Administration’s Left Hand Declines to Defend Right Hand

Ars Technica reported this morning that the Department of Justice has declined to defend the FCC in two lawsuits involving municipal-owned broadband networks.  Back in February, the FCC adopted an order preempting state laws that attempt to prohibit municipal broadband networks.  The states of Tennessee and North Carolina sued the FCC in March, complaining that the FCC does not have authority to preempt states in this area and seeking to nullify the Commission’s order.

These cases, and this development, are interesting on several levels:  interesting that the FCC felt emboldened to preempt under Section 706, interesting that the Commission’s original order was supported by the Administration, interesting that two states are challenging the order on grounds that it violates the nondelegation doctrine, principles of statutory interpretation, and federalism, and interesting to see the federal law enforcement agency back away from the cases.

The Ars Technica article quotes former FCC attorney Ronald May on the curious nature of the DOJ’s filing in the cases and the possibility that the Administration is second-guessing the FCC’s interpretation of its own authority:

The decision is “especially curious” because the FCC was following the wishes of President Obama, May wrote. “We don’t know for sure, but my best guess is that the DOJ, quite rightly, is concerned about the lawfulness of the FCC’s preemption action. If so, the concern is justified.”

Stay tuned . . . I’ll continue to track this story.

Symposium on Open Internet at ACSblog

The folks over at ACSblog have put together a nice little symposium on the FCC’s Open Internet Order and the ensuing rules:

ACSBLOG SYMPOSIUM ON FCC’S NET NEUTRALITY RULES

Net Neutrality and Regulatory Flexibility under Title II of the Communications Act

Network Equality and the End of Innovation

EFF Urges Federal Appeals Court to Protect Speech, Guard Against Censorship By Upholding Net Neutrality Order

FCC Receives First Complaint Under New Net Neutrality Rules

Here’s the first official net neutrality complaint to the FCC

Washington Post

Photo by Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post

Well, that complaint just dropped. In a filing with the Federal Communications Commission on Monday, Commercial Network Services (CNS) claims that it’s being charged unjust rates to deliver its streaming Web cam video to consumers.

CNS wants Time Warner Cable to carry its traffic for free. But TWC is telling CNS’s chief executive, Barry Bahrami, that his company doesn’t qualify for what’s called a “settlement-free” deal.

“TWC is acting as gatekeeper and degrading our ability to exercise free expression,” Bahrami writes in the complaint. “TWC’s management policy is restricting the open exchange of Internet traffic.”

TWC has said that its behavior is consistent with industry standards and that it’s confident the FCC will reject Bahrami’s claims.

It’s unclear how much traction Bahrami will get with the commission. His argument is that Time Warner Cable has violated the FCC’s rules against paid prioritization, or the tactic where Internet providers charge a fee to selectively speed up certain Web sites. That behavior was labeled illegal under the FCC’s net neutrality rules.

But that part of the FCC’s rules only cover the so-called “last mile” between a consumer’s device and his Internet provider. It doesn’t address the part of the Internet where Time Warner Cable and Bahrami are having their dispute. So the FCC could find that, in fact, TWC hasn’t broken any rules after all.

ALJ Issues Heating Up at SEC

SEC Fights Challenges to Its In-House Courts:  Securities and Exchange Commission deploys countermeasures to defend its approach

Wall Street Journal

By Jean Eaglesham

BN-JA330_SECALj_M_20150621164852

The Securities and Exchange Commission is fending off a flurry of legal challenges to its in-house court system, which has become a key cog in its enforcement strategy but has drawn mounting criticism.

The agency is deploying a variety of countermeasures to fight at least seven cases brought by defendants around the country. The expanding effort prompted one federal judge last week to say the agency appears to be in “a little bit of chaos right now.”

The cases are forcing the SEC to defend the growing use of its five administrative-law judges, to whom it sends hundreds of cases a year. The agency has been directing more cases to its internal courts since the Dodd-Frank financial-reform law granted it more latitude to do so.

The SEC says the system is faster and more efficient than federal courts. Critics have said the process unfairly denies defendants important protections afforded by the federal courts.

A federal judge in Atlanta this month said in a ruling that the SEC in-house tribunal was “likely unconstitutional.” She ordered a temporary halt to the SEC case under review, ahead of a final decision on whether to block it permanently.

That case is just one of many challenges brought in recent weeks. Because the cases involve different legal issues but are being brought close together, the agency is employing a range of defenses.

The SEC accused several defendants of “judge shopping” by trying to get a case heard in a particular court and in another instance asked one of its own judges to submit a formal statement about whether he has ever felt pressure to favor the agency.

An SEC spokeswoman declined to comment.

The legal backlash stems in part from the SEC’s recent push to send more cases to the in-house judges, including some relatively complicated matters such as insider-trading that were traditionally heard by a federal judge or jury.

Some defendants have argued that the SEC judges appear biased toward the agency, based on their decisions. Several former high-ranking SEC officials have also said publicly in recent weeks that the system should be amended.

The legal battles could have far-reaching repercussions.

