OPINION
This is an action challenging the constitutionality of the government’s enforcement of § 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (“Code”), 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3) (1976). Plaintiffs are 29 individuals and organizations concerned about the right of a woman to choose to carry a fetus to term or to abort it and about the constitutionally mandated separation of church and state. The complaint names four defendants: two government officers (“government” or “federal defendants”), Donald T. Regan, the Secretary of the Treasury, and.Roscoe L. Egger, Jr., the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and the two principal national organizations of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States (“church defendants”), the United States Catholic Conference, Incorporated (“USCC”), and the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (“NCCB”).
Defendants move to dismiss the action. They assert that none of the plaintiffs has the requisite standing to bring the suit, that the complaint does not state a claim upon which to grant relief, and that the court may not review the particular decisions to enforce or not to enforce § 501(c)(3) that are in dispute. In addition, the church defendants contend that they are not proper parties to this suit and that § 501(c)(3) is unconstitutional. For the reasons discussed herein, the motions to dismiss are granted in part and denied in part.
I
A. The Plaintiffs
The complaint names nine organizations and twenty individuals as plaintiffs. Each *474 plaintiff (except Judith Seibel) has submitted an affidavit to augment the complaint’s description of that plaintiff’s particular concerns and injuries. The plaintiffs are described briefly here; their particular grievances are discussed in greater detail infra.
Abortion Rights Mobilization, Inc. (“ARM”) is a non-profit, tax-exempt organization under § 501(c)(3) that seeks to secure and implement a woman’s right to a legal abortion. It is a national organization and is prohibited from engaging in political activity under the terms of its tax exemption. Contributions to ARM are tax-deductible.
Lawrence Lader is a writer, and founder and president of ARM. He has been active in the abortion rights movement and has written a number of books on the subject.
Harold W. Bostrom, Margaret O. Strahl, M.D., Helen W. Edey, M.D., and Ruth P. Smith all contribute to ARM, other abortion rights organizations and pro-choice political candidates.
National Women’s Health Network, Inc. (“NWHN”) is a tax-exempt membership organization of many clinics, counseling services, publishers and others who provide a wide range of services to women and attempt to influence the public to support women’s rights, including the right to have an abortion. Contributions to NWHN are tax-deductible, but the organization is prohibited under § 501(c)(3) from engaging in electoral politics.
Long Island National Organization For Women (“Nassau-NOW”) is a membership organization dedicated to the promotion of women’s rights, including the right to have an abortion. Nassau-NOW is exempt from taxes under § 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Rabbi Israel Margolies, Reverend Beatrice Blair, Rabbi Balfour Brickner, Reverend Robert Hare and Reverend Marvin G. Lutz (“clergy plaintiffs”) are members of the clergy whose religious beliefs differ significantly from the Catholic Church’s view of abortions. These clergy members have been active in the abortion rights movement but have not used the power of their pulpits to engage in political activities.
Laurel Clinic, Inc., Women’s Center for Reproductive Health, The Federation of Feminist Women’s Health Centers, Inc., Harrisburg Reproductive Health Services, Inc., Hagerstown Reproductive Health Services, Inc. and Women’s Health Services, Inc. are clinics that offer to women a range of medical and other services, including abortions. The Federation of Feminist Women’s Health Centers, Inc., Women’s Health Services Inc. and the Women’s Center for Reproductive Health are exempt from taxes under § 501(c)(3).
Milan M. Vuitch, M.D., is president of the Laurel Clinic, Inc.
Jane C. Delgado, Jennie Ross Lifrieri, Eileen Walsh, Patricia Sullivan Luciano, Marcella Michalski, Chris Niebrzydowski and Judith A. Seibel are Roman Catholics who, in keeping with their religious beliefs, contribute or have contributed to the church but who nonetheless are opposed to the church’s position on abortion.
Karen DeCrow is a leader of the feminist movement and a former national president of the National Organization for Women. She was a candidate for political office in 1969 and is a potential candidate in the future.
Susan Sherer is active in the abortion rights movement.
All the individual plaintiffs are taxpayers and voters. Each of them in his or her affidavit expresses a substantial concern for the separation of church and state that is required by the establishment clause of the first amendment. Finally, plaintiff Brickner, as a private citizen, is chairman of the national issues committee of the New York State Liberal Party.
B. The Statutory Scheme
Section 501(c)(3) of the Code exempts from taxation groups “organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, ... or educational purposes, ... no substantial part of the activities of which is *475 carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting, to influence legislation ..., and which does not participate in, or intervene in (including the publishing or distributing of statements), any political campaign on behalf of any candidate for public office.” 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3) (1976). Organizations exempt from income taxation under this section in effect receive a double benefit because § 170(a), (c)(2)(B) of the Code permits an income, gift or estate tax deduction for contributions to most § 501(c)(3) entities. See 26 U.S.C. § 170 (1976). Section 501(c)(3) status, thus, is valuable to an organization because the organization can provide donors with an economic incentive to contribute to it and the organization is not taxed on the income received. Organizations exempt from taxation under other portions of § 501, by contrast, often are not entitled to receive tax-deductible contributions. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 170, 501 (1976).
