Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
The question presented in this appeal is whether an organization devoted to the separation of church and state, and several of its members suing as individual citizens, have standing to challenge the transfer of government property to a concededly religious organization.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In August 1976, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) conveyed 77 acres of surplus government property located in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, as well as buildings, fixtures, and equipment situated thereon, to the Valley Forge Christian College. The property was transferred pursuant to the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949, which authorizes HEW to sell or to lease surplus government property to tax-exempt institutions for health and educational purposes.
The Valley Forge Christian College is admittedly sectarian. Operated under the supervision of the Assemblies of God, the college’s primary purpose is to train leaders for church-related activities. Its curriculum is devoted to bible study, Christian
Numerous transfers of government property to hundreds of church-denominated institutions have been authorized under the Act. As a matter of practice, HEW nearly always grants these organizations a public benefit allowance ranging from 95% to 100% of the property’s estimated fair value. In this manner, HEW has in most cases relieved the benefitted religious organizations of the obligation to make financial payment for property received. Since the passage of this Act, HEW has authorized more than 650 separate transfers of surplus government property to various religious institutions. The total fair market value of government property transferred to denom-inationally sponsоred organizations during this period amounted to more than $25,700,-000.00. The initial cost of acquiring this property was over $64,494,000.00.
Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc., a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization claiming a membership of 90,000, and four of its individual directors, citizens and taxpayers of the United States, challenged HEW’s transfer of government property to the Valley Forge Christian College. As defined by its Articles of Corporation, American United’s purpose is “to defend, maintain and promote religious liberty and the constitutional principle of the separation of church and state.” The plaintiffs alleged that this property transfer constituted a violation of their individual rights protected by the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, and sought declaratory and injunctive relief to void the transfer. On the defendants’ motion, the district court dismissed the suit on the ground that plaintiffs lacked standing as taxpayers to challenge a transfer of property pursuant to the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act. This appeal is from that judgment.
Although we accept the district court’s conclusion that the plaintiffs lack taxpayer standing to contest the challenged conduct, we disagree with its conception of the legal identity assumed by the plaintiffs in this case. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a nonprofit organization, is precluded by its very nature from assuming the status of taxpayer. And while the four members of this organization suing as individual plaintiffs do assert standing as taxpayers, none of them does so exclusively or as a matter of primary concern. The plaintiffs’ essential contention, rather, is that the governmental conduct in question caused them individuated injury because it abridged their right — protected by the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment — to a Government that does not establish religion. Because the constitutional injury complained of by the plaintiffs gives them a sufficient “personal stake” in the present controversy to assure the court a “complete perspective” of the issues, and because the interest they seek to protect is arguably within the zone of interests protected by the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, we hold that the plaintiffs possess legal standing to maintain this action. Accordingly, we will reverse the judgment of the district court.
II. THE STANDING REQUIREMENT IN GENERAL
The concept of standing to sue derives essentially from Article III of the Constitution, which extends the federal judicial power only to certain classes of “cases” and “controversies.”
Courts and commentators have been confounded for many years by the question of standing.
Early discussions by the Court regarding the question of standing were anchored in the notion of a “legally protected interest” on the part of the litigant.
A. The Modern Law of Standing: Personal Injury in Fact
The modern law of standing set forth in Data Processing and Barlow and reaffirmed in the same words since, requires no more than an allegation that the challenged official action has caused the plaintiff “injury in fact, economic or otherwise,”
The categories of injury that may be alleged to support a litigant’s standing to sue have increased considerably since the modern formulation of the standing doctrine in Data Processing and Barlow. Various allegations of harm have been recognized by the Supreme Court as sufficient to meet the requirement of “injury in fact.” The most commonly recognized “injury in fact” has been economic in nature. In Data Processing, for example, the economic interests of data processors in agency rulings allowing nationally regulated banks to compete in the data processing industry supplied the requisite personal stake for the processors to challenge the agency action. Yet the Supreme Court went out of its way “to emphasize that standing may stem from [noneconomic values] as well as from . economic injury.”
