jost and
Rescue Rochester from promoting sidewalk counseling, and on a motion to
dismiss—making all inferences in favor of the plaintiff—we cannot
conclude that making supportive Facebook posts amounts to aiding and
abetting. But regardless of whether the promotion is a violation by the
enjoined parties, the complaint does not establish that Havens either
assisted or encouraged Jost’s and Rescue Rochester’s promotion of his
activities. See Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833 (“[T]he only occasion when a person
not a party may be punished[] is when he has helped to bring about … an
act of a party.”). Havens cannot be bound to an injunction by the unilateral
act of an enjoined party.

                                    22
Havens. Havens, 435 F. Supp. 3d at 506. The district court’s inference
was far from the only reasonable one; it was not even a reasonable
inference. The sole allegation in Havens’s complaint that related to
these individuals is that they sidewalk counseled at Planned
Parenthood of Rochester and that Havens advised them that they
must abide by the Arcara Injunction. Construing the complaint in the
light most favorable to Havens—as a court is required to do at the
motion-to-dismiss stage—the allegation is that Havens separated
himself from these individuals as he engaged in his protest activities,
not that he coordinated with them. The district court’s inference relied
in part on the observation that Havens “d[oes] not affirmatively
allege” that McBride’s, Pokalsky’s, and Warren’s sidewalk counseling
“was done independent of [Havens’s] own sidewalk counseling.” Id.
This was also an error: an “affirmative conclusion” cannot be drawn
from “an apparent omission.” Menaker v. Hofstra Univ., 935 F.3d 20, 35
(2d Cir. 2019).

                                     B

      In the end, the only relevant admitted fact alleged in Havens’s
complaint is that Havens held trainings at a facility associated with
Jost. Based on this allegation, the Attorney General argues that
Havens acted “in active concert or participation” with Jost.

      The Attorney General identifies only one violation of the
Arcara Injunction that Havens might have impermissibly facilitated:
Jost’s aiding and abetting Havens’s own sidewalk counseling in the
buffer zone. 17 The Attorney General’s theory is that Havens—by

17 Before the district court, the Attorney General said that no violation by
an enjoined party had been established. See App’x 158 (“[I]f the Court were
to agree that we would need an actual violation of the 2005 injunction, we
are not at that point here.”). The Attorney General argued that if holding

                                    23
holding a training at a facility with which Jost is associated—aided
and abetted Jost to aid and abet Havens’s own entry into the buffer
zone. The Attorney General can make this recursive aiding-and-
abetting argument because the Arcara Injunction prohibits named
parties not only from engaging in their own conduct but also from
aiding and abetting other individuals to engage in the specified
conduct—conduct that, in the case of those individuals, is lawful. See
App’x 22-23 (providing that the named defendants are “further
enjoined and restrained from inducing, directing, aiding or abetting
in any manner, others to take any of the actions described ... above”).

       We disagree that Rule 65(d) extends to nonparties in that
manner. Moreover, even if the Attorney General’s recursive theory
were viable, the allegations in Havens’s complaint do not
demonstrate that Havens aided and abetted Jost to aid and abet
Havens.

                                     1

       The Attorney General’s recursive theory of aiding and abetting
is inconsistent with Rule 65(d) and the principles of equity it codified.
As Alemite explains, “it is not the act described which the decree may

Havens to be in active concert required a predicate violation by an enjoined
party, then there would be “a ripeness problem” because “there was [no]
violation here.” App’x 160. This sort of “concession ordinarily precludes a
party from advancing a different argument on appeal.” Lenzi v. Systemax,
Inc., 944 F.3d 97, 109 (2d Cir. 2019). We nevertheless consider the Attorney
General’s argument on appeal, which assumes that Jost violated the
injunction. In any event, we disagree that the case was unripe. Even if no
enjoined party had violated the injunction, Havens was restricted from
sidewalk counseling within the fifteen-foot buffer zone. That injury would
cause him to “endure hardship if decision is withheld.” In re Methyl Tertiary
Butyl Ether (“MTBE”) Products Liability Litigation, 725 F.3d 65, 110 (2d Cir.
2013).

                                     24
forbid, but only that act when the defendant does it.” 42 F.2d at 833.
In other words, only a named party’s actions may be enjoined, and it
is therefore the named party who must be the principal and moving
force of the proscribed conduct. See Lindland v. U.S. Wrestling Ass’n,
Inc., 227 F.3d 1000, 1006 (7th Cir. 2000) (Easterbrook, J.) (“The ‘active
concert or participation’ clause is designed to prevent what may well
have happened here: the addressee of an injunction … persuades a
friendly third party to take steps that frustrate the injunction’s
effectiveness.”). But when the proscribed conduct is aiding and
abetting a nonparty, the named party cannot be the principal actor.
See United States v. Williams, 341 U.S. 58, 64 (1951) (“Aiding and
abetting means to assist the perpetrator of the crime.”); Twitter, 143
S. Ct. at 1229 (identifying “the essence of aiding and abetting:
participation in another’s wrongdoing that is both significant and
culpable enough to justify attributing the principal wrongdoing to the
aider and abettor”). The Arcara Injunction prohibits named parties
from aiding and abetting nonparties to engage in certain conduct, but
the injunction cannot thereby prohibit the nonparties from engaging
in that conduct. If merely receiving aid from Jost were enough to
render Havens unable to enter the buffer zone, he as a nonparty
effectively would be forbidden from engaging in “the act described.”
Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833.

      We rejected a similar theory in Doctor’s Associates. In that case,
the district court sought to apply its injunction to nonparties because,
in its view, the named parties were “agents or servants” of the
nonparties. Doctor’s Assocs., 191 F.3d at 304. We disagreed that Rule
65(d) allowed that result. It was “one thing for an injunction against a
principal also to bind the principal’s agents or servants” but “quite
different for an injunction against an agent or servant also to bind the
principal.” Id. Because “the servant does not control the principal,”

                                   25
we did not understand the district court to “have the power to bind
[the principal] through an order directed against her servant.” Id.