To maintain the dual benefit of tax exemption and deductible contributions, a § 501(c)(3) entity must refrain from any kind of campaigning for candidates for public office. 26 U.S.C. § 170(a), (c)(2)(D) (1976); id. § 501(c)(3). These groups, however, are allowed to lobby as long as their attempts to influence legislation do not constitute a “substantial part” of their activities. 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3) (1976).
C. The Dispute
The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), annually since March 25, 1946, has ruled that “the agencies and instrumentalities and all educational, charitable and religious institutions operated, supervised, or controlled by or in connection with the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, its territories or possessions appearing in the Official Catholic Directory . .. are entitled to exemption from Federal income tax under ... section 501(c)(3). ... ” Exh. A to church defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Letter from T. Kern, District Director, IRS to USCC, June 16, 1980). Defendant USCC is the recipient of the Revenue Ruling letter that certifies the church’s exempt status.
Plaintiffs contend that this grant of § 501(c)(3) privileges was erroneously and illegally conferred because the church defendants are engaged in a nationwide plan to change abortion laws by,
inter alia,
lobbying and participating in partisan political campaigns on behalf of candidates supporting the Roman Catholic Church’s position on abortion and in opposition to candidates with contrary views. Amended Complaint ¶¶ 21-28;
cf. McRae v. Califano,
Plaintiffs contend that this illegal activity has injured them in several ways. The individual plaintiffs and the members of certain of the institutional plaintiffs have been denied access to a means of contributing tax-deductible funds to promote free choice candidates. Persons with opposing views about abortion, on the other hand, can use the church to funnel donations to support candidates opposed to abortion and thereby receive a tax benefit. Those plaintiffs who have stood for office or aspire to do so on a pro-choice platform, have no means of collecting tax-deductible and exempt funds for their campaign chests. Their opponents may do so. The government defendants, it is alleged, have diminished the effectiveness of plaintiffs’ political speech and their chances to prevail at the polls by enhancing the voice of plaintiffs’ political adversaries.
Plaintiffs also express concern about the entanglement of church and state through the selective grant of an unrestricted tax exemption to the church defendants. The *476 government defendants’ actions are viewed by plaintiffs as selecting a favored state orthodoxy, thereby breaching the wall between church and state and denigrating religious beliefs out of government favor. In addition, plaintiffs who are religiously compelled to consider abortion as the cor-rect response to pregnancy or who, as ministers, must counsel their congregants to do the same, express the fear that government financial support, through the Code, of the Roman Catholic Church’s position on abortion will imperil the opportunity of women to obtain abortions and thereby frustrate their ability to observe their religious beliefs. Plaintiffs who are members of and contributors to the Roman Catholic Church object to their 'church’s political use of the religiously compelled contributions.
The organizational plaintiffs complain that the government defendants have treated them differently from the church for no rational reason. In addition, those plaintiffs offering medical services to women, including abortion, assert that as a result of the church defendants’ government subsidized political campaigning, restrictive abortion legislation has been enacted that has caused a decrease in plaintiffs’ revenues.
Plaintiffs seek a declaration from the court that the political activities of the Roman Catholic Church and the inaction by the Secretary and the Commissioner violate the Constitution and the Code. In addition, plaintiffs request an order requiring the government defendants to take all actions necessary to enforce the Constitution and the Code, including revocation of the church defendants’ § 501(c)(3) status, collection of all taxes- due, and notification to church contributors that they may not deduct such contributions.
Jurisdiction is founded on 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1340, 1361.
II
Defendants challenge plaintiffs’ standing to bring an action concerning the tax status of third parties. Plaintiffs respond by asserting three bases for their right to proceed: establishment clause standing, voter standing, and equal protection standing. 1
A. Article III Requirements
The Supreme Court recently has had occasion to examine and clarify the rules for standing in federal courts.
“The essence of the standing inquiry is whether the parties seeking to invoke the court’s jurisdiction have ‘alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of difficult constitutional questions.’ ” Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Env. Study Group,438 U.S. 59 , 72 [98 S.Ct. 2620 , 2629,57 L.Ed.2d 595 ] (1978), quoting Baker v. Carr,369 U.S. 186 , 204 [82 S.Ct. 691 , 703,7 L.Ed.2d 663 ] (1962). This requirement of a “personal stake” must consist of “a ‘distinct and palpable injury . . . ’ to the plaintiff,” Duke Power Co.,438 U.S. at 72 [98 S.Ct. at 2629 ], quoting Warth v. Seldin,422 U.S. 490 , 501 [95 S.Ct. 2197 , 2206,45 L.Ed.2d 343 ] (1975), and “a ‘fairly traceable’ causal connection between the claimed injury and the challenged conduct,” Duke Power Co.,438 U.S. at 72 , [98 S.Ct. at 2629 ], quoting Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Corp., 429 U.S. *477 252, 261 [97 S.Ct. 555 , 561,50 L.Ed.2d 450 ] (1977).
Larson
v.
Valente,
- U.S. -, -,
1.
Establishment Clause Standing.
The existence of Article III injury “often turns on the nature and source of the claim asserted.”
Warth v. Seldin, supra,
Although the Supreme Court has recognized that violation of a person’s “spiritual stake in the First Amendment values” of separation of church and state may inflict sufficient harm to satisfy the injury in fact test,
see Data Processing Service Organizations v. Camp,
In
Valley Forge,
the Supreme Court overturned a decision granting standing to an organization suing on behalf of its members who professed injury to their shared individuated right to non-establishment when surplus federal property was transferred to a denominational college.