Dictum in Data Processing to the effect that the alleged injury necessary to confer standing need not be of an economic nature was soon fortified. In Sierra Club v. Morton,
An averment that official action violates the plaintiff’s constitutional rights may also set forth a sufficient injury to meet the “injury in fact” tеst. In Baker v. Carr,
Although it is now unquestioned that standing to sue may be premised on injury to noneconomic as well as economic values, “the ‘injury in fact’ test requires more than an injury to a cognizable interest.”
B. Taxpayer Standing
The more “distinctive and discriminating” the harm alleged by a plaintiff, and the more clearly linked it is to the action challenged, the more easily a plaintiff may meet the “injury in fact” test. When á plaintiff claims such harm, there is no need to consider what must be set forth to satisfy the standing requirement by a party who asserts no special harm, but sues rather as a taxpayer to vindicate the interests of taxpayers generally.
Flast v. Cohen
Because the program attacked in Flast dealt with a substantial expenditure of tax funds, rather than an incidental payment in the administration of an essentially regulatory statute, the Court found that the plaintiff-taxpayer satisfied the first requirement. The Court then discerned, on the basis of a remark by James Madison,
The two-part nexus test of Flast has been criticized. It is uncertain why a taxpayer should be precludеd from questioning congressional spending authorized by a constitutional provision other than the taxing and spending clause. All government disbursements and expenditures, it has been asserted, are exercises of the spending power, even if also supported by some other constitutional provision. In addition, it is often difficult to distinguish governmental action that is primarily spending from activity primarily regulatory. The Court has nevertheless “drawn a sharp if artificial distinction”
III. STANDING UNDER THE ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE
In the present case, the district court apparently assumed that the allegation of injury to plaintiffs’ economic interest in reduced taxes offered the only possible basis for standing. From this assumption, the district court decided that the plaintiffs lack standing as taxpayers under Flast, because they cannot show a logical link between their taxpayer interest and the claim sought to be adjudicated. The legislation authorizing the transfer in question was enacted pursuant to the property clause of the Constitution, which provides Congress the “Power to dispose of . Property belonging to the United States.”
We do not dispute the district court’s determination that under the law as it presently exists, individuals asserting solely their interest as taxpayers have standing to challenge only exercises of the taxing and spending power, and not actions authorized by other constitutional provisions. Inasmuch as litigants suing in the capacity of taxpayers must show that the activity in question involves substantial taxing and spending, it may well be that the plaintiffs here lack taxpayer standing. We do question, however, the assumption by the district court that the only basis advanced by the plaintiffs in support of their standing claim is, or must be, alleged injury to their interest as taxpayers.
As enunciated in Flast, the doctrine of taxpayer standing was not meant to qualify the general standing requirement of a “personal stake in the outcome.” To the contrary, Flast’s purpose was to outline a limited set of circumstances in which an allegation of financial injury in the form of increased tax liability by itself might be considered an acceptable stake on which to predicate standing, quite apart from any allegation of individuated injury to other judicially cognizable interests. Indeed, the Flast court apparently found itself forced to premise standing on the plaintiff’s taxpayer interest, solely because it perceived no other allegation of injury that could supply the requisite personal stake in the outcome. The Court described its “point of reference” as well as its “starting point for analysis,” to be “the standing of individuals who assert only the status of federal taxpayers.”
