Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge BUCKLEY.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
The District of Columbia appeals from a summary judgment entered for plaintiffs by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. We hold that the individual appellees have standing as municipal taxpayers to challenge expenditures by the District of Columbia government to influence the outcome of an initiative. On the merits, we conclude that the expenditures were illegal.
I. BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs/appellees are District of Columbia Common Cause (“Common Cause”) and three individuals. Common Cause sues on its own behalf to vindicate its “direct interest in maintaining the integrity of the initiative and referendum process in the District of Columbia,” Complaint at 116. It also asserts “the rights of its members who are registered voters” in the District of Columbia (“D.C.” or “District”). Id. The three individual plaintiffs sue as voters and municipal taxpayers; two of them signed the petition to place the initiative on the ballot and voted for it. Complaint at 117. The individual plaintiffs also seek to assert the “rights of all other registered voters and taxpayers in the District óf Columbia.” Complaint at ¶ 7.
In November 1984, D.C. voters were asked to vote on Initiative 17, which would establish the right of all persons in the District to adequate overnight shelter and require the Mayor to take reasonable steps to provide such shelter. On election day, the District distributed pamphlets, flyers,
After the dismissal of an administrative complaint, appellees instituted this action against the District and the Director of its Department of Human Services, whom they sued in his official capacity. The district court granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment, holding that the use of public funds for the purpose of opposing an initiative was neither authorized by statute nor permitted by the First Amendment. The court enjoined the District from expending public funds to prepare or distribute materials supporting or opposing an initiative, referendum, or other ballot measure.
II. Discussion
A. Standing
Although the parties did not address standing in their initial briefs, we requested supplemental briefing on that question. We conclude that the individual appellees have met the burden of establishing their standing, as municipal taxpayers, to challenge the District’s use of public funds to oppose the initiative. Accordingly, we need not determine whether Common Cause has standing in its own right or as representative of its members. See Bowen v. Kendrick, — U.S. -,
1. Varieties of Taxpayer Standing: An Overview
In the first case in which the Supreme Court explicitly considered federal taxpayer standing, Frothingham v. Mellon,
that court sustained the right of the plaintiff to sue by treating the case as one directed against the District of Columbia, and therefore subject to the rule frequently stated by this Court, that resident taxpayers may sue to enjoin an illegal use of the moneys of a municipal corporation. Roberts v. Bradfield,12 App.D.C. 453 , 459-460. The interest of a taxpayer of a municipality in the application of its moneys is direct and immediate and the remedy by injunction to prevent their misuse is not inappropriate. It is upheld by a large number of state cases and is the rule of this Court. Crampton v. Zabriskie,101 U.S. 601 , 609 [25 L.Ed. 1070 ] [1880],... The reasons which support the extension of the equitable remedy to a single taxpayer in such cases are based upon the peculiar relation of the corporate taxpayer to the corporation, which is not without some resemblance to that subsisting between stockholder and private corporation.... But the relation of a taxpayer of the United States to the Federal Government is very different. His interest in the moneys of the Treasury — partly realized from taxation and partly from other sources — is shared with millions of others; is comparatively minute and indeterminable; and the effect upon future taxation, of any payment out of the funds, so remote, fluctuating and uncertain, that no basis is afforded for an appeal to the preventive powers of a court of equity-
The distinction between federal and municipal taxpayer standing retains its vitality. Frothingham’s rule against federal taxpayer standing was relaxed in Flast v. Cohen,
Schlesinger, Valley Forge, and similar cases must be understood as limiting the Flast exception to the Court’s general rule against federal taxpayer standing. They do not limit municipal taxpayer standing which, as we know from Frothingham, rests on an entirely different foundation. See, e.g., Hawley v. City of Cleveland,
2. Elements of Municipal Taxpayer Standing
a. Pocketbook Injury
A taxpayer’s challenge to a state expenditure establishes a case or controversy “when it is a good-faith pocketbook action.” Doremus v. Board of Education,
Although Doremus involved only state taxpayers, the pocketbook injury requirement also applies to municipal taxpayers, as Doremus’ reference to Frothingham makes clear. For example, municipal taxpayers lack standing when they challenge a regulatory program that only incidentally involves expenditures of public funds. See e.g., Reich v. City of Freeport,
When a municipal taxpayer can establish that the challenged activity involves a measurable appropriation or loss of revenue, the injury requirement is satisfied. See, e.g., Hawley,
b. Causation and Redressability
Injury is only the first part of the standing analysis; the plaintiff must also establish that the challenged action caused the injury and that the injury would be redressed by a favorable decision. See, e.g., Allen v. Wright,
In Valley Forge, the Court questioned whether invalidating a transfer of surplus property would have reduced the plaintiffs’ tax burden. As there was “no basis for believing that a transfer to a different purchaser would have added to Government receipts,” and delay in disposition of the property entailed upkeep costs, the claimed injury — a heavier tax burden — would not be redressed by the relief requested.
