Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
On June 13, 2007, the Committee on the Judiciary of the United States House of Representatives issued a subpoena to Harriet Miers, former Counsel to President George W. Bush, seeking to compel her to produce documents and to appear and testify about the forced resignation of nine United States Attorneys in late 2006. On the same day, the Committee issued a subpoena to Joshua B. Bolten, President Bush’s Chief of Staff, seeking documents regarding the same subject. President Bush asserted executive privilege to block the testimony and production of the documents, and Ms. Miers and Mr. Bolten refused to comply with the subpoenas. On February 14, 2008, the House of Representatives voted to hold Ms. Miers and Mr. Bolten in contempt of Congress and passed an accompanying resolution authorizing the Committee to initiate an action in federal court seeking to enforce compliance with the subpoenas. The Committee filed suit in the district court on March 10, 2008.
The district court declared that Ms. Mi-ers was legally required to appear and testify in response to the Committee’s subpoena, although she could invoke executive privilege in response to specific questions. The district court further ordered Ms. Mi-ers and Mr. Bolten to produce all non-privileged documents and to provide privilege logs describing any documents not produced. The district court’s opinion did not address whether executive privilege would bar the disclosure of any particular communication or document. Ms. Miers and Mr. Bolten filed a notice of appeal and moved for a stay pending disposition of the appeal and for expedited briefing and oral argument.
Although the Committee acknowledges that an order granting an injunction is immediately appealable, see 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a), it argues that this court lacks jurisdiction because the district court issued no such order. With respect to the production of documents, the Committee is plainly incorrect. The district court ordered Mr. Bolten and Ms. Miers to take certain actions — to produce documents and a privilege log despite their claim, at the President’s behest, that they are shielded from legislative compulsion enforced by the judiciary. Given that claim, the district court’s order is immediately appeal-
The present dispute is of potentially great significance for the balance of power between the Legislative and Executive Branches. But the Committee recognizes that, even if expedited, this controversy will not be fully and finally resolved by the Judicial Branch — including resolution by a panel and possible rehearing by this court en banc and by the Supreme Court — before the 110th Congress ends on January 3, 2009. At that time, the 110th House of Representatives will cease to exist as a legal entity, and the subpoenas it has issued will expire. See, e.g., United States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co. (AT & T I),
We therefore grant the motion for stay pending appeal and deny the motion for expedition.
So ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the disposition of the motions:
I agree that we have jurisdiction. The district court’s order directing the defendants to produce a list of privileged documents, relief the Committee specifically seeks in its complaint, Compl. ¶83, operates as an appealable injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). See Cobell v. Kempthorne,
To show a likelihood of success on the merits sufficient to obtain a stay pending
Nonetheless, I am perplexed by the panel majority’s willingness to grant a stay while hypothesizing that the expiration of the 110th Congress might moot the case before it is heard on the merits. Never have we granted a stay that would have the effect of irrevocably depriving a party of its victory in the district court. Nor have we authority to do so, for a stay in such circumstances would necessarily cause “substantial” — indeed, overwhelming — harm. See United States v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
For the reasons stated by committee counsel at oral argument, however, I am convinced the case will survive this Congress. Whether or not the case would otherwise be capable of repetition yet evading review, the successor Congress can assert the prior Committee’s investigatory interest, as it did in United States v. AT & T Co. (AT & T II),
The Committee has asked us to expedite this appeal if we grant a stay, but the fact that the case will in any event continue into next year counsels against rushing our deliberations. In another parallel to the AT & T litigation, abiding by the usual briefing schedule has the advantage of allowing the input “not only [of] a new House but [of] a new President.” United States v. AT & T Co. (AT & T I),