Thomas McCarthy, a past president of the Federal Administrative Law Judges Conference, an association of in-house judges for the SEC and other government agencies, said in an interview the wrangles could “open a can of worms” by calling into question hundreds of administrative law judges’ decisions across government. More than two dozen agencies use administrative-law judges to settle a variety of legal actions and disputes.

The challenges to the SEC system, many in New York and Georgia federal courts, focus on the legality of how the decades-old SEC in-house tribunal is operated, as well as the relative fairness of the system.

In ruling this month that the SEC in-house tribunal was “likely unconstitutional,” U.S. District Judge Leigh Martin May in Atlanta said the judges were “officials” and so should have been appointed by the commissioners who run the SEC, rather than by more-junior people within the agency. Mr. McCarthy said in the interview he agrees with Judge May that administrative judges are officials, rather than employees as the SEC argues.

The SEC intends to seek a fast-track appeal of that Atlanta ruling, its lawyers told U.S. District Judge Richard Berman, who is presiding over a separate legal challenge.

In the meantime, the SEC is fighting several challenges that seek to elicit a ruling similar to the one in Atlanta and have their administrative cases put on ice because of constitutional concerns.

At last week’s New York hearing, Judge Berman refused a request by lawyers representing Barbara Duka, a former Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services executive, to grant an immediate halt to the SEC administrative case against her. Instead, he set dates next month for more-detailed arguments by Ms. Duka, who denies SEC civil allegations of fraud.

But the judge grilled the government lawyer on why the SEC won’t adopt a seemingly “easy fix” to its legal headache. He asked if the issue highlighted in Atlanta—the need for “officials” such as in-house judges to be appointed by senior figures—could be cured by “one line in a memo” from the SEC commissioners, formally hiring its judges. Nelson Boxer, a lawyer for Ms. Duka, told the court this approach would address their concern, adding: “It doesn’t strike us as a very complicated exercise.”

Judge Berman said the government’s strategy for dealing with “all these cases all over the country” seemed surprising—“I just don’t get it,” he said.

But the SEC isn’t convinced any easy cure exists, according to people close to the agency.

Senior agency officials are weighing changes to its in-house tribunal, including a new appointments process, the people close to the agency said. The SEC could also update its rules for in-house cases.

Officials say, however, that any change shouldn’t be rushed.

“We should not act rashly,” Jean Lin, a Justice Department lawyer representing the SEC, said at last week’s hearing before Judge Berman.

One reason for caution is the possible impact on other SEC enforcement actions, the people close to the agency said. Any change seen as a tacit admission the SEC judges were appointed in an unconstitutional way might open the door to lawsuits, these people say, including in the more-than-100 disputed cases now going through the agency’s in-house courts.

The SEC is trying to prevent more of its in-house cases from being stopped in their tracks.

The agency last week asked Judge May—the Atlanta judge who issued the ruling that the SEC judges were likely unconstitutional—to send another lawsuit against the SEC back to the court clerks for assigning to a different judge. The case in question was filed by investment-firm Timbervest LLC and four of its executives, who are appealing to the SEC a ruling last year by Cameron Elliot, an SEC judge, that they defrauded a pension-fund client.

The Timbervest defendants say their lawsuit in the Atlanta federal courts, challenging the constitutionality of the in-house process that led to a decision against them, should be heard by Judge May because it raises issues similar to ones she ruled on in the earlier case.

But the SEC said the cases involved different facts and should be heard by different judges. Allowing the Timbervest challenge to be decided by Judge May would “stunt the development of the law and encourage judge shopping,” the SEC said in a court filing.

Joel Shapiro, Timbervest chief executive and one of the defendants in the case, called the agency’s stance “laughable.” Agency officials “are the ones who are both judge shopping and forum shopping,” he said.

Are Administrative Law Judges Unconstitutional?

Great question.  It’s a question that appeared in this post on PrawfsBlawg this week.  Last week, a federal District Court judge in Georgia determined that ALJs at the Securities and Exchange Commission are not properly appointed.  Judge Leigh Martin May, in an order on a motion for temporary injunction in Hill v. S.E.C., agreed with the arguments of  Charles Hill who was accused of insider trading by the SEC.  Hill argued, among other things, that Article II of the Constitution requires that “inferior officers” be appointed by the President, the Judicary, or “heads of departments”.   ALJs at the SEC are, instead, appointed by a chief ALJ.

As the PrawfsBlawg post points out,

“there’s an easy fix for the SEC because the SEC is already considered a ‘department’ and has authority to appoint ALJs itself. But the opinion raises new concerns for other ALJs in the administrative state, who together hear over 250,000 cases a year.  That’s because many agencies are not freestanding departments–like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which operates inside of the Federal Reserve.”

So, these questions remain:  will the holding in Hill stand up on appeal and, in cases involving ALJs in agencies not considered “departments”, will the Constitution be applied to require the appointment of ALJs by Article II officers (President, the Judiciary, or department heads)?  Stay tuned . . .

FCC Issues New Neutrality Rules

Net neutrality rules published, lawsuit to overturn them immediately filed:  After Federal Register publication, trade group for ISPs files suit

ars technica

by Jon Brodkin

While the Federal Communications Commission passed its net neutrality rules on February 26, they weren’t published in the Federal Register until today.