The enormous labor spent by the Court to extend standing to the plaintiff in Flast through the precarious opening of taxpayer standing is best understood as a function of the Court’s acknowledged “point of reference” — it found no allegation of injury except that claimed by the litigants in their capacity as a federal taxpayer. It was this perceived limitation in the pleadings and nothing else, we believe, which constrained the Court in Flast from deciding that the plaintiffs’ interest in the establishment issue, without reference to their taxpayer status, would supply a stake sufficient to support standing. The underlying justification for according standing in Flast it seems, was the implicit recognition thаt the Establishment Clause does create in every citizen a personal constitutional right, such that any citizen, including taxpayers, may contest under that clause the constitutionality of federal expenditures. As previously suggested, it is because “each citizen has a personal stake in ensuring that the Government not establish a religion,” that “a citizen apparently does suffer a sufficiently personal injury to confer standing when he is taxed to support a religious institution.”
In contrast to the construction of the plaintiffs’ contentions in Flast, the litigants here do allege injury in fact to an interest other than the economic interest they share as taxpayers. They claim that the challenged action injures their important concern in the separation of church and state and that this is within the zone of interests protected by the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. Thus, their appeal squarely presents the novel and important question posed by Justice Fortas in Flast, which the Court did not reach and thus did not decide: whether “the vital interest of a citizen in the establishment issue, without reference to his taxpayer’s status, would be acceptable as a basis for [standing to bring] this [kind of] challenge.”
The question of “the vital interest of a citizen in the establishment issue” must be distinguished from the question of “citizen standing” as such. The Supreme Court has consistеntly admonished that a citizen who suffers equally with all other citizens will not be heard to raise generalized grievances about the conduct of the Government.
A similar question was raised in United States v. Richardson,
Accordingly, because he had failed to demonstrate a “ ‘personal stake in the outcome,’ . . . or a particular, concrete injury ... in short, something more than ‘generalized grievances,’ ”
The decisions in Reservists and Richardson appear to be based on the inadequate nature of the plaintiffs’ alleged injury in fact. In both cases, the Court sought to distinguish the “abstract injury in nonobservance of the Constitution asserted by respondents as citizens” from what it described as “direct” or “concrete” injury.
The claim that individual citizens are entitled to judicial enforcement of their rights does not, of course, tell us exactly what Constitutional rights individuals have against the government. But plaintiffs need not establish that they actually have a legal right under the Establishment Clause to be free from the kind of governmental conduct in question. An allegation of injury in fact to an interest protected by the Establishment Clause is all that is required for standing. Only if the court determines, after consideration of the merits, that the governmental action is barred by the Establishment Clause, will it thereby recognize legal rights in the plaintiffs. It is certainly not irrelevant to the prior determination, however, that the very first words of the Bill of Rights declare that: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
IV. CONCLUSION
One of the central purposes of judicial review is to restrain overreaching majorities from violating the rights of individuals that the Constitution was designed to protect. Yet, under the defendants’ view, Congress could transfer to a particular religious organization such national facilities as the Naval Observatory or the Army War College, secure in the knowledge that any individual citizen attempting to challenge such action as an abridgement of his or her rights under the Establishment Clause would not even be granted standing to make the claim. As Chief Justice Marshall wrote long ago in Marbury v. Madison, “[t]he very essence of civil liberty certainly consists in the right of every individual to claim the protection of the laws, whenever he receives an injury.”
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court dismissing the complaint for lack of standing will be reversed, and the case remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. 40 U.S.C. § 484(k) (1976).
. Id. 45 C.F.R. § 12 (1978).
. U.S.Const. art. Ill, § 2, states:
The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their Authority; —to all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls: —to all Cases of admiralty and maritime Jurisdiction; —to controversies to which the United States shall be a Party; —to Controversies between two or more States; —between a State and Citizens of another State; —between citizens of different States; —between Citizens of the same State claiming Lands under Grants of different States, and between a State, or the Citizens thereof, and foreign States, Citizens or Subjects.
. Flast v. Cohen,
. Association of Data Processing Serv. Organizations v. Camp,
. Flast v. Cohen,
. Id. at 97,
. One recent commentator has insisted that the law of standing “lacks a conceptual framework” and amounts to “little more than a set of disjointed rules dealing with a common subject.” Tushnet, The New Law of Standing: A Plea for Abandonment, 62 Cornell L. Rev. 663, (1977). Another has concluded that the “whole law of standing is so confused and cluttered . . . that the lower courts and practitioners especially need Supreme Court guidance.” K. Davis, Administrative Law of the Seventies § 22.00.-01, at 167 (Supp.1977).