      In this case, according to the Attorney General, Jost violated the
injunction by “aiding and abetting” Havens. If so, Jost was acting as
the agent to Havens as principal. Rule 65(d) does not permit Havens
to be held in contempt for being aided and abetted. “[T]he mere fact
of an employer/employee, master/servant, or principal/agent
relationship, without more, does not necessarily satisfy the standard
of ‘persons in active concert,’ at least where the consequence would
be to extend the injunction to cover the dominant party.” Id. at 304 n.5.
If Rule 65(d) extended an injunction over an agent to the dominant
party, “one would never need to obtain jurisdiction over a principal
in order to obtain a binding injunction over her.” Id.

      The Attorney General argues that because the Arcara
Injunction proscribes “aiding and abetting,” Havens could have
“assisted” Jost in the offense of “aiding and abetting.” But aiding and
abetting itself “does not constitute a discrete criminal offense.” United
States v. Delgado, 972 F.3d 63, 75 (2d Cir. 2020) (quoting United States
v. Smith, 198 F.3d 377, 383 (2d Cir. 1999)). “[W]hen a person is charged
with aiding and abetting the commission of a substantive offense, the
crime charged is the substantive offense itself.” Id. (alteration omitted)
(quoting United States v. Oates, 560 F.2d 45, 55 (2d Cir. 1977)). For that
reason, “[o]ne cannot aid and abet an aider and abettor.” United States
v. Verners, 53 F.3d 291, 295 n.2 (10th Cir. 1995); see also United States v.
Doig, 950 F.2d 411, 415 (7th Cir. 1991) (“[I]t is logically inconsistent to
hold a corporation criminally liable because of the acts of its agent,
and, at the same time to hold the agent liable for aiding and abetting
the corporation.”). The Attorney General has not produced a single
case in which we have recognized a category of aiders and abettors of
aiders and abettors. Rule 65(d) does not require that we devise a new

                                    26
category of liability—aiding and abetting to two degrees—that is
unknown to our law.

       Indeed, the Attorney General’s theory requires an even greater
departure from the law of aiding and abetting. Under the Attorney
General’s theory, Havens would be simultaneously aiding and
abetting Jost and aided and abetted by Jost. Yet “[i]n order to aid and
abet another to commit a crime it is necessary that a defendant ‘in
some sort associate himself with the venture, that he participate in it
as in something that he wishes to bring about, that he seek by his
action to make it succeed.’” Nye & Nissen v. United States, 336 U.S. 613,
619 (1949) (quoting United States v. Peoni, 100 F.2d 401, 402 (2d Cir.
1938) (L. Hand, J.)). So if Jost violated the injunction, that means she
“associate[d] [herself] with” Havens’s “venture.” Peoni, 100 F.2d at
402. Holding Havens liable for aiding and abetting Jost for aiding and
abetting him would thus conflict with the principle that “one cannot
aid or abet himself.” United States v. Bowens, 907 F.3d 347, 351 (5th Cir.
2018) (alteration omitted) (quoting United States v. Shear, 962 F.2d 488,
495 n.10 (5th Cir. 1992)). 18

18 See United States v. McCoy, 995 F.3d 32, 58 (2d Cir. 2021) (“For the aiding-
and-abetting theory of liability to apply, the underlying federal crime must
have been committed by someone other than the defendant.”), judgment
vacated on other grounds, 142 S. Ct. 2863 (2022); United States v. Teffera, 985
F.2d 1082, 1086 n.3 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (noting that “[t]he technical elements of
aiding and abetting” include “commission of the substantive offense by
someone else”); United States v. Walden, 464 F.2d 1015, 1020 (4th Cir. 1972)
(“By definition accessories cannot alone commit a crime. At least one
principal is essential, and when all who allegedly participate are in fact
principals there is a degree of absurdity in proceeding against them all as
accessories for purposes of choice of jurisdiction.”); United States v. Morris,
612 F.2d 483, 496 (10th Cir. 1979) (noting that because the substantive
offense “required the participation of at least five persons,” it “necessarily
follows that an aider and abettor could not be counted as one of the required

                                      27
       Rule 65(d) establishes a general rule that nonparties may not
aid and abet named parties to violate an injunction. That general rule
does not require us to hold that Rule 65(d) creates aiding-and-abetting
liability for every aspect of every injunction a district court might
devise. When an injunction prohibits the named party from aiding
and abetting nonparties, Rule 65(d) does not create an additional
layer of aiding-and-abetting liability for nonparties, especially when
the nonparty is the principal actor in the underlying conduct. 19 We
apply Rule 65(d) with a “presumption favoring retention of
long-established, familiar principles.” United States v. Federative
Republic of Brazil, 748 F.3d 86, 95 (2d Cir. 2014). To the extent an
injunction seeks to depart from those principles by proscribing third-
party conduct through an “aiding and abetting” provision, those
words “add[] nothing to the decree.” Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833.

       We find additional support for this conclusion in the specificity
requirement of Rule 65(d). If we were to recognize a new category of

five persons”); Morgan v. United States, 159 F.2d 85, 87 (10th Cir. 1947)
(“[O]ne cannot be an aider and abettor of himself in the commission of an
offense.”).
 19  The dissenting opinion attempts to reformulate the recursive aiding-
and-abetting theory into a conspiracy between Havens and Jost to violate
the injunction. See post at 13-14. Both the Attorney General and the City rely
only on an aiding-and-abetting theory. See Attorney General Br. 20; City Br.
5. Neither has argued that Rule 65(d) incorporates conspiracy principles or
that Havens and Jost conspired to have Havens enter the buffer zone for the
purpose of violating the injunction. See United States v. Sineneng-Smith, 140
S. Ct. 1575, 1579 (2020) (“[W]e rely on the parties to frame the issues for
decision.”) (quoting Greenlaw v. United States, 554 U.S. 237, 243 (2008)); see
also Acosta v. Artuz, 221 F.3d 117, 122 (2d Cir. 2000) (“Generally, courts
should not raise sua sponte nonjurisdictional defenses not raised by the
parties.”). Nor does the complaint allege facts that would establish such a
conspiracy.