3
See
Similarly in
Doremus v. Bd. of Education,
the Court dismissed for lack of standing the complaint of taxpayers contending that a New Jersey statute requiring Bible reading at the opening of the school day violated the establishment clause.
See
Underlying the rejection of plaintiffs’ standing in
Valley Forge
and
Doremus
is the principle that the interest of each citizen that the government be administered according to law does not confer standing because it does not create in that citizen a discrete and palpable injury.
Valley Forge, supra,
The individual plaintiffs’ concern about the establishment clause violations perpetrated by the defendants does not rise above the whistleblowing that the Supreme Court held, in
Valley Forge,
does not satisfy the injury requirement. Plaintiffs attempt to articulate injury in fact by linking the offending activity with their involvement in the abortion rights controversy. They describe the government action of which they complain as a subsidy to opponents of abortion that impacts on plaintiffs’ particularized interest to preserve reproductive choice. Plaintiffs argue, in effect, that because they object to an establishment violation occurring in a particular arena of public controversy in which they are involved, they have suffered a discrete and palpable injury not experienced by the
Valley Forge
plaintiff. Plaintiffs’ characterization of their injury shares the defect that caused the demise of the
Valley Forge
complaint. In both cases, plaintiffs described an interest that brought them to court, but they did not articulate an injury that they had suffered. Plaintiffs’ devotion to the pro-choice position does not identify an interest that the allegedly illegal activities have damaged; it only explains why plaintiffs have chosen to complain about a particular government impropriety — renewal of the church defendants’ § 501(c)(3) status — and not about some other wrongdoing. Plaintiffs’ “special interest” in reproductive freedom is no different than the
Valley Forge
plaintiff’s “special interest” in strict separation. The narrowness of the focus of litigant’s concerns is not of constitutional significance as
*479
far as standing is concerned. There is no indication in the
Valley Forge
opinion that the plaintiff there would have met the injury in fact test if it single-mindedly pursued its anti-establishment goals in the field of public education only, rather than its objections to government support for any religious body or activity.
See id.
The organizational plaintiffs also fail to set out the injury in fact to themselves or their members that is necessary to confer standing under the establishment clause. They merely allege concern about the first amendment violations arising from the church’s political activity while it enjoys § 501(c)(3) status. As did the individual plaintiffs, the organizations have explained why they are moved to bring suit to end these violations; they have not, however, explained how the violations injure them. 6
The clergy plaintiffs and the Women’s Center for Reproductive Health (“Women’s Center”) have disclosed, in their affidavits, compelling and personalized injuries flowing from the tacit government endorsement of the Roman Catholic Church position on abortion that are sufficient to confer standing on them to complain of the alleged establishment clause violations. The clergy plaintiffs have devoted their lives to religious communities and beliefs that are denigrated by government favoritism to a different theology. They provide spiritual leadership to and care for the spiritual needs of their congregations. As part of these duties, they must counsel those in their care in accordance with religious laws that command consideration of abortion as the morally required response to pregnancy. 7 The Women’s Center provides guidance to women in decisionmaking on issues pertaining to family life, including child *480 bearing. It was founded by Reverend Lutz along with others to put the principles of the Presbyterian Church into effect. As with the clergy plaintiffs, the Women’s Center’s religiously inspired mission is denigrated by government endorsement of a theology contrary to its guiding principles.
Tacit government endorsement of the Roman Catholic Church view of abortion hampers and frustrates these plaintiffs’ ministries. The government need not silence these plaintiffs to cause discrete spiritual injury because official approval of an orthodoxy antithetical to their spiritual mission diminishes their position in the community, encumbers their calling in life, and obstructs their ability to communicate effectively their religious message. The spiritual values protected by the establishment clause can be injured without direct coercion against individuals,
see Engel v. Vitale,
These plaintiffs also clearly satisfy the second and third aspects of the Article III standing test — causation and redressability. Their injury flows directly from the federal defendants’ allowing the church defendants the privilege of retaining § 501(c)(3) status while electioneering and denying this privilege to other religious organizations. The granting of a uniquely favored tax status to one religious entity is an unequivocal statement of preference that gilds the image of that religion and tarnishes all others. A decree ordering the termination of this illegal practice and restoring all sects to equal footing will redress this injury. Accordingly, the clergy plaintiffs and the Women’s Center meet the Article III requirements for standing to raise claims under the establishment clause.
2.
Voter standing.
In
Baker v. Carr,
Baker’s voter standing analysis was applied in three cases that strongly support a finding that the individual plaintiffs 8 and certain of the organizational plaintiffs 9 *481 have asserted a distinct, personal injury that confers standing. Two of the cases, like the instant action, involved challenges to the enforcement of the tax laws. All three are highly instructive.
Tax Analysts and Advocates v. Shultz,
Two Illinois voters, one a political candidate, the other a supporter, had standing to challenge the patronage system in Cook County because of the alleged injury to their interest “in an equal chance and an equal voice” in the election process.