Internet providers are now common carriers, and they’re ready to sue.

The publication means a couple of things: the rules go into effect 60 days from today, and parties that oppose the rules have 10 days to file lawsuits against the FCC. Almost immediately after publication, a trade group representing ISPs called USTelecom filed suit in the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

USTelecom’s petition said the FCC’s ruling is “arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion” and “violates federal law, including, but not limited to, the Constitution, the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, and FCC regulations promulgated thereunder.”

You may recall that this same group sued the FCC over the net neutrality rules last month. That was done just in case the 10-day deadline could be applied after the rules were posted to the FCC’s website, which happened before publication to the Federal Register. In either case, the initial challenge is mostly a procedural matter; detailed briefs laying out a legal argument against the FCC’s rules will probably come this summer.

The FCC’s vote reclassified fixed and mobile broadband providers as common carriers and imposed rules against blocking or throttling Internet content and a ban on prioritizing content in exchange for payment.

USTelecom represents both large and small service providers and suppliers for the telecom industry. AT&T, Verizon, and numerous other companies serve on its board of directors.

While Verizon sued the FCC over its 2010 net neutrality rules (and ultimately won), this time the legal challenges are expected to be led by consortiums rather than individual companies.

The National Cable & Telecommunications Association, the top group representing cable companies, declined to comment today on whether it plans a lawsuit.

 

Supreme Court Strikes Down Paralyzed Veterans and “Notice-and-Comment” Requirement for Interpretive Rulings

Perez, another iceberg Supreme Court opinion: the best lies beneath

The Volokh Conspiracy

By Sasha Volokh

Perez v. Mortgage Bankers Ass’n is another Supreme Court opinion that came down on Monday, just like the Amtrak decision that I’ve written about here, here, and here.

The majority opinion is entirely correct and should be uncontroversial. (The result was 9-0, and Justice Sotomayor’s majority opinion was joined by almost 7 Justices — Justice Alito joined all but a small section, and also wrote separately. Justices Scalia and Thomas wrote concurrences in the judgment.)

When agencies promulgate rules, they often have to go through “notice-and-comment rulemaking” under the Administrative Procedure Act. But some kinds of rule are exempt from these requirements: this exemption includes “interpretative rules” (or, as we now call them, “interpretive rules”). So for example, if Congress passes a statute with an ambiguous term, an agency can issue a memo saying “We think this term means X,” and it doesn’t have to go through a round of notice-and-comment rulemaking. (At the same time, the memo has no binding force in court.) The same is true if an agency promulgates a notice-and-comment regulation with an ambiguous term, and later clarifies that term’s meaning using a similar memo.

So far, so good. But the D.C. Circuit had its own special doctrine, which it developed in a 1997 case called Paralyzed Veterans. If an agency has an ambiguous regulation and clarifies a meaning via interpretive memo, no notice-and-comment rulemaking is required. On the other hand, if it later on changes its mind and issues a second interpretive memo that contradicts the first, then notice-and-comment rulemaking is required.

This doctrine is so clearly contrary to the APA that the Supreme Court had no trouble overruling it. (Why do they hate paralyzed veterans?)

Justice Alito’s concurrence and Justices Scalia and Thomas’s concurrences in the judgment make the separate point that, while the Paralyzed Veterans doctrine was legally wrong, it did address a real problem, which is that, thanks to judicial deference to agency interpretations of their own regulations (so-called Auer deference), agencies can radically change the meaning of regulations after the fact without much judicial review — and, if there’s no notice-and-comment rulemaking, without much scrutiny on the front end either. As Jonathan Adler has written earlier, the Auer doctrine’s days may be numbered; it’s clear that several Justices are waiting for a proper case to arise. (Though Justice Scalia’s opinion was primarily about Auer, I did find the tone unusually lukewarm toward Chevron as well; Scalia has always been a huge fan of Chevron, ever since his days on the D.C. Circuit.)

Justice Thomas’s concurrence in the judgment is of extra interest because it goes together with his concurrence in the judgment in the Amtrak case, DOT v. Ass’n of American Railroads.

In this separate opinion, Justice Thomas writes that Auer deference is unconstitutional. The Founders’ design was to leave all interpretation of the law in the hands of the judiciary, and this is why they designed the federal judiciary with tenure and salary protection, two measures to promote judicial independence. The judiciary is required to exercise its independent judgment; transferring the exercise of judgment to the executive branch is unconstitutional, and dilutes the judiciary’s ability to operate as a check on the other branches. This part of the opinion is full of historical citations to Federalists, Anti-Federalists, and Chief Justice Coke and James I.

He goes on to say that, in practical effect, deference to agency interpretations allows agencies to change the substantive content of the law. This connects directly to Justice Thomas’s Amtrak opinion: deference (particularly Chevron deference) has always been justified as an implicit delegation of gap-filling power to agencies. But if Justice Thomas is right that agencies lack the power to make substantive rules governing private conduct, then in many cases (but not all: only those involving substantive rules governing private conduct) such a delegation would be unconstitutional. So while Justice Thomas focuses primarily on Auer deference, his arguments here and in the Amtrak case seem to imply that he believes that Chevron deference is likewise invalid.