We can only apply the redressability requirement after carefully defining the injury. Frothingham described the municipal taxpayer’s injury as the “misuse” of municipal funds.
The Supreme Court has never required state or municipal taxpayers to demonstrate that their taxes will be reduced as a result of a favorable judgment. If a state taxpayer has shown that the challenged program involves a measurable appropriation of public funds, the Court will recognize standing. The injury — misuse of public funds — is redressed by an order prohibiting the expenditure. See, e.g., Grand Rapids School District v. Ball,
Federal taxpayers must allege not only a nexus between their status as taxpayers and the government action challenged (i.e., an exercise of congressional power under the taxing and spending clause of Art. I, section 8 of the Constitution), but also a nexus between the taxpayer injury and the constitutional claim (i.e., that the action exceeds a specific limitation on that clause). Flast,
As municipal and federal taxpayer standing are based on different doctrinal underpinnings, the second nexus requirement does not apply to municipal taxpayers. Frothingham’s bar on federal taxpayer standing derived from concerns both about the attenuation of the federal taxpayer’s interest in federal expenditures and about the flood of litigation that would otherwise result. Flast seems to have rejected the former rationale, recognizing, as we have previously stated, that a federal taxpayer’s interest in spending programs “is conceptually direct, even though the dollar-and-cents consequence for a taxpayer is minimal.” Public Citizen, Inc. v. Simon,
The separation of powers consideration is not applicable in the context of municipal taxpayer standing. Whereas federal taxpayers must demonstrate that Congress had no constitutional power to authorize the expenditure, a federal court has no interest in determining whether the expenditure violates the authority of the municipal legislature. We are concerned only with the congruence between the Constitution and the municipal action, be it “legislative” or “executive.” Public Citizen,
Some have argued that federalism may replace separation of powers as a limiting principle in cases involving state taxpayers. See, e.g., Taub v. Kentucky,
Whatever the merits of that view, it does not apply to the District of Columbia, which is “constitutionally distinct from the States.” Palmore v. United States,
[Tjhose limitations implicit in the rubric “case or controversy” that spring from the Framers’ anxiety not to intrude unduly upon the general jurisdiction of*7 state courts need have no application in the District.
Glidden Co. v. Zdanok,
While we are reluctant to intrude on the autonomy granted by Congress to the District of Columbia and its own judiciary under the District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970, Pub.L. No. 91-358, 84 Stat. 552 (cf. below at 17), this deference is unrelated to the constitutional principle of federalism, which finds its roots in the powers and independent role reserved to the sovereign states by the Constitution. Rather, we have extended deference “because the Court Reform Act made the District of Columbia Court of Appeals the ‘highest court’ of the District, and thus the principal arbiter of District law.” Flintkote,
We note that most courts have refused to apply Flast’s second nexus to municipal taxpayer standing:
The distinction between taxpayer standing to challenge municipal but not federal spending was explicitly made in Frothingham v. Mellon,262 U.S. 447 , 486-87 [43 S.Ct. 597 , 600-01,67 L.Ed. 1078 ] (1923), and the extension of taxpayer standing to challenge federal expenditures alleged to violate the Establishment of Religion Clause, Flast v. Cohen,392 U.S. 83 [88 S.Ct. 1942 ,20 L.Ed.2d 947 ] (1968), should not be considered a retrenchment of taxpayer standing to challenge municipal expenditures.