Shakman v. Democratic Organization of Cook County,
Finally, in
Common Cause v. Democratic National Comm., supra,
a non-profit public interest corporation, its chairman (a voter) and two elected politicians sought declaratory and injunctive relief against several national committees of political parties. Plaintiffs alleged that those groups circumvented the statute placing limits on individual campaign contributions.
Grounded in the equal protection safeguards of the fifth, rather than the fourteenth, amendment, plaintiffs’ claims seem barely distinguishable from those involved in Baker. Both cases center on allegations that some arbitrary government action diluted the strength of voters in one group at the expense of those in another. Plaintiffs’ injury is no less real because they claim discrimination based on issues rather than geography, nor is it relevant that the impact of allegedly harmful government conduct is felt during the battle over choosing representatives rather than in the number of representatives technically available to the aggrieved voters. The bottom line is that plaintiffs have alleged government action which has improperly biased the political process against the discrete group to which they belong.
*482 Defendants contend that Shakman, Shultz and Common Cause incorrectly applied the concept of voter standing as set forth in Baker v. Carr. Baker, it is said, requires a, showing of mathematical dilution of voting strength as a prerequisite of voter standing. Such precision supposedly, is necessary to establish concrete personal injury.
The rationale of Baker’s standing analysis cannot be so restricted. Baker, the three subsequent decisions and the case at bar all concern allegations that some arbitrary government action impaired one group’s ability to affect the political process in preference to a more favored group. The injury to oppressed voters is as distinct and palpable here as in any of the previous cases.
The precision with which an injury can be defined is irrelevant to the concreteness of the injury, but that factor may affect considerations of causation or redressability. Defendants contend that the imprecise allegations of harm in the complaint mask its inadequate showing that defendants’ actions have caused the harms plaintiffs allege or that an alteration or threatened alteration of- the church defendants’ tax status will ameliorate plaintiffs’ injuries. Defendants’ arguments, however, mischaracterize the complaint as objecting to the church’s political activity per se and seeking relief in the form of a legislatively guaranteed right to abortion.
Plaintiffs have asserted a more circumscribed grievance and request. They do not demand a discontinuation of the church’s political activity, nor do they seek, through the court, to prevent the election of antiabortion candidates. Plaintiffs claim that allegedly unconstitutional government conduct and illegal private conduct have distorted the electoral and legislative process by creating a system in which members of the public have greater incentive to donate funds to the Roman Catholic Church than to politically active abortion rights groups and in which each dollar contributed to the church is worth more than one given to non-exempt organizations. Plaintiffs do not complain of diminished representation and do not demand increases in actual representation. They complain of arbitrary government interference that disfavors them in the process of selecting representatives.
Viewed as such, there can be no question that, even in the absence of a mathematically demonstrable injury, the complaint satisfies the causation and redressability requirements. Clearly, the government defendants’ tax policy is the source of the distortion in the political process that plaintiffs complain of. An injunction against that discriminatory policy will restore the proper balance between adversaries in the abortion debate. The standing question is unaffected by the church defendants’ possible resolve to continue their current rate of political activity despite a decision requiring application of § 501(c)(3) to them and it is unaffected by plaintiffs’ ultimate chances of success in their drive to preserve or expand women’s rights to choose to complete or to terminate a pregnancy. That the court cannot guarantee plaintiffs’ success in the political arena does not signify that the plaintiffs cannot gain anything from this litigation. On the contrary, plaintiffs have the opportunity to redress what they perceive is a grievous imbalance in the electoral and legislative process. It is sufficient for purposes of standing that “ ‘the plaintiff has shown
an
injury to himself that is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.’
Simon v. Eastern Ky. Welfare Rights Org.,
*483
3.
Equal Protection Standing.
Plaintiffs contend that in addition to having standing based upon injuries to rights guaranteed by the establishment clause and to their right to equal participation in the electoral process, they have standing based upon injuries to rights conferred by the equal protection provisions of the fifth amendment. The thrust and importance of this argument are unclear. Having satisfied the requirements for establishment clause and voter standing, plaintiffs can press their claims of illegal disparate treatment. Thus it appears that the so styled “equal protection” standing would not enhance plaintiffs’ position. Moreover, plaintiffs have not alleged any facts that state an injury to rights conferred by the fifth amendment alone. They do not assert that the Code has been applied to them discriminatorily or that they have been denied some tax benefits to which they are entitled. The differential treatment of plaintiffs and the church that plaintiffs complain of creates a legally cognizable injury only in conjunction with plaintiffs’ first amendment claims. Their acknowledgement that the Code has been applied properly to them concedes that they have not been injured, in purely fifth amendment terms, by the alleged misapplication to the church defendants. Viewed from this perspective, their “equal protection” claim is reduced to an assertion that the federal defendants are acting improperly.
Schlesinger v. Reservists Comm. to Stop the War, supra,
*484 B. Prudential Concerns
The twenty individual plaintiffs and three of the organizational plaintiffs, ARM, NWHN and Nassau-NOW, have satisfied the Article III requirements for voter standing. In addition, the clergy plaintiffs and the Women’s Center have satisfied those constitutional prerequisites for establishment clause standing. Before a final decision on these parties’ standing can be rendered, however, they must demonstrate that the court should not decline to confer standing because of prudential considerations. The Supreme Court has identified three such prudential limitations that will defeat the standing of a plaintiff who has satisfied the Article III case or controversy requirements. Where “the harm asserted amounts only to a generalized grievance shared by a large number of citizens in a substantially equal measure,” the exercise of federal jurisdiction is not warranted.