                                     28
aiders and abettors of aiders and abettors, and if we were to apply
that category recursively as the Attorney General suggests, the
enforcement of the Arcara Injunction against Havens would violate
Rule 65’s command that an injunction “must … describe in reasonable
detail” the “acts restrained or required.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(d)(1)(C).
“Rule 65(d) is satisfied only if the enjoined party can ascertain from
the four corners of the order precisely what acts are forbidden or
required.” City of New York v. Mickalis Pawn Shop, LLC, 645 F.3d 114,
144 (2d Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Schmidt
v. Lessard, 414 U.S. 473, 476 (1974) (“[B]asic fairness requires that those
enjoined receive explicit notice of precisely what conduct is
outlawed.”). Commanding Havens not to aid and abet Jost to aid and
abet himself does not provide “reasonable” detail about what acts are
forbidden. Aiding and abetting a party to aid and abet oneself is such
a novel and attenuated concept that it cannot provide the notice that
Rule 65(d) requires.

                                    2

      Even if we were to assume that the Attorney General’s
recursive theory were viable and that Jost violated the Arcara
Injunction by assisting Havens, the complaint still does not establish
that Havens accepted her assistance “for the benefit of, or to assist,”
Jost in violating the injunction. Arista Records, 122 F. Supp. 3d at 36.
The complaint alleges that Havens began sidewalk counseling within
the buffer zone without knowledge of the Arcara Injunction, twelve
years after its entry, and independent of any enjoined party, including
Jost. Havens later conducting training sessions at a facility Jost
allowed him to use does not transform his independent sidewalk-
counseling conduct into an aiding and abetting of Jost. To the extent
that the Attorney General’s argument focuses on Havens’s specific
conduct of accepting Jost’s offer of the facility—as distinct from his

                                    29
sidewalk counseling in the buffer zone—that conduct does not
establish active concert because it does not violate the Arcara
Injunction to conduct training sessions at a location far from the buffer
zone. To be in active concert or participation with Jost, Havens would
have had to undertake the prohibited conduct—entering the buffer
zone—in order to assist Jost. Nothing in the complaint suggests that
he did. 20

       For these reasons, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of
Havens’s complaint.

                                       C

       One more aspect of the Arcara Injunction requires our
attention. The injunction purports to bind persons “known and
unknown” who “act in concert with the [named defendants] to

20 The Attorney General further argues that Havens and ROC are “legally
identified” with the parties to the Arcara Injunction. Attorney General Br.
28-31. As proof of this shared identity, the Attorney General points to
(1) facts that are not alleged in Havens’s complaint—Jost allowing Havens
to use Focus Pregnancy Center for his trainings and the enjoined party’s
promoting Havens’s activities—and (2) the shared pro-life goals of Havens
and the enjoined parties. But shared legal identity requires a legal
relationship, not simply some mutual assistance and shared goals. See
Operation Rescue Nat’l, 80 F.3d at 70-71 (holding that a “successor”
organization with “a substantial continuity of identity” was legally
identified with its predecessor); John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Book Dog Books,
LLC, 327 F. Supp. 3d 606, 638 (S.D.N.Y. 2018) (holding that there was
sufficient legal identity when one entity “owns and/or controls all twenty-
five entities that Plaintiffs seek to enjoin”); Quinter v. Volkswagen of Am., 676
F.2d 969, 972 (3d Cir. 1982) (holding that an expert witness and consultant
was the enjoined party’s “agent” and for that reason “legally identified”
with the enjoined party). Neither the factual allegations of the complaint
nor the additional facts on which the Attorney General relies demonstrate
that Havens is legally identified with the enjoined parties.

                                       30
engage in, or who will engage in, the conduct complained of” in the
injunction. App’x 19-20. The City argues that this language means
that the injunction is “global in scope and applies to [Havens]
directly.” City Br. 5. That is incorrect. The reference to unknown
persons in the Arcara Injunction cannot “enlarge its scope beyond
that defined by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” Regal Knitwear,
324 U.S. at 14. 21 As we have explained, Havens may not aid and abet
a named party in violating the injunction and may be held in
contempt for doing so. Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(d). That does not mean that
Havens may retroactively be added to the list of permanently
enjoined parties. See Additive Controls, 96 F.3d at 1395-96 (“Having a
relationship to an enjoined party of the sort set forth in Rule 65(d)
exposes a non-party to contempt for assisting the party to violate the
injunction, but does not justify granting injunctive relief against the
non-party in its separate capacity.”).

      The City’s argument contradicts the principle that “everyone
should have his own day in court.” Richards, 517 U.S. at 798. A court
“cannot lawfully enjoin the world at large, no matter how broadly it
words its decree. … It is not vested with sovereign powers to declare
conduct unlawful; its jurisdiction is limited to those over whom it gets
personal service, and who therefore can have their day in court.”
Alemite, 42 F.2d at 832-33.

      The argument also would lead to a perverse result. Havens’s
alleged conduct—peaceful sidewalk counselling within the fifteen-
foot buffer zone—does not violate FACE. If Havens were a party to

21 We think it is likely that the injunction’s reference to unknown persons
was directed at individuals who were engaged in relevant conduct at the
time the original complaint was filed but whose identities were not known.
Havens could not have been part of that group.

                                    31
the original action, he would have had the opportunity to argue that
the district court could not enjoin him because his conduct did not
violate the statute. Indeed, this court vacated the order of injunction
as applied to Warren for that exact reason. We held that the district
court’s “limited findings d[id] not support” its conclusion that
Warren “likely violated—or threatened to violate” FACE. Operation
Rescue Nat’l, 273 F.3d at 197. We explained that the district court’s
finding that “Warren entered the Planned Parenthood Rochester
buffer zone” was not a sufficient ground for enjoining him because
“[m]ere presence within a buffer zone is not enough for finding a
F.A.C.E. violation.” Id. at 199. We reject the argument that the district
court could have applied the injunction to Havens “directly” twelve
years before he approached the buffer zone. City Br. 5.