. United States ex rel. Chapman v. Federal Power Comm.,
. Flast V. Cohen,
. Association of Data Processing Serv. Organizations v. Camp,
. Flast v. Cohen,
. See, e. g., Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co.,
. Tennessee Power Co. v. TVA,
. As Justice Frankfurter elaborated: “A litigant ordinarily has standing to challenge governmental action of a sort that, if taken by a private person, would create a right of action cognizable by the courts. ... Or standing may be based on an interest created by the Constitution or a statute. . . . But if no comparable commonlaw right exists and no such constitutional or statutory interest has been created, relief is not available judicially.” Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Comm. v. McGrath,
. J. Vining, supra note 14, at 23.
.
.
. J. Vining, supra note 14, at 26-27.
. Data Processing Serv. Organizations v. Camp,
. Id. at 153,
. Baker v. Carr,
For a discussion of the distinction between “personal” and “external” preferences see R. Dworkin, Taking Rights Seriously 234-39 (1977). External preferences need not be independent of, indeed they may reinforce, personal preferences. See Sierra Club v. Morton,405 U.S. 727 , 738,92 S.Ct. 1361 , 1367,31 L.Ed.2d 636 (1972) (“The test of injury in fact goes only to the question of standing to obtain judicial review. Once this standing is established, the party may assert the interests of the general public in support of his claims for equitable relief.”).
. Baker v. Carr,
. Barlow v. Collins,
.
. Id.
.
. Id. at 734,
.
. Id. at 688-89,
.
.
. Sierra Club v. Morton,
. E. g. Schlesinger v. Reservists Comm. to Stop the War,
. Id. at 734,
. L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 3-19, at 85 (1978).
. Id. As the Court later held in United States v. SCRAP,
. Barlow v. Collins,
.
. Id. at 91,
. Id. at 102,
. Id.
. Id. at 102-03,
. “ ‘[T]he same authority which can force a citizen to contribute three pence only of his property for the support of any one establishment, may force him to conform to any other establishment in all cases whatsoever. [Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments.] 2 Writings of James Madison 183, 186 (Hunt ed. 1901).”’
. Id. at 104,
. J. Vining, supra note 14, at 109.
. L. Tribe, supra note 36, § 3-19, at 84 n.18 (1978).
. Davis, Standing — Taxpayers and Others, 35 U.Chi.L.Rev. 601, 604 (1968).
. Flast v. Cohen,
. U.S.Const, art. IV, § 3, cl. 2.
.
. United States v. Richardson,
.
. United States v. Richardson,
. Schlesinger v. Reservists to Stop the War,
.
. Richardson v. United States,
.
. E. g., Schiesinger v. Reservists Comm. to Stop the War,
.
.
. Id. at 220,
. Id. at 226-27,
. Id. at 227,
.
. Id. at 177,
. Id. at 179-180,
. Sierra Club v. Morton,
. Schlesinger v. Reservists Comm, to Stop the War,
. Id.
.
. In a recent article, Professor Tushnet has argued that a preference by the Supreme Court for “better” plaintiffs stands as an implied limitation upon the conferral of standing. See supra note 8, at 690-93. In both Reservists and Richardson, the Supreme Court rеcognized a similar argument “that if respondents could not obtain judicial review of petitioner’s action, ‘then as a practical matter no one [could]’
. Abington School Dist. v. Schempp,
.
.
. Id. at 224 n.9,
.
. L. Tribe, supra note 36, § 3-19 at 82. See Note, “Standing to Assert Constitutional Jus Tertii, 88 Harv.L.Rev. 423, 428-30 (1974).