Duke Power Co.
v.
Carolina Env. Study Group, supra,
These prudential factors do not dictate barring plaintiffs’ opportunity to proceed with this lawsuit. Although a large number of citizens likely share the injuries alleged by the clergy under the establishment clause and by the voters and abortion rights organizations under the first and fifth Amendments, these are not “generalized grievances” such that there will be any lack of sharp controversy. Standing is not a doctrine to restrict access to the courts, and prudential concerns should not be so applied if the court is satisfied that plaintiffs bring a live and pointed controversy to it.
See, e.g., Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Env. Study Group, supra,
*485
The prudential limitation on standing when rights of third parties are implicated avoids “adjudication of rights which those not before the Court may not wish to assert . . . [and assures] that the most effective advocate of the rights at issue is present to champion them.
See Singleton v. Wulff,
The final prudential hurdle restricts access to judicial forums to resolve abstract policy questions of broad public importance. Courts erect this barrier from their awareness of the judiciary’s limited competence to resolve societal, as opposed to personal, disputes and the superiority of other mechanisms to make complex social choices. Not all issues of broad public importance, however, are necessarily, or even better, left to the executive and the legislature. Plaintiffs do not seek resolution of “abstract questions;” they have articulated particular improper actions by the church defendants and illegal and unconstitutional disregard for that activity by the government defendants. Although the complaint implicates social policy issues, it does not call for judicial selection of an appropriate policy. Congress already has made that choice and set out the correct policy in § 501(c)(3); plaintiffs ask only for a judicial determination of whether defendants have observed Congress’s commands concerning paying taxes and engaging in political activity. The prudential barriers do not restrict a court from adjudicating such a claim merely because of the interplay between the litigation and social controversy.
Ill
Defendants urge dismissal, even if plaintiffs do have standing, because the complaint does not state a claim upon which relief may be granted. Defendants contend that plaintiffs’ injuries, such as they are, do not amount to actionable wrongs either as establishment of religion or unconstitutional vote dilution. The church defendants further argue that regardless of the vitality of the complaint, it states no claim against them and that, therefore, they should be dismissed.
Plaintiffs are permitted to proceed “unless it appears beyond doubt that [they] can prove no set of facts in support of [their] claim which would entitle [them] to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
In count two of the amended complaint, plaintiffs allege that by granting the Roman Catholic Church a uniquely favored status under the tax code, the government defendants have violated their duty, arising under the first amendment, to treat all religious organizations similarly. In recent years, the Supreme Court has set out a three part test to determine establishment clause violations. A challenged government action withstands establishment clause scrutiny “if it has a secular legislative purpose, if its principal or primary effect neither advances nor inhibits religion, and if it does not foster an excessive government entanglement with religion.”
Committee for Public Education and Religious Liberty v. Regan,
*486 It is not implausible that plaintiffs will be able to adduce facts that demonstrate that the government favoritism allegedly shown to the defendants lacks secular purpose or that this preferential treatment advances the cause of the Roman Catholic Church. If plaintiffs are successful in either of these tasks, they will have demonstrated an actionable establishment clause violation. The difficult evidentiary burdens that plaintiff must shoulder to prove these allegations do not, by themselves, justify dismissal. 12
Defendants place undue reliance on
Walz v. Tax Comm’n of the City of New York,
In count three, plaintiffs allege a violation of their fifth amendment rights to due process, including equal protection of the laws, by the government defendants’ failure to revoke the church’s § 501(c)(3) status. The gravamen of this claim is the adverse impact on the plaintiffs’ political voice that results from the government’s financial sponsorship of the plaintiffs’ opponents in a bitter public controversy.
Baker v. Carr, supra,
and its progeny confirmed that individuals have a right to equal participation in the electoral process and to be free from arbitrary government action that favors the political strength of some persons relative to others.
See, e.g., Reynolds v. Sims,
In count five, plaintiffs seek a writ of mandamus to compel the government defendants to enforce the Code against the church defendants. It is firmly established that ordinarily mandamus relief is available only to compel ministerial administrative actions.
See e.g., Leonhard v. Mitchell,
Count one states simply that “[t]he activities of the Roman Catholic Church violate § 501(c)(3) of the Code and the First Amendment to the Constitution.” This count fails to state a claim against the church defendants because they are incapable of violating the first amendment and they have breached no duty imposed by the Code and to plaintiffs.
The constitutional prohibition against establishment of religion prohibits government activities that enhance the status of one theology over all others or the status of religious beliefs and organizations generally over non-religion. Like all other protections afforded by the Bill of Rights, this stricture does not restrict purely private corporate action. Admittedly, the line between the public and the private is indistinct and, some say, vanishing, but the activities of the Roman Catholic Church, as alleged in the amended complaint, do not even approach this disputed border. Therefore, no action can proceed against the church defendants based on their abridgement of plaintiffs’ first amendment, guaranteed rights.