                                    D

      We next address the district court’s denial of Havens’s motion
for a preliminary injunction. We review a denial of a preliminary
injunction for abuse of discretion. Nicosia v. Amazon.com, Inc., 834 F.3d
220, 238 (2d Cir. 2016). “A district court has abused its discretion if it
has (1) based its ruling on an erroneous view of the law, (2) made a
clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence, or (3) rendered a
decision that cannot be located within the range of permissible
decisions.” Warren v. Pataki, 823 F.3d 125, 137 (2d Cir. 2016) (quoting
Lynch v. City of New York, 589 F.3d 94, 99 (2d Cir. 2009)). We review de
novo the district court’s resolution of questions of law implicated in a
request for a preliminary injunction. Lusk v. Village of Cold Spring, 475
F.3d 480, 484 (2d Cir. 2007).

      In denying Havens’s motion, the district court abused its
discretion. First, the district court decided that the motion was moot
given the dismissal of Havens’s complaint. Because we have

                                   32
concluded that the dismissal was erroneous, so too was the holding
of mootness. Second, the district court’s legal reasoning regarding
“active concert or participation,” on which it relied to deny the
motion, was inconsistent with the requirement that Rule 65(d)
requires a showing that the challenged action of the nonparty was
taken for the benefit of, or to assist, a party subject to the decree in
violating that decree. The district court instead decided that it was
of “no moment” whether Havens acted “for the purpose of aiding and
abetting a violation of the Arcara Injunction” because “the Court’s
focus is on the actuality of concert or participation.” Havens, 435
F. Supp. 3d at 507. That was erroneous because the actuality of
concert or participation depends on whether the nonparty acted to
benefit or to assist the named party.

      The Attorney General argues that the evidence it submitted in
opposition to Havens’s preliminary injunction motion reveals that
Havens acted in active concert with parties to the Arcara Injunction
and as a result he cannot establish a likelihood of success on the
merits. We do not decide whether that evidence justifies the denial of
Havens’s motion for a preliminary injunction. We are “a court of
review, not of first view.” Decker v. Nw. Env’t Def. Ctr., 568 U.S. 597,
610 (2013) (quoting Ark. Game and Fish Comm’n v. United States, 568
U.S. 23, 37 (2012)). The district court may consider this evidence on
remand under the correct legal standard. In doing so, the district court
should determine whether the parties have demonstrated “a clear or
substantial likelihood of success on the merits.” N. Am. Soccer League,
LLC v. U.S. Soccer Fed’n, Inc., 883 F.3d 32, 37 (2d Cir. 2018) (quoting
NYCLU v. N.Y.C. Transit Auth., 684 F.3d 286, 294 (2d Cir. 2012)). To
that end, it may consider evidence—such as the news reports
referenced in Havens’s complaint—that was not properly before it at
the motion-to-dismiss stage. See Mullins v. City of New York, 626 F.3d

                                  33
47, 52 (2d Cir. 2010) (noting that courts at the “preliminary injunction
stage may rely on otherwise inadmissible evidence”) (internal
quotation marks omitted). The parties may also wish to supplement
the record.

      We vacate the district court’s denial of the motion for a
preliminary injunction and remand for consideration of that motion
consistent with this opinion.

                           CONCLUSION

      A person who is not a named party to an injunction is bound
by the injunction only when legally identified with an enjoined party
or when aiding and abetting an enjoined party’s violation of the
injunction. The allegations in Havens’s complaint do not establish
that he meets this standard. For that reason, the complaint states a
claim for declaratory relief that the defendants’ threatened
enforcement of the Arcara Injunction against Havens and ROC lacked
a legal basis. We reverse the judgment of the district court insofar as
it dismissed Havens’s complaint and vacate the judgment insofar as
it denied Havens’s motion for a preliminary injunction. We remand
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                  34
 1   LOHIER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

 2            Federal district court injunctions are not to be trifled with. The permanent

 3   injunction at issue here, named the “Arcara Injunction” after the federal judge in

 4   the Western District of New York who initially imposed it, prohibits named

 5   parties and those who act on their behalf from doing several things in or near

 6   reproductive healthcare clinics. They cannot trespass on them, impede or

 7   obstruct access to them, physically abuse or harass persons entering or leaving

 8   them, make excessively loud sounds that would disturb their patients or

 9   employees, vandalize them, be present within a fifteen-foot buffer zone

10   surrounding them, or aid and abet in any manner others from taking any of

11   those actions. 1 The injunction itself, though broad, is not challenged on appeal

     1   Here is the actual relevant language of the Arcara Injunction:

              [D]efendants; the officers, directors, agents, representatives of defendants; all
              other persons whomsoever, known or unknown, acting in defendants’ behalf or
              in concert with defendants; and any persons present protesting against
              defendants’ activities, and receiving actual or constructive notice of this Order,
              are:

                    1. Enjoined and restrained from: . . . demonstrating, congregating,
                    standing, sitting, or lying on, or posting or carrying signs, or being present
                    within fifteen feet of either edge of any doorway, walkway or driveway
                    entrance to any [facility providing reproductive health care services in the
                    Western District of New York];
                    ....
                                                   1
 1   and is, everyone agrees, perfectly lawful. 2

 2          In most cases, the party aggrieved by the breach of an injunction initiates

 3   suit. Here, though, the appellant, Jim Havens, an anti-abortion protestor who is

 4   neither an aggrieved nor a named party to the injunction, moved first by filing a

 5   complaint. As the District Court (Larimer, J.) noted, Havens admits in his

 6   complaint to conducting training sessions at Focus Pregnancy Help Center,

 7   which is run by its founder, Mary Jost, another anti-abortion protestor who is a

 8   named party to the injunction. Jost and Focus were not shy about their

 9   association with Havens and his followers. For example, Havens’s complaint

10   specifically mentions the “Focus Pregnancy Help Center’s website promoting a

11   Jim Havens and Sidewalk Advocates for Life protest outside Planned

                   4. Are further enjoined and restrained from inducing, directing, aiding or
                   abetting in any manner, others to take any of the actions
                   described . . . above.