(Note that Thomas hasn’t joined some of Scalia’s Chevron-maximalist opinions, like Mead. [NOTE: He did join the big-Chevron opinion in Arlington v. FCC — thanks, commenter “Asher on Volokh.”] Thomas did write Brand X, where Scalia dissented, and that could be characterized as somewhat pro-Chevron with Scalia’s dissent being anti-Chevron, but that case had special considerations in it, like the finality of judicial interpretations, which make it hard to map onto a pro-/anti-Chevron spectrum.)

(Fun extra fact: Justice Thomas’s footnote 5 suggests that he also disapproves of the widespread use of “informal” notice-and-comment rulemaking: he cites Florida East Coast Railway disapprovingly and suggests that formal rulemaking under §§ 556 and 557 should be the norm.)

Justice Thomas Returns to His Concurrence on Nondelegation Doctrine in Whitman

Justice Thomas delivers what he promised on February 27, 2001

The Volokh Conspiracy

By Sasha Volokh

On February 27, 2001, the Supreme Court handed down Whitman v. American Trucking Ass’ns, where the Supreme Court considered whether the EPA could validly promulgate National Ambient Air Quality Standards. The challengers had argued that the Clean Air Act violated the non-delegation doctrine by delegating too much power, in terms that were too vague, to the EPA. The Supreme Court upheld the delegation 9-0: the prevailing test is whether Congress has stated an “intelligible principle” to guide the EPA, and given the sorts of broad delegations that had been upheld in the past (including a law requiring an agency to act in the “public interest”!), the delegation in the Clean Air Act easily passed muster.

Justice Thomas joined the main opinion, but he wrote the following in his brief concurrence:

The parties to these cases who briefed the constitutional issue wrangled over constitutional doctrine with barely a nod to the text of the Constitution. Although this Court since 1928 has treated the “intelligible principle” requirement as the only constitutional limit on congressional grants of power to administrative agencies, [citing J.W. Hampton (1928), the case that first used that test,] the Constitution does not speak of “intelligible principles.” Rather, it speaks in much simpler terms: “All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress.” U. S. Const., Art. 1, § 1 (emphasis added). I am not convinced that the intelligible principle doctrine serves to prevent all cessions of legislative power. I believe that there are cases in which the principle is intelligible and yet the significance of the delegated decision is simply too great for the decision to be called anything other than “legislative.”

As it is, none of the parties to these cases has examined the text of the Constitution or asked us to reconsider our precedents on cessions of legislative power. On a future day, however, I would be willing to address the question whether our delegation jurisprudence has strayed too far from our Founders’ understanding of separation of powers.

That future day was Monday, the day before yesterday, when the Court handed down Dep’t of Transportation v. Ass’n of American Railroads. I wrote about Justice Kennedy’s opinion on Monday, and wrote about Justice Alito’s concurring opinion on Tuesday. Today, I’ll summarize Justice Thomas’s opinion (which Eugene also excerpted earlier), where he gives his originalist view of the non-delegation doctrine at length (his opinion, at 27 slip-opinion pages, is longer than the main opinion and Alito’s opinion combined).

Traditional non-delegation doctrine as a species of a more general non-delegation idea

First, Justice Thomas sees the traditional non-delegation doctrine as part of a broader separation-of-powers doctrine:

When the Court speaks of Congress improperly delegating power, what it means is Congress’ authorizing an entity to exercise power in a manner inconsistent with the Constitution. For example, Congress improperly “delegates” legislative power when it authorizes an entity other than itself to make a determination that requires an exercise of legislative power. [See Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’ns.] It also improperly “delegates” legislative power to itself when it authorizes itself to act without bicameralism and presentment. [See, e.g., INS v. Chadha (1983).] And Congress improperly “delegates”—or, more precisely, authorizes the exercise of, [see Thomas’s concurrence in the judgment in Monday’s other case, Perez v. Mortgage Bankers Ass’n,] (noting that Congress may not “delegate” power it does not possess)—executive power when it authorizes individuals or groups outside of the President’s control to perform a function that requires the exercise of that power. [See, e.g., Free Enterprise Fund v. PCAOB].

Conventionally, these doctrines are thought of as somewhat distinct: the non-delegation doctrine guards against Congress giving up too much power; Chadha guards against Congress acting legislatively without bicameralism and presentment; and Free Enterprise Fund has to do with presidential control of the administration via appointment and removal. But Justice Thomas conceptualizes these as all part of a common problem of “delegation.”

Anyway, under Thomas’s view, you have to rigorously establish what sort of act something is — whether it’s legislative, executive, or judicial. (The same act can sometimes be of more than one type, so it can be performed by more than one branch.) The bottom line of his opinion is: “The function at issue here is the formulation of generally applicable rules of private conduct. Under the original understanding of the Constitution, that function requires the exercise of legislative power. By corollary, the discretion inherent in executive power does not comprehend the discretion to formulate generally applicable rules of private conduct.”