In case of overbreadth challenges under the free speech clause of the First Amendment, the Supreme Court has extended the concept of standing to allow individuals whose conduct may be regulated or proscribed by a statute to assert that the statute is unconstitutionally overbroad with respect to third parties not before the court. Broadrick v. Oklahoma,413 U.S. 601 [93 S.Ct. 2908 ,37 L.Ed.2d 830 ] (1973). Moreover, the Court has granted standing in such cases not only to one who has been charged with a violation of the statute but also to one merely threatened with such prosecution. Dombrowski v. Pfister,380 U.S. 479 ,85 S.Ct. 1116 ,14 L.Ed.2d 22 (1965). Even under this liberalized approach, however, the litigant seeking to challenge the allegedly overbroad statute must be either specifically charged or threatened with prosecution under that statute. A plaintiff not so charged or threatened but who nonetheless challenges such a statute lacks the personal stake in the outcome of the controversy for the conferral of standing. See Laird v. Tatum,408 U.S. 1 ,92 S.Ct. 2318 ,33 L.Ed.2d 154 (1972).
. West Virginia State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette,
. U.S.Const. Amend. I.
As one constitutional scholar has argued: “It is no historical accident that the two religion-related guarantees of the Bill of Rights are stated as the very first provisions of that historic document. . . the draftsmen of the Bill of Rights, working in the perspective of a history known to them all, put first things first.” Jones, Church-State Relations: Our Constitutional Heritage, in Religion and Contemporary Society 156, 163 (H. Stahmer ed. 1963).
. See Flast v. Cohen,
. Id. at 129 n.18,
. Abington School Dist. v. Schempp,
.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree with Judge Adams’ analysis that Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc., (Americans United) has standing under the Establishment Clause to challenge the transfer of surplus government property to a religious organization. I write separately, however, because I believe there is an additional reason which requires that we find standing. Simply stated, I believe that the plaintiffs have standing because they possess the necessary adversity of interest and, as a practical matter, no one is better suited to bring this lawsuit and thus vindicate the freedoms embodied in the Establishment Clause.
The Establishment Clause, and the first amendment of which it is a part, operates to protect the rights of political minorities against abuses by political majorities. See J. Madison, Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious Assessments. Thus, the first amendment, with its protections of fundamental rights, must be enforceable by the judicial branch of government, for it is by its very nature and terms designed to protect against possible abuse by the political branch. See West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette,
The first amendment is different from some provisions of the Constitution which do not depend primarily upon judicial enforcement for their efficacy and where alleged violations thereof thus do not give rise to a judicially cognizable controversy. See Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War,
The first amendment, however, is unlike the constitutional provisions at issue in Richardson and Schlesinger. There is no doubt that it is “subject to enforcement by an individual citizen.” See United States v. Richardson, supra,
The fundamental nature of first amendment interests and their nonmajoritarian nature is reflected in the liberalized stаnding rules that have been applied to over-breadth challenges under the Free Speech Clause. Within certain constraints, one whose conduct may be permissibly regulated or proscribed may, nevertheless, assert that the statute is unconstitutionally over-broad with respect to third parties not before the court. See Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
The scope of the liberalized standing rules in the free speech area is, I suggest, governed in part by the Court’s realization of the need for an available plaintiff. When an individual has himself been charged with a violation of a statute, the Court is willing to allow him to challenge it, even though his conduct is permissibly regulable, because of the Court’s concern that it will not otherwise have an opportunity to examine the challenged statute. See Broadrick v. Oklahoma, supra,
Statutes alleged to violate the Free Speech or Free Exercise Clauses are likely to have a perceptible impact or focus upon individual conduct. Thus, even though all citizens may be said to have a generalized interest in free speech or free exercise values, that is insufficient to confer standing. There is normally an available class of likely plaintiffs better situated to challenge the offending statute. Similarly, statutes allegedly violative of the Establishment Clause may also be directed at the regulation of individual conduct. In Abington School District v. Schempp,
Unlike statutes allegedly violative of the Free Exercise and Free Speech Clauses, statutes alleged to violate the Establishment Clause may not have an individual
In the case before us, we are presented with a statute that does not arise under the taxing and spending power. Thus, I agree that there is not taxpayer standing. Furthermore, the statute at issue here is not directed at the regulation of individual conduct. Although it is possible to conceive of economic interests that might give rise to a plaintiff who meets traditional standing requirements, that will be relatively rare and is certainly not the case here.