     Joint App’x 20–23.

     2 The constitutionality of the Arcara Injunction was litigated in the 1990s and early-
     2000s. See Pro-Choice Network of W. N.Y. v. Project Rescue W. N.Y., 799 F. Supp. 1417
     (W.D.N.Y. 1992), aff’d in part & rev’d in part sub nom. Pro-Choice Network of W. N.Y.
     v. Schenck, 67 F.3d 359 (2d Cir. 1994), aff’d as modified, 67 F.3d 377 (2d Cir. 1995) (in
     banc), aff’d in part & rev’d in part, 519 U.S. 357 (1997); see also New York ex rel Spitzer
     v. Operation Rescue Nat’l, No. 99-CV-209A, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20059 (W.D.N.Y. July
     26, 2000), aff’d in part & vacated in part, 273 F.3d 184 (2d Cir. 2001).
                                                  2
 1   Parenthood on University Avenue.” Joint App’x 35. Even though Havens was

 2   actively associating with Jost and Focus as part of his protest efforts, his

 3   complaint asserts that he is not bound by the injunction, and he seeks a counter-

 4   injunction that would allow him to continue to cross the buffer zone and engage

 5   in other activity (or help others engage in activity) that the injunction clearly

 6   forbids. 3 As the District Court determined, under any fair reading of the

 7   complaint now before us, Havens and Jost were “coordinat[ing] [their]

 8   activities,” Roe v. Operation Rescue, 54 F.3d 133, 140 (3d Cir. 1995), to enable Jost

 9   to do through Havens what she could not do directly: cross the buffer zone and

10   encourage others to do the same.

11         I would affirm the District Court’s decision across the board. Based on the

12   allegations in his own complaint, Havens was in “active concert or

13   participation,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(d)(2)(C), with at least one party named in and

14   enjoined by the injunction. For that reason, the District Court was right to

15   dismiss Havens’s complaint. I would also affirm the District Court’s denial of

     3 The majority opinion notes that Havens also requested nominal damages below and
     suggests that he is entitled to them. Majority Op. at 9 n.6. On appeal, however, the
     parties have not raised any arguments pertaining to Havens’s claim for or entitlement
     to nominal damages, so that issue is not before us.
                                               3
 1   Havens’s motion for a preliminary injunction as moot or, in the alternative, on

 2   the merits. I address both of these issues in turn.

 3                                                 I

 4                                                 A

 5         Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d)(2) provides that an injunction binds

 6   only those who have actual notice of the injunction and are (1) “the parties,”

 7   (2) “the parties’ officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys,” or

 8   (3) “other persons who are in active concert or participation” with anyone in the

 9   first two categories. The central question in this appeal is whether Havens was

10   in “active concert or participation” with any party to the Arcara Injunction and

11   was therefore also bound by its terms. The answer, in my view, is yes.

12         A nonparty can be in active concert or participation with an enjoined party

13   when it aids and abets the party’s violation of the injunction. See Alemite Mfg.

14   Corp. v. Staff, 42 F.2d 832, 833 (2d Cir. 1930) (L. Hand, J.). Not so long ago we

15   held that a “court’s inquiry into the fact of aiding and abetting is directed to the

16   actuality of the concert or participation, without regard to the motives that

17   prompt the concert or participation.” Eli Lilly & Co v. Gottstein, 617 F.3d 186,

18   193 (2d Cir. 2010) (quotation marks omitted). All that a district court needs to

                                               4
 1   consider, in other words, is whether the nonparty “help[s] to bring about . . . an

 2   act of [a named] party” that the injunction forbids. Alemite Mfg. Corp., 42 F.2d

 3   at 833. Do not listen to what the nonparties say they want; watch what they do.

 4   Applied here, it is irrelevant that Havens may have been “independently

 5   motivated by [his] political, social, and moral positions on the subject

 6   of . . . abortion.” N.Y. State Nat’l Org. for Women v. Terry, 961 F.2d 390, 397 (2d

 7   Cir. 1992) (ellipsis in original) (quotation marks omitted), vacated on other

 8   grounds sub nom. Pearson v. Planned Parenthood Margaret Sanger Clinic, 507

 9   U.S. 901 (1993).

10         The majority opinion concedes that “motive” is not a relevant factor. See

11   Majority Op. at 16 & n.12. It nonetheless insists that a nonparty’s challenged

12   action constitutes active concert or participation if it is taken with the intent to

13   “benefit or to assist [an] enjoined party.” Majority Op. at 14. Respectfully, this

14   requirement has no support in any precedent anywhere. No circuit court has

15   held that a nonparty’s challenged action must be taken with the intent to benefit

16   or to assist a named party in order to satisfy Rule 65(d). The majority opinion

17   tries to stitch together this novel intent requirement by relying on Arista Records,

18   LLC v. Tkach, 122 F. Supp. 3d 32, 36 (S.D.N.Y. 2015), which itself cites to a

                                                5
 1   Northern District of Ohio case, see Adcor Indus. v. Bevcorp, LLC, 411 F. Supp. 2d

 2   778, 794 (N.D. Ohio 2005), which in turn relies on two decisions from the First

 3   and Federal Circuits, see Microsystems Software, Inc. v. Scandinavia Online AB,

 4   226 F.3d 35, 43 (1st Cir. 2000); Additive Controls & Measurements Sys., Inc. v.