The complaint also fails to state a violation of § 501(c)(3) by the church defendants. They have received a determination letter from the IRS that confirms their tax-exempt status. Even if, as plaintiffs contend, that letter was erroneously or illegally issued, the church is entitled to rely upon it and withhold payment of taxes. The Code imposes no duty upon the church to gain pre-clearance from the IRS before embarking on activities that might trench upon the § 501(c)(3) prohibitions against political activity. If the church does engage in these proscribed endeavors, then it is liable to revocation of its exemption, but as long as it holds that exemption, it cannot be said to have violated the Code.
Moreover, the plaintiffs, by their own admission, have no direct grievance with the church defendants. The injuries set out in the complaint arise from illegal and unconstitutional government action. Plaintiffs concede that they do not seek, to terminate the Roman Catholic Church’s political program; they desire to place the church on an equal footing with themselves in the political battle over the right to choose to have an abortion. The disadvantage plaintiffs suffer comes from government indifference to church excesses and it is against the government, not the church, that plaintiffs have stated a claim.
*488 IV
Defendants’ final assault on the action flows from statutory and common law prescriptions against judicial review of plaintiffs’ claims. Defendants contend that the doctrine of non-reviewability of certain administrative or prosecutorial decisions precludes consideration of the action. In addition, defendants maintain that Congress has explicitly excluded lawsuits such as this from those in which injunctive or declaratory relief is available.
A. Reviewability of Administrative or Prosecutorial Discretion
As a general rule, courts will review administrative actions in the absence of a clear and convincing showing of contrary legislative intent.
Eastern Ky. Welfare Rights Organization v. Simon,
This action fits much more closely within the rule allowing review than the rule excluding it. No statute explicitly bars all judicial review of IRS decisions concerning taxpayer status. 14 To the contrary, Congress recently added to the Code a section explicitly permitting judicial review of IRS decisions denying an organization § 501(c)(3) status. See Pub.L. 94-455, Title XII, § 1203(b)(2)(A), 90 Stat. 1690 (1976), codified at 26 U.S.C. § 7428 (1976). 15 The jurisdictional restrictions contained in this section of the Code — limiting § 7428 suits to taxpayer actions for declaratory relief— do not undermine the inference that Congress recognizes the competence of the judiciary to reevaluate and where necessary to supervise IRS decisions concerning the award of § 501(c)(3) status. There is no significant difference in the decisional task presented to the courts in determining whether-an organization has improperly been denied an exemption and in determining whether it has improperly been granted one. Both decisions require consideration of complex federal revenue collection policies. Both require delving into the nature of the taxpayer, its expenditures and its activities. Neither is susceptible to simple application of rules to facts.
Defendants place undue reliance on the doctrine of non-reviewable prosecutorial discretion. Their most compelling argument draws upon the deference courts show to executive decisions to allocate law enforcement resources in a manner that the executive deems most efficacious. Offsetting this resource efficiency argument, however, is the consistent judicial intervention into prosecutorial decisions that fail “to promote the ends of justice and den[y] rights conferred upon a citizen by the Constitution and by federal law.”
NAACP
v.
Levi,
B. The Anti-Injunction Act
The Code expressly prohibits, with certain exceptions not relevant here, all “suit[s] for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax ...” 26 U.S.C. § 7421(a) (1976). Defendants contend that this litigation falls within the prohibited category.
Reference to the words of the statute alone places plaintiffs’ case beyond its purview. The complaint seeks an injunction commanding, not forbidding, the collection of taxes. Peering behind the words provides no greater support for defendants’ position.
This section of the Code, known as the Anti-Injunction Act, apparently has no recorded legislative history.
Bob Jones Univ. v. Simon, supra,
The majority of the courts that have considered the scope of the Anti-Injunction Act, however, have declined to interpret its prohibitions as broadly as defendants suggest. The consistent theme in these decisions is that the statute only extends to those actions it expressly refers to and that its effect is to require that taxpayers who object to the payment of taxes pay the assessment and sue for a refund.
See, e.g. Wright v. Regan,
C. The Declaratory Judgment Act
In addition to their prayer for an injunction, plaintiffs seek a declaration that defendants have violated the Code and Constitution. The Declaratory Judgment Act confers jurisdiction on the court to issue such relief “except with respect to [controversies concerning] Federal taxes other than the actions brought under Section 7428 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, ...” 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (Supp. IV 1980).
Conceding that they cannot bring a § 7428 action, plaintiffs change hats from those of the strict constructionists who advocated a literal reading of the Anti-Injunction Act to those of contextualists who argue that that statute and the Declaratory Judgment Act share the same purpose and thus should be interpreted to be coextensive. Plaintiffs’ only support for this proposition is dicta from several opinions that interpreted the two laws as “coterminous.”