It is apparent that Americans United and those four of its directors named as individual plaintiffs, possess the requisite adversity of interest necessary to insure legitimate and effective judicial decisionmaking. Americans United is a non-profit organization some 90,000 strong with a historic and documented commitment to vindication of Establishment Clause interests. As stated by its Articles of Incorporation, Americans United’s purpose is “to defend, maintain and promote religious liberty and the constitutional principle of the separation of church and state.” Organizational purpose is, by itself, normally an insufficient basis on which to rest standing. See Sierra Club v. Morton,
. In Richardson the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff lacked standing to bring an action seeking to enforce the provisions of Article I, § 9, cl. 7 of the Constitution. The Court stated: “It is therefore open to serious question whether the Framers of the Constitution ever imagined that general directives to the Congress or the Executive would be subject to enforcement by an individual citizen.”
. Judge Adams observes that:
In the present appeal, for instance, it might well be argued that Americans United is not as “good” a plaintiff as would be a nonsectarian educational institution that had actually applied for the award of government property in question, but lost out to the Valley Forge Christian College. Yet the fact that such an organization might make a “better plaintiff’ cannot justify a denial of standing to [Americans United] .
Maj. op. at 263 n. 72. I agree. I would, however, further observe that the record contains no indication that there was any applicant other than the appellee competing for the transfer of the property. Nor do I believe that there ordinarily will be such a “better” plaintiff.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority concedes, and I agree, that the plaintiffs do not have taxpayer standing. I also agree that the rules of standing are at best far from clear. Nevertheless, it seems to me that the grant of standing to the plaintiffs runs contra to the Supreme Court’s pronоuncements in this complex area of the law.
Although the Court has expanded the categories of assertible injuries to include such matters as aesthetic and environmental well-being, United States v. Students Challenging Regulatory Agency Proceedings (SCRAP),
Analysis of the raison d’etre of the injury in fact prerequisite may be interesting, but it does not provide much enlightenment in resolving standing questions. No general definition of injury in fact has been particularly conclusive, with such descriptions as “specific,” “concrete,” and “personal” having found their way into opinions. The cases depend to a very large extent upon their factual backgrounds, furnishing but little effective guidance for future determinations.
Out of thе morass that is the American law of standing, however, several principles emerge. First, a generalized grievance brought by concerned citizens seeking to enforce a particular constitutional guarantee has been deemed too abstract to satisfy the injury in fact component of standing. Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War,
In the case at bench, the majority essentially finds a different kind of “citizen standing” derived from “[a] shared individuated right to a government that ‘shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion.’ ” At 261. Although there is respected scholarly cоmmentary approving that approach, it does not find support in the United States Reports.
In Flast v. Cohen, supra, Justice Fortas, in a concurrence, floated the idea that “[pjerhaps the vital interest of a citizen in the establishment issue, without reference to his taxpayer’s status, would be acceptable as a basis for this challenge.”
It does not suffice to say that the Flast Court was limited by the plaintiffs’ pleadings to a consideration only of the taxpayer issue. In the three-judge district court, Judge Frankel, in dissent, urged that the plaintiffs be given standing, not because they alleged that their tax dollars were being distributed unconstitutionally, but because they were asserting violations of the establishment clause — the same argument made by the majority here. See Flast v. Gardner,
“to prevent a pocketbook injury but only because that is part of what they deem a much graver injury, an injury to the right to live under a government which separatеs itself strictly from the church and church affairs.”