History of non-delegation in England and the Founding

What follows is an extended discussion of the history of the idea of the separation of powers and how it was thought of as being an aspect of the “rule of law.” The historical discussion seems deeply indebted to Philip Hamburger’s recent book, Is Administrative Law Unlawful? (Hamburger has guest-blogged right here: see this post, this one, and this one. To the question posed in Hamburger’s title, Adrian Vermeule answers “No”; see Gary Lawson’s review for a favorable take.)

Thus, Justice Thomas discusses Henry VIII and the Act of Proclamations, where Parliament (for a while) delegated to the king a limited power to legislate by proclamation. He next discusses the Case of Proclamations, where Chief Justice Coke repudiated James I’s effort to make rules governing private conduct by proclamation. And he quotes Locke and Blackstone arguing that rules governing private conduct should be made by the legislature, not by the king.

These experiences “profoundly influenced” our own Founders. “This devotion to the separation of powers is, in part, what supports our enduring conviction that the Vesting Clauses are exclusive and that the branch in which a power is vested may not give it up or otherwise reallocate it. (After all, the text of the Vesting Clauses alone doesn’t establish any non-delegation principle, only a “starting allocation” for all federal power — and Justice Stevens took precisely that “starting allocation” view in American Trucking.) “The Framers were concerned not just with the starting allocation, but with the ‘gradual concentration of the several powers in the same department’” (quoting Federalist 51). And — not believing, as Blackstone did, in legislative supremacy — they thought that a delegation of legislative power passed by the legislature (like Henry VIII’s Act of Proclamations) should be invalid (citing James Wilson at the Pennsylvania ratifying convention). There are more citations, to the Federalist Papers, Montesquieu, and Locke.

Justice Thomas closes his historical discussion by saying: “This history confirms that the core of the legislative power that the Framers sought to protect from consolidation with the executive is the power to make ‘law’ in the Blackstonian sense of generally applicable rules of private conduct.”

Development of non-delegation doctrine since the early 1800s

Now he turns to the doctrine, as it’s evolved since Brig Aurora (1813), through Wayman v. Southard (1825) and Field v. Clark (1892), to the “intelligible principle” doctrine of J.W. Hampton (1928). The early delegations that had been upheld “had taken the form of conditional legislation”: Congress had passed the law (e.g., an embargo against France), and it was to go into effect if the President found a fact (e.g., has France violated the neutral commerce against the United States?). In Justice Thomas’s view, the practice of conditional legislation, with its “factual determination[s],” “does not seem to call on the President to exercise a core function that demands an exercise of legislative power.” This, he says, is like “the type of factual determination on which an enforcement action is conditioned: Neither involves an exercise of policy discretion.”

Whoa! Factual determinations don’t involve policy discretion??? Well, Justice Thomas grants immediately afterwards that sometimes there are at least implicit policy determinations. (One might object: Always.) When this is the case, there’s a “constitutional problem” because the statute would “effectively permit the President to define some or all of the content of that rule of conduct.” But when the Court upheld such statutes in Field v. Clark and J.W. Hampton, it did so on the (perhaps mistaken) theory that there was no great discretion involved. The analysis in those cases “may have been premised on an incorrect assessment of the statutes before the Court, but neither purported to define executive power as including the discretion to make generally applicable rules governing private conduct.” So it’s a mistake to see them as blessing broader delegations — even of the conditional kind — that really do involve executive discretion. (For those who think there’s always executive discretion, then perhaps even conditional legislation is generally unconstitutional under Justice Thomas’s view.)

Justice Thomas also interprets Wayman v. Southard, discussing a statute giving rulemaking authority to the courts, to hold that courts can’t be the recipients of delegated power to make rules governing private conduct — only to make rules governing the conduct of judicial officials themselves. This, Justice Thomas says, is the right reasoning: the power to make rules affecting substantive private rights can’t be delegated.

Obviously, the modern “intelligible principle” doctrine can’t be squared with Justice Thomas’s conception: statutes have been upheld that delegate power to agencies to make all sorts of binding rules, with guidance no more specific than “fair,” “not unduly complicated,” “public interest,” etc. Justice Thomas writes: “Our reluctance to second-guess Congress on the degree of policy judgment is understandable: our mistake lies in assuming that any degree of policy judgment is permissible when it comes to establishing generally applicable rules governing private conduct.”

(Note: but if, as I suggested above, any conditional legislation involving factfinding necessarily involves policy discretion, and if this is basically similar to the factfinding that occurs when the executive decides whether to initiate a prosecution, what does that do to the validity of core executive activities like initiating prosecutions? Conversely, if we carve out conditional legislation involving factfinding as being per se O.K., lots of the administrative state might be re-created in this conditional form, with the factfinding involving exceptionally much policy discretion and taking the form of a lot of filling-in of details.)

Anyway: “We should return to the original meaning of the Constitution: The Government may create generally applicable rules of private conduct only through the proper exercise of legislative power.” Justice Thomas accepts that this would cramp the federal government’s style, but this is a feature, not a bug.

