McGahn DC Circuit Opinion
McGahn DC Circuit Opinion
McGahn DC Circuit Opinion
No. 19-5331
v.
2
Steven A. Hirsch, Justin Florence, Jamila G. Benkato, and
Cameron O. Kistler were on the brief for amici curiae
Republican Legal Experts, et al. in support of plaintiff-
appellee.
The en banc court held that the Committee has Article III
standing, but the Committee “also need[s] a cause of action to
prosecute” its case in federal court. Make the Road N.Y. v. Wolf,
962 F.3d 612, 631 (D.C. Cir. 2020). Here, the Committee
argues that it has an implied cause of action under Article I,
that it can invoke the traditional power of courts of equity to
USCA Case #19-5331 Document #1859039 Filed: 08/31/2020 Page 3 of 21
3
enjoin unlawful executive action, and that the Declaratory
Judgment Act provides a separate basis for this suit. We
disagree.
4
Congress,” “our watchword is caution,” Hernandez, 140 S. Ct.
at 742, and we should not ignore Congress’s carefully drafted
limitations on its authority to sue to enforce a subpoena.
5
courts of equity, because the “separate systems of law and
equity” in our federal system ceased to exist in 1938. SCA
Hygiene Prods. Aktiebolag v. First Quality Baby Prods., LLC,
137 S. Ct. 954, 960 (2017). The Committee’s smattering of
examples from the 1970s comes (at least) thirty years too late.
6
671 (1950) (internal quotation marks omitted). Because Article
I does not create a “judicially remediable right” to enforce a
congressional subpoena, the Committee cannot use the
Declaratory Judgment Act to bootstrap its way into federal
court. Thus, even though the Committee has the Article III
standing necessary to “get[] [it] through the courthouse door,
[that] does not keep [it] there.” Make the Road, 962 F.3d at 631.
7
Anderson v. Dunn, 19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 204 (1821), or the
criminal contempt statute enacted in 1857, see McGrain, 273
U.S. at 167.
II
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precludes it from doing so without first enacting a statute
authorizing such a suit. The Constitution’s Necessary and
Proper Clause vests Congress with power to “make all Laws
which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into
Execution” its constitutional powers, and that Clause gives
Congress—and certainly not the federal courts—the broad
discretion to structure the national government through the
legislative process. U.S. CONST. art. I, § 8, cl. 18.
9
call for a wrenching departure from past practice” and for a
new statute allowing the House to leverage the power of federal
courts to compel testimony or the production of documents.
Grupo Mexicano, 527 U.S. at 322. But if any institution is well-
positioned to “perceive” those new conditions, to assess
Congress’s needs, to balance those needs against the
countervailing policy considerations, and then “to design the
appropriate remedy,” that institution is Congress. Id.
So ordered.
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I.
A.
2
information but also “process to enforce” such a demand,
namely a subpoena enforcement lawsuit. Similarly, the
Supreme Court stated in Quinn v. United States, 349 U.S. 155
(1955), that a subpoena gives Congress “the authority to
compel testimony, either through its own processes or through
judicial trial,” id. at 160–61, indicating that the subpoena power
encompasses the authority to enforce a subpoena in federal
court. In sum, the Supreme Court has explained that the
powers of Congress enumerated in Article I of the Constitution
imply not only a right to information but also a right to seek
judicial enforcement of its subpoena.
B.
3
although emphasizing that the Act is not a source of federal
court jurisdiction or any substantive rights, has never stated that
it does not create a right of action.
The various limits that the Supreme Court and this court
have placed upon lawsuits brought under the Declaratory
Judgment Act do not preclude the House of Representatives
from proceeding under the Act. First, the Supreme Court has
emphasized that the Declaratory Judgment Act does not
provide an independent source of federal jurisdiction. In Skelly
Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 339 U.S. 667, 671 (1950),
the Court stated that the Declaratory Judgment Act “enlarged
the range of remedies available in the federal courts but did not
extend their jurisdiction.” Id. In that case, plaintiffs filed suit
pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act seeking an
interpretation by the federal court of a contract provision, a
question solely of state law. Id. at 672. The Court decided that
the mere fact that the plaintiffs had proceeded under the Act
did not suffice to render the case’s state contract law issue a
federal question for purposes of § 1331. See id. at 671–72. The
proscription of Skelly Oil is no obstacle to the Committee here
because the court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331, see
Part II infra. Thus, the Committee does not impermissibly seek
to rely on the Act as a source of federal court jurisdiction.
4
Judgment Act was not an avenue to circumvent that statutory
requirement. See id. at 202. Citing Schilling v. Rogers, 363
U.S. 666 (1960), the court stated that “federal courts may not
declare a plaintiff’s rights under a federal statute that Congress
intended to be enforced exclusively through a judicially
unreviewable administrative hearing.” Id. at 201. That makes
C&E Services quite different because the Committee is suing
in the context of its constitutional duty of impeachment to
enforce a right to compulsory process that follows from the
Constitution, not a statute. Furthermore, because the
Committee does not assert a statutory right, there is no
statutorily mandated exclusive remedial scheme for
vindication of that right, as there was in C&E Services.
McGahn points out that this court has stated: “Nor does the
Declaratory Judgment Act . . . provide a cause of action.” Ali
v. Rumsfeld, 649 F.3d 762, 778 (D.C. Cir. 2011) (citation
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omitted). That statement was made in the context of unique
factual circumstances very different from the present case. In
Ali, the appellants were Afghan and Iraqi citizens detained in
their home countries in the course of U.S. military operations
there. See id. at 764–65. Their lawsuit sought, among other
things, a declaratory judgment that their treatment in detention
violated the law of nations, treaties to which the United States
was a party, and the Fifth and Eighth Amendments of the U.S.