 5   Flowdata, Inc., 154 F.3d 1345, 1353 (Fed Cir. 1998). 4 Neither of those circuit

 6   decisions refers to an intent to benefit or assist a named party. Each stands

 7   instead for the uncontroversial and undisputed proposition with which I started,

8    namely, that aiding and abetting is but one way that a nonparty can be in active

 9   concert or participation with an enjoined party. See Microsystems Software, 226

10   F.3d at 43 (noting that being in “active concert or participation” with a party

11   “means, of course, that the nonparty must be legally identified with that [party],

12   or, at least, deemed to have aided or abetted that [party] in the enjoined

13   conduct”); Additive Controls & Measurements Sys., 154 F.3d at 1353 (“Non-

14   parties are subject to contempt sanctions if they act with an enjoined party to

     4 The majority opinion asserts that the District Court “acknowledged the appropriate
     standard” by applying its newfound intent requirement. Majority Op. at 13 n.10. But
     the District Court actually cited both Eli Lilly and Arista Records to explain that “the
     Court’s focus should be on the “actuality of concert or participation, regardless of a
     party’s motive.” Id. at 507 (citing Arista Records, 122 F. Supp. At 38). And its decision
     focuses entirely on the “actuality” of Havens’s conduct. See Havens, 435 F. Supp. 3d at
     505.
                                                 6
 1   bring about a result forbidden by the injunction . . . but only if they are aware of

 2   the injunction and know that their acts violate [it].”). In any event, Arista

 3   Records reconfirms rather than rejects Eli Lilly’s principle that “‘a court’s inquiry

 4   into the fact of aiding and abetting is directed to the actuality of concert or

 5   participation, without regard to the motives that prompt the concert or

 6   participation.’” Arista Records, 122 F. Supp. 3d at 37 (quoting Eli Lilly, 617 F.3d

 7   at 193).

 8          According to the majority, district courts must now determine whether a

 9   nonparty acted with the intent to benefit or assist a named party. This additional

10   requirement breaks with prior decisions in which we have held that district

11   courts need only decide whether a nonparty aided and abetted a named party in

12   violating an injunction. See Eli Lilly, 617 F.3d at 193. We have never required

13   district courts to delve into whether a nonparty acted with the specific intent of

14   benefiting an enjoined party. Instead, we have instructed courts to consider

15   what the nonparty actually did. 5

     5In addressing this issue, the majority opinion cites to the Supreme Court’s recent
     decision in Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh, 143 S. Ct. 1206 (2023), as if to suggest that the
     decision supports the majority opinion’s take on aiding and abetting liability and the
     intent to benefit requirement. In fact, however, Twitter does not once mention such a
     requirement in its lengthy analysis and description of aiding and abetting. See id. at
     1218–23.
                                                 7
 1         Civil aiding and abetting liability arises when one “knows that the other’s

 2   conduct constitutes a breach of duty” but nevertheless “gives substantial

 3   assistance or encouragement to the other so to conduct himself.” Restatement

 4   (Second) of Torts § 876(b) (Am L. Inst. 1979). Indeed, in defining civil aiding and

5    abetting liability, the Second Restatement of Torts makes no reference to a

6    common law requirement that the aider and abettor act for the principal’s

7    benefit. On this point, the Restatement provides a useful illustration. Suppose

8    “A and B participate in a riot in which B, although throwing no rocks himself,

 9   encourages A to throw rocks.” Id. at cmt. d, illus. 4. Suppose further that “[o]ne

10   of the rocks strikes C, a bystander.” Id. B is then subject to civil liability to C for

11   aiding and abetting. See id. As the illustration suggests, B would be liable

12   regardless of whether B encourages A to throw the rock for B’s own benefit or for

13   A’s benefit.

14         Requiring no more than a finding that the nonparty has aided and abetted

15   the named party in this way (by encouraging the violation of law), without

16   requiring an additional finding that the nonparty intended to benefit or assist the

17   named party, will not “expand the equity power so broadly ‘as to make

18   punishable the conduct of persons who act independently.’” Majority Op. at 20

                                                8
 1   (quoting Regal Knitwear Co. v. NLRB, 329 U.S. 9, 13 (1945)). That is because

 2   “[a]iding and abetting a party is not acting independently.” Eli Lilly, 617 F.3d at

 3   193 (emphasis added).

 4         The majority opinion’s break with precedent is, to say the least,

 5   unfortunate and, in my view, unwise. Our inquiry into whether a nonparty

6    aided and abetted an enjoined party has always focused on the acts of the

7    nonparty. This is for good reason. While it is true that a court “cannot lawfully

 8   enjoin the world at large,” Alemite, 42 F.2d at 832, Rule 65(d) “is designed to

 9   codify the common-law doctrine ‘that defendants may not nullify a decree by

10   carrying out prohibited acts through aiders and abettors . . . [who] were not

11   parties to the original proceeding,’” Heyman v. Kline, 444 F.2d 65, 65 (2d Cir.

12   1971) (quoting Regal Knitwear, 329 U.S. at 14 (1945)). The rule serves to promote

13   respect for the injunctive orders of federal courts and to prevent named parties

14   from working with nonparties to flout those orders, which have played such an

15   important role in our Nation’s history. Demanding that district courts determine

16   that nonparties act with specific intent to benefit or assist named parties subverts

17   these goals. It allows named parties to dodge injunctions by finding willing

                                              9
 1   nonparties careful enough to avoid suggesting, in a complaint or otherwise, that

 2   they undertook the challenged actions for the benefit of the named party.

 3                                                    B

 4          Applying our binding decisions to the facts of this case makes clear that

 5   Havens was in active concert or participation with at least one named party to

 6   the Arcara Injunction: Jost. The injunction prohibits named parties from “being

 7   present within fifteen feet of either edge of any doorway, walkway, or driveway

 8   entrance” to “any facility providing reproductive health care services in the

 9   Western District of New York.” Joint App’x 20–21. It also prohibits named

10   parties “from inducing, directing, aiding or abetting in any manner, others,”

11   including nonparties, “to take [such] action[].” Joint App’x 22.