Moving closer to the Amtrak case: regarding private delegations

Now comes the application of these principles to the case at hand. Justice Thomas accepts the D.C. Circuit’s conclusion that you can’t have delegation to private parties:

Although no provision of the Constitution expressly forbids the exercise of governmental power by a private entity, our so-called “private nondelegation doctrine” flows logically from the three Vesting Clauses. Because a private entity is neither Congress, nor the President or one of his agents, nor the Supreme Court or an inferior court established by Congress, the Vesting Clauses would categorically preclude it from exercising the legislative, executive, or judicial powers of the Federal Government. In short, the “private nondelegation doctrine” is merely one application of the provisions of the Constitution that forbid Congress to allocate power to an ineligible entity, whether governmental or private.

For this reason, a conclusion that Amtrak is private—that is, not part of the Government at all—would necessarily mean that it cannot exercise these three categories of governmental power.

As you’ll know if you’ve followed my writings on this issue (for example, yesterday’s Alito post), I don’t think there is any principle that you can’t delegate to private parties, and the case that the D.C. Circuit cited for the proposition (and which both Justices Alito and Thomas repeat), Carter v. Carter Coal, is properly seen as a Due Process case, not a non-delegation case.

Not that I disagree with the broad principle: I do think that Amtrak might be unconstitutional because (as Justice Alito writes) its president isn’t appointed by the proper Appointments Clause process. That’s an Appointments Clause issue, which applies to anyone who’s classified as an Officer of the United States (which the Amtrak board members and president may well be).

But what’s an Officer? Buckley v. Valeo holds that anyone who exercises significant authority under the laws of the United States is an Officer, though an OLC opinion suggests that “Officer” applies only to people who exercise significant authority in a continuous way. Under OLC’s view, there would seem to be no Appointments Clause problem with (private) qui tam plaintiffs. Under either view, there would seem to be no Appointments Clause problem with delegating some power to private people who exercise some, but not significant, authority.

But the non-delegation doctrine of Article I, § 1 protects a distinct principle: that whoever the delegate, Congress can’t give up so much power that it’s legislative. The non-delegation doctrine focuses on how much (or what kind of) power Congress has given up; other clauses, like the Articles II and III Vesting Clauses and the Appointments Clause, focus on who may exercise the power. (Other clauses, like the Due Process Clause at issue in Carter Coal, focus on whether the power granted is exercised fairly.)

(For instance, what about the power to make these factual determinations under conditional legislation? In an elusive case where no discretion is involved, perhaps it might be consistent with the Appointments Clause to delegate this power to a private (non-Officer) person; and it would also be a non-legislative judgment that could be delegated by Congress under the non-delegation doctrine. Perhaps the on-off switch held by private industry in Currin v. Wallace (1939) might qualify… but let’s wait a bit to discuss Currin.)

Admittedly, under Justice Thomas’s view of what doctrine should be, perhaps he’s right that a private delegate would never wield any governmental power — perhaps even temporary officers (contrary to the OLC opinion) are still Officers, so qui tam plaintiffs are unconstitutional, and perhaps even wielding insignificant authority under the laws of the United States is enough to make you an Officer, or at least to require that you be in the Executive Branch somewhere. If that’s so, then the three Vesting Clauses together cover the entire range of permissible government power, which would imply that there can be no delegation to a private actor — though I would locate this doctrine in the Article II Vesting Clause, not in the Article I Vesting Clause.

(But if all implementation of federal law, even where one wields insignificant authority, must be done by non-private members of the executive branch, then goodbye federal prison privatization, and privatization of pretty much everything else? It seems like there has to be room for implementation by non-Executive Branch actors; even if qui tam plaintiffs are no good, and even if no federal functions can be privatized, what about just any old private plaintiff implementing federal law by suing with a private right of action?)

Anyway, just note that Justice Thomas is talking about his preferred view, not about current doctrine: this is not something that the D.C. Circuit can take into account on remand. Under current doctrine, not all exercises of authority are significant, they don’t all require Officers, and they don’t have to all be in the Executive Branch. So the exclusive vesting idea needn’t prevent all grants of authority to private parties. The reasoning above thus doesn’t establish that the non-delegation doctrine prohibits any private delegations, and so there’s room for the non-delegation doctrine to apply to private delegates just as to public ones.

Finally, the Amtrak case itself: regarding public delegations

Let’s move past private delegations now, because after all, the Court has just held that Amtrak is public. Justice Thomas’s previous analysis says that if rules governing private conduct are involved, they have to be made by Congress. In the Amtrak case, this is legislative power: the metrics and standards that Amtrak participates in formulating “shape the types of contracts that satisfy the common-carrier obligations because § 207 [of PRIIA] provides that ‘Amtrak and its host rail carriers shall‘ include the metrics and standards in their contracts ‘[t]o the extent practicable.’”