Constitution. Id. The court held that the Declaratory Judgment
Act did not provide the plaintiffs with a cause of action, see id.
at 778, casting doubt that the Fifth and Eighth Amendments
protected them because they were detained overseas in a
country over which the United States did not exercise “de facto
sovereignty,” id. at 772 (citing Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S.
723, 755 (2008)). The court stated: “[W]e have . . . held that
the Suspension Clause does not apply to Bagram detainees.
[Appellants] offer no reason — and we see none ourselves —
why their Fifth and Eighth Amendment claims would be any
stronger than the Suspension Clause claims of the Bagram
detainees.” Id. The clear implication of that reasoning is that
the Fifth and Eighth Amendments did not apply to the Ali
plaintiffs, and thus that no constitutional right was at stake.
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II.
7
This conclusion is bolstered by United States v. AT&T, 551
F.2d 384 (D.C. Cir. 1976). In that case, the Executive Branch
sued AT&T to enjoin its compliance with a congressional
subpoena. The President had directed AT&T “as an agent of
the United States, to respectfully decline to comply with the
Committee subpoena.” Id. at 387 (citation omitted). The
House of Representatives intervened as a defendant to
represent its interest in AT&T’s compliance with the
Committee subpoena. After observing that the subpoena
dispute presented “a clash of the powers of the legislative and
executive branches,” this court held that subject matter
“[j]urisdiction exists under 28 U.S.C. § 1331,” as explained in
Part II. Id. at 389. The court reasoned that because the question
before it was whether the Executive Branch possessed the
“constitutional powers” to “prevent transmission of [requested
information] to Congress” pursuant to a congressional
subpoena, “[t]he action therefore arises under the Constitution
of the United States.” Id. AT&T thus establishes that a dispute
over whether a party must comply with a congressional
subpoena arises under the Constitution and therefore lies within
§ 1331’s grant of subject matter jurisdiction.
8
order issued by the Senate or committee or subcommittee.” 28
U.S.C. § 1365. On its face, § 1365 says nothing about
subpoena enforcement lawsuits brought by the House of
Representatives. Yet by explicitly granting the federal courts
jurisdiction over a Senate subpoena enforcement action but not
a House subpoena enforcement action, McGahn maintains that
Congress intended that the federal courts should not have
jurisdiction over the latter. This argument fails on two grounds.
First, it overlooks the key context. When Congress enacted §
1365 in 1978, § 1331 contained an amount-in-controversy
requirement for lawsuits against private parties and officials
acting in their individual capacities. The Senate had good
reason to believe that this requirement would be an obstacle to
subpoena-enforcement lawsuits because the district court in
Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities
v. Nixon, 366 F. Supp. 51 (D.D.C. 1973), had originally
dismissed the Senate’s lawsuit for failure to meet the
requirement, see id. at 59–61. Congress addressed this problem
in 1978 with the enactment of § 1365, which granted federal
courts subject matter jurisdiction over Senate subpoena-
enforcement actions without regard to the amount in
controversy. The Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs
explicitly disclaimed the inference that McGahn now seeks to
draw, stating in its report on § 1365 that the provision “is not
intended to be a Congressional finding that the Federal courts
do not now have the authority to hear a civil action to enforce
a subp[o]ena against an officer or employee of the Federal
Government.” S. REP. NO. 95-170, at 91–92 (1978).
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others.” Williamson v. Lee Optical, 348 U.S. 483, 489 (1955)
(citation omitted)). With § 1365, Congress was responding to
a particular problem: the amount in controversy requirement
that, until it was eliminated in 1980, prevented federal courts
from exercising jurisdiction over Congressional subpoena-
enforcement suits under § 1331. Given the specific obstacle
Congress overcame in enacting § 1365, there is no basis to
conclude the statute bears on federal jurisdiction over House
subpoena-enforcement actions. The inference that § 1365 has
repealed such jurisdiction is therefore unwarranted.
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of Congress guards its constitutional prerogatives, these
statements are hardly a clear instruction concerning the effect
of § 1365 on the institutional powers of the House of
Representatives. It would therefore be inappropriate, in the
absence of a clear statutory directive, to conclude that § 1365
also restricted the power of the House to file a federal
subpoena-enforcement lawsuit.
III.
11
The Supreme Court elaborated on the President’s qualified
power to screen Executive Branch materials from disclosure in
Nixon v. Administrator of General Services, 433 U.S. 425
(1977), concerning not a judicial subpoena in a criminal matter
but rather a statute regulating the preservation of President
Nixon’s Presidential papers. The Court reiterated that although
the context was different, the executive privilege was “a
qualified one” and that “there has never been an expectation
that the confidences of the Executive Office are absolute and
unyielding.” Id. at 446, 450. The privilege is similarly
qualified when asserted in civil litigation. See Dellums v.
Powell, 561 F.2d 242, 245–46 (D.C. Cir. 1977).
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House Counsel, are presumptively privileged, the President
does not have absolute, unreviewable discretion to determine
what information will be disclosed in response to a subpoena
— whether a judicial subpoena in a criminal proceeding or a
valid congressional subpoena. Yet that is exactly the nature of
McGahn’s absolute immunity claim. By asserting that he need
not even appear in response to the Committee’s duly issued
subpoena, he in essence contends that the President may
unilaterally determine that no information will be disclosed in
response to the subpoena. He thereby seeks to revive a view of
Presidential power expressly rejected by the Supreme Court.