McGlotten v. Connally, supra,
Declaratory relief and injunctive relief are two different forms of the courts’ remedial powers; there is no inherent reason that the two should be interpreted as equal in scope. Congress extended the Declaratory Judgment Act and created the § 7428 remedy in response to the Bob Jones Univ. decision. See S.Rep.No.94-938, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 586-87, reprinted in [1976] U.S. Code Cong. & Ad.News 3439, 4010-11. Nothing in the wording that Congress chose to allow these taxpayer suits for a declaration of a right to § 501(c)(3) status indicates that it desired to define the scope of the available remedy in terms of judicially recognized exceptions to the Anti-Injunction Act. The different purposes of the declaratory and the injunctive remedies— the former allows a litigant to seek an order from the court before subjecting itself to liability, for example, by not paying taxes, while the latter more often is invoked to terminate ongoing injurious activity — suggests that the absence of cross-references between the Declaratory Judgment and Anti-Injunction Acts resulted from a conscious tailoring of each to the circumstances Congress thought most befitting. The Anti-Injunction Act, by its narrow wording, permits suits to compel collection of taxes; such suits will be brought by parties whose tax status is not in dispute in the litigation and who, as plaintiffs here, can have standing only if they can show that a third party’s privileged tax status imposes on them a discrete and palpable injury. At that point the opportunity for a declaration of rights would be surplusage. The party seeking to adjudicate its own tax status presents a very different injury, the denial of an exemption from future taxation. A declaration of its right to the exemption can prevent it from suffering any permanent damage, but allowing such a party to seek an injunction would interrupt collection of federal revenues and thereby promote the principal mischief Congress sought to prevent through the Anti-Injunction Act. This analysis supports defend *491 ants’ position that no declaratory relief is available to plaintiffs.
V
Pursuant to the preceding discussion, the motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. The church defendants motion to dismiss themselves from the lawsuit is granted. Plaintiffs Laurel Clinic, Inc., The Federation of Feminist Women’s Health Centers, Inc., Harrisburg Reproductive Health Services, Inc., Hagerstown Reproductive Health Services, Inc., and Women’s Health Services, Inc. are dismissed for lack of standing. The motions to dismiss the other plaintiffs are denied. The twenty individual plaintiffs have standing as voters to contest the alleged infringement of their right to participate in the political process on equal terms with all others and free from arbitrary government interference. ARM, Nassau-NOW, and the National Women’s Health Network, Inc. have standing to represent their voter-members injured by the challenged government conduct. In addition, the clergy plaintiffs and the Women’s Center for Reproductive Health have satisfied the requirements to bring an action complaining of an unconstitutional establishment of religion. The motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted or because the action is barred by the Anti-Injunction Act or the doctrine of administrative discretion are denied. The court finds that the Declaratory Judgment Act does not authorize relief in this action.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs have withdrawn a fourth theory of standing based upon their status as taxpayers. Taxpayer standing is a narrow grant to challenge Congressional action under the taxing and spending power of Art. I, § 8 of the Constitution.
Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State,
Inc.,-U.S.-,-,
For purposes of ruling on the standing question, the court must accept as true all material allegations in the complaint, construe the complaint in favor of the plaintiffs and similarly consider supporting affidavits.
E.g. Warth v. Seldin,
. Although some opinions have described the test as a two pronged one, the second “prong” seemingly contains two discrete, albeit closely related, elements: causation and redressability. For purposes of clarity, the test therefore shall be considered to analyze three separate factors.
. Although the
Valley Forge
plaintiffs asserted principally a claim of taxpayer standing, the Supreme Court opinion discussed at length the standards for establishment clause standing.
See
. The crucial standing defect in the claim of a citizen alleging governmental misconduct and nothing more is not that the alleged misconduct does not inflict harm on someone, but that the wrongdoing does not injure the plaintiff personally. Such allegations may be sufficient to make out a claim that someone has been injured; they fail to confer standing because they do not satisfy the Article III requirement that the plaintiff be among those who have suffered the injury.
See Warth v. Seldin, supra,
This standing defect should not be confused with the prudential reason for declining to hear a case that presents a generalized grievance that is better resolved by the executive or the legislature even though the plaintiff has suffered an injury in fact and has satisfied the other Article III standing requirements. See p. 484 infra.
. Several Roman Catholic laity assert claims of injury that could be distinguishable from the claims of the public generally. These plaintiffs object to the federal defendants’ standing aside while the church violates § 501(c)(3) by using funds contributed to it, including donations from the plaintiffs, to electioneer for anti-abortion candidates. Such claims might be construed to plead injury to the plaintiffs’ church from non-enforcement of the Code. The establishment clause was designed not only to protect civil society from undue pressures from spiritual communities within it, but also to protect the sacred life of the population from the taint of secular politics.
See Everson v. Bd. of Educ. of Ewing Tp.,
In their affidavits, however, these plaintiffs do not express concern for the pollution of their church by its forbidden entrance into the area of politics. Their expressed claims are limited to injuries to their “rights to live in a society that believes in freedom of religion.” E.g. Delgado affidavit ¶ 5; Walsh affidavit ¶ 5. This is a generalized harm experienced as a citizen, not as a church member, and is a harm that is indistinguishable from the injury inflicted upon all citizens by executive disregard for the law. Because these plaintiffs have not complained of a distinct and palpable injury inflicted upon them as practicing Roman Catholics, they have no standing under the establishment clause.
. The groups providing medical services to women arguably occupy a different position from the other institutional plaintiffs because they allege threatened or actual economic loss from the defendants’ illegal activities. This injury, however, will not confer standing because the causal link between the church’s tax status and these plaintiffs’ lost revenues is tenuous at best. It is doubtful that the marginal increase in the coffers of the foes of abortion that is attributable to the church’s tax exemption is a significant factor in legislation that has reduced the income of abortion clinics.