But what about Currin v. Wallace (1939) (and a related case, United States v. Rock Royal Co-operative (1939)), which said that private industry could, consistent with the non-delegation doctrine, hold an on-off switch to determine whether previously determined regulations would go into effect? The Court said there that deciding whether and when regulations go into effect isn’t an exercise of legislative power. Justice Thomas’s previous analysis clearly implies that these cases are wrong. But Justice Thomas says more than that: “these precedents are directly contrary to our more recent holding that a discretionary ‘veto’ necessarily involves an exercise of legislative power” (citing INS v. Chadha). Currin and Rock Royal thus “have been discredited and lack any force as precedents.”

Now this may be fine under Justice Thomas’s view of what doctrine should be, since the industry veto did change the otherwise applicable regulations governing private conduct. (But if we’re going to be totally remaking all of doctrine since the New Deal revolution, why worry about whether a 1939 precedent was overruled by a 1983 precedent?) But if this is a statement about the validity of Currin under current doctrine, I think this is going too far.

Chadha did say that a legislative veto was an exercise of legislative power because it was Congress changing the legal status quo. (If Congress hadn’t acted, Chadha would have stayed in the U.S.; after Congress acted, Chadha had to go leave the U.S.) But that doesn’t mean that the same veto, if wielded by the President under a valid grant of authority, would also have been an exercise of legislative power: the Immigration and Nationality Act authorized the President (through the Attorney General) to decide whether to let Chadha stay in the U.S. even though he was deportable; this was a change in the legal status quo, and this may well have coincided with an inherent Article II power of the President (if you buy the Curtiss-Wright theory that foreign-affairs-like stuff, perhaps including immigration, is a more presidential area).

So the same act — determining whether or not Chadha gets deported — can be legislative when done by Congress and executive when done by the President. I read Chadha as merely saying that when Congress does such an act, it becomes a legislative act (because Congress can only act legislatively, see also Bowsher v. Synar), and must therefore comply with bicameralism and presentment. I don’t read Chadha as standing for the broader proposition that any veto must be a legislative power. While Currin may be bad law under Justice Thomas’s new and improved view of what doctrine should be, it’s not bad law under current doctrine, because Chadha hasn’t implicitly overruled it.

(Finally, and least interestingly, Justice Thomas endorses Justice Alito’s view of the remaining separation-of-powers issues present in the case.)

Perez Decision a Victory for Federal Agencies

Court Re-Shifts Power Back to Federal Agencies

Constitutional Law Prof Blog

By Steven D. Schwinn

The Supreme Court ruled today in Perez v. Mortgage Bankers Association that the Department of Labor need not engage in notice-and-comment rule-making when it changes a Department interpretation of an existing rule. At the same time, the Court overturned the D.C. Circuit rule that forced agencies to do this whenever an agency wished to issue a new interpretation that deviated significantly from an old one.

The ruling thus re-shifts power back to executive agencies in determining the meaning of their own regulations. That’s because Congress didn’t require agencies to use notice-and-comment rule-making for interpretations, but the D.C. Circuit did, when a new interpretation deviated significantly from an old one–that is, when an agency changed its interpretation. By overturning that decision, and putting interpretive decisions back in the exclusive hands of the agencies (with loose, deferential judicial oversight), the Court re-set the balance that Congress struck. The ruling is thus a victory for agencies and their power to interpret their own regulations without notice-and-comment rule-making and with deferential judicial review. (More on that last part below.)

The case grows out of DOL’s re-interpretation of its FLSA rule on minimum wage and overtime for mortgage-loan offices. The agency’s rule exempts certain classes of employees, including individuals who are “employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity . . . or in the capacity of outside salesman . . . .” In 1999 and 2001, DOL issued interpretive letters opining that mortgage-loan officers did not qualify for this exemption. In 2006, however, DOL reversed course and opined that mortgage-loan officers did meet the exemption. But in 2010, DOL went back to its old position, withdrew the 2006 interpretation, and opined that mortgage-loan officers didn’t meet the exemption.

The Administrative Procedure Act requires agencies to provide public notice and an opportunity to comment when they propose new rules and regulations under an authorizing statute. But the APA does not require this notice-and-comment rule-making when an agency simply issues an interpretation. Seeing the potential for abuse, the D.C. Circuit devised a court-created rule that said that agencies still had to use notice-and-comment rule-making, even for a mere interpretation. The D.C. Circuit rule is called the Paralyzed Veterans rule, after the case that established it.

So the question in Mortgage Bankers Association was whether DOL had to use notice-and-comment rule-making in issuing its 2010 interpretation.

The Supreme Court said no. The Court, in an opinion by Justice Sotomayor, ruled that the APA by its plain terms exempts interpretative decisions from the notice-and-comment requirement, and that the D.C. Circuit’s Paralyzed Veterans rule violated those plain terms. Justice Sotomayor wrote that Congress, in enacting the APA, considered the costs and benefits of applying notice-and-comment rule-making requirements to agency interpretations, and that Congress decided that notice-and-comment procedures weren’t necessary.

All nine justices agreed on the result, but Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Alito each wrote separately to take issue in different ways and to different degrees with judicial deference to agency interpretations. In other words, they’re not sure that the courts should defer to agency interpretations (even if courts do validly defer to agency rules), or they reject deference altogether. Judicial deference to agency interpretations comes from Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co. and Auer v. Robbins. In Auer (relying on Seminole Rock) the Court held that agencies may authoritatively resolve ambiguities in their own regulations.