12          According to its website, of which we can take judicial notice, 6 Focus was

13   founded and is currently staffed by Jost. See Joint App’x 94. Havens does not

     6  My colleagues in the majority resist taking judicial notice of Focus’s website, which
     New York’s Attorney General provided and which is currently available online,
     because it is not an “official government website.” Majority Op. at 6 n.4. I disagree.
     Courts can take judicial notice of “a fact that is not subject to reasonable dispute because
     it . . . can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot
     reasonably be questioned.” Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). Havens does not question the
     accuracy of or shy away from Focus’s website or contest that Jost founded Focus. This
     Court and district courts in this Circuit have taken judicial notice of non-government
     websites under similar circumstances. See, e.g., Mirlis v. Greer, 952 F.3d 51, 63 n.11 (2d
     Cir. 2020); Magnoni v. Smith & Lacquercia, 483 Fed. App’x 613, 616 (2d Cir. 2012); Hesse
                                                 10
1   dispute this basic fact. The complaint alleges that Havens held training sessions

2   on sidewalk counseling at Focus. It further alleges that Havens learned from a

3   reporter that New York’s Attorney General had evidence of (1) a Facebook post

4   by Havens promoting one of his trainings at Focus, and (2) a screenshot of

5   Focus’s website promoting Havens’s protest outside of Rochester’s Planned

6   Parenthood. 7

7          These allegations support the District Court’s conclusion that Havens, the

8   nonparty, was in active concert or participation with Jost, the named party (and,

9   for that matter, Focus, the organization that Jost ran), because Havens “helped to

    v. Godiva Chocolatier, Inc., 463 F. Supp. 3d 453, 463 (S.D.N.Y. 2020) (collecting cases);
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Wrights Mill Holdings, LLC, 127 F. Supp. 3d 156, 167
    (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (same). Of course, Focus’s website, when considered, powerfully
    counters Havens’s claim that there is no coordination between him and Jost.

    7 Although Havens now attempts to distance himself from the allegations regarding the
    statements made by the reporter, he failed to raise this argument below, where he
    argued only that any such evidence did not show that he was in active concert or
    participation with Jost. Ordinarily, we decline to consider arguments first raised on
    appeal where, as here, those arguments were available to a party and the party offers no
    reason for its failure to raise it in the district court in the first instance. See In re Nortel
    Networks Corp. Sec. Litig., 539 F.3d 129, 133 (2d Cir. 2008). The majority opinion
    nevertheless takes up Havens’s argument—despite its forfeiture below and its
    abandonment at oral argument on appeal when Havens was specifically asked about
    the reporter’s statements. See Oral Arg. Tr. at 16–17. At the pleading stage, district
    courts within our Circuit accept as true all factual statements alleged in a complaint,
    even if they might constitute inadmissible hearsay at some later stage of the
    proceedings. See, e.g., Thompson v. Booth, No. 16-CV-3477, 2018 WL 4760663, at *5
    (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 28, 2018) (collecting cases).
                                                  11
 1   bring about” an “act of a [named] party” that the injunction forbids. Alemite, 42

 2   F.2d at 833. Jost breached the injunction’s prohibition against aiding and

 3   abetting a violation of the injunction by supporting Havens’s efforts to both cross

4    the buffer zone and encourage others to do the same. Meanwhile, by

5    affirmatively accepting Jost’s help knowing that she was prohibited from

6    providing it, Havens actively helped Jost circumvent the injunction. After all,

7    had Havens declined Jost’s help, she could not have violated the injunction’s

8    aiding-and-abetting provision. Because Havens “helped bring about” Jost’s

9    violation of the aiding-and-abetting provision, he fell squarely within the scope

10   of Rule 65(d)’s active-concert-or-participation provision. Alemite, 42 F.2d at 833.

11         The majority opinion’s primary response is to label this a “recursive theory

12   of aiding and abetting” that is “inconsistent with Rule 65(d).” Majority Op. at 24.

13   It asserts that “[t]he Arcara Injunction prohibits named parties from aiding and

14   abetting nonparties to engage in certain conduct . . . but . . . cannot thereby

15   prohibit the nonparties from engaging in that conduct.” Majority Op. at 25

16   (citing Dr.’s Assocs., Inc. v. Reinert & Duree, P.C., 191 F.3d 297 (2d Cir. 1999)).

17   This assertion is little more than an attack on the breadth of the injunction, which

18   has been litigated for decades and is no longer a subject of dispute. As I noted

                                               12
 1   above, Havens has never challenged either the injunction or its aiding-and-

 2   abetting provision below or on appeal. The issue, first raised by my colleagues in

 3   their majority opinion, thus falls well outside the scope of this appeal.

 4         In a similar way, the majority opinion derides the concept of “a category of

 5   aiders and abettors of aiders and abettors” as without support in criminal law.

 6   Majority Op. at 26. The criminal law concept of aiding and abetting has never

 7   defined the scope of what it means for a nonparty to be in “active concert and

 8   participation” with a named party under Rule 65(d). But even assuming that the

 9   majority opinion is correct to ground its analysis in criminal law, it still fails to

10   recognize Havens’s and Jost’s conduct for what it is: a conspiracy. Here, two or

11   more persons (i.e., Havens and Jost) have entered into a joint enterprise for an

12   unlawful purpose (i.e., to violate the injunction) with awareness of its general

13   nature and extent. See United States v. Khalupsky, 5 F.4th 279, 288 (2d Cir. 2021).

14   Because Havens is conspiring with Jost, he is in active concert or participation

15   with her for the purposes of Rule 65(d). 8

     8 According to the majority opinion, this basis for affirming the District Court’s
     judgment is unavailable because the parties did not argue it and it thus violates the
     party presentation rule for us to rely on it. Majority Op. at 28 n.19. As we have often
     noted, however, “we are not ‘hidebound by the precise arguments of counsel.’” United
     States v. Graham, 51 F.4th 67, 80–81 (2d Cir. 2022) (quoting United States v. Sineneng-
     Smith, 140 S. Ct. 1575, 1581 (2020)). The principle of party presentation does not
                                                13
 1         Consider a second illustration. Suppose that A and B participate in the

 2   same riot and each now seeks to push a heavy boulder off a bridge onto C’s car.