Brief for Appellant at 37.
The briefs of several amici reflect the same approach:
“[T]he rights advanced here are not primarily monetary in nature.
[T]he dominant inducement for this action is the protection of individual and social freedom . . .
Brief for National Council of Churches at 9.
“Thus, as Judge Frankel suggested, an economic analysis of the plaintiff’s interest is inappropriate in a case of this kind. Ibid. The proper analysis must comprehend the nature of the rights confirmed by the Establishment Clause, and the identity of the party upon whom these rights are conferred. . . . [T]he plaintiffs in this case, as citizens, contend that the Elementary and Secondary Education Act infringes the rights conferred upon them by the First Amendment. Their status as injured citizens, and nothing else, gives them the requisite interest to maintain their suit.”
Brief for Americans for Public Schools at 8. It cannot be said, therefore, that the Supreme Court was not strongly urged to adopt the theory that the majority here now advances.
If as the majority suggests, however, the Flast Court felt itself bound by the pleadings, then that same limitation must necessarily apply to us as well. The amended complaint, upon which the district court reached its decision, identifies the plaintiffs as “taxpayers.” The corporate plaintiff is described as an organization of taxpayers, and each individual is listed as a taxpayer who “would be deprived of the fair and constitutional use of his (her) tax dollar for constitutional purposes in violation of his (her) rights under the First Amendment . . . (App. 9.)
The Flast complaint also identified the plaintiffs as taxpayers and protested the use of federal funds to finance instruction in sectarian schools. Thus, there is no substantial difference between the two complaints, certainly none that would permit consideration of citizen standing in one case and not in the other.
The plaintiffs do not allege any direct injury that the transfer of the property has inflicted upon them or any direct benefit that will accrue to them as a result of the requested judicial action. Their freedom of religion is not alleged to be affected in any respect. Rather, the complaint alleges that the granting of the property is a violation of the establishment clause and asks that the conveyance be declared void or that the college be required to return the property to the government. Neither of these actions would directly affect any of the plaintiffs.
The lack of cognizable injury to the plaintiffs places them in the same posture as those in Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War, supra. There, the Court reiterated the requirement that the party seeking review must himself have suffered an injury and said: “Abstract injury is not enough.” Id., at 219,
Similarly, in United States v. Richardson, supra, the Court repeated the necessity for the plaintiff’s allegations of “particular concrete injury as a result of the operation of this statute,” id., at 177,
I, for one, am unwilling to believe that Congress, responsive as it is to public opinion, is likely to give away either the Naval Observatory or the Army War College.
In light of this authority, I do not find persuasive the argument that the establishment clause creates a right capable of being enforced by all citizens. As Justice Harlan indicated in his Flast dissent, premising standing on a hierarchical view of constitutional commands would increase, without any logical basis, “the number of situations in which individual citizens could present for adjudication ‘generalized grievances about the conduct of government.’ ”
The majority has embraced a concept of standing presented to the Court in 1968 and not accepted by it at that time, or since. If the basic principles of standing prove to be unworkable or undesirable, then it is the Supreme Court and not a court of appeals that has the right to change them. See Hicks v. Miranda,
. See, e.g., Bogen, Standing Up For Flast: Taxpayer and Citizen Standing to Raise Constitutional Issues, 67 Ky.L.J. 147 (1978); Davis, Standing: Taxpayers and Others, 35 U.Chi.L. Rev. 601 (1968). See also United States Parole Commission v. Geraghty,-U.S.-,-,
. The Valley Forge hospital was originally constructed in 1942 to treat wounded servicemen during World War II. As one real estate appraiser wrote, “[T]hese buildings were constructed several years ago for one purpose only, that is for an army hospital, and it is my feeling that they have little or no use, generally speaking, for other purposes.” (App. 242.)