Ridgefeld Women’s Political Caucus, Inc. v. Fossi,
3. Relevance of Miller
Appellants argue that appellees’ claim of municipal taxpayer standing is foreclosed by Miller v. California Commission on the Status of Women,
The Court first discussed the prece-dential weight of summary dispositions in Hicks v. Miranda,
Mandel v. Bradley,
To identify the issue or issues in Miller-U.S. that caused the Supreme Court to dismiss the appeal, we first look to Dore-mus, on which the dismissal was predicated. This is an easy task because Doremus contained just one issue of possible relevance to Miller-U.S.: whether the taxpayer appellants had standing to challenge the constitutionality of a New Jersey statute requiring daily readings from the Old Testament in its public schools. The Court noted that a “taxpayer’s action can meet [the ‘case or controversy’] test ... only when it is a good-faith pocketbook action.”
When we turn to Miller-Cal., we find that the record presented no clear evidence that the challenged activities had been financed at public expense. As the concurring judge pointed out:
the trial court did not expressly address the issue of expenditure of public funds for election campaigning considered by this Court in Miller I.... The [trial] court ... found ... “that evidence as to the extent of the expenditure of public funds is insufficient upon which to base a judgment_” Plaintiff’s cross-appeal does not challenge the latter finding.
Thus the Supreme Court’s summary dismissal of the appeal in Miller-U.S. “for want of jurisdiction” represents a straightforward application of the Doremus rule that a state taxpayer will not have standing to bring a suit unless he can show pocketbook injury. As the taxpayers in this case have made such a showing, appellants’ argument that their claim is foreclosed by Miller-U.S. is without merit. To read Miller-U.S. more broadly would contravene the Supreme Court’s direction not to read summary dispositions as renouncing doctrine established in previous eases (here by Frothingham).
4. Application to Present Case
Unlike Miller, the record here clearly demonstrates that appellees are challenging a specific expenditure of public funds. Indeed, the relief granted was an injunction against the use of public funds by the District to campaign against initiatives. District of Columbia Common Cause v. District of Columbia, No. 85-3528, slip op. at 9 (D.D.C. Oct. 21, 1986). Appellees did not seek to restrict the speech of individual government officials, which would have raised standing questions similar to those posed in Doremus. See Complaint at 1113.
This case differs from the typical taxpayer suit because appellees do not seek to enjoin ongoing expenditures. Nor did ap-pellees ask the individual defendants to reimburse the public treasury for the $7,000 spent in connection with the 1984 campaign. Although they sought restoration of “all funds that were unlawfully expended” by the District and its Director of Human Services, as well as an injunction against future such expenditures, id., they obtained only the latter. Appellees have not pursued their request for restoration of moneys on appeal, possibly because they concluded, on reflection, that the request that the District and its Department reimburse themselves would not redress the injury caused by past misuse of public funds. Thus we examine redressability solely in the context of appellees’ request for an injunction against future activity.
In order to obtain such an injunction, a plaintiff cannot simply allege that he was previously subjected to the defendant’s actions. Although past harm is relevant, the ultimate standing inquiry remains “whether there is a real and immediate threat of repeated injury.” O’Shea v. Littleton, 414
O’Shea and Lyons differ from this case because they involved individual plaintiffs who had been subjected to challenged governmental practices. Their standing depended on proof that they, and not some other members of the public, would be subjected to the practices again. Here, by contrast, appellees will be injured as taxpayers if the District again uses public funds to play a partisan role in an initiative campaign.
Appellees have satisfied their burden by alleging that the District is likely to use public funds to campaign against a future initiative and therefore to injure their interests as municipal taxpayers. The complaint states that seventeen initiatives and one referendum have been voted upon in the District since 1978, and there is cause to think the practice will continue. The complaint continues:
Initiatives and referenda, by their nature, often involve controversial subjects which have garnered little support from governmental authorities and legislators. Plaintiffs, therefore, have reason to believe that defendants will continue to make unlawful expenditures in opposition to initiative or referendum measures ..., thereby continuing to cause injury....