 3   Neither is strong enough to do so alone, so they do so together. Under these

 4   circumstances, A and B are obviously engaged in a conspiracy to damage C’s car.

5    One could, I suppose, refer to this conduct under a “recursive theory of aiding

6    and abetting” or use the “conspiracy” label with which courts are already

7    familiar. Either way, A and B would be in active concert or participation with

8    each other for the purposes of Rule 65(d).

9          Finally, the majority opinion implies that sidewalk counseling does not

10   necessarily entail crossing the buffer zone. See Majority Op. at 20–21, 29–30.

11   That suggestion conflicts with the complaint, which alleges that Havens has

12   crossed and intends in the future to cross the buffer zone in the course of and as

13   part of his sidewalk counseling. See Joint App’x 10–11. Specifically, the

14   complaint alleges that the particular buffer zone at issue in this case is “very

15   burdensome” because “the sidewalk counselors are unable . . . to have an

16   intimate conversation in close proximity with a woman who is willing to talk to

     override the principle that “we may affirm a judgment of the district court on any
     ground that is directly responsive to an appellant’s arguments.” Id. at 81. Indeed, we
     may affirm on any ground fairly supported by the record. Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC
     v. Sappington, 884 F.3d 392, 396 n.2 (2d Cir. 2018).
                                               14
 1   them,” and is “counterproductive to their ability to communicate effectively.”

 2   Joint App’x 11. At least for Havens, then, crossing the buffer zone forms a core

 3   part of sidewalk counseling. Were this not the case, Havens would gain no

 4   benefit from sidewalk counseling.

 5         For these reasons, in my view, the alleged coordination between Havens

 6   and Jost is enough to subject Havens to the unchallenged terms of the Arcara

 7   Injunction as a nonparty. If Havens’s conduct fails to qualify as “active concert

 8   or participation” under the natural and plain meaning of Rule 65(d), I am not

 9   sure what would. We should therefore have affirmed the District Court’s

10   dismissal of the complaint.

11                                           II

12         Although the additional facts developed in the preliminary injunction

13   record confirm that Havens was in active concert or participation with Jost for

14   purposes of Rule 65(d), the majority opinion takes the extraordinary step of

15   reversing the District Court’s denial of Havens’s motion for a preliminary

16   injunction and in effect enjoining the court from enforcing its own injunction.

17   Reversal now permits Havens to cross the buffer zone with impunity and pursue

18   a range of actions that Jost and other named parties are enjoined from taking.

                                             15
 1         Because I would affirm the District Court’s dismissal of the complaint, I

2    would also have denied Havens’s motion for a preliminary injunction as moot.

3    But if there were any lingering doubt that Havens is bound by the terms of the

4    Arcara Injunction based on the allegations in his complaint, the preliminary

5    injunction record erases it altogether, and the District Court was right to deny his

6    motion.

7          “‘A preliminary injunction is an extraordinary remedy never awarded as

 8   of right.’” UBS Fin. Servs., Inc. v. W. Va. Univ. Hosps., Inc., 660 F.3d 643, 648 (2d

 9   Cir. 2011) (quoting Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 24 (2008)).

10   The District Court’s decision to deny Havens’s motion for a preliminary

11   injunction is subject to a deferential abuse of discretion standard. See N. Am.

12   Soccer League, LLC v. U.S. Soccer Fed’n, Inc., 883 F.3d 32, 36 (2d Cir. 2018). “A

13   party seeking a preliminary injunction must show (1) irreparable harm; (2) either

14   a likelihood of success on the merits or both serious questions on the merits and

15   a balance of hardships decidedly favoring the moving party; and (3) that a

16   preliminary injunction is in the public interest.” Id. at 37.

17         Here, the record developed by the parties after Havens moved for a

18   preliminary injunction shows that Havens was no passive actor. He actively

                                               16
 1   solicited Jost’s assistance by asking her if he could conduct sidewalk counseling

 2   trainings at Focus. There is no dispute that Jost then agreed to “host[] sidewalk

 3   counseling training sessions at Focus,” Havens Reply Br. 19, and that Havens

 4   thereafter held trainings at Focus. Jost went so far as to hand Havens the key to

 5   Focus for his personal use on days when he was protesting and sidewalk

 6   counseling outside of Planned Parenthood. Needless to say, this was a mutually

 7   advantageous relationship; Jost benefitted greatly from the arrangement, too.

 8   Havens advertised Focus in a television interview and on his personal Facebook

 9   page and repeatedly diverted women he met in front of Planned Parenthood to

10   Jost and Focus.

11         On this record, the District Court acted well within its very broad

12   discretion when it determined that Havens’s conduct constituted active concert

13   or participation with named parties to the injunction. For this reason, I would

14   leave undisturbed the District Court’s assessment that Havens failed to

15   demonstrate a “likelihood of success on the merits” or even to present “serious

16   questions on the merits.” N. Am. Soccer League, LLC, 883 F.3d at 37.

17                                     *      *     *

                                             17
 1         The majority’s decision threatens to undermine the authority of federal

 2   district courts to enforce their injunctive decrees well beyond the context of anti-

 3   abortion protests and sidewalk counseling. As I’ve said, the decision is

 4   unmoored from the text of any rule or statute, and it contradicts a prior

 5   precedential decision of this Court. Could things be worse? Well, yes, because

 6   the decision also defines “active concert and participation” so narrowly as to

 7   render Rule 65(d)(2)(C) practically meaningless. Few bound by an injunctive

 8   decree will have much trouble enlisting a nonparty to do what they are unable to

 9   do directly. It is unclear to me how district courts will be able to meaningfully

10   enforce their decrees against clever and devoted parties with clever and devoted

11   friends.

12         For these reasons I respectfully dissent.

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