. The clergy plaintiffs have identified in their affidavits their respective denominations’ attitudes towards pregnancy and abortion. These affidavits state that certain theologies consider compelling a woman to carry a fetus to term as repugnant as other theologies, such as the contemporary Roman Catholic Church doctrine, find abortion,
see
Affidavit of Rabbi Israel Margolies ¶ 3 (“To force a woman to bring an unwanted fetus into the world is a serious abridgement of the Bible ... ”), and that the availability of safe abortions may be necessary to permit a woman to fulfill her religious obligations,
see
Affidavit of Rev. Beatrice Blair ¶¶ 5-6 (“part of Episcopalian doctrine that women and families should be free to terminate [certain] pregnancies.”);
cf. McRae v. Califano, supra,
. Plaintiffs Lader, Bostrom, Strahl, Edey, Smith, Margolies, Blair, Brickner, Hare, Lutz, Vuitch, Delgado, Lifrieri, Walsh, Luciano, Michalski, Niebrzydowski, Seibel, DeCrow, and Sherer.
. None of the organizational plaintiffs can allege injury to themselves as organizations in the context of voter standing.
See Simon v. E. Ky. Welfare Rights Organization, supra,
The other organizational plaintiffs nowhere allege that they or their members engage in any political activity or that they are involved in affecting the legislative process in any substantial manner. In the absence of such allegations, these organizations have no standing to represent their members’ interests under the voter standing doctrine.
. The cases concerning challenges to the validity of the census, which defendants rely upon, are inapposite to an application of standing doctrine to the particular voter claims here. Plaintiffs in those actions alleged that “the votes of persons in some states or regions will be diluted in comparison to those in” other areas if the census was not performed in accordance with strict constitutional mandates.
See Fed’n for Am. Immigration Reform v.
*483
Klutznick, supra
“[Bjecause of the way our method of apportionment operates” it was “impossible” for plaintiffs in
Fed’n for Am. Immigration Reform
to demonstrate that concrete harm would occur from the inclusion of illegal aliens in the census count.
In
Sharrow,
plaintiff was faced with an exceedingly burdensome, but not impossible, pleading problem. In order to show that his injury might be redressable, he needed to perform “a state-by-state study” of the effects of the claimed impropriety in the census procedures.
The pro-choice plaintiffs need not demonstrate that the alleged discriminatory enforcement of § 501(c)(3) has resulted or will result in a specific loss in the number of pro-choice legislators, and they are not suing merely as members of a group, some of whom are likely to be injured. The Sharrow requirement is inapplicable because these plaintiffs allege unequal ability to participate in the electoral process, not actual loss of representatives vis-a-vis other groups, and they seek a non-discriminatory enforcement of the laws, not an increase in the number of offices available. The court can act upon their injury and demands without the type of statistical information required to prove injury and to structure relief in a census case. Unlike plaintiffs in Fed’n for Am. Immigration Reform, these voters all allege particular personal injury. This is no general claim that the census will come out “wrong” and thus harm some voters and help others. Rather, these plaintiffs allege that all pro-choice voters, candidates and contributors have suffered the injury complained of and will benefit from the relief requested. Assuming the truth of their pleadings, each plaintiff in this category has shown particular interests at stake and likelihood of benefiting from the relief sought.
. Defendants suggest that as part of the prudential limits on standing plaintiffs must show that they are within the “zone of interests” that § 501(c)(3) protects. Plaintiffs fail this zone of interests test, defendants maintain, because Congress never intended § 501(c) to preserve government neutrality in the electoral process. The structure of § 501(c) creates inequality among organizations depending upon the exemption for which each qualifies. For example, § 501(c)(3) organizations enjoy tax exemptions and the right to receive tax-deductible contributions at the cost of foregoing all electioneering and limiting their lobbying efforts to an insubstantial part of their activities; § 501(c)(4) organizations are not subject to these stringent requirements but they too are ineligible for tax-deductible contributions; and § 501(c)(19) must observe few restrictions on their political endeavors while enjoying tax benefits equivalent to those conferred on § 501(c)(3) groups. Plaintiffs’ standing, however, is not undermined by the fact § 501(c)(3) is not a general safeguard against tax policy induced economic distortions of the political marketplace because the zone of interests, or nexus text, applies only to taxpayer suits.
See Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Env. Study Group, supra,
. The neutrality of the statute itself, of course, does not immunize defendants if they apply that statute in a manner that favors one religion over all others.
See, e.g., Fowler v. Rhode Island,
. The court makes no judgment at this time on the appropriate standard of review for these claims. The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit recently applied the strict scrutiny test to claims, analogous to those at bar, that § 501(c) of the Code facilitated the speech of some persons over others. See Taxation with Representation of Washington v. Regan, supra, at 723-731.
. As discussed infra, pp. 489-90, the Anti-Injunction Act, 26 U.S.C. § 7421(a) (1976), and the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (Supp. IV 1980) restrict the scope of remedies available in tax related controversies. Neither of these statutes, however, can be construed as a blanket preemption of judicial review of taxpayer status. They are limitations on remedies only.
. Section 7428 authorizes certain organizations whose application for tax-exempt status is denied or revoked to bring an action for judicial declaration of the organization’s entitlement to the exemption. See 26 U.S.C. § 7428 (1976).