Complaint at ¶ 22. As this claim is not logically defective, we cannot dismiss the complaint unless the allegation lacks factual support. See Haase,
Although the factual record on this allegation is sparse, we think appellees have made a sufficient showing to avoid dismissal for lack of standing. The District spent $7,000 in the 1984 campaign, which is evidence that it may do so again. O’Shea,
The factual support for appellees’ allegations might have been inadequate had the District challenged them by a motion for summary judgment for want of standing. See Haase,
Appellees’ injury — the District’s future misuse of public funds — will be redressed by an injunction prohibiting such expenditures. Even though the injunction is unlikely to reduce appellees’ tax payments, it will ensure that their taxes are not used unlawfully in the future to advance political objectives they may oppose, but only for lawful purposes of potential benefit to them as taxpayers.
B. Pendent Jurisdiction
Appellees argue that the District’s expenditures violated both the First Amendment and D.C. law. The claim under D.C. law is: (1) a taxpayer has standing to seek an injunction to prevent D.C. from expending sums not authorized by statute; (2) a D.C. statute provides that no expenditure may be made unless it is authorized by Congress; (3) Congress did not authorize D.C. to use funds for political campaigning. This claim is examined more fully below.
The leading case on pendent jurisdiction is United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
The district court in this case held for appellees on the constitutional as well as the pendent claim. The court had power to exercise jurisdiction over the pendent issue, as the two claims manifestly derive from a common nucleus of operative fact. Although we do not decide the constitutional issue, we recognize that it is not “ ‘so attenuated and unsubstantial as to be absolutely devoid of merit.’” Hagans v. Lavine,
Furthermore, the district court did not abuse its discretion in exercising pendent jurisdiction. As the district court was prepared to hear the federal claim, judicial economy and convenience argue most strongly for reaching the pendent claim as well. There may be cases in which the local law issue is so important and so unsettled that the district court must decline to exercise pendent jurisdiction even though it decides the federal claim for the plaintiff. Cf. Grano v. Berry,
C. Merits
The right of a taxpayer under District of Columbia law to sue to enjoin an unlawful expenditure of public funds has long been recognized. Roberts v. Bradfield,
District of Columbia law provides:
*11 Except as provided in [sections dealing with public indentures], no amount may be obligated or expended by any officer or employee of the District of Columbia government unless such amount has been approved by act of Congress, and then only according to such act.
D.C.Code Ann. § 47-304 (1987). The expenditures involved in this case were made from funds appropriated by Congress.
The funds were expended in November 1984, i.e., fiscal year 1985. The congressional appropriations statute for that fiscal year provides: “No part of this appropriation shall be used for publicity or propaganda purposes or implementation of any policy including boycott designed to support or defeat legislation pending before Congress or any State legislature.” H.R. 5899, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. § 117 (1984), adopted in Pub.L. No. 98-473, 98 Stat. 1837 § 101(b) (appropriating sums as provided in H.R. 5899). The statute prohibits D.C. from using federally appropriated funds for (1) publicity, (2) propaganda, and (3) policies to influence legislation. Printing pamphlets, flyers, and posters in connection with an initiative campaign constitutes publicity or propaganda within the meaning of the appropriations statute. The expenditures are prohibited on the first two grounds specified, and we need not decide whether the D.C. electorate voting on an initiative is a “State legislature” under the statute.
As we conclude that appellees must prevail on the pendent claim, we decline to address their argument that the expenditures violate the First Amendment. The judgment of the district court with respect to the pendent claim is
AFFIRMED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Municipal taxpayer standing appears on its face inconsistent with current principles of constitutional standing. The Supreme Court, however, has found standing for municipal taxpayers (though seemingly not since Bradfield v. Roberts,
Any injury to plaintiffs as taxpayers here is highly fictional. A District of Columbia taxpayer with an income of $1 million a year would have contributed about 27 cents to the challenged expenditures of $7000.
One can imagine a case where a taxpayer could show a “substantial likelihood” that the illegal spending caused him to suffer an identifiable loss, redressable at the
Moreover, the evolution of standing doctrine has significantly undermined the original case for municipal taxpayer standing, however strong one may perceive that case. In Frothingham v. Mellon, the Court distinguished the municipal from the federal taxpayer on the ground that whereas the former’s interest in the lawful application of funds was “direct and immediate,” that of the latter “is shared with millions of others; is comparatively minute and indeterminable; and the effect upon future taxation, of any payment out of the funds, so remote, fluctuating and uncertain, that no basis is afforded for an appeal to the preventive powers of a court of equity.”
