In 1990, Theresa "Terri" Schiavo suffered cardiac arrest, resulting in severe brain damage and a diagnosis of persistent vegetative state. Her husband and legal guardian, Michael Schiavo, petitioned Florida courts to authorize withdrawal of artificial nutrition and hydration, asserting this would accord with Terri's wishes. Her parents, the Schindlers, opposed, contesting both her condition and her supposed preferences. After extensive evidentiary hearings, the Florida trial court found by clear and convincing evidence that Terri would not have wanted continued life-sustaining measures and authorized removal of the feeding tube. Years of state appellate review and collateral litigation followed, including the invalidation of Florida's 2003 "Terri's Law" (which had attempted to mandate reinsertion of the feeding tube) on separation‑of‑powers grounds. In March 2005, Congress enacted the Act for the Relief of the Parents of Theresa Marie Schiavo, Pub. L. No. 109‑3, granting federal district courts jurisdiction to hear de novo any claim that Terri's federal rights had been violated and permitting injunctive relief. The Schindlers, acting ex rel. Terri, filed suit in the Middle District of Florida alleging violations of due process, equal protection, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Rehabilitation Act, and seeking a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to reinsert the feeding tube. The district court denied emergency relief, finding the plaintiffs had not shown a substantial likelihood of success on the merits. The Schindlers appealed and simultaneously sought an injunction pending appeal. The Eleventh Circuit addressed whether an injunction was warranted and whether the special federal act required injunctive relief to preserve the status quo.
Does the Act for the Relief of the Parents of Theresa Marie Schiavo require federal courts to grant emergency injunctive relief to reinsert Terri Schiavo's feeding tube pending de novo consideration of federal claims, and, under traditional equitable standards, did the plaintiffs demonstrate a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of any asserted federal right?
A party seeking a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction, or injunction pending appeal must demonstrate: (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2) irreparable injury absent relief; (3) that the balance of harms favors the movant; and (4) that the injunction would not disserve the public interest. The Act for the Relief of the Parents of Theresa Marie Schiavo confers federal jurisdiction and directs de novo consideration of federal claims, but it does not create new substantive rights, displace traditional equitable standards, or mandate automatic injunctive relief. Appellate review of the denial of such relief is for abuse of discretion, with legal conclusions reviewed de novo.
The Act did not mandate automatic injunctive relief or reinsertion of the feeding tube. Applying traditional equitable standards, the plaintiffs failed to show a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of their federal claims. The request for emergency injunctive relief was denied and the district court's refusal to grant preliminary relief was affirmed.
The court first interpreted the federal Act's text as jurisdictional and procedural: it authorized de novo adjudication of federal claims and permitted, but did not require, injunctive relief. Phrases such as "as may be necessary" and the Act's structure—linking injunctive relief to a determination on the merits—left traditional equitable discretion intact. Thus, there was no congressional command to grant an automatic stay or to order reinsertion of the feeding tube pending review. Turning to the equitable factors, the court focused on the absence of a substantial likelihood of success. The due process claims failed because extensive Florida proceedings had already provided constitutionally adequate process. Florida recognized an incompetent person's right to refuse medical treatment consistent with Cruzan, applied a clear‑and‑convincing evidence standard, and afforded multiple layers of review. The plaintiffs did not identify a federal procedural deficiency in the state adjudication, nor did they show that federal law required different decisional criteria for end‑of‑life determinations. Substantive due process likewise did not aid the plaintiffs; the asserted rights belonged to Terri, and the state court's substituted‑judgment finding that she would decline artificial nutrition undercut any federal claim to a contrary entitlement. The equal protection theory failed because plaintiffs did not show similarly situated individuals were treated differently or that any classification—disability‑based or otherwise—triggered heightened scrutiny. The decision to withdraw life support turned on Terri's own wishes as found by the state court, not on animus or discriminatory treatment. Likewise, the ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims were unlikely to succeed: the withdrawal of life‑sustaining treatment pursuant to a patient's preferences is not discrimination "by reason of" disability within the meaning of those statutes, and the private conduct of the guardian, even when implemented through a state court order, did not constitute the sort of discriminatory denial of services those laws address. Given the weakness on the merits, the extraordinary remedy of an injunction was unwarranted despite the profound irreparable harm inherent in end‑of‑life cases. The court further noted that the public interest and balance of harms do not override the requirement of a substantial merits showing. Because the Act neither created a new substantive federal right to continued life support nor lowered the injunction standard, and because the asserted federal claims were unlikely to prevail, emergency relief was properly denied.
For law students, Schiavo illustrates core principles at the intersection of constitutional law, federal courts, and remedies. It reaffirms that special jurisdiction‑conferring statutes do not alter the substantive rights at issue or the traditional standards for equitable relief absent clear congressional direction. The case also underscores federalism and separation‑of‑powers themes: Congress may open a federal forum, but federal courts will not function as appellate overseers of state‑law determinations without a cognizable federal right. Finally, the decision is a touchstone for the high bar to emergency injunctions, even in morally urgent contexts, and for understanding how Cruzan‑style right‑to‑die jurisprudence frames federal claims.
Schiavo ex rel. Schindler v. Schiavo stands as a pivotal example of federal courts exercising restraint in the face of intense public pressure and urgent moral questions. The Eleventh Circuit's analysis grounded the outcome in statutory construction and settled equitable principles, concluding that the special federal act did not mandate an injunction and that the plaintiffs had not shown a substantial likelihood of success on their federal claims.