The rule that courts defer to an agency’s interpretation of its authorizing statute is well settled in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council. This is called Chevron deference. But Auer extended that deference to an agency’s interpretation of its own rules. This Auer deference is what caught the eyes of Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Alito.

They all indicated that they’d reconsider Auer deference if given the chance. Justices Scalia and Thomas both outlined their (separate) separation-of-powers objections to Auer deference. In short, Justice Scalia expressed concern that an agency could both write its own rule and then interpret that rule without meaningful oversight; Justice Thomas explained why Auer deference took power away from the judiciary and gave it to the executive agencies.

Both Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy signed on in full to Justice Sotomayor’s opinion (as did Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, and Kagan). None of these joined Justice Scalia, Justice Thomas, or Justice Alito and the concerns with Auer deference that they expressed.

Texas District Court Blocks President’s Immigration Actions: What Does It Mean?

5 Points On The New Court Order Blocking Obama’s Immigration Actions

Talking Points Memo

By Sahil Kapur

On Monday night a federal judge in Texas ordered a halt to President Barack Obama’s executive actions to shield more than four million people from the possibility of deportation.

So, what does it all mean? What happens next?

Here are five things to know about the judge’s decision.

1. The order is just a preliminary injunction, but suggests a tough legal battle ahead.

In a Republican-led lawsuit brought by Texas and 25 states, Judge Andrew S. Hanen issued a preliminary injunction stopping the Obama administration from implementing the president’s recently announced executive actions to confer temporary lawful presence and 3-year work permits to more than 4 million undocumented immigrants who are considered a low priority for deportation.

Hanen’s 123-page ruling found that the states have “standing” to sue and suggests that he will probably agree with their argument on the merits. The appeals court and perhaps the Supreme Court will have the ultimate say in the matter.

2. The ruling only stops Obama’s recent deportation relief initiatives announced in November 2014.

The programs put on hold are the expansion of the 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and the new Deferred Action for Parents of Americans. Both announced in November 2014, the DACA expansion was scheduled to start taking applications on Feb. 18 while DAPA applications were set to begin on May 20. Neither can move forward until the injunction is lifted by a higher court or the case is resolved on the merits.

Numerous immigration law experts have said Obama’s executive actions fall within the boundaries of his executive authority. The Supreme Court has affirmed broad executive authority when it comes to immigration enforcement, and prior presidents like George H. W. Bush have taken similar steps to protect categories of undocumented immigrants in the past. The current legal dispute concerns actions by Obama that are unprecedented in scale.

3. The order doesn’t affect the 2012 program to protect DREAMers.

The order does not affect the existing DACA program, which has currently shielded hundreds of thousands of young people brought to the U.S. as children, commonly called DREAMers.

It also doesn’t mean the Obama administration has lost the fight over the new actions — far from it. Immigrant rights groups are downplaying the judge’s decision, telling their members to prepare to apply for the expanded programs because they expect the ruling to be overturned by higher courts.

In a message to members, United We Dream declared, “Don’t be worried” and portrayed the lawsuit a stunt by Republicans.

“We are confident that the higher courts will reject this lawsuit since it has no legal merit and only wastes taxpayer dollars & attack immigrant youth, workers & families,” the group wrote. “This decision only delays the application process.”

4. The judge’s move is a wrinkle in the DHS funding fight ahead of a possible shutdown.

The judge’s decision could affect the political battle over immigration. To counter Obama’s immigration move, congressional Republicans have been blocking funding for the Department of Homeland Security. But that legislative has been fought to nearly a draw, with Senate Democrats filibustering and the White House promising a veto. Republican leaders might come to see the court victory as the off-ramp they’ve been looking for from the DHS funding fight.

For now, though, there’s no sign of that, and leaders are steeling for a partial shutdown on Feb. 27. House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) responded to the court order with statements calling on Senate Democrats to drop their filibuster of House-approved legislation that funds DHS while reversing Obama’s new executive actions.

“We will continue to follow the case as it moves through the legal process,” Boehner said. “Hopefully, Senate Democrats who claim to oppose this executive overreach will now let the Senate begin debate on a bill to fund the Homeland Security department.”

5. The judge’s decision was not a surprise — he has strongly criticized the Obama administration on immigration.

The decision was not a surprise to those following the case because Hanen has previously chastised the Obama administration’s immigration enforcement methods as too lenient and flouting the rule of law. In other words Texas Republicans landed the case before their dream judge.

The Obama administration said it intends to appeal the order to the conservative-leaning 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. The case could potentially rocket to the Supreme Court.

“The Department of Justice, legal scholars, immigration experts, and the district court in Washington, D.C. have determined that the President’s actions are well within his legal authority,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Tuesday. “Top law enforcement officials, along with state and local leaders across the country, have emphasized that these policies will also benefit the economy and help keep communities safe. The district court’s decision wrongly prevents these lawful, commonsense policies from taking effect and the Department of Justice has indicated that it will appeal that decision.”