In Frothingham the Court also invoked an analogy to corporate shareholders’ derivative actions to support municipal taxpayer standing. See id. at 487,
As I understand the court’s opinion, we agree that affording state taxpayers standing on so exiguous a basis would at least raise a very serious problem of federalism: it would allow the federal courts to set aside state action despite the absence of a concrete, palpable injury. See Maj. Op at 6, citing Taub v. Kentucky,
Here, of course, no constitutional federalism can be relevant (i.e., provide a special necessity for judicial insistence on a real injury), as the Constitution expressly grants Congress plenary legislative power over the District. Art. I, § 8, cl. 17. As the court notes, however, Congress has granted the District considerable authority to govern its own affairs and, in particular, to adjudicate its own legal disputes. See District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970, Pub.L. No. 91-358, 84 Stat. 552 (1970); District of Columbia Self-Government and Governmental Reorganization Act, Pub.L. No. 93-198, 87 Stat. 774 (1973), codified as amended at scattered sections of District of Columbia Code (1981). Thus, as the court suggests, Maj.Op. at 6-7, Congress’s authority over the District may justify a relaxation of constitutional standing requirements. But even if this be so, prudential standing limitations may nonetheless come into play. The Supreme Court has observed that in the absence of such limits “the courts would be called upon to decide abstract questions of wide public significance even though other governmental institutions may be more competent to address the questions and even though judicial intervention may be unnecessary to protect individual rights.” Warth v. Seldin,
In Flast v. Cohen,
While Flast may simply open a new door for federal taxpayers, an alternative reading is that it makes a more general, conceptual shift in the analysis of taxpayer standing at all levels of government. The municipal/federal line of course can still serve as a rough cut at some quantitative difference for taxpayers; Flast does not directly impinge on its validity as such. On the other hand, Flast tends to move the analysis to the plaintiff’s genuine interest — in Flast itself, the taxpayers’ interest in her funds not being used for the “establishment” of religion. The present plaintiffs cannot assert an equivalent interest: at
The post-Flast cases in the lower federal courts relying on municipal taxpayer standing shed some light on whether such standing serves a useful function. We may put aside cases that can be sustained simply as applications of Flast at the local level, such as Donnelly v. Lynch,
Apart from them, what is there? In two Establishment Clause cases, the courts found standing for municipal taxpayers challenging municipal dispositions of property rather than “spending.” Hawley v. City of Cleveland,
Finally, there are four instances where courts have relied on state or municipal taxpayer standing to address alleged inequalities in the distribution of government resources: Hoohuli v. Ariyoshi,
In short, the record of the last 20 years suggests that the sole effect of non-federal taxpayer standing in the federal courts has been to allow such taxpayers (1) to present the sort of Establishment Clause claims that Valley Forge denies federal taxpayers, i.e., ones not involving an explicit spending of funds, and (2) to present discrimination claims that could far more plausibly be brought by genuine victims of discrimination. And, of course, in this case, through the operation of pendant jurisdiction, see United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Accordingly it would seem that abolition of municipal taxpayer standing as a special doctrine would eliminate a serious risk of unjustified intrusions on local independence, leaving courts quite able to grant relief for taxpayers who suffer a palpable injury, linked to the alleged illegality by the sort of causal connection normally required for constitutional standing.
Notes
. During the relevant period D.C. residents were assessed personal income taxes of $1950 on the first $25,000 of taxable income, plus 11% of the excess, 47 D.C.Code Ann. § 1806.3(a) (1981), resulting in a tax burden of about $109,200 for 858 F.2d — 3 my hypothetical taxpayer. D.C. general expenditures for the year ending June 30, 1985 were $2,835 billion. Statistical Abstract of the United States 277 (1988). $109,200/2,835,000,000 x $7000 = 27 cents.
. Viewing the District as an arm of Congress, one might suppose that separation of powers principles, which underlie the requirement of a real injury where congressional action is attacked, would impose a similar requirement here. But as it is the conduct of locally elected officials that is under attack, it is the quasi-federalism manifest in the congressional grant of District autonomy that requires us to insist on a sufficient